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A09277 VindiciƦ gratiƦ. = A plea for grace More especially the grace of faith. Or, certain lectures as touching the nature and properties of grace and faith: wherein, amongst other matters of great use, the maine sinews of Arminius doctrine are cut asunder. Delivered by that late learned and godly man William Pemble, in Magdalen Hall in Oxford. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1627 (1627) STC 19591; ESTC S114374 222,244 312

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VINDICIAE GRATIAE A PLEA FOR GRACE MORE ESPECIALLY THE GRACE OF FAITH OR Certain LECTURES as touching the Nature and Properties of GRACE and FAITH Wherein amongst other matters of great use the maine sinews of ARMINIUS doctrine are cut asunder DELIVERED BY THAT late learned and godly man William Pemble in Magdalen Hall in Oxford AUG de Grat. lib. Arbitr cap. 16. Certum est nos velle cum volumus sed ille facit ut velimus bonum Certum est nos facere cum facimus sed ille facit ut faciamus praebendo vires efficacissimas voluntati LONDON Printed by R. YOVNG for I. BARTLET at the golden Cup in Cheape-side 1627. TO THE RIGHT WORshipfull Nathanael Stephens Esquier Grace and Peace from Iesus Christ. SIR BOokes are more necessary in a state than arms Arms are to defend us from the invasion of foes bookes are to preserve us from the infection of errors enemies can but kill the body errors endanger the soule There are crept into the Churches a number of false opinions some that oppugne others that obscure the grace of God The earth is of it selfe prone enough to bring forth weedes but should one withall sow tares we should have much ado at harvest Our hearts are ranke enough to breed errors and our wits cunning enough to defend them but the scripture tells us that the envious man comes and sows the tares of false opinions and of weedes tares are the very worst sith therefore errors are so plenty bookes cannot but be very necessary T is true there bee many and it may bee according to the complaint too many bookes abroad already because many bee to little purpose some little to the purpose but of good and learned bookes bookes fitted to the errors and diseases of the time as this is there neither be nor well can bee too many Many errors require many bookes Nay I may safely say that many bookes are more necessary now than ever for that wee are fallen into the very age of the Church wherein as diseases in the body so errors the sicknesse of the soule doe and must abound For errors are necessary evills in the Church that they that are approved may be made manifest saith Saint Paul And this is all that Satan hath gotten by stirring up the corrupt witts and pens of many abroad and some at home to write they care not what Now wee doe begin to see that Truth is the daughter of time Truth is never new but let an old Truth be newly proposed and at first wee suspect it let it settle a little and in time truth gains ground and wins upon the judgement and consciences of men but erroneous opinions just like new fashions when they are first on foote many doate upon them give them but some time and they grow stale and vaine so now what by the decrees of Synodes and the writings and preachings of the learned Time hath brought it so about that there are few Schollars or others that minde these matters but doe begin to see thorow the conceipts of the Arminians Though then this treatise might have beene abroad sooner yet I dare promise that it comes not in too late for hee that reads it with judgement shall soone see that in the doctrine of Arminius there is more wit than truth I doe here commend it to your reading as to one whom the Lord hath made willing to learne and able to judge as also under your name unto the good of the Church to stand as a testimony of my duty and love unto you and of your zeale and love unto the truth Yours in the Lord Iesus RICH CAPEL To all that love and desire the grace of God and the glory of his grace in IESUS CHRIST MY deare and beloved brethren in Christ who are sensible of the dangers of these dayes and of the misery of this sinfull age wherein the heresies of the old condemned hereticke Pelagius that notable profest enemy of Gods grace are againe revived and raised up out of the bottomlesse pit by the malice and subtiltie of the restlesse enemy of mankinde that old Serpent the Divell working powerfully in and by that new upstart sect of Arminians the Wolves of this age who comming abroad in sheepes clothing and bearing the name of Protestants yea professing themselves Preachers of the Gospel in the reformed Churches are indeed Pelagian heretickes and disciples also of blasphemous Servetus and Socinus yea and also have joyned hearts and hands in many maine fundamentall errors with the Papists our enemies of the Romish Religion and faction I doubt not but that as you grieve and sorrow in your soules to see this smoake of pestilent heresies ascending upon the face of our land obscuring the light and eclipsing the glory of our Church so you do in your hearts earnestly desire to be made partakers of such worthy works painful labours of Gods faithful Ministers as are in all probability like to prove by Gods grace and blessing most powerfull and effectuall meanes both for the establishing of your hearts in the love of Gods truth and in the knowledge of the true doctrine of his grace and also for the confirming of your minds that they may neyther be daunted with the reproachfull calumnies and slanders nor troubled and entangled with the deceitfull cavils and carnall reasons which these subtile Sophisters have devised against Gods sacred truth in our Church professed And therefore I doe presume to commend unto you this ensuing Treatise which I having occasion to peruse it while it was under the Presse doe perceive to be as most necessary for these times so also most excellent and profitable for your purpose For I finde in it first the doctrins of truth concerning the grace of God and the powerfull worke of grace in the effectuall calling conversion and regeneration of the elect most plainly propounded and strongly proved out of the sacred Scriptures Also true saving and justifying Faith most accurately described unfolded with the whole nature and all the speciall properties of it by which it may be distinctly knowne and discerned from common fading hypocriticall Faith Secondly the maine errors of Arminians and Papists and their most grosse absurdities about universall grace and mans free-mill and power in working his owne salvation truly related their calumnies and slaunders of our Churches doctrine detected and discovered and their principall arguments carnall reasons and objections with wonderfull brevitie and singular dexteritie answered and refuted Thirdly by the way the authority perspicuity and certainty of the holy Scriptures strongly maintained and Popish errours about the uncertainty and obscurity of them beaten downe by strength of reason and by the Word of God as by a hammer that beates the rockes in pieces Though the style and maner of handling be somwhat Scholasticall sitted and applyed to the place and persons where and among whom these Exercises were first performed to wit in one of the Schooles of the
truth as themselves had either received by tradition from the Ancestors or learned by new revelation from God himselfe When the Church grew out of a family into a Nation and that as men multiplied so ignorance corruption increased God himselfe writes a Catechisme for the Iewes describing a short compendium of Religion in the two Authenticke Tables of the Law containing Ten words so few and so plaine that the shortest memory and shallowest wit might easily comprehend them And withall God now layes an expresse command upon his people both for themselves and for their children Deut. 6. 6 7. And these words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart And thou shalt rehearse them vnto thy children and shalt talke of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou liest downe and when thou risest up The word is emphaticall Thou shalt rehearse them continually 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt sharpen them by often and seasonable instruction giving an edge or point to the precepts of the Law that they may pierce into the mindes of the unlearned How carefully this strict injunction was afterward observed either by the Levites in publick or in private by masters of families wee cannot certainely define where Scripture is silent of both their practises but if wee may judge of the carefulnesse of former times by the carelesnesse of these there is good cause to thinke that both Levites in the Synagogues and Governours in their private houses were negligent enough in discharging this duty Yet we may well presume that there were both of the one and other not a few whose godly industry in this particular may justly shame the impious slothfulnesse of Ministers and People in latter ages Where will a David and Bathsheba be now found personages of highest quality yet counting it no disgrace to reade a Lecture of religion and morality to a yongue Salomon You shall finde their practise 2. Chron. 28. 8. Prov. 31. 1. And Salomon himselfe seemes to give that precept out of the experience of his owne most excellent education Teach a childe the trade of his way and when hee is old he shall not depart from it though himselfe scarce did so Yea albeit infinite corruptions have at this day deformed all religion among the Iewes yet even to these times may be seene some prints of their ancient discipline among them whose children are in their tender yeares first taught the law and bookes of Moses and after that their Talmudicall Traditions with such care and industry as their skill in Iudaisme at 17. exceedes the knowledge of many among us in Christianity at 70. whereof see the learned Buxd. Synag Iudaic. c. 3. But come we unto those times when the Sunne of righteousnesse arose and the knowledge of holy things shone in its full strength by the ministery of Christ and his Apostles and we may trace this practise by its apparant footsteps even from the first age of the Christian Church and downeward The words which I have read are but a copy and briefe description of the Primitive Catechisme the Apostle Paul commends to Timothies custody 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pattern and delincation of wholesome doctrine which hee had learned from the Apostle 2. Tim. 1. 13. which also Rom. 12. 6. he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Analogy of faith contained in all fundamentall points of sacred doctrine with which all interpretations of Scripture must beare due proportion Now very necessity drave them in those Primitive times to draw religion into compendious heads and short summaries partly in regard of Infidels who being converted to the faith were to be instructed in the maine points of Christian beleefe a thorow knowledge and open confession whereof was required of them at their Baptisme partly in respect of the children of Christian parents who because of the dangerous sollicitations of Idolatrous Gentiles and Hereticall Christians privily creeping in to beguile by craftinesse ignorant and unstable soules were of necessity to have their mindes setled in the chiefe and generall conclusions of Christian doctrine by which they might defend themselves against all sophistical seducements Both these whether new Converts or yongue Christians were anciently called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 till their Baptisme and Confirmation and for such whose narrow wits could not comprehend large discourses it was needfull to make use of Epitomes Touching the word we finde it more ancient than this custome and more generally understood than of it onely In generall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in its Metonymicall signification is to teach others vivâ vo●● by speech sounding into their eares in speciall to instruct any in the first rudiments of an art or science because such as are ignorant learne more by others teaching than their owne study In the generall acception besides profane authors wee finde it used in the new Testament five severall times Luke 1. 4. That thou mightest acknowledge the certainty of those things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereof thou hast been instructed saith S. Luke to Theophilus rendring the reason of the dedication of his Gospell unto him Of Apollos an eloquent man mighty in the Scriptures it s said he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instructed in the way of the Lord Act. 18. 25. Rom. 2. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instucted by the Law againe 1. Cor. 14. 19. I had rather in the Church speake fiue words with mine understanding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that I might also teach others than ten thousand words in a strange tongue But most notable is that place Gal. 6. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let him that is taught in the Word make him that hath taught him partaker in all his goods In all which places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is no more than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bee taught or instructed as the circumstances of the Texts doe evidently demonstrate But in times presently succeeding the Apostles and since the word hath been usually taken by Ecclesiasticall Writers in the strictest sense for the first instruction of yongue beginners in the rudiments of Christianity For now began the Gentiles in great multitudes to joyn themselves unto the Church and the number of those that were to be Catechised daily increasing gave occasion to the Pastors of every Congregation to bee more frequently imployed in this businesse And as the burden grew heavier so new meanes were devised for their better institution Hence besides the Pastors and Bishops of the Churches there were some specially deputed to attend this office who from their imploiment were called Catechistae and not onely in the Temples but also in Schooles opened for that purpose did teach such as were rude and ignorant the elements of Christian religion Famous above others is that Schoole at Alexandria in Egypt wherin so many learned men taught and so many holy Martyrs and Confessors had their first education There it was that Origen
bee assured that a heart surcharged with covetous desires ambitious thoughts voluptuous uncleane and impure affections is farre un fit for the study and meditation of these sacred writings and shall never attaine to the saving understanding thereof Againe be humble and not proud sober and not curious neglect no helpes of Nature or Art that may bee gotten nor relye too much upon either as foolish Anabaptists doe on the one side and presumptuous wits on the other whose stocke will soone decay Study to obey not to dispute turne not conscience into questions and controversies lest whilst thou art resolving what to do thou doe just nothing Draw not all to reason leave something for faith where thou canst not found the bottome admire the depth kisse the booke and lay it downe weepe over thine ignorance and send one heartie wish to heaven Oh when shall I come to know as I am knowne Goe not without nor before thy guide but let thine eyes bee alwaies towards that Lambe who onely can open this booke and thy understanding And then Blessed is he that readeth and he that heareth the words of the prophecy of this booke for the time is at hand Yea the time is at hand when all shall be accomplished and wee must bee accomptable when arts shall cease tongues shall be abolished knowledge shall vanish away Doe but thinke now one thought what will be the joy of thy conscience in that day when thou maist truly say Lord thou hast written to me the great things of thy Law and I have not accounted them a strange thing or with David I have hid thy Word within my heart that I might not erre from thy Commandements 2. This for your private in the second place attend to hearing as well as reading It is a fault greatly reproveable in many who despise all but their owne study Gods ordinance of preaching and a moneths paines of the learned cannot do them so much good as an houres study of their owne who therefore out of scorne of Gods ordinance and other mens abilities will keepe home And I could wish that yet it were so that whom God lookes for at the Church he might finde them in their studies they should be though not so wel busied as they ought yet not so ill imployed as now they are But I spare them in this place hoping that none heares mee who doth not hate this practise and tremble to cast such contempt upon the sacred office and ordination of the publike Ministery I le rather touch upon our private an exercise of an inferiour nature yet of excellent use and great necessity Let that before spoken perswade your attention and diligence in thriving by it and besides that know the worke of providence to be such that how simple soever the messenger be that brings it yet Gods words will alwaies accomplish that whereto it is sent in hardening or softening the heart Here only let me commend unto your acceptance and expectation a double plainnesse needfull to be used 1. Of stile and speech that matter may have leave to command words and not bee constrained to follow them in servile attendance How many excellent discourses are tortured wrested and pinched in obscured through curiosity of penning hidden allusions forced phrases uncouth Epithites with other deformities of plaine speaking your owne eares and eyes may be sufficient judges A great slavery to make the minde a servant to the tongue and so to tie her up in fetters that shee may not walke but by number and measure Good speech make the most on 't is but the garment of truth and she is so glorious within shee needes no outward decking yet if she doe appeare in a rayment of needle-worke it s but for a more majestike comelinesse not gawdy gainesse Truth is like our first Parents most beautifull when naked t was sinne covered them t is ignorance hides this Let perspicuity and method bee ever the graces of speech and distinctnesse of delivery the daughter of a cleer apprchension for my self I must alwaies thinke they know not what they say who so speake as others know not what they meane If they doe it of purpose they are envious to others and injurious to Nature and the best interpretation I can make of such misty and cloudy eloquence is that it serves onely to shadow an ignorant minde or an ill meaning T is naught in all discourse about religion much more as if the darknesse of our understanding were not hinderance enough without obscurity of speech and of all I am sure in this kinde of exercise most un fit where both matter and auditors require plainnesse Catechismes are pend like lawes in plaine not eloquent termes its a great absurdity in definitions summary decisions to seek after tropes and figures Wherefore for curious discourses sitted to rub itching ears let AElians grave censure of Myrmerides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coaches with foure horses so little you might hide them undor a slies wing or Callicrates his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 copies of verses written so small as a chery stone might hold them passe likewise upon them they are to say the least 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a laborious losse of time Certainely I finde both the one and the other cendemned in Pauls practise and the Iewes example Hee was learned and spake all languages and that exactly eloquently if Gods teaching can doe any thing more than a Grammarians or Rhetoricians schoole yet in case of preaching hee would not doe that which he condemned in the false Apostles but professeth his opinion and practise 1. Cor. 2. 1. I came not to you with excellency of words or of wisedome and verse 4. nor stood my word and my preaching in the entising speech of mans wisedome but in plaine evidence of the Spirit and of Power and he gives a reason for it verse 5. That your faith should not be in the wisedome of men as wrought by mans perswasion but in the power of God Againe Exekiel was an eloquent man and the Iewes tooke a pleasure to heare him but where grace wanted what could his eloquence helpe Yee shall have it in Gods owne words Ezek 33. 31. 32. They come unto thee as a people useth to come and my people sit before thee and heare thy words but they will not doe them for with their mouths they make jests and their heart goeth after their covetousnesse But it may be Ezekiels utterance was harsh and they were offended at it No it followes And loe thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voice and can play well on an instrument for they heare thy words but they doe them not This for speech the other plainnesse is 2. Of the matter that ye will give mee leave to enquire after the old way and to walke in it I meane that plaine path which the Scriptures have laid forth before us the easiest I assure me to
be found the safest to travel in Mens writings are infinite their opinions changeable their resolutions doubtfull and if wee begin there wee are out of the way at the first entrance and t is hazzard but wee loose truth and our selves among so many turnings and windings of errors heresies opinions conjectures quarrelsome contradictions disputes and brawling controversies as we shall meete withall Who would be so troubled in his way to heaven thus wearied and vexed with endlesse and needlesse discourses which like the envious Amalekites set upon us in our sore travell towards Canaan assaulting the simplicity of our faith disquieting the peace of conscience by strange decisions of doubtfull cases darkning the cleer light of sacred Scripture which shines dimme through such painted glasse and in briefe mingling the sincer● milke of the Word with the noisome ingredients of carnall reason and corrupt affections Surely we doe not beleeve when we read that in the 12. of Eccl. v. 12. There is no end of making of bookes and much reading is a wearinesse to the flesh if we did we would hence learne to see a fault which an eager desire of learning not wel guided drawes upon us all that would be schollars A strange curiosity to prie into all books of the same kinde thinking wee never know the truth till wee know what all men have said of it And are we certaine then wee have it It were somewhat if t were in learning as t is in bearing of a burden where many weake men may beare that which one or few cannot But in the search of knowledge it fares as in descrying a thing a farre off where one quicke sight will see further than a thousand cleere eyes It is most usuall in comparing of humane authors for the Scriptures its certaine that they alone without other helpes are sufficient for our direction in all necessary truth and were our hearts inflamed with love of their excellent holinesse and our heads a little more acquainted with study and meditation therein wee should finde by experience that more light shineth in this sunne than in all the starres of the Church which doe but borrow their light from hence For mine owne part I have alwaies wondred at the discord between the doctrine and practice of many Divines who stiffely and truly maintaining against the Papists the all-sufficiency of Scriptures for heavenly instruction doe yet in their private studies condemne them of insufficiency bestowing to say the least three parts of their times and paines in the wearisome reading of those huge volumes of Fathers Schoole-men and other Writers for one part which they spend in the meditation of the Scriptures Wee love to seeke gold among drosse when wee may have it ready tried and purified to our hands yea pure as mettall tryed in a furnace and fined seven times as the Prophet speakes Psal. 12. 6. Blame not my resolution to follow Salomons admonition By these things my sonne bee admonished and to goe to the living not to the dead to the Law and Testimony the lively oracles of God ever speaking loud enough if wee have eares to heare what the Spirit saith and plaine enough if as our Apostle speakes wee had our wits exercised to discerne both good and evill You shall doe mee wrong to conceive any such meaning by my words as if I would dash out all writings of men with one stroke or condemne all Libraries to the fire an arrogant impiety it were so to thinke or speake of mens paines in writing and Gods providence in preserving their bookes No. I touch none but those who consult onely with flesh and bloud men like themselves out of whose discourses they frame to themselves an humane divinity making such to be pillars that should bee but helpers of their faith which how likely t is to faile in time of triall I wish them to forecast betime before they feele it too late Among you my Brethren I suppose there is none who had not rather have his soule saved than his fancy pleased and therefore will bee willing to beleeve where God affirmes to obey where he commands without mans authority to convince your reason or perswade your affections And if so I am eased of the most troublesome least profitable toile the curious search and allegations of Authors which if you do expect you overburden me if I should promise I should belie mine owne knowledge and as I suppose your opinion of my meannesse Furthermore for deeper speculations new-minted Divinity or elder Heresies buried in hell with their authors or strange opinions husht up in silence it will bee a wrong to imbroile the mindes of such an auditory and to shake them with the unseasonable blasts of doubtfull disputes before they have taken deeper roote in the faith You must pardon mee I speake to those whom this exercise most concernes that are the yonguer in age and knowledge And therefore I must beseech you beloved and much respected in the Lord who are the elder and stronger in the Lords stocke to give mee leave to drive on in Iacobs pace so as I weary not nor leave behinde the more tender Lambes I dare say wee may all at last come to Canaan and yet breake no company He that gives to them that want takes not away from them that have and you know that men may bee nourished with milk though infants cannot live with stronger meate Finis Prologi THE NATVRE AND properties of GRACE and FAITH THe summe of all Christian dueties is briefly comprised under these two heads Agenda and Credenda Doing and Beleeving Which the Apostle 2. Tim. 1. 13. makes the two maine parts of all wholesome doctrine Hold fast the form of sound words which thou hast heard of mee in Faith and Love which is in Christ Iesus The Epitome of Love is the morall Law briefly contained in ten more briefly in two precepts Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe The sum of Faith more at large delivered in the Apostolicall writings is shortly drawne into that excellent compendium which wee now use and call the Apostles Creede containing the substance of Evangelicall doctrine Both these Faith and Love have one common adversary Satan by whom they have beene continually assaulted and whether more dangerously it is not easie to determine they seeme both to bee imbarked together in the same bottome and if Conscience suffer shipwrack Faith sinkes too and if Faith the most precious lading be throwne overboard I doubt how Charity will be able to make a saving voiage As Paul said of the Marriners attempting an escape in their dangerous passage so I of those Except they abide in the ship ve cannot be saved and you may observe it equally difficult to find an Hereticke vertuous or an Atheisticall vicious liver a true beleever Wherefore the divell cares not much where he begins his battery yet if I be not deceived
is exceeding weake The tree must be good before it bring forth good fruits True but what makes vs good trees our Iustification or our Sanctification Surely our Sanctification For though by Iustification wee are accounted good and Holy before God yet wee are not so in our Selues but most euill and Corrupt till we bee indewed with the grace of sanctification And then only wee become Good trees fit to beare the fruite of good workes so that the reason is in effect as if he had said we must first be Sanctified before our workes be Holy and that 's true for euen to Beleeve is a good and Holy worke and therefore though it goe before Iustification yet of necessitie presupposeth Sanctification 2. That faith is su●b an instrument of making vs partakers of the Benefites of Christs Mediation as is neither absolutely necessary in al. the Elect nor yet simply anteceding all manner of participation in those benefites That it is not absolutely necessarie in all appeares in the Elect dying infants who enjoy all the benefits of Christs merits in their Iustification Sanctification and Glorification without this instrumentall meanes of their actuall Faith as wee shall see more at large anon That Faith doth not simply precede all manner of Participation with Christ appeares by a double benefit wee enioy by and from Christ before such time as wee doe beleeve 1. Our Sanctification wrought by the Spirit which from Christ convaies Life and Grace into our Soules when wee were utterly devoid of all both Faith and other graces as hath beene shewed before at large And this is the first benefit of Christs death bestowed on us before we so much as aske it 2. Our Iustification in Gods sight which euen long before we were borne is purchased for vs by Christ. For t is vaine to thinke with the Arminians that Christs merits have made God only Placabilem not Placatum procured a freedome that God may be reconciled if hee will and other things concurre but not an actuall reconciliation A silly shift devised to uphold the libertie of mans will and universality of Grace No t is otherwise the Ransome demanded is paid and accepted full Satisfaction to the Diuine justice is giuen and taken all the sinnes of the Elect are actually pardoned Gods wrath for them is suffered and ouercome he rests contented and appeased the debt book is crossed and the hand-writing cancelled This grand transaction betweene God and the Mediator Christ Iesus was concluded upon and dispatcht in heaven long before we had any being either in Nature or Grace Yet the benefit of it was ours and belonged to us at that time though we never knew so much till after that by faith wee did apprehend it As in the like case Lands may bee purchased the Writings confirmed the estate convayed and settled vpon an Infant though it know nothing of all till it come to age and finde by experience the present commoditie of that which was prouided for him long agoe And the reason of all this is because it is not our Faith that workes Gods reconciliation with us but Christ beleeved on by our faith Now his Merits are not therefore accepted of God because we doe beleeve but because they of themselves are of such Worth and sufficiency as doe deserve his most favourable acceptance of them for vs. And what reason have we then to thinke why they have not alwaies procured aswell as deserved Gods love and actuall reconciliation for the Elect not only before their faith as in all but also without their faith as in Infants I proceed to the second cause of our Conversion viz. the Efficient cause which really produceth it and that is the Holy Ghost in whose person not excluding the Father and the Sonne this worke of Sanctification is peculiarly terminated This blessed Spirit are those two golden pipes through which the two Oliue branches emptie out of themselues the golden oyles of all precious graces into the Candlesticke the Church as it is Zach. 4. For which cause all the Graces of God are called the Fruites of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. and Eph. 5 9 For the Fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth yea the whole worke of sanctification and renued Grace is styled by the name of the Spirit Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh id est Grace fights against corruption and this opposeth against Grace In respect of this opperation which the Holy Ghost hath in Sanctifying the Elect he is in Scripture set forth vnder a double Similitude of Water and Fire which are Elements most apt to cleanse The similitude is from the custome of the Leuiticall Purifications which were done by the use of both Elements For all vessells and utensills polluted by any legall uncleanenesse were to bee purged by Water if they were of wood but by Fire if made of metall or other materialls that might endure it as you may reade Num. 31. 23. So what euer filthinesse cleaves unto us or how deeply soever incorporated into our natures the Holy Ghost by his most blessed vertue as by water washeth away as by fire consumeth Then I will poure cleane water upon you and yee shall bee cleane from all your filthinesse and from your Idols will I cleanse you saith God unto the Church Ezech. 36. 25. And what is this water in Verse 27. he interprets himselfe in these words And I will put my Spirit within you Hence wee are said to bee baptized with the Holy Ghost Ioh. 1. 33. to bee baptized by one Spirit into one body 1 Cor. 12. 13. to bee borne of water and of the Spirit Ioh. 3. 5. Which baptizing of washing by the Holy Ghost is in plainer tearmes our Sanctification wrought by his power cleansing us from inherent corruption and creating in us Purite and Holinesse as is cleare out of that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 6 11. And such were some of you but yee are washed what 's that the next words tell us But yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God Hence the bestowing of the abundant gifts of the Holy Ghost is metaphorically described by Effusion or pouring out as Esa. 44. 3. I will poure water upon the thirsty and flouds upon the dry ground I will poure my Spirit upon thy seed and my blessing upon thy buds Ioel 2. 18 I will poure out my Spirit vpon a●l fl●sh fulfilled Act. 2. For that other appellation of Fire we haue it expresly Mat. 3. 11. Hee will baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire and implied Marc. 9 49. Euery man shall bee salted with fire and euery sacrifice shall be salted with salt Grace therefore is of a diuine off-spring the immediate effect of the all-powerfull vertue of Gods Spirit whereby he replants inherent Holinesse in our Soules having purified them from
the eyes of the minde opened to discerne of spirituall things according to their spirituall nature Herein also lies a great difference because all things that are inevident to a man unregenerate are not so to the regenerate These things thus distinguished let us set downe the truth touching this point in some few conclusions which follow 1. All things revealed in the Scriptures whether they be Doctrinall Historicall or Propheticall may be knowne in the evidence of the Narration not only by such as are truly sanctified but by those also who remaining unregenerate enjoy only the benefit of common illumination This conclusion is to be observed against that injurious accusation wherewith those of the Romish Church have standered God and his written Word that the Bible is an obscure booke not to be understood A fond and impious conceit if ever any were The Scriptures are obscure say they but to whom trow yee To their learned Clergie and illuminated Doctors No they can understand them well enough they are able to reconcile all seeming contradictions to reduce all tropes and figures to their plaine meaning to note the various acceptions of words to dive into all hidden mysteries of the text and over and above the just meaning finde out many spirituall senses of it that the author never thoughton This they can doe and for witnesse of it we have of their owne writing infinite volumnes both of Controversed Divinitie decided if wee beleeve them by Scripture rightly understood and also of Commentaries upon the text which testifie unto us as no small painfulnesse in searching out so much peremptorinesse in defining the true sense of the most Difficult places of Scriptures And surely well they may bee confident having besides their owne and others wits the helpe of the Popes infallibilitie in which respect one would thinke they should now make an end of writing or at least of jarring one with another in their opinions and interpretations For may we not thinke that the Popes are very uncharitable who being endued with an infallible Spirit doe not sitting at ease in their chaire compile at last an absolute Commentary upon the Bible after which no Iesuite of them all should dare to vent his owne private opinions or it may bee t is bashfulnesse in the Friers not to trouble his Holinesse about so small a tri●●e as is the right meaning of Scriptures unlesse we say that the Romish Apollo is not at leisure to utter Oracles from his trivet unto every poore Frier that intends to trouble the world with a new booke Here questionlesse is a great fault but let them take it among them meane while wee see their owne practice confuting their owne opinion of the Scriptures obscurity unlesse they will give us leave to thinke that all their preaching disputing and writing hath beene about they know not what But say they the Scriptures for all this are obscure to the Laity And are they so whose fault is that but the Clergies whose duty it was if pride and lazinesse would have given leave to have seene their people better instructed If Scriptures are plaine unto themselves why did they not make them plaine unto others or must we in earnest speak that of the Romish Clergy which Iob doth of his friends in derision No doubt but they are the people and wisedome shall die with them as for the poore snakes the Laickes they simple soules have not wit enough to understand the meaning of plaine words To such their proud contempt of Gods people we may with indignation oppose that of Iob Even these have understanding as well as they yea are not inferior unto the greatest part of them unlesse they could give the world better proofe of their deeper wisdomes But what if they be inferior are the Scriptures obscure because some things are hard to be understood by the ignorant and unstable mindes So we might say of the plainest book that ever was written of Logick that t is obscure because a fresh man doth not understand it It is no prejudice to the cleernesse and perspicuity of the Declaration that there be some things in it which are hard to be conceived by some men at some times We doe not account the prophecy of Esay touching Christ which the Eunuch read to be a darke and obscure prediction but we know t was cleer and plaine enough though the Eunuch a raw proselyte understood not the meaning of it T is much we cannot be as charitably minded of the Scriptures as we are of other bookes in our ordinary studies wherin when we find some things difficult we can suspect our selves rather than the author when afterward we understand him we doe not censure him of obscurity but blame our owne dulnesse that could not apprehend things plainely enough expressed And me thinkes the Iesuites might be content to give God Almighty leave to write but even as men of greatest understanding do namely to comprise much matter in few words They might know that in such writing and such is the stile of all the Scripture things may be expressed very distinctly and properly which yet cannot ●●ply be understood at first reading but after some study In which case t were a reasonable thing for our adversaries to perswade the world that the Bible were at least as easie a book as some humane author and that the abundant riches of knowledge in it did by the least deserve as much paines in the search of it as a piece of Aristotle some hard Poet on some intricate crabbed scholasticall discourse of some Iesuite Did they not greatly mistrust the discovery of their owne errors by such an insinuation of Scriptures facility they would never discourage their disciples from them and yet exhort them to the study of many an obscurer author For our selves we have learned better things than to bring God in suspicion with man of envie and fraud as if hee had caused a word to be written for instruction of men which they should not understand and in it had laid a snare to intrappe mens soules in Heresie and false opinions by perverting the Scriptures to their owne perdition No against such calumnies we oppose Christs censure of his owne words for such are the Scriptures Prov. 8. 8 9. All the words of my mouth are in righteousnesse there is nothing froward or perverse in them no danger of Hereticall infection They are all plaine to him that understandeth and right to them that find knowledge nor intricate obscurity that no man can tell what to make on 't Yea we dare avouch that did the simplest of people use but halfe that diligence that they ought in attaining Christian knowledge and would take but as much paines to understand the Scripture as they doe of the Evidences of their Land● or the Statute booke or such like experience would quickly tell them that the Scriptures are not so farre above the reach of their understandings as now generally all men