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A15527 Saints by calling: or Called to be saints A godly treatise of our holy calling to Christ, by the gospell. With the seuerall gifts proper vnto the called: and their counterfeits in the hypocrites which are not partakers of this effectuall calling. Written by Thomas Wilson, minister of Gods word, at S. Georges Church in Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1620 (1620) STC 25796; ESTC S103067 273,228 442

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Sathan outward troubles inward temptations yet especially those last and greatest euils and afflictions which at and about the time of his crucifying and sacrifice were for mans sinne inflicted vpon him in soule and body either immediately from the hand of his most irefull highly offended Father or mediately from the Diuell and wicked men Iewes and Gentiles outragiously conspiring and working him all the smart and shame possible could be put vpon him whatsoeuer euill diuine iustice would or hellish malice could heape vpon him and he was capable of that and all that he as our surety in humble submission to his Father did endure for our iniquities The which his passiue righteousnesse consisting in his willing and constant obedience of his manhood vnder the Crosse hath receiued such sufficiency of merit and worthinesse from his godhead to which it is personally vnited for the deseruing and purchasing for all his Elect that most notable benefit which the Scriptures commonly call remission or forgiuenesse of sins Which is an vtter acquitting and deliuering of all beleeuers from all guilt come vpon them by their owne or Adams sinne imputed and from all punishment due to them for the same either in this World or in the next So as West is not so farre remoued from East the highest heauens from the nethermost earth as guilt and paine fault and curse be remoued from the faithfull by this passiue obedience of Christ Iesus Wherevnto belong all those Scriptures which affirme that we haue remission of sinnes by his bloud and that hee died for our sinnes and redeemed vs from alliniquity by his death This being his last and greatest suffering by a Synecdoche of the part for the whole comprehends all other sufferings which being endured of him with most hearty obedience haue freed all beleeuers from extreme euill from damnation in hell and the whole wrath of God for sinne Insomuch as howsoeuer many and great tribulations doe chance to befall them in their life time and death in the end seaze vpon the godly yet these happen vnto them as no part of Gods curse for sinne or as fruites of his fury and hot indignation but quite contrary the crosses of their life being sanctified by Christ his Crosse they are great furtherances to mortification and amendment of life and good trials of their faith patience and nourishments of their hope and death when it comes hauing lost his sting there is nothing remaining in it which is not beneficial to them it being but as a bridge or gate to carry them ouer and conuey them into their heauenly Countrey And as the faithfull doe escape all euill by the passiue righteousnesse of Christ his suffering of euils being their acquittance and discharge as a surety hauing answered a debt for thee enfreeth thee as if it had beene satisfied with thy owne money the most iust God neuer exacting one debt twise so they find entrance into life by his actiue iustice for none must liue but the iust which haue perfect conformity with the strict iustice of the Law The iust shall liue This exact righteousnesse all flesh lacketh for No flesh can be iustified in his sight Psal. 143. 2. Therefore no more surely was Adam shut out of earthly Paradise then we his posterity for lacke of perfect iustice are excluded out of the third heauens the Paradise which is aboue Therefore as Iesus Christ our Mediatour by bearing the whole punishment due to the breach of the Law with most sincere obedience hath enfreed vs from the curse and destruction of hell so by keeping doing all duties toward God and man required in the Law and that in most perfect loue he hath by this his actiue obedience merited and obtained for his people a right and title to the Kingdome of Heauen This actiue righteousnesse is doing and keeping the whole Law it is the absolute conformity and agreement of the man Christ in his life vnto the perfect rule of righteousnesse giuen of God in the Decalogue or ten Commandements Of this actiue righteousnesse there are two parts one is the conformity of his nature to the wil of God all the powers and faculties both of body and soule being rightly framed according to the most exact iustice of the moral Law he being conceiued by the holy Ghost the lumpe of flesh which hee tooke and whereout his manhood was framed was so seuered from all spot of sinne as there was not to bee found in him the least taint of sinne and corruption no inclination in minde or will against God but a through-disposition to all good Hence called the immaculate Lambe vndefiled separate from sinners and so he behoued to be that hee might offer himselfe a spotlesse sacrifice to God who vnder the Law would admit no blemished oblation Had ought in his nature been neuer so little crooked and vnright his death had no more auayled for remission or his life for righteousnesse then the death or life of Peter Paul or any other Saint for then himselfe needing a Sauiour should not haue beene ours The other part of his actiue obedience is the conformity of his actions with the holinesse of the Law which in the course of his life hee kept and fulfilled doing all that was commanded in both Tables doing it in a perfect manner and measure with perfect loue of God his Father whom he obeyed to the death and of men his neighbours whom hee loued as himselfe yea more then himselfe giuing himselfe to a cruell infamous death for them Also doing all this to a right end that he might honor his Father whose glory he sought in all things And lastly being constant vnto the end continuing in his loue obedience vnto the last breath Hence it is saide He did all things well he knew no sinne no guile found in his mouth and is called that Holy one and iust and righteous one who indeede alone hath that iustice which is able to abide the touch-stone euen the most rigorous examination of the most seuere diuine iustice which hauing thorowly and narrowly sifted it cannot not onely finde nothing what to blame in it but of right must allow it and crowne it with eternall life Hence it is that this righteousnes which Christ in his manhood hath thus performed as we haue saide is often in the Epistles of Paul termed the righteousnes of God as Rom. 3 〈◊〉 22 26. 2 Cor. 5 verse last Phil. 3. Not onely because that person which wrought it was very God the Sonne of the eternall God though it were wrought in the humane nature assumed but especially to teach vs that this righteousnes of the man Christ it is that and that alone which the most iust God approoueth and rewardeth not as hee doth approoue the vnperfect obedience of his children in fauour pardoning what is wanting and accepting the will for the worke but
whether they were little or great against God or men after this there followes a reuelation of all the fearefull punishments and curses temporall and eternall for the plaguing of body and soule now and for euer by the threatning and denunciation whereof and haply by a sensible experience of some part of it the holy Spirit breedeth terrour feare and astonishment vpon the view and apprehension of so many erroneous sinnes and such lamentable dolefull estate as is due thereunto Hereof called the Spirit of feare and bondage Rom. 8. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Whereupon the saide spirit bringeth to a speciall griefe vpon the sence of Gods heauy wrath for some especial sinne called Pricking of the heart Acts 2. 37. whereby it bereaueth men of their chiefe desires putteth them out of conceit with the best things in themselues turning their mirth to mourning their chiefe delight to bitter griefe taking downe their hearts courage and stomack because they see they haue to doe with a righteous most rigorous Iudge who will remit nothing of his iustice but taketh reuenge vpon all sinne and iniquities and finding no strength or meanes in themselues to escape his wrath they despaire of euer obtaining his fauour by any their owne worth or goodnesse These are the workes of the Spirit in the ministry of the Law and in Ioh. 16. 8. They are called the rebuking of the world of sinne Here the office of the Law ceasseth and can bring no neerer to Christ but onely to bewray vnto vs our great neede and want of his sufferings righteousnesse and thereof the Law is termed our Schoole-master to Christ Galat 3. 24. Thus then the Spirit hauing brought the sinnefull soule by the preaching of the Law in the view and dread of her iniquity and misery to beholde what great and extreame neede shee hath of Christ and of euery droppe of his blood of his Spirit and of euery grace thereof doth after this by the Word of the Gospell begin to open her a doore to the grace and fauour of God shewing God vnto her as a Redeemer and Sauiour of sinners freely offering mercy for forgiuenesse and saluation in the promises of the Word enlightening the minde to know the truth and certainty of them mouing the iudgement to yeeld and subscribe vnto them being known to be from God and then further making poore sinners to perceiue and beleeue that all sinnes how many and horrible soeuer for all the multitude and hugenesse of them are pardonable and such as may be forgiuen them as being far and very farre lesser then the infinite mercies of God and most vnualuable merites of Christs passion and death the infinite price and worth whereof being wrought by the same Gospell to see and consider the distrustfull hearts be therewithall stirred vp by the holie Ghost to make particular confession of sinnes and to seeke mercy and pardon of them from God by Iesus Christ with trust of finding it as also to hunger and thirst after that perfect righteousnesse of Christ there set before them and finally by the operation of that Spirit applying to them the promises concerning Christ and righteousnesse by him they are sure'y perswaded that they belong to themselues wherupon flying from the terrour of iustice threatned in the Law they dare approach to the Throne of grace saying Abba Father in respect whereof the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of adoption of faith and of a sound minde Rom. 8. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Aquila I doe acknowledge my selfe now well content with this your Anatomy and opening of the works of the Spirit in calling illuminating and opening the heart that it may beleeue Christ to saluation whereby I see how farre many are from faith which suppose themselues neere to it and also perceiue how manifoldly and greatly the Elect which doe beleeue are beholden to God for his wondrous working in them And lastly more and more discerne the continuall and sincere preaching of the Law and Gospell to be of great vse in the Church that Gods Elect thereby may bee translated from infidelity to faith Now if you thinke good we will hold our selues content to haue proceeded thus farre at this present and at our next meeting we will conferre further if God will concerning this great worke of Faith to the creating whereof we haue seene so many and sundry workes of the Spirit to be behouefull and requisite Apollos I am well pleased so to doe for my businesse calleth me away and it may be also your Family or calling may craue your presence and meete it is that these lesser duties giue place to the greater At our next meeting together I will try your knowledge about the nature and office of faith and other things which belong to that worthy and noble gift the Mother-gift and Queene of all graces which bee inspired into mans hear The third part of the Dialogue concerning a true and liuely Faith in Iesus Christ. Apollos WEll saide Neighbour Aquila I see you will not faile me in that you keep your appointed time so duly for you are here euen iust at the time we agreed vpon Aquila Sir I loue to stand to my word in euery thing which is in my power to performe I will be aduised what I promise but hauing once giuen my faith I will not breake it willingly Fidelity in keeping promise with men is one of those Christian graces which are proper to Gods children as there will be occasion hereafter to declare but in the meane time the thing that wee are now to deale in it is not concerning ciuill faith betweene man and man but about Christian faith in the promises which God hath made to man Which because it is a large theame and wil take vp much time I haue purposely set apart some and ouercome othersome businesse that wee might intend the through-sifting of this point Apollos And my leysure doth serue mee very well Therefore because you thought it no ease vnto you to propound Questions ye shall now vndergoe the burthen of an answer which you liked so well of Let me see how you proue that Faith is a fruite of our calling and a gift proper to the Elect seeing it is reported of many that they haue beleeued which yet were not Elect as of Simon Magus Actes 8. 13. Also some in Iohn 2. 23 24. Yea of the very Diuels that they doe beleeue Iames 2. 19. In which place verse 26. the same Apostle telleth vs of a dead faith which one may haue and yet be no true Christian. Aquila For your former Question whether it be a fruite of our effectuall Calling If there were no euident testimony to proue it yet the thing is plaine enough for all know which know any thing that in our Calling wee are made to beleeue this being the very terminus or end wherein the worke of our Calling resteth to bring vs
a dying to sinne and liuing to righteousnesse Apollos I will tell you what I conceiue of it that Repentance is a fruite of Sanctification a consequent of it which doth immediately follow it and is ioyned to it as a companion the difference I will expresse it to you by a similitude as you may vnderstand it better In the worke of Sanctification the holy Spirit doth as it were shape a new garment for the soule which as it hath a robe without to wit the perfect iustice of Christ to put on by faith so it hath other garments of lesse worth which be inherent and sticke within it selfe and this is the quality of holinesse created in the soule which we are willed to put on as Col. 3. Put on the new man Againe As the Elect of God put on compassion meekenesse c. And in 〈◊〉 6. 13. Keepe your garments pure and without spot Now as in a new garment there happens rents and breaches so our holinesse by strength of corruption striuing against it and Sathans temptation doth take some rents and breaches daily which are to be made vp and restored by repentance Sanctification is as the building of an House our soules and bodies thereby are made the Temples and habitation of God Ephe. 2. verse last 1 Cor. 6. Houses being wind and weather-beaten will take decayes and neede reparations Now repentance is the repairing of those wrackes and harmes which our selues take by the assaults of sinne and Sathan Take yet another comparison In Sanctification wee haue giuen to vs the skill and power to warre against sinne Sathan and the World and weapons put into our hands wherewith to defend our selues and to offend them Now our weapons wil waxe dul and need sharpening our selues take blowes and 〈◊〉 and neede curing this doth repentance which 〈◊〉 the weapons and makes whole our selues after hurts receiued I haue now shewed you what my iudgement is of the thing you propounded Aquila Yea I vnderstand it and will examine it and then rest in it if I find no iust matter of exception meane time I yet see not but that ye are right But tell me Sir what Repeutance doe you meane For Repentance euen in Scripture phrase is attributed sometime to reprobates and wicked men as where it is said that Iudas repented him Math. 27. 1. 2. And there was a certaine repentance euen in Cain Esau Achab Symon Magus and others as the Story of Scriptures euidenceth Beside the Elect which yet are in their sinnes and want all true sauing grace the holy Ghost vseth to exhort them to repentance as Acts 3. 19. To those that killed Iesus Peter saith Repent and returne And Acts 17. 30. to the supersticious Athenians Paul saith God admonisheth all men euery where to repent See also Acts 14. 15. by which it may appeare that there is a repentance in some which are neuer sanctified and others haue a repentance before their sanctification Apollos This was well moued for it is true that Repentance hath sundry acceptions in the Word of God which is the cause that Diuines write diuersly of this point and somewhat confusedly sometime for not duly distinguishing those workes of God which he diuersly worketh in men as hee pleaseth To shew you what I comprehend of this matter this word Repentance is in Scripture either taken in euil part or in good part when it is taken in the euill part then it signifieth a greefe of minde conceiued onely for punishment of sinne when yet the sinne it selfe is not a whit loathed and hated but still well liked of Thus is Iudas saide to repent who because of the present horrour which his sinne bred in his conscience and through the feare of future iudgement wished that vndone which hee had done and so repented but his heart nothing changed to abhorre his couetousnesse When it is taken in good part then it is either Legall or Euangelicall Legall Repentance I call that when by the ministery of the Law the Spirit is effectuall to worke a sight of sinnes both secret and grosse and of the curse and punishment due thereunto together with a certaine greefe and feare in regard of that sinfull and wofull estate which the sinner seeth by the Law himselfe to lie in This in the Elect is a preparatiue to the grace of conuersion and alwayes goeth afore which though in it selfe it be not true sauing grace yet it is the beginning the entrance and way to it in all the chosen and this is meant in part in all those exhortations made to vnconuerted elect persons Repentance Euangelicall is either generall or speciall generall repentance which is a turning from all sinne at once is that whereby a sinner being by precepts and threats of the Law stricken with terror and humbled vpon sight and some sense of his owne damnable state through sinne is by grace conuerted and changed in his minde and will so as of an euill man hee become a good now truly hating all his sinnes as offences of a good God reconciled in his Son and not only for punishment sake and louing righteousnesse vnfeinedly This is called passiue Repentance or conuersion and is in truth the same with Sanctification wherof ye may reade in these Texts Acts 11. 18. Acts 20. 21. Luke 24. 47. Speciall Repentance Euangelicall it is that whereby a sinner that beleeueth forgiuenesse of his sinnes and is sanctified or conuerted and already made good doth repent particularly of such sinnes which by occasion in the course of his life he falleth into this is of Diuines called particular Repentance Actiue and renewed Repentance and they doe distinguish it from the former And thus it is taken in all places of Scriptures where the Saints are saide to repent or exhorted to repent as 2 Cor. 7. 9. Reuel 2. 5. and 3. 19. Mathew 18. 3. And thus in this sence doe I speake of it at this time taking it for the repairing or renewing of those daily decayes and slips which doe arise in the practise of godlinesse For as in a garment namely a beggers garment there is alwayes something to be amended and in an house though well swept and cleansed yet there will still be something to be purged out and in an healthy body there fal out infirmiries to be cured so in the life and conuersation of euery good Christian there will be still something to be repented of and amended Our frailety and Sathans malice being considered there would indeede that care and watchfulnesse be vsed that as neere as euer may be those pure garments of our righteousnesse holinesse be kept cleane and vndefiled and our Temples of body and soule to be preserued holy yet as a materiall garment be it neuer so well lookt vnto gathereth spots and the house which is kept most neatly and curiously will haue dust and sulledgy so in the best Christians somewhat will be alwayes amisle and therefore the whole life of a Christian
euill company alone but whatsoeuer occasions of sinne by place persons times or things must be taken heed of for occasions being taken hold of giue great strength to our sinfull nature but being taken heed of doe much pull it in I would also counsell men sometime to faste and refraine from meate and all pleasures of life for at certaine fit times they can beare it and alwayes to vse great temperance in meates and drinkes and other lawfull delights but aboue all thought and study must be had that these priuate meanes be holpen by the publike That men put themselues vnder a good Ministerie it being the principall instrument of our calling for howsoeuer the word of God read or preached if we respect the letters sillables hath not any strength at all nor the action of reading or preaching as it is performed by man how well soeuer they be as weake as water to this purpose of conuersion and calling yet being both the good and holy ordinances of God they become strong because the God of strength and might worketh by them yet in a seueral degree For the Scripture teacheth vs that ordinarily it pleaseth God by preaching Christ to saue such as beleeue 1 Cor. 1. 21. That is to say both to begin their saluation by it drawing them effectually out of their infidelity making them to beleeue Also to build them vp further in their holy faith and godlinesse of life vntill they come to possesse fully saluation in Heauen Hence it is that the preaching of Christ crucified is there verse 18. termed the power of God to saue that is the powerfull instrument by which it pleaseth God mightily to worke for the sauing of the Elect. Moreouer we are taught in Rom. 10. 14 15. that ordinarily we are not otherwise being of yeeres brought to haue faith to beleeue in God then by hearing such Preachers as be sent and furnished from God with authority and gifts for that ende as it is written How shall they beleeue in him except they doe heare and how shall they heare except they preach and how shall they preach except they be sent In the Acts of Apostles Chap. 26. 18. Saint Paul reporteth that hee was called to this very ende that by his preaching the Gospell hee might open the eyes of the blinde turne men from Satan to God from darkenesse to light Finally to omit infinite authorities of Scripture as Ephe. 4. 11 12. 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. and such like places which oftentimes yoake or ioyne preaching and beleeuing as cause and effect Acts 11. 20 21. and 14. 1. c. I doe beside reade of innumerable soules euen by thousands at once called to Christ by the opening and application of the word Albeit then we are to leaue to Christ to engender encrease faith and sanctification by what meane he himselfe will yet for our selues we are to depend vpon such meanes as wee find in the word to be ordained for such workes and this is principally by preaching the word that is by a faithfull deliuery of the sense of Scripture by the Scripture with wise and fit application of doctrines to exhortation confutation rebukes comforts threatnings as it is written He that prophecyeth speaketh to men to edification to exhortation to consolation 1 Cor. 14. 3. In the 24 25. verses of this Chapter we may reade the mighty operation of this Ordinance of Christ for begetting and confirmation of a liuely faith most notably to be commended If saith Paul all prophecie and there commeth in one that beleeueth not or is vnlearned he is rebuked of all and so are the secrets of his heart laide open and so he will fall downe on his face and worship God and say plainely that God is in you indeede By this it is cleere that together with preaching God coupleth his owne arme and power both to enlighten the minde to see inward and secret corruption hid from vs before and to bow the heart to reuerence and obey God As men therefore for the health of their bodies doe chuse places conuenient to dwell in where there is wholsome ayre sweete water and other commodities so they wil much more doe this duty to their soules for the health and safety thereof as to prouide for it good diet by the wholsome preaching of the word ordinarily on the Saboath which together with Catechizing and the benefit of publike prayer and Sacraments shall in Gods appointed houre effect this blessed worke of a true calling to their present comfort and euerlasting saluation of their soules Where these meanes be not at all vsed if so be they may be had or some and not all or vsed negligently or by fits and starts onely there the case will goe hard For howsoeuer our calling hath God alone for the Authour and beginner the finisher also and perfiter of it yet there is a necessity laide vpon vs to serue the gracious prouidence of Almighty God as instruments therein by attending and exercising the meanes appointed Therefore as Paul Acts 27. hauing a warrant from God of good security yet saide If these Mariners doe not tarry in the Ship we cannot be safe so I may say Gods ordinary dispensation considered that if these meanes be cast off and not cared for we cannot be called Now for such as be already called and can finde in themselues the true markes thereof as this is the greatest comfort in the World so if they will preserue this comfort then they must see to it that such meanes as it pleased God to blesse vnto them at first for the obtaining of an effectuall vocation and conuersion these very meanes they addict themselues vnto vsing them still and them all if there be no necessary let and being constant without being weary in a right manner also sincerely and humbly with a feruent desire of Gods glory aboue all things being much in prayer and godly meditations and as euer they will be thankefull for such a grace as their effectuall calling is let them striue to walke worthy of the vocation wherewith they are called in all lowlinesse and meekenesse long suffering and loue Ephe. 4. 1 2. Apol. Friend Aquila ye haue reported vnto me verie much of that which ye learned touching effectuall calling now if ye will let vs passe on to the other point namely the graces which doe necessarily goe with this calling except ye haue somewhat further to speake of this matter which if ye haue I will gladly giue you the hearing Aquila Yes Sir I will craue your patience alittle for I forslowed to tell you when ye asked me of the meanes of calling that it hath seemed good in the eyes of God to call some immediately without any ministry of Angels or Men as Adam in Paradise Abraham in Charran Paul in his iourney to Damascus to declare himselfe to be most free not bound to the meanes which are rather
first and second one before another after for it is not in this new creation when this our little World of our selues is brought out of the world of sinne and vnbeliefe vnto the Christian World of grace as it was in the creation of the great World of Heauen and Earth when the parts of that world were made one after another in order of time the worke being distinguished according to the number of dayes in the weeke but here in this new creation we haue the blessed sauing workes and graces of the holy Spirit powred into vs all at one instant We are not at one time called and at another time iustified and at another time sanctified and then receiue graces of hope and loue and wisedome c. but these come as Iosephs brethren came into AEgypt for Corne all together As the prodigall childe returning to his Father did at once receiue all those fauours from his kinde Father of kisse embracing ring robe and charge to kill the fat Calfe Indeede the sauing graces for their encrease and growth to perfection require succession of time euen as Infants become not tall men till after many yeeres but these graces at the beginning and first begetting like grapes in a cluster doe all come together Euen as it standeth with the naturall body in the quickning of it the soule comming into it giueth power of motion and sense to euery member at one instant not to one sooner to another later so in our new birth all the faculties of the minde and body being before dead in trespasses and sinnes are by grace the soule of the soule spiritually at once reuiued and enabled to all functions duties of godlinesse The truth whereof appeareth in that Paul reports of the Romans that being made beleeuers they were iustified and being iustified by faith they had withall other graces as peace with God hope of glory ioy in that hope sense of Gods loue And of the Ephesians he saith that when they were called and heard the Gospell with an obedient care they also beleeued and had the seale earnest of the Spirit In a word the Elect comming to Christ at the time of their calling and Christ with his merits graces being so ioyned as one cannot haue himselfe but withall he hath all his It is therfore an vndoubted truth that howsoeuer some sauing graces may appeare before others or be felt sooner then others yet they are put vpon into the Elect at one and the same time but in order of causes one grace doth precede afore another and they are to be handled of vs one after another according to that order as neere as we can hit vpon Aq. Wel then I yeeld willingly vnto this truth acknowledge that that most mighty God that at one moment could deck adorn the firmament of heauen with so many glorious stars he also is able to fixe so many sundry glorious graces at once in the firmamet of mans heart But seeing the God of order in this supernaturall work doth obserue a natural order according to which some graces must be first as causes others must follow as effects of those causes would it please you then to declare vnto me which grace is first in the order of causes Apol. As I conceiue of it I will declare vnto you and I verily trust that I conceiue aright thus the case stands Before our effectuall calling our mindes are couered with darknesse of ignorance vnbeliefe our hearts being ful of obstinacy by reason therof so as we are wholy estranged from God Now in the worke of God in our calling the Spirit of Christ by the Gospell hauing mightily cast downe these strong holds and scattered these foggy mists doth illuminate effectually the mind and vnderstanding distinctly soundly to know beleeue the promises of forgiuenesse reconciliation by Christ made 〈◊〉 the word withal 〈◊〉 opening the heart obediently to assent to it and embrace it with a faith affiance in the mercy of God the promiser the by this faith of the promise the elect is brought euen to Christ to be neerely vnited 〈◊〉 to him who being a stranger before now by faith dwels in the heart as a familiar guest rather as the master of the Family to guide rule keepe in order all Now being made one with Christ they straight way haue comunion first with his righteousnesse actiue passiue for iustifying them to the great tranquility ioy of the conscience and also to the raysing vp of their hearts to a sure certain hope expectation of heauenly glory Then afterwards they haue fellowship with his Spirit for sanctifying in which work of their sanctification is giuen that excellent grace of repentance or turning to God also of hearty loue toward God their father now reconciled appearing so to the cōscience quieted 〈◊〉 through the atonement felt perceiued this begetteth loue to all men especially to the Saints carieth with it all the traine of Christian vertues It coming hereof that the Elect are patient temperate peaceable meeke good long suffering modest humble c. because through that faith hope which they haue in God by Christ they are moued so to loue him to be affected to seek his honor to doe his will as withall their heart is affectioned in all things which concerne him themselues or others to please him by obedience and practise of his Word in sincerity and truth Aquila By that which hath beene spoken I perceiue what order ye thinke to be kept of God in the working the workes proper to the Elect. First there is calling in which there is 2 illumination or opening of the eye Thirdly opening of the heart Fourthly liuely faith Fiftly vnion with Christ or our incorporation into him Sixtly Iustification or imputation of Christs righteousnesse Seuenthly peace of conscience Eightly Ioy in the holy Ghost Ninthly hope of glory Tenthly Sanctification 11. Repentance called our turning from sinne 12. Loue of God 13. Charity to our neighbour 14. Patience in affliction 15. Obedience to the will of God Let me aske of these in order what I am desirous to know for my further instruction and first touching illumination where doe yee finde ground in Scripture for it Then describe it and shew what it is and what kindes there be of it and how the illumination of the Elect doth differ from the worke of the Spirit in illuminating some of the reprobate Apollos In the calling of a sinner to faith there are two workes of the Spirit The one opening of their eyes Acts 26. 18. The other the opening of their hearts Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydea the former is Illumination or enlightning whereof the holy Ghost speaketh in Heb. 6. 4. They which were once enlightened And Luke 1. 79. To giue great
light to them that sit in darknesse And againe The people which sate in darknesse saw great light Mat. 4. 16. In respect of this worke of the Spirit Christ is said to be the light of the Gentiles Luke 2. 32. And the Ministers who are but Instruments of this worke are called Lights of this Word and Lights of the blinde Mat. 5. 14. Rom. 2. 19. This worke of illumination or enlightning it is that whereby the Spirit first purgeth the mind vnderstanding from darkenesse and vanity which was in it through ignorance of God also the iudgement from that peruerse corruption of it in things belonging to God whereby it could not put a difference betweene good and euill and secondly putteth into the vnderstanding and iudgement a new light of knowledge and discretion whereby the soule knoweth and discerneth aright the truth of saluation by Christ euen particularly in the seuerall doctrines This enlightning is twofold The first is generall and slight whereby the minde is enlightened vnto an idle and vnfruitfull knowledge of God The latter is a speciall and through-enlightening vnto a diligent and profitable vnderstanding of Christ. These two kindes of knowledge whereof the one a wicked man may haue the other is giuen to none but to the Elect though they both be the gifts of the Spirit and also be of the same things yet they differ very much For first the knowledge which a godly man receiueth in his illumination it is certaine and distinct so as hee is able to applie the threatnings of Gods iudgements to the humbling of himselfe and the promises of God to raise and comfort himselfe the wicked by their knowledge cannot doe so hauing but a naked and bare speculation without any particular application of the same for humbling or comfort Againe the knowledge of the godly is sufficient to direct them generally and in euery particular duty whether it be for auoyding euil or for doing any good but the insight and knowledge of the wicked is vnsufficient and vnable to direct them in their singular and particular actions either for omission of euill or practise of good The former knowledge is full of good workes and directs them in whom it is to doe good things constantly but the latter is barren and fadeth before the end or leaues them in the end In respect of these differences the knowledge of the Elect for the cleerenesse sufficiency and certainty of it is likened to the light of the Sunne and the knowledge of the reprobates for the confusednesse vnsufficiency vnstablenesse is compared to the Lightening which doth not giue any certaine light it doth not continue any certaine time and when it is gone men see worse then before So doth it fall out with the wicked for their knowledge doth soone vanish and while it lasteth it is very vncertaine and there is in them afterwards greater and more dangerous darknesse then before for because they winke with their eyes and make their hearts fat striuing willingly not to see that they cannot but see wilfully blinding and hardening themselues therefore as a punishment of this sinne they are giuen ouer to haue dull and heauy eyes and eares so as they shall see and not perceiue heare and not vnderstand Acts 28. 27. Whereas the knowledge of the godly encreaseth in brightnesse like the Sunne which shineth more more cleerely vnto the perfect day Prou. 4. 18. So as the godly are very greatly bound to praise God for such their light of knowledge and to endeauour to walke in that light answering such a grace by thankfulnes in tongue and obedience of liues and workes as becommeth children of such light translated out of such darknesse Aquila Now that ye haue spoken of illumination or opening the eyes will it please you to say somewhat of the other worke of the Spirit which ye call the opening of the heart what may this signific or how may it differ from the former worke of enlightening Apollos By the heart according to Scripture phrase is signified not the fleshy part of the body which is thought to be the fountaine of life and seate of the affections but the faculties of the soule especially the vnderstanding and will For the heart is as it were the chaire of estate for the soule where the soule sheweth her selfe in presence therefore it is so often put for the soule and the chiefe powers thereof as God opened Lydiaes heart that is her soule Now this opening sheweth and teacheth vs that the soule is as a Chest fast lockt and barred into which while it is so there can no treasure be put So it is with the soule before our effectual calling it is close shut vp and lockt vp through ignorance and vnbeliefe sinne so as no sauing grace can drop into it but it is kept from all sight and feeling of Gods peculiar mercies Therefore this opening of the heart besides the illumination already spoken of whereby the Spirit piercing into the minde endued it with that heauenly light before touched that it may cleerely and certainely vnderstand the whole truth of the Word but chiefly the promise of the Gospel it hath also the mouing and bowing of the will with affection to receiue and embrace this promise the Spirit enduing the soule with a sweete feeling of the most mercifull goodnesse of God therein And of these two workes of the Spirit in opening of the eyes and the heart ariseth that third worke called Faith which is a gift powred into the soule knitting it vnto Christ with whom being vnderstood and knowen as hee is reuealed in his Word and embraced with affection both of the mind will it now resteth satisfied as one that hath found a rich treasure or great spoyle Aquila But I am not yet satisfied with this that you haue said about these workes of the Spirit Therefore I pray you yet more plainely and particularly lay forth the actions of the Spirit tending to the engendring of faith in the heart of an elect sinner Herein I will doe mine endeauour to giue you satisfaction the Spirit of God as in our first conference you rightly told vs worketh both by the Law and the Gospel In the preaching of the law it worketh first a knowledge of God as he is God the Creator and preseruer of all things reuealing his most great maiesty power iustice and wisedome making vs to see him a mighty terrible Iudge extremely hating and infinitely recompencing all iniquity Then it goeth on by the Law to shew vs our sinnes against this God The knowledge of sinne is by the Law Rom 3. 20. especially reuealing vnto vs that the very first motions of our minde and will against God or our Neighbour are damnable sinnes and breaches of Gods Law Rom. 7. 7. Our sinnes being thus vttered vnto vs in the very particulars as well actuall as originall as well of omission as of commission in our thoughts words and workes
Christ can cleanse and make vs white as snow in Salmon How can any one great sinne hinder God from sauing any beleeuer when all his sinnes could not keepe him from reconciling him being an enemy to him Yea such as haue slaine the Lords Prophets and offered their Children and haue long both themselues liued in and by their authority maintained Idoll seruice as Manasses and Salomon yet haue found fauour vpon their beleeuing Yea he that by his sinne plunged the whole World with him into sinne and death yet was accepted and pardoned because he beleeued the promise And for lying in sinne you haue not abode in them longer then Dauid or Salomon or if ye haue yet as no sinnes so no space of time doth limit God God may forgiue what hee will and when he will to whom hee will The theese that had lyen in his sinnes euen till his last breath in a manner yet finding grace to beleeue found also the grace of pardon and was taken vp into Paradise there to be with Christ for euer That infinite mercy that can ouercome the multitude and vglinesse of our sinnes can also preuaile against our continuance in sinnes Aquila I haue so gone against the light of my knowledge in the course of my life as I am often in doubt lest I haue sinned that vnpardonable sinne yea I haue had feareful thoughts against that gracious diuine maiesty whereby I haue beene moued to feare lest hee had giuen me ouervtterly Apollos In all soule temptations lightly this of sinning against the holy Ghost is one as an ague goeth with all bodily diseases which commeth through ignorance of this sinne or the strong subtilty of Satan bewitching our mindes with feare of this sinne which is not any one nor many actions against knowledge but it is a sinne committed in speech being contumelious and reprochfull against Christ his person offices benefits doctrine and workes or against all of these yet not euery such speech is this sinne vnlesse it proceede of despight and malice of heart against the truth of Christ once knowne by the enlightening of the Spirit Also this sin is accompanied with an vniuersall and totall Apostacy from truth and generall pollution in maners quite contrary to the worke of the sanctifying Spirit wrought in them whereupon it is called the blasphemy of the Spirit Hee that dreads this sinne neuer did it Secondly he that truly greeues for any sinne neuer did this sinne Thirdly he that can pray for forgiuenesse of sinne if it be but with vnfained desire to be in Gods fauour he is free from this sinne Fourthly he that can speake honorably of Christ and can abide nay like the honourable mention of him and his truth by others neuer did this sinne Fifthly hee that hath any good affection to the Ministers or other members of Christ hath no part in this finne Lastly not he that feares lest hee be giuen ouer but knowes certainly that he is indeed giuen ouer to it is within the compasse of this sinne he that feares lest hee be in it is not in it for whosoeuer is in it knowes he is so this is most certain for he is damned of his owne conscience Aquila But when I am brought to see that all my sinnes are such as may be forgiuen me then I am troubled with this that I haue no faith My heart is dull and dead full of vnbeleefe and so all that can be saide is nothing to my comfort I feele no more then a stone or blocke except it be great feare sometimes and trembling of heart with excessiue dolour and heauinesse wherewith I am euen ouerwhelmed Apollos Faith is not feeling but apprehension feeling followes as a fruit of faith which is in assent not in sence What feeling had Christ when he cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and my soule is heauy to death Mat. 26. and 27. 46. In your heauinesse and sorrow you are conformed to your head and other his members to Hezekiah mourning as a Doue and chattering as a Crane Esay 38. 14 To Dauid complaining of the disquietnesse of his heart Psal. 42. and confessing that his teares was the water that washed his Couch Psal. 6. 6. To Iob whose greefe was like heauy sand and pressed downe his heart to the graue Then as wheate may be hid in chaffe so faith is often buried vnder the heape of our corruptions and discomforts Say not therefore ye haue no faith because your heart is dull and dead They of whom Christ saide that their hearts were slow to beleeue heauy and dull and foolish hearts yet did beleeue Luke 24. 25. And howsoeuer you thinke all to be full of vnbeleefe it commeth in you from hence because 〈◊〉 beleeue not now so strongly and comfortably as you were wont to doe and feele those motions of incredulity and distrust which you were not wont to feele And howsoeuer it goeth with you now as with a man in a great sicknesse that hath lost his tast and cannot iudge of meates yet you shall hereafter when health is restored say you were deceiued Finallie if it were some other besides your selfe that saide they had no faith I might be sooner brought to beleeue them And would giue them this counsell that though as yet they beleeue not yet not to despaire or cast off hope for they may beleeue hereafter so they carefully vse the meanes with waiting vpon God who calleth at all houres It is darknes in the night but at due time the Sunne ariseth so after darknesse of vnbeleefe couering the firmament of the heart there wil arise the Sun shine of liuely faith to all Gods Elect in the meane time to feele vnbeleefe with a mislike of it and with a desire of faith in Christ it is a good beginning as we haue heard hereof in the degrees of faith Aquila Sir you haue now well satisfied me in these obiections and in this whole discourse about faith I trust hereafter to heare you speake of the fruits of faith and namely to lay forth distinctly and cleerely our vnion with Christ by meanes of our faith and our communion with his righteousnesse and Spirit for iustification and sanctification which being matters of great importance and our allowance of time being already more then spent wee are to expect some new occasion for the further dealing in these things Apollos Ye say well in the meane time I thanke you for your good company and wish you much good by this conference The sixth Dialogue Of Vnion with Christ. The first maine fruite of Faith Apollos YEa Neighbour Aquila are you here already You got the start of me this time I perceiue your quality I may be your Physicion for I know your pulse If once you begin a matter ye loue to see the end of it you had neede to take in hand good things and with good aduisement seeing you are so constant in prosecuting enterprises
Well shall we consent and agree to set vpon onr worke afresh For therefore ye are come I am sure Aquila It is so I come about that very thing and haue here indeed somewhile expected you It is my quality you say right that first hauing made choyse of good and rightful things I loue to goe thorow stitch and like the constant builder to proceede in laying one stone vpon another till he come to the loouer But goe we to our taske it is about the first and cheefe fruite of a liuely faith which hauing but lightly mentioned before as in his passage a Traueller would looke vpon a faire Tower now we are to make a more neere and particular suruey and to dwell vpon it especially the point being of so good vse and great moment What will ye Sir that I doe moue to you by questions such things as concerne it or will you put vpon me the office of a replyer for though I cannot doe either to purpose yet looke what ye enioyne mee that I will frame my selfe vnto with my best skill Apollos Nay friend Aquila I meane to be your poser and examiner this day First let mee vnderstand from you by what plaine place of Scripture yee proue that there is such an vnion of the Elect with Christ and that faith is the instrument of it Aquila Herein I will quickly satisfie you if first I tell you that there is an vnion of seuerall persons in one Nature so are the Father Sonne and Spirit one Secondly there is an vnion of seueral Natures in one person Thus God and man are one Christ. Thirdly there is an vnion of sundry persons in one Spirit Thus the Elect amongst themselues and with Christ be one This vnion is our being one with Christ and Christ his being one with vs by the band of one Spirit For plaine places to proue such an vnion it is written 1 Iohn 1 3. That the Gospell is therefore preached that wee should haue communion with the Father and the Sonne Also it is expresly saide 1 Cor. 10. That we haue communion with his body and bloud 1 Cor. 6. 17. a Christian is said to be ioyned to the Lord And 1 Cor. 12. 12. Christ and his members are there affirmed to be one body Also the faithfull are saide to be his members Flesh of his flesh bone of his bone Ephe. 5. 30. All those places wherein we are affirmed to be in Christ doe proue this vnion In Iohn 17. 21. Our Sauiour praying that such as beleeue might be one in him and in his Father doth teach both that there is such an vnion and that faith is the Instrument thereof Which is cleered also by Ephe. 3. 17. That Christ dwels in our heart by faith Vnto which we may adde that which is written Gal. 3. 26. For yeare all the sonnes of God by faith in Iesus Christ. And in Iohn 1. 12. When Christ had said that such as beleeue haue this dignity done them to be sonnes of God he addeth which be borne anew not of flesh and bloud but of the will of God where he plainely teacheth that our vnion with Christ where by our new birth wee are brought forth into the Christian World to become members of Christ and children of God that this is effected by faith So as this our vnion with Christ it is not by touching or bodily mixture or as it were by souldering one soule into another but it is a spirituall vnion made in a spirituall manner and by a spirituall band an infinite diuine power creating faith in vs as an hand whereby we graspe and take holde on Christ applying him to vs that hee may be most neerely ioyned to vs. As the soule of man conioyneth together the head and the foote which be farre asunder so the mighty Spirit of Christ in an vnexpressable manner by meanes of faith ioyneth him to vs and vs to him notwithstanding all the distance between vs. Whence it is that though the faithful be ioyned to the very substance of his manhood as wel as to his godhead touching the operation and efficacy thereof yet it is a spirituall vnion being from the Spirit as authour by faith as a spirituall Organ and to this ende to leade a spirituall life Apollos Shew vs now more distinctly first what is required to the working of this vnion secondly by what similitudes it is exprest thirdly what is the necessity of it fourthly as also the commodities and fruites doe come from it Aquila Two things necessarily required to make this vnion one is donation or free gift of God the Father freely bestowing Christ his onely Sonne vpon the Elect and the Elect vpon Christ for thus it is written That he gaue his Sonne to vs Es. 9. 9. and for vs Rom. 8. 32. And on the other side it is saide The Elect are giuen to Christ I declared thy name to them whom thou gauest me out of the World Iohn 17. 6. And Iohn 10. 29. My Father which gaue them me is greater then all Vnto this donation we must adde a second thing which is a mutuall agreement and consent betweene Christ and the soule of an elect sinner each consenting to be one with the other Christ comprehends the faithfull soule as his owne the soule apprehending Christ as her own Phil. 3. 12. As in marriage the coniunction betweene man and wife is effected both by the gift of the parents each giuing their children to liue in maried state together and also by each party agreeing to bee ioyned to the other and so they twaine become one flesh and are no more twaine so it is betweene Christ and his Church And now to your second point this of marriage is one and the most frequent similitude whereby the neere coniunction betweene Christ and the faithfull is shadowed out The whole Booke of Canticles alludes to this similitude and by a continuall allegory setteth forth vnder it the most sweet and happy fellowship betweene Christ and his Church Againe in the Gospell the similitude of a mariage feast is vsed also Ephesians 5. 24 and Romans 7. verse 3. 4 5. and in many other places And indeed there is no straighter band in humane society then this of mariage by the band whereof and the vertue of Gods institution they which were before twaine are now no more so but as it were one body which light of Nature taketh notice of Therefore by humane Lawes there lieth no action against the woman the man being aliue shee is no person to be sued in Law so as this fellowship was very apt and meete to declare that most neere vnion which the soule as Spouse hath with Christ as her Husband For as in mariage the man communicateth his person and all his goods whatsoeuer hee hath to the woman so it is here Christ and all his good things whatsoeuer are bestowed vpon euery soule beleeuing in him
And as the woman hath giuen her selfe into the power of the man shee and whatsoeuer is hers be now become her husbands so it is here likewise euery beleeuing soule giues her selfe and all hers againe vnto Christ. The second similitude is of a naturall body wherein the head and the members are well knit and compact together by ioynts sinewes which as ligaments and bands doe so linke the members amongst themselues and to their head as they though they be distant one from another yet being all quickned by one soule they all make but one body So it is betweene Christ and the faithfull his members though they be many and by place diuided amongst themselues and all from Christ their head yet the Spirit of their head by influence from him descending into the members and quickening them with the life of grace they are by that Spirit as a band so fastened to their head through faith and amongst themselues through loue as that their head and they are mystically yet truly but one body as it is saide 1 Cor. 12. 12. As the body is one and hath many members and all the members of the body which is one though they be many yet are but one body euen so is Christ. Where note that to declare the neerenesse and euennesse as I may so speake betweene the beleeuers and Christ hee and they are all termed by one name euen Christ comprehending in this word the head with the members Hitherto also belongeth Eph. 4. 15. In all things grow vp in him which is the head by whom all the body being coupled c. The naturall body then and the head is not more one then Christ and the faithfull Which is further opened by the similitude of the Vine and branches and of grafting and planting grafts into new stockes Iohn 15 verse 1 2. c. Rom. 6. 6. As also of an house and the foundation whereon it stands Ephe 2. verse 21 22. Christ Iesus is the head corner stone in whom all the building c. For Christ is as the Vine we are as the branches he the noble stocke or roote of Iesse we the grafts he the corner stone we the building laide on him planted and grafted into him to be one with him and to grow vp in him The necessity of this vnion with Christ it is very great so as without it wee are for euer accursed For by Adam wee all fell from God lost his grace and fauour his Spirit his communion being through sinne become the very limmes of Satan held vnder his power as vassals and so seruants of sinne heires of hell and damnation thus deuoyded of all true life and bewrapt in the bands of sinne and death and so remaine till by vnion with Christ we recouer our communion with God his grace and Spirit his righteousnesse and life Hence it is so peremptorily auouched that Christ is the bread which came downe from Heauen of which whosoeuer eateth not hath no life in him And againe his flesh which he gaue for the life of the World is saide to be meate indeede his bloud drinke indeede and except a man eate his flesh and drinke his bloud hee cannot liue for euer Iohn 6. 51. In which Chapter these three things are taught about this matter First that we must haue vnion with Christ euen such as is betweene the nourishment and our substance And secondly that this vnion is wrought by beleeuing in him by seeing him by comming to him by hungering and thirsting after him And thirdly that vpon and by this vnion with Christ wee doe partake in the life of Christ which being originally in the Deity as it is written The flesh profiteth not it is the Spirit that quickeneth and againe God is life and that life is in God yet it is conueyed into the manhood of Christ personally vnited to the Godhead and from his flesh as from a Conduite receiuing grace of life from the fountaine of the Diuinity it is by the pipe of faith deriued into all his members To be short not more needfull that a naturall member as hand or foote be ioyned to the head that it may liue haue sense and motion or a branch to the Vine conioyned that it may take iuyce to fructifie then it is needfull for the Elect to bee coupled to Iesus Christ for spirituall life and euerlasting happinesse And now as concerning our last point moued touching the fruits and commodities of this vnion it is euident by this that hath beene spoken that all our good now and for euer dependeth vpon it it being the base and foundation of all the benefits whatsoeuer we haue from Christ whereof we can haue no part vnlesse we haue first a fellowship with himselfe by enioying of whom wee doe together enioy all his graces here and all his glory hereafter as his members are capable but not equally with the head euen as the branch once knit to the Vine partakes in all the life thereof And as the woman being ioyned in mariage to a rich and mighty King together with her coniunction to his person hath his maiesty glory and wealth 〈◊〉 farre as shee is capable of it and may be for her fullest contentment imparted to her Euen so it is heere in this spirituall coniunction that seeing Christ from his gifts blessings cannot be diuided but whosoeuer hath the one doth most certainly communicate in the other therefore the elect being vnited to Christ their head as there flowes from the naturall head to the lowest members power of life sense and motion so from Iesus Christ there is communicated to his spouse and his body the Church and to euery member all his riches and vnsearchable treasures both power of grace and possession of glory Heere of it being saide that Christ is made of God to vs Wisedome sanctification righteousnesse and redemption 1 Cor. 1 30. and that God hauing giuen vs Christ with him will giue vs all things Rom. 8 32. and in Iohn 6 54. All such as eate his flesh and drinke his blood that is haue vnion with himself first with his manhood and then by meanes thereof with his Godhead haue euerlasting life that is haue all his benefits euen to their eternall blisse and glory in heauen Apollos Friend Aquila it is very right so as you speak As a man cannot haue a farme as owner of it but hee hath all fruites commodities immunities royalties yea the treasure also if any happen to be hidde in the field is his so whosoeuer is owner of Christ by beleeuing in him and Christ againe possessing him as his owne the same party cannot but haue all the goodes and glory of Christ euen whatsoeuer is Christs is his his conception his birth his life his doctrine his sufferings his death his buriall his resurrection to glory his ascension his kingdome his Priesthoode his Spirit all the merits fruits profits
and effects of the former so farre as a member of Christ is capeable shall make for his full felicity they are assuredly his therefore it is written A childe is borne to vs and that he fulfilled all righteousnesse for vs and died for vs and that 〈◊〉 are dead and buried with him and 〈◊〉 with him and sit in heauenly places with him At a word what is done to any of his is done to him and what is suffered by any of his it is suffered for him and with him And on the other side what he hath either suffered or done it is all suffered and done for vs. For as mariage makes all things both for weale and woe common to married persons so fareth it in this spiritual marriage our sinnes and our miseries common to him eke his iustice and blessednesse common vnto vs. But for our better vnderstanding of the fruites we haue by this our vnion may it please you to draw them vnto some heads to set downe some speciall benefites thereof which containe the rest lest our speech runne forth at large without bound or limits Aquila I will agree to this therfore we are to know that being one with the person of Christ in sort as wee haue heard we are immediately one with his righteousnesse for our perfect iustification before God and also with his Spirit for our vnperfect sanctification before men Of Iustification by Christ the second maine fruite of Faith For the former that the righteousnesse of Christ becomes ours and that so soone as we beleeue by the instrument of our faith there is nothing more plainly spoken in Scripture as in Rom. 3. We conclude that a man is iustified by faith and God is a iustifier of him which is of the faith of Iesus Rom. 3 26. and often in the fourth chapter is Christes righteousnesse called the righteousnesse of Faith and affirmed to come to vs by imputation of faith Also 2 Cor. 5. verse last we are saide to be made the righteousnes of God in Christ. And Paul wisheth Phil. 3 9. to be found hauing the righteousnesse of Christ by Faith And Gal. 2 15. Wee know that a man is not iustified but by the faith of Iesus Christ. And infinite places of this kinde there bee which teach that Christ his righteousnesse is ours for our iustification and that this commeth to passe by meane of our faith as a spirituall instrument to conuey it to vs. Apollos For your better proceeding in this point I will request you plainly and yet in as few wordes as ye can to shew vs of iustification what manner of benefit it is and then in what manner we are iustified by faith Lastly what be the neerest effects which immediately flow out of the sense of this benefit Aquila I cannot well tell you what manner of benefit iustification is except first I shew you what maner ones we once were now are and should be Once we were created perfectly iust in Adam hauing a full conformity with God and his wil in our soule and body as it is written God made man righteous Eccles. 7 31. The minde in our creation was enlightned to perfect knowledge of God the heart framed to most willing obedience of his known pleasure there being neither thought nor desire nor affection in man which agreed not most perfectly to Gods will our bodies also being fit instruments to the soule for fulfilling all good things rightly desired and embraced of the mind and will This perfect righteousnesse had perfect happinesse ioyned to it as an vnseparable Companion Blessednesse can no more bee scuered from perfect righteousnesse then God and heauen can be diuided Now when Adam voluntarily transgressed he lost perfect iustice both for himselfe and for all that come of him who are not onely depriued of perfect innocency but haue the guilt of Adams disobedience to make vs sinners Ro. 5 19. By which meanes as also by our personall sinnes wee haue not onely falne from blessednesse but are become the children of Gods wrath Ephes 2 3. So as we are now plunged into a double euil one that for lacke of perfect righteousnesse wee are spoiled of all blisse hauing no interest in heauenly glorie and ioy the other that thorough the guilt of Adams and our owne disobedience to the Law wee are subiect to euerlasting misery and paine in hell Therefore we stand in neede of a double grace from Christ one whereby wee may escape damnation in hell the other whereby we may finde entrance into Heauen In which two things consists that saluation by Christ whereof so much and comfortable mention is made in Scripture For saluation it is a deliuerance from extreame euill and a recouering of supreame good Hence it was behoouefull and necessarie that Iesus Christ the second Adam to make whole the wounde which the first Adam gaue vs must performe a double righteousnesse one Passiue so called of Diuines to free vs from deserued death the other called Actiue righteousnesse to giue vs interest vnto eternall life which is not bestowed but vpon such as bring absolute iustice according to that is written Doe this and liue Againe Into the holy City shall come nothing that is vncleane and If thou wilt enter into life keepe the Commandements And because this perfect Iustice resteth onely in the person of Christ therefore of all men he onely it is that hath right to life euerlasting in heauen As it is he onely whose sufferings can free from eternall destruction in hell because of the infinite merit of his obedience It will then be worth our labour to speake something of this double righteousnesse of Christ for so a passage will be opened to talke of iustification with more profit The passiue righteousnesse of Christ is that obedience which hee expressed and performed to his Father in his passion and sufferings which began at his birth or cradle or at his conception rather and ended in his death or at the yeelding vp of his ghost Of this passiue obedience ye reade Heb. 5. 8. Though he were the Sonne yet he learned obedience by those things which he suffered and when that bitter cup was giuen him to drinke Math 26. he shewes his obedience in saying Father be it as thou wilt Howsoeuer humane infirmity would haue declined it Let it passe if it be possible yet his most holy will obediently submitted to his Father Not as I will And this commendations is giuen him of Paul Phil. 3. That hee was obedient to his Father to the death of the Crosse for obedience is shewed no lesse to God in suffering what he will then in doing what he wil and so our Sauiour approued himselfe and his obedience in suffering as all other euils which were sent vnto him in the whole course of his life hunger thirst cold wearinesse contempt reproch pouerty want banishment conflict with beasts with
beholding this iustice of the man Christ with the eye of his strict Diuine iustice he doth finde nought in it to mislike giuing to it De iure euen according to good right the recompence of life eternall This was well knowne to the wise and blessed Apostle Paul who hauing in his owne person yeelded obedience to the morall Law before his conuersion while he was a Pharisie but much better and more obedience after his calling to be a Christian yet beeing well assured that it could not stand before the tribunal of Gods iustice which condemneth the least obliquity and sweruing from the Law therefore hee renounceth it as hauing no affiance in it nay reiecting it as losse and as dung that he might be found not hauing his owne but the righteousnesse of Christ Phil. 3 6 7 Teaching all Christians euery where in his Writings namely in his Epistles to the Romanes and the Galathians to seeke after their perfect iustice from and in Christ agreeable to the rest of Scripture which exhorteth all men as they will euer enioy life to thirst hunger after the same For this all men are to take notice of that as Christ Iesus suffered not for himself but for sinners so the righteousnesse which he wrought in his humane Nature by his actiue obedience it belongeth to all his members being a mantle or robe large and broad enough to couer and cloath both himselfe and all his Howsoeuer our garments doe but fit one body at once to couer it yet this Wedding garment is able to apparrell both husband and spouse Christ his whole inuisible church which is the society of chosen and beleeuing ones There being deriued from his Godhead an infinite worth valew and price as to the sufferings of Christ so also to his passiue and actiue obedience and workes which he did that he might bee able to iustifie thereby all his elect These things being thus opened now a way is paued for vs to speak somthing of that worthy benefit of Iustification which according to your desire I will declare what manner of blessing it is and how it is by faith Iustification what it is Amongst sundry significations of this word Iustification which I meane not now to meddle with there be three especially to bee obserued One is to make iust which except it be with some commodious interpretation doth not agree to this matter wee haue in hand for we are not made iust by a iustice in our selues or in our persons Secondly it importeth as much as to declare shew foorth and allow for good and iust that which before was so as in that saying Wisedome is iustified of her children Luke 16 15. Againe the Publicans iustified God Luke 10 29. And in Iames 2. Abraham is sayd to be iustified declared such by his Workes In a third signification to iustify it is according to the vse and custome of speaking among the Hebrewes to absolue one from guilt and to pronounce him innocent As in all these places where Iustification is set against condemning as in the Prouerbes He that iustifieth the wicked or that condemneth the innocent both are like abhomination c. And Rom. 8. who shall condemne it is God that iustifieth and Acts 13 39. All that beleeue in him are iustified from all those things c. and innumerable the like places It is a word borrowed by the holy Ghost from Courts of ciuill Iustice where such as being accused and are found guiltlesse they bee by the mouth of the Iudge absolued and pronounced innocent In this third signification we vse the word here when we speake of the iustification of an elect sinner by faith not for infusion of iustice into vs whereby wee should be made iust by an inherent righteousnesse of our own nor for the declaration of our iustice before men but for the absoluing of a sinner from his guilt of sinne and the accounting or pronouncing him iust before the tribunall of God In which sence the worde is taken without all exception to the contrary in Acts 13 39 where it is written Through this man is preached to you forgiuenesse of sin and from all things from which ye could not be iustified by the Law of Moses by him euery one that beleeueth is iustified Which words in good and right interpretation can haue no other meaning then this That whereas by the Law by the workes and ceremonies thereof men could not be acquitted and assoyled from their sinnes yet by Iesus Christ so we by a liuely faith lay hold on him we shall bee absolued from our sinnes before the iudgement of Almighty God And in this selfesame meaning doth the blessed Apostle vse this word throughout his disputation of this matter in his Epistles to the Romanes and Galathians so as now it will be no hard thing to shew what benefite our iustification is Iustification of an elect sinner before God it is an action of the most mercifull God freely according to his couenant of grace absoluing him at what time he beleeueth from his sinnes before his Tribunall by the passiue righteousnesse or sufferings of his Son imputed and an accounting or pronouncing him for perfectly iust by the actiue righteousnesse of Christ imputed also vnto such a beleeuing sinner For the fuller vnderstanding hereof we are to note that in this worke of Iustification there is a two-fold action of God to be considered One is an imputation or reckoning of all our sinnes and the whole punishment thereof vnto Christ vpon whom as our surety or husband they were put by the decree of his Father and his owne election that he by bearing them might so acquit vs from them The second is an imputation or reckoning of Christ his whole righteousnesse both passiue and actiue to vs for the forgiuenesse of sinnes by the merit of the former and the acceptation of vs as absolutely righteous in his sight for the merit of the latter Euen as in a marriage where a Noble man marrieth a begger there is an exchange made The nobility and riches of the Husband is communicated to the Wife and her meannesse or extreme pouerty is now esteemed his or at least extinguished in his greatnesse so it fareth here All our faults and punishments were by imputation of God the Father so put vpon his Sonne as if they had beene his owne he was recounted a sinner yea made a sinner by it and the chastisements of our peace was vpon him he became a curse for vs and on the other side the whole righteousnesse of Christ both in his keeping the Law and in his suffering paine and death for the breach of it is so beeome and made ours by imputation as if wee in our owne person had suffered and fulfilled all So as a mans body and soule is no more his owne his sicknesse or health is no more his owne then vpon Gods imputation the passion and obedience of Christ are
ours for our Iustification For as Adams disobedience done in his owne person is yet the fault of all his Progeny euen to the subiecting them vnto death by Gods imputing it vnto them so is the obedience of Christ in his nature actions and sufferings though it sticke inherently in his manhood yet it is verily ours for forgiuenesse of sinnes and for our accounting righteous by Gods imputation of it vnto vs. The reason why this imputation is so requisite in the worke of our iustification it is apparent because the righteousnesse of Christ being without vs in the humane nature of Christ it can no otherwise become ours for the absoluing vs from our sinnes and getting vs to be accepted as iust in Gods sight then by a free imputation of it vnto vs. God accounting all the righteousnesse of his Sonne vnto the elect sinner to be his owne with the whole merit of it at what time hee beleeueth on his Sonne by a liuely and true faith And this the Scripture plentifully and plainely teacheth that as on Gods part there is this action of imputing Christ his iustice vnto vs so on our part there is required faith to beleeue the promise hereof made vnto vs by his Sonne Therefore it is so often saide that we are iustified by faith and Christ his righteousnesse is called the righteousnesse of faith in many Texts of Paul his Epistles Which is not so to be taken as if either faith were a part of righteousnesse which is wholy in Christ his doings and sufferings or as if the quality and action of faith did deserue remission of sinnes for it is vnperfect as all other graces are in vs and it selfe with the weake action of beleeuing needeth pardon from God neither as any mouing cause of our righteousnesse for it is the onely meere grace and vndeserued loue of God which moues him to offer and giue vs his Sonne with his righteousnesse Therefore it is written We are iustified by grace but we are saide to be iustified by faith as by an Instrument or hand created in the soule by the holy Ghost for this purpose that it may receiue apprehend or lay hold on the perfect iustice of Christ as it is promised and giuen vs of God in his Word of Grace euen the Gospell of Christ. As it is written that by faith we receiue the Sonne of God and the promise of the Spirit and the righteousnesse of God This way and meane of receiuing Christ his iustice by faith being ordained of God as meetest for our humbling and the praise of his owne free grace For when wee are brought once to see that we can bring nothing of our owne to iustifie vs hauing in vs manifest and manifold guiltinesse from Adam and our selues and an vtter emptinesse and depriuation of all righteousnesse and so are driuen to goe out of our selues to borrow and take from another euen from Christ his perfect iustice in his workes and passions performed and haue all this reckoned vnto vs for our owne both for remission of sinnes and for being accounted perfectly rightcous and that done freely by the gracious loue and fauour of God freely giuing his Sonne for vs to death offering him in his Gospel preached freely freely bestowing him with his righteousnesse vpon vs beleeuing in him and also freely working that faith by which alone it is whereby wee receiue both Christ and his iustice the due meditation 〈◊〉 must needs make greatly as for the abasing of our selues who are vtterly by this meanes put from all matter and cause of glorying and reioycing in our selues before God so also for the honour and commendations of Gods infinite loue and grace thus enriching vs with the most perfect righteousnesse of his Sonne vnto the full pardon of all our sinnes and freedom from the whole curse due to them and to the obtaining of such absolute iustice whereby we may stand iust before the seuere iudgement seate of God and worthy of eternall life through the same For this is a necessary consequent of our iustification or righteousnesse imputed euen the right of eternall life restored as it is written The iust by his faith shall 〈◊〉 where the Apostle argueth that righteousnesse is by faith because wee liue by faith Here are then two effects of faith one consequent to the other Faith bringeth vs to Iustice Iustice hath life annexed to it Hence it is saide Rom. 5. 17. That by the gift of this righteousnesse being receiued the Elect reigne in life that is they are made partakers of true and euerlasting life which no more can be seuered from righteousnesse then death from sinne which made the Apostle say that hee did liue because he did beleeue in the Sonne of God For then he began to liue the life which is eternall in Heauen at what time his faith did grapple on Christ his righteousnesse for this is the compact of God to giue life vnto him which keepeth the Law Doe this and liue which the faithfull doe in the person of Christ to whom they are ioyned by faith and therefore the right of life belongeth vnto them So as they can no more be depriued of eternall life in Heauen then Christ who already enioyes it Thus by the double righteousnesse of Christ imputed to the faithful both death damnation is auoided and euerlasting life and blessednesse is attained Apollos By this which you haue spoken so amply of this second fruite of faith to wit of Iustification before God it may appeare that they are deceiued which will haue it to consist onely in remission of sins whereas beside our absolution from sinne by the sufferings of Christ there is also an accounting of Christ his actiue righteousnesse vnto vs for our perfect iustice Secondly that they are in an errour also which doe teach it to be a grace or quality powred into our selues whereby wee leade a iust and holy life by which they say one is iustified Also the ignorant Christians seemeth to be in wofull case who neuer vnderstand what this great benefit meaneth But especially Gods children already called may herein see their owne most happy condition by their calling to the faith of the Gospell For as it fareth with a bondman ransomed out of bondage by his Emperour and aduanced to great dignity and riches or with a poore miserable man imprisoned for debt vnto his Prince and is not onely pardoned his debt but hath a very great treasure heaped vpon him being one which had neuer deserued well nay many wayes very ill of his Prince and from whom his Prince could neuer looke for any benefit and commodity to himselfe yet now by this most franke liberality and grace of his Soueraigne is suddenly of extreme poore and contemptible made very rich and glorious Euen so it fareth with Gods Children being through guilt of sinne and corruption of Nature and by actuall
hating our sinnes and we through sinne extreamly hating God the guilt of these sinnes and punishment being wholy done away freely pardoned by the merit of Christ his death we haue now God pacified towards vs of a more then terrible Iudge becom a most amiable and kinde Father taking vs now for sonnes by grace who were children of his wrath before Secondly from this peace and reconciliation made with God our faith accepting the mercy forgiuenesse by his gracious promise freely offered there followeth another peace and happy tranquility of our cōscience which the woundes and terrors of it being now healed and quieted vpon that blessed consent betweene Gods promise and our faith instead of accusing and trobling as it was wont doth now excuse and acquite vs before God with vnspeakable rest so as in the sense of Gods pacification towards vs wee are not greatly terrified with sinne and other enemies of our saluation and though there be some agreement likenesse betweene this true peace of a good conscience that false peace of a dead and benummed conscience inasmuch as both are quiet and free from trouble or anguish yet there is in other respects as great ods betweene them as is betweene heauen and hell 1. For first a dead conscience is quiet because it hath no feeling of sinne at all like to dead flesh which you may prick with a Needle and yet it feels nothing so is it with a sleeping dead conscience it hath no sense of sinne or iudgment and thence growes the quietnes it hath which will quickly be shaken off and horrible terror succeede in the roome with sin reuiueth And it is awaked by the knowledge and due consideration of the Law of God But an holy conscience washed in the blood of Christ it is quiet because it so feeleth sinnes as it 〈◊〉 them al forgiuen and God pacified and well pleased in his Son Hence ariseth her peace which passeth all vnderstanding 2. Secondly a benummed conscience though it be quiet yet it comforteth not but lyeth as asleepe there may be in the heart naturall liuelinesse and comfort by presence of things pleasing to nature but no spirituall comfort in the conscience at all whereas the truly pacified conscience hath great comfort in it selfe chearing vp the soule as a man is cheared at a feast a good conscience is a continuall feast 3. Thirdly the benummed conscience is awlesse feareth not the offence of God by sinne nor his wrath for sinne Whereas the truely appeased conscience is fearefull to offend such a Father though it now feare not damnation which is taken away by faith in Christ yet it feareth transgression breach of the Law as it is written of Iob that he feared alwayes and of 〈◊〉 that he feared God greatly Aquila Sir may it please you ere you passe ouer to the next fruite First to shewe how this blessing of a peaceable conscience is gotten and how to be preserued and also whether and how farre it may be lost and what is to be done to recouer it Apollos There are two wayes vvhereby to attaine this peace First by an vnfeigned displeasure sorow conceyued in our hearts against our owne sinnes breaking forth in an humble sincere and constant confession of them particularly so far as they are knowne with an earnest endeauour against them to shun all occasions of them Secondly by stirring vp the heart to embrace that promise of the Gospell which offereth to vs the forgiuenesse of them verily beleeuing them to be indeede remitted to vs from God according to that his mercifull promise which hee can no more breake then he can denie himselfe for he is true and cannot lie Now hauing thus gotten this peace of mind there must great care be taken for the preseruation of it seeing it is no lesse praise to keepe a treasure then at first to purchase it And it is to be kept euen by the same meanes by which it was come by euen by often and earnest confession of our sinnes and crauing pardon thereof and by beleeuing the truth of the promise but especiallie by a carefull auoiding of euery knowne sinne euen the least labouring still as to get a cleerer insight of sins by the lanterne of the Law so as they are more brightly known and perceiued to encrease in care and watchfulnesse ouer our hearts to stop the course of sin in the very thoughts and desires where sinne being yet but young and weake may most easily be crushed neuer let it goe so farre as to get consent of the will to agree to the motion of it much lesse the helpe either of tongue or hand or other part of the body to execute it for then it will raise vp new stormes and trouble the quiet peace of the soule Hereunto ioyne a desire and study how to performe all knowne duties which concerne vs in our generall or speciall calling with all vprightnesse and singlenesse of heart as in Gods sight out of loue to please him and true desire to glorifie him by our obedience to his will For great is the peace that they haue which walke in his Statutes saith the Psalmist Therefore that which we cannot doe perfectly let vs striue to doe sincerely and aske forgiuenesse of our imperfections and so it will come to passe that our peace will not onely stand to vs but encrease daily and more abound in vs. Whereas you desire to know touching this peace if it may be lost To this I answer you it cannot be lost none can take it away no more then reconciliation with God or faith can be lost Indeede this peace of conscience as touching the sense and feeling of it may be and sometime is lost as appeareth both in the examples of Scripture as in Iob Dauid Ezekiah and by the experience of others in these our dayes who either by falling into some grosse actuall sinne or by some fearefull security not looking to and watching ouer theirwayes or by some strong fit of temptation haue beene for a time in an hell of horror and soule-sorrow hauing no more sence of peace then a man vpon a racke doth feele any ease complaining in the anguish and bitternesse of their griefe that the terrour of God hath beene vpon them that their soule hath beene disquietted within them that they were cast out of Gods sight mourning as a Turtle chattering as a Crane weeping and watering their cheekes and couch with teares weary of life wishing for death finding nothing but feare on euery side yet all this while their liuely faith the remission of their sinnes their atonement with God and the blessed peace of minde comming thereof not vtterly lost but the sense onely of these benefits taken away it faring with them as with the Sunne which being vnder the darke cloudes yet is still in it selfe a lightsome creature and when it hath power to scatter the thicke cloudes giueth forth his
the meanes of Christ absoluing him from sinne and reconciling him to God he is set in the estate of Gods fauour hath thereby his conscience sweetly quietted enioying this liberty that he may vpon all iust occasions with holy boldnesse and reuerence come to the gracious God and enter into his presence So hee is established to abide and remaine in this happy condition for all eternity so as though through the malice of the Diuell and by his owne vnwarinesse and infirmity hee may be sore assaulted and shaken and take some deepe and dangerous fall yea so farre as for a time and in part hee may lose sundry tokens fruites and gifts and feeling of grace as peace of conscience ioy of the Spirit touching the sense of them cleerenesse of vnderstanding affection to goodnesse feruency of loue boldnesse in confession of God and such like as is very manifest in Dauid and Peter Psal. 51. 7 8 9. Mat. 26. yet he is preserued so sure as hee cannot possibly fall wholly and vtterly or for euer from that grace of attonement and such effects as necessarily depend thereon which they haue attained by the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ. Because God who loueth the Elect in his Sonne is vnchangeable louing to the end also he hath receiued them into an euerlasting couenant promising so to put his feare in them as they shall not haue the will to goe from him as hee neuer hath the will to cast out whom hee hath once embraced being also of almighty power to maintaine them in his fanour committing them to the custody of his Sonne to be kept who will lose none whom the Father hath giuen him by election and which come to him by faith And though they doe often of frailety sinne and that greeuously whereby they deserue to be forsaken perpetually yet are they kept from that vnrecouerable downefall Mathew 12. Hebrewes 6. and by the intercession of Christ haue all their other falles of weakenesse couered and pardoned His Spirit moreouer which is in them and which they haue of God in due time quickening that is dead strengthening that is weake raysing them vp from their falles stirring vp their repentance and faith and enabling them to keepe on their way vntill they come to the goale And therefore this I cōfidently hold vpon the promised grounds would haue all to receiue it as a truth of God which cannot deceiue the Elect being once by a liuely faith vnited to Christ through his Spirit iustified by his righteousnes hauing their sins forgiuen them by his death and reconciled to God to the sound pacification of their conscience before him and enioying this liberty of hauing accesse into the gracious presence of God can neuer by all the powers of hel be quite and wholly pluckt from this grace Howsoeuer they may as I saide lose for a space many fruites of grace and bee further worthy for their offences to lose all for euer if God should deale in rigor as he neuer doth nor will doe with those to whom he is become so propitious in Christ as to iustifie them to be reconciled to them and to admit them as children to come to him as to their kind Father The consideration hereof it is so farre from being to be feared or suspected lest it should breede security and Iull men asleepe in a carnall presumption as on the contrary it is very auailable to quicken and prouoke Gods children to all Christian care and watchfulnesse both because the faithfull are so preserued of God in the estate of Grace as that the same word which teacheth this doth teach also that their owne feare endeuour and vigilancy in the carefull vse of all good meanes and in diligent heed-taking to all their owne wayes is required heereunto as the means of their standing Let him that standeth take heed lest he fall 1 Cor. 10 12. And againe Bee not high minded but feare Rom. 11 20. And againe He that is borne of God preserueth himselfe 1 Iohn 5 18. And secondly because the elect vpon calling to minde such mercies of God towards them as they haue with their calling to faith will be moued vnto great thankfulnes to loue and honor such a God as hath brought them and setled them in such a blisseful sure and steddy condition so as they will not grow bold to offend liue securely if it were but in this regard that they will not bee found ingratefull to such a most kinde Father But when his honour and their owne safety lyeth vpon it that they eschew security and stand vpon their guard this double corde will strongly holde them vnto theyr dutie Aquila Now I would gladly heare you speak something to the fift fruit of our iustification by faith which ye called after the Apostle a Reioycing vnder the hope of the glory of God Where if it please you I wold haue you distinctly to shew mee these three things First what he meaneth by the glory of God Secondly then what is the hope thereof And lastly of reioycing vnder that hope so this fifte fruite will bee euidenced to me the better what it is Apollos In all these I will seeke to satisfie you and that with so few words as such things may well be vttered The glory spoken of Rom. 5 2. it is that blessed celestiall glory which beleeuers shall enioy in Heauen with God and it consistes first in a remoouing from them all manner of sinne and miserie from which they shall be absolutely free the euill of sin and paine shall touch them no more then it shall touch God Secondly in the presence and hauing of al good for soule and body and that in all perfection their bodies being made incorruptible strong bright and glorious as the Starres or Sunne in the Firmament their soules filled with holinesse abounding in all loue of God his Angels and Saintes and God mutually louing and delighting in them And all this as without measure so without all terme or end Earehath not heard eye hath not seene heart cannot conceiue and thinke of the greatnesse of this glory None know it saue such as receiue it This is called the glory of God not only in this regard for that it is his free gift which hee bestoweth on his sonnes and daughters but also for that himselfe liues in it and is infinitely cloathed with this celestial glory He dwels in inaccessible glory his children being made partakers of some beames of it as they are capable yet so farre as to their absolute felicity for euer For the second thing what may bee the hope of that glory It is that certaine and sure expectation of the beleeuing iustified soule to enioy in due time this heauenly glory and whatsoeuer serues to leade thereto as it is certaine of such good things as it enioyeth already For seeing the faithfull do hope for heauenly glory and their hope shall
fauourable vnto them as being well and throughly resolued that howsoeuer the force of Adams disobedience ioyned to their owne sinnes was very great for the spoiling of them of perfect integrity and filling them full of the infection of sinne to the casting them downe from an happy estate to infinite misery yet the grace of Christ in the merit of his passiue and actiue righteousnesse to wit of his sufferings and doings is of far more exceeding might and vertue for the ouercomming of their sinnes and the restoring of them to a farre more surpassing blessednesse then that they lost grace superabounding aboue sinne So as their hearts be replenished with ioy and glorying not onely because of the glory they looke for in Heauen but also in the vnderstanding and beleefe of that wonderous fauour which God the Father in his Sonne Christ and for his sake beareth to them here in their pilgrimage Aquila Ye are at the length come through this large Sea of doctrine touching Iustification and the nine neerest Effects thereof and are arriued safe at the doctrine of sanctification which followeth next in order to be spoken of but that we haue already by our former discourse exceeded the bounds of our appointed time Therefore it were meete we did now after this recreation of minde repaire thither where we may haue some refreshing to our bodies and if it please you Sir to goe with me wee shall finde little fare and great welcome Apollos Agreed friend Aquila so ye will passe your word to me that at our next conference ye will doe as much for my sake I had rather feede with you of your little with such great loue as you will sawce it with all then to haue great aboundance of good cheere with little sound good-will The eighth Dialogue Entreating of Sanctification the third maine fruite of Faith Aquila SIR I am glad ye are come I had so long waited for you that I began to doubt lest you had been someway letted that you could not haue kept appointment which I would haue beene sorry for Apollos No good friend not so I would haue sent you word of it if there had beene any such matter my late comming was occasioned by some vnlooked for affaires It is not with men of my function as it is with you and men of your condition who hauing lookt to your selues and some few which depend on you or haue to deale with you there is an end of your care but our care stretcheth further and is publike not priuate onely Wee know not when wee haue done so many sundry occasions of employment offer themselues so many soule cases so many soule necessities there be Sathan will find vs worke enough wee must be faine to wake when others sleepe and though I will not mention any party to you yet the matter about which I haue been stayed from you I will impart vnto you It was of one that did acknowledge himselfe to beleeue truly vnfainedly in Christ for the remission of his sinnes and yet doubted of his sanctification he found his heart so encombred and toyled with the vile corrupt motions of finne which arise vp in him as hee saide euen like sparkes out of a burning Furnace or as vapours out of a low moist and waterish ground Aquila See the notable malice and subtilty of that old Serpent when hee cannot preuaile against Gods Children in the maine to make them doubt of their faith and whether they haue their sinnes forgiuen them he troubles them about the bye and wil stirre vp doubting about their sanctification whether they be renewed If hee cannot come directly to strike at the heart yet he will haue a blow at the thigh or the leg so as hee may wound any where it is enough to him but with his malice he couples vnmatchable policy for by breeding scruple about our renewing by the Spirit of sanctification his purpose is to draw the temptation vnto this That therefore they haue no faith they are not forgiuen their sinnes they are none of Gods Children Apollos Ye say right and very truly touching Sathans drift in this temptation but herein Sathan declareth himselfe a sot to seeke to perswade one that hath his faith whole and vncrackt and doth beleeue himselfe iustified and pardoned that hee is not sanctified For whomsoeuer Christ iustifieth them at the same time he doth sanctifie These two workes in the soule of a Christian can no more be diuided then the two natures of God and man can be diuided in Christ for that death of Christ which hath merited remission of sinnes to the beleeuer the same hath merited the holy Ghost to be giuen him for the creating of holinesse in his heart And that faith which apprehends the merit of Christs death and obedience for iustification doth also lay hold vpon the vertue and power of his death and resurrection for the renewing of the minde and will vnto Gods Image of holinesse and righteousnesse Faith doth as well purifie the heart from filthinesse as deliuer it from guiltinesse of sinne Acts 15. And God the Father which gaue his Sonne to be righteousnesse made him also to be sanctification to vs not onely in that his holinesse imputed couereth all our prophanenesse of nature and life but for that the effects of his most holy Nature powred into our corrupt nature changeth both minde and will from darknesse of ignorance and sinne to the light of knowledge and holinesse Therefore Iustification and Sanctification be ioyned in Scripture as Chickens of one broode 1 Cor. 6. And Paul when hee had named the Ephesians Saints by calling and presently addeth the faithfull in Christ Iesus he would teach not onely who be worthy to be entitled Saints but also how the Elect come by this grace euen through faith in Christ Iesus faith as an Instrument receiuing as well the Spirit of Christ vnto sanctification or making vs Saints as his righteousnesse vnto iustification that wee may stand iust And thus faith of the truth and sanctification of the Spirit are put both together 2 Thes. 2. because they cannot be seuered but it is of necessity that he that beleeueth the truth of the promise for forgiuenesse of sin hath a power from the Spirit applying the vertue of Christ dead and raised for the destruction of sinne that he may walke holily And now we are thus put vpon this argument of sanctification if it please you wee will consider of it more distinctly and throughly Let me heare of you by what names this gift vseth to be called in Scripture and amongst Diuines and then how ye doe describe sanctification what be the causes and parts of this benefit in what measure we hold it how it is to be discerned in a mans selfe by what markes and such other things as doe concerne this doctrine Aquila As vnion with Christ incorporation into him engrafting or coniunction or communion with Christ doe all import
effected by force of Christs death applied vnto vs for that same diuine power of Christ which sustained his manhood in the suffering of death and gaue it merit to deserue for vs remission of sinnes the same godhead and diuine power worketh in the members of Christ thereby the death and mortification of sinne that it should be lessened in force as well as it wipeth away the guilt of their sinnes Hence it is saide Our sinne is dead by his body and againe Our old man is crucified with him because the body of Christ crucified did deserue for vs that his diuine power should kill and crucifie sinne in them which beleeue in his death The second part of Sanctification is the buriall of sinne which is the continuall proceeding of mortification euen as buriall is the proceeding of death sinne wasting in the Elect touching his vigour and strength euen as corpes waste and moulder in the graue this is wrought by Christ buried whiles that diuine might which preserued the body of Christ in the graue without putrifaction doth effect in the members of Christ by meanes of his buried body a greater degree of mortification euen to the burying and casting mould as it were on their sinnes then they are saide to be buried with him The third part of Sanctification is the quickening of the new man which consists of two parts to wit holinesse containing all vertues and duties whereby we are fitted for the loue and worship of God 2 Righteousnesse which hath all such vertues and duties as enable to loue and profit our neighbour in all things which concerne him This proceedeth from Christ raised againe from the dead that same diuine vertue which wrought in Christs body for the quickening and raising it being dead working also in the soules of his members in whom sinne is already wounded by his death and buriall for their raising vp and quickening vnto godlinesse that they may liue to God hauing strength to practise and doe the workes of God as before they did the workes of sinne For the Elect being coupled to Christ by faith and being one with his manhood touching the substance of it yet spiritually are also one with the godhead touching the efficacy thereof whence it is that the godhead which vttered force and might in Christ to vphold him in his death preseruing him from corruption in his graue and to raise him againe the third day the same godhead powerfully effecteth in Christs members the mortification of sinne by his death and buriall and newnesse of life by his resurrection As the graft which is set in a new stocke taketh iuyce and life from that stock into which it is newly planted so the faithfull partake of the vertue and power of Christ dead and raised with whom they haue communion being grafted into him by his Spirit through faith But this power of Christ communicated to the beleeuers to the killing of sinne and to the quickening of them to God and all godlinesse it doth not effect this worke all at one time but after a long time bringeth it to perfection They therefore are in a dangerous errour such as tendeth to the making of such swel as do beleeue it for truth and others to tremble which feare it may be a truth namely that the grace of Sanctification doth perfectly deliuer from sinne in this life so as thereby one shall be able to liue here without doing any sinne which is the next way to pitch downe headlong to despaire such as find not this perfection or to lift vp vnto hellish pride such as dreame they haue such a perfection Besides the falshhood of it all Scriptures both examples and testimonies crying the contrary and euery mans owne conscience and experience proclaiming aloude that we neuer ceasse to sinne till wee ceasse to liue and that the breath of sinne and our breath be both at once stopped In so plaine and vndoubted a matter proofe is needlesse yet the forme of prayer by Christ appointed to all Christians to be vsed of them as a prayer and patterne of all prayers to be made by them in their pilgrimage enioyning them to aske forgiuenesse of sinnes past to craue deliuerance from temptations of Sathan and sinne for the time to come and the Sacrament of the Supper which belongeth not to men which want nothing but to such as hauing many and great wants do in the sence of them hunger after Christ and his graces and finally the chastisements of God common to all his children which are corrected of God to preuent future faults and offences especially that iudgement of death which taketh hold of all doe demonstrate to euery one that is not wilfully blind that there is none of all the Saints which here in this World doe or can liue without sinne Therefore it will be good to spare this labour and in stead of prouing this which were as if one would bring a candle to giue light to the Sunne to declare rather the ends of Gods counsell therein and withall seeing sanctified persons haue still sinne stirring and striuing in them and bringing forth most loathsome fruites how they may perceiue that they haue the grace of Sanctification Apollos Friend Aquila I doe well allow of your purpose for I am of this minde that for many proofes in matters not darke nor doubtfull nor of great profit it is but waste time and rather bewrayes the vanity of the speaker his indiscretion at least then any whit auailes the hearer may it please you then to goe to those points which you haue propounded and sithence it is so that it had beene as easie for God in the regenerating of his Elect to haue freede them vtterly of sinne and put into them absolute holinesse as he did at first create man righteous voide of all corruption and this had beene much better for vs as one would thinke at once to be rid of such an enemy and had also more expressed Gods power to haue quelled it at one blow rather then by many strokes what might therefore be the reason why it is otherwise that his children after sanctification not onely haue sin still abiding but more troublesome to them then before Aquila That it hath pleased God to haue it thus the matter it selfe speaketh and being he is most wise therefore he will haue it so for most iust causes For touching his power there is no doubt but thereby he could haue caused it to be otherwise for how could not he quit the soule and body from sinne in the time of life that can doe it at death in one instant and his goodnesse is such that had it been more expedient for his children to haue had it so it had surely beene so But the truth is Gods way as in all other things so in this is the best way For as it was Gods wonderful mercy at all to giue them sanctification in any measure and so to put them out of that 〈◊〉
God that seeing Christ 〈◊〉 by his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put into him hath subdued his corruption giuing to it a deadly wound by his death so as though it still liue yet it can neuer recouer former 〈◊〉 and hath planted the image of God in his heart that he may beginne to be like vnto God in true holinesse and 〈◊〉 therefore it stands him vpon not to bee wanting to this grace of Christ but by all diligence and good endeuour to be an helper to it keeping 〈◊〉 vnder now Christ hath pulled it downe and 〈◊〉 it in the euill motions and desires that it neuer get a kingdome againe Being assured that he is bound as carefully and willingly to striue against sinne and to serue Christ as before his regeneration he semed sinne greedily fulfilling the lusts thereof And here of also fully assured that his resisting shall not bee in vaine but through the blessing of God shall further him to the vtter conquest rooting out of sinne at length Vnto which hee is animated nor onely vnder Gods 〈◊〉 promise of a full victorie in the end but also of a blessed fruite in this life and glorious reward in the next For if we serue 〈◊〉 by doing the will of Christ then our fruite shall be in holinesse and end in euer lasting life Wherfore the sanctified man thinkes all that he can doe to hinder the reigne of sin and to further his perfection in obedience to God to be all too little Apollos I thanke you good friend Aquila for helping me to spend the time so well and now our allowance and houre-glasse being run out we will close this conference For if you should enter vpon that hard combate which is in euery sanctified person betweene his old man and his new man I doubt you would sooner finde an entrance into it then a way out of it So wee will keepe that in store till our next meeting in this or some other conuenient place and now I challenge your promise for resorting home with mee where you shall haue little meat and a great deale of cheere Of the Spirituall combate betweene the Spirit and flesh Grace and corruption Aquila SIR I doe much thanke you for my yester-nights cheere and especially for the sawce that I had with my meate feeding me with the fruits of your lips as well as with the fruites of the earth Me thought wee had a Theologicall supper wherein our mindes were no lesse refreshed then our bodies so as I went from you well apaid with more then ordinary comfort But to see how that cunning and vigilant enemie which espieth and 〈◊〉 all our good and endeuoureth to bereaue vs of it did attempt to ouerthrow the ioy and gladnesse of my soule For within soure houres after I was gone in my first sleepe I had such a sodaine and bitter conflict as I haue had many yet to my remembrance neuer any so sharpe for the time But I thanke God for his helpe whereby the assault was repulsed ouercome Apollos Good friend Aquila I perceiue that olde enemy of yours and of all good men hath not done with you nor indeede will he till either you be dead or he cast and chained vp in hell I am not so sorrie for your greefefull combate as I am glad of your ioyfull victory ouer it But thus it falleth out that as after a great calme sodainly ariseth a rough storme and then returnes a calme againe so our ioyes euen when they are of the best sort are broken off with some greeuous euents inward or outward after which commeth matter of gladnesse againe So all things heere are vneertaine and keepe an vnsteddy and vneuen course euen as the Kings highway where it is sometime lowe as a valley sometime ouer hils and then downe againe into the bottome Thus is our way of Christianitie not all plaine and pleasant but some rugged stonie and cragged pathes we haue to passe through ere wee can come well to our iournies end But tell mee Aquila was your assault all outward in temptations from the fiend or felt you inward motions concurring your self aswell as satan combating against you Aquila Nay Sir it was a mixt combat Satan found friends in my owne bosome to helpe him euen mine owne corrupt heart which troubled me as much and more too neerer it was to me then that that damned dogge did but both together vnited their force and put me to the more molestation When all is well at home that I get the mastery of my sinfull affections I find my battle with Sathan more easie and my victory more easie but when my corruption rageth and ioynes side with the enemy then it goes harder Apollos The last time of our conference you did truly affirme that the worke of Sanctification is vnperfect during this life and that the diuine power of Christ by his death hath crackt but not wholy crusht the strength of the olde man which by mortification is left as a Souldier that hath his braine pan crackt with a blow who yet liueth and strugleth still with his aduersary or as a serpent that hath his head brused but wriggles still with his tayle and yet by his rising vp the heart is quickened and made a new man yet left as a weake babe or young childe who is in processe of time to gather strength and to grow vp to the age and stature of a man till hee come to a ripe age Now this truth Sathan knoweth as well as you or I by long obseruation as also being present in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where it is taught and being a subtill Spirit hee knowes that the old man howsoeuer daunted by grace and much taken downe yet is still ready to play his part to arise vp against that new creature which by the Spirit is framed in the heart And though he can neuer hope to heale his wound againe and to set him in former plight yet hee is content to conspire with remaining corruption and to vse it as an instrument to vexe and hurt the Children of God whom hee doth so extremely hate yea though he oftentimes be not afraide onely but assured to take the foyley yet that accursed fiend such is his malice will be doing and giuing enterprizes and onsets But now we are entred thus farre in this talke of the combate of a Christian and you Aquila doe so well know by experience what it meaneth I will put you to speake of it what you know and feele for my better instruction for one experimentall Teacher is better then ten other Aquila Indeed Sir my owne experience being holpen with that which you taught vs when you handled this point amongst other the workes of grace doth enable me to say somewhat of this argument and to fetch it from the beginning I doe well remember that you haue shewed both by Scripture and common experience especially that of Paul Rom. 7. 16 17. vnto the end of the Chapter a battell there is in euery
good Christian and that it is spirituall and inuisible fought by inuisible combaters and weapons At length you deliuered the necessity of this battle by the true causes of it whereof the first is the wil and good pleasure of God who as he ordained his owne Sonne so all his members to this spirituall warre and conflict thorow which they are to passe vnto the Crowne and the Kingdome which is prepared for them as in earth no man is crowned except first hee striue lawfully none diuide the spoile which first haue not abid the brunt of the battle and obtained the victory The second cause is the extreme malice of Sathan against Christ the head and for his sake against all the Elect his members whom he will neuer ceasse to tempt and that with most wonderfull subtilty as a Serpent long experimented and with outragious cruelty as a red fierce and fell Dragon or roaring Lyon if it were possible to draw backe againe the regenerate vnto his kingdome and hauing ouercome them to destroy them 1 Pet. 5. The third is the repugnancy and contrariety which is betweene the Spirit and the flesh in the new borne Christians in whom they continually striue together as the twinnes did in Rebeccaes wombe the Spirit striuing against the flesh and the flesh lusting against the Spirit without truce or reconcilement hell and Heauen light and darkenesse God and Sathan being no more contrary in quality then the Spirit and the flesh Here I call to minde that it was taught that in Scripture phrase Spirit grace new man law of the mind in this argument were Synonyma and of one signification also flesh old man corruption law of the members were equiualent termes importing one thing so as euery regenerate man hauing these in him consisted of a double man and had two men warring in him perpetually during his whole pilgrimage the old man which is that remainder of sinne that vicious quality deprauing and poysoning our Nature inclining to the breach of Gods Law which is vsually called the flesh That which is borne of flesh is flesh Iohn 3. 6. And abstaine from the lusts of the flesh 1 Peter 2. 12. And corruption as Ephe. 4. 22. The old man is corrupt for it causeth spirituall vnsoundnesse wasting all where it reigneth lastly Law of the members because in faculties and powers of soule and body it hath force of a king or law to command and enioyne absolutely in wicked men but in the regenerate with resistance And the other man is the new man which is that quality of holinesse created in mind and will renewed by the Spirit of God hence called The Spirit and Grace because it is freely giuen and worketh things gracious and pleasing to God and lastly The Law of the minde because there it gouernes as a Law or Commander Now the opposition and strife betweene these two men in the regenerate it is this in generall that grace or the Spirit or the new man doth raise and beget godly desires and affections tending to Heauen and hindereth the wicked motions of corruption and the old man and this againe engendereth vicious euill desires and thoughts crossing and hindering the good counsels and purposes of the Spirit and new man In which conflict sometime sinne preuaileth against grace carrying vs away and leading vs captiue as it were fast bound in fetters and chaines Rom. 7. 23. and sometime grace mastereth the lusts of sinne and remaineth Conquerour And this alwayes falleth out by reason of this combate that a godly person as he cannot doe what euill Sathan sinne and himselfe according to his will corrupt would doe because grace dwelling in him doth put an obstacle and barre vnto sinfull desires that they doe not breake out as blisters or botches in ones body so he is not able to attaine to performe either all that good which he would or in so good a manner as he would with such loue to God and his Neighbour as his soule wisheth and the Law requireth because remaining corruption doth oppose it selfe vnto the worke and motions of the Spirit Which is the thing whereof Paul had experience in his owne person and hath reported in Rom. 7. 14 15. both to the instruction of all and great comfort of the weake that by reason of dwelling sinne egging and tempting him to euill pulling and drawing him from God hee both did the euils which he would not and left vndone the good which hee would doe or did it vntowardly and weakely He could no sooner haue a good thought and motion tending to God ward but euill was present and at hand very ready to quench and smother This was the condition which hee was subiect vnto euen like the condition of a sicke man newly recouered or but recouering who faine would walke a mile or two for his health but when he begins to go his legges double vnder him for feeblenesse and he can scarse walke two turnes about his chamber Or as it fareth with an escaped prisoner which desireth to flye and his heart could serue him to go twenty miles or forty a day yet his bolts and fetters so comber him as he can scarse rid one mile a day So the Apostle felt and so much other regenerated persons feele themselues encombred with their sinnefull Nature as they are enforced euen when they do best to do their duties with care wants and imperfections Apollos In this spirituall combate there is a materiall thing to bee enquired into whether corruption do so farre at any time preuaile ouer grace as wholly to extinguish it for a time or the faithfull do but onely fall into a spirituall sleepe deepely forgetting themselues yet still retaining the life of Grace The case of Dauid falling so heinously sinning so deliberately lying so long being falne causeth diuers more then to suspect that the godly in their conflict with sin may take such a foyle as to haue grace wholly beaten out of their hearts for a season though not finally For it thoughts that he yeelded vnto sinne with his whole will which cannot be where any sparkle of Grace remaines Aquila Sir this is a Question which it were more meete for you to make answer to then my selfe howbeit seeing you will haue it so I will speake my minde in it When I reade in Scripture that God is vnchangeable his couenant euerlasting his calling and giftes without repentance his regenerating grace to bee an immortall seede to remaine in the elect to be such as none can take from them and that the life of grace can no more returne to the death then Christ can returne to dye againe and that Christ doth make intercession for beleeuers and that the Comforter which is giuen them shall abide in them for euer Vpon these and such like grounds I am resolued that howsoeuer sauing grace in the Elect may be wounded yet not killed battered and beaten yet not raced sore shaken yet not plucked vp by the rootes
of heart out of a true hatred of sin not to offend in any sinne as neere as euer frailty will suffer Whereas in all euill men what shew soeuer they make there is not this purpose but a full determination to liue in some knowne sinne or a great security in their generall course Secondly a true perswasion of heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sinne done that God will forgiue it through Christ when they aske pardon by him with hope of Gods goodnesse This is not in the repentance of 〈◊〉 Heereof it commeth to passe that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath of his repentance most excellent vse euen to testifie to him the soundnesse of his faith and to bee a witnesse of the forgiuenesse of his sinne and of his incorporation into Christ and finally of his saluation by him forso much as this true repentance can bee no where where first there is not faith and true reconciliation with God Thirdly true repentance causeth vs to abhor and leaue our sinnes because he whom wee know and belecue to be our Father in Christ so extreamly hateth them hath so infinitly punished the in his own Son Hypocrits leaue some sins but it is for other respects Aquila Certainly this is a goodly encouragement to inuite and prouolie all men without 〈◊〉 or dalliance to fall to repentance and to perseuer in the practise of it sithence our Christianity is thereby approoued to vs and we are thereby discerned from hypocrites and all euill men Apollos It is so indeed for what greater comfort in the world then to rest assured of our 〈◊〉 that it is vnfained and that thereby we are in Christ and bee partakers of his merites into faluation And baing greatly 〈◊〉 vnto this assurance by our Repentance how ought wee to apply our selues to the practise of it Howbeit there want not many other and weighty encoragements inciting vs to take this course For first of all to giue you a little 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 more full draught consider of the sundry and excellent promises made in the word to repentant persons not onely touching things earthly and transitorie for the remouing and freeing them from dangers calamities and plagues as that he will not iudge them which iudge them selues 1 Cor. 11 29. That toward such as amend their wayes and workes hee will repent him of the plague denounced Ier. 26 15. That from such as turne and repent he will turne his fierce wrath and repent him of the euill that he hath said he wil do Ionah 1 10 11. To such as rent their hearts and turne to him with all their heart he will repent of the euill Yea his promise runs not only for taking euil things from them but for temporall good things to be giuen them and that plentifully as that he will leaue a blessing behinde him euen a meace offering Ioel 2 13 14. That He wil open the Windowes of heauen and poure out a blessing aboue measure Mal. 3 9 10. They shal be a pleasant Land and a blessed Nation verse 11 12. That such as turne to the Almighty they shall be built vp and lay vp Gold as dust Iob 22 23. And Such as for sake their sinnes and cease to do euill and learne to 〈◊〉 well should eate the good things of the Land with innumerable such promises of euill things to bee turned from such as turne to God and good things to be cast vpon them euen in this life not onely made but performed Which if it should seeme but a light thing because it concernet but temporall happinesse yet it cannot be thought small that God hath passed his Worde and Faith for euerlasting good things such as belong to heauenly happinesse to bee bestowed vpon persons truly repentant as that their sinnes both guilt and punishment should be blotted out at the day of refreshing Act 3. So 〈◊〉 as that though their sinnes 〈◊〉 as 〈◊〉 and of a 〈◊〉 die yet they should be made white as wooll or snow Esay Y. 18. Neither onely remission of sinnes to escape from iniquity and death but an entrance into 〈◊〉 life duen saluation in Heauen 〈◊〉 from the Lordsown mouth assured those that turne that they shall 〈◊〉 die but liue Ezek 18. 27. yea and that for 〈◊〉 for the repentance which springeth from godly sorrow is to 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 7. 10. 〈◊〉 sarrow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnta soluation So as it 〈◊〉 that they which 〈◊〉 shall be saued as it is true that except we repent we shall all perish Luke 13. 3. Not for the merit of out worke of repentance done but because Repentance is a fruite of that faith whereby 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 on 〈◊〉 vnto saluation These promises shame not be end so 〈◊〉 made but also were as faithfully kept toward repenting Manasses Dauid Peter the woman in the Gospell and infinite other Adde vnto all this that euen the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of God when they lie in any known sinne without repentance or liue securely then they not onely lie open to temporary iudgements and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but all that while their prayers and all their 〈◊〉 of God is 〈◊〉 to God Mat. 5. 23 24. 〈◊〉 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of their saluation the Word and Sacraments become vnprofitable and can doe them no good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 26. 28. all their actions are polluted and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So on the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to God and repent they haue through faith an 〈◊〉 to God who will heare their prayers them 〈◊〉 accepted their actions and their labours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 738. Finally these things ought not a little to quicken vs to repentance and amendment of life that there is a day appointed wherein all shall be iudged Acts 17. 30. That repentance of a sinner doth glad Heauen and Earth Angels and men 〈◊〉 15. 10. That by meanes thereof our conscience is comforted and finds peace offences of our brethren auoided the Church edified by our example our profession beautified Sathan confounded God glorified Aquila I haue willingly heard you speake of encouragements to Repentance and I perceiue not a three-fold but seauen-fold coard both of wrath and loue to enforce and allure vnto it That euen as wee ought to esteeme present or future happinesse of body or soule of name or estate of our selues or our posterity the good of others or the glory of God and doe abhorre and will auoide the contrary then the exercise of Repentance ought to be deare vnto vs. But now Sir I couet to heare how you will direct one for the ouercomming of such hinderances as discourage and draw backe from Repentance which hath many lets euen as our faith hath Apollos Good friend Aquila wherefore serue these former encouragements but to strengthen you against discouragements when ye meete them But because haply it is hard rightly and duly to apply these encouragements when occasion is offered and it may be that there be some blockes and lets
perswasions to moue vs to embrace it whereunto wee are prouoked by other reasons also as namely because God hath so streightly and often commanded it Feare God 1 Pet. 2. 17. Againe Feare him that can kill body and soule Luke 12. which doth shew it to be a thing pleasing to him Also it is a gift of God yea one of his speciall and peculiar gifts which hee vouchsafeth vnto his Children into whom he hath promised so to put his feare as they shall neuer depart from him Ier. 32. Moreouer the feare of God is a mans best wisedome As it is written The feare of God is the beginning of wisedome it hath great promises euen of blessednesse made to it Blessed is the man that feareth God It is the garden of all vertues which are preserued by an ho'y feare of God it is the enemy of all vices which cannot raigne where the feare of God hath place Besides the examples of the godly and the approbation of the feare of God in them by the holy Ghost in Scripture should greatly excite vs to it Cornelius is commended for this that he was a man that feared God and all his houshold Acts 10. 1. Also Iob that hee was a man fearing God Iob 1. 1. Of Hezekiah it is saide that he made the feare of God his treasure Esay 33. 6. Also Obediah Ioseph Daniel and others highly praised in this respect As on the other side it is laide downe as a marke of a wicked man not to feare God Rom. 3. And as the want of it hath beene the cause that wicked men haue quite fallen away from God as in Pilate who feared not God but Caesar and he slew himselfe the like is to beseene in Achitophell and Iudas so the weaknesse of it in Gods children hath beene occasion of sundry falles as of Peters abiuring through too much feare of man and too little feare of God and in Dauid counterfeiting himselfe to be an Ideot or mad through feare of Achis King of the Philistians and sundry others which out of little feare of God and too much feare of man haue done euils or denied the truth Therefore Gods Children are to labour not onely for sound feare but for a great portion of it to haue it and to haue it abundantly as that it may preuaile ouer the feare of the flesh to feare God as he should be feared according to the greatnesse of his Maiesty and power Of trust or confidence in God Aquila AMongst other things spoken by you touching the feare of God your last words of fearing God accordingly be very worthy of all Christians to be thought on for it is not enough if we will doe our duties and be safe to feare God and to doe it sincerely vnlesse we doe feare him accordingly that is considering our owne infirmities how weake wee are and prone to euill vnable to doe well feeble to resist encounters and to beare off assaults stumbling at euery straw and fearing euery bush or shaking of a leafe and the malice and force the subtilty and guile of our visible and inuisible enemies how many furious and crafty they be also considering how sundry men stronger then our selues haue beene surprized and ouertaken by them moreouer the awefull Maiesty of God his terrible iustice and almightinesse so hating sinne so able to annoy and hurt sinners the infinite goodnesse and mercy and holinesse of God so louing the righteous so willing and able to blesse the iust all these being duly pondered it would be the duty and worke of all men to pray and vse all good meanes that they may feare God and feare him much and plentifully and continually And to speake truth how can hee bee too much feared that hath already done so much for vs of whom also we looke for so much from whom commeth all good without whom nothing can be had that is helpefull and healthfull vnto vs hee gouerning and disposing all things as he will hauing all creatures subiect to his will and pleasure Angels Men Diuels Beasts to make them friends or enemies Blessed is therefore the man whose heart is alwayes and much in his feare being afraide of sinning against God as of the greatest euill that can befall him and studious of pleasing God as the greatest good that can come to him But now Sir I would heare you proue vnto me that to trust in God is such a worke as the faithfull alone can doe it and wherein it consisteth and how it differeth from the confidence of wicked men and what be the effects and markes of it in those that haue it and how we are to be encouraged vnto it Apollos Of all other workes which be proper to the Elect there is least question of this whether it be appropriated to godly men alone because the Scripture euery where doth describe the wicked hereby as by an essentiall effectuall note that they trust not in God that there is in them an euill heart and vnbeleeuing that they with-draw themselues through vnbeleefe that they are full of vnbeleefe that they are faithlesse that their trust is in their riches or in the arme of flesh or in man and not in the liuing God Which plainely proueth that none saue the godly man can put his trust in God it being put downe as the property and vnseparable marke to a righteous man that his trust is in God that hee maketh God his buckler his tower his shield and defence his fortresse and bulwarke that his heart is fixed in God and stayeth on him The promises also which be made to them that they shall neuer be remoued Psalme 125. 1. but be established and stand like mount Sion that cannot be remoued that mercies shall compasse them on euery side that they shall not perish that God will be their God for euer that his saluation belongeth to them that he will neuer faile nor forsake them Heb. 13. And many such like do confirme to vs that to trust in God as it is a thing maruellous acceptable vnto God so it is a duty which euery one cannot performe but they onely with whom God hath stricken an euerlasting couenant This trust in God causeth the godly man to repose and place his affiance and confidence in God that through his onely goodnesse and power he shall not onely be safe against all enemies and euils so as not to be ouercome by them though he be assaulted but to obtaine whatsoeuer good thing is expedient for him to haue The ground of this their confidence it is first the knowledge of Gods nature that he is mercifull most true and almighty Secondly the consideration of his promises whereby he hath bound himselfe to doe his children good and to keepe euill from them Thirdly the great experience of Gods great care and kindnesse both to others and toward themselues For the first ground of our trust in God see Psal. 146.
appeare and of the gracious promises which hee hath made to his owne ordinances with earnest prayer to be enabled to doe their publike seruice in faith and godly reuerence with singlenesse of heart as in Gods presence and before his face Secondly in the time of those solemne actions remembring themselues to be vnder the eye of God occupied in his seruice and about their owne saluation they demeane themselues accordingly being full of most holy and heauenly motions sutable to that worke they haue in hand Lastly after their being in the Assemblies they labour to reape great fruite by the vse of the meanes for the encrease of their faith and obedience that as they bring with them vnto the Ministery of the Word an honest and good heart truly fully resolued according to the measure of grace receiued to beleeue and obey God hungring and thirsting after his graces offered and louing his Word and Sacraments as his blessed Ordinances and their owne soules nourishment so after the participation of the Word and mysteries they perceiue and feele by experience their strength against sinne and Sathan much encreased and their soules refreshed somewhat in all the graces of the new man euen as the strength and powers of their bodies are cheered and reuiued after a moderate wholsome bodily repast This sence and experience engendreth in them hearty thankefulnesse vnto God their Father for blessing vnto their good his own holy institutions which for their sinnes he might haue turned into a curse and withall it prouoketh them to attend and waite with reuerence loue and hope of more fruites vpon the sacred Ordinances of God making great conscience of sanctifying the Lords Sabbath in the religious and godly vse thereof Thus it is ordinarily with Gods Children when they partake in the Word and mysteries and if they happen to faile of these duties either for substance or degree they are very sorry and flye to Gods mercy for pardon and become more heedfull afterwards Of the religious vse of Gods Name and Sabbath Aquila NOw may it please you to speake of the Name and Sabbath of God and tell me how the godly must carry themselues in the vse therof as God may be pleased for herein outwardly there appeareth great likenesse betweene man and man The wicked and hypocrites in their common speech oathes vowes prayers confessions vsing Gods name and obseruing the rest of the seuenth day as diligently as any the Scribes and Pharises will be in the Synagogue on the Sabbath as well as Christ and his Disciples Apollos Indeede the sonnes of Sceua are too bold with the Name of Iesus Acts 19. 13. and so were the Priests with the Name of God We adiure thee by the liuing God tell vs c. Mat. 26. And as with the title of God they are too forward to meddle so where God hath stamped his Name vpon his Doctrine his Sacraments his workes they with their foule hands are sound to be too ready to touch it but all they get by vsing or abusing it rather it is the encrease of their guilt by prophaning so sacred a thing as his Name which is glorious and fearefull it being written That God will not hold him guiltlesse which taketh that Name in vaine Therefore the godly they very sparingly vse the Name of God neuer or sildome in their common speech vnlesse vpon great occasion and when necessity constraines and then they take it vp with great feare and awe lest they sinne in vainely vsurping it praying at least in their hearts and secretly desiring the Lord to guide them in the vse of his Name alwayes fearing to apply it to any light and trifling much lesse to any wicked purpose as to confirme a falshood or to cloke a naughtinesse And this is it which Salomon admonisheth vs of in that antithesis or opposition between him that sweareth and him that feareth an oath Eccle 9. 2. Hereby teaching that whereas sinners doe rashly vse the Name of God euen in an oath without reuerence or consideration of that awefull and wonderful Name contrariwise good men whensoeuer they are to vse the Name of God in an oath especially or otherwise they come to it with feare lest they offend by vaine vsage of it Now concerning the Sabbath they are thus affected towards it farre otherwise then euill men are they doe not supersticiously esteeme it aboue other dayes as it is a day but they ioy in the remembrance and vse of it in regard of the worship of God performed on that day and because of the benefit that doth redound to their soules for the building them vp into the sauing knowledge of God and of Iesus Christ his Sonne In these respects they doe long for the Sabbath till it come they cheere vpon it when it doth approach and in the weeke dayes they looke so well to their wayes keeping in all things a good conscience and so religiously walking in the workes of their vocation as when the Sabbath doth come they can with alacrity and ioy sanctifie it The men of this World doe not with more gladnesse gather in their Corne Wine and Oyle then God Children to keepe the Lords day Psalme 122. 1. I reioyced when they saide to me We will c. From the obseruation where of neither themselues nor such as be vnder their charge are held by such common hinderances as the World is letted by But as they breake through all 〈◊〉 that they and theirs may resort to the House of God so their desire study is to spend the whole day throughout publikely and priuately in such holy workes as are commanded of God and be sitting his day as reading singing conferring praying visiting the sicke prisoners exhorting comforting as occasion is offered reconciling of iarres examination of their Family how they profit by the publike Ministery lastly by meditation on the creatures For which purposes they make a cessation from all their owne seruile workes which on other dayes were lawfull to be done that they may be free to attend all holy duties of the Sabbath to obtain fresh strength of grace from the God of Heauen to ceasse all their life long from their dead workes the lustes of their sinfull nature so as 〈◊〉 here into a spiritual rest they may enioy at last an eternall Sabbath in Heauen Aquila What letteth but that now we may passe forwards vnto that ranke of good workes which doe concerne men seeing wee haue taken a taste of those workes which godly men and they onely can and doe performe towards God Apollos Yes friend Aquila there is a 〈◊〉 for wee haue a principal part of godlinesse yet to 〈◊〉 in which we may in no wise passe ouer and it 〈◊〉 Patience in affliction Aquila It was well remembred for there is no more necessary worke of godlinesse then this of patience we haue not more need of water and the aire then of
to succour others tryed and tempted in this manner being as willing as able to releeue them and they which are so tempted according to his example haue this reason of patience and comfort that they are conformed and made like vnto their Head in suffering the vngodly in their soule-trouble haue no such hopes nor build vpon any such foundations and therefore are without any comforts Of the tryall of Martyrdome Aquila THe other heauy tryall you call Mattyrdome let me heare what it is by what degrees men are brought to it how they are to prepare for it vpo what grounds they are to resolue for it and be patient vnder it Apollos A Martyr is any witnesse or one that beareth witnesse to any truth ciuill or religious but as it is an ecclesiasticall word it signifieth one that beareth witnesse to diuine truth not by common profession and practise as euery Christian doth but by extraordinary suffering of death or torment or both At a word he that is ready to giue his life for the testimony of Iesus is by an excellency termed a Martyr as Reuellation 2. 13. My faithfull Martyr Antipas was slaine amongst you where Sathan dwelleth It is not the manner of God at the first to call his Children to this tryall of Martyrdome but by certaine degrees after hee hath tried them with lesser and lighter afflictions when by long exercise they haue got good strength and vpon sure tryall of Gods mighty grace in sustaining and comforting them are growne to experience and good hope it being the wisedome of God to measure tryals according to the strength which men haue for hee will not tempt nor try any of his aboue their power 1 Cor. 10. 13. As in Abraham and Iob we may perceiue that God did obserue an order in their tryals and still their last were greatest and weightiest Thus it was likewise in his proceeding with the Apostles of Christ after they had beene tryed with mocking and taunts Acts 2. with imprisonment and bands Chapter 4. with scourging and stripes Chapter 5. at length they were called out to the hard and hot tryall of Martyrdome to teach all men that whatsoeuer tryals they shall passe yet still to looke for sharper and more bitter to be behind Also it pleaseth God in his wise dispensation to follow this course towards his Children that he doth not put vpon them this tryall but first warneth them of it before it come by his Ministers calling vpon them to prepare make ready against the euill day to take away all excuse from inconstant back sliders and to stirre vp the godly to arme themselues And wee are here to remember a further goodnesse of God in this matter namely that hee chargeth all the faithfull that they doe set their loue vppon Christ and his truth as in respect thereof neither friends kinsfolke brethren and sisters parents husbands wife or life it selfe ought to be so dearely loued but that when the comparison is betweene these things and Christ with his Gospell they be ready to manifest that they were lesse loued by their willingnesse to lose and forgoe them all for him And surely it is a most reasonable thing that Iesus Christ being of more worth and excellency one that is higher then the Heauens ful of grace and truth in whom all treasures of wisdome are hid the God-head dwelling in him bodily Colos. 2. 9. and also hauing loued vs best and out of his loue towards vs hath done much for vs in that after many great crosses and calamities of his life he suffered the extreme paine of a shameful death giuing his body and soule an offering for our sinnes and calling vs to the knowledge of himselfe by his Word Therefore of all things which be deare vnto vs he should be most deare and best beloued so it is but equall our loue towards him should carry vs so farre that if need be and God will haue it so wee should be ready and forward as alwayes in affection so when time requireth actually to lay downe our liues for his sake For if we must so loue our euen Christians our brethren in Christ as that we be content to lay downe our liues for them I Ioh. 3. 16. how much more doe we owe this to our elder brother Christ Iesus from whom we receiue the spirit of adoption If Subiects to please their Prince or for the honor and safety of their Countrey Souldiers at the commandement land for the loue of their Generall Finally if men in their priuate quarrels be willing to hazard their liues and doe put them in perill how equall is it that the like be performed by vs for Christ who is our life and for his blessed Word of life Especially seeing it is a condition which hath layne vpon the shoulders not onely of Prophets Apostles and other godly men and women in all ages but such as our Lord himselfe was not exempted from and let not the seruant looke to be in better condition then the Lord. It is well with the Disciple to be as his Master is neither is it onely an equall condition but it is also a blessed condition Christ hauing pronounced them happy which shall lose bonse or land wife or children or life for him and his Gospell Mathew 19. 29. Aquila It is a thing apparant that there is great equity in this condition of denying leauing our liues for Christ. Had one man a thousand liues hee owes them all to him who being Lord of life and glory was content by giuing his life a ransome for our sinnes to redeeme vs from so great destruction and by his word to call vs to so great saluation But now let me heare what you will say to the necessity of this condition and what is to be done of Christians which will prepare themselues for it that they may be found ready if it fal to be their lot For many Christians neuer thinke of it and few doe thinke it will be their portion and such as doe lacke preparation Apollos If you meane the necessity of affection and will to die for Christ then I say it is necessary for him that will liue the life of a Christian to be willing in his affections to die for Christ for except wee hate father and mother and our owne life also wee are not worthy of him Mathew 10. 37. And againe 〈◊〉 a man 〈◊〉 himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow Christ he cannot be his Disciple verse 38. As no man that is a King goes to 〈◊〉 with another King but he will sit downe and reckon whether he be able to giue him the encounter nor any man that is wise will goe to build but first he will sit downe and cast his account to see whether he haue where with to finish the building So it stands euery one vpon who takes vpon him the profession of Christ to try his heart whether hee can be content to prefer Christ aboue all
nor of God Againe we are commanded to keepe our selues from Idols I Iohn 5. 21. and in the second commandement we are forbid either for any religious purpose to make or serue any Image Exod. 20. 5. 3. Also our bodies being created redeemed and sanctified of God their seruice is due to him not to Idols which rather then godly men would honour with their presence and seruice but of their bodies they haue chosen to die Dan. 6. 15 16. Because it hath in it both offence of God and his Church and for the losse of house goods or lands there is this comfort against it that the Saints shall receiue a house made without hands for their earthly Tabernacle 2 Cor. 5. 1 and an Inheritance in Heauen immortall and vndefiled 2 Pet. 1. 5. For the losse of friends we shall be ioyned in fellowship with the Angels and spirits of blessed men Heb. 12. 23. For wife and children the care of them must be eased with meditatiō of Gods prouidence who is our God and the God of our seede Gods prouidence is his childrens inheritance and howsoeuer it be greeuous to part from them yet it is more greeuous for their loue to hate and for sake Christ for whose sake and loue wee are commanded to hate all Mat. 10. 37. Besides we part from them for a time to be ioyned with them for euer I Thes. 4. 18. Comfort your selues with these things Aquila But death is terrible and very fearefull saith our flesh to vs. Apollos Flesh that is carnall and corrupt reason is an euill counsellour as well as carnall friends let men rather thinke how fearefull eternall death is for natural death we owe it to nature to which wee must pay it let vs pay that to Christ to whom we much more doe owe it and who can preserue it for vs in another world And how should death be fearefull to beleeuing Christians to whom it is an end period of all their sinnes and sorrowes an entrance and beginning of endlesse ioy perfect righteousnesse at a word a passage from death to life from mortality and misery to immortality of blisse and glory wherein hee that hopes to liue cannot greatly feare to die Aquila But the paine of burning is too sharpe and greeuous we could be content to die so it were not in the fire that is most terrible Apollos Yet whom God calleth to that or any other violent and terrible death he can enable them to endure it the power of his might can strengthen them Secondly he will enable them for he hath promised neuer to exceed the power of the tempted I Corinthians 10 13. Thirdly he hath enabled sundry to beare it yea such as feared it most when they came to suffer were made valiant as Master Sanders Lastly consider a while how terrible hell fire is being incomprehensible and euerlasting Aquila But wee cannot abide death with torment Apollos Torments of Tyrants in earth haue both measure and end so haue not hell torments Aquila May we not dissemble or denie for a time the Doctrine of the Gospell without danger of denying Christ himselfe Apollos The Scripture saith Ye cannot Mat. 10. 33. Luke 11. 26. In the former place it is saide He that denyeth me in the latter is added or is ashamed of my words I will denie him and be ashamed of him To deny Christs Word is to denie himselfe who is knowne to vs by his Word Aquila But when wee feele our selues too weake to stand to it to the death what then is to be done Apollos Such as cannot endure violent death let them suffer exile let them liue a while out of their countrey which cannot giue their liues to Christ let them be Martyrs in desire that cannot be so in deede and effect yet hearty prayer may obtaine that strength which is lacking In the meane time such weaknesse is to be confessed and bewayled Aquila We know not what to say when we come before the persecutors Apollos Christ Iesus will giue you a mouth wisedome against which they shall not be able to resist therefore trust in him and relie vpon him Remember poore men and women in Queene Martes time Aquila Their threatnings are very full of terrors Apollos Yet God is to be feared more then all tyrants which can but kill the body God can send body and soule into hell fire Againe of all threatnings feare these Luke 12. 9. Aquila Their faire promises if we wil yeeld doe allure much for wee haue their word for life and preferment to be giuen vs vpon our yeelding Apollos They promise these things as the Diuel their master promised the World to Christ to corrupt him and yet he could not performe it The issues of life are in Gods hands and for preferment he lifts vp one and pulles downe another I Sam. 2. 6 7. and it is the greatest misery to be great without God Secondly if God should spare life what is the gaine of a transitory life to the losse of eternall life Thirdly consider that Christ maketh better promises and surer to such as cleaue to him in life and death 2 Tim. 2. 11 12. Rom. 8. 17 18. Mar. 16. 28. Luke 9. 24. Marke 8. 36. Luke 12. 8. Mat. 10. 32. Thus farre of such good workes as containe our duty to God which yet are to be practised with respect of edification to men as all duties to men are to be done with desire and regard of pleasing and honouring God in them The eleuenth Part of the Dialogue Of such good workes as concerne our Neighbour Aquila SIR ye are well met here shall I tell you what I feele in my selfe Me thinkes it fareth with me as it vseth to doe with a trauelling Horse which the neerer hee drawes to 〈◊〉 eyes end the more he takes heart to him 〈◊〉 more couragiously in hope to come shortly 〈◊〉 baiting and resting place so it is with me I find myself now more eagar and sharpe set vpon this 〈◊〉 then when we began for I haue good hope that wee shall at this our meeting and conference draw it to a conclusion We are come now to those workes of grace which the true beleeuers are to doe towards their Neighbours I pray you Sir which are these and amongst these being many what shall wee first take vp to deale in Apollos I could be well content our hands were eased of this labour for I begin to feele my selfe scarse well but it wil not be laide out of hand I doubt so soone as you make reckoning of for with my good will there shall not be one peculiar grace of Gods Elect but some thing shall be saide of it My desire is as much as lyeth in vs that this our glasse shall discouer to a Christian all his dignity by his calling and all his duty being called towards his Caller To proceede therefore in our purpose all our duty to man is comprehended in this one word Righteousnesse as
our loue as touching the manner and measure and end we haue sundry rules giuen vs in Scripture the first is to loue our Neighbour as our selfe Now as the Apostle saith No man hateth himselfe but wisheth all good to himselfe Mat. 22. Now such as with a right ruled loue doe loue themselues they doe not onely wish but procure such things to themselues as indeed be wholsome and good for them both for their bodies and soules abandoning such things as be euill and noysome to either haue they neuer such apparance and shew of good and profit euen thus ought euery man to loue his neighbour And according to the second rule looke what things by the iudgement of sound reason wee would haue done or not done to our selues these things wee should be willing to haue done or not done to another be he friend or foe Mat. 7. Also in what measure and degree we desire that our Neighbor should loue our selues in the same we ought to loue them againe The third rule is to loue as brethren 1 Pet. 1. 22. That is such loue as naturall brethren ought to beare both for manner and measure one to another such euen such so hearty and vehement ought the loue of Christians to be amongst themselues knowing that they are brethren by a brotherhood consecrated and ratified in the bloud and death of Christ our elder brother who hath charged vs as one who may command vs to loue one another as he hath loued vs Iohn 13. 15. Loue one another as I haue giuen you example And againe a new commandement I giue you that ye loue one another as I haue loued you Iohn 13. 15. That so ye loue one another this is our fourth and best rule to direct vs in our brotherly Christian loue which must be vnfained without hypocrisie or counterfeiting earnest without coldnes indifferency constant without change or wearinesse free without respect of our owne pleasure or profit and very great not small and meane for thus Christ loued vs for in that he would besides his doctrine his miracles his example of life his prayers in all which he witnessed his loue vouchsafed also to giue himselfe to such a death and that for his enemies This declareth how sincere free constant and exceeding great his loue was towards vs wherein though we cannot equall him by attaining to his perfection which is not possible nor required of vs yet wee must be like to him in our loue and striue to come so neere as wee may which is both required and possible And herein the true Christian doth differ from the false that the one in his loue looks vpon Christs loue as his patterne and thereto frameth his owne but the other hath no thought at all to imitate Christ as he hath him for no Sauiour so he makes him no example The godly Christian who beleeueth him to be a Redeemer doth labour to follow him as a guide and sampler as in this duty of loue so in all other Offices of Christianity Apollos I haue heard your rules of neighbourly and brotherly loue let me heare some of your best reasons to moue and perswade both to begin and to perseuere in exercising of this loue for it is as needfull to haue good grounds of our loue as a good guide of our loue He is as much too blame that loues without reason as he that loues without rule Aquila As there be certain common reasons which may perswade our loue towardes all men whatsoeuer they are to wit because they are the creatures of God our flesh and bloud of one kind with vs our Neighbours also being made after Gods Image hauing a commandement to loue them and the examples of godly men who haue done good to all out of an affection of loue and because wee would haue others to loue vs so there be peculiar and speciall reasons to moue vs vnto the loue of our brethren which hold the same faith that we doe and of these I will giue you but a light touch it shall be sufficient to name them our labour ought to be more in practising them then in speaking of them It were enough that it is the will of our Father which is in Heauen that his Children should dwell in loue and that he hath by his example gone before vs first louing and still louing vs and that he hath made vs partakers of the same grace to be all euen Christians brethren fellow heires members of Christ his seruants his friends his children his Spouse his inheritance also that except we truly loue one another we cannot loue God nor be loued of him nor haue any assurance that wee be his people or looke for any blessing but for all wrath from him yet vnto all this if wee adde the sweete pleasure and delight which is in brotherly loue behold how pleasant and the great and manifolde commodities which arise and grow thereby behold how good it is for brethren to dwell together in vnity our loue being for comfort and delight like that precious oyntment and for profit like that deaw of Hermon and withall if wee doe consider the bitternesse of hatred being as gall and wormewood and the hurt which it bringeth all this would greatly preuaile with vs to stirre vp and encrease mutuall loue Apollos Let me stop you a little in your course what be these profits which loue brings and the discommodities which follow the wants of it Aquila Whiles Christians are ioyned together they are strong as an army where the Souldiers keepe euery one his ranke or as a wall where the stones be all ioyned together Also we may boldly come with our selues seruice vnto God vnder hope of acceptance wee thereby greeue the aduersaries of God which see our accord through loue and reioyce the godly we spite Sathan whose kingdome is more hindered by vs the more that loue doth abound we glorifie the word of God and glorifie our profession our prayers haue more feruency and fruit As on the other side through lacke of loue amongst brethren God and his Gospell be dishonoured Sathan pleased and the wicked made glad our safety hazarded because a house diuided cannot stand our prayers hindered and reiected with infinite discommodities which lamentable experience teacheth men better to know then any mans speech can doe The Apostle aymeth at the great commodity and necessity as also at the excellency of loue when he bids vs aboue all things to put on loue and when hee likeneth it to a bond calling it the bond of perfection Colos. 3. 14. because it knitteth our selues and our duties together and vnto sinewes and ioynts Ephe. 4. As being of that vse and force in the mysticall body as sinewes and ioynts in our naturall body be to ioyne and fasten all the members together these things as also to consider that loue remaines in heauen when faith and hope faile must much prouoke vs both to esteeme and to exercise
grauity to deliuer their humblenesse from contempt Now after these things thus touched we are next in order to speake of gentlenesse that grace and vertue which makes a Christian milde and tractable apt to please loath to displease easie to be entreated ready to yeeld to others and to doe them any fauour with reason a vertue wherein Christ excelled being most gentle and wherein euery true Christian is his follower treading in the steps of his curteous and gentle disposition Doe you declare good friend what the gentlenesse of a regenerate Christian doth differ from that which vnregenerate persons doe practise for euen amongst these is a certaine gentlenesse to be seene The chiefe Captaine at Rome being an Heathen man gently entreated Pauls kinsman Acts 23. 19. and Publius the chiefe man in the I le of Melita 〈◊〉 entertained Paul himselfe Acts 28. 7. And we may reade of many others which were no Christians who seemed gentle milde curteous and faire spoken farre from frowardnesse and rigour Aquila Ye speake truth but the difference is manifold and apparant for first Gods Children in exercising gentlenesse preferre them that doe feare God being most gentle towards them euen in that respect without regard to their owne pleasure or profit others are gentle indifferently to all and least of all to such as be good Againe the godly will not be gentle when they must be seuere whereof Moyses is an example being a man maruellous gentle yet in Gods cause exceeding seuere and stout Exod. 32. 27. It is contrariwise in men vnsanctified who be sharpe and bitter in their owne but remisse in Gods quarrell Thirdly the faithfull take care to doe nothing out of their gentlenesse to please men which may displease God hereof wicked men haue no care Moreouer the godly will not turne their gentlenesse to the hurt of any man because hee loueth his neighbour therefore he lookes circumspectly to it not to doe him euill by his gentle dealing with him Fnally he is afraide least either he be too rough or too gentle being sorry if hee swarue at any time from the meane crauing pardon euen of his weaknesse that way a thing that euill men doe not trouble themselues withall And as in gentlenesse so in long-suffering the godly doe approue themselues to be the Elect of God guided by the Spirit and partakers of Gods Image for whereas euill men are either stupid and soft being without sence of iniuries done them or else too hasty and proue too eager soone and suddenly moued many times vpon light and meane occasions The godly haue such apprehension of trespasses done against them as that they forbeare wrath bridling and biting in their anger being hardly prouoked vnto displeasure waiting long and with much patience for the amendment of their enemies after the example of their heauenly Father who is slow to anger and of great patience as themselues haue felt him to be towards themselues by good experience as well as by his owne testimony in Scripture Therefore as God being deeply prouoked by their owne sins hath mercifully borne with them in his long-suffering nature so they endeauour to deale with others that offend them expecting if God at any time will giue them repentance for their sinnes But as for euill men howsoeuer they are contented to suffer and forbeare yet it proceeds not out of care to obey the commandement which requires forbearance or to follow the example of God but either because they are not able to hurt such as trespasse them or for feare of some hurt to themselues if they should by impatiency breake out into any extreme and hard courses or else they couet to be commended for quiet and patient men But that we may goe forward with this long-suffering and forbearing there goes hand in hand forgiuenesse of offences ouer against vs when vpon due consideration that God hath straitly commanded vs to forgiue one another and for his Sonne Iesus Christs sake hath pardoned vnto vs our owne manifold and great sinnes we are moued againe for his sake and for duty sake to pardon our Neighbour all wrongs done by him against our selues that it may be a testimoniall to vs of our owne forgiuenesse before God Therefore we hold our selues bound not onely to keepe our selues from reuenge but we are ready if our offending brother repent and shew himselfe desirous of reconcilement with vs to receiue him into our fauour according to the counsell of our Sauiour willing to forgiue our brother when he commeth vnto vs saying It repents me and after his owne practise embracing sinners vpon their conuersion in which point there is one special caution to be obserued of vs and it is this that wee may sometimes vnfainedly forgiue and loue where wee haue iust reason not to repose trust and confidence None more charitable then Christ forgiuing his mortall enemies yet where hee found 〈◊〉 couered with guilefull deceitfull words and countenances he would not commit himselfe vnto such Iohn 2. Herein all true Christians must endeauour to resemble and be like to their Sauiour out of their loue forgiuing quarrels and iniuries as out of their wisedome they proue slow to giue credit for hee that commanded vs to be simple and innocent as Doues loath to be harmefull vnto any euen hee also hath enioyned vs to be wise as Serpents looking to our selues lest we take hurt by easily trusting such as without cause haue declared themselues to be our enemies whatsoeuer pretence of friendship or promise they make The old and common saying is Trust not a reconciled enemy Herein naturall men doe very much faile either being loath to forgiue their enemies or doing it fainedly or with great indiscretion without heede taking and being made more wary for afterwards Apollos There be two other vertues to wit goodnesse and meeknesse let me know wherein they consist and how neere the wicked come to them and yet haue them not Aquila Goodnesse it is that vertue whereby Gods Children being good in themselues by participation of Gods goodnesse they also endeauour to doe good and to be beneficiall to others after the patterne which Christ hath set them Of whom it is written that hee went about doing good either by some word or deede priuately or publikely ordinarily or extraordinarily to mens bodies or soules he was profitable and good All true Christians be thus affected they are sorry when any houre hath passed without doing good to themselues and others watching for opportunities and according to their meanes endeuouring vpon offered occasions gladly to helpe all men being carefull to take good when they can doe none Adde hereunto that they are not onely sorry when none are the better for them but that the good which they doe is so little beseeching and begging mercy because they are so empty of goodnesse and barren in doing good things and as by their goodnesse they are carried in a great desire of being helpeful
to her husband in respect of his prehemmence in graces and authority Ephesians 5 verse last the husband loueth his wife as a daughter of Israel and member of Christ and out of this holy affection of loue careth for her I Peter 3. 7. beareth with her infirmities cherisheth instrusteth her and protecteth her Fathers are not bitter to their children but in mildnesse wisedome bring them vp in the instruction and nurture of the Lord Ephesians 6. 3. Children doe loue reuerence obey their Parents for the Lord Ephesians 6. 1. witnessing their honour towards their Parents especially in this that they make no choyce of their trades and matches without their priuity and counsell Seruants not out of feare with eye seruice but in singlenesse of heart study to please their bodily Masters Ephesians 6. 5. 6. and these againe are willing to doe that which is equall and iust both touching the bodies and soules of their seruants knowing that they also haue a Master in Heauen Calosians 3. verse last The Pastor feedes his flocke not for filthy luker nor by constraint 1 Peter 5. 2 3 4. but out of a willing minde shewing himselfe an example to the flocke The flocke and people on the other side acknowledge him and haue him in singular loue for his worke sake I 〈◊〉 5. The Magistrate kindly tendreth his inferiours as his children Iob 29. and mildly ruling with iustice giueth praise to such as doe well and punisheth those that doe euill 〈◊〉 13. 2 3 4 5. And finally inferiours and subiects obediently submit themselues vnto their Rulers as vnto Fathers doing with readnesse their iust commandements and with patience bearing euen their vniust punishments Thus haue I giuen you a certaine taste of these singular and speciall duties for neither time nor your infirmity wil permit vs more largely to discourse them onely this I thinke good to adde that it is the property of all sauing graces which wee haue named and of the others which we haue forgotten for who can remember all to waxe and encrease till they come to perfection as the young fruites groweth till they be ripe it pleasing God to follow his first graces with new supplies till he haue finished the worke which he hath begun 〈◊〉 1. 4. So it is not with the wicked whose gifts decrease and at last 〈◊〉 and fall away as leaues in winter fall from the trees they being as the chaffe and dust which hauing no stedfast firmenesse be therefore soone 〈◊〉 Psalme 1. 5. Whereas the godly which are as a tree planted by the Riuers side brings forth fruite in due season whose leaues are alwayes greene and look whatsoeuer they doe it prospereth Psalme 1. 3 4. And now good Sir if it please you we will shut vp this our conference with this short Prayer O eternall most wise mighty and mercifull God we giue thee thankes for all thine Elect whom thou hast according to thine eternall will called effectually by the Ministry of the Law and Gospell to thy Son opening their eyes to see him to be their Sauiour and their hearts to embrace him with affection being satisfied with him and so working in them that most worthy gift of faith whereby being vnited and incorporate into him they partake with his iustice both actiue and passiue for their perfect iustification before thee and with his Spirit for their vnperfect sanctification in this life hauing power giuen them both to abide the combate with remaining corruptions and vpon wounds and foyles receiued in that encounter to arise by repentance and also to be able to witnesse the truth of their repentance by the constant exercise of all good workes furnishing them with needfull graces of all sorts for the sincere seruice of thy Maiesty and of their brethren according to their seuerall estates and degrees good Father we blesse thy blessed name for these workes of thy grace in them all and pray thee heartily both for their continuance in grace vnto the end til they be perfectly glorified in heauen and that the rest of thine Elect who as yet are not gathered thou wouldst hasten their conuersion and calling to fulfill in them also the good worke of thy pleasure with power encreasing them in all goodnesse protecting them against all enemies and euils till the great glorious appearing of thy Son Iesus to whom with thee and thy holy Spirit be all praise honour and glory now henceforth and for euer Amen Finis laus Christo nescia finis Errata IN Page 6. Line 20. Reade capable p. 13. l. 6. r. seruice for shew it p. 16. l. 31. let the comma be after them p. 19. l. 3. r. desert l. 17 r. for a certaine time as they c. p. 21. l. 26. r. Sacrament p. 29. l. 15. r. calling p. 36. l. 13 after proceed r. and goe l. 19. r. it after vpon p. 37 l. 14. after keepe r. all p. 51 put comma out in l. 5 8. after mind and will p. 55. l. 8 r. as for is p. 59 l. last r. wrought p. 611 l. 9. r. belong p. 69 l. 6 r. matter p. 91 l. 27 r. effects worke p. 111 l. 5 r. against the first Table after sinne l. 24 after Christ r. because they are such p. 116 l. 8 r. vnexpressible p. 110 l. 27 r. onenesse l. 28 r. so is Christ p. 151 l. 13 r. premised p. 161 l. 10 r. hard for yours p. 162 l. 22 r. friend p. 179 l. 26 r. worke p. 188 l. 22 r. after then to be exalted p. 190 l. 11 r. falles p. 192 l. 32 r. comfort p. 201 l. 26 r. is after it p. 202 l. 6 r. of sinister death p. 223 l. 26 r. rich man for Diues p. 248 l. 16. r. halted l. 27 r. renewed p. 250 in the margin r. meetnesse p. 263 l. 10 r. that euill which is our owne afore being p. 287 l. 27. r. awefull p. 290 l. 7 r. gardian p. 303. l. 13 r. outward rest p. 307 l. 8. r. these p. 308 l. 2 r. as that after mind p. 328 l. 10 strike out the latter onely 2. workes of the Spirit proper to the elect Calling and Gifts A double calling 1. Outward common to all 2. Inward peculiar to some Difference between inward and outward calling Effectuall calling hath 3. inseparable cona panions first vnion with Christ 2. Iustification 3. Sanctification Effectuall calling what it is Inward means No name giuen c. Outward and inward Law Spirit of feare Gospell Spirit of adoption The time of Calling 1 Tim. 4. 6. 2 Tim. 3. 1. 2 Kings 22 1. Persons Who not 1. Pagans Creatures teach somewhat of God but nothing of Christ. 2. Proud Iusticiaries 3. Scorners 4. Impenitent or obdurate finners 5. Worldly wise 6 Worldlyrich Example in the Laodiceans Reuel 〈◊〉 7. Idiots Lunaticke 8. Borne deafe and dumbe Who