Selected quad for the lemma: scripture_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
scripture_n great_a holy_a see_v 3,964 5 3.2444 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A10615 The golden chayne of salvation. Written by that reverend and learned man, maister Herman Renecher. And now translated out of Latine into English; Aurea salutis catena. English Rennecher, Hermann.; Allibond, Peter, 1559 or 60-1628. 1604 (1604) STC 20889; ESTC S101212 181,755 288

There are 21 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

rewards vnto the religious worshippers of him Of which we may reade Moses his bookes Deut. 28. Surely such like promises are like so many heavenly spurs by which all and every one is pricked on to the doing of good as if the Prophets and Apostles should collect conclude thus 1. Tim. 4.6 Whatsoever things have the promises of this life and of that which is to come they ought to be thought vpon and to be done above all things But the works of godlinesse have the promises of this life and that which is to come therefore those works above all things ought to be thought vpon and done In this world God giveth vnto the godly some taste of his goodnesse in temporal blessings that by such a taste hee might allure and whet them on more and more vnto the desire of heavenly things S. Paul having respect vnto this 1. Tim. 4.8 writeth vnto Timothy that godlinesse is profitable vnto all things and hath the promises of this life and the life to come By this saying he doth stirre vp all the godly vnto true and sincere religion for the great goodnes sake of God in as much as God suffereth nothing to be wanting vnto them which love the wayes of God Therefore Paul setteth downe godlines alone to be the beginning accomplishment of an happy and prosperous life as if he should say whosoever attaineth vnto true godlinesse indeed possesseth God himselfe and all good things do attend vpon him and the Scripture requireth nothing els at his hands Seeing therefore that faith is nourished by good works that the holy spirit is cherished in man and that God is mooved stirred vp vnto a larger measure of liberality every man should dayly take heed that the transitory things of this world do not hinder the study and course of godlinesse So the godly and holy men by giving themselves dayly vnto good works Phil. 2.15 and by serving God faythfully are the lights of the world For on the one side by the good works that they doe they doe set forth and further the glory of God and doe adorne his Gospell and enlarge it vnto others on the other side they doe mutually edifie and benefite both themselves and others together with them Therefore good workes are precious oyntments which send forth their savour farre and wide vnto others and doe allure them vnto it by the pleasant odour whose wounds it cureth and healeth like balme and thus much of this matter Now wee must briefely runne over the reasons why good workes are to be done Phil. 2.4 for our neighbours sake A Christian man ought not only to thinke on and be carefull of those things that are his owne but also on those thinges which doe concerne his neighbour For what good thing soever a man receyveth of God hee ought not to suppresse and conceale them in his owne power as if he might enioy them alone but is bound to stretch and enlarge them further to the benefiting of others And so he should endevour himselfe to be profitable vnto his neighbour not onely by good counsell and other temporall commodity but much rather by a good and godly example of life that he may eyther be more furthered and edified in true fayth or converted vnto the fayth and continued therein For this often is effected by a godly life and an honest conversation that men which are altogether enemies of the Gospel are converted vnto the love and liking thereof So that the very infidels by a godly speech or by one good worke and holy example or other are gayned to Christ and do attayne salvation Agayne good works ought to be done lest others beeing offended with such or such faults should start backe from the love of the Gospel or should bee discouraged from embracing it for they thinke that the Gospell is such as their manners are which professe it for the world is wont to measure all religion by the manners of men If then the professours of the Gospell be holy and without blame then do they commend and prayse the Gospell it selfe But if they live wickedly after this or that sort theyr mindes are changed and they dissallow and reiect the Gospell which certaynely ought not to be so For the Gospell doth not depend vpon this or that event or vpon any manners of men but vpon God himself and hath authority from it owne nature so that the Gospell is holy and remayneth true yea though the whole world should abandon it selfe vnto the committing of all manner of wickednes and should with one consent condemne the whole worship of God together with the Gospell vnto hell and vtter darkenes notwithstanding they which live wickedly and dissolutely are infectious and bring assured destruction both to themselves and others So a wicked and prophane life is nothing else but a shame and reproach of true religion and of the Gospell and not only so but also it giveth matter and occasion vnto others to skorne and eschew the Gospell For they which professe and embrace that have after a sort the name of God engraven in their foreheads As often therefore as they do wickedly so often do they by their vncleanenes disgrace the very face of God and make his blessed Gospell a reproach and laughingstock vnto others And all they worke wickednes and live vngodly Rom. 2.24 not onely which commit evill and things that are forbidden of God but also which neglect good and things commaunded by God both which God hath decreed to punish For the Lord sayth in Mathew I thirsted Mat. 25.35 and yee gave me not to drinke and so forth These are the chiefest ends for which good works are to be done for all they are so necessary for a man of a ripe age Mat. 25.42 that without them not one can enter into eternall life not that they are the causes of salvation for of it there is not neyther can be any other cause but the merit of Christ alone and Gods onely goodnes Agayne men are reconciled vnto God and iustifyed before they have done any good workes for first theyr sinnes are forgiven and pardoned them Secondly the Holy Ghost by which they are renewed vnto a new life and to the doing of good workes is given vnto them So that in the order of nature iustification doth goe before the renewing of man and the perfourming of good workes Therefore the Papists which seeke for iustification by good workes doe make a cause of the effect and change the cause into the effect But good workes are necessary vnto men of ripe age as certayne meanes without which men cannot attayne vnto salvation for God doth acquite and iustifie man freely but he will not have man to abuse his grace by vngodly living Ephes 2.10 therefore he hath ordeyned good workes for men that they should walke in them Agayne in the last iudgement of the whole world he will pronounce eyther the sentence of
Will Therefore the everlasting good pleasure of God is the onely vnmooveable ground of our Salvation so that our Salvation is subiect and in danger to none of the devices of Sathan to no troubles of the world nor to no waverings of the flesh because it hath a most strong foundation vpon Gods everlasting Decree Secondly this circumstance of eternall time hath prevented the entrance of Sathans temptations For if God should have taken the first care of our Salvation after the Fall of man was committed and had not thought of it before then surely this Will of God might seeme to have a beginning And Sathan might thereby take occasion maliciously to alledge against God and to perswade vs that the Will of God concerning our Salvation is not certayne and constant because that as it had a beginning so it might likewise have an ende and wee being prone vnto all diffidence might quickly have thought it had beene so and by this meanes might have beene in doubt of our Salvation Therefore God by his provident goodnesse hath timely prevented these temptations and sleights of Sathan and hath found out an excellent remedy for our diffidence teaching vs that his Decree for our Salvation is no sudden thing nor limitted within the listes of momentany time but eternall and vnchangeable So our fayth is then builded and grounded vpon a strong and vnmooveable foundation when we heare and know that our Salvation was ordayned and appointed of God from everlasting Lastly this Note of eternall Time is profitable for this purpose namely to withdraw and reclaime vs as well from all regard or respect of our owne merits and worthinesse as also from the opinion of the intercession of other men for vs. For God did know that the divellish opinions of our owne satisfaction and merit would often times steale vpon vs so that wee should thinke that there is some goodnesse in vs by which we should be gratious and acceptable before God For man doth not willingly humble and cast himselfe downe thus farre as to attribute all the prayse of his Salvation vnto the Grace of God only These things and the like the holy Scripture doth prevent and dispell shewing that God hath elected vs from everlasting before we were and hath given vs Salvation in Christ and so doth condemne vs of foolishnes and vngodlinesse if wee now created would get or deserve our Salvation by any other meanes For such is the vntowardnesse and blindnesse of mans disposition because that wretched men are so bewitched of Sathan by sinne that when there is any speech of Salvation and everlasting Felicitie they would gladly beginne from themselves Hence they frame to themselves divers preparations by which they strive to prevent and deserve the favour of God But by what meanes I pray you can they deserve any thing which are not at all And what good works or merits of theirs could there be before the world was made and before their owne Creation Therefore the eternall Election of God doth every where throughout the whole Scripture proove that this Mercy is the free gift of GOD and that hee for his owne sake onely was mooved to elect vs. So that this eternall Election doth not onely set farre aside all respect of mans worthinesse but also throweth man downe even to Hell together with all his merites if hee should bee dealte withall according to his owne desertes and Gods iust iudgement Here therefore is set downe a continuall contrariety and opposition betweene mans merite and worthinesse and Gods eternall Election yea such and so great an opposition that the affirming of the one is the manifest deniall of the other Looke how much therefore the Scripture attributeth to Gods Election 2. Tim. 2.9 so much it detracteth from mans worthinesse For this cause the holy Scripture hath set that eternall Election and mans worthinesse as two things extreamely contrary one to an other teaching vs that a man may sooner and easier wring oyle out of a Flint stone or strike fire out of the middest of the Ocean then that God should finde any thing in mans Nature worthy of his Election They therefore which seeke for Salvation or the least parte thereof without the eternall Election of GOD they doe not onely seeke Life in death and Salvation in the middest of condemnation but also they seeke God without GOD and by such seeking shall finde nothing else but hell fire and eternall punishment because that one and the selfe same thing cannot proceede from divers causes For God onely is good and so good that hee can finde no good elsewhere at any time or in any place but onely in himselfe and contrariwise mans Nature is so wicked and depraved that out of it can proceede nothing but wicked deedes and vngodly practises But of this hereafter wee will speake more largely It is therefore the vndeserved and altogether the free goodnesse of God in that hee from everlasting ordained and appointed eternall Salvation for vs when wee were not as then created And therefore of so good and bountifull a God who would not hope well Moreover seeing God hath elected vs to Salvation and Life everlasting hence it manifestly appeareth that none could bee our Intercessour to God for vs. Because then there was no man beside God onely and alone which was the whole cause of our Election Hence likewise as out of a most cleare Glasse we may see what care God hath of our Salvation because that from everlasting he did so providently prevent and turne away all the hindrances of our Salvation So the incredible and more then fatherly goodnesse of God is chiefely made knowne in this namely that he was carefull for our Salvation before we were And let these thinges suffice to bee briefely compiled concerning the first Proprietie of Election The second Proprietie of Election is that Election is an high and hidden Decree not onely because God from all eternitie before the foundation of the world before any thing was created did fore-ordaine and appoynt it with himselfe but also in respect of those things which are contayned and ordayned in that eternall decree which are so deepe and hidden in the meaning and vnderstanding of them that they doe not onely farre out-strippe mans capacity but also doe as farre exceed the vnderstanding of the Angelles themselves as the highest Heaven is distant from the lowest earth For the manner of redeeming and saving of Mankinde is so deepe and secret that the very Angels themselves cannot surmise the least of it much lesse consider and determine of it For this cause it is often called in the Scripture the Mysterie that is hidden in God Ephes 3 9. Col. 1.26 because it is manifest and knowne vnto God onely and because no Creature can know it but by Revelation And so it is called by Paul to the Romans Cap. 16.25 the secret Mysterie that is vnknowne to the Creatures In this great and secret Consultation the Sonne
rageth and is angry against God and his wicked affections breake forth openly like vnto wilde and vntamed beasts and run out like wilde horses and the more severely that God forbiddeth any evill the more egerly doth miserable man rage and resist it so that a man may sooner wring oyle out of an hard stone then that a man not regenerate should do any good thing that should please God or be avayleable for his salvation Seeing then that man in his whole nature and will is a foe and an enemy to God I see not by what meanes he may deserve life at Gods hands Moreover seeing that man was drenched through sinne in so deepe a pit and bottomlesse gulfe of damnation that he could not vnderstand nor comprehend it therefore also he had perished for ever in it if God by his grace had not plucked him out of it and delivered him through Christ his only begotten Sonne For miserable man is so blinded through sinne that he cannot vnderstand his owne evill much lesse can he cure it Sinne therefore as an vnavoydable destruction lurketh in mans nature as in a deepe pit of hipocrisy and if God had not revealed it in his lawe and withall found a remedy for it in his Gospel man altogether ignorant of his mystery had runne headlong into eternall destruction Againe the least sinne that is in the nature of it is so vgly that it redoundeth to the dishonor of God and deserveth his fierce indignation the greatnes whereof no creature is able to suffer and overcome as a man may see in the Angels that fell and were condemned So that man had for ever perished in his misery if God by the death of his Sonne had not drawne him out of it This vntowardnes of mans nature and backwardnes to all good doth wonderfully set forth Gods mercy and proveth it to be free because God in choosing man being such as he is vnto life doth declare his free bounty and vndeserved mercy Vpon this mercy of God is grounded the hope and consolation of all the faithfull wherefore although they excell in no worthines nor have any merites which they may bring vnto God yet this one thing may be sufficient for them to come to all happines namely that God in his nature is good and mercifull and so far forth good and mercifull as that he would rather help and advance vnto happines miserable men such as were almost past help then those that were of great account and trusted in their owne strength They therefore which trust that God will be their Saviour even for his owne free goodnes sake it necessarily followeth that they have their faith grounded vpon and correspondent vnto the grace of the Gospell But they which trusting in their owne merits thinke that God will be their rewarder have their hope in no wise framed according to the tenor of the Gospell so that they waver in doubtfull and hurtfull perplexities till being at the length overcome they are at the last cast downe and swallowed vp of desperation This therefore is the mutuall and continuall relation betweene a Christian mans faith and Gods free bounty that an humble and prostrate sinner should by fayth lay hold on Gods mercy though he bring nothing else vnto God but a contrite and a broken heart Psa 51.17 for he exacteth this one thing and requireth nothing else Therefore out of this mercy of God miserable sinners may suck this most sweete comfort that by theyr humble and lowly confession and loathing of their sinnes they have Gods exceeding mercy prepared and exhibited vnto them as a certayne and present remedy for all theyr evils Also heere is a thing worthy to be noted that God who of his vndeserved favour did deliver miserable mankinde from so great a mischiefe doth teach and commaund vs by his example that to our power we should helpe those that are in misery Yea and the greater that their misery is the more should every of vs know that we are bound vnto God for to helpe them and if wee do not helpe them as much as we can when neede requireth by that wee shewe our selves to be enemyes and adversaryes to God For they which are wicked against God can not be good towards men And they do indeede declare that they are man-sleyers in the sight of God For if others should forsake them likewise and not helpe them they should decay and perish in their misery and so they are the occasion and cause of theyr death as farre-forth as in them lyeth and therefore are iudged and shall be condemned of God as manifest man-sleyers This the Scripture setteth downe in expresse words saying that iudgement mercilesse shall be to him that sheweth no mercy Heere the wicked and fond fiction of the Papists concerning faith and good works foreseene which they dreame to be the causes of election are confuted as false by playne testimonies of holy scripture CHAP. 12. NOw whatsoever the Papists doe talke of concerning fayth and godlinesse fore-seene is nothing else but a most vayne dreame and foolish fiction For in that they say that God from everlasting knew such or such that they would be good and that they would deserve election by their good workes it is to forge a weake and fond fable about which they may trifle at their pleasure and without feare For God is so the cause and beginning of all good that the least drop of goodnes cannot any where be found of which he is not the onely author and finisher The Papists in this doctrine are confuted by many places of holy scripture and are convinced of manifest vntruth For holynesse and a godly life are the fruites and effects of election For God did elect his from everlasting not because they would be good in themselves and worthy of their election but he elected them being evill that afterwards by his grace they might become good This the Scripture doth testifie in manifest and expresse words when it sayth that God hath chosen vs Ephes 1.4 that wee should be holy and without blame before him through love Heere we may cleerely see that God did not finde such as should be elected good but that being elected of him he maketh them good So that integrity of life and good workes do follow election as the true effects thereof and go not before it as the cause And if good workes should be the cause of election man should have chosen God and God should not have chosen man so salvation should be mans merit and not Gods gift and election should be not because God is mercifull but because man is good and iust Againe the Papists in setting vp workes foreseene as the cause of salvation deny God to be God and make his grace of no account For God alone is good Iam. 1.17 and the only fountaine of goodnes Therefore whosoever thinke that they have the very least good thing in them without God do deny him to be
give his glory to another which by the Prophet Esaias he flatly denieth to doe saying Esay 48.11 I will not give my glory to another that is God will not cause that any Creature should have infinite strength or infinite wisedome For of ones selfe to perfourme and bring forth those workes which may merite Election and eternall life is not in the power of any creature For life eternall is a farre more excellent good and greater worke then mans strength is able to compasse That life is heavenly and infinite and therefore not to bee gotten or procured but by an heavenly and infinite power For as wee have sayde before there is no comparison nor proportion betweene an infinite good thing and a finite worke and merite Therefore when as the Papists brag that they are able to make themselves worthy of their elelection by their owne proper workes and merits they doe more foolishly and fottishly then if they should take in hand to build and set vp a new heaven and a newe earth with mallets and other tooles For albeit that this bee altogether impossible for them to doe yet that other is farre more hard and much more impossible For God the onely Almighty One was able to create the Heaven and the Earth and all that is contained in Heaven and in Earth by his word onely without any difficulty but he could not redeeme Mankinde from eternall damnation but by the precious blood of his Sonne So the Scripture calleth them that shall bee saved the Chosen in Christ namely in that hee hath redeemed them by his blood and restored Gods Image in them Wherefore seeing that Salvation could not bee recovered by any other meanes but by the most bitter death and passion of Christ hence it clearely followeth that there-obtayning of Salvation doth farre exceed the strength and power of any creature whatsoever Wherefore it is most false and wicked which the Papists dreame of that man is elected vnto Salvation for such or such good works foreseene Because those workes cannot pacifie the exceeding great wrath of God nor make satisfaction for the sinnes of man For as we have sayde before they are altogether repugnant and contrary vnto God therefore they doe not pacifie him but offend him and provoke him the more to anger Surely the whole masse of the worlde may farre more easily bee stayed vp with a staffe of reede then Salvation can bee gotten or obtayned by the power of man But that fiction concerning workes fore-seene should have the more likelyhood of trueth if they did bring forth such workes to deserve Salvation as were truely good but they can bring forth no such for as wee have sayde before man is wholly corrupt and wicked therefore there can bee expected from him nothing but corrupt and wicked deedes Lastly by theyr workes fore-seene they doe manifestly tempt God as if he were not able to save his Elect and bring them to happinesse by his meere grace being apprehended by fayth vnlesse they should put to theyr owne good workes as helpers and furtherers of his Grace And surely by offering theyr workes they shew that they are in doubt whether the Grace of God bee able and sufficient to save them and so denie God to be God For God cannot bee God vnlesse hee bee absolutely good and infinitely mercifull otherwise he should be imperfect and conditionally good such an one as the Papistes doe make him to bee with theyr good workes and merites fore-seene And a greater dishonour cannot redound vnto God then for a man to doubt of his infinite goodnesse and free mercy and God cannot be iniured more then if a man should preferre his owne workes fore-seene before the mercy of God as if by them God could bee mooved or turned this way or that way like man Certaynely whomsoever he hath not chosen for his owne mercy sake him wil he not chuse hereafter for any fore-seene good works of his owne For it is all alike to choose a man to Salvation for his owne workes as if God should cease to be God For if God should choose a man for his workes there would bee found manifest change in God and so God should cease to bee God but they which thinke themselves vnworthy of Election and yet doe truely and constantly beleeve that they are from everlasting elected vnto Salvation by the free mercy of God they give vnto God his deserved honour For a greater honour cannot be given vnto God then that hee is much more good and mercifull vnto vs in Christ then if wee had never sinned at all For hee that beleeveth in Christ and layeth hold on him by a true fayth hee hath the love of God and shall as truely and certaynely attayne life everlasting for his Passion sake as God in his Nature is everlasting and vnchangeable in his Will But the Papists which make their owne workes and merites the cause of theyr Election doe labour to abolish his mercy and to establish theyr owne integrity and righteousnesse as if God had chosen man not because he himselfe was God and mercifull but because man was thought acceptable and approoved of God for such or such good workes fore-seene when as the Gospel teacheth the cleane contrary Luke 18. that before Gods iudgement seate no workes nor merites of man may be suffered to approach but that a lowly and humble prayer powred out in the blood and merites of Christ shall bee heard and accepted Therefore the least imagination or establishment of mans merit is the manifest abolishing of the grace of God and the merits of Christ and a most certayne hazard and losse of eternall life By these things that are spoken it appeareth evidently enough that this fiction of workes fore-seene is as an il favoured head which hath many vnseemely members vnder it For where one absurdity is graunted a great many must needes followe after 2. Tim. 2.17 For errour is as a fretting canker For where the least chincke is opened to errour there the very greatest Monsters of errours throng in by troopes other most vngodly sins are heaped together vpon them So out of this false opinion as out of Pandoraes box there do flie horrible reproaches and blasphemies agaynst God For they which doe misvnderstand and falsely expound one place of Scripture it must needes follow that they mis-interpret and misvnderstand many places Because that all the Articles of Christian fayth are so artificially lincked together that one of them cannot be hurt but all the rest are wronged neyther can one bee taken out from amongst the rest but the whole rancke and order of all the rest will be broken and fall to nothing Certaynely the Papists being the subtile teachers and patrones of good workes fore seene doe openly declare that they neyther know the strength of sinne nor the vntowardnesse of our corrupted nature nor the iustice and wrath of God against sinne and so they are most ignorant of that which it
to the law and Christian charity For the law commandeth and charity willeth that there be no hurt done to any man but good vnto all but there is no good but hurt done vnto them which are ordeyned vnto this miserable condition and cursed estate therefore it is repugnant to charity and contrary to the lawe I answere God is not bound nor subiect vnto the lawe so that he gave that commandement to men only and not to himselfe Agayne the iustice of God is altogether infinite whose greatnes the shallownes of mans capacity cannot conteyne nor search out therefore it is not to be measured by the law and rule of civile iustice For there is no consequence from an infinite thing vnto a finite thing because there is no proportion betweene them Therefore a man in this matter must renounce all naturall reason and submit himselfe wholy vnto the onely wise God knowing that the iustice of God cannot be examined or comprehended by the shallow conceit of man nor be measured according to the rule of civill iustice Therfore it were extreme madnes blasphemous impiety not to attribute more wisedome vprightnes vnto God then man can vnderstand or imagine Surely this were to erect and worship a vaine idoll in the steed of God or rather to deny God himselfe Moreover there are certaine particular works of God which are not to be reduced to the generall rule of equity as for example the fact of Abraham who in his obedience vnto God would have killed his sonne and have sacrificed him vnto God when as notwithstanding the law sayth Thou shalt not kill The holy man of God knew that God was not subiect to the law but that it was given vnto men onely so that he did not examine the speciall commaundement which he had received concerning the sacrificing of his Sonne according to the lawe but simply obeyed the commaundement of God and desired to execute it with a ready and good will By this example we are taught first that God sometimes doth decree somewhat in his secret will which he prescribeth not in his lawe Secondly that we must obey this his secret will when God commaundeth though the lawe after a sort commaund the contrary otherwise the will of God revealed in his word is the onely continuall rule of good life So there may be some worke which God doth not therefore will because it is iust but it is therefore iust because he willeth it and thinketh it good Furthermore although of two men of which neyther had done any thing he hath predestinated the one vnto life the other vnto death and that before the foundation of the world yet this predestination is no lesse iust then if both had bin created and committed many great offences But it apeareth manifestly that reprobation was decreed before all time and not ordeined in time both from the nature of God and also by the holy scripture From the nature of God it appeareth because God doth nothing with a new will but all things by his everlasting will whatsoever therefore God doth in time that did he determine to do before all time otherwise there should manifest change be found in him if he should do the least thing in time which he did not determine to do before time from everlasting By the scripture it is evident because that every where as well in the doctrine of reprobation as election it reduceth vs vnto the eternall counsell of God that men might certaynely be perswaded that nothing happeneth vnto them in this life which was not ordeyned and decreed for them by God from everlasting So that that happeneth to them in time which God hath fore-ordeyned before time Moreover although the reprobates be reiected from this mercy of salvation by the iust and eternall iudgement of God yet they are not condemned but for their owne sinnes and misdeeds by which they deserve and pull vpon their owne heads the iust wrath of God and eternall destruction Therefore although they are not reprobated reiected for any infidelity or wicked deeds foreseene but because God hath so willed it and decreed it iustly yet they shall not be condemned but for their owne vngodlines To conclude as there is no merit foregoing in election so also is there no desert foregoing in reprobation but both do proceede and flowe from the good pleasure of God Now heere remayneth to be shewed briefly for what causes the reprobates are subiect and liable vnto iust condemnation The first cause of their destruction is the corruption of their nature this is so great that it is fully sufficient for to condemne them iustly as we may see in the death and condemnation of infants and little children that are reprobated who although they be polluted with fewe or none actuall sinnes yet for the originall corruption of their nature they are thrust hedlong into everlasting destruction Therefore this corruption of nature is the first and meritorious cause of damnation Agayne God vouchsafeth not to bestow vpon them the mercy of regeneration but leaveth them by his iust iudgement in their former depravation of nature Neyther can God be accused or charged with iniury because he doth not reforme nor better them for God doth not owe them so much because he hath not promised it vnto them and therefore is not bound to perfourme it And as for the promises although by the publike ministery of the Church they be pronounced vnto all that heare in generall yet indeed and effectually they do properly pertayne and belong vnto the elect only for whatsoever God hath promised in the Gospell and in the matter of salvation they onely obteyne and enioy Agayne the promises do not declare what God hath decreed and determined concerning every one but do shew how he is affected towards them that beleeve therefore they belong to none but to the beleevers so that God oweth nothing to the reprobates but deserved wrath and iust indignation Therefore in that he doth not call them nor draw them to Christ nor iustify them in him nor create faith in them it is for this cause because he hath not chosen them so that when the cause is denyed them the effects must needs be denyed them also For to whomesoever he vouchsafeth not election he also denyeth those blessings and benefits which are the effects of election These being by the iust iudgement of God thus left to themselves are hardned daily more more so that they feare not to commit great detestable sinnes and iniquities neither stand in awe of Gods vengeance but nuzsle themselves in their sinnes with delight and love and commit sinnes willingly and that so proudly and securely as if God the avenger of wickednes did winke at them and would take no account of them for their lives passed These God doth not only reiect and repell from all saving grace and all the effects thereof but also in his iust iudgement doth deliver thē over being so reiected partly
and is very profitable for the Elect and the godly For they being affrighted by the hurt and example of others are thereby more humbled in spirite and the more mooved and stirred vp to the better acknowledgement and more earnest desire of Gods grace and mercy Agayne that they may learne the more diligently and studiously to hate and eschew sinne which hath procured so great dammage and such fearefull condemnation vnto others and heartily to abhorre it And on the contrary that they may frame and apply theyr whole studies and endevours to this namely to the care of conforming themselves their life and manners according to the will of God in all things that there may bee betweene their God and them one and the same will and one and the same vnwillingnesse in all thinges as there is wont to be betweene mutual and faythfull friendes So that no evill can bee so great so noysome or hurtfull but God knoweth how to order and direct it vnto the edifying and Salvation of his chosen whereby every man may easily perceyve with what tender affection God loveth his Children when as out of deadly poyson he produceth instruction and wholesome medicine for them Let them therefore with fervent prayers give great thankes to God their so good and mercifull Father in that he hath vouchsafed to save them from eternall death and confusion and to elect them vnto everlasting Salvation and Glory before others whom they excelled neyther by nature nor byrth nor were in the least respect better then they From hence it clearely appeareth and is without all controversie true that the reprobates and such as shall be condemned have not onely any iust cause for which they should murmure agaynst God and frette at his so severe iudgement but farre contrariwise they are bound to prayse and thanke God for his benefites receyved partly because they were by him created men partly because hee hath forborne them here a long time Rom. 2.4 with much patience and long suffering and hath bestowed sundry and great benefites vpon them filling them and refreshing their hearts with meat and drinke Actes 14.17 partly because he hath beautified adorned many of them with notable and excellent giftes whilest he hath made some excellent in the knowledge of narurall things some he hath not debarred from the knowledge of his word but hath wrought in them a certayne consent vnto religion and begotten in them some shew of fayth as appeareth in Iudas the traytor and in Balaam and in many others of whom Christ speaketh in Saint Matthew Cap. 7.22 But when these doe wickedly abuse those benefites and spirituall giftes they do turne to them to their greater damnation Therefore by how much they have receyved from God the greater benefites and more excellent giftes by so much the more grievous iudgement and more bitter punishment doe they by their owne default deserve and plucke vpon their owne heads Further likewise the longer that their life lasteth here the greater curse is there prepared for them But in that hee forbore them here so long and bestowed on them so many good turnes it is his incredible goodnesse and admirable clemency And in condemning of them on the one side he sheweth his iustice and on the other side he setteth forth his power his iustice in that he hth condemned them for sinne which his holy Nature and Will cannot suffer vnpunished and his power in this that hee could impose and inflict vpon them everlasting punishment and most exquisite torments Lastly the reprobates while they are in this life doe hate God their Creator cast away and make no account of his worde and grace and doe deryde and mocke at the whole religion and worship of his divine Maiestie and so honour and love not God but the divell rather Agayne many times they doe most cruelly persecute the religious worshippers of God which professe and embrace his holy Gospell that so they might satisfie their hatred they beare agaynst God and doe molest and kill them with most exquisite torments So that they are the cause of many troubles vnto the godly in this life and incense and arme the hatred and power of the whole world against them all which thinges notwithstanding God for his vnspeakeable goodnesse and love sake towards the Elect doth so guide and direct that by them theyr fayth is the more edified and theyr Salvation furthered For all things both externall and internall must needes turne and worke together for the best to them which have the most mightie God for theyr Father For although that godly men be predestinated by God and elected vnto the heavenly Glory through Christ from everlasting yet they can come vnto that glory by no other way but by the bitter crosse and sundrie troubles and afflictions of this life 2. Tim. 3 2● Psal 34.20 For although that GOD doe love them with his most tender love that surmounteth all things yet such a lotte and condition is assigned and appointed vnto them in this life that an heavie and a continuall crosse is ioyned as an vnseparable companion vnto that his more then fatherly love For God loveth his children not with a pleasing but with a severe love so that hee chasteneth them sharpely here for their great profit that they might be made partakers of his holinesse But this is their onely hope and most strong consolation that the fatherly will of God for the verifyng and performance of their Salvation is more strong then an vnbatterable wall of brasse This reprobation ought to be preached abroad as wel as Election because that this is a great part of the holy Scriptures which are to be propounded wholy and not piece meale Rom 9.18 So Saint Paul flatly and freely affirmeth that God hardeneth who he will So the same Paul affirmeth 2. Tim. 2.20 that in a great house there are some vessels for dishonour So the same Paul sayth that Pharaoh was raised vp and appoynted for this Rom. 9.21 that God might shew his power in him Rom. 9.12 So also he affirmeth that Esau was reprobated of God Rom. 9.11 before hee had done any evill So also Christ himselfe denyeth Iohn 10.26 that the vnbeleeving Iewes are any of his stocke Matth. 22.11 So likewise he affirmeth in Matthew that to them which are without it is not given to vnderstand the mysteries of the kingdome of heaven So also in the same Gospel of Saint Matthew Cap. 13.19 hee doth by sure signes and infallible tokens discerne and make a difference betweene the elect and the reprobates and there calleth the Elect the wheate of God and the reprobate the tares of the Divell These and the like sayings and testimonies of Scriptures doe teach vs that the doctrine of reprobation ought publikely to be propounded and preached and that for these causes First that the Elect might so much the more certainely and surely repose themselves in the free
CHAP. 23. FVrthermore that every man may the more safely exercise himselfe in this doctrine of Predestination and profite soundly in it these foure heads must alwayes be knowne and considered First that eternall and free Election in Christ be accounted to be the onely ground-worke of all Salvation and that so that not the least part of Salvation be sought elsewhere then from that one doctrine of Predestination which if it should be sought elsewhere the true naturall meaning of the Scripture in many places will not onely be missed and the conscience out of quiet and tormented being vexed as well with continuall feare as doubting but also Salvation it selfe will bee hazarded But seeing that I have spoken more fully of this matter in the Chapters fore-going and that this doctrine is confirmed by testimonies of Scripture I thinke there neede no more to be spoken of it in this place Secondly that concerning God he conceive nothing but a most sure and strong hope of his salvation and be most certainely perswaded in himselfe that he is one of the number of the elect and let no sinnes or continuall slippes weaken his faith or discourage his hope concerning his election For oftentimes many are of the number of the elect which live a very bad life and yet by the goodnes of God are brought to repentance through whose patience they are not taken out of this life in the very committing of their wickednes that it might be made knowne vnto them and their fellow heyres out of how great a mischiefe the grace of God can deliver them as Augustine speaketh Moreover Tom. 7. Colum. 170 Rom. 8. although the holy spirit do governe the children of God yet many times it suffereth them to fall into great sinnes that they might be more and more humbled and being so humbled they might repent the more hartily and have a fellow feeling of others that fall and yet afterwards he bringeth them againe into the right way to salvation by true repentance and if a man beleeve not that he is of the number of the elect he shall surely do great iniury against God as if he would mock any man or call any man vnto Christ in vayne Agayne although many more be ordeyned vnto destruction then to salvation yet that ought not to move or trouble any man because that the Scripture doth no where say that this or that man in particular is a reprobate therefore let not this or that man thinke himselfe of the number of the reprobates which if he shall do and beleeve that he is a reprobate he is iniurious against God and envious of his own salvation but let him much diligently betake himselfe vnto continuall prayer and give himselfe to the reading of the Gospell and exercise his faith in Christ by the study of holynes and say with the Apostle Luke 17.5 Lord increase my faith and then in the end he shall truly feele in his soule more and more that he is of the number of the elect Furthermore let no man presuppose that he is hated or detested of God by reason of any afflictions how great or how lasting soever they be For God is then most ready to bestow life everlasting when he sheweth himselfe to be contraryly minded as Augustine else-where well observeth So that whē he afflicteth Christians with these or those troubls he doth either chastice their sinnes or else they are exercised in a spirituall tryall and such are proposed vnto others as valiant and worthy captaynes eyther for their willing obedience or else for their invincible patience and strength and they being striken with these afflictions as with Gods rod are reduced vnto a more sober cariage and right-course of life So the fatherly love of God striveth with the perverse wickednes of man vntill at the last it softneth it and maketh it better And so S. Augustine rightly witnesseth elsewhere The common crosse and calamity of the godly is not a sentence to punish but an affliction to heale therefore he often punisheth his children to drive them to repentance and draw them to himselfe Hether apperteineth that of S. Austine which sayth elsewhere The afflictions that oppresse vs compell vs to go to God To this also belongeth that of the Prophet Amos Amos. 4.9 who sayth I have smitten you with blasting and mildew your great gardens and your Vineyards and your figge-trees and your olive-trees did the palmer-worme devoure yet have ye not returned vnto me sayth the Lord. By these things therefore it appeareth that God afflicteth his children that he might amend them and he amendeth them for this cause to save them Therefore let all the godly not onely submit both their hands but also their whole body and soule vnder his rod especially seeing that the afflictions that are sent vnto them are as Gods hammers by which as vpon an anvile they are fourmed and made fit for his kingdome and celestiall glory Seeing then that afflictions are as spirituall chariots to carry men into heaven they do minister much better matter to trust wel in God then any matter at all to despaire so that they are to be accounted the medicines of our sinnes and the remedies of our falls Againe out of them the godly learne that God doth not grant nor promise vnto his childrē a freedom from punishment but that he only promiseth them a fatherly moderation in their punishments that he will not execute vengeance on them in the highest degree So that betweene this great gentlenes of God which otherwise might be some alurement vnto sinne and his extreame rigor which would cast men hedlong into destruction this midle chasticement of his is put as wholesome temperature So also must we iudge of the inward temptations with which as often as God doth prick and vrge his children so often doth he try their faith prove their patience and stirre them vp vnto earnest prayer Therefore God will have his children to live heere vnder a continuall crosse both that being convicted of theyr owne infirmitie they might be humbled and that beeing humbled they might learne to seeke strength and helpe from God for if things went alwayes well with them according vnto theyr owne minde they woulde not acknowledge theyr owne weakenes nor thinke that they stand in neede of Gods helpe and also that the stubbornes of the flesh might dayly more and more bee subdued and brought vnder by the remedie of the crosse And lastly that they might be withdrawne from the desires of the world and the concupiscences of the flesh and be incited to the meditation and search of heavenly things knowing that their felicity consisteth not in the things of this world By this it may be playnely gathered that the afflictions of the godly are vnto them as it were spirituall provokements to call vpon God and most wholesome remedy and medicine for their sinnes In which respect those things which men thinke many times to be noysome evils
vnderstood rightly expounded it is the effectual wholesome instrumēt of the holy spirit to convert save mē So that the word of God his spirit is the singular and inestimable treasure and the excellent peculiar goods of the Church of which the Church according to that promise ought never to be deprived but to be alwayes begotten of it and to be continually directed and preserved by it Therefore the Holy Ghost is the begetting cause of faith he doth create and worke it in the hearts of the elect and by the dayly proceedings and increase thereof doth augment and preserve it vnto the end of their lives But the stedfast apprehension and applying of the promises of God and the merit of Christ is the expresse forme and lively image of faith in this consisteth the whole force and efficacy of faith Gal. 2.20 So S. Paule doth in expresse words set downe saying The sonne of God loved me and gave himselfe for me So true faith doth behold the generall promise of God and apprehendeth it and maketh particular application to it selfe certainely setting downe this that that promise of grace and salvation doth no lesse appertayne vnto it then vnto the rest of the beleevers For then the promise of God is effectuall in men and commeth to the proper end and issue of it selfe when it is apprehended by a true faith Againe the word publikely preached in the ministery of the Gospel is the instrumentall cause of faith and therefore that word is called by Paul the power of God vnto salvation Rom. 1.16 Rom. 10.17 vnto every one that beleeveth because that the holy ghost worketh by it in the hearts of the elect so that faith springeth from the preaching hearing of the Gospell Therefore whatsoever the elect do heare with their outward eares from the publike preaching of the word that doth the Holy Ghost make fruitefull and effectuall in their hearts Furthermore a stedfast confidence and a true hope in Christ a fervent love towards God also a sonne-like feare and reverence of God a sincere love of our neighbour and other honest and holy actions are such effects of the holy spirit which do accompany and attend vpon true faith as naturall and inseparable vertues So true fayth doth rest selfe vpon the fatherly love of God and doth heartily reverence and worship God as a good and loving Father and doth continually study how to please him and cleave vnto him and carefully avoydeth whatsoever may offend him and lastly doth steadfastly hope that it shall be partaker together with Christ of everlasting life and heavenly glory But the finall cause of fayth is 1. Pet. 1.9 the comprehending and conceyving of good thinges to witte life eternall and blessed immortalitie And if any shall here subtily obiect vnto a man and say that fayth is alwayes here lame and vnperfect and therefore cannot make a man perfect and happy For that which ought to save one must be every way perfect and absolute wee must answere him that fayth as farre forth as it abideth in the heart of man as in the subiect thereof is alwayes imperfect here and scarce deserveth the name of vertue But as it beholdeth and apprehendeth Christ so it is effectuall and maketh men of the sonnes of perdition the children of God then great power and saving actions are ascribed vnto it by the Scripture as that it iustifieth men that it quikneth them and saveth them So that fayth doth not save and make happy any man in regard of the subiect in which it remayneth but it is sayd to save and iustifie a man in regard of the obiect whither it tendeth and which it apprehendeth For Christ being layd hold on by fayth saveth a man whether that fayth be great or small And that Christ being apprehended with a little and slender fayth doth yet save and iustifie a man the examples of the holy Scripture declare manifestly enough For that Ruler in Iohn although he were endued with a very slender and weake fayth in Christ Iohn 4.49.53 yet for all that Christ reiecteth him not but iustified and saved both him and his sonne with all his houshold So likewise he in Marke Marke 9.24.25 although he was sayd to have a meane and a weake fayth yet Christ being layd hold on by it tooke pittie vpon him and healed his sonne that was possessed of the divell Here is notwithstanding diligently to be marked that in these manner of speeches wherein in the vertue of saving is attributed vnto fayth the power and force of the efficient cause is attributed vnto the instrument by which it worketh and is effectuall So that when iustification salvation is ascribed vnto faith as vnto the cause then the obiect of fayth is vnderstood For Christ cannot be apprehended but by sayth onely as by the instrument wherewith it is done Furthermore here is carefully to be considered that this saving Calling is produced and wrought more by the inward working of the spirite then by the outward preaching of the word For although God by his Ministers should speake and call vnto vs a thousand times by the voyce of his word in the Ministery yet vnlesse wee be drawne inwardly by the spirite of God we shall never come vnto him Many and most wonderfull examples of all ages have sufficiently declared this and do yet at this day declare it Whereby it may bee gathered that this Calling is placed in the good will and hand of God onely farre out of our owne reach For he alone can illuminate vs and convert and change vs into new creatures For in this calling the whole man is repugnant vnto God that calleth Iohn 6.44 Psal 51.12 Therefore Christ in S. Iohn vseth this word drawing David vseth this word creating speaking of the conversion of man Christ by the word drawing sheweth that this heavenly grace cannot bee conceyved of the naturall man but that there must be a new mind and a new vnderstanding to conceive it And David by the word creating would teach vs that the renewing and amendement of man is so difficult hard a worke that it can be wrought or brought to passe by no creature Bara This he sheweth by the Hebrew word Bara he created which properly signifieth hee made a thing of nothing which which was not before Secondly it signifieth to bring to passe some singular and wonderfull worke out of some matter already created which cannot possibly be imitated by any creature So that this regeneration of man is a certayne spirituall creation by which the regenerate are transported into a newe life and prepared for that heavenly glory which never shall have ende Here is refuted the errour of the Papists concerning the strength that is in man and shewed in what things an vnregenerate man hath free-will and in what not and how farre free-will stretcheth it selfe And the grosse ignorance or manifest impietie of the Papists is disclosed
betweene them then there is betweene fire and water or then can be shewen betweene any other naturall disagreeing contraries So that whatsoever is attributed to the one must needes be withdrawne from the other one and the selfe same thing doth not please nor agree to them both nor one and the selfe same thing can in no sort bee attributed and given to both They therefore which follow the one must needes shunne and flie from the other and they which shunne and flie from the one must needes follow and embrace the other For there can come no meane betweene two things so extreamely contrary And let this suffice to be briefely touched and spoken by the way concerning the first Linke of Saint Paules Chayne Of Predestination howe it is distinguished from Foreknowledge how many wayes it is taken of how many Degrees it consisteth what it is and how it is distinguished from Fore-knowledge CHAP. 5. THe second Linke of Pauls Chayne is Predestination and this Predestination is put vnder Fore-knowledge as vnder the first and larger Cause For Gods Fore-knowledge stretcheth it selfe vnto the whole compasse of the vniversall World and to all the parts thereof and to all the qualities and actions of the parts of it and as well to those thinges that shall be made as vnto those things that are made and beholdeth and comprehendeth as well the evill workes of the wicked as the good workes of God But Predestination is restrayned and bound vnto reasonable Creatures Who seeth not therefore that Fore-knowledge is a word of a larger signification and Predestination a word of a stricter signification Yet notwithstanding the Apostle doth restraine this generall word vnto the Salvation of the Elect in this present place and therefore rightly affirmeth that whom God knew before that is whom hee determined to save those also hath hee predestinate that they might bee made like vnto the Image of his Sonne to witte first in the Crosse and afterward in glory For Gods chosen Children must vnder-goe and suffer many reproches and slaunders a hard Warre-fare and Conflictes and diverse and sundry Persecutions and Oppressions as long as they remayne in this life for the name of Christ and the Profession thereof before they can come to that ioyfull Tryumph and heavenly Glorie There also shall they be like vnto Christ as they have beene Partakers of his Crosse heere in this life But before wee beginne or declare the Definition of Predestination three things must be cleared first whether there bee Predestination or no secondly in howe many Degrees this worde Predestination is contayned and expressed and lastly howe many wayes it is taken First therefore wee must diligently enquire whether there be Predestination or no lest this Labour and Treatise may seeme to be vndertaken and pursued in vayne But that there is Predestination it appeareth and may evidently bee prooved first by diverse and pregnant places of Scriptures and also by famous Myracles The Scripture certainely in many places prooveth and declareth that God doth alwayes choose some certaine Flocke out of the whole companie of Mankinde which hee loveth adorneth and beautifieth with eternall blessings over and above all the rest For the proofe of this many manifest places of Scripture may be produced and cited as namely these Many are called Cap. 20. vers 16. Cap. 15. vers 16. Cap. 10. vers 16. but fewe are chosen sayth Christ in Saint Matthewe And agayne You have not chosen me but I have chosen you sayth Christ in Saint Iohn And agayne And other Sheepe I have which are not of this Folde them also must I bring and they shall heare my voyce and there shall be one Fold and one Shepheard saith Christ in Saint Iohn Also he hath chosen vs in him before the foundations of the world were layd that wee should bee holy and without blame before him through love Cap. 1. v. 4. sayth Saint Paul to the Ephesians Againe I have much people in this City saith the Lord vnto Paul in the Actes of the Apostles Many such testimonies may bee produced out of the holy Scriptures which clearely and playnely shewe and teach that God hath mercifully chosen some to Salvation and hath iustly reiected some from it Neither of which come by any chance of Fortune or Will of man but both proceede from Gods eternall and vnchangeable Decree And where Election is allowed there cannot be allowed or approved the accepting of all Furthermore there are almost an innumerable company of sayings and sentences all about in the holy Scriptures in which God hath promised to a fewe even to such as love him eternall ioyes such as neyther eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor hath entred into the heart of man Hither belong all those Testimonies of Scripture which preach and teach of free Remission of sinnes of Vocation of Iustification and of Sanctification They therefore which doubt whether there be any Predestination and Election or no doe call in question the whole Scriptures of God and doe defame and accuse it of manifest vntrueth And further they seeme to accuse of lightnesse and to laugh at all the Promises concerning eternall Life and the Heavenly Glory which is to bee revealed and bestowed as though they were olde wives fables As if God had inserted vayne and fruitlesse wordes in his holy Scriptures which should feede man with vayne hope and not performe and make good the Promises indeede And to conclude they which waver and remayne doubtfull concerning Election doe also doubt whether there bee any certayne Iudgement of GOD whereby hee knoweth and discerneth as by a true and infallible marke the godly from the wicked and those that shall be saved from those that shall be damned and by making a doubt of that they make a doubt whether God be God or no which thinges seeing they are false and absurde wee must conclude as a most certayne and knowne Trueth that Election is a thing certayne and vndoubted of Over and besides these testimonies of Scripture and words of promise there are divers and sundry Myracles of the conservation of the Godly found in many places of the Scripture which God hath wrought since the beginning of the world whereby it is clearely and vndoubtedly confirmed that there are some chosen of God from among the rest and beloved of him more then others Hither belongeth the saving of Noah in the Flood Gen. 6.7 Gen. 13. the delivering of Lot from the destruction of Sodome the bringing of the people of Israell out of Egypt Exod. 12.13.14 hither also belong all the places of Scripture wherein we reade that GOD hath defended the good and beaten downe and destroyed the wicked These Myracles and wonderfull workes of God doe confirme more clearely then the Noone-light that there is a certayne Flocke which above the rest God loveth with a most tender affection and with his Fatherly care doth conserve and keepe wonderfully in this life and which hee defendeth and
holy although he willeth those things which the vngodly do because God willeth them with a farre other manner of counsell and end then the vngodly do will and do them So in the death of Christ the action of the wicked was so evill that in respect of them it could not be worse nor more vile for they slew the innocent and killed the Lord of glory and intended in that one consent and outrage of theirs to hinder the salvation of mankinde yet that very same action in respect of God was so good and holy that no other coulde bee better nor more holy because he by the death of his sonne would redeeme miserable sinners from eternall death and translate them into heavenly glory and eternall life Wherefore wicked and vniust men oftentimes vnwittingly and intending some other thing doe fulfill and performe the good and righteous will of God Yet notwithstanding afterward God iustly punisheth condemneth them because they pursue their owne wicked desires and vngodly enterprises and respect not nor regarde Gods will at all They preferre their owne perverse affections before God and before his will So the actions of Almighty God and of wicked men differ by their diverse purposes and are distinguished one from another in their diverse ends So also at this day God suffereth many sinnes to bee committed of wicked men throughout sundry Nations and in the greatest kingdomes where he doth not vouchsafe them his word nor reforme them by his spirite and doth not enlighten their mindes with the knowledge of himselfe nor governe and incline their willes and affections so that they may propose to themselves this principall end as their onely marke namely to endevour to execute Gods knowne will earnestly and continually and to frame and fashion themselves their life and their manners vnto it as vnto a continuall rule to walke by and to honor God by their obedience in eschewing of evill and dooing of good these things except God worke in them by his word and spirite whatsoever they intend or doe howsoever before men it may seeme good and iust yet all that in the sight of GOD is nothing else but vglie and execrable sinne For God doth not at all regard nor respect the outward workes except the integrity of the heart go with them and appeare in them therefore where that wanteth there sinnes are accounted for no sinnes and vertue with vices and one thing with an other are confounded and so there will be but little difference betweene honesty and dishonesty Heere the author returneth to his purpose and ioyneth the third degree of praedestination then the causes of praedestination are vnfoulded next the definition of it is given and lastly praedestination is distinguished from providence CHAP. 7. THese things it seemed good to touch by the way and lightly to handle concerning permission which is the second degree of predestination now we must come vnto the third degree of predestination Thirdly to predestinate heere is nothing els then to purpose to choose some and to adopt them for sonnes in Christ out of the vniversall company of wicked men For God by his mercifull foresight did ordayne and appoynt from amongst sinfull men and such as were past cure in respect of themselves to receive some vnto mercy without any merit of theirs to redeeme them through Christ and by him also to bring them vnto eternall life But heere more properly and peculiarly is meant the other acceptation of this word election as in the definition heereof a little before we have declared This word election is taken diversely in the scripture so that sometimes it hath reference vnto some office or duty and sometimes to life eternall After the former manner Saul and Iudas were elected the one of which was chosen to a Kingdome and the other to an Apostleship neyther of them to eternall life But seeing that no definition can rightly be made or vnderstoode vnlesse the causes of which it is compounded and made be well perceived and knowne therefore I thinke I shall not do amisse if first I lay open the causes of predestination before I set downe the definition of it As for the efficient and first moving cause of predestination there can no other be set downe and appoynted but onely the eternall and onely purpose and good pleasure of God For God onely is hee which by his most wise counsell and iudgement doth discerne betweene men and men and hath decreed from everlasting what shall become of every man God hath lively expressed and declared this in his word manifestly and playnely for men considered in themselves and by themselves are all alike corrupted so that some are no whit better then other some Therefore in the iudgement of man some cannot be preferd before others because there is one and the selfesame condicion of all But God the highest iudge of all hath elected some men to eternall life in Christ and hath in his iust iudgement appoynted others to everlasting destruction and whome he hath chosen vnto salvation those hath he chosen by his owne meere mercy and vndeserved grace hee regarded nothing that is without himselfe but whome he hath elected he did onely for himselfe and in himselfe and not for any other cause Moreover he could finde nothing in those whome he hath chosen that might be worthy of election because they were all defiled and strangers from God also he could foresee no good thing in them as proceeding from them for which they should be chosen If he foresaw any good thing in them himselfe wrought it wholy and altogether in them For there can be found no good thing in them nor elsewhere of which God is not the sole author and onely effector Therefore what good thing so ever is and abideth in them that God himselfe wholy beginneth and finisheth in them And he beginneth and finisheth nothing in them but he decreed from everlasting that he would begin it and finish it in them For if in time he should worke any thing in them how little soever which he decreed not before time then should there be found manifest change in God which should do some thing by a new will and not by his eternall will Those things which the Papists pratle of here concerning workes foreseene whose cause and beginning should be man are vayne and frivolous fictions which after in their places shall more largely be confuted and reiected seeing the efficient and first moving cause of election is onely and alone Gods mercy and goodnesse hee by his bountifull and more then fatherly good will hath from everlasting made and finished the whole decree of Election Ephes 2.5 moreover Election is altogether the free and vndeserved favour of God For all men by nature were wholy corrupt and the children of wrath therefore in them God could foresee nothing at all but extreame and most absolute wretchednes They also which take the name of election which is found in many places of the
scripture for a certaine singular excellency whereby a man may be worthy to be chosen so that he should be called elect which is excellent and singular they I say are the authors of fables and trifle with toyes seeing that every man is esteemed farre otherwise in this civile and earthly court then he is or iudged to be in the court of heaven Moreover no other cause of reprobation can be alleaged or produced out of the scriptures but the iust and vnchangeable will of God for as much as he in that his eternall and secret counsell hath of himselfe and by himselfe adiudged some men vnto eternall death destruction and that before they were and had done any evill For sinne can in no wise be the cause of reprobation For all have sinned and are alike polluted Ephes 2.3 and by nature the children of wrath so that all even every one should have perished if sinne had bin the cause of reprobation Sinne verily is the cause of those things that necessarily follow reprobation of which we shall speake more hereafter Although sinne that is committed of man be in it selfe a iust and efficient cause of damnation yet the cause of reprobation is not to be sought for in man but the first and chiefest cause thereof is even the free and righteous will of God But in as much as the reprobate are damned that they have deserved by their owne sinne this is the iust cause of damnation for if they had not sinned they should not have beene punished For God is every way so iust that he punisheth none except he be inthralled to sinne and most worthy of punishment And now seeing that it is proved by evident testimonies of the scripture that there is praedestination and that the doubtfulnes of the word and divers signification thereof is playnely discussed and that the causes thereof are produced and layd open it remayneth that wee should playnely define what this praedestination is which except it be done those things which follow to be handled cannot be conceaved and vnderstood Praedestination therefore is the eternall free iust and vnchangeable purpose of God by which of his mercy he hath determined to adopt some men for sonnes through Christ and hath appoynted them to eternall life and glory and hath not vouchsafed othersome that grace and favour but hath reiected them by his iust iudgement and appoynted them to eternall death This definition many places of the scripture do deliver and prove Rom. 9.13 Malac. 1.3 but chiefely the example of Iacob and Esau do wonderfully declare it These two although they were bretheren borne of the same parents although they were sinners both alike and by nature the children of wrath yet the wisedome of God did so discerne betweene them that by his free grace he loved and elected one of them and by his iust iudgement hated and reiected the other and that not according to the good or evill workes foreseene eyther of the one or of the other but according vnto his purpose he did choose Iacob Rom. 9.11 and hated Esau and that when as yet neyther of them were borne and had done neyther good nor evill The scriptures have set forth these two persons as it were two opposite and contrary arguments from which it inferreth two generall propositions namely that Almighty God from everlasting before all ages hath so discerned betweene men by his firme and vnchangeable wisedome that some without any merit of theirs should obtayne vndeserved grace and that some should have and vndergoe deserved iustice and due punishment This praedestination is distinguished from providence as a speciall thing from a generall or as a part from the whole seeing that predestination is not so common nor so large as providence For predestination hath his operation and working eyther in the saving or condemning of men although the created spirits namely the Angels may not vnfitly be referred herevnto But providence reacheth further spreading and extending it selfe vnto all the workes of God So that praedestination is as well the iust councell of God in forsaking the reprobate and casting him off into eternall punishment as the voluntary purpose of God in the salvation of the elect to be begun in this life and finished in the life to come Also providence is the eternall counsell of God and such an order and ratified governement in things that are created according to which all things are directed and do fall out to the glory of God and for the profit and salvation of the elect To this his governement even the temptations and sleights of Sathan are held in subiection which are so guided by the most wise God that they still turne to the good of his Saints although his devises are hurtfull in themselves yet God knoweth how to prevent them and to turne them to a contrary event Therefore although the endevours of Sathan are in their owne nature most pernitious yet by Gods direction they become wholesome vnto his children For God is such a workemaister as is able to alter and withdraw the effect from the cause so as the effect by an accident becommeth good and helpfull whose cause was most ill and hurtfull This providence of God although it reach vnto the creation of all things and to the ordering and governement of them yet it chiefely intendeth the counsels and actions of reasonable creatures and is so intentive about them that although they be very much confused and out of order yet it doth most wisely turne and bring them to those ends which from everlasting were foreordayned and appoynted for them So that all those things which God from everlasting by his vnsearchable wisedome did foresee and know before they were those things by his wonderfull and mervailous providence in the instant and moment of time appointed he doth create ordereth them being created maintaineth them being ordered governeth them being mayntayned and in governing them he doth so draw forth the course and line of his providence in this world that nothing can happen or be done in it then that which God from all eternity did fore-ordayne and appoynt All things do so depend and hang vpon this providence and power of God that without it not one action can be done nor one motion be produced in any creature For God is he by whose power and working is brought to passe all in all and that so as without this power and working of God neyther the godly can do that which is good nor the wicked commit that which is evill This providence of God is so ioyned and combined with his foreknowledge that the one of them seemeth as it were to shake hands with the other For what things soever God by this his vnsearchable foreknowledge did from all ages and from everlasting determine to doe those things being created in time he doth by his infinite providence bring vnto those appoynted ends even as he had decreed from everlasting What and how many are the
Hence it is clearely proved that God could foresee no good thing in man but that which hee himselfe doth worke in him Therefore the Papists in this poynt doe betray theyr owne grosse ignorance or wicked malice in that they are not ashamed to affyrme and to defend that Gods fore-knowledge is contrary to his grace especially seeing that wee heare nothing throughout the whole Scripture in the doctrine of Election but onely Gods good purpose and meere mercy and concerning workes fore-seene and mans merites there is not a word spoken Therefore the Papists seeing that they wrest this word of fore-knowing from the true and naturall sence thereof into a strange and mischievous vnderstanding by a glosse of their owne interpretation and vnderstand not the propiety of the phrase they fall into an errour of ambiguity of wordes and through the likenesse of words bring in a fallacy and by theyr like kinde of speaking as with a cloake they hide the colour of their mistaking of the word and as much as they can suppresse and diminish the truth Out of this which is spoken may be gathered not darkly nor doubtfully but cleerely and plainely what is the disposition of the Devill and wicked men which because they are enimyes vnto God and do hate him they cease not to darken and obscure his glory wheresoever they may And in this respect they shew their malice two manner of wayes First in that they do most earnestly hate and detest that which most especially pleaseth God and is acceptable vnto him Secondly in that they only love and most desire those things which God hath in the greatest hatred and abomination So likewise the Papists in this matter are most against that which pleaseth God most and on the contrary side do most approve and desire that which God hateth For God is most delighted with this and this is his certaine will that the elect should attaine salvation by his only free mercy But the Papists pleasure is that the elect should be saved by their owne worthines and merits Againe God doth reiect and altogether exclude mans merits in the matter of salvation but the Papists like of them and make them the causes of election salvation So that betwixt God and the Papists there is a most manifest and vehement contrariety Therefore they are not lovers of God but his sworne enimies And that they are such they do sufficiently declare by this in that they make works foreseene the causes of salvation In which thing they commit two grievous offences namely first in that they set nothing by the first and true cause in respect of their owne merits and so erect an imaginary and false cause thereof Secondly in that they labour to withdraw mankind from God and having withdrawne thē from him as much as in them lieth sell them as bondslaves to the devill So that the Papists on the one side are cruell and iniurious against men and on the other side sacrilegious and blasphemous against God because they alwayes hinder his glory and derogate from his Maiesty as much as their ability can stretch vnto On the contrary S. Paul although before his conversion he was in the Iewish profession vnreproveable and after his conversion farre more holy then all the popelings yet he to the Philippians Phi. 3.6.8 not onely constantly and boldly excludeth all workes and merites as well going before as following after faith but also accounteth them for dung that in steed of them having gayned Christ of an vngodly and wretched man he might become iust and rich Heere also we must know that the Papists as they do forsake God and resist his grace so also they do not onely shut vp the dore of his mercy against themselves but even pluck on their owne necks an horrible curse and most certayne destruction For cursed is he sayth Ieremy Iere. 17.5 that trusteth in man Therefore this glosse of the Papists concerning good works fore-seene is to be reiected as wicked and blasphemous because it is not onely not found in all the holy Scriptures but also is most extreamely contrary vnto them For God in the electing of man had respect vnto himselfe and had no regard vnto works eyther past or to come which the Apostle to the Ephesians delivereth in expresse words Ephes 1.5 saying he hath predestinated vs whom he hath adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will In that he sayth in himselfe he teacheth that God in choosing vs saw nothing but himselfe which he made any account of Therefore Gods goodnes and love is the onely roote of our election Whereas he sayth according to the good pleasure of his will that is put downe for the better cleering and expressing of the truth and by that we are taught that Gods free goodnes could not but with great difficulty by perswasion have beene beaten into vs. And what I pray you could God foresee in vs in our election seeing that our whole being Act. 17.28 and what good thing so ever we have 1. Cor. 4.7 we have received it and inioy it by him onely Wherefore that the true cause of election may be held of vs we must in no wise frequent the schoole of the Papists but we must search and follow the holy Scripture which is the onely Schoolemaister and the most faithfull expositor of eternall salvation Sathan hath inspired and suggested into the Papists this opinion of workes foreseene that by it he might withdraw men from the true cause of their salvation and so cast them headlong into eternall destruction For Sathan well knew that mans whole salvation would fall to the ground except it were wholy fetched and derived from God Surely there cannot be given vnto mankinde a greater nor more pernicious hurt then this opinion is and there is no vice worse then this divelish pride which snatcheth from God his chiefest honour and stealeth away the prayse of his mercy Therefore this more then frantike opinion of faith foreseene is vtterly to be cast off and refused Heere is shewed by cleere and vnanswereable arguments how horribly and grievously the Papists do offend against Gods divine Maiesty by their pestilent opinion of faith or workes foreseene CHAP. 13. FOr the Papists in that divelish opinion do offend against God against his Maiesty many waies and do commit many sacrilegious offences First they do offend against the fatherly goodnes free mercy of God For Gods mercy is the onely fountayne of all goodnes in such sort that there is no good which may any where be found but it floweth and springeth of that fountayne Moreover God is so good and mercifull that he will be acknowledged and honoured for no other vertue nor property more then for his free goodnes and mercy Hence it commeth to passe that the holy scripture when it speaketh of Gods mercy doth heape and recken vp as it were in a catalogue many words signifying one and
mercy of God and might so much the more strongly be confirmed Secondly the Election might be so much the more made knowne and manifest For contraries being set one against an other and compared together are made the more apparant and familiar vnto vs as also that men may knowe that this world is so governed by the providence of God that nothing else can happen vnto men but that which was fore-ordayned and appointed for them by God before the world was made Lastly this doctrine is to be vrged that the Elect might so much the more carefully eschew and avoyd sinne and exercise themselves in all the study of godlinesse and also that the reprobates may knowe what and what manner of things shall fall to theyr share and what they have deserved by theyr sinnes and wickednesse So that this doctrine is very profitable and necessary on both sides Therefore it ought dayly and diligently to be propounded and preached both to the godly and to the wicked Therefore let all religious and godly Ministers of the word of God apply themselves to this namely to preach this Decree of God publikely in the Church as the Scripture commandeth and let them not esteeme nor care for the Popes censures and curses which are like lightning breaking forth without any naturall cause appearing and not to be feared But the Papists with theyr conventicles cry out that this is an horrible opinion and not to be tollerated in the Church and this they do very craftily For they see that by this doctrine that fable which they have dispersed concerning free will and many other trifles which they chaunt out in theyr Synagogues with bigge words and lofty sentences will altogether vanish and fall to the ground Therefore they goe about to wound and stabbe the doctrine of the Apostles and of Christ concerning reprobation through the sides of the Ministers Others pretend a shadow of desperation and that this doctrine should not be preached lest men should bee cast downe and fall into desperation This danger is not so much to be feared but that the Ministers may pronounce all those things which God hath revealed in his holy word I doe confesse indeed that they must speake wisely of reprobation vnto the people and I thinke also that a wary Caveate should be vsed in the preaching thereof lest a good cause and a profitable doctrine by evill dealing and preposterous handling should be spoyled and made vnprofitable And yet so that nothing which the holy Ghost hath delivered in the Scripture concerning that matter should bee omitted by silence Let the whole world goe to wracke rather then that any thing should be diminished from the trueth of God Let the Ministers therefore faythfully and diligently handle that doctrine and commit the event vnto God and let them know that the Papistes or others cannot nor ought not to forbid those things which God will have opened before the whole world For are they the masters and teachers of God that they ought to teach and prescribe vnto him what ought to be preached This Decree of Election and reprobation is so sure and certayne on both sides that none of the Elect can be reprobated and condemned nor any of the reprobates can bee elected and saved and it is shewed by sure testimonies of Scripture that there are more of the reprobates then of the Elect. CHAP. 21. TWelfthly this Decree of Predestination is a sure and certayne Decree because that with God there is a certayne and set number as well of the reprobate as of the Elect so that the number both of the one and of the other can neyther encrease nor bee diminished For the state and condition of the one and of the other is an vnchangeable order so that the reprobates cannot be elected and saved nor the Elect cannot bee reprobated and condemned Otherwise Gods Decree concerning the one and the other could not be constant and fayth it selfe wanting a sure ground-worke should bee wavering in continuall suspence and should no where have any certayne proppe whereon safely to relye and so should become rather an vnconstant and wavering opinion then a setled and steadfast fayth Therefore as his Fatherly good pleasure of Election is vnchangeable so also is his severe Decree of reprobation Mat. 25.46 So that the Elect shall goe forth into everlasting Life and ioy and the reprobates shall goe into everlasting death and torment Now the Scripture playnely teacheth that there is a certayne number of the Elect. Iohn 10.14 17. Christ himselfe in Saint Iohn expressely and plainely affirmeth that hee knoweth his sheepe that is his Elect and that none is able to take them out of his hand If Christ as he sayth knowe his Sheepe therefore every one by himselfe is knowne of him So that with him there is a certayne number of them for if the number of them were vncertayne he could not be able directly to know them For of a thing vncertaine none can have certayne knowledge So also Saint Paul sayth that the foundation of God standeth sure and hath this seale 2. Tim 2.19 The Lord knoweth them that are his God also hath numbred all the haires of the heads of his children how much more therefore doth he know how many are his Furthermore God knew all and every thing before they were created and nothing is able to escape or be hidde from his infinite Wisedome How therefore should he not discerne and know all his Elect chosen in generall and every one in particular whom he loveth and tendereth with singular care above all thinges Surely if hee should not knowe them every one in particular he could have no great care of them and so they should of necessity perish but they shall never perish therefore they are knowne of him and preserved vnto Salvation Moreover the Scripture manifestly teacheth that there is a set number of the reprobates Mat. 25.32 For Christ shall separate them from the Elect and condemne them in the last great iudgement of the whole world Therefore he knoweth severally and distinctly who they are otherwise hee could not separate them from the Elect vnlesse they were knowne to him by their particular persons severally every one by himselfe And further God which numbreth and knoweth the starres of the Skie the sand of the Sea and all things that are contayned in heaven and in earth from the least vnto the greatest and from the greatest vnto the least knoweth them also For he that knoweth greater and infinite things cannot bee ignorant of the lesser and finite things And for a man to thinke or say that there is not a set number of the Elect and Reprobate that were to deny God and to thinke that there is no God For there is nothing more agreeable or proper vnto God then to discerne and know all things in generall and every thing in particular farre more playnely and distinctly then wee can know those things that lie
open vnder our eyes And therefore if any things though never so little should be exempt from the knowledge of God his wisedome and providence should not be infinite which ought to extend it selfe as well above all things as through all things and so God should not be God whose knowledge were straightened vnto a fewe things and particular and not enlarged vnto all things and vniversall Also here is further to be noted briefely and by the way that there are many more reprobated then elected This may first by most manifest testimonies of Scripture and then by dayly experience be truely verified and declared Christ himselfe playnely affirmeth and pronounceth in Saint Matthew that many are called Mat. 22.14 but few are chosen Luke 12.32 For this cause also in Saint Luke Christ calleth the number of the Elect a little flocke Also the Parable of the seede in Saint Matthew Mat. 13.4 doth in evident and expresse words explane and set forth this when as onely the fourth part of men are capable of the heavenly and spirituall seede and bring forth fruite And the rest eyther doe not receyve that spirituall seede Mat. 13.19 or else suffer it not to growe but set theyr studies and desires vpon things below which shall perish so that they neglect and and contemne the treasure of eternall Life By this Similitude Christ himselfe declareth who are elect and who reprobate the Elect are compared to the good and fruitfull ground and bring forth fruite eyther more or lesse according to the measure of the grace that is bestowed vpon them But the reprobate are compared eyther to barren and stony ground or to thornes which doe choke the heavenly seed by one meanes or an other and bring forth no fruite So that in Gods iust iudgement they are left in the corruption of nature and are not renewed therefore they are reprobates and shall be condemned And although that there are more reprobated then elected yet the number of the Elect is so great that it contayneth infinite millions of men so that with Moses they are compared vnto the starres of the skie and the sands of the Sea Agayne dayly experience teacheth vs that the number of the reprobate is greater then the number of the elect For how many and how great kingdomes and regions are there where the blessed Gospel of the Sonne of God was never preached nor heard of For none can attayne true Fayth and Salvation in Christ without the word of God preached or taught For faith sayth the Scripture Rom. 10.17 commeth of hearing and hearing by the word of God They therefore which neyther have not heare the word of God cannot attayne vnto fayth and so to Salvation And to dreame of some secret inspiration without the ministery of the worde is an hare-braind conceyt which needeth no confuting For although God bee not tyed vnto the outward word and that an extraordinary way may bring men vnto fayth yet he hath so tyed vs vnto the word that without it in this matter we cannot iudge any thing Therefore how many millions of men as well yong as old have departed out of this life before they have heard any thing at all concerning Christ and his Gospel Such ought rather to be left vnto the iudgement of God then to bee iudged by the censures of men For it is evident that Salvation commeth from nothing els but from fayth and faith proceedeth from nothing Tit. 1.1 Iohn 17.3 but from a true and sincere knowledge of God of Christ And this true knowledge of God and of Christ cannot bee had el ewhere but from the Gospel onely Therefore how can they obtayne fayth and Salvation which have neyther heard nor read the Gospel But seeing this kind of men is one of the foure secret mysteries of God which man ought not to search out and determine as Augustine elsewhere speaketh we must leave them to God and must hope that for his great Mercy sake if they bee not converted to day they may bee to morrow converted Concerning false christians which are mingled among the true ones as tares amongst the good corne I say nothing in this place That Similitude of the seede and of the Sower in Saynt Matthew doth playnely show Matt. 13.3.4 that there are many of them For we are taught by that Similitude that all are not true Christians before God which heare Gods word and professe themselves to be such for because that many bragge and boast of the shew and title of godlinesse whose heart notwithstanding is most farre from it Therefore our fayth will bee shaken and waver except wee remember that many of them are false brethren which speake and boast of the name of Christ Let not their falling away which surely will come overthrow our fayth and bring it to ruine As by the multitude of them that shall be damned the greatnesse of Gods wrath against them may be gathered so also by the scarcitie of those that shall be saved the aboundance of the Love of God towards them may be collected And men ought to examine by theyr fayth in what account they are with God CHAP. 22. ANd in as much as there are more condemned then saved it may from hence easily be gathered how great the wrath of God is against rebellious and vnrepentant persons which being oftentimes admonished by the word of God or endued with other good benefites or afflicted with such or such calamities yet repent not nor cease from sinne Agayne by how much the greater and more severe the wrath of God is against the rebellious stiffe-necked by so much the greater and more notable is his Love and Mercie towardes the penitent and such as cease from evill So that the fewer they are the dearer they are vnto God for rare thinges are vsually more fervently beloved and more carefully tendered This scarcity of the Elect and multitude of the reprobates ought to trouble no man nor weaken any mans fayth neyther is the grace and mercy of God for that to be thought straitned into a narrow roome and Christians ought not to despayre for this cause but to be in the better hope For where the Gospel of Christ is preached and taught and the holy Ghost made powerfull by it there God hath his Elect. Therefore all they which embrace the Gospel of Christ and by a true faith put theyr whole trust and confidence of the obtayning of Salvation in the sole mercy of God and in the onely Sacrifice of Christ and are not strangers from the holy Spirite but doe bewayle theyr sinne and have an hearty desire and care to profite in true faith and amendment of life they may surely perswade themselves that they are elected from everlasting and that they shall never perish For the Scripture doth every where reduce men vnto Christ and to true fayth in him that men might confirme themselves concerning their Election and pronouncerh such blessed And
sayth expressely Cap. 2.13 that God pardoneth all our trespasses I have put away sayth God by Isayas all thy sinnes as a cloud and thine iniquities as a mist Isay 44.22 Againe in the same Prophet he speaketh thus I am he which putteth away thine iniquities Isay 43.25 and that for mine owne sake and will remember thy sinnes no more So also David teacheth vs Psal 103.12 that God removeth our sinnes as farre from vs as the East is from the West So also Michah teacheth vs Michah 7.19 that God will cast all our sinnes into the bottome of the sea and blot them quite out Likewise S. Iohn in the Revelation affirmeth Revel 1.5 that Christ hath loved vs and washed vs from our sinnes in his bloud The same Isayas likewise affirmeth Isay 1.18 saying though your sinnes were as Crimsin they shall be made white as snow though they were red as Scarlet they shall be as wooll So the holy Prophets and Apostles speake all as with one mouth and constantly affirme that not some of our sinnes onely are forgiven vs of God but that all our sinnes are pardoned vnto vs how great and fearefull how many and sundry soever they be But God doth not only wipe out those sinnes that are committed and past but doth also pardon the dayly slips of the penitent This let no man storme at as a paradox vnheard of For if God would punish the dayly falls of his children and take vengeance on them for theyr sinnes that are to come and yet pardon those that are past what would it profit I pray you So that the great and incredible goodnes and mercy of God doth extend and stretch it selfe as well to the pardoning of sinnes that are to come as to the remitting of those that are past otherwise the mercy of forgivenes of sinnes should be but halfe a mercy onely and not perfect and absolute None of vs ought to take vnto himselfe liberty to sinne from this fatherly compassion of God for this were to make a mocke of God and to tread his grace vnder foote and to shew that a man is a stranger from God and from his spirit For the least sinne cannot be committed of any man without manifest contempt of God But it should rather be an encouragement and provocation vnto vs to the more earnest study of godlynes for by how much the greater benefits God hath bestowed vpon vs by so much the greater obedience are we bound to yeeld him which we cannot performe without a studious care to avoyd evill and to do good They therefore which sinne rashly and securely do indeede shewe that they are prophane and have nothing to do with God Iude. 4. This the scripture delivereth playnely saying that they are appoynted of old vnto condemnation which from the grace of God take to themselves liberty to sinne securely and let loose the reynes to their owne lusts and obey them for they which so abuse the grace of God and his lenity in pardoning vnto wantonnes do not onely abrogate the kingdome of Christ and deny that there is a God but also do shew that they are wholy given over vnto Sathan as his very bondslaves But the godly which do feare and obey God as their father and Lord though there were no hell nor punishment to be feared yet they would vtterly abhorre to sinne and displease God Wherefore that infinite goodnes of God in forgiving sinne should be vnto no man an enticement to sinne but a teacher vnto every one to live holy and without blame For he which liveth wickedly loseth the price of his redemption and belongeth not vnto Christ as long as he sinneth securely and defileth and poluteth himselfe with abhomination But they which earnestly labour to order and frame themselves according to the rule of Gods law they do indeed and lively declare that they have the holy spirit and belong vnto Christ Moreover it ought to move nor trouble no man because that some of the promises of the forgivenes of sins before rehearsed are spoken without any generall note and seeme to be as it were particular So that we must know that notwithstanding they are indeed vniversall and generall for indefinite propositions are equall vnto generall propositions This the multitude of them doth argue and shew Or if a particular word or a word that signifieth but one thing be set downe Iohn 1.29 as The Sonne of God taketh away the sinne of the world then the generall word is signified which conteineth vnder it all and every particular kind And he that taketh away the generall thing it must needs be that he must take away also all and every particular kind thereof For sinne that is heere put in the singular number although it be referred by some vnto the common vice corruption of nature and that not amisse yet nothing hindreth but that it may be taken figuratively for every iniquity Synecdoche as if the Evangelist should have said whatsoever corruption or vnrighteousnes is amongst men by which God may be offended or alienated from mē all that is taken away and satisfied for everlastingly by the only sacrifice of Christ made once for all This benefite of Christ ought to be enlarged and applied as well vnto all actuall sinnes as vnto the originall sinne and corruption of nature that all occasion of cavilling should be shut vp from the Papists which in their Synagogues do babble and blatter that Christ hath satisfied only for originall sinnes not for actuall for which they impudently say that we ought to make satisfaction So that sinne in the singular number with the Evangelist is as an il-favoured head vnder which many vnseemely members are couched and it is as an vncleane fountaine out of which many vncleane chanels do spring flow and as an evill and corrupt tree out of which much evill and corrupt fruit do bud and grow all which and every of which the Lambe of God hath taken away with his pretious bloud In this free forgivenesse of sinnes the most excellent glory of the Mercy of God shineth brightly and triumpheth infinitely over the rest of the workes of God Therefore the Prophet sayth in expresse words Psal 145.9 God is loving vnto every one but his mercy is above all his workes For the Hebrew word which the Prophet vseth in the place rehearsed signifieth an inward Mercy such as remaineth in the very bowels which the Scripture is wont to vse when there is any speech of the Free-mercy of God and the receyving of a wretched sinner vnto grace Therefore the Prophet doth preferre the infinite mercy of God farre before all temporall benefites as if hee should have sayd The goodnesse of God is great in that he mercifully vpholdeth this world in that hee favourably provideth for all creatures and maintayneth and keepeth them in their estate but that goodnesse of God by which hee plucketh miserable man out of
everlasting death and redeemeth and saveth him in Christ is by infinite degrees greater and more excellent This Mercy of God is the onely refuge for miserable sinners a most sure Sanctuary from all danger and a most welcome refreshing The whole Scripture teacheth vs and dayly experience prooveth it true that God is easiie to be intreated and mercifull vnto none but vnto such only which reverently and humbly fly vnto his Mercie with an vnfeigned confession of theyr sinnes and bewayling of theyr guiltinesse Whosoever therefore seeke for acquitall from sinne without the grace of God and merite of Christ doe set light by the mercy of God and the blood of Christ and shall never attayne to the remission of theyr sinnes For no pleading of a mans own worthines hath any place before Gods heavenly iudgement seate Luke 18.14 but an humble deploring of sinne is there accepted They therefore which desire to bee iustified and to be acquited both from the punishment and from the offence must altogether withdraw themselves from the righteousnesse of workes and betake themselves wholy vnto the Mercy of God onely for hee alone can put away sinne and wipe out the guiltinesse thereof For whomsoever the goodnesse of God and merite of Christ hath not delivered from sinne let him see and try what it is that can set him free from the law and the penalty thereof From this it may be concluded for a most certaine and an approoved thing that wretched men can no other wayes be freed from theyr sinnes but by the Mercy of God onely This therefore is the first and chiefest prop and foundation of our fayth and Salvation that wee are accepted of God not that we deserve this by our owne worthinesse but that our sinnes are forgiven vs by the Mercy of God and not layd to our charge So that God doth iustifie his children by forgiving them their sinnes and imputing the obedience of Christ his life vnto them for righteousnesse Now no man ought to marvell that we are iust before God not by our owne inherent righteousnesse but by that which being in Christ is imputed vnto vs through fayth Certaynely in our selves wee are vnrighteous and cannot by any power of our owne attayne vnto righteousnesse before God But Christ satisfying for our sinnes by his death brought to passe that this satisfaction should be imparted vnto vs and that wee in respect of this should bee accounted iust before God For even as he made our sinnes his so also on the other side he maketh his righteousnesse our righteousnesse In Psal 22. as Saynt Augustine sayth As therefore Christ in our sinnes was guilty so likewise wee in his righteousnesse purchased by him in his death are reputed and become righteous This the Apostle playnely testifieth when he sayth 1. Cor. 1.30 that Christ is made vnto vs of God righteousnesse By which wordes hee signifieth that Christ was appoynted of God for vs a Priest and a Sacrifice to witte that by offering vp himselfe hee might purge our sinnes and obtayne remission of sinnes for vs in which our righteousnesse consisteth before God and also that this obedience which hee yeelded vnto his Father by tasting of death for vs should be imputed vnto vs for righteousnesse And although this obedience of Christ his death is properly that thing which is imputed vnto vs of God for righteousnesse as which God esteemeth as if it had beene done by vs and that wee our selves had satisfied his iust iudgement yet wee must know that the obedience of the life of Christ which he yeelded vnto the Lawe by living holily and that holinesse of the nature of Christ by which he was holy from his Conception are not by this altogether excluded from the matter of Iustification For that holinesse of Christ both of his nature and life was necessary for this purpose that the Sacrifice of Christ might bee imputed and imparted vnto vs for righteousnesse For Christ could not have satisfied for our sinnes by his Sacrifice and so have obtayned remission of them for vs if he had not been an holy Priest and also offered vp an holy Sacrifice Hence is it that Saynt Paul vnto the Hebrewes sayth Hebr. 7.26 27. Such an high Priest became vs which is holie harmelesse vndefiled separate from sinners and made higher then the heavens which needed not dayly as those high Priestes namely the Leviticall to offer vp sacrifice first for his owne sinnes and then for the peoples for that did hee once when he offered vp himselfe Beholde a most cleere and evident testimonie of the holinesse of our Priest Of the holinesse of our Sacrifice 1. Pet. 1 18 19. Saint Peter speaketh when he sayth that wee were not redeemed with gold nor silver but with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lambe vndefiled and without spot By these wordes Saint Peter signifieth that those lambes which were killed in the old Testament and did resemble Christ as types and figures ought therefore to bee without blemish that by this the innocency and holinesse of Christ our Sacrifice should bee shadowed forth vnto vs. For Christ as Iohn Baptist sayth is that Lambe of God that is that Sacrifice ordayned of God to take away the sinne of the world By these thinges it may now be vnderstood how and how farre forth the holinesse both of the life and nature of Christ appertayneth vnto this matter of Iustification namely how farre forth it was necessary to this purpose that Christ by his holy Sacrifice or obedience of his death might deserve remission of sinnes for vs in which remission of sinnes consisteth our righteousnesse before God as wee may vnderstand by the wordes of Paul to the Romanes Rom. 5.19 And hence also may this bee gathered whenas Paul to the Romans sayth that by the obedience of one to wit Christ we are made righteous that he meaned it of the obedience of his death which Christ yeelded to his Father by tasting of death for vs. For wee are reconciled vnto God by the death of Christ Rom. 5 9 10 and iustified by his blood as the same Apostle sayth in the same Chapter Furthermore this Iustification is not onely free and perfect but also everlasting in as much as sinne ought not to be imputed vnto them that are iustified any more for ever For whom God hath once receyved into favour having blotted out their sinnes and offences those doth hee still preserve in his favour as righteous so that they can fall from grace and perish by no manner of sinnes they being and remayning pardoned in them For God wil never remember those sinnes to which the regenerate are as yet subiect This the Scripture expresseth and diligently affirmeth in many places For God by Isaias sayth I will remember thine iniquities no more Isay 43.12 Agayne he sayth by Ieremie Ierem. 31.34 I will be mercifull vnto theyr iniquities and remember their sinnes and transgressions no more These
the word he sheweth vs what things he wil have done or not done by vs and by his Spirite there is strength ministred vnto vs to performe them This regeneration is especially wrought continued in the mind will and heart of man So that God sheweth forth and declareth his goodnesse towards his children here three manner of wayes First hee doth enlighten and dispell the blindnes of the mind by the Sun-shine of his Spirit For whatsoever man savoureth of his owne selfe Rom. 8.6 7. is enmity against God bringeth death with it This blindnesse of mans mind is not simply the ignorance of God and of himselfe but it is a stubborne rebellion and prowd presumption against God So that by how much a man excelleth and is indued with the greater quicknes of nature by so much the more doth he resist and strive against God himselfe and his owne Salvation Because such an one feareth not to charge the wisedome of God with extreame folly For all men as long as they are not renewed with this new and heavenly light do thinke the holy mysteries of God to be foolishnesse So Paul whilst hee preached Christ crucified vnto the Grecians sayth 1. Cor. 1.23 that to them he preached foolishnes So that the enlightning of this rebellious and hurtfull blindnesse is a great and inestimable benefite of God After this inlightning followeth a right iudgement and opinion of God of his will and of his workes because that then men begin to know God rightly and to iudge of him accordingly when they be inlightened by the spirit of God Secondly it changeth and reformeth the will of man which is extreamely contrary vnto the law of God And of evill it maketh it good and of vnwilling and stubborne it maketh it ready and obedient Phil. 2.13 So the will of man doth then begin to be good when it is reformed and renewed by God Here also the infinite goodnesse of God sheweth it selfe whilest that it maketh man of an adversary and foe to become a friend and heyre of heavenly glory which otherwise in himselfe is so corrupted and depraved that hee hath mind to nothing but evill and hateth God extremely This will of man howsoever by nature it be so wicked and perverse as to resist and withstand God and his will yet no will can be so wicked and stubborne but God if he will can mollifie it and make it good as Augustine sayth well Now God will doe this in the Elect Ezech. 36.26 27. because that of his owne accord hee hath promised that he will doe it Thirdly it converteth and reneweth the stubborne vnapt and disobedient heart and so doth weaken and debilitate the strength of sinne in his children and doth create in them an earnest study and desire to live godly and maketh them altogether forward vnto all piety Lastly it stirreth vp in them good workes and endueth them with sincere and holy behaviour Phil. 2.13 So God worketh in them both to will that which is good and doe that which is right So that all power to live godly proceedeth and commeth not from theyr owne power but from God onely which worketh in them effectually by his Spirit For this spirituall renewing is called in many places of the Scripture by an excellencie The creation and worke of God because that it is his worke to illuminate the blind vnderstandings of men with the knowledge of himselfe and to change theyr crooked willes and hard heartes and to frame them vnto the obedience of his owne will For these are so hard and difficult workes that they can bee brought to passe and effected by none other but by God onely Therefore the Lord by EZechiel promiseth that he will cause that we shal walke in his commandements shewing that regeneration and power to doe well is a worke farre surmounting all creatures The vse of this doctrine is divers First that the grace of God by which onely the Elect are changed into new creatures may be maintayned agaynst that divellish invention of free will which the Papists dreame of But here the Papists offend grievously for looke how much they attribute vnto the power of man so much doe they detract from the grace of God and merit of Christ For the grace of God and the power of man are in this matter two contraries which cannot be maintayned of one and the selfe same subiect at one time Therefore Saynt Austine in one place sayth very well that that is not free which the grace of God hath not made free For the Scripture as we have sayd before doth not leave a man so much as a good thought which is the least part of a good worke 2. Cor. 3.5 For such is the blindnesse and frailty of mans wit that it is not onely vnable to conceyve and bring forth of it selfe any thing rightly or truely but also that it frameth and inventeth to it selfe many and most dangerous errors even from most true principles An evident example of this we may see in the free-will of the Papists But that most fond dreame of theyrs vanisheth like a vapour by this doctrine of regeneration and the spirit of God onely is prooved to bee the onely beginning and true cause of every good worke Agayne seeing God doth regenerate man and make him fit for good works that other fiction which the Papists have dreamed concerning workes fore-seene is overthrowne and beaten to pieces For seeing no man can doe good except by the grace of God hee be changed into a new creature it thence followeth that God could fore-see no other workes in man but such as hee himselfe should worke in him whence a man may easily gather which considereth the matter any thing at all that this opinion concerning workes fore-seene is a meere and forged fable Moreover the Papists and the more grosse sort of Vbiquitaries do in this place after their manner erre and invent a new fiction whenas they thinke that there is some secret and hidden power in tne water of Baptisme which is able to convert and renew a man And from thence they labour to inferre that they which are baptized are regenerate in the very act of Baptisme This vnsavory invention is the fosterer of noysome errours But the falshood thereof is found first in this that it evidently appeareth by the holy Scriptures that all are not regenerate which are baptized as we may see not onely in Simon Magus but also in many others eyther openly wicked or hypocrites vnder hand and secretly which although they have beene baptized and receyved Baptisme as a true marke of their regeneration yet theyr lives sufficiently declare that they were not regenerate For although that the Sacraments are meanes or instruments by which the holy Ghost is effectuall in the Ministery of the Church yet in his power and efficacy hee hath not tyed himselfe vnto them neyther doth hee so worke by them that that working should alwayes shew it selfe
and exercise the strength thereof in the very act of administring them Agayne they doe offend and sinne exceedingly and out of measure agaynst the office of the holy Spirite and the blood of Christ For the holy Spirite is the onely efficient cause and principall worker of regeneration and the bloud of Christ is the meritorious cause thereof therefore they attribute that vnto the outward water of baptisme which is due only vnto the holy spirit the bloud of Christ so fall into a fallacy from that which is no cause as if it were a cause for they do cast that vnto the false and fayned cause which ought to be attributed vnto the true and proper cause and so as much as in them lyeth do overthrow and vndermine the principall heads of Christian religion And whereas they inferre that the purer and preciser sort of Divines do deny that Baptisme is the washing of the new birth Tit. 3.5 as Paul to Titus speaketh This is an vnsavory and a vile cavill for they doe not onely admit and like of those words of Paul in their true and naturall meaning but do receive them as a most sound confirmation and strengthening of our cause for Paul there playnely pronounceth that the power of the holy spirit doth effect and worke regeneration in vs. But our adversaryes do misvnderstand those words of Paul and do abuse them whilest they wrest them into an other sence as seducers vse to do and apply them amisse and so do fall into a fallacy of the ambiguity of a word whilest they interpret that ill which they apply worst of all Among true and sound Divines it is a thing firmely resolved and agreed vpon that the Sacraments do not bring grace but do for the strengthening of faith seale vp that which was bestowed before as we may see in Abraham Rom. 4.10 as in the common example and father of all them which beleeve Lastly they erre not a little by this their most vayne fiction whilest that they place the first beginning of salvation and the ground thereof in the water of baptisme for so they forge and frame the causes of salvation from the instruments that are vsed as meanes and from the manner of applying them but with deepe silence they do passe by and with wonderfull craft neglect the true and proper cause of salvation namely everlasting and free election and the onely merit of Christ that they might the more easily deceive and cast a mist before the eyes of the ignorant For there is no greater nor more plentifull occasion to beguile and deceive then where false and imaginary causes are supposed for true and proper causes Moreover this regeneration heere is alwayes defective and imperfect and a small beginning of a new life and a certayne onset vnto it This is prooved by manifest testimonyes of Scripture and also by dayly experience of the godly The testimonyes of Scripture say that we ought to be changed into the image of God from glory to glory 2. Cor. 3.18 Rom. 1.17 and to go forward dayly more and more from faith to faith Also that the children of God ought to walke in his commaundements Eze. 36.27 Tit. 2.14 and to keepe his statutes and to be zealous of good workes These and the like places of Scripture doe teach vs that the elect are not the first day polished vnto the highest perfection but that by little and little as it were by degrees they are brought from one vertue vnto an other vntill after this life they shall come vnto the highest perfection for they are not perfect which must be changed from one glory to another and goe forward from faith to faith Secondly they which walke in the commaundements of God are yet in the way and are not come vnto the end of theyr race therefore they are vnperfect For wayfaring men are often weeryed and now and then stumble and fall by reason of these or these lets and hindrances so also the regenerate men beeing as it were weeryed in the course and study of godlines doe slip often and fall into these and these sinnes Therefore the Apostle Saint Iohn sayeth playnely 1. Iohn 1.8 that they which say they have no sinnes deceive themselves and the truth is not in them Also the most holy Prophets do playnely and freely confesse of themselves that theyr best workes are poluted and stayned with many and great imperfections Esay 64. for in them alwayes the dregges of sinfull flesh remayne and abide and very often the sparkles of theyr lewde affections doe breake forth and shewe themselves but these hinder them not because they have a promise of a pardon These things the testimonies of Scripture teach vs that the children of God do onely obtayne some beginnings of a new life heere so that regeneration heere is maymed and vnperfect For the holy spirit doth so illuminate and renew the mindes of the elect 1. Cor. 13.9 that heere they doe know but in part and doth so change and refine their wills that they can will and do that which is good but in part as long as they live in this life So that whether a man respect the vnderstanding of the regenerate or whether a man consider theyr will hee shall easily finde that they are vnperfect for they which are renewed still day by day are not as yet wholy renewed but the children of God as long as they live heere are renewed day by day therefore they are not as yet perfect nor wholy renewed Besides these there are many other tokens whereof the scripture is very plentifull as which are wrought successively by the children of God eyther in reioycing at the benefites of God or sorrowing at theyr owne sinnes and surely these do bewray theyr imperfections So that infirmity alwayes abideth and dwelleth in them with which they must strive even vnto the death of the body with an entercourse of going backward and going forward as Augustine sayth in one place Secondly dayly experience it selfe doth convince and prove the imperfection of the godly For the most holy men of all ages have offended and sinned very often which they could not have done if they had not bin vnperfect for they which by regeneration are quite perfected are set out of all danger of sinning any more furthermore God hath no where promised that he will indue his children in this life with exquisite perfection therefore they cannot be made perfect heere for God doth not perfourme more in this worke of regeneration by the power of his spirit then he hath declared in the revealed word of promise and they themselves by their owne power cannot make themselves better and more holy then God will have them to be Also the most holy Apostles themselves say Iames. 3.2 that in many things they sinne all Iohn also in his Epistle pronounceth most plainely saying 1. Iohn 1.8 If we say that we have no sinne we deceive
in themselves and in respect of themselves be infected and stayned with many faults and blemishes yet in respect of God which wipeth away all those blemishes they are holy and righteous and so their righteousnes doth much more consist in the forgivenes of sinnes then in the perfection of vertue and good works as Augustine in one place sayth very well The Scripture in some places compareth this favour of God vnto the compassion which a father hath toward his sonne for fathers do so love their children that albeit they see such or such blemishes in their bodyes they do not yet thrust or drive them out of doores yea rather if they have children that are lame or tender eyed or otherwise marked or misshapen by any other blemish their fatherly love and naturall affections are sturred vp breake forth so much the more vnto pity compassion of them and they do not only not cease to love them but also they are much more carefull for their health welfare then for others which are not so diseased So also God the most mercifull Father of all fathers doth pardon our faults when he hath adopted vs for his children therefore he will neyther drive vs out of dores though we be vnperfect nor cast our workes out of his sight though they be staynd with many spots Hence is it that the scripture sayth in playne words Though the righteous fall that is Psal 37.24 though he sinne thus or thus yet he shall not be cast off Let the godly therefore remember though they stumble and fall this way or that way that God remembreth and will not forsake his worke so that God will finish the beginning of salvation which he hath begun to worke in them Phil. 1.6 because God loveth and accepteth both them and their workes Therefore although God doe punish the sinnes and transgressions of his children by sundry wayes and divers afflictions yet doth hee not execute revenge vpon them in that extremity as hee doth vpon the reprobates but vseth towards them a fatherly and milde chastisement as a most wholesome medicine whereof there is a most comfortable promise Psalme 89. verse 31. and so forward Furthermore seeing the workes of the godly are vnperfect theyr obedience also which they perfourme and yeeld vnto God must needs be vnperfect But although it be such yet God not for any inward merit and worthines of it but for his owne grace and mercyes sake doth no lesse approve and accept it then if it were altogether perfect and absolute in every poynt As a father is contented with any indeavour of his sonne and requireth not of him an exact perfection of worke so that hee see him obedient and dutifull from his heart so God also doth not reiect the earnest and sincere study and endeavour of obedience in his children but God doth approve it as perfect because he esteemeth an obedient will as a worke done for that cause hee doth accept and like of any care of obedience so that it be sincere and proceede from the heart And albeit that care be defective and vnperfect which in it selfe deserveth rather to be reiected then favoured yet God doth behold it with a mercifull countenance and fatherly love This condition and circumstance the Prophet Malachy setteth downe in playne words Mal. 3.17 saying They shall be vnto me sayth the Lord in that day for a flock and I will spare them as a man spareth his owne sonne that serveth him As therefore a father doth not require full and perfect obedience of his sonne so likewise God doth not demaund exact and perfect obedience of his children but is content with such as they for the measure of humane fraylety are able to perfourme therefore whatsoever God promiseth vnto the keepers of his lawe that he will give them This do the regenerate and godly obtayne and come vnto not that theyr workes deserve this in theyr worth and excellency but because the infinitenes of Gods goodnes and mercy hath so disposed and appoynted it To conclude although the works and obedience of the godly be imperfect and cannot merit salvation yet for all that they are not vnprofitable nor to be left vndone for they may be profitable for other ends many of which are ordeyned for one thing Heere therefore I suppose it very fit and not vnprofitable if I speake somewhat largely and playnely concerning good workes and that for the Papists sake who doe wholy corrupt and quite overthrow the vse of these workes as also of all the scripture beside But that these things beeing conteyned in a briefe summary and set downe in a playne method may the more orderly be handled of me and the more easily be vnderstood of the reader these three things ought to be considered as markes set before vs. First what and what manner of workes there be in this life and whether the grace of God may be attayned and gotten by them or no. Secondly seeing that life everlasting is by all meanes the meere and free gift of God why the scripture in many places doth promise a reward and ascribe salvation vnto them Thirdly why good workes are to be done seeing salvation is by no meanes attayned by them That the first may rightly be vnderstood we must know that the works of man by reason of his divers condition are diversly to be considered for we must iudge of the effect by the nature and condition of the cause If therefore there be a diversity found in the cause it ought likewise to be considered in the effect for one and the selfesame thing cannot be spoken and affirmed of divers matters and of vnlike things the iudgement must likewise be vnlike Therefore man as touching his nature is wicked and vntoward yea and so wicked that he is extreamely contrary vnto God and his will so that his workes also before regeneration must needs be evill For from an evill cause there can proceede and be expected nothing but an evill effect because the effect differeth not from the cause so that these workes are worthily reiected of God as worthy of eternall death and the punishment thereof and beeing so reiected are most iustly condemned because they are extreamely contrary vnto the will of God Thus man and his workes are so contrary vnto the lawe of God as that there can bee nothing more extreamely contrary How then can man perfourme any thing in this estate of corruption and iniquity which may be approved or acceptable vnto God when as man in the corruption of his nature and in all his thoughts and actions is an enemy vnto God how can he deserve any thing at Gods hands Therefore as man in this estate is wholy corrupt and evill so likewise doth he bring forth evill and corrupt workes by which he can deserve nothing else of God but eternall death But heere the Papists with all their wit are out of the way in that they fayne that there are certayne
sinnes which are many and grievous and is silent as concerning his merits which are none at all Such humbling of ones selfe is the exalting of God that is he which thinketh himselfe vnworthy of the grace of God God maketh him worthy and exalteth him to heaven For an vnfayned acknowledging and confession of a mans own humility hath the compassion of God as a remedy prepared for it as Augustine in one place speaketh so that by how much a man is the more weake in himselfe by so much the more doth the Lord sustayne him Therefore a true confession of their owne imperfection is the chiefest perfection of the godly as is aforesayd but they which with full and open mouth boast and prayse their owne worthines and strength are not regenerate at all neyther do rightly knowe their owne sinnes nor humble themselves before God for then are men wont to humble themselves before him when they see and know their owne corruption But if they shall make an argument of contraryes and conclude thus Evill works condemne therefore good works save because that contraryes have contrary consequences by concluding thus they conclude nothing talke much to no effect because these are not true contraryes for evill works are perfectly evill but good works are but partly good only so that they are not equall on both sides nor stretch not one so far as another which is required in true contraryes and ought to be in them for seeing that evill works are perfectly evill there is more evill in them vnto death because they are altogether contrary vnto the lawe of God but seeing that good workes are but onely good in part therefore there is lesse good in them vnto life because they are not every way agreeable vnto the lawe of God By this it is manifestly proved that these contraryes of the Papists are not every way equall So that the obiection and conclusion of them prooveth nothing at all because it is wholy sophisticall and in no wise according to a Syllogisme And let it not trouble any man that one and the selfe same worke is sayd to be good and badde at one time because the respect hath relation and reference vnto divers heads It is sayd to be evill in respect of the flesh from which it proceedeth and it is sayd to be good in respect of the spirite from whose motion it commeth So that there is no contradiction in this because good and badde may be in one thing both at once in a divers respect And let these things suffice to be spoken of the first Seeing the workes of the godly are here alwayes imperfect why God doth ascribe Salvation vnto them and calleth his owne free gifts our reward CHAP. 31. NOw the second thing remayneth to be handled in a few words namely why the Scripture doth ascribe life and salvation vnto imperfect and maymed workes seeing that they also are the free and vndeserved gift of God Here therefore we must know that God doth oftentimes cal his owne free gifts our rewards not because they are due vnto our merits and good deeds but because they are added as supplies vnto the graces that have formerly beene bestowed vpon vs. For to whom God hath vouchsafed his Election which is the first grace those also doth he adorne and beautifie with all other benefits which follow and depend thereof So that whom he hath chosen beeing induced thereunto by his owne mercy those also doth he iustifie by the free forgivenes of theyr sinnes and being iustified he calleth them being called he regenerateth them and being regenerate he glorifieth them With these benefites doth God enrich and adorne his children that nothing may be wanting in them vnto Salvation And these are with such an vnseparable knot lincked one within an other that he which receyveth one of them becommeth partaker of all the rest In this respect these latter benefites are after the vsuall manner of the Scripture called the rewards and wages of the former not in respect of man that deserveth them but in respect of God that giveth them So that God taketh occasion to give these latter benefites vnto men not for such or such merits of theyrs but for his owne former benefites which he hath bestowed and powred vpon them Therefore the Schoole-men do in this poynt erre grossely in that they make these latter benefites to be the rewards of mans merit and that because they have vsed those former graces well and wisely Surely we must not deny but that God doth reward the right vse of his gifts with greater graces but we must alwayes take heed that mans merit bee not opposed vnto Gods bounty So that the reward which God hath appointed vnto good workes doth not depend vpon their perfection and worthinesse but descendeth from the greatnesse of Gods goodnesse and from his bountifull liberality Therefore as Augustine in one place speaketh very well God crowneth not our merits but his own gifts in vs. Therfore whatsoever reward is given vnto our good deeds it is much rather in regard of vndeserved grace then of a deserved reward For the infirmity of the flesh hindereth vs that we cannot merit grace everlasting life Therefore al obedience which we yeeld vnto God deserveth not the worth of an hayre For which cause no rewarde can bee appoynted vnto our workes as due by desert or equity And when as God calleth his free gifts our rewards he seemeth to put on the person of man and as a Father to make much of vs to whom nothing is pleasing but reward and thinketh not much as it were to make a covenant with vs. He surely for his part doth not onely not owe vs any thing but on the contrary holdeth vs all bound and indebted vnto him and so bound as that we are not able to pay the least part Agayne when as God ascribeth that vnto the godly beyond their desert which he giveth freely he sheweth how acceptable wel-pleasing a sincere indevour to live well is vnto him Therefore by this terme of reward he doth inflame and stirre them vp vnto the greater study of godlinesse so that they imploy themselves wholy in his service Therfore the reward is not promised and given vnto the godly for their merit or desert but for the vndeserved favour of God otherwise the most absolute observing of the law could not deserve the least reward For God hath all mankind every way so bound and indebted vnto him that he may rightly chalenge for his owne whatsoever proceedeth as wel from each man in particular as from all men in generall Agayne the righteousnes and holines of the law of God is so great that even the most perfect misseth much and commeth farre short of it in this life For as he leaveth vndone many things which he ought to have done so he doth many things which he should have left vndone Agayne among those good workes which hee doth the flesh alwayes mixeth some evill
condemnation or salvation according to theyr workes so that none shall then be saved except he be endued and clothed with good workes By all this it appeareth manifestly with what an vniust and vndeserved slander the Papists do accuse and backbite vs among the rude and ignorant common sort of men when with open and impudent mouth they cry out vpon vs that we despise and reiect good works when as they rather are they which do this for they reiect and despise those workes which are acceptable and well pleasing vnto God and out of theyr owne brayne do forge and invent workes of their owne by which they say they can prevent and deserve the grace of God With these fayned workes they vaunt themselves vnto the rude and simple that they can attayne vnto glory by them but seeing they have not true workes which proceede from the renewing of grace or at the least do not teach the right vse of true workes they lost theyr glory with God And heere an end of these things thus spoken briefely as by the way concerning good workes Now returne we vnto the further handling of regeneration Although the regeneration of the godly be vnperfect and but onely begun in this life yet it is so necessary vnto every Christian as that without it not one can be saved Secondly although it he vnperfect yet it is never at an end Lastly it is declared by the scripture vnto whom regeneration hapneth CHAP. 33. ALthough regeneration be vnperfect and be but onely begun in this life so that the godly can never in deed and in act perfourme so much as in will they are prest to do Heb. 12.14 yet neverthelesse it is so necessary vnto every one that without it no man can attayne vnto salvation For the generation of every one is condemned in Adam as in the common father of vs all for which cause as Augustine sayth Tom. 10. col 336. every one that is begotten is condemned except he be begotten againe Therefore the scripture sayth playnely and absolutely that no man can see the kingdome of God except he be borne againe Iohn 3.3 Heb. 12.14 their eyes onely shall see God which have bene renewed vnto his image For man in his nature is wholy corrupted and a stranger from God Ephes 4.18 and from the life of God and sinne doth wholy possesse him By this it is cleere enough Rom. 7.16 how necessary regeneration is and a new creature in Christ Iesus Moreover although regeneration in this life be very small and vnperfect continually yet by the holy spirit it is made so great in the elect as that the power of sinne is restrayned and weakened in them that it beareth not the whole sway nor raigneth and ruleth at large So that although the godly and the regenerate doe fall now and then into such or such sinnes Rom. 7.18 yet they never sinne with all their mind and with their whole will but do so resist the corruption of nature that they never fully approve and do that which it perswadeth and biddeth So that in them there is such reluctation and striving Rom. 7.25 that the refourmed will desireth one thing and the corruption of nature perswadeth another Thus they doe not that which they would but that which they hate that do they So with theyr minde they serve and obey the lawe of God but with their flesh the ●●●w of sinne so that in them there is in a divers respect both a will and no will There is a will as they are reformed and renewed by the heavenly grace There is no will in them as farre forth as they are not regenerate and obey the flesh In them the refourmed and renewed will fighteth and striveth with the vnregenerate part that at the length it becommeth conquerour and overcommer For the grace of regeneration that perswadeth and inviteth men vnto goodnes is more mighty then the corruption of nature that tempteth vnto evill And thus farre of the second poynt to be observed in this regeneration now the third remayneth briefely to be vnfolded and declared This regeneration and renewing of the corrupt nature is afforded vnto none but vnto the elect onely This the scripture in expresse words sayth and playnely proveth that they onely are enlightened and do come vnto faith which are ordeyned vnto eternall life Act. 15.48 for faith proceedeth and commeth from regeneration and both are conteyned vnder election Therefore none are regenerate but the elect and againe none are elected but they which shall be regenerate and endued with faith Heere therefore are convertible termes which are equall one to an other and may one be affirmed of the other Also Paul in this cheyne affirmeth playnely that the elect onely are glorified For so hee sayth whom hee predestinated those also hee called and whom hee called those also hee iustifyed and whom hee iustifyed those also hee glorifyed therefore this glorification happeneth vnto none but vnto those that are predestinated By this most heavenly gradation from the highest vnto the lowest it commeth to passe that the conclusion of the grace of God answereth and agreeth very fitly vnto the preface or beginning thereof Now they which are glorified are first regenerate vnto a sincere and holy life then they are renewed more fully and perfectly dayly by continuall proceeding toward the attaynement of everlasting life vntill that their glorification being fully ended and finished they be made happy both in body and soule together and translated into the heavenly rest So God doth prepare man and make him fit by regeneration for the heavenly inheritance which can neither perish nor be defiled 1. Pet. 1.4 nor fade away Therefore whom he adorneth in this world with his grace those also he crowneth in heaven with glory This regeneration howsoever in respect of man it be very weake yet in respect of the foundation and beginning thereof it is farre more firme then the frame of heaven for it hath the holy spirit the Almighty God for the effector and preserver thereof Hee therefore which will disanull and overthrow that must first vanquish God and thrust him from his throne for God doth not onely glorify his children but also doth preserve them in that glorification and other spirituall gifts vntill at the length he finally glorify and crowne them both in body and soule For after that true faith hath once begun to be in a man it can never fall quite away and wholy decay for it is grounded and propped vp by the power of God 1. Pet. 1.5 and in it it hath a most strong foundation Indeed it may be that the course and fervency of faith may be much interrupted and alayed by this or that fall but the roote of faith being fastned and planted in the heart of man by the holy spirit and the bud that springeth from thence can never be quite supplanted and cleane rooted out And if that faith once given