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A35955 Therapeutica sacra shewing briefly the method of healing the diseases of the conscience, concerning regeneration / written first in Latine by David Dickson ; and thereafter translated by him. Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1664 (1664) Wing D1408; ESTC R24294 376,326 551

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that which hath pacified the Fathers Justice and reconciled Him to us is made over in a gift unto us for by Christ procurement we have God made ours Christ pacifying God put as it were in our bosome for God having sold us to Christ by taking Christs satisfaction for ours He hath come over to us as reconciled and given us Christ the Reconciler and the atonement to be ours Here is an agreement made between God and Christ and the condition of the agreement between the parties for our behoof clearly imported and presupposed The fifth title given to Christ is this He is called the propitiation 1 Ioh. 2. 2. Whereby God is pacified not only for the believing Iews but also for the whole elect World which should believe in Him And if He be the pacifying propitiation then God hath satisfaction in all that His Justice craved from Christ for the elect and Rom. 3. 25. He is called a propitiatory sacrifice wherewith God is so well pleased that He makes offer of Him to us and sets Him forth to us for pacifying our Conscience through faith in His blood to declare His righteousnesse for remission of sins without breach of Justice wherein what price God required and was payed by Christ is insinuat and presupposed for satisfaction could not be except the price agreed upon had been promised and accepted before in Covenanting The third proof THe third evidence proving that there was a Covenant of Redemption past before the beginning of the World is because the eternall decree of God was fixed about the way of Redemption to be fulfilled in time for Known unto God were all His works from the beginning Acts 15. 18. And whatsoever God doth in time He doth it according to the eternall counsell of His own Will Ephes. 1. 9. Now Christ the eternall Son of God being made man laid down His life for His sheep The Son of man goeth as it was determined but wo unto that man by whom He is betrayed Luke 22. 22. And whatsoever Christ suffered was by the determined counsell of God Acts 2. 23. And God the Son before He was incarnat declares the decree of the Kingdom promised unto Him by the Father and of the victories which He should have over all His enemies and of the felicity and multitude of the subjects of His Kingdom that should believe in Him Psal. 2. 7. I will declare the decree saith He presupposing therefore the decree of God of sending His eternall Son into the World to become a man and to suffer and thereafter to reign for ever we must also necessarily presuppose the consent of the Son making paction with the Father and the Spirit fixing the decree and agreement about the whole way of Redemption to be brought about in time for the same Person Christ Jesus who dwelt among men in the dayes of His humiliation Ioh. 1. 14. Was with the Father from eternity and as by Him all things were made which were made Ioh. 1. 2. 3. So without Him nothing was decreed which was decreed Prov. 8. 22. to 32. which also is manifest in the Apostles words 2 Tim. 1. 9. He saved us and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to His own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Iesus before the World began For as before the beginning of the World the elect were given to the Son designed Mediatour to be incarnat and the price agreed upon so also grace to be given in time to the redeemed by compact was given from eternity unto Christ their designed Advocat Also Ephes. 1. 3. 4. 5. we were elected in Christ unto holinesse and salvation and unto all spirituall blessings and were predestinat to the adoption of sons by Jesus Christ. And 1 Pet. 1. 18. 19. 20. we are redeemed not with gold or silver but by the precious blood of Christ who was predestinat before the beginning of the world Whereby it is manifest that the Covenant between the Father and the Son was transacted concerning the incarnation of the Son and His sufferings death and resurrection and all other things belonging to the salvation of the elect The fourth proof THe fourth evidence of the passing a Covenant between the Father and the Son is holden forth in the typicall priesthood of Levi by the altar and sacrifices and the rest of the leviticall ceremonies which were prescribed by God for as these things were testimonies preachings declarations and evidences of a Covenant past of old between God the disponer and the Son the Redeemer about the way of justifying and saving such as believed in the Messiah by an expiatory sacrifice to be offered in the fulnesse of time for the redeemed So also they were prefigurations predictions prophesies and pledges of the Redeemers paying of the promised price of Redemption And this agreed-upon-price because of the perfections of the parties contracters the Father and the Son was holden and esteemed as good as payed from the beginning of the World and the agreed-upon-benefits purchased thereby to wit grace and glory were effectually bestowed on the faithfull before Christs incarnation as the Psalmist testifies Psal. 84. 11. The Lord saith he is a sun and a shield the Lord will give grace and glory and no good thing will He withhold from them that walk uprightly and Psal. 73. 24. Thou shalt guide me with Thy counsell and afterward receive me into glory and that because the promised price of Redemption was of no lesse worth to give righteousnesse and life eternall to believers in the Messiah to come then the price now payed is now of worth to give for it righteousnesse and life eternall to these that believe in the Messiah now come Jesus Christ incarnat And this donation of saving graces as remission of sin and carying on to life eternall was sealed unto believers in the Covenant of reconciliation by the appointed Sacraments of circumcision and the paschal lamb The fifth proof THe fifth evidence of a Covenant past between the Father and the Son Mediatour to be incarnat is this Christ now incarnat doth ratifie all these things which the Father and Himself not yet incarnat and the holy Spirit had spoken in the old Testament about the salvation of the elect and the price of their redemption and of the conditions to be performed on either hand And as it were of new doth repeat and renew the covenant which before was past between the Father and Himself before He was incarnat for Luke 2. 49. speaking to Ioseph and His mother when He was about twelve years old He saith Wist ye not that I must be about My Fathers businesse and Matth. 3. 13. He presents Himself pledge and surety for sinners before the Father to be baptized for them with the baptism of affliction and to fulfill all righteousnesse as was agreed upon before vers 15. whereupon the Father doth receive and admit the surety and His undertaking for payment vers
to invocat his holy name for the right use-making of his affliction The ninth question is how remission of sin may be said to be granted in respect of sins to come IT is commonly said that the convert in his justification hath the remission of sins by-gone and sins to come whereupon the question is moved how this can stand with daily renewed remission of daily sins on the one hand daily renewed remission seemeth not necessary first because we believe that remission of all sin is the priviledge of all believers in Christ and the abridgement of the special articles of faith set down in the Apostles Creed as it is called holdeth this forth 2. Because it is certain that Christ in his death did compleat the payment of the price of redemption from all sin as 1 Ioh. 1. 7. The blood of Iesus Christ cleanseth us from all sins 3. We are said to be not under the law but under grace and so fred from the curse of the law 4. Because if daily remission of sin be necessar to be granted then it presuppones that both original sin and every actual sin flowing forth from it daily must be taken notice of reckoned for and repented of daily which is impossible On the other hand the convert seeth that every transgression of and disconformity to the law is sin and the Apostle 1 Ioh. 1. 8. speaking of himself and other converts saith If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us And Christ hath taught us as oft as we pray for our daily bread to pray also for the remission of sins The question is how the doubt of the convert may be cleared 2. For answer We must grant to the convert that original sin remaineth in the believer and is not only an exceeding sin as the Apostle calleth it Rom. 7. 13. but also is the fountain of all actual sins which doth pollute the conscience and sometimes also the outward man 2. We must grant also that there cannot be an actual and properly called remission of sins which are not yet committed for no man is guilty of that fault wherewith he cannot be charged for such a remission were a dispensation and licence to sin such as the Pope granteth to his slaves to gratifie them in allowing their vile lusts for inriching himself with the price of that iniquity 3. If such an actual remission of sins were given in justification the once justified person could never become a daily debtor by his daily transgressions contrary to the declaration of Christ in one of the articles of the Lords prayer 3. For solving the doubt then we must distinguish the significations and acceptions of remission of sin For 1. it is taken for remission purchased by Christ by virtue of the covenant of Redemption in favours of the elect but not applied unto the elect before the mans conversion Heb. 10. 12 13 14. But this man after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever sat down on the right hand of God from henceforth expecting till his enemies be made his foot-stool For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified 2. It is taken for remission promised by Christ to all that shall believe in him to be bestowed on them so soon as they shall turn to him Act. 26. 18. Thirdly it is taken for the sentence of absolution judicially applyed and adjudged to the actual believer Eph. 1. 7. In whom we have redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace 4. For the actual remission of all sins past before his conversion Rom. 3. 25. Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past through the forbearance of God 5. For a constant right to daily remission of sin and accesse to the fountain opened up in the house of David that is to all the children of the houshold of faith in Christ Zech. 13. 1. In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and for uncleanness 4. So then the convert hath first the actual remission of all sins preceeding his conversion and withall his state changed from being a child of Sathan to be a child of God Secondly he hath right unto daily remission of sins as they fall out after conversion for Christ speaking of the remission had in the time of conversion calleth it a washing of the whole man Joh. 13. 10 He that is washen needeth not to wash save his feet but is wholly clean to wit for the state of his person accepted in Christ and for the application of his right unto daily remission Christ teacheth all his disciples daily to pray for it which Christ calleth the washing of the believers feet Joh. 13. 10. 5. For answer to the objections made against the necessity of daily renewed remission of sin let it be remembred that the article of our Creed is so far from making daily remission of sin not necessar that of necessity it must be extended not only to the remission of sins past before conversion but also to the right made unto us for daily remission of the sins which run daily from the relicts of corrupt nature not fully mortified for otherwayes the believer could not have quiet consolation in the daily exercise of renewed repentance and faith in Jesus Christ. 2. As to the second objection concerning the perfect purchase made by Christ of remission by-past and to come It doth prove indeed that there is no other sacrifice for sin nor price of redemption from sin save that which was compleated on the crosse but it doth not prove that we must only once make application of this purchase for Christ keepeth the full purchase in his own hand and doth let forth the application thereof as we stand in need in his own order and by degrees till he perfect us in sanctification and glorification also 6. As for the third objection we must not think that when we are loosed from the Law as a covenant of Works we are loosed also from the commands of the Law for the covenant of Works prescribed in the Law is posterior both in order of nature and time to the natural writing of the Law in mans heart Rom. 2. 15. And therefore when the covenant of the law of Works is taken off the authority of the Law to direct and command all moral duties doth remain and can no more be dissolved then the obligation of the reasonable creature to be obedient to the Creator can be abolished and therefore when the believer falleth in a transgression he meriteth death and destruction as the wages of sin But Christ our Advocat who liveth for ever to make intercession for us holds off the execution of deserved wrath and giveth to the believer the grace of renewed repentance
dissimilitude of manners or discrepance of judgment or contention about any mater then partiality hindereth a right judgment one of another and affection marreth reason many times that it cannot discern what is right Therefore let the person afflicted with this tentation turn himself to God who searcheth the reines and let him humble himself in his sight renewing the exercise of repentance and faith in Christ and let him apply to himself what the Scripture doth pronounce of these who in the sense of their sin do flye to Christ Jesus that in him they may have remission of sin and amendment of their life for so did the Prophet in the whole Psal. 17. when he had to do with his uncharitable friends and kinsfolk and so let the afflicted do CHAP. XV. Wherein the converts doubting of his being in the state of grace so oft as he doth not feel the sense of his reconciliation with God is examined and answered SO●e true converts are who indeed are indued with the saving graces of faith hope and charity and give evident proof of the in-dwelling of the holy Spirit in them and do rejoyce now and then in God their Saviour when his love to them is shed abroad in their heart but when a cloud cometh over their eyes and they do not feel the warm beams of the Sun of righteousnesse shining in their soul as they before have felt they are assaulted with doubting if any saving grace be in them at all and do entertain these tentations oft-times so far as to suspect and expresse in words that there is no solid faith in themselves no lively hope no christian charity no mortification of sin no purity of heart and such like if when they are thus tempted and tossed they lay hold on Christ as in their first conversion and find the sensible comfort of the holy Spirit by the word of the Gospel applyed unto them then all is well their doubting is overcome for the time they rejoyce and praise God But if the Lord shall delay for his own wise ends to renew their sensible consolations and to renew the earnest-penny of their inheritance forthwith they begin to doubt again and to hearken to Sathans suggestions and to suspect that their former feelings were but temporary and not the special operations of the holy Spirit and at length break forth in many sad complaints And in a word they do not maintain the work of saving grace in themselves longer then the sun shine of spiritual felt consolations abideth with them And albeit their exercise be no wayes so hard as was the Prophets Psal. 77. yet they fall out in the same complaint which the Prophet expresseth ver 7 8 9. Will the Lord cast off for ever and will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone for ever doth his promise fail for evermore hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies 2. For clearing of this case two diseases may be perceived in the afflicted which is here described The one is this the afflicted setteth himself to live rather by sense then by faith and doth put his faith on work of set purpose that he may obtain or recover consolation shortly but if his desire be not shortly granted he maketh not use of the formerly felt consolations to strengthen his own ●aith when consolation is withdrawn The other sicknesse is this the afflicted doth not take up the nature of saving graces nor perceive the beauty thereof except in the sun-shine of sensible divine approbation thereof he doth not take up the right definition or description of saving graces for saith is to him nothing if it be not a full perswasion except he can pour forth tears alwayes he thinks he doth not repent except he find a joyfull expectation of Christs coming in glory he thinks his hope not lively and so of charity and patience temperance righteousnesse and holinesse if he do not find them in some eminent measur as they may near●by stand before the law the afflicted of whom we are now speaking thinketh he hath nothing of saving grace in him We grant that this sicknesse is very rare and few they are that are troubled with it yet where it appeareth it must be speedily cured but with great circumspection cured for the earnest desire he hath of feeling the sweet sense of the joy of the holy Ghost must not be disallowed but commended to him and he taught to cry as it is said Cant. 2. 5. Stay me with flaggons comfort me with aples for I am sick of love yet with holy submission unto Gods will for time maner and measure 2. He is also to be commended that in his trouble he goeth to God in Christ not altogether without faith which he putteth forth in active exercise thereof by confession of sin by supplication and otherwayes but here is he to be reproved that while he is actually exercising faith love hope c. he reckoneth all he doeth to be nothing no faith no hope c. because it is not in such a measure as he would 3. He is to be commended that he doth aime at the highest degrees of faith love hope patience mortification of sin and practice of holinesse and all commanded vertues but here he faileth that he counteth all as nought when consolation and sensible approbation of what he hath is not felt for here he despiseth the day of small things and unthankfully mis-regardeth the lower degrees of these saving graces which notwithstanding are bought to the redeemed by the same price wherewith the highest degrees are bought to wit with the precious blood of Jesus Christ. 3. Wherefore let the afflicted consider first that the will of God revealed requireth of us that we walk by faith and under the sense of our sinfulnesse and afflictions whatsoever hold fast the covenant of grace in Christ Jesus and by adhering unto him hold up our heart and entertain spiritual life in us Secondly let him consider that this way of living by faith and dependence on the word of Gods grace doth please the Lord well for without faith it is impossible to please him and thus living by faith in him doth give more glory of truth grace mercy and constancy unto God then when we suspend the glorifying of him till we find the sense of consolation from him for if we believe in God only because we find the consolations of his Spirit our faith in that case is weak and leaneth more upon the pledge and sensible evidence of his truth bestowed upon us then upon his promise without a pledge for no man will refuse to give credit to a man upon a pawn but God is worthy to be credited upon his word without a pawn yea when his dispensation seemeth contrary to his promise Thirdly let him consider that the Lord useth to give sensible consolations not only to help our faith in the time of consolation but also to help our
grace of God the man made a believer in Christ then the absolute promises of making a new heart and of writing the Law of the Lord therein Ier. 31. 31. and Ezek 11. 19. and all the promises of saving graces set down in holy Scripture do all of them belong to the believer in Christ in whom all the promises are yea and amen as if his name were set down 4. As to his doubt arising from his weak and infirm application of the promises let the afflicted consider what God hath already wrought and is a working in him by way of application for first God hath granted to him the use of the meanes with others in the visible Kirk so that it may be said unto him in this respect as it is Esa. 5. 4. what could be done in outward means and offer-making of grace which is not done Secondly God hath drawn more near unto him and hath illuminat his mind about his sinfull state in nature and about the way of delivery by faith in Christ and yet more hath inclined his heart to accept of the offer of Christ and make answer to the call as David did When thou saidst seek my face my soul answered thy face O Lord will I seek Psal. 27. 8. Thus God hath applyed Christ and the promises of the Gospel to the afflicted and hath made the afflicted to flye unto Christ offered in the Gospel and to apply him unto himself that hitherto the afflicted hath no reason to complain of not application of Christ and his promises on Gods part nor yet of begun-application on the afflicted's part Where is the● in-lake then I answer the defect is first in the afflicted who hath not duly considered the passages of Gods gracious approaching to him and drawing of the man to himself in Christ another defect is that the afflicted upon groundlesse mistakes doth not lay claim to Christ and to all the promises of grace for righteousnesse and salvation in him and that because he is not so clear of his right unto and interest in Christ as he can lay claim confidently unto the same 5. For clearing of the afflicted in this his right and warrant confidently to apply Christ and all the promises of the Gospel let him consider first the dreadfull sentence of the curse and condemnation of all them that do not believe on Christ Ioh. 3. 18. He that believeth in Christ is not condemned but he that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not believed in the only begotten Son of God Secondly let him consider the largenesse of the Gospel wherein grace is offered to all and every believer Ioh. 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life He saith whosoever without exception lest any man who desireth to believe in Christ should doubt that he shall be received and made welcome Thirdly let him mediate upon the wonderfull mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God who that he might ransom and redeem his people from sin and misery hath assumed humane nature into the union of person with his divine nature and given a perpetual pawn and pledge of his hearty willingnesse to reconcile justifie sanctifie and save to the uttermost every one who shall come unto God through him whereunto his mediatory Office and cloathing himself with most sweet relations of Prophet Priest and King to all his followers doth hear abundant witnesse Fourthly let him hearken to the quickening and comfortable invitations which by his Spirit speaking in Scripture he uttereth in the ears of all to whom the Gospel cometh with a joyfull sound Ho every one that thirsteth Isa. 55. 1. to 10. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy loaden Mat. 11. 28. We are Embassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead beye reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely Rev. 22. 17. Fifthly let the afflicted consider what answer he will give to the expresse command of God 1 Ioh. 3. 23. This is his comandment that we should believe in the name of his Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he hath commanded us For this commandment being directed to all the hearers of the Gospel chargeth every one without exception first to examine seriously their life by the rule of Gods Law that thereby they may be convinced of their damnable state in nature and made to acknowledge their sin and misery and inability to help themselves Secondly having examined and acknowledged their natural lost condition they are commanded to flye to Jesus Christ that by faith in him they may be delivered Thirdly that having fled to Christ they should evidence their faith by love to Christ or God in Christ and their neighbours especially such as are of the household of faith In which commandment both the order of applying Law and Gospel is set down and the necessity of believing in Christ upon the warrant of this clear command so that whosoever is a hearer of the Gospel and doth not in this order flye unto Christ he is inexcusable even the wicked and worst of men And much lesse excusable is the afflicted convert of whom we are now speaking who already hath acknowledged his lost condition without Christ and knoweth that there is no hope of relief except by faith in Jesus and hath fled to Christ and dare not depart from him if this man shall stand here and not relye on Christ and rest his soul upon him confidently what excuse can he make If he do object that his name is not written in this command 1 Ioh. 3. 23. it hath no force to impede his faith for neither is his name written in any of the ten commands of the morall Law and yet he findeth himself tyed to the obedience of every one of them and why is he not tyed also to this sweet command of the Gospel of grace as well as to other commands this command being given forth as the last declaration of Gods will for relief of them who acknowledge that they by the law are condemned wherefore let not the afflicted any more pretend the difficulty of applying Christ and his graces offered in the Gospel seing it is presupposed he hath fled to Christ and dare neither depart from him nor for the pretended scruple draw confidently in unto him but let him check and chide himself for not haunting Christ and conversing with him in heaven in that humility and confidence which the Word of the Lord doth allow unto him and commandeth him to take up and hold fast CHAP. XXII Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert concerning his conversion arising from the observation in himself of presumption and security in his prosperity and of his misbelief in adversity THere are some true converts who albeit they are neither idle nor
whether every sincere convert shall remain in the covenant of Grace if possibly they have so far abused grace as to defile themselves again with the pollutions which they seemed to repent of before And this erroneous opinion of the instability of the covenant of grace they do apply to themselves for when they have found by experience the power of sin as it were not only rageing but in appearance reigning in them as the conscience of their relapsing in their old sins beareth witnesse And when they know their nature so corrupt and ready to sin yet more they doubt if this condition can stand with being in the covenant of Grace and whatsoever they have found of their being in this covenant they now fear that they be fallen from grace because they have as they conceive broken the covenant of Grace on their part therefore they apprehend also that God in justice being provoked oft-times by them hath now at last dissolved the covenant of Grace on his part for say they it is no reason that God should be tyed unto them in covenant who so many wayes have violated that covenant but as Adam by sinning excluded himself from all benefit of the covenant of Works So is it reason that every one who have violated the covenant of Grace as I have done should be excluded from the covenant of Grace And here the afflicted doth stand as a miserable man uncertain what to do in which condition horrible temptations and heavy suspicions of their state do arise namely that they are in the condition and case wherein Esau was who when he had sold his birth-right for a messe of pottage found no place for repentance albeit he sought the blessing with tears Now what torment may be in the conscience of the afflicted in this case it is easie for them who at any time have felt the wrath of God to conjecture And this doubt doth vex the man most who is conscious of his often abuse of the grace of God for what shall I do saith he shall I defile my self and go and wash and again defile my self and go and wash and by this means augment my own guiltinesse from day to day what is if this be not to abuse the grace of God 2. That this evil may be removed we must confesse that there are many who after some remorse for some sins raised by a natural and unrenewed conscience do weep now and then as Saul did for his injust persecution of David and do think that by their tears they have washen away their sin and attained to some sort of quietnesse in their conscience for a time who yet do not cease from their wickednesse but remain in their natural state strangers from God and Christ. We must also acknowledge that some of the regenerat in their carnal security falling back in their old sins ordinarily are sharply chastised by God and indeed no wonder is that such as have once attained to peace with God do meet with broken bones after they have abused the grace of God in giving way to their sinfull lusts which was the case of David Ps. 51. 3. As for those who fall in open grosse scandalous sins which defile the whole man soul and body both it is safest for them whether they were before that time converted or not to let alone long disputation whether they were regenerat or not before their fearfull fall and to stir up themselves to a deep search of the wickednesse of their nature that they may be humbled before God and in the sense of their in-born sin and grosse actual out-breakings flye unto Christ for pardon and grace to bring forth better fruits then they have done 4. As for these who have not fallen in grievous open transgressions but in their wrestling against sin not obtaining the victory they would or hoped to have do find themselves polluted in their spirits and put to the worse in their conflict against their sinfull lusts and passions and that very frequently and thereupon they apprehend that either they were never in the state of grace or if they were in it that they have abused and broken the covenant of grace To these we answer that every transgression of the commands albeit it be a violation of the covenant of works yet is not a dissolution of the covenant of grace for it is one thing to fail in a duty which the covenanted party should have done another thing to break or dissolve the covenant of grace for it is provided in the covenant of grace as a special article that God will forgive the sin of his confederat people when they confesse their faults and sue for pardon according to the promise of mercy to the covenanted Ier. 31 32 and lest any humble sinner should be discouraged and not receive this solution of his doubt let him consider the words of the Apostle Gal. 6. 1. expresly set down for their comfort who having resolved to live holily justly and temperatly are overtaken in an offence and are not purposed to abuse mercy or turn the grace of God into lasciviousnesse and 1 Iob. 2. 1. These things I write unto you to wit believers in Christ carefull to live holily that ye sin not but if any man sin we have an advocat with the father Iesus Christ the just one And this article of the covenant for granting daily remission according to the necessity of the Saints maketh the covenant of grace perpetual and to be daily made use of as we are directed in the Lords prayer And in this doth the covenant of grace differ from the covenant of works which by any one sin is so violat as the curse doth follow till the sinner run in to the covenant of grace in Jesus Christ And by this doctrine a door is not opened unto sinning but the door only is closed to keep in the true convert from desperation and running away from Christ and to help him out of the mire of discouragement wherein he is fallen lest he sink in it and despair Neither is the study of holinesse hindered by this way or the diligence of the convert slakened in the duties of new obedience and pleasing of God but only servile fear in the maner of serving God is taken away and the obligation of love to God who is found to be so mercifull is more strictly tyed upon us which love as it is augmented daily by new confirmations of faith and fresh experiences of his grace to us doth cast out servile fear as the Apostle teacheth 1 Ioh. 4. 18. As for the afflicted convert his fear that he be like Saul who though he felt remorse and shame when all the beholders in his army saw him so confounded by Davids loyall carriage toward him yet did he not repent this sin at all nor amend his life at all there is no ground to suspect himself to be like unto him or to Esau who was solicitous only for an earthly blessing
So soon as his condition is clear to the Pastor or friend who is about to help him let the speaker unto him recollect in few words his condition as he conceiveth it and take up his doubt in a word as shortly as may be that the afflicted may perceive that his case is well taken up by the Pastor or Christian friend For oft-times here is the cure marred when the afflicted conceiveth that his case is not rightly apprehended or what is spoken is not spoken to purpose 7. Whatsoever his case seem to be Christian compassion must be shewed to the afflicted and his affliction estimat no lesse then the afflicted conceiveth of it but made possible for God to cure it For even our Lord in the resurrection of Lazarus groaned in his spirit in compassion toward the mourning friends before he gave them the full consolation And surely compassion doth well become a Physician for it is an addition to the affliction of the afflicted when the beholder cometh to him to think little of his pain 8. Whether the afflicted seem to be a convert or not let him be exhorted by his present exercise to humble himself before God and confesse his original and actual sins to God and flye to the grace of reconciliation and remission of sins and consolation holden forth in the Gospel to every self-condemned sinner through Jesus Christ our Lord for Christ is the end of the law for righteousnesse when the conscience is burdened and the rod is heavy the curse of the law and the rod of correction do drive the man to flye unto Christ and take his yoke upon him And this course is wholsome and safe whatsoever be the afflicted mans estate whether he be converted or not 5. And as for that speciall stratageme of Sathan whereby he beareth in the sentence of condemnation on the afflicted and fiteth his phantasie with the continual ingemination and inculcating of this fiery dart crying over and over again blasphemous words charging the afflicted with the sin thereof and pronouncing sentence against him saying thou art condemned thou art a reprobat and such like the afflicted man must be informed 1. that such peremptory sentences are not from the Lords Spirit speaking in the Scripture but from the false accuser of the brethren for God pronounceth not condemnation but remission of sin to every one that flyeth to Christ. 2. That he must put difference betwixt Sathans part in the sinfull suggestions and his own part in rejecting of them abhorring them and grieving for them 3. That he must put a great difference between his imagination or phantasie and his conscience between the voice sounding in his phantasie whether he will or not and the sentence of his well informed conscience approving or disallowing what is offered unto it to be chosen or refused consented unto or dis-assented from by the conscience judging according to the rule of Gods Word for a sentence of words may be suggested to the phantasie repeated and obtruded upon the phantasie a thousand times which the conscience may and should refuse and reject a thousand times We know by experience that a sentence of words may by oft repeating in the ears of a parret and other birds take such an impression on the phantasie of the bird that it shall repeat vocally the words one by one and pronounce them disstinctly as if that sentence had been the work of its own invention So also we see that by frequent repetition of any whistle or song the phantasie of some birds may be so beaten and informed that they shall chant the same song over and over again and make it as if it were its own Now phantasie and imagination being a thing common to man and beast it is certain that the phantasie of a man may be wrought upon and stamped with the like impression And this much as experience teacheth us doth befall men for when a certain song or toon is sung in our audience and is often repeated our phantasie before we be aware useth to repeat and same song or toon or quietly whisper the notes and measure of the song or toon And after our judgment hath observed this work of the imagination we can hardly stay our imagination or phantasie while we are about other serious thoughts from its secret sowthing of the measures and notes of the song for phantasie will not be ruled by the laws of reason more then the outward sense of seeing can be hindered from observation of what it seeth whether pleasant or displeasant What wonder is it then that Sathan who hath great influence on mens imagination doth make so deep impression on it by continual iteration that the afflicted seems to himself to own those blasphemous suggestions as his own thoughts and as the voice of his conscience and yet they are indeed nothing but Sathans whistling and false sentences pressed on the mans imagination And put the case that his deluded mind should take them for the justly deserved sentences of the conscience yet are they only the voice of the conscience ill informed not judging of the mater according to the rule of Gods Word which ●oth not impute Sathans suggestions to the soul afflicted by them and mourning for them And so much for solving of the doubts of the true convert concerning his state in grace and regeneration THE THIRD BOOK CHAP. I. Concerning some premises WE have handled some examples of those cases of the conscience of a regenerat man wherein his state whether he be converted or not is brought in question Now follow some examples of those cases which concern his condition In which cases albeit the state of the convert be not at the first brought in question yet his conscience may be deceived and miscarry for a time to his detriment Of which cases that we may speak the more clearly some considerations must be premised and taken along with us 1. A mans sta●e and his condition sometime are taken in a larger sense indifferently for the same thing as when we say that all the regenerat are in a blessed state or good condition and that all the unregenerat are in a miserable state or in an evil condition But when we put difference betwixt these two in a more strict sense a mans state is that relation of his person wherein he standeth either as a child in grace or as a child of wrath In which sense every convert is said to be in the state of grace and every unregenerat person is said to be in the state of wrath judicially declared such in Scripture But the condition of a man is his present morall disposition in order to his exercising of vertue or vice better or worse In which sense the renewed man or true convert is said to be in a good condition when he is going about the duties of religion and righteousnesse as becometh a renewed man and said to be in an ill condition when he is otherwayes disposed and exercised for
whether the believer perceive his absolution or not for the time 4. There is a sensible intimation of this sentence unto the believer joyned with peace and joy which the Apostle calleth the shedding abroad of the love of God in the heart Rom. 5. 5. and the sealing of the holy Ghost stamping the heart with holinesse Ephes. 1. 13. The first three makes the absolution of the believer certain whether the believer thinks so or not but the fourth which is the sensible intimation of this sentence doth make the believer both sure and joyfull As justification is taken passively four things may be distinguished in the believer justified The first is his actual receiving of Christ offered in the Gospel for a perfect remedy of sin and misery The second is the Lords judicial setling of the general sentence of absolution upon the believer as if he had spoken to him by name as he did to the Apostles Ioh. 15. 3. Now are ye clean through the word I ●ave spoken unto you that is you are clean from the guil● of sin by my absolving of you The third is the believers observing in a reflect act of his conscience that he hath fled to Christ for absolution and therefore justified indeed The fourth is the feeling and observing of the testimony of the holy Ghost bearing witnesse with his spirit that he is a child of God absolved from sin and wrath The first two of these to wit the act of faith receiving of Christ and of the right made by Christ to the believer in him of his absolution may be in and on the believer without the other two to wit his observation of the act of faith and the felt intimation of this worl● of grace by the holy Spirit 2. For solving of the doubt then as justification is actively taken as proceeding from the immanent act of Gods eternal purpose and decree to justifie the believer it is no more the actual justification in this life of which we are speaking then the immanent act of Gods eternal purpose to raise the bodies of believers in Christ and to glorifie them in soul and body can be called the actual resurrection of their bodies and glorification of both soul and body in this life But the transient act of justification in a judicial way which is the Lords judicial sentence of absolution of the believer declared by his Word set down now in holy Scripture it is indeed and formally the believers justification and is judicially terminar upon every believer in the act of his conversion whether the believer doth clearly perceive his own conversion or be in suspicion of his being reconciled and justified And this may be made to appear if we compare the condemnation of the unbeliever with the absolution of the believer fled to Christ Ioh. 3. 18. As he that believeth not in Christ is condemned already because the curse of the law and condemnation pronounced in the Scripture by God the soveraign Judge stands against him so long as he doth not believe in the only begotten Son of God And this sentence standeth fast whether the unbeliever take notice of this sentence or not whether he do apply it to himself or not do find grief for it or not So the believer in Christ is relaxed from condemnation and absolved and hath right unto eternal life and begun possession of it albeit for the time of his infancy tentation trembling and fear it be not so albeit he doth not perceive the blessed change of his state nor doth lay to heart as he might the words of Christ judicially pronouncing the sentence comprehending him as certainly as if his name were expressed Ioh. 3. 18. He that believeth on him is not condemned and ver 36. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life and Ioh. 6. from ver 37. to 41. Hence we conclude that the formal act of justification of a man fled to Christ is to be found in the written sentence of the judge absolving every believer and the man we speak of There is another transient act of God in an actual revelation of justification wherein the holy Ghost openeth the eyes of the believer to behold and perceive the gift of saith already bestowed on him Of this speaks the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 12. And after that the holy Ghost hath pointed out his own grace bestowed on the believer he followeth his work by giving remarkable peace and joy as earnest of life everlasting whereof the Apostle speaketh Ephes. 1. 13. In whom ye also trusted after ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your salvation in whom also after ye had believed ye were sealed with the spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance Therefore he that desireth to have the intimation of his justification after flying for refuge unto Christ for relief of felt sin and feared wrath must read his absolution in the Gospel as well as he hath read before that his condemnation in the law Unto which sentence of absolution let him hold fast in his daily endeavour after sanctification The fifth question is how to satisfie the convert who findeth himself pursued for his sins after remission believed and is brought in question what to judge of his case MAny converts have fallen in Iobs case and seemed to themselves to possesse the sins of their youth Iob 13. 26. For after conversion and felt reconciliation they find the sins they did repent of and did believe to be forgiven through Christ objected to them afresh pursued with sharp accusations and signs of wrath joyned therewith Their reconciliation and righteousnesse through Christ they purpose to hold fast their old guiltinesse and sentence of their conscience writing bitter things against them they cannot deny The pinch is here either the remission they did believe is null or the challenge is unjust do they reason with themselves the nullity of their remission they dare not admit and the just ground of challenge they cannot deny and the doubt what to think of this case they cannot shun not seeing how these things can consist and stand together 2. For answer to this doubt these four things must be distinguished and how they may all consist one with another must be timously considered The four things to be distinguished are 1. the reconciliation of a convert with God 2. the remission of the reconciled mans sins freely gifted unto him by God 3. a renewed bitter accusation raised by Sathan against the re●iled convert 4. The holy and wise dispensation of God permitting ordering these renewed accusations of his child by Sathan for the tryal and exercise of his faith and growth of his repentance and other good ends Now for the consistence of these four we need not doubt but the accuser of the brethren can cast up to us forgiven sins and bear upon us that they are not forgiven N●ither need we doubt but God in wisdom and love to his children may suffer Sathan to
power according to His own pleasure to dispose of men looked upon as lying before God to Whom all things are present in sin and death drawn on by ma●s own deserving and yet for the glory of His grace resolving to save the elect so as His justice shall be satisfied for them in and by the second Person of the Trinity the co-eternall and co-essentiall Son of the Father 4. This covenant of redemption then may be thus described It is a bargain agreed upon between the Father and the Son designed Mediatour concerning the elect lying with the rest of manking in the state of sin and death procured by their own merit wisely and powerfully to be converted sanctified and saved for the Son of Gods satisfaction and obedience in our nature to be assumed by Him to be given in due time to the Father even unto the death of the crosse In this bargain or agreement the Scripture importeth clearly a selling and a buying of the elect Acts 20. 28. Feed the Church of God which He hath purchased by His own blood 1 Cor. 6. 20. ye are bought with a price and 1 Pet. 1. 18. The seller of the elect is God the buyer is God incarnat the persons bought are the Church of the elect the price is the blood of God to wit the blood of Christ who is God and man in one person This covenant of redemption is in effect one with the eternall decree of redemption wherein the salvation of the elect and the way how it shall be brought about is fixed in the purpose of God who worketh all things according to the counsell of His own Will as the Apostle sets it down Ephes. 1. unto the 15 verse And the decree of redemption is in effect a covenant one God in three persons agreeing in the decree that the second Person God the Son should be incarnat and give obedience and satisfaction to divine justice for the elect unto which piece of service the Son willingly submitting Himself the decree becometh a reall covenant indeed But for further satisfaction that there is such a covenant between the Father and the Son as we have said for redeeming of the elect Scripture giveth us evidence six wayes The first way is by expressions which import presuppose a formall covenant between the parties buying and selling the second way is by styles and titles given to Christ the Redeemer the third is by expressions relating to an eternall decree for execution and performance of the covenant of redemption the fourth is by representation of this covenant in the Leviticall types the fifth is by Christ the Redeemer now incarnat His ratification of the covenant and the sixth way is by holding forth to us the heads and articles agreed upon wherein the covenant consists The first poof AS to the expressions importing a formall covenant first Ephes. 1. 7. it is called a redemption or a buying of the elect out of sin and misery by blood shewing that no remission of sin could be granted by Justice without sheding of blood and Christ undertook to pay the price and hath payed it Again the inheritance which the elect have promised unto them is called a purchase importing that the disponer of the inheritance to the elect must have a sufficient price for it and that the Redeemer hath accepted the condition and laid down the price craved for it Ephes. 1. 14. and so bought back lost heaven and forfeited blessednesse to so many sinners who otherwayes for sin might justly have been excluded and debarred therefrom for ever A third expression is holden forth Acts 20. 28. wherein God disponer and God Redeemer are agreed that the elect shal go free for God the Redeemer's obedience unto the death who hath now bought them with His blood A fourth expression is in plain terms set down by Paul 1 Cor. 6. 20. Ye are bought with a price God the disponer selleth and God the Redeemer buyeth the elect to be His conquest both body and spirit And Peter more particularly expresseth the price of redemption agreed upon to be not gold or silver but the blood of the Mediatour Christ the innocent Lamb of God slain in typicall prefigurations from the beginning of the World and slain in reall performance in the fulnesse of time 1 Pet. 1. 18. 19. 20. 21. A fifth expression is that of our Lord Jesus in the institution of the Sacrament of His Supper Matth. 26. 28. This is my blood of the new Testament which is shed for many for remission of sins Here an agreement between the Redeemer and God disponer that these many which are the elect shall have remission of sins for the Redeemers ransom of blood payed for them The purchase of this ransom of blood He maketh over in the Covenant of grace and reconciliation to believers in Him and sealeth the bargain with them by the Sacrament of His Supper The second proof THe second evidence of this Covenant of Redemption past between God and God the Son Mediatour designed is from such titles and styles as are given to Christ in relation to the procureing of a Covenant of grace and reconciliation between God and us First He is called a Mediatour of the Covenant of reconciliation interceeding for procureing of it and that not by a simple intreaty but by giving Himself over to the Father calling for satisfaction to Justice that reconciliation might go on for paying a compensatory price sufficient to satisfie Justice for the elect 1 Tim. 2. 5. 6. There is one God and one Mediatour between God and man to wit God incarnat the man Christ Iesus who gave Himself a ransom for all to wit elect children to be testified in due time Another title is given to Him by Job Chap. 19. 24. Where He is called a Redeemer a near kinsman who before His incarnation had oblieged Himself to take on humane nature and to pay the price of Redemption represented by slain sacrifices for the elect His kinsmen A third title is held out in that He is called a Surety of a better Covenant Heb. 7. 22. Whereby is imported that God would not passe a Covenant of grace and reconciliation to men except He had a good Surety who would answer for the debt of the party reconciled and would undertake to make the reconciled stand to his Covenant And Christ undertook the Suretyship and so hath procured and established this Covenant of grace much better then the Covenant of works and better then the old Covenant of grace with Israel as they made use of it This necessarily imports a Covenant between Him and the Fathers Justice to whom He becometh surety for us for what is suretiship but a voluntary transferring of anothers debt upon the Surety oblieging to pay the debt for which he ingageth as Surety A fourth title given to Christ is that He is a reconciliation by way of permutation the atonement Rom. 5. 11. We have by Christ received the atonement that is
due to us in full measure but also because that which Christ suffered in the point of torment and vexation was in some respect of the same kind with the torment of the damned for in the punishment of the damned we must necessarily distinguish these three things 1. the perverse disposition of the mind of the damned in their sufferings 2. the duration and perpetuity of their punishment and 3. the punishment it self tormenting soul and body The first two are not of the essence of punishment albeit by accident they are turned into a punishment for the wickednesse vilenesse and unworthinesse of the damned who neither will nor can submit themselves to the punishment and put the case they should submit are utterly unable to make satisfaction for ever do make them in a desperat dolefull condition for ever though obstinat sinners do not apprehend nor believe this but go on in treasuring up wrath against themselves pleasing themselves in their own dreams to their own endlesse perdition Of these three the first two could have no place in Christ Not the first because He willingly offered Himself a sacrifice for our sins and upon agreement payed the ransom fully Not the second because He could no longer be holden in the sorrows of death then He had satisfied Justice and finished what was imposed on Him and His infinit excellency made His short suffering to be of infinit worth and equivalent to our everlasting suffering The third then remaineth which is the reall and sensible tormenting of soul and body in being made a curse for us and to feel it so in His reall experience And what need we question hellish pain where pain and torment and the curse with felt wrath from God falleth on and lyeth still till Justice be satisfied Concerning which it is as certain that Christ was seased upon by the dolours of death as it is certain in Scripture that He could not be holden of the sorrows of death Acts. 2. 24. Quest. But what interest had Christ God-head in His humane sufferings to make them both so short and so precious and satisfactory to Justice for so many sins of so many sinners especially when we consider that God cannot suffer Ans. Albeit this passion of the humane nature could not so far reach the God-head of Christ that it should in a physicall sense suffer which indeed is impossible yet these sufferings did so affect the person that it may truly be said that God suffered and by His blood bought His people to Himself Acts 20. 28. for albeit the proper and formall subject of physicall suffering be only the humane nature yet the principall subject of sufferings both in a physicall and morall sense is Christs person God and man from the dignity whereof the worth and excellency of all sort of sufferings the merit and the satisfactory sufficiency of the price did flow And let it be considered also that albeit Christ as God in His God-head could not suffer in a physicall sense yet in a morall sense He might suffer and did suffer for in as much as He being in the form of God and without robbery equall to God did demit His person to assume humane nature and empty Himself so far as to hide His glory and take on the shape of a servant and expose Himself willingly to all the contradiction of sinners which He was to meet with and to all railings revilings contempt despisings and calumnies shall it seem nothing and not enter in the count of our Lords payment for our debt Obj. But how could so low a downthrowing of the Son of man or of the humane nature assumed by Christ consist with the Majesty of the person of the Son of God Ans. We must distinguish in Christ these things which are proper to either of the two natures from these things which are ascribed to His person in respect of either of the natures or both the natures for infirmity physicall suffering or mortality are proper to the humane nature The glory of power and grace and mercy and superexcellent Majesty and such like are proper to the Deity but the sufferings of the humane nature are so far from diminishing the glory of the divine nature that they do manifest the same and make it appear more clearly for by how much the humane nature was weakned depressed and despised for our sake by so much the love of Christ God and man in one person toward man and His mercy and power and grace to man do shine in the eyes of those that judiciously look upon Him Obj. But seing Christs satisfaction for sinners doth not stand in any one part of His doings and sufferings but in the whole and intire precious pearl and compleet price of His whole obedience from His incarnation even to the death of His crosse how cometh it to passe that in Scripture the whole expiation of our sins is ascribed so oft to His passion and particularly to His blood Ans. This cometh to passe 1. Because the certainty and verity of His assumed humane nature and the certainty of His reall suffering and the fulfilling of all the leviticall sacrifices did most evidently appear unto sense in the effusion of His blood 2. Because the expression of His sufferings both in soul and body appeared in the effusion of His blood for in the garden while His body was not as yet touched or hurt by man from the meer pains of His soul drops of blood fell down out of all His body to the earth 3. Because His blood-sheding and death was the last act of compleeting the payment of the ransom to the Father for us which payment began in His humble incarnation and went on through all His life and was compleeted in His bloodshed and death whereof our Lord gave intimation on the crosse when He cryed as triumphantly victorious it is finished The use of this article of the covenant of Redemption WE have at some length spoken of the price of Redemption and of Christs defraying the debt by His passion 1. That hereby the merit of our sins may the more clearly be seen 2. That the sublimity and excellency of divine Majesty offended by sin may appear 3. That we may behold the severity of Gods justice till He have satisfaction and reparation in some sort of the injuries done to Him 4. That the admirable largenesse of Gods mercy may be acknowledged and wondered at For in the price of Redemption payed as in a mirror we may see how greatly the Lord hateth sin how great His love is to the world in sending his Son Christ amongst us how heavy the wrath of God shall lye upon them that flee not to Christs satisfaction for their delivery how great the dignity and excellency of the Lord our Redeemer is for whose cause reconciliation is granted to all that take hold of the offer of grace through him how great the obligation of believers is to love God and serve him and how
the uttering of the promise did not direct his speech unto Adam and Evah but to the devil by way of threatning and cursing him and his seed even all the reprobat in the audience of Adam and Evah that our first parents over-hearing the curse of the serpent and his seed and the promise of Christs incarnation in laying hold upon the promiser by faith might be justified and saved as privat persons after the same way as other believers after them should be justified and saved This their faith in Christ the Lord did foster and augment by his doctrine taught unto them and by the prescribing typicall sacrifices to be offered in faith to God for remission of sins And the Lord did admit their children into the externall fellowship of this covenant without putting difference between one and another outwardly as we see in Cain and Abel of which two the one to wit Cain was a covenanter in the fl●sh outwardly and in the letter only for he was destitute and void of saving faith the other to wit Abel was both outwardly and inwardly a covenanter not in the letter only but in the spirit also indued with lively justifying and saving faith in Christ to be incarnat and to die for his own people as the Apostle testifieth reckoning him up among believers justified by faith Heb. 11. 4. 3. After the flood God did not make the covenant with every man nor with any family by way of explicit and formall paction except Abraham and his family only of whom the Messiah God the Mediatour was to come according to the flesh and with him the Lord confirmed the covenant by adding unto it the Sacrament of circumcision as the seal of righteousnesse and justification by faith 4. In the wildernesse at mount Sinai that the Lord might make evident the necess●●y of justification by faith in Christ to come he did repeat the law to works and to them that did acknowledge their si●● he did set forth Christ their deliverer under the v●●l of sacrifices and leviticall types and the very same is the covenant now whereunto Christ and his ministers laying aside the vail of the ceremonies did openly invite their hearers that acknowledging their sins and renouncing confidence in their own power and worth they should cast themselves into the arms of Christ the Saviour that through him they might obtain justification and life eternall We see here indeed a diverse maner of dispensing and outward managing the making of the covenant with men but the covenant was still the same clothed and set forth in a diverse maner and did no other wayes differ then and now but as one and the self same man differeth from himself cloathed sutably one way in his minority and another way in his riper age 5. If the covenanters therefore be compared among themselves in respect of diverse dispensations the covenanters in spirit after Christs incarnation are in a better condition then the believers before Christs coming for the believers before Christ incarnat under the pedagogie of the law did lye under a servitude and bondage as to the outward man for then the sons and heirs not come to age did differ nothing from servants Gal. 4. 1. and in regard of the inward man they saw the mystery of salvation albeit savingly yet more obscurely for through the vail they saw the mystery of salvation to be had by Christ but after Christs coming the Lord dealt more liberally with believers because by their freedom from the leviticall ceremonies taking away the vail they may behold with open face the glory of the Lord as in a mirror and be transformed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. 6. But as for what concerns the covenanters in the letter and outwardly only they are in worse condition after the coming of Christ then the literall covenanters before his incarnation for the unregenerat under the Gospel are in danger of more heavy judgement then the uncircumcised in heart were before Christ came in regard it is a greater sin to neglect and despise Christ speaking from heaven in the more clear manifestation of himself in the Gospel then it was before Christ came to contemn the darker doctrine of Moses Heb. 2. 3. and 10. 20. Concerning the condition of the Covenant IN receiving or admission of persons who are come to the use of reason into the covenant these three things are to be observed and distinguished one from another first the condition of the person desireing to be in covenant with God for reconciliation and grace through Christ 2. The condition upon which he is entered in covenant 3. The condition required of him for evidencing of his sincere covenanting The first condition required of the man who desireth to enter in the covenant of reconciliation is the acknowledgement of his sins for except a man confesse himself a sinner and unable to help himself Christ rejecteth him and will have nothing to do with him for Christ hath said I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9. 13. As for the next the condition of the covenant upon which the man is received and whereby the man becometh a confederat it is his consent to receive the grace offered even Christ with his benefits as he is holden forth in the Gospel or the condition of the covenant is faith receiving Christ for righteousnesse and eternall life As for the third the condition required of the man now entered in the covenant for evidenceing the truth and sincerity of the faith which the covenanter professeth it is the taking on him the yoke of Christ which he layeth on his confederat people or this condition is the covenanters up-giving of himself to Christs government and obedience of his commands and all these three are expressed by Christ Matth. 11. 28. 29. First they that labour and are heavy laden are they whom Christ calleth unto a covenant and fellowship of his grace Secondly he propounds the condition of the covenant to wit that they believe in Christ or come unto Him that in him they may find full relief from sin and misery and in him full righteousnesse and felicity Thirdly he requires of them who do embrace him by faith and so have accepted the condition of the covenant that they give evidence of their faith in him by taking on of his yoke on them take my yoke upon you ●aith he All these three a covenanter in the letter externally will professe to have and to purpose to follow but the true covenanters in spirit have indeed all the three for true faith in Christ or the receiving of Christ offered in the Evangell for justification and salvation which is the condition of the covenant presupposeth the condition of the man who is called to imbrace Christ and draweth after it the condition required of the man covenanting for he that receiveth Christ for righteousnesse and eternall
cast out and were broken off the true olive tree So also the obligation of the baptized who turn the true covenant of grace in a●o●her of their own framing doth still stand tying them to perform the condition of the true covenant and their right to the external priviledges of the confederat doth remain still in some sort even when they are inter-dyted from the honourable possession thereof by excommunication For the Apostle teacheth us that the excommunicat remain as to their ecclesiastick state albeit not as to their present ecclesiastick condition citizens and members of the Church and subject to Jurisdiction ecclesiastick and to Christs discipline because when they are judged and are under censure they are said to be within the Kirk and not without it 1 Cor. 5. 12. What have I to do to judge also them that are without do not ye judge them that are within And these that were delivered unto Sathan as to their present external condition remained notwithstanding as to their external state the domesticks of God under the discipline of God's house and were pressed by the censure laid on them to learn to cease from their sinfull course and specially from these faults for which they were censured and corrected by their excommunication 1 Tim. 1. 20. Hymeneus and Alexander were given over to Sathan that they might learn not to blaspheme that is that being humbled and brought to repentance they might return to the acknowledgement of the truth and to a reverent speaking of holy things and so the right to be counted brethren and members of the Church albeit under censure restraint and dis-respect till they repented was not taken altogether from them even under excommunication nor yet were the private duties of charity due to brethren in that fearfull condition to be altogether denied unto them even when the possession of the former honour of blamelesse brethren was taken from them for the Apostle will have them albeit excommunicat to be esteemed still censured brethren and not looked upon as enemies ● Thess. 3. 14 15. If any man obey not our word by this epistle note that man to wi● by putting the censure of excommunication on him and have no company with him that he may be ashamed yet count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother and this is so much the more carefully to be observed that the constitution of the visible Church of such and such members and the use of excommunication may be the better understood least the excommunicat being over-burdened by the sharpness of the censure should seem to themselves altogether excluded from Church-society and so despair of returning to the full possession of their priviledges but might know that the right of citizens of the city of God was reserved unto them and was to be restored by way of possession after their repentance and that they were not cut off from the Christian charity of the brethren no not when they were lying under the sentence that they might so much the sooner return to repentance and to the possession of their Ecclesiastick honour Obj. But here there ariseth a greater doubt and objection how and upon what reason God doth require the condition of faith which men cannot perform except it be given of God as the Apostle testifieth Ephes. 2. 8. you are saved of grace by faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God Ans. The equity of the duty required doth not depend upon mens present power or strength of whom the condition is required but upon this ground that ability was given to Adam and to his posterity in him for all injoyned service and so the duty of believing in Christ is founded upon mans naturall obligation to obey the morall law for by vertue of the first command Adam was bound and we in him not only to believe the word of God already revealed unto him but to believe also every word of God to be revealed and he was bound to give unto God the glory of all his attributes not only of these which already did shew forth themselves in his works but also of these attributes which as yet did not put forth themselves in actuall exercise for as it cannot be denied that man was bound to give God the glory of his avenging justice upon his threatning to inflict the punishment of death in case man should sin albeit he could not see the execution of it before he fell So also it is manifest he was bound to give God the glory of his goodnesse and mercy albeit no object of shewing mercy was yet to be found and that partly because it was his duty to give the glory of all perfections unto God whereof mercy is one and partly upon the experience he had of Gods manifested goodnesse in his creation and Gods making a covenant with him about eternall life upon so easie and equitable tearms upon the same ground even after the fall Adam was bound not to despair nor flye nor hide himself from God from whom it was impossible he could escape It cannot then be reasonably denied but man by the law of nature is bound to give credit to God when he speaketh and bound to trust in God when He offereth himself as a friend and a father to him and when God bids him seek his face he is bound to obey him and seek his face and to follow after more and more near communion with him It is true indeed that Adam in his integrity could not formally and actually believe in God as a Redeemer partly because this mystery was not yet revealed partly because he not having yet sinned had not need of a Redeemer or of remission of sin but yet the power and ability of believing in God according as God should let forth his will and the power to adhere unto God and rest on his goodnesse and good-will was given to man in his creation for this perfection was a part of the image of God wherein man was created even as the habit of shewing mercy on the miserable though such an object was not to be found while man continued in the state of innocency was a part of that original holinesse in him and if this ground hold not sinners by their sinning once should make themselves free to sin for ever after and exempt themselves from all the duties of the morall law upon this pretence that they were unable to give obedience to it which is most unreasonable And 2. Because the hearers of the Gospel esteem themselves able to perform the condition of the covenant of grace offered and to believe in Christ yea and to give credit or not to what is preached unto them as they see reason is it not equitable then to put all men to it who judge themselves able to perform what is required to the end that after experience and tryall taken of themselves they should either acknowledge their naturall inability to believe in Christ and so go
variable contingency or differency of mans will but can work upon the will of man and by the will of man what pleaseth him and by second causes whether working freely and contingently or by a naturall necessity can wisely holily and powerfully bring about his own purpose in his set time the dayes come saith he wherein I will make a covenant with the house of Israel Wherein he taketh upon him the effectuall work of covenanting promising not only for his own part but also for the elect of Israel and Judahs part for his promise is that it shall come to passe that by inclining their will unto reconciliation they shall willingly consent unto a covenanting with God for he saith I will make a covenant with them he saith not if they will but absolutely I will make them close a covenant with Me heartily 9. The party to be converted and to enter in covenant is not all men nor every society but the Church Gods own family not every nation but Gods people chosen out of all nations on the whole earth I will make a covenant with the house of Israel as it is also cleared Deut. 7. 6 7 8. 10. The Church of Christ under the Gospel as the Apostle looketh on this place is comprehended under the name of Israel and Iudah partly because Israel hath the priority of all other people in Gods covenant and partly because all the Christian Church of the Jews and Gentiles is comprehended under the name of the house of Iudah which is Christs tribe whereof he came who is the prince and head of all believers and confederat persons reconciled to God and partly because the Israelits or Jews have this prerogative above all other people and nations on the earth that of that race of people the posterity of Abraham Isaac and Iacob there shall be in all ages some elected persons till the great bulk of the now scattered people turn Christians and till the end of the world Rom. 11. 5. 11. No age old nor young no sex man nor woman nor any externall difference of men that can be put between one and another in this life doth exclude any man from the benefit of this covenant or commend a man to God that his person should be respected of God but all and every one whom God shall externally call may safely accept the offer of grace and joyn themselves to Jesus Christ for the grace of God here is extended unto all degrees and sorts of men from the least to the greatest 12. In the mean time God knoweth his own man be man both great and small and with the same love doth embrace them all for the promise is that all those elect who are known to God shall know him from the greatest even to the least 13. The great obstacle which may be supposed to exclude any from coming in to God through Christ is here removed to wit the greatness and multitude of by-gone sins cast up against the in-coming of some when they are called The mercy and grace of Christ the Testator taketh this doubt out of the way saying I will forgive their iniquity and their sins I will no more remember Jer. 31. 34. 14. This promised remission the Lord will not have limited nor abridged neither by the number of sins nor grievousness thereof nor kinds of sins but he purposeth and promiseth to take away all iniquity by forgiveness and to forget their by-gone sins ver 34. And confirmeth this by repeating the promise of not casting them off who shall acknowledge him ver 37. 15. From this promise the Apostle Heb. 10. draweth this consequence that under the Gospel or new covenant there is but one offering for sin which offering cannot be repeated in regard that full remission thereby is purchased For ver 14. he saith by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified and this he proveth from the words of the covenant ver 15 16 17. whence he concludes ver Now where remission of these are there is no more offering for sin 16. If any shall ask for the cause of so rich mercy and grace covenanted he shall find none in man at all The only cause is set down here to wit the will and good pleasure of God I will forgive their iniquity saith the Lord and their sins will I remember no more that is I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy 17. Because the Lord our God and Mediatour is here making his Testament wherein also he taketh upon him to be executor of his own latter will and to perform all that is promised therefore in confirmation he subscribeth and sets down his name Ier. 31. 35. Thus saith the Lord and that his subscription may be of weight with all men he designs himself by his stately stiles or titles taken from his creation and government of the creatures Thus saith the Lord which giveth the sun for a light by day and the ordinances of the moon and of the starrs for a light by night which divideth the Sea when the waves thereof roar the Lord of hosts is his name This he saith least the faith of his people should be shaken by their looking to impediments and difficulties and that they may gather strength and courage to go on in the Lords way constantly when they consider the power of God in the workmanship and government of the world 18. Unto his subscription he addeth both witnesses and pledges of his promises ver 36. If those ordinances depart from before me saith the Lord then the seed of Israel which comprehendeth the seed of Abrahams faith shall cease from being a nation before me forever ver 36. 19. Last of all least any man in the consideration of the grievousness of his sin or of the apparent impossibility of performing these promises should doubt of remission of sins to be granted to the confederat or of the perseverance of the true believer or of the perpetuation of the Church the Lord bids his people that come in to him be confident and quiet ver 37. saying If heaven above can be measured and the foundations of the earth searched out beneath I will also cast off all the seed of Israel for all that they have done saith the Lord Now both these are impossible that we can measure the heavens or search the bottom of the earth Therefore it is impossible that this covenant and the promises made therein should fail The maner of dispensing the new covenant outwardly and inwardly AS to the dispensation of this covenant both outwardly and inwardly first this promise of a new covenant is a challenge against the mis believing fathers who slighted the offer of grace and followed after the covenant of works seeking righteousness by works which covenant of works they were not able to perform and it served unto them only for their condemnation This the Apostle doth collect from this place of Ieremiah Heb. 8. 8. He found fault with
might weaken their faith and to rejoyce in believing and to be zealous for the Lords glory and carefull to bring forth more and more fruits of faith and love and working such other gracious works of his Spirit in his children as may more and more mortifie sin in them and perfect the image of God in his new creature This divine magisteriall and effectuall application of reall blessings belongeth to God only and is the end of all ministeriall application which is of the externall means appointed of God to be made use of by men the blessing whereof must be left to God to bestow on whom how and in what measure and in what time it pleaseth him as the Apostle doth shew unto us 1 Cor. 3. 6. I have planted and Apollos hath watered but God giveth the increase 3. The externall means which do serve unto the foresaid divine operations are 1. The doctrine of life and salvation set down in the Scripture to be heard and read by all men and meditat upon with prayer for a blessing And 2. sent ministers to whom God hath committed the word of reconciliation by whose ministery disciples may be made unto Christ out of all nations And 3. the administration of the Sacrament whereby they with their children are baptized and gathered together in severall Churches and put under the government of such Church-officers as his Testament hath appointed And 4. these Churches joyned together in the most edifying way of mutuall communion and strengthening one another in true doctrine pure worship and discipline which Gods providence doth make way for that the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus may continue and grow in the world and all his ordinances may be exercised publickly and privatly to the best advantage of the Church for perfecting of the Saints for the work of the ministery and for the edifying of the body of Christ as the Apostle requireth Ephes. 4. 12 13 14. 4. In the use of these external means and specially in the application of these three covenants prudence is required both in P●stors and people to which intent and purpose these following considerations may serve 1. The remedy of every sic●ness of the conscience must be grounded on the doctrine of salvation set down in Scripture which doctrine 〈…〉 be known and believed by the porty 〈◊〉 before he can receive benefit thereby And 〈…〉 a prudent application of wholsom and saving doctrine may be made of necessity the party diseased must be acqu●●ared with the doctrine to be applyed unto him before he can make use thereof to his advantage for experience teacheth us how hardly gross ignorants can be convinced of sin add how hardly such can be comforted when their conscience is wakened with the terrours of God because they neither know from the Word of God the cause of the terrour and anxiety wherein they are nor can they be capable of the remedy of their evill except they first be catechised in the heads of saving doctrine h●ld forth in the Law and Gospel which instruction can hardly be given or received in a short time and howsoever a prudent Pastor must make use of time as it is offered yet when death is near to the party to be instructed how little is it that can be expected to be done 2. The order of applying saving doctrine doth not begin at the application either of the covenant of Redemption or at the covenant of Grace but he that will follow a right order must begin at the law and covenant of works under the yoke whereof we are all born by nature children of wrath And if a man apply that covenant and law to his heart and subscribe his own dittey and deserved condemnation then may he turn up his soul to Christ Jesus the Redeemer and flye to him for refuge and accept the offer which he makes in his Gospel of a new covenant of grace for pardoning of sin and reconciling unto God in himself the person who is fled unto him and for sanctifying and saving of him which covenant when a chased soul doth consent unto and layeth hold on Christ offered for relief from sin wrath death and hell then may he ascend by faith unto the covenant of Redemption and apply to himself with Gods allowance all the saving graces purchased by Christ by that covenant to all that flye unto him and believe in him 3. This order of making use of these three covenants many do not follow but they begin at the covenant of Redemption and will either be satisfied about this whether they be elected or not given to Christ to be redeemed or not which is a secret and not to be inquired into save in Gods order as we have shown or else they will not enter upon the use-making of these means which God hath appointed to bring a man to repentance and faith in Christ. This is a tentation of Sathan which if they yield unto it shall lead them either to resolute profanity with Cain or to anxious desperation with Iudas 4. There are some also who make leap-year of the covenant of works and do take no notice of their own naturall sinfulness or wrath due to them and lying on them by nature but neglecting this order do start a race and run to a presumptuous avouching of their faith in Christ and will thrust in themselves in the number of the elect given before the world was unto Christ to be redeemed and saved pretending their believing of the Gospel when they have not believed the doctrine of the law and so do turn the grace of God into lasciviousness and wantonness and go about the satisfying and fulfilling of their own lusts Wherefore it is necessary that every man who seeketh to be saved and hath resolved to follow Gods way to attain unto salvation do begin first at the covenant of works and examine himself according to the rule of the morall law how he hath behaved himself in obedience unto the first and second table and having sound a dittey great enough that he judge himself and passe sentence on himself as guilty and worthy of everlasting wrath for his sins Secondly when he is convinced of sin and deserved wrath and of his own utter impotency to deliver himself then let him flee to Christ and lay hold on the grace offered in the Gospel applying the same to his burthened conscience according to the tennor of the covenant of grace fully revealed in the Gospel And thirdly when he hath in earnest consented unto the covenant of grace and reconciliation and hath laid hold on Christ with unfaigned faith seeking in him remission of sin and renovation of life being resolved by the grace of Christ to use the means appointed of him for that end Now it is time and not till now to look up unto the covenant of Redemption and there to read his own name as it were written in the book of life and to acknowledge that the measure of repentance and
faith in Christ bestowed on himself now in experience hath flowed from that fountain of Gods love and free grace through Christ. Except this order be keeped a man cannot warrantably and with confidence and comfort make application of these covenants Hence it followeth that it is a preposterous and perilous course which some do follow and presse others to follow that presently upon the hearing of the Gospel every man should believe that Christ hath died for him for Christ calleth no man warrandeth no man to come to him except he first do acknowledge his sins and himself to be worthy of wrath condemnation and hell for his sins and to be utterly unable to save himself by any mean save by Christ for Luke 5. 32. Christ saith I came not to call the righteous but sinners unto repentance Neither doth Christ require of any man to believe himself to be of the number of Christs sheep for whom he laid down his life except he come by faith as a lost sinner to him and submit himself to his doctrine and discipline and pastorall care over him for Ioh. 17. 9. Christ saith I pray not for the world but for these thou hast given me out of the world and no man shall know that himself is given of the Father to Christ till first he come in the order foresaid unto Christ and when he is come to Christ resolveth to abide with him then may he say the Father hath given me to Christ and drawn me to Christ for this is the mark which Christ giveth Ioh. 6. 37. All that the Father hath given unto me shall come to me And again vers 44. No man cometh unto me except the Father draw him 3. There is an order al●o to be observed in the application of the graces offered in the Gospel for in the Evangel first Christ himself is offered as the only and sufficient remedy against sin and misery and next unto the person that receiveth Christ heartily all Christs benefits are promised to come to him by Christ and are to be found in and through Christ such as are Justification Adoption the indwelling of the holy Ghost love joy peace gentlenesse bounty fidelity meekness temperance and other Christian graces Gal 5. 22. for no man hath right unto Christs benefits before he be a believer in Christ. But so soon as a man in the foresaid order is fled unto Christ and hath laid hold on him by faith straight way a door and entresse is opened unto him unto the rich treasure of grace and right is given to him unto all the benefits of Christ for all the promises are yea and amen not before a man come to Christ not to a man without Christ but they are all yea and a men in Christ. 4. Therefore they wrong both God and their own selves who when they come unto the throne of grace do prescribe unto God another order of working then he hath set down in his word craving in the first place consolation and sensible peace in their conscience felt in their hearts and that God would work some such saving graces in their heart which the reprobat cannot counterfit which directions if God will take off their hand and bestow his graces on them sensibly as they prescribe unto him then they will stand oblieged to continue in the faith of Christ but if they find not their directions obeyed and their petitions in their order granted then with grief of heart they begin to complain and to pretend that they dare not approach unto God or Christ so long as these petitions are not first granted and felt to be granted This temptation doth invert and overturn the order of Go●s calling for Christ doth not call unto him well-doers or these that do found their faith upon their own good behaviour and lean to their own works which they desire to find in themselves before they fasten faith on Christ but Christ doth call sinners in their own sense and acknowledgment who renounce all confidence in their own works past present or to come He calleth such as are lost in their own sense and do feel themselves utterly unable so much as to think a good thought of themselves that they may be cloathed with the imputed righteousnesse of Christ and indued with the spirit of sanctification by him and Christs will is that they who believe in him abide in him and suck by faith out of him as the branches do suck sap out of the tree grace to bring forth fruits more and more abundantly for this is the order which Christ doth prescribe unto his disciples Ioh. 15. 5. He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can do nothing Whosoever therefore will not believe in Christ or do think it is not lawfull to approach unto him till first they find in themselves amendment of life and evident fruits of saving faith they do in effect change the condition of the covenant of grace and do suspend their faith in Christ till they find works to build upon when it were their duty the more they feel their barrennesse so much the more straitly to lay hold on Christ and hold him fast and ply him with earnest supplications to make good his promise to them who do abide in him Ioh. 15. 5. 5. It is necessary to presse every man who doth believe his justification by faith that he be carefull to observe the morall law or ten commands as the perpetuall and unchangeable rule of good works prescribed of God for Christ came not to destroy the law but to fulfill it Matth. 5. 17. He hath indeed unto believers in him dissolved the covenant of the law not only by his doctrine teaching them that by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified in the sight of God because by the law is the knowledge of sin gotten but no absolution from sin Rom. 3. 20. But also by absolving every believer in him that walketh not after the flesh but after the spirit from all condemnation Rom. 8. 1● Mean while he hath not broken the yoke of obedience of the law from off the believer as he hath broken off the yoke of the covenant of works but by the contrair he prescribes to them who come unto him for remission of sin that they take on his yoke upon them and bring forth works of new obedience Matth. 11. 29. and this is the order which the Apostle doth prescribe Tit. 3. 8. This is a faithfull saying and these things I will thou affirm constantly that they which have believed in God might be carefull to maintain good works these things are good and profitable unto men 6. The moral precepts of the law are so to be pressed that the hearers whether un-converted or converted may by them whether in some measure obeyed or disobeyed be driven to Christ that the law may ever in some sort be a pedagogue unto Christ for before conversion
sin must be made manifest by the law and the merit of sin committed must be shown forth that the man to be converted may see himself in a lost condition and that he must certainly perish except he flee for refuge to Christ the Redeemer that by him he may have remission of sin And after a mans conversion the believer must by the precepts of the law be convinced of his duty and inability to perform obedience except by grace power be communicated unto him from Christ both to will and to do And when he hath gotten grace to give obedience in some measure yet must he examine his best works by the rule of the commands and acknowledge the imperfection of his service that he may be more and more humbled in himself and glory only in the imputed righteousness of Christ and withall give unto Christ the glory of any good thing which he hath in any measure done well 7. The threatnings also all of them must so be applyed in general as both converted and un-converted may be forced to run to Christ who only can deliver the un-converted from guiltiness and wrath and death eternal deserved by sin and who only can deliver those who are converted from the deserved punishment of their sins and from the execution of the sentence which the law pronounceth and who only can make them eshew and hold off the way which God hath cursed And it is easie to judge how much cause of humiliation the godly shall have by daily comparing their actings with the law and how dear and precious Christ must be to them who giveth unto them as many deliverances from death as they commit sins and do fail of their oblieged obedience to God 8. A sinner already convicted of sin and impenitency and hardness of his own heart and who is grieved for the same must not be skarred nor deterred from going unto Christ till first he attain such a prescribed measure of contrition as he conceiveth his sins do call for which measure un-skilfull Physicians do rigidly exact of sinners who are desirous of repentance pretending for their rigidity their fear lest if such sinners should be so easily admitted unto Christ the work of repentance should be marred in them and presumption should have way and be fostered in them this fear is needless because it belongs to Christ alone to give repentance and he came to call sinners convicted of sin and destitute of repentance in their own estimation and sense unto repentance that he may give them repentance We grant that there is a danger lest a sinner lightly touched with the sting of the conscience do not well weigh the weight of his sin and the merit of it and that he go to Christ with his lips only when his heart is far from him but on the other hand there is no less hazard left he who is destitute of repentance in his own sense and not permitted to go to Christ to have it may either be driven to dispair or conceive that by his own pains on his own heart repentance must be wrought before he go to Christ whom God hath exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance unto Israel and remission of sins Act. 5. 31. We must be wary therefore lest a burdened conscience in any measure being excluded from going to Christ till he be in such and such a measure humbled set himself so upon bodily exercise of ordinances without daring to go to Christ as that he put some merit in effect upon his bodily exercise which he useth to bring himself unto contrition or else turn desperatly careless and leave off all using of means We need not fear that instantly upon a sinners coming to Christ he shall find too soon consolation and so not be humbled as need were for Christ is only wise and can prudently deal with the sinner coming unto him he hath eye-salve to give his proud merchant to let him see his blindness poverty and misery as well as gold and garments to the poor and naked but if any be proud and rich in their own conceit and approach toward him without sense of sin he can suspend them from comfort till first he rebuke and chasten them and keep them off from felt access a while till they be truly humbled and thirst in earnest after pardon and imputed righteousness 9. As the narrow way to the kingdom of heaven must not be made straiter then God hath made it So neither must the way be made broader then God hath made it and reignies loosed to mens lusts as if believers sins were either none or but light ones for God is not a favourer of sin and whosoever do turn the grace of God into wantonness undoubtedly they are ignorant both of the Law and of the Gospel Wherefore the Law and the Gospel must be so tempered that on the one hand none who would be at Christ and through him at mortification of their sinfull nature be discouraged and on the other hand that no man boasting of his profession of faith be strengthened in his iniquity for this is the true sense and intent of God both in his threatnings and promises that none despair hearing threatnings but repent and live and that none presume to sin upon hearing his gracious promises but walk in fear before him Ezek. 33. 10 11 12. to v. 20. and Christ doth blot out from the number of the saved all them who break off and make void any of the precepts and do teach men so to do Matth. 5. 19. 10. Because God doth make use of the same arguments in his Word both for moral swasion and for effectual operation of saving faith and bringing forth fruits of new obedience therefore the force of God's arguments and inducements as occasion is offered must so be opened up and sharpned and pressed that the hearers being soundly convinced of the holiness equity verity and necessity of the Lords commands may at least be morally perswaded to yield unto them And to this end that hearers must be exhorted that they call to mind and weigh such and such arguments unto duties that by reasoning with themselves they may prevail by Gods bl●ssing to believe the Word of God So did Paul directing his speech to the governour Felix brash the castle of his conscience with this engine that he near by took it in Act. 24. 25. and so did he deal with Agrippa whom he near-by perswaded to become a Christian Act. 26. 28. and this was his endeavour to perswade all his hearers to believe the truth he taught 2 Cor. 5. 11. Knowing therefore saith he the terror of the Lord we perswade men And the same Apostle hath taught all Christs disciples to exercise the faculty of reasoning in the mater of strengthening their faith and purpose of obedience that having set before them the arguments which the Word of God doth furnish they may sum up the truth in
conclusions drawn there-from and by holy reasoning tye themselves to believe and obey the Word of God Rom. 6. 11. Likewayes saith he by reasoning reckon ye your selves to be deal unto sin but alive unto God through Iesus Christ our Lord. And giveth an example of this reasoning 2 Cor. 5. 14. 15. The love of God constraineth us because we thus judge c. 11. Because the Lord divers wayes according to his own wisdom exerciseth men that sometime by his long-suffering patience he leads them unto repentance sometime also by his word and rods he doth drive them thereunto therefore let the use of all exercises all temptations and afflictions and the use of all benefits and divine dispensations of providence be carefully made use of that men may so look upon Gods bounty and long-suffering on the one hand and upon their own sins and ill deservings on the other hand as they may be led and constrained in love to seek after so gracious a God and to flee for refuge unto Christ mourning for their provoking of justice so oft against themselves and in whatsoever condition of prosperity or adversity to submit themselves to God however he shall be pleased to dispose of them 12. The doctrine of reprobation must not be determinatly applyed to any particular person how wicked soever he shall for the present appear neither must the suspicion which any man may have of his own reprobation be ●ostered because particular reprobation of this or that person is among the secrets of the Lord not to be medled with whereof a man may not give out sentence before the Lord hath revealed his own decree But on the contrair all the hearers must be warned and pressed to be wary to entertain any hostile thought of God or to foster suspicions of him as implacable but rather think of him as their faithfull Creator just indeed yet mercifull long-suffering and bountifull both to the kind and the un-kind as they shall find if they will seek him for Sathan will press this temptation hard enough and foster the suspicion which he hath suggested against God in the minds of them whom God hath afflicted albeit he get no assistance by any imprudent and un-just application of the Lords Word unto this or that particular person to conclude their reprobation 13. The scope of all doctrine must be this that sinners may be humbled in the sense of their unrighteousnesse indigence infirmity and unworthinesse and being humbled may be led unto Christ believe in him and be more and more glued unto him and grow in the love of him and rest their souls upon him as God one with the Father and holy Spirit worshiping him in spirit and truth endeavouring according to their vocation to advance his Kingdom in themselves and others And to this end let neither on the one hand his incarnation nor humiliation in the dayes of his flesh wherein he was in paying the promised price of our Redemption derogat any thing to the estimation of his person who is one God with the Father and holy Spirit God over all blessed for ever Nor on the other hand his Majesty make sinners stand off or be afraid to make their adresse to him but by the contrair that the personall union of the divine and humane nature in him and his cloathing himself with the offices of Prophet Priest and King may allure all sinners who hear of him to come to him as Media-tour who will not deal with them who come unto him as a judge against them but as an advocat Surety and intercessor for them and who will save to the uttermost every one that come unto God through him Heb. 7. 25. 14. For tryall of a mans regeneration and coming rightly to Christ and growing in grace the exercise of these three duties are necessarily required to wit 1. The exercise of repentance or the entertaining in himself of the sense of his naturall sinfulnesse and infirmity to do good and of the power of inherent corruptions whereby he may be made more and more to renounce all confidence in himself and walk humbly before God 2. The exercise of faith or the daily renewed imploying of Christ for grace and actuall help in all things as his case requireth 3. The exercise of love or the endeavour of new obedience flowing from love to God and his neighbour through Christ. CHAP. IX Of the more speciall application of divine covenants for removing the impediments of regeneration VVE have spoken of the prudent application of divine covenants in generall it followeth that we speak of the curing of the sicknesses of the conscience concerning regeneration more specially Some of these sicknesses do tend to hinder regeneration that it be not wrought at all whereof we shall speak God willing in the rest of this first book Other sicknesses do tend to obscure the work of regeneration begun and to foster questions in the regenerat man and make him doubt whether he be regenerat or not or whether he be in the state of grace or not and of these we shall speak somewhat in the second book And last of all some cases and sicknesses of the conscience do tend toward the deceiving of the regenerat man about his present condition wherein he is without calling his state in question at the first and of these we shall speak in the third book 2. As for the first sort these cases which impede and altogether marr regeneration cannot easily be numbered because of the multitude of deceits whereby the unregenerat are deluded but it shall suffice for our purpose to name some of them only for examples cause in handling whereof the way of curing other like cases may be observed In handling of these cases it is not to be expected we should follow any exact method or accurat distinction of one case from another partly because many faults may be variously interwoven one with another partly because in all these cases the same faults are found after divers wayes to put forth their poyson We therefore that we may follow the easiest course shal divide all unregenerat men impeding their own regeneration in three ranks The first rank shall be of those who eshew so far as they can all examination of their own conscience least it should pronounce sentence of their state and disquiet them The second rank shall be of those who do judge themselves indeed according to the law of God but after examination do despair of any remedy The third rank shall be of those who make a slight examination of themselves and upon some slight pretence give our sentence of absolution of themselves which God will not allow 3. As to the first rank to wit of those that eshew all examination of their own conscience we shall name only seven sicknesses or impediments hindering their self-examination and passing sentence on themselves The first is gross ignorance of their naturall sin and misery and of deliverance to be had through Christ
4. They eat up my people as they eat bread and call not upon the Lord. They have a form of godlinesse but in their deeds they deny the power of it for they beleeve never a word of what is preached of things spirituall revealed in the word of God No wonder therefore that they will not examine themselves nor receive any accusation from their own consciences for any sin of this sort which concerneth godlinesse 2. The causes of such mens hardening of their heart may be four the first is the measure of worldly wisdom granted to them and others like themselves above common people with the conceit whereof they are so puffed up that they care for nothing save this present world they acknowledge no other holinesse but civil observance of humane laws as if Scripture and all Religious exercises were to be referred to this only end that men living according to the laws and customes received into the Societies they live into should study to make the best they can of this present world And this worldly and carnall wisdom is called Psal. 1. the counsell of the ungodly because all ungodly persons do think it shall be more safe to walk in the wayes of their wisdom then to be hemmed in by the laws of God The second cause of their obduration is carnall confidence in their worldly prosperity which they hope alwayes to enjoy and that by the principles of their own wisdom Psal. 10. 6. he hath said in his heart I shall never be moved I shall never be in adversity The third cause is the stumbling block of the cross and affliction wherewith they perceive the godly usually to be exercised Upon which offence they stumble the more readily because they judge that the greatest part of the affliction of the godly proceeds from their own imprudency and do ascribe their own prosperity to their own wisdom wherein they are so lifted up in their own estimation that they despise all men in comparison of themselves Psal. 10. 5. As for his enemies he puffeth at them The fourth cause is the not observing the slighting and despising of Gods Judgments concerning which they do not give credit unto God when he speaketh and therefore do not make use of the operation of his hands Psal. 10. 5. Thy judgments are far above out of his sight 3. Albeit there be very small hope of the conversion of any such because they cannot abide free dealing from any man in private for to give them any admonition is to them a reproach and they cannot endure it and nothing can cut them at the heart more then that any man should suspect them of hypocrisie and atheism yet because no Pastor may despair of any man or judge him a reprobat so long as the long-suffering patience of God inviteth him to repentance therefore the Pastor must deal with such men in the general in his sermons that from the Scripture he may convince them of their ignorance of Gods wayes and of their atheism To which end and purpose first he must point such men forth in their colours as the Scripture doth describe them yet so as he hold himself in generall in dealing with all such persons without particular description of any man by particular circumstances whereby such a man one or moe of the auditors may appear to be picked out and shot at Secondly he must denounce gravely and with compassion the heavy Judgments of God against them Thirdly he must pull the mask of civil honesty off their face and let them know the righteousness of Christ imputed to humble sinners flying to him to be the only garment to hide nakedness if possibly the hearer may conceive hope he may be forgiven his former hypocrisie and be allured unto Christ. Fourthly let him often against such persons make use of the Apostles admonition 1 Cor. 3. 18 19. Let no man deceive himself if any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may be wise for the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God for it is written he taketh the wise in their own craftinesse Fifthly let the Pastor observe the occasion if at any time it shall please God to lay calamity on such a man and then let him wisely labour with all meekness and tenderness to awaken up his conscience to take notice of the sparks of wrath least he perish in Gods displeasure if he do not humble himself before God and draw in to Christ upon which condition let him make the fairest offers of grace and mercy that the Gospel can yield to him if possibly the Lord may give him repentance and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. For removing the fourth impediment THe fourth impediment of self-examination is the stupidity and senslesness of the conscience past feeling as it were burnt with a hot iron This disease may be seen in b●●otted Epicures given to their brutish lusts who are so carried on after their furious beastly affections that they have no more power over themselves then beasts and such monsters of men by frequent sinning have extinguished all sense of sin for albeit by nature there is some remainder of light in fallen man whereby the work of the law may be found written in their heart as far as to make them inexcusable when they do contrary to it and albeit there is le●t in the natural man some natural power of the conscience to vex him that rebelleth against it to restrain him thereafter from doing the like yet some have so sold themselves to the lust and wantonnesse of their fl●sh that they will not hear any admonition or check of the conscience which might make any remorse but do run madly after all sort of uncleannesse corrupting themselves as brute beasts The like disposition may be seen in openly profane persons who not only in their deeds have denyed the power of godliness but also renounce the profession of all form of godlinesse and shamelesly foam forth their ungodlinesse as an open rotten grave casts forth the stink thereof Of this sort are these who when they do blaspheme will not be reproved Psal. 12. 4. Our tongues are our own who is Lord over us and who as dogs do trample under-foot all holy things and rent them who reprove them and who insult over the godly in their affliction saying with Davids enemies where is their God and who openly scorn all religion like these desperat scoffers 2 Pet. 3. 4. saying where is the promise of his coming Such as these are practically atheists and in some sort also in their minds for albeit they have some natural principles of a Godhead imprinted on them yet they smother all knowledge of God and belch out their own shame against God and religion and all the godly 2. Of mens falling unto such a fearfull abomination four causes may be rendered The first is the mans violence used against his conscience frequently in committing of grievous
so doth harden and obdure himself against all threatenings and goeth on in his own wayes resolved to take ease and pleasure in the world so long as he liveth and not to make himself miserable before the time Such was the desperation of carnall Israelits Isa 22. 13. who hearing the threatenings of the Prophets concerning the just Judgments of God to come upon them when they should have humbled themselves in prayer and fasting in sackcloth and ashes and sought mercy from God they did set themselves to make good cheer and to feast one another saying Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die Of this sort were also these in Ezekiels time chap. 33. 10. Thus ye speak saying If our sins and transgressions be upon us and we pine away in them how shall we then live They do not deny that they are loadened with iniquity they doubt nothing of the righteousnesse of the threatned Judgment but comparing the justice of Gods Judgment with their sins and laying aside all thought of a remedy from Gods mercy they flatly despair as if there had been no remedy provided in the Word of God for them or as if the threatenings had been pronounced as sentences pronounced absolutely without exception of their repentance 5. The causes of this evil are specially these three the first is grosse misbelief of Gods Word contemning all threatenings as but the words of an angry prophee stirred up to vent his passions against people The second is the perversenesse of corrupt nature so hardened with the custom of sinning that the conscience not being terrified with Gods threatenings is nothing moved with inward accusations which they know to be just whereupon they resolve neither to seek for mercy nor care for reconciliation with God not to shed with their carnal pleasures and sinfull lusts but will go on in their own wayes and take their hazard The third is a false perswasion that it is impossible they can be reconciled to God arising partly from the vileness of their former life and grosseness of their sins partly from the ignorance of the Gospel and of the rich grace of God offered to the worst of sinners who shall forsake their former wayes and flye unto Christ and partly arising from the ignorance of the scope and end of the law which is appointed to be a pedagogue to lead and draw men unto Christ after their conviction of sin by the law how grievous soever their sins have been 6. The remedy of this sort of secure desperation is very hard and in some incurable namely these who do not believe the threatenings and go on still in unbelief or do believe the threatenings but are so wedded to their lusts that they will not change their course and maner of sinfull carriage come what may come but resolve to eat and drink and be merry while they live Concerning whom the Prophet Isaias sayeth chap. 22. 14. It was revealed in mine ears by the Lord of hostes surely this iniquity shall not be purged from you till ye die saith the Lord of hostes The best ground of hope is of such who through ignorance of the end of the law and offer of the Gospel have taken up a false perswasion of their desperat estate Now because the Pastor hath no warrand to read the decree of any mans reprobation in particular his care must be in private and publick to waken epicures and all besotted in their sins out of their deadly sleep laying before them from Scripture the unextinguishable fire of hell and the torments of the damned to be endured for ever by the impenitent and unbelieving sinner on the one hand and on the other hand making offer of remission of sin and reconciliation to all who shall forsake their former vitions wayes and be content to embrace Christ Jesus for their righteousnesse sanctification and salvation And to this end let him certifie all his hearers that threatenings are not intended of God to drive any man to desperation but to lead all to repentance that they may be saved and that the exception of repentance and faith in the Redeemer is to be understood in every threatening for so the Lord hath made a plain commentary upon all his threatenings and all his promises also that he be not for ever mistaken which is this in summe that by his threatenings he doth not intend to make any man to despair but to repent and turn to God and that by his promises he doth not intend that any man should presume to sin or turn his grace into wantonnesse as is at large set down Ezek. 33 from ver 10. to ver 21. and chap. 18. from ver 21. to the end Of anxious tormenting desperation ANxious and tormenting desperation is when a sinner from the apprehension of his guiltinesse of irremissible sins and fear of inextricable wofull misery wherein he hath thrown himself doth cast away all hope of relief to be had and so is tortured and vexed within himself without rest In this sort of desperation the miserable man having wrestled a while doth either turn himself to a carnal temporary consolation in this world and maketh choyce of a carelesse and secure desparation that he may be rid of present anxiety or else he resolveth to dispatch himself by some sort of self-murder counting it more easie to die by his own hand than to live and endure the tormenting vexation of his own mind 2. As for that sort of anxious desperation which after the sore byteing of the conscience once wakned falleth back again in carnal security it is most perilous and giveth very small hope to the Pastor or faithfull friends who perceive the man after fearfull wakening of his conscience to have fallen back to his old wayes and turned carelesse of the means of salvation for such a man is of set purpose and resolvedly wicked Such was the desperation of Cain who after a whiles lamentation and houling for the curse pronounced upon him by God plucked up his heart departed from the society of the Church where God giveth his presence and goeth into the land of Nod or voluntary banishment and giveth himself over to building of Cities Gen. 4. 13 14. Such also was the desperation of Esau who when he saw he was excluded from the spiritual blessing of the birthright laments a little and then turned himself toward the earthly blessing and sought all his consolation in it Gen. 27. 34 38. yet such men must be dealt with if God possibly may bless the means 3. As for the other sort of anxious desperation except it be cured by Gods blessing of the means used it draweth on voluntary and deliberat self-murther We put a difference between brute self-murther and voluntary or deliberat self-murther for this beastly brute self-murther may befall mad persons furious melancholious distracted persons or such as are beset by some evil spirit in whom the faculty of reasoning is so impeded that without the use of
and covenant of works for it is true indeed when God is dealing with those that are already justified by faith in Jesus and have renounced all confidence in their own works and fled unto Christ and have taken on his yoke the Lord doth take in good part the first fruits of the new creature and doth much esteem the tender fruits of the spirit as the places cited Isa. 1. and 2 Cor. 8. do shew But when the Lord hath to do with the proud natural man the unrenewed man the man that is not humbled for violation of the covenant of works he dealeth with him according to the rigour of the law according to the condition of the covenant of works pronouncing his curse against that man for every sin till the sinner be humbled and slye to Christ. 5. With the former we may joyn all these who believe they may wash away their sins partly by bearing such afflictions as are laid on them by God in this life partly by their tears prayers fastings pilgrimages penances and scourging of themselves and partly by their almes-deeds and other good works do believe they shall make amends for all their misdeeds and what they cannot perfect in this life for the mater of good works they will take assignation to the supererogation and superfluity of the merits of Saints made over unto them by the Pope And what for the mater of suffering is not endured in this life they will take upon them to endure in an imaginary purgatory and place of hell after this life and so poor souls they think they may absolve themselves at least from the sentence of everlasting condemnation by such poor shifts as those But the truth is so long as they rely upon their own sufferings and satisfactions they deny both the necessity and the worth of Christs sufferings and so long as they have confidence in their own works or works of other men they reject and disclaim the covenant of grace and yet behold how proud they prove themselves to be Isa. 58. 3. when they plead with God saying wherefore have we fasted and thou seest not wherefore have we afflicted our soul and thou takest no knowledge 6. Last of all unto the former sort we joyn these who please themselves in the composition of righteousness by works and righteousnesse by faith thinking to save themselves under the shelter of the one righteousnesse or of the other however God shall deal with them Such were the Seducers and seduced amongst the Galatians for refuting of whole errour the Apostle as it were travelled in birth till he brought them to take up the right frame of Christs way of salvation 7. The cause of all such mens deceiving of themselves in a false absolution of their conscience is their ignorance both of the righteousnesse of the law and of the righteousness by faith for such as think their sins are so few and light or their lives so innocent or their good works they have done so weighty and their purpose to do yet moe good works to be so holy or their pains taken in religion so considerable or their sufferings resolved upon so great and thereupon do absolve themselves consider not that the law or covenant of works doth require perfect personal obedience to all Gods law under the pain of Gods curse growing in Items as the law is oftener transgressed till they flye in to the perfect ransom of Christs obedience And as for the righteousnesse of faith in Jesus they consider not that his righteousnesse will not be bestowed upon any who do not renounce all confidence in their own or others works and betake themselves altogether to the only grace of Christ they consider not that if the worth of any work be relyed upon the bargain of free grace is spoiled and clear marred for if it he by works it is no more of grace and if it be of grace it is no more of works for these two are so opposit one to another in the mater of mans election and justification that they can no more consist together as causes p●ocuring or moving God then contradictory sentences can be both true as Paul teacheth Rom. 11. 6. 3 A third sort of self-deceivers and unwarranted self-●b●olvers we reckon all persons poysoned with deadly herefies who being drawn away from the doctrine of Christ set down in the holy Scriptures turn after some false christ and false religion of mens or their own devising giving unto their Idol what worship what service what employment what power they please and making their own conditions of peace with God as they think good some denying the eternity of the Godhead of the true Christ some the reality of his assumed humane nature some evacuating so far as they can his three offices and the fruit of his execution thereof all of them promising to themselves salvation in another then in the true Christ described to us in Scripture who is Creator up-holder and Governour of all things very coeternal God with the Father and holy Spirit in the fulness of time made man ever-living Prophet Priest and King to his Church both before his incarnation and constantly since the way the truth and the life made of God unto true believers in him wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption who walk among the golden candle-sticks and searches the wayes and hearts of every man as he holdeth forth himself in these Epistles unto the seven Churches of Asia Revel chap. 2. and 3. Of this danger of mistaking the true Christ and embracing a false in his room he himself doth carefully fore-warn his Disciples Math. 24. 4 5 24 25 26 Take heed that no man deceive you for many shall come in my name saying I am Christ and shall deceive many The proper remedy of this evil is this let every one that hath an ear hear what the spirit speaketh to the Churches not only in these seven Epistles but also in all the rest of the holy Scriptures which are the expressions of the holy Spirit but if any man receive not the truth in love set down by the Lords Spirit in the Scripture his punishment is set down by the Apostle 2 Thess 2. 11. and for this cause to wit because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved God shall send them strong delusion that they should believe a lye that they all might be damned who believed not the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousnesse 1. The fourth sort of absolvers of themselves without Gods warrand are these who pretend unto true religion and deny the power of it of whom some are couvinced of their duty to repent their sins and to forsake their lusts and to endeavour a reformation of their life and this they do promise to themselves and purpose seriously to do as they think only they cannot presently and at once break off the course they are upon but do hope by little and little to come forward
to your selves lest at any time your hearts be over-charged with surfeting and drunkenness and cares of this life No wonder then that such men profit not by the Word of God but remain fruitlesse because they are by our Lord compared to the ground that receiveth the seed among thorns Mat. 13. 22. He heareth the word but the cares of this world and the deceitfulness of riches choaks the word and he remaineth unfruitfull 6. Some there are who having received a sufficient measure of gifts whereby they may promove the kingdom of Christ and be profitable to the society they live in by making use of their gifts do pack up all their duties in a sequestration of themselves from all businesse conceiving this way to be fittest both for God's service and their own salvation Whereupon they betake themselves to a private life in some obscure corner choosing rather to live as Monks and Eremits then to appear in publick and make use of their gifts with the hazard of toyling themselves and tossing of their estimation among beholders of them And this their resolution is backed with a pretended purpose to spend their time in reading and prayers without provoking any man to hatred or emulation against them thus they conceive they shall provide best for their own ease and safety and if withall they apprehend that they are not fitted with gifts which may be profitable to others and do think what they have bestowed upon them by God to be scarce sufficient for the carrying of themselves on in the course that tendeth to happinesse then they conceive they are well excused if they let all publick works alone without putting forth their finger to help what they see amisse We do not deny but sundry godly persons in the heat of persecution have been forced to lu●k in a wildernesse among wild beasts during the time of the danger of whose fellowship the world was not worthy neither do we deny that age and infirmity of body may make men unfit for all publick imployment But the fault we tax is of such men as being able in Church or State to do service to God and the society they live in do for the love of their own ease hide their talent and not make use thereof for the benefit of others for if a narrow search be made of such mens resolution the fear of outward trouble in the world a declining to fight the fight of faith impatience to be at any pains and a desire to keep the estimation of their parts from the hazard of mens censure and love of their own fleshly ease will be found the fountain of their resolution But here we deal with none but such as the Apostle and Christ doth speak against to wit such as in some honest imployment for the common utility refuse to be at pains and work and therefore are not worthy of their bread 2 Thess. 3. 10. And let us hearken to Christs judgement of such men whom the world admireth for most holy Moncks in the parable of the talents he taketh up the lazy lubbart of whom we speak under the reckoning of a k●avish servant who because he had but one talent which amounteth to no small sum went away and hid it in the earth Mat. 25. 26. Thou wicked and slothfull servant saith he c. and ver 30. cast the unprofitable servant into outer darkness there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth The remedy is that men of parts and abilities do not yield unto their lazy humor nor to their discouragements which may foster their temptations to idlenesse but study rather to live in the sense of their obligations to God and to improve all that they have received from him for his honour and the well-fare of his people and to this end it is fit they should hearken to the counsel of judicious friends rather then lean to their own judgment over-swayed with temptations lest the Lord deci●her them and lead them forth with the workers of iniquity Ps. 125. 5. 7. Some are very like in all externals to the true converts so far as can be observed by beholders for they professe the true religion with others they seem to have consecrat themselves unto Christ they associat themselves unto and haunt the company of these who are in best esteem and joyn themselves alwayes with the reputed godly they seem ready prepared to bear Christs crosse and to go forth out of the city after him bearing his reproach and to be waiters upon his second coming yet inwardly they were never renewed they are not troubled with the sense of sin and sinfullnesse they do not in earnest or seriously seek after Christs righteousnesse and remission of sin through him nor worship God in their spirit These are described to us in the parable of the foolish and wise Virgins Matth. 25. the foolish were in company and outward fellowship of religion with the wise their outward conversation was without scandal as was the behaviour of the wise they had lamps of profession as the wise and were not suspected by themselves or others to be unsound they went forth in profession waiting for the coming of the Lord as the wise did and last of all no other infirmities were found in them then such as the wise Virgins were subject unto also they all fell asleep now and then nothing could be outwardly found to difference them from the wise Virgins which external likenesse as it deceived the beholders of these foolish Virgins So also it deceived themselves neither shall this personal difference be openly manifested till the Judge the searcher of hearts shall come and separat the goats from the sheep and the hypocrits from the unfeigued believers The remedy is that every one who pretend unto holinesse externally search their own hearts and inward sinfulnesse daily and flye to Christ in earnest that their nakednesse may be covered and their affections made spiritual seeking after things above and that by faith in Christ they may be filled with the unction of the holy spirit for bringing forth true fruits of faith 8. Unto the former we may joyn such as for their eminent gifts above the common sort of pious people and their abilities to conset discourse and dispute of maters of religion seem to themselves and to beholders also eminent Saints especially if they appear sharp censurers of others and z●alous against every least degree of sin in others but most of all if they for their enduements be fitted and called to pray in publick and preach the Gospel to others and withall do live without scandal they doubt nothing but they are high in Gods estimation as they are set up in reputation among the godly in the visible Church Now that such gifted men may deceive themselves and passe sentence in their own favours for their own absolution from any challenge which may condemn them our Lord doth fore-warn us Matth 7. 21. 22. telling us that not only many private
faith and to follow hard after the growth of sanctification without which no man shall see the face of God and let us so extoll the covenant of Grace and freedom of the believer from the covenant of Works that we neglect not to keep up the authority of the moral Law and the commands thereof as the perpetual rule of new obedience the use whereof is very profitable in the whole course of a Christian life to hold forth the duty of believers in Christ and to shew unto them by their short-coming in duties the poyson and power of corruption remaining in the Saints and to make them sensible of the necessity of flying daily to that imputed righteousnesse by faith in Christ and of drawing strength from Christ to bring forth more aboundant fruits whereby Christ shall be more and more precious in our eyes and be acknowledged absolutely necessar for our justification sanctification and salvation 15. When question is made concerning Christian vertues and operations of the holy Spirit in us the order of Gods working held forth to us in Scripture is carefully to be marked by us which is that sense of sin should go before faith in Christ for the Law is a pedagogue to Christ for he came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9. 13. And faith in Christ goeth before the fruits of faith and the fruits of faith before the sensible approbation of them and approbation of the fruits by Scripture goeth before the sensible fealing of the believer and the quieting of the conscience in its approbation of what the Scripture approveth for after we have believed we come to be sealed Ephes. 1. 13. Now for the not observing this order many real Christians do make unto themselves a very un-comfortable life for albeit they be convinced of sin and humbled in the sense of their own inability to help themselves and are fled to Christ for pardon and help and do lead a life blamelesse yet do they unhappily suspend the acknowledging of the work of faith bestowed upon them and do disquiet themselves so as they cannot rest on Christ but do quarrel the reality of their faith till they shall feel and perceive with approbation of their conscience such and such fruits of faith in themselves and that in such a measure as they have fore-imagined to be the necessar evidences of faith yea and they refuse to account themselves persons justified because they cannot perceive such mature fruits in themselves as they conceive must not only be but be acknowledged also to be in the justified person before he can lay hold on justification Such persons do in effect invert the order which they should observe for when it were their part to flye unto Christ the only Mediator because they come short of new obedience and because they are loaden with sin that in him they might have God reconciled to them and by his Spirit pouring in of his grace in their souls to make them more holy they take another and contrary course by suspending their faith upon their works and do exact of themselves works before faith and so do weaken their own faith and hinder it to bring forth such fruits as they do require It is reason indeed to prove our faith by our works and it is just that such a faith be accounted dead which is not accompanied with the purpose and endeavour to live holily justly and soberly But it is against all reason and equity to condemn weak faith accompanied with the purpose of a new life as if it were no faith because it hath not as yet brought forth so fair and fully ripe fruits as the weak believer would It were their wisdom when they perceive such impotency to do what is good and such strength of the body of death in them to flye unto the Redeemer so much the more and in him to seek remission of sin and strength to bring forth good fruits and to be sucking juice and sap out of him as the true Vine for if we come to him and abide in him we shall bring forth much fruit Iob. 15. 4 5. For faith in Christ in order of nature goeth before good works for only they who come to Christ and abide in him do bring forth aboundant fruit and not they who upon the apprehension of their want of fruits do loose or slacken their grip of faith and upon discouragment are ready to depart from the living God 16. The like wisdom is required in dealing with the consciences of men concerning the preparatory dispositions of such as may confidently come unto Christ to be justified sanctified and saved for albeit it be true that all that come to Christ ought to come in the sense of their sin and acknowledgment of wrath and death deserved for their sins ought to come with contrition of heart with godly sorrow for their sins and a humble renunciation of all confidence in themselves yet must not such persons as do not satisfie themselves in the measure or sincerity of such preparatory dispositions in themselves be keeped back or debarred from coming to Christ because they not only want as they conceive both the humiliation and sorrow of heart for sin and fear of wrath required in such as have accesse unto Christ but also do perceive in themselves such blindnesse of mind and vanity thereof such stupidity of conscience and stubbornesse of a proud heart as is not fit as they conceive to be received by Christ or fit to be comforted by him such persons I say are not to be forthwith debarred from coming to the throne of grace for oft-times sincerity of conviction compunction and humiliation is to be found in such as are displeased with their own short-coming in such preparatory dispositions more then in many others who make a fairer shew and profession of their godly sorrow and humiliation and are well pleased with themselves in that respect We must be wary also while we require sorrow and humiliation and other like preparatory dispositions in them who may come unto Christ least we secretly import and insinuat a sort of merit to be in such dispositions so as if he that doth not perceive himself thus qualified could expect no good at Christs hands except he have in his hand such preparatory dispositions as if it were a price of purchasing adresse to Christ. But let us hold this fast that the more poor and empty a man be in his own eyes he ought to draw the more near unto the riches of grace in Christ because in him only are to be found all the treasures of every saving grace and preparatory dispositions for receiving thereof he is that exalted Prince who giveth repentance unto Israel Act. 5. 31. he is the author and finisher of faith unto whom all they who in the sense of their want of repentance and faith do sigh in themselves ought and safely may come that they may have from him a more ample
found the spirit of consolation with-drawn from him and the wrath of God breaking his bones and consuming the marrow thereof Ps. 51. 8 9 10 11 12. Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice c. 2. In answering this doubt we must proceed sutably to each degree severally In curing this case in the fi●●t degree let the afflicted admit all the just aggravations of his sins against the Law which the conscience doth presse for by extenuation of sin neither is Gods justice glorified nor the conscience satisfied and consolation or hope of remission of sin must not arise from the few number o● lightnesse of sins but from the multitude and largenesse of Gods mercy and therefore we must not cut short the reckoning with the Lords law nor must we diminish the weight and estimation of our evil deservings but course must be taken that by the sense of guiltinesse the judgment of the afflicted person be not so confounded ●nd perplexed as if his case were desperat and possibility of salvation were passed but rather let the afflicted humble himself under the mighty hand of God who alone can destroy and make alive and who usually bringeth down to death and brink of hell and bringeth back again and who alone doth work wonders This doubt then arising from the multitude of sins may be loosed first by a fresh consideration of the infinit excellency and worthinesse of Christ Jesus God manifested in the flesh and of the incomprehensible value of the price of redemption payed by him for all who flye unto him for the Father hath declared himself satisfied by him in behalf of the redeemed for whom he did offer himself Matth. 3. 17. saying This is my well-beloved Son in whom I am well pleased And Heb. 7. 25. ●his is he who is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God by him Secondly by consideration of the infinit largenesse of God● bounty grace and m●rcy wherein he hath set no bounds to himself in pardoning and abolishing the sins of those that come unto him how grosse and grievous soever they have been Isa. 44. 22. I have blotted out as a thick cloud thy transgressions and as a cloud thy sins return unto me for I have redeemed thee And Isa. 1. 18. Come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as sca●●et they shall be as white as snow though they be red as crimson they shall be as wool And Matth. 11. 28. Come unto me saith Christ all ye that labour and are heavy loaden and I will give you rest Thirdly by the consideration of the many examples and experiences of the mercy of God manifested in the pardon of hainous sinners both in the old and new Testament set down in Scripture of set purpose to invite such as are troubled with the sense of their manifold sins to come unto Christ the Mediator or to God in Christ reconciling the world to himself by not imputing sins to them who embrace the offer of grace and reconciliation tendered unto them in the Gospel As to the second degree wherein the doubt is augmented by the addition of the sins against the Gospel unto the sins against the Law by despiseing or slighting the means of salvation offered in the Gospel true it is that the despising or slighting of the offer of grace in Christ cannot be sufficiently aggreged because the sins of Sodom and Go●orah will be found lighter being laid in the ballance with the contempt of the Gospel Matth. 10. 14 15. yet notwithstanding when God is entered in reckoning with a sinner and is begun to challenge him for his sins against the Law and the Gospel also and hath by his terror humbled the man there is mercy insinuated unto that person in the bosome of the threatening Wherefore the soul born down with the sense of ill-deserving by his sins against both Law and Gospel must be exhorted to humble himself before God and flye in unto Christ who of set purpose 〈◊〉 he might answer this doubt hath declared that whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man it shall be for●iven him to wit if he repent this injury done to Christ Matth. 12. 32. and he standeth knocking at the door of luke-warm Laodicea with an ofter of coming in to them and supping with them that shall open to him notwithstanding they have slighted him long in their senslessenesse of sin nakednesse and misery As to the third degree wherein the afflicted doth suspect that he hath sinned against the holy Ghost because he hath sinned against the light of his conscience and di●ement of the holy Spirit let the afflicted consider that the sinning in actual grosse out-breakings against the light of the conscience is indeed a high provocation of God to his face for which the offender is to be humbled all the dayes of his life Secondly let him learn to glorifie God● Justice who hath made a proud rebell to be scourged with scorpions and sore bitten with the remorse of a slighted and contemned conscience Thirdly let those particular transgressions objected to be done against the light of the conscience be examined with their motives and circumstances and out of the bitter rod of Gods correcting the offender that he should not perish with the world let the afflicted take up the Lords love in judging him that he may not be condemned As also let the Pastor or the prudent friend who goeth about to comfort the afflicted carefully observe if the afflicted be grieved for grieving of the holy Spirit if he desire and long after the consolation of God whom he hath offended if he purpose to walk more circumspectly afterward and eshew the snare he hath taken into or what other evidences of repentance can be seen in him whereof use may be made to assure the afflicted that he hath not sinned unto death Because the sin against the holy Ghost as it is described unto us in holy Scripture is either a malicious refusing and opposing wittingly and wilfully of Christ Jesus after that the Spirit of Christ hath convinced the person that Christ is the Redeemer and this was the sin of some Pharisees desperat professed and irreconciliable enemies to Christ Mat. 12. 24. to 33. or it is a totall apostasie from Christ after they have known him to be the Redeemer joyned with a malitious oppugning of the christian Religion as it is set forth Heb. 10. 26 27. to 32. and whosoever falleth in this sin he neither repents him of it nor desires to repent or be reconciled with God And therefore let the humbled and afflicted penitent longing to be reconciled unto God through Christ and to find the sense of his favour granted or restored not suspect himself any more guilty of this sin but let him make use of the offer of grace in the Gospel and of the example of penitents mentioned in Scripture Who knoweth how soon the
sense of sin begun in the afflicted by Gods mercy and that the afflicted cannot now be hindered from repentance nor be keeped in his former snare doth change himself as if he were an angel of light and setteth all at nought the measure of sorrow which the afflicted hath already and shews unto him how unanswerable the proportion of his sorrow is unto the multitude and hainousnesse of his sins and so spurreth him on to mourn more and more that if it be possible he may distemper and distract him or make him pine away and perish in his sorrow without faith or consolation in Christ this is one evil Another evil is this the affectation of such a degree of sorrow smelleth of seeking some sort of expiation of sin and compensation of the pleasure taken in sin by suitable sorrow for it unto which practical error we are by nature too too prone for as by nature we strive to be justified by works according to the covenant of works written in the children of Adam so when we see our selves come short of the righteousnesse of works we go about as is to be seen in Papists to supply the defect of works by some one sort or other of our sufferings and satisfactions for sin in special that by sorrow and tears in abundance we may wash away the guilt and pollution we have contracted by sin And in this course we run on naturally after wakening of the conscience to exact pennance and punishment on our selves till the deluded heart say it is enough And then as if all were well the deceived sinner resteth himself which deceit of the heart the oftener it hath place and prevaileth without being observed it is the more dangerous A third evil following on this practical error is by it the free grace of God and merits of Christ are greatly obscured and both the mans consolation and sanctification are marred the loss that the afflicted sustaineth on the one hand and the drawing on of new guiltinesse by such a course on the other hand is covered under the vizard of humiliation A fourth evil followeth this error which is this the afflicted person so long as he continueth in this mistake he giveth way to the tentation and doth of set purpose foster his own misbelief that he may thereby foster and augment his own sorrow and afright himself with dreadfull imaginations what shall become of him that he may augment his affected heavinesse of spirit and make the fountain of his tears run the more abundantly A fifth evil is the afflicted so long as he suspends his going to Christ because he hath not mourned sufficiently for sin he fosters another fault unawars to wit a purpose to lay down any more sorrowing for sin if once he had overtaken his imagined measure of sorrow and had his accesse so made unto Christ. This deceit of the heart is brought to light in the practice of some Antinomians who allow themselves once to mourn for sin that their mourning may make way for faith in Christ but after they apprehend they have once repented and casten their burthen on Christ and do number themselves among believers they scorn to mourn any more for sin they harden themselves against all remorse of conscience and do reject secret challenges as groundlesse and make themselves merry with their own fancy and reckon all penitents to be under the spirit of bondage which evils if the afflicted person would perceive to follow upon his error which as a net is spred before his feet to keep him from going to Christ and following the course and exercise of repentance all the dayes of his life he would take heed better to his steps 4. The afflicted must be informed or called to mind concerning sorrow for sin that it is not commended from the quantity or measure of it but from the quality or sincerity of it Now sincere sorrow for sin is best discerned by the hatred which the mourner hath against sin by the mourners humiliation of himself before God by his abhorring himself both for his sin and for the hardnesse of his heart under sin by his purpose to strive against all sin by his flying in unto Christ for relief from sin by his entertaining and renewing of godly sorrow after he hath believed in Christ according as he findeth the inherent roots of sin to be springing up in him This is indeed sincere and godly sorrow which causeth repentance never to be repented of 5. Fifthly and last of all the afflicted must be exhorted not to linger any more but flye to Christ and let him be humbled so much the more as he is not so humbled as he should and would be let him call to minde that Christ came not only to comfort mourners for sin but also to call sinners unto repentance for Christ hath not put such a measure of sorrow whereof we are speaking to be the condition of the covenant of Grace he doth not fell his precious wares nor his gifts of grace for the price of mens tears but let him remember that whosoever is so destitute in his own sense of all good as he finds neither the sense of sin nor repentance nor faith nor any other good thing in himself which may commend him to God but by the contrair much evil of all sorts and yet cometh to Christ is no doubt the poor in spirit whom Christ hath pronounced blessed Matth. 5. 3. and that the sense of his sin and misery in the measure which he hath of it is the evidence of eye-salve already bestowed upon him to encourage him to buy of Christ all the riches which he holdeth forth to the poor in spirit Revel 3. 18. CHAP. VII Wherein the Christians doubt whether he be regenerat because he findeth not his righteousness exceeding the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees is answered THere are some regenerat persons who in the sense of their sins and acknowledgment of their unworthinesse and inability to help themselves are fled unto Christ and have given over themselves to him by faith and are endeavouring to bring forth fruits suteable to repentance who for all this fall a doubting whether they be renewed whether their faith be true and saving faith and the reason which they give of their doubting is because the reformation of their life whereunto they have attained appeareth unto them not to exceed the righteousnesse which may be found in some Pagans or in Scribes and Pharisees of whom Christ hath said in the Evangel Matth. 5. 20. I say unto you that except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven This doubt is followed with grief anxiety of mind and fear least all vertues in them be found nothing but counterfeit and this case except it be speedily cured cannot chuse but draw after it heavy and hard consequences For curing whereof we must confesse that many Pagans and Infidels
this doubt let us remember that it is pre-supposed and found by experience that some that are afflicted with this doubt and suspicion do not cease to follow duties howbeit heartlesly do live blamelesse in an evil world and so are not idle nor unfruitfull only this doth trouble them that they find not the peace of conscience which they did expect they misse joy in God consolation in their prayers patience in affections chearfulness and alacrity in following their calling they do not find sensible approbation of their work from God as they did promise to themselves and did expect Hence flow their tears lamentations and complaints of themselves and suspicions of the reality and sincerity of their faith and all without just cause for as in bodily sicknesses sometime moe maladies then one are complicat and to each of them respect must be had for perfecting the cure So in this case moe practical errors do concur and each of them must be deciphered and removed We shall condescend upon four The first practicall error of the afflicted is the suspending of his faith upon a tacite condition that such and such effects be produced and that Gods sensible approbation of his diligence and works be felt as if there were no warrantable act of faith for laying hold on Christ except after a certain time and tryal taken whether it shall produce such or such fruits or not And here three deceits do concur The first is a faith with a secret reservation if such fruits follow is by suggestion of the tempter thrust in in the place of absolute believing without reservation and in effect is a trying of God in stead of trusting in him for through temptation the afflicted tacitly craveth a condition to be performed by God that when God performeth the prescribed condition then the mans faith after that may rest upon him other wayes not for when a sinner cometh to Christ he should speak to this sense O Lord my God seing it hath pleased thee to reveal thy self to me a blind impotent sinner running toward hell and hast offered thy self to me for a Saviour in whom I may have wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Behold O Lord I heartily receive the grace offered I imbrace thy Word and thy Self offered to me in thy Word and do give up my self wholly to thy government that thou may repair in me the lost Image of God and powerfully carry me on unto salvation Instead of saying thus and closing absolutely the bargain with God in Christ reconciling the world to himself the tempter would have the poor afflicted man to speak as it were to this sense O Lord the condition whereupon thou dost offer to be my God and Saviour doth please me well but because I fear I may deceive my self in performing that condition I require another condition of thee that thou wouldst first let me see the fruits of faith in me which if I shall find within sometime hence then will I count my self a believer and will rest on thee but if I find not such fruits as may evidence true faith in me I must pronounce my saith either no faith or a dead faith which hath a name of faith but neither power nor life in it For faith without works is dead as Iames saith ch 2. 26. Now what is this else in effect then to make a new condition in the covenant of Grace and to promise upon this condition to believe on Christ if God shall do as the sinner giveth him direction that is if God shall make him bring forth the fruits of faith first when it became him absolutely to imbrace Christ that he might both be forgiven of sin and enabled to bring forth fruits of faith Another fault is here also which is this the afflicted person doth require mature fruits from a weak faith from a faith that is not setled and fixed but suspended on a condition which is no lesse unreasonable then if a foolish Gardner should require fruits of a young tree lately planted yea before the roots of it were well setled in the ground yea and would not let it stand in his garden except it should first bring forth fruits whereby it might evidence it self worthy of pains taking on it A third fault is this that the afflicted in this case doth pre-suppose that true faith is posterior to the fruits of true faith both in nature and time for if he will not believe in Christ till after he perceive and feel in himself the fruits of faith upon this ground he can never believe till he first find the fruits of faith in himself which is nothing else in effect then to imagine that the effect must go before its cause Unto this threefold self-deceit we offer this one remedy in general that the afflicted person in the foresaid case humble himself before God in the sense of his barrennesse and so much the more as he findeth small or no fruits in himself let him flye to Christ and fasten himself the more on his imputed righteousnesse and cleave unto him by faith without delay that he may draw vertue and furniture from him to bring forth good fruits for this is the only way to make him bring forth fruits in abundance as Christ doth teach us Ioh. 15. 5. He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can do nothing He and he only can make a good tree of an evil imp and cause it bring forth fruits answerable to the nature of the true vine wherein it is ingrafted And seing Christ in the Canticle ch 2. 13. doth make no small account of the green figs and tender grapes let not the afflicted despise the day of small things 4. The second practical error in the afflicteds foresaid case is this the afflicted person hath imagined in himself that such and such fruits would presently follow upon his receiving the offer of Christ as that he should forthwith be skillfull in the knowledge of the mysteries of salvation able to pray eloquently made chearfull in singing songs of praise unto God ready and expedit to every good work and that he should feel constantly an un-interrupted peace in his conscience and joy in the holy Ghost but after that by experience he hath found that he cannot so much as enter upon any good work without a fight with Sathan and with his own corrupt nature and other impediments and withall he doth feel the peace of his conscience and the joy of the holy Ghost with-drawn hereupon he begins to suspect the whole work of Gods grace in himself and that he remaineth in the state of nature unrenewed 5. For removing of this error let the afflicted know that the hopes which he hath conceived at the hearing of the Gospel shall not be disappointed albeit according to his childish fore-conception they come not to passe for in a time due and acceptable God shall perform all his promises
things to come and the gift of working miracles and the gift of preaching the Gospel may be granted unto the unregenerat for the use and edification of the Church The observing of this difference shall teach the afflicted to esteem well of all the gifts of God which may serve for humane society or to edifie the Church but not to look upon them as evidences of regeneration for they are nothing in comparison of saving graces for if he shall study to humility and repentance toward God and faith toward Jesus Christ and love to God and his Saints and to a holy life by the grace of Christ in any measure let him esteem more of them then of all these common gifts how glorious soever they seem As also let him put a difference betwixt the judgment of charity concerning other mens estate which contents it self with probabilities and the judgment of certainty and reall verity concerning his own estate which proceeds from the operation of the holy Spirit bearing witnesse to our spirits that we are the children of God and revealing unto us what things are freely given to us of God to wit among other gifts giving unto us eye-salve to make us know that we are blind poor naked and miserable with grace leading us to buy without money or price from Christ gold tryed in the fire and garments to hide our nakednesse which is the righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto us In the judgement of charity concerning other mens estate we see nothing save what is outward and cannot pierce into their hearts which God only can and doth search but concerning our own estate we may know certainly if we search well 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. Wherefore that the afflicted may overcome this doubt let him leave unto God the judgment of the hearts of these hypocrits and apostats which were never humbled in 〈◊〉 sense of sin nor seriously believed in Christ but to satisfie himself concerning his own estate let him study to discern the power of sin in himself more and more and daily be humbled before God in the sense of it And the more he discern the loathsomnesse of sin in himself let him the more heartily embrace Christ offered in the Gospel and consecrat himself wholly unto him that in his furniture drawn by faith out of Christ he may bring forth good fruits and add one vertue to another and so shall he be sure that he hath passed the perfection of the unregenerat and is a true subject of the kingdom of God effectually called and elected of God unto eternall life 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7 8. CHAP. XIV Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert whether he be in the state of grace because some godly persons look upon him as an hypocrit SOme true converts do suspect themselves not to be true converts because some of the godly of their acquaintance whose judgment otherwayes is not to be lightly rejected not only do suspect them to be hypocrits but by words spoken of them and behaviour toward them declare their judgment of them 2. This tentation doth not a little afflict the weak in faith who of themselves are ready to call in question their own conversion and when they perceive their own suspicion of themselves to be as it were confirmed by the suspicion and testimony of some Saints howsoever rashly judging other mens hearts no wonder the tentation of Sathan questioning whether they be the children of God grow strong against them By this stratageme Sathan useth to assault the strongest in faith and to vex them at least as we may see in the exercise of Iob whose faith was mightily assaulted when his godly friends mistook his affliction and condemned him as a wicked hypocrit The like we see in the exercise of the Prophet Ps. 38. 11. when his friends stood aloof from his plague 3. For strengthening the afflicted under this tentation first let him examine himself so much the more acuratly because of the suspicion that the godly have of him after which examination if he find any measure of sorrow for sin in himself and of faith flying to Christ for relief and of endeavour to live holily righteously and soberly albeit joyned with much infirmity and manifold imperfections let him not cast away his confidence but rather strengthen what he findeth of the Lords gracious work in him although it seem to him ready to dye Secondly let him consider whether this exercise and affliction be a correction from God chastising him for his rash judgment of others whom possibly he hath wounded with such rash suspicions of them but whether he find this or not let him not despise this exercise but be humbled before God in the acknowledgment of the reliques of hypocrisie in our corrupt nature and flye unto Christ in whose mouth there was no guile that he may be cloathed with his righteousnesse head and feet and let him study unto more and more sincerity that he may approve himself to God and to discreet Judges of his conversation and let him not alienat himself altogether so far as in him lyeth from them by whose suspicions his faith and good name hath been wounded but in humility and charity toward them in the constant following of piety toward God and righteousnesse toward men labour to commend himself to all mens consciences And in so doing he needeth not stand for the rash judgment of any man for by so doing Iob was victorious over this tentation in his conflict with his friends and it is sure that men may be deceived in their judgement of other mens estate for first the ignorance of another mans heart maketh the Judge to judge what he knoweth not It is true God hath granted unto his children liberty according to his Word to judge of the actions of other men and from their actions to judge of their condition and temper in relation to those actions but to judge of their state who outwardly do what is right doth not belong to men but to God who hath reserved to himself the searching of every mans heart and only knoweth who is the upright and who is the hypocrit who is the wise and who is the foolish virgin the outward conversation of both being like one to another Again to know another mans manners ingine inclination and way of his life doth require long conversing with him comparison of his actions one with another and a prudent conjunction of all signes of his inward disposition before a discreet charitable judgment can be had of him And whosoever do judge rashly of other mens hearts do not well know their own heart or of what spirit they are in judging for many presume too much to justifie their own condition and state and make themselves to be as rules and paterns unto others and so become too too rigid censurers and severe judges of other mens conditions and state except they find it like to their own And if there be any
and for drawing him to Christ to be his refuge in his worst condition CHAP. XXVIII Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert concerning his regeneration because he findeth the power of the body of death in the pollution of the imaginations of his heart vigorous and powerfull THere are some true converts who albeit they be cleansed from the pollutions that are in the world and have their conversation blamelesse and without giving scandall unto them they live among yet frequently are troubled with doubting of their state in grace because they feel in themselves such a power of in-bred corruption of their hearts as can hardly consist as they conceive with regeneration and saving saith because Iames chap. 3. ver 11. maketh the question thus doth a fountain send forth at the same pl●ce sweet water and bitter c. unto the end of the Chapter This doubt the afflicted wrestles with and saith with himself what shall I think of my self whose heart is so polluted that it casteth forth continually dirt and mire how shall I reckon my self among the Saints how shall I incrude my self among the justified who find so little evidence of the work of sanctification in me For faith should purifie the heart from this pollution whereof I do justly complain 2. For solving of this doubt many things are already spoken which serve for the curing of this case and comforting the afflicted in this condition but because one and the same doubt doth diversely present it self now in one shape then in another and doth vex the afflicted in sundry wayes we shall answer this doubt proposed as it is set down First therefore let the afflicted examine himself whether he may with some measure of honesty say with the Psalmist Ps. 66. 18. I do not regard iniquity-in my heart I do not so delight in sin but that sin is still my affliction and my daily grief Secondly let him examine himself whether the power of corruption doth break forth in words and deeds or not or if it do burst out in some passionat fits whether he doth open the sluce and give it way or whether he sets himself to oppose the out-breaking of sin and is humbled for what doth break forth Thirdly let him examine whether he flyeth to Christ to wash him and help him against the power of sin or not If after examination he can in any measure of honesty joyn with the Apostle in his lamentation and recourse unto Christ for delivery Rom. 7. 24 25. he may be assured he is in the state of grace For there is a vast difference between a mans being sold unto sin by his native corruption captivating him and a mans setting of himself unto sin as a voluntary servant of sin for a renewed man may be in sundry cases a captive to sin and is a fighter against sin But a man selling himself to sin is a slave voluntarily suffering sin to reign in his mortall body Let the afflicted therefore comfort himself because in him there is a perpetual conflict between the flesh and the spirit between his native inclination to sin and the new creature or inclination to holinesse Neither let him by mis-understood Scripture formerly cited vex himself for his faith is indeed upon the work and the way of purifying his heart first because he doth flye to the bloud of Christ which cleanseth him from all sin in respect of remission granted Secondly there is a constant endeavour to be more and more holy and to draw vertue by faith from Christ to bring forth good fruits well-pleasing unto God Thirdly he is about to mortifie his lusts by the Spirit of Christ and to purge out the leaven of all filthinesse of flesh and spirit albeit he cannot purge it out all at once or wholly in in this life And fourthly because albeit his doubting of his estate in grace be not allowable yet it doth bear witnesse that the remainder of pollution in him is his grief affliction and vexation So also that other Scripture Iames 3. 11. which faith that out of the same fountain proceedeth not salt water and sweet is not to be understood so as if no rotten speech could possibly proceed out of the mouth of a regenerat man at any time for Iames doth witnesse that in many things we sin all in thought word and deed But the meaning is that he that bridleth not his tongue his religion is vain and nothing but a presumptuous boasting of that wich is not reall and in truth and that it is inconsistent with regeneration that out of a mans mouth pretending to blesse God cursing of men who are made after the similitude of God should flow forth as waters flow forth from a running fountain without controlment CHAP. XXIX Shewing how to quench the fiery darts of Sathan and resist his sinfull suggestions whether of shorter endurance or of longer continuance SOmetime on a sudain Sathan casteth a fiery dart of tentation unto some sin as his messenger seeking to prepare the lodging for him which tentation he doth so furiously presse as if he would not be refused or could not be resisted and possibly may so bear-in his tentation as the convert may be afraid that Sathan shall prevail finding himself as it were over-powered and unable to bear out in such a case as the Apostle had experience of 2 Cor. 12 7 8 9. who found himself as it were buffeted and abused by the messenger of Sathan and unable of himself to resist him The remedy whereof is that the afflicted with the Apostle be humbled in himself in the sense of his in-born sinfulnesse and inability to overcome tentations 2. That he flye to Christ the captain of militant souldiers and do pray unto him instantly to help to bear out in the conflict and to be rid of the Tempter 3. Let him hold fast the faith of promised grace and wrestle on so long as it shall please God to exercise him so With such a tentation Iob also was exercised which so far prevailed as to make carnall and corrupt nature speak for it The tentation was very fearfull and no lesse then self-murther Iob 7. 13 14 15. When I say my couch shall ease my complaint then thou scarrest me with dreams and terrifiest me with night-visions so that my soul chooseth strangling and death rather then life The remedy whereof is with Iob to flye to the Redeemer and fix faith upon him and to present the tentation unto God by prayer and humble lamentation striving against the suggestion and never to give over relying on God as he did 2. Sometime Sathan when he cannot find instruments to charge the convert with hypocrisie and a course of wickednesse as he found in Iobs tryall by his uncharitable friends he useth immediately to fall a railing against the whole course of the work of grace in the convert and charge him falsely with deep guiltinesse as calumniators use to do in their furious flyting and slandering
perfection which the Law doth require albeit he find not the fruits whensoever he would exact them albeit he find them not in that measure as he hath found them before For as trees are not to be esteemed dead or barren which bring forth fruits in due season albeit they bear not fruit in winter So faith is not to be esteemed dead which as occasion is offered bringeth forth the fruit at one time of mercy at another time of justice and equity at another time the evidence of zeal at another time of love and other vertues albeit when occasion or opportunity offereth not it doth not exercise such and such vertues yea albeit sometimes when occasion calleth for the evidencing of such and such gracious vertues the convert be somtime found in-laking or short of doing duty or guilty of doing contrary to duty faith must not be counted dead for all that Because it may come to passe that faith may be so wounded and fall sick and languish and fall in a swound that it cannot bring forth fruits till it be recovered of its sicknesse as we may see in Ionah David and Peter whose faith fainted but failed not altogether It is true they suspected they were cut off and gone when they were in hard exercise but after that they did look up to the mercy of God in Christ draw near unto him and did shew themselves alive in the Lord and to be in the state of grace Last of all we answer that the regrate of the humbled soul of its barrennesse and short-coming of bringing forth fruits as it would is no small evidence of life and sense in the inward man And of such a disposition it may be said as it is written Cant. 2. 13. The figtree putteth forth its green figs and the vines with the tender grape give a good smell For he that is fled to Christ and laments his barrennesse is a lover of doing good works and of bringing forth the fruits of the Gospel Quest. V. Q. BUt how can a man maintain his faith in Christ who after examination findeth no evidence at all of his conversion and that all his former life hath been spent in the unfruitfull course of corrupt nature and the mater is so indeed he hath lived after the course of this world a stranger to the life of God and grace Ans. Let such a mans examination and sentence of himself stand being according to the truth but this sentence of himself must not hinder him from believing in Christ or from flying to him for refuge for remission of sin for reconciliation and furniture of grace to bring forth better fruits then he hath brought forth before he hath proven against himself that in time bygone he hath no● been a regenerat man hath not been a believer in Christ but he hath not cut off himself from flying to Christ and believing in him for time to come for he must put di●ference between these two questions whether I have been of the number of sincere believers in Christ heretofore and whether I must now ●lye to Christ for time to come that I may be found herea●ter and henceforth a true convert believing in Christ His former want of good fruits altogether doth prove him not to have been a believer in Christ for time by-past which is the first question and the same want of all good fruits heretofore doth answer the other question for his present duty and in time to come to wit that now except he will perish he must flye to Christ and believe in him In proving of this assertion that I have heretofore for such a space of time been a true convert I must bring forth the evidence of my faith by my works as the Apostle Iames appointeth shew me thy faith by thy works and I will shew thee my faith by my works But in proving this other assertion to wit I must now flye to Christ while the offer is made to me of reconciliation left I perish it will suffice to produce first my want of good fruits and next the commandment of the Gospel charging me to flye to Christ for refuge in time le●t I perish And so a man must maintain the way of believing in Christ Jesus for time to come whether he find he hath been a 〈◊〉 or a barren branch in time by-gone or not Quest. VI. Q. SEing the Apostle 2 Pet. 1. 10. commands us to make our calling and election sure by well-doing how can it be called carnal confidence which in part doth lean upon good works For seing assurance and certainty of our effectual calling is not attained unto but by reasoning from our good works that we are called effectually and are elected how do not our works support the assurance of faith concerning our calling and election and so may be leaned unto Ans. A man may make use of his good works for confirmation of his faith and yet not lean his confidence upon his works but upon the grace of God who hath called him of his free grace and made him imbrace the offer of his free grace and given unto him both to will and to do of his free grace and made him to be Gods workman-ship created of Gods free grace unto good works wherein he hath made him to walk Thus grace is by Gods word and working cleared up to the believer to rest upon without laying too much weight upon the mans work but if a man lay hold on Christ and his free grace only then when he observeth in himself such and such fruits of faith and looseth or slacketh his grips of Christ when he feels deadnesse and indisposition to good works justly we may call this a carnal confidence in his works for when he ought with Paul Rom. 7. 24 25. so much the more to flye in to Christ and his righteousnesse as he findeth the body of death powerfull in him and in-born sin strong to hinder his obedience he doth contrary wayes abate of his confidence languish and decay in his faith and look like a departer from Christ we must say he putteth carnal confidence in his own works Quest. VII Q. BUt seing it is impossible to perswade me of the truth and sincerity of saving faith in me except I do observe in me and can bring forth my good works to prove the reality of faith in me how is it possible that I should not lean weight on my good works seing the proof of my faith is by my works which proof if I have not I am at a stand I cannot prove my self to have been a true believer in Christ I cannot perswade my self that I have been and am a true believer in Christ Ans. 1. The observation of the fruits of faith in me is not the only proof of my believing in Christ for the very act of imbracing the offer of reconciliation made to me in the Gospel and flying unto Christ for a refuge when I am chased by the Law by the
conscience and felt wrath pursuing me for sin may be clear to me by its own light and scriptural evidence albeit it being possibly the very instant of my conversion I cannot produce any fruits or evidences of my conversion past or else what shall be said of malefactors on the scaffold presently to be put to death and possibly not wakened in conscience before not fled to Christ before What shall be said of sick persons near unto death who being self-condemned do betake themselves in their last agony unto the grace of God in Christ offered to self-condemned sinners in the Gospel 2. I must put difference between a reason to prove that I have believed and a reason why I may and must now believe The reason to prove that I have believed is from the effect to prove the cause thereof to wit faith to be in me but the reason why I may now and must believe is from the cause to infer the effect that should be in me the cause of believing in Christ is Gods command to self-condemned sinners which command I must now obey left I perish and so if I find fruits I prove I have believed because I feel the love of God shed abroad in my heart and that I love God who hath freely loved me and here I reason from the effect to prove that the cause of this fruit to wit sa●ing faith hath preceeded and is gone before Again I prove that I should believe because the offer of the Gospel and of free grace in Christs made to all self-condemned persons renouncing confidence in their own worth or works is made to me with a command to believe in the Son of God Christ Jesus for which cause I may and ought to cast my self upon his grace who justifieth the ungodly flying to him without the works of the Law 3. I must put difference between my having fruits of faith in me and my observing and finding these fruits in me for a true convert may have both faith and fruits and for the time being under tryal and temptation may be so darkened that he can see nothing in himself but sin and apparent wrath pursuing him for sin as may be seen in Ionah in the belly of the fish Ionah 2. 4. and David Ps. 51 9 10. 4. I must put difference between my perswasion that I have been and am a true convert and a sincere believer and my perswasion that I have right reason and good warrand to believe in Christ in my lowest condition howsoever then I find my self emptied of all signes of saving grace in me for the time yet my perswasion that I should in this sad condition flye to Christ and believe in him doth serve to make me consent heartily unto the offer of the covenant of grace in Christ doth serve to make way for my justification and looseth all doubts and objections of Sathan tempting me to mis-believe and to run away from Christ and the offered mercy in him 5. And last of all I must put difference between making use of good fruits brought forth by me for confirmation of my faith and my putting confidence in or laying weight on these good fruits for many true converts do here fail and do not mark the mistakes for when they find love to God and his Saints with fear and holy reverence and such other like signes of grace in their hearts and outward fruits thereof in their life then they do believe in Christ and rejoice in him but when at another time they find hardnesse of heart profanity and perversenesse of a wicked nature in themselves they are like to quite their interest in the covenant of Grace and to stand aloof from Christ like strangers when they should most be humbled and creep in to him for remission of sin a●d hiding of their nakednesse by his imputed righteousnesse And what is this in effect else then in the first place to lean on their works and holy disposition as if there were merit in them and then after in the next place to believe in Christ who hath furnished them those fruits whereas they should in the sense of their sin and unworthinesse first flye to Christ and firmly adhere to him by faith that out of his fulnesse they may receive grace for grace according as we are taught to do by Christ himself Ioh. 15. 5. He that abideth in me and l in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me you can do nothing CHAP. VII Concerning the case of the convert in some point of doctrine deluded and pleasing himself in this condition TO speak of delusion and bewitching in the general requireth a large Treatise It shall suffice our purpose to speak of it as it hath place in the point of doctrine and practice erroneous Which we describe thus Delusion is a powerfull operation of a lying Spirit whereby he obtrudes to men some noysome error in doctrine or practise contrary to true doctrine fairded over with sophistical deceits and doth perswade inconsiderate souls effectually to receive the error for truth and to defend and spread it in their rash zeal For explication of which description we say 1. delusion is a powerfull operation of a lying Spirit wherein Sathan in Gods judgment is permitted to put forth his power in lying effectually Therefore in all his effectuall delusions there is a concurring righteous judgment of God in loosing reins to the rempter that by delusion one sin in one degree may be punished by a following sin in a higher degree No wonder therefore that a lying Spirit do work more effectually when he is not restrained by the powerfull hand of God 2. We say that delusion is in some dangerous error tending to the damage of the Church and hazard of souls And this we say not as if we did think that any sin doth not draw with it the merit of death for the wages of every sin is death but because Sathan is not so busie to spred and foment such errors as are lesse perillous as he is active in such errors which do most tend to pester the Church and divert the professors of religion from the path way of saving doctrine And to this purpose he essayes all means that he may obscure and darken the truth and devise and spread abroad the most pernicious errors Mean time he is not idle in sowing and spreading lesser errors that he may stir up contention and jangling in the Church whereby precious time which should be spent for mutual edification may be idly wasted in needlesse disputes and mens minds may be prepared to receive grosser errors Thirdly we put some difference between errors in doctrine and errors in practice albeit there cannot be one error in practice whether it be in the external worship or government of the Church or in outward conversation which being stiffly maintained hath not some error of judgment and doctrine joyned with it or else it should not be contrary to sound doctrine
shall be made sensible of his injury done he may pretend that the glory of God requireth so much that sins should be punished the avenging whereof if it should be delayed longer then occasion of revenge should offer or till the Magistrat should take notice of it no punishment should fall upon the injurious at all and last of all he may pretend the good of the party injurer who by feeling the smart of his wrong done may be led to repentance and made to learn by his suffering the recompence of his injury done to carry himself more equitably toward his neighbours in all time coming All these pretenses may bear weight in the corrupt inclination of a convert and may harden him in his sinfull course of seeking a privat revenge on the person who hath injured him And his corrupt inclination may be observed by himself 1. by the stirring of his passion and wrath against the injurer whensoever he doth see the party injurer or call the injury to mind 2. By dissimulation and hiding from all men the sense he hath of the wrong received till he find an occasion offered to be avenged on him 3. By a stop made in his own prayer for remission of sins by his conscience telling him he could not subscribe the condition put in the prayer for remission of sin by Christ which is forgive us our sins as we also forgive them that sin against us The causes of this sinfull condition are 1. corrupt and unmortified carnal self-love with a too high estimation of himself in pride which maketh the injury seem so much greater as he hath a higher estimation of himself 2. A defect in his christian love meeknesse long-suffering patience and pity which should have their exercise specially in cases of provocation of our unmortified affections 3. The oblivion of the commands of God and of the manyfold sins daily committed against him whereof if there were a due estimation had the fountain and course of carnal revenge should soon be stopped that privat and carnal revenge should not break forth When these evils are found out and acknowledged by the convert in himself the main remedy thereof is in and by Christ who hath died for us when we were his enemies Rom. 5. 8. and for whose cause greater sins against God are daily forgiven to us then are the injuries done unto us by men 2. In this case also the grave admonition of the Apostle should not be forgotten Ephes. 4. 26 27. Let not the Sun go down upon your wrath neither give place to the devil Giving us to understand that if wrath which draweth with it the desire of revenge shall lodge all night with a man the devil will lodge with it also stirring the man up to pursue a revenge whensoever he findeth opportunity A third instance A third instance of this possible mistake of a convert may be found when he pleaseth himself in his carriage too much for his own carnal satisfaction in meat drink apparrel and recreations and here he may be hardened by sundry pretenses which he may have for his excesse in the use of things otherwayes lawfull As 1. that what he spendeth upon himself is of his own means 2. That his recreations are lawfull and allowed unto him of God 3 That in all this he hath a care of his health 4. That he doth not spend more upon himself then his rent and ability may well bear 5. That God hath said by the mouth of a wise King that this course which he doth follow in allowing on himself is the gift of God Eccles. 5. 19. And last of all that he might seem justly a nigard if he did not well to himself when he is able so to do and here are pretences abundant But if after examination of a mans own self he shall find the aboundance of earthly things weakening his desire after things spiritual or shall find the sense of his in-born corruption laid over to sleep in his prosperity or shall find his flesh wax wanton against the spirit and to prevail in the conflict or shall find his compassion toward the poor and afflicted to grow cold and his delight in things spiritual much diminished or shall find too great a share and portion of his time bestowed upon his body and but little time bestowed upon the care of his soul a wakened conscience may easily convince the convert that maters are not so right with him as he supposed The remedy of this evil is not for a man to turn unto another extremity and to a contrary vice as if there were no place for a wise moderation or as if at sometimes a more liberal use of the creature were not allowed unto men or as if a spiritual disposition of a mans spirit could not consist now and then with any banquet or festivity for it is plain from Scripture that there is a time to ●east and a time to fast a time to labour and a time to be refreshed both in body and mind after labour In which prudence the Apostle had not a little advanced when he saith Phil. 4. 12 13. I know both how to be abased and I know how to abound every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and suffer need I can do all things through Christ that strengthens me But here is the remedy 1. that distrusting our selves and fearing the snares which Sathan layeth for us in all things we have our conversation with Christ and set our affections on things which are above as the Apostle giveth direction 1 Col. 3. 1 2. Next that we watch against the lusts of the flesh least at any time our hearts be su●fetted with meat or drink or any thing which is pleasant to the flesh Luk. 21. 34. Rom. 13. 14. For we are not debters to the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Rom. 8. 12. but are bound so to care for our bodies so as our souls have no loss thereby for the lusts of the flesh do fight against our souls 2 Pet. 2. 11. And to this end let the admonition of the Apostle be well remembred 1 Cor. 7. 29 30 31. This I say brethren the time is short it remaineth that both they who have wives be as though they have none and they that weep as though they weept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not and they that use this world as not abusing it for the fashion of this world passeth away Many moe instances might be given but these may suffice our purpose who mind only to give some taste of cases of conscience in some examples which may give light unto other like cases as they fall in CHAP. IX Of the case of conscience dealing treacherously under pretense of liberty of conscience PRevarication or treacherous dealing is strictly taken when for a bud or bribe the conscience doth betray
licentious libertine is not compelled at all to sin but to say and do that which is right and to hearken to the Word of God rather then to his own erring conscience for the scandalous sectary schismatick or heretick lyeth in a twofold sin the one is in his spirit believing and embracing an error the other in his external words and deeds corrupting the minds and maners of Gods people If after conference and disputation the sin of his misled mind cannot be taken away yet the correcting of him by Church-censures and civil punishment may restrain and bind him up from troubling and infecting others with his leaven and ill example and so his sinning externally is cut off and he made in so far to cease from evil wherein he doth not sin in so far because sin is not every transgression of the ditement of the conscience simply but the transgression of the law and ditement of the conscience speaking according to the law is a sin It is true indeed that whosoever doth judge the ditement of his conscience to be the Law of God and yet doth the contrary must by interpretation of his deed be holden guilty of sin because he who by fear or hope can be moved to do contrary to the ditement of his erring conscience in effect doth professe he may be moved by hope or fear to do contrary to the ditement of his conscience well informed Mean time it is expedient not only for the good of the society of Gods people but also for the good of the erroneous person himself that he be curbed and hindered by these that have lawfull power from doing yet more harm and restrained from following the course of sin and filling up the full measure of sinning which he was about to do CHAP. X. Of such as do please themselves in a condition not pleasing God because they conceive they can pray well under any condition SUndry there are who think their souls to be in a good case and condition when they can pray much and that with freedom of spirit when possibly they do not watch over their hearts nor wayes as becometh them This sicknesse even converts are subject unto sundry times but it may be most clearly seen in those who put a sort of worth and merit in effect upon their religious exercises as we may see in many Israelits in Isaias time chap 58. They did reckon themselves among them that did seek God daily who delighted in his wayes and did approach unto him ver 2. yet because God did not grant their petitions they fell on chiding him ver 3. Wherefore have we fasted say they and thou seest not wherefore have we afflicted our souls and thou takest no knowledge The history also of Korah Dathan and Abiram is notour wherein we see what esteem Korah and his complices had of their own holinesse and of their accesse to God in their prayers that they durst hazard and lay their lives in pawn that God should make them as welcom when they came with their cenferes to pray before him as Aaron and Moses yea and more welcome then they Such a sort of deceit is that whereby some fanaticks enthusiasts and hereticks do foster themselves in their own folly and imagine they are no small men in Gods account because they find a sort of eloquence in their prayers which they conceive God would not give unto them except he were well pleased with their persons prayers and wayes and that the true convert also is subject to this sicknesse appeareth by this that Moses in charity judged many who countenanced the conspiracy to be godly persons otherwayes and therefore exhorted them to forsake the unhappy society of these wicked men And sure it is that sundry of the sons of Korah did repent and flye from the company of the obstinat transgressors for it is clear that all the sons of Korah did not perish Numb 26. 11. and frequent mention is made of the posterity of Korah in the Chronicles and Psalms But we need not insist much here seing experience teacheth that many go on confidently in maintaining schisme and error perswading themselves of the goodnesse of their course and condition because their prayers do flow according to their wish from day to day And many are who if they find fredom in prayer for any particular concerning themselves or others do assure themselves that it shall come to passe which they pray for And if their spirits be straitned in praying for sp●●itual and promised graces they fear they shall not be satisfied in the particular they pray for For remedy of this self-deceit men must know that it is one thing to pray much and another thing to be heard and their prayers and persons accepted The Jews are told by the Prophet Isaiah chap. 1. 15. that albeit they put up many petitions the Lord will not hear them because their hands were full of blood 2. Carnal affection may easily creep in and stir up a fervency of prayer Iam. 4. 3. you ask and obtain not because you ask amiss that you may bestow what you pray for upon your lusts 3. Saints may pray earnestly for that which God is not minded to grant unto them as Samuel prayed for Saul that he might be continued King 1 Sam 16. 1. And David may pray for the life of Bathshebas child and not prevail 4. On the other hand prayers put up from a straitened heart in a sad condition may prove no lesse pleasing unto God then when the supplicant doth find most inlargement of spirit and fredom of prayer How oft did the P●almist cry out of the deeps when his spirit was overwhelmed within him when darknesse and the cords of death did straiten him as Ps. 61. 1. is holden forth And the Apostle Rom. 8. giveth us to understand that the spirit of the convert may be so straitened by afflictions bodily and spiritual that they are not able to set their words in order before God yea nor have clear notions of their necessities and desires but in stead of an oration do sigh and groan unto God Wherefore if a man shall in the sense of his sins and wants have his daily recourse unto Christ and be carefull to bring forth the fruits of the spirit praying for what is promised with submission to God what measure and at what time he pleaseth to give he may be sure his person and prayers are acceptable as we are taught 1 Ioh. 5. 14 15. This is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us and if we know that he heareth us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him CHAP. XI Of the converts esteeming the peace of God to be but a carnal security VVE have brought forth some examples of the first sort of the conscience erring by esteeming an evil condition to be a good condition Now let us look upon some
be ready for new conflicts and assaults from Sathan and not be afraid of being deprived of the peace of God while he by faith in Christ is yoked in battel against sin which he seeth in the world and feeleth in himself CHAP. XII Of the case of a convert taking some acts of justifying faith to be high presumption in his person THis case is like the former Some true converts are who have fled to Christ for remission of sin and delivery from ●erdition and have applyed the promises made for sanctification and consolation and full salvation after this life in such a measure as doth suffice them for encouragment to wrestle with difficulties wherewith with they may meet in their way to heaven But when the highest and most excellent priviledges of the Gospel are presented to them and come to be made use of such as are sitting together with Christ in heavenly places E●hes 2. 6. being co-heirs annexed with Iesus Christ Rom. 8. 17. So esteemed of and loved by Christ that they who touch his Saints do touch the apple of his eye Iudging the world and the damned Angels 1 Cor. 6. 3. and such like other priviledges they are at a stand and dar not apply these priviledges for fear of high presumption 2. Neither must we wonder that a soul should fall in this exercise and yet adhere to Christ as a convert and true believer For when a sinner for fear of perdition is chased to a Saviour and dar not loose his grips lest he fall in the pit he may seem to himself to be in good case if he get in to Christ albeit he do not thrust himself upon such high priviledges and joyn himself with Abraham and the Patriarchs and Prophets Like unto Mephibosheth who judged himself to have found grace enough at Davids hand that his life was spared but trembled when he was priviledg'd to come to the Kings table who in his own eyes was like a dead dog for his unworthinesse as he judged of himself Or like the prodigal in the Gospel who in his own eyes was not worthy to be counted a child of the family but content to be as one of the hired servants in his fathers house And true it is that the wonderfull largenesse of the promises of the Gospel maketh the true convert lately come forth of the slavery of sin and Sathan to stand so astonished that he dar not take to him so glorious titles priviledges and consolations as the Scripture doth allow him yea when he would lift up himself to believe the glory promised he can no more apprehend the infinit love and grace of God propounded and adjudged unto him then he can measure the heaven with his span or comprise in his hand the great Globe and round of heaven and earth From such a consideration was it that Peter did at first utterly refuse to suffer Christ to wash his feet and that Martha in the beginning of her conference with Christ could not think of so great a benefit as the resurrection of her brother Lazarus before the day of judgment 2. The convert in this case doth wrong to himself and to the Word of God and to the liberality and rich grace of God for so long as he suffereth himself to be born down from imbracing as safely he may the rich allowance of God upon a soul reconciled to him by ●aith in Christ he not only cuts himself off from that measure of joy of the holy Ghost which he may have but also giveth occasion and advantage to Sathan to brangle and call in question whether the man hath indeed believed in Christ at all or whether he hath laid hold on Christ for righteousnesse and salvation by faith un●ained for if it be presumption for a self-condemned sinner flying unto Christ by faith to lay hold upon the benefits which Christ hath prepared purchased and offered unto him upon this pretended reason that these benefits are so hudgely great and the man so small and unworthy in his own eyes why may not Sathan with as great reason if there were any weight in it call it presumption for such a man to lay claim unto Christ who is greater then all his benefits and so beat him off from faith and confidence in Christ the great gift of God made of God to poor sinners fled unto him wisdom and righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 3. Wherefore to help the convert in this condition let him consider he doth well to be feared for presumption for it is a fearfull evil but let him remember to put due difference between presumption and true faith and confidence for 1 presumption is proud and pu●t up with self-conceit but we pre-suppose the convert to be humble and laid low in his own eyes in this condition we are speaking of 2. Presumption is secure and negligent in the discharge of commanded duties but the convert we speak of is about the use of the means and in some measure diligent in discharging commanded duties in his calling 3. Presumption layeth hold upon promises not made to the presumptuous and troubleth not it self with precepts and threatnings but the convert in this condition we are speaking of regardeth both precepts and threatnings and is so far from putting forth his hand without a warrant unto promises that he stands aloof from laying hold on moe promises then he conceiveth necessar to save his soul from hell 4. The presumptuous promiseth to himself felicity albeit he walk in his own wayes and turneth the grace of God into lasciviousnesse incouraging himself to sin because God is mercifull but this convert● sheweth sin and followeth the way which may lead him to the possession of all promises Therefore 1. let the convert in this condition remember that Christ and all his benefits are so joyned together in the grant of grace that he may confidently say with the Apostle Rom. 8. 32. that seing Christ is given to the believer flying unto him it cannot be but God with him will give all things also 2. Let him consider that it is a dangerous mater not to give credit unto Gods faithfull Word holden forth in one promise as well as in another For seing he is worthy to be believed in the first promise of receiving into favour a sinner flying to Christ why shall he not have the glory of truth and grace in the rest of the promises which belong to the accomplishing of the full glorification of the man reconciled 3. And last of all let the convert in this condition consider how near he draweth to a popish error in this practice for Papists do measure the gifts of God unto men by the mans merit and well-deserving and not by meer grace only and upon this ground do reckon it presumption for any ordinar Christians to be assured in this life that God will guide them with his counsel and at their departure out of this life immediatly receive them into glory For if the
these two help one another and therefore are joyned together by the Apostle 1 Ioh. 2. 16. All that is in the world is the lust of the eyes the lust of the flesh and the pride of life And when men are tempted by their own lusts the world doth furnish objects allurements and inducements to sin The third sort are the tentations from Sathan who beside that he is not idle to take advantage of concupiscence and the worlds inducements so is he chiefly busie to throw his fiery darts against the convert and to sollicit men to such sins as the convert doth most detest and abhor As for the first sort of tentations from God they are ordinarily by afflictions bodily or spiritual wherein oft-times the converts do not observe the Lords purpose and will revealed in Scripture or are forgetfull of the admonitions and consolations which they have heard from Scripture which was the case of the afflicted Saints Heb. 12. 5. and so they are more vexed then they should be and Ps. 42. 11. dejected and disquieted and do suspect that God is angry with them and with the way they walk in Heb. 12. 12 13. Of this sicknesse there may be three causes 1. the bitternesse of affliction for the present time wherein it is ●elt 2. The sense of by-past sin which the afflicted doth suspect God is pursuing and making hi● possesse the sins of his youth Iob. 13. 26. The third is the observation of in-born corruption discovered unto the afflicted much more then in prosperity 4. For remedy of this evil let the afflicted convert perswade himself from the Word of God that in all the afflictions of Gods children the Lord doth intend the tryall and exercise and increase of faith and other grace bestowed on them And upon this consideration the afflicted should rejoyce in this exercise Iam. 1. 2 3. Secondly let him remember that with the tryall of faith there is alwayes a discovery of infirmity and corruption of nature in the afflicted As in the purifying of gold both the good mettal and the drosse are discovered which as he should acknowledge that he may be keeped from fretting So must he still remember that the Lord doth intend the tryal of his faith that he may be constant in believing on Christ the only help and relief from sin and misery Thirdly in whatsoever condition he is in let him endeavour to go on in patience experience and hope which shall never make him ashamed for this doth the Lord teach us Rom. 5. 3 4. and Iam. 1. 4. As for the second sort of tentations from the concupiscence of the fl●sh and from the worlds allurements and terror let the convert afflicted follow the same course which is prescribed in the remedy of the tentations of the first sort As for the third sort of tentations which are from the devil tempting men to atheism or blasphemy or dispair or self-murder and such like which even nature doth abhor whereof something is spoken elsewhere 1. let the afflicted convert put difference between the devils sin in tempting to vile sins and his own seeming feeble resisting wherein albeit he thinketh himself polluted yet his not yielding testifieth his dissenting from those fearfull sins whereunto Sathan doth tempt him 2. Let him put difference between the consent of his unmortified corrupt nature inclinable to every evil from the lust of the spirit which fighteth against the lust of the flesh which hindereth the adversary from getting the victory 3. Let him put difference between the sufficiency of Gods grace upholding him in the conflict and the full victory against the messenger of Sathan buffetting him for God useth to susspend the victory for a time and yet make his grace sufficiently uphold his souldier till the victory be given as Pauls experience 2 Cor. 12. teacheth us And indeed it is a pleasant spectacle to the Lord to look upon his weak child striving against the flesh the world and Sathan and standing out by faith in Christ against them all 4. Let him consider that by these tentations of Sathan unto vile sins God can and doth mortifie sin and make his child watchfull and strong against both the sinfull inclination unto these and all other sins In the mean time let him beware of a more slye and subtile tentation which Sathan useth to slide in at the back of these ugly and grosse tentations which is this when he hath pressed with all violence these fiery darts and vile suggestions upon the convert he chargeth the afflicted soul with a giving consent unto them and like a scolding calumniator impudently beareth guiltinesse upon him and all to make him apprehend his condition to be worse then it is and to suspect that God by this exercise is pursuing him in wrath and this tentation is not readily observed by the afflicted convert but yielded vnto more then to the gros●e tentation Therefore in the last place let the convert guard against this tentation which brangleth his faith and lay the blame with the Apostle on corrupt nature whatsoever guiltinesse is found Rom. 7. 17. Now then it is no more I that doth it but sin that dwelleth in me a speech beseeming a man free of out-breaking and prevailing corruption and striving against all inward motions of corrupt nature And for remedy of this and other evils let him renew the acts of his faith in Christ laying hold upon the covenant of Grace that he may more confidently draw near unto God reconciled in Christ and so no more doubt of Gods good will to him notwithstanding of his hard exercise under tentations for thus Sathan shall not only flye from the first tentation being resisted but also be disappointed of the successe he expected in questioning the coverts condition and weakening of his faith CHAP. XXVII Concerning the converts mistaking his condition when he doth observe some degrees of Gods deserting of him TO speak of the sorts and degrees of Gods deserting a soul requireth a large Treatise and the case and cure thereof is already publickly set forth by a learned and godly Preacher of the Gospel It shall suffice for our purpose to speak of it only so far as it concerneth the converts mistaking his condition when he apprehendeth himself deserted whether the desertion be reall or apparent only and falleth into suspicion of Gods love to him or that God is displeased with him because he findeth not such lively influence of Gods Spirit as he hath found and such assistance of his gracious presence as he did expect in discharge of religious duties or exercises wherein divine providence hath yoked him The Scripture and daily experience do furnish instances of sad complaints of the Lords hiding his face and withdrawing or with-holding of light or peace or consolation or strength and ability for spiritual duties c. 2. For remedy whereof 1. let the convert remember that God doth not leave a believer fled to Christ for relief from sin and misery alwayes
in their calling and that as they find the imperfections of their service so they are forced to renounce all confidence in their own righteousnesse and to flye to the righteousnesse of Christ as the only true garment able to hide their nakednesse yet they are for the most part heavy in their spirit seldom they rejoyce but many times they weep and howsoever they maintain confidence in Christ for the state they stand into yet when they consider their ordinar heavinesse of heart they doubt what to think of this their sad condition Ans. This condition if well considered is very usefull albeit not alwayes comfortable for the Lords dispensation toward such a person thus exercised is well tempered and wisely mixed for he neither suffereth the heavy in heart to cast away his confidence in Christ nor to be idle and unfruitfull in his vocation nor to glory in his own works or put confidence in them but so keepeth him up to the duty of more and more esteeming of Christs righteousnesse and drawing of strength from him by faith that he goeth on in his course uprightly albeit not fed as he would be by the consolations of the holy Ghost 2. For remedy whereof let him quiet his mind for after examination of his own natural inclination he shall find the reason of the Lords dispensation toward him sparingly giving unto him such measure of consolation as he would have to be this least he should abuse the same and lean more to the sensible feeling thereof then to the word of faith and therefore however he find heavinesse of heart through manyfold tentations let him hold on his way in the obedience of faith he shall after a whiles patience and wrestling meet with as much peace and consolation as may suffice a pilgrim walking from strength to strength till he appear before God in heaven where all tears shall be wiped away from his eyes Mean time let this ground be holden fast that God mixeth the cup of his own children as he findeth it fit for their edification The third question is concerning the converts who for not looking on their originall sin and the out breakings thereof are in doubt what to think of their former condition SOme converts are who after a quiet possession of peace injoyed in a blamelesse conversation among men and in the exercises of religion uprightly before God after examination of their condition more narrowly do find that the conscience for a long time hath been silent and hath not changed for the motions of original sin but suffered them to go on securely under the guiltinesse of the daily sprouting forth thereof In this case as they dare not cast away their confidence in Christ nor their holy purpose of walking uprightly before God So they cannot justifie the silence of their conscience which hath suffered the motions of sin although not consented unto to go away without challenge or reckoning made for them and here they are in straits and doubt what to judge of their own condition Ans. In this case the silence of the conscience is not to be excused And the peace of the convert albeit it may be sound in order to the converts state in grace yet the condition wherein he is is not good but mixed with much security for to make the condition of a convert to be good it is not only required that his conscience be keeped free from grosse pollutions but also that he be daily aiming at mortifying of sin and that to this end he daily give an account unto God of his wandering and vanity and of the observed out-sproutings of the bitter root of original sin that he may after his best behaviour perceive a necessity of that prayer taught us by our Lord for daily remission of sins and so may daily have the answer of God from the Evangel saying Son be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven unto thee For there is a twofold absolution of the convert one is in order to his person which Christ calleth the washing of the whole man the other is in order to his daily imperfections and blemishes of his conversation which Christ doth call the washing of the feet By vertue of the first sort of absolution the child of God flying to Christ is judicially declared free from condemnation by the other the believer making use of the fountain opened up in Christ is exeemed from his acknowledged uncleannesse This is clear from Christs words Ioh. 13. 10. Mean time we confesse that the motions of sin in our mortal bodies are so innumerable that no man can overtake them yet must they be counted for an heap at least as David doth teach us Ps. 19. 12. Who knoweth the errors of his life cleanse me from my secret sins And this same lesson doth the Apostle teach us Rom. 7. 24. Wretched man that I am saith he who shall deliver me from the body of this death I thank God through Iesus Christ. Wherefore let the convert go on in his formet godly and righteous behaviour and conversation not mis-regarding the sproutings of original sin but giving account thereof unto Christ as said is that he may glorifie that righteousnesse of Christ by faith and injoy peace with God not only in order to his state but also in order to his condition daily The fourth question is how the convert may know and be certain of his justification VVHen the true convert heareth the different opinions of Theologues concerning the act of justification of a believer some saying that it is an act of God immanent whereby he willeth the absolution of the believer some saying that it is an act of God emanent and transient from God upon the spirit of the believer some saying it is the sentence of the Judge absolving the believing sinner from the curse of the law The believer here possibly is at a stand and knoweth not how to answer the question till his doubt be loosed For the satisfaction of the convert first we may safely say that it is not material whether the convert be able to take up the quiddity and formal notion of the act of iustification provided he be a believer in Christ and know that the believer in Christ is justified before God and that being justified by faith he hath peace with God and can apply these truths unto himself in the exercise of repentance and new obedience But if possibly the convert cannot be satisfied till his doubt be answered let him consider that he must distinguish between justification actively taken as it proceedeth from God and justification passively taken as it is terminat on the justified man as it is taken actively these four things are to be distinguished 1. Gods eternal will and decree to absolve from sin and wrath every believer in Christ. 2. Gods actual revealing in time this his gracious pleasure in the Gospel 3. Gods judicial application of this general sentence to the believer in the point of his conversion
renew accusations against them and so order that mater as neither Sathan shall prevail nor his child suffer damn●ge by the means for there is a great difference between Sathans renewing of accusations for sins forgiven and Gods making null the remission granted the Lord can suffer the one to be but the other he will never suffer to be for when a true convert groweth negligent and falleth in such sins after conversion as he lived in before conversion no wonder Sathan be permitted to call his former conversion in question yea the Lord may justly cast up to his child his former faults to humble him and shame him from going on albeit he doth not disannull the formerly granted remission 3 When thanksgiving for remission of sin granted for Christs cause beginneth to cool in the heart of a convert what wonder the Lord not only suffer but also present the vilen●ss● of by past sins to make the convert sensible of the remission and to cause him renew the acts of repentance and godly sorrow for his sins by-past as Ezek. 16. 63. and 36. 32. Then shall you remember your own evil wayes and your doings which were not good and shall loath your selves for your iniquities and abominations When the convert ●roweth remisse in watching over his own heart wayes and is in danger of falling back into these sins which he had repented of before what wonder the Lord by remembring him of his natural inclination and former wayes do warn him of his danger to make him preveen his fall 4. Wherefore let the convert maintain the solidity of former remission of sins and make good use of his former sins which went before his conversion and let him follow the example of Paul who did not suffer his former si●s go out of his mind but did renew the confession of them upon all occasions for his own daily humiliation for the edification of others and for magnifying the glory of the grace of God and yet for all this did not suspect the remission of sins received For by this means the convert shall preveen accusations and stop Sathans mouth and make his accusations have no force By this means the convert shall possesse firm and stable confidence of Gods unchangeable grace and mercy and of the stability of the remission of sin granted The sixth question is of a convert casten not only in an uncertainty for the time of his conversion but also in a doubt whether he be elected or not and knows not how to do in this case SOme converts fall in Heman the Ezrait his exercise whereof we read Ps. 88. especially ver 14. 15 While I suffer thy terrors I am distracted saith he Counsell hath been offered by some to the afflicted to follow the practice and experience of some eminent Theologues who being brought to such straits with good successe have submitted themselves to God to save them or destroy them as he pleased after which submission they have felt the marvellous sweet embracements of Gods loving kindnesse making them sure both of their conversion and election Whether to follow this example and experience of some notable Saints is the doubt wherein the convert is not clear and knoweth nor how to carry himself toward God in this case 2. For answer to this question It is free for God to comfort a soul casten down when and how he pleaseth it is free for God to passe by the infirmity and error of a terrified soul coming to him not in the wisest way prescribed to him and to look to the necessity of the mans consolation and not to his way of seeking of it But howsoever it pleaseth God to comfort some extraordinarily yet this is not the duty of the afflicted to come with such an unrequired submission unto God for it limiteth the Lord in a manner either to comfort the man speedily or suff●r him upon apparent refusal for the time to dispair For Gods order is to bring the sinner under the sense of sin and acknowledgment of deserved wrath for sin and then to charge him to believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and after believing in Christ to seal the believer with the stamp of holinesse and the earnest-penny of the inheritance which is peace with God and joy in the holy Ghost shed abroad in his heart 3. Wherefore as for the conversion of a man straitned in the pains of the new birth and fear of everlasting wrath and tempted to suspect that he is not elected It is a more safe way to lay aside all disputation about Gods decree because secret things belong to the Lord and to look to the Lords command and to his own duty of flying unto Christ So for the recovery of a convert fallen in Ionahs case and made to suspect that he is a reprobat cast off of God it is a more safe way not to dispute for the time either his election or conversion whatsoever suggestions may be cast in by Sathan then to offer unto God an absolute submission to be saved or destroyed as he pleaseth and then to lye in sorrow till God give an answer of consolation for God doth not require such a submission but calleth for an act of faith and obedience for God hath declared in his Word that he delighteth not in the death of a sinner but that he should repent and turn to God and be saved Secondly in this submission the heart will be found deceitfull which neither will nor can submit to be destroyed Thirdly this offer of such a submission as this is Lord I know not whether thou hast chosen me or rejected me in thy decree but I submit my self to thee absolutely If thou wilt destroy me thou shalt be found to be just and I do confesse so much unto thee but if thou wilt save me I shall proclame thy grace such a submission I say is but in effect a tempting of God speedily to reveal his secret counsel either by consolation if the submitter be an elect or refusal of consolation if he be a reprobat The only safe way in the foresaid case is to be humbled before God and flye to Christ by prayer as Heman did Ps. 88. and as Ionah did who choosed to look again to his holy Temple where the Mediator sat upon the mercy seat between the cherubims and not suffer such a thought as reprobation Thus did Heman Ps. 88. 13 14. But unto thee have I cryed O Lord and in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee Lord why castest thou off my soul why bidest thou thy face from me Let the command of God to every self-condemned sinner to believe in Christ prevail against all temptations to the contrair 1 Ioh. 3. 23. This is his commandment that we should believe on the name of his Son Iesus Christ. The seventh question is how to satisfie the convert doubting whether it be b●tter to forbear or go on in the outward exercise of religion at least in
and faith in him and so saveth the believer 1 Ioh. 1. 9. and 2. 1. 7. As for the last objection taken from the impossibility of knowing taking notice of or confessing every sin wherewith we are daily polluted or from the impossibility of putting repentance and faith in exercise about every particular sin we answer first that the children of God notwithstanding of this impossibility acknowledged by them have sought and obtained renewed remission of their innumerable sins Ps. 40. 12. and Ps. 19. 12 13. 8. Secondly such as are justified by faith upon confession of such sins as they know and do remember are accepted of God as if they had confessed all their sins particularly because he that hath no mind to deny or excuse any sin in himself but is willing to open up his heart to God in sincerity and to canfesse every particular if he were able he hath presented a contrite heart before God which is a sacrifice acceptable to God Ps. 51. 8 9. Ps. 32. 5. and this much also Christ doth teach us speaking of the Publican who made a short and general confession of his sins in sincerity and went home justified Luk. 18. 13 14. Thirdly it is not impossible for a watchfull conscience to observe daily as many particular sproutings from the root of in-born sin as may humble him daily and bear down all confidence in his own righteousnesse and furnish to him mater for exercise of repentance and faith in Christ. And this lesson the Lord did teach his people under the Law by the twice offering sacrifice every day morning and evening that his people observing daily the running issue of corrupt nature might daily have their recourse by faith unto the lamb of God that takes away the sins of his own people and hitherto we are directed to look Is. 45. 22. and 1 Iob. 2. 1. Mean time on the one hand let us beware to lay any sort of merit upon our daily exercise of faith and sorrow for sin in our repentance otherwayes we should be found offerers unto God of satisfaction from us and not suiters of remission of sins from God and on the other hand let us beware to be discouraged albeit we do not find daily the renewed intimation and sense of remission but as we apply the Law to our selves in the exercise of repentance So let us apply the sentence of absolution pronounced in the Gospel in favours of every penitent soul that flyeth to Christ for refuge The tenth question shall be concerning spiritual dispositions of mind and qualifications which may be joyned with or separat from the special work of true conversion and saving grace THe Apostle Heb. 6. 4 5 6 9 10. tells us of sundry qualifications which may be found in unconverted men and also he tells us of better things which do accompany salvation and are sure evidences of regeneration Of the first sort there are among others these five 1. A legal conviction of the vilenesse of sin and vanity of the world 2. A renouncing of unlawfull pleasures joyned with a refraining even from lawfull and allowed wordly delights 3. A natural desire of salvation and of sanctification that they may be saved 4. A purpose to live righteously holily and soberly in this present world 5. An outward change of maners and conversation so far as they may be blamelesse before men These and such like qualifications may make a fair show in the flesh and yet may be found to be not only in true converts but also in such as are strangers from the life of God such was the Apostle Paul before conversion such was Israel Rom. 9. 31. Which followed after the law of righteousnesse and did not attain to the law of righteousnesse Who being ignorant of Gods righteousnesse did and going about to establish their own righteousnesse did not submit themselves to the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10. 3. Of this sort are such of the Papists who go about to be justified by their own works and do but mock at the imputation of Christs righteousnesse calling it blasphemously a putatious or conceited righteousnesse not considering that the Pope and his servants do reckon the imputation of the righteousnesse and merits of men and of the superfluity of the Saints righteousnesse by reason of their works of supererogation to be worth a great sum of money as they find their merchants Concerning these five qualifications some converts especially such as desire to see the evidences of saving grace in those with whom they will joyn in the society of Church-membership may make question what to think whether they be saving graces or common operations of the Spirit 2. For answer we must distinguish between a mans judging of those qualifications in himself and his judging of another in whom these qualifications appear to be for a man judging of himself may attain to a clear and certain discerning of saving grace in himself as the Apostle giveth us to understand 1 Cor. 2 11 12. In which case of our judging of our selves this much may be said that if a man find in himself those qualifications joyned with faith in Christ for righteousnesse and eternal life and is seeking furniture from Christ to bring forth fruits of his faith in new obedience he may be quiet and be out of doubt of saving grace in himself for unto such a person the description of a true convert may safely be applyed Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision c. And pre-suppose he hath observed these qualifications in himself before he hath observed his closing with Christ or his application of the offer of reconciliation through him he neither needeth nor should trouble himself or others with questioning whether such and such qualifications in him before his fixing on Christ were the common or special operations of the holy Ghost for seing the kingdom of heaven cometh not with observation alwayes it is hard to determine of the first beginnings of the working of saving grace by the holy Spirit because saving faith hath in it the substance of historical dogmatical and temporary faith And therefore when both saving faith and historical dogmatical and temporary faith may produce belief of the law and convince the man of sin and wrath due for sin and produce the belief of the Gospel also without application of the offer of reconciliation how shall a man determine whether these effects were produced by vertue of dogmatical and temporary faith or by vertue of saving faith untill the time that the humbled sinner flye in unto Christ and seek to draw furniture from him for new obedience of the law of love toward God and man and so put difference betwixt saving faith and that faith which may be in an unregenerat aud unreconciled man But when the man is come up to apply Christ and cleave unto him for righteousnesse and life and furniture to carry him on the way unto salvation it is not his wisdom to dispute whether these
from the body of this death and while he searcheth how it cometh to passe that such a body of death lodgeth in the children of God and so powerfull relicts of sin remain in the justified man he cannot satisfie himself considering that God doth hate sin and maketh the new creature hate it also which God could easily take away in a moment in the day of the converts reconciliation and justification 2. For answer to this question if a reason of Gods permission of the relicts of sin to remain in the Saints all the dayes of their life be asked after a reason superiour to the most holy will of God to permit it can none be given nor should it be sought after But to quiet our minds in this case these following considerations may suffice 1. it is the will of the Lord our God our wise and loving Physician to renew and restore his image in his children piece and piece till it be brought to perfection in all the lineaments parts and degrees thereof and to heal our sinfull sicknesses and infirmities not in an instant but by little and little as he seeth fit this way of bringing his work to perfection by degrees he keeped in the creation of the world which he did not perfect in a moment but in six dayes So also the seed that is casten in the ground every year he doth not bring forth to maturity for mens use in lesse time then some moneths He doth not form infants in the womb and bring them up to their appointed stature and strength in lesse time then a number of years And for the relicts of sin how odious and loathsome soever they are in themselves yet he can in his deep wisdom make use thereof in a most holy way for the good of penitent converts for as it was fitting that a difference should be put between the militant Church on earth and the triumphant in heaven So it is the Lords wise will to exercise his militant children in conflicting against sin and misery in this life that the next life and triumph over sin death and hell may be the sweeter when it cometh and more desired till it come 2. Secondly as the Lord after sub-duing of the Canaanites did not forthwith cast them altogether out of the holy land but suffered a multitude of them to live for the exercise of the Israelites with warfare and for teaching his people by their own experience that the victory which they had obtained over the Canaanites was not purchased by their sword or bow but was given unto them from the Lord of hostes who led forth their armies and prospered them So doth he not abolish the relicts of sin in his Saints in this life after their conversion that they may know that the victory which they have received over the devil the world and the flesh in their conversion is not to be ascribed to the power of their own free-will but unto God only For if the renewed convert cannot over-come the relicts of the broken forces of his spiritual adversaries within him which his renewed will would most earnestly expell how can he give the glory of his victory over the devil and the world in his conversion unto the power of his corrupt and unrenewed free-will 3. Thirdly it is required of all that come unto Christ that they deny themselves take up their crosse daily and follow him and to make them so do strong motives are daily furnished from the feeling of the relicts of sin in our selves for how can a renewed convert look upon his own ignorance errors folly and vanity of his mind perversenesse of his will impotency to good and propension unto all sin and not loath himself and so be forced to flye to Christ the Redeemer for relief 4. The remainder of sin being an adversary to all vertues doth furnish work to all the habits infused by God for the daily exercise thereof according as inborn sin doth put forth it self to the hinderance of faith love hope patience temperance c. but in special it serves to bear down pride and to foster humility for this doth the experience of the Apostle shew 2 Cor. 12. 7. Least I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelation there was given to me a thorn in the flesh 5. Nothing doth more manifest the infirmity of the strongest souldiers of Christ then the power of inborn sin brought forth in the conflict against the new creature No sharper spur to prayer and imploring of Gods help then the felt power of the remainder of sin this also doth the experience of the Apostle teach us 2 Cor. 12. 8. For this thing I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me 6. How much the endurance of this conflict with the remainder of sin doth serve to manifest the greatnesse of the Lords power and largenesse of his grace towards his weak souldiers whom he upholdeth and comforteth in this conflict the answer which the Lord giveth to the Apostles prayer maketh manifest 2 Cor. 12. 9. And he said unto me my grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weaknesse 7. We are slow to believe dull to apprehend and learn that which the Word of God tells us of the uglinesse of the body of sin the perverse wickednesse of corrupt nature the filthinesse of the flesh the wiles and deceitfulnesse of the old man and the enmity of our corrupt nature against God Therefore in and by the frequent and renewed conflicts now with one lust then with another we are forced by experience to learn the lesson more and more solidly and believe the truth of the Lords Word speaking of sin that is in us and to ingage our selves to prosecute the mortification of sin unto the death 8. The renewed experience of the power of sin in our flesh should make us so much the more vigilant against it and daily to put on the whole armour of God Because we must fight not only with the flesh but also with principalities powers and spiritual wickednesse which take advantage of the sin that naturally dwelleth in us Ephes. 6. 11. 12. Put on the whole armour of God for we wrestle not with flesh and blood to wit only 9. The conscience of the remainder of sin dwelling in us serveth to move us to pity and to have compassion on the children of Adam and meekly to restore our weak brethren who are overtaken in any offence as the Apostle doth teach us Tit. 3. 2. Shewing all meeknesse to all men For we our selves also were sometime foolish disobedient deceived c. Gal. 6. 1. Brethren if a man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the spirit of meeknesse considering thy self lest thou also be tempted 10. Last of all the permission of the reliques or sin to remain in true converts all the dayes of their life doth serve to decide the great controversie between
God and men concerning the way of justification For by nature we cannot admit the righteousnesse of God which is by faith in Jesus Christ flying to his satisfaction of justice for us and righteousnesse imputed to us thereby for by nature with mis-believing Israel we acknowledge no iustification save of or for works albeit it be impossible Rom 10. 3. And as they being ignorant of Gods righteousnesse and going about to establish their own righteousnesse have not submitted themselves unto the righteousnesse of God So we even after conversion and after embracing of justification by faith in our conversion do give oft-times evidence of our natural inclination to seek after the righteousnesse of works for after examination of our selves we shall find that our confidence doth flow and eb as we are pleased or displeased with our own carriage and when we have most need to make use of the righteousnesse by faith in Christ we forget it or slight it do not flye to it do not adhere to it do not comfort and strengthen our selves in conflicts by it as hath oft-times been observed by us what then would we do if our going about to establish our own righteousnesse did prosper or if the power of in born sin did not set up it self against us and force us by the law either to dispair or flye to Christ And this our natural inclination even after conversion to return and seek after the righteousnesse of the law may be seen in the Galatians who having begun in the spiritual way of justification by faith sought to be perfected by the fleshly way of justification by works and did fall in danger of falling from grace and excluding themselves from the blessing of the promise through Christ. Wherefore our infinitly wise Physician Jesus Christ taketh course as we have said for his own glory and our good not to repair at once the image of God in us not to heal our sinfull diseases all at once but piece and piece by degrees that his righteousnesse bestowed on those that flye unto him for refuge may be in higher and higher estimation daily that the fountain opened up in him for removing of sin and uncleannesse may daily be made use of and the benefit of justification may daily be looked upon as a new gift that vertue may daily be sucked out of him for bearing of good fruits and out of his fulnesse we may receive daily grace for grace and may render thanks unto our God daily and blesse him for his grace given unto us as did the Prophet Ps. 103. 1 3. Blesse the Lord O my soul who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy infirmities And grow in the love of God for the remission of so many sins as escape us daily as did the woman Luk. 7. 47. who loved much because many sins were forgiven her And grow in holinesse without putting confidence in our works as the Psalmist did Ps. 71. 15. 16. My mouth shall shew forth thy righteousnesse I will go in the strength of the Lord God and will make mention of thy righteousnesse even of thine only And the Apostle giveth us his example Phil. 3. 8 9 12 13 14. Wherefore let the doubting convert make use of these considerations and long for the coming of Christ who shall abolish sin and misery altogether To whom with the Father and holy Spirit be glory for ever Amen A TABLE of the Titles of the several Chapters BOOK I. Chap. Page 1. OF Conscience in general 1 2. Of cases of Conscience in general 7 3. Of Regeneration what it is and the regenerat man who he is 10 4. Of divine Covenants about the eternal salvation of men and in special of the covenant of Redemption shewing that there is such a Covenant and what are the articles thereof 22 5. Of the covenant of Works 71 6. Of the covenant of Grace 86 7. For a further clearing and confirmation of the doctrine about the three Covenants from Jer. 31. and Heb. 8. 133 8. Of the prudent application of divine Covenants in general 148 9. Of the more special application of divine Covenants for removing the impediments of regeneration 162 10. Concerning them that are like to despair 182 11. Concerning them that absolve themselves without warrand 190 BOOK II. 1. OF considerations to be premised 215 2. Wherein the regenerat mans doubt of his being in the state of grace by reason of his felt unworthiness is answered 241 3. Wherein the regenerat mans doubts arising from the multitude and weight of his sins against the Law and the Gospel and against the light of his conscience are answered 245 4. Wherein is solved the doubt of the regenerat man raised by his suspicion whether he be elected or not 250 5. Wherein the regenerat mans doubting of his regeneration because he findeth no power in himself to believe in Christ is answered 253 6. Wherein the doubt of the regenerat man concerning his being in the state of grace arising from his apprehended defect of humiliation and sorrow for sin is answered 257 7. Wherein the Christians doubt whether he be regenerat because he findeth not his righteousness exceeding the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees is answered 263 8. Wherein the regenerat mans doubt whether he be in the state of grace arising from his unquietnesse of spirit is answered 274 9. Wherein the converts doubt arising from his uncertainty at what time he was converted is solved 292 10. Wherein is solved the converts doubt of his regeneration arising from his apprehension that the beginning of the change of his life was not from the sincere love of God but either from terrour or self-love which he conceiveth to be but carnal 294 11. Wherein the converts doubt of his being in the state of grace arising from heavy afflictions and grievous tentations is solved 298 12. Wherein is solved the converts doubt of his conversion arising from the power of his corruption manifesting it self more after his entry upon the course of new obedience then it did before he began to repent 304 13. Wherein is solved the converts doubt whether he be in the state of grace arising from his comparing of himself with the hypocrit and unregenerat in those perfections they may attain unto 311 14. Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert whether he be in the state of grace because some godly persons look upon him as an hypocrit 313 15. Wherein the converts doubting of his being in the state of grace so oft as he doth not feel the sense of his reconciliation with God is examined and answered 316 16. Wherein is solved the true converts doubt of his regeneration because he seemeth to himself not to grow in grace by the use of the means appointed for his growth 320 17. Wherein is solved the converts doubt whether he be regenerat because he seemeth to himself to follow religion and righteousnesse from the common operation of Gods working by moral swasion
private when he finds an indisposition of mind unto it SUndry converts when they perceive the unfitnesse of their spirits to offer immediat worship to God in prayer praises or thanksgiving especially in private do fall in doubt with themselves whether it be better to delay the offer of their worship till they find themselves well disposed for it or to go on as they may albeit they apprehend their lips polluted and their hearts far away from God Their fear on the one hand is lest they should pollute the worship and take Gods name in vain on the other hand they fear lest they fall in the guiltinesse of omit●ing a prescribed duty The question shall be what the doubting convert should determine and do 2. For answer this case is spoken unto before 2. Book Chap. 17. in as far as the convert determineth not and doth not what is right but goeth wrong and pleaseth himself in his bad condition But here we speak to this case as the convert is in doubt only and desireth to be keeped from deceiving himself In which case we say that as it is the converts doubt so we must confesse that this case of indisposition and un●itnesse for spiritual exercises is very frequent and is ordinarily and oft-times a chastisement of us drawn on by our selves because we do not watch unto prayer we do not study to keep our hearts in the fear of the Lord all the day long we do not foster that tendernesse of conscience which might furnish us mater of humiliation and of thanksgiving to God upon observation of our faults against God and of Gods favours daily and hourly remarkably running toward us Hence it is when our ordinar time of secret worship doth come we find our vaiging minds hardly called home from their wandering our conscience challenging us for our loose and uncircumspect walking our affections dull and dead and all the powers of our souls taken as with a palsie that we cannot bestir our selves in worship as we should and would Therefore in this case let the convert be humbled and confesse his fault and take with this chastisement and ●●ye unto Christ who heareth and taketh away the iniquity of our pollution of holy things and let him nor defer his worship till another occasion but wrestle against all impediments and follow out the work in hand blessing God for his pointing out unto him his wants and weaknesse his wandering and vanity of mind his slipping and sliding in his wayes and for opening unto him a ●ountain in Christ for washing his pollutions and healing his wounds And that the convert may be encouraged to aim at and follow on this way let him consider that the converts worship may be pleasant and acceptable to God when the convert is much displeased with himself in the discharge of it for there is a worshiping of God in faith without sense and feeling of the hearts inlargement and there is a worshiping of God with felt enlargement of heart The worshiping of God in faith is pleasant unto God albeit the worshiper in perplexity and wrestling with temptations and corruptions be much displeased with himself The worshiping of God with inlargement of heart is pleasant both unto God and to the worshiper also as Ps. 119. 32. David gives us to understand I will run the way of thy Commandments saith he when thou shalt enlarge my heart But when this inlargement by sensible assistance of the holy Ghost is not perceived the Psalmist is but a dead man in his own estimation yet he doth not forbear or delay to worship God as well in bonds as in freedom Quicken me saith he according to thy loving kindnesse Therefore let the convert in this case 1. follow the example of the Psalmist who Ps. 5. 3. resolveth to call on God with his voice that is to follow the work of prayer externally pre-suppose his spiritual powers were bound up and he unable to back his pe●itions with suteable affections My voice saith he shalt thou hear in the morning O Lord in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee and will look up And Ps. 27. 7. Hear me when I cry with my voice have mercy also upon me and answer me 2. For his incouragement in this case to go on in his worship let him confesse unto God the truth as it is presen●ed unto him by his conscience and say O Lord my God these are my sins which I ought to acknowledge before thee with tears which for the present are dryed up c. These are thy favours and benefits wherewith I am loaden●d which I should acknowledge with joy and sense of thy goodnesse c. but thou Lord delights in truth in the inward parts Ps. 51. 8. This will be found our reasonable service which the Apostle calleth for Rom. 12. 1 2. The eight question is how to satisfie the convert doubting what is the sin which God pursueth by long-lasting affliction IT falleth forth oft-times when a true convert being a long time pressed under some lasting crosse or calamity doth inquire after the special causes of his affliction and when he cannot be clear what to determine doth doubt what to think of his condition for he acknowledgeth his sins common to him and other converts to be innummerable but apprehendeth that it is some special sin pursued by God which is the cause of his affliction which because he cannot condescend upon he is at a stand and doubteth what to think or do 2. For answer we say 1. such a case is more troublesom then dangerous for so long as he is observing his sins common to him and other converts and in the exercise of repentance is daily humbled before God for his known sins he must not be anxious albeit he know not the particular sin pursued as he apprehendeth for albeit the Lord afflict no man but such as have sin in them yet he doth not alwayes in afflicting of his children pursue unknown sin in them For sometime he afflicteth his child to preveen his sinning hedging up his way with thornes lest he should follow after beloved lusts Sometime he doth afflict him to try his faith to teach him patience meeknesse temperance and other virtues such as are dying to the world seeking after things spiritual compassion toward others in affliction 2. When the afflicted hath composed his mind to reverence Gods dispensation whatsoever it is or shall be then let him yet again look upon his affliction and it may be he shall read in the rod what is the Lords quarrel 3. Whether he shall find the special cause of his affliction or not let him turn all his indignation zeal and hatred against the body of death the bitter root and bulk of actual sins and watch diligently over the motions of original sin or concupiscence in himself 4. And let his whole exercise stir him up to have Christ in greater estimation to make use of Christs righteousnesse imputed to believers and