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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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will also evidently appeare to him that shall but a little survey the writings of Philosophers both those that are extant in whole or in part and such whose titles onely wee have remaining recorded by those that have written their lives For among so many hundred volumes written by the Ancients how few or none almost shall we finde touching the matter of Religion Those great scriblers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrysippus was called who left no part of Logicke Oratory Mathematickes Morality Policy and Nature it selfe unattempted but with a curious and inquisitive eye pried into the smallest matters yet in those higher speculations concerning the Nature of Divine things were either miserably blinde or wilfully negligent Aristotle a man of the deepest reach that Antiquity ever bred among so many bookes that he wrote and are in part yet extant hath not left us any one discourse by which it might appeare that hee bestowed any paines in searching after the knowledge of God except a little here and there in some poore pitifull disputes Theophrastus his schollar who exceeded the master in numbersome writings composed sixe bookes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 three which we wish had remained to posterity albeit by the very titles we may suspect what stuffe they were not unlike to Hes●ods Theogonia and such other fooleries and that both his bookes and others written of the same subject by Crito Simon Xenocrates Strato Cleanthes Epicurus and many more as may be seene in Laertius were they now extant would give us but small satisfaction in this point unlesse it were to discover the grosse stupidity and dulnesse of those otherwise refined and sublimated wits Tullie who had read them and sets downe the summe of their opinions gives us cause to beleeve that the wisest of them all and himselfe too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were here starke fooles and forsaking the right way of searching out the Deity in the footsteps of Nature by a due proceeding from the lower to the higher they gave heede to old fond fables or vanished away in their idle imaginations and new opinions Nor could it be otherwise if we respect either the corruption of Nature which how quick and forward soever it bee in other matters is dull enough in sacred imploiments as the experience of many dispositions proves who are excellent in many sorts of Learning yet dunces in Divinity or if wee regard the policy of Satan who blinding the eies of so learned and wise men made use of their wits and pens in darkning the cleerer light of divine knowledge by senselesse fables and foolish fancies which passed unto the ignorant vulgar with approbation under the authority of their deepe learning Wherefore seeing neyther the most wise and learned in former times have alwaies applied their industry in this part of knowledge nor yet the labours of such as have beene busied therein are preserved to our times nor those few monuments that are left doe give sufficient proofe that men have done their best in going so farre as they might we must without consideration of particulars first dispute in generall how deepe the eye of Naturall reason can pierce into divine mysteries and then see in briefe how far men whose inventions are come to our knowledge have proceeded therein Concerning the first you are to call to minde that Religion containes in it two chiefe branches 1. All Divine truths to bee knowne and beleeved in way of Spirituall contemplation and assent and the Summary of these are the Articles of our Creed which in general declare unto us what is to be beleeved touching God as Creator in the first Article Redeemer in the rest 2. All Divine and Morall duties to be done and practised by us the briefe wherof is in the Decalogue describing unto us the rules of 1. Pietie in Gods worship 2. Of Charity in righteousnesse towards man Within these bounds wee must seeke for the utmost extent of the meere naturall mans knowledge which wee will doe beginning with the knowledge of God the Redeemer touching which I lay downe this position as infallible and undeniable that The meere naturall man cannot by the most industrious use of all Natures helpes attaine unto any the least knowledge of God as hee is mans Redeemer in Christ. This is most apparant by the Scriptures wholly ascribing the knowledge of this mystery to the Sonne of God revealing it from the bosome of the Father and to the Spirit of God but utterly denying so much as a thought of it to any of the greatest or wisest of this world yea unto the blessed Angells themselves And t is no lesse agreeable to good reason which forbids to imagine that a man fallen corrupted by sin should ever attaine to the understanding of those things which Adam in his perfection never had knowledge of Now the knowledge of God as Redeemer with all the dependances thereupon as Adam had no need of it so was hee before his fall utterly ignorant of it and had so remained forever if God had not vouchsafed to reveale it to him Which revelation though made to Adam when wee were in his loynes yet was not as I may speake Generall and deriveable to all his posterity as the first connaturall and inprinted knowledge was but particular for the benefit of Adam and so many of his seed as were elect And though no doubt but Adam did instruct his children and they theirs for some descents in this mysterie yet wickednesse increasing in men as fast as men multiplied in the earth and by reason of the darksome obscurity of this mysterie in those first times of the world it came to passe that this knowledge quickly decreased being almost decayed even among the sonnes of God the Few of Gods Church whom therefore God was faine by new revelations continually to instruct but for the Sonnes of men the rest of the wicked world it was utterly extinct and no sparke of it left alive They soone forgot what they cared not to beleeve Wherefore wee must confine the meere naturall mans knowledge within these two limits 1. The knowledge of God as Creator 2. The knowledge of the morall Law and beyond these it is not possible for him to goe The knowledge of which though very much eclipsed in Adam himselfe but more and more darkned in his posterity as they further degenerated from his originall purity yet is it not so farre obscured except in such whose brutish and savage education have made them equall to the beasts that perish but that by carefull education and vigilant industry in the use of all helpes it may be somewhat repaired though this some what is but a very little part almost nothing of its first clearenesse Wherefore in the second place touching the knowledge God as Creator I suppose a meere naturall man may know these things touching God in his nature and attributes 1. That there is a God 2. That
after its future estate conclude after diligent search that as yet it hath neyther part nor portion in the inheritance of grace or glory Be assured that conscience will not lye and flatter at such a time and that where it findes no reformation of manners no change of the heart no puritie in the affections and desires no sense of the powerfull worke of the Spirit of Grace conscience will not spare to tell such a man to his face That he is a man of death prepared against the day of slaughter one hated of God detested of Saints and Angels living without communion and fellowship with Christ and so in a continuall expectation of Gods vengeance to fall on him in hell assoone as death shall strike him to the ground This will put the heart into a cold sweate and make the powers of the soule to shake specially when it shall looke about to all those things whence succour may seeme to be had and then shall finde it selfe utterly forsaken by them in its distresse Againe consider with me that no stranger can partake or perceive the unspeakeable joy of that heart which upon the like examination finds it selfe to be translated out of the bondage of Corruption into the libertie of Grace washed from its uncleanenesse by the Holy Ghost linked in communion with the Saints and body of Christ and sealed with the Spirit of promise to the assured Hope of everlasting happinesse If any thing can these thoughts will melt the heart into most humble thanksgiving and make us fall on our knees and with hands and eyes lifted up to him from whom our help commeth to confesse with the holy Prophet I was brought low but thou hast helped me I was in thraldome but thou hast loosed my bonds the sorrowes of death compassed mee and the paines of Hell gat hold on mee I found trouble and sorrow but thou hast delivered my soule from death mine eyes from teares and my feete from falling What is now my duty I will offer to thee the sacrifice of thanksgiving and call upon the Name of the Lord My soule praise thou the Lord and all that is within me praise his holy Name And againe My soule praise the Lord and forget not all his benefits saith the same holy David Psal. 103. 1. 2. But wherefore was all this contention of Spirit why this striving with utmost endeavour to bee thankefull Oh there was good cause Grace was worth God-a-mercy and t is for that this holy man thus strives to bee thankefull to God who forgave all his iniquities and had healed his diseases Certainely where so undeserved mercy in such desperate misery in that shewed upon a wretch as not onely to free him from all evill but also put him into the possession of all blessednesse where this grace workes not the heart to Thankfulnesse and Humility it is most apparant that such a heart knowes not what such Grace meanes For our selves let us shew forth these vertues of the Spirit which hath converted us and dwells in our hearts let 's looke to the rocke out of which we were hewen to the pit whence we were digged consider what wee were and should have beene what we are and shall be and then take we up that most modest speech of that noble Athenian Captaine in the midst of all his glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from how great basenesse and misery to what great glory and blessednesse are wee advanced Make wee our confession with Iacob With my staffe I came c. and the Israelites Deut. 26. 5. A Syrian was my father ready to perish c. And now let us in like manner make unto God our thankefull acknowledgement and say in the words of the Prophet O Lord wee confesse unto thee that our father was an Amo●ite our mother an Hittite that our birth is of the land of Canaan wee were borne bond-slaves and children of the curse In the day of our nativity our navell was not cut we were not washed with water not salted with salt nor swadled in clouts none eye pitied us to doe any of these things unto us and to have compassion upon us but wee were cast out into the open field to the contempt of our persons in the day that wee were borne Onely thou O Lord when thou passest by and sawest us polluted in our bloud hast had mercy on us and saidst unto us Live even when we were in our bloud thou saidst unto us Live Of vile thou hast made us Honourable of sinnefull Holy of miserable Happy Wee praise thee wee blesse thee and wee beseech thee to finish the good worke thou hast begunne and as by thy mercy thou hast brought us into the kingdome of Grace so by thy power preserve us through faith unto thy Kingdome of Glory Amen I proceed to the third Circumstance considerable in this point of our Conversion namely the Subject wherein it is wrought Now this in generall is the Elect and they onely whom onely God hath called to glorie and vertue appointing them to that as the end preparing them unto it by this as the meanes I shall need to name vnto you but one place for proofe hereof and that 's Rom. 8. 30. Moreover whom he hath predestinate them also hath he called whom he hath called c. The linkes of this chaine are so surely fastned together that no power of hell no wit of man may breake and sunder them Whom God fore knew he predestinated to be made like to the image of his Sonne in grace and glorie whom he hath thus elected before all time those in due time he calls or converts those he justifies those he glorifies Wherefore Sanctification Iustification and Glorie are bounded within those limits which Gods predestination or election hath prescribed unto them extending to no other persons but such only as haue their names written in the booke of life and are enrolled in the List of Gods eternall election But this generalitie of the Subject is yet more particularly to be differenced The Elect in this life are of two sorts 1. Infantes Infants whose age permitteth them not the knowledge of good or actuall practise of evill 2. Adulti Such as are of age who may both know and doe eyther good or evill Both these are the Subjects of Conversion or Sanctification but with some difference in the circumstances or maner of working it in them Which will thus appeare our Vocation unto the state of grace is double 1. Inward in the worke of the Spirit of grace upon our hearts regenerating and sanctifying them by the infusion of Holinesse Now though this be properly a Worke yet it is metaphorically termed a Voyce or Calling whereby the Spirit speakes unto our hearts and perswades us to Obedience But you must know that this inward voyce or speaking of the Spirit to the heart of a man unregenerate is much more than a bare suggestion of some thing to bee done by him it
much is our assent weakned But of the three the authority of the speaker is the chiefest whose wisedome and fidelity certainely knowne unto us will move us to a certaine beliefe of those things wherein we apprehend no great matter of consequence nor discerne any evidence of the truth at all whereas if one that hath neither wit nor honesty tell us of a matter of greatest moment wherof we also see the probability and truth in part yet doth he not perswade us to beliefe though he may move us to a strong suspicion Thus then you see that assent being the approbation of the truth of any thing is common to Knowledge Opinion and Beliefe but with this difference In exact Knowledge our assent is alwaies firme and unremoveable in Opinion t is alwaies wavering and mutable in Beliefe t is certaine but more or lesse according to the different concurrence of those three forenamed grounds Now out of that which I have spoken let these two conclusions be carefully observed 1. That all Knowledge is more certaine than Beliefe which rule you must understand in things of the same kind not of divers thus He that most firmely beleeves any truth upon the former grounds is not yet so certaine of it as hee that perfectly knowes it as a Countri-man who strongly beleeves that the Sunne or least Starre is bigger than the whole Earth upon the affirmation of a learned and honest Mathematician is not yet so certaine of it as when afterward he knowes it by infallible demonstration But now in divers kindes our beliefe of some things may bee more certaine than our knowledge of others as our beliefe of divine things upon Gods testimony may be more certaine than the knowledge of humane things by the light of our reason because our understanding hath alwaies this prejudice that in the generall it may possibly erre but Gods Word cannot erre at all 2. That perfect Knowledge takes away all Beliefe that is for so you must understand it perfect knowledge of any thing excludes all beliefe of the same thing otherwise perfect knowledge in one thing may helpe our beliefe in another and knowledge in part of the same thing doth much strengthen our beliefe of the other part But here in this opposition betweene knowledge and beliefe your must alwayes remember what knowledge wee meane namely Scientiam Intuitivam or per Visionem that knowledge which is had by beholding things in their proper nature but not Scientiam Disciplinarem or per Revelatione● that knowledge which is got by discourse and relation of others And so these two propositions We beleeve what we know not and We beleeve what we know are not opposite each to other for t is true we beleeve that which we do not know namely by the proper and immediate sight of the things themselves and t is true also we beeleeve that which we doe know viz. by relation which so far forth represents to us the nature of the thing related as that we are not ignorant what it is we doe beleeve Where it must also be observed that the difference is great between these two sorts of knowledge in regard of the assent that is given to matters thus known Knowledge that is by Vision or Intuition of things that are presented to the sense or understanding in their proper evidence inforceth assent unto the things knowne For in this case the apprehension of the thing is so cleere that the understanding cannot but approve the truth of it And therefore the Colledge of the Sceptikes of old was little better than a Society of fools and their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Perpetuall doubtfulnesse of all things was somewhat worse than madnes when they would not assent that they saw the Sunne shine when they looked on it nor that the fire was hot when they felt it burne nor would be certaine of any principles or conclusions in reason nature And such was Anaxagoras his dull melancholy or wilfull frenzy to maintaine in good sadnesse that the snow was blacke For such is the naturall assinity between evident truth and our understanding that though wee would yet wecannot but subscribe and yeeld our allowance and assent unto it Whence it falls out many times that a Vsurer a Chuch-robber or some other not willing to leave this or that course though doubtfull whether lawfull or not dares not for his life read such or such a booke written on those subjects for feare lest he should bee made to know more than hee is content to practise and that his conscience should bee convicted in spight of his will But now t is not so in that other knowledge by relation let a thing be never so plainly delivered so that we fully conceive the meaning of that which is spoken yet if neyther our owne sense nor reason doe convince us we may choose whether or no we will beleeve and assent unto it embracing it for a truth It is the very naturall property of man never to be satisfied with others reports till we our selves have seene and knowne the thing it selfe by evident experience Draw the liveliest picture of any man the most curious landship of any country it contents not wee must see both the one and other Set downe the most tried experiments in nature taken by most skilfull Artists this pleases not others till their owne triall confirm them Generally every man would faine see with his owne eies heare with his owne eares understand by his owne not another mans reason In which inclination of nature lies the originall of all the distrust and diffidence that is in the world and also the cause of those restlesse inquiries which we make one after another into the same things Whence it comes to passe that whilst we are bul●ed in examining our forefathers inventions and posterity also imployed in making triall of our examinations neither we nor they have much time to adde any thing unto the increase of learned knowledge Hence also may we ghesse at one cause why many Sciences even for some thousands of yeares have kept one pitch and not growne above that dwarfish stature they had in their infant invention and also what the reason is why many that reade most prove not the deepest schollars for no greater impediment to exact learning than to make use of other mens understandings and neglect our owne It would also hence appeare that History a pleasant and profitable imploiment is yet of all studied learning the weakest to give full satisfaction to the minde of man because that depends wholly upon such grounds of truth as mans minde desires not to depend upon at all namely anothers tongue eyes and eares And it is observable that very usually those that are of credulous and passive understandings least able to imploy their owne strength in painfull and attentive inquiries after knowledge such doe not unwillingly apply their diligence to that course of study But I
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