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A89737 The orthodox evangelist. Or A treatise wherein many great evangelical truths (not a few whereof are much opposed and eclipsed in this perillous hour of the passion of the Gospel) are briefly discussed, cleared, and confirmed: as a further help, for the begeting, and establishing of the faith which is in Jesus. As also the state of the blessed, where; of the condition of their souls from the instant of their dissolution: and of their persons after their resurrection. By John Norton, teacher of the church at Ipswich in New England. Norton, John, 1606-1663. 1654 (1654) Wing N1320; Thomason E734_9; ESTC R206951 276,720 371

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and yeilds it self to be doubly lost utterly lost and out of measure vile So as in this condition the Command to believe with the Promises of grace fall heavier upon the soul then the Command and Promise of the first Covenant in that Gospel doth exceed the Law Our disobedience to the Gospel so far exceeds in evil our disobedience to the Law as the Gospel transcends the Law The Soveraignty of God in this particular The Soveraignty of God is his absolute free Power to shew or not to shew mercy unto man according to his own good pleasure Gods making himself a Debtor unto his Elect is the effect of his good pleasure Rom. 9.18 We know not that we are of the number of his Elect unto whom he hath made himself a Debtor until we do believe Our personal and practical Acknowledgement That God hath power to deal with us according to his good pleasure is a part of our humiliation The Object of Faith Of the Object of Faith with Arguments moving to believe is the Doctrine of the Gospel the Sum whereof is That Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 Arguments moving to believe are The Command to believe 1 John 3.23 And this is the Commandement that we should believe in the Name of his Son Jesus Christ God's invitation of repenting sinners to believe for which end he in Jesus Christ by the Ministery standeth at the door of our hearts knocking there for entrance Revel 3.20 Woeth us John 3.29 Beseecheth us 2 Cor. 5.20 The honour that is given to God by believing Rom. 4.20 Our duty to believe 1 John 3.20 The good of believing He that believeth on the Son hath Everlasting life John 3.36 The evil of not believing He that believeh not shall be damned Mark 16.15 The Efficacy of the Gospel to work that faith in us which it commands from us therefore called the Ministration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 Because the Spirit concurreth with the Dispensation of the Gospel to work faith in our hearts Lastly The Promise made to them that do believe Mark 16.15 In this way we are to meditate of God Look upon me and be ye saved all the Ends of the Earth Isai 45.22 I sail Behold me behold me Isai 65.1 As Moses lifted up the Serpent in the wilderness even so must the Son of man be lifted up that whosoever believe in him should not perish but have Everlasting life John 3.14 15. Wayting for the Lord Jesus in the use of means Of waiting in the forementioned disposition for the Lord Jesus Christ with preparatory hope is our seeking after him in the wayes which he hath instituted in his Word for that end until we find him such as are hearing of the Word Reading Meditation Conferring Praying c. Seeking for Christ is either without faith in which condition we seek not Christ for himself but for our selves We seek rather the benefits of Christ then Christ we seek our selves not Christ John 7.34 36. and Chapter 8.21 Or with faith so only believers seek Christ and that for himself Though they that have not faith cannot seek Christ as they ought but their very prayer is sin yet it is their duty to pray and to seek after Christ Psal 79.6 Jer. 10.25 Pour out thy fury upon the Heathen that know thee not and upon the Families that call not on thy Name If the not calling upon the Name of God be a sin then to call upon the Name of God is a duty Peter calls upon Simon Magus though an unbeliever to pray Repent therefore of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee Acts. 8.22 The Pharisee a Type of sinners establishing their own righteousness The Publican a Type of sinners sensible of their sin and want of the righteousness of Jesus Christ both go to the Temple to pray Luke 18.10 The Prophet personates Ephraim yet unconverted praying unto God to turn him Jer. 31.18 The Elects seeking God is the effect of Gods seeking them Our seeking before faith is the effect of the common work of the Spirit our seeking after faith is the effect of the saving work of the Spirit Invenitur Deus à non quaerentibus nempe ante inventionem prius siquidem quam nos quaeramus Deus nos quaerit Paraeus in Rom. 10. dub 16. I am found of those that sought me not Rom. 10.20 Namely before his finding of us And thou shalt be called sought out Isai 62.12 God seeks us before we seek him In this soul-thirsty disposition after Christ whilest we so restlesly desire as yet we find we cannot sincerely desire so seek as yet we cannot seek so pray as yet we cannot pray The Lord Jesus in his set time to have mercy finds us and having found us by his Spirit is found of us by the act of faith When the poor and needy seek water and there is none and their tongue faileth for thirst I the Lord will hear them I the God of Israel will not forsake them Isai 41.17 God converts Ephraim whilest he is praying for conversion Jer. 31.18 19. The Publican finds mercy whilest he is praying for mercy Luke 18.13 14. Quest 1. Is a distinct Experience of the several Heads of Preparatory Work necessary according to Gods ordinary Dispensation unto conversion Ans No yet the more distinctness the better and some distinctness in respect of some of the principal parts thereof according to the ordinary Dispensation of God seemeth necessary as namely the conviction of the sinfulness of sin the conviction of the guilt of sin i. e. that it justly binds over the sinner unto punishment impossibility of salvation by the Law revelation of the object of faith i. e. God the Father Son and Holy Ghost and Jesus Christ God-man in one Person set forth to be a Mediatour according to the Gospel of frec-grace Some sense of our lost estate looking up unto Jesus Christ not only as come to seek and save them that are lost but also as able to seek and to save waiting upon him in a broken-hearted and diligent use of means until we be made partakers of his free saving grace Quest 2. What measure of Preparatory Work is necessary to conversion Ans As the greatest measure hath no necessary connexion with salvation so the least measure puts the soul into a preparatory capacity or Ministerial next-disposition to the receiving of Christ So that in respect of the Order of Gods Dispensation such a soul being called to believe is not now to object against its believing The defect of such a measure of humiliation but together with its due attending to and belping on any kindly work of a further degree of humiliation it is to apply it self in a principal manner immediately to believe There is not the like degree of humiliation in all those that are converted Humiliationis gradus nō est idem in
a sinner is an undivided act done altogether not by parts it doth not receive more or lesse if there be any there is all and if not all not any either all or none Justification in respect of the price and the acceptation of the persons justified is equal thus The Person that suffered for all is one and the same the sufficiency of an infinite Person suffering was requisite for the redemption of one and in the suffering of an infinite Person there was sufficiency for the redemption of all The kinde of punishment suffered for all was the same Gods acceptation thereof was the same Christ having suffered the punishment due in kinde and degree to the greatest sinner it cost Christ no more to pardon Paul than Timothy it cost him as much to pardon Davids childe 2 Sam. 12.23 as to pardon Manasseth The punishment for kinde and degree due unto the greatest sinner being suffered by an infinite person it was as much as if all the elect had suffered an infinite person containeth eminently all persons Christ therefore being in himself an infinite person and being by Divine ordination a publick Person in his suffering he was as many persons as God willed him to stand for therein Hence when the redemption mony was brought the rich must not give more the poor must not give lesse Exod. 30.15 in the Passeover and in the Supper of the Lord the portion of all is equal the distribution of Manna was equal Exod. 16.18 A Beleever at the same time is a sinner in respect of the remaining principle of inherent disobedience and righteous in respect of the imputed obedience of Christ guilty of damnation if looked at in himself not guilty of Damnation if looked at in Christ Adam a Beleever though a sinner was more just than Adam before the Fall Adam before the Fall was without sinne and innocent but not just because he had not fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law Adam a Beleever though a sinner is yet just because by beleeving he hath fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law Adam innocent had no right unto eternallife Adam a beleever notwithstanding sin hath right unto eternal life The righteousnesse of one Beleever is more acceptable unto God than the righteousnesse of all Mankind in the first Covenant The Lord Jesus Christ was just inherently but a sinner imputatively the Beleever is a sinner inherently but just imputatively Mary under the Crosse was more just imputatively than Christ which was also true of every Beleever then living when Christ was under the actual imputation of sin the same righteousnesse is both anothers and ours also Anothers that is Christs subjectively yet ours that is the Beleevers imputatively The righteousnesse of a Beleever in this life is both perfect and imperfect perfect in respect of Justification imperfect in respect of Sanctification Annot on the Bible in Numb 23. God looking on beleevers through Christ seeth no more sin safely understood than he seeth in him for they are made the righteousnesse of God in him by imputation Hence followeth peace of Conscience to all Beleevers Of the peace of Conscience following upon justification by faith notwithstanding all their unrighteousnesse Rom. 5.1 so farre as we have confidence in justifying grace there remaineth no conscience of condemning sin Rom. 8.1 No bitterer warre than between the Conscience and the Curse no sweeter peace than when Mercy and the Beleever meet together when the Conscience and the Promise kisse each other that is a taste of Hel this of Heaven Peace is that Gospel-tranquillity which followeth upon the Souls certain relyance on Christ concerning its freedome from the evil of the Curse and fruition of the good of the Promise As Christ being the great sinner imputatively in the instant of his dissolution passed from a state of wrath into a state of perfect peace so doth the Beleever upon his justification by faith If Christ hath peace who was made our sin then need must the Beleever have peace who is made his righteousnesse if Adams peace had been perfect in case of his fulfilling all righteousnesse then the Beleevers peace is perfect who hath fulfilled all righteousnesse in his Surety the beleeving commanded in the Gospel hath in Christ done yea out-done the doing commanded in the Law The peace of the Beleever is as perfect as the peace of those who are in glory the righteousnesse of these being the same with theirs See the grounds hereof in respect of God and Christ God himselfe is the Author and Object of our peace therefore it is called the peace of God Phil. 4.7 peace with God Rom. 5.1 He even he it is who is the Creator of peace Isa 57.19 The Speaker of peace Psal 85.5 When he giveth quietnesse who can give trouble Job 34.29 them hee also justified What shall we say to these things if God be for us who can be against us Rom. 8.30 31. The Merit of Christ a fruit and effect whereof is justifying grace is infinite because of the eminency of the person being God-man the Law violated was but a Creature but he that was made subject to it is a Creator the holinesse of the subject exceeds the holinesse of the Law the transgressor of the Law was but a Man the satisfier is God-man See here the honour of the Law that had such a subject farre more than what could have redounded to it from the subjection of all Angels and meer men See the security of the Transgressor that hath such a satisfier our disobedience is but the disobedience of Men his obedience is the obedience of him who is God needs then must his righteousnesse exceed our unrighteousnesse and in this respect wel may justifying grace compared with sin be called abundance of grace Rom. 5.17 And God bee sayd abundandy to pardon Isa 55.7 This sweet truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 longe majus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 postcrioris Adami quam fuit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prioris Terra instar puncti respectu caeli the sweet Psalmist of Israel sings forth in lively compatisons Psal 103.11 12 13. For as the heaven is high above the earth so great is his mercy towards them that fear him As farre as the East is from the West so farre hath he removed our transgressions from us Like as a Father pittieth his children so the Lord pittieth them that fear him Sin is exceding sinful and grace is out of measure gracious Though sin hath abounded yet grace doth much more abound Rom. 5.20 God Christ the Gospel the Law and the Beleever all gain through justification by faith The Merit of Christ being infinite hath no bounds but is excendible according to the pleasure of the disposer thereof the obedience of Christ is All-sufficient able to have saved the whole world had God so pleased and that as wel as one man From the effectual apprehension and perswasion of the Premises proceeded that triumphing speech of a Beleever
of such persons to such offices be by the call of men Or civil whether natural as parent and child Or voluntary as Magistrate and Subject 4. Benignity is God willing freely to communicate his grace and goodness unto his creatures proportionably to their several capacities Exod. 33.19 Matth. 5.45 Psal 33.5 Goodness according to some admits of a three-fold Consideration Of Nature which is called perfection Of Manners called holiness Of Beneficence id est a disposition to do good to others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this is properly called Benignity Thou art good and doest good Psal 119.68 Goodness is either essential or by participation God is essentially good he is good of himself he is goodness it self the creature is good by participation i. e. by a goodness received of God The Sun if compared with other creatures you may say in that respect it hath light of it self but the Moon and Stars are light by participation that is they receive their light from the Sun God is a full Fountain or rather a Fountain which is fulness it self willing to communicate as the Sun sends forth its light a fountain its streams and the prolifical virtue in plants inclineth them to fruitfulness as the seminal virtue in living creatures disposeth them to generation the peculiar affection in parents towards their children renders them propense to do them good and the soul full of matter like wine which hath no vent propends to pour out it self so is the Lord affected to do good according as he hath willed concerning the creature The goodness communicated from God unto the creature is either special bestowed upon Angels and men Or common bestowed upon the rest of the Creation The Earth is full of the goodness of the Lord Psal 33.5 The impression of his Image is upon the reasonable the impression of his Footsteps is upon the unreasonable creature God who is the increated good communicateth himself without division effusion or multiplication of himself all that he communicates notwithstanding he remaineth infinite and the same God were God blessed for ever though he had never willed of his goodness unto any but if he were not a God of Benignity he were not our God Goodness so descends and cometh from God unto the creature as that it stops not there but ascends and returns again unto God either by way of manifesting of his glory as a meer subject and representative glass of his goodness in the unreasonable creature or by way of giving glory to him not only as a meer subject whereon his goodness is legibly engraven but also as a subject yeilding obedience to the command in the reasonable and sanctified creature Amor est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Circulus perpetuus est in amore Hence love is said to be both extatical that is carrying the lover as it were out of himself unto the loved as it is with the soul removed out of the body in a Trance and circular the beginning and end of which Circle is God that Alpha and Omega from whom and to whom are all things Unto that infinite and increated Sea whence all created rivers of goodness come thither they return again Mercy is God willing to succour the creature in misery Mercy in God is either essential namely that which is in him by necessity of nature and had been in him though he had never willed the manifestation thereof by shewing mercy to any this is Gods sufficiency to shew mercy Or Relative namely that which is in him with respect to the creature and is his will to manifest mercy to whom he pleaseth Exod. 33.19 Rom. 9.18 Mercy is increated viz. the Attribute of God or created viz. a transient act of God in time or the effects of such transient acts so Vocation is said to be an act of mercy Rom. 11.30 32. 1 Pet. 2.10 Remission of sin Luke 1.78 Mat. 18.33 Salvation Jude 21. Increated mercy is Gods will to shew mercy Created mercy is Gods actual shewing mercy according to his will The Effects of Mercy are either special proper to the Elect as flowing from special grace Rom. 9.23 The Elect are called and by effectual calling so made vessels of mercy Or common extended to those who are not elected Luke 6.35 36. Vnto the beasts of the field Psal 104.27 Yea over all his works Psal 145.9 Redemption is that whereby God gave his Son and Jesus Christ God-man gave himself and accordingly in due time became a Ransom for the Elect whence it cometh to pass That Justice is no hinderance to the application of Mercy John 3.16 Gal. 2.20 Rom. 3.26 Creation Providence and Redemption considered as they are in God i. e. as immanent acts belong unto Gods sufficiency and may be placed amongst his Attributes but if they be looked at as transient acts i. e. as acts passing and done in time so they belong unto Gods Efficiency and are placed amongst the works of God Though God by his absolute Power might have saved man without Redemption wrought by Christ yet having constituted that Rule of relative Justice In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye Gen. 2.17 He could not in respect of his Power now limited to proceed by this rule so that man having sinned man must dye and satisfie the Law that man may live Justice requireth the Surety should dye that the Debtor may live That he might be just and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus Rom. 3.26 Justice is God willing to render unto the reasonable creature what is due thereunto according to his word whether by way of grace or punishment Deut. 32.4 Dan. 9.16 1 John 1.9 Psal 62.11 12. Justice in God is either essential of the absolute nature of God whence it is that God can do no wrong To be in God essentially is to be in God by necessity of nature that is it is of the necessary Being of God so as if God is that is and if that were not God were not Or Relative viz. The Justice of God in respect of the creature that is in God necessarily This is in him freely and is nothing else but Gods constant will to give unto the creature what is its due The Will of God is the Rule of Justice That which Gods Law is unto man that is Gods Will unto himself Justice consisting in rendering to every one their due and Gods Will being the Rule of Justice it followeth that and only that to be due unto man which God hath willed concerning him The Moral Law it self the Rule of Manners the Recompence contained in the Promise in case of obedience the Punishment contained in the Curse in case of disobedience are all the effects of Gods free pleasure It being a truth That Gods Will is the Rule of Justice between him and the creature and consequently That the desert and punishment of sin determined by him is therefore just because he hath so determined It followeth that in case
is that condition of things possible wherein there is not only a possibility that such things may be but there is also a divine determination that they shall be This is founded in the Decree of God The Existence of things is there actual being in time according to the Decree This proceedeth from the external efficiency of God The creature considered as possible is the object of the Decree The creature in the second state fore-mentioned viz. in its condition of possibility is the object of the Decree Where we must remember the sufficiency of the Creator is the possibility of the creature The possibility of the creature is nothing else but God able to create the creature To think the creature hath a possibility of it self were in effect to think the creature to be a Creator As the Futurition of the creatures is not any thing in the creatures themselves in that as yet they actually are not but is God Esse objectivū creaturarū in intell●ctu divino est ipsū esse Dei quia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esse Eminenter creaturarū est non tam esse creaturarū quā esse Dei Twiss de sci Med. willing the creatures to be so the possibility of of the creature by the same reason is not any thing in the creature but is God able to cause the creature to be But the Futurition of the creature is nothing else but God willing the creature to be God able to cause the creature or what else is possible to be is his sufficiency God willing the creature to be is his Decree God representing the creature having an objective being in his will is that which is called the divine Idea The creature as possible is the object of the Decree The Idea is the object of the divine knowledge of what is decreed The objective Being of the Creatures in God is the very Being of God Esse Objectivum Creaturarum in intellectu divino est ipsum esse Dei The Creature in God is the Essence it self creating Creatura in Deo est ipsa creatrix Essentia Anselm The Idea is the Divine Essence representing the creature Idea est Essentia Divina Aquinas representans Creaturam The Creatures themselves as they are conceived in the mind of God are the Idea of that nature which they have in themselves Ipsae Creaturae prout in mente divina concipiuntur Twisse de Scien media lib. 1. cap. 7. Numb 14. sunt Idea illius Naturae quam habent in semetipsis The Objective Being of things in respect of the divine understanding is not a relative being but a most absolute and most real being viz. the very Being of God himself Esse Objectivum rerum respectu Intellectus Divini Cajetan in part pri Tho. q. 15. Art 1. non est esse relativum sed absolutum realissimum scil esse Dei We judge with Cajetane saith Doctor Twisse that the objective being of the creatures in God is the very Being of God Nos autem cum Cajetano judicamus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esse Objectivum Cajetan ibid. Twiss de sci med Creaturarum in Deo esse ipsum esse Dei Were not the Object of Divine Knowledge in God there could be no certaine knowledge of future contingents Objectum proximum immediatum divinae cognitionis Rivet Cattol Orth. tractat 4. qu. 6. non est aliquid extra Deum sed est ipsa Essentia divina quia sequeretur ex suppositâ sententiâ scientiam futurorum contingentium non esse infallibilem Deus in seipso effectus videt tanquam in causa Et quomodo vid. ibid. Which premised the Proposition appears thus The Object of the Decree is not to be sought for out of God himself but both to be sought and found in himself 1. Because the Object of the Decree is from Eternity being as ancient as the decree it self There cannot be an Act without or before the Object 2. The Object of the Decree being Eternal and there being nothing Eternal but God either the Object of the Decree must be in God or no where The Object of the Decree is that which in order proceedeth or fore-goeth the Decree The Sufficiency of God in which the possibility of the creature is founded precedeth the Decree in order of our conception For though the Sufficiency of God and the Decree or Will of God which is also true of all other Attributes are the same in God not having in him any real difference yet they represent unto us notions formally differing The Object of the Decree that is which by the free Act of the Decree acting as it were thereupon passeth from a state of Possibility unto a state of Futurition Now all these predications joyntly are found and only found in the possibility of the creature founded in the Sufficiency of God Therefore the creature in its condition of possibility is the Object of the Decree This Proposition asserting the creature in its condition of possibility to be the Object of the Decree agreeth every way with the Doctrine of the Nature of God and inferreth no incongruities whereas the asserting of any other object disagreeth with the Nature of God and inferreth intolerable inconsequences From these grounds it is not hard to conceive that not man considered as actually being whether in his pure or corrupt estate but as yet to be and in the Divine Essence namely as capable in respect of the Sufficiency of God to be what he pleased is the Object of the Decree scil as concerning man This great Truth would be the more readily and quietly embraced did we duly consider 1. That this one single Act of the Decree is to be conceived by us after the order of the end and the means conducing to that end 2. The End of God in the Decree is himself Prov. 16.4 God made all things for himself i. e. for the manifestation of his glory in a way of justice upon the Reprobate in a way of justice tempered with mercy upon the Elect. The Creation of man mutable the permission of sin the punishing of him justly for sin make up one full and perfect Medium conducing to this end as concerning the Reprobate The Creation of man mutable the permission of sin the effectual Application of Free-grace and Glory notwithstanding sin for the merit sake of Jesus Christ make up one full and perfect Medium conducing to this end as concerning the Elect. 3. That these Acts not being subordinate so as any of them are to be looked at as the end of the other but all of them being co-ordinate that is conjoyned into and making up one way serving unto Gods end we ought not to think or say thus God created man that he might permit him to sin and permitted him to sin that he might punish him for sin Ezek. 33.11 But God created man permitted him to sin and condemneth him for sin to manifest the Glory of his Justice The
affirmeth that one Act of Volition or Willing in God should be the object of another and then by the same reason that again may be the object of another and so in infinitum This Answer unto this Objection concerning faith foreseen may serve in like manner for an answer unto the objection concerning works foreseen being the cause of Election As also unto that of sin foreseen being the cause of Reprobation Good works are the way to salvation not the cause of Gods Decree to save Sin ●is the cause of punishment which is the actual execution of justice for sin but not of Gods intent to punish sin Sin is the cause of damnation and consequent of reprobation Election is not without the sight of faith and new obedience nor Reprobation without the sight of sin yet faith though it be the instrument and means of the application of salvation following thereupon is the effect not the cause of Election and sin though it be the cause of the application of all the evil of punishment yet is it the consequent not the cause of Reprobation Obj. 3. If sin followeth necessarily upon the Decree then God is the Authour of sin But sin followeth necessarily upon the Decree Therefore God is the Authour of sin Ans This blasphemous Inference is in effect the same with what the ancient Enemies of the Doctrine of the Decree of old calumniated the Teachers thereof with thereby through their sides blaspheming the Scriptures and God himself So objected the Adversaries of this great Truth against Paul the greatest Preacher thereof amongst those that were but men Rom. 9.19 Thou wilt say then unto me Why doth he yet find fault for who hath resisted his Will i. e. If Gods Will determining the being of sin be irresistable then man in committing sin is unblameable Prideaux Lect. 1. de absoluto Decreto Bellarmine de Amiss gratiae cap. 4.5 6 7. why is fault found with that which was unavoydable So the Pelagians against Augustin An absolute Decree necessarily concludeth God to be the Author of sin So Bellarmine against Zuinglius Calvin Beza and other Orthodox Divines slandering their Doctrine of the Absoluteness of the Decree with these horrid Criminations viz. That thence it followeth that God is the Author of sin 2. That God sinneth truly and properly 3. That God is the only sinner 4. That sin is not sin For satisfaction of the Objection we must distinguish of Necessity There is a necessity of Coaction and a necessity of Infallibility Sin followeth not the Decree by a necessity of Coaction or Compulsion in which sence the Objection only holdeth but by a necessity of Infallibility which consisteth with and hindereth not the liberty of sin of which afterwards Hence the Decree though it be the antecedent that is the foregoer of sin yet it is not the cause of sin and sin though it be the consequent that is somewhat infallibly following upon the Decree yet it is not the effect thereof The day goeth before the following night and the night foregoeth the following day yet night and day are far from being causes one of another The diligent attending to the difference between an Antecedent and a Cause and between a Consequent and an Effect for the clearing of which sufficient hath been spoken before is of great use to unty many knots in this place But meeting here with this Satanical and abominable Sophism of imputing unto God the being of the Author of sin it will not be unseasonable to remove other Arguments disputing for the same Conclusion though not all of them upon the same grounds Arg. 1. If God hath absolutely fore-determined all Events then God hath willed sin if God hath willed sin then God is the Author ●f sin Answ Though sin as sin he evil yet the being of sin for a better end is good God doth not will sin as sin For thou art not a God that hast pleasure in iniquity neither shall evil dwell with thee Psal 5.4 yet God hath willed the permission of the being of sin for a better end In peceato actus volendi in Deo non transit in rem permissā sed in permissionem Twisse Cr. 3. l. 3. Rivet disp 1. Th. 24. Cum dicitur Deus vult peccatū esse hoc refugit pia mens non quia quod dicitur non bene dicitur sed quia quod bene dicitur malè intelligitur Vide Twisse Cr. 3. l. 2. The Jews Acts 4.27 did what God had determined to be done in his Decree when they did what he forbad to be done in his Command Those who give their Kingdom to the Beast Revel 17.17 in so doing fulfilled the word of the Decree yet brake the word of his Command The water whilest it runneth his own course serveth the end of the Artificer in turning about the Mill according to his intent For who hath resisted his Will In the mystry of sin the Decree of God saith a learned and judicious Author passeth into the permission but not into the evil that is permitted that is God willeth the permission of sin but he doth not will sin as sin That better End in order unto which God willeth the being of sin is the manifestation of his own Glory the glory of his Mercy upon the Elect the glory of his Justice upon the Reprobate The manifestation of the glory of God is a greater good then the transgression of man is an evil Had not there been sin there had not been a Gospel had not there been sin there were no need of a Saviour if there had been no sin Jesus Christ had not been Arg. 2. If God ascribeth unto himself the doing of actings that are sinful then God is the Author of sin But God ascribeth unto himself the doing of actions that are sinsul Therefore Concerning the selling of Joseph by his Brethren the Scripture saith It was not you that sent me hither but God Of the Egyptians hatred against the Israelites He turned their heart to hate his people to d●al subtilly with his servants Psal 105.25 Of the Incest of Absalom I will do this thing before Israel and before the Sun 2 Sam. 12.12 Of the Rebellion of the ten Tribes and Jeroboam This thing is from me 1 Kings 12.24 Of the cruel plunder of the Babylonians I will send them against an hypocritical Nation and against the people of my wrath will I give him a charge to take the spoyl and to take the prey and to tread them down like mire in the street Isa 10.6 the like is to be seen in many other places Answ We must distinguish between the action and the evil of the action God is so the Author of the action Acts 17.28 as that he neither is nor can be the Author of the evil of the action James 1.14 It is impossible either that God should not be the Author of all good or that he should be the Author of any evil The act or effect hath
that nothing shall separate as Sarcerius came to Camerarius his wife when she had been exercised with a long and tedious conflict and read to her the latter end of the eighth of the Romans she brake out in triumph using Pauls words Nay in all these things we are more then Conquerors Oh Christians neither sin nor Devil nor world can divide you from Christ for he * Rom. 16.20 did not only tread down Satan but under your feet 3. In times of great danger and defection either through error and persecution as Saunders trembled to think of the fire especially when others fall fearfully who were before us in knowledg and profession of zeal and piety when the first become last when glorious Luminaries are eclipsed and leave their orb and station as the Martyrs were troubled to hear of the revolt of some great Scholers that had appeared for the Gospel When Hymeneus and Philetus two eminent Professors fell there was a great shaking 2 Tim. 2.18 But the foundation of the Lord standeth sure c. that 's the comfort the Apostle opposeth in such a case 4. In times of disheartening because of the difficulties of Religion when the use of means groweth troublesom to quicken you in your Christian course think of the unchangeableness of Gods love all graces rise according to the proportion and measure of faith loose hopes weaken endeavors 1 Cor. 9.26 I run not as one uncertain Those that ran a race gave over when one had far out-gone them as being discouraged and without hope When hope is broken the edg of endeavors is blunted Go on with confidence you are assured of the issue God will bless you and keep you to his everlasting Kingdom 5. In the hour of death when all things else fail you God will not fail you this is the last brunt do but wait a little while and you will find more behind then ever you en joyed death shall not separate as Olevian comforted himself with that * Vide Scultetum in Isai 54. Isai 54.10 The hills and mountains may depart but my loving-kindness shall not depart from you being in the agonies of death he said Sight is gone speech and hearing is departing feeling is almost gone but the loving-kindness of God will never depart The Lord give us such a confidence in that day that we may dye glorying in the Preservation of our Redeemer VERSE II. Mercy unto you and Peace and Love bemultiplyed VVE are now come to the third thing in the Inscription and that is the form of salutation delivered as all Apostolical salutations are in the way of a prayer In which we may observe 1. The matter of the prayer or blessings prayed for which are three Mercy Peace and Love 2. The manner or degree of enjoyment be multiplyed I begin with the matter or blessings prayed for It will not be altogether unuseful to observe that diversity which is used in salutations In the Old Testament peace was usually wished without any mention of grace as Psal 122.8 For my brethrens and companions sake I will say Peace be within thee and ● an 6.25 Peace be multiplyed unto you But in the times of the Gospel grace being more fully delivered that was also added and expressed in the forms of salutation but yet in the times of the Gospel there is some variety and difference Sometimes you shall meet with a salutation meerly civil as James 1.1 To the twelve Tribes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 greeting so Acts 15.23 which was the usual salutation among the Heathen but most usually 't is * Rom. 1.17 grace and peace and in other places grace mercy and peace as 2 John 3. and 1 Tim. 1.2 and here it differeth from them all for 't is mercy peace and love And Causaubon observeth that the Greek Fathers if they wrote to a carnal man they would wish him grace but not peace if to a godly man they would wish him grace and peace too To touch upon these things is sufficient From these Blessings mentioned in this place I shall observe something in general and then handle them particularly and apart First In the general Consideration you may observe 1. Observat 1. That spiritual blessings are the best blessings that we can wish to our selves and others The Apostles in their salutations do not wish temporal felicity but spiritual grace Gods people pray for one another out of the communion of the Spirit and for themselves out of a principle of the divine Nature and therefore they do not seek wealth and honour for themselves or one another but increase of Gods favour and Image 'T is true Nature is allowed to speak in prayer but grace must be heard first our first and chiefest requests must be for mercy peace and love and then * Mat. 6.33 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an additional supply like paper and pack-thread which is given over and above the bare gain other things shall be added to us the way to be heard in other things is first to beg for grace Psal 21.4 He asked life of thee and thou gavest him length of days for ever Solomon sought wisdom and together with it found riches and honour in great abundance Well then if thou prayest for thy self make a wise choyce beg for spiritual blessings so David prayeth Psal 106.4 Remember me O Lord with the favour that thou bearest unto thine own people nothing less would content him then Favorites mercy other blessings are dispensed out of common pity to the generality of men but these are mercies privilegiate and given to Favorites now saith David of this mercy Lord no common blessing would serve his turn So Psal 119.132 Look upon me and be merciful to me as thou usest to do to those that love thy Name Surely that which God giveth to his people that 's a better mercy then that which God giveth to his enemies Again these are mercies that cost God dearer they flow to you in the Blood of his own Son yea they are mercies that are better in themselves wealth and honour may become a burden yea life it self may become a burden but not mercy not grace not peace of Conscience and therefore they are better then life Psal 63.3 then wealth then honour none ever complained of too much mercy of too much love of God These are blessings that swallow up other miseries yea the loss of other blessings grace with poverty 't is a * James 1.9 preferment peace of Conscience with outward troubles is an happy condition if there be a † 2 Cor. 1 5. flowing of spiritual comforts as there is an ebbing of outward comforts we are not much wronged therefore first seek these blessings Again If you pray for others pray for grace in the first place that 's an evidence of spiritual affection Carnal men wish such things to others as they prize and affect themselves so also do gracious men and therefore their thoughts run more
upon mercy peace and grace then wealth and honour and greatness When a man sendeth a token to a friend he would send the best of the kind These are the best mercies if you were to deal with God for your own Souls you can ask no better You may ask temporal things for God loveth the prosperity of his Saints but these special blessings should have the preferment in your wishes and desires of good to them and then you are most likely to speed Our Lord Christ in the 17 of John commendeth the Colledg of the Apostles to the Father and what doth he ask for him dominion and worldly respect Surely no nothing but preservation from evil and sanctification by the Truth these are the chiefest Blessings we should look after as Christians Observe again the aptness of the requests to the persons for whom he prayeth Observat 2. Those that are sanctified and called have still need of mercy peace and love They need mercy because we merit nothing of God neither before grace received nor afterward the very continuance of our glory in Heaven is a fruit of mercy not of merit our obligation to free-grace never ceaseth We need also more peace there are degrees in assurance as well as faith there is a temperate confidence and there are ravishing delights so that peace needs to be multiplyed also And then love that being a grace in us 't is always in progress in Heaven only 't is compleat Take it for love to God there we cleave to him without distraction and weariness or satiety God in communion is always fresh and new to the blessed spirits And take it for love to the Saints it 's only perfect in Heaven where there is no ignorance pride partialities and factions where Luther and Zuinglius Hooper and Ridley joyn in perfect consort Again Observat 3. Observe the aptness of these requests to the times wherein he prayed when Religion was scandalized by loose Christians and carnal doctrines were obtruded upon the Church In times of defection from God and wrong to the Truth there is great need of mercy peace and love Of mercy that we may be kept from the snares of Satan Christians whence is it that any of us stand that we are found faithful 'T is because we have obtained mercy They would dec●ive if it were possible the very Elect Mar. 24.24 Why is it not possible to deceive the Elect as well as others of what mould are they made wherein do they differ from other men I answer Elective grace and mercy interposeth 't is not for any power in themselves but because Mercy hath singled them out and chosen them for a distinct people unto God And we need peace and inward consolations that we may the better digest the misery of the times and love that we may be of one mind and stand together in the defence of the Truth Again Observat 4. Note the aptness of the blessings to the persons for whom he prayeth Here are three blessings that do more eminently and distinctly suit with every person of the Trinity and I do the rather note it because I find the Apostle elsewhere distinguishing these blessings by their proper fountains as Rom. 1.7 Grace to you and peace from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ Sort the blessings right there is grace from the Father and peace from Christ So here is mercy from God the Father who is called the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort 2 Cor. 1.3 and peace from the Son for he is our peace Ephes 2.14 and love from the Spirit Rom. 5.5 The love of God is s●ed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given to us Thus you see every Person concureth to our happiness with his distinct blessing In the next place Observat 5. how aptly these blessings are suited among themselves first mercy then peace and then love mercy doth not differ much from that which is called grace in Pauls Epistles only graee doth more respect the bounty of God as mercy doth our want and need By mercy then is meant the favour and good-will of God to miserable creatures and peace signifieth all blessings inward and outward as the fruits and effects of that favour and good-will more especially calmness and serenity of Conscience or a secure enjoying of the love of God which is the top of spiritual prosperity And then love sometimes signifieth Gods love to us here I should rather take it for our love to God and to the Brethren for Gods sake So that mercy is the rise and spring of all peace is the effect and fruit and love is the return He beginneth with mercy for that is the fountain and beginning of all the good things which we enjoy higher then love and mercy we cannot go for Gods Love is the reason of it self Deut. 7.7 8. Rom. 9.15 Isai 45.15 and we can deserve nothing at Gods hands but wrath and misery and therefore we should still honour Mercy and set the Crown upon Mercy 's head as further anon that which you give to Merit you take from Mercy Now the next thing is peace mark the order still without mercy and grace there can be no true peace Isai 57.21 There is no peace saith my God to the wicked they say Peace peace but my God doth not say so Christ left his peace with his own Disciples John 14.27 and not as worldly and external peace is left in the happiness of which both good and bad are concerned that is general but this is proper confined within the Conscience of him that enjoyeth it and given to the godly 'T is the Lords method to pour in first the oyl of grace and then the oyl of gladness Alas the peace of a wicked man 't is but a frisk or fit of joy whilest Conscience Gods watchman is naping stoln waters and bread eaten in secret Prov. 9.17 The way to true peace is to apply your selves to God for mercy to be accepted in Christ to be renewed according to the Image of Christ otherwise sin and guilt will create fears and troubles Again the last thing is love great priviledges require answerable duty Mercy and peace need another grace and that 's love 'T is Gods gift as well as the rest we have graces from God as well as priviledges and therefore he beggeth love as well as mercy and peace but it must be our act though we have the grace from above We would all have mercy and peace but we are not so zealous to have love kindled in our hearts Mercy peace all this runneth downward and respects our interest but love that mounteth upward and respects God himself Certainly they have no interest in mercy and were never acquainted with true peace that do not find their hearts inflamed with love to God and a zeal for his glory that as he hath ordered all things for our profit so we may order and refer all
I have cleansed my heart in vain c. ver 13 14. Hereupon Job himself was overmuch disquieted Job 23.3 4 5. his friends concluded him an hypocrite The Disciples began to doubt whether Christ were the very Christ Luke 24.21 5. The Prosperity of the wicked Exigit Cato ut ipsi Deus rationem reddat cur Pompeium Caesar vicerit nam victrix causa ● iis placuit sed victa Catoni Mernae de verit relig cap. 12. which consideration hath from time to time troubled the godly Job 12.17.14 Psal 37.1 Psal 73.2.3 Jer. 12.1 Cato is unsatisfied until God give him a reason why Caesar prevails against Pompey 6. Things not falling out alike in this life in matter of suffering with them who are alike in transgression To these six Heads may be referred the chief Objections striking at the Justice of divine Government the Answers whereunto take in order thus 1. The Permission of sin for a much better good then sin is an evil of which in the Doctrine of the Decree Chap. 4. is no way repugnant unto the Justice of God held forth in the Law whereby God hath not bound himself from the permission of sin The punishment of transgression contained in the curse in case of the commission of sin is so far from opposing as it rather supposeth the permission thereof 2. As God hath not bound himself by the Law from the permission of sin so neither hath he bound himself to the punishing of it immediately upon the commission thereof The set season for the full punishment of the sins of the Reprobate is not before the time of death and the Day of judgement till then God hath left himself arbitrary and is various in his Dispensations no man taxeth the Judge because the offender remaineth unpunished until the Assizes 3. It is a truth that all things come alike to all and that there is one event to the righteous and to the wicked yet we are to consider 1. Though it be so oftentimes yet it is not so always 2. Though their outward condition at times is alike yet their inward condition at such times is not alike 3. The principal difference which God makes between the good and the bad the clean and the unclean between him that sacrificeth and him that sacrificeth not in this life is in things which are spiritual and for ever and not in respect of things that are outward and but for a time 4. Notwithstanding Gods Dispensations unto the Sons of men are various and mysterious many times past our finding out yet in the end the righteousness of his Government shall be manifest None shall be found losers by godliness none gainers by ungodliness Sin shall appear to be the only evil piety the only good Every one shall receive according to their deeds 4. Concerning the Adversity of the godly Here would be no place for so much sin as to question Gods Justice did we not forget that his Saints in this life are sinners the best of them that suffer most suffer less then they deserve Thou our God hast punished us less then our iniquities deserve Ezra 9.13 5. Though the sins of the Saints deserve why God may deny unto them temporal mercies and why he may inflict upon them temporal crosses yet the sins of the ungodly do not deserve that God must deny unto them temporal mercies or that he must inflict upon them such temporal crosses The Justice of God in the Law punishing the sins of the Reprobate in their measure and season for ever restraineth not God from shewing common mercies unto them according as he pleaseth for a time Adde hereunto that their blessings are cursed 6. That the various dispensation in ordering events not falling out alike in point of affliction with them who are alike in transgression is no way prejudicial to the Justice of God may appear 1. By considering the condition of men in general 2. By comparing the several conditions of men one with another If you look upon the condions of men in general then as notwithstanding such are the sins of the Saints as that they deserve which also God may do in a way of trial of his servants or for testimony to his truth or upon the point of his meer Soveraignty why God might visit them with continuing temporal chastisement yet such is the grace of God in Christ whence he may not only spare them but also confer special favour upon them so notwithstanding the sins of the wicked are such why God might yet doth not Justice require that God must always afflict them with temporal sorrows or that he may not at times shine upon them with temporal blessings The same is further to be seen by laying the several conditions of men one unto another 1. If we compare wicked men with wicked men their punishments are corporal or spiritual these temporal or eternal If God punisheth not in the one he neither doth or will punish in the other first or last more or less here or hereafter so as in conclusion each impenitent one shall suffer according to their deserts none more none less 2. If we compare the Saints with the Saints their chastisements are various both inward and outward that which they suffer not one way who can say they suffer not another The conclusion also with them all will prove all sin to end in loss and grief and all obedience to end in endless gain and joy Their repentance shall hold proportion with their offence and glory shall be answerable unto grace 3. If we compare the wicked with the godly always remembring that the sins of the wicked are fully punished in Hell the sins of the Elect already punished in their Surety and in due time chastised in their own persons we are further to consider that the great difference between the godly and ungodly is not in things visible or pertaining to this life but in their state respectively after this life The chastisements of the Saints do not exceed but are far short of their deserts the punishment of the wicked shall be according to their deserts 'T is not against justice that the Saints suffer chastisement before the wicked suffer punishment It is of mercy that they so suffer chastisement as that they may not suffer punishment with the World 1 Cor. 11.32 Gods judicial acts of Providence are oftentimes such in this life whence he convinceth the beholders that he governeth amongst the most ungoverned of the sons of men so that a man shall say Verily there is a reward for the righteous verily he is a God that judgeth in the Earth Psal 58.11 Not mans reason but Gods Word is the Interpreter of Gods Works Whence in the Psalmists temptation we might attain the Psalmists satisfaction did we seek it with the like spirit When I sought to know this it was too painful for me till I entered into the sanctuary of the L rd Psal 73.16 17. If yet we cannot see that
beleeve Paul had a righteousness of his own Phil. 3.9 thought he was alive Rom. 7.9 him Christ came to call though in his conceited righteousness because he was elected but before he obtained mercy to beleeve he is made sensible both of the dung and unrighteousness of his own righteousness Phil. 3.7 8. and also of his sin Rom. 7.9 The second Reason is taken from the Ends that this Preparatory Work serves unto Reason 2. First To convince of sin The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that beleeve Gal. 3.22 For God hath concluded all in unbelief that he might have mercy up n ali Rom. 3.19 Secondly To justifie the Law i. e. the Curse The Law is holy and the Commandment holy just and good Rom. 7.12 the Precept holy the Promise good the Curse just Man must acknowledg himself a lawful captive before God will deliver him Shall the prey be taken from the mighty or the lawful captive be delivered Isai 49.24 Before God will justifie man according to the Promise man must justifie God had he proceeded with him according to the Curse We must condemn our selves before God will pardon us Even in this respect God will make his Law honourable Thirdly To teach the Soul the nothingness of all it is and hath without Jesus Christ You see your calling Brethren c. 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28 29. that no flesh should glory in his presence and that not only after they were called but also in the manner of their calling God calleth them that are not Rom. 4.17 Christ is sent to bind up the broken hearted Isai 61.1 His people know him to be the Lord by the manner of his bringing them out of their graves Vt sentiant suam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cal. in Dan. 4.35 37. Nostrum esse nihil al●ud est quam subsistere in Deo sumus aliqi id in D●o in nobis autē nihil id●m ibid. Ezek. 37.13 As God in the Creation brought the creature by his Fiat i.e. Let there be Gen. 1. from its term nothing unto its being So in Vocation by his word Vive I said unto thee Live Ezek. 16.6 He bringeth it from its term of a spiritual nothing unto its spiritual being Which in time past were not a people but now are the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy 1 Pet. 2.10 1 Cor. 13.2 'T is one of the Attributes of God that those that walk in pride he is able to abase I an 4.37 Job 40.11 14. Fourthly To teach the Soul how to esteem of and magnifie the free mercy of God in Christ Rom. 11.32 For God lath concluded them all in unbelief that he might have mercy up n all See Ez k. 16. ult Isai 30.18 Here God getteth unto himself a Name Rom. 4.17 the Quickner of the dead the Caller of those that are not as if they were the Justifier of the ungodly Hence also the people of God receive their name Isai 62.12 And thou shalt be called Sought out A City not forsaken that they might be called the trees of righteousness the planting of the Lord that he might be glorified Hosea 2.1 Say to your brethren Ammi and to your sisters Ruhamah The third Reason is taken from the season of preparatory Work Reason 3. The fittest season to affect the heart with the sensibleness of sin is between the rest of the Soul in sin and the infusion of faith God works upon man not according to his absolute Power but according to the nature of the subject and fitness of the second cause The fittest time to affect the heart of man with fear is whilest he looketh at the danger as in being not when he looketh at the danger as over If Joseph intend to be an object of fear unto his Brethren he acts this part whilest they look at him as a Judg before he revealeth himself to be a Brother The time between the rest of the Soul in sin and the grace of faith is not only the fittest but the only season to affect the Soul with the spirit of bondage The Soul cannot be affected with the spirit of fear whilest it is at ease in sin to be in fear and not to be in fear in the same respect is a contradiction Neither can the spirit of bondage be in a Beleever Ye have not received the spirit of bondage to fear again Rom. 8.15 This fear is the work of the Spirit of God in the working whereof the Spirit doth two things 1. It threatens the Soul with the Curse as justly due to and impending over it in that estate 2. It causeth the Soul to fear this wrath Now the Spirit cannot cause this fear in a Beleever to whom there is no condemnation Rom. 8.1 for in so doing he should affirm and cause the Soul to beleeve and to be affected with an untruth which vvere blasphemy to think besides the spirit of servile fear and the spirit of Adoption are opposite either then there is no spirit of bondage or it is betvveen the rest of the Soul in sin and faith in Christ Jesus Obj. Fear of eternal Wrath may be caused by the Spirit in a Beleever Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall dye Ans 'T is a threatening of them in respect of their Way not in respect of their Estate 2. 'T is a filial fear not a servile that the Spirit works hereby The fear of punishment for sin is so a means to awe them from sin as they yet fear sin more then the punishment for sin The last Head of Argument Examples is taken from Experiences of the Saints who being asked will bear witness unto this truth The Parable of the Prodigals return unto his Fathers house Senior filius Typum gerit Pharisaeorū Scribarū quemadmodum junior Types est publicanorū peccatorum in genere omnium qui ad Christum consugiunt Aret. in loc is propounded as a pattern of a sinners being brought home unto Christ Jesus In him we may see the conscience of sin Th●ne●ar sea mighty famine in that Land ver 14. The sence of this perishing condition under sin And I perish with hunger ver 17. The experience of his lost estate He fain would have filled his belly with the husks the swine did eat And no man gave unto him ver 16. This my Son was lest ver 32. His sight of his need of Christ and seeking after him And when he came to himself he said How many hired servants in my Fathers house have bread enough and to spare I will arise and go to my Father c. ver 17 18. Hereunto may be added many instances recorded in the Scripture Matthew the Publican before he was effectually called was sick of sin as may be well gathered from Mat. 9. ver 9.12 13. Zacheus confesseth his sin Luke 19.8 felt himself lost
of our transgressing of this holy Law Sin is considered in respect of its nature the kinds of it and the dominion of it Sin is the transgression of the Law 1 John 3.4 The kinds of Sin are three Adams sin Our first Fathers sin Isai 43.27 Original sin 3. Actual sin and that by way of Omission or Commission The Actual Sin of Adam was that transgression of Adam yet standing as a publick person in eating the forbidden fruit This actual sin of Adam is made ours by participation and imputation By Participation Adam being a publick person his Posterity in a seminal respect was contained in his loyns and so sinned in him sinning Liberi sunt purs parentū Adam was not only the Progenitor but the root of mankind Rom. 5.12 as Levi is said to have paid tythes in Abraham Heb. 7.9 By imputation God imputes the legal guilt thereof unto his whole posterity descending from him by way of ordinary generation Rom. 5.18 19. 1 Cor. 15.22 Original Sin which is the hereditary and habitual contrariety and enmity of the Nature of man against the whole Will of God is propagated to the soul by reason of the sin of Adam the meritorious cause thereof and floweth from thence in an unknown manner as a punishment from the offence by the Seed of our next parents as the instrumental cause Sin is derived in the Seed dispositively not effectually Peccatum in semine traducitur dispositivè Tho. 1.2 ae qu. 83. art 1 2 3. Whitak de peccato cri inali l. 1. c. 8. non effectivè Nothing is more known to be preached nothing more secret to be understood then Original Sin that is then the propagation of it Nihil Peccato Originali scil Propagatione ejus ad praedicandum notius nihil ad intelligendum secretius The soul by its contradiction to the body contracts vice as when one falls into the dirt he is defiled and besmeared Anima ex contractione ejus ad corpus contrahit vitium sicut quando quis cadit in lutum faedatur commaculatur God whilest he creates souls doth together therewith justly deprive them of Original righteousness Deus animas dum creat simul justè privat origin li rectitudine Sin passeth from the parents unto posterity neither by the body nor by the soul but by the fault of our parents i. e. our first parents for which God whilest he creates souls doth together therewith justly deprive them of oginal righteousness It was just for God to punish the sin of Adam with such punishment Idem Peccatum transit a parentibus in posteros neque per corpus neque per animam sed per culpam parentum Propter quam Deus animas dum creat simul justè privat originali justiria Justū fuit Deum peccatū Adami tali poe na punire The Offence of the chiefest Good deserved the greatest punishment Vrsin Explic Catech. Part 1. qu. 7. Let justice be done and let the World perish Idem Summi boni Offensio meruit summam poenam Fiat justitia pereat Mundus Actual Sin is the swerving of the act of man either in thought word or deed from the Law of God either by Omission or Commission The Dominion of Sin is that reigning power of concupiscence whence we sin freely necessarily continually and together with its malignity doth notably appear in the irritation of concupiscence by occasion of the Doctrine of the Law But sin taking occasion by the Commandement wrought in me all manner of concupiscence Rom. 7.8 Hence the Law is said to be the strength of sin 1 Cor. 15.56 Because sin by occasion of the restraining command breaketh out the more fiercely From the not-being of this accidental irritating power of the Law in the soul the Apostle denyes the dominion of sin Rom. 6.12 as on the contrary from the being thereof in the soul he implicitely infers the dominion of sin and compares the dominion of the Law in respect of its occasional irritation or provocation of concupiscence unto an hard Husband Rom. 7. beg In this irritation of sin by occasion of the Law the command is only the occasion sin dwelling in us is the cause As the shining of the Sun is the occasion why the dunghil sendeth forth its filthy savour the corruption thereof or putrifaction therein is the cause The prohibition of the Physician is the occasion only the feaver is the cause why the Patient desires drink 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denocat eum qui 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habetur tenetur stringitur aliqua re ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The higher the dam is the higher the water swelleth yet the dam is only the occasion the abundance and fierceness of the water is the cause of the swelling of the waves 3. The Conviction of Guilt is such a conviction of sin as doth not only argue the sinner to have offended but also bindeth over the offender to punishment according to the Law Guilt is the debt of the offender Suffering punishment in way of satisfaction is the payment of that debt Obligatiopeccatoris ad poenam dicitur relatus Kek. Theol. lib. 2. cap. 7. The curse of the Law-giver is the bonds of the offender keeping the sinner unto judgement as the prisoner is kept until the Assizes Thus the Angels guilty of sin are delivered into everlasting chains of darkness to be reserved unto the judgement of the great Day 2 Pet. 2.4 Jude 6. The truth justice and power of God do not only reserve the sinner in safe custody unto punishment in due time but also execute that punishment in the season thereof 4. The concluding the soul under sin is a judicial dispensation whereby God by the accusation conviction and condemnation of the Law shuts up the soul in the prison of the power and guilt of sin From whence without the mercy of God in Christ there is no escape For God hath concluded or shut them up all in the prison of unbelief that he might have mercy upon all Rom. 11.32 Concluded under sin kept under the Law shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed Gal. 3.22 23. To which prisoners no Law nor man only he whom God hath given as a Covenant unto his people can say Come forth Isai 49.9 The Law could not do it Rom. 8.3 and 3.20 Man is without strength Rom. 5.6 To this purpose you may frequently observe in the Scripture the soul in this condition compared to a prisoner sin unto a prison God unto a Judge See Isai 42.7 and 49.8 9. and 61.1 Luke 4.18 Rom. 11.32 Gal. 3.22 25. To justifie God is to acknowledge 1. God just in case he should punish man for sin That God in the Execution of the Curse doth the sinner no wrong 2. That he doth that which is right he should do wrong unto himself and with reverence so to speak be unjust if he should not execute justice upon
just Either Relative Justice is regulated by the Will of God or the Will of God as vvilling relative justice is regulated by it But the Will of God cannot be regulated by any Rule precedaneous unto it because it vvould thence follovv that he vvere not infinitely just Hence the Demerit of sin being according to the Order of Justice for the demerit of sin intends nothing else but that which is due thereto according to the constituted rule of moral righteousness between God and man and the order of justice proceeding from the free good pleasure of God it followeth that the demerit of sin receiveth its nature measure and limits from the Will of God according as he hath revealed himself in the Moral Law so that the damned in Hell suffer not more nor less then they deserved yea had God pleased to have inflicted a greater punishment for sin it had been just as also if he had pleased to have inflicted a lesser punishment for sin it had been just The sinners demerit is such whereupon it is free for God to deny mercy and just for him to punish sin but a sinner which hath been intimated formerly hath not merited that God should shew no mercy for then it would be unjust with God to pardon sin 'T is an unmoved and received Proposition God doth not will things because they are just but things are therefore just because God so willeth them 4. God proceeding to execute justice according to this rule of righteousness doth no wrong can do no wrong Summi boni offensio mercbatur summā poenam h. e. creaturae aeternam destructionem Vrsin Expl. Catech. Part 1. qu. 7. God being an infinite Being against whom sin is committed and the person suffering for sin being but finite The Object offended being God the person suffering being but a man the evil of punishment cannot exceed the evil of offence Thus David willing to justifie God mentions the object against whom he sinned as a reason whereupon to infer the justice of the punishment Against thee thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest and clear when thou judgest Psal 51. 4. The offence of the chief good might well deserve the greatest punishment that is the eternal destruction of the creature Christ the Surety suffering death for all his Elect amongst which are children guilty of no actual sin it was therefore just that those children should dye Besides nothing hinders why those words of David personating Christ even in the very hottest of his passion upon the Cross as acknowledging God to be holy O my God I cry in the day time and thou hearest not but thou art holy may not be understood of the justice of the wrath of God The curse being executed upon him who was made sin for the Elect sake and not restrained only unto the Justice of the Promise belonging to the Elect for Christs sake This appears further from the Office of God viz. that he is Judg of the World Is God unrighteous that taketh vengeance God forbid for then how should God judg the World Rom. 3.5 6. So Abraham That be far from thee to do after this manner to slay the righteous with the wicked and that the righteous should be as the wicked that be far from thee Shall not the Judg of all the Earth d●right Gen. 18.25 From the Wisdom of God which dictateth this way and no other to serve best to the manifestation of the glory of God Lastly From the Nature of God who is essentially just and his Will as was said before is the Rule of Justice To grant that God can will Injustice as such is to grant that God can be unjust that is to grant that God cannot be God We cannot acknowledg the Justice of God if we do not acknowledg sin The acknowledgment of the righteousness of so great an evil of punishment as is contained in the Curse necessarily presupposeth an answerable evil of offence in sin We cannot acknowledg Grace if we do not acknowledg both sin and Justice Impunity where punishment is not just is but abstaining from an act of Injustice and no act of Grace If Damnation were not just the gift of Salvation in some respect were not Grace The due acknowledgment of the Justice of God makes the sufferer more quiet and patient God the more glorious sin more sinful sinners more awful Unjust therefore in case of punishment for sin is mans complaint of God in point of Justice First Because God punisheth no man but for sin God now having freely bound himself to such an order of Justice is relatively just necessarily yet this relative Justice proceeds to execution by accident that is in case of sin Gods Decree and Justice notwithstanding if man had not sinned he should not have dyed Secondly When God punisheth for sin he delighteth not in the death of a sinner Ezek. 18.23 32. and 33.11 Punishment here is to be considered as it is an execution of Justice but not as it is the destruction of the creature God delights in it as it is the execution of Justice but not as it is the destruction of the creature Punishment is to be looked at as a natural evil or as a moral good As it is the destruction of the creature it is a natural evil i. e. an evil to Nature as it is the execution of Justice it is a moral good O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self but in me is thy help Hosea 13.9 The living man afflicted should complain of his sin not of his suffering But we are not hence to infer that we ought to be content to be damned To justifie God is our duty but to be contented to be damned is no where commanded nay if taken without limitation it is prohibited because to be contented to be damned is to be contented to be an Enemy and to sin against God and that for ever the condition of the damned including an everlasting state of enmity and sin against God Paul Rom. 9.3 wisheth himself for his brethrens sake accursed from the fruit of the love of Christ not from the love of Christ he vvisheth to be vvithout the vision and fruition of Christ not to be the Enemy of Christ he vvisheth to perish not as an Enemy of Christ but as a Saviour to his Brethren he vviseth to them his Salvation but he doth not vvish unto himself their Damnation The like is to be judged of Moses request Exod. 32.32 6. Inexcuseableness is that effect of the legal Work of the Spirit vvhence the Soul lying under conviction of the nature of the Command sin guilt and the Justice of God against sinners notvvithstanding any former shifts cavils contradictions or vvhatsoever else against the mutableness of our Creraion Adams sin original sin actual sin or the Justice of God is vvholly left vvithout any excuse of or defence for it self so as novv God is justified in
of himself as it is a great sin for the greatest sinner to be without hope in respect of Christ Carnal presumption of mercy because our sins are comparatively little lessens the demerit of sin Despair of mercy because our sins are great lessens the Merit of Christ A mans nearness unto or remoteness from the participation of grace according to Gods ordinary Dispensation is not to be judged according to his Commission of more or fewer sins but according to his proceeding in the preparatory work A man may have committed many sins yet being Ministerially disposed in respect of the receiving of Grace he is near to salvation A man may have committed fewer sins yet being without the preparatory Work of Law and Gospel he is far from salvation 'T is not a mans former commission of sin but his continuance in sin that keeps him far from salvation For the fuller clearing the description of Free-grace some Objections are to be removed the former whereof concern the Freeness of grace in respect of Election the other in respect of the Application of the good of Election i.e. that good whereunto we are elected Obj. 1. Ephes 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the Foundation of the world Here the Apostle seemeth to make Christ the Cause of Election therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Though it be be rendred through in English 'T is in in the Greek Election is not a free act Ans The Particle In is not always taken causally 2 Thes 2.13 Because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation in sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth i. e. in sanctification and belief of the truth as the way not as the cause of salvation True the Apostle saith We are elected in Christ but he saith not That we are elected for Christ We are said to be elected in Christ because Christ is the Meritorious cause of the Application of the good of Election so that in Christ in this place is the same with by Christ 1 Thes 5.9 For God hath appointed us to wrath but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ 'T is here said We are saved for Christ because Christ is the cause of our salvation but 't is not said We are elected for Christ because Christ is not the Cause of Election To be elect in Christ and to be elect for Christ are not to be confounded * Est quaedam Dei Dilectio erga nos unde profecta est Missio Christi John 3. Twiss vind grat de elect lib. 1. part 2. deg 3. Sect. 1. Etenim ex dicto Petri constat Christū ut Mediatorē qualis hic consideratur non esse praedèstinationis causam sed effectum 1 Pet. 1.20 Pisc de praedest N. 97. Meritum Christi nonest absolutum Cham. To. 3. l. 9. c. 1. S. 7. That we may rightly discern this truth of so spiritual and high a nature we must carefully distinguish between Election and the Application of the good of Election between Gods Act of willing grace and glory to be applyed and the actual application of grace and glory willed by God God electeth that is he willeth grace and glory to be applyed unto his people without any respect of the Merit of Christ as a Cause or Motive of that volition but the actual Donation and Application of that grace and glory is for the Merit sake of Jesus Christ Christ is the Effect of Election or of the Love of God but he is the Cause of the salvation of the Elect. He is the Effect of Election therefore called a Servant and said to be elect of God Behold my Servant whom I uphold my Elect in whom my soul delighteth Isai 42.1 His Incarnation Heb. 10.5 His Office John 6.27 His Acceptation in that Office Jes 53.10 all proceeds from the Love of God Election is God himself electing according to that received and regulating Proposition Whatsoever is in God is God To say then That Christ is the Cause of Election or of the Love of God were to say There might be given a Cause of God yea that God is an Effect and consequently that God is not God God hath ordained that the Merit of Christ should be the cause of our salvation but he hath not ordained that Christ should be the Meritorious cause of his so ordaining which implyeth a manifest contradiction Christ then is the Cause of the gift of Eternal life but not of Gods Will to give Eternal life unto us Christ is the Cause of salvation but not of Gods Decree to save Christ Ephes 1.4 is made the Cause of Sanctification And 1 Thes 5.9 he is made the Cause of Salvation but he is no where made the Cause of our Election Christ is the Meritorious Cause the Application of all spiritual Benediction in Heavenly places but not of Election Obj. 2. Ephe. 1.6 To the prayse and glory of his grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the Beloved If accepted in Christ then loved only in Christ therefore Christ is the cause of Gods Love Ans The Love of God is taken for the Act of Love it self viz. Election or for the effect of his love viz. Vocation Justification c. Christ is the cause of the latter not of the former By Acceptation in this place we are to understand Justification of which Christ is the cause He is the cause why we are justified but he is not the cause of Gods Decree to justifie us Gods special Love is his Will to bestow all saving good upon us All which good he willeth to us without Christ as a cause of his volition but not without Christ as a cause of the application thereof 'T is the same Volition or Act of Willing in God by which he willeth the Being of a Mediatour and the Salvation of the Elect for the Merits sake of this Mediatour The Salvation of the Elect is not the last end of the Merit of Christ but Gods Supream end is the Manifestation of the glory of his grace in a way of mercy tempered with justice whereunto both the Merit of Christ and the Salvation of the Elect conjoyned are the means and make one fit Medium thereunto Like Objections from some other Texts of like nature may receive the like answer Notwithstanding it be a truth That Christ is not the cause of Election yet it is also a fundamental Truth That Christ is the Meritorious cause of the Application of the good of Election 1 Thes 5.9 2 Cor. 1.20 Acts 4.12 Particulo gratis excludu tur merita nostri non Christi Bucan loc 31. quest 16. Foedus graetiae nullā propriè dictam aut antecedentem conditimem requirit Med. cap. 22. th 19 Ex tali inquam conditione si penderēt promissiones Dei actum esset de salute nostra Coron artic 4. cap. 3. Cham. Tem. 3. lib. 15. c. 3. 5. Si feceris hoc vives par●icula si est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
4. art 7. that we are justified by faith alone because it imbraceth him that justifieth us namely Jesus Christ Beza Cum Apostolo fide sola nos justificari dicimus eo quod amplectitur eum qui nos justificat nempe Jesum Christum Faith justifieth not as an inherent quality and gift in us Willet synop cent 4. err 56 by any worthinesse thereof but as it apprehendeth Christs righteousnesse and this to us and a little after So that in faith reputed for righteousnesse we are not to respect the worthinesse of the act of beleeving in it self but in respect of the Elect Dr. Willet Consensum patrum cum orthodoxis reformatis in hac hujusce propositionis explicatione videat qui volet apud Chamierum panstrat Tom. 3. l. 22. c. 5. apud Polanum Symphon cathol cap. 12 For the cleerer understanding the justification of a sinner by faith let these three acts be considered the one looked at as succeeding the other in order not in time First God actually imputes the active and the passive Mediatorly obedience of Christ unto a beleever Rom. 4.6 therein God is freely giving Secondly The soul having before in order of nature not in time received Jesus Christ as its head and Saviour by the same faith receiveth his obedience as the matter of its righteousnesse herein the soul is taking Rom. 5.17 Rom. 6.11 Gal. 3.13 Thirdly God hereupon in the court of Conscience judicially declares and pronounceth the sinner to be righteous and to have right unto eternal life by vertue of the promise Joh. 5.24 Rom. 3.22.30 The righteousnesse of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By faith through faith upon them that beleeve which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that beleeve By this act of grace the person of the sinner is justified in himself really yet not inherently but imputatively his state changed who before justifying faith was a childe of wrath even as others untill now the persons of the Elect not being accepted in themselves neither are their actions accepted but now our persons being accepted our actions are capable of being accepted Gen. 4.4 Faith 1 Acknowledges that we are justified for the righteousnesse sake of another viz. Christ God-man 2 Acknowledgeth that our justification is free 3 Renounceth our own righteousnesse First We need the righteousnesse of another and the righteousnesse of this other is sufficient the least sinner needs no lesse the greatest sinner needs no more the least sinner cannot be saved without it the greatest sinner needs no more to be saved God cannot save any Infant without the righteousnesse of Christ the righteousnesse of Christ is fully able to save all beleevers See the Sinfulness of Sin that nothing but the righteousnesse of him who is God could expiate it See the Righteousnesse of Christ which taketh away all sin Faith acknowledgeth the least sin unpardonable without it the greatest pardonable by it Were we onely guilty of Adams sin we could not be saved without it Were we guilty of all the sins of the Elect we might be saved by it To think any sin little is a great sin t is a greater to think that Christs righteousnes is not above all sin our disobedience is but the disobedience of man but the obedience of Christ is the obedence of him who is both God and man the disobedience of man is infinit only improperly in respect of the object the obedience of Christ is infinite properly in respect of the subject that which is infinit hath no limits but the pleasure of the disposer Davids childe needed the righteousnesse of Christ for its justification and Manasseth needed no more To think any sin little is no little sin t is to excuse sin to accuse justice in sentencing our sin in Adam or original sin with death to lessen nay so far to frustrate the righteousnesse of Christ The Pharisee puts confidence in his not having done so ill yea in his having done better than other men Luke 18.11 That he had so done was good but that he put confidence in it was bad If thy hope be more in thy little sins then in Christs great mercy Woe be unto thee had there been but one man to have been redeemed Christ must have dyed and Christs death was sufficient to have redeemed all men T is a sin for the least sinner not to despair of righteousnesse in respect of himself Isa 5.7.10 T is a sin for the greatest sinner to despair concerning the righteousnesse of Christ He that beleeveth not be he never so righteous shall be damned He that beleeveth hath he been never so unrighteous shall be saved 2 The beleever acknowledging his righteousnesse to be the righteousnesse of another to be merited by another acknowledgeth it to be free it cost Christ to the full but it cost us nothing being justified freely by his grace Rom. 3.24 Justification is called the gift of righteousnesse Rom. 5.11 the free gift the gift of grace vers 15 Grace in this verse noting the love of God it self the gift by grace Justification as an effect of that love God will either not justifie at all or justifie for nothing t is the glory of grace to be free and mans prirce to come without mony The experience of this truth is compared to buying because the sinner parts as hardly with his righteousnesse as the covetous man doth with his mony Isa 55.1 And when they had nothing to pay he frankly forgave them both Luke 7.42 God will take nothing for our Justification as it is repugnant to the whole so to each part of grace not to be free To attribute any thing to man in way of condignity or congruity were to lessen the sinfulnesse of sin to exalt man to betray Grace and to take so much from Christ This truth God standeth much upon as is notably to be seen in the manner of Naamans cure a figure of the free recovery of a sinner both from the power and guilt of sin hence the Prophet healeth him for nothing and though urged refuseth and that not without an oath but he said As the Lord liveth before whom I stand I will receive none and he being urged to take it still refuseth 2 King 5.16 Where God forgiveth sin be forgiveth much no sin is in it self little Luke 7.47 Simon the Pharisee who looked at sin as a little thing was not forgiven at all where God forgiveth little or much he forgiveth all for nothing That which is said of the Lilly compared with Solomon Consider the Lillies of the field how they grow they toyl not neither do they spin and yet I say unto you that Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these Matth. 6.28 29. is most true of the Beleevers compared with the Lillies The Garments of fine linnen the righteousness of the Saints far exceed the glorious aray of the Lillies yet they do not so much as spin for it Thirdly