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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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and Paul 6. In Pleasures as in Moses when he left Pharaohs Court 7. In case of Provision for Posterity 8. In matters of daily imployment The Titles given to true Faith viz. 1. It is called the Faith of the Elect Tit. 1.1 for none but the Elect have it and all the Elect have it at one time or another when once they have it they never utterly and totally lose it 2. It is called Saving Faith because it bringeth us to Salvation Eph. 2.8 3. It is called Justifying Faith because it is that means or Instrument which Gods Spirit worketh in us whereby we apply unto our selves Jesus Christ in and by whom we are justified Rom. 3.28 4. It is called Sanctifying Faith because by it God purifieth our hearts Acts 15.9 How far the sense of Faith may be lost in men 1. It may be so covered over and smothered as it may not be discerned they may for a time have no Assurance of it 2. All the joy and comfort of it wherewith they were formerly upheld may be clean taken away and they even faint for want of it 3. No fruits thereof may appear they may be as Trees in winter little conscience of any duty dull in hearing Gods Word cold in Prayer nothing remaining but a formal Profession if that 4. Their Consciences may prove a very Rack a grievous Torture and Torment unto them 5. They may think it is like to be recovered with a wet finger with a light sigh or a groan but they may call cry and roar again and again before they be heard 6. And when they recover it it may be they shall never attain to that measure which once they had or if to that measure of the thing it self yet not of the joy and comfort of it They may carry the grief of this their Fall to their graves The difference between Faith and Presumption viz. 1. Faith driveth a man out of himself and casts himself wholly on Christ Presumption makes him boast of himself and makes him self-conceited 2. Faith resteth on a sure ground even Gods Word Presumption relieth onely on a mans surmise and meer conjecture 3. Faith is joyned with the use of the means Presumption not onely carelesly neglecteth but arrogantly contemneth all means 4. Faith is wrought by degrees as first by Knowledge then by Grief after by desire Presumption is a sudden apprehension of the minde 5. Faith makes a man work out his Salvation with a holy jealousie yea with fear and trembling Presumption is over-bold 6. Faith makes a man depart from all iniquity and keep a clear Conscience Presumption is accompanied with much pollution 7. Faith is most sure in time of Tryal then the strength of it is most manifested Presumption maketh greatest flourish when there is least danger 8. Faith continueth unto the end and never quite falleth away Presumption is subject to decay totally and finally Motives to labor for and to grow in Faith 1. Without it whatsoever we do is sin Rom. 14.23 2. We cannot please God in any one action without Faith Heb. 11.6 3. We cannot hear Gods Word with profit except we have Faith Heb. 11.6 4. We cannot Pray without this Faith Jam. 1.6 5. We cannot Receive the Benefit of the Lords Supper without it 6. We cannot be saved without it Mark 16.16 7. We must grow in Faith because we need more strength daily and daily meet with greater Assaults 8. We shall hereby grow in joy and gain the favor and love of God the more 9. We shall the more prevail in Prayer 10. By growing in Faith we shal bring the more glory to God The means of getting Faith are twofold 1. Outward which are either such as both work and strengthen Faith as the Word of God or onely such as strengthen it as the Sacraments 2. Inward or rather the Cause which is the Sanctifying Spirit of God who softneth quickneth openeth our hearts making them to bring forth the blessed fruit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 1 Cor. 2.4 5. The way to obtain and encrease Faith viz. 1. To be vigilant Hearers and to continue Hearers of Gods Word Rom. 10.17 2. To labor for a good Conscience and to keep it when we have it 1 Tim. 1.19 3. Godly effectual and fervent Prayer to God for it Luke 17.5 4. The worthy receiving of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which though it doth not confer Faith ex opere operato yet it confirms and strengthens it 1 Cor. 11.25 26. 5. That to our uttermost power we use and well imploy that ability whatsoever it be that we have by nature or by special gift 6. That we resist not any motion of Gods Spirit like the rebellious Jews nor put off from us the Promises of the Gospel as if they belonged not to us and think our selves unworthy of eternal life The true desire of the heart after Christ which worketh Faith may be known 1. By the Cause which is the Gospel and nothing but it can do it because by it alone is Christ revealed and offered 2. By the Order which followeth upon grief for sin and despair of succor in our selves or others 3. By the Quality for it is an hearty and true desire an inward desire of the Soul and also a vehement and earnest desire greater then the desire of any other thing can be 4. By the Fruits as a conscionable care in using and fervent Prayer for blessing the means of Faith 5. By the Continuance of it which raiseth up and preserveth an appetite after Christ even after we have tasted him The Fruits Effects Signs of Effectual Faith 1. It purifies the heart and sanctifies the person therefore Faith and Repentance are put together a purged and sanctified heart renewed in Soul and Body Acts 15.9 2. The Spirit of Prayer 3. Peace in the heart that which passeth all understanding Peace of Conscience or Joy resting on God Rom. 5.1 4. To hold out in cleaving to Christ Constancy and perseverance in Christ unto the end Jude 20.21 5. The Concomitants of it which are Love Hope Joy Humility 6. The justifying of us before God 7. Our whole Conversion which followeth Faith and beginneth at the same time with Faith 8. The fruits of Conversion and Repentance even good works 9. Increase of Spiritual and Corporal gifts 10. Justification Regeneration and all the benefits purchased by the blood of Christ 11. It is an effect of Election none have it but the Elect Acts 13.48 Tit. 1.1 12. The continual working of it for true Faith is never idle Gal. 5.6 13. Hearing of the Word with joy and practising it Joh. 10.27 14. A striving against Doubt Distrust Despair of Gods Mercy if we have not attained a full perswasion And this is acceptable to God Isa 42.3 The principal effects of Faith whereby it may be best proved may be drawn to these two Heads 1. A quiet Conscience whence proceedeth 1. A holy Security of minde having peace with God
4. That he is Just To leave my wicked ways and to restrain my self from sin 5. That he is merciful To turn unto him by Repentance 6. That he is Omnipresent To carry my self as in his Presence 7. That he is Omniscient To keep my heart upright before him continually 8. That he is Infinite To stand in awe reverence and fear of him The Vices repugnant unto the knowledge of God viz. 1. Atheism which is the Acknowledgement of no God 2. Ignorance or not knowing the true God and his Will 3. Errors conceived or false Imaginations and Opinions of him 4. Prophaneness which is a Regardlesness of God and of his special Service 5. Magick Sorcery or Witchcraft in such as desire the help of it as well as in those who use it 6. Superstition Soothsaying Observation of Dreams Divinations Signs and Predictions or Foretellingof Wizards 7. All trust or confidence reposed in the Creature 8. Idolatry whether Inward when another is worshipped then that one true God or when the Worship of God is given unto Creatures by Praying unto them Trusting in them or Setting the heart upon them which kinde doth properly belong unto this First Commandment or Outward when though the true God is worshipped yet after another maner then God himself hath prescribed 9. The contempt of God which is to know those things of God which are true but not to be moved thereby to love him Were all the Wisdom of the East in one Compris'd Couldst thou discourse with Solomon From th'Isop to the Cedar or of ought In Heav'n Earth Hell Couldst thou foresee a Thought And so prevent it or by strength of Brain When 't is thought Argument it back again Hadst thou all Arts and Sciences refin'd Couldst joyn East to West or divide the Winde Wer 't thou for Wisdom the Worlds Nource or School And knew'st not God thou wer 't a damned Fool. §. 2. Of Faith or Trust in God THe second Duty required in this Commandment is To Trust in the onely true God and in him alone to put all trust and confidence Psal 20.8 This is Faith by which whosoever is united unto Christ the same is Elected Called Justified Sanctified and shall be Glorified Joh. 3.36 5.24 By this Faith is not meant an Historical Faith as to know and think all those things to be true which are manifested from above either by Voyce or by Visions or by any other maner of Revelation and are taught in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles and thus to be perswaded of them for the asseveration and Testimony of God himself firmly assenting to the truth of those things contained in the Scripture for the Authority of God that spoke them which Faith is good in it self but made ill yea sin by them that cannot apply it Thus Simon Magus is said to have believed Acts 13. By this Faith is not meant a Temporary Faith as to assent unto the heavenly Doctrine which is delivered by the Prophets and Apostles to profess it and to rejoyce in the knowledge thereof and to glory therein for a time yet not for any feeling of Gods grace towards them but for other causes whatsoever and therefore without any true Conversion and final perseverance in the Profession of that Doctrine for this kinde of Faith is led as in a string with the commodities of this world and with them doth live and dye By this Faith is not meant the Faith of working Miracles which is a special gift of working Miracles that is a certain perswasion springing from an especial Revelation and Promise of God whereby a man firmly resolveth That some extraordinary or miraculous Work and contrary to Nature shall come to pass by Gods Power which he hath foretold and would have to be done in the Name of God and Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 13.2 which Faith so flourishing in the Primitive Church ceaseth in those days for that the Doctrine is now sufficiently confirmed so sufficiently indeed as he that will not now believe without a Miracle may stand for a Wonder himself But by this Faith is meant Justifying Faith wrought in the hearts of the Elect by the operation of Gods Spirit grounded on Gods Promises whereby we do undoubtedly believe that God hath freely forgiven us all our sins applying Christ Jesus in particular to be our Savior and Redeemer From this Faith Gods people can never finally and totally fall away howsoever it may be sometimes shaken obscured and eclipsed so as it may not so manifestly appear at one time as at another and this Faith is incident onely to the Elect Acts 13.48 For it is a principal Grace of God whereby man is ingrafted unto Christ and thereby become one with Christ and Christ one with him Eph. 3.17 By this Faith in Christ we are partakers of the Merit of the Death and Resurrection of Christ so as it is Satisfaction for us and Forgiveness of all our sins a special grace or habit infused into the Soul by the Holy Ghost whereby we are enabled to believe not onely that the Messias is offered unto us but also to take and receive him as a Lord and Savior Thus Justifying Faith cometh not neither proceedeth or ariseth out of the instinct of Nature neither out of sense or experience neither out of Demonstrations or Reasons borrowed from Philosophy but it cometh and dependeth of a peculiar and supernatural Revelation or Divine Testimony it proceedeth from the Holy Ghost who kindleth it in our hearts by the Preaching of the Gospel Eph. 2.8 and confirmeth it by the use of the Sacraments Mat. 28.19 20. Now we are not said to be made Righteous through Faith onely or that we please God through the worthiness of meer Faith but because onely the Satisfaction Righteousness and Holiness of Christ is our Righteousness before God 1 Cor. 1.30 and we cannot take hold of it or apply it to our selves any other way then by Faith 1 Joh. 5.10 Yet Faith without Righteousness is Presumption as Righteousness without Truth is Hypocrisie And thus Faith is as it were an Addition of a New Light to Reason without which Reason is purblinde and begins to breed in the heart when the party begins to be touched in Conscience for his sins and hungers withal and thirsts after Christ and his Righteousness the first act of the understanding being to assent to the Truth contained in the Promises wherein Christ is offered and then the act of the Will to consent unto them that is to embrace them But before a man will be willing to take Christ the heart must be changed by God for none will take Christ upon Christs conditions till they be throughly humbled and have their hearts broken that know what the wrath of God is and have their Consciences awakened to see sin till they have been stung with a sense of their sins till they be heavy and have felt the weight of Satans yoke till then they will not come under the yoke
of Christ and then they will come in and be glad they have Christ though on Christs conditions Thus as the children of Israel being stung with fiery Serpents and that unto death were healed by looking unto the brazen Serpent erected by Moses so when we are stung by the old Serpent Sin and Death we must ever remember by Faith to look upon Christ Now we are said to Take Christ when we so take him as to bring him into our hearts to dwell there when we are knit to him and he to us But some men cleave to Christ not because they have any good ground but because they want Temptations to a contrary way therefore it is Gods usual maner when men seem to Take Christ and to believe in him to put them to the tryal to see what they will do whether their Faith will work or no For when to such as take Christ for love of the good things by him and not for love of his person other commodities are presented that are present and sensible and in their apprehension greater then those by Christ then they let Christ go again and their Faith proves uneffectual like those that marry not for Love but for Wealth the maner of these men is to seek mercy and not grace yet may we look upon our own advantages by Christ but not on that alone Thus when a man is drawn from God it is either by some offer of some great benefit or some great evil which he is put in fear of in both which Faith is that Vnum Necessarium to keep thee from sinning for it is Faiths office to guide our lives so as that we be not overcome by Adversity nor drawn aside from God in Prosperity Now that Faith that saves must be effectual Faith it is the effectualness of Faith onely that God requires that is if there be any effectualness in man that comes not from Faith God requires it not but if we labor to grow in Faith we shall be enabled to do the duties of New Obedience but if we have not the ground all that we do is but in vain Therefore when we finde any coldness weakness or languishing in the Graces we have encrease Faith and all other Graces will grow This effectual Faith is wrought or our Faith is made effectual by the Spirit of God it is not in our own power of our selves we are not able to believe if God himself put not his hand to the work no man is able to believe because naturally man hath a hard heart So for an holy life when we have believed and accepted the Righteousness that is offered us in Christ when that is done it is Gods part to frame and fit us for an holy life for after that a man is Justified by Faith Christ Sanctifieth him and it is he that carries him afterward thorough his whole life in a holy conversation And as Christ is thus made unto us Justification and Sanctification so is he made unto us Redemption also for he delivers us from the least evils as well as from Death Eternal and Hell it self yea there is no evil that the Saints are freed from but it is purchased by the Blood of Christ which is over and above some general works of Gods Providence that all men taste of Now though there be sufficiency in Christ to save all yet none have benefit by it but those that receive it as they ought that is as a Lord as well as a Savior We must therefore come to God as with a full heart so with an empty hand for Faith doth its work best alone for all that Faith hath to do is onely to Take from Christ that Righteousness which we want our selves And without this Faith God regards not the best Moral Vertues the Moral man what he doth he doth it of himself and through himself and for himself but he that doth what he doth by Faith doth it of Christ and through Christ and for Christ for we must receive all from Christ and do all for Christ and all by Faith Faith worketh in us a love to God and presenteth to him a perfect Righteousness and this Faith is the sum of the Preaching of Christ and his Apostles Now God requires no more but a Willingness in Earnest to come and take Christ he will make thee able afterward to do the rest for God never gives his Son to any but he gives them the Holy Ghost the Spirit of his Son also And we must know That Faith admits degrees and that every Christian ought to grow from degree to degree Rom. 1.17 for though the weakest Faith may be a true and so a Saving Faith yet if this small measure of Faith be not edged on with a longing fervency after fulness of perswasion and seconded with an assiduous serious endeavor after more perfection it is no sound and saving Faith but onely a counterfeit shew or deceiving shadow The least Assent to the least Belief of the Promises so it be sufficient to over-ballance the Scale of Doubting which is called the least degree of Faith brings us to Christ and make us willing to Take him and is Faith though it come not to the full degree though it hath some doubting some fears And afterward we shall be more fully and better perswaded which addes to the degrees For Faith though it be mingled with some doubtings and fears may be effectual though not perfect for there is a Doubting mingled with the best Faith so it be but such a Doubting as does not overcome it may stand with true and sound Faith If a man hath so taken Christ that still he is growing still his Faith is prevailing still overcoming these doubts and fears from day to day he is better and better resolved if it be thus still on the growing hand it is a saving and effectual Faith yea it is not Faith except it hath some Doubting except there be some fears some troubles within that resist this Faith and strive against it for there is no man that hath perfect Faith especially at the first or afterward so as to set his heart fully at peace So that it is said of Doubting in this case as we say of Thistles They are ill Weeds but it is a sign the ground is fat and good where they grow So Doubting as it is a thing that resists Faith is bad but it is a sign the heart is good where it is so that where there is no Questioning there is all Flesh And a man may have a saving Faith though he want the comfortable Assurance thereof in his own knowledge which is the reflect act of Faith For as some men have a perswasion of the forgiveness of their sins yet not savingly believe so a true Believer may have but a weak perswasion of the forgiveness of his sins but that Faith which is joyned with Love is infallibly true but disjoyned thence is false and the smallest Faith yea the weakest may
Holy Ghost and so both also confirm and establish Faith 3. God instituteth both God offereth both 4. God accomplisheth both by the Ministers of his Church by whom he speaketh with us in his word and giveth those Signs in his Sacraments The Sacraments of the old and new Testament differ thus 1. In Rites whereof change and alteration was made at Christs coming that thereby might be signified the ceasing of the Ceremonies of the Law and the beginning or succeeding of the Gospel 2. In multitude and number under the Law were more in number and more laborious now are fewer and more easie Rites 3. In signification those signified Christ to come these Christ that was come 4. In binding and obliging men the Old bound onely Abrahams posterity ours binde the whole Church of all Nations and Countreys 5. In continuance the Old were to continue but until the coming of the Messias the New to the end of the world 6. In clearness they were more obscure and dark because they signified things to be manifested but these more clear and plain because they signifie things already manifested How the Sacracraments of the old new Testament agree 1. In the Author God alone can ordain Sacraments 2. In the things signified or in substance for by the Sacraments of both Testaments the same things are offered signified and promised unto us even Remission of sins the gift of the Holy Ghost and that by Christ alone who is yesterday to day and the same for ever The Sacraments work and confirm faith in us but not without us as the Holy Ghost doth For 1. The Holy Ghost worketh and confirmeth faith in us as the efficient cause thereof the Word and Sacraments as instrumental causes 2. The Holy Ghost wheresoever he dwelleth is effectual in working the Sacraments are not so The ends of the Sacraments are 1. To be Signs and Seals of the Covenant 2. The distinguishing of the true Church from all Sects whatsoever 3. The profession testification of our thankfulness duty towards God 4. The propagation and maintenance of the Doctrine for they may not be without the use of the Word and explication thereof 5. An occasion thereby given to the yonger sort to enquire what these things mean and so an occasion also of explicating and preaching the benefits of Christ unto them Exod. 13.14 6. That they may be the bonds of mutual dilection and love 1 Cor. 12.13 The right use of the Sacraments 1. When the Rites ordained of God are rightly and truly observed and not corrupted 2. When those persons use those Rites for whom God ordained them that is the houshold of Christ onely such Christians who by profession of faith and true repentance are the citizens of the Church Mat. 3.6 3. When the Rites and Sacraments are used to that end for which they were instituted Sacramental union consisteth in two things 1. In a similitude and proportion of the Signs with the thing signified 2. In the joynt-exhibiting or receiving of the thing and in the lawful and right use The Sacramental union consisteth not in a presence of the Sign and the thing signified in one and the same place much less in any transmutation or transubstantiation but it is when the faithful and they onely do in the lawful and right use receive the Signs of the Ministers and the things signified of Christ and when we so receive both that is the Sign and the thing signified the same is called Sacramental union whereby appeareth that this conjunction of things with their Signs or Sacramental union is not corporal or local Here Actions speak and representing Signs Language the Contents of the upper lines Words visible Th' one inducts us into Grace Th' other doth establish both run one race To man s Salvation both proclaim the Power And Goodness of our blessed Saviour That he which measures Heaven with a span Should yet descend to Covenant with Man And be so far beyond expression good As both to cleanse and feed us with his Blood §. 2. Baptism BAptism is a Sacrament instituted by Christ in the New Testament whereby we are washed with water In the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost to signifie that we are received into favor for the Blood of Christ shed for us and also to binde us that hereafter we endeavor in our actions and deeds truly to testifie newness of life Baptism is necessary in part and respectively so as it is a mark of the true Church as it is a Seal of the Covenant and as it serveth to enter and admit Infants into the visible Church but it is not absolutely or simply necessary so as the party that dyes without it remains in the state of damnation and cannot be saved for the Seal of the Covenant differeth from the Covenant it self to which this Seal is but annexed and depending upon Indeed the Covenant of Grace and our being in Christ is absolutely necessary but the bare want of Baptism when it cannot be had or privation of it in this case is pardonable and doth not condemn the party unbaptized The thief upon the Cross was saved though he were never Baptized Luke 23. Infants born of believing Parents are holy before Baptism and Baptism is a Seal of that holiness 1 Cor. 7.14 The children of believing Parents are holy Rom. 11.16 therefore the children of the faithful are not to be denyed this Baptism because God hath promised in the person of Abraham that he will be the God of the faithful and of their seed as also for other reasons set down in the Scripture For seeing Infants belong as well unto the Covenant and Church of God Gen. 17.7 as they who are of full age and seeing also unto them is promised Remission of sins by the blood of Christ Mat. 19.14 and the Holy Ghost the worker of Faith Luke 1.14 15. as well as unto those of full growth they are by Baptism to be ingrafted into the Church of God and to be discerned from the children of Infidels Acts 10.47 as in the Old Testament was done by Circumcision in whose place Baptism succeeded in the New Col. 2.11 12 13. And though Infants have not indeed an actual faith yet they have an inclination to believe which the Holy Ghost as is fittest for their capacity and condition worketh in them So that we must judge of the Infants of the faithful according to charity who have interest in the outward Covenant until by infidelity when they come to years of discretion they shall cut off themselves grounding our selves upon the Promise of God made to Abraham Gen. 17.7 yea the resolution of Beza in his Tenth Epistle is That the children of Excommunicated persons may be Baptized And though to be Baptized actual faith be required in those of understanding yet in Infants born in the Church is required an inclination onely to this actual faith which they have after their maner potentially though
not actually and to be born in the Church of believing Parents is unto Infants in stead of profession of Faith and Repentance Hence may it appear how far from this Sacrament of Baptism the Anabaptists derogate by making it but an idle Ceremony acknowledging indeed some of the ends and uses thereof but restraining the efficacy thereof and so take away the chiefest comfort and truest benefit the Church reaps thereby Many indeed are Baptized which receive not the Graces propounded and offered therein but the fault is not in that no Grace accompanieth that Sacrament but in that they receive it not but afterwards when they come to years of discretion they reject the Grace which appertaineth thereto What if some believe not shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect God forbid Rom. 3.3 and Baptism is no natural means of working Grace as if the Grace which is sealed up thereby were inherent in the water or in the Ministers act of sprinkling it but it is onely a voluntary instrument which Christ useth as it pleaseth him to work what Grace or measure of Grace seemeth best to him so as Grace is onely assistant to it not included in it yet in the right use thereof Christ by his Spirit worketh that Grace which is received by it in respect whereof the Minister is said to Baptize with water but Christ with the Holy Ghost Mat. 3.11 So that unto true Baptism must concur a death unto sin in him that is Baptized and a new birth unto righteousness otherwise his Baptism is vain for it is not the washing away of the filth of the flesh but the stipulation of a good Conscience 1 Pet. 3.21 The use of this Sacrament without faith doth not save therefore with faith it doth save the want of this Sacrament doth not condemn yet so as that want be without contempt so some may be saved which are not Baptized but none can be saved which do not believe For the bare water in Baptism is not sufficient unto Salvation neither is it changed into the very Blood of Christ neither is the Blood of Christ present in the water or in the same place with the water neither are their bodies who are Baptized washed therewith visibly neither is the Holy Ghost by his vertue more in this water then elswhere but in the right use of Baptism he worketh in the hearts of them who are Baptized and Spiritually sprinkled and washeth them with the Blood of Christ and useth this external Symbole or Sign as an instrument and as a visible word or promise to stay and stir up the faith of them who are Baptized Now all they and they alone receive Baptism to the right use who are renewed or renewing and are Baptized to those ends whereto Baptism was by Christ instituted And as the Covenant once made with God is also afterwards after sins committed perpetually firm and of force to the Repentant So also Baptism being once received confirmeth and assureth the Repentant all their life time of remission of sins and therefore it ought not to be reiterated nor deferred neither yet are all those who are Baptized with water whether they be of understanding or Infants partakers of the Grace of Christ for the everlasting Election of God and his Calling into the Kingdom of Christ is free And as for the wickedness of the Minister Baptizing it makes not the Baptism void or of no effect and force unto them so Baptized so that it be administred into the Promise and Faith of Christ and therefore also the true Church doth not Baptize them who have been Baptized of Hereticks but onely must inform and instruct them with true Doctrine concerning Christ and Baptism Lastly touching the use of Godfathers and Godmothers it is not at all necessary nor by God required to the Sacrament of Baptism for Christ hath not in any of his Institutions so much as intimated the use of such Sureties and the whole Congregation are witnesses of the childes admission into the Church the Parents being bound to perform what is required for the childes education The words used in Baptism signifie 1. That Baptism was instituted by the Commandment and Authority of the three Persons in the Godhead 2. That these three Persons confirm unto us by their own testification that they receive us into favor and perform that unto us which is signified by Baptism which is Salvation if we believe and be Baptized 3. That he which is Baptized is bound to the knowledge faith worship trust honor and invocation of this true God who is the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost Baptism comprehendeth 1. The Sign which is water 2. The Ceremony as the sprinkling of water 3. The things themselves which are 1. The sprinkling of the Blood of Christ and the imputation of his Righteousness 2. The mortification of the old man and putting on of the new 3. The quickning of the new man into a certain hope of the Resurrection to come by Christ 4. The Sign which not onely signifieth but also confirmeth 5. The Sign which hath that authority and power of confirming from the Commandment of God That Baptism testifies and confirms the will of God touching his bestowing Salvation on us may appear thus 1. Because we are Baptized in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost that is we are assigned deputed and claimed to be his own 2. Because God hath promised Salvation to him who shall believe and shall be Baptized 3. By several Testimonies of Scripture as Acts 22.16 Mark 16.16 Rom. 6.3 Tit. 3.5 1 Pet. 3.21 The use of Baptism is twofold 1. It serves to be a Pledge or Token of Gods favor towards us 2. It serves to be a notable means of our death unto sin Baptism is a Pledge of Gods favor to us principally three ways 1. It sealeth to us the free pardon and forgiveness of our sins Acts 2.38 2. It is a Pledge of the vertue of Christs death Rom. 6.3 4. 3. It is a Pledge unto us of the life of Christ and of our fellowship with him Baptism is also a means of our death unto sin three ways 1. By putting us in minde of mortifying the flesh and crucifying our own corruptions 2. It causeth us to dedicate our selves wholly unto God in Christ 3. It causeth us to labor to keep and maintain peace and unity with all men but especially with Gods people To be Baptized into the death of Christ is 1. To be partakers of Christs death no otherwise then if our selves were dead 2. To dye also our selves which is to mortifie the lusts of our flesh This mortification God promiseth us in Baptism and bindeth us unto it Baptism is a means of our sanctifying and cleansing in these respects viz. 1. In that it doth most lively represent and set forth even to the outward senses the inward cleansing of our soul by the Blood of Christ and sanctifying us by the
and so was it with Pauls Viper Faiths double Act 1. The Direct Act of Faith by which we apprehend and take Christ 2. The Reflect Act by which we know and are assured that we have apprehended and taken Christ Faith hath also this double Quality 1. To lay hold of Christ offered 2. To empty a man of all things else whatsoever especially 1. Of all opinion of Righteousness in himself 2. Of all opinion of strength and ability to help himself Faith admits Degrees in four respects viz. 1. In Perswasion That Christ is offered that he is ours that he is given by God the Father 2. In regard of the difficulty and hardness of the things to be believed 3. In regard of the Extent of it when there are more things revealed to us 4. In regard of the Proof and here as the Evidence of Sanctification is more so is the Assurance Opinion is but an Assent to the Truth with a fear lest the contrary may be true So that Faith and Opinion differ in these three things 1. In the Object which is something in its own nature uncertain but Faith pitcheth upon the Word of God which is in its own nature infallible and cannot deceive 2. In the working Opinion being a matter of Speculation and no more Faith a matter of Practice but that is not all 3. In overcoming Doubts for Opinion goeth no farther but stays in a Doubt but Faith proceeds to full Assurance To be rooted and grounded in Faith is To have the first ground right and so to proceed from one to another As thus 1. Stedfastly to believe the Scriptures in general 2. All the Promises therein contained in particular 3. To apply and appropriate them to our selves justly and upon good ground No man knoweth what Justifying Faith is but he that hath it whose true Properties are these 1. He being convicted thereof in his Conscience knoweth that whatsoever things are spoken in the Scriptures are true and Divine 2. He findeth himself bound to believe them 3. He is certain That through Christs Satisfaction he is received of God into favor and is endowed with the Holy Ghost and is by him regenerated and directed 4. He applyeth to himself all those things concluding that they belong unto him 5. He rejoyceth in the present Blessings which he hath but most of all in the certain and perfect Salvation to come And this is that peace of Conscience which passeth all Understanding 6. He hath a Will to obey the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles without any exception in doing or suffering whatsoever is therein commanded 7. He is certain that his Faith though it be in this life imperfect and languishing and often very much eclipsed yet being builded upon the Promise of God which is unchangeable doth never altogether fail or dye Faith is said to work four ways viz. Towards 1. God by a quiet and peaceable Conscience grounded on Gods love Rom. 5.1 2. Our Neighbor by mutual concord especially in matters of Religion Acts 1.14 3. Our selves by Patience with joy and thankfulness in Afflictions Rom. 5.3 4. 4. The Devil and the World by victory over their Assaults and Temptations 2 Joh. 5.4 5. 1 Pet. 5.8 9. The work of Faith towards God 1. Peace in Conscience from our Reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 2. Love towards God and Christ Luke 7.47 3. Hope of the Glory of the Sons of God in the world to come and joy in troubles Rom. 5.3 4. Boldness to speak unto God grounded on a sure confidence in him Eph. 3.12 5. A Confession of the Truth 2 Cor. 4.13 Rom. 10.10 6. Obedience to God Rom. 1.5 for which Abraham is chronicled as the Father of the Faithful 7. A Perseverance and Constancy in the Truth of Christ Joh. 6.68 And a commending of our Souls to God Acts 7.59 The work of Faith towards our neighbors 1. A knitting of the mindes of men one towards another Acts 1.14 2. It extendeth Brotherly love even to our Enemies 1 Tim. 1.6 The work of Faith towards our selves viz. 1. It makes us entertain with joy and thankfulness Gods loving Chastisements Rom. 5.3 4. 2. A Resting upon his Providence and Promises for Blessings Temporal and Spiritual Mat. 6.25 3. It affects our hearts with comfort strengthning them against all troubles Joh. 14.1 4. It worketh in us a hatred of sin and of our former ways with shame and grief Joh. 12.46 A thing may be said not to be done of Faith three ways viz. 1. Conscientia Dubitante when a thing is done with a doubting or unresolved Conscience as in those that are weak in knowledge 2. Conscientia Errante thus the Mass-Priest sinneth in saying Mass though in his Conscience he think it the Ordinance of God 3. Conscientia Repugnante though upon Error and false judgement of the Conscience it is in the doer a sin Thus an Anabaptist that holds it unlawful to Swear sinneth if he take an Oath In what sense Faith is called Effectual 1. When it does its proper Office or Function namely To Take Christ 2. When it is true real and substantial when it is opposed to vain Faith 3. When it is an operative lively stirring and a fruitful Faith 4. When it goes thorough with the work in hand that is when it Sanctifieth the heart throughout in respect of parts and throughout in regard of time when it brings a man to the end of his Salvation when it carries a man through all impediments when it leaps over all difficulties a growing pervailing overcoming Faith Wherein the Effectualness of Faith consists viz. 1. In being well built that is when the preparation is sound and full by Humiliation 2. When a man believes the Promises on sure infallible grounds and sees them distinctly 3. When the Will takes Christ out of love to him not his not out of fear nor out of mistake 4. When it turns not onely the Will but all the Affections when it turns the whole man when it shoots it self into life and practice The Causes of Uneffectual Faith viz. 1. The Taking of Christ upon misinformation without due consideration 2. The Taking Christ out of fear not out of true love to him as men in sickness 3. The taking Christ for the love of the good things by him not of his person 4. Want of Humiliation that should go before it 5. Because Faith is not grounded aright when men falsly take to themselves a perswasion of the Remission of their sins upon an uncertain and wrong ground The Reasons why God accepts no Faith but such as is Effectual 1. Because otherwise it is not Faith for it is dead 2. Other Faith hath no Love which condition is required 3. Other Faith the Devils have for they believe and tremble 4. Else it works no Mortification for we must deny our selves 5. Else Christ should lose the end of his coming into the world 6. Because good Works are the way to Salvation The usual means that
Spirit to Regenerate and Sanctifie us c. 2. He doth never cease to communicate his Love unto us it is never dry 3. He Loves us for our own good having no need of us he gets nought by it 4. He Redeems us from all sins gives us Faith and Repentance freely we deserve it not 5. He Dyed for us even when we were his very Enemies the Children of wrath 6. He Prevents us with his Grace when we sought not to him for it 7. He Bestows Temporal Favors and withholds present Afflictions from the Reprobate 8. He Prosecutes us with his Love unto the end and in the end gives us the Salvation of our Souls the end of our Faith The consideration of Gods Love must Teach us these Duties viz. 1. To beware of all sin whereby we do offend and displease our God who is so gracious unto us 2. To trust God with our Lives Healths Bodies Estates and all we have for Food Raiment and Protection in the sober use of all lawful means 3. To seek for help and succor from God in all distresses and want 4. To love so bountiful a God yea to enforce our hearts to all duties of love to him 5. To be thankful to God for all good things we enjoy for whatever good we have comes from him 6. We must labor continually in heart and life to walk worthy of the Lord and to please him in all things being fruitful in all good works Col. 1.10 The Duties required of such of us to whom Gods Love hath been specially manifested in raising us who before were weak and contemptible in the world to be Instruments of his Glory viz. 1. We must confess our selves miserable by Nature and no good thing in us to raise up our selves above others being no way better then others 2. We must consider That whatsoever we have it is Gods gift we have received at his hands it cometh down from above and therefore let us not glory as if we had not received it 1 Cor. 4.7 3. We must walk worthy of our Calling even of those Mercies which we have tasted and acknowledge our selves to be unworthy of them 4. We must be humble in our own eyes and not boast of any thing in our selves or in our own merits nor think our selves worthy to be regarded of him 5. If we be thankful for lesser Mercies we may be assured of greater and of fatter blessings 6. We must keep a Register of his blessings and so settle them in our hearts that we forget them not but may thereby be provoked to set forth his praise II. ELection is a Decree in which God according to the good pleasure of his Will hath certainly Chosen some men to Life Eternal in Christ and that for the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 1.4 5. God Decree is that by which God hath necessarily and yet freely from all Eternity Isa 46.10 determined all things Howbeit the Decree of God is the first and Principal Cause of all things yet it doth not take away the nature and property of second Causes Eph. 1.12 Mat. 10.29 Rom. 9.2 but brings them into a certain order that is directeth them unto the determinate end whereupon the effect of things are contingent or necessary as the nature of the second Cause is When Christ was offered freely to every man and one received him and another rejected him then the Mystery of Election and Reprobation was Revealed The Reason why some received him being Because God gave them a heart which to the rest he gave not but in point of offering of Christ we must be general without having respect to Election So that Predestination is the Decree of God in as much as it concerns man by which God hath ordained all men to a certain and everlasting estate that is some to Salvation in his Son 1 Thess 5.9 others to condemnation for his own glory and their sins Rom. 9.22 Reprobation is Gods Decree in the which because it so pleased him he hath purposed to resuse some men by means of Adams Fall and their own Corruptions for the manifestation of his Justice Prov. 16.4 2 Cor. 13.5 Again Election is the eternal unchangeable free and most just Decree of God whereby he hath decreed to convert some to Christ to preserve and keep them in Faith and Repentance and by him to give them Eternal Life So Predestination is an Eternal Decree or Purpose of God in time causing effectual Grace in all those whom he hath Chosen and by this effectual Grace bringing them infallibly unto Glory Predestination being thus an immanent and eternal Act of Divine Understanding and Will cannot be conceived as dependent upon any foreseen Temporal Acts of mans Free-will for Election findeth or considereth all meer men in one and the self-same condition and it is the Grace prepared for them in Predestination which maketh the predestinate become holy and happy men They who will have God in his Divine Predestination to behold all men and elect those men consequently whom he considereth as believing and persevering in Faith and Holiness unto the last gasp are in an Error for our Election is not grounded upon any foreseen acts in us of Obeying Believing Persevering and the like but these acts are grounded upon our Election for whoever is predestinated to Salvation is also predestinated to the Grace of Believing Obeying and the like otherwise it were a conditional Predestination but there is none such for whoever is elected to Salvation is predestinated also to the means of Salvation God in his most gracious Decree of Election is as absolutely and certainly ordaining men unto Saving Grace as unto Everlasting Life and Glory And this Grace prepared for the Elect in Gods Eternal Predestination and bestowed upon them in the Temporal Dispensations so causeth their Belief Repentance Perseverance as that it imposeth no necessity or violent coaction upon the Wills of men but causeth their free and voluntary Endeavors All that are inwardly and effectually called are Elected but many are called onely outwardly few such are chosen Now that God hath chosen some and passed by others he is not at all cruel for he owed not his Grace to any but justly might have suffered all Mankinde to have perished That some are Elect and some Reprobate is known unto us in general but not in special whether this or that man be but of our own Election every of us not onely may but ought to be in special certain and assured whereof he may be by the effect which is Conversion that is true Faith and true Repentance Now if any one shall think that the Election of some before others in regard of Gods special Mercy came from this That God foresaw something in them which was not in the others let him hear what Moses saith to the Jews The Lord did not set his love upon you nor chuse you for your multitude but because the Lord loved you and would keep the
Oath which he swore to your fathers Deut. 7.7 8. And in Mat. 7.23 Christ saith of some I never knew you yet speaking of others he saith I know my sheep Joh. 10.14 And again I know whom I have chosen Joh. 13.18 and Paul saith The Lord knoweth who are his From which places we may safely gather That the Lord puts a difference betwixt man and man Angel and Angel acknowledging some to be his own and denying the same of others If God himself had not avouched this in his Word no man might have taught it but being here plainly propounded it is with all reverence to be acknowledged and received whereof no other Reason can be given but Gods good pleasure alone Mat. 11.25 26. For Jacob hath he loved and Esau hath he hated neither did this difference come from their works either good or evil for this difference God put between them before either of them had done good or evil but it is wholly ascribed to the Will of God who will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardeneth Rom. 9. Neither must this seem strange unto us for we permit unto men to use their own discretion in their own Affairs and can we think it unreasonable in the Creator to use his touching his Creature Thus our whole Salvation is of Gods Free-grace which in Christ is the Fountain from whence it floweth yea it is the Beginning Continuance and Ending of our Salvation So that as for any foreseen Faith and Good-works they are not causes of our Election but fruits and effects thereof for what Faith or Good-works could be foreseen in the Sons of Wrath born dead in Sins God chose us not because he knew we would believe hereafter but to the end we should believe that is that he might bestow upon us Faith and so save us in his Son Eph. 1.4 Tit. 1.1 Acts 13.48 and Faith is the gift of God to us and the work of God in us Joh. 6.29 44. And if Faith foreseen were the cause of Election then Infidelity foreseen were the cause of Reprobation which is false because then all Mankinde should be reprobated and rejected forasmuch as the whole Mass of Mankinde sinned and God could foresee nothing in it as of it self but Incredulity and Unbelief Neither is our Election of Merit which is a work undue to which we are not bound making the Reward and Recompence that was not due to be due but all we can do is due unto God for our Spiritual life is called a Debt unto him both in respect of Creation Redemption and Glorification therefore neither is our Salvation of Merit but of Gods own Free-grace Neither is our Election of any Free-will in us to good for there is not any cooperation as the bold Papists affirm of mans Free-will with Gods Free-grace in the first act of our Conversion but God does all and we nothing in good things save as Instruments for God worketh both the will and the deed he preventeth us with his Grace prepareth us by his Word enclineth us by his Spirit and worketh both the beginning and ending of our Salvation For Election Vocation Faith Adoption Justification Sanctification and Eternal Glorification are never separated in the Salvation of any man but like inseparable Companions go hand in hand Now the Elect regenerated and once come unto the Church of the Saints may sometimes fall from it but they can never forsake it wholly because they never so fall as to become the Enemies of God and the Church nor finally because they persist not in this Apostacy but at length return to Repentance Thus was it with David and Peter Lastly the Notes of Election are Vocation Justification Sanctification and all they who are elected unto Salvation if they come unto the years of discretion are called outwardly by Gods Word and inwardly by his Spirit Of this Election Christ Jesus is the Foundation 1 Thess 5.9 The Decree thereof is that Book of Life wherein are written the Names of the Elect Rev. 20.12 2 Tim. 2.19 And the execution of this Decree is an Action by which God even as he purposed with himself worketh all those things effectually which he decreed for the Salvation of the Elect For they whom God elected to this end that they should inherit Eternal Life were also elected to those subordinate means whereby as by steps they might attain this end and without which it were impossible to obtain it Rom. 8.29 30. Election is twofold 1. Eternal whereby God out of the Lump and Mass of Mankinde hath before all Worlds chosen out some to life Eternal 2. Temporal 1. To some certain Office Joh. 6.70 chosen to the Apostleship All such are not Redeemed by Christ 2. Out of the World into the Church Joh. 15.19 Such are Redeemed by Christ Of Eternal Election 1. The Efficient Cause is the everlasting Purpose of God Rom. 9.11 2. The Material Cause is the Blood of Christ 1 Tim. 1.18 19 20. 3. The Final Cause or End why both God the Father hath loved and Christ for his Elect hath suffered is the Glory of God and Salvation of man Eph. 1.5 6. Rom. 8.29 The chief effects of Election are 1. Justification by Faith in this life and Glorification in the life to come 2. A Conformity to the Image of Christ in suffering here and enjoying glory hereafter Indeed the Effect of our Election is the whole Work of our Salvation and all the Degrees of our Redemption viz. 1. The Creation and Gathering of the Church 2. The sending and giving of Christ the Mediator and his Sacrifice 3. The effectual Calling of Men to his Knowledge 4. Faith Justification Regeneration and Good-works 5. Raising unto Glory Glorification and Eternal Life The means whereby to come to the Assurance of our Election as it is set down in the 2 Pet. 1. viz. 1. Faith to put our sole trust and confidence in God onely 2. Vertue an upright doing of the Works of the Moral Law 3. Knowledge whereby to carry our selves warily before men 4. Temperance in natural Appetite in Meat Drink Apparel c. 5. Patience a moderation of sorrow in enduring Affliction 6. Godliness whereby we Worship God in the Duties of the First Table 7. Brotherly Kindeness to embrace Gods Church and the Members thereof 8. Love whereby we are well-affected to all men even to our Enemies The three principal grounds of Assurance of Salvation in the First of John 1. He that hath communion of fellowship with God in Christ may be undoubtedly assured of his Salvation 1 Joh 5.11 2. He that is the Adopted Son of God shall be saved 1 Joh. 3.2 3. They that are assured of the love of God to them in particular may also be certainly assured of their Salvation 1 Joh. 4.9 From the Doctrine of Election follow two weighty Points to be known and believed viz. 1. That the Promise of Remission of Sins and Everlasting Life in the Messias is
VVorking Grace whereby we are delivered from the Dominion of Sin and are renewed in Minde VVill and Affections having received power to obey God 4. Co-working Grace whereby God conferreth and perfecteth the Grace of Renewing being received And without this Grace following the first is unprofitable 5. Persevering Grace whereby after that we have received the Grace of Renovation we do also receive a will to persevere and continue constantly in that good which we can do even by this gift of Perseverance The Object of Conversion is 1. Sin or Disobedience from whence we are converted 2. Righteousness or New-Obedience whereunto we are converted The subject or matter of conversion viz. 1. In the Minde and Understanding a right judgement concerning God his VVill and VVorks 2. In the VVill an earnest and ready desire purposing to obey God in all his Commandments 3. A good and reformed Affection Mans Conversion consists of these two parts viz. 1. In mortifying the Old Man that is to be truly and heartily sorry that thou hast offended God by thy sins and daily more and more to hate and eschew them 2. By quickning the New Man that is to live to God through Christ and an earnest and ready desire to order thy life according to Gods will and to do all good works The Causes of Conversion viz. 1. The Principal Efficient Cause of Conversion is the Holy Ghost 2. The Instrumental Causes or Means are first the Law then the Gospel the next Instrumental Cause is Faith 3. The Furthering Causes are the Cross and Chastisements as also Punishments Benefits Acts of Providence and Examples of others 4. The Formal Cause is the Conversion it self and the Properties thereof 5. The chief Final Cause is Gods Glory the next and subordinate end is our own good and the Conversion of others When thou art converted confirm thy Brethren How the true Conversion of the godly differs from the false Repentance of the wicked 1. In their Grief the wicked are grieved onely for the punishment ensuing not for that they offend and displease God the godly are specially grieved that God is offended 2. In the Cause the wicked repent by reason of a despair and distrust so that they more and more offend God but the godly repent by reason of Faith and a confidence they have of the Grace of God and Reconciliation in the Mediator 3. In the Effect for in the wicked New-Obedience doth not follow Repentance which always accompanieth the Repentance of the godly so that the Repentance of the wicked is no true no sound no saving Repentance The former part of Conversion is called Mortification and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because as dead men cannot shew forth the actions of one that is living so our Nature the Corruption thereof being abolished doth no more in such sort shew forth or exercise her evil actions For Mortification is by the grace and operation of the Spirit a decay and perishing of the deeds of the flesh which are evil Actions and carnal Affections 2. Because Mortification is not wrought without grief and lamenting and for this cause Mortification is called a Crucifying consisting in the subduing by a holy Discipline our inordinate lusts which rebel against God and in a patient bearing of the Cross of Christ The latter part of Conversion is called Quickning viz. 1. Because as a living man doth the actions of one that is living so Quickning is a kindling of new Faculties and Qualities in us 2. In respect of that joy which the converted have in God which indeed is such as words are not able to express nor any heart conceive but his who hath it Quickning comprehendeth those things which are contrary to Mortification 1. A Knowledge of Gods Mercy and the applying thereof in Christ 2. A Joyfulness thence arising for that God is pleased and New-Obedience is begun 3. An ardent or earnest endeavor or purpose to sin no more arising from Thankfulness and because we rejoyce that we have God appeased or pacified towards us a desire also of Righteousness and of retaining Gods love and favor being now converted from sin which next comes to be spoken of XI SIN in its proper nature is an Anomy that is a want of Conformity to the Law of God The nature of sin lies not in the action but in the maner of doing the action and sin properly is nothing formally subsisting or existing for then God should be the Author of it but it is an Ataxy or Absence of goodness in the thing that subsisteth whereupon it is truly said in Schools In peccato nihil positivum whatsoever a man doth whereof he is not certainly perswaded in judgement and conscience out of Gods Word that it may be done is sin Original Sin is the Corruption of the whole man and chiefly of the Soul of man and is not onely an absence of goodness but also a real presence of an evil property and disposition and this infection of Nature doth remain yea in them that are Regenerated For the Principle of Flesh that is in holy men may sometimes prevail mightily upon them yea so as to make them do as evil actions as the worst of men for this is a true Rule A man that excelleth in Grace may sometimes excel in ill-doing but he allows not himself therein nor is it properly he that does it but sin that dwelleth in him as the good that evil men do it cannot be said that they do it Gods Spirit may be there to help them to do much but the Spirit dwelleth not there so a man may do good and not be good On the other side things though commanded yet in the unregenerate become sins it is sin when a wicked man giveth Alms because it proceeds not from Faith and Love yet the Moral actions of the unregenerate are not to be omitted by us because in them they are sin but we must avoid the sin and perform the action avoid not the works of Hypocrites but the hypocrisie of their works Thus is sin the Corruption of a Nature created good of God but not any Creature made of God in man for it is onely an accidental Quality or natural Property of man corrupted but no substantial Property nor of the nature of man simply as he was first created Solomon hath drawn the picture of Sin to the life in the Description of an Harlot the Fawns Flatters Pleases Delights but in the end Destroys it speaks to us in Joabs language to Amasa 2 Sam. 20.10 and his kisses are as mortal or in Jaels language to Sisera Judg. 4.18 5.26 27. but the Butter in the lordly Dish will not balsum the wound it gives All sin is like the painted Harlot or the beautiful forbidden Fruit he that sucks the Honey-comb of sin sucks the Poison of Asps it is a golden Hook baited with all the Glory of the World All sin is foul filthy unclean infectious contagious and loathsom in the sight of
deed Also he that is grieved truly and unfainedly from his heart for one sin shall proportionably be grieved for all the sins that he knoweth to be in himself for in the most Regenerate there remain some unknown sins of which he cannot have a particular Repentance and yet they are not imputed when there is Repentance for known sins Thus David repented of his Murther and Adultery and yet afterward erring in judgement by reason of the corruption of the times lived to his death in the sin of Poligamy without any particular Repentance that we hear of so the Patriarchs but God in mercy received a general Repentance for the same provided we endeavor to finde out particular sins Now though Godly sorrow be the beginning of Repentance yet Repentance it self doth chiefly consist in a change of Life upon this Sorrow and this standeth in a constant purpose of the Minde and resolution of the Heart not to sin but in every thing to do the Will of God In this purpose stands the very nature of Repentance nor must it be several from Humiliation and Faith We cannot so much as think of our sins aright without grief of heart neither ought we to be grieved for this grief 2 Cor. 7.8 This Sorrow pleaseth God greatly and maketh glad the Angels in Heaven Luke 15.10 And bringeth the Mourners unto infinite joy and peace of Conscience Some there are that repent of their Repentance are sorry they have sorrowed for those sins they yet delight in This is the height of Impiety and that which filled the hardness of Pharaohs heart to the full nor were the Israelites themselves free there-from when their murmuring appetites lusted after the Flesh-pots of Egypt But he that indeed repents mourns that he hath not mourned repents that he hath not repented humbles himself because he hath not been humbled This is that which a man must do before he can truly repent of any particular sin whatsoever And such think it nay they know it to be impossible for them to repent enough Such are our Offences against the Eternal and Infinite Majesty of God as no man is so humbled for them as that he can say He need be humbled no more for them So that this is an undeniable Truth a general Rule without exception That whosoever is come to this pass to think he hath repented enough he is not in the account of Gods Word a true Convert or Penitent Could our life in length equal Methuselahs and our Repentance in an undiscontinued practice thereof equal our Life all this compared to the Infinity of the Majesty offended would come short to entitle it Long-lived An unintermitted Watchfulness fed and supported by a daily constant revolution of faithful Prayers is the pith of Repentance which is likely to prove so much the sounder by how much the more free and voluntary the performance thereof is for extorted and inforced Repentance though it often proves sound and good no doubt yet may not be always so the instrumental cause thereof hapning to be removed the Work may not go on Repent therefore for except we repent we shall all perish Luke 13.3 But if we judge our selves we shall not be judged of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.31 Not as the custom is a seeming sad Confession of sin out of Formality not Conscience of Passion without remorse or of fear without change like Judas who confessed he had sinned in betraying innocent blood This is not to repent nor can we be said to be truly penitent when the Judgements upon us for sin grieve us more then the sins themselves And although whensoever an unrighteous man truly repenteth he shall be pardoned yet he cannot truly repent whensoever he will Beware therefore of deferring Repentance He that refuses to turn when God calleth him provokes God to refuse to turn to him when he calls upon God yea to give him over to the hardness of his heart and to assign him Belshazzers or the rich Fools death There are two parts of Repentance viz. 1. The Mortification of the Old man that is Of the Corruption which by reason of sin sticketh in us 2. The Resurrection of the New So there is a twofold consideration of Repentance 1. In respect of the beginning of Repentance as Contrition This is before Faith 2. In respect of the Act of it now the Act of Repentance followeth Faith The exercise of Repentance viz. 1. A constant turning from all sin unto God which hath two parts viz. 1. A purpose of heart and resolution never to sin more 2. A holy endeavor of performing the said resolution 2. A humble Confession 1. Of our sins not in word onely 2. Of our desert of punishment due for them 2. A continual inward grief and sorrow of heart for our sins not a worldly but a godly sorrow which consisteth of two parts 1. To be displeased with our selves for our sins 2. To have a bodily moving of the heart which often causeth crying and tears The former of these is necessary the latter is not simply necessary though it be commendable in whomsoever it is if it be in truth 4. A true inward Humiliation of the heart joyned with a true inward shame of all our sins whatsoever 5. An earnest begging of God in the Name and Mediation of Jesus Christ pardon for all our sins Grief of heart causing Repentance ariseth 1. From the Word of God whereby sin and Gods wrath for the same is discovered Acts 2.37 2. From Despair of all help in our selves or any other Creature Acts 16.30 3. From our wretchedness and vileness by reason of sin whereby God is offended and his wrath provoked as well as from our cursedness by reason of the punishment and fearful issue of sin Luke 15.18 What the grief is which is in the godly when they repent viz. 1. A grief both for sin past and present which is called Sorrow and also for sin to come which is called Fear 2. An hatred of sin committed both of present sin and sin to come 3. An averting from sin committed to Godliness 4. A flying from sin to come So the grief is in the heart the flying is in the will the averting is in the heart and will and it is an averting from evil unto good The effects of true spiritual grief viz. 1. Shame for evil which hath been done Jer. 31.19 Rom. 6.21 2. A true and thorow Resolution to enter into a new course of life 3. A renuing of grief so oft as occasion is offered True spiritual grief is never clean dried up because sin the cause of it is never quite taken away The true properties of sound repentance viz. 1. We must begin with our hearts to purge them of all corruptions and filthy lusts Ezek. 18.31 2. As we must turn unto God with the heart so with the whole and all the heart with all our soul Deut. 30.2 3. We must shake off all our sins as well one sin as another