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A53688 The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some degressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject / by John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1654 (1654) Wing O740; ESTC R21647 722,229 498

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to the body of the Jewes returning out of Captivity was before demonstrated The Righteousnesse here mentioned is that which God will and doth exercise in this very Act of Betrothing and not any other act of it which he will make use of to that purpose God engageth to betroth them to himselfe in Righteousnesse using and exercising his Righteousnesse in that very Act of his Love and Grace to them and this is now given in an alluring them to love him by appearing Righteous in bringing them out of Captivity The like interpretation is given of the other expressions following §. 33. Judgement It is saith he by punishing and judging their enemies and destroying them that led them into captivity and held them in bondage and subjection and Loving-kindnesse is his giving them corne wine oyle peace and plenty and Mercy in pardoning of daily sins and insirmities and Faithfulnesse is he knoweth not what This is made the summe of all God by doing them good with outward mercies and pardoing some sins and infirmities will morally try to get their affections to himselfe Virgula Pictoris 1. It is not an Expression of Gods attempting to get their Love but of the establishing and confirming of his own 2. That God should morally try and essay to doe and effect or bring about any thing which yet he doth not will not or cannot compasse and effect is not to be ascribed to him without casting the greatest reproach of Impotency Ignorance Changeablenesse upon him imaginable 3. God promising to Betroth us to himselfe fixing his love on us that we shall know him so fixing our hearts on him to say that this holdeth out only the use of some outward meanes unto us enervateth the whole Covenant of his Grace wrapt up in these Expressions so that all things considered it is not a little strange to me that any sober learned man should ever be tempted so to wrest and corrupt by wrested and forced Gsosses the plaine words of Scripture wherein whatever is pretended he cannot have the least countenance of any Expositor of note that went before him Although we are not to be pressed with the name of Tarnovius a Lutheran a professed Adversary in this cause yet let his Exposition of that place under consideration be consulted with and it will plainely appeare that it abideth not in any compliance with that which is here by our Author imposed on us The Promises we have under consideration §. 34. looking immediately and directly only to one part of that Doctrine whose defence we have undertaken to wit the Constancy and Unchangeablenesse of the Grace of Justification or God's abiding with his Saints as to his free acceptance of them and love unto them unto the end I shall not insist on many more particulars The 10. §. 35. Iohn 27 28 29. closeth this Discourse My sheepe heare my voice and I know them and I give unto them Eternall Life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand my Father which gave me them is greater then all and no man is able to pluck them out of my Fathers hand In the verse foregoing our Saviour renders a reason why the Pharisees notwithstanding all his Preaching to them and the Miracles he wrought among them yet believed not when sundry others to whom the same dispensation of outward meanes was afforded did heare his voice and did yeild obedience thereunto and this he telleth us was because they were not of his sheepe such as were given him of his Father and for whom as the good Shepheard he lay'd downe his life v. 14 15. upon the close of this discourse he describeth the present Condition of his Sheepe their Preservation in that Condition from the power of himselfe and his Father engagedthere unto He layeth their abiding him as his Sheepe upon the Omnipotence of God which upon account of the constancie of his Love towards them he will exercise and exert as need shall be in their behalfe There are many emphaticall expressions both of their continuance in the Obedience of Faith and of his undertaking for their Preservation therein The latter I at present only intend Saith he 1. I know them 2. I give them Eternall Life 3. They shall never perish 4. No man shall plucke them out of my hand 5. My Father is Omnipotent and hath a Soveraignty over all and he taketh care of them and none shall take them out of his hand It is not easy to cast these words into any other form of arguing then that wherein they lye without loosing much of that convincing Evidence that is in them this you may take for the summe of their influence into the Truth in hand Those whom Christ so owneth as to take upon him to give them Eternall Life and by his Power and the Power of his Father to preserve them thereunto which power shall not nor possibly can be prevailed against so that the end aimed at to be accomplished therein should not be brought about those shall certainely be kept for ever in the Favour and Love of God they shall never be turned from him Such is the case of all Believers for they are all the Sheep of Christ they all heare his voice and follow him Some few things to wrest this Gracious assurance given Believers of the everlasting good will of God Christ unto them §. 36. by Mr Goodwin Cap. 10. Sect. 37. Page 203. are attempted 1. He granteth that there is an engagement of the mighty power of God for the safegarding of the Saints as such or remaining such against all adverse power what ever But no where for the compelling or necessitating of them to persevere and continue such is there any thing in the Scripture Ans. The sum is if they will continue Saints God will take care that notwithstanding all opposition they shall be Saints still Very well if they will be so they shall be so But that they shall continue to be so that is not promised The termes of Compelling or Necessitating are cast in meerly to throe dirt upon the Truth least the beauty shining forth too brightly there might have bin danger that the very Exceptor himselfe could not have born it We say not that God by his Power compelleth men to persevere that is maketh them doe it whether they will or no. Perseverance being an habitual Grace in their wills it is a grosse contradiction once to imagine that men should be compelled thereunto But this we say that by the Almighty Power of his Spirit and Grace he confirmeth his Saints in a voluntary abiding with him all their dayes Having made them a willing People in the day of the Power of Christ towards them he preserveth them unto the end Neither are they wrapt up by the power of God into such a necessity of Perseverance as should obstruct the liberty of their Obedience The necessity that regardeth them in that Condition respecting
is equally provoked and had not Christ answered for the sinnes of Believers they could not they should not have escaped the wrath due to them 2. That the same sinnes doe not argue men alwaies under the Gospell to be in the same Condition as shall be afterwards fully manifested for 1. They doe not find them in the same state some are in a state of Death and sinne others of Life and Grace being translated from the one to the other having a Title to the Promise of Mercy in Christ. 2. And chiefly as there is a twofold justification of the Person and of the Fact and the one may be without the other so there is a twofold condemnation or dis-approbation of the Fact and of the Person As to the particular dis-approbation of God in respect of any sinfnll Act it is the same in reference unto all Persons Believers and Unbelievers As to their Persons there are in the Gospell other ingredients to the judgement of them beside particular Facts or Acts in answer to the Law or the rule of Righteousnesse viz. Faith and Repentance which alter the case of the Person even before the judgement seat of God To suppose the Saints to fall into the same sinnes with other men in the same manner and to continue in them without Faith and Repentance is to begge the thing in Question Suppose them to have what we affirme God hath promised those conditions of Evangelicall mercie and M. Goodwin himselfe will grant it no acceptance of Persons to deale otherwise with them then with others who have committed like sinnes with them in whom those conditions are not wrought or found that is he that Believeth shall be Saved he that Believeth not shall be Damned This is all we say in this thing but of the difference between Believers and unbelievers in their sining we shall speake afterwards at large to the full removall of this and another Objection For the present this shall suffice though Believers fall or may fall into the same sinnes with other men yet they fall not into them in the same manner with them and they have a reliefe provided to prevent the deadly malignity of sinne which those who believe not have no interest in no right unto Mr Goodwins second Argument is §. 8. that which of all others in this case hee seemeth to lay most weight upon and which he pursueth at large in 17 Pages and as many Sections treating in it concerning the Ministry of the Gospell and the usefulnesse of the Exhortations Threatnings and Promises thereof For an entrance into the consideration of it I must needs say Non venit ex pharetris ista sagitta tuis For besides that M. Goodwin hath taken very little paines in the improvement of it considering how it was provided to his hand by the Remonstrants at the Synod of Dort and that which he hath done farther consisting in a meere uselesse and needlesse stuffing of it with sundry Notions taken out of their first Argument and fifth De modo conversionis of the manner of the Spirits operation in and upon the Soule in its first conversion to God it was the old song of the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians in their dealing with Austine Fulgentius Hilarius Prosper by them at large confuted renewed by Castallio and Erasmus against Luther after it had been sifted and rejected by the more learned Schoolemen in former ages What ever it be and how ever it is now come to hand being taught to speake out Language and that in the best fashion the consideration of it must not be declined And thus it is proposed If the common Doctrine of Perseverance rendreth the Ministry of the Gospell §. 9. so farre as it concerneth the Perseverance of the Saints vaine impertinent and void then is it not a Doctrine of God but of men and consequently that which opposeth it is the truth But certaine it is that the said Doctrine is of this unchristian tendency and import Ergo. The first part of the consequent of the Major is granted The Work of the Ministry being for the edification of the body of Christ and the perfecting of the Saints Ephes. 4. 12 13. that which frustrateth the End whereunto of Christ himselfe it is designed can be no Truth of his Of the farther inference That the Doctrine which opposeth it or is set up in opposition to it is the Truth more will be spoken afterwards For the present I cannot but insist upon the former observation That notwithstanding Mr Goodwins pretence of proving and arguing for the Doctrine he maintaines yet upon the matter he hath not any thing to say in the carrying on of that designe but instantly falls to his old work of raising Objections in their very setting up prepared to be cast downe for the most part which with all his might he laboureth to remove The stresse of the whole as farre as we are concerned in it lieth on the Minor which is thus farther attempted to be made good The Minor Proposition is Demonstrated thus The Doctrine which rendreth the Labour and Faithfulnesse of a Minister in pressing such Exhortations Threatnings and Promises which tend to the preservation of the Saints in Faith and holinesse to the end uselesse rendreth the Ministry of the Gospell as farre as it concerneth the encouragement or inabling of the Saints to Persevere needlesse and vaine but guilty of such a tendency as this is the commonly received Doctrine of Perseverance Ergo. Ans. This labour might have been saved and both these Syllogismes very easily reduced to one but then another seeming Argument as we shall find afterwards insisted on would have been prevented Our trade in such cases as this is by weight and not by number the Minor then is still to be confirmed which he laboureth thus to doe The common Doctrine of Perseverance requireth and commandeth all Saints or true Believers to be fully perswaded and this with the greatest and most indubitable certainty of Faith that there is an absolute and utter impossibility either of a totall or finall defection of their faith that though they should fall into ten thousand enormous and most abominable sinnes and lyewallowing in them like a swine in the mire yet they should remaine all the while in an estate of Grace and that God will by a strong hand of irresistible grace bring them off from their sinnes by Repentance before they dye but the Doctrine which requireth and commandeth all this and much more of like import to be confidently believed by true Believers rendreth the pressing of all Exhortations Threatning Promises upon them in order to prevaile with them or make them carefull to Persevere bootlesse and unnecessary Ergo. Ans. 1. §. 10. What weight M. Goodwin with all those with whom as to his undertaking under consideration He is in fellowship doth lay upon this Argument is known to all The whole foundation of what is afterwards at large insisted on for the establishment of
Perseverance which are given to the Saints yet many there are who are not enabled all their dayes to mix them with Faith although their interest portion lyes in them no lesse than theirs who through Grace attaine the greatest Assurance and on that account do never all their dayes get free from some bondage by reason of the Feare of Death and destruction And in respect of such as these the Comminations and threatnings insisted on may have much of that End accomplished which by Mr Goodwin is assigned to them not that such a frame is directly aimed at in them Christ dying to deliver them who by reason of Death were in bondage all their dayes from that bondage which the Feare of Death for since doth keepe the soules of men in and under but that it followes and will follow upon their darkenesse and weaknesse of Faith Secondly that the Promises of Perseverance being of the effecting and accomplishment of it by and in the use of meanes do not nor will give deliverance to them to whom they are made from feare of death and Hell but only whilst they conscientiously use the meanes appointed for them to walke in so that upon their deflexion from the Rule which is attended with Mercy and Peace the threatnings of God to sinne and sinners to Apostacy and Apostates do lay hold on them in their full force and efficacy especially to the ingene rating in them a Terrour of the Lord as the Apostle speakes an abhorrency of their wayes a loathing of them as not good that would cause them to fall into the hands of the Living God So that all Mr Goodwin's Arguings not being levied against the certaintey of Perseverrance but mens Certainty that they shall Persevere which some never attaine unto some loose either in whole or in part oftentimes are not to the businesse in hand Thirdly that eternall death and destruction is not the only subject of God's Threatnings nor all the evill that they may have a feare of whom he deals withall by them Desertion Rejection Rebukes sharpe and keene arrowes blowes of Gods hand Temporall death it selfe with the like are also threatned yea and so often in an eminent and dreadfull manner have been inflicted that though they might be supposed to have alwayes some comfortable Assurance of Deliverance from the wrath that is to come yet the Threatnings of God may be suited to beget in them this feare of evill to such an heigth as may make their bowels to flow like water rottemesse to enter into their bones and all their joynts to tremble Fourthly that the end of the Threatnings of God being to discouer to men the connexion that is by his Appointment between the sinnes exagitated and the punishment threatend whence the Feare mentioned doth consequently insue they may obtaine their full primary effect though that Feare be not ingenerated If they be prevailed on by any other Considerations so that the sinne be avoided Fiftly that when The Saints do walke orderly regularly and closely with God in the use of meanes by him appointed and so doing from the Promises of Perseverance do receive a comfortable Assurance that they shall be kept by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation the begetting in them of Feares of Death and Hell is neither usefull in it selfe nor are they intended of God to be their portion But if at any time they turne aside from the holy Commandement and thereby faile of the perswasion of their Perseverance as their Faith will be by such meanes impaired though the certainty of the thing it selfe be no lesse infallible than formerly yet by the Threatnings of God to them it may be needfull to rouze them by the terrours of the Lord in them from the Condition whereinto they have cast themselves I doubt not but that from the light of these and the like Considerations which might farther be insisted on it will appeare that there may be and is an harmonious consistency between the Promises and Threatnings of the Scripture notwithstanding the mist that is raised in a long and tedious Discourse to interrput the evidence thereof In the 13 Section §. 57. under pretence of Answering an Objection a long Discourse is drawen forth farther to varnish over what was before spoken Nothing of importance to my best observation being added It may be reduced to these foure heads First an Assertion hat the Threats against Apostacy do not belong to Hypocrites that is to them that are not really Regenerate let their profession be what it will for Hypocrites ought not to Persevere in the way wherein they are to the end and therefore there is no danger of their falling away from it Which is a Ridiculous peice of Sophistry For though they may not be exhorted to continue in their Hypocrisy which corrupts and vitiates their profession yet they may in their profession which in it selfe is good And though there is no danger of leaving their Hypocrisy yet there is of their waxing worse and worse by falling from the beginnings of Grace which they have received the profession which they have made and the Regular Conversation which they have entred upon So that notwithstanding any thing sayd to the contrary the comminations under consideration may principally belong to some kind of professours who notwithstanding all their guifts and common Graces which they have received yet in a large sence may be termed Hypocrites as they are opposed to them who have received the Spirit with true and saving Grace Secondly he saies It is evident that they belong unto true Believers from Heb. 6. 4 5 6 and 9. and Heb. 10. 26 27 and 29. but if there were no better evidence of the concernment of true Believers in the threatnings made to Apostacy than what can be drawne from the places mentioned I dare undertake that Mr Goodwin shall never prove any such concernment of theirs therein whilst his eyes are open but about this I shall not at present contend Thirdly he tells us That the end and aime of God in these threatnings is the good of Believers Of which as farre as they are concerned in them I much lesse doubt than I do of the clearenesse of the proofe of this Assertion from Psal. 85. 8. I will heare what God the Lord will speake for he will speake peace to his people and to his S t s but let them not turne againe to folly A place that I presume was hooked in here violently for want of a fitter opportunity to wrest it with a by interpretation because it lookes so hardly on the Doctrine which our Author hath undertaken to defend But let this passe also His fourth Assertion which he pursues at large or rather with many words is That these Threatnings have no tendency to the good of Believers but only by begetting in them a feare of Hell and Destruction which that they ought to do is strongly proved from Luke 12. 4 5. Where we are
forbearance of the allowance of temporall things from them to whom he Preached which was due to him by all right whereby any claime in any kind whatever may be pursued together with the expresse institution of the Lord Jesus Christ by him before laid downe In this course he behaved himselfe with wisdome zeale and diligence having many glorious aimes in his eye as also being full of a sence of the duty incumbent on him v. 6. to whose performance he was constrained by the Law of Jesus Christ as he also here expresses Among other things that provoked him to and supported him in his hard labour and travaile was the Love he bare to the Gospell and that he might have with others fellowship in the propagation and declaration of the glorious message thereof This is his intendment v. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. For the Gospells sake or the love he bare to it he desired with others to be partaker of it that is of the excellent worke of preaching of it for of the benefit of the Gospell he might have bin partaker with other Believers though he had never bin set a part to its promulgation In his whole Discourse he still speaks accommodately to his businesse in hand for the describing of his worke of Apostleship in preaching the glorious Gospell of Jesus Christ and as to the end of this worke he acquaints us that there was proposed before him the incorruptible Crown of his Masters approbation upon his lawfull running and striving in the way of the ministry whereto he was called the peculiar Glory of them whom he is pleased to imploy in this service and though the cause of his fighting at that rate as he did was not wholly the feare of non approbation in that worke a necessity of duty being incumbent on him which he was to discharge yet he that knowes how to value the crowne of approbation from Christ the holy Angels and the Church of having Faithfully discharged the office of a Steward in dispensing the things of God will think it sufficiently effectuall to stirre up any one to the utmost expence of Love paines and diligence that he may not come short of it And of Mr Goodwins proofe this is the issue His next is from Heb. 6. 4 5 6 7. with Chap. 10. 26 27. which he brings in attended with the ensuing Discourse §. 26. Sect. 18. The next passage we shall insist npon to evince the possibility of a finall defection in the Saints openeth it selfe in these words For it is impossible for those who were once enlightned and have tasted of the Heavenly guift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost and have tasted of the good Word of God and the powers of the world to come if they shall fall away to renew them againe nnto repentance seeing they crucify to themselves the sonne of God afresh and put him to an open shame For the earth which drinketh in the raine that cometh oft upon it and bringeth forth herbes meet for them by whom it is dressed receiveth blessing from God But that which beareth thornes and briers is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned Answerable hereunto is another in the same Epistle For if wee sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for sinnes but a certaine fearefull looking for of Judgement and fiery indignation which shall devour the Adversaryes He that despised Moses Law dyed without mercy under two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment suppose ye shall he be thought worthy who hath troden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the Bloud of the Covenant where with he was Sanctifyed an unholy thing and hath done despight unto the Spirit of Grace Evident it is that in these two passages the Holy Ghost after a serious manner with a very pathetique moving straine of Speech and discourse scarce the like to be found in all the Scriptures admonisheth those who are at present true Believers to take heed of relapsing into the wayes of their former ignorance impiety This caveat or admonition he presseth by an argument of this import that in case they shall thus relapse there will be very little or no hope at all of their recovery or returne to the Estate of Faith and Grace wherein now they stand Before the faces of such sayings and passages as these rightly understood and duely considered there is no standing for that Doctrine which denies a possibility either of a totall or finall defection of the Saints But this light also is darkened in the Heavens by the interposition of the vailes of these two exceptions 1. That the Apostle in the said passages affirmes nothing positively concerning the falling away of those he speakes of but only conditionally and upon supposition 2. That he doth not speake of true and sound Believers but of Hypocrites and such who had Faith only in shew not in substance The former of these exceptions hath been already nonsuited and that by some of the ablest Patrons themselves of the cause of Perseverance where we were taught from a pen of that Learning that such conditionall sayings upon which Admonitions Promises or Threatnings are built doe at least suppose something impossible however by vertue of their Tenor and forme they suppose nothing in being But 2. As to the places in hand there is not any Hypotheticall signe or conditionall Particle to be found in either of them as they come from the Holy Ghost and are carried in the Originall Those two Iffs appearing in the English Translation the one in the former place the other in the latter shew it may be the Translators inclination to the cause but not their faithfulnesse in their engagement an infirmi●y whereunto they were very subject as we shall have occasion to take notice of the second time ere long in another instance of the like partiality But the Tenor of both the passages in hand is so ordered by the Apostle that he plainly declares how great and fearfull the danger is or will be when Believers doe or shall fall away not if or in case they shall fall away Ans. Of the two Answers which as himselfe signifyeth are usually given to the objections from these places of Scripture that Mr Goodwin doth not fairely acquit his hands of either will quickly appeare 1. To the first that the forme of speech used by the Apostle in both places is conditionall whence there is no arguing to the event without begging the thing in question or supposall that the condition in all respects may be fulfilled where it requires only to the cōstitution of it as a condition in the place of arguing wherein it is used that it be possible in some only he opposeth That some of them who have wrote for the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance have disclaimed the use of it as to its application to the place in Ezechiel
an interest in the good of them all that being only represented variously for the advantage of them that believe My designe is Gal. 16. 17. to describe the generall intention of God in all Gospell Promises whereby they being equally Spirited Eph. 2. 12. Heb. 6. 17. become as one and concerning these I say 1. That they are free and Gracious as to the rise §. 5. and fountain of them They are given unto us Tit. 1. 2. meerely through the good will and pleasure of God That which is of Promise 2 Pet. 1. 3 4. is every where opposed to that which is of doubt or that which is any way deserved or procured by us Gal. 3. 18. If the inheritance be of the Law which includes all that in us is desireable acceptable and deserving it is no more of Promise that is free and of meere Grace He that can find out any Reason or cause without God himselfe why he should promise any good things whatever to Sinners as all are are shut up under sinne till the Promise came Mat. 20. 15. Gal. 3. 22. may be allowed to Glory in the invention which he hath found out A well conditioned Nature necessitating him to a velleity of doing good and yeelding reliefe to them that are in misery though justly receiving the due reward of their deeds which even among the Sonnes of men is a vertue dwelling upon the confines of vice for their recovery is by some imposed on him But that this is not the fountaine and rise of his Promises needs no other evidence but the light of this Consideration That which is naturall is necessary and universall Promises are distinguishing as to them in misery at least they are given to men and not to fallen Angells But may not God doe what he will with his own Farther Jesus Christ is himselfe in the Promise he is the great originall matter and subject of the Promises and the giving of him was doubtlesse of free Grace and Mercy so Iohn 3. 16. God so Loved the World that he gave his only begotten Sonne and Rom 5. 8. God commendeth his Love towards us in that whilest we were Sinners Christ died for us and in the first of Ioh 4. 10. Herein is Love Mat. 11. 26. not that we Loved God but that he Loved us and sent his Sonne to be a Propitiation for us All is laid upon the account of Love and free Grace I confesse there are following Promises given out for the orderly carrying on of the persons to whom the maine originall fundamentall Promises are made unto the end designed for them that seeme to have Qualifications and Conditions in them but yet even those are all to be resolved into the Primitive grant of Mercy That which promiseth Life upon believing being of use to stirre men up unto and carry them on in Faith and Obedience must yet as to the pure nature of the Promise be resolved into that which freely is promised viz. Christ himselfe and with him both Faith and Life Believing and Salvation As in your Automata there is one originall spring or wheele that giveeth motion to sundry lesser and subordinate movers that are carried on with great variety sometimes with a seeming contrariety one to another but all regularly answering and being subservient to the impression of the first mover The first great Promise of Christ Gen. 3. 15. 16 and all good things in him is that which Spirits and principles all other Promises whatsoever Gen. 49. 10. Isa. 9. 6. and howsoever they may seem to move upon conditionall termes 2 Cor. 1. 20. yet they are all to be resolved into that absolute and free Originall Spring Hence that great Grant of Gospell Mercy is called the Gift by him Rom 5. 16 17. yea all the Promises of the Law as to their Originall Emanation from God and the constitution of the reward in them ingaged to be bestowed for the services required are free and Gracious There is not any naturall indispensable connexion between Obedience and Reward Diatr de Iust. Div. as there is between Sinne and Punishment as I have elsewhere at large Disputed and Proved 2. I call them Discoveries and Manifestations of Gods Good-will and Love §. 6. which is the prime and sole cause of all the good things which are wrapped up and contained in them Of this Good-will of God the Promises which he hath given are the sole discoveries We doe not in this Discourse take Promises meerely for what God hath said he Will doe in termes expresly but for every Assertion of his Good will and Kindnesse to us in Christ all which was first held out under a word of Promise Gen 3. 15. And this the Apostle inferres in Tit. 1. 2 3. In hope of eternall life which God that cannot lye promised before the● World beganne but hath in due time manifested his Word through Preaching or discovered or made known that good will of his by the Promises in Preaching of the Gospell And to this extent of significancy is that Promise in the Scripture both name and thing in very many places stretched out Every thing whatever that is manifestative of Grace and good will to Sinners is of the Promise though it be not cast into a Promissory forme of expression Yea whereas strictly a Promise respecteth that which is either only future and not of present existence or the continuance of that which is yet even expressions of things formerly done and of a present performance some Individuals to the end of the World being to be made a new partakers of the Grace good will and Mercy in them doe belong to the Promise also in that Acceptation of it which the Holy Ghost in many places leads unto and which we now insist upon Mica 7. 17 18 19. 3. I say they are made unto sinners and that as sinners under no other Qualification whatever it being by the Mercy of the Promise alone that any men are relieved out of that condition of being sinners and morally nothing else Were not the Promises originally made to sinners Ephes. 2. 12. there would never any one be found in any other state or Condition Rom. 3. 19. I know there are Promises made to Believers Gal. 3. 22. even such as are unchangeable and shall beare them into the bosome of God but I say these are all consequentiall and upon supposition of the first and great Promise whereby Christ himselfe and Faith for his sake is bestowed on them This runs through them all as the very tenor of them Ioh. 3. 16. Rom. 8. 32. and method of God in them do manifest as we shall see afterwards So the Apostle Gal. 3. 22 The Scripture hath concluded all under sinne 1 Cor 1. 30. that the Promise by Faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that Believe Phil. 1. 29. All are shut up under sinne Ephes. 1. 3. untill
which in and by themselves to a believing soule they cast upon it Now least any should think that there is the least tendency in such Promises as these as held out to Believers to turne them aside from close walking with God before I enter upon the consideration of any other this seeming of all others most exposed to Exceptions of that nature I shall give some few Observations that may a little direct Believers to whom I write and for whose sake this taske is undertaken into the right improvement of them The genuine influence which this §. 20. and the like Promises have upon the soules of the Saints is mightily to stirre them up unto and to assist them in answering what lieth in them that inexpressible Love and Kindnesse which their God and Father in Jesus Christ holdeth out unto their hearts in them This the Apostle inferreth from them 2 Cor 7. 1. Having these Promises that is those especially mentioned in the words preceding the conclusion and the inference the Apostle here maketh Ch. 6. v. 16 18. I will dwell in them and will be a Father unto them and they shall be my children therefore saith he let us cleanse our selves from all pollution of slesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of the Lord. Universall purity holinesse and close walking with God is that which these Promises doe presse unto and naturally promote in the hearts of Believers and in 2 Pet. 4. 5 6. that Apostle pursueth the same at large God hath called us to Glory and Vertue hath given us exceeding great and pretious Promises that by these you might be partakers of the Divine Nature having escaped the corruption that is in the World through lust Besides this giving all diligence c The exceeding great and pretious Promises which are given unto us in our calling are bestowed for this end that by them we may be made partakers of the Divine Nature they have no tendency to communicate to us the Nature of the Divell and to stirre us up to Rebellion Vncleannesse and hatred of the God of all that Love that is in them But lye indeed at the bottome the Root and foundation of the practice and exercise of all those Graces which he enumerates and from the receiving of those Promises exhorts us to in the following verse Some 〈◊〉 ●●●fesse doe or may turne the Grace of God into lasciviousnesse that is 〈◊〉 ●●trine of grace and of pardon of sinne in the bloud of Jesus Christ and so the mercy mentioned in such Promises as these meerely as in them it is mentioned Grace and Mercy communicated cannot be turned into Wantonnesse but what are they that doe so Vngodly men men of old ordained to condemnation Jude 4. Paul rejecteth any such thoughts from the hearts of Believers Rom. 6. 1. Shall we continue in sin that Grace may abound God forbid Nay suppose that that naturall corruption that flesh and bloud that is in Believers be apt to make such a conclusion as this Because God will certainly abide with us for ever therefore let us walke carelesly and doe him all the despight we can these Promises being not made for the use and exalting of the flesh but being given to be mixed with Faith which is carefully to watch against all abusing or corrupting of that Love and Mercy which is held out unto it flesh and bloud can have no advantage given unto it thereby as shall afterward be more fully and clearly demonstrated The Question is then what conclusion Faith doth will and ought to make of these Promises of God and not what abuse the flesh will make of them Let then the meanest and weakest Faith in all the World that is true and saving speake for it selfe whether there be any thing in the nature of it that is apt to make such conclusions as these My God and Father in Jesus Christ hath graciously promised in his infinite Love and Goodnesse to mee through him in whom he is well pleased that he will be my God and guide for ever that he will never forsake mee nor take his Kindnesse from mee to eternity And he hath done this although that he saw and knew that I would deale foolishly and treacherously that I would stand in need of all his Goodnesse Patience and Mercy to spare mee and heale mee promising also to keep me from such a wicked departure from him as should for ever alienate my soule from him therefore come on let mee continue in sinne let me doc him all the dishonour and despight that I can this is all the sence that I have of his infinite Love this is all the impression that it leaveth upon mee that I need not love him againe but study to be as vile and as abominable in his sight as can possibly be imagined certainly there is not any smoaking flax or any oruised reed there is not a soule in the World whom God in Christ hath once shined upon or dropped the least dramme of Grace into his heart but will look on such a conclusion as this as a blast of the bottomlesse pit a detestable dart of Satan which it is as proper for Faith to quench as any other Abomination whatever Let then Faith in reference unto these Promises have its perfect worke not abiding in a naked contemplation of them but mixing them with its selfe and there will be undoubtedly found the improvement before mentioned for the carrying on of Godlinesse and Gospell obedience in the hearts of Believers But this I shall have occasion to speake to more afterward Hosea 2. 19 20. §. 20. is pertinent also to the same purpose I will betroth thee unto mee for ever I will betroth thee unto mee in righteousnesse and in judgement and in loving kindnesse and in mercies I will even betroth thee unto mee in faithfulnesse and thou shalt know the Lord. The words themselves as they lye in the Text doe directly confirme our Assertion The Relation whereunto God here expresseth that he will and doth take his People is one of the most neer and eminent which he affordeth to them a conjugall Relation he is and will be their Husband which is as high an expression of the Covenant betwixt God and his Saints as any is or can be used Of all Covenants that are between sundry persons that which is between Man and Wife is the strongest and most inviolable So is this Covenant expressed Isai 54. 5. Thy maker is thine Husband the Lord of Hosts is his Name and this Relation he affirmeth shall continue for ever upon the Account of those Properties of his which are engaged in this his Gracious undertaking to take them to himselfe therein He doth it in Righteousnesse and in Judgement in Loving-kindnesse and in Mercies and in Faithfulnesse so that if there be not something in the Context or words adjoyning that shall with an high hand turne us aside from the first immediate open and full sence of these
Judgement Loving-kindnesse and Mercies and Faithfulnesse whose efficacy also in reference unto their abiding with him whom he doth betroth to himselfe he mentioneth in the close of v 20. thou saith he shalt know the Lord. I shall not insist on the particular importance of the severall Expressions whereby the Lord hath set forth himselfe and his goodnesse here unto us It is plaine that they are all mentioned to the same end and purpose namely to give Assurance unto us of the Unchangeablenesse of this worke of his Grace and to prevent the objections which the fears of our unbelieving hearts from the consideration of our weaknesse wayes and walkings temptations trialls and troubles would raise upon it The Lord when he betroths us to himselfe sees and knows what we are what we will be and how we will provoke the eyes of his Glory He sees that if we should be left unto our selves we would utterly cast off all knowledge of him and obedience unto him Wherefore saith he I will betroth thee unto me in Righteousnesse and Judgment allowing full measure for all thy weaknesses that they shall not dissolve that union I intend As if a Prince should goe to take to him in Marriage a poore deformed Beggar who being amazed with his kindnesse and fearing much least he should be mistaken and account her otherwise then indeed shee is which when it is discovered will be her ruine she plainly telleth him she is poore deformed and hath nothing in the World that may answer his expectation and therefore she cannot but feare that when he knoweth her throughly indeed he will utterly cast her off But he thereupon replieth Feare no such thing what I doe I doe in Righteousnesse and Judgement knowingly of thee and thy Condition and so as that I will abide by it Perhaps as some think by this betrothing us in Righteousnesse the Lord may intimate his bestowing upon us Righteousnesse yea his becoming in Jesus Christ our Righteousnesse to supply that utter want Isa. 45. 24. which is in us of that which is acceptable unto him Now because we are not only unmeet to be at first accepted into any such termes of alliance with the Lord but also shall certainly in the carrying of it on behave our selves foolishly and frowardly unanswerable to his loving-kindnesse so that he may justly cast us off for ever he telleth us farther that he betroths us to himselfe in Loving-kindnesse and Mercies knowing that in entring into this alliance with us he maketh worke for his tenderest bowels of Compassion his pitty and pardoning mercy In his continuance in this Relation whatever his Kindnesse Patience and Pardoning mercy can be extended unto that he will accomplish and bring about But will not the Lord when he pardons once and againe at length be waried by our innumerable provocations so as to cast us off for ever No saith he this will I doe in Faithfulnesse He doubleth the expression of his Grace and addeth a Property of his nature that will carry him out to abide by his first Love to the utmost I will saith he even betroth thee unto my selfe in Faithfulnesse His firmenesse constancie and truth in all his waies and promises will he use in this work of his Grace Deut 32. 4. But perhaps notwithstanding all this the heart is not yet quiet yet it feareth it selfe and its own treachery least it should utterly fall off from this gracious Husband wherefore in the close of all God undertaketh for them also that no scruple may remaine why our soules should not be satisfied with the sincere milke that floweth from this breast of Consolation Thou shalt saith he know the Lord This indeed is required that under the Accomplishment of this gracious Promise you know the Lord that is believe and trust and obey the Lord and saith he thou shalt doe it I will by my Grace keep alive in thy heart as a fruit of that Love wherewith I have betrothed thee to my selfe that Knowledge Faith and Obedience which I require of thee This then is some part of that which in this Promise the Lord holdeth out unto us and assureth us of notwithstanding his Rejection of the carnall Jewes yet for his elect both the Jewes and Gentiles he will so take them into a Marriage Covenant with himselfe that he will continue for ever a Husband unto them undertaking also that they shall continue in Faith and Obedience knowing him all their dayes and of all this he effectually assureth them upon the account of his Righteousnesse Judgement Loving-kindnesse Mercy and Faithfulnesse I cannot but adde that if there were no other place of Scripture in the whole Book of God to confirme the Truth we have in hand but only this I should not doubt the Lord assisting to close with it upon the signall Testimony given unto it thereby notwithstanding all the specious Oppositions that are made thereunto For the Close §. 32. I shall a little consider that leane and hungry Exposition of these words which is given in the place before metioned Ch. 11. Sect 8. pag. 229. I will betroth them unto me in Righteousnesse and in Judgement and in Loving-kindnesse and Mercy so the words are expressed in a different Character as the very words of the Promise in the Text. 1. Thee that is the Church is changed into Them that is the Jewes and their Children or carnall seed as a little before was expressed and then that emphaticall expression for ever is quite thrust out of the Text as a stubborne word not to be dealt withall upon any faire termes Let us see then how that which remaineth is treated and turned off I will betroth thee that is I will engage and attempt to insure both them and their affections to mee by all variety of waies and meanes that are proper and likely to bring such a thing to passe But who knoweth not that this is wooing and not betrothing we need not goe farre to find out men learned in the Law to informe us that to try and attempt to get and assure the affections of any one is not a Betrothment This then is the first part of this Exposition I will betroth that is I will wooe and essay attempt and endeavour to get their affections which besides the forementioned absurdity is attended with another sore oversight to wit that God promiseth to doe this very thing in the last words of v. 20. which is affirmed that he doth but attempt to doe To proceed he saith I will doe this 1. By shewing my selfe Just and Righteous unto them in keeping my Promise concerning their deliverance out of captivity at the end of 70 years So then in this new Paraphrase I will Betroth thee that is the Election of Jewes and Gentiles to my selfe for ever in Righteousnesse is I will essay to get their affections by shewing my selfe Righteous in the Promise of bringing the Jewes out of captivity That this Promise is not made
sinne the body of it or the ruling of Originall sinne the old man and the full fruit of actuall sinne in the body of it is by the death of Christ crucified and destroyed and in that whole Chapter from our participation in the death of Christ he argues to such an abolition of the Law and Rule of sinne to such a breaking of the power and strength of it that it is impossible that it should any more rule in us or have dominion over us Of the way whereby virtue flowes out from the death of Christ for the killing of sinne I am not now to speake And this is the first way whereby the death of Christ hath an influence into the safegarding of Believers in their continuance of the Love and Favour of God He so takes away the guilt of sinne that it shall never be able utterly to turne the Love of God from them and so takes away the rule of Sathan and power of sinne destroying the one and killing the other that they shall never be able to turne them wholly from God Farther §. 19. to secure their continuance with God he procureth the Holy Spirit for them as was shewed before But because much weight lyes upon this part of our foundation I shall a little farther cleare it up That the Spirit of Grace and Adoption with all those Spirituall Mercyes and operations wherewith he is attended and accompanied is a Promise of the new Covenant doubtlesse is by its own evidence put out of question There is scarce any Promise thereof wherein he is not either clearly expressed or evidently included Yea and often times the whole Covenant is stated in that one Promise of the Spirit the actuall collation and bestowing of all the Mercy thereof being his proper worke and peculiar dispensation for the carrying on the great designe of the Salvation of sinners So Isa. 59. 20. As for me saith God this is my Covenant with them my Spirit that is upon thee and my word which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart from thee This is my Covenant saith God or what in my Covenant I do faithfully ingage to bestow upon you But of this Text and its vindication more afterwardes Many other places not only pregnant of proofe to the same purpose but expressly in termes affirming it might be insisted on Now that this Spirit §. 20. promised in the Covenant of Grace as to the bestowing of him on the elect of God or those for whom Christ dyed is of his purchasing and procurement in his Death is apparent 1. Because he is the Mediator of the Covenant by whose hands and for whose sake all the Mercyes of it are made out to them who are admitted into the bond thereof Gen. 17. 1. Though men are not compleatly stated in the Covenant before their owne Believing Ierem. 31. 32. 32. 38 39 40 which brings in what of their part is stipulated yet the Covenant and Grace of it layes hold of them before even to bestow Faith on them Ezek. 11. 19. 36. 25 26. or they would never Believe for Faith is not of our selves it is the Guift of God God certainely bestowes no such Guifts but from a Covenant Spirituall Graces are not administred soly in a providentiall dispensation Heb. 8. 9 10 11. Faith for the receiving the pardon of sinne is no guift nor product of the Covenant of workes Now as in generall the Mercies of the Covenant are procured by the Mediator of it so this whereof we speake in an especiall manner Heb. 9. 15. For this cause he is the mediator of the New Testament that by meanes of death they which are called might receive the Promise of Eternall Inheritance By his death they for whom he dyed and who thereupon are called Deut 27 29. being delivered from their sinnes which were against the Covenant of workes Gal. 3 12. receive the Promise Rom. 3. 21. or pledge of an Eternall Inheritance What this great Promise here intended is and wherein it doth consist the Holy Ghost declares Acts 2. 23. The Promise which Jesus Christ received of the Father upon his exaltation was that of the Holy Ghost having purchased and procured the bestowing of him by his Death upon his Exaltation the dispensation thereof is committed to him as being part of the Compacte and Covenant which was between his Father and himselfe The grand bottome of his satisfaction merit This is the great Originall radicall Promise of that Eternall Inheritance By the Promised Spirit are wee begotten a new into a hope thereof Rom. 8. 11. made meet for it Col. 1. 12. and sealed up unto it Ephes. 4. 30. Yea do but looke upon the Spirit as promised and yee may conclude him purchased for all the Promises of God are yea and a men in Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. They all have their Confirmation Establishment and Accomplishment in by and for Jesus Christ. And if it be granted that any designed appointed Mercy whatever that in Christ the Lord blesseth us withall be procured for us by him in the way of merit being given freely to us through him but reckoned to him of debt it will easily be manifested that the same is the condition of every Mercy whatever promised unto us and given us upon his Mediatory interposition 2. It appears from that peculiar promise § 21. that Christ makes of sending his Holy Spirit unto his owne He tels them indeed once and againe that the Father will send him Ioh. 14. 16 26. As he comes from that originall and Fountaine Love from which also himselfe was sent But withall he assures us that he himselfe will send him Ioh. 15. 26. When the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the Spirit of truth It is true that he is promised here only as a Comforter for the performance of that part of his Office But look upon what account he is sent for any one Act Ioh. 16. 7. or Worke of Grace on that he is sent for all I will send him then saith Christ and that as a fruit of his death as the procurement of his Mediation for that alone he promiseth to bestow on his And in particular he tells us that he receives the spirit from the Father for us upon his Intercession wherein as hath been elsewhere demonstrated he askes no more nor lesse Salus Electorum sanguis Iesu. then what by his death is obtained Iohn 14. 16 17. I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever even the spirit of Truth whom the World cannot receive he tells us v. 13. that whatsoever we aske he will doe it But withall in these verses how he will doe it even by interceding with the Father for it as a fruit of his Bloodshedding and the Promise made to him upon his undertaking to Glorify his Fathers
thing that is free noble ingenuous filiall and of an heavenly descent in the Saints of God thus 1. It strengthens their Faith in God and in Jesus Christ which is the bottome of all acceptable Obedience whatsoever All that which proceedeth from any other Roote being but a product of labouring in the fire which in the end will consume both Root and Branch That which prevailes upon and drawes out the soule to Faith and believing I meane as it is peculiar to the Gospell and Justifying that is as it is in God as a Father and in the Lord Christ as a Mediator is the discovery of the good will of God to the soule in Christ and his designe to advance his Glory thereby I speake not of the formall cause of Faith in generall but the peculiar motive to Faith and Believing in the sence before mentioned So our Saviour giving the command in generall to his Disciples Ioh. 14 1. ye believe in God believe also in mee in the whole ensuing Chapter provokes them to it with gratious discoveries of the good will of God his Fathers and his own good will towards them And indeed propose what other considerations ye will provoke the soule by all the feare and dread of Hell and the most dismall representation of the wrath to come untill it be convinced of this it will never take one steppe towards God in Christ Now our Adversaries themselves being Judges the Doctrine we have had under consideration abounds above all others with the discoveries of the good will and kindnesse of God to poore sinners yea the great crime that is laid to the charge of it is that it extends it too farre it doth not only assert that God freely beginnes the good worke in them but that he will also powerfully perfect it to the day of Jesus Christ It assures the soules of the poore Saints of God that he who lookt upon them in their bloud and said unto them Live when no eye pittied them who quickned them when they were dead in trespasses and in sinnes begetting them of his own will by the word of Truth that they should be a kind of first fruits to himselfe wasting them in the bloud of his Sonne and delivering them from the old Tyrant Satan that he will not now leave them to themselves and to the Counsell of their own hands to stand or fall according as they shall of themselves and by themselves be able to withstand opposition and seduction but that he will keep them in his own hand giving them such constant supplies of his Grace and Spirit as that in the use of meanes they shall waite upon him to the end And that howsoever or whensoever by the power of Temptation and surprisalls of corruptions they are carried aside from him he will heale their back-slidings and receive them freely and though they change every day yet he changeth not and therefore they are not consumed And hereby I say it confirmes and strengthens their Faith in God as a Father in Jesus Christ taking everlasting care of them 2. Of their Love there is the same reason Gods love to us is of his free Grace he loves us because so it seemes good to him Our Love to him is purely ingenerated by his Love to us and carried on and increased by farther Revelations of his desireablenesse and excellency to our soules Herein is Love not that we loved God but that he loved us first There is no Creature in the least guilty of sinne that can put forth any acceptable Act of Love towards God but what is purely drawn out upon the Apprehension of his Love and lovelinesse in his Grace and mercy A man I confesse may love God when he hath no sence of his Love to him in particular but it must all be built upon an apprehension of his Love to sinners though he may come short in the Application it is the terrour of the Lord that causes us to perswade others but it is the Love of Christ that constraineth us to live to him Shee loved much to whom much was forgiven Looke then the more abundant discoveries are made of the lovelinesse and desirablenesse in the riches of his Grace the more effectuall is the sole and only motive we have to love him with that fi●iall chast Holy Love that he requires For the Love of God to his Saints our Doctrine of their Perseverance sets it forth with the greatest Advantage for the indearement of their soules to draw out their streames of Love to God especially doth it give it its Glory in three things 1. In its freedome It setts forth the Love of God to his Saints as that which they have no way in the least deserved as hath been manifested from Isa. 48. 8 9 11. chap. 54. 9 10. As he first loved them not because they were better then others being by nature Children of wrath and lying in their Blood when he said to them Live quickning them when they were dead in trespasses and sinnes So he doth not continue his love to them nor purpose so to do because he fore sees that they will so so walke with him in Holinesse uprightnesse for he ●oresees no such thing in them but what he himselfe purposeth effectually to worke upon the account of his loving them but he resolves to do it meerely upon the account of his owne Grace He neither resolves to continue his Love to them on Condition that they be so and so holy at randome and with uncertainty of the Event but freely that they may and shall be so Eph. 1. 4. And this is the Glory of Love the most Orient pearl in the Crowne of it 'T is not mercenary nor selfe-ended nor deserved but as a Spring and fountaine freely vents and powers out it selfe upon its owne account And what ingenuous truly noble Heavenly descended heart can hold out against the power of this Love It is effectually constraining to all manner of sutable returnes let the soule but put it selfe in to the actuall Contemplation of the Love of God as it lyes represented in this property of it every way free undeserved the great Love of God to a poore worme a sinner a nothing and it cannot but be wrought to a serious Admiration of it delight in it and be pained and straitned untill it make some suitable Returnes of Love and Obedience unto God If not it may well doubt it never tasted of that Love or enjoyed any fruits of it 2. It gives the Love of God the Glory of its Constancy and Unchangeablenesse This is another Starre of an eminent Magnitude in the Heaven of Love It is not a fading a wavering an altering thing but abides for ever God rests in his Love Zeph. 3. 17. It is a great thing indeed to apprehend that the great God should fixe his Love upon a poore Creature But adde hereunto that he may love them one day and hate them the next embrace them
lesse Anti-evangelicall This foundation then being removed what ever is built upon it mole ruit su● Neither is it in any measure restored or laid a new by the reason of it given by Mr G. viz. That the Scripture affirmeth in sundry places that God is no accepter of persons for he that shall hence conclude that what ever Doctrine affirmeth directly or by consequence that God is no Aceepter of persons what ever other abomination it is evidently deeming with all is yet true and according to the minde of God shall have leave notwithstanding the antiquated Statute of our Vniversity against it to goe and reade Logicke at Stamford On this account do but provide that a Doctrine be not gnilty of any one crime and you may conclude that it is guilty of none For instance That Doctrine which impeacheth not the Omnipresence of the Diety is true according to the Scripture for the Scripture aboundeth with cleare Testimonyes of the Presence of God in all places Now the Doctrine of the Vbiquity of the humane nature of Christ doth no way impeach the omnipresence of the Diety therefore it is true and according to Scripture I might supersede all further considerations of this Argument having rendered it altogether uselesse and unserviceable in this warfare by breaking its right legge or rather cruteh whereon it leaned but something also may be added to the Minor because of its reflection in the close of its proofe upon the Doctrine we maintaine intimating an inconsistency of it with that Excellency of God spoken of namely that he is no Accepter of Persons Prosopolepsia §. 4. or Accepting of Persons is an evill in Judgment when he who is to determine in causes of righteousnesse hath respect to personall things that concerue not the merit of the Cause in hand and judgeth accordingly This properly can have no place in God as to any bestowing of free Grace Mercy or Pardon There is Roome made for it only when the things that are bestowed or wrought by it are such as in Justice are due it being an Iniquity solely and directly opposed to distributive Justice Exod. 23. 2 3 6 7 8 9. that rendreth to every one according to what is Righteous and due Iob. 31. 34. That with God there be no Accepting of Persons there is no more required but this that he appoint and determine equall Punishments to equall faults and give equall Rewards to equall deservings If he will dispose of his pardoning Mercy and free Grace to some in Christ not to others who shall say unto him what dost thou May he not do what he will with his owne So he giveth a peny to him that laboureth all day he maygive a peny also to him that worketh but one houre Now suppose that Mr G's Doctrine render God free from this or rather chargeth him not with it yet if withall it calleth his Truth Righteousnesse Faithfulnesse Oath and Immutabillity into question shall it passe for a Truth or be embraced ever the sooner But the sting of this Argument lieth in the Taile §. 5. or close of it in the Reflection insisted on upon the common Doctrine of Perseverance as it is called viz. that it teacheth God to be an accepter of Persons This is Mr Goodwin's way of Arguing all along When at any time he hath proposed a proofe of the Doctrine he goeth about to establish finding that as somthing heavy worke to lye upon his hand and not much to be said in the case he instantly turneth about and falleth upon his Adversaries in declaiming against whom he hath a rich and overflowing Veine There is scarce any one of his Arguments in the pursuit and improvement whereof one fourth part of it is spoken to that head where in he is engaged But wherein is the Common Doctrine of Perseverance guilty of this great crime §. 6. It teacheth that He that believeth shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be damned It teacheth that God hath allotted equall punishments to equall Transgressions and appointed equall Rewards to equall wayes of Obedience That the Wages of every sinne is death and that every sinner must dye unlesse it be those concerning whom God himselfe saith Deliver them I have found a Ransome Job 33. 24. that he is a like displeased with sinne in whomsoever it is and that in a peculiar and eminent manner when it is found in his owne Indeed if this be to impute Acceptation of Persons to God to say that he hath Mercy on whom he will have Mercy and whom he will he hardeneth that he is tender to his owne as a Father to his only Child that serveth him and will recover them being faithfull in his Promises from their sinnes and heale their backeslidings though he suffer others to lye wallowing in their rebellions and pollutions all their dayes that he will not give pardon to any finner but upon Faith and Repentance but will give Faith and Repentance to those whom he hath chosen and given unto Jesus Christ to be saved If this I say be acceptance of Persons our Doctrine owneth the imputation of ascribing it to God and glorieth in it we being ascertained that God taketh all this to himselfe clearely and plentifully in the Word of Truth The summe of what our Author gives in §. 7. to make good his charge upon the common Doctrine of Perseverance is That it affirmeth that though Saints and Believers fall into the same sinnes of Adultery and Idolatry and the like with other men yet they are not dealt withall as other men but continued in the Love and Favour of God To wave the consideration of the false impositions by the way on the Doctrine opposed as that is that it teacheth the Saints to fall into and to continue in them to the significancy of that expression never so long under Abominations and to joyne Issue upon the whole of the matter I say 1. That in and with this Doctrine and in perfect Harmony and Consistency therewith Rom. 1. 32. we maintaine that the judgement of God is the same in respect of every sinne in whomsoever it is and that he that doth it on that account is worthy of death and 2. That the sentence of the Law is the same towards all cursing every one that continueth not in all things written in the Book thereof Deut. 27. 26. to doe them 3. That in and under the Gospell wherein a remedy is provided in reference to the rigour and severity of both the former Apprehensions yet the Judge of all dealeth with all men equally according to the tenor of it He that Believeth shall be Saved and he that Believeth not shall be damned Men in the same condition shall have the same recompence of reward But you will say Doe not the same sinnes put men into the same condition and deserve the same punishment in one as in another Ans. 1. They doe deserve the same punishment God
bidde to feare him who can cast both body and soule into Hell-fire Now though the Logicke of this Argument doth scarce appeare to me or the strength of the inference from the text there being a great difference between fearing him who can cast both body and soule into Hell-fire and fearing of Hell-fire between fearing God for his Severity and Power in Opposition to the weakenesse and limitednesse of Persecutors even whilst we feare not their feares but sanctify the Lord of hosts in our hearts making him our dread and our feare and such a feare of punishment as is inconsistent with the Promises of God that we shall be preserved in Obedience so be free from it Yet I shall consider the following Discourse that is built thereon Supposing all that Mr Goodwin observes from this Text and that the reason of the feare here injoyned is taken from the power of God to cast into Hell yet the whole of the Argument thence amounts but thus farre because such who are threatned to be persecuted by men who can only kill their bodyes ought rather to feare God who can extend his power of punishing to the destruction of body and soule of those that offend him therefore there is such a feare ingenerated in the Saints by the Threatnings of the Word as is inconsistent with the truth of Gods stedfastnesse in his Covenant with them to keepe them up to Obedience unto the end Sect. §. 59. the 14. he farther pleades from Heb. 11. 7. 2 Kings 22. 19 20. That the eminentest and Holyest men that live may do many things from a principle of feare or of being afraid of the Judgments of God that they should come upon them and upon that account have beene put upon wayes that were acceptable to God Ans. We know that the Feare of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdome and that the Feare of the Lord and his Goodnesse is a great Mercy of the Covenant of Grace This is not the thing here pleaded for it is a thing quite of another nature even that ascribed to the strange nations that were transplanted into Samaria by the King of Syria upon the captivity and removeall of the ten tribes and frightened by Lyons that destroyed some of them who did yet continue to worship their owne Idolls under the dread of God which was upon them which is called the Feare of the Lord. To compleat this feare 't is required that a man have such an Apprehension of the comeing of Hell and Wrath upon him as that he be not relieved against it by any interposall of Promise or ought else from God that he should be preserved in the way and path whereby he shall assuredly finde deliverance from that which he feares How farre this kind of Feare the feare of Hell not as declarative of the terrour of the Lord but as probable to betide and befall the persons so fearing it and that solely considered as an evill to himselfe may be a principle of any act of acceptable Gospell Obedience is not cleared by Mr Goodwin nor easily will be so For 1. That it is not the intendment of any divine Threatnings to beget such a Feare in reference to them that believe hath beene declared 2. It is no fruit or product of the Spirit of Life and Love which as hath beene showne is the principle of all our Obedience and walking with God 3. It holds out a frame of Spirit directly contrary to what we are called ond admitted unto under the Gospell For God hath not given us the Spirit of feare but of ●●wer of Love and of a sound minde 2. Tim. 1. 7. and Rom. 8. 15. We have not received the Spirit of bondage unto feare but the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father The Spirit of this Feare and Dreade and the bondage that attends it is at open variance with the Spirit of Liberty Boldnesse Power Adoption and a sound minde wherewith Belivers are indued And 4. It is that which the Lord Christ intended to remove and take away from his by his death Heb. 2. 15. He dyed that he might deliver them who for feare of death were in bondage all their dayes This feare then I say which is neither Promise of the Covenant nor fruit of the Spirit nor product of saving Faith will scarce upon strict inquiry be found to be any great furtherer of the Saints Obedience what use the Lord is pleased to make of this dread and terrour in the hearts of any of his for the hedging up their wayes from folly and staving them off from any Actuall evill when through the strength of Temptation they do begin to cast off the Law of Life and Love whereby they are governed is not in the least prejudiced by any thing asserted in the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance Toward some who though they are perswaded of the Perseverance of the Saints Indefinitely yet have no perswasion or at least no prevailing chearing Assurance that themselves are Saints which Mr Goodwin thinkes to be the condition of far the greatest part of Believers it hath its full power extent its whole efficacy depending on the Apprehensions of the minde wherein it is Towards the residue who upon abiding grounds and sure foundations have obtained a comfortable Spirituall perswasion of their owne Interest in the Promises of God That the consideration of Hell and Judgement as the due debt of sinne and necessary vindication of the Glory of God hath also its Effects and influence as farre as God is pleased to exercise them therewith acquainting them continually with his Terrour and filling them with an abhorrency of those wayes which in and of themselves tend to so dismall an end and issue hath beendeclared Secondly §. 60. the places of Scripture mentioned by Mr Goodwin doubtlesse will not reach his intendmend Of Noah it is said that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Being warned of God of that floud that was for to come upon the World of ungodly men and the Salvation of himselfe and his Family by the Arke being filled with the Reverence of God and assured of his owne preservation he industriously sets himselfe about the use of the meanes whereby it was to be accomplished That because a man assured of an end from God himselfe in and by the use of meanes did with a Reverentiall Feare of God not of any evill threatned which he was to be preserved from set himselfe to a conscientious use of meanes whereby the promised end of God's owne institution is to be brought about Therefore the Feare of Hell such a Feare as hath been decribed is one principle of the Obedience of the Saints in their walking with God and such as they ought to cherish as being a meanes appointed of God for that end and purpose is an Argument of no great value here with us Neither surely will the Conclusion intended be more evidently educed from
the Jewes peculiarly and suited to the peculiar state and condition wherein they were do not concerne the People of God in generall And why may not the same be the condition of Threatnings given out upon a parralell account Compedes quas fecit ipse ut ferat aequum est 2. That it is the determination and stating of a particular Controversy between God and the people of the Jewes suited to a peculiar dispensation of his Providence towards them which is here proposed is evident from the occasion of the words lay'd downe v. 2 3. What mean ye c. that use this proverb concerning the Land of Israel saying the Fathers have eaten sower Grapes and the Childrens teeth are set on edge As I live saith the Lord c. It is the use of a Proverb concerning the Land of Israel that God is descrying and disproving the truth of the Proverb it selfe under consideration and that this should be the standard and Rule of Gods proceeding with his people in the Covenant of mercy no man that seemes to have either understanding judgement or conscience can reasonably imagine 3. That it is not the nature and tenour of the Covenant of Grace and Gods dealing with his chosen secret ones his Saints true Believers as to their eternall condition which in these words is intended but the manifestation of the Righteousnesse of God in dealing with that people of the Jewes in a peculiar dispensation of his providence towards the body of that people and the Nation in generall appeares farther from the occasion of the words and the provocation given the Lord to make use of these expressions unto them The proverbe that God cuts out of their lips and mouthes by the sword of his Righteousnesse in these words was concerning the Land of Israel Used perhaps mostly by them in captivity but it was concerning the Land of Israel not concerning the Eternall state and condition of the Saints of God but concerning the Land of Israel v. 2. God had of old given that Land to that people by Promise and continued them in it for many Generations untill at length for their wickednesse ' Idolatry Abomination and obstinacy in their evill wayes he caused them to be carryed captive unto Rabylon In that Captivity the Lord revenged upon them not only the sinnes of the present Generation but as he told them also those of their fore-Fathers especially the Abomination Cruelty Idolatry exercised in the dayes of Manasseh taking this season for his worke of vengeance in the Generations following who also so farre walked in the steps of their fore-Fathers as to Justify all Gods proceedings against them Being wasted and removed from their owne Land by the Righteous Judgement of God they considered the Land of Israel that was Promised to them though upon their good behaviour therein and how instead of a plentifull enjoyment of all things in peace and quietnesse therein there were now a small remnant in captivity the rest the farre greatest part being destroyed by the sword and famine in that Land In this state and condition being as all other of their frame and principle prone to justify themselves they had hatched a proverb among themselves concerning the Land of Israel promised to them excedingly opprobrious and reproachfull to the Justice of God in his dealings with them The summe of the intendment of this saying that was growne rise amongst them was that for the sinne of their fore-Fathers many yea the greatest part of them was slain in the Land of Israel and the rest carried from it into bondage and captivity To vindicate the Righteousnesse and equity of his wayes the impartiallity of his Judgements the Lord recounts to them by his Prophet many of their sinnes whereof themselves with their Fathers were guilty in the Land of their nativity and for which he had brought all that calamity and desolation upon them whereof they did complaine confirming under many supposalls of rising and falling that principle of rising and falling that principle he layd downe in the entrance of his dealings with them that every one of them suffered for his own iniquity whatever they suffered whether death or other banishment and not for the sinnes of their fore Fathers Whatever influence they might have upon the procuring of the generall vengeance that overtooke the whole Nation in the midst of their iniquity This being the aime scope and tendency of the place the import of the words and tenour of Gods intendment in them I cannot but wouder how any man of understanding and Conscience can once imagine that God hath given any Testimony to the possibilty of falling out of Covenant with him of those whom he hath taken ●igh to himselfe through the Bloud of his Sonne in the Everlasting bond thereof As though it were any thing of his dealing with the Saints in reference to their Spirituall and Eternall Condition that the Lord here reveales his will about being only the tenour of his dealings with the House of Israel in reference to the Land of Canaan 4. This is farther manifest in that principle Rule of Gods proceedings in the matter laid down v. 4. which is not only a line from but also directly opposite unto that which is the principle in the Covenant of Grace The soule that sinneth he shall dye That soule and person and not another when in that Covenant of Grace he sets forth his Sonne to be a propitiation through faith in his Bloud giving him up to death for all causing the just to dye for the unjust the soule that never sinned for the soules that had sinned that they might go free And I would faine know on what solid grounds an answer may be given to the Socinians triumphing in the 4. v. against the satisfaction of Christ nolesse than Mr Goodwin in the 24 25. against the Perseverance of the Saints If you do not manifest the whole tendency of this place to be accommodated to Gods providentiall dispensation of temporall Judgements and Mercyes in respect of that people and the Covenant whereby they held the Land of Canaan and not at all to respect the generall dispensation of his Righteousnesse and Grace in the Bloud of Christ. So that 5. The whole purport and intendment of the Scripture under consideration is only to manifest the tenour of Gods Righteous proceeding with the people of Israel in respect of his dispensation towards them in reference to the Land of Canaan convicing them of their own abominations confuting the profane proverb invened and reared up in the reproach of his Righteousnesse beating them from the vaine pretence of being punished for their Fathers sins and the conceit of their owne Righteousnesse which that people was perpetually puffed up with all He letts them know that his dealing with them and his wayes towards them were equall and righteous in that there was none of them but was punished for his owne sinne and though some of them might have made some