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B10086 The safety of appearing at the day of judgement, in the righteousness of Christ: opened and applied. By Solomon Stoddard ... Stoddard, Solomon, 1643-1729. 1687 (1687) Wing S5709; ESTC W22065 210,940 366

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Gospel truths but men may be taught by the spirit and yet be very unable to give a resolution of many Objections the Disciples were taught of God that Jesus was the Son of God Mat. 16.17 and yet knew not what to say to that Objections that Elias must first come Mat. 17.19 tho a Christian cannot answer many Objections about the sufficiency of Christs Righteousness yet he knows that that will satisfie his heart that it is sufficient namely that God gives this testimony to it and invites him to venture upon it 4. Consider in what way the spirit of God works this conviction and assurance and that is by a spiritual illumination of the mind the spirit of God is not wont in adult persons to reveal this Doctrine in any extraordinary way he works this conviction in such adult persons only as have the knowledg of the Doctrine by hearing and reading of the Word men must not expect to be taught that in a miraculous way which they may learn in an ordinary way neither would this be suffieient to work a through conviction and assurance of it a man may have things revealed unto him extraordinarily by God that has no Faith as Balaam neither does the Spirit assure men of this in way of testimony the Spirit of God is wont to testifie and witness some things to the soul of the Saints the Spirit it self beareth witness with our spirits that we are the children of God Rom. 8.16 but he does not in that way reveal unto men the truth of the Doctrine of the Gospel but he openeth our eyes to see the truth of it the Spirit gives us eyes to see and also the actual understanding of the truth of the Gospel he puts a principle of spiritual understanding into us by a work of creation ye were sometimes darkness but now are ye light in the Lord Eph. 5.8 he also assists us actually to discern the truth of this way of salvation by Christ while the soul is hearing reading and meditating of it he puts a light into him discovering it to be true and sometimes while the soul is thinking of his misery the spirit brings to remembrance some word and with that puts in a light into the soul that satisfies the heart in the truth of the Gospel and this is wrought these three wayes 1. The Spirit helps us to see the truth of this in the testimony of God in his Word 't is not any inward testimony that our Faith depends upon but the testimony of God in his Word and the inward work of the Spirit is to help us to receive the sure Word of Prophecy and depend upon that God witnesses in his Word plentifully to that that there is salvation wrought out for us by Christ that he has redeemed us purged away sins brought in everlasting righteousness and in this testimony of God we see the truth of the thing it self the Spirit satisfies the heart and clears it up to him that this is Gods testimony that it is no deceit that it is not any device or forgery of man under a pretence of Gods testimony but that this is the very Word of God the Word comes in Gods Name and has many characters of divine authority in it and the soul is satisfied that it is Gods Word 1 Thess 2.13 ye received it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the Word of God The Spirit also satisfies the heart in the faithfulness of God naturally men have no assurance of the faithfulness of God though they profess it but the spirit convinces the soul that the Lord is a God of truth I know him whom I have believed 2 Tim 1 12. he does with Sarah judge him faithful that has promised and here though his soul be precious to him yet he can quietly venture it upon his Word 2. The Spirit helps us to see the certainty of this in a way of reasoning from other Principles which we do undoubtedly receive there is an assurance by arguing from such things as we are certain of this is called the demonstration of the spirit 1 Cor. 2.4 when once a man is principled in that foundation that the testimony of God in his Word is certain and infallible then he is assured of such principles as these that Jesus Christ who was our Surety is exalted to the right hand of God that sinners are invited to rely upon the blood of Christ that Christ has fulfilled the righteousness of the Law for us for these things are plainly laid down in the Word of God he had the notion of these things before but now he is assured of them and being assured of them God help him to argue from them the infallible certainty of salvation by Christs righteousness John 16.10 the spirit convinces of righteousness because I go to my Father so a Christian sometimes after he is come to Christ finds by experience in that way the sanctifying and comforting presence of God with him and from hence he argues and is more established in the Doctrine of salvation by Christ 3. The Spirit helps to see the glorious excellency of God and Jesus Christ and thereby the great Objections of his heart do vanish away and fall of their own accord there are some less Objections which arise for want of distinct knowledg and from a mis-understanding of some places of Scripture which though they prove temptations yet don't wholly hinder the workings of Faith but the main Objections of the heart were that God could not find in his heart to pardon such sins as they have been guilty of and that the Law threatens them with ruine but the spirit discovers unto the soul the excellency of God in Christ the riches of Gods grace and the preciousness of the righteousness of Christ and then those Objections fall Psal 36.7 How excellent is thy loving-kindness O Lord therefore the sons of men put their trust under the shadow of thy wings Joh. 17.3 This is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent Consider 5. That this is a great work of Gods Spirit to convince men and assure them that it is safe appearing in the righteousness of Christ it is a matter of exceeding great difficulty to give entertainment unto this truth and hence it is that many men are never satisfied in it all their dayes they continue all their lives long under the means of grace and yet never come unto the knowledg of this truth and many others whom God has perswaded of it have been long before they were satisfied though they have been full of inward troubles and fears and thereby put upon it to be inquisitive into the way of salvation yet were long before they came to Christ their hearts were unsatisfied about their safety in so doing and after prevailing and clear conviction doubts are ever and anon arising in their hearts and this difficulty must needs be very
nature that does compel him to shew mercy to any man God had been infinite in mercy if it had pleased him never to exercise any there are voluntary inclinations in God to exercise mercy but no natural inclinations but his merciful nature is that whereby he can find in his heart to exercise mercy God is not of such a nature as to be uncapable of pitying and being kind there is no opposition in the nature of God unto acts of mercy his nature is such as that he can be willing to shew kindness and do good the merciful nature of God is a power to be willing to deal graciously with with his creatures God is of such a nature as that he can be willing to do good to those that are unworthy willing to pardon those that are guilty c. and this is called his merciful nature the words of Moses serve to clear up this Numb 14.17 18 19. Let the power of my Lord be great according as thou hast spoken saying the Lord is long suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity transgression and sin pardon I beseech thee the iniquity of this people according to the greatness of thy mercy And the greatness of Gods mercy or merciful nature consists in this that he can find in his heart to do any thing that is an act of mercy his merciful nature reacheth to every thing that is an object of mercy there is nothing which it would be an act of grace or mercy to do be it never such wonderful grace but God can find in his heart to do it 't is true he can't pardon sin in a way contrary unto Justice for that would not be an act of grace but of injustice nothing that is an act of grace does exceed the grace of God and herein lies the greatness of his mercy the greatness of Gods power lies in this that he can do whatever is possible whatever is an act of power so the greatness of his Wisdom lies in this that it extends it self to every thing that is known the greatness of his Justice lies in this that he can find in his heart to do every thing that is an act of Justice so the greatness of his grace consists in this that there is no gracious act but it falls within the reach of his gracious nature and herein the grace of God doth exceed the grace of any man or angel is it an act of grace to send a Mediator for lost Sinners to bring worthless man to eternal glory to pardon multitudes of sins sins against light love covenant to convert all a mans children these and whatever else of the like nature may be thought on fall within the reach of divine mercy yea the reason why he does not pardon the sin against the Holy Ghost the sins of devils and reprobates is not for want of mercy but because of the soveraign determinations of his own will Rom. 9.15 That God is thus great in mercy may be made manifest from those two considerations First That there is no corruption in God to make him uncapable of performing any act of grace men can't find in their hearts sometimes to do acts of mercy because their lusts are too strong for them it will not suffer them their corruptions bear such sway that they cannot be willing sometimes mens covetousness is such that they cannot shew acts of mercy so it was with Nabal 1 Sam. 25. sometimes pride and passion so prevail that they cannot forget an injury they have a spirit of reverge and cannot satisfie their hearts without avenging themselves but God is altogether free from corruption there is no evil disposition in him to hinder him from doing good Mat. 7.11 he has no evil properties to be an impediment unto him men are ill conditioned which makes them unwilling to do good but God is of unsported purity and holiness Isai 6.3 God is not subject to any wrongful passions the Scripture does often attribute anger unto him but that must be understood so as is agreeable unto the nature of God whatever injuries God receives he never is transported with passion he can overlook millions of offences his grace is such as can prevail over all our guilt hence his grace is said to reign it overcome all those objections that are in the way of the exercise of it Rom 5.21 there is nothing of any unruly passions in God 1 Joh. 4.8 God is not subject unto envy he can find in his heart to advance his creatures unto eternal felicility he does not soorn or disdain that dust and ashes should have fellowship with him God is not of such a spirit that he can't bear that man should be happy but he can delight to make him so Mic. 7.18 By this we have gained one step namely that the grace of God does exceed the grace that is in sinful man which may be of advantage to us for there is that vanity in the heart that we are prone to measure the mercy of God by our own and to allow him no more grace than we find in our selves and others like our selves which God witnesses against when he tells us That his thoughts are not as our thoughts Isai 55.8 but there is a further consideration that will make it appear that the Grace of God does exceed the grace of the most glorious angel in heaven which is the unlimited perfection of Gods nature the Angels have a stinted measure of perfection the excelling of their nature is not sufficient in order to some acts of grace as in other respects they are not sufficient so they have not grace enough to pardon such wrongs as God pardons to be at such cost for mans salvation as God has been at 't is true that they do approve of and rejoice in all those acts of Grace that God does but such actions do exceed the grace that is in their hearts they have such imperfection of grace and mercy that they can't perform those acts of mercy that God does therefore where God would shew his sufficiency to pardon the iniquities of his people he tells them that he is God Hos 11.6 this infiniteness of Gods grace is the foundation of our faith for such things as we are utterly unworthy of Psal 36.7 how excellent is thy loving kindness O Lord therefore the Sons of men put their trust under the shadow of thy wings There is an infinite Ocean of grace in the heart of God whereby he can bestow the greatest gifts upon his creatures that their natures are capable of this is plain from that absolute liberty which the Scripture does ascribe unto God in all his actions he does all things after the counsel of his own Will Eph. 1.11 I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy Rom 9.15 which shews there is no limitedness in his perfection to be any restraint unto him or a reason why he does not pardon and save these and those his glorious excellency is
that presents it self for his relief is the reformation of his sins and diligent applying himself unto the duties of Religion and they are travelling this way after peace sometimes many years with a neglect of Christ men ought indeed to seek their peace with reformation but not by their reformations but men are mightily wedded to this way of seeking salvation by their own duties this is one of those things that make the work of conversion so exceeding difficult it is a difficult thing to bring men to be earnestly seeking salvation and when they are brought unto that it is very difficult to bring them to seek it in the right way they sought it not by faith but as it were by the works of the Law Rom. 9.32 but men have no ground at all for this it is safe appearing before God in the righteousness of Christ but it is no ways safe for men to trust in their own righteousness when men make their own righteousness the ground of their confidence they do but flatter themselves and please themselves in a vain delusion their own works can never procure their acceptance with God. In prosecuting this Vse let us consider 1. Who they are that seek salvation by their own Righteousness 2. What righteousness they do attain unto 3. What are their temptations to seek their salvation in this way 4. What confidence they have in their own righteousness 5. How they do to hide it from themselves that they trust in their own righteousness 6. The vanity of mens trusting to their own righteousness The first thing to be considered is Who they are that seek salvation by their own righteousness But before I give you their characters it will be needful to premise two things 1. They that seek salvation by their own Righteousness do not expect salvation from the covenant of works as it requires perfect obedience in order unto life they dare not adventure their souls on the strictness of the Law though they had need to do so if they seek life by their own works but they do not thus they look upon their righteousness as that which will allay the Anger of God and be an inducement unto God to save them that which will win the good-will of God and draw the heart of God to them yea they look upon their righteousness as that which will bring God in their debt that God is beholden to them for their service yet they do not lay claim to blessedness by the strictness of the Law for they know and confess themselves to be sinners they pray for forgiveness which things are inconsistent with justification by their own works the Jews did not stand upon a strict covenant of works Rom. 9.31 32 they sought it as it were by the works of the Law but these men do make such a mixture of the covenant of works with the covenant of grace wherein the covenant of works is predominant they make some profession of the Gospel and yet adhere to a covenant of works therefore the Apostle tells them that if they be circumcised Christ shall profit them nothing Gal. 5.2 they made account to have some benefit by Christ so they made account to have some benefit by grace therefore the Apostle tells them that whoever of them are justified by the Law are fallen from grace they did not pretend to the strictness of the Law but took in Gospel Principles into their way of justification and yet were legal all the while this makes the Apostle dispute in that manner against them Rom. 6.11 if it be grace it is no more of works otherwise grace is no more grace but if it be of works then is is no more grace otherwise work is no more works they mingled grace and works together they made their own works the foundation of their hopes and yet took in the plea of Gods grace and Christs Righteousness they thought their own works did contribute something and the grace of God through Christ would make up their defects 2. The Saints of God have a great deal of a self-righteous spirit remaining in them and men must not conclude because they find such workings in their hearts that they are self-righteous no doubt many of the Galatians that were tainted with the doctrine of the Legallists were really converted Gal. 4.14 there was somewhat of this spirit in Peter Mat. 19.29 we have forsaken all what shall we have therefore as the people of God are not compleatly delivered from other corruptions so not from carnal confidence there is such a spirit working and sometimes prevailing in them but there is also in the Saints an evangelical spirit Phil. 3.3 we rejoyce in Christ Jesus and have no confidence in the flesh they allow not themselves to have any confidence in the Flesh These things premised take these characters of those men that seek salvation by their own righteousness 1. Such men as magnifie themselves by their duties and frames they count highly of themselves because of what they do pride is the very spirit of self-righteousness The self-righteous man sets a great price upon what he does he loves to be thinking upon what he has done how his heart melted in such a duty how his affections were drawn out and enlarged in such a prayer what he has done and suffered in the cause of God he loves to chew over duties again as things that do commend him to God while another man is magnifying free-grace and the Righteousness of Christ the self-righteous man is idolizing his own services falls in love with his own beauty is taken with his own carriage and thinks that God and man should be taken with him he thinks his works do ingratiate him with God and draw the heart of God towards him so the Pharisee Luke 18.12 I fast twice in the week and give tithes of all that I possess he minds God of it what a choice man he was and thinks that God has not many such servants as himself he counts his own righteousness his riches Rev 3 17. he is rich in prayers rich in mournings rich in duties of Religion and of charity he is not brought to be poor in spirit he don't see himself without money and without price but has a considerable estate of his own to live upon he thinks that by his duties he gains somthing towards the paying for salvation Phil. 3.7 he places his confidence in those things and glories in them as a rich man boasts of his wealth so he boasts of his righteousness and despises other men as the Pharisee Luk. 18 11. I am not as other men or like this Publican whereas the spirit of a Saint is to glory in the righteousness and sufferings of Christ Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of Jesus Christ 2. Such men make their duties their refuge in time of danger such men are oftentimes scared from a remembrance of their former courses and sence of present
be put into them so the heart of a sinner must be first prepared before it be united unto Christ Act 2.37 9.4 5 16.29 30 and hence the call of the Gospel is particularly directed to them that are prepared to such as are a thirst Isai 55.1 to such as are weary and heavy laden Mat. 11.28 not but that it is other mens duty also to believe but because it is their next and immediate work to close with Christ whereas it is other mens next work to come off from the World and out of themselves in order to their closing with Christ There are two degrees of this preparation the first is a work of awakening whereby the sinner is convinced of a present necessity of peace and reconciliation with God whereby be is put upon a diligent use of all means in order to his salvation the other is Humiliation whereby the sinner is brought out of himself and off from all his carnal confidences to yield himself a Prisoner to God until the soul be thus humbled he is not capable of Faith men will not come to Christ till they are convinced of an absolute necessity of Christ men will never take salvation as a gift of free grace until they are convinced of the necessity of the free grace of God they that are whole need not the Physitian but they that are sick Mat. 11.12 and they that conceit themselves whole do conceit that they don't need the Physitian men that do not come off from all their own confidences will not put their confidence in Christ and therefore until men have this work of Humiliation God does not open their eyes to see the offer of the Gospel so that whatsoever Faith men have that have not had a work of Humiliation their Faith is not of the right kind for this is the manner of God whenever he has fully prepared a soul for Faith by a work of Humiliation then to infuse Faith and many times he does it presently when he has by the wonderful work of his spirit prepared a sinner for Christ he does bestow Christ upon him though I dare not say there is any direct promise made to Humiliation in the Scripture a man is not an heir of the promises till he does believe yet universal experience does confirm it it seems to be in this case as in the work of nature when the Child in the womb is prepared for a soul God does alwayes infuse a soul into it though there be no such promise so where the sinner is prepared for Faith God does infuse that In order to your making use of this Trial we shall consider what this work of Humiliation is and the manner how it is wrought Question What is the work of Humiliation Answer 1. Negatively in two particulars 1. It is not a broken bleeding spirit for sin many men take it to be so and when they understand that they must be humbled before their coming to Christ they strive after this broken frame of spirit and when they find but little of it they complain they are not humbled enough and give that as a ●●ason why they do not come to Christ but what sinners find this way is more like humility than humiliation men think if they could get much of this Spirit they should be prepared for Christ indeed but this is quite another thing from that humiliation that does go before Faith. Argument 1. This appears because an unregenerate man can't trnly mourn for sin from what principle should he do it before he is born again he may be grieved for it under other considerations as it exposes him to a great deal of misery here and hereafter yea as it is in it self evil but not as the greatest evil as it is against God to suppose that a man can sincerely mourn for sin before his conversion it is to suppose him converted before his conversion it is in regeneration that all the graces of the Spirit are implanted in the heart it is then that the heart of stone is taken away Ezek. 11.9 while men remain in a state of nature as they do under this work of humiliation it is absolutely beyond them to hate sin or mourn for sin nature improved by common conviction will never produce this effect every naturul man is dead in sin Eph. 2.1 all his works in religion are dead works Heh 9.14 there is no inclination in his heart to mourn for sin men must have a work of new creation upon them before they can do this Eph. 2.10 created in Christ Jesus unto good works Argument 2. While natural men seem to have relentings and breakings of heart for sin it is impossible but they should put their confidence therein as long as he does imagine that there are any good affections in himself he will be lifted up with them these affections will keep him from being humbled men will feed upon these husks as long as they can get them there is no bringing of a natural man out of his strong hold until it be thrown to the ground a bleeding heart is meat for carnal confidence there is that spirit of pride and slavish fear in natural men that as long as they can imagine any good in themselves they will hang upon it Rev. 3 17. thou sayest thou art rich and increased in goods Argument 3. When a man is indeed under the work of humiliation he sees he cannot mourn for sin he sees his mourning frames are gone he finds his heart shut up and the pangs of affection which he sometime had gone beyond recovery in order to the work of Humiliation God makes men to see their hard hearts and hence they are wont to complain when God is about to humble them that God has left them and is giving them over to an hard heart But it is one thing to be judiciously hardned another to have their eyes opened to see the natural hardness of their heart then a man sees that his heart is an heart of stone Argument 4. Mourning for sin is a fruit of reconciliation it folows upon the revealing of the mercy of God in Christ all the sorrow and shame that went before were meerly legal but evangelical repentance follows Faith men never come to have any genuine mourning for sin before they are converted all that went before was in hypocrisie but a spirit of repentance flows from faith and is peculiar to such as are reconciled Ezek. 6. ult thou shalt loath thy self when I am pacified towards thee for all that thou bast done saith the Lord God. 2. Humiliation is not a willingness to be damned some have thought that to be necessary and that this was humiliation some have thought they have attained to this and 't is possible that under some strong pang persons may find somewhat of this nature but certainly they did not know their own hearts in it neither does God require any such thing of men in order to their coming to
imagined before that his duties would make amends for his sins that God would be at peace with him because of his affections but God shews him that the Law stands for perfect righteousness the Law must be fully satisfied that the Law pronounces a curse for every sin that it can neither be abrogated nor moderated but must be fulfilled that the law curses every one that continues not in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them gal 3.13 and her●by the sinner sees the insufficiency of all his duties and is brought to despair in himself 3. By leaving a hope in the heart that God may yet help him this conduces much to make the sinner yield there is a secret hope that God leaves in the heart that God will have mercy upon him God leaves an apprehension in men of the possibility of their salvation if they don't yield there is certain death but there is some hopes that God may spare them they have some hopes arising from the power of God he can make dry bones to live and from the mercy of God whose thoughts are not as mens thoughts nor his ways as mens ways but high above them as the heavens are above the earth that also begets some hope that there is a way of salvation by Christ that others have found help when they have been in such a case that there are promises of taking away the heart of stone Ezek 11.19 this hope helps the soul much in submitting to God. 4. By discovering his own Soveraignty men are greatly offended at Gods proceedings and unsatisfied about his decrees and providences and this hinders them from submitting unto him but God by his spirit lets in some discovery of his own soveraignty and thereby convinces him that God does him no wrong that God may bestow his grace where he pleases that he has dominion over his creatures this makes the soul confess with Job Job 42.2 I know thou canst do every thing the soul standing convinced of these things can do no other but yield up himself into the hands of God. Before I leave this way of trial I shall answer two scruples that may arise in the hearts of some of the People of God about their Humiliation 1. Doubt I sear whether I had a thorow work of Humiliation I never saw so much of the wickedness of my own heart as some others do speak of Answer 1. There is no necessity of seeing all those sinful inclinations that are in the heart particularly there is a great variety as to the particular discoveries that God makes to divers men and one great occasion of it is the different temptations that they are under some see more of a worldly spirit some more of a froward some more of an aspiring spirit a man may have discoveries of his own heart after he hath been a Saint many years that he never had before if a man see the fountain it is sufficient though he do not see all those various channels wherein it may run 2. There is no necessity of seing particularly their inability to every duty they must feel themselves spiritually dead they feel themselves unable to do any thing that is good but some men can speak abundance more particularly to their inability to this and that duty than others can there are some duties that did not come into their thoughts at that time it is necessary they should lose their sense of their ability to any thing should not be conceited of any power or sufficiency it is not enough for men to see that they can do nothing of themselves men may say that when they only find need of assistance and not of the infusing of a principle of grace into them but it is sufficient if they feel themselves spiritually dead but there is no necessity that at that time they must particularly take notice of their inability to love Gods People to be thankful c. though often they do their thoughts are wont to be fixed at that time on such particulars as they were wont before to pride themselves most in and such as they have special occasion at that time to think of from what the hear or read 3. There is a necessity of seeing so much of his own heart as to make him despair of mending it to see it wholly under the power of sin a man may see abundance of corruption and wickedness in his own heart and yet be a stranger to it though he sees a great deal yet if he imagines that he can cure it if he have hopes of getting victory over it he will not be humbled Isai 57.12 thou art wearied in the greatness of thy way yet sayest thou not there is no hope thou hast found the life of thy hand therefore thou wast not grîeved before he be humbled he must see himself altogether under the power of sin Rom. 7 9. 4. There is a necessity of seeing so much as to set him down that God may righteously cast him off a man may see much and yet not yield it that it is fair for God to reject him one foundation of quarelling is an opinion of what he is and has been doing this breeds a great deal of wrangling in the heart Isai 58 3 he is excusing of himself because he would be better and has taken pains in Gods service so that there is a necessity that he should see so much of his own wicked heart as may quite silence him that he may see himself inexcusable that he may not have a word to say but may be satisfied in Gods proceeding if he should cast him off Luk. 18.13 Doubt 2 I fear whither I have had a through work of Humiliation because I never found so much opposition to the yielding of my self into Gods hands as some others speak of others have more dreadful risings of heart and more horrible sturdiness of spirit and bore more dreadful terrors before they could be brought to yield were much longer opposing and resisting than it was with me somewhat this way I found but not so much as others and therefore I fear whither the work were true Answer 1. Men have had a great deal more of opposition to this work of Humiliation than they take notice off or understand all those methods and wayes that men take to establish a righteousness of their own are from a spirit of opposition to this work of Humiliation all mens endeavours to get any thing to commend them to God are the workings of this spirit mens flying to refuges of lies and hiding themselves in the strong-holds of their own righteousness are because they are not willing to submit to God all mens strivings to obtain the savour of God by their prayers affections reformations are upon this account that they are not willing to yield themselves to be lost why do men strive to earn their own salvation but because they are unwilling to submit to the meer mercy of
authority from none but Jesus Christ as Mediator does derive his authority from God but his authority is a sufficient warrant Mat. 17.5 hear him and hence Ministers may indifferently invite men in the name of God or Christ 2 Cor. 5.20 now then we are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God. 3. There is no necessity that at the time of the souls closing with Christ he should be reading or hearing the call of the Gospel it is by those calls but many times they do not prevail while a man is hearing of them but afterwards sometimes it is in the very time of hearing Acts 14.1 2. Acts 2.41 but it may be as well afterwards it may be in time of prayer and often is or in meditation God does it for them that wait upon him in his Ordinances but not always in the time of Ordinances thus it is with other works of the Spirit awakening of finners comforting of Saints and Sinners Mat. 21.29 be said I will not but afterwards he repented and went. 3. There is no necessity that this closure with Christ should be wrought by the letter of the Scriptures frequently it is by some particular word but it is many times otherwise sometimes the thing is urged by a Minister according to the Scripture and God makes some sentence that he speaks effectual Acts 16.31 32. so somtimes in meditation God makes men see the general cal of the Gospel though no particular place be pitched upon thus 't is sometimes afterwards with Saints 4. There is no necessity that the particular word that draws the soul to Christ should be in the form of an invitation it is many times so as by those words Mat. 11.28 Rev. 22.17 but it may be by any other Gospel expression as by those words 1 Pet. 2.24 who bore our sins in his own body upon the Cross Isai 53.6 he was wounded for our sins and bruised for our iniquities Eph. 5.2 he hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God of a sweet smelling savour it may be wrought by any Gospel precept promise declaration God by any such word may let in a light to shew the soul the truth of the Gospel Call. From this particular we may conclude the saith of two sorts of persons to be false 1. Such as ventured at first upon Christ from that encouragement that God loved them they thought that God had a love for them either from his outward providences he smiled on them in his providences and blessed them and heard their prayers or he manifested his love to them by restraining their corruptions and keeping of them from such evil practices as others are addicted unto or else from some inward comfort that God has given them God gave them some inward comfort when they were in a sad condition and from thence they conclude the love of God and so are bold to venture themselves on Jesus Christ they have had some inward joy and that they make the foundation of their Faith and so they quite prevent Gods order they get first a faith of assurance that God loves them and then they have a saith of dependance but the particular love of God is not the foundation of our faith there is no need of knowing that in order to believing the love of God is to be cleared up by effectual calling 2 Pet. 1.10 Gods love to the soul is a secret till he does believe Eph. 1.13 after ye believed ye were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise God may reveal the love he has to a man unto some other before the man believes as the love God had to Jacoh was revealed to Rebecca but not to the man himself Gods particular love is not the foundation of Faith but the call of the Gospel 2. Such as ventured first upon Christ upon that encouragement that they loved God they found affections to God and Christ and that made them think that God meant them in the call of the Gospel that made them think that it was not presumption for them to come to Christ that made them think that God would not reject them their first encouragement rises from themselves and then in a secondary way they take encouragement from the Gospel that adds to their encouragement but this faith is a rotten faith it has not a right foundation such a faith may make men live more comfortable here but it will deceive them Rev. 3 17. 3. In the first closure with Christ there is such a light let into the Soul of the sinner that he cannot but come to Christ when he does come there is a necessity upon him to come it is thus many times very remarkable afterwards but eminently so at first before he comes he cannot come and when he does come he cannot but come the sinner has at that time such a supernatural light let into him that he is under constraints to come to Christ all the wit in hell can't perswade him to stay away where God begins to open the eyes there may be some objecting but before God has done the light is so full that the soul is carryed captive by it Ministers are required to compel men to come in Luke 14.23 that is to use compelling arguments such as when God sets the same home will compell men the light that God puts in to the soul at that time is such that he cannot withstand it it silences all his carnal reasonings stops his mouth answers his objections so that he cannot stand out any longer John 6.45 every one that has been taught and hath learned of the Father commeth unto me This I clear up from these considerations 1. All that have this inward light and teaching doe come unto Christ 't is true there is an illumination that is not effectual to work saith Mat. 13.20 2 Pet. 2.21 that light is only the irradiation of the natural understanding but there is an inward light that is always attended with faith such men as have a thorow conviction of the gospel doe ever close with it that light that is sufficient in order to saith is always efficacious the inward call of the gospel is always answered Rom. 8.30 whom he called them he also justified all those that God draws do run after him Cant. 1.4 they that know Christ will come to him John 17.35 Psal 9.10 and this shews that they cannot but come if this inward light could be resisted some would resist it among so many thousands some would refuse to come this way would not be universally successful with men of all tempers and inclinations if it did not necessitate them some or other would be found that would refuse 2. This inward light is said to come with power upon the soul it has a perswading overcoming power with it it has power to gain the will and draw the consent of the heart the gospel where the Spirit
yielded any real obedience unto God therefore this threatning cannot be understood of the certain ruine of all that have hardned their necks after many reproofs if you he of this number there is free liberty and good encouragement for you to come to Christ notwithstanding Objection 5. But I am afraid that God has given me up to judicial hardness of heart that he has taken his spirit away from me and if so he does not intend me in the call of the gospel Answer 1. There is an hardness of heart that is not judicial indeed every man by nature is under the power of an hard heart there may be abundance of hard heartedness in you though no judicial hardness there may be some legal softness and tenderness and relenting where there is judicial hardness as it was with Pharaoh so there may be hardness where there is no judicial hardness this is an evidence of it because God promises them to take away the hardness of their hearts Ezek. 11.19 I will take the heart of stone out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh 2. Many others have feared that they have been judicially hardened that have afterwards been converted they that are judicially hardened do not use to be perplexed with this fear the judgment it self is wont to deliver them from fears of this kind but it is a frequent thing for souls under trouble to be afraid of this others have seen afterwards that they have been mistaken and so may you 3. The reasons why persons under the work of conversion fear that they are given up to hardness and that the Spirit of God has forsaken them is because the spirit does after a while change its way of working when the Spirit begins to work upon them his manner is to discover their danger and after a while to give them some encouragement whereby they come to have strong affections sorrow desire delight and now they are easily perswaded that the Spirit is at work with them and dont look upon themselves hardened but after a while when these affection fail them and they find themselves dull and senseless now they are afraid that the Spirit has left them whereas the reason is the spirit has changed his work and is about to shew them what hearts they have in order to the work of Humiliation if men could maintain their lively affections they would never come to Christ therefore the Spirit of God does leave them unto and lead them into an experimental knowledg of the hardness of their hearts so that this is no sign of the Spirits leaving you but an effect of the presence of the Spirit his manner is to convince men that they are poor and wretched and blind and miserable Rev. 3.17 4. The conditional offer of the gospel is made to you how hard soever your heart is you are called and if you will accept you shall be saved God rejects none that come to him by Christ do you accept the gospel and God will never object your hard-heartedness against you he never turned any away because their hearts were hard come to him and he will give you pardon and a soft heart too Objection 6. I am afraid I have committed that sin for which there is no Sacrifice it is said if we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledg of the truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for sin Heb. 10.26 and I am afraid it is so with me for I have had great enlightnings and since I have been enlightned I have been guilty of a great deal of rebellion against God and have felt the workings of enmity to God in my heart and if so it is a vain thing for me to come to Christ he was not sacrificed for such Answer For the answering of this Doubt I shall open this Scripture to you and shew you what is meant by sinning and by wilful sinning 1. By sinning here is not meant any sort of sin but some special sin particularly the sin of Apostacy and renouncing of the gospel this is evident because this sin is that which he speaks of in the verse immediately preceding there he speaks of mens casting off their Christian society and therewith the profession of the truth which is the thing he disswades from in this verse and he evidently speaks of Apostacy when he comes to explain his meaning more sully ver 29. he calls this sin a treading under foot the Son of God c besides the same Apostle speaking of the same sin Heb 6.6 calls it a falling a way 2. By sinning or apostatizing wilfully we are to understand a malicious apostacy the word indeed does signifie willingly but it also signifies spitefully or maliciously or as in our version wilfully there are three ways that men may apostatize from the profession of the Gospel they may do it ignorantly when men are blinded by the arguments of Hereticks they may do it against their light through a spirit of fear as some good men have done and many others that have not sinned unpardonably in time of Persecution many have through weakness denied the Gospel they may do it spitefully and maliciously that is here intended for they are said ver 29. to do despite to the Spirit of grace by this you may fee that though there have been many backslidings after your illumination though you have had a stubborn and rebellious heart yet you may be free from the sin here intended and have opportunity to come with acceptance unto Christ Objection 7. I have not the qualifications that are mentioned sometimes in the invitation of the Gospel as Isa 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters Mat. 11.28 come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest therefore I fear I am not invited Answer 1. Some persons have these qualifications that fear they have not some men think they are not a thirst because they don't find longing desire after Christ their hearts are dead and senseless they don't find any love unto Christ but souls may be said to be a thirst when they are in want of refreshing when their souls are parched under the sense of Gods anger their hearts are ready to fail for want of comfort so they think they are not heavy laden because sin is not such a burden to them as it should be because they have not an heart to mourn for sin but there is no man can mourn for sin aright until he has closed with Christ but you are heavy laden if the anger of God and your danger do load you and you can't find any means in your selves to ease you of your burden Act. 16.30 What must I do to be save 2. The invitation is not confined to men that have these qualifications but only particularly applied unto them such are under special temptation and have special need of support it is one thing to apply the call to one particular
if they be not sanctified but there be many in whose lives there is no evidence that they are destitute of holiness no man can justly charge them with living in any known sin with any unmortifyed corruption or acting from a corrupt principle in religion but this cannot be said concerning others that do not make this profession moral men among the Heathens Turks or Jews there are few or none of them but would make it evident to a man of a discerning spirit that was familiarly acquainted with them that they were under the rule and power of some lust 2. Among those that profess to believe in Christ there are many men in whom there are very speaking evidences that they lead an holy life they do not only walk inoffensively in their conversation but there is a great deal of the breathings of a spirit of holiness in them their carriage savours of the fear of God love to God submission to the will of God care of the advancement of the glory of God there carriage has a great relish of piety and holiness there is as much appearance of holiness as can ordinarily be expected from men that have still a principle of corruption remaining in them 3. Many of those who has formerly lived a corrupt life when once they are in appearance brought home to Christ do give great evidences of an holy life many that live among the people of God do live very corruptly but when once such men come to embrace the Gospel in appearance many of them do become very exemplary in holiness cast off all their former ways of sin and live an humble spiritual obedient life as far as man can judge But there are two wayes whereby the truth of this is evident above exception One is by the testimony of Gods Word the Scripture does commonly give the title of Saints unto believers hence that title of Saints in Christ Jesus is given to the Church at Philippi 1 Phil. 1. so they are called holy brethren that are partakers of the heavenly calling Heb. 3.1 and Saints and faithful in Christ Jesus are used as terms equivalent Eph. 1.1 all those that are implanted into Christ do crucifie their corruptions Gal 5.24 hence good works are a demonstration of the truth of Faith James 2.18 Another way whereby it is made evident is by the experience of many saints hereby it is made evident to them though not unto the world every believer has experience of a great change in himself though they have many fears whether it be indeed a life of holiness that they live it is exercising unto them whether they go beyond hypocrites and are acted by any higher principles than self-love and confcience yet there be several that at times do evidently see a spirit of holiness working in themselves so that their consciences do bear witness that they are the children of God besides what they do perceive of a daily bent of heart to keep Gods commands there are at times more visible and sensible actings of grace there are times when the strings are wound up to the height when grace breaks forth as the light and the heart is satisfied in that that he has a spirit of holiness John 21.17 Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee Psal 18.23 I was also upright before him And this fanctification which the people of God have they have in a way of believing some take sanctification so largely as to comprehend the work of regeneration and count regeneration also an effect of closing with Christ but I will not now discuss that controversy though there is no doubt but regeneration is the fruit of Christs purchase but I take sanctification for that work of Gods spirit whereby he does more and more purge away the remainders of sin and carry on the work of holiness in the hearts of his people and this is the fruit of faith in Christ Acts 26.18 they are sanctified by faith that is in me Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me and this sanctification comes from Christs purchase he has by his death redemed us from the power of sin Tit. 2 4. who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purisie to himself a peculiar people zealous of good works so John 17.1 Pet. 1.18 19. Heb. 9 14. 2 The people of God have inward spiritual comfort in a way of believing in the righteousness of Christ it is very true that many men that do not profess the true religion and many others that tho they do profess the true religion yet do not in sincerity embrace it have much inward comfort under an expectation of blessedness hereafter but the people of God that do believe in Jesus Christ have inward comfort in that way peculiar to themselves Which we may consider under these two heads of peace of conscience and communion with God. 1. The people of God in a way of believing have peace of conscience and this is not a particular priviledge of some believers but a blessing that all do in some degree partake of those men that before their coming to Christ were under the terrors of an evil conscience conscience was terrifying of them and binding them over to eternal judgement do upon their closing with Christ enjoy a tranquility of mind and inward peace Indeed this peace may be interrupted and disturbed because of darkness and temptations and because conscience is but in part satisfyed but they are never brought back to take up such conclusions against themselves as before their closing with Christ but commonly they do enjoy some comfortable serenity of heart have the answer of a good conscience by the resurrection of Christ 1 Pet. 3.21 this comes to pass by these two things 1. When a soul comes to Christ the soul is satisfied that there is peace with God to be obtained in a way of coming to Christ that there is safety in coming to Christ the inward call of the Gospel satisfies the soul that there is salvation in Christ for all that come to him conscience is thereby well satisfied in the sufficiency of Christ the freeness and the fulness of the grace of God 1 Pet. 2.7 to him that believes Christ is precious the objections of the heart are removed by the convincing work of the Spirit 2. The first act of closing with Christ is not so sensibly done but that he does take some notice of it some after acts of faith may be more plain and in continuance of time the soul may lose the exact knowledge of the time of his first closing with Christ and the circumstances of it but this first closing with Christ is not so secret a thing but that it falls under the observation of conscience Jer. 3.22 This is clear For 1. The act it self is very observable when the soul comes at first to close with Christ there is a weighty change
Rom. 9.32 they sought it as it were by the works of the Law. 2. They pretend that they do not trust in their own works for tho they do take encouragement from them yet it is only as they are signs of a good estate not as the foundation of their Faith they say that Ministers do commonly give men signs from their works and qualifications to try their good estate and so does the Word of God and we find that holy men in Scripture have laid great weight upon them and they are not to be blamed for that that is not a self-righteous spirit but many men that make this pretence do make them the foundation of their Faith for they take their first encouragement from hence to come to Christ and dare not come when they can see nothing in themselves to encourage them 3. They pretend that they are not seeking salvation by their own righteousness but they are only labouring after a work of Humiliation to prepare them for Christ they have all along been instructed that there can be no true Faith without a foregoing work of Humiliation and therefore they only wait for that work in order to their coming to Christ but men do greatly deceive themselves in this thing a natural man may have a work of Humiliation but a natural man cannot heartily seek after it for every unhumbled sinner is striving against the work of Humiliation they are opposing of it either by endeavours to set up a righteousness of their own seeking in that way to escape condemnation instead of yielding to God they are flying to their strong holds sheltering themselves in their prayers reformations desires c. or else by wrangling as a person pursued runs away till overtaken and then he fights so the sinner when he sees that he can't save himself is contending with God objecting against divine proceedings thinks that Gods dealings are very hard measure Rom. 9.19 in both these methods they oppose the work of Humiliation and when a sinner thinks that he is seeking after the work of Humiliation he is opposing it he is indeed striving against the work of Humiliation when he is seeking of it as much as when he is seeking to strengthen and increase his desires and affections for indeed he is making a righteousness of Humiliation he labours after it that that may commend him to God he thinks that would ingratiate him with God he looks at Humiliation as an eminent peice of righteousness as a castle that would shelter him from the wrath of God he looks upon Humiliation as a choice frame of spirit he looks on at it as a great attainment so that those that stay away from Christ under pretence that they are not humbled and are waiting for a work of Humiliation are seeking salvation by their own righteousness 6. Let us consider the vanity of mens trusting in their own righteousness men do please themselves with an idle dream when they put their confidence in their own Righteousness all that they gain by it is to go the more pleasantly to hell mens own righteousness is but a sandy Foundation to build upon the hopes of such men shall be cut off and their trust prove a spiders web it is a needless thing for men to trust in their own righteousness there is foundation enough for Faith without that there is no need of our own righteousness to draw the heart of God to us the love of God is free and independent there is no need of our own righteousness to satisfie the Law for us Jesus Christ has done that fully there needs no addition of our own to perfect his work and it is a vain thing for men to trust in their own righteousness they idolize it and give an honour that does not belong to it yea such persons do cast great reflections upon Christ as if he laid down his life to no purpose they cast disparagement upon God they despise the love of God in sending Jesus Christ cast reflection on him as if he might have spared that cost they do what in them lies to make the death of Christ in vain yea it is a dangerous thing men think it is a great venture to depend up on the righteousness of Christ but it is a desperate venture for men to depend upon their own righteousness such whose eyes God has opened would not for a thousand worlds venture their souls upon that foundation there is not only hazard of miscarrying but certain ruine in that way the expectations of such men will end in miserable disappointment though Paul had done as much for God as any man alive yet he durst not entertain such a thought of appearing before God in his own righteousness Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law he that trusts in his own righteousness takes as certain a course to ruine his own soul as he that lives in ways of unrighteousness This appears 1. God has made no promise to you in this way there are promises made to them that trust in the Righteousness of Christ but there is not a syllable that way to those that trust in their own righteousness it is a presumptuous thing for any man to promise himself salvation in such a way wherein God does not promise it to him God indeed in the covenant of works does promise life upon the account of perfect obedience but what is that unto you who are destitute of that obedience who neither have nor ever can fullfil the condition of that covenant God also promises salvation in the Gospel to those that are sincerely godly and righteous but where does he speak one word of saving them upon the account of their own righteousness or to save those that confide in their own righteousness God is wholly silent as to any such promise if there were such a promise there would be a foundation for Faith but God gives no encouragement unto men to depend upon their own righteousness which he would certainly do if that were a way of safety for God undertakes in his Word to direct men the right way to heaven if this way had been right God would not have neglected to have promised salvation to them in this way besides it has bin Gods manner all along to deal with man in the way of a covenant to that end that men may be encouraged to walk in the right way to the obtaining of good and honour him by exercising Faith in his Word Gods manner is to propose conditions to men and give them assurance of the benefit in that way he never left mankind to guess at the way of salvation and to contrive by their own wisdom a suitable way to bring them to heaven the wisdom of man is utterly insufficient to any such work God knew his own mind what way pleased him and has bound himself unto man in that way when he first made man he entred into a
Christ indeed it is contrary to nature for men to be willing to be damned wicked men do act as if they love damnation Prov. 8.36 they that hate me love death they do so interpretatively but for men directly and understandingly to be willing to be damned is against nature God had planted a principle of self-love in men whereby they do necessarily desire their own happiness no perswasions can prevail with men not to desire their own happiness we may as soon perswade a stone not to be heavy or the Sun not to shine there is a weight upon the soul of every man carrying of it that way this is implanted by God in the very constitution of nature and remains in man in his corrupt and his renewed estate a man must shake off his nature before he can shake off this desire self-love is natural unto man man is capable of happiness and being capable of it stands in need of it he cannot be satisfied until his capacity of happiness be filled hence he necessarily and perpetually desires happiness besides this it is contrary to Gods command for a man to be willing to be damned for God has commanded us to seek salvation he is often calling upon us to be seeking life and that with earnestness Luke 13.24 Strive to enter in at the strait gate and this seeking must be with earnest desires and indeed when this work of Humiliation is wrought in the heart he yields under this encouragement that there is some hope of salvation in God hopes of life in this way is one of the things that make him lie down at Gods foot the four leprous men fell unto the Host of the Syrians because that was the most likely way for their lives to be preserved 2 King. 7 4. the Syrians submitted to Ahab in hope to find favour 2 King 20.31 when the soul is humbled he is as desirous of salvation as ever and it is the hope of that that has a great influence into his humiliation 2. Affirmatively it is an absolute submitting of himself unto Gods disposal when humbled he yields himself into the hands of God and makes an absolute resignation of himself unto the will of God he yields himself a prisoner he would have yielded upon terms before but now he yields absolutely as a Rebel when he sees himself conquered yields so does the Soul to God. This carriage is opposite to his carriage before 1. He does not seek deliverance from himself he yields to God despairing in himself he don't feed himself with vain hopes and carnal confidences any longer those hopes have all died away his strong holds that he trusted in are thrown down he does not stay any longer upon his affections reformations victories over corruptions c. he has no dependance upon any strength of his own to gain any thing that will commend him to God he has no dependance on Ordinances on his own wisdom to discover any way of help but he throws up all his carnal hopes as vain and submits himself to mercy Luk 15.17 2. He leaves off quarrelling with God before he was humbled his heart wrought within him he could not bear the thoughts of it that God should cast him off his heart rose up against God and he thought he had hard measure from God his sins were all decreed he had done what he could he took great pains and yet God did not shew him mercy his heart rose to think that God should make him to damn him save and pardon others and reject him but now his mouth is stopt he is silenced he lets fall all his pleas yields it to be fair for God to cast him off he says as David Psal 51 4. against thee thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight that thou mayst be justified when thou speakest and clear when thou judgest Question In what way is this work of Humiliation wrought and the soul brought to submit himself to God. Answer In general it is wrought by conviction it is not wrought by the infusion of any new principle into him the soul under this work is in a state of nature neither is it wrought by mens own endeavours Humilation is not the fruit of mans industry but is a thing forced on him by conviction as men under the first work of the Spirit are by conviction forced to fear and so by a work of conviction they are compelled to yield themselves to God their strong holds are pulled down and they necessitated to resign themselves God works this work by conviction Particularly 1. By giving him experience of the failing of all means he sees no other way left he has been trying to wring himself out of the hands of God he has been turning every way and refuge fails him he sees all his carnal hopes fall flat to the ground his carnal hopes vanish and dye away he has been waiting for light and behold obscurity he has been trying all conclusions every way he could devile and think of turning every stone he hoped by his prayers to make his heart better and by his fastings and by his watchfulness sometimes he thought if he had more terrors that would do sometimes if he had more encouragements then his heart would be better he has tryed the utmost of his skill upon his heart sometimes he hoped that in time his heart would grow better sometimes if he could hear such a Minister sometimes if he could get such a good book that others had got much good by then his heart would mend the sinner is like a man lost in the woods that thinks if he steers such a course that will bring him to the path and if that fails he thinks if he steers such a course that will do but at last he can contrive no longer but is utterly lost in his own sence so the sinner has had many contrivances but all his projects fai●le upon experience he finds himself after all his pains under the reigning power of sin and that he is spiritually dead he thought he had made some proficiency but now he finds by experience that the life of sin is whole within him and that he has no power nor disposition to any thing that is good he has no spirit to any thing that is good he had enlargements formerly and thought he could delight in Sabbaths but God is pleased to withdraw those encouragements that he had and suffers the corruption of his heart to break out and upon that occasion his affections wither away that discourages him that his heart dies within him and he has no more strength now he sees he cannot love God mourn for sin c. and hereby all his vain hopes of mending his own heart fall to the ground Rom. 3 9. Sin revivived and I died 2. By convincing of the strictness of the Law this is another thing that helps to make him yield God convinces him of the rigour and exactness of the Law he
and reject the holiness of God do men take Christ for their Priest and the Devil for their King if faith were in mens hearts those lusts would never rest there faith would be purging of them out such unholy persons do not adorn the Gospel but are blemishes to the societies to which they do belong the Scripture gives us an account of the humility heavenly mindedness love self-denyal of believers and if these men be believers they are of another kind then the Scripture tells us of such men do turn the grace of God into wantonness as if Christ came into the world to procure them a liherty to sin without danger as if the gospel did countenance iniquity such men are not guilty of deceiving many others if the sinfulness of their wayes be known men may easily tell what their faith is and if they were not stark blind they could not deceive themselves but if they hope for heaven in this way they will surely be mistaken God threatens them with damnation 2 Pet. 3.7 they that continue ungodly will as certainly perish as if there were no gospel indeed such men are not fit to be saved they are not fit for the company that is in heaven for the comfort that is there nor for the employment that is there 2. Such persons as are observing Gods commands only under some pangs for a time they set themselves carefully to do their duty and make conscience of their duty and reform things that are amiss and afterwards they wither away again and from one neglect fall to another they grow bold to sin and careless of duty lie in the practise of evil they had a fit of religion but have lost it such men have no faith if men had faith they would continue in the practise of Gods will unbelief makes men depart from God Heb 3.12 Faith is a preservative from Apostacy Heb. 10.39 we are not of them that draw back unto perdition but of them that believe to the saving of the soul such men as have once been zealous in religion and now don't regard it or live in any way of disobedience have no true faith faith will not preserve men from falling but it will from falling away and from a course of disobedience 3. Such persons as do not walk in Gods commands out of a gracious respect unto him though they be exceeding diligent and conscienscious yet they are not acted from spiritual considerations they do not duties from a spirit of obedience and for the glory of God and from a true sence what a glorious God this is these men have no faith for they have no true holiness they have no faith for by faith men come to have a spiritual understanding of the glorious excellency of God and if they understood that they would serve him because he is such and hence those men that are acted by a principle of morality in their religion have no faith and those men that are acted only by an enlightned conscience have no faith many men are terrified and scared into religion out of a spirit of fear they reform and do duty but this is not real holiness an enlightened conscience is not sufficient to make a man produce any one holy action though men abound in duties of religion yet it be not from a right motive they have no faith for all their duties are but hypocrisie not onely when men make it their great end to get wealth and reputation but when they make it their great end to get peace of conscience deliverance from hell and the joyes of heaven if such things as these be the great things that have an influence into mens religion God will not accept of it saith makes men serve God from a spirit of love gal 5.6 Faith which worketh by love Before I pass this way of Trial I shall answer some doubts that may arise in the hearts of the people of God. Doubt 1. I fear whether I have any true holiness because I see such actings of corruption as seems inconsistent with holiness and love to God. Answer There may be such actings of corruption in a saint as are inconsistent with the actual love of God but men are often mistaken in thinking that sinful actings are not consistent with the habitual love of God many times a man sees such workings of grace as seems to him inconsistent with such sinful inclinations as afterwards he finds in his heart so 't is here but there is no act of sin the sin against the Holy Ghost excepted but is consistent with habitual grace whatever lust is in the heart it may be drawn into act notwithstanding the being of grace that grace that does not altogether destroy the disposition cannot altogether hinder the working of it there needs more than the being of grace to hinder the workings of the vilest corruptions Jonah 4.9 Doubt 2. I fear because in those conflicts that I have sin gets the upper-hand I set my self to carry patiently and yet am carried away with impatience and I set my self against such a temptation and yet am out-bid Answer They may be overcome in a particular skirmish that may overcome in the war a godly man is many times out-bid in his conflicts with corruption that argues the weakness not the total want of grace grace is sometimes under hatches corruption comes like a storm and bears down all before it corruption does not only out-bid conscience but grace too if a man throw a bawl right forward the strength of the bias carries it aside Doubt 3. I fear because I find a spirit in my self to seek my happiness in the world and to mourn for affliction as the greatest evil Answer Every one that has any worldly love and carnal sorrow has this spirit worldly love is not a loving of the world but a loving of it more than God so carnal sorrow is not a mourning for afflictions but a mourning for them as the greatest evil he that is under the power of worldliness has this spirit reigning in him but godly men so far as they are unregenerate and acted by a worldly spirit do prefer the World above God and make the world their God the spirit of worldliness is to idolize the world but notwithstanding this you may love God above the world and mourn for sin above any affliction though there be a spirit to prize the world above God yet there may be another spirit in you to prize God above all things and where there is any degree of true love to God there is a loving of God above all the unregenerate part loves other things more than God the regenerate loves God more than all other things Doubt 4. I fear because I commit such sins soon again as I have been mourning for Answer It is true that mourning for sin does mortifie sin and leave the heart more fortified against the temptation yet the same corruption is in the heart still and sometimes that
5. You act contrary to self-love it is every mans duty to love himself and seek his own good God commands men to prosecute their own good in a way of subordination to his glory God allows no man to ruine himself but requires them to seek their own wellfare all their days Mat 6.20 and indeed what ever sin a man commits he acts contrary to the rule of self-love all sin is hurtful and not beneficial to men but in a peculiar manner they act contrary to this rule in rejectin of Christ for therein they refuse a tender of blessedness God in the Gospel is offering salvation unto them if they will but accept of Christ they shall immediately be made heirs of blessedness so that in refusing Christ they reject at once all the glory of heaven and the great fruits of Christs purchase that they might enjoy here in this world they are enemies to themselves put away salvation from themselves you act in this thing like a deadly enemy to your own soul if a man that were poysoned should refuse an antidote if he that was condemned should refuse a pardon would they not be therein enemies to themselves so are you in refusing Christ Prov. 8.36 all they that hate me love death 6. You hereby hinder your selves from doing any thing that is good from doing any thing in obedience to God by neglecting of Christ you keep your selves in a way of disobedience the rejecting of Christ is the reason why you live an unspiritual life your neglecting to come to Christ makes you neglect every other spiritual duty you may perform indeed many external duties and attain unto inward affections but you will never do any duty in a spiritual and acceptable manner until you come to Christ faith in Christ is the first act of obedience that any sinner does perform that man that don't believe don't love God mourn for sin aright nor seek the glory of God it is faith that purifies the heart Acts 15.9 it is by faith that a man first gives up himself to be Gods servant so that by neglecting to believe you bring your selves under a necessity of neglecting every other spiritual duty this is the reason that whatever you do in religion is done in hypocrisie 2. You may see the greatness of this sin in not coming to Christ from the fountain from whence it does proceed in secure sinners it flows nextly from a contempt of salvation their eyes are dazied with the glory of the world they are unsensible of eternal things they regard not the end and therefore it is no wonder that they do not regard the means but in awakened sinners the neglect of coming to Christ arises from these two things 1. Pride This way of salvation by Christ don't fuit their proud spirits God has chosen such a way of life as suits his glorifying his grace but it does not suit with their naughty hearts this way wherein God carries away all the glory don't please them and hence it is that they are striving by all ways they can devise to find out some other method wherein they may have salvation they don't like it to be so much beholden unto God but would fain find something in themselves to glory in hence they have an opposition of spirit to comming unto Christ John 5.40 you will not come to me that you may have life it is not meerly from weakness but from pride and sturdiness of spirit that they don't come unto Christ 2. From their not believing the testimony of God he tells them plainly that there is righteousness enough for them in Christ that if they will come they shall be saved but they don't lay weight upon the Word of God Gods Word don't remove their doubts they are not satisfied in the preciousness of Christs righteousness nor in the riches of Gods grace nor in the stability of the covenant they do not believe the report of the Gospel Isa 53 1. and hence they don't see their way clear they are afraid to come to Christ they imagine it will be presumption they think it is a way to get a curse and not a blessing 2. The next motive is the certain ruine of all unbelievers there is nothing else to be expected if you continue to reject Jefus Christ but to be destroyed for ever the misery that will overtake you is exceeding great 't is not poverty sickness disgrace temporal death but somewhat ten thousand times worse then those this is that that the eternal state of your souls turn upon if you come not unto Christ you will fall short of everlasting blessedness and must take up your abode among Devils you are now under a possibility of enjoying the presence of God and dwelling in the highest heavens in unspeakable joy and happiness but it is all lost and gone for ever if you give not entertainment to the invitations of the Gospel and after you have spent a few days in vanity you must lye down in sorrow and have your portion in the lowest hell death will deliver you into the hands of tormenters and you shall have darkness without light pain without ease and sorrow without joy it had been better for you if you had never been born the wrath of God will lie like a talent of lead upon your soul you will have no friends to comfort you no worldly enjoyments to refresh you no hopes to support you but must set your self to bear what you cannot bear and to endure that which is in tollerable it may make ones flesh to tremble to think what miseries some in this world have endured from cruel enemies and bloody Persecuters but those miseries were but for a little time and fell nextly upon the body and they are not to be compared with those miseries that are reserved for unbelievers in another world will it not be a dreadful thing to be separated from the joyes of heaven and that glorious society that is there will it not be dreadful to dwell with the Devil and his Angels will it not be dreadful to be left to the terror of a guilty conscience the beginnings whereof here have made many men choose death rather than life will it not be dreadful to be filled brim full with the fiery wrath of God to have every limb of thy body and faculty of thy soul as full as it can hold of the indignation of the Almighty how loth will you be when it comes to to enter into this condition men would shrink into nothing if it were possible terrors will take hold upon them as waters they would fain escape out of the hands of revenging Justice how will you draw back when you see your selves upon the borders of distruction men would be glad that the Rocks would fall upon them and the hills cover them so they might but escape what will you think of it when the Devil shall lay hold of you to drag you down to hell how will you cry
of great sinners that is evident because God does pardon great sinners Luk. 7.47 her sins which are many are forgiven 2 Jesus Christ has satisfied for great sins and great sinners as well as lesser when God sent Jesus Christ it was in his liberty to appoint him to dye for what sins and sinners he pleased Christ Jesus was capable of satisfying for one as well as for another for he was so worthy a person that he was capable by his sufferings to expiate the greatest sins his short sufferings were sufficient to satisfie for the greatest offences and God did put that work upon him to satisfie for great sins and he has discharged it he has satisfied for great offenders Christ has payed a price of redemption for the greatest sins one excepted therefore generally in Scripture it is said that he has made reconciliation for sins without any exception he bare our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 he is the propitiation for our sins 1 Joh. 2.2 he has purged our sins Heb. 1.3 yea the Scripture testifies that his blood cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 he died for the chiefest sinners as is implyed 1 Tim 1.15 and therefore sinners without distinction are invited to come to Christ for forgiveness 3. Gods manner is to suffer a great deal of sin to remain in his people here he could if it pleased him purge it out all at once but he suffers it to be otherwise for many great ends as to magnifie his power in preserving the seed of grace notwithstanding all that opposition which is made by Satan and their own corruption so to carry on the work of sanctification in such a manner as that they shall stand in continual need of justification and pardon and among other ends this is not the least to try the saith of his people and exercise taht there be none of the people of God but are attended with a great deal of sin so was Noah Jacob Asa Jehosaphat and Paul Rom. 7.23 I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin that is in my members and that shews that God can love those that have a great deal of sin in them and that he can pardon them his suffering of it to be in his own evidences the sufficiency of grace to pardon it 4. God is as free to pardon hypocrites as any other men if they come unto Jesus Christ the people of God are afraid many times that they are hypocrites but that should not discourage them from believing hypocrites are as wellcome to come unto Christ as Saints God does not exclude those that have lived long in a way of hypocrisie they may come with freedom of spirit notwithstanding men should not suspend the exercise of Faith until it be cleared up to them they are no hypocrites when they are most in the dark about their state their way is to trust in the name of the Lord and stay themselves upon their God Isa 50.10 if you should be hypocrites there is encouragement enough to receive the Gospel God has pardoned thousands that have spent a great deal of time in hypocrisie were not the Jews that Christ and the Apostles offered salvation generally to hypocrites had not Paul lived a great while in a way of hypocrisie and Nicodemus God rejects not any man that accepts of Jesus Christ though he has been an hypocrite Discouragement 3. That God passes by many others and does not bestow salvation upon them there be many whole Nations that God passeth over and leaves to perish and many particular men among his visible people many are called but few are chosen Mat. 20.16 and they can't see any reason why God should bestow salvation upon them when he does deny it to multitudes of others why God should make such a difference between them and others when they are called on to believe on Christ they are afraid to do it it damps their hearts to think that there are so few that God does save so many rejected and they can fee nothing in themselves to incline the heart of God to them God passes over many wise men noble men valiant men rich men learned men good natur'd men men of great accomplishments and don 't bestow salvation on them if they could but see any reason why God should set his heart upon them and make such a difference between them and others it would not be so hard to them to believe but when they consider what kind of men God has cast off and rejected it makes them fear that God will reject them also the severity of God upon others discourages them as if there were little likelihood of their salvation they are frighting of themselves as if there were little hopes for them it is a sinking thing to them that many men more probable than they have fallen short of Salvation if they could give a reason why God should set his heart upon them when he rejects others it would mightily satisfie them but because they can't they are full of doubts For the removal of this Discouragement Consider 1. The only reason why God sets his love on one man and not upon another is because he pleases he acts the soveraignty of his own will in it it is his own will that makes the difference between men 1 Cor 4.7 who maketh this to differ from another and what hast thou that thou hast not received Rom 9.15 I will have mercy upon whom I will have mercy God in loving of men acts arbitrarily he acts as the Potter in forming his Vessels to divers uses out of the same lump the with of God is sufficient to move him to chuse one and refuse another he can bestow his love upon men where there is nothing in them to draw it the will of God can act independently and indeed it cannot have a dependance upon any other thing there is nothing out of God that can incline the will of God all those things that men are apt to suppose to have an influence upon the will of God have indeed a dependance upon his will there is nothing in any man to sway the will of God any way there is nothing in any man to be an argument with the Lord to love him nothing that can work upon the affection of God to make God love him he has no excellency that can perswade the Lord to love him whatever beauty understanding good nature he has those things can't sway God God is not taken with those excellencies and accomplishments that are in men as to have his heart fastened and allured to them thereby and on the other hand there is nothing in man that can hinder God from loving of him if the man be weak in understanding of contemptible and wicked Parents and his outward condition mean yet God can set his heart upon him there is nothing in this and that man that can have any efficacy upon
the Lord to make him hate him there is nothing in man that can byas the will of God either way to love him or hate him but God herein acts from his meer pleasure 2. Hence it follows that this or that particular man is as capable of being loved of God as any other in the World God has manifested special love unto thousands of men and women and you are as capable an object of divine sove as any of them you are as capable as Abrahum Moses David Paul or any other it is true you are as capable of Gods hatred also as any other the meer pleasure of God does decide it who shall be the objects of his love and his hatred you have no reason to be discouraged because you can find no reason in your self of Gods love those that God did set his love upon could find no reason in themselves of Gods love though you be mean and despicable yet you are as capable to be an object of Gods love as any other I do not say that one man is under as great likelihood as another they that God brings under means are the children of godly Parents that God is striving with by his Spirit are more likely than others but one is as capable as the other for the free will of God is the only thing that does determine it and therefore you have sufficient ground of encouragement to accept the offer of salvation 3. If God have wrought a spirit of Faith and Holiness in you that is a manifestation that God has set his love upon you though you can find no reason why God should love you can't tell why God should have any respect unto you yet it is certain he does love you if you have a gracious change wrought in you though he has cast away thousands of greater natural and acquired endowments than you and of greater external enjoyments than you yet you are one of those that he has chosen and has set his heart upon 2 Tim. 1.9 Who hath loved us and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his purpose and grace given us in Christ Jesus before the World began Discouragement 4. They find things since their coming to Christ much contrary to their expectation they thought that they should have had more expressions of the love of God more quicknings of the Spirit more help against corruption more visible answers of prayer they thought that if they came to Christ they should have had little trouble or temptation but have lived a sweet easie and pleasant life but things are far otherwise things run very low in their souls they have a great deal of darkness and temptation they find very evil workings of heart and therefore they fear whether God has accepted of them or be willing to accept of them and to bestow salvation upon them did they walk in the light of the Lord and enjoy such communion with God as they expected and feel such evident fruits of the love of God as they promised themselves they should not be so backward to believe but since it is otherwise it begets a trembling and fearfulness in them it puts them to a great stand hence the calls of God take less impression on them especially because they think it is not so with others that come to Christ others do enjoy more manifest tokens of divine acceptance but they are both in inward and outward respects under tokens of divine displeasure and this is an hindrance unto their believing Job 9 16 17. If I had called and he had answered yet would I not believe that he had bearkened to my voice for he breaketh me with a tempest and multiplieth my wounds without cause For the removal of this Discouragement Consider 1. That many sad and sorrowful dispensations are consistent with the favour of God men are ready to think that if God delighted in them he could not find in his heart to exercise them in such a manner his compassion would work so towards them that they should not experience such sorrows but men greatly mistake it is true that all the wayes of God are mercy to them that fear him but yet many times his wayes are in appearance contrary unto love it is common with God to bring those that he has rejected into a prosperous condition they are under very smiling providences and on the other hand God frequently frowns upon his own children not only in external dispensations but also by inward darkness leaving them to conflict with sore temptations the love of God to his people is not an affection as love in men is but it is a design to make them happy not to bestow all those degrees of blessedness upon them that he can but it is with subserviency to a greater design even the glory of his Name and therefore he leads them to happiness in such a way as is conducible to the manifestation of the glory of his pardoning grace his holiness and soveraignty and it is frequent with God to lay very heavy afflictions upon his dearest children Psal 73.14 all the day long I have been plagued and chastened every morning and God leaves his sometimes to a great deal of inward darkness Psal 88.15 while I suffer thy terrors I am distracted men that fear the Lord may be in darkness and have no light Isai 50.10 the dispensations of God unto Job and the issue of the controversie between him and his friends stand upon record to satisfie the hearts of Gods people in all ages in this particular 2. God does sometimes withdraw from his own children the sensible quicknings of his spirit God never takes away wholly his sanctifying presence from his people God is present with them to uphold the being of grace there is a divine manutenency whereby God does preserve the life of grace at all times but the sensible quicknings of his spirit may be often withheld God may often so far withdraw that they may not perceive any special gracious operation of the spirit upon their hearts and that as at other times so in duties of worship they may be left many times under great dulness and senslesness left much to the stoniness of their own hearts without any special impressions made on them by the spirit of God there are times when God makes their hearts burn within them but there are times when they are left unto a benummed frame of spirit as if they had no spiritual senses they have great cause of joy but their hearts do not rejoyce therein great cause of sorrow but unaffected with it great cause of fear but fearless their senses are bound up and spiritual truths that they think of or hear of don't sink into them Mat. 25.5 They all slumbred and slept 3. The people of God ought not to count it a frown that they have not the immediate light of Gods countenance frequently we must have a care that we do not complain
is the way to have grace quickned and strengthned Faith in Christ is the greatest furtherance of repentance and holiness Faith discovering the grace of God in Jesus Christ melts the heart for sin and arms the heart against it and Faith in Christ is the great ordinance of the Gospel for the subduing of sin in this way God will give his Spirit to work repentance and holiness Gal. 2.20 I live by Faith in the Son of God Isa 6.56 he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him 3. The next thing to be considered is what course Christians should take that they may live a life of Faith upon Christs Righteousness and not be discouraged Direction 1. Diligently attend the Ordinances of God unto that end the Ordinances of God have a tendency to stir up Faith as well as other graces and it is in that way that God has promised his presence and Spirit God delights to be found in ways appinted by himself God has not said that we should seek him in vain Isa 45.19 Christ will be present with us in those ways Mat. 28.20 Gods very prescribing of means is an encouragement unto us to attend upon them especially when he has annexed his promise to the same if men be remiss and slighty in attending upon Gods Ordinances they are not likely to thrive in faith or any other grace it would be no wonder if they should wither away and live in a dark discouraged condition but if christians be careful to attend Ordinances and improve them for the strengthning of their faith they are in a hopeful way to thrive no wonder if there be a blast upon the inventions of men but experience teaches the people of God to say it is good for us to draw nigh unto God Psal 73 28. God can make faith to flourish without Ordinances and so he can maintain mens bodily strength without food he can reveal himself to those that seldom wait upon him but his manner is to dole out his spiritual gifts at his own gates he can make them flourish else where if he please but he chooses to do it in his own courts Psal 92.13 14. the Psaimist might have understood the end of the wicked in another place if God had pleased but he chose to give him the understanding of it in the Sanctuary Psal 73 17. God has appointed the place where we shall meet with him and there we must wait for him if men desire to flourish in faith they must be diligently improving Ordinances that way God loves to honour his own Ordinances and help his people in a way of Obedience and give forth his presence in such a way that they may see his faithfulness as well as his mercy beware that you do not under any pretences grow negligent in waiting upon God some men are carried away with a sluggish spirit they cannot endure to take the pains to wait upon God constantly and solemnly they love their ease and indulge themselves in a lazy way of carrying an end their religion and some are carried away with a worldly spirit they are Martha like cumbring themselves with much buisiness involving themselves so deep in the world that they can find little leasure to wait upon God their worldly buisiness over-rules their religion if you give way to these lusts conclude upon it that you will not thrive in faith you must be content with a little faith that give way to a slighty spirit in waiting upon God you never knew an eminent believer that was not a great prizer of Ordinances in this way there is hope that Faith will increase therefore diligently attend them Particularly 1. Read the Word of God diligently it is very useful to this end to read the writings of faithful and experienced men such books are of great use for the understanding of the Scripture but there is a peculiar usefulness in the Word of God it self because that is without error and mistake it is given by inspiration from God 2 Tim. 3.16 in other mens writings you have the judgment of men and many times their judgments are according to the Word of God and cleard up from thence but in the Scripture you have the testimony of God himself there is a divine authority in the Scripture the Scripture is the sentence of God a message from God it is cloathed with divine Majesty the Word of God has a power over the conscience there is secret vertue in it to stir up Faith there is a majesty and commanding authority in the Scripture yea the Scripture is sanctified by God to work upon the hearts of men Joh. 20.31 these are written that ye might believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God there is a special advantage in it to hear God speaking in his own language 2. Frequently attend the preaching of the Word that which God makes use of especially for the begeting of Faith is very proper for the nourishing of it Rom. 10.17 Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the Word of God this is an ordinance as well as the reading of the Word and there is a special usefulness in it several ways the life and zeal that is in the delivery is of special use and a great means to affect the heart in the preaching of the Word counsels and encouragements are directed more partiticularly unto them and that by those that God has set over them that must give an account of their souls Act. 20.28 yea the very solemnity of the Assembly does help to solemnize the heart and prepare it to receive what is spoken from the Word of God. And therefore you should be forward to take opportunities for the hearing of the Word men had need have weighty grounds before they remove to such places where they are like to live many years without the preaching of the Word on to such places that they and their families can seldom come to the Publick Assembly and you had need be careful that you do not make frivolous excuses to stay away from the House of God if the weather be difficult or if there be some small bodily indisposition many count they have a good warrant to stay at home persons that could overlook such difficulties in order to a worldly design and although there be more liberty respecting weekly opportunities especially in neighbour places yet you had need have the weight of those two things upon your heart that you don't cast contempt upon the Ordinance of God and that you don't neglect the advantages that God gives for spiritual profit Psal 122.1 I was glad when they said unto me let us go into the House of the Lord. 3. Attend the Sacrament of the Lords Supper the great design of this Ordinance is for the strengthning of Faith therein is offered to us special communion with a crucified Saviour therein is a sacramental representation made before us of the death of Christ therein is a special offer
wrought in it it is a thing quite contrary to what he has been doing he has been reasoning against it making objections standing out against all the pleadings of God with him but now when he closes with Christ he lets fall all his objections and gives entertainment unto Christ before he despised him now he prizes him before argnments did not sink into him now they do now he makes Christ well-come this is exceeding remarkable easy to be observed this carriage of the soul is set forth in Scripture by opening to Christ coming to him marrying of him is so contrary to his carriage immediately before that it is of easy observation 2. There is a great ability in conscience to take notice of the more secret stirrings of the heart conscience has a wonderful quick eye conscience is a curious observer of mens actions Rom. 2.15 the conscience takes notice of the secret windings and turnings of the heart the desires the ends the thoughts that pass through him Heb. 4.12 by the help of the word conscience makes discovery of the secret thoughts and intents of the heart there is a wonderful sharp sightedness in conscience to discover the carriage of the heart 3. Conscience at this time is more than ordinary exact in taking notice of the carriage of the heart at other times Conscience will take notice of small things but at this time Conscience does most carefully observe what is done for Conscience is now in a blessed condition it is a matter of life and death how he carries now under the call of the Gospel Conscience takes more notice of this than of hundreds of other things this is a thing that his salvation depends upon Conscience has been pursuing of the sinner a great while telling of him that if he would not close with Christ he was undone and must burn in hell for ever he has been neglecting to hearken to conscience and conscience has given him no rest now when he comes to do the thing that conscience has been so long urging him unto conscience will take special notice of that conscience will watch like Benhadads Servants 1 King. 20 33. as a man would much observe it when he had compleated a design that he had been labouring in many years 2. The people of God in a way of believing have comfortable communion with God there is a state of communion with God whereby a believer has a standing interest in the favour power wisdom of God and the righteousness of Christ and in all his offices but besides this there is an actual communion with God which is sometimes more insensible sometimes more sensible sometimes the people of God do enjoy glorious actual communion with God in this world this is one of those enjoyments that man fell from by his sin and no man in his natural estate does enjoy A carnal man may have many internal discoveries of God and be mightily affected therewith but they do not properly enjoy any communion with him but the people of God doe 1 John 1.3 our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ the fullnes of this is reserved in heaven but there is an inchoation of it here God had communion with Abraham and others of old in a visible appearance and now has communion with his Saints though in a more spiritual manner And there are four particular ways of it that I shall mention 1. By discovering his own glorious nature to them sometimes God breaks out of the clouds and makes a discovery of his own glory to the soul he has promised to the pure in heart that they shall see God and sometimes he does cause his glory to pass before the soul sometimes God makes a special discovery of one of his attributes and sometimes of another of his soveraignty holiness mercy faithfulness Job 42.5 6. now mine eye seeth thee 2 Cor. 3.18 we all with open face behold as in a grass the glory of the Lord hereby men come to know God other men have notions of God but a Saint knows him And there are two effects of these discoveries One is a drawing out of the actings of grace they put new life into the soul they are very quickening and powerful on the heart The other is That they enkindle a desire to know more of God they make the soul long after further acquaintance with God to see his power and glory as they have seen him in the Sanctuary Psal 63.3 2. By revealing of Christ and gospel-grace unto the soul God does not only at first conversion but many times after make a discovery of Christ to the soul the Lord shews the soul the safety of this way of salvation Saints long for this Phil. 3.10 That I may know him and the power of his resurrection and God is at times gratifying them Christ is opening this mystery of the Gospel unto them the Lord draws nigh and holds forth the Scepter of mercy the acceptableness of his sacrifice the freeness of his grace the wonderfulness of his love the certainty of salvation in a way of believing and these discoveries that the Lord makes of the Gospel doe answer all the objections of the heart that though the soul was before in an unbelieving frame he has power to resist no longer these discoveries make Christ very precious he esteems him as one that does indeed save from sin and wrath these discoveries make the soul contented with Christ he sees he needs nothing but this righteousness to carry before God he has done looking out else-where for help yea he takes delight in this way of salvation it is a way that pleases he counts it glorious 1 Tim. 1.11 3. By promises of particular mercies God does draw nigh to some of his people and by his spirit make known unto them that he will bestow some particular mercy upon them thus he sometimes promises assistance in their works recovery from sickness publick deliverance of old God has sometimes by the Prophets made particular promises to wicked men as to Abab and Jehu whether he does any such thing by his spirit now to those that are carnal men is not so certain but undoubtedly he does to some Saints and that in answer to their prayers when they have been begging a mercy for God he by some promise gives assurance to the soul that the request shall be fullfilled 4. By witnessing his love to the soul God does not only help the soul to gather it by consequence but God by his spirit does evidence the same to the soul that he may quicken the heart in holiness and that he may help the soul under temptations and sinking discouragements or arm him against some special conflicts he gives witness to his good estate Gen. 7.1 Rom. 8.16 this differs much from those tasts that hypocrites may have wherein they have some sence of the sweetness that is in promises for this is by way of testimony yea the spirit does make it
manifest at that time that it is his testimony and hereby this differs from the delusions of Satan as the Prophets knew it to be the Lord that revealed things unto them so Saints at the time knew it to be the Spirit of God that witnessed to them they do not need any other help at that time to know it to be the voice of God they do not need a candle to see the Sun though soon after they may have doubts Thus I have cleared up the assumption of the Argument it remains that somewhat be added to evidence the proposition that it must needs be safe appearing in that righteousness upon the account of which God does bestow the beginnings of salvation here And I may evidence that from these two Principles The first Principle is That righteousness which does purchase any part of the good of the covenant does purchase the whole good of the covenant by the righteousness of Christ believers stand already possessed of some part of the good of the covenant and that righteousness that brought them into the possession of that will in due time bring them into the possession of what remains for that which purchases any part of the good of the covenant must needs purchase the whole the condition upon which all the good of the covenant depends was one so that the good of the covenant must be wholy purchased or wholly forfeited it could not be in part purchased in part forfeited the condition of the covenant of works was perfect righteousness if that were performed all the good of the covenant was purchased if that were not performed all the good of the covenant was forfeited an imperfect righteousness would not purchase any one good thing mentioned in the covenant one sin was sufficient to break the whole covenant and expose unto death one sin would make a course of righteousness for many years utterly ineffectual unto the purchase of any good and lay the sinner open unto the curse of the Law Gal. 3.10 Rom. 6.23 whatever was done towards the performance of the condition of the covenant signified nothing except the full was performed that God required so the condition of the covenant of the Mediator was perfect obedience to the law of the Mediator viz. perfect obedience to the commands of the law and perfect bearing of the curse 't is true that the active and passive obedience of Christ have a distinct respect one of them to the possession of good the other to the removal of evil the one is meritorious the other satisfactory one procures the blessings promised the other delivers from the evils threatned but yet Christ being made under such a covenant the success of one depended upon the other and they are joyntly together the purchasing cause of our salvation and one of them would have had no efficacy at all towards our salvation if not accompanied with the other so that this principle stands firm that that righteousness that does not procure all the good of the covenant procures none that righteousness can purchase no good for us that is not sufficient for our compleat salvation that cannot purchase the beginnings of salvation that does not justifie us seeing therefore on the account of Christs righteousness we have already the beginnings of salvation that righteousness is suffieient for our Justification and Salvation The Second Principle is That God in giving the beginnings of salvation in a way of believing in Christs righteousness for salvation does own that to be the way of salvation God does in this way give such mercies as are evidences of his favour and such as do accompany salvation he subdues sin quickens the heart in holiness reveals his loving kindness c. And herein God does plainly testifie that this is the way to salvation and that the righteousness of Christ was the procuring cause of salvation if the righteousness of Christ were not sufficient for our salvation God would be angry with us for believing in Christs righteousness we might expect frowns and judgments in this way but Gods giving the beginnings of salvation in this way does eminently own it to be the way of life when did God in such a way own men in a way of depending upon their own righteousness or external priviledges they have some common mercies but none of the beginnings of salvation but the beginings of salvation being bestowed in this way are an evident sign of divine approbation of it God bore witness to the Apostles preaching this doctrine by many wonderful signs Heb. 2.4 and he bears witness to those that by saith receive this doctrine by wonderful gracious effects in them he gives the earnest of heavenly glory which evidently shews the efficacy of this righteousness which they trust in to accomplish their salvation Eph. 1 13 14. in whom after that ye believed ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession unto the praise of his glory CHAP. VII The ninth Argument From the Sacraments of the New-Testament Two Objections against this Doctrine Answered Argument IX IT is safe appearing before God in that righteousness the efficacy whereof unto salvation we are taught in the Sacraments of the New-Testament But in the Sacraments of the New-Testament we are taught the efficacy of Christs righteousness unto salvation God in these Sacraments is by sensible signs teaching of us this truth so that in the Sacraments there is a divine testimony to this doctrine 1. We are taught the efficacy of Christs righteousness unto salvation by the ordinance of Baptism as 't is said of circumcision that it was a seal of the righteousness of Faith so is baptism the washing of water signifies our washing in the blood of Christ as the legal washings had a respect unto the cleansing away of sin by Christs blood so has our baptismal washing this ordinance practised first by John and afterwards appointed by Christ to be a perpetual ordinance in the gospel church is appointed on this design to strengthen our Faith in this Doctrine 1. This appears because by baptism is held forth our fellowship with Christ in his sufferings that is signified thereby that we have an interest in the vertue of his sufferings that his sufferings are made over unto us that we do participate in the good and benefit of them Rom. 6 3. so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death there was sealed up unto us the vertue and efficacy of his death therefore verse 4. we are said to be buried with him by baptism into death the like expression you have Col. 2.12 we are thereby partakers of his sufferings as if we our selves had suffered and if this be held forth then our justification and reconciliation is held forth for that is procured by the sufferings of Christ Rom. 5.10 we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son. 2. Baptism is
does inwardly teach it has a prevailing power therefore it is called a rod of strength Psal 110.2 it comes with power upon the heart 1 Thes 1.5 when God convinces men of the truth of it it alwayes works effectually upon them 1 Thes 2.13 let but the truth of it sink into a mans soul and Christ will be precious unto him 1 Pet. 2.7 the light of the gospel turns about the wills of men Psal 110.3 3. If the sinner could stay away from Christ the corruption of his heart would make him stay away from Christ if men were able to stay away they would not be able to come there is a great deal of opposition in the heart of a sinner to believing in Christ men are as great enemies to the gospel as they are to the law sinners are dreadful averse to come to Christ how many objections and cavils have men to keep them from Christ how many by-paths will they turn into before they come to Christ how much sorrow will they endure before they come to Christ Phil. 3.18 Rom. 10.3 and this opposition of heart would not suffer them to come except they were made to come if they were nor under a necessity of coming they would stay away 4. It is against nature when men have this inward light let into them to stay away from Christ there is a principle put into every man in his first creation to seek his own happiness and however the nature of man be corrupted yet that principle is not lost but remains strong in men however they mistake the way yet the desire of all men is happiness the Devil blinds men and tells one that this is the way and another that that is the way but still they are driving an end that design Psal 4.6 who will shew us any good and therefore when the Spirit of God shews a man that Christ is the way to happiness that there is salvation in Christ he cannot but come to him Joh. 6.6.8 to whom shall we go thou hast the words of eternal Life 5. When the sinner comes at first to Christ this inward teaching of the Father works such affections that he cannot but come when his eyes are opened his affections are so wrought upon that he cannot but come when he comes out of darkness into light his heart is affected with the sight of Christ and he cannot stay away there are three affections that are wrought upon one is hope he sees a hope of blessedness if he comes to Christ he sees in that way hopes of pardon and glory Heb 6.18 who are fled for refuge to lay hold on the hope that is set before us another is Love when the soul comes to see Jesus Christ offering himself he cannot but love him and look on this way of salvation as a glorious way he despised Christ before but now he charges his mind he prizes him 1 Pet. 2.7 to them that believe in Christ is precious and then it works on fear he dare not lose the opportunity he does not know whether he shall have another call so that he dares do no other than take God at his word Objection This seems to overthrow the liberty of mans will if he can't come to Christ where is his Freedome Answer Liberty does consist in an indifferency unto contrary Acts or Objects sometimes indeed men have such a liberty but that is peculiar to some cases liberty is not opposed to necessity but to force the will cannot be force by any external violence but it may be necessitated by reason and conviction natural men sin voluntarily yet necessarily they reject the Gospel voluntarily Joh. 5.40 yet necessarily Joh. 6.44 Saints in heaven love and serve God necessarily yet freely so t is here Psal 110.3 thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power From this Particular we may conclude the faith of such men to be false as have made a faith of their own convinced sinners hearing they shall certainly be ruined that do not believe in Christ and that they that do believe shall be saved set themselves in their own strengths to work their hearts to this duty and after a while imagine that they have got the victory and have prevailed over their unbelief and wrought their hearts unto a closure with Christ this Faith is not right it s very true that after a man has been brought in he may in this way by Gods assistance come to perform renewed acts of Faith but it is never thus in the first closure with Christ at first God layes a necessity upon men they cannot but come to Christ Eph. 1 19 20. what is the exceeding greatness if his power to us-ward who believe according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead when the sinner comes indeed to Christ he is compelled to come Luk 14.23 Before I leave this Particular I shall answer two Doubts in the hearts of some Saints from hence Doubt 1. I fear my closing with Christ is not right because after God let light into me I objected awhile before I yielded the light did not at first overcome me Answer Many times when God comes with that inward call of the Gospel he does not at one instant let in such light as does overcome all objections but after God begins to bring the call home to the soul there are some struglings of unbelief before he yields sometimes the light is such that it strikes all objections dead at a blow sometimes it answers them gradually the light breaks in fuller and fuller till at last it quite overcomes him as in Moses's call Doubt 2. I fear my closing was not right because when I came first to Christ I had a fear and trembling on my heart I bad not such full satisfaction as some have but crouded through difficulties Answer Some have more clear light than others but every one has so much that he cannot but venture though there be remaining darkness yet they have so much light as overbears them that their hearts are carried out to rely on Christ and that is sufficient Rom. 4.18 who against hope be teved in hope 3. The third way of Trial is by living a life of Faith on Jesus Christ they that have received Christ by Faith do not satisfie themselves that they have believed but do from time to time live a life of dependance on Christ this life Paul lived Gal. 2.20 I live by Faith in the Son of God that is the duty of them that have believed 1 Joh. 5.13 I have written to you that have believed on the Son of God that you may know that you have eternal life and that you may believe on the Son of God. And this is the spirit of those that have believed they live a life of dependance upon Christ for every thing even for outward things for life health peace liberty provision protection for private and publick blessings
sort of men another to limit it and confine it to them it may be applied particularly to young ones yet that does not exclude the Antient to poor ones yet that does not exclude the wealthy to afflicted ones and that does not exclude men that are in prosperity unto the Jews but that does not exclude the Gentiles Rev. 22.22 Whoever will let him come and take the water of life freely Objection 8. I have not a work of Humiliation I am not brought wholly out of my self therefore I am not called Answer 1. Persons that are not humbled are called to come to Christ their next work indeed is not to come to Christ but to come out of themselves and so come to Christ to forsake all other confidences and build on Christ to throw away other hopes and flee to this hope that is set before them to throw away their crutches and lean upon Christ self-righteous persons are invited Rev. 3.17 18. they that said they were rich are invited to come to Christ for gold tried in the fire 2. If persons are so far humbled as to be willing to take Christ on his own terms that is enough there needs no humiliation before faith but upon this account that persons may be so shiftless that they may be willing to take Christ as a free gift of God men need so much that they may not make lies their refuge but may be prepared to take the free offer of the Gospel so much as is necessary in order to a dependance on Christ and free-grace is needful and no more Objection 9. How can the Righteousness of Christ make God love one I have no righteousness of my own to draw the heart of God to me and I don't see how the righteousness of Christ can procure the love of God for me Answer 1. The use of the righteousness of Christ is to answer the demands of the Law for you the Law laid an objection in the way of your salvation which must be removed before you could be saved the Law would not admit of your salvation without a compleat righteousness and the righteousness of Christ does remove this objection this is as much as the Law does demand as the condition of life the righteousness of Christ makes you an heir of blessedness according to the law this removes the guilt of sin this supplies your want of worthiness so that hereby fair way is made for your salvation without any injustice Rom. 3.26 there needs nothing more to make your salvation free from any legal exceptions 2. There is no need that the righteousness of Christ should procure the love of God for you men are troubling of themselves in vain when they are seeking a cause of Gods love out of himself Gods love is the first cause of mans salvation and has no dependance upon any thing it is impossible that any thing out of God should move God to love you and there is sufficiency of grace in God to love you tho' there be no external cause to move him God loves men freely Hos 14.4 he can have mercy upon you because he will the love that God has to the angels of heaven is not built upon their righteousness but is the foundation of their righteousness because they were elect angels therefore they continued holy angels and the love of God to Abraham and all his Saints does not depend upon their righteousness nor upon the Righteousness of Christ indeed the love of God was the reason why Christ was sent to work out righteonsness for us Joh. 4.10 he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins Objection 10 I have not the inward call of the Gospel how can it be said then that God calls me I have indeed an external call but God does not inwardly call me and I wait for that Answer It is the outward call of the Gospel that gives men their warrant to believe it is the written Word of God that bears us out in it and you must not expect any other warrant but that you must not expect any new revelations to warrant your coming to Christ 2 Pet. 1.19 we have also a more sure word of Prophesie the inward call is nothing else but the opening of the ear to hear the outward call the inward call is only that illumination of the mind wherby we see God calling of us in his word the assuring us of the truth of the Gospel the call of God in his Word is that that gives men their encouragement to come to Christ the Word of God is the ground of faith Psal 91.4 his Truth shall be thy shield and buckler the design of the inward call is only to clear up the outward call and satisfie the heart in that the outward call evidences mens safety in coming there is Gods testimony and that is an evidence beyond exception 1 Joh. 5.9 Gods call in his Word makes it your duty to believe but that it would not do if it did not give you a sufficient warrant to believe the inward call helps us to read and understand our warrant but it is the outward call that gives warrant to believe the outward call is the foundation of saith Acts 13.48 they glorified the Word of the Lord and believed God speaks his heart in the outward call men slight it and say it is but an outward call but the outward call is no delusion God speaks uprightly in the outward call there you may see the heart of God how ready he is to bestow salvation upon sinners and the outward call binds Gods faithfulness the outward call lays such a tye upon God as makes the condition of believers very safe Heb. 10.25 let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering for he is fatthful that promised Objection 11. I have an unwilling spirit to come to Christ and therefore I am not called for the call is only to them that will Rev 22.17 whosoever will let him take of the water of life freely Answer 1. When God says whoever will he does not limit the call to them that will the offer is general and therefore is made unto them that will not as well as unto them that will men that are unwilling ought to come mens duty does not depend upon their willingness to do it God commands those that are unwilling the generality of the Jews were not willing to come to Christ yet God required them to come Joh. 9.29 this is the work of God that ye believe on him whom he hath sent God makes conditional promises unto such and will punish such men for their not coming unto Christ it will be a poor excuse at the last day for men to say they were not willing out of their own mouth God will conde mn them 2 When God says whosoever will he does not require any antecedent willingness before their coming the meaning is not that men must first find themselves willing and so come
to Christ men must not wait for a willing spirit as a ground of encouragement to come to Christ God does not require that men should be first willing and then come it is a concomitant willingness only that God does require not an antecedent for indeed no man is indeed truly willing to believe in Christ until he does so 3. The meaning of it is that there is an universal liberty given to men to come to Christ he will bestow the blessing on none but those that will and upon any one that will the meaning is that he will reject no man that will come upon any defect whatever upon any account that may be thought of whatever their outward condition be whatever hearts they have whatever their former life have been whatever weakness there be in their faith it is an universal offer without an exception Objection 12. I am afraid I don't understand the meaning of the call God promises life to them that believe but there may be some interpretation or other found out that I did not think of I fear I should but deceive my self if I should come Answer You scare your self causelesly God has upon design so phrased the calls of the Gospel that all our scruples may be removed Joh. 6.37 he that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out God has made our way plain to Christ there can be no interpretation made contrary to the words of the call and they bind the thing sure enough there can be no interpretation contrary to the glory of free grace which is the great thing that God does design his design shall not fall to the ground there can be no such interpretation as shall rob Christ of his honour the honour of being a compleat Saviour yea there can be no such interpretation but what is suitable to the necessity of sinners this way of salvation is proposed to be an help to us and if we can't have salvation in a way of free grace upon Christs account but that there must be some worthiness in us it would be no help to us if God did stand for any worthiness in us we should be uncapable of salvation Objection 13. I am afraid if I should believe that I shall come in a wrong way and then I shall be in a worse condition then I am now then I shall go hoping to hell Answer If you come to Christ meerly upon Gospel encouragement you cannot come in a wrong way if you come indeed upon such encouragements as these that you have not much angred God that you have pacified him that your have a great love for him that you have not been so bad as other men that your heart is soft and broken for sin c. you don't come in a right way but if you come meerly upon the encouragements that God sets before you in his Word you do come in a right way God offers salvation to you and tells you that his grace is free that Christ has dyed for our sins and if this prevail upon you that though you are vile yet there is vertue enough in Christ for the pardon of them that God is a God of glorious grace and his Word is true and upon the encouragement hereof you come to Christ God will not reject you this is the faith that God calls for Psal 36 7. Psal 91.4 2 Tim. 1.12 Objection 14. In this way of coming unto Christ I must take all upon trust we don't see that it is so we cannot tell whether Jesus he the Christ whether God does take delight in his sacrifice and be willing to accept of us it is so reported and recorded but we don't know it to be so but must take it upon trust Answer We must indeed take things upon trust but it is upon the testimony of God if we must take it upon trust from man only that would be hard but it is not hard to take it upon trust from God we have more for it than against it we have nothing against it but vain conjectures and surmises the things themselves are not incredible this way of salvation is neither contrary to the justice of God nor beyond the mercy of God no man was ever able to give any demonstration against this way of salvation Men scare themselves with many vain scruples and ignorant imaginations of their own and are such conjectures and guessings to be set against the testimony of God God has sent us word from heaven that we may have salvation by Christ he gives his witness unto it and that may well satisfie us what God speaks he will make good if we receive the witness of men the Witness of God is greater and we may safely venture our souls upon his Word God assures us that it is so and gives a large account in his Word how the thing is brought about he gives us an account of the reason of it the means and method of accomplishing it and the design that is upon his heart in such a way as is exceeding agreeable unto right reason remoxing all weighty objections that can arise in your hearts if you will hearken unto cavils and the pretenses of reason and stand off from Jesus Christ you must expect to rue it another day but if you desire the good of your souls and to escape those miseries that shall come upon an unbelieving world reject temptations and cast away all the vain arguings of your hearts and accept of this glorious call and build upon this sure foundation you need not have any greater assurance than Gods Word which will endure when Heaven and Earth shall fail it is well for those men and women that have Word of God for their salvation it is bad building hopes of heaven upon mens fancies but it is safe building them upon Gods Word CHAP. XI Vse 4. Exhortation To Saints to live by Faith upon the Righteousness of Jesus Christ for your acceptance USE IV. I Shall conclude the Discourse with an Exhortation to the people of God to be often renewing acts of dependance upon Christs Righteousness for your acceptance with God be believing on Christ for your acceptance both now and in the day of Judgment a great part of the life of a Christian lies in the exercise of Faith and as you are to be exercising Faith in Christ for other things so especially for your acceptance and salvation 't is not enough that you have once ventured your selves on Christ and accepted of the tender of life made to you through him but you must live upon Christ for acceptance all your dayes you ought to be alwayes in a believing frame and never to put forth any act contrary unto the act of Faith and very often to be renewing of the acts of Faith for your acceptance there are many special occasions when it is duty so to do as when God is setting the offers of this grace before you in his Word and in the Sacrament of the