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A09386 A C[hristian] and [plain]e treatise of the manner and order of predestination and of the largenes of Gods grace. First written in Latine by that reuerend and faithfull seruant of God, Master William Perkins, late preacher of the word in Cambridge. And carefully translated into English by Francis Cacot, and Thomas Tuke.; De prædestinationis modo et ordine. English Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Cacot, Francis.; Tuke, Thomas, d. 1657. 1606 (1606) STC 19683; ESTC S103581 116,285 285

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sanctifie Any but Those who are cleansed and dead to sinne Redemption washing away and sanctification are partakers together The Application is when as Christ is giuen vnto vs of God the Father by the Spirit in the lawfull vse of the Word and Sacraments and is receiued of vs by the instrument of a true faith And Christ being giuen is made vnto vs of God wisdome righteousnes sanctification and redemption 1. Cor. 1. 30. The accomplishment of the application is Glorification whereby God shal be all in all by Christ in all the elect By this which hath been said it is apparent that the decree of election is the cause and foundation of all good giftes and workes in men From hence is true faith Act. 13. 48. As many as were ordained vnto eternall life beleeued And calling Rom. 8. whom he predestinated them he called And who are called of his purpose Hence Adoption Eph. 1. predestinated to Adoption And sanctification Eph. 1. He hath chosen vs that we should be holie and blamelesse Hence good workes Ephes. 2. Which he hath prepared that we should walke in them And perseuerance Ioh. 6. All that the Father giueth me shall come vnto me and 〈◊〉 6. 37. 39 him that commeth to me I cast not away Againe And this is the Fathers will that of all which he hath giuen me I should lose nothing 2. Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale the Lord know●te who are his Excellent is that saying of Augustine He did choose no man worthie but by chusing he made him worthie Againe Cont. Iul. Pelag. lib. 5. cap. 3. In Psal. 41. It is the grace of God whereby he doth elect me not because any worthines is in me but because it doth vouchsafe to make me worthie Againe And did not they also afterwa●ds chuse him and preferre him before all the good things of this life but they did chuse him because they were chosen they were not chosen because they chused him And thus much of the decree of election The decree of reprobation is a worke of Gods prouidence whereby he hath decreed to passe by certaine men in regard of supernaturall grace for the manifestation of his iustice and wrath in their due destruction or it is his will whereby he suffreth some man to fall into sinne and inflicteth the punishment of condemnation for sinne It hath in like manner two actes The first is the purpose to forsake some men and to make knowen his iustice in them This act hath a finall cause but no impulsiue cause out of God For it ariseth of Gods meere good pleasure no respect had of good or euill in the creature For the will of God is the cause of causes therfore we must make our stand in it and out of or beyond it no reason must be sought for yea indeed there is nothing beyond it Moreouer euery man as Paul Rom. 9. 21. auerreth is vnto God as a lumpe of clay in the potters hand and therefore God according to his supreme authoritie doth make vessels of wrath he doth not find them made But hee should not make them but find them made if we say that God willed in his eternall counsell to passe by men only as they are sinners and not as they are men for causes most iust though vnknowen to vs. Thirdly if God did reiect men because he foresaw that they would reiect him reprobatiō should not depend vpon God but vpon men themselues And this is all one as if a man should say that God foresaw that some would chuse him and others refuse him And the contempt of the Gospell doth not befall infants which die out of the couenant of the Gospell Fourthly Paul who was a most skilful defender of Gods iustice doth exclude all workes in the first place out of this wonderfull election of one from another made in the counsell of God Not by worke● saith he and therefore excludeth all respect of sinne then Rom. 9. 11. afterwards being rauished with admiration he quieteth himselfe in the alone will of God Who hath resisted his will But O man who art thou which pleadest against Rom. 9. 19. 20. Rom. 11. 33 God Againe O the deepenes of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God how vnsearchable are his iudgments and his waies past finding out To conclude if it be demaunded why God created this world and no more we must haue recourse 〈◊〉 ●he meere will of God and why must we not doe so if it be demaunded why God electeth this man and forsaketh that man or another Author de vec gent. A part of mankinde is redeemed a part perisheth But who can tell why God doth not pity them and pitieth these the reason of the distinction is vnknowen but the distinction or separation it selfe is not knowen The second act is the ordaining of them to punishment or due destruction This ordination in respect of the diuerse consideration thereof may be distinguished and so it is either simple or comparatiue The simple ordination is that wherby this man suppose Peter or Iohn is ordained to punishment And this ordination is of the most iust will of God yet not without respect of originall and actuall sinnes For as men are actually damned for sin so God hath decreed to damne them for the same sinne Yet notwithstanding sin is not the cause of the decree of reprobation but in regard of order it goeth before in Gods fore-knowledge not that former but this latter act The ordination which stands in comparison is that whereby one man and not another and this man rather then that being in the like condition is ordeined to punishment This serueth to shew the libertie of Gods will in the dispensation of supernaturall benefits For in that God chuseth this man and not that it declareth the libertie and very great perfection of God and therefore vnder the name of an housholder he challengeth the same vnto himselfe when he saith May I not do● Ma● 20. 15. with my own what I list And verely though God destroy and condemne all those whom he doth forsake yet should he not be iniust For we our selues in the daily killing and slaughtering of beasts will not be counted vniust neither indeed are we and yet in comparison of God we are not so much worth as a flie is in respect of vs. If it be lawfull for thee to receine in or to thrust out any out of thine house because thou wilt it were a point of desperate boldnes to take the same right from God in his house The cause of this comparatiue ordination is the sole wil of God yea euen without respect of any sinne at all So Augustine God deliuereth no man but of his free mercy and condemneth no man but m●st righteously Now why he deliuereth this man rather then that let him search who can diue into the great depth of his iudgements Againe why is
and bestowing on him necessarie and sufficient helpe for the auoyding of sinnes now man being forsaken by him sinneth necessarily And yet the fault is not to be laid on God because that in this his forsaking him the will of man commeth betweene For God forsaketh man being willing to bee forsaken and not against his will and mind Secondly I answere to the aforesaid reproch of our doctrine that wee say not that sinne is from the decree or of the decree of God as from the efficient materiall formall or finall cause But wee doe teach and au●rre that sinne commeth to passe according to the prouidence or decree of God as the sole consequent thereof For wee assuredly thinke and iudge that the decree of God doth so go before the sinne of man as that it hath no respect vnto any cause vnlesse it be of such a one as is a failing and deficient cause So saith Augustin Therefore truely the great works Enchir. cap. 101. of the Lord are exquisite in all his wills so that after a wonderfull and vnspeakable manner that is not done beside his will which notwithstanding is done contrary to his will Againe it is obiected He that saith that the decree of God is the energeticall operatiue beginning of all things necessarilie maketh the decree of God the beginning also of sinne Whereunto I answer That the holy Ghost himselfe saith that the decree of God is the beginning of all things being and existent Eph. I. cap. II. verse God worketh all things after the counsell of his owne will And againe in the 17. of the Acts In him we liue we moue and haue our being Augustine saith The will of God is the very cause of all things which are Hugo De gene cont Manic lib. 〈◊〉 c. 2 de S. Vict. saith There is no cause of the will of God which is the cause of all things And this very thing common reason will teach vs because there must first some certaine ground be laid from whence euery thing should haue or take the being and existence thereof and this ground is euen the very will of God For a thing is not first and then afterward God willeth it to come to passe but because God hath decreed that a thing should come to passe or be done therefore it is And yet shall not God therefore bee the cause of sinne because sinne is not properly a thing action or being but a defect only and yet neuerthelesse it is not therefore nothing For whatsoeuer hath a being is either E●s Real● Rationale Really and positiuely or else in Reason onely And vnder those things which are in Reason are contained not only notions and relations but also priuations because they haue not a reall matter and forme out of the vnderstanding But sinne hath not a positiue and reall being yet it hath a being in Reason as they terre it For so farre forth it is in the nature of things being as it may cause a true composition in the mind and although it doe not exist positiuely that is by matter or forme created yet it is priuatiuely because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by the remoue or taking away of originall righteousnesse that doth immediatly and truly follow and exist Neither doth it follow as some other naturall habit or as a pure negation but as a certaine thing betweene both that is a want and absence of the contrarie good Some vse to obiect that wee doe teach that God doth incline vnto sinne and that hee doth positiuely harden the heart Whereto I answere that wee allow not a bare permission seuered vtterly from his will neither doe we atribute a positiue or naturall action vnto God as though hee did infuse corruption and sinne and yet we say that hee doth actiuely harden the heart The action of Gods Prouidence as saith Suidas in the works of men is threefold The first is according to his good pleasure whereby God willeth any work 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alloweth it effecteth it and is therewith delighted this action is onely in good workes which haue their beginning in vs from the holy Ghost The second action of Gods prouidēce is of sustaining wherby 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God vpholdeth and maintaineth the being and all the faculties motions actions and passions of nature which offendeth Act. 17. 28. In him we liue and moue and haue our being And although God do sustaine nature offending and the action of nature yet is hee free from fault because he vpholdeth the creature onely as it is a creature not as it is euill For the second cause as the will of man can by it selfe doe euilly and corruptly yet it can doe nothing by it selfe vnlesse the effect thereof bee reduced to the first cause As may appeare more plainly by this similitude A man doth hault by reason that his legge is out of ioynt now heere are two things to be considered the very walking or motion it selfe and his haulting the haulting proceedes onely from his legge out of ioynt the walking both from his legge and also from the facultie of mouing In like manner a man sinning in that he doth it is of God but in that he doth euilly it is of himself We must therfore heere know that God doth vphold order as it is of nature but furthereth not the will violently breaking out against the order of the morall law The third 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 action of Gods prouidence is according vnto concession whereby God in the euil worke of man worketh some things holily and this last action is threefold The first is permission whereby God forsaketh especially the wicked by withdrawing from them his grace and by leauing them according to their deserts vnto their owne wickednesse which hee had before restrained that it might not breake forth to so immoderate libertie And wee vse commonly to say that he which permitteth doth and effecteth some thing as when the rider giueth the reines vnto his wanton and sporting horse wee say that hee doth moue and encourage him and wee say that the hunter doth put his dog on the game when as hee letteth him slip The second action as I may so terme it is occasionall whereby God by proffered occasions in themselues good or indifferent outwardly draweth foorth stirreth vp and bringeth out sinne in those who of themselues openly runne into wickednesse to the intent that hee may either iustly punish their knowne impietie or else discouer it being closely shrouded The like haue wee ordinarily euen among our selues for the Physitian by his preseruatiue medicine stirreth vp inflameth and draweth foorth the humours out of the corruption of the bodie Admit a house be weakely timbred which being almost now already falne wilere lōg fall and that I doe not with any engines or instruments throw or beate down the same but onely take away the outward hindrances and on euery side as it were open a way for the
to worse maketh a necessitie to sinne and yet the necessitie although it be voluntarie is not able to excuse the will nor the will although it bee enticed to exclude necessitie If any man shall say that by this our platforme many are tied by an ineuitable necessitie to bee damned I would haue him giue care to Augustine who saith Hold this most stedfastly and doubt not in De fide ad Pet. cap. 35. any wise that any can perish whom God before the creation of the world hath of his free goodnesse made vessels of mercie or that any of them whom he hath not predestinated to eternall life can by any meanes be saued And yet I say that the decree of reprobation doth not cause a necessitie of damnation in any man For the first act thereof which is a purpose not to shew mercie causeth not this necessitie in men but goeth before it as an antecedent and man himselfe verily hath brought vpon himselfe this necessitie with his owne most free yet rebelling will Now the second act of Reprobation which is a purpose of condemning causeth not any necessitie of damnation but by the sinne of man comming betweene Moreouer the necessitie of damnation followeth after the same manner by the foreknowledge of God and yet this neuer seemed a thing strange vnto any one But some will say that the foreknowledge of God doth neuer cause in men any necessitie of damnation although it doe assuredly foresee the same And I say also that Reprobation doth either not at all cause damnation in man or that it doth not cause it but for sinne But it may be obiected They that are predestinated vnto damnation cannot be freed by repentance although they would Whereto I answere with Augustine As they did fall by their will so by their will they are content to lie and he that turneth himselfe Ar● 15. away from God hath both depriued himselfe of will to doe that which is good and also of power It doth not therefore follow as they imagine which obiect such things that God hath taken repentance from those to whom he gaue it not and hath throwne downe those whom he hath not taken vp Moreouer the selfe same necessitie followeth of their hypothesis who affirme a bare permission For that which God permitteth the selfe same thing will hee not hinder and euill if God hinder not cannot bee auoyded and that which cannot be auoyded shall come to passe infallibly And therfore euill permission being once graunted of necessitie cōmeth to passe although most freely on mans part Whereupon it is plaine that the decree of God is not more ineuitable than is the very permission separated from the decree I doe wish that they would well weigh and cōsider this who obiect vnto vs either the Stoicall fate or the do●ages of the Manichees For we differ from them as much in certaine iudgement opinion as whosoeuer doe differ most For first the Stoickes doe tie God vnto the second causes so that he cannot doe otherwise then the nature of them will suffer wee on the other side doe hold that all second causes do depend vpon and are ordered by God Secondly the Stoickes say that neither God nor second causes can doe otherwise by their nature than they doe wee say that some second causes are by Gods ordinance mutable othersome immutable and that God himselfe can either not doe that which hee doth or else doe it otherwise But now to come to the Manichees who make two coeternall gods we but one They of their two Gods make one good and another euill we say that there is one absolutely good iust God Thirdly they wil haue one of their Gods to bee the cause and worker of good things and the other of euil we make one true God the creatour and ruler of all things and working nothing but that which is most good and most iust Fourthly they say that they which are created by their good God cannot sinne we say that God doth most freely conuert whom hee will and when they are conuerted they can neuer in this life perfectly be free frō sinnes but doe sometimes run into such sinnes as doe grieuously wound the conscience Fiftly they say that they that are created by the euil God simply cannot be conuerted wee say that vncleane spirites and men were created both good and holy but yet they fell by their owne will and fault and not by any fault but the iust permission of the Creatour and brought vpon themselues a necessitie of sinning And although it be true that man cannot withhold himselfe from sinning vnlesse God giue him that grace yet doth he not sin of necessitie that is of compulsiō but willingly And the will hath sufficient libertie if by it selfe or the nature therof it be inclinable to the cōtrary of that which it chooseth and doth of the owne accord choose that which it chooseth although the same liberty bee gouerned and one way limited by God Wherefore I am flat of Anselmus opinion who saith Although Lib. de concor grat lib. arbitr it bee of necessity that those things do come to passe which are foreknowne and predestinated yet some things foreknowne and predestinated doe not come to passe by that necessitie which goeth before a thing and causeth is but by the same necessitie which followeth a thing For God doth not cause although he doth praedestinate them by forcing the will as by resisting it but by leauing them in the power thereof And I am also of Gaudentius his opinion who saith The Iewes Ser. 3. ad Neophy were willing to doe that euill which they did And verily if they had bin vnwilling to doe it they had not done it And it is a grosse sinne but to thinke that God who is not onely good and righteous but also goodnesse and righteousnesse it selfe doth either command or compel any thing to be done which he condemneth when it is done But that I may in a word fully deliuer my opinion if it bee demanded how the will of God carrieth it selfe to good or euill I answere that in a good act God carrieth himselfe positiuely For first he determineth the euent of good by willing effectually to worke it and secondly hee inwardly inclineth the will of the creature to doe that good which it doth Thirdly he sometimes laieth a necessitie of immutabilitie on him that doth well but yet it is ioyned with an exceeding freedome After this sort the elect Angels doe necessarily obey God yet not by constraint but greatly coueting and with all the strength of their will desiring it not being thereunto compelled In an euill act I say that God carrieth himselfe priuatiuely not by a logical but a natural priuation foregoing the habit For first he willeth that euill come to passe not by doing it himselfe but by willing not to hinder it to be done by others Secondly he doth not inwardly incline the will to doe euill but
Anselmus It Comment in Math. c. 11. is not ours to know why God demeth grace to them which would gladly receiue and consent to grace and neglecteth another that would so well consent vnto it This is onely In Rom. cap. 11. knowne ●●to God Againe No creature is able to search out why he is mercifull to this man rather than to another x The same doe other Summ. 1. par quae 23. art 5. Schoolmen affirme in ●e midst of Papacie Gregorius Ariminensis laieth downe sixe conclusiōs cōcerning Predestination First that there is no bodie predestinated for the well vsing of freewill which God for●knew that he should haue Secondly that no man is predestina●ed because he was foreknowne to cōtinue to the end without Cont. Gent. lib. 1. c. 44. any let of habitual grace 3. That whomsoeuer God predestinated ●●m hee did predestinate freely purposedlie and of his pure mercie Fourthly that no man is reiected for the euill vsing of free-will which God foresaw he would be tainted with Fiftly that there is not any reiected because hee was foreknowne to haue finally an impedimēt of diuine grace Sixtlie that whomsoeuer God reiected him hee did reiect without anie cause in him The very same conclusions hath Petrus de Alliaco lib. 1. sent quaest 12. art 2. and Marsilius of Inghen lib. 1. dist 42. q. 4. Some of whose words I will set downe He is predestinated saith he to whom God hath purposed to giue euerlasting life And he is reiected on whom God hath determined not to bestow the same as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 9. Againe No man that is predestinated is predestinated for any thing which should bee in him in time to come so also there is no reprobate reiected for any cause which was to be in him in time to come And euery one that is predestinate is predestinated only by grace by Gods mercifull disposition not for any cause either actuall or priuatiue to bee found in him whiles hee liueth Againe To reiect is to nill to shewe mercie and this is not for the euill workes of In sent lib. 1. quae 22. art 2. any creature for how holy soeuer the workes were God would shew mercie as he listed So also Francis Mar. lib. x. q. 31. art 2. 3. saith that there are foure signes necessarie for the vnderstāding of the proceeding of predestination and reprobation First in which Peter Iudas are offred to the diuine will as to neither of thē both And ●hen the diuine will 〈◊〉 preordaine P●ter vnto gl●●ie but it had no posi●ne act about Iudas according to ●u●ustine The second s●gne is in which hee preordained Peter to grace and thē he had ●o posi●●ue act as yet about Iudas The th●●d signe 〈◊〉 in which they are left to themselues and bot● o● them doe fall into sinne The fourth s●gne is that in which Peter riseth againe ●or he cannot continue because he is predestinated by the first signe But Judas riseth not againe because he hath not God to raise him vp therefore hee is reiected D. Bannes in 1. Thom. q● 23. The cause and reason of the whole worke of reprobation cannot be said to bee in the reprobates for sinne it selfe cannot be the cause of that pennission of sinne for which a man is damned whether it bee originall or actuall as it appeareth in infants who die only with originall sinne which verely howsoeuer it may be the cause why infants are forsaken in it yet neuerthelesse it cannot bee the cause and reason why the whole nature of man should be suffered to fall in Adam And Ferrariensis in Thom. cont Gent. pag 603. saith that foure things are found in a reprobate to wi● a sufferance to fall into sinne the sin it selfe Gods forsaking not raising him from sin and the punishment or damnation Now reprobation is not alike but diuersly affected to all these For if we consider sinne in it self reprobation is not caused by i● Although nothing on our parts to wit no worke of ours bee the cause of the whole work of reprobatiō for of al these together namely of the permission forsaking and punishment the manifestation of Gods iustice is the alone cause considering that no worke of ours is the cause of the permission yet notwithstanding our wicked working or sinne is the cause why wee are damned and punished Againe We denie that God is cruell for we say that God doth not punish and torment the reprobate for the fulfilling as it were of his owne fancie but for sinne eternally foreknowne which he determined so to dispose of by punishing of it that his iustice might be made manifest Thomas Why hee ele●teth these vnto glorie and reiecteth those he hath ●o reason but the diuine will Againe The difference of those which are to be saued from them that are to be damned proceedeth from the principall ●●●ention of the first Ag 〈◊〉 Againe Wee 〈◊〉 not enquire why he conuerieth these and not those For this commeth of his owne meere will And Augustine vpō Iohn Why Lib. 3. c. 161. hee draweth this man and not that do not desire to iudge if thou wouldest not erre Neuerthelesse reprobation in regarde of the second act that is in respect of the purpose to damne is not absolute but for sinne For no man perisheth but thorough his owne default and no man is absolutely ordained to hell or destruction but for his sinne hauing also receiued before in Adam power whereby hee was able to liue holily and happely if so be that hee would And therefore I say that that which they alleage is a very calumnie Secondly I answer that God did not simply create man to destroy him but that he might manifest his iudgement by the iust destruction of the sinner Now it is one thing to will the destruction of a man as hee is man and another thing to will the deserued destruction of a man as he is a sinner Heere also the iudgemēt of Cameracēsis a iudicial Scholeman is to bee heard and obserued According to the Scripture saith hee although God should punish or afflict some creature eternally or vtterly abolish it without any sinne in it yet he should not deale vniustly or cruelly with it Whence it is Wisedome 12. 12. Who dare accuse thee if the nations perish which thou hast made God is not bound to lawes created as if any thing were iust before God did will i● whereas indeed the contrarie is true The third Crimination is That the Stoicall predestination and fate is brought in by vs because as they say wee teach that all things come to passe by the necessarie and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Powerfull in working energetical decree of God yea euen the fall of Adam the which say they God according to our opiniō did decree and will Answere We say that Adams fall came to passe God not only foreknowing but also willing and decreeing it and that without blasphemie if thou wilt
Thus therefore I answere That sinne in the causes and circumstances thereof fully and exactly weighed is two waies to be considered First we consider sinne not as it is sinne but so farre foorth as it hath some respect vnto good with God which decreeth it And this way taking sinne although God willeth it not simply and by it selfe yet he decreeth it and willeth it as touching the euent Moreouer sinne hath respect vnto God two manner of waies first because it is in that which is good secondly because it tendeth to that which is good I say it is in that which is good because euery euill is in that which is good as in the subiect Now in respect of the subiect that is as sinne is a motion an inclination or an action God both willeth and effecteth the same Moreouer sin tendeth to that which is good because God ordaineth it to good and from thence draweth the good either of triall chastisement or punishment And we say that God is so farre foorth willing that sinne should come to passe as hee is able and will by his wonderfull wisedome from thence to draw foorth that which is good Secondly we consider sinne according God did n●t decree the fall of Adam nor any sin as it is 〈◊〉 vnto God to the propertie and naturall being thereof that is sinne as it is sinne And this way also we weigh sinne either so far forth as it is sinne in it selfe in regard of men or as it is sinne to God But God himselfe neither willeth nor approueth nor effecteth sinne as it is sinne in it selfe in regard of the creatures that offend and yet hee willeth as touching the euent not simplie as those things that are good in themselues but only by willing to permit that it may be For there is a threefold action of Gods wil the first is that whereby God willeth any thing by willing it that is when he willeth it with his whole and absolute will as Tertullian saith and this way he willeth that which is good in it selfe The second action is that whereby he nilleth any thing by nilling it as that which shall neuer come to passe because God doth vtterly nill the being thereof The third and last action is remisse and in the middest betweene both whereby hee willeth some thing by nilling it slackely or remissely that is when hee partly willeth it and partly nilleth it or else so far forth wills it as that for iust causes he nills it And after this sorte wee say that God willeth the euent of euill as it is euill in it selfe in respect of men because euill as it is euill after this sorte is not absolutely euill and God draweth good out of euill as it is euill in the nature thereof or in it selfe as hee brought forth light out of darkenesse euen as it was darkenesse in it selfe And if so be that euill were absolurely euill as God is absolutely good he would in no wise will the euent of euill neither should there be any euill existent at all For that which God vtterly nilleth hath not any being or existence But sin as it is sin to God now that is a sinne to God which is in it selfe sinne in his decree whereby all things are ordained as it considereth sinne hee neither willeth it nor approueth it nor worketh it no in this respect he doth not so much as permit it I doe not denie but that God permitteth and suffreth euill as it is euill in it selfe otherwise there were not euill properly and naturally but I denie that he permitteth it because it is euill For God neuer suffreth euill for it selfe but for the good that is therewith conioyned And this is the meaning of that saying of Beza The Lord neuer permitteth sins as they are sins ●ib cont Castel de pr●dest yea rather be euermore forbiddeth and hindreth them And againe Sinnes so farre forth as they are permitted by God being thereto willing are not sinnes but the punishments of sinne And thus vsing this exposition is the mind and iudgement of Master Caluin of blessed memorie to bee vnderstood where as he saith that all the sons of Adam did fall away by Gods will And againe that it was decreed by God that Adam should perish by his owne falling away Instit. lib. 3. cap. 23. 5. 4. 5. 7. And againe it was the secret counsell of God in which the fall of man was ordained And againe Adam did not fall away but according to Gods knowledge and ordinance Opu●● ●05 8. 616. In these and such like maner of speeches his purpose was to ouerthrow the opinion of the Schoolemen who would haue his permission seuered from his will It were good therefore for them better to consider of the matter who without either chatitie or humanitie doe with the blasphemies of the Manichees slaunder and bely this holy man Secondly they vse to obiect that God willeth things contrarie if hee will that that should come to passe which hee forbiddeth in his law Answer It is true indeed if he should will one and the same thing to come to passe and not to come to passe in one and the same respect and manner but God forbiddeth euill as it is euill and willeth it to come to passe as it hath respect vnto good Heereupon Aquinas saith That euill be and that euill bee not are contradictorilie opposed but that Summ. q. 9. art 9. God willeth euill to be and that God willeth euill not to be are not contradictorily opposed seeing both are affirmatiue Thirdly they obiect thus That thing which being graunted another thing necessarilie followeth is the cause of that selfe same thing that doth follow but this being granted that God willed the fall of Adam to come to passe the same came to passe necessarily and infallibly Therfore the will of God was in this respect the cause of sinne Whereto I answere that the first proposition of this argument is not generall for in admitting the creation of the world both the place and the time or continuance thereof are infallibly and without doubt also to bee admitted and yet the creation of the world is not the cause of the continuance thereof and of the place where it now consisteth And that this proposition may be true it is thus to be framed That thing which being granted another thing infallibly followeth no other cause comming betweene is the cause of the very same thing that followeth And the second proposition also sitted to this former is vntrue For this being granted that God willeth sin to happen sin shall not come to passe immediatly but by the meanes of mans free wil although it come to passe infallibly on Gods part which decreeth it yet it comes to passe freely on mans part for it had been possible for man not to haue sinned when hee did sinne if hee had would As may appeare by this Similitude God forsaketh man by not conserring
Gods counsels either haue an vncertaine euent or are in vaine propounded Thirdly this platforme attributed vnto God a certaine ordered and fitted will Error 3. which doth wholy depend on mans will Thou saist that God willeth that all men whatsoeuer should bee saued by Christ. Very well Tell me therefore why they are not saued They themselues will not thou first Yea wis What is this but to set the creature in the throne of almightie God the Creator against the order of nature and of all causes For the first cause which indeede is Gods will ought to order and dispose the act of the second cause And therefore wee must not giue vnto God a will that is ordered by the will of the creature especially considering that all order in heauen and in earth whatsoeuer proceedeth from him That which ordereth all things is ordered of none Moreouer men after this sort are elected of themselues by receiuing of Gods grace being offied by the assistance of common grace and are also reiected of themselues by refusing of grace offred and men themselues shall be the makers and framers of their owne election and reprobation and God who chuseth is not so much to be praised as the men that do receiue and embrace the blessing offered Fourthly this platforme laies downe a determinate spreknowledge about the Error 4. euill of fault without any decree going before concerning the euent of the fault which cannot be A definite foreknowledge is not the cause of that thing which is to be but the thing which shal be is the cause of the foreknowledge thereof For the thing which shall be followes not the foreknowledge of it but foreknowledge followeth the thing which shall be as Iustinus taught For God doth first decree a Quaest. 58. Orthodox thing as touching the euent then afterwards hee doth foreknew by his definite foreknowledge that it shall be And Anselme In that saith he a thing is said to be foreknowne it is by that pronounced that Depraed sanct c. 14. it shall be And Augustine before his time affirmed That God doth foreknow that which shall be Hence it followeth that a thing must oxist with God before it can be precisely and definitly knowne before And euery thing existeth and is because God did will and decree to doe it if it be good or to suffer it to be done if it be euill haue respect alwaies to the good that is ioyned with it Vnlesse wee shall hold and grant this it will follow that something hath being of it selfe that is that something is a God Therefore the existencie or being of things doth not goe before but out of all doubt followes the decree of God For first of al there is a foteknowledge or as it pleaseth others a knowledge Scientia intuitiua of beholding whereby God beholdeth and seeth what is possible to bee and what not Then followeth the decree either of Gods operation or of his voluntarie permission and consequently of the euent of the thing And this decree being once laid down the definitiue foreknowledge is conceiued whereby it is knowne what shall come to passe infallibly The fifth desect in this platforme is that it teacheth that Christ for his part Error 5. hath redeemed and reconciled all and euery man to God and that very many of them for all that as touching the euent are damned which is very absurd For if this were so sinne Satan death and hell should be more mightie than Christ the Redeemer and as Augustine saith Vitio humano vincitur Deus God is ouercome by mans sinne If thou wilt say that God is De cor grat cap. 7. not ouercome yet I say and that according to this platforme that he is altered for hee hath decreed and seriously willed to saue all men and yet not withstanding another sentence being giuen he willeth to destroy those which will not incline and bend themselues to this counsell This platforme maketh sauing grace which indeed is supernaturall to be altogether Error 6. vninersall But this opinion to speake no hardlier of it is a plausible deulse of mans braine For first of all hereby the speciall couenant made with Abraham and the greatnesse of Gods metcies towards the Gentiles is abolished And there is no mysterie of the vocation of the Gentiles if all and euery particular man were by certaine meanes called vnto Christ from the beginning For those which shall by the helpe of common grace which they shall receiue giue assent vnto God calling them whether it bee by extraordinary instinct or by the ministerie of the word preached they shall bee accounted among the members of the Church and shal belong to the speciall couenant of the Gospell Moreouer if the first grace bee vniuersall it is either faith actually or in power For without faith it is impossible to please God and to attaine saluation But actuall saith is not common to all The power of faith is double the first is that whereby thou hast receiued power to bee able to beleeue if thou wilt But this is not sufficient vnto saluation because now after Adams fall free will in spirituall things is wanting especially in the conuersion of a sinner and therefore further grace is required whereby a man may he able to will to beleeue No man can come to Christ but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Ioh. 6. 44. drawne of the 〈◊〉 N 〈◊〉 they are not drawne 〈◊〉 to beleeue if they will 〈◊〉 of men willing a●● ma●● 〈◊〉 ●●lling The second power is that 〈◊〉 by a man hath receiued power to ●●ll to belee 〈◊〉 but this is not common to all men 〈◊〉 you saith Christ to his discipl●s it 〈◊〉 gi●●● 〈◊〉 know the mysteries of the Kingd●●e of heauen but Mat. 1● 15. not so 〈◊〉 sho 〈◊〉 because the Father hath ●idd● them from the wise Againe Therfore could they not beleaue because Isa 〈◊〉 foretold this Ioh. 32. 39. Furthermore if this power were common to all and to each person faith were common to all For the will and the deede sloweth from one and the selfe same grace Phil. 〈◊〉 13. It is God who worketh 〈◊〉 yo● the will and the deed euen of 〈◊〉 good Preposition pleasure Iohn 〈◊〉 Wh●s●●uer hath heard and learned of the f●ther 〈◊〉 vnto 〈◊〉 Christ. But whosoever hath power to will to beleeue hath heard and learned as being drawne of God therefore whosoeuer hath power to will to beleeue commeth vnto Christ. Well saith Ausien It followeth not that hee which can c●me doth De●at 〈◊〉 grat 〈◊〉 Pelag. c. 5. come vnlesse hee both will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do● i● 〈◊〉 euerie one that hath learned of the father hath not only power to c●me bu● also he doth 〈◊〉 where now there is possibili 〈◊〉 profect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 affectus effectus est So it appeareth that to wil to beleeue and actually to beleeue are most neerely conioyned yea seriouslie to will to beleeue
fourthly that the Reprobate may bee conuerted and saued 〈◊〉 ly that Christ dyed for the reprobates and that it is the purpose and will of God simply that all men without exception should be saued Some do subiect Election vnto Gods eternall decree but not Reprobation Others putting no difference betweene Reprobation and Damnation do thinke as God doth passe by some men of his meere pleasure that he doth in like sort damne them of his meere will and pleasure whereas indeed sinne is the cause why men are damned Many of the Romish synagogue do teach that men are elected for their foreseene faith and meritorious works And it is the common opinion of all Papists that the Elect cannot be certaine and sure of their election vnlesse it be extraordinarily by some speciall reuelation and singular priuiledge Many also there are which would not haue this doctrine publickly taught by the Minister but without good reason For first as the Minister must not search the secrets of God which are not reuealed so he must not suppresse or hide that which is reuealed For things Reuealed belong to Deu. 29. 29. vs and to our children for euer as Moses teacheth Therefore as we may not search into those things which God will haue kept secret so we may in no wise be wholly ignorant of those things which he hath reuealed vnto vs. But this doctrine of Predestination is very plentifully and perspicuously reuealed and deliuered vnto vs in the Scriptures Secondly as the word of God omitteth nothing which is needefull to be knowne touching the saluation of our soules so wee must know that it teacheth nothing but that which is profitable and worthy to be learned of all For that speach of Paul to the Romanes is true of all the writings of the Prophets and Apostles also VVhatsoeuer things were written were written for Rom. 15. 4 our learning But the word of God doth teach this doctrine of Election and Reiection as is euident by many places therein therefore it is necessary and fit to be taught of the Minister and to be learned of the people Thirdly it is the duetie of all faithfull Ministers to teach all the counsell of God as Paul sayth Act. 20. 27. hee did but Predestination is a part of Gods counsell therefore it ought to bee deliuered of vs vnto the people of God alwayes remembring that wee applie our selues to your capacities and teach it orderly as occasion serueth keeping our selues in all sobrietie within the limits of the Word Fourthly Christ commaundeth the Gospell to be preached Mark 10. 15. to euery creature but this Doctrine belongeth to the Gospell and therefore is to bee preached vnto the vnlearned as to the learned Lastly all Ministers are bound to keepe back nothing which is profitable but to shew Act. 20 20. it as Paul did But the doctrine of Predestination is very profitable For first it letteth vs see the omnisciencie the omnipotencie the soueraignetie and immutable nature of God Secondly it serueth to increase and confirme our faith and hope concerning the eternall felicitie of our soules and bodyes seeing it is not founded vpon our selues or vpon any sandie foundation but vpon the constant and vnchangeable good pleasure of God Thirdly it teacheth vs not to wonder at the small number of beleeuers and at the hardnesse and blindnesse of many mens hearts and minds For it sheweth that God hath elected but a fewe and hath Math. 20. 16. passed by many leauing them vnto themselues and deliuering them vp into the hands of the Diuell Fourthly it serueth to strengthen and comfort vs in all afflictions and to arme vs against all the fiery darts of the Diuell and the fury of his lims For it sheweth that nothing can separate vs frō the loue of God and that all things Rom. 8. 28 39. worke for the best vnto them that loue God euen vnto them that are called of his purpose All stormes and waues of woe shall passe ouer and in the end we shall rest in the quiet hauen of euerlasting happinesse Fiftly this doctrine stayeth vs from taking offence at the Apostacy of many professors for it sheweth vs that all is not gold which glisters and that some stand for a time and some stand fast for euer If they had been of vs sayth Iohn they should haue continued with vs. Sixtly it teacheth 〈◊〉 Iohn 2. 19. vs to acknowledge Gods singular goodnesse towards vs who of his meere good will toward vs hath elected vs vnto eternall life and the fruition of immortall glory in the heauens Seuenthly it serueth to teach vs humility and to beate downe the pride of our harts For it sheweth that Gods grace and not our goodnesse is the originary cause of our welfare and saluation The cause which mooued God to choose vs rather then many others was not our foreseene preparations or meritoriou● works but his owne loue and free good will toward vs. Lastly to 〈◊〉 sundry vses which might be made of this one doctrine it teacheth vs to ascribe the glory of our saluation to God alone and to walke thankefully before him manifesting the gratitude of our hearts by our religious righteous and sober liues To conclude some are so far out of loue with this doctrine that they can scarce with patience indure to heare it spoken of And many licencious and prophane persons do very wickedly abuse it to take vnto themselues liberty of lasci 〈◊〉 us and loose 〈◊〉 For say they if I be ordeyned to 〈◊〉 ed I cannot be damned 〈◊〉 if damnation be my destiny I can neuer be saued And therefore it skilleth not how I liue for if God haue appointed me to be saued I shall be saued though I do iust nothing and it he haue determined that I shall be damned I shall neuer escape it though I liue neuer so well For Gods decree is constant his appointment shall stand whosoeuer sayth nay to it But these men forget that God doth predestinate men as well to vse the meanes as to atteine vnto the end As he hath appointed a man to liue so he hath appoynted the same man to vse those meanes which preserue life as meate drinke rest recreation labour phisicke Euen so as hee hath appoynted a man to be saued hee hath appoynted him to vse the meanes and to walke in the way of saluation as to bele●ue and therefore the scripture saith So many as were ordeined to euerlasting life beleeued Act. 13 48. And Paul shew 〈◊〉 that those God doth call 〈◊〉 bee hath predestinated and iustifieth those 〈◊〉 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth effectually call before he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 them And in his Epistle to the Ephesians he teacheth that as God hath chosen vs vnto life eternall so he hath Ephes. 1. 4. also chosen vs in Christ that we should be holy and without blame before him in loue and that as hee hath ordeyned vs vnto saluation so hee hath created vs
thee a view and picture of this Doctrine composed of these principles and do publish the same that I might to my power help out * Theologia fludi●ses those that stick in the difficulties of this doctrine of Predestination and that I might cleere the truth that is as they call it the Caluinists doctrine of those reproches which are cast vpon it and that I might mitigate and appease the mindes of some of our Brethren which haue beene more offended at it then was fit For I do willingly acknowledge and teach vniuersall redemption and grace so farre as it is possible by the word My mind is to pursue after peace which is departing from vs and I would haue all men so interpret my fact I alleadge the testimonies of the auncient euery where not but that euen one euident and perspicuous sentence of sacred Scripture cōcerning any point of Doctrine and Faith is of more value and force then all the testimonies of the Doctours and Schoole-men but because I hold it necessary that there should be had an example of consent and concord in that doctrine which is expounded in holy bookes and is propagated to all posterity And I hope I shall sufficiently perswade an indifferent iudge that these things haue not beene lately hatched at home which wee deliuer in our Congregations and Schooles but that we haue also deriued and fetched them from the Fathers themselues VVilliam Perkins THE ORDER OF PREDESTINATION as it is collected out of the Scriptures by the Author PRedestination is the counsell of God touching the last end or estate of man out of this temporall or natural life For as touching 1. Co● 15. 46 natural life we are all alike and this kind of life is in the counsell of God onely a preparation and step vnto the spirituall and heauenly life The supreme end of predestination is the manifestation of Gods glorie partly in his mercie and partly in his iustice And this hath bin the doctrin of the Fathers S. Austen saith that one of those two societies De Ciuit. ●Dei lib. 1● of men which wee mystically call two cities is that which is predestinated to raigne eternally with God and the other to suffer eternall punishment with the diuell Fulgentius saith also That in Gods predestination there Ad Monymum lib. 1. is prepared either a mercifull remission of sins or a iust punishing And Gregorie saith That God being a iust Creator vnto all after Comment in 1. Reg. Cap. 4. an admirable manner hath foreelected some and forsaken others in their corruptions And the more learned Schoolemen vse to say that God for the more full manifestation of his perfection hath predestinated some in manifesting his goodnes by the rule of mercie and damned others in representing his perfection by the rule of iustice The common meanes of accomplishing this counsell is two-fold the creation and the permission of the fall Creation is that by which God made y e whole man of nothing according to his owne image but yet changeable and endued with a naturall life The permission of the fall is whereby God did iustly suffer Adam and his posteritie to fall away in that he did not hinder them when he was able as being indeed bound to none to hinder And God is said not to hinder euill when he ceaseth after a sort from his operation not illuminating the minde and not inclining the will to obey his voyce This permission of the euill of fault is by Gods foreknowledge and will but yet only for the greater good of all which would bee hindred if God did not suffer euill For if there were not sinne there should bee no place for the patience of Martyrs and for the sacrifice of Christ offered vpon the crosse which doth infinitely exceede all the sinne of the whole world Augustine saith well God hath iudged it better to doe Enchir. cap. 27. good with euils than to permit no euill to be In like manner Gregorie saith In his seuere Expos. 〈◊〉 Reg. cap. 4. iudgement he suffereth euill to be done but withall he doth in mercie forecast what good things he may bring to passe by these euils which hee doth ordaine by his iudgement For what greater sinne is there than that by which we doe all die and what greater goodnesse than that by which we are deliuered from death And doubtlesse but that Adam sinned our Redeemer should not haue taken our flesh vpon him Whiles God was to be borne man the Almightie did foresee that hee would make of that euill for which they were to die a good which should be greater than that euill The greatnesse of which good what faithfull man is there who doth not see how wonderfully it doth excell Surely great are the euils which we suffer by the desert of the first fault but what faithfull man would not rather endure worse than to be without so great a Redeemer And in this respect elsewhere he calleth the fall of Adam foelicem culpam a happie fault That In benedict Cerci Pasc. which I haue said of the permission of the fall I doe also say of the fall permitted sauing that the permission is a meanes of the decree by it selfe but the fall is a meanes of accomplishing the decree onely by the ordination of God who draweth good out of euill This fall permitted commeth not to passe but God being willing neither doth it come to passe contrariwise or otherwise than God permitteth neither can it any further be than hee doth permit Yet the will of God is not the cause of the fall but the will of man left vnto it selfe by God and moued by the suggestion of Sathan which will appeare by this similitude I build a house subiect to change and falling which notwithstāding would continue many yeeres if it might bee free from the annoyance of windes yea if I would but vnderprop it when the storme commeth it would continue stable But as soone as the windes begin to rage I do not vnderprop it and it is my will not to vnderprop it because it is my pleasure so to doe thereupon the house being weatherbeaten falleth downe I see the fall and in part I will it because now when I could very easily haue hindred the fall yet I would not And although thus farre I doe will the fall in so much as it is my will not to hinder it yet the cause of the fall is not to be imputed vnto me that did not vnderproppe it but to the winds which cast it downe So God leauing Adam vnto himselfe that hee might be prooued by tentation and that it might appeare what the creature is able to doe the Creator ceasing for a time to helpe and guide is not to bee accounted the cause of this fall For he did not encline the minde to sinne hee did not infuse any corruption neither did he withdraw any gift which he did bestow in the creation onely it pleased
him to deny or not to conferre confirming grace The proper cause of the fall was the diuell attempting our ouerthrow and Adams will which when it began to bee prooued by tentations did not desire Gods assistance but voluntarilie bent it selfe to fall away Predestination hath two parts the decree of election and the decree of reprobation So Isidore saith There is a double predestination either of the elect vnto rest or of the reprobate vnto death and both are De summo bo lib. 2. cap. 6. done by God that he might make the elect alwaies to follow after heauenly and spirituall things and that he might suffer the reprobate by for saking them to bee delighted alwaies with earthly and outward things And Angelome saith Christ by his secret dispensation Jn lib. 1. Reg. cap. 8. hath out of an vnfaithfull people predestinated some to cuerlasting liberty quickning them of his free mercie and damned others in euerlasting death in leauing them by his hidden iudgement in their wickednes The decree of election is that whereby God hath ordained certaine men to his Eph. 1. 5. glorious grace in the obtaining of their saluation and heauenly life by Christ. In the decree of election according These acts are vsually called the decree and the execution of the decree to Gods determination there is as wee conceiue a double act The former concernes the end the latter concernes the meanes tending to the end This the holy Ghost seemeth to me to haue taught very euidentlie Rom. 9. 11. That the purpose which is according to election might remain Heere wee see that Paul distinguisheth Gods eternall purpose and election and placeth in his decree a certaine election in the first place before the purpose of damning or sauing And in Rom. the 8. 29. 30. Those which he knew before he also predestinated to bee made like to the image of his son Whom he predestinated them also he called In which wordes Paul distinguisheth betwene the decree and the execution thereof which he maketh to bee in these three Vocation Iustification and Glorification Moreouer he distinguisheth the decree into two acts foreknowledge whereby hee doth acknowledge some men for his owne before the rest and predestination whereby he hath determined from eternitie to make them like vnto Christ. In like manner Peter teacheth 1. Pet. 1. 2 where hee saith that the faithful are elected according to the foreknowledg of God the father vnto sanctification of the spirit If any man shall say that by foreknowledge in these places wee must vnderstand as many would the foreknowledge or foreseeing of future faith he is manifestly deceiued For whom God foreknew them hee did predestinate that they should bee like to Christ that is that they should bee made iust and the sonnes of God for Paul addeth Rom. 8. 29. That he might be the first borne among many brethren But those which are predestinated to be iust and to be the sonnes of God are also predestinated to beleeue because Adoption and Righteousnes are receiued by faith Now we cannot rightly say that God doth first foreknow that men will beleeue and afterwards predestinate thē to beleeue because that God hath therfore foreknowne that those shall beleeue whom hee did foreknow would beleeue because hee did decree that they should beleeue So Iustin Martyr calleth Cont. ●riph those elect who were foreknowne that they should beleeue And Lumbard Whom hee Comment in cap. 8. ad Rom Cognosc● scio hath foreknowne them he hath predestinated that is by grace conferred hee hath prepared that they should beleeue the word preached Moreouer the word know when it is giuen vnto God speaking of the creature doth very often signifie to imbrace or approue Psal. 1. 6. The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous but the way of the wicked shall perish Matth. 7. 23. Depart from me yee workers of iniquitie I neuer knew you Furthermore the prescience purpose of God are by the holy Ghost put for one and the same thing 2. Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God remaineth sure the Lord knoweth who are his Rom. 11. 2. Those whom God foreknew are said to be elected according to the election of grace vers 5. And therefore the foreknowledge mentioned by Paul doth not signifie the foreknowledge of faith or of any other vertue in those which were to bee elected It is also the iudgement of Augustine that predestination De perseu sanct lib. cap. 18. Rom. 11. 1. 2 is sometimes vnderstood by prescience euen in the foresaid place Hath God cast away his people which hee knew before And he saith that Those are sonnes in Gods foreknowledge whose names are written in their fathers register so as they shall neuer be raised out Cyrill saith also that Christ knoweth his sheepe electing and foreseeing them Expos. in Ioh. 7. cap. 6 vnto euerlasting life As the Apostle saith Rom. 11. 12. God hath not cast away his people which hee knew before For as the Lord is said not to know those whom he doth reiect as when he answered the foolish virgins saying Matth. 25. 12. Verilie I say vnto you I know you not so hee is said to know those whom he doth predestinate and fore-appoint vnto saluation And Thomas expoundeth that place in the 8. to the Romanes after Idem Hugo de sanct ●ict in annot in Rom. et Ioachim in Reuel par 1. this sort Whom he foreknew in his knowledge of approbation these he hath also predestinated And he will also haue an effectuall will of conferring grace to bee included in the knowledge of approbation In the decree of election the first act is a purpose or rather a part and beginning 1. Pet. 2. 9. People which God challengeth vnto himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the diuine purpose whereby God doth take certaine men which are to be created vnto his euerlasting loue and fauour passing by the rest and by taking maketh them vessels of mercie and honour and this act is of the sole will of God without any respect either of good or euill in the creature And God doth wrong none although hee chuse not all because hee is tied to none because he hath absolute soueraigntie and authoritie ouer all creatures We that are but men giue leaue vnto men especially vnto our friends to do at their pleasure in many things as they themselues list and to vse their owne discretions The rich man is kinde to which poore person hee pleaseth and of beggers he doth adopt one and will not adopt another and that without offring any iniurie Now that libertie which wee yeeld vnto man must much more bee granted vnto God The second act is the purpose of sauing or conferring glorie whereby hee doth ordaine or set apart the very same men which were to fall in Adam vnto saluation and celestiall glorie This act is in no wise to be seuered from the former but to be distinguished in the minde
for orders sake and for the better vnfolding of it for as by the former men were ordained vnto grace so by this latter the meanes are subordained whereby grace may be conferred and manifested and therefore this latter maketh a way for the execution and accomplishing of the former Moreouer this act hath no impulsiue cause ouer and beside the good pleasure of God and it is with regard to Christ the Mediatour in whom all are elected to grace and saluation and to dreame of any election out of him is against all sense because hee is the foundation of election to bee executed in regard of y e beginning the meanes and the end Lastly this act is not of men to bee created as was the former but of men falne away Therfore in this act God respecteth the corrupted masse of mankind Furthermore in this second act there are fiue degrees the ordaining of a Mediatour the promising of him being ordained the exhibiting of him being promised the applying of him being exhibited or to bee exhibited and the accomplishment of the application It is not vnlike which Bernard saith The kingdome of De verbis libri sapientiae God is granted promised manifested perceiued It is granted in predestination promised in vocation manifested in iustification perceiued or receiued in glorification The ordaining of a Mediatour is that whereby the second person being the Sonne of God is appointed from all eternitie to bee a Mediatour betweene God himselfe and men And hence it is that Peter saith that Christ was foreknowne before 1. Pet. 1. 20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the foundation of the world And well saith Augustine that Christ was predestinated to be our head For howsoeuer as he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the substantiall word of the Father or the Sonne he doth predestinate with the Father and the holy Ghost yet as hee is the Mediatour hee is predestinated himselfe The promising is that whereby Christ being from eternitie ordained for the saluation and spirituall life of men is reuealed and offred vnto them together with grace to be obtained by him this promise is vniuersall in respect of all and euery one that doe beleeue Ioh. 3. 16. God so loued the world that he hath giuen his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 onely begotten sonne that euery one that beleeueth in him should not perish Ioh. 6. 47. Hee that beleeueth in me hath life euerlasting Matth. 11. 28. Come vnto me all yea that are wearie and laden and I will ease you Mark 16 16. He that shall beleeue and bee baptised shal be saued but he that will not beleeue shall be damned Act. 10. 43. That thorough his name all that beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes Act. 13. 39. By him euery one that beleeueth is iustified Rom. 1. 16. The Gospell is the power of God to saluation to euery one that beleeueth Rom. 10. 4. Christ is the end of the law for righteousnes vnto euery one that beleeueth Gal. 3. 22. The Scripture hath concluded all vnder sin that the promise by the faith of Iesus Christ should be giuen to them that beleeue With the promise there is ioyned an exhortation or commandement to beleeue which is more generall than the promise because the promise is made onely to beleeuers but the commandement is giuen to beleeuers and vnbeleeuers also For the elect are mingled with the wicked in the same assemblies and therefore the Ministers of the Gospell ought indifferently to exhort all and euery one to repent considering that they are altogether ignorant who and how many be elected and be to be conuerted moreouer God by exhortations to repentance meaneth to leaue those without excuse whom he doth see will neuer repent So Abbat Ioachim saith It behooueth In Reuel p. 3. l. 2. them to preach for the elects sake and to declare vnto men the words of life that their light may shine before men and that they may fatten the hearts of the elect by anoynting them with the oyle of spirituall doctrine but for the reprobate ligare aquam coelo to 〈◊〉 the water in the clowdes And againe Lest the reprobate should haue excuse and for the Part. 4. t. 7. elect which are among them the messenger himselfe shall bee sent who doth not onely preach this in secret as it were for feare but crieth also with a loude voyce which may bee heard farre off and of all men also Some are wont to say that Gods commandement by this meanes doth ouerthwart his decree because he commandeth that which he willeth not to effect But I answere first that God in his commandements and promises doth not vtter whatsoeuer hee hath decreed but doth in part onely so farre forth propound his will as he knoweth it expedient for the saluation of the elect and the gouerning of all By his commandements therefore he sheweth what he liketh and what hee willeth that we should doe to him not what hee will doe to vs or in vs. And God who willeth not all things alike in all doth will conuersion in some only in respect of approbation exhortation and meanes in others he willeth it also as touching the decree of working it Here is no disagreement in the wils but sundrie degrees of willing in regard of vs according to which God is said both to will and to nill Secondly I answere that the reuealed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will is neuer contrarie to the will of his good pleasure or to the decree of God with the which it doth alwaies agree both for the beginning as also in the end and scope but that it is notwithstanding often diuers and that in shew it seemeth sometimes contrarie if wee consider the manner wherein it is propounded God commanded Isaiah to declare vnto Hezekiah his death and hee did also denounce Esa. 38. destruction vnto the Niniuites Ion. 3. 4. within fourtie daies and yet he had decreed to put neither of them both in execution The humane wil of Christ did with Mat. 26. 3. an holy dissention in some sort will deliuerance from the agony of death which notwithstāding the diuine willed not Abraham Gen. 28. prayed without doubt by diuine inspiration therefore with faith that the Sodomites might be spared and yet he knew that in Gods decree they were appointed to destruction Neither must this seeme strange for one good thing as it is and remaineth good may bee different from another thing that is good Thirdly thou biddest thy debter pay his debt though in the meane time thou dost not make him able why may not God therfore for iust causes command that which he himselfe will not do The exhibiting of the Mediator is that whereby the Sonne of God being borne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 man in the fulnes of time doth pay the price of redēption to God for the sins of men The vertue and efficacie of this price being paid in respect of merit and
it thus to this man and otherwise Lib. 1. ad Simpl. q. 2. to this O man who art thou that thou darest dispute with God And Gregorie Let Expos. in Ioan. ca. 37. no man desire to search wherefore one should bee elected when another is reiected because his iudgements are vnsearchable and his waies past finding out In this second act of reprobation there be two degrees a iust desertion or forsaking damnation for sinne So Fulgentius In such saith he Lib. a● Mo● God begins his iudgement by forsaking and ends it in ●ormenting Diuine desertion is twofold The first is that whereby God doth forsake man only in regard of his assistance and strengthning by omitting the confirmation of the creature and by not conferring the second grace wherby the first might be made effectuall to resist temptations and to perseuere in goodnesse Desertio explora●i●nis This is the desertion of triall and may happen to them who haue not thēselues as yet forsaken God For it was in the first man Adam who receiued of God power to do that which he would but not will to do that which be could So Augustine He receiued saith he power if he willed De correp grat cap. 11. but he had not will answerable to his power for if he had had he should haue perseuered Againe He was able also to perseuere if he would and in that he would not it proceeded offree will which then was so free that he was able to will well and ill The cause of this desertion was that Adam and his posterity might know that they could fall by themselues but that they could not stand much lesse rise againe and therefore that they should wholly depend on Gods mercy Heere also it must be remembred that betweene this desertion and Adams sin there came also Adams will whereby he being left to his owne strength did by and by perceiue the very same his conscience telling and yet for all that he willed his owne fall by the free motion of his will The second desertion is a priuation and leesing of the gifts wherwith the mind is adorned and a deliuering into the power of Sathan that he may seduce men and more and more lead them into sinne This is a desertion of punishment and therefore Desertio poenae it followeth sinne And of this desertion and not of the former is the rule to be vnderstood A Deo deserti Deum priores deserunt those which are forsaken of God do themselues first forsake God And this is our doctrine of Predestination which sauoreth neither of the errors of the Manichees Stoickes Pelagians nor of Epicurisme but is as I am perswaded agreeable to the truth and orthodoxall but yet it is oppugned by sundrie criminations or false accusations which I will striue with all my strength to ouerthrow and that briefely The first Crimination is That we teach that certaine men and those but few are elected Answere Certaine men we say For all the elect are knowne vnto God and their number can neither be increased nor diminished Few we do not say but after a prescript and certaine manner For to omit the Angels if you consider the elect by themselues they are many Matth. 8. 11. I say vnto you that many shall come from the East and West and shall sit downe with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the kingdome of heauen Reuel 7. 9. I beheld and loe a great multitude which no man could number of all nations kindreds people and tongues stood before the throne and before the Lambe cl●athed with long white robes and palmes in their hands Yea there is as it were a world of elect Augustine The Church which is De doctr Chr. lib. 3. cap. 34. without spot and wrinkle and gaethered together out of all nations and which shall reigne with Christ for euer euen she is the land of the blessed and the land of the liuing Againe The reconciling world shal be deliuered out Tract in Jo●n 111. Hist. lib. 4. 〈◊〉 15. of the maligning world Eusebius Christ suffred for the saluation of the world of those which are to be saued The Author of the booke de vocat gen lib. 1. In those which are elected foreknowne and seuered from the multitude of men there is a certaine speciall vniuersalitie counted that the whole world may seeme to be deliuered out of the whole world and that all men may seeme to be taken out of all men Beda calleth those a world to 〈◊〉 Tobiam be enlightned and healed who were predestinated to eternall life Thomas The crue light enlighteneth those who come into the world of In Catena in 1. Ioan. ex Orig. vertues not those which come into the world of vices Neuerthelesse if those same elect be compared with them that are iustly damned wee say according to the Scriptures that they are few Matth. 7. 13. 14. The gate is narrow and the way streight which leadeth vnto life and few there be which find it Againe Many are called but few are chosen Matth. 20. 16. The second Crimination is That we teach that God ordained men to hell fire and created them to the end that he might destroy them Answere Here the distinction of the double act in reprobation must bee repeated and retained First therefore I answere that reprobation in regard of the former act is absolute that is in regard of the purpose to forsake the creature and to manifest Iustice in it so we teach and beleeue For we cannot so much as imagine a cause in the creature why it was Gods wil to passe by it and to suffer some to fall finally from their blessed estate Yea sinne is it selfe after the desertion and iust permission of God and therefore it can by no meanes be the cause of the permission and desertion Whence it is that Lumbard the Lib. 1. dist 41. Master of all the Schoolemen saith that God hath reiected whom he would not for any future merits which he did foresee but yet most righteously though we cannot conceiue the reason thereof And Ierome long before him dothd thus expound y ● place of Paul Ad Hebid. quaest 10. Rom. 9. 11. Ere the children were borne and whē they had neither done good nor euill If Esau saith hee and Iacob were not yet borne neither had done good or euill whereby they might win●● Gods fauour or offend him and if their election and reiection doth not shew their seuerall deserts but the will of the Elector and Reiector what shal we say Afterwards If we grant this that God doth what soeuer hee will and that he either chuseth or condemneth a man without desert and workes it is not therefore in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but in God that sheweth mercie Againe Therefore it is in vaine asked seeing that it is in his power and will either to chuse or to refuse a man without good and euill workes
infallibility Necessitie of compulsion is that which inferreth violence to things by some cause working without and forciblie constraineth that they doe either this or that And this indeed is the Stoicall necessitie that a man Tull. de Finibus should doe any thing against his will being compelled by force and necessitie There is also such a like kind of necessitie of the Manichees condemned by the fathers who taught that there was no violence or necessitie offred vnto the will by God nor that it was forced by necessitie to sinne The necessitie of infallibilitie is that whereby a thing according to the euent shall certainly and immutably come to passe yet so as if we consider the cause of a thing by it selfe it may either not come to passe or else come otherwise to passe Of this manner of necessitie wee must vnderstand that principle Euerie thing that is when it is is of necessity And thus is necessitie distinguished now will I shew how farre forth it is agreeable to seuerall things The euents of all things haue reference either to the second causes or to God who is the first cause Now some things in respect of the second causes are necessary othersome contingent From causes which are necessarie must needs proceede that which is necessarie from those that are free that which is free from those that are naturall that which is naturall and to bee briefe such as are the next causes aforegoing such also is the euent of things But in respect of God all things whatsoeuer are partly changeable and partly necessarie In respect of Gods libertie which doth that which it doth freely all things are contingent and mutable howsoeuer according to nature and the order of the next causes they be necessarie and immutable In respect of Gods decree the second causes and the effects of them are all necessarie howsoeuer in themselues they bee vncertaine and conti 〈◊〉 nt And yet they are not absolutelie necessarie but by the supposition of Gods decree neither are they necessarie by the necessitie of compulsion but of infallibilitie only because God ordained before that those things which should come to passe should be And this kind of necessitie taketh not away the contingencie and libertie of second causes but rather establisheth and confirmeth it For that which is free worketh freely and that which is contingent worketh contingently by the necessarie decree of God Neither doth libertie and necessitie mutually ouerthrow each other but libertie and compulsion It is manifest therefore that Gods decree causeth an immutabilitie to all things of which notwithstanding some in respect of the next causes are necessarie and othersome contingent but all of them in respect of Gods liberty mutable And as the mutabilitie which thinges haue from Gods power taketh not away the necessitie which they haue from the second causes so the necessitie of immutabilitie by Gods decree consequently comming to passe taketh not away the contingencie which they haue from the next causes and Gods libertie Moreouer wee say that Gods decree ordaineth the second causes and the verie libertie it selfe also of mans will not by compulsion as if a man should violently throw a stone but by inclining and gentlie bending them by obiects outwardlie offred to the vnderstanding euen as a sheepe is said to be drawne when grasse is shewed her being an hungry that a man August de verb. Apost ser. 2. may choose by his owne free motion or refuse that which God hath iustly decreed from all eternitie These things being granted it is manifest also what we ought to thinke concerning the fall of Adam Which truely according to the euent is necessarie by the necessitie of infallibilitie by reason of the forcknowledge and decree of God yet so as that God is not guiltie of any fault because the decree of God howsoeuer it was necessarie in it selfe yet it planted nothing in Adam whereby he should fall into sinne but left him to his owne libertie not hindring his fall when it might and the same fall in respect of mans wil which doth that freely that it doth came to passe contingently and most freely But you will say that Adam could not withstand Gods will that is his decree whereto I answere that euen as he could not so also hee would not But you will say againe he could not will otherwise Which I confesse to bee true as touching the act and euent but not as touching the very power of his will which was not compelled but of the owne free motion consented vnto the suggestiō of the diuell But to the intent that these things may more plainely bee vnderstood wee must make distinction betweene three times the time going before his fall the present time of his fall and the time after his fall In the first moment of time the fal of Adam was necessarie in a double respect First by reason of the foreknowledge of God for that which he foreknew would come to passe must needes of necessitie come to passe Secondly by reason of the permissiue decree of God that fal was according to the euent necessarie immutably Honorius Augustodunensis saith It cannot otherwise Dial. de praed citat in Catalogo Illyrici ●e but that al things must come to passe which God hath predestinated foreknowne seeing that hee onely either doth all things or permitteth them to be done Hugo de S. victore saith Sinne followeth of necessitie by Quaest. in Rom. 44. the withdrawing of grace And the reason hereof is very easie because euill permitted must come to passe and cannot otherwise come to passe than God permitteth For to permit euill is not to stirre vp the will and not to bestow on him that is tempted the act of resisting but to leaue him as it were to himselfe and he whose will is not stirred vp by God and to whō the act of resisting is not conferred howsoeuer he may haue power to withstand yet can he not actually will to withstand nor persist for euer in that vprightnesse wherein hee was created God denying him strength I confesse truly that this kinde of necessitie as touching the liberty of mans will was altogether euitable and to be auoided and yet according to the euent of the action it was ineuitable Yet I would not that any man should thinke that this necessitie did any way proceede from the decree of God which did onely follow the decree being granted and admitted and Adam in his temptation being destitute of the helpe of God cast himselfe of his own accord into this same ensuing necessitie of sinning In the second time his fall being present there was another necessitie thereof because when it was it was of necessitie In the third time man drew vnto himselfe by his fault his nature being now corrupted another necessitie of sinning insomuch that he made himselfe the seruant of sin Bernard saith I know not after what euill and strange manner the will it selfe corrupted or changed
he forsaketh and outwardly offereth obiects which are good in themselues Thirdly God laieth not on vs any necessitie but a desertiō or want of grace to which being imposed followeth the necessitie of sinning not as the effect doth his cause but as the defect doth him that forsaketh And this I am resolued on that Gods decree doth altogether order euery euent partly by inclining and gently bending the will in all things y t are good and partly by forsaking it in things that are euill and yet the will of the creature left vnto it selfe is carried headlong of the owne accord not of necessitie in it selfe but contingently that way which the decree of God determined from eternitie We therefore thankes be giuen vnto God doe with all our hearts renounce the doting follies of the Stoickes and the Manichees The fourth Crimination is That wee doe teach that the greatest part of mankinde is depriued of Christ and all sauing grace Answere 1. It might happily seeme a rigorous course that some should bee depriued of Christ if so bee that they had neuer at any time nor any where receiued sauing grace But all and euery one receiued holinesse and happinesse in Adam together with abilitie to perseuere and remaine in the some holy and happie estate if they had would But Adam would not but did of his owne accord cast away that grace which was bestowed on him by his Creator for which being lost it is a wonder that all without exception are not damned And therefore it may seeme the lesse strange to any one if grace by Christ bee againe bestowed vpon one and not vpon another Secondly I answere that wee doe acknowledge with glad mindes that Christ died for all the scripture auerring so much but we vtterly deny that he died for all and euer one alike in respect of God or as well for the damned as elect and that effectually on Gods part For first let vs weigh well the words of Christ I neuer knew you depart from me yee workers of iniquitie Matth. 7. 25 Now to know with God is to acknowledge and therefore whom Christ neuer knew hee neuer acknowledged for his And those whom he hath not sometime acknowledged he neuer bought or redeemed with the price of his bloud And therefore well saith Gregorie Not to know with God is to reiect Againe if al and euery one be effectually redeemed al and euery one are reconciled vnto God Because that the forgiuenesse of sinnes and the satisfaction for the same are inseparably ioyned together Yea and Paul placeth Eph. 1. 7. Col. 1. 14. redemption in the remission of sins where he saith By whom we haue redemption through his bloud euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes Very well therefore saith Prosper As it is not sufficient for the renewing Lib. 1. resp pro Aug. obiect 9. of men that Christ Iesus was borne man vnlesse they bee renued also in the same spirit whereof he was borne so it is not sufficient for mans redemption that Christ Iesus was crucified vnlesse wee die together and be buried with him in baptisme Of these premises therfore I frame this assumptiō But al are not reconciled vnto God neither doe all receiue remission of sinnes for then all men were blessed and it were not possible Psal. 32. 1. for them to perish which thing to affirme of all and euery one is very grosse Thirdly Christ gaue himselfe that hee Tit. 2. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 might● sanctifie vnto himselfe a people peculiar that is as a precious treasure and his owne gotten good selected and chosen from among other therefore it was not Christs purpose to giue himselfe for a ●ansome for all euery one alike Fourthlie for whom redemption it ordained to them al is giuen on Gods part the making of them sonnes by Christ but the making of sonnes or Adoption is not graunted to all and euery one euen on Gods part For Iohn 1. 12. the power of the Adoption wherby a man is made of the child of wrath the child of God is only giuen to those y ● beleeue and De Correp grat c. 9. apprehend Christ. They are saith Augustine the children of God who are not as yet so vnto vs and yet they are so vnto God because that by beleeuing they should afterwardes bee so through the preaching of the Gospell and yet before this was so they were engrauen the children of God by a stedfast and immutable stabilitie in the register of their father And againe there are some which in respect euen of some present or temporall grace which they haue receiued are said by vs i● bee the children of God and yet are they not so vnto God Fiftly None are truely redeemed on Gods part but they who are freed from sinne both according to the power that it hath to cause damnation and also according to the power that it hath to reigne in them In this do the antient fathers agree for Augustine saith By this mediatour God sheweth that he De Corre● 〈◊〉 grat c. 11 doth make them of euill men eternally good whom he hath redeemed with his blood And againe Those whom he would make his brethren he freed and made them fellow heires Tr●ct in Ioh. 2. 7. 7 And againe Christ will haue no partaker in that which hee hath bought but will possesse it wholly to himselfe and to that end gaue hee so great a price that hee might onely possesse the same Isychius saith Christ ●n Leuit. lib. 1. c. 23. In Psal. 64. who suffered for vs hath freed vs from sinne and the bondage thereof Remigius saith Thou art the reconciler thou art the reconcilement and blessed shall they bee for whom thou shalt make reconciliation Out of these I thus conclude all and euery one are not redeemed according to both the aforesaid powers of sinne For let vs grant that on Gods part they are freed frō damnation yet they are not in such measure indued with grace as that sinne shall no more reigne in them Christ therefore is but onely the halfe redeemer of these and for that cause not a redeemer Lastly let vs diligently consider the iudgemēt of ancient writers Ambrose saith If thou beleeuest De fide ad Gratian. not Christ came not downe for thee Neither did he suffer for thee Augustine saith Euery one that is generated is damned and no one is freed vnlesse he be regenerated Ser. 14. de verb. Apost ser. 20. de verb. Apost And againe It is well said I will haue mercie on whom I will haue mercie For if the whole world being in thraldome and in the power of sinne and most iustly ordained to punishment bee neuerthelesse in part by Gods mercie freed who can say vnto God why dost thou condemne the world And againe He that hath bought vs at so deere a price will not that we whom he hath bought should bee Serm. 109. destroyed God
that himselfe may escape hee doth absolutely will to cast them into the sea Yea indeede this kinde of will seemeth to argue weaknes because God willeth that which shall not come to passe But you will say that this will is conditionall that is that God will that they be saued if they shall beleeue And I say first that the will of God stands doubtfull vntill the condition bee fulfilled that the first cause is by this meanes held in suspence by the second causes moreouer there is giuen vnto men a free will either to beleeue or not to beleeue that is flexible and inclinable both waies either by grace or by nature both which things are false as I will afterwards shew And therfore this will is rather a humane will than a diuine Heare what Anselmus saith The will of God is taken foure manner of waies by the principall Doctors first for Lib. de volunt Dei the knowlddge of God then for the will of the Saints who will in charitie that euen the vniust should be saued againe for humane reason and lastly for Gods Commandemēts Secondly this conditionall will seemeth idle and vnnecessarie especially in him whose power is infinite because if hee earnestly willed hee would verily doe a thing when he might without hindrance Thirdly Gods wil is not such concerning the Angels whereby he willeth that all of them should be saued therefore it may well bee demanded whether his will bee such concerning man Fourthly if God will that all men as they are men bee saued in like manner hee will that all sinners as they are sinners be damned which is absurd Fiftly that will which cannot bee resisted is absolute but Gods Antecedent or first will cannot bee resisted Rom. 9. 19. For there Paul speaketh of the will that goeth before all causes Therefore the precedent will is absolute And this will I make manifest after another manner the will of God is that some should beleeue and perseuere and that othersome should bee forsaken either not beleeuing or not perseuering You will aske me happely how I know this I answere by the euent For as touching the euent some beleeue and some doe not beleeue But to beleeue and to perseuere is a certaine kind of good action and on the contrarie not to beleeue or not to perseuere is an euill action And euery thing that is good is through the effectuall will of God and so farre foorth as there is or existeth that which is good so farre foorth God willeth it and maketh it to exist by willing it And that euill which commeth to passe commeth to passe God not hindring it and because God will not hinder it therefore consequently it commeth to passe Hereupon it is certaine that God willeth that some should beleeue and perseuere vnto the end and that othersome doe not so yea euen without any condition and no reason can be rendred wherefore he willeth this Therefore this will is both absolute and first and therefore that vniuersall precedent will concerning the saluation of all and euery one in Christ is counterfeite and fained Sixtly the ground of this opinion is that foresaid place of Paul which I haue alreadie shewed to be misunderstood And yet that place laieth not down vnto vs any conditional but an absolute will For there it is first affirmed that God will haue all men to be saued afterwards that he will haue all men to come to the knowledge of the truth that is vnto faith because by applying faith to the word of God we acknowledge the truth Where is now thē that condition of faith Lastly against Damascene I oppose Augustine who to the Pelagians vrging this Hypog lib. 6 cap. 8. place of scripture God will that all men be saued maketh a double answere first hee denieth that it is not generally to bee vnderstood of the vniuersalitie of men and that by this argument That which God willeth he effecteth but hee doth not generally saue all men therefore hee willeth not Secondly hee faith that the place is to be vnderstood of them which are actually saued because all men which are saued are saued by the will of God Againe I oppose against him Prosper also who saith If the will of God concerning Respon pro August lib. 1 〈◊〉 8. the vniuersall sauing of mankinde and the calling them to the knowledge of the truth is to bee affirmed so indifferent throughout all ages as that it shall be said to ouerpasse no man in what place soeuer Gods impenetrable and deepe iudgements receiue a great blow And againe Wee cannot say that there is the calling of grace whereas there is as yet no regeneration of the mother the Church And againe Hee forbad the Apostles to preach the Gospell vnto some people and now as yet he suffereth some people to liue out of his grace Also I oppose Thomas Aq●ina● Quest ●3 in su● art 3. against him who saith But such some man God loueth all men Whereto I answere that it is true so farre foorth as hee willeth some good to all and yet hee willeth not euery thing that is good to all that is eternall life and therein hee is said to hate and reiect them To conclude I oppose against Him Hugo de sanct vict Who will saith he that all men be saued according Annot. in 1. Tim. cap. 2. to Ambrose if they themselues will But are there not many who would be saued and yet are not saued or thus he offereth grace vnto all by which if they will they may bee saued But how is this solution true are there not and haue there not bin many which neuer heard so much as a word of preaching Obiect III. That which euery one is bound to beleeue is true but euery one is bound to beleeue that he is effectuallie redeemed by Christ therefore it is manifest that euery one euen the reprobate is effectually redeemed by the death of Christ. Whereto I answere that the termini or parts of the proposition are to be distinguished that which euery one is bound to beleeue is true according to the intention of God that bindeth but it is not alwaies true according to the euent Ionas preached and therefore hee was bound to beleeue Yet fortie daies and Niuiue shall bee destroyed but this was not true according to the euent The assumption also must bee distinguished Euerie one in the Church by Gods commandement Beleeue the Gospell is bound to beleeue that he is redeemed by Christ yea euen the reprobate as well as the elect but yet notwithstanding in a diuers and different respect The elect is bound to beleeue that by beleeuing hee shall bee made partaker of election the Reprobate that by not beleeuing hee may bee made vnexcusable euen by the intention of God For God sometimes giueth a commandement not that it should be actually done but that men may bee tried that they performe outward discipline and that they may be conuicted of their
cause why he foreseeth faith in one man rather than in another but onely because it is his will to giue one man faith and not an other Lastly th● rule is vncertaine for faith as appeareth by this platforme may bee vtterly lost and therefore the thing ruled to wit predestination is made uncertaine This a certaine Author plainly confesseth in his exposition of the epistle to the Romanes where he teacheth vnaduisedly that Gods decree may be changed and that election and reprobation haue recourse one to another because as he saith they depend vpon the condition of faith and infidelitie Furthermore this platforme teacheth that true and sauing faith may perish and Error 〈◊〉 be lost either wholly or for euer which notwithstanding is not true Reason 1. Matth. 16. 18. Vpon this rock will I build my Church and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it Here three questions must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be asked what the rock is what is meant by building on the rocke and what is that which is promised to those which are built vpon it The rocke is either faith it self or Christ apprehended by faith Chrysostome Vpon this rocke that is saith he vpon the faith of confession Againe He setteth Homil. in Matth. 55. Psal. 32. our feete vpon the rocke that is vpon faith for faith in Christ● may well be said to be that which cannot bee broken Againe Christ being wise hath built his house that is In com imperfect in Mat. cap. 7. his Church vpon a rocke that is vpon the fortitude of faith or a strong faith Now if faith be a rock it remaineth constant and immoueable To be built vpon the rock is to perceiue the doctrine of the Gospel to embrace Christ our Sauiour with a true faith and to cleaue fast to him with the heart For the Cori●thians are said to bee Pauls building because he brought them to the faith And the Ephesians are said to be built vpon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets because Paul came and preached vnto them the Gospell of peace The certaintie and firmnesse of the doctrine of the Gospell may also bee called a Rocke Epiphanius They shall not preuaile against the rocke that is Lib. haer 74. to say against the truth Hilarie This is thy blessed rocke of faith which Peter hath De Trin. l. 3 confessed with his mouth Augustine Vpon this rocke which thou hast confessed I will build my Church Now no man can be built vpon the confession and vpon the truth but by faith Hence I doe conclude thus Those that are built vpon the rocke cannot fall away vtterly but those which truely beleeue are built vpon the rocke therefore those which t●uly beleeue doe not vtterly and whollie fall away Thirdly the promise made to them that are built vpon the rocke is that the gates of hell shall not preuaile against them From hence it followeth necessarilie that the Diuels can but make a slorish and shew their strength and power against the faith and that they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall neuer be able to ouercome and conquere Let vs here also weigh the iudgements of the fathers Cyprian Lord to whom shall we goe signifying that the Epist. 1. 3. Church which beleeueth in Christ and which kepeth that which it hath once knowne doth at no time altogether depart from him and that they are the Church who doe abide in Gods house But that they are not of God the fathers planting whom we doe see to be voyd of the stedfastnes and massie soundnes of corne and like to chaffe vanned or blowne about with the wind of the winnowing enemi● of whom also Iohn speaketh in his 1. Epistle saying They went out from vs but they were not 〈◊〉 Ioh. 2. 19. of vs for if they had bin of vs they had surely remained with vs. Augustine Loue which may be lost was neuer true Againe To beleeue Dec● de poe●it d. 2. c. 2. Tract 116. 〈◊〉 Ioh. truly is to beleeue constantly stedfastly valiantlie and firmely so as that thou maist not now returne vnto thine and forsake Christ. Againe Those which are truely saints being predestinated to reigne with God De cor grat c. 12. by his grace haue not onely giuen them now a power to pers●●ere if they wil but perseuerāce 〈◊〉 selfe Againe Hee which makes men good ●aketh them to perseuere in that which is good And againe The Church loseth none on the earth but those which are wicked Epist. 163. and admitteth none into heauen but those that are good Againe As the a●ke was Quaest. 52. ad O●osium built of foure-square timber so the Church is builte of saints for that which is foure-square will stand steddy on which side soeuer you set it And the saints continue stedfast in euery temptation Chrysostome This is the propertie of faith that howsoeuer Hom. 1 in 2. Tim. 1. things may fall out contrarie to the promises yet it neuer falleth away vtterly and is Penitus omninò neuer wholy confounded Againe Let vs keepe faith which is a firme and sure rocke for neither the floods nor the winds can do vs any hurt though they driue hard against vs because we stand stedf●st vpon a rocke so also if in this life we will choose that true foundation we shall abide without any detriment or losse Againe Thou canst not ouercome Hom. de expuls Chrys. one faithfull man O Diuel thou knowest not what the Martyre haue done vnto thee the flesh often fainteth in the torments and the strēgth of faith faileth not Hence it is that in y e same place he speaketh after this sort If thou makest warre with mā thou shalt it may bee ouercome or perhaps thou shalt bee ouercome but no might can ouercome the Church Furthermore The Church Hom. 25. in Gen. is farre stronger than the earth yea and stronger than heauen Againe Faith in God In 7. cap. Ioh is a certaine secure anchor Gregorie Because the light of the elect is not extinguished by temptation wee doe not say there is a night made but an euening namely because temptation doth oftentimes hide the light of righteousnesse in the hearts of the elect but it doth not put it quite out it makes it as it were twinkle and looke wanne but it doth not extinguish it Angelome The obseruation of Gods commandements being established In lib. 3. Reg. cap. 7. in the hearts of the elect by faith hope and loue of that heauenly recompence can by no let of temporall things bee dissolued Againe The hearts of the elect are compared Ibid. cap. 5. to a foure-square figure which haue learned so to remaine in the strength of faith that they cannot be remoued from the certaintie of their estate by any repugnancie of those things they meete with no not by death it selfe Andreas Those are found to be abortiue Epise Capp in
must afterward be propped and helped by his grace and that hee predestinated them vnto his kingdome who being freely called he foresaw that they would be worthie of election and that they would depart out of this life making a good end And that therefore euery man is prouoked to beleeue and doe good by godly institutions that no man may despaire of the attainement of eternall life seeing that there is a reward prepared for a voluntarie deuotion The difference I confesse consists in this that the Pelagians doe either wholly ascribe vnto nature the abilitie to do well or else partly to nature and partly to grace but this platforme ascribeth all things wholly vnto grace which indeede is very right but whilest they goe about to ordaine vniuersall grace they doe not free themselues but are rather more entangled For most true is that saying of Peter Martyr Whilest these men make grace so common to all they turne grace into nature And I would willingly Io● Com. class 3. c. 1. be certified whether they who haue receiued this grace be regenerate or no if they be regenerate then all men are regenerate if they bee not regenerate then haue all men power to beleeue and to attaine saluation if they will yea euen whilest they remaine vnregenerate But this power if it bee in man before his conuersion will not differ much from nature And if so be that grace extend as farre as nature wee must not pray more for grace than for nature neither neede wee any more pray for the conuersion of vnbeleeuers because it is in their owne power by reason of generall grace to be conuerted if they will Prosper also ascribeth this platforme to the Pelagians in these verses Lib. car de ingratis Thus we determine of that grace that makes Vs Gods owne people and to him full deere But yee affirme that no man it forsakes But that the world from sinne it freeth cleere And passing none doth proffer meere saluation To all without exception yet they come Guided by their owne list to this vocation And motions of the mind directing some To the embracing of that offred light Which vnto all that will doth cleere the sight But afterwards he condemneth it in this sort Le ts see how you can prooue that Christ his grace Prossers Gods kingdome and true blessednesse To all men borne letting none ouerpasse To Whom it granteth not this happinesse Whē euen at this time thorough the whole worlds frame And compasse of the earth wherein we liue Christ Gospell is not knowne nor yet his name I cannot say but that he could it giue Euen at the first to all that breathe on earth Or euer in this world receiued birth And againe he saith If no man bee whom he will not redeeme No doubt but that his will shall be effected But of a greate part he makes no esteeme Who in infernall darkenesse liue reiected Now if the diuers motions of the mind And a peculiar perfect libertie Doe make a different cause to all mankind Gods will most free from inabilitie Either receiueth strength from humane pleasure Or wanteth strength when will attaines that treasure And againe hee answereth the Pelagians who say that by willing it wee are able to attaine Gods grace or else to resist it by nilling it after this manner How falls it out that this almightie grace Which saueth all reiects the worke it wrought When neither cause condition time nor place Can for a hindrance thereunto be brought And againe What would you say when you doe plainely see How Christ his grace in twins a difference makes And those who at one time conceiued be And whom the world into her bosome takes It doth distinguish granting one heauens blisse The other Hell where griefe and horror is To say the will directs you speake amisse And againe No man can hold them iustly culpab●s Or guiltie of this sinne to whom Gods might Did neuer shew it selfe so fauourable As to appeare no not in glimmering light Faustus the Semipelagian accused the Lib. 1. de lib arb cap. 19. Catholiques in that they said that our Lord Iesus Christ did not take vpon him mans flesh for all men nor died generally for all And on the other side the Catholiques accuse the Pelagians in that they say that God repelleth none from eternall life but is willing * Prosper ep ●d August indifferently that all men * should be saued and to come vnto the knowledge of the truth And againe that they say that our Lord Iesus Christ died for all mankind and that no man is vtterly exempted from the redemption of his blood although he leade all this his life estranged from him because that the sacrament of Gods grace appertaineth vnto all men whereby many are not therefore regenerated because they are foreknowne that they haue not a will to be regenerated and that therefore on Gods part eternall life is prepared for all men but in respect of the freedome of the will they say that they onely attaine euerlasting life who doe of their owne accord beleeue And againe they say that they will not admit of that exposition of that saying which is alledged out of Augustine which is that vnlesse bee will haue all men to be saued And againe not onely those which appertaine vnto the number 1. Tim. 2. of the faints but all men altogether without exception of any I wish also that thing were marked Hilar. epist. ad August namely that the Catholiques are accused by the Pelagians that vnder the name of predestination they did establish a certeine fatall necessitie and that they made a kind of violent preordination Which accusation hath also been laid against vs. And the like crime sheweth the like cause Lastly this platforme doth passing wel agree with that doctrine concerning predestination which is generally maintained in the schooles and Synagogues of the Papists yea verily to speake the truth it seemeth to bee borrowed euen from thence For if we well consider of the matter what else hath Pighius taught What else hath Cartharinus maintained and else at this day doe the grosse fat Monckes maintaine who imparke Gods actions in the case of predestination within these pales First say they God foresaw the natures and sinnes of all men Then prepared he Christ the redeemer Afterward he willed for the merit of Christ foreseene to bestow sufficient helpes of Grace vpon all men whereby they might bee saued through Christ And hee would it euen in this so much as in him was that all men might bee saued his will preceding Lasily he did mercifullie predestinate those whom he did see would end their liues in Gods fauour and hee did iustly reiect othersome either for originall or actuall sins in which he foresaw they would end their liues A Corolarie or addition A most certaine theoreme or vndoubted truth GOD HATH NOT REVEALED Christ vnto all and euery man The Proofes This is euident