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

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conteyned in the word of the Prophets and Apostles yet by reason of the blindnes of mans vnderstanding and the backwardnes and frowardnes of his will they are not sufficient to worke in vs a true knowledge of God and of Christ but that God must needes worke effectually in vs by his holy spirit that we may vnderstand them as wee ought to doe and soundly consent vnto them being so vnderstood Therefore there can come no greater benefite from heaven vnto man then the true knowledge of God and faith in Christ Heere for our better vnderstanding-sake wee must marke that God by his word doth lay open his will vnto all men in the whole Church but he revealeth it and maketh it knowne by his spirit vnto the elect onely and that not onely vnto all together in generall but to everyone by himselfe in particular This kinde of revealing is the proper worke of the Holy Ghost they therefore which stubbornely and of set purpose resist it do sinne against the Holy Ghost and shall be condemned without any hope of forgivenes as the scripture witnesseth Mat. ●2 31 And this effectuall vocation is manifested and revealed almost by the same meanes as election is revealed by But it appeareth by the outward preaching of the word of God by the inward instinct operation of the holy ghost In the outward preaching of the word God doth plentifully and playnely declare his will towards vs to wit that he wisheth well vnto vs in that he inviteth and calleth vs vnto himselfe which were wholy corrupted and altogether enemyes vnto him Heere therefore doth he indeed and by lively experience teach vs that he is more prompt and ready to defend and save vs then we can desire to be saved and defended by him whilest that of enemyes and foes he maketh vs his friends whilest that of vnwilling he maketh vs willing whilest that of infidels he maketh vs beleevers Doth he not thus offer salvation vnto vs of his owne accord Surely except God should call vs vnto him we should not onely never come vnto him but also we should remain sworne enemyes and adversaries to him and to our owne salvation But in the meane time by the inspiration of his spirit Ephes 1.9 1. Ioh. 5.20 he doth make fit and dispose our will to trust and beleeve in him For God doth not onely reveale vnto vs the misteryes of his hidden will but also giveth vs a minde that we may vnderstand and know those misteryes In this calling there is no violent motion to be dreamed of by which men are drawne against their will but it is a quiet and fatherly perswasion of the Holy Ghost by which of an vnbeleever Phili. 1.13 a man is made a beleever For first he doth cleere and illuminate our mind by his holy spirit that we may vnderstand Secondly he doth renew and change our will to affect that which is good and do that which is right So God by this effectuall calling doth beget faith in vs whereby we may apprehend the obedience and merit of Christ and apply it vnto our selves This incomprehensible goodnes and mercy of God toward vs is to be embraced beloved with our whole soule For when he draweth vs vnto Christ and calleth vs vnto himselfe then are we as it were created anew and do arise out of nothing because we have not the least sparkle of the least good thing in vs which may make vs worthy or fit for the kingdome of God So that faith and a spirituall life is wrought in vs from above altogether of nothing Faith followeth this calling which ariseth from the word of God being well vnderstood and the inward motion of the holy spirit Heere is to be noted that the word of God and the holy spirit ought to be ioyned together in this effectuall calling so that neither the word should be separated from the spirit nor the spirit from the word For those things which God hath ioyned together are by no meanes to be put asunder And that God hath ioyned togother the word and the spirit in the publike ministery of the Church it is manifestly cleered out of Esay Esa 59.21 where God speaketh thus This shall be my covenant with them sayth the Lord My spirit that is vpon thee and my words which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seede sayth the Lord even from henceforth for ever This is a most sweete promise that God by his ministery will alwayes even to the end of the world teach and gather together his Church with his word and spirit They which reiect this order which God hath established in his Church are but vayne boasters that they obey God so that they which seperate the spirit from the word and seeke for new revelations are mad and turne aside out of the right path of heavenly wisedome and wander altogether from the way of salvatio for the spirit separated from the word is not the spirit of God but of the Devill They therefore wliich brag of the name of the spirit despising and reiecting the word they are not the ministers of God but of the devill for whom also they gather together a Church but the spirit ioyned together with the word is the soule and life of it For the spirit doth quicken the word in the ministery of the Church maketh it frutefull and taketh wholsome roote in the hearts of men bringeth forth fruit Seeing therfore that this word of God is that only instrumēt by which the holy ghost sheweth forth his power to the saving of men his ministers therfore should with earnest vndaunted study give themselves vnto it that they may handle it rightly and deliver it vnto the people most diligētly And that they may the more commodiously performe this they must duly consider daily practise these three things First that they keep that word of God pure vncorrupted not adding to it nor taking from it as do the Papists being lyers in adding and sacrilegious in taking from it Secondly that they vnderstand it rightly according to the will of God the analogy of Christian faith Thirdly that they interpret and apply it vnto those ends and vses for the which God hath ordeyned and appoynted it These three things except they shall dayly consider practise they shall not only beate the peoples eares with an empty sound without any edifying but also they shall set open a wide gap for Sathan himselfe for to sow errors by for he neglecteth not such an occasion offred but most carefully layeth hold vpon it wheresoever he may For the word of God being distracted drawne from the right and naturall meaning therof ceaseth to be the word of God and becommeth a snare to intrap deceive men But the whole fault shall fall vpon the Ministers which shall in no wise escape vengeance And where it is well
vnderstood rightly expounded it is the effectual wholesome instrumēt of the holy spirit to convert save mē So that the word of God his spirit is the singular and inestimable treasure and the excellent peculiar goods of the Church of which the Church according to that promise ought never to be deprived but to be alwayes begotten of it and to be continually directed and preserved by it Therefore the Holy Ghost is the begetting cause of faith he doth create and worke it in the hearts of the elect and by the dayly proceedings and increase thereof doth augment and preserve it vnto the end of their lives But the stedfast apprehension and applying of the promises of God and the merit of Christ is the expresse forme and lively image of faith in this consisteth the whole force and efficacy of faith Gal. 2.20 So S. Paule doth in expresse words set downe saying The sonne of God loved me and gave himselfe for me So true faith doth behold the generall promise of God and apprehendeth it and maketh particular application to it selfe certainely setting downe this that that promise of grace and salvation doth no lesse appertayne vnto it then vnto the rest of the beleevers For then the promise of God is effectuall in men and commeth to the proper end and issue of it selfe when it is apprehended by a true faith Againe the word publikely preached in the ministery of the Gospel is the instrumentall cause of faith and therefore that word is called by Paul the power of God vnto salvation Rom. 1.16 Rom. 10.17 vnto every one that beleeveth because that the holy ghost worketh by it in the hearts of the elect so that faith springeth from the preaching hearing of the Gospell Therefore whatsoever the elect do heare with their outward eares from the publike preaching of the word that doth the Holy Ghost make fruitefull and effectuall in their hearts Furthermore a stedfast confidence and a true hope in Christ a fervent love towards God also a sonne-like feare and reverence of God a sincere love of our neighbour and other honest and holy actions are such effects of the holy spirit which do accompany and attend vpon true faith as naturall and inseparable vertues So true fayth doth rest selfe vpon the fatherly love of God and doth heartily reverence and worship God as a good and loving Father and doth continually study how to please him and cleave vnto him and carefully avoydeth whatsoever may offend him and lastly doth steadfastly hope that it shall be partaker together with Christ of everlasting life and heavenly glory But the finall cause of fayth is 1. Pet. 1.9 the comprehending and conceyving of good thinges to witte life eternall and blessed immortalitie And if any shall here subtily obiect vnto a man and say that fayth is alwayes here lame and vnperfect and therefore cannot make a man perfect and happy For that which ought to save one must be every way perfect and absolute wee must answere him that fayth as farre forth as it abideth in the heart of man as in the subiect thereof is alwayes imperfect here and scarce deserveth the name of vertue But as it beholdeth and apprehendeth Christ so it is effectuall and maketh men of the sonnes of perdition the children of God then great power and saving actions are ascribed vnto it by the Scripture as that it iustifieth men that it quikneth them and saveth them So that fayth doth not save and make happy any man in regard of the subiect in which it remayneth but it is sayd to save and iustifie a man in regard of the obiect whither it tendeth and which it apprehendeth For Christ being layd hold on by fayth saveth a man whether that fayth be great or small And that Christ being apprehended with a little and slender fayth doth yet save and iustifie a man the examples of the holy Scripture declare manifestly enough For that Ruler in Iohn although he were endued with a very slender and weake fayth in Christ Iohn 4.49.53 yet for all that Christ reiecteth him not but iustified and saved both him and his sonne with all his houshold So likewise he in Marke Marke 9.24.25 although he was sayd to have a meane and a weake fayth yet Christ being layd hold on by it tooke pittie vpon him and healed his sonne that was possessed of the divell Here is notwithstanding diligently to be marked that in these manner of speeches wherein in the vertue of saving is attributed vnto fayth the power and force of the efficient cause is attributed vnto the instrument by which it worketh and is effectuall So that when iustification salvation is ascribed vnto faith as vnto the cause then the obiect of fayth is vnderstood For Christ cannot be apprehended but by sayth onely as by the instrument wherewith it is done Furthermore here is carefully to be considered that this saving Calling is produced and wrought more by the inward working of the spirite then by the outward preaching of the word For although God by his Ministers should speake and call vnto vs a thousand times by the voyce of his word in the Ministery yet vnlesse wee be drawne inwardly by the spirite of God we shall never come vnto him Many and most wonderfull examples of all ages have sufficiently declared this and do yet at this day declare it Whereby it may bee gathered that this Calling is placed in the good will and hand of God onely farre out of our owne reach For he alone can illuminate vs and convert and change vs into new creatures For in this calling the whole man is repugnant vnto God that calleth Iohn 6.44 Psal 51.12 Therefore Christ in S. Iohn vseth this word drawing David vseth this word creating speaking of the conversion of man Christ by the word drawing sheweth that this heavenly grace cannot bee conceyved of the naturall man but that there must be a new mind and a new vnderstanding to conceive it And David by the word creating would teach vs that the renewing and amendement of man is so difficult hard a worke that it can be wrought or brought to passe by no creature Bara This he sheweth by the Hebrew word Bara he created which properly signifieth hee made a thing of nothing which which was not before Secondly it signifieth to bring to passe some singular and wonderfull worke out of some matter already created which cannot possibly be imitated by any creature So that this regeneration of man is a certayne spirituall creation by which the regenerate are transported into a newe life and prepared for that heavenly glory which never shall have ende Here is refuted the errour of the Papists concerning the strength that is in man and shewed in what things an vnregenerate man hath free-will and in what not and how farre free-will stretcheth it selfe And the grosse ignorance or manifest impietie of the Papists is disclosed
and exercise the strength thereof in the very act of administring them Agayne they doe offend and sinne exceedingly and out of measure agaynst the office of the holy Spirite and the blood of Christ For the holy Spirite is the onely efficient cause and principall worker of regeneration and the bloud of Christ is the meritorious cause thereof therefore they attribute that vnto the outward water of baptisme which is due only vnto the holy spirit the bloud of Christ so fall into a fallacy from that which is no cause as if it were a cause for they do cast that vnto the false and fayned cause which ought to be attributed vnto the true and proper cause and so as much as in them lyeth do overthrow and vndermine the principall heads of Christian religion And whereas they inferre that the purer and preciser sort of Divines do deny that Baptisme is the washing of the new birth Tit. 3.5 as Paul to Titus speaketh This is an vnsavory and a vile cavill for they doe not onely admit and like of those words of Paul in their true and naturall meaning but do receive them as a most sound confirmation and strengthening of our cause for Paul there playnely pronounceth that the power of the holy spirit doth effect and worke regeneration in vs. But our adversaryes do misvnderstand those words of Paul and do abuse them whilest they wrest them into an other sence as seducers vse to do and apply them amisse and so do fall into a fallacy of the ambiguity of a word whilest they interpret that ill which they apply worst of all Among true and sound Divines it is a thing firmely resolved and agreed vpon that the Sacraments do not bring grace but do for the strengthening of faith seale vp that which was bestowed before as we may see in Abraham Rom. 4.10 as in the common example and father of all them which beleeve Lastly they erre not a little by this their most vayne fiction whilest that they place the first beginning of salvation and the ground thereof in the water of baptisme for so they forge and frame the causes of salvation from the instruments that are vsed as meanes and from the manner of applying them but with deepe silence they do passe by and with wonderfull craft neglect the true and proper cause of salvation namely everlasting and free election and the onely merit of Christ that they might the more easily deceive and cast a mist before the eyes of the ignorant For there is no greater nor more plentifull occasion to beguile and deceive then where false and imaginary causes are supposed for true and proper causes Moreover this regeneration heere is alwayes defective and imperfect and a small beginning of a new life and a certayne onset vnto it This is prooved by manifest testimonyes of Scripture and also by dayly experience of the godly The testimonyes of Scripture say that we ought to be changed into the image of God from glory to glory 2. Cor. 3.18 Rom. 1.17 and to go forward dayly more and more from faith to faith Also that the children of God ought to walke in his commaundements Eze. 36.27 Tit. 2.14 and to keepe his statutes and to be zealous of good workes These and the like places of Scripture doe teach vs that the elect are not the first day polished vnto the highest perfection but that by little and little as it were by degrees they are brought from one vertue vnto an other vntill after this life they shall come vnto the highest perfection for they are not perfect which must be changed from one glory to another and goe forward from faith to faith Secondly they which walke in the commaundements of God are yet in the way and are not come vnto the end of theyr race therefore they are vnperfect For wayfaring men are often weeryed and now and then stumble and fall by reason of these or these lets and hindrances so also the regenerate men beeing as it were weeryed in the course and study of godlines doe slip often and fall into these and these sinnes Therefore the Apostle Saint Iohn sayeth playnely 1. Iohn 1.8 that they which say they have no sinnes deceive themselves and the truth is not in them Also the most holy Prophets do playnely and freely confesse of themselves that theyr best workes are poluted and stayned with many and great imperfections Esay 64. for in them alwayes the dregges of sinfull flesh remayne and abide and very often the sparkles of theyr lewde affections doe breake forth and shewe themselves but these hinder them not because they have a promise of a pardon These things the testimonies of Scripture teach vs that the children of God do onely obtayne some beginnings of a new life heere so that regeneration heere is maymed and vnperfect For the holy spirit doth so illuminate and renew the mindes of the elect 1. Cor. 13.9 that heere they doe know but in part and doth so change and refine their wills that they can will and do that which is good but in part as long as they live in this life So that whether a man respect the vnderstanding of the regenerate or whether a man consider theyr will hee shall easily finde that they are vnperfect for they which are renewed still day by day are not as yet wholy renewed but the children of God as long as they live heere are renewed day by day therefore they are not as yet perfect nor wholy renewed Besides these there are many other tokens whereof the scripture is very plentifull as which are wrought successively by the children of God eyther in reioycing at the benefites of God or sorrowing at theyr owne sinnes and surely these do bewray theyr imperfections So that infirmity alwayes abideth and dwelleth in them with which they must strive even vnto the death of the body with an entercourse of going backward and going forward as Augustine sayth in one place Secondly dayly experience it selfe doth convince and prove the imperfection of the godly For the most holy men of all ages have offended and sinned very often which they could not have done if they had not bin vnperfect for they which by regeneration are quite perfected are set out of all danger of sinning any more furthermore God hath no where promised that he will indue his children in this life with exquisite perfection therefore they cannot be made perfect heere for God doth not perfourme more in this worke of regeneration by the power of his spirit then he hath declared in the revealed word of promise and they themselves by their owne power cannot make themselves better and more holy then God will have them to be Also the most holy Apostles themselves say Iames. 3.2 that in many things they sinne all Iohn also in his Epistle pronounceth most plainely saying 1. Iohn 1.8 If we say that we have no sinne we deceive
striveth vnto the obedience of Gods law with a carefull endeavour Therefore this wrestling betweene the flesh the spirit and the love of goodnes and hatred of evill are such works in a man as can be found in none but in the regenerate only for where there is no regeneration there can be no strife betweene the flesh and the spirit but men wallow nuzzle themselves in sin without feare But in a regenerate man there are contrary affections which alwayes fight one with an other They therefore which feele within themselves this conflict betweene the flesh the spirit and yet in the meane while doubt whether they be elected vnto salvation or no they do great iniury vnto God as if he did regenerate and call men vnto Christ in vayne and would not save them By this conflict the imperfection of the godly in this life may easily be perceived because that the corruption of nature is not fully and wholy vanquished and subdued in this world so that the godly should strive and contend manfully against it vntill by the holy spirit they have subdued it and so obtayne a ioyfull victory and rule over the stubbernes of the flesh Therefore Paul commaundeth Gal. 5.17 that the godly should not doe that which they would So in this life there is such a condition and conflict in the Saints that the flesh alwayes lusteth against the spirit Rom. 7.15 and the spirit against the flesh So that what they do they approve and allow not for that which they would they doe not but that which they hate that do they So Paul in his owne person as in the common example of all the godly doth teach vs that such is the infirmity of the best that they cannot do that good which they would but contrarywise that they doe that evill which they would not By this it is evident that the children of God are never such good proficients heere as that the perfection of their worke should be answerable vnto their will And so Paul sayth playnely and confesseth freely of himselfe That to will is alwayes present with me but I finde no meanes to do that which is good so the corruption of nature doth alwayes hinder the most godly in this life that they cannot perfectly serve and obey God Therefore let every Christian carefully examine himselfe whether he do acknowledge Christ for his redeemer and stedfastly beleeve in him or no if he shall find that he hath any whit of Christ within him so that for the love and feare of God he hateth evill loveth that which is good then surely he hath the beginning of life in himselfe Rom. 8.1 and neede to have no feare of condemnation at all They therefore which beleeve that they are elected do honour God by giving credit vnto his word Certainely we should by faith embrace the promise of God and not respect the frailty of man for they which by a true faith do beleeve that they shal be saved for Christ his sake his merit are the sonnes of Abraham shal be the heires of promise Gal. 3.29 Therfore by faith may every one be assured of his salvation So that this is a sure infallible conclusion I do beleeve truly and sincerely in Iesus Christ and do put the whole confidence of my salvation in him alone therefore I am elected and cannot be lost For true faith is a most certayne and vndoubted argument of salvation that is to say a most infallible and evident token which maketh an end of all wavering and doubting For the scripture sayth in playne and expresse words 2. Thes 3.2 Tit. 1.1 Act. 3.28 Rom. 5.1 14.17 that faith is not given vnto every one but is a gift peculiar vnto the elect only Now this faith is not idle but doth glad the conscience and bringeth peace vnto it This the scripture expresseth saying that God sheadeth abroade the feeling of his love into the hearts of the elect by the holy spirit by which they cry Abba father So Paul sayeth playnely that hee knoweth whom he hath beleeved on 2. Tim. 1.12 teaching every of the godly by his example that he may iudge and discerne of his owne faith Therefore whosoever beleeveth in his heart and desireth to go forward that is to make better proceedings in faith and in the workes thereof he may set it downe for a certayne truth that he is elected of God redeemed by Christ and regenerate by the Holy Ghost So God witnesseth and declareth in theyr consciences how he is affected toward every one so that where there is a quiet and peaceable conscience toward God there doth God set vp the throane of his fatherly and saving grace and ruleth and worketh by his holy Spirit vnto everlasting life Moreover although faith be an evident testimony of election yet the want of faith is no evident signe of reprobation Therefore this consequence is false and deceitfull I beleeve not therefore I am not elected but reprobated That is as vntrue as this The Sunne is not as yet risen therefore it will never rise for after a little while it may rise So also although this or that man beleeve not to day nor feeleth any effect of faith yet when the time shall come which God hath appoynted and set downe for his calling hee may have faith attaine vnto the true feeling therof Therfore we should hope very well in our good God evē vntil the last gaspe of life especially seeing he is endewed with so kind and mercifull a nature as that he is infinitely more desirous to save miserable sinners then they are to be saved of him Let every man therefore repent him and betake himselfe vnto a better way and through Christ he shall obtayne salvation For sinnes passed as Augustine sayth do not hurt a man if sinnes that are present do not delight him And he that is displeased with himselfe in his sinnes he is well pleasing vnto God in grace For the favour of God and a wicked life agree not together neyther can be in one man both together Therefore 2. Tim. 2.19 let every man that nameth Christ depart from iniquity for so hee shall indeede feele that hee is not of the number of the reprobates but of the elect So that whosoever loveth God truly 1. Cor. 8.3 and studieth and desireth to order his life according to his will let him know that he is truly elected and regenerate indeede For the vnregenerate men with their whole soule and will are at enimity with God Rom. 8.7 Col. 1.21 and are wholy caryed headlong into all wickednes and every kinde of sinne for theyr minde is alienated from that which is good and is wholy addicted and given vnto that which is evill These things being thus considered both in a generality and common view concerning the chayne of salvation is also being divided and vnfolded through the five linckes thereof as it were by
CHAP. 25. THe Papists in this doctrine of Vocation doe erre most shamefully which thinke and write that there is a certayne naturall faculty in man by which hee may come of his owne accorde vnto the embracing of the grace of God For so they doe not onely wickedly seduce and miserably deceyve men but also doe open iniurie vnto God For they take so much from the iustice and grace of God as they doe give vnto the naturall facultie and power in man For the grace of God and the power and faculty of man are in this matter opposed as contrary one vnto an other by which ioyntly together Salvation cannot bee wrought For one and the selfe matter and thing cannot by any meanes bee brought to passe and proceede from contrary causes And in this matter they doe follow and maintayne the damnable opinion and manifest dotage of the Pelagians For they did wickedly thinke and teach as ill that it was in the power and will of man to beleeve or not to beleeve But the Scripture of God depriveth man of all goodnesse and that so that it leaveth him not so much as a good thought the least part of a good worke For the Apostle to the Corinthians doth expressely say that wee are not sufficient of our selves to thinke any thing that is good 2. Cor. 3.5 So that this spirituall grace cannot bee conceyved with our naturall senses and naturall reason cannot direct a man vnto God This place ministreth occasion to speake some fewe things concerning free wil. But that they may the more rightly be vnderstood and the more familiarly bee conceaved we must consider the two estates in man The first in a good and innocent nature before the fall of man the second in an evill and depraved nature after his fall Man before his fall was indued with most free power to will and doe that which was good for man was created wholy according to the Image of God Gen. 1.27 Therefore all his actions as well outward as inward were agreeable to the will of God But by his fall man lost not onely himselfe but also his free-will together with himselfe So that looke how great ability there was in him before his fall to please and serve God so great desire of sinning is there in him now and wilfulnesse of rebellion against God Agayne as before his fall there was in him the habite of all goodnesse and the absence of all evill so now there is in him the habite of all evil the absence of all good for there is no evill in man but by the losse of the contrary good Here therefore we must know that in outward and civill matters a man hath some free-will as that he may be obedient and subiect vnto civil iustice so hee may obey his Parents and reverence the Magistrates so he may yeeld a certaine kind of duty vnto his Masters and Instructers so he may keepe his hand from theft and murder so he may keepe his tongue from slandering and reproching So in other outward actions and things man hath some freedome to will or not to will accordingly as reason shall perswade him that the thing is to be chosen or refused And although that there bee in man by nature a desire of good and profitable thinges and a loathing and hatred of thinges evill and hurtfull yet in all these and in every of these there is imperfection and error because he doth not chuse do these naturall civil good things so as they ought to be chosen and done nor avoyd the contrary evilles as hee should avoyd them So that the love and loathing in choosing and avoyding of those things which by nature are to bee chosen and avoyded is common vnto men with bruit beastes for they desire those things which are agreeable vnto theyr nature and avoyd and hate things contrary and hurtfull Notwithstanding these thinges which the vnregenerate man willeth and doeth in these outward things rather deserve the name of vice then of true Vertue because they are not aymed vnto that ende vnto which they ought to be directed For every thing hath his reward and is to be esteemed by the ende The honour of God and Salvation of men should be preferred before private commodities But a man that is left vnto himselfe cannot thinke nor do any thing vnto these endes therefore that which seemeth fayre in the sight of men and carrieth a great shew of vertue and godlinesse is vncleane and abominable in the sight of God But in inward and spirituall things a man of himselfe hath no free-will and libertie at all but in man there is a meere bondage of sinne and a most miserable slavery of Sathan Here man is so vntoward impotent as that he is not able to begin or perfect any good worke nay he is not able in his least thought to attayne vnto any thing that may be acceptable or well pleasing vnto God 2. Cor. 3.5 but with all the affection of his whole nature he is obstinate and rebellious against God because that of himselfe he can doe nothing but sinne and that continually and of necessity yea beside all this he is so corrupted and blinded that he can neyther see nor acknowledge his sinne except God by his law reveale it and by his spirite declare it vnto him So that the misery of man consisteth chiefely in these things First because he is so corrupted both in body in soule and in all the parts of both that he is more repugnant and contrary vnto God then any one thing can be to another Secondly because he neither knoweth this his corruption neither wil be brought to confesse it without much indignation and murmuring Thirdly because he dayly increaseth this his corruption with many actuall transgressions and maketh it alwayes worse and worse Fourthly because that by this accesse and increase of sinnes hee provoketh the iudgement of God against himselfe and day by day maketh his condemnation the more grievous Fiftly because that by his owne strength of nature hee cannot amend his owne corruption of nature nor pacifie the wrath of God nor overcome and escape death Therefore as man by his owne voluntary will depraved himselfe and offended God so by his owne power he cannot amend himselfe nor reconcile himselfe vnto God So that man could proceed from the habite of goodnes vnto the privation and losse thereof but he cannot returne from the privation vnto the habite Therefore free-will in man is so maymed that it is sound on no side For God when he created man in the beginning gave him over vnto his owne will But hee by abusing his free-will lost both himselfe and it as Augustine sayth And to conclude In enchirid cap. 130. the Scripture doth not onely teach vs but even the experience of every one doth proove vnto vs that all libertie to will that which is good and all power to doe that which is right is lost
morall workes which by their owne worth can make men gratious and acceptable vnto God before they have bin regenerate and grafted into Christ by faith And those merits they call merits ex congruo so called because that as they say by right and equity they deserve some reward which God by right is bound to repay them If this were true why then man belike should not be wholy infected and corrupted with originall sin But man as we have testimonyes in the holy scripture is wholy infected and corrupted with originall sinne Gen. 6.5 Psal 51.7 therefore that idle fiction of the Papists is nothing else but a meere invention of the Devill Surely those works which proceede from any man before his regeneration are every way foule and vgly sinnes to which by right and equity there is no reward else due but onely everlasting torment But it goeth very well and fayrely with vs if God doe not punish them in vs as they deserve Agayne all those workes of men although they seeme fayre and comely in the sight of man yet if they be skanned according to the rule of Gods lawe they will be found to be meere filth and vnsavoury pollution And that as the Starres which although they seeme most bright in the night time yet at the arising and presence of the Sunne they lose their brightnes so likewise those workes of men which in the common view seeme to be right and beautifull shall be manifest iniquity in the sight of God so lawdable sincerity heere shall be greater vncleanenes there and that which heere is approved as great glory shall there be reiected as extreame shame and reproach Farre therefore be from vs these faire-shewing and foule-meaning hipocrites which cover the corruption and wickednes that is wrapped vp in the heart of man with a vayne flourish and fayned maske and by their merits which are worse then extreame filthines doe labour to winne the favour of God and to make him beholding vnto them Surely it is without all doubt that they do provoke God more and more by these their workes seeing that they are execrable sinnes Agayne they doe plucke vpon their heads the more grievous iudgement and do aggravate theyr punishment in that they thinke that theyr workes which are nothing else but damnable sinnes extreamely contrary vnto the lawe and will of God are pleasing vnto God and worthy of his favour for by this meanes as much as in them lyeth they do as it were change God into a Devill and make him the patrone of sinnes to appoynt a reward for them therefore farre be from a Christian mans heart all those workes which are thus farre opposite vnto the will of God and condemned of him as meere offences Then after that God hath begun to renew men by the power of his spirit of evill they become good and that but in part onely for the corruption of nature is but onely restrayned and amended in some sort for as is aforesayd the elect are regenerate but imperfectly in this life therefore they are not wholy good and conformeable vnto the lawe of God wherefore theyr workes also can be good but in part onely and not perfect for there cannot be more in the effect then there is in the cause but whatsoever is in the effect that shall be in the cause much more therefore the workes of the godly are partly good and partly evill They are good as they proceede from the operation and motion of the holy spirit and are agreeable vnto the law of God And they are evill as they proceede from the flesh and vnregenerate part and do decline and stray from the rule and obedience of Gods law By this it manifestly appeareth that no worke of man is so prayse-worthy as Augustine sayth well which is not defiled and stayned with some blemish or other These works deserve nothing at all toward the attainement of salvation because they are imperfect and stray and swarve very farre from the law of God For the law requireth so great perfection as that it condemneth the least thought of the least sinne Agayne vnperfect works according vnto the Canonicall rule which the Lawyers so call are as if they were not done at all for such as the cause is such also must the effect needs be Seeing therefore that the cause is vnperfect the effect must needs follow vnperfect for it were extreame and ridiculous madnes to loke for a perfect and durable worke from an imperfect and transitory cause therefore these workes are proved and convinced to be vnperfect from their cause which is vnperfect so that if a man seeke for a reward by them he shall finde punishment as Saint Augustine saith for man in the least thing is not able to perfourme so much as the lawe requireth therefore he cannot be thought righteous and acquited before God and before his iust iudgement seate by the merit of his owne works Wo therefore vnto the life of men even the most commendable as the same Augustine sayth if it should be iudged according vnto the strict rigor of the lawe without the mercy of God Moreover seeing these good works proceed not from mans strength but do spring the power and grace of the holy spirit man cannot deserve or get any thing by them seeing they be not his owne but the works of God for man doth them not of himself but God doth worke them in him So that to do that which God commandeth to receive those things which he promiseth are both the gift of God and so man had no merits of his owne therefore the free works of God fall not within the compas of mans merit because those works are the effects of the holy ghost and not the deeds of mē proceeding from their own strēgth Therefore the Papists in as much as they hunt for salvation by these works are of all hunters the most vayne for their labours and endeavours are alwayes frustrate and without effect for they shall never attayne vnto that which they seeke for by them and they play the fooles more absurdly then if they should say they were able to strike fire out of the sea Certaynely in this their foole-hardy enterprise they do manifestly tempt God in that they go about to bring to passe things that are infinitely farre greater then their strength will suffer or permit Agayne in that they boast their owne deserts so confidently and boldly it is a manifest signe that they are not regenerate and that they know not themselves at all for by how much the more a man is regenerate by so much the more doth hee see and bewayle his owne sinnes and infirmityes and so findeth and perceiveth by experience that hee can do no good thing without the grace of God Therefore from his heart doth he humble himselfe before God and in the griefe of his heart with much lamenting doth he earnestly pray against those plagues which he hath deserved also he confesseth his
and grafted in the heart of the elect by the finger of God could vtterly fall away and come to nothing then certaynely the counsell of God it selfe concerning the salvation of the elect should be variable not sure mutable and not constant Agayne if they whom the father hath planted into his Sonne by a true and stedfast fayth might be cutte off and perish then without doubt the Salvation of the Elect would bee vncertayne But seeing that Christ is the most faythful keeper of the Elect and Beleevers Ioh. 10.29 hee will not suffer them to perish Therefore they are set farre beyond all danger of perishing and falling away For God taketh them into his keeping and safegard his will remayneth vnchangeable in the preservation of them and is fortified with soveraigne power So that albeit in themselves they be weak and subiect to falling yet because they are vpheld and preserved by the hand and power of God they are stedfast permanent can never fall from the blessed estate of Salvation For God makes them to persevere in goodnes because he himselfe hath made them good Tom. 7. col 1345. saith S. Augustine If therefore some of the elect do fall grievously God is able to restore them For he it is that vpholdeth those that fall Psal 145.14 and lifteth vp those that are ready to fall saith the Scripture God giveth and bestoweth vpon them certayne and continuall perseverance in the faith because hee hath appoynted vndoubted salvation for them So that although they be weak and fraile in themselves yet they have more perseverance in their weakenesse than Adam had in his perfection Because they have a promise of perseverance which Adam had not For God is faithfull saith S. Paul 2. Thes 3.3 which will establish you and keepe you from evill Therefore they which dream that true faith may be lost againe do erre in their vaine conceit and offend grievously For they take away from Christians the sure comforte of their Salvation Therefore a finall perseverance in the faith is an vnseperable companion of true faith from which it can be seperated no more than can the light from the Sunne and heate from the fire For it is fortified with power from heaven against all the sleights of Sathan against the very gates of hell Mat. 16 1● and so preserved from every hurtfull annoyance that it can never be lost nor fall away By what bonds the elect are vnited vnto God so that they cannot perish nor fall away Also by what signes they may be knowne and how they may be assured of their Salvation Chap. 34. ANd God hath vnited them to himselfe by two bonds stronger than Adamant The first of which is his vnchangeable and everlasting election before the foundations of the world were layd For whom he hath chosen from everlasting those will he have to be blessed for ever therefore they cannot perish so that the salvation of the elect doth not depend vpon any doubtfull event but it was appoynted and prepared for them by God from everlasting before they were borne Thus it is shewed that their salvation is so sure and certayne that the troublesome motions of the whole world nor all the feends of hell cannot overthrow nor weaken it the other bond is an effectuall calling vnto Christ in time But they whom God grafteth into Christ effecctually by a true faith can no more fall away and perish then Christ himselfe because he hath redeemed them with his bloud and being redeemed doth preserve them safe and without danger of every evill and deadly hurt Iohn 10.28 They are his sheepe which no man can take out of his hand Hence we may resolutely and strongly conclude that the salvation of the elect and true beleevers is so sure and certayne as Christ is the omnipotent and Almighty God Therefore who can pluck and withdraw them from Christ whom God hath called and drawne vnto Christ by his almighty spirit Surely the gates of hell shall not prevayle against them therefore theyr vnmoveable constancy and stedfast certaynety of salvation ought not to be considered in theyr nature but consisteth in and is grounded vpon the might and power of God Therefore in this and in nothing else doth the salvation of the elect depend and stand Fourthly and lastly regeneration may be knowne by the fruites thereof as the Sunne rising may be knowne by the light and the fire by the heate for it may be knowne by sundry motions and operations of the holy spirit as by infallible tokens and assured signes for as the life of a living creature may be discerned by the sence and motion so also this regeneration may be knowne by those things and workes which necessarily follow it for they which are truly and effectually regenerate in them the love of God is begotten This Saint Paul expressely affirmeth saying If any man love God 1. Cor. 8.3 the same is taught of him He therefore which loveth God with his soule and hath an earnest desire to keepe his commaundements let him know that he is elected and regenerate and be most certainely perswaded that he shal be saved Secondly they which are regenerate heare Gods words and receive them by faith Iohn 8.47 He therfore that hath an harty desire to heare the word of God to profit in it in him there shineth and appeareth a visible signe of election and of a godly and regenerate mind So that he which heareth Gods word enioyeth God himselfe and hath fellowship with him So on the contrary there is no more evident signe of a reprobate and prophane mind then to contemne and reiect the word of God for they of set purpose do deprive themselves of righteousnes and life eternall Thirdly the holy spirit doth kindle a sincere and serious desire to do wel and to please God in the hearts of the regenerate so that on the one side they do love and seeke after righteousnes and on the other side they hate eschue iniquity Psa 34.15 1. Thes 4.4 and therefore the Prophets and Apostles do exhort the children of God that they should depart from evill and do good Paul sayth playnely that this is the will of God even our sanctification that every one should abstayne from fornication and from every prophane wicked course of life should possesse his vessell in honour They therefore which do hartily love God and abhor evill may be most certainly perswaded that they are regenerate that therfore they are elected from everlasting vnto salvation Moreover this regeneration worketh in man a vehement strife betweene the flesh the spirit So that when the flesh which is the vnregenerate part doth withdraw man from the care obedience of Gods law and tempteth him vnto the committing and doing of that which is evill then on the other side the spirit being the part regenerate by God doth labour the contrary way for it aspireth
the word he sheweth vs what things he wil have done or not done by vs and by his Spirite there is strength ministred vnto vs to performe them This regeneration is especially wrought continued in the mind will and heart of man So that God sheweth forth and declareth his goodnesse towards his children here three manner of wayes First hee doth enlighten and dispell the blindnes of the mind by the Sun-shine of his Spirit For whatsoever man savoureth of his owne selfe Rom. 8.6 7. is enmity against God bringeth death with it This blindnesse of mans mind is not simply the ignorance of God and of himselfe but it is a stubborne rebellion and prowd presumption against God So that by how much a man excelleth and is indued with the greater quicknes of nature by so much the more doth he resist and strive against God himselfe and his owne Salvation Because such an one feareth not to charge the wisedome of God with extreame folly For all men as long as they are not renewed with this new and heavenly light do thinke the holy mysteries of God to be foolishnesse So Paul whilst hee preached Christ crucified vnto the Grecians sayth 1. Cor. 1.23 that to them he preached foolishnes So that the enlightning of this rebellious and hurtfull blindnesse is a great and inestimable benefite of God After this inlightning followeth a right iudgement and opinion of God of his will and of his workes because that then men begin to know God rightly and to iudge of him accordingly when they be inlightened by the spirit of God Secondly it changeth and reformeth the will of man which is extreamely contrary vnto the law of God And of evill it maketh it good and of vnwilling and stubborne it maketh it ready and obedient Phil. 2.13 So the will of man doth then begin to be good when it is reformed and renewed by God Here also the infinite goodnesse of God sheweth it selfe whilest that it maketh man of an adversary and foe to become a friend and heyre of heavenly glory which otherwise in himselfe is so corrupted and depraved that hee hath mind to nothing but evill and hateth God extremely This will of man howsoever by nature it be so wicked and perverse as to resist and withstand God and his will yet no will can be so wicked and stubborne but God if he will can mollifie it and make it good as Augustine sayth well Now God will doe this in the Elect Ezech. 36.26 27. because that of his owne accord hee hath promised that he will doe it Thirdly it converteth and reneweth the stubborne vnapt and disobedient heart and so doth weaken and debilitate the strength of sinne in his children and doth create in them an earnest study and desire to live godly and maketh them altogether forward vnto all piety Lastly it stirreth vp in them good workes and endueth them with sincere and holy behaviour Phil. 2.13 So God worketh in them both to will that which is good and doe that which is right So that all power to live godly proceedeth and commeth not from theyr owne power but from God onely which worketh in them effectually by his Spirit For this spirituall renewing is called in many places of the Scripture by an excellencie The creation and worke of God because that it is his worke to illuminate the blind vnderstandings of men with the knowledge of himselfe and to change theyr crooked willes and hard heartes and to frame them vnto the obedience of his owne will For these are so hard and difficult workes that they can bee brought to passe and effected by none other but by God onely Therefore the Lord by EZechiel promiseth that he will cause that we shal walke in his commandements shewing that regeneration and power to doe well is a worke farre surmounting all creatures The vse of this doctrine is divers First that the grace of God by which onely the Elect are changed into new creatures may be maintayned agaynst that divellish invention of free will which the Papists dreame of But here the Papists offend grievously for looke how much they attribute vnto the power of man so much doe they detract from the grace of God and merit of Christ For the grace of God and the power of man are in this matter two contraries which cannot be maintayned of one and the selfe same subiect at one time Therefore Saynt Austine in one place sayth very well that that is not free which the grace of God hath not made free For the Scripture as we have sayd before doth not leave a man so much as a good thought which is the least part of a good worke 2. Cor. 3.5 For such is the blindnesse and frailty of mans wit that it is not onely vnable to conceyve and bring forth of it selfe any thing rightly or truely but also that it frameth and inventeth to it selfe many and most dangerous errors even from most true principles An evident example of this we may see in the free-will of the Papists But that most fond dreame of theyrs vanisheth like a vapour by this doctrine of regeneration and the spirit of God onely is prooved to bee the onely beginning and true cause of every good worke Agayne seeing God doth regenerate man and make him fit for good works that other fiction which the Papists have dreamed concerning workes fore-seene is overthrowne and beaten to pieces For seeing no man can doe good except by the grace of God hee be changed into a new creature it thence followeth that God could fore-see no other workes in man but such as hee himselfe should worke in him whence a man may easily gather which considereth the matter any thing at all that this opinion concerning workes fore-seene is a meere and forged fable Moreover the Papists and the more grosse sort of Vbiquitaries do in this place after their manner erre and invent a new fiction whenas they thinke that there is some secret and hidden power in tne water of Baptisme which is able to convert and renew a man And from thence they labour to inferre that they which are baptized are regenerate in the very act of Baptisme This vnsavory invention is the fosterer of noysome errours But the falshood thereof is found first in this that it evidently appeareth by the holy Scriptures that all are not regenerate which are baptized as we may see not onely in Simon Magus but also in many others eyther openly wicked or hypocrites vnder hand and secretly which although they have beene baptized and receyved Baptisme as a true marke of their regeneration yet theyr lives sufficiently declare that they were not regenerate For although that the Sacraments are meanes or instruments by which the holy Ghost is effectuall in the Ministery of the Church yet in his power and efficacy hee hath not tyed himselfe vnto them neyther doth hee so worke by them that that working should alwayes shew it selfe