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A15525 A commentarie vpon the most diuine Epistle of S. Paul to the Romanes Containing for matter, the degeneration of our nature by Adams Fall; and the restauration thereof, by the grace of Christ. Together with the perfection of faith, and the imbecillity of workes, in the cause of iustification of elect sinners before God. For forme and maner of handling, it hath the coherence and method, the summe and scope, the interpretations & doctrines the reasons and vses, of most texts. All which, are set downe very familiarly and compendiously, in forme of a dialogue, betweene Tlmotheus [sic] and Silas, by Thomas Wilson, one of the six preachers in the cathedrall church of Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1614 (1614) STC 25791; ESTC S120148 882,533 1,268

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faith Vnbeleefe if it bee a meere absence of faith then it breedeth that wauering where of Iames speaketh Iam. 1. 7. if it be but a defect of beleese then it engendreth doubting such as is here spoken off Tim. But had Abraham no doubting at all touching the thing which he beleeued Sil. Yes on euery side doubting offered it selfe but when hee looked to the will and power of God hee was certaine of the promises and subdued doubts arising for it is impossible that any man should so beleeue as to bee freed from all doubting because euery mans faith hath infirmities in it Tim. Whence happeneth this infirmity of faith vnto godly men Sil. It commeth two wayes first by want of knowing well such thinges as are to bee beleeued example in the Iewes Rom 14. 21. Secondly by not constantly and firmely cleauing to such things as they know well as Peter when he walked on the water knew Christ wold haue him come to him but did not closely hold to Christs words Tim. What should this worke Sil. Earnest prayer vnto God to encrease and stablish our faith Tim. Now tell vs of the measure of Abrahams faith what it was Sil. It was not a little and weake faith but a strong and great faith such a faith as fully assured him of the thing promised to him This word full assurance is fetched from shippes which against winde and waues are yet with full and strong saile carried vnto the hauen so Abraham by the strength of his faith ouercame al waues of doubts beating against his minde Tim. What may be obserued from hence Sil. That in euery true faith there is an assurance and perswasion of that which it beleeuth but not a full assurance for this is proper to a strong faith Secondly that weake Christians should not be discouraged because they be not fully assured so as they striue towards it for the mea sure of true faith is differing and God lookes not to the quantity but to the trueth of faith Tim. What is the end whereunto faith tendeth Sil. It is the glory of God because our faith giueth vnto God a witnesse of his great power truth and goodnes euer contrary to our reason and sence DIAL XII Verse 22 23 24 25. And therefore it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Now it is not written for him onely that it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse but also for vs to whome it shall bee imputed for righteousnes which beleeue in him that raysed vp Iesus from the dead who was deliuered to death for our sins and is risen againe for our iustification Tim. VVHat is the end and scope of this scripture Sil. Together with the conclusion of this Chapter it doeth conclude the treatise of Abrahams iustification In this conclusion wee may obserue these things first the cōclusion it selfe verse 22. and therefore Secondly an application of Abrahams example to the beleeuing Romaynes and to all beleeuers verse 24. as teaching a doctrine common to the whole Church Thirdly a proofe of the fitnes of this application from the end and drift of this Scripture verse 23. now it is not written Lastly a declaration of iustifying faith by the twoe speciall things on which it principally leaneth the death and resurrection of our Lord. Tim. For the conclusion tell vs what is the meaning of it Sil. Thus much that it is no maruell if the faith of Abraham were imputed to him for righteousnesse seeing by it hee did so strongly and liuely apprehend the mercies and promises which the strong and faithfull God gaue him Tim. We may not then thinke by the Apostles words therefore that he meant to make faith a meritorious cause of Abra hams righteousnes Sil. No surely his purpose is to declare not what his faith merited but that it was a true liuely and sound faith seeing it did so firmely lay hold on the trueth and the power of God promising to Abraham eternall blessednesse in the person of the Messiah Tim. May not a weake Beleeuer by this be moued to thinke that he is not reckoned iust seeing hee cannot so strongly beleeue as Abraham did Sil. No such matter For this Text applyeth Abrahams example not vnto strong beleeuers but vnto beleeuers For whosoeuer beleeueth truly though weakely yet that weake faith being true shall iustifie them For Faith iustifieth not as a quality or in respect of the quantity and measure but by the vertue of the obiect Tim. But is not righteousnesse imputed to the elect before they do beleeue Silas No such thing it was not imputed to Abraham till he had faith Likewise it is reckoned to his children on this condition so as they beleeue or at that time when they shall beleeue Faith and imputation of righteousnesse go together in order of time though not in order of Nature for so faith as a cause goeth before Tim. Tell vs now what the application is Silas Abraham beleeued and was reckoned righteous likewise all Abrahams Children are iustified by beleeuing the promise For no otherwise are the Children to be iust then was the Father who by an inheritable right conueyeth to them the Iustice imputed to himselfe Tim. What is the ground and reason of this application Silas The scope and end of the Scripture which aymed not at Abraham only when it is written he beleeued and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse but had respect heerein to all that should beleeue as Abraham did This may appeare by the fifteenth Chapter of this Epistle verse 4. that the things which are written of some one do concerne all Also Paul saith so much in effect in this place That that which was written of one Abraham did belong to all the faithfull Tim. But how will this hold in other things which are written both of Abraham others which no man may draw vnto himselfe for imitation as Abrahams sacrificing of his son and lying with his handmaide and many such like things and if it hold not in these things how then doth Paul with any strength of reason gather in this poynt of Iustifying by Faith that it belongeth to vs which was written of Abraham Silar The answere is this Some things which are written of Abraham and other of the Saints are personall or singular which either were their infirmities or such things as they did by a singular calling as Elias his praying for fireto fall 〈◊〉 heauen and some other thinges are written of them which they did by vertue of an vniuersall vocation which are common to them with all others These we may distinguish after this manner Such things as they did besides or contrary to the lawe of God these are singular and personall and herein wee must not imitate them but such thinges as were agreeable to the law or the generall commandements of God they belong to the generall estate of all Gods people and in them wee are to followe them as for the other we are not to read or think
become his members hee bestoweth his benefits by his spirit giuing them righteousnesse holinesse peace ioy and life Fourthly he putteth his spirit into them to direct and gouerne them in the wayes of God that they may do the workes pleasing to him Note this that these seuerall actions of faith and of the spirite howsoeuer in the order of causes some go before others followe and some are felt of vs before others yet in respect of time they are all wrought togither Tim. What instructions are we to learne from this spirituall vnion Silas First we learne what a noble worke our Vnion with Christ is vnto which are required so many seuerall actions both of faith and of the spirit Secondly we are taught that this vnion is to be taught and prized aboue all things as being the foundation and roote of all that good which we haue by Christ. Thirdly it confutes such as haue thought our vnion with Christ to haue beene a naturall commixtion of substances his ours togither or to be nothing else but an agreement between minds and wils such as may bee betweene friends or man and wife or Prince and subiect Lastly it doth admonish all men what a needfull thing it is to be endued with faith and the spirit seeing without these there can be no vnion had with Christ. Tim. And if wee haue no vnion with Christ through the spirit and faith can we not be Christians Silas Without this vnion wee may bee Christians by profession and before men but before God we cannot for it is plainly saide If we haue not the spirit of Christ wee are none of his And if we neither haue Christs spirite nor be none of his we cannot be Christians otherwise then in name for as a branch and a member are saide to liue so long as they do partake in the iuice of the Vine and life of the body from whence beeing seuered they are dead and withered cut off and cast out so it is with vs we haue the life of a Christian by being Christs and hauing his spirit Iohn 15 1 2 3. Gal. 2 20. Tim. What profit are we to make of this point that euerie true Christian is one with Christ hath his spirit Silas First this reprooues such as vse to excuse their sinnes by saying they are flesh and bloud and not spirituall which is as much to say as that they are no Christians for if they be of the body of Christ they must of necessity haue his spirit and be spirituall Secondly it reproues the Papists that withhold the Scriptures from Gods people vppon pretence that they haue not Gods spirit they might euen as wel say that they are no Christians For to be a member of Christ and to be led by the spirit of Christ they be things that go necessarily together cannot be puld asunder no more thē can a liuing member of a naturall body bee seuered from the soule euen so can no Christian be without Christs spirit Lastly this reproues such as say we must alwaies doubt whether we haue the spirit of Christ or no which wee ought no more to doubt of then whether wee bee Christians or no. Tim. I but many pretend themselues to be one with Christ and to haue his spirit and so to bee good Christians which yet are not How then shall we be sure of these things Sil. We shall surely know it by the effects of our spirituall vnion to wit Iustification and the fruits thereof as they are laide forth Rom. 5 1 2 3 4. 5 11. Also by the effects of our Sanctification as they are laid forth Rom. 7 16 17 18 19 20. Psal. 15. throughout 2 Pet. 1 6 7. DIAL IIII. Verse 10. And if Christ be in you the bodye is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life for righteousnesse sake Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas A comfortable conclusion drawne from the spirituall vnion which the beleeuers haue with Christ as thus The faithfull which haue Christ dwelling in them by his spirit may bee certaine of the saluation of their souls without all perplexed doubting wauering and feare of condemnation Tim. In what manner and how is this conclusion of comfort brought in Silas By a Prolepsis or preoccupation by the preuenting a secret Obiection which he propoundeth and answereth The Obiection is this To what end is it to bee Christs and to haue his Spirit in vs sithence we must die as others Vnto which obiection the Apostle answereth that our bodies indeed because of sinne stil remaining in them are dead or mortall but the Spirit is life because of righteousnesse This text then hath two parts an obiection and an answer to it Tim. Now to the words and tell vs what is meant by this particle If Silas This particle If signifieth forsomuch it doubteth not it reasoneth affirmeth or demonstratiuely concludeth An argumentatiueparticle or word and not dubitatiue Tim. What is it for Christ to be in vs Sil. It is all one with our beeing in him both these speeches signifie the most secret spirituall ioyning or vnion of Christ and his members Tim. What is heere meant by Body and by Dead As also why is this added Because of sin Silas By body some vnderstand the flesh or vnregenerate part of man figuratiuely but it would bee taken properly for that part of man called the body The reason is because body is neuer found put for sinne without some addition also by dead is signified mortall or subiect to death Rom. 6. 12. or fraile corruptible Phil. 3. 21. 1 Cor. 15. moreouer sin is added to shewe the true cause of mortality to wit sin which brought in death Gen. 3 19. Rom. 5. 12. nowe the bodies of the Saintes being not voyd of sinne therefore they be obnoxious and lyeable to death Tim. What doth righteousnes signifie Silas It well may be interpreted either of Christs righteousnesse imputed to faith or of righteousnesse inherent and begun in our hearts by the regenerating Spirit If wee take it of the former the sence will be thus much viz. The soule or spirit shall liue through righteousnesse imputed to the beleeuer because hee being iustified and freed from guilt of sin is also thereby to be absolued and set free from death eternall which being remooued life eternall must needs come in the roome as a necessary fruite and consequence of righteousnesse imputed Rom. 1. 17. The iust by faith shall liue Rom. 5. 18. But if wee take the latter sence then it will haue this sēce not as any meritorious cause of it but because it is a certaine vndeceiueable signe of imputed righteousnesse to which life eternall belongs also of Christ his spirite dwelling in vs and of our communion with Christ al which are soundly witnessed by our vnperfect righteousnesse or holinesse of life as trees known by the fruite Tim. What instructions do arise from hence Silas The first is this that all men euen the godly are fraile
not vs. This is by accident and not of the Essence Na ture of the Gospell Doctrine Psal. 34. 1 2 3 1. Cor. 8 5. See Actes 14 11 12 13. 1. Cor 10 20 21. Act. 7 22. Fxod 32. Ezek 8. 10. God blindeth men saith August when he doth not ealighten them and hardens whē he doth not sosten 2 Chro. 15. 2. Psal. 69. 22. Rom 11. 7. Acts 17. Iames 1 4. Esay 3 10 11 2 Thes. 1 6 7. Vnrighteousnesse set out by the parts 1 Cor. 6 12 13 14 c. Luke 16. Reason 1. Part. Scope Interpretation Instructions Psal. 77. 1 3. The end of Gods bounty Right vse of Gods kindnesse Abuse of Gods bounty and kindnes Of hardnesse of heart Causes of it The kinds of it Rom. 14 9 10 11. Note this Rom. 3 20. Rom. 4 15. Iohn 13 17. Iames 1 22. Iohn 14 23. Rom. 2 4 5. Coloss. 3. 10. Psa. 119. 105 Math. 7. 22. Gen. 4. also 18. Math. 16. 7. Priuiledge The chayre of Moses and an heap of titles By euil liuing by giuing occasion they blasphemed God Some do receiue the Sacrament and the thing som the Sacramēt and not the thing some the thing and not the Sacrament Sins not 〈◊〉 but per accidens are causes of Gods glory Prou. 22. 1. Eccles. 3. 7. Sin is not eligible Math. 7. None righteous ex natura Some men be counted righteous ex gratia Obad. 12 13 14 15. Psal. 5. 9. Also saith Origen Vsus sce lerum verecundiam 〈◊〉 Psa. 113. 3. Note further that a venomous tongue is thus resembled 1. because this Serpent infecteth by biting 2. It is a poyson vncurable 3. they are in t actable stopping their care at the charmers voyce Psal. 10. 7. Their mouth is said to be ful because their mouth is as a large vessel out of which flowes cruel word Esay 59. 7. 8. Psal. 36. 1. Quideum non timent sine retinaculo currūs ad maium 〈◊〉 anus Besides the meeting with this Obiection it may wel be that area sem is giuen why the Law could not iustify the Iews because it condemned them Not the writing or Scripture but the thing written to wit that al men are sinners stoppeth al mouthes Non opera que precip untur sed quae prestātur Workes done before Faith cannot iustify because they please not God nor workes done after faith because they be vnperfect In his sight this distinguisheth between righteousnes of good men and that whiche is before God 3. Reasōs why none can be iustified by works before God I the most perfect purity of gods nature before whome heauens be not clean Iob 15. 15. 2. God lookes vnto the heart which is perfect in none 3. the law is spiritual requiring exact obedience such as none can attain vn to yet before men we may be iustified as Abraham was Rom. 4. 1. Iames. 2. That law in this text hath a double acception 1. for the doctrine of the moral Law this doth not reueale faith in Christ ney ther yet natu ral law 2 for the bookes of Mese where in be many promises of Christ. Iohn 5 46. Acts 10. 43. Rom. 1. 2. Faith iustifies not effectiuely as working a iustice in vs or materially as being our Iustice. A word borrowed from such as come shortin a race and cannot attaine to the mark or prize Iohn 3. I Cor. 1. 30. This word set forth sheweth the euerlasting purpose of God to giue his sonne for our Redemption so is the same word vsed Rom. 8 28. Iohn 1. Hebr. 13 8. Apoc. 13 8. 1 Cor. 1. 29. Iohn 6. 27. Also without Faith it is impossible to keep the law or anie part there of In this sence the word imputing is vsed Nom. 8. 27. 1 Cor. 1. 30. Abraham had the promise of righteousnes Anno 85. of his age but hee was circumcisea an 99. Righteousnes of faith is often had before the Sacraments be had which follow as seales and do not go before as causes Sacramenta sig na sunt sigilla non merita 〈◊〉 et vitae Sacraments be signes first of grace secondly of duty Obsigna ' analogia signi pactionali stipulatione Sacramenta 〈◊〉 tantum significāt iustitiam sed dant et obsignant 〈◊〉 in glossa A digression into the praise of Abraham and his faith Non 〈◊〉 more sed dei exemplo vt Chrysost. Faith is but a condition or Organ of righteousnes not a meriting cause God manifested in the death and resurrection of Christ is the euen or equal obiect of true faith which is so carried to God as it acknowledgeth Christ the re deemer and confidently resteth on him dead and raysed Iudas shal haue the reward of his malice when Christ shal reape the prayse of his Loue. Scriptures lead our mids to God as soueraign cause Esay 53. Iohn 13. 17. Rom. 8. 32. 33 2 Cor. 5. v. last Esa 53. 5. 6. 7. That we may haue the fruit of Christ his death we must bring Abrahams faith loue repentance as proofes of a true faith If Christ had abid in the Graue sinne had not been ransomed nor Gods wrath appea led not death conquered nor life merited Quisacit boons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per 〈◊〉 in bono 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dei timor in cordibus piorumvt dco 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Idem 〈◊〉 charitas Christi 〈◊〉 sacit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rabiles Ambro. Sine muta 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dena dci Hoc est 〈◊〉 fider 〈◊〉 nunquam 〈◊〉 deturbatur 〈◊〉 F. 〈◊〉 est perpetua 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quoni am vera Luthe rus fides cocuti potest non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What Hope is As God could not sweare by a greater then himselfe so he could not giue a greater then himselfe in the person of Christ. He suffered the first death and the pangs of the second death A Metonimie of the cause put for the effect Prouerbes 1. This is Piscators iudgemēt Mille mundis red mendis sufficit Christus 〈◊〉 The iust shall liue by faith Rom. 1 I liue by faith Gala. 2. Christs-obedience actiuein doing passiue in suffering How many wayes the seruice of sin is knowne How Hypocrites be discerned frō true Christians How and by what signs our freedom from sinne is manifested 1. Food 2. Recreatiō 3. Exercise 4. Sleepe 5. Phisicke 6. Remouing impediments Est peccatum luèt non imputalur Sanctis Augustin Reatus tollitur in Baptismo non corruptio macula Idem Original concupisence is sin formally and not the matter or mother of sin Euery sin original and actual raigneth in the vnregenerate not so in the godly Therefore Mortal Obsta principijs sero medicina paratur cum mala per longas conualuere moras As weapons may be vsed by a good Subiect or a Rebell so the body is an indifferent thing Theophylact. Not I sayth Paul but the grace of God in me 1 Cor. 15 2. Ephe. 〈◊〉 1. Help the pore with those hands with which ye oppressed
importeth a Letter sent from one to another to certifie their minde so is the worde vsed heere Tim. What meaneth this worde Apostle Silas Generally by it is meant any messenger as Phil. 2 25. more especially one selected of Christ to carrie the message of saluation into the whole world whereof there were twelue to whome Mathias was added in Iudas roome Tim. What be the notes of an Apostle Silas Foure first to bee immediately called by Christ Gal. 3 1. Math. 1 2. Secondly to bee sent with Commission to preach vnto all nations Thirdly to haue seene Christ in the flesh 1 Cor. 1 2. Fourthly to haue a priuiledge to be kept from error in their Doctrine Iohn 16 13. to which may be added the fift to haue the power of doing myracles Luke 9 1 2. Tim. Who was this Paule Silas A Pharisie by profession a Iew by byrth a most wicked persecuter for his practise Tim. How was he changed Silas By the mighty power of Christ who from heauen suddenly altred him and of a persecutor made him a Preacher From whence wee may learne that none dispaire though they be yet in their sinnes or being called haue greeuously falne For Paul sinned fearefully before his Calling and Peter after yet were both pardoned vpon their returning to God Tim. Why did Paul write to the Romaines Silas First because they were many of them his Countreymen according to the flesh the Iewes then dwelling at Rome in great Companies Acts. 28. Secondly because by writing to them hee gaue an instruction common to all within the Iurisdiction of the Romaines which was exceeding large the Romain Empire being then in florishing estate and as it were the Queene and Mistris of the world Tim. Why was this Epistle set before the rest of Paul his Epistles Silas Neither for that it was in time written before all other nor yet for the great dignity of the Romain nation being then Lordes almost of the whole earth nor for the excellencie of the Romain Church which consisting of Gentiles was inferiour vnto the Church of the Iewes who were the Oliue tree others being wilde Oliues nor yet for the length of this Epistle as some haue imagined but for the exceeding worth and vse of the matter handled therein For besides the maine Article of Iustification by faith defined debated and determined there be other questions and points of Christian faith of gteat moment and profit as about the fall of Man the force of Original corruption the restoration of man by Christ of the sweet and manifold fruits of Iustifying faith also of Sanctification of the Crosse and comfort to them which beare it of predestination of the vocation of Gentiles of the breaking off and graffing in againe the Iewes of Good-workes of Maiestracy of Charity of the vse of things indifferent of the diuersitie of Guifts and functions in the Church so as this Epistle was vpon good respect set before the rest as the Key to open the way to vnderstand the other and as a Catechisme or Introduction to our most holy Religion also the most exact and accurat Method of this Epistle did deserue it should bee prefixed For after the 〈◊〉 he defineth Iustification declaring what it is Rom. 1 16. and that is held most artificiall Method which beginneth with definition Also hee expresseth the seuerall causes thereof Efficient 1. Gods grace 2. Materiall Christ Iesus dead and raised to life 3. the Formall our beleefe of the Gospell 4. the Final or end remote the praise of Gods righteousnes the neerest end our saluation Moreouer hee amplifieth our free Iustification by the contrary that wee cannot bee iustified either by workes of Nature or of the Law Cha. 2 3. therefore by grace and faith after the patterne of Abraham Ch. 4. then by the principall and immediate effects of iustifying faith both inwarde peace of Conscience accesse vnto the gracious God ioy hope patience in tribulation experience sence of Gods Loue in the heart Ch. 5. and outward Holinesse of life dying to sinne and liuing vnto righteousnesse Cha. 6. by the contrarie operation of the Law which is to reueale Sinne and Wrath Cha. 7. whereas the Gospell freeth from condemnation Ch. 8. by the cause Election by the Subiect Gentiles called and Iewes to be called Ch. 11 by Testimonies Ch. 10. by Examples Dauid and Abraham Ch. 4. And as this Article of Iustification so other points are treated of in a verie perfect order a hath beene partly touched and shall more perticulerly appeare heereafter Tim. Of what kinde is this Epistle Silas It is mixt partly Didascalicall teaching instructing the minde in the truth of the Gospell partly deliberatiue or paraeniticall exhorting vnto Duties of all sortes and constancie in the faith partlie Consolatory comforting against the fear of condemnation and affliction of the Crosse partly Reprehensorie rebuking the Iewes for their infidelitie and contumacie against God and the Gentiles for their immodestie security and pride and both for their debate and carnall aemulation partly Gratulatorie giuing thankes for their obedience to the Gospell and Laudatorie praising their zeale and Petitoric praying for Grace to them and to himselfe Tim. Shew vs now the scope and marke whereat this Epistle aymed Sil. The scope is double the first is remote and further off being common to all the Church in all ages as the more plentiful instruction of al the Saints in the mystery of saluation and secondly the quenching of the flames of contention raised between the two people Iewes and Gentiles and to set a firme peace which is the nearest end CHAP. I. DIAL II. Tim. VVHat is the sum of this whole first Chapter and what are the chiefe Parts thereof Sil. Hauing in the beginning by an Artificiall and elaborate Exordium insinuated himselfe into the minds of the Romanes to make them attent docible and beneuolous receiuers of his Doctrine ad ver 14. toward the middle of the Chapter hee layeth foorth the maine question to wit that al people both Iews and Gentiles are no otherwise to be iustified and saued then by the Gospell being beleeued on which touching the Gentiles he doth demōstratiuely proue from verse 18. to the end of the Chapter the reason is because being transgressors by manisold and gricuous sinnes both against God thorow impiety and men thorow vnrighteousnesse monstrous and vnnaturall they were worthy of aeternall damnation so farre off was it that their woorkes could Iustify and giue them life eternall For the maine points of this Chapter they be foure 1. A salutation to verse 8. 2. The exodium or Praeface making way and entrance to the matter to verse 17. 3. The principall Thesis or proposition touching righteousnesse before God by the fayth of Christ verse 17. 4. The confirmation or proofe from verse 18. to the conclusion of the Chapter this is the effect of the argument brought for probation Gentiles Iewes are to be iustified either by Faith or by Works
things Sil. First they obtained remission of sinnes Secondly they were made inwardly new and outwardly they liued hohly Thirdly they called vpon God with perseuerance communicating together in prayer doctrine breaking of bread and all holy workes Fourthly they stedfastly put their trust in God Fistly they regarded not riches for they laid the price of their things at the Apostles feete Sixtly they gaue testimony of Christ boldly Seauenthly in his quarrell they bestowed their liues and cheerefully shedde their bloud For proose of all these haue your recourse to the history of the Acts. Tim. How is this righteousnes manifested without the law Sil. That is without the workes of the law or without this that the law be fulfilled of vs for some Gentiles were iustified which knew not the lawe also some Iewes were iustified which regarded not the lawe and though some did both knowe regard and doe it as Nathanael and Zachary yet the obseruation of the law by them was not the cause why they were iustified The law then is an helpe to iustification in somuch as it doth accuse and condemn vs and so driues vs to Christ accidentally as a disease brings to the Phisition but the law of it selfe hath no strength to forgiue sinne and to suggest and work faith into our harts or to enable vs to keepe it perfectly that we might bee iustified thereby Tim. How many wayes hath this righteousnes witnes of the law and the Prophets Sil. Sundry waies First by euident and cleere sentences which prophesied of Christ and of faith that iustifieth Secondly by tipes and figures which went before in the old Testament as the brasen Serpent and Ionas his beeing in the Whales belly three daies also the Paschall Lambe the Rocke the Cloud did shew Christ. Thirdly by Sacrifices Offerings and ceremonies of the law the bloud of Lambs Goates did signifie Christ to be slain for sin Fourthly by the Sacraments as Circumcision and the Passeouer all which doe beare testimony that our righteousnes remission of our sinnes and eternall life are not to bee founde in our selues but to be sought by faith in Iesus Christ. DIAL XII Verse 22. I meane the righteousnes of God through the faith of Iesus Christ in all and ouer all that heleeue Tim. IN what sence is the faith of Iesus vsed here Sil. Not actiuely for that which Iesus had but passiuely for that faith whereby hee is had and receiued Tim. What is the drift of this text Sil. To open and vnsold more at large that which hee spake concerning the righteousnes of God laying foorth first the instrument whereby it is applied vnto vs which is faith Secondly the persons or subiect vppon whome it is bestowed which be all beleeuers without difference of nations Thirdly the efficient and principall cause of righteousnes which is God And fourthly the materiall cause which is Iesus Christ. Tim. What is the righteousnes of God Sil. That which commeth meerly by Gods good guift and maketh vs acceptable to God euen able to stand before God this righteousnesse wee doe attaine through faith which iustifieth obiectiuely because it leadeth to Christ and instrumentally as the hand of the soule to apprehend it therefore it is written the righteousnes of God through faith Tim. What are the kinds of faith Sil. Foure first historicall which is a knowledge of the history and letter or of the doctrine of the Scripture thence called dogmaticall faith Secondly temporarie faith which is a knowledge of the trueth with an assent to it for a time Math. 13. 21. Thirdly miraculous which is a beleefe that by the power of God straunge wonders may be done 1 Corin. 13. 1 2. Fourthly iustifying faith by the which the righteousnes of God is receiued Of this iustifying faith there are two parts the first is a knowledge of the things to be beleeued as Iohn 6. 69. wee know and beleeue Secondly application of them to our selues Tim. How proue ye that there must bee application in true faith Sil. First by the commaundement beleeue the Gospell Marke 16 1 5. Secondly by the nature of faith which is an hand to drawe Christ to vs. Thirdly by the example of Scripture as Dauid Psalme 18 2. Mary Luke 1 28. Thomas Iohn 20 28. Fourthly by reason for howe can Christ profit vs if he be not applied and put on by faith And 5. by the testimony of the learned which teach true faith to be particular with application as Hierom Cyril c. Tim. What actions are required vnto faith Sil. These fiue First approbation of the things beleeued Secondly expetition in an ernest desire of them 3 〈◊〉 apprehension in a fast laying hold of them Fourthly oblectation in delighting my selfe in them Fiftly expectation in looking certainly to inioy them Tim. What be the degrees of faith Silas Three-fold First such a faith which is a true and earnest desire to beleeue the promises of Christ. Secondly a little faith which is a certaine assurance that the same belongs to vs. Thirdly a full perswasion when the heart is strongly assured thereof ioyned with a sure and certaine knowledge of things hoped for Heb. 11 1. Tim. What is the obiect of Faith Silas Christ Iesus in whom wee do consider three things First his person God and Man Secondly his Offices King Priest and Prophet Thirdly his benefits Remission of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reconciliation adoption sanctification eternall life Tim. What are the persons vnto whom God 〈◊〉 Christ with his benefits Sil. All the beleeuers and onely the beleeuers Tim. What thinke ye of the elect Infants are they Beleeuers Tim. Some think them to be iustified by the beleefe of the Church Others thinke it to be by the beleefe of their parents Others by the beleefe of sureties Others by some secret worke of the spirit But I think that they are saued by their owne faith as it is generally written The iust shall liue by his owne faith Tim. But they want knowledge without which there is no Faith Sil. True they lacke knowledge which is by discourse yet they are not altogither without some knowledge such as for their age they are capeable of as appeareth by this that reason is in children though they want the vse of it Also by the example of Ieremy Iohn Baptist and Christ all which had the light of the Spirit in their infancy being sanctified in the wombe Tim. What vse was made of this Sil. That men which haue not true faith should labor to get it seeing no righteousnes is had without it nor saluation but by it Secondly such as haue it should cherish and labour to encrease it by all good means and be thankfull to God for it Thirdly to take comfort to our selues vpon the death of young children seeing God who hath made a Couenant of life with them doeth worke in them to beleeue in him DIAL XIII Verse 23 24. For there is no difference for all haue sinned and are
they are prepared by themselues and by Sathan Note that it is good diuinity taught from God by the pen of the Apostle Paul in plaine expresse tearmes that there be some men which be vessels of wrath and prepared to destruction that they know no diuinity which deny this vpon pretence least God be found vniust and tyrannicall It is a safe thing in speaking writing or preaching to follow the phrase and speech of the Holy-Ghost rightly taken in the true sence men may not labour to bee wiser then God nor thinke to defend Gods iustice by a lye Such be miserable patrons of God and his righteousnesse Bonum non indiget malo nor truth hath no neede of falshood to prop and support it DIAL XIII Verse 23. And that be might declare the riches of his glory vpon the Vessels of mercy which hee hath prepared vnto glory Tim. VVHat is the drift and purpose of this Text Silas To illustrate or set foorth the ende of Gods counsell touching the reprobate which is the manifestation of iustice and power in their deserued destruction by the contrary end touching his counsell of election which is two-fold First Gods owne glory this is the vtmost end Secondly the eternall glorye and happinesse of the elect this is the neerest end Tim. Tell vs what is meant by he as also by declare Silas By he is meant God as verse 22. and by declare is signified to make knowne to al reasonable creatures to wit Angels and men Tim. What is signified by his glory as also by the riches of his glory Silas By his glory is meant the grace of God wherein hee shewes himselfe glorious see Ephe. 3 16. and by the riches of his glory is meant his vnmeasurable and meruellous great mercy see the like Rom. 2 4. Ephes. 1 3 8. Tim. Who are meant heere by the vessels of his mercy Silas Elect men and women ordained to obtaine saluation in heauen through the mercies of God in Christ. Tim. What doctrines arise out of these words thus expounded Sil. First that the elect as well as the reprobate are vessels or instruments framed of God to speciall vses for God makes nothing in vaine if reprobates bee for vse much rather the elect Tim. What vse of this point Silas It warnes vs that whatsoeuer wee are or haue we hold it of God and are to referre it to him euen as vessels are what they are by the will of the Potter and serue to his pleasure Tim. What is the next doctrine Sil. That not mans merit but Gods mercy puts a difference betweene vessell and vessell person and person The godly in that they are vessels this is by nature common to them with the wicked but in that they are vessels to honour this must be ascribed to mercy whereas yet the reprobates are vessels of wrath by merit for their wrath and punishment is not inflicted till it bee deserued Tim. What vse to be made of this point Silas It admonisheth Gods children that they haue nothing whereof to glory in themselues seeing all they are or haue flowes from free and vndue mercy Therefore let them that will reioyce reioyce in this that they know God to bee mercifull Ierc. 9. Whereas God calleth iustifieth c. hee sheweth not thereby what wee deserue but how good and mercifull himselfe is Tim. What other doctrine from hence Silas That the praise of Gods glorious mercy is the furthest and chiefest ende why hee electeth and chuseth some This doctrine may be proued by plaine texte of Scripture as Prouer. 16 4. Rom. 11 36. Ephe. 1 12. to the praise of his glory The reason of this doctrine is because there can bee no higher or further ende of his owne decree then his owne praise It is iust and equall that he doe seeke glory vnto himselfe by his creatures Tim. What vse is to be made of this doctrine Silas It stoppes the mouths of such as are ready to accuse the decrees of God to be vniust whereas they tend vnto most righteous endes as they bee the decrees of a most righteous God Secondly it warneth vs to make the glory of God the vtmost end of our counsels and actions euen as God hath propounded it to himselfe for the scope of his owne counsels 1. Cor. 10 31. Col. 3 17. 1. Tim. 4 5. Tim. May not yet some other doctrine be drawne from the former part of this verse Sil. Yes this That the mercie which God shewes the elect is not common and ordinary but exceeding abundant and plentifull for to forgiue them so many sins to deliuer them from so great wrath to fulfill them with such exceeding graces to call them to such exceeding and endlesse ioyes to giue them his owne Sonne to purchase all this and to do all this most freely passing by others no worse then themselues shewes his mercy and goodnesse to be exceeding rich and glorious towardes the chosen Tim. What vse of this point Silas It affoords an exhortation to the godlie to enlarge their hearts vnto all possible loue and thankefulnesse towardes this mercifull God with continuall and great care to glorifie him by our obedience vnto his word Thus farre of the first end Tim. What is the second end of election Silas The glory of the elect by glory here is not onely meant the glorious and blessed estate of the Saints in heauen but all the meanes also which bringes them thither as Calling Faith Righteousnesse Sanctification c. and finally the whole woorke of theyr Redemption Tim. In what sence is it sayde That God prepareth vnto Glorie Silas That is to say he hath made them fit and meet before hand to be partakers of this glory and this God doth three wayes First by eternall predestination Secondly by an innocent creation Thirdly by an effectuall restauration restoring them by Christ vnto their lost Image Tim. Speaking of the reprobate hee saith of them passiuely prepared but of the vessels of mercy he prepared what are we to learne from this difference of the phrase Silas That the reprobates bring something of their owne to further their destruction to wit corruption of nature and the fruites thereof whereas the elect hauing from God alone whatsoeuer good belongs to their saluation they also haue from God both the ende and all the meanes both grace iustice and glory The reprobate in respect of nature and ende are prepared of God but prauity and naughtinesse they haue from Sathan and themselues Tim. What is the doctrine from these latter words Silas That God hath vnseparably ioyned the saluation of the elect with the praise of his owne glory The reason hereof is to make his owne goodnes more renowned and the elect more gratefull and obedient for all men being alike sinfull by nature if hee would haue condemned all it had been but iust therefore the more was his mercy that he would
verse 13. Therefore men doe beleeue with the heart to righteousnesse aud saluation pertaineth to such as confesse him Tim. What may we learne heereby that Paul prooueth his doctrine by testimony of Scripture Silas These lessons First that the Scripture is sufficient not onely to teach al needfull truths of godlinesse but to confirme and prooue it also Secondly that the word written is the infallible rule of al doctrines which are to bee deliuered vnto the Church for direction of faith or manners for in that Paul doth prooue and stablish all doctrines of Christianity by the Scripture alone not vsing any other testimony for that end Thence it followes that Scripture onely is the most certaine and vndeceiueable rule of all doctrines The reasons heereof bee first because God the author of all Scripture is most perfect in knowledge and of infinite wisedome therefore his word must needs containe a perfect rule direction whereby to iudge of doctrines Secondly our faith springs from Scripture alone Romanes 10 17. Therefore wee must beeleeue that onely for sound doctrine which can be drawne from the word of God written Tim. What vse of this doctrine Silas First it serues to admonish vs to try all things which is taught of any Ministers by the touchstone of the Scriptures as the Christians of Berea did Acts 17 11. receiuing willingly what wee finde grounded vpon and consonant vnto the Scriptures but refusing all that is diuerse from it The ancient fathers and Doctours of the Church nay the Apostles submitted their sermons and writings to this tryall 1. Thes. 5 21. 1. John 4 1 2. As we like that Gold onely that will abide the touchstone so wee must holde onely such doctrines as agree with the word of God Secondly it confuteth the Papists which make vnwritten traditions to be a rule equal to holy Scriptures being indeed a leaden rule of deceit vncertaine and subiect to change and to falshoode and error yet they will haue them imbraced with like reuerence and affection as the holy Bible Tim. From whence is this first authority fetched Sil. Out of Esay Chapter 28 verse 16. Tim. Tell vs first what ye doe obserue in the manner of alleadging this authority and what ye note in the matter Silas Touching the manner the Apostle doth so alleadge the place of Esay as withal he doth interpret and expound it which is the best manner of alleadging scriptures so to cite them as to giue some light to them For whereas Esay said he indefinitely Paul writeth whosoeuer vniuersally to shew vs that an indefinite proposition is equipollent to an vniuersall Secondly Paul mentioneth the obiect of our faith in him that is Christ whereas Esay saide onely hee which beleeueth Thirdly in Esay it is written shall not make hast in Paul shall not be ashamed that is frustrate of his successe being deceiued of that they looked for which is a fruite and consequent of hast for such as are hasty and precipitant doc their businesse vntowardly and naughtily as Saul did when hee made hast to offer sacrifice before Samuel came wherein hee did greatly sinne and was thereby brought to shame As also Peter his precipitation caused shame to him whereas the true beleeuers without such shame shall obtaine forgiuenesse of sinne by Christ. Tim. What note ye in the matter of this sentence cited out of Esay Silas First that as the high cause to wit predestination or election is not restrained to the Iewes onely but powred out vpon all sorts of men as well as Iewes Rom. 9 29. so is faith the next cause equally giuen to all people without difference of nation whatsoeuer Secondly that the reason why many Iewes and others bee ashamed and confounded is for that they beleeue not because who-soeuer beleeueth shall not bee ashamed Thirdly that the true iustifying faith hath no other proper obiect but Christ Iesus and him as he is both dead quickened this is that brazen Serpent towards which our faith looketh Fourthly that Christ is very true God because we are bound to beleeue in him see Iohn 14 1. This confuteth the Arians denying Christs eternall and naturall diuinity Fiftly that the vniuersality of the promises of the Gospell are restrained and limited to beleeuers and to them also they be extended and to euery one of them and to none other there is an vniuersallity of beleeuers as there is of vnbeleeuers Tim. But the Iewes did appropriate the promises of God to themselues alone as the true and sole heires thereof Sil. They did so but vniustly for now vnder the Gospell howsoeuer before there was manifolde and great difference see Rom. 3 2. Also 9 4 5. there is no distinction but Iew and Gentile are al one For first they haue all neede of saluation all being sinners destitute of Gods grace and of the gift of true righteousnesse Esay 53 6. Rom. 3 23. Or if wee looke vnto the meritorious cause which is Christ in him all haue like intrest by Gods mercy Rom. 11 32. or the meanes whereby to be made partakers of Christ which is Faith a guift bestowed by God indifferently vpon the Iewes and Gentiles Gal. 3 8. Ephes. 2 17 18. Tim. In what sence is God saide to be Lord of all Silas Because hee is the common Creator of all who made both Iew and Gentile Secondly because he is the iustifier of all without respect of countrey euerie one which beleeueth in Christ shall haue righteousnesse before God who is one which doth iustifie the circumcision by Faith and the vncircumcision through faith Rom. 3 30. From whence it doth follow that God accepteth not persons Acts 10 30. so as to loue one the more because he is a Iew or the lesse because he is a Gentile but is of like affections to all the faithfull of what people or language soeuer as a Father is well affected vnto all his children which do well and a workeman to all his work made by him so is God good to all his people without distinction of place Therefore a Gentile though not circumcised yet if he haue faith he shall become righteous and liue for euer whereas an vnbeleeuing Iew shall be sent away vniustified though he be circumcised Tim. What is meant by this that God is good to all Silas That he is abundantly louing and kinde not to euery particular person without exception of any singular but to all men of all sorts for Riches signify plentifull goodnesse as Ephes. 2 4 7. and by all is often meant some of all kinds Countreyes and degrees as 1. Tim. 2 3. Rom. 11 32. Tim. What are we to learne from hence Silas Not that euery man and woman be elect called and iustified as some falsely collect from hence beeing the enemies of Gods grace sufficiently confuted from this place where the vniuersall particle all is limited to such as call vpon him which none do in truth but beleeuers onely but that
the promise therefore also he had righteousnes by beleeuing Thus most commonly the purpose and connexion of this text is laide downe by interpreters But Maister Beza and Paraeus wil haue it not a new argumēt to proue the principall thing in question viz that righteousnesse is by faith for this is not the thing concluded but the medius terminus or reason to inferre a conclusion premised in verse 12. that the children of Abraham are they onely which walke in the steppes of Abrahams faith not they which walke in the steppes of his circumcision or works for the lawe viz. workes of the lawe naturall or written is nothing to this child-ship as I may speak reason is because the promise giuen to Abraham to bee heire of the worlde or to haue the world his inheritance came to him by the righteousnesse of faith therefore they which walke not in Abrahams workes but in his faith be his children as Abraham became their father not by his working but by beleeuing If this sence and coherence be iudged best then by world the beleeuers dispersed and scattered ouer the worlde is meant also there is an Ellipsis of the worde giuen which should bee added to promise and the particle disiunctiue or hath couched in it a close obiection as thus Be it that the promise of being father of many nations and heire of the world were giuen to Abraham on condition of his beleeuing yet to his seed it might be on condition of workes no saith Paul in no wise the reason is rendred in the next verse because so the promise of the inheritance and faith should be void and of no effect Tim. What is meant here by the world as you doe Iudge Sil. Some say the land of Canaan at least typically and mystically some by it vnderstād all the beleeuers which are dispersed through the worlde as is aforesaide some by it vnderstand all the creatures of the world which are the inheritance of Abraham and euery faithfull person and I take it to be meant of the world to come euen of the possession of saluation in heauen of the celestiall inheritance That this is the meaning may appeare by the whole former treatise of iustification also by the 14. verse of this Chapter wherein by heire none can bee meant but the heires of eternal life if any think good to ioyne this sense and that of Paraeus and Beza together as subordinate one to the other it is not a misse Tim. What learne ye hereby that this inheritauce of heauen dependeth vpon the promise of grace Sil. That beleeuers may surely looke to haue it in the end because the promise doth not deceiue seeing it is his promise which cannot lye Secondly wee learne that it behoueth the faithfull to haue an eye still vpon the promises and to haue their refuge thither when they shall be assaulted as a chased Hart flies to the colde broke and the fearfull Coney to the rocke or borrow so wee being tempted run to the promises Tim. Vpon what condition was this promise giuen or made of God to Abraham Silas Not vpon condition that he should fulfill the Law because the Lawe was published long after the promise and therefore could be no condition thereof againe none can possibly keepe the Law But the promise was giuen vpon condition of beleeuing namely that Abraham his seede should embrace it by faith Tim. What doth this shew vnto vs Si. The necessity of Faith in that we are not partakers of the promises without it 2. the excelency of faith that to it the greatest promises are made Lastly frō hence we are exhorted to labour and striue to attaine the guift of Faith and to encrease it if we haue it labouring against hinderances Let this be further noted that though this promise giuen to Abraham bee chiefly accomplished in the heauenly inheritance yet it cōprehends the church of Christ ouer the world as a spirituall heritage yea the right to temporall things in this world 1 Cor. 3 21. and all this thorough Christ the promised seed DIAL VIII Verse 14. For if they which bee of the Law bee heyres then is faith but vaine and the promise made of none effect because the law causeth wrath for where no Law is there is no transgression Tim. WHat is the drift of this Text Silas To proue that the inheritance of heauen is not giuen on this condition that the Law be fulfilled by vs and therefore it is giuen on condition of beleeuing This is proued by a reason taken from absurdities or from contraries which is thus That if the inheritance be got by fulfilling the law then faith is void and the promise of none effect or more plainly thus If saluation bee giuen on condition of woorking or doing then it must needs be that faith which beleeues the promise is idle and so the promise is also idle and frustrate which were an absurd thing either to thinke or speake so for God neither doth or promiseth ought in vaine Tim. Hath the reason good waight and firmenesse if it bee framed from the law of contraries Sil. Yea for to haue saluation by merite of our workes and to beleeue that it is giuen vs by vertue of a free promise these two are so contrary that if merit bee granted beleeuing is clean destroyed and if beleefe be taken away then the promise vanisheth the promise the law workes and fauour in this case of iustification cannot agree together as Rom. 4. 4. Tim. What is meant by them which be of the law Sil. This phrase in Scripture signifieth two things first by them of the law is meant the Iewes which are circumcised to whom the law was giuen Secondly such as challenge claime saluation by merit of works or vpon condition to fulfill the lawe so it is taken here now the lawe thus taken for merit of workes doth suppose a debt destroyeth grace being quite opposite to the promise Tim. What is meant by this that faith is vaine and the promise voyd Sil. That is to say faith should be required of vs in vain and the promise of God made in vaine if the inheritance of heauen came by workes but it were a very absurd and wicked thing to say thus as apeareth by these reasons First because God doeth nothing in vaine Secondly because none can in any wise keepe that condition of fulfilling the law therefore the promise of grace and faith bee most needfull and necessary without which our mind would alwayes be full of distrust the law being vnpossible Tim. But if the law and the promise be so contrary that the putting of the one destroyeth the other howe is it that God hath annexea so many promises to the law Sil. There is a difference to bee put betweene the promises of the law and of the Gospel for the promises of the Gospell bee of remission of sinnes iustification the holy Ghost saluation these are not made to the lawe that is
it may not be applied to licentiousnesse I astly wee are not to bee ignorant that it is neuer seuered from some doubting which is moderated and ouercome by a true and liuely Faith Tim. How can our Faith be certaine and yet be moued to doubting Sil. Yes for these come of diuers grounds certainty of faith springeth from the nature of faith and from the truth and power of the promiser Rom. 4 20. but doubting commeth from the weakenesse of faith as shaking commeth from the palsy not from the hand Tim. What is the vse of all this Silas First it administreth a maruailous great comfort to such as haue obtained grace to beleeue truly although weakly for they bee without hazard of perishing and certaine to haue saluation Secondly an admonition to labour hard for faith and to preserue it when we haue it Lastly that the Papists must needs doubt of their saluation and be fearfull seeing they will haue the promise of life eternall fulfilled vnto them vppon the merit of their workes and not on their faith only For they are alwayes doubtfull whether they haue merited sufficiently they know not when they haue done works enough yea in their Tridentine Councell they commend no other faith but coniecturall euen a bare opinion and haesitation condemning ful assurance or certainty of faith for impious presumption allowing not certainty of grace without a speciall reuelation from heauen DIAL X. Verse 17. As it is written I haue made thee a Father of many Nations euen before God whom he beleeued who quickened the dead and called those thinges which bee not as though they were Tim. WHat things be contained in this Text Silas Foure thinges First hee proueth by the word of the promise that Abraham is the father of beleeuing Gentiles as it is written Secondly hee she weth how and in what manner he is their father before God Thirdly he commendeth Abrahams faith in respect of that whereunto it leaned which is God himselfe Lastly God is described by two effects impossible to art or nature First quickning the dead secondly calling thinges which were not as though they were here is the second mayne part of this chapter namely a degression into the praise of Abraham Tim. From whence is the authority fetched which is here brought to proue the beleeuing Gentiles to bee Abrahams children Sil. Out of Genesis 17. 5. which Oracle contayneth the Etymology or notation of Abrahams name Tim. What is here meant by many nations Sil. All such as should beleeue of what nation or people soeuer they were Tim. In what sence is Abraham called their father Sil. First because he was a patterne of faith to all beleeuers Secondly because he was a teacher of that saith being a Prophet Gene. 20. 7. Thirdly and chiefly because all beleeuers haue fellowship with Abraham in those promises concerning the Messias which were made to him Tim. But how came Abraham by this honour to bee the father of all beleeuers Sil. By the vertue of Gods free promise beeing beleeued by him therefore Abraham had not this honour by workes Tim. But how and in what manner is Abraham the father of all beleeuing people Sil. That is expressed in these words before God which wordes bee taken diuers wayes of interpreters some expound it thus before God that is to say as God is or after the example of God who is father of all people Gentiles as well as Iewes so is Abraham a father Some againe expound it thus before God that is so he is a father as the fatherhoode of Abraham cannot bee vnderstood by mans reason but by the Spirit of God But these words before God are to bee vnderstoode of a spirituall kindred such as hath place before God in his sight and account and maketh vs accepted in his sight there is great necessity hereof because sithence the blessing of sauing health is contayned and shut within the seed of Abraham therefore wee must bee Abrahams Children according to faith that we may be partakers of life eternall Tim. What is the instruction from hence Sil. That the Iewes which are Abrahams children onely according to the flesh by carnall generation are not so precious in Gods sight as the Gentiles which beleeue for these are properly children and heires of heauenly Canaan where of the earthly was but a type and a shadow Tim. What is that whereunto Abrahams faith doth leane Sil. It is God whome hee beleeued now to beleeue God is not only to giue credit to his word but to put confidence in his mercifull promises for faith cannot find any stay vntill it come to God because hee onely is infinite in power as well as in trueth and goodnes for hee alone can produce a beeing out of a-not-beeing and restore life to things dead Tim. What testimony did God giue to Abraham of his infinite power and omnipotency Ril Vnto the persons of Abraham and Sarah who in respect of generation were as good as dead for she was both barren aged and past bearing and hee was an hundered yeare olde so as there was in reason as much hope of the dead to engender as of them This of quickning the dead may be stretched further euen to the particular raysing of some who were naturally dead as Lazarus and others as also to the generall resurrection of the dead at the last day in both which respects God doth quicken the dead also the Saints while they liued haue had often experience of this effect of Gods power namely that being often as it were dead in their owne opinions by greate sicknesse or very perillous daungers they haue beene suddenly and mightily reuiued as Daniel in the den Isaac on the Mount Moriah Ioseph in the pit Moyses in the water and Peter on the water nay further this hath also place euen in soule cases for while some that haue thought themselues no better then dead and lost men in respect of their many and fearfull sinnes haue yet bin quickned by Gods mighty grace and restored to hope as Iob Dauid and others Lastly in order of Nature this hath place for we yearely see thinges as Hearbes Plantes and other creatures dead in winter reuiued in the spring time Tim. Whereunto should this serue Silas To teach the godly in their greatest extreamitics to fixe the eye of their minde vpon Gods Almightinesse that they may haue comfort knowing that they haue to do with a God that can say to the dead Liue they shall liue Also to ground all their prayers vppon his power as the chiefe prop of faith Tim. Whereunto do ye refer that which followeth of calling things which are not as though they were Silas Vnto the Gentiles which of no people were made a people by Gods especiall calling These words haue yet a larger sence for God fulfilled them in the first creation wherein by his word onely hee made all things of nothing also he daily fulfilleth them in the regeneration of the
elect who before being not beloued are now beloued Hos. 2. 23. Tim. What may we note from hence Silas The easinesse of creating and regenerating which with God is no harder for vs then to cal a man to vs or to call any thing by the name Wee see also what an effectuall calling is a powerfull woorking causing persons to be what they were not of enemies and sinners sonnes of God and righteous DIAL XI Verse 18. Which Abraham aboue hope beleeued vnder hope that hee should bee the Father of many Nations according to that which was spoken so shal thy seede be Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To extoll and praise Abrahams Faith by two reasons First that it did not giue place to sence nature or humaine reason For he beleeued aboue the hope of man Secondly that it did embrace the truth of Gods promise contained in these words So shal thy seed be And thirdly that he made the Diuine promise the support and prop of his Faith according to that was spoken Tim. What is meant when he saith He beleeued vnder hope aboue hope Sil. That he beleeued vnder the hope of God aboue the hope of man for when things were dosperate in the reason of man and there was no hope at al yet looking vp vnto God he had hope he conceiued inuincible faith in his heart ioyned with an infallible hope euen against hope of flesh nature and all mans reason Tim. Do ye not by hope vnderstand things hoped for Sil. It is true then the meaning is contrary to that which might by man haue beene hoped for hee waited for things which were set forth of God to be hoped for ouercomming by his faith all difficulties absurdities impossibilities which natural reason might obiect and oppose to him Tim. What was our instruction from hence Sil. This that a true faith dooth enable vs to expect such things as the reason of man would neuer look for Example heereof we haue in Abraham who beeing an hundred yeare old it was against reason that he should looke to bee a Father yet his faith beleeued it seeing God promised it Also Dauid against all humaine reason and hope beleeued that he should be King of Israel Also when Moyses beleeued that the people should passe through the Red sea as on dry Land it was against reason the like is to bee saide of Ioseph and of many others Tim. Is it not dangerous in things which are set forth to be beleeued to take counsell with the wisedom of the Flesh or with humaine reason Silas It is so as appeareth in the example of Sara of Zachary and Moyses all which were punished because they consulted with flesh and bloud instead of beleeuing Also in the example of wicked men who haue receiued hurt by leaning too much to the wisedom of the flesh more then to the word of God as they which perished in the wildernes also a Prince which was seruant to Iehoram King of Israel 2 Kings 7. Lastly Zedekiah K. of Iudah Ier. 39 7. Therefore in things which are propounded by the word to be beleeued of vs we must renounce that which our owne and other mens reason can obiect seeme it neuer so absurde and vnpossible which God promiseth yet it must absolutely be beleeued Tim. What was further commended to vs out of the first part of this sentence Silas That it is the propertie of a true faith to keepe men in hope euen when things seeme desperate Example heereof we haue in our Sauiour Christ Math 27. My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee And Saint Paul Act 27. Iob Ieremy For faith doth beare it selfe bold vpon the truth of Gods promises For faith doth beleeue the whole word of God according as is written Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. 10 17. But the word of promise is that whereabout Faith is properly occupied and especially the word of the Couenant wherein God promised to bee mercifull to our sinnes Tim. Yet the promise that Abraham is saide to beleeue was of a temporal blessing euen of a large posterity Silas It was so but this dependeth vpon the Couenant of grace and helpeth him to beleeue that For he that can beleeue God to be faithfull in smaller thinges can also beleeue that he will keepe his truth in greater thinges Againe all earthly pronuses are fulfilled for Christ who is the substance of the Couenant Againe all earthly promises proceede from mercy and Christ is the foundation of Gods mercy towards vs. DIAL XI Verse 19 20 21. And he not weake in Faith considered not his owne bodie now dead when he was almost an hundred yeare olde neyther yet the deadnesse of Sarah her wombs hee doubted not at the promise thorow vnbeleefe but was strong in faith and gaue glory to God being fully assured that he which had promised was able to performe it Tim. WHat was the drift and end of this Text Silas To praise the faith of Abraham by these few Reasons First by setting downe the hinderances of his faith as the deadnesse of Abrahams body and of Sarah her wombe Secondly by opposing to it the contrary which is vnbeleefe Thirdly by the measure of his Faith which was a strong and full assurance Lastly by the end of his beleeuing which was the giuing of God the glory Tim. What is meant heere by being weake in Faith Silas Sometimes Faith is put for the Doctrine beleeued Rom. 14 1. then to be weake in Faith is to be rude and ignorant of the truth and not to be weake is to be verie expert and skilfull But faith is heere put for the guift of faith and by not being weake in faith he meaneth that he did strongly beleeue God This speech is a figuratiue kinde of speech when one meaneth more then he expresseth as Psal. 〈◊〉 1. 17. not to despise is put for to hold in great account Tim. What were the hinderances which might haue troubled and hurt Abrahams faith Sil. The deadnesse of his owne body and of Sarahs wombe which he did not consider that is he thought not these things so able to hinder the promise of God as Gods power was able to fulfill the thing promised neither did he reason by vnbeleefe against the promise of God saying he mocks me or it will come to nothing Tim. What was the instruction from hence Sil. Thisꝭ a strong faith yeeldeth not to such lets which discourage or daunt it but breaketh thorough and ouercommeth them all bee they neuer so many and so great whereby the faithfull are to be admonished of their duty which is to striue against the impediments of their faith not to yeeld Tim. What thing is contrary to faith Sil. Vnbeleefe by which is meant either a meere priuation of faith when there is none at all as in Turkes and Iewes and wicked men or a defect in beleeuing whereby one beleeueth a thing faintely through infirmity of
might misse of glory then it should make ashamed contrary to the saying of the Apostle Secondly great and many sins cannot make hope vaine because all sinnes are forgiuen to the godly which beeleeue and repent 1 Iohn 1. 9. Thirdly the godly are taught of Christ to pray for forgiuenesse of sins and the confirming of their wils to the end Math. 6 12. And that which they aske according to the will of God is granted them Finally though mens wils in their nature bee changeable yet the hope of glory is founded vpon the vnchangeable will and counsel of God Tim. What vse and profit is to be made of this doctrine Sil. First it controlleth the opinion of the Papists which ground hope at least in part vppon merit of good workes from whence will follow continuall vn certainty and doubt of saluation for that they neuer are sure when their merits are sufficient Also their corrupt opinion wil proue vnsound by these reasons First because all hope and confidence is accursed which doth not rest vpō God Iere. 17. 10. and our good woorkes are not God therefore no hope is to be put in them Secondly such as are newly conuerted vnto Christ from some wicked life and grieuous sins they haue hope then but they 〈◊〉 no merit of woorkes going before therefore their hope cannot rest vpon their merits which be not but as for those who haue good workes and liue well they haue more cause to hope well because good workes are a good signe of good hope and some prop they are to helpe hope but they may not be hoped in or taken as a cause why we must hope If any say that patience is a good worke and Paul faith hope springeth of patience therefore hope springeth out of works I answere hope commeth of patience but not as from a cause of it no more then afflictions bee cause of patience Furthermore from hence wee are admonished that such as alwaies doubt of their Saluation can haue no Christian hope therefore they must striue against doubting Lastly there is great vse for them which feele themselues indued with Christian hope for whatsoeuer their afflictions or enemies or sinnes bee yet they cannot bee confounded but at last must be happy for we are saued by hope Rom. 8. Tim. Now come to the second part of this text and tell vs how many wayes is the loue of God taken in Scripture Sil. Two wayes either passiue for that loue wherewith God is loued of vs 1 Iohn 4 12. or actiuely for the loue wherewith God doeth loue vs in his Sonne this is meant here Tim. How may it appeare that it is put here for that loue wherewith God loueth and embraceth vs Sil. First by the reason vsed in the next verse for Christ dyed for vs which proueth Gods loue to vs. Secondly by the 8. verse following where it is written God commendeth his loue to vs. Thirdly wee haue not our hope certaine and vnshaken because we loue God but because God who deceiueth not loueth vs. Tim. In what meaning is Gods loue said to bee shed abroad in our harts Sil. It is thus much that the sence and feeling of his loue is shed and powred into the hearts of his children Tim. Did not God loue the elect from euerlasting before they were borne Silas It is true howbeit that was onely in purpose and decree and so it was secretly knowne to himselfe But Paul speaketh of the manifestation of this loue vnto the elect after they are borne a new for when the elect are regenerate then God dooth expresse his loue vnto them and they do by faith lay hold of the loue of God beleeuing that they are loued of God and haue their harts affected with a ioyous feeling of it For as the box of costly and precious ointment which the woman poured vpon Christs head Mathew 26 7. gaue no fauour while it was shut up in the box but being shed powred out did yeelde a most sweete sent and sauour vnto all which were in the roome euen so the loue of God is pent and shut vp as it were in Gods decree before regeneration and faith so as it is not felt of the elect but at their new birth when they haue faith to beleeue the promise of saluatiō by Christ thē this loue is as an ointment powred out and doth exceedingly and plentifully refresh the hearts of the elect with the sence and feeling of it Tim. What then is the doctrino we learne heere Silas That the most louing God is content not onely to loue his children but withall doth assure them of his loue so as they certainly know that they are loued and are cheared in their hearts by the perswasion of his loue For as it is nothing to a blinde man to know that the Sunne is a glorious bright creature when himselfe cannot see it or to a poore man to know where much treasure is whiles himselfe cannot come at it so it is nothing to heare and know that there is much loue hid in God except our selues feele it and become partakers of it Examples we haue of the Apostles many other beleeuers Acts 5 41. Rom 8 38 39. who haue had the sence of Gods loue in their hearts and haue reioyced therein euen in their extreame afflictions in the flames of fire and depth of Dungeons horrible and darksome Tim. Haue the faithfull a feeling of Gods loue alwaies in one tenor and like measure Silas Neither of both but by sinnes and temptations it is often interrupted as the light of the Sunne is darkned and lessened by mistes and clowdes yet this loue of God shall alwayes endure in them because God altereth not Tim. Whence commeth the feeling of Gods loue Silas It is the especial worke of Gods spirite of Adoption Rom. 8 16. and it commeth by the free gift of God who giueth it to all the members of his son Rom. 8 9. Ephes. 1 13. Tim. What doth the sence of Gods loue giuen them by the spirit worke in the faithfull Silas First a feruent and vnfaigned loue of God 2. Cor. 5 14. 1 Iohn 4 19. We loue him because hee loued vs first Secondly an hearty loue of our neighbor for Gods sake 1 Iohn 4 21. Thirdly ioy in the holy Ghost 1 Pet 1 8. Lastly great encrease of hope in a more full assurance of inioying the glorie looked for inasmuch as God who loues vs and holds vs deare vnto him cannot change nor deceiue vs. Silas I pray you tell vs heere is it the nature of hope to bee certaine and to giue this assurance ye speake of Silas Of hope generally taken it is the property only to looke and expect for a thing which wee haue not Rom. 8 24 25. but the certainty and assurance of hope growes from the nature of the things hoped for which if they be certaine and haue sure and certaine causes the hope is certain and assured otherwise it is not for hope
stead of not stirring raging it doeth moue and trouble our mindes to see and to feele it For sin is neuer truely dead in any natural man but counterfotly and in seeming onely while the knowledge of the law is absent there is a true death of sin by the Holy Ghost as Chap 6. 2 3. and a dissembled death while the law is hid from vs. Tim. What doth the Apostle meane in the beginning of the 10. verse when he said he dyed Sylas That is while before hee seemed to himselfe to bee aliue nor hee sawe himselfe to bee vnder the wrath of God and eternall condemnation through the breach of the law hence came death not frō the law as he sheweth by his owne example Tim. What instruction haue we from hence Silas This that the law serueth to kil men by shewing and making them feele that they are dead and most wretched by reason of their sinnes Some are thus killed to destruction as Cayne Esau and Iudas and such as wholly despaire Others are killed vnto saluation as Paul and such as by their despaire are driuen to Christ when they are brought to see nothing in themselues saue matter of eternall misery and bee out of hope euer to bee saued by any goodnesse or strength in themselues this causeth them to looke about for succour from elsewhere DIAL VII Verses 10 11. The same commandement which was ordayned to life was found to be vnto me vnto death 11. For sin tooke occasion by the commaundement and deceiued mee and thereby slew me Tim. VVHat is the drift of this text Sil. To prooue that the lawe is not properly the cause of death but sinne verse 10. and withall to shew how it is that sinne did slay and kill Paul namely by deceiuing him verse 11. he cleareth nowe the lawe from being cause os destruction as before from being cause of sin Tim. How is it proued that the law is not the cause of death and of Gods wrath Silas Because on Gods part it was ordained vnto this end that it might giue life but sinnefull lustes stirred vp in Paul by occasion of the law deceiued him and by that deceiuing slue him spiritually so sin is the proper cause and by it selfe of death law is the occasion only that by the deceit of sin abusing it Tim. In what meaning doth the Apostle say that the commandement is ordayned to life Silas It teacheth what end and vse there is of the lawe in respect of it owne nature that is if so it be obserued it doeth giue life eternall For so it forbiddeth euill things and commandeth good things as it propoundeth the promise of life to the perfect doers of it as it is written He that doth these things shall liue in them Leuit. 18 5. Indeed the Apostle sayth Gal. 3 21. That the lawe cannot giue life and Rom. 8 3. that it is impossible for the law to giue life But the fault hereof is not in the nature of the law which of it selfe is a worde and oracle of life like to the fountaine whence it flowed but in our weaknesse which cannot fulfill the perfect righteousnesse of the law whence it is that it cannot giue life as the Sunne cannot giue light to him that hath no eyes to see it nor Christ cannot giue righteousnes to him that hath no faith to receiue it Tim. How doeth the Apostle meane that the commaundement was found to be to him to death Silas Thus much that at length he felt it to be so for the law when he rightly vnderstood it made him perceiue that hauing in it owne nature a good vse euen to giue life that accidentally and besides the nature of the law it proued to him the cause of death insomuch as by breaking it he felt himselfe guilty of death and damnation For the proper cause of death and damnation it is sin or our natural corruption deceiuing vs which abusing the ministry of the law by being stirred vp by it the more brings forth of it owne nature properly and by it selfe death and damnation Thus sin as the true cause doeth produce death and the law occasionally doth produce it Tim. Open this somewhat more playnly and fully vnto vs how death comes of sin by the occasion of the law and how sinne deceiued Paul the Apostle being in his Pharisaisme Sylas Thus when wee begin to knowe the law rightly we see and feele our sinnes which before wee did not and that thereby wee are woorthily adiudged to damnation in hell fire This cannot bee carnestly thought on but that it will bring vs to some taste of destruction in which respect though wee doe liue in our bodies yet we are said to bee slaine by sin and to be dead For as a malefactor condemned who by feare feeling of his death approaching looking for it euery minute with terrour may be said to tast of death and to die before he be dead so it was with Paul being vnregenerate and so it is with all the elect when the law hath effectually conuicted them of death through sin they haue a sence of death eternall which breedeth great heauines and disquietnes in their minds Tim. What instruction is to be gathered from hence Silas That there is none of yeares which are partakers of the life of Christ and of his righteousnesse vntill by the preaching of the lawe they haue such a sence in regard of their sinnes that they feele themselues dead this is the course that God taketh with all his children to kill them before hee make them aliue to humble them in feeling of their own dead-sick and damnable estate before he heale them and saue them The reason hereof is because till men be brought to a through-sight sence of their own dsmnation they will neuer secke after Christ nor desire him without which they can neuer finde him nor haue him God hauing so ordained it that by seeking we shall find him Secondly the health and saluation by Christ becomes more sweete and precious to men that first haue felt themselues lost and damned without him as health is more pleasant after sicknesse liberty after bond plenty after scarsity faire weather after foule peace after warre therefore to haue his grace highly esteemed God vseth to bring them very low that shall enioy it Tim. What is the vse of this Doctrine Sil. First to stir vp secure sinners to labour much to be brought to the feeling of their owne deserued damnation that they may become capable of the grace of Christ vnto saluation Secondly to comfort those which bee humbled to Hell gates in the sence of their sinnes seeing by this meanes God is a preparing of them for his Sonne to become meete to bee his members by faith Lastly to admonish such faithfull Christians as haue by the Law beene brought to seele the death due to their sinnes to be thankfull in word and deed for such a deliuereance This is
newes to all beleeuers that they shall not be condemned yet this comfort should be most effectuall to the godly poore because amidst many worldly wants and miseries which trouble them it may and should excedingly ioy their heartes to thinke vppon what great good thinges they haue by Christ as forgiuenesse of all sinnes freedome from all punishment of sinne from Gods anger and hell fire yea and more then this euen perfect righteousnes and eternall life of which things the least is more worth then a whole world and therefore whosoeuer cannot reioyce in these thinges whatsoeuer their worldly crosses be it argueth deepe vnthanksulnesse and is a signe of vnbeleefe Finally touching the godly rich they are to be admonished here that they are more to cheere themselues with the comfort of this freedome then with all their wealth and worship Tim. But seeing none shall haue this comfort but such as are in Christ and walke after the spirit tel vs what it is to be in Christ Silas To be knit and ioyned vnto him through faith as members be to the head or as branches be to the vine Tim. What are we to learne from hence Silas First that none saue the faithfull are capable of the former comfort because onely they are in Christ therfore howsoeuer hypocrites and other wicked men yea prophane men and Atheists do lay claime to this comfort yet it doeth not at all belong vnto them because they are out of Christ. Secondly wee cannot be partakers of any benefit by Christ except first we be in Christ as the members must be one with the head and the branches with the vine ere they can draw any life from them Thirdly such as beleeue in Christ and abide in this faith may be sure and certaine to be saued the reasons hereof bee first because euery beleeuer is iustified and is freed from the guiltinesse of his sinnes and therefore must needs be saued Secondly hee is one with Christ in whome there is nothing but righteousnesse and life therefore he is free from sinne and damnation Tim. Yea but though hee is freed from sinnes past and the punishment of them yet euery beleeuer by his dayly sins makes himselfe worthy and guilty of death Silas True beleeuers neede not feare neither sins past present nor to come for this vniuersall negatiue particle No excludes all sinnes the beleeuer being iustified from sins past sinnes present are pardoned and sinnes to come shall not be imputed therefore he needs feare no destruction Tim. Will not this doctrine make men secure and carelesse Silas This doctrine shakes out of mens heartes the feare of condemnation and therefore in that behalfe they may bee spiritually secure but it nourisheth the feare of God beeing an enemy to carnail security Psalme 130 4. Rom. 12 1 2. Tim. Yea but we cannot be so certaine of our saluation as S. Paul who had his certainty by speciall reuelation Silas This is not so for first Paul speakes not here of his owne particular assurance but giues a generall comfort common to all the faithfull therefore he writeth not there is no condemnation to mee but to them Secondly the signes and tokens of this comfort to wit to bee in Christ and to walke after the Spirit are common with Paul to all other true Christians verse 1. Therefore the certainty of saluation and the comfort from thence must needes be common Tim. Yea but it is no where written that thou art in Christ and that thou shalt not be condemned and it is the doctrine of Protestants to beleeue no more then is written and therefore no man can be assured to be saued Silas When wee teach that no more is to be beleeued then is written it is to be vnderstood of vniuersall doctrin and generall points of sauing trueth to which wee are not bound to giue credit nor can we firmly assent vnto them vnlesse wee finde them in the written word which is the onely sufficient perfect rule of faith and manners Iohn 5. 29. and 21 24. and 2 Tim. 3 16. Secondly wee affirme and hold that the certainty of euery mans owne saluation is written in the fleshy tables of his heart by the finger of the Holy Ghost for as this vniuersal trieth that there is no condemnation to such as are in Christ is written in the word so this particular assumption of the faithfull but I beleeue and am in Iesus Christ is written in his owne heart by the Spirit which alwayes togither with Faith workes and engenders a feeling and testimonie of his owne Faith whereby he knowes he is a beleeuing person 2 Cor. 13 5. 2 Timoth 1 12. Marke 9 24. all which places shew that a man hath in himselfe a witnesse of his owne Faith Now wee are bound no lesse certainely to beleeue the inward particular witnesse written by the Spirite in the hearts and consciences of ieuery faithfull person then that outwarde vniuersall testimony which is written in the word for both these testimonies come from one Spirit and the sence of faith is as firme as an article of faith Tim. Yea but this singular Faith what is it else but a singular presumption For how common is it for euery euill liuer to say I trust to be saued Silas It is verie true that such as haue no faith and so be not in Christ if they say they trust to bee saued it is presumption but for a truely faithfull man to beleeue and to say it is no presumption but dutie and godly submission to him that commands to beleeue in his Sonne Tim. But how shall we bee able to know the presumption of the Flesh from the assurance of faith they be so like the one to the other Sil. By this marke which the Apostle himselfe giues vs that such as haue Faith and be in Christ walke after the Spirit that is by the Spirit they do mortifie the flesh and the workes thereof Tim. What other instructions ariseth there hence Silas It teacheth vs the exceeding priuiledge of a true Christian beleeuer in that he is freed from all feare of condemnation and eternall punnishment in Hell fire Tim. But tell vs whether it may be knowne who they are that are knit to Christ by faith Silas Yes it may surely be knowne though not to others yet to themselues for otherwise this freedome priuiledge from condemnation could bee no ground or matter at all of any comfort Secondly the taking of an elect soule out of Adam and the corruption of nature to graft it into Christ is not such a sleight worke but that it may be knowne and percciued of him in whom it is wrought being a person come to yeares and discretion For it is the opening the eyes of the blinde the quickening of the dead the translating from darkenesse to light the healing of the withcrcd hand the making of the lame to walke the setting at liberty him that was in prison All which shewes this work to be both mighty
merits which are to be abhorred howsoeuer couered coloured with the name of Christ. 2. It admonisheth al men to seek after the true distinct knowledge of Christ and to desire to knowe nothing but him vnto their Saluation hungring after his righteousnesse wherein standeth their full and perfect happines Tim. What is the other instruction out of this first part of the verse Silas That the whole righteousnesse of Christ and whatsoeuer is in him is theirs which are his members by faith Tim. By what meanes may we know them which are thus his members Silas By this marke that they walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Tim. But wherefore doth the Apostle repeate this hauing mentioned it before Sil. Because faith by the which we are in Christ being an inward and hidden thing seated in the heart may easily be counterfeited by hypocrites who if they doe say professe and glory as they are apt enough to doe that they are in Christ there is none can controlle them because none can see what is within their heart And howsoeuer such as are in Christ and haue faith cannot deceiue themselues yet many doe by thinking that they are in Christ and haue faith when they haue not presuming of what they neuer receiued This moued the Apostle heere againe to mention such a witnesse of our being in Christ which is outward and more subiect to sence and therefore lesse apt to deceiue namely newnesse of life or sanctification which is such a thing as without it we can neuer assure our selues that our sinnes are forgiuen by Christ and that wee are free from condemnation For though it bee not the proper cause of our comfort yet it is a cause without the which we can haue no sound comfort because it is ioyned vnseparably with iustification for God doth euer sanctifie by his Spirite whom he doth iustifie by faith also newnesse of life is a sure testimony of a liuely faith which makes vs certaine of our reconciliation with God Moreouer newnesse of life is a fruite of the Spirite and it is a chiese part of our thankfulnesse to God who is then most honoured when his will is sincerely obeyed Tim. What vse is to be made of this doctrine Silas First it reproues the hypocrites who say they haue sanctification and yet still walke after their owne corrupt lusts Secondly it admonisheth all to labour for sanctification without which there is no certainty of iustification to be had Lastly it much confirmeth such Christians as labour to leade their liues purely after the motions of Gods Spirit stiuing against the lusts of the flesh grieuing hartily with a godly sorrow for their dayly failings of infirmities rising by true repentance laying hold vpon forgiuenesse promised of Christ in the Gospell and euer after walking more awfully and warily and endeuoring to profit to better and greater obedience of the worde let not such despaire DIAL V. Verse 5. For they that are after the flesh sauour the things of the flesh and they that are after the Spirit sauour the things of the Spirit Tim. VVHat doth this text containe Sil. The Apostle hauing turned himselfe againe to the doctrine of sanctification affirmeth of all beleeuing iustified persons that they study to liue and leade an holy life this hee declareth by a comparison of contraries after this manner They which are after the flesh walke after the flesh and liue wickedly but they which are after the Spirit walke after the Spirit and liue godly Tim. Now expound the words and tell vs who they are that are said to be after the flesh Sylas Vnregenerate and wicked men who are nothing spirit euen as carnall men guided by the flesh are wholly giuen and addicted to such workes as bee euill The reason hereof is that which our Sauiour saith Math. 12 33. make the tree good and the fruite will be good also it is the nature of the spirit and grace of God to moue and prouoke vnto such works as be like it selfe that is to say holy and good works as the spirit is holy and good Tim. But many godly persons which are after the spirit haue both thought vpon and done the things of the flesh as Dauid Peter c. Howe then is it saide that they which are after the spirit sauour the things of the spirit Sil. It is so yet godly persons are not mooued to those euill works by the spirit but by remaining flesh and dwelling sin for the godly are sanctified in part and not perfectly and wholly therefore it is that they are still subiect to sin which as they doe not commit by full consent of will so they rise againe from it by repentance Secondly a spirituall and godly person must not be iudged by one or some few acts and deeds of his life but by the tenour of it and as it is for the most part now for the most part godly men do sauour and mind the things of the spirit their desire is to liue honestly and to keepe an vnspotted conscience toward God and all men Tim. Shew vs nowe the profit that is to bee gathered out of this doctrine Silas First it teacheth that all beleeuing iustified persons much exercise themselues in such works as are commanded of God for iustification by faith wheresoeuer it is it hath alwayes annexed with it sanctification or study of an holy life which can no more bee separated from it then a liuing man can bee separated from the Soule Secondly heere is a speciall comfort for such as endeuour to doe good things pleasing to God with loue and delight in them because such haue the spirit of Christ and therefore are certainly iustified free from sin and death and shall neuer be condemned but eternally saued in heauen Lastly it affoards a reproofe to such as say they haue the spirit of Christ and yet sauour not the things of the spirit being either openly vicious and wicked or else careles of a godly conuersatiō neither fearing the offence of God nor yet once in earnest minding his glory DIAL VI. Verse 6. For the wisedome of the flesh is death but the wisdome of the Spirit is life and peace Tim. WHat doth this text containe Silas Vnto the doctrine of sanctification set forth in the 5. v. here is now ioyned an exhortation stirring vp beleeuing persons vnto holinesse of life Secondly a dehortation to disswade from following the lusts of the flesh and liuing wickedly Tim. By what argument and reason doth he call men from walking after the lusts of the flesh Sylas By a reason taken from the effects thus To liue after the flesh following and obeying the lustes thereof will bring forth death and therefore we must not sauour and affect the things of the flesh but eschue them rather Tim. By what reason are beleeuers perswaded to sauour the things of the spirit or to liue holily Silas By a reason taken from the effects after this sort To sauour the
whereby Gods eternall loue descends to his chosen and whereby they climbe to their decreed felicity to which none can come but through these meanes by which means the elect are sure to attaine it yea though they be afflicted here which causeth them to bear afflictions more patiently and valiantly in that they perceiue their saluation to be of God by so many excellent works of his grace so certainely and vndeceiueably procured and effected Tim. What are the degrees whereby the elect arise and climbe to blessednesse in heauen Silas Foure 1. predestination 2. vocation 3. iustification and glorification the first of these is done afore all times the three last of them be performed in time Tim. What doe ye call predestination Silas It is an action of God peculiar to all the elect which are purposed vnto saluation the rest of mankinde being passed by and left to their corruption and iust perdition This action of God is not done in time but from euerlasting God fore-ordaining his elect both to the end which is eternall life and vnto the meanes leading thither to wit vocation faith iustification sanctification the Crosse also death eyther naturall or violent The very worde predestinate is taken foure times in Scripture in this sence as Rom. 8 29 30. Ephe. 1 5 11. But yet the matter and doctrine it selfe is handled in very many places as Rom. 9 and 11. Ephe. 1. Mat. 11 25. Iohn 6. and 17 6. Acts 13 48. 1. Thes. 5. 1. Pet. 1 2. Iude 4. Reuel 17 8. and else-where often Tim. Some thinke this doctrine should not bee taught and therefore raile at the teachers of it what thinke ye do they well Sil. No verily for it ought to be taught to Gods people and Gods Ministers should sinne if they passed by it My reasons for this be these First because Christ and his Apostles taught it and their example is warrant enough for Gods ministers For as the Apostles were followers of Christ in doctrine and life so ought other Ministers Secondly it is a part of Gods reuealed will and therfore belongs vnto vs Deut. 29 29. Thirdly it is a speciall ground-worke of comfort and patience vnder the Crosse to knowe our predestination to bee so vnchangeable strong and firme as our Apostle doth heere aduertise vs ●●at afflictions though many and great cannot hinder ●●●t further our saluation Fourthly it is the Mother of all godlinesse to which a man or woman doth then and neuer before seriously and chearfully apply themselues when they vnderstand by Faith Gods eternall loue towards them in their free predestinating to life 1 Iohn 4 10. We loue him because he loued vs first Lastly it begetteth true and ioyfull thankfulnesse which we will not offer vnto God except wee know that all good comes of his eternall purpose without any respect to our worthinesse Tim. But the conceite of Predestination and that the Predestinate persons must be saued dooth take away from men all care of Faith Ministery Prayer and Good workes vse of Sacraments c. Silas This is a verie slanderous vntrueth because the Doctrine of Predestination doth necessarily put commend vnto vs all these meanes so farre off it is from destroying them or extinguishing the care vse of them because it is taught that whome God predestinateth them he calleth iustifieth and glorifieth Thus vnlikely it is that Predestination should exclude Christ the Gospell Faith Calling Iustification Holinesse of life as it doth include and inferre all these necessarily The reason heereof is because it is wholesomly taught beleeued according to Scripture that God predestinating vnto the end hath also fore-ordained to the meanes which bring vs vnto such an end and that immutably and most freely And therefore it is a grosse error to say this Doctrine breedeth either desperation or licentiousnes Tim. What is heere meant by Calling Sil. It is that meane or worke of God wherein his eternall loue in predestinating vs to eternall life doth first appeare and shew it selfe vnto vs for till the time of our Calling the decree of predestination is secret and hidden in Gods counsell but by our Calling it is made knowne to the elect themselues For if God doe call all those in time whom he ordained to life before all times then such as be called may thereby know they are predestinated as the cause is knowne by the effect the roote by the fruit the fountain by the riuer so Gods eternal loue by calling Tim. Yet it is written Math. 20. 16. that many are called but few chosen whereby it should seeme that calling is no sure marke of election and predestination vnto glory Silas It is true there is an outward calling by the Gospell onely which wants the inward grace of the Spirite to make it effectuall this is common to many reprobates and is no sure token of election because it brings no further then to the bare knowledge and profession of Christ and to some generall and sleight reformation such as an hypocrite may haue but not to Christ himselfe by faith in the gospel But the calling which is both a fruite and a certain note of predestination is such a calling which together with the outward preaching of the word hath the inward working of the holy Spirite to be get faith in the Gospell whereby a man is carried to Christ himselfe to be planted in him and ioyned to him as a true member and to be gouerned by his spirit working in vs obedience to our caller of this calling our text speakes Tim. What instructions are to bee learned from this which hath beene sayd of calling Sil. First how needfull a thing it is for vs to haue the gospell and the preaching thereof seeing persons of yeares are not ordinarily called vnto the faith of Christ without it Rom. 10. 14. Secondly that no Christian must rest in an outward generall calling and knowledge though it be a great mercy but striue and labour after that especiall and effectuall calling which is euer coupled with faith and obedience to the Gospell Thirdly such as haue this calling haue exceeding cause to reioyce and be glad and to bee thankfull to God because they haue receiued an vndoubted pledge of Gods loue and their owne saluation in such sort as they may glory in God yea euen in tribulations Tim. But what shall we thinke of Infants that cannot heare the Gospell cannot they haue an effectuall calling Silas Yea all predestinate Infants and such wee are to take all the infants of Christian Parents to be for that they belong to the Couenant and we know nothing to the contrary they haue an inward calling by the Spirit though not after the same manner as persons of discretion and yeares For the Apostle heere speakes of the meanes how all the elect are brought to blessednesse therefore seeing infants are predestinate as no doubt many be they must of necessity bee iustified and haue a Calling For whom hee predestinateth them he
people yet the greatest number of them shoulde not be deliuered from eternal destruction The reasons hereof bee first their generall vnkindnesse and vnthankefulnesse deseruing it Rom. 10 21. also verse 2. Secondly God had decreed to call and saue but a few of them as appcareth by the latter part of this prophesie verse 28. For to make his account and gather it into a short sum signifies not onely that God would lessen the number of the Iewes but that he did it out of his foreappointment his election and reprobation bearing the whole sway stroake in this thing For more could not bee called and saued then were elected and these were not many Tim. What is the vse of this doctrine Sil. First that euē in the visible Church al are not elect yea that the reprobates do in number exceede the elect Secondly that we must not bee offended with the fewnesse of the godly and great heapes of the vngodly for such was the estate of Gods people vnder the law Thirdly it teacheth that multitudes be no markes of the visible Church in all societies for the most part the best number is the least and the greatest the worst Tim. What is meant by the Lord of Hoasts Sil. The mighty God whose hoasts all creatures be executing his will as Souldiours the will of their Captaine Tim. What doth Seede signifie Silas A small number reserued as a little seed Corne out of a great heape that which is chosen for seede is much lesse then the whole crop Tim. What learne we by this comparison Silas First that Gods elect bee a precious people as the seede Corne is the best graine 1 Pet 2 9. which must engender in them a loue and comfort of theyr excellent estate euen vnder the Crosse and in others a reuerence towards them and it condemnes the world which iudge basely of them Secondly we learne that the godlie are exceeding fruitfull as seede bringes forth some thirtie some sixty some an hundred folde a sew Apostles conuerted whole nations to Christ Acts 2 41. Colos. 1 7 8. Rom. 1. Thirdly the number of the elect is the smallest number It is verie great considered simply Reuel 7 9. but small in respect of the damned Luke 12 32. Tim. What vse of this last point Sil. It admonisheth all men to striue most earnestly to finde themselues amongst this little slocke and to ioyne rather with a fewe that liue well then to doe ill with a multitude that ioyne together in euill Tim. What learne we from hence that God is saide to haue left this seede Silas To hold it for a great mercy of God that there be any that beleeue in him and feare him in so generall an apostacie as if in a deluge of water or generall fire one house or two should bee preserued in a great Citic Tim. What is meant by being like Silas Vtterly to be wasted destroyed as they were whereof reade Deut. 29. Gen. 18. Tim. What is our Doctrine from hence Silas That Gods owne people deserued as greeuous things as the Sodomites should he deale with them in Iustice because to other sinnes common to them both they doe adde contempt of grace and most grosse vnthankfulnesse in that being trusted with much they render but a little Also they haue stronger more meanes to keepe them from sinning and so their rebellions bee more grieuous This commends Gods meruailous patience in bearing with his people and admonisheth them of earnest and speedie repentance least his anger breake forth and his fire burne when none can quench it DIAL XIX Verse 30. What shall we say then That the Gentiles which followed not Righteousnesse haue attained vnto righteousnesse onen the righteousnesse which is of faith Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To set downe more clearely by what meanes God brings both elect and not elect to their appointed endes of eternall life or death Hecreunto the Apostle is come by these degrees First he had saide that the promise of God depends vpon his election Secondly he had shewed the moouing cause of election and reprobation his owne absolute will and most free mercy Thirdly he had declared the ends of Gods predestination the glorye of his mercy in sauing of the one and of his power and iustice in destroying the other Fourthly hee had declared that the meanes to iudge of our election is by our effectuall calling Lastly that men may discerne when their calling is effectuall or not by faith or vnbeleefe which are those two meanes whereby that high counsell of God is executed as in this text is plainely to bee seene in the examples of faithfull Gentiles saued and vnfaithfull Iewes confounded Tim. What be the parts of this Text Silas Two First a question in these words What shal we say then Secondly an answere in the rest the answere also consists of two parts a double proposition and a double reason The first proposition is that the Gentiles found righteousnesse when they sought not for it the reason because they beleeued in Christ verse 30. Secondly the Iewes followed after righteousnesse but found it not the reason because they beleeued not in Christ but would be righteous by their owne workes verse 31 32. Tim. What signifies these words What shall we say Silas It is thus much Shall wee condemne God of vnrighteousnesse for reiecting so many Iewes that studied to please him and were his people calling the Gentiles that were Idolators and leud liuers and none of his people Tim. What are we to learne from these words Silas Two things First that mans corrupt reason will haue alwayes something to obiect against Gods truth for Paul had firmely proued both the calling of the Gentiles and the generall reiection of the Iewes by the Scripture and yet see how reason still goes on to iangle and quarrell Therefore let men pray God to reforme their reason for it is an enemy of Gods wisedome till grace haue renued it Rom. 8 8. and 12 2. Secondly from hence wee learne that the Ministers of Christ must bee able to foresee what carnall men can say against the trueth and to stop their mouthes this beeing one part of their function to conuince gainsayers Tim. Now come to the first part of the answere touching the Gentiles and tell vs what is meant by the Gentiles Silas All the people of the world which were not Iewes Tim. What is meant by righteousnes Silas The perfect iustice of works which God requires in his lawe or the performance of all such duties perfectly as the law commands Tim. In what sence are they sayed not to haue followed it Silas They neither loued nor cared for nor practised iust and righteous workes This may appeare first in that they could not because they were ignorant of Moses law much more ignorant were they of the righteousnesse of Christ. Secondly as for the law of nature they were also transgressours of that being both
we trust not in our owne workes to haue righteousnes and life thereby least through pride wee fall into the same condemnation as these Iewes did whome if God spared not for their vnbeleefe how will he spare vs Tim. But what did follow the pride of the Iewes Sil. A wicked contempt of the righteousnesse of God for they would not be subiect vnto it Tim. What is it not to be subiect to the righteousnesse of God Silas Not to receiue it being offered but stubbornly to refuse it to cast it from vs as a thing superfluous Tim. What doctrine ariseth from hence Silas That ignorant proud iusticiaties which trust in the merites of their owne workes are rebels against God and his grace for it is rebellion against God to resist his will in his promises as well as in his commandements For as rebels will not bee subiect to their Prince but rise vp in armes against him partly because they are ignorant of the Princes power and partly because they are highly conceited of their owne strength So Pharisaicall iusticiaries and merit-mongers because they knowe not the perfect exact iustice of Christ and doe too highly thinke of their owne righteousnes thence it is that they onely entertaine not but reiect the grace of Christ with disdainesulnesse a most miserable condition Tim. Come we now to the distinction of righteousnes and tell vs what it is Sllas Either Gods righteousnesse or our owne this distinction was set down before in cha 9. in other termes righteousnes of law and of faith Tim. What doe ye call Gods righteousnes Silas It consists in the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by Christs sufferings and the imputation of his perfect obedience for our perfect iustice before God Rom. 3. 4. 5. whereas our owne stands in working and our doings Tim. What further difference is there in this double righteousnesse Silas They differ in respect of the subiect for the one sticks in our selues the other is without vs in Christs manhoode Secondly they differ in the forme for our owne righteousnesse comes vnto vs by our owne working but Gods comes vnto vs by free guist and imputation of it to our faith Thirdly in efficacy for the one merites remission of sinnes and eternall life the other deserues nothing saue in strict iustice eternall death but is acceptable to God through Christ by approbation not of iustice but by acceptation of grace Tim. What is to be learned out of the comparison of this double righteousnes Silas That such as sticke to their owne righteousnesse trusting to their owne works shall neuer enioy the righteousnesse of faith or of Christ. The reason is because in the matter of saluation there is a flat contrariety between grace and merite Christ and Moses so as by no meanes they can agree together See Rom. 11 6 Gal. 2. 21. 5. 2. 4. Tim. What is the vse heereof Silas That all popish Iusticiaries and merite-mongers which so liue so dye are in most wretched condition for that righteousnesse of works which they follow they loose it because they can neuer bee able to keepe the Law withall by hauing confidence in their owne merites they neuer attaine Christs righteousnesse and so dye in their sinnes without pardon or saluation Secondly it exhorts all Christians for eternall life to depend vpon the grace of God and merit of his Sonne renouncing all selfe worthinesse euen as they couet and desire to be partakers of the righteousnesse of God vnto absolution for sinne and euerlasting saluation in heauen for God wil saue none but such as being humbled in the sight of their owne vnworthinesse and misery doe reioyce and glory in Christ oncly Rom. 5 11. 1. Cor. 1. 29 31. 1. Pet. 4. DIAL IIII. Verse 4 5. For Christ is the ende of the Law for righteousnesse vnto euery one that belesueth For Moses thus describeth the c. Tim. VVHat doth these two verses containe Silas Paul doth heere set vpon the third parte of this Chapter to wit the confirmation of the twofold righteousnesse which he propounded verse 3. and to shewe that the righteousnesse of faith is that alone which is to be sought after for our iustification and for our meriting eternall life Tim. How doth the Apostle proue that we are to follow the righteousnesse of faith rather then of workes Silas By two reasons contained in this present text the first is this That Christ is the end of the Lawe for righteousnesse but it is certaine that wee doe receiue Christ Iesus rather by beleeuing then by working Therfore wee must seeke to bee iustified before God by faith and not by workes Or thus The lawe serueth to send vs vnto Christ therefore we are iustified by beleeuing in Christ who is the end of the law by fulfilling it and not by the workes of the lawe which wee doe The other reason is taken from the property of the lawe which requireth perfect keeping of it vnto righteousnesse life verse 5. but the perfect keeping of the law is vnpossible to vs therefore wee cannot haue righteousnesse by the workes of the law but by faith in Christ. Or thus 〈◊〉 righteousnesse is impossible to be had which promiseth life vpon an vnpossible condition but the righteousnesse of the law is such therefore it is impossible and not to be sought after by vs but on the contrary the righteousnesse of faith being possible to bee had therefore it is to be followed of vs and rested in onely Tim. What be the parts of the fourth verse Silas Two First in what sence and meaning Christ is the end of the law And secondly how and to whom Tim. What is the connexion of this verse with the former Sil. By a preoccupation making answere to a secret obiection of the Iewes who might say and pleade that they sought for themselues no other righteousnesse thē that the law requireth and that being the true righteousnesse therefore they could not erre in their zeale for it Againe they being affraide to be excluded from this true righteousnesse if they admitted Christ therefore did not they imbrace him Vnto this their obiection the Apostle answeres that indeed the Iewes did not seek true righteousnes because they contemned Christ who is the end of the law for righteousnesse to beleeuers and therefore they had no cause to feare the loosing of the righteousnesse of the law by cleauing to Christ who is the end of it Or the connexion may be this to render 〈◊〉 why the Iewes through ignorance and pride refused the righteousnesse of God because they knew not Christ who is the end of the law for righteousnesse Tim. What law is meant heere Sil. By law is meant both ceremoniall and morall but chiefely the morall law of the ten Commandements Tim. In what sence and meaning is Christ saide to bee the end of the Law Silas This worde End hath foure significations in Scriptures
the law either by natural strēgth or as it is made easie by grace for then Paul shoulde not haue spoken of righteousnesse by faith but of sanctification and newnes of life which is quite besides his drift and scope which is out of Moses to commend the righteousnes of faith as is very plaine in the text Tim. But the Apostle doth not report Moses words Silas True not in so many letters and sillables for something is altered also added and taken away but in sence and meaning hee doeth alledge them and that is sufficient Tim. What is meant by saying in thy heart Sllas Thus much thinke not doubtfully within thy selfe or let not thy minde bee perplexed with wauerings thoughts and reasonings Tim. What is meant by this question who shall a seend into heauen Silas Thus much as if it were sayd Who shall goe thither for vs to bring vs word whether God bee pacified with vs and meaneth to giue vs saluation there Tim. What is meant by the other question who shall descend to the deepe Silas By the deepe is meant Hell as Reue. 9. 1. 11. 20. 1. To descend to the deepe signifies to goe downe into the place of torment the meaning is who shal go down thither to tell and assure vs that we are free from the malediction and damnation of hell and shall neuer be throwne down into that deep burning lake Tim. What are we to learne from these questions Silas First that they which sticke to their owne workes and thinke to be saued by their owne deseruings they haue wauering and vnquiet consciences troubled with doubtings tremblings and feare for that which the righteousnesse of faith speaketh not that the legall iustice doeth speake The reason of this doctrine is because the lawe which promiseth life to perfect obedience giues no power to obey it threatneth death against euery transgression but giues no remedy against any such euill and misery Therefore it must needs be that such as follow the righteousnes of the law must still be filled with anguish of Soule because their conscience witnesses vnto them that they haue not done all which the law commaunds but are transgressours manifold wayes in many thinges and so remaine perplexed and without rest Tim. What is the vse of this poynt Silas This sets foorth the miserable condition of all such as seeke righteousnes and life by their owne deedes for such can neuer haue any sounde ttanquility well may they haue benummed dead consciences but pacified conscience they cannot haue because they alwayes lack what is required by the law which condemneth to death euery fault euen the least Tim. What other thing is to be learned out of these questions Sil. That there are two maine doubtings which vse to perplex and trouble mē that are without faith in Christ the one is how to be saued and to attaine heauen The other how to escape hell and damnation And these two doubtings are continuall and necessary effects of legall righteousnesse for a man that hath not wholly kept the law must needes doubt whether hee shall haue eternall life For it is promised vpon no other condition but of exact and strict performance and he who knoweth that he hath done things against the lawe must needs bee in feare of damnation because it is threatned vnto euery sinne Tim. Haue ye yet any other instructions out of these questions Sil. Yea namely this that these doubtings are contrary and repugnant to the nature and property of faith whose property is to expell doubting as heate expels coldnesse as appeareth by Iames which tels vs that faith forbids vs to wauer Iames 1 6. and by the wordes of Paul the Apostle Rom. 4 20 21. Tim. But how then comes it to passe that beleeuers are often troubled with doubtings Silas This happens through the infirmity of their flesh and naturall weakenesse which wrestles and striues with the assurance of faith which though it be certaine and firme yet it is not perfect and full And from the imperfection of faith there comes doubting as Christ saith to his Apostles Why doubt ye o ye of little faith For the hand shaketh through palsie or some other weakenesse though the property of the hand be to holde fast so of the weakenesse of faith ariseth doubting but the property of faith is to breed affiance and confidence and to driue away doubtings and feares euen as the Sunne scatters mists Ephes. 3 12. Hebrewes 10 2. 2. Colossians 2 2. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas It teacheth a maine difference betweene the righteousnesse of the law and of faith for of this springs tranquillity through the assurance of Gods loue and of the other trepidation and trembling through conscience of sinne Secondly it confutes the Papists who deny infallible assurance and certainty to bee the office of faith and destroy the very nature of faith which is to assure men Thirdly it warnes vs to detest doubting as a thing contrary to faith and out of an hatred of it to fight against it Fourthly it exhorts all men to seeke after faith by which alone they are able to get victory ouer doubtings which may well assault faith but must be ouercome by faith 1. Iohn 5 4. Tim. But from whence fetcheth faith a remedy against doubtings and feares Silas From the ascension of Christ into heauen against the doubting of saluation for if Christ be ascended and possesse heauen in our names and there make request for vs then wee must needs deny his ascension and fetch him backe from heauen againe if wee make question how to be saued Tim. Whence haue wee the remedy against the feare of condemnation Silas From the faith of Christ his death and resurrection For if Christ be dead and raised from the graue then hath he gotten victory ouer sinne death hell and Sathan Therefore what is it else but to deny his death and to bring him backe againe to the Crosse and graue if wee should greatly feare the torments of Hell Consider this well Tim. What are we to learne from hence Silas That an vnbeleeuer denies the death resurrection and ascension of Christ whatsoeuer profession he make Secondly that the articles of Christs death and resurrection and ascension be as a fortresse against infidelity doubtings and feares and serue as notable meanes and helpes to confirme and establish a Christian hearte in faith therefore they ought to be well knowne and often with good study meditated on DIAL VII Verses 8 9. But what saith it the word is neere thee euen in thy mouth and in thine heart And this is the worde of faith which we preach For if thou confesse with thy mouth and beleeue with thy heart that God raysed vp Iesus from the dead thou shalt be saued Tim. VVHat is the scope of this text Silas To commend vnto vs the righteousnesse which is by faith in Iesus Christ without
before him the learned Doctors of the Church yea Apostles Prophets and Christ himselfe had deliuered this truth to the Church euen from the beginning How then can it bee an heresie in Luther to teach thus but it must be an heresie also in the Pen-men of the holy Ghost to write thus Tim. What is the next Doctrine Silas That the seate and subiect of Faith is not the minde alone but the will also which is more speciallie signified by heart Acts 8 37. Ephes. 3 17. For this confidence is at least a necessary companion of faith but confidence hath place in the heart therefore Faith lodgeth there also Tim. What vse are we to make of this Doctrine Sil. It serueth to teach that vnto a liuely Faith there is required a double worke of the Spirit First to enlighten the minde that it may certainly see and assent to the things written in the Gospell Of this first worke it is that Faith is often in Scripture tearmed Vnderstanding and knowledge and seeing The other worke is to bow the affections that they embrace and fully rest in that which the minde hath fully assented vnto From this worke Faith in Scripture is tearmed trust confidence and affiance Secondly this Doctrine serueth to confute the Romanists which place Faith in the supernal part of the soule onely and will haue it to bee nothing else but the assent of the minde to the will of God whereas it is not written heere that with the vnderstanding but with the heart man beleeueth to righteousnesse There may indeede bee worthy knowledge and notable assent in the vnderstanding part but it is the heart which beleeueth to iustification Thirdly here is an exhortation to all Christians as they will bee assured of this iustifying faith not to rest content with a naked knowledge of the Gospell or that in their mindes they haue yeelded agreement and consent to the trueth of it but neerely to looke vnto this whether faith haue taken holde of their will and affections to make them obediēt to their illuminated vnderstanding with some measure of peace and ioy and to resist all contrary thoughts and motions with a loathing of them being ready to make confession of Christ in our mouthes Tim. What is signified here by confession of the mouth Silas Not onely a plaine and cleere acknowledgement of Christ to be the onely Lord and Sauiour of mankinde and of all that doctrine which concerns his office natures persons and benefits but the calling vpon his name with trust in him as in our owne Lord and Sauiour as it is expounded in the 13. verse following wherein vocation is put for consession Tim. Wherefore is this worke of confession added vnto fayth Silas To distinguish and put difference betweene a dead and a liuely faith by a peculiar fruite of it Tim. But why is this work named as the witnes of faith rather than any other worke Sil. First because it is easily gathered out of the words of Moses before alledged in verse 8. where Moses spake of the mouth and ioyned it with the heart Secondly because it is a principall token of a true faith when occasion serueth sincerely to confesse the doctrine of Christ and to call vpon his name faithfully which no hypocrites doe for they draw neere with their lippes onely Math. 15. 8. but this consession which is a sure marke of faith comes from faith as from the root of it Thirdly because great promises are made to this duty of confession Math. 10. 32. and heere saluation is promised to such as confesse Christ out of a liuely faith Tim. But in what sort and sence is saluation annexed to confession Silas Not as the effect to his cause but as the way to the end for confession is but the way onely by which iustified persons doe come to their perfect blessednes in heauen which is here signified by saluation as the highest degree of our happines Seeing righteousnes is attributed to faith and saluation necessarily follows righteousnes therfore faith is the onely instrumentall cause whereby we be iustified and saued and not confession which is but the path onely wherein the godly are to walke to heauen and a 〈◊〉 of a sauing faith 10 as vaine is that Popish note vppon these wordes that faith without workes iustifieth not it iustifieth without workes but it is not in a Christian without workes What doctrines are taught from this latter part Silas That a liuely faith bringeth forth good workes and namely the consession and inuocation of Christ which where they are there is true faith and there is no true faith where they bee not as there is no fire where there is no light nor heat for it is the nature of faith to witnesse it selfe vppon occasion as fire sendeth forth heate Therefore are wee wronged by the Papistes who accuse vs to teach a weake and a dead faith voyde of workes and Christians are to be warned to get such a faith as can shew it selfe by workes and such workes as proceede from faith for wee teach that true faith workes by loue and all works which come not of faith to be sinnes Secondly we learne that confession is a worke necessary to saluation and is to bee done of all those that will be saued necessarily as a duty and a thing commanded vs of God but not as a meritorious cause Tim. But what things belong vnto Christian confession Silas First knowledge to see the trueth concerning Christ. Secondly wisedome to espy the due occasion of confession to wit when God may bee glorified and our neighbour edified Thirdly boldnesse to doe it freely without feare of man Fourthly sincerity without dissimulation and guile Fiftly reuerence as in Gods quarrell and presence Sixtly meekenesse 1. Pet. 3 15. Such as bee drowned in ignorance of the Gospell and vnbeleefe also rash presumptious and vaine-glorious persons timorous and fearefull ones hypocrites and false-hearted men and women proud and mallepart people be not fit and meeke to performe this duty of confessing Christ. DIAL IX Verses 11 12 13. For the Scripture saith whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not be ashamed For there is no difference betweene the lew and the Grecian for he that is Lord ouer all is rich vnto all that call vpon him For whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To proue by authority of Scripture what he had said before in verse 10. where he ascribed righteousnesse vnto faith as to a cause and saluation to confession as to a way which leadeth vnto saluation The argument standeth thus It is not possible that the scripture should be broken and vntrue but the Scripture promiscth righteousnesse and saluation vnto such as truely beleeue and call upon Christ. This is proued by these three verses of our Text touching faith verse 11. touching confession in
Thus the Publican prayed Luke 18. 13. and Dauid Psal. 25. 1. This latter kinde of calling on God is either in heart only as Moses prayed at the red sea Exodus 14. 15. and Hannah 1. Sam. 1. 13. or both with hart and mouth as Dauid prayed Psal. 116. 1 2 3. They are both meant here vocall and mentall prayer but chiefly the latter Tim. What learne we from hence Silas That true prayer is a certaine vndoubted note of saluation euen as the want of the guist of prayer is a plain marke of a wicked man Psal. 119. Saue me O Lord for I call vpon thee Psal. 14 4. They call not vpon the Lord. Tim. What vse of this point Silas It serues to moue such as would bee saued and lacke the guift of prayer to striue to haue it and such as haue it to make precious account of it and to be heartily thankefull to God for such an vnspeakeable guift yet we ought not to thinke that by the worke of prayer we merite saluation the roote and cause whereof is faith from whence it hath all efficacy and commendation Tim. What may it teach vs that we must beleeue in him on whom we do call Silas That faith in Christ is necessary vnto true prayer yea so necessary as without it wee not onely cannot pray aright with hope to speede Marke 11 24. Iames 1. 6 7. but our prayers are turned into sinne Rom. 14 23. The reasons heereof be first because it is written he that commeth to God must beleeue that God is and that he is a rewarder of them that seeke him Heb. 11 6. Secondly because trust and confidence of the heart that God will heare is that which begetteth prayer whereof as of all other good guifts and good workes liuely faith is the mother and roote whence they spring fetching all their praise and vigor from faith therefore it was that Moses cryed for deliuerance from the Egyptians Dauid from Saul and other enemies the Syrophenissian prayed for her daughters safety the blind mā for his sight and the Publican for the remission of his sinnes c. because they beleeued that God could and would grant their petitions As we in our necessities when we need other men do willingly become sutors for helpe at their hands when we haue trust to bee heard and succoured so it is the affiance of Gods goodnesse which doth bring foorth inuocation and calling on his name as Dauid said Wee beleeue and therefore wee pray Psal. 116. Tim. What profit is to be made of this instruction Sil. First it doth admonish vs that when we pray we bring faith hauing assurance of Gods loue in Christ that for his sake he is our sather and also will faithfully keepe his promises which he hath made to them that call vpon him Secondly to reprooue such as doe offer to pray hauing their hearts voyd of this holy confidence without which all prayers bee vaine and idle Thirdly to comfort such as feele their hearts stirred vp to desire of Gods blessings with a confidence to obtaine because this is a certaine note that they haue faith without the which they could not haue such desires and such confidence Ephe. 3 12. Fourthly to conuict the Papists of error for their calling vpon Saints departed in whome because they may not put any trust for cursed is he that trusteth in man therefore no prayer ought to bee made to them but to God alone in whom alone it is that wee may put our confidence Therefore all religious prayers to him are onely to be made and to none other Also this confuteth Bellarmine who saith that vnto prayer it is not needefull that hee that prayeth haue faith to assure him of being heard directly against this Scripture and Iames 1 6 7. Tim. Proceed and tell vs what hearing he speakes of in saying How can they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard Silas Not onely the hearing which is inward of the minde and heart but of the outward hearing by the sence of the eare neyther is it the hearing of euery sound or voyce but the hearing of the word euen the word of the Gospell which is meant in this place Tim. What is the instruction from hence Silas That vnto true beleefe in God the hearing of the Gospell with our bodily eare is necessarilye required Tim. But how then shall elect Infantes beleeue seeing they are not capable of this hearing through the weakenesse of their Organ Silas This text speaketh of the meanes how to come by actuall faith which is ioyned with discourse and is got by institution and not of that habituall faith or faculty of beleeuing whereby insants are endowed thorough the wonderful secret operation of the Spirit engrafting them into Christ for saluation Tim. What are wee to thinke of them that are borne deafe and cannot heare Sil. The Holy-Ghost both by his extraordinary motion in their hearts supplies the want of outward meanes in so many deafe ones as be his chosen whereof sundry examples both in former and in this age Our text speaketh of the ordinary way whereby Christians doe obtaine the guift of faith to wit by externall hearing which is as necessary to faith as faith is to prayer or prayer to saluation Tim. What reasons can bee giuen why externall hearing of the word should auaile vnto faith Silas First Gods ordinance hath appointed it to bee so that by hearing faith should be engendered 1. Cor. 1 21. Secondly his promise heere made vnto hearing that there by he will worke faith Thirdly actuall faith cannot bee had without some good measure of actuall knowledge which we haue put into vs by such as instruct vs in the truth whose voyce therefore it is needfull to heare for the thing beleeued is Gods word and that is receiued by hearing Fourthly as our first parents were turned from God and drowned in vnbeleefe by hearing the Serpent so it is but conuenient that the elect by hea ring Christs voyce should be conuerted to the faith and so returne to God Tim. What vse are Christians to make heereof Silas First it teacheth the sence of hearing to bee a great and necessary blessing The Philosopher Aristotle calleth this the sence of vnderstanding sensus discipline and Paul calleth it the sence of beleeuing sensus fidei Our other senses especially our eyes are good helpes of many notable thinges for thereby wee reade in the great booke of Gods creatures wherein we beholde the glory of the Creator his maruailous wisedome his eternall power and God-head Psal. 19 1 2. 1. Cor. 2 21. Rom. 1 19 20. Yea moreouer by our eyes wee reade in the word of God and other good bookes made and penned for increase of godly knowledge sithence the sight of the creatures and workes of God is sufficient to leaue vs without excuse Rom. 1 20. but vnsufficient and effectuall to breed faith And
because reading belongs to a few and hearing is common to all therefore euen by Pauls owne testimony it hath the preheminence so as better it were to loose all our senses then to misse this alone Secondly it sets foorth the miserable estate of popish Recusants which stop their care like the Adder and will not heare also of Atheists who thereby doe barre themselues of the meanes of faith and saluation Thirdly it exhorts vs to diligent hearing with all care and conscience to heare with our best attention seeing faith is dropt in to vs by the eare Fourthly it reproues sleepy drowsie and carelesse hearers who doe as it were shut out faith that it should not enter But let vs not looke that God will open our heart except we keepe open our eares Fiftly and lastly it is matter of great cōfort for wandring lost sinners to vnderstand that there is yet a way euen by hearing the word to recouer and saue themselues therefore that they ought to liue in those Countries and places where they may bee partakers of hearing and that they hearken vnto the sauing doctrine of the Gospell with desire to vnderstand and obey it Tim. Come we now to the first step and tell vs what is heere meant by Preacher Silas It signifieth one that is the Embassadour of God to spread abroade his word and with a loude voyce to declare it Tim. What is the office of a Preacher Silas To interpret the word of God by the word of God Nehem. 8 18. and to make application of the word to the vses of Gods people by doctrine exhortation comfort 1 Cor. 14 3. Also by a reproofe and confutation 2 Tim. 3 16. Tim. What is our Lesson from this word Preacher Silas That the Office of a Minister is of great dignity because it principally consistes in publishing and declaring the word of God which is a farre more high and excellent function in spirituall account respect then to be the Ambassador of the greatest man in the worlde by how much heauen is higher then the earth and the counsell of GOD higher then the will and pleasure of men and saluation passeth all humane and worldlie affayres Tim. What vse is to be made heereof Silas It must stay men from rash entering into so high and holy a vocation before they haue fitnesse thereunto which were a fearfull presumption Secondly it admonisheth such as be Ministers to do the work whereto they are called that is the work of Gods Ambassadors to preach the word with an holy importunity 2 Ti. 4 2. 3. it conuicts the Popish Church of error in that they wil haue the greatest worke of a Minister to bee to minister the Sacrament of the Altar to sacrifice Christ againe Fourthly it reprooues such as will continue Ministers and yet are vnmeete for this duty of proclayming Gods word Lastly it warneth to lay hands hastily on no man 1 Tim. 5 22. Tim. What means this Question How can they hear without a Preacher Sil. It cannot be that one can heare vnlesse the worde be preached made to sound in his care by liuely voice for there is a relation betweene hearing and speaking Tim. What Doctrine ariseth from hence Silas That vnto the hearing of the word the preaching of it is necessary euen as hearing is necessary to faith and faith to prayer and prayer to saluation so it is necessarie that there be preaching that men may heare The reason heereof is because there is a relation or mutuall respect betweene the sence of hearing and the obiect thereof which is a sound or voice We can hear nothing but a sound and therefore there must be some to preach and teach that others may heare Thus often times are preaching and hearing in Scripture set downe for Correlatiues Secondly it is the good pleasure of God now no otherwise to call his people to his kingdom then by Preachers therefore Preachers of the word are needful for we cannot be saued vnlesse we be called to the Faith of Christ and there is no way to call vs but eyther by God himselfe immediately or by his Ministers mediately but he hath ceased now to speake to vs immediately from himselfe Therefore if we will be saued wee must heare Gods Ministers speake to vs out of his worde and thus much we may gather from such Texts of Scripture wherein the holy Ghost doth often ioyne preaching and beleeuing togither as in Iohn 17 20. Acts 8 12. 14 1. And moreouer it serueth to teach vs that if we desire to beleeue and be saued wee must attend preaching and hearing of Sermons and this is the reason why GOD woulde neuer suffer his people in any age to want outward vocation by his Ministers Noah was a Preacher of righteousnesse Abraham a Prophet God gaue vnto the Iewes Moses his prophet and after him the Priestes and Leuites to teach Israel his Lawe and extraordinarily raised vp many Prophets and at last hee sent his Sonne to declare his wil for the saluation of the world He gaue moreouer some to be Apostles Prophets Euangelistes and others to be pastors and teachers to the end of the world for the gathering of the Saints Ephes 4. Tim. But cannot God giue Faith and saluation vvithout preaching and hearing Silas Yes he both can and doth it to elect Infants so dying and to many Christian exiles which liue in continuall banishment from his Church but we are to consider not what he is able to do but what his will and appointment is namely to saue vs by the word preached 1. Cor. 1 18. 1. Tim. 4 16. How admirable and gracious is God who can wrap such power in the voyce words of men as shall kindle sauing faith in the hearts of the hearers Stoope to this holy ordinance Tim. What profit is to be made of this doctrine Silas This teacheth how miserable that people is which want the ordinary preaching of the word they must needes fall into the Ditches which haue none but blinde or carelesse guides to leade them they cannot but decay which haue no vision Prouer. 29 18. As the Lampe is extinguished without oyle so religion and knowledge will decay without preaching which is as the oyle to the lampe as grasse withers without raine and our bodies starue without foode so doe our soules without sound doctrine seasonably giuen which is as raine and food to the soule Secondly heere is an admonition to all Magistrates namely Patrons of beneficies whom it concernes to prouide the people of Preachers of whom they may heare instructions to life as they will answere to God for their soules And thirdly to the people that they do earnestly desire and seeke to liue vnder the preaching of the Gospell where they may heare the doctrine of saluation for where preaching may ordinarily be had God neuer workes an inward calling without an outward vocation nor is knowne to
vnder when they fall that they fall not from him Psal. 37. 24. and that none shall plucke his Sheepe the faithfull out of his handes Iohn 10. 28. They shall neuer perish but haue life euerlasting Ioh. 3 16. That he will not tempt aboue strength 1 Cor. 10 13. Of which promises it followeth that God beeing faithfull and constant the beleeuers cannot by their owne folly and vnheedfulnesse quite loose no not for a moment their election faith for then the temptation should exceed their strength they were pluckt out of the Shepheards hand and they cease to liue vnto God Faith which is soules life being extinct so not euerlasting Secondly albeit our corrupt nature is so made as it would goe backe and easily of it selfe would fall away yet the elect being vpheld by the power of God the beleeuers cannot haue a will to reiect their calling nay their will is confirmed to perseuerance also faith bringeth with it a perswasion that God being our Father in very deed will be our God and Sauiour to the death for euer And therefore though of weakenesse we often take sore fals yet he will not suffer vs to fall away from him Lastly sithence without perseuerance in Fayth to the end Gods calling cannot truly be saide to be without repentance for calling and faith bee so knit as they stand together or fall together therefore liuely Faith cannot be lost no not by our owne default For none wholly can forsake God saue such as bee wholly forsaken of God who hath promised the righteous neuer to faile and forsake them Iosh. 1. Heb. 13 5. And to shut vp because this point hath beene elsewhere largely spoken of it is not in vaine that the elect being weake are commaunded to watch and pray and be sober to preserue themselues to feare with humblenesse of minde Math. 26. 1 Peter 4. 1 Iohn 5. Rom. 11. For by these and such exhortations as instruments of grace they are of the holy Spirit stirred vp to great and continuall fear to keepe their faith and other graces and by the mightie blessing of God vpon the ministery of the word and Sacraments they are stablished and made strong to abide in the Faith Of the fals which they take by ouersight or force of spirituall assaults they haue a sight sence and sorrow giuen them so rise againe by true repentance to walk on more steadily and heedily for afterward being conuerted confirme thy Brethren This Doctrine that our election calling and faith cannot faile is verie comfortable to all such as bee well assured of their owne election and calling by the worthy fruites of faith and testimony of Gods Spirit it makes them ioyfull in Tribulations and to glory in God euen when Satan sinne and the world do most rage against them because they know that these spirituall and spightfull aduersaries do imagine but a vaine thing they shal be no more able by all their wrestling and fighting to breake off from saluation any whom God hath chosen to his kingdome of heauen then could Saul with his Courtiers hinder Dauid from attaining the promised kingdome of Israel and therefore with his wordes in their chiefest conflictes of conscience may say O ye gates of hell how long will yee loue vanity and seeke after leasing Assure ye the Lorde hath set apart him that is godly for himselfe he will heare mee when I call vpon him DIAL XXIII Verses 30 31 32. For euen as yee in times past haue not beleeued God yet haue now obtained mercy through their vnbeleefe euen so now haue they not beleeued through the mercie shewed vnto you that they also may obtaine Mercie For God hath shut vp all in vnbeleefe that hee might haue Mercie on all Tim. VVHat may be the contents of this Text Silas It containeth the two last arguments to proue the conuersion and saluation of the Iewes ascribing it neither to chaunce nor their owne merites but wholly vnto the mercy of God as the head-spring of all good gifts The one of these arguments is drawne from a comparison of equals or from the example of the Gentiles being matched with a like example of the Iewes ver 30 31. The other from the common ende of that misery wherein both Iewes and Gentiles were wrapt through vnbeliefe which is not that they might perish but to minister occasion vnto God to expresse his mercy Tim. What is the summe of the former argument Silas Thus much as ye Gentiles were not forsaken of God when ye were vnbeleeuers so though the Iewes be now vnbeleeuers yet doe not ye thinke that they shall bee forsaken for euer for they nowe are not woorse then you haue beene Or thus If the vnbeliefe of the Iewes was occasion of beeliefe to you Gentiles then the mercy of the Gentiles shall likewise bee occasion of shewing mercy to the Iewes that they may beleeue so bee saued The pith and sinewes of the argument consisteth herein that there is as much or rather more force in that which is good to produce a good effect then there is in that which is euill to bring sorth a good end Therefore if the blindnesse of the Iewes though it bee a sinne yet being Gods worke had so good an end as the conuersion of the Gentiles why may we not thinke that the calling of the Gentiles should helpe towardes the calling and saluation of the Iewes by prouoking them to emulation and earnest desire after the same grace to enjoy it as verse 11. Tim. In this example what things are compared together Silas Three things with three things First the vnbeliefe of the Gentiles past with the present disobedience of the Iewes Secondly the present mercy vpon the Gentils with the future mercy to be shewed vpon the Iewes hereafter Thirdly occasion with occasion the vnbeliefe of the Iewes as occasion of beliefe to the Gentiles and the mercy extended to the Gentiles as an occasion of mercy Iewes vnto the. Tim. Come to the words and tell vs whether it were better to reade vnbeliefe or disobedience Silas Though it skill not much yet vnbeliefe is the better reading for none are woorse to bee perswaded then vnbeleeuers and the word here vsed commeth of a word signifying to perswade Also Paul in this chapter maketh vnbeliefe the cause of the Iewes reiection from God as verse 20 25. Tim. What is here signified by mercy Silas The cause is put for the effect mercy for the gift of faith that commeth from Gods mercy so to obtaine mercy is to obtaine faith through the mercy of God and your mercy in ver 31. not that whereby themselues were mercifull but that blessing of faith which Gods mercy had giuen vnto them as before in verse 22. goodnesse or bounty doth signify a liuely faith the fruit of Gods goodnesse Tim. What instructions are wee now to take from these two first verses of this text Silas That the elect of God be they Iewes or Gentiles do
obtaine to beleeue in Christ not by fortune or by their owne merites but freely through the mercy of God The proofe hereof is first Rom. 9. 16. where election and faith which dependeth vpon it are denied vnto and taken from our owne merites and attributed wholly to God and mercy adde hereunto Ephe. 2. 8. Furthermore vnbeliefe commeth from the free will of man being corrupt therefore it cannot ingender faith for out of one fountain commeth not sweete and sowre water Lastly if faith come from our selues though but in part then might wee haue some reioycing in our selues but we must wholly glory in God and not in our selues 1. Cor. 1. 31. Therefore faith in them by an effectuall calling is the onely woorke of his grace and mercy Tit. 3. 4. 5. 2. Tim. 1. 9. Tim. What is the profit wee are to make to our selues by this doctrine Silas It teacheth where to beg faith when we lacke it and whome to thanke when wee haue it Thirdly it conuicteth such of errour as in matter of saluation part stakes and deuide betweene Gods mercies and mans free will as if it had some power to beleeue the promises and onely needed some helpe of grace Thirdly it humbleth the pride of man to consider that all that is pleasing to God and tending to eternall life doth come without our selues wholly by the grace of God 1. Cor. 1 29. Tim. Will not this weaken our endeauour after the getting and increasing of faith and other sauing heauenly graces Sil. No verily it may quench arrogancy but it will quicken our industry because the more mercifull God is vnto vs the more wee are bound to doe what lyeth in vs to please him Psal. 130. 4. Rom. 12 1. Secondly though faith come of God yet our duty is to seeke aske knocke labour and striue to attaine it and the promise is to such Tim. What other things may we learne from the two former verses of this text Silas That the vnbeleefe and contumacy of the Iewes hath well deserued their breaking off from the Christian Church so as God is iust and they haue no cause to complaine Secondly why the Iewes and the Gentiles might not beleeue both together but by courses one after another is a secret to be adored of vs and not to be inquired into verse 33. Thirdly the conuersion of the Gentiles followed the vnbeleefe of the Iewes not as an effect of the proper cause for the Iewes in their disobeying intended no mercy to the Gentiles but as an euent consequent of Gods prouidence and counsell so purposing disposing matters to the praise of his name Elsewhere that noteth the euent and not the moouing of the finall cause 1. Cor. 12. Acts 1 2. Tim. Now proceede to the 32. verse and tell vs the summe of the argument contained therein Silas God hath equally shut vp both Iew and Gentile as it were in a prison to this ende that the elect among them might equally obtaine mercy vnto saluation Tim. In what sence may it be saide of God that he shuts vp men in vnbeleefe Sil. Not by dropping and powring vnbeleefe into their hearts for God is not the author of sinne nor yet onely by suffering men to be blinded with ignorance and to become vnbeleeuers or by withdrawing the Spirite and word of faith from men and by declaring and conuicting men of infidelity in which sence the Scripture is saide to shut vp men vnder sinne Gal. 3 22. because sinne is reuealed by the law Rom. 3 20. But God as a righteous Iudge deliuering men vp to blindnesse and hardnesse of heart doth hold thē fast fettered in the ghiues of their vnbeleef Like as a Iudge doth inflict imprisonment vpon offenders and restraineth their liberty so all men till the time of their effectuall calling are kept in the prison of incredulity by the iustice of God their sinne so deseruing to haue it This is therefore a metaphor or speech borrowed from earthly affaires and applied to spirituall things Tim. What is our lesson from the first part of the verse Silas That God vseth to punish one sinne by another wherein yet he is not the author of the sinne but of the punishment the iudgement is from God the fault is from men therefore let all men stand in feare of him who can strike the Spirite as well as the flesh Secondly that the condition both of elect and reprobates by nature is alike all being incredulous disobedient to God and miserable and therefore none ought to bee puft vp aboue another our case being all one and the elect beeing no better then others by birth haue the more cause to praise Gods goodnes for caling them to the faith and leauing others in vnbeleefe which were no worse thē themselues were Tim. In the next part of the sentence what is meant by the world All Silas Not euery particular person but some of all sorts as Augustine expounds it some Iewes some Gentiles euen all the faithfull of euery nation This may appeare to be the sence by comparing this place with Ro. 10 11 12. Gal. 3 20 22. where that is called sin which is called vnbeleefe here that tearmed the promise there which is heere tearmed mercie and the vniuersall particle All restrained or limited vnto beleeuers Tim. What instructions haue wee from these last words Silas That wee are not to despaire of the conuersion of any be they neuer so great vnbeleeuers for Gods power and mercy are greater then mens sinnes therefore none must cast away hope of others or their owne saluation Secondly it is God alone that is able to open the eyes of such as are blinded by vnbeleefe as none deliuereth the offender out of prison but the Iudge which committeth him so none can escape out of the Fetters of vnbeleefe but through the mercy of God which shut them vp in that prison Therefore let all pray vnto him to pardon their vnbeleefe to giue them Faith to beleeue in his onely begotten 〈◊〉 our Redeemer for they onely are free whom the Sonne maketh free al others remaine fast tied and bound in the chaines and manacles of naturall blindnesse and infidelity hauing not so much by any strength of their own wil as to desire liberty DIAL XXIIII Verses 33 34 35 36. O the deepenesse of the Riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God howe vnsearchable are his iudgements and his wayes past finding out for who hath knowne the minde of the Lorde or who was his Counseller c. Tim. VVHat doth this Text containe Silas A conclusion of the former argument touching election and reprobation but especially of the mystery touching the reiecting and calling of the Iewes at the consideration of which things he as one striken with amazement exclaimeth that they are too high or deepe for him eyther to vnderstand or vtter being worthy to be admired and adored because of the admirable wisedome and iustice of God in them and
all to increase and preserue them what we can This must moue vs both to pray for greater measure of grace to be able to performe this better heereafter and instantly to beg pardon of God through Christ for our failing heeretofore for the debt of charity being neglected doth increase the debt of sinne and looke how much wee come short of paying the debt of loue so much we multiply the debt of sinne and therefore stand in need both of faith to beleeue the forgiuenesse of that which is past of repentance to amend our liues for time to come to walke henceforth in charity dooing all our things in loue Tim. Come now to the reason of the Apostle why we should loue one another and tell vs what is meant by the law and by the fulfilling of it Silas Among sundry acceptions of the word lawe as first for the books of Moses Secondly for the whole doctrine of the word Thirdly for the morall precepts giuen in Mount Sinai c. heere it is put for the second 〈◊〉 because he discourseth of the duties to our neighbour the loue whereof beeing coupled with the loue of God as an effect with the cause therefore it may well comprehend the whole morall law By fulfilling is meant heere not the exact keeping in euery point without any swaruing but the careful endeuour to do one commandement as well as another without baulking any of them The drift of the Apostle heere being this to teach that the law is generally kept by the exercise of loue which is therefore saide to bee the fulfilling of the law First because it is the end of the commandements 1. Tim. 1 5. Secondly for that it is the motiue to stirre vp to euery duty both to God man Thirdly because it is the summe of the law Math. 22. 37. 38. 39. Finally because it is the perfection of the lawe and were it perfect in vs would make vs perfect keepers of the law Tim. What is the doctrine we are to learne from hence Silas This ought very much to kindle our loue seeing it is such a helpe to the fulfilling of the lawe then which there is nothing except faith in Christ eyther of more honour and beauty or of more profite and benefit then to be keepers of the lawe by which first wee haue 〈◊〉 with God whose image of holinesse and righteousnesse is most absolutely and liuely purtrayed in the lawe the neerer therefore we come to the law the liker we are to God Againe our study to walke in the law is both a signe of a blessed man and the way to blessednesse Psal. 119 1. and 112 1. If the keeping of the law be so beautifull and beneficiall iudge how behouefull it is to imbrace loue which inables vs to keepe the law heere in some measure and in heauen perfectly As Paul saith of loue if wee had all graces without it they were nothing so may I say if we could keepe all the commandements and not do them in loue it were nothing Wherefore let all men that haue their hearts endued with loue thinke they haue a great blessing and thanke God for it and as the Apostles prayed Lord increase our faith so let euery good Christian pray Lord encrease my loue for the more we loue the more we fulfill the law and the more we fulfill the law the more we resemble God the giuer of the lawe and the liker wee are to God in holinesse the more we are to be like him in happinesse Besides all this though loue bee not the forme of faith yet it is a necessary effect of iustifying faith which workes by loue Gal. 5 6. and a fruite of the Spirite Gal. 5 22. The bond of perfection Col. 3 14. The badge of a Christian Iohn 13 35. Touching the properties works of loue also for the excellency and continuance read 1. Cor 13 4. to the end Tim. But whereas many pretend loue and haue it not how shall wee know when we haue indeede the gift of Christian charitie Silas First by the obiect of our loue if it bee right that is if we loue euery one that is our neighbour louing one man as well as another without partiality though some men more then others being wel affected vnto all howsoeuer others be affected vnto vs as Christ loued his enemies so must we This is one and the best triall of our loue Secondly by the measure or maner rather of our loue that we loue our neighbor as our selus that is as constantly without fainting as sincere without dissembling being as carefull through loue to bee helpfull to the bodies and soules of others and to euerie thing that is deere vnto them as we would haue it done to our selues Thirdly by the quality and nature of loue which stirs vs vp to respect one man as well as another though not so much so to tender him in one thing as well as in another for what God ioynes no man may separate that God which commaunded loue to our Neighbours persons hath enioyned charity towardes all the things of our neighbors not to hurt him in any of them no not so much as by a thought much lesse by disgrace or cruelty or vncleannesse or oppression or slander For if we do keepe that Law of not stealing and dooing wrong and breake the other which forbids adultery or incontinency or keepe this and trespasse by false witnesse being full of lies and euill reporters or false accusers of others or vntouched in all these yet be cruell vnmercifull and fierce offending against that Lawe which prohibits murthers or at a word caring somewhat to obserue one and being loose and licentious in transgression of some other not dooing many euils against our neighbors yet stiffely and obstinately culpable in some one or few certainly our loue is not that christian godly loue which looketh to euery precept and preuenteth the euill and harme of our Brethren in euery thing as much as lyeth in vs for loue dooth none euill vnto our neighbor Touching these singular and particular Precepts note that that of honouring Parents is omitted because they might be contained vnder powers also in an other Commandement the Commandement of Adulterie is prefixed vnto the Commandement of Murther Lastly this of fulfilling the Lawe by loue is ill wrested of Papists to proue Iustification by workes for this is not heere the Apostles purpose and when they shall proue that any meere man hath perfect charity such as the Law exacteth we will then confesse that righteousnesse before God may come by loue Meane while wee dare not crosse the doctrine of the Spirit teaching in so many plaine texts righteousnesse to be attained by faith without the workes of the Lawe which yet wee may in some sense bee saide to fulfill both because in our head it is perfectly kept that is allowed to such as beleeue in him Also with Augustine we say Quicquid 〈◊〉
good or the euill offered to them redounds to him Mat. 25 45. Also how can wee by our offence giuen make voide the fruite and force of Christs death towards our brother offended by v so much as we may and no thankes to vs if it bee not so what other thing I say can this be then to sinne against Christ by plucking from him one whom he hath so dearely bought Which ought not to bee vnderstood as if any effectually redeemed by the death of Christ and by faith ingrafted in him could indeed perish as Huberus many Lutherans teach for this is most firmely to be held as Augustine saith That none of the predestinate can vtterly fall away from grace for then Gods election should be frustrate and Christ vntrue who saith It is vnpossible Mat. 24. And his loue changeable Iohn 13 1. His couenant broken Iere. 31 32. Christs intercession vnauaileable Iohn 17 15 20 21. Gods wisedome decelued his power and goodnesse ouercome and vanquished by mans sinne all which are not onely absurd but impossible howbeit in respect of mans weakenesse ready to fall euen as a young childe or a sicke person soone ouerturned and the extreame power and malice of Sathan that like a Dragon is able to shake and pull downe Cedars euen strong ones if God permit And lastly in regard of the great dangerous temptations and scandals which sore tempt vs it is true that the beleeuer may be destroyed and when any offence is giuen them then what lyeth in the party that put the blocke in his brothers way hee casteth his brother downe headlong to eternall destruction but the mighty God with his hand vpholds all his not from falling but from falling away Tim. What duties may this doctrine of offences teach vs Silas It instructeth vs to know that such things as in respect of their nature bee not euill and which otherwise we might doe yet if they proue scandals and hurts to our brethren we ought to shun them as things sinfull and vnlawfull for that meate which may be eaten if no offence follow to eate it with offence is euill to him that doth it Rom. 14 20. and the like we are to iudge of all other indifferent things that accidentally by the scandall annexed to them they cease to be indifferent and pollute him that doth them with offence Secondly here is an admonition to all Christians which openly commit grosse sinnes and by their example teach others to doe the like Also to parents Maisters and all Gouernors which in the presence of their inferiors haue spoken or done wicked things or foreslowed good duties as prayer reading c. edifying them in iniquity by such naughty practises and by sins of omission that betimes vpon the former reasons they moue themselues to hearty repentance for the scandall and offences they haue set before others For seeing Christ hath said it Woe must bee to such by whom offences come except such as giue thē be truly humbled turning to God desiring forgiuenesse of his mercy fully purposing to walke without offence heereafter for certainely they shall feele the curse of God which doe giue occasion of harme to the soules of heedelesse men seeing a cursse is threatned Deut. 27 18. Will God poure his curse and vengeance on them who make the blinde stumble to the hurt of his body wil he not much more do this to soul destroyers Tim. Now that we haue done with the doctrine of offences and proued it by reasons both forreigne and bred in the Text let vs heare what we are to learne from the obiection in the 14. verse and first what it is to be perswaded through the Lorde Iesus Silas Through the Lord Iesus signifies not the merit of his death as some thinke for before the time of his passion nothing was vncleane in his owne nature but either 1. generally through Adams sinne which polluted all or 2. morally by intemperancie and ryot or 3. Ceremonially prohibited as certaine Beasts vnder the Law or 4. scrupulously and superstitiously of such as doubt of the lawfulnesse of lawfull meates It signifies therefore by the teaching and instruction of Christ by whose spirit he knew and was perswaded not probably and couiecturally as the word is vsed when the Scripture speaks of other mens faith and constancy as Rom. 15 14. 2 Tim. 1 5. Heb. 6 9. but certainly infallibly and assuredly so as he knowes it could not be otherwise In which sence the word is vsed when a man speakes of his owne Religion and saluation as Rom. 8 20. For euery man knowes best his owne heart and those things that himselfe hath receiued of God 2 Cor. 2 12. Tim. What is our Doctrine hence Silas That Christian faith is not a bare opinion or a doubting thinking a thing to bee so but an vndeceiuable certainty of that wee doe beleeue containing in it these three distinct things First a sound distinct knowledge of the thing beleeued I know Secondly a firme perswasion strongly assuring the heart Thirdly a confidence resting and reioycing with satisfaction vnto our mindes surely looking to enioy that we beleeue Tim. What Vse is to be made of this doctrine Silas That ignorant Christians who do either hate knowledge or seeke not for it also the wauering minded which do not rest with any gladnesse in the promises of Christ they are quite destitute of Faith what socuer they thinke of themselues And they doe falsly teach the doctrine of faith who deny to it infallible certainty And lastly it is a good token both of the being and growing of faith in a Christian heart the more firmely and strongly it doth apprehend and sticke to the word Moreouer from the 14. verse we are taught that the Papists defile pollute Gods creatures to themselues because they iudge them to be vncleane for meates bee as they are esteemed vncleane to him that thinks them so Of the purity and impurity of meates we shall say more in verse 20. Tim. Then in the meane time expound and collect the instructions from verse 16. the last verse of our text Silas It hath a new argument to disswade from giuing offence to the weak in our christian liberty about meats thus We may not do ought which may cause our Christian liberty to be euill spoken of but for the strong to eate with offence to the weake it wil cause our commodity to be euill spoken off therefore offences ought to be auoided For exposition of the words howsoeuer by your good or commodity some vnderstand their faith or hope of glory or godlinesse yet the matter in hande which is to direct to the right vse of christian libertie in middle things and the comparing this Text with 1 Cor. 10 29. wher that is stiled Liberty which here is phrased Good doth clearely open this place to be meant of this liberty which might be blasphemed that is reproched and euill spoken of and Christ also by it
the defect not vsing thē at al or in the excesse vsing them intemperatly may and doth deserue damnation and will certainly draw it vpon the heads of all such which repent not of their immoderatenesse about these externall thinges yet a man doth not please God or shal be saued because he eateth Fish rather then Flesh and drinketh Beere and not Ale Tim. Shew vs what vse Christians are to make of this doctrine Silas It serues for confutation of the Manichees affirming some meates in their owne nature to bee euill as Flesh Egges Milke and Wine saying of Wine that it is the gall of the Prince of darknesse dishonouring the Creator and 〈◊〉 this Text which plainely faith The Kingdom of God is not meates Also the 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 fellowes who defend that it were as good to eate and deuoure a soule as to eate things that had bloud and life These put sinne and damnation in meats euen directly and so do the Papistes indirectly and by necessarie consecution For whilst they doe auouch in worde and writing that howsoeuer no creature is impure by creation but so confesse all to bee good which God hath made yet that to eate flesh or white meates at certaine time as Lent Ember Weekes Fasting daies c. is a matter against Religion displeasing to God yea a mortal that is in their construction a heynous sinne and no lesse fault then to kill a man holding them for best christians which doe put most Religion in abstinence from meates which they reckon as a thing not acceptable alone but meritorious and satisfactory to Gods Iustice both for themselues and others all vpon this pretence to tame the flesh which in the meane time they pamper with manifold delicacies great prouokers of lust What is this else but to fulfill the prophesie of the Apostle 1. Tim. 4 2. in hypocrisie and coloured wordes to make all meates vncleane at some time and to some men at all times as if meates were the Kingdome of God or if the kingdome were to be won or lost by meates or drinkes Tim. What other Lesson from these words Silas That meates and whatsoeuer other indifferent things are more slight then that Christians ought to contend about them for seeing they are no parts either of Law or Gospell what reason haue Christians to dissent for them Indeed for such things that please or displease God as precepts of the Law promises of the gospell faith and obedience towards God we are strongly to stand and earnestly to contend for such things Iude 3. whereof we haue Paul for example Galat. 2 11. What may wee iudge then of those Papistes and Protestants which chafe and fret for neglect of a humane Ceremony being colde and carelesse about Christian duties tything Mint and Annice and neglecting greater things of the Law stumbling at strawes and leaping ouer blockes Also what folly to make such adoo about titles precedencie and such other toyes as if Heauen did lye vpon it This very distinction of things vnnecessary to the kingdome and necessary well and duely considered would cut off diuision and debate among brethren who howsoeuer there may be some reason for differences about the inheritance and their fathers goods yet for chips and feathers to contend may argue lacke of wit or good will or of both DIAL VIII Verses 17 18 19 20. But righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost For whosoeuer in these things serueth Christ is pleasing to God and approued of men Let vs then follow c. Tim. WHat doth this text containe Silas First the condition or parts of Christs kingdom which consisteth not in meates or in other externall things bur in things inward and spirituall to wit righteousnesse peace and ioy such as come from the Holy-Ghost and are not carnall nor can bee lost verse 17. Secondly a reason from the effects thus In these things we serue Christ and please God but the kingdome of God doth stand in seruice of Christ and pleasing of God therefore righteousnesse peace and ioy are necessary to the kingdome and not meates verse 18. Thirdly a conclusion that sithence peace is one part of religion and of the kingdome therefore by all meanes Christians are to imbrace that and to put away strife about other vnnecessary things verse 19. But least wee should thinke that euery kinde of peace should bee followed hee adioyneth thereunto edification verse 20. An edifying peace is to be followed and whatsoeuer belongs to it as charity forbearing concord forgiuing one another meekenesse and all other furtherances of peace be diligently to bee sought for Vnto this edifying peace there is set against it as opposite destroying contention Fourthly an answere vnto a secret obiection But seeing all meates are pure created and granted of God as lawfull to vse why should it not be good for me to eate of all meates whatsoeuer become of other men Not so saith Paul for though al meats be good yet they bee not good to him which eateth with offence to his brother verse 20. Tim. Now expound and tell vs what is meant by righteousnesse peace and ioy Silas Righteousnesse signifies iustice imputed or of the person beeing absolued from sinnes and accepted righteous through faith in Christ. Secondly inherent iustice righteousnesse of workes or that which the Scripture calleth sanctification or holinesse of life begun in such as are iustified by faith Peace signifies inward peace of conscience quieted in respect of reconciliation with God and remission of sinnes also outward concorde with the brethren this beeing a fruite of inward peace of the soule as that followeth iustification by faith Romanes 5 2. By ioy is vnderstood the sweete motion of a Christian soule cheered vp and made glad partly by present sence of Gods loue shed into the heart and partly out of hope of the reward to come Rom. 5 3 5 6. Of this ioy Christ saith it is not taken away Iohn 14. And Paul that it makes ioyous in tribulation Rom. 5 3. Of these three ye may reade at large before namely in the Dialogue vpon the beginning of the fift Chapter The Holy-Ghost is added here both to note the efficient cause of Christian righteousnes peace and ioy also to distin guish Christian righteousnes peace and ioy from that which is worldly and carnal grounded vpon earthly thinges and being also vnconstant Tim. What is the doctrine from these words Silas That things which be necessary to the kingdome that is to religion and saluation they bee spirituall and inward things such as by the Holy-Ghost are wrought in the soule as namely iustification by faith peace of conscience ioy in the Holy-Ghost which is not so to bee taken but that charity repentance godlines meekenes patience temperance truth goodnesse fidelity c. doe belong to the kingdome But these three are heere named as chiefe and cause or ground of the rest which bee vnseparably linked to these For iustifying faith