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A53688 The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some degressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject / by John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1654 (1654) Wing O740; ESTC R21647 722,229 498

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good pleasure what validity there is in these inferences will be easily discerned God worketh Grace in men as men and as men impotent and corrupted by sinne As men he workes upon them by meanes suited to their Rationall being by Precepts and exhortations but as men impotent and corrupt by sinne they stand in need of his effectuall power to worke that in them which he requireth of them Of the termes wherewith his arguing in this case is clowded and darkened enough hath been remarked already His second Argument to this purpose §. 22. viz. That the Inclination of the will to good and to persevere in a Saint must be after his being made a Saint is as weake and no lesse Sophysticall than the former That inclination is radically wrought in every Believer at his Conversion the Spirit being bestowed on him which shall abide with him for ever and the Seed of God laid in his heart that shall remaine and never utterly faile with an habituall inclination to the exercise of all those Graces wherein their persevering doth consist Actually this is wrought in them according to the particular dutyes and actings of Grace that are reqnired of them which they are carryed forth unto by the daily influence of Life Power and Grace which they receive from Christ their head without whom they can do nothing Neither is the third Exception of any more validity being only a Repetition of what was spoken before rendred something more impedite darke and intricate by the termes of Physically Irresistibly and Necessitated which how farre and wherein we doe allow hath been frequently declared The summe of what is spoken amounts to this Gods reall worke in and upon the Soule by his Spirit and Grace is inconsistent with the exhortations to Obedience which we have before disproved and do reject it as an Assertion destructive to all the efficacy of the Grace of God and the whole worke of it upon the Soules of Men. What his Fourth Argument also is but a Repetition of the same things before crudely Asserted in other termes let them apprehend that can If God worke Faith and Love in the hearts of his Saints and support them in them to the end what place is left for Exhortations I say their own proper place the place of meanes of meanes appoynted by God to stirre up his to Perseverance and which himselfe makes by his Spirit and the immediate efficacy thereof effectuall to that end and purpose And I know no use of that Query Are exhortations effectuall to perswade men to Persevere after the end being built only on his false Hypothesis and begging of the thing in Question viz. That if God worke Faith and Love and continuance of them in our hearts effectually by his Grace there is no need no use of exhortations though God so work them by and with those exhortations And this is his first Attempt upon the first member of the Division made by him selfe wherein what successe he hath obtained is left to the judgement of the Reader And but that I shall not having now the part of one that Answers incumbent on mee turne aside unto the proofe of things denied I should easily confirme what hath been given in for the removall of his Objections from the Testimony of God by innumerable places of Scripture He proceeds then Sect. 6. and saies §. 23. Secondly Neither can the latter of the said consequences stand God doth not make use of the said Exhortations to influence or effect the Wills of the Saints upon any such termes as hereby to make them Infallibly Infrustrably Necessitatingly willing to Persevere or to do the things upon which Perseverance dependeth For first If so then one and the same act of the Will should be both Physicall and Morall and so be specifically distinguished in and from it selfe for so farre as t is produced by the irresistible force or power of the Spirit of God it must needs be Physicall the said irresistible working of the Spirit being a Physicall action and so not proper to produce a Moralleffect Againe as farre as the said Exhortations are meanes to produce or raise this Act of the Will or contribute any thing towards it it must needs be morall because Exhortations are Morall causes and so not capable of producing Physicall Naturall or Necessary effects Now then if it be impossible that one and the same Act of the Will should be both Physicall and Morall that is Necessary not Necessary impossible also it is that it should be produced by the irresistible working of God and by exhortations of this joynt efficiency It may be Objected they who hold or grant such an influence or operation of the Spirit of God upon the Will which is frustrable or resistible do or must suppose it to be a Physicall action as well as that which is irresistible If so then the act of the Will so farre as t is raised by the meanes of this action or operation of God must according to the tenor of the former Arguments be Physicall also and so the pretended Impossibility is no more avoided by this opinion then by the other I Answer Though such an operation of God upon the Will as is here mentioned be in respect of God of the manner of its proceeding from him Physicall yet in respect of the Nature and Substance of it t is properly Morall because it impresseth and affecteth the Will upon which t is acted after the manner of Morall causes properly so called that is Perswadingly not Ravishingly or Necessitatingly When a Minister of the Gospell in his preaching presseth or perswadeth men to such such dutyes or actions this act as it proceedeth from him I meane as 't is raised by his naturall abilityes of under standing or speaking is Physicall or Naturall but in respect of the substanceo● native tendency of it 't is clearely Morall viz. because it tendeth to incline or move the wills of men to such or such Elections without necessitating them thereunto and so comports with those Arguments or Exhortations in their manner of efficiency by which he presseth or moveth them to such things By the way to prevent stumbling and quarrelling it no way followes from the Premises that a Minister in his preaching or perswading unto duty 's should doe as much as God himselfe doth in or towards the perswading of men hereunto it only followes that the Minister doth cooperate with God which the Apostte himselfe affirmes in order to one the same effect i.e. that he operateth in one the same kind of efficiency with God Morally or perswadingly not necessitating for where one necessitates another only perswades they cannot be said to cooperate or worke the one with the other no more than two when the one runnes the other walkes a soft pace can be said to goe or walke together But when two perswade in one and the same action one may perswade more effectually by many
on the wills of men M. G. discourse and judgement 24. Considered 25. Effects follow as to their kind their next causes 26. The same Act of the will Physicall and Morall upon severall accounts Those accounts considered 27. God by the reall efficacy of the Spirit produceth in us Acts of the will morally good that confirmed from Scripture 28. Conclusion from thence 29. Of the termes Physicall Morall and necessary and their use in things of the nature under consideration Morall causes of Physicall effects 30. The concurrence of Physicall and Morall causes for producing the same effect the efficacy of Grace and exhortations 31. Physicall and necessary how distinguished Morall and not necessary Confounded by M. G. 32. M. G. farther progresse considered 33. What operation of God on the will of man he allowes All Physicall operation by him excluded 34. M. G's sence of the difference between the working of God and a Minister on the will that it is but graduall 35. Considered and removed All working of God on the will by him confined to perswasion perswasion gives no strength or ability to the person perswaded 36. All immediate acting of God to good in men by M G. utterly excluded 37. Wherein Gods perswading men doth consist according to M. G. 1 Cor. 3. 9. considered 38. Of the concurrence of diverse Agents to the production of the same effect 39. The summe of the 7 Section of Gh. 13. The will how necessitated how free 40. In what seuce M. G. allowes Gods perswasions to be irresistible 41. The dealings of God and men ill compared 42. Pauls exhortation to the use of meanes where the end was certaine Acts 24. c●df●dered God deals with men as men exhorting them and as corrupted men assisting them 43. Of Promises of Temporall things whether all conditionall 44. What condition in the Promise made to Paul Act. 27. 45. Farther of that Promise its infallibility and meanes of Accomplishment 46. The same considerations farther prosecuted 47. 48. Of Promises of Perseveran●e and what relations to performe in conjuction 49. M. G. opposition hereunto 50. Promises and protestations in conjunction 1 Cor. 10. 12 13. discussed An absolute Promise of Perseverance therein evinced 51. Phil. 1. 12 13. to the same purpose considered M. G. Interpretation of that place proposed removed 52. Heb. 6. 4 5 9. to the same purpose insisted on 53. Of the consistency o● Threatnings with the Promises of Perseverance 54. M. G. opposition hereunto 55. Considered and removed What Promises of Perseverance are asserted how absolute and infrustable Feare of Hell and punishment twofold The feare intended to be ingenerated by threatnings not inconsistent with the Assurance given by promises 56. Five Considerations about the use of Threatnings the first c. 57. Hipocrites how threatned for Apostasy of the End and Aime of God in Threatnings 58. Of the proper End and Efficacy of Threatnings with reference unto true Believers 59. Feare of Hell and punishment how farre a principle of Obedience in the Saints 60. Of Noahs feare Heb. 11. 7. 61. M. G's farther arguings for the Efficacy of the feare of Hell unto Obedience in the Saints proposed considered removed 62. 1 Ioh. 4. 18. cons●dered 63. Of the Obedience of Saints to their heavenly Father compared to the obedience of Children to their naturall Parents M. G's monstrous conception about this thing 64. How Feare or Love and in what sence are principles of Obedience That which is done from Feare not done willingly not chearfully 65. How Feare and what feare hath torment 66. Of the nature and use of Promises Close of the Answer to this Argument IT will be needlesse to use many words unto the Discourse of the first Section §. 1. seeing it will not in the least prejudice our Cause in hand to leave Mr Godwin in full possession of all the Glory of the Rethoricke thereof For although I cannot close with him in the Exposition given of that expression 1 Tim. 6. 16. God inhabiteth Light inaccessible some thing in my weake apprehension much more glorious divine being comprised therein then what it is here turned aside unto Neither am I in the least convinced of the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the former Discourse in the close of the whole asserting a deliverance to be obtained from our thoughts of the Doctrine of the defection of the Saints which he intimateth to be that it is anti-evangelicall tormenting and bringing soules under bondage by a narrow and unprejudicate search into it finding my selfe every day more and more confirmed in thoughts of that kind concerning it by my engagement into such an enquiry which hath been observed in this present Discourse as farre as my weakenesse will permit yet it being not in the least Argumentative but for the whole frame and intendment of it Commune exordium and that which any man of any opinion in the world might make use of I shall not insist upon it His second Section containeth his first Argument §. 2. drawne forth in the defence of his Doctrine of the possibility as he calleth it but indeed what it is we have heard of the defection of Believers Of this I presume he intended no more use but as a forlorne to begin a light Skirmish with his Adversaries ordering it to retreat to his maine Body advancing after or desperately casting it away to abate the Edge of his Combatants Weapons it is so weake and feeble and therefore I shall be very briefe in the consideration of it thus then he proposeth it That Doctrine which rendreth God free from the unrighteousnesse which the Scripture calleth the respecting of persons of men is a Doctrine of perfect consistence with the Scripture and the truth The Doctrine which teacheth the possibility of the Saints declining and this unto death is a Doctrine of this import Ergo. Ans. 1. §. 3. The first proposition must be supposed Vniversall of else the whole will quickly be manifested to be unconclusive If it be only Indefinite and so equivalent as it lieth to a particular the conclusion is from all particulars and of no force as Mr Goodwin well knoweth Take it universally and I say it is evidently false and might easily be disproved by innumerable Instances Not that any errour or falsehood can indeed give God the Glory of any one of his Attributes but that they may be fitted and suited for such a service were not their throates cut and their mouthes stopt by the Lies that are in them which Mr Goodwin's Doctrine is no lesse lyable to then any other and not at all exempted from that Condition by its seeming subserviency unto Gods Aprosopolepsia Doth not the Doctrine of Justification by Workes even in the most rigid sence of it according to the tenor of the old Covenant absolutely render God free from the Unrighteousnesse of Accepting of Persens And yet for all that it hath not one jot the more of Truth in it nor is it the
this Subject of Perseverance In the entrance of his disputation he layes down the same Principles with the Former concerning the necessity of the Peculiar Grace of Perseverance to this end that any one may persevere Disput 103. Then Disp 108 He further manifests that this gift or Grace of Perseverance does not depend on any Conditions in us or any Cooperation of our wills His position he layes down in these words Donum perseverantiae in ratione Doni perseverantiae efficacia illius nullo modo dependet effectivè ex libera Cooperatione nostri Arbitrii sed à solo Deo atque ab efficaci absoluto Decreto Voluntatis ejus qui pro suâ misericordiâ tribuit illud Donum cui vult In the further proof of this proposition he manifests by clear Testimonies that the Contrary Doctrine hereunto was that of the Pelagians and Semi-pelagians which Austine opposed in sundry Treatises And in all the Arguments whereby he further confirmes it he still presses the absurdity of making the Promise of God concerning Perseverance Conditional and so suspending it on any thing in and by us to be performed And indeed all the Acts whereby we persevere flowing according to him from the Grace of perseverance it cannot but be absurd to make the Efficient Cause in it's Efficiency and operation to depend upon it's own effect This also is with him Ridiculous that the Grace of perseverance should be given to any and he not persevere or be promised and yet not given yet withal he grants in his following Conclusions that our wills secundarily and in dependency do cooperate in our Perseverance The second Principle this learned School-man insists on is that this gift of perseverance is peculiar to the Elect or praedestinate Disput 104. 1. Con Donum perseverantiae est proprium Praedstinaterum ut nulli alteri conveniat And what he intends by Praedestinati he informes you according to the Judgment of Austin and Thomas Nomine praedestinationis ad Gloriam felùm 〈◊〉 praedestinationem intelligunt Augustinus Thomas quâ Electi ordinantur efficaciter transmittuntur ad vitam aeternam cujus effectus sunt vocatio Justificatio perseverantia in gratiâ usque ad Finem not that or such a Conditional predestination as is pendent in the ayre and expectant of men's good final Deportment but that which is the eternal free fountaine of all that grace whereof in time by Jesus Christ we are made Partakers And in the pursuit of this proposition he further proves at large that the persverance given to the Saints in Christ is not a supplement of Helps and advantages whereby they may preserve it if they will but such as causes them on whom it is bestowed certainly actually so to do and that in it's efficacy and operation it cannot depend on any free cooperation of our wills all the Good Acts tending to our perseverance being fruits of that Grace which is bestowed on us according to the absolute unchangeable Decree of the will of God This indeed is common with this Authour and the Rest of his associates the Dominicans and pres●●● Jansenians in these controversies together with the residue of the Romanists that having their Judgments wrested by the abominable figments of implicite Faith and the efficacy of the Sacraments of the new Testament conveying really exhibiting the grace signified or sealed by them that they are inforced to grant that many may be are Regenerate made True Believers who are not predestinate that these cannot persevere nor shall eventually be saved Certaine it is that there is not any Truth which that Generation of men do receive admit but more or less it suffers in their Hands from that gross ignorance of the free Grace of God in Jesus Crhist the power whereof they are practically under what the poor Vassailes and Slaves will do upon the late Bull of their Holy Father casting them in sundry maine Concernements of their Quarrel with their Adversaries is uncertaine otherwise setting aside some such deviations as the above mentioned whereunto they are enforced by their Ignorance of the Grace and Justification with is in Jesus Christ there is so much of Antient Candid Truth in opposition to the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians preserved and asserted in the writings of the Dominican Fryers as will rise up as I sayd before in Judgment against those of our Dayes who enjoying greater Light Advantages do yet close in with those and are long since Cursed Enemies of the grace of God To this Dominican I shall only adde the Testimony of two famous Jesuites upon whose understandings the light of this glorious Truth prevailed for an Acknowledgment of it The first of these is Bellarmine whose disputes to this purpose being full and large and the Authour in allmens hands I shall not transcribe his assertions arguments but only referre the Reader to his l. 2. de Grat. l. Ar. Cap. 12. Denique ut multa alia Testimonia c The other is Suarez who delivers his thoughts succinctly upon the whole of this Matter Lib. 11. de perpetuitat vel Amis Grat Cap. 2. Sect. 6. saith he de praedestinatis verum est Infallibiliter quòd gratiam finaliter seu in perpetuum non amittunt unde postquam semel gratiam habuerant ita reguntur proteguntur à Deo ut vel non cadant vel si ceciderint resurgant licèt saepius cadant resurgant tandem aliquando ita resurgunt ut amplius non cadant in which few words he hath briefly comprized the summe of that which is by us contended for It was in my Thoughts in the last place to have added the concurrent witness of all the reformed Churches which that of the most eminent Divines which have written in the defence of their Concessions but this Trouble upon second considerations I shall spare the Reader my selfe for as many other reasons lye against the Prosecuting of this Designe so especially the uselesness of spending-Time and paines for the demonstration of a thing of so evident a truth prevailes with me to desist Notwithstanding the Indeavours of Mr. Goodwin to wrest the words of some of the most antient Writers who laboured in the first Reformation of the Churches I presume no unprejudiced Person in the least measure acquainted with the systeme of that Doctrine which with so much paines diligence piety and Learning they promoted in the world with the clearness of their Judgments in going forth to the utmost compass of their Principles which they received and their constancy to themselves in asserting of the Truthes they embraced owned by their Friends and Adversaries until such time as Mr. Goodwin discovered their selfe Contradictions will scarce be moved once to question their Judgments by the Excerpta of Mr. Goodwin Cap 15 of his Treatise so that of this discourse this is the Issue There remaines only that I give a brief account of some concernments of the
ensuing Treatise and dismisse the Reader from any further Attendance in the Porch or entrance thereof The Title of the book speakes of the Aime and Method of it the Confutation of Mr. Goodwin was but secundarily in my eye and the best way for that I judged to consist in a full Scriptural Confirmation of the Truth he opposed That I cheifly intended and therein I hope the pious Reader may through the Grace of God meet with satisfaction In my undertaking to affirme the Truth of what I assert the Thing it selfe first and then the manifestation of it was in my Consideration for the thing it selfe my arguing hath been to discover the Nature of it it's principles and causes it 's relation to the Good will of the Father the mediations of the Son and dispensation of the Holy Ghost to the Saints thereupon it 's use and tendency in and unto that fellowship with the Father and the Son whereunto we are called and admitted As to the manner of it's Revelation the proper seates of it in the Book of God the occasion of the Delivery thereof in several seasons the Significant Expressions wherein it is set forth and the receiving of it by them to whom it was revealed have been diligently remarked In those parts of the Discourse which tend to the vindication of the Arguments from Scripture whereby the Truth pleaded for is confirmed of the usefulness of the thing it selfe contended about c. I have been I hope Careful to keep my Discourse from degenerating into Jangling and strife of words the usual Issue of Polemical writings being not altogether Ignorant of the devices of Satan and the usual carnal Attendencies of such proceedings The weight of the Truth in hand The Common interest of all the Saints in their walking with God therein sense of my own duty the near approach of the Account which I must make of the ministration to me Committed have given bounds and limits to my whole discourse as to the manner of handling the Truth therein asserted Writing in the Common language of the Nation about the Common possession of the Saints the meanest and weakest as well as the wisest and the most learned labouring in the workes of Christ and his Gospel I durst not hide the understanding of what I aim'd at by mingling the plaine doctrine of the Scripture with Metaphysical Notions expressions of Arts or any pretended ornaments of wit or fancy because I Feare God For the more sublime Consideration of Things and such a way of their Delivery as depending upon the acknowledg'd reception of sundry Arts and sciences which the Generality of Christians neither are nor need to be acquainted withal Scholars may communicate their Thoughts and Apprehensions unto and among Themselves and that upon the stage of the world in that language whereunto they have consented for to that end purpose That I have carefully abstayned from Personal reflections scoffes Undervaluations applications of Stories and old sayings to the provocation of the Spirit of them with whom I have to do I think not at all prayse worthy because that upon a review of some passages in the treatise now irrecoverable I feare I have scarce been so careful as I am sure it was my duty to have been Errata in the Preface Read p. 1. l. 36 it 3 a fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 3 l. 24 viz 104. 29. an impeca p. 5. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 6. l. 7. quae 3. Canonical 8 à fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 7. l. 23 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 8. l. 1. 2. d. that he wrote l. 21. à fine then he addes p. 9. l. 1 5. Genevatismum 18. dele no. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 10. l. 2. helped p. 11. l. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 14. Vienna and Lyons 17. A Syrian p. 12. l. 6 breakes 10. him in that course of proceeding 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 12. 26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 32. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. ult 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 13. l. 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 38. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 39. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●3 à fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 12. à fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 11 à fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 8 a fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 7. â fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. à fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 14. l. 9. dele l. 3. ext 24. approbation is added 7 à fine spiritu p. 15. l. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 27. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 16. l. 6. d ab l. 5. à fine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 15. l. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 17. give us Ch●p 20. l. 22. à fine antients seeming to favour them p. 21. l. 7. à fine Episcopal p. 22. l. 22. à fine Archiepiscopal l. ult He be sound CAP. I. 1. The various thoughts of men concerning the Doctrine proposed to consideration 2. The great concernment of it how ever stated on all hands confessed 3. Some speciall causes pressing to the present handling of it 4. The fearfull Back-sliding of many in these daies 5 The great offence given and taken thereby with the provision made for its removeall 6 The nature of that offence and temptation thence arising considered 7 Answer to some Arguings of Mr G. c 9. § 8 9 10 11. from thence against the truth proposed The use of trialls and shakings Grounds of believers assurance that they are so 8. The same farther argued and debated 9 Of the Testimony of a mans owne conscience concerning his uprightnesse and what is required thereunto 10. 1 Ioh 3. 7. considered of the rule of selfe-judging with principles of settlement for true Believers notwithstanding the Apostasies of eminent Professors 2 11. Corrupt teachings rendring the handling of this Doctrine necessary its enemies of old and of late 12 The particular undertaking of Mr G. proposed to consideration 13 An entrance into the stating of the Question 14. 15. The termes of the Question explained of Holinesse in its severall acceptations Created holinesse Originall or Adventitious Compleate or Inchoate Typicall by dedications Reall by purification 16. Holinesse Evangelicall either so indeed or by estimation 17. Reall Holinesse partiall or universall 18 19. The partakers of the first or Temporary Believers not true Believers maintained against Mr G. Ground of judging professors to be true believers 20. Mat. 7. 20. Considered what is the rule of judging men therein given 21 22. What knowledge of the
apprehension there are held out Intentions and Purposes of God distinctly suited to all Beings Operations and Events yet in God himselfe they are not multiplyed As all things are present to him in one most simple and single Act of his Understanding so with one individuall Act of his Will he determines concening all but yet in reference to the things that are disposed of we may call them the Purposes of God And these are the Eternall Springs of Gods Actuall Providence which being Ratio ordinis ad finē the disposing of all things to their Ends in an appointed manner and order in exact correspondence unto them these Purposes themselves must be the Infinitely Wise Eternall Immanent Acts of his Will appointing and determining all Things Beings and Opperations kinds of Beings manners of Opperations free necessary contingent as to their Existence and Event into an Immediate tendency unto the exaltation of his Glory Or as the Apostle calles them the Counsell of his Will according whereunto he effectually worketh all things Ephes 1. 11. Our consideration of these Purposes of God being only in reference to the Businesse which we have in hand §. 4. I shall doe these two things 1. First manifest that they are all of them Absolute and Immutable wherein I shall be briefe not going out to the Compasse of the Controversy thereabout as I intimated before My intendment lyes another way 2. Secondly shew that God hath Purposed the continuance of his Love to his Saints to bring them infallibly to himselfe and that this Purpose of God in particular is Vnchangeable which is the second part of the Foundation of our Abiding with God in the Grace of Acceptation By the Purposes of God §. 5. I meane as I said before the Eternall Acts of his Will concerning all things that outwardly are of him which are the Rule if I may so speake of all his following Operations All externall temporary Products of his Power universally answering those internall Acts of his Will The Judgment of those who make these Decrees or Purposes of God for I shall constantly use these words promiscuously as being purely of the same import as relating unto God to be in themselves Essentiall to him and his very Nature or Understanding and Will may be safely closed withall They are in God as was sayd but one There is not a reall multiplication of any thing but Subsistence in the Deity To us these lye under a double Consideration First Simply as they are in God and so it is impossible they should be differenced from his Infinite Wisdome and Will whereby he determineth of any thing Secondly in respect of the Habitude and Relation which they beare to the things Determined which the Wisdome and Will of God might not have had In the first sence as was said they can be nothing but the very nature of God The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 velle of God his Internall willing of any thing that is either Created or Increated for those Termes distribute the whole nature of beings Created they are not for they are Eternall that no new immanent Act can possibly be ascribed to God hath full well of late been demonstrated Farther If they are Created then God willed that they should be Created for he Created only what he will If so was he willing they should be Created or no If he were then a progresse will be given infinitely for the Question will arise up to Eternity If Increated then doubtlesse they are God himselfe for he onely is so 'T is impossible that a Creature should be increated Againe Gods very willing of things is the cause of all things and therefore must needs be Omnipotent and God himselfe that Voluntas Dei is Causa rerum is taken for granted and may be prooved from Psa. 115. 3. Which the Apostle ascribes Omnipotency unto Rom. 9. 19. Who hath resisted his Will Doubtlesse it is the Property of God alone to be the Cause of all things and to be Almighty in his so being but hereof at present no more On this supposall the Immutability of the Decrees of God would plainely be coincident with the Immutability of his Nature before handled It is then of the Decrees and Purposes of God with respect to the matter about which they are whereof I speake in which regard also they are Absolute and Immutable not that they worke any essentiall Change in the Things themselves concerning which they are making that to be Immutable from thence which in its owne Nature is Mutable but only that themselves as Acts of the Infinite Wisdome and Will of God are not lyable to nor suspended on any Condition whatever forreigne to themselves nor subject to change or Alteration whence floweth an infallible certainty of actuall Accomplishment in reference to the things Decreed or Purposed be their owne nature what it will or their next causes in themselves never so undetermined to their Production whereof I treat That the determining Purposes or Decrees of Gods will concerning any thing or things by him to be done or effected do not depend as to their Accomplishment on any conditions that may be supposed in or about the things themselves whereof they are and therefore are Vnchangeable and shall certainely be brought forth unto the appointed Issue Mat. 11. 25. 1 Cor. 26 27 28. is that which we are to prove Knowing for whose sakes and for what End this labour was undertaken I shall choose to lay the whole proofe of this Assertion upon plaine Texts of Scripture Iam. 2. 5. 2 Tim. 2. 10. rather then mixe my Discourse with any such Philosophicall Reasonings as are of little use to the most of them whose benefit is hereby intended Isa. 46 9 10 11. The Holy Ghost speakes expressly to our purpose §. 7. Remember the former things of old for I am God and there is none like me declaring the End from the beginning and from ancient times the things that are not yet done saying my Counsell shall stand and I will doe all my pleasure calling a ravenous Bird from the East the man that executes my counsell from a far Country Yea I have spoken it I will also bring it to passe I have purposed it I will also doe it v. 19. The Lord asserts his owne Deity and Eternall Being in opposition to all false Gods and Idols whom he threatens to destroy v. 1. Of this he gives them a threefold Demonstration First from his Patience or fore-Knowledge there is none like me declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times the things that are not yet done In this am I infinitely discriminated from all the pretended Deityes of the Nations All things from the Beginning to the End are naked before me and I have declared them by my Prophets even things that are future and contingent in themselves soe are the things that I now speake of the destruction of Babylon by the Medes Persians a thing to
Distinctions Yet the certaine accomplishment of them as they are ascribed unto God is here asserted by the Holy Ghost Were the confirmation of the matter of our present Discourse §. 9. my designe in hand I could farther confirme it by inlarging these ensuing Reasons 1. First from the Immutability of God the least questioning whereof falls foule on all the Perfections of the Divine Nature which requireth a correspondent affection of all the Internall and Eternall Acts of his Mind and Will 2. Secondly from his Soveraignty in making and executing all his Purposes which will not admit of any such mixture of Consults or Cooperations of others as should render his thoughts lyable to Alteration Rom. 11. 34 35 36. The Lord in his Purposes is considered as the great Former of all things who having his clay in the hand of his Almighty power ordaines every parcell to what kind of vessell and to what use he pleaseth hence the Apostle concludes the consideration of them and the distinguishing Grace flowing from them with that admiration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oh the depth c. 3. Thirdly from their Eternity which exempts them from all shadow of change and lifts them up above all those sphears that either from within and their owne nature or from without by the impression of others are exposed to turning that which is Eternall is also Immutable Acts 15. 18. 1 Cor. 2. 11. 4. Fourthly from the Absolutenesse and Independency of his Will whereof they are the Acts and Emanations Rom. 9. 15 16 17 18 19 20. whatever hath any influence upon that as to Move it Cause it Change it must be Before it Above it Better then it as every cause is then its effect as such This Will of his as was said is the fountain of all beings to which free and independent Act all Creatures owe their being and subsistence their operations and manner thereof their whole difference from those Worlds of beings which his Power can produce but yet shall lye bound up to Eternity in their nothingnesse and possibility upon the account of his good Pleasure Into this doth our Saviour resolve the disposall of himselfe Math. 26. 42. and of all others Math 11. 25 26 27. certainly men in their wrangling Disputes and Contests about it have scarce seriously considered with whom they have to doe shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made nice thus 5. Fiftly §. 10. from the Ingagement of his Omnipotency for the accomplishment of all his Purposes and Designes as is emphatically expressed Isa 14. 24 25 26 27. Surely the Lord of Hosts hath Sworne saying surely as I have thought so shall it come to passe and as I have purposed it shall stand that I will breake the Assyrian in my land This is the purpose of God that is purposed upon the whole Earth and this is the hand that is stretched out upon all the Nations for the Lord of Hosts hath purposed and who shall disanull it And his hand is stretched out and who shall turne it back The Lord doth not only Assert the certain Accomplishment of all his Purposes but also to prevent and obviate the Vnbeliefe of them who were concerned in their fulfilling he manifests upon what account it is that they shall certainly be brought to passe and that is by the stretching out of his hand or exalting of his mighty Power for the doeing of it so that if there be a fayling therein it must be through the shortnesse of that Hand of his so stretched out in that it could not reach the end aymed at A Worme will put forth its Strength for the fullfilling of that whereunto is is inclined and the Sonnes of men will draw out all their Power for the compassing of their designes if there be Wisdome in the laying of them and foresight of Emergencyes they alter not nor turne aside to the right hand or to the left in the pursuit of them And shall the Infinitely Wise Holy and Righteous thoughts and Designes of God not have his Power engaged for their accomplishment His Infinite Wisdome and Understanding are at the foundation of them they are the Counsells of his Will Ephes. 7. 11. who hath known his minde in them saith the Apostle and who hath been his Counsellour though no creature can see the paths wherein he walks nor apprehend the reason of the waies he is delighted in yet this he lets us know for the satisfying of our hearts and teaching of our inquiries that his owne Infinite Wisdome is in them all I cannot but feare sometimes that men have darkned counsell without knowledge in curious contests about the Decrees Purposes of God as though they were to be measured by our rule line and as though by searching we could find out the Almighty to Perfection But he is Wise in heart he that contendeth with him let him Instruct him Adde that this Wisdome in his Counsell is attended with infallible Prescience of all that will fall in by the way or in the course of the accomplishment of his Purposes and you will quickly see that there can be no possible intervenience upon the account whereof the Lord should not ingage his Almighty Power for their accomplishment He is of one minde and who can turne him he will worke and who shall let him 6. Sixtly by demonstrating the Vnreasonablnesse Folly and Impossibility of suspending the Acts and Purposes of the Will of God upon any actings of the Creatures whatsoever seeing it cannot be done without subjecting Eternity to time the first Cause to the second the Creator to the Creature the Lord to the Servant disturbing the whole order of Beings and Operations in the world 7. Seventhly by the removeall of all Possible or Imaginary Causes of Alteration and change which will all be resolved into impotency in one kind or other Every Alteration being confessedly an imperfection it cannot follow but from want and weaknesse Upon the Issue of which Discourse if it might be perused these Corollaries would insue 1. First Conditionall Promises and Threatnings are not declarative of Gods Purposes concerning Persons but of his Morall Approbation or Rejection of Things 2. Secondly There is a wide difference betweene the Change of what is Conditionally pronounced as to the things themselves and the change of what is Determinately willed the certainty of whose event is proportioned to the Immutable Acts of the Will of God it selfe 3. Thirdly That no Purpose of God is Conditionall though the things themselves concerning which his Purposes are are often times conditionalls one of another 4. Fourthly That conditionall Purposes concerning Perseverance are either Impossible implying contradictions or Ludicrous even to an unfitnes for a Stage But of these and such like as they occasionally fall in in the insuing Discourse This foundation being laid §. 11. I come to what was Secondly proposed namely to manifest by an Induction of particular Instances the ingagement
whole Booke of God 2. That it is a case surmised by him suitable to his owne Hypotheses neither true in its selfe nor any way Analogous to that wherewith 't is yoked being indeed a new way and tone of begging the thing in question For instance It supposeth without the least Attempt of proofe 1. Conditionall Decrees or a disjunctive intendment of Events in God it shall come to passe or otherwise 2. A middle science conditionall as the foundation of those disjunctive Decrees with 3. A futurition of things Antecedent to any determining Act of the Will of God and 4. A possibility of frustrating as to Event the Designes and purposes of God and 5. That all medium's of the Accoplishment of any thing are conditions of Gods intentions as to the end he aymes at 6. That God appoints a series of mediums for the compassing of an End and designes them thereunto without any determinate Resolution to bring about that End 7. That the Acts of Gods Grace in their Concatenation mentioned in this place of Rom. 8. are severally Conditionall because he hath invented or faigned some Decrees of God which he sayes are so All which with the inferences from them Mr Goodwin knowes will not advance his Reasonings at all as to our Understandings being fully perswaded that they are all Abominations of no lesse base alloy then the Errour it selfe in whose defence and Patronage they are produced To our Argument then before mentioned §. 35. prooving an equall indissolveablenesse in all the linkes of the Chaine of Divine Graces drawne forth and insisted on from the equall dependance of the designe Purpose of God on the mutuall dependance of each of them on the other for the fullfillng of that Purpose of his and obtaining the End which he professes himselfe to intend this is the summe of Mr Goodwins Answer If I can invent a series of Decrees and a Concatenation of Divine Acts though indeed there be no such thing neither can I give any colour to it without laying downe and taking for granted many false and absurd supposalls and though it be not of the same nature with that here proposed by the Apostle nor any where held out in the Scripture for any such End Purpose as this is neither can I assigne any absolute determinate end in this Series of mine whose Accomplshment God ingages himselfe to bring about as the Case stands in the place of Scripture under Consideration then it is meet and equitable that laying aside all inforcements from the Text Context Nature of God the thing treated on all compelling us to close with another sence and Interpretation that we regulate the minde of the Holy Ghost herein to the Rule proportion and Analogie of the case as formerly proposed This being the summe of that which Mr Goodwin calls his Answer made naked I presume to its shame valeat quantum valere potest I shall only adde that 1. when Mr Goodwin shall make good that order and Series of Decrees here by him mentioned from the Scripture or with solid Reason from the nature of the things themselves suitably to the Properties of him whose they are And 2. Proove that any eternall Decree of God either as to its primitive enacting or temporall Execution is suspended on any thing not only really contingent in it selfe and its owne nature in respect of the immediate fountaine from whence it flowes and nature of its immediate cause but also as to its Event in respect of any Act of the will of God that it may otherwise be and so the accomplishment of that Decree left thereupon uncertaine and God himselfe dubiously conjecturing at the Event for instance whether Christ should Dye or no or any one be saved by him and 3. Clearely evince this notion of the Decrees and Purposes of God that he intends to Create Man and then to give him such advantages which if he will it shall be so with him if otherwise it shall be so To send Christ if men doe so or so or not to send him if they doe otherwise so of the residue of the Decrees mentioned by him and 4. That all events of things whatsoever Spirituall and Temporall have a Conditionall futurition antecedent to any act of the Will of God When I say he shall have proved these and some like things to these we shall further consider what is offered by him yea we will confesse that Hostis habet muros c. Of the many other Testimonies to the purpose in hand §. 36. bearing witnesse to the same Truth some few may yet be singled out and in the next place that of Jeremiah 31. 3. presents it selfe unto tryall and Examination Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawn thee It is the whole Elec● Church of the seed of Iacob of whom he speaks the foundation of whose blessednesse is laid in the Eternall Love of God Who the persons are thus beloved and of whom we are to interpret these expressions of Gods good will the Apostle manifests Rom 11. as shall afterwards be more fully discoursed and cleared He tells you it is the Election whom God intends of whom he saies that they obtained the Righteousnesse that is by faith according to the purport of Gods good will towards them though the rest were hardned God who adds daily to his Church such as shall be saved Acts 13. 48. drawing them thereunto upon the account of their being so Elected He calls them also the Remnant according to the Election of Grace and the People whom God did foreknow v 1 2. or from Eternity designed to the participation of the Grace there spoken of as the use of the word hath been evinced to be These are the Thee here designed the portion of Israel after the flesh which the Lord in his Free Grace hath eternally appointed to be his peculiar inheritance which in their severall Generations he drawes to himselfe with Loving Kindnesse And this everlasting Love is not only the fountaine whence actuall Loving Kindnesse in drawing to God or bestowing Faith doth flow as they Believe who are ordained to eternall life but also the sole Cause and Reason upon the account whereof in contra-distinction to the Consideration of any thing in themselves God will exercise Loving Kindnesse towards them for ever That which is everlasting or eternall is also unchangeable Gods everlasting Love is no more liable to mutability then himselfe And it is an alwaies equall Ground and Motive for Kindnesse On what account should God alter in his actuall Kindnesse or favour towards any if that on the account whereof he exercises it will not admit of the least Alteration He that shall give a Condition on which this everlasting Love of God should be suspended and according to the influence whereof upon it it should goe forth in Kindnesse or be interrupted may be allowed to boast of his discovery That of
the Promise of Salvation by Jesus Christ and Faith in him cometh in for their deliverance The Promise is given to them as shut up under sinne which they receive by mixing it with Faith And Rom 3. 23. 24. All have sinned and come short of the Glory of God being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Christ. Their condition is a condition of sinne and falling short of the glory of God when the Promise for Justification is given unto them and finds them Thence the Lord tells us Isai 54. 8 9. that this Promise of mercy is like that which he made about the waters of Noah Gen 5. 21 22 where is mentioned no condition at all of it but only the sinnes of men And in that state unquestionably was Adam when the first Promise was given unto him To say then that Gospell Promises are made to men in such conditions and are to be made good only upon the account of mens abiding in the condition wherein they are when the Promise is made to them is to say Ephes. 2. 4 5 8. that for men to leave the state of sinne is the way to frustrate all the Promises of God All deliverance from a state of sinne is by Grace all Grace is of Promise under that condition then of sinne doth the Promise find men and from thence relieve them 4. I say §. 7. these Discoveries of Gods good Will are made through Christ as the only medium of their Accomplishment 2 Cor. 1. 20. and only procuring cause of the good things that flowing from the good will of God are enwrapped and tendred in them And they are said to be in Christ as 1. The great Messenger of the Covenant as in him who comes from the Father because God hath confirmed and ratified them all in him not in themselves but unto us He hath in him and by him given Faith and Assurance of them all unto us declaring and confirming his good Will and Love to us by him He reveals the Father as a Father from his own Bosome Ioh 1. 18. declaring his name or Grace unto his Ioh 17 3. 2 Cor. 1. 20. In whom all the Promises of God are yea and in him amen to the Glory of God by us Ioh 17. 3. In him and by his Mediation they have all their Confirmation Establishment and unchangeablenesse unto us And 2. Because he hath undertaken to be Surety of that Covenant whereof they are the Promises Heb 7. 24. He is the Surety of the Covenant that is one who hath undertaken both on the part of God and ours what ever is needfull for confirmation thereof 3. Because that himselfe is the great Subject of all these Promises and in him it being of his own Purchase and procuring he having obtained Eternall Redemption for us Heb 9. John 1. 16. there is treasured up all the fulnesse of those Mercies Col. 1. 18 19. which in them God hath graciously engaged himselfe to bestow cap. 2 10. c. they being all annexed to him as the portion he brings with him to the Soule Rom. 8. 32. Then I say 5. That they are discoveries of Gods good will in a Covenant of Grace they are indeed the Branches Streames and manifesting conveyances of the Grace of that Covenant and of the Good Will of God putting it selfe forth therein Hence the Apostle mentions the Covenant of Promise Ephes 2. 12. either for the Promises of the Covenant or its manifestation as I said before Indeed as to the Subject-Matter and eminently the Promise is but one as the Covenant is no more but both come under a plurall Expression because they have been variously delivered and renewed upon severall occasions So the Covenant of Grace is said to be established upon these Promises Heb 8. 6. that is the Grace and Mercy of the Covenant and the usefulnesse of it to the Ends of a Covenant to keep God and man together in Peace and Agreement is laid upon these Promises to be by them confirmed and established unto us God having by them revealed his Good Will unto us with an attendency of stipulation of duty Their use for the begetting and continuing Communion betweene God and us with the concomitancy of precepts places them in the capacity of a Covenant And then 6. I mentioned the foundation of the Certainty and Vnchangeablenesse of these Promises with our Assurance of their Accomplishment The Engagements and Undertakings of God upon his Truth and Faithfulnesse is the stock and unmoveable foundation of this respect of them Therefore speaking of them the Holy Ghost often backs them with that Property of God He cannot lye so Heb 6. 17. 18. God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of Promise the immutability of his Councell confirmed it by an Oath that by two immutable things wherein it was not possible for God to lye c. So Tit 1. 2. God which cannot lye hath promised us eternall life There is no one makes a solemne Promise but as it ought to proceed from him in sincerity and Truth so he engageth his Truth and Faithfulnesse in all the credit of them for the Accomplishment thereof what lyeth in him And on this account doth David so often appeale unto Psal. 31. 1. 5. 14. and call upon the Righteousnesse of God as to the fulfilling of his Promises Isa 45. 19. 2 Pet 1. 1. and the word which he caused him to put his trust in It is because of his engagement of his Truth and Faithfulnesse whence it becometh a righteous thing with him to performe what he hath spoken How farre this Respect of the Promises extends and wherein it is capable of a dispensation is the summe of our present Controversy but of this afterwards Then 7. A briefe description of the Matter of these Promises and what God freely engageth himselfe unto in them was insisted on Of this of the Promises in this regard there is one maine Fountaine or Spring whereof there are two everlasting Streames whence Thousands of refreshing Rivolets doe flow The originall Fountaine and spring of all good unto us both in respect of its being and manifestation is that He will be our God Gen 17. 1 2. I am Almighty God walke before me and be thou perfect and I will make my Covenant So every where as the bottome of his dealing with us in Covenant Ierem 31. 33. I will be their God Hos 2. 23. and they shall be my People Isai 54. 5. And in very many other places Now that he may thus be our God two things are required 1. That all Breaches and Differences between him and us be removed perfect Peace and Agreement made and we rendred acceptable and well pleasing in his sight These are the termes whereon they stand to whom he is a God in Covenant For the Accomplishment of this is the first maine streame that floweth from the former Fountaine namely the
it and to preserve it from being destroyed But may it not at one time or other be surprized into desolation No saith he I will keep it night and day but what if this vineyard prove barren what will he then doe Nay but he will so deale with it that it shall never be so barren as to cause him to cast it up He is not with it for nought his presence is attended with Grace and Kindnesse I water it saith he and that not now and then but every moment He powres out fresh supplies of his Spirit upon it to make it fruitfull Thence it becomes a vineyard of red wine v. 2. the best wine the most delicious the most pretious to cheare the heart of God himselfe as Zep 3. 17. The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty he will Save thee he will rejoyce over thee with joy he will rest in his Love he will joy over thee with singing He causes them thereby that come of Iacob to take root he makes Israel blossome and bud to fill the face of the World with fruit This is that which God promiseth his people he will not forsake them he will alwaies give them his presence in the kindnesse and supplies of a God in Covenant to protect them from others to make them fruitfull to himselfe This is his not forsaking them He will preserve them from others who shall take them out of his hand he will make them fruitfull to himselfe he will worke and who shall let him 2. The Reason why the Lord will not forsake his People why he will continue doing them good is expressed in these words for his owne name sake and in this Assertion two things are considerable 1. A tacite exclusion of any thing in themselves for which or upon Consideration whereof God will constantly abide with them It is not for their sakes for any thing in them or what they have done may or can do it is not upon the account of any Condition or qualification whatever that may or may not be found on them but meerely for his name sake which in the like case he expresseth fully Ezek. 36. 32. Not for your sakes doe I this saith the Lord be it knowne unto you be ashamed and confounded for your owne wayes oh House of Israel The truth is they may prove such as on all accounts whatever shall deserve to be rejected that nothing in appearance or in their owne sence as well as others though the root of the matter be in them may be found upon them when God takes delight in them Like those you have described at large Isai. 43. 22 23 24 25. But thou hast not called upon me Oh Jacob but thou hast been weary of me Oh Israel thou hast not brought me the small Cattell of thy burnt offerings neither hast thou honoured me with thy Sacrifices I have not caused thee to serve with an Offering nor wearied thee with Incense thou hast brought me no sweet cane with money neither hast thou filled me with the fat of thy Sacrifices but thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes thou hast wearied me with thine iniquities I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes any more Weary of God they are neglecting his worship making his Patience and Forbearance to serve with their iniquities It seemes to be impossible almost for any Creature to apprehend that God will not give them up to everlasting confusion Yea perhaps they may be forward in their follies and contend with God when he goes to heale them Isai. 57. 17. For the iniquity of his covetousnesse was I wroth and smote him I hid me and was wroth and he went on forwardly in the way of his heart Iniquity is upon them a vile iniquity the iniquity of Covetousnesse God is wroth with them and smites and hides him and they goe on frowardly and yet for all this he forsakes not for ever he abides to be their God and that because his so doing is not bottomed on any consideration of what they are have been or will be but he doth it for his Names sake and with regard unto that which thereupon he will doe for them And upon this account this Promise of Gods abiding and continuing with his let Grace be never so weake corruption never so strong temptations never so violent may be pleaded and the Lord rejoyces to be put in remembrance of it by the weakest frailest sinfullest Saint or Believer in the World 2. The Cause or reason is positively expressed § 6. why God will not forsake them it is for his Great Name sake His Great name is all that he consults withall about his continuance with his people this he calls himselfe Isa. 43. 25. I blot out thy sinnes for my own sake that is for no other cause in world that may by found in thee or upon thee The Name of God is all that whereby to us he is knowne all his Attributes his whole will all his Glory When God is said to doe any thing for his name it is either the Cause and End of what he doth or the Principle from whence with the motive wherefore he doth it that is by him intended In the first sence to doe a thing for his Name sake is to doe it for the manifestation of his Glory that he may be known to be a God in the Excellency of those Perfections whereby he reveals himselfe to his with most frequently a speciall regard to his Faithfulnesse and Grace it is in those properties to make himselfe knowne and to be exalted in the hearts of his So all his dispensations in Jesus Christ are for the praise of his glorious Grace Eph. 1. 6. That he may be exalted lifted up made knowne believed and received as a God pardoning iniquity in the Sonne of his Love And in this sence may the Lord be said to abide with his people for his Name sake for the exalting of his Glory that he may be known to be a God faithfull in Covenant and unchangeable in his Love who will not cast off for ever those whom he hath once received into favour It will not enter into the hearts of Believers sometimes why the Lord should so deale with them as he doth and not cast them off their soules may goe to rest as to this thing he himselfe is glorious herein he is exalted and doth it on that account 2 ly If by his name you understand the principle from whence he worketh and his motive thereunto as it comprehends the whole long-suffering gratious tender unchangeable nature of God according as he hath revealed himselfe in Iesus Christ in whom his name is Ex. 23. 21. and which he hath committed to him to be manifested Ioh 17. 6. so evidently two things in God are engaged when he promiseth to work for his Names sake or according to his great Name 1. His Power or sufficiency
Upon the engagement of the Name of God on his peoples behalfe Moses carefully pleads this latter or part thereof Num 14. 17 18 19. God hath given his Name unto his people and this is wrapt up in that mercy that he will lay out his Power to pardon heale and doe them good in his preserving of them and abiding with them Let thy Power be great according as thou hast spoken the Lord is long suffering and as when he workes for his name the way whereby he will doe it is according to the greatnesse of his Power so the fountaine and rise from whence he will doe it is 2. His Goodnesse Ioh. 17. 3 26 Kindnesse Love Patience Mercy Grace Faithfulnesse in Jesus Christ. Psal. 22. 22. And thus under the title of his Name doth he call poore afflicted Psal. 63. 4. darke hopelesse helpelesse Creatures upon any other account in the World persons ready to be swallowed up in disconsolation and sorrow Psal. 69. 30. to rest upon him Isa 50. 10. Who is among you that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voyce of his Servant that walketh in darknesse and hath no light let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God When all other holds are gon when flesh failes and heart failes then doth God call poore soules to rest upon this Name of his So the Psalmist Psal 73. 26. My flesh and my heart faileth all strength naturall and spirituall faileth and is gone but God is the strength of my heart saith he and my portion for ever Now this is the sole motive also of Gods continuance with his He will doe it because he himselfe is good gracious mercifull loving tender and he will lay out these Properties to the utmost in their behalfe that it may be well with them lifting up exalting and making himselfe Gracious in so doing This the Lord emphatically expresseth five times in one verse Isa. 46. 4. ●ven to your old age I am he even to hoary haires will I carry you I have made and I will beare I will carry and will deliver you this then I say is the reason and only ground This the principall aime and End upon the account whereof the Lord will not forsake his People 3. The Rise of all this Goodnesse §. 7. Kindnesse Faithfulnesse of God to his People as to the exercise of it is also expressed and that is his own good pleasure because it hath pleased the Lord to make you his People This is the spring and fountaine of all the goodnesse mentioned God is essentially in himselfe of a good gracious and loving nature but he acts all these properties as to works that outwardly are of him according to the Counsell of his Will Eph 1. 11. according to the Purpose which he purposeth in himselfe and his Purposes all of them have no other rise or cause but his own good pleasure Why did the Lord make us his People towards whom he might act according to the Gracious Properties of his nature yea and lay them forth and exercise them to the utmost on our behalfe Was it because we were better then others did his Will walked with him Did he declare we should be his People upon condition we did so and so Not on any of these or the like grounds of proceeding doth he doe this but meerely because it pleaseth him to make us his People Mat 11. 26. and shall we think that he who took us to be his People notwithstanding our universall alienation from him on the account of his own good pleasure which caused him to make us his People that is obedient believing separated from the World will upon any account being himselfe Unchangeable not perserve us in but reject us from that Condition Thus is God's Mercy in not forsaking his People resolved into its originall principle viz. his owne good-pleasure in choosing of them carried on by the Goodnesse Unchangeablenesse of his own Nature to the appointed Issue This then is the summe of this Argument What worke or Designe the Lord entereth upon meerly from his own good pleasure or solely in answer to the Purpose which he purposeth in himselfe and engageth to continue in Mercy for his Name sake thereby taking upon him to remove or prevent what ever might hinder the accomplishment of that Purpose Work or Designe of his that he will abide in unchangeable to the end But this is the state of the Lords undertaking to abide with his People as hath been manifested at large Let us adde in the next place that of the Psalmist §. 8. Ps. 23. 4 6. Though I walke through the vally of the shaddow of death I will feare none evill for thou art with me thy rod thy staffe doth comfort me Surely Goodnesse mercy shall follow me all the dayes of my life and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever The Psalmist expresseth an exceeding confidence in the middest of most inexpressible troubles and pressures He supposes himselfe walking through the vally of the shadow of death as death is the worst of evills and comprehensive of them all so the shaddow of death is the most dismall and darke Representation of those evills to the Soule and the vally of that shaddow the most dreadful bottome and depth of that Representation This then the Prophet supposed that he may be brought into a condition wherein he may be overwhelmed with sad apprehensions of the comeing of a confluence of all manner of evills upon him and that not for a short season but he may be necessitated to walke in them which denotes a state of some continuance a conflicting with most dismall evills and in their owne nature tending to death is in the supposall What then would he do if he should be brought into this estate Saith he even in that condition in such distresse wherein I am to my owne and the eyes of others hopelesse helpelesse gone and lost I will feare none evill A noble resolution if there be a sufficient bottome foundation for it that it may not be accounted rashnesse groundlesse confidence but true Spirituall courage and holy Resolution Saith he it is because the Lord is with me But alas what if the Lord should now forsake thee in this Condition and give thee up to the power of thine enemies and suffer thee by the strength of thy Temptations wherewith thou art beset to fall utterly from him Surely then thou wouldest be swallowed up for ever the waters would go over thy Soule and thou must for ever lye downe in the shades of death Yea but saith he I have an assurance of the contrary Goodnesse and Mercy shall follow me all the dayes of my life But this is say some a very desperate perswasion If thou art sure that Goodnes Mercy shall follow thee all the dayes of thy life then live as thou pleasest as loosly as flesh can desire as wickedly as Sathan
antecedently to all the Grace which he worketh in us whether the Spirit be bestowed on men on the account of Christ's undertaking for them none can question but they must withall deny him to be the Mediator of the new Covenant The Spirit of Grace is the principall Promise thereof Isa. 59. 20 21. We are blessed with all Spirituall Blessings in Christ Ephes. 1. 3. Surely the holy Spirit himselfe so often Promised to us of God is a Spirituall Blessing God's bestowing Faith on us is antecedent to our Believing this also is given upon the account of Christ. Phil. 1. 29. It is given to us on the behalfe of Christ to Believe on him If then God for Christs sake antecedently to any thing that is good that is not enmity to him that is not iniquity in men do bestow on them all that ever is good in them as to the root principle of it surely his quarrell against their sins is put to an Issue Thence Christ being said to make Reconciliation for the sins of the people Heb. 2. 17. God as one pacifyed and attoned thereupon is said to be in him reconciling the world unto himselfe 2 Cor. Eph. 2. 13 24 5. 19. And in the dispensation of the Gospell he is still set forth as one carrying on that peace whose foundation is laid in the blood of his Sonne by the Attonement of his Justice and we are said to accept or receive the Attonement Rom. 5. 10. We receive it by Faith it being accepted by him Thus his death and Oblation is said to be a Sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour Eph. 5. 2. that wherein God is abundantly delighted wherewith his soule is fully satisfyed so that as when he smelt a sweet savour from the Sacrifice of Noah Gen. 8. 21. he sware he would curse the Earth no more smelling this sweet savour of the Oblation of Christ on the account of them for whom it was Offered John 17. 19. he will not execute the Curse on them whereof they were guilty Rom. 5. 10. I might also insist on those Testimonies for the further proofe of the former Assertion Rom. 6. 6. where an immediate efficacy for the taking away of sinne 2 Cor. 5. 21. is ascribed to the death of Christ Eph. 5. 25. 26 But what hath been spoken may at present suffice Titus 2. 14. The Premises considered § 14. some Light may be brought forth to discover the various mistakes of men Heb. 9. 14. about the effects of the Death of Christ Heb. 10. 14. as to the taking away of sinne 1 Pet. 2. 24. if that were now the matter before us Some having truly fixed their thoughts on the efficacy of the death of Christ 1 Joh. 1. 7. for Abolition of sin Revel 1. 5 6 doe give their Lusts and darknesse leave to make wretched inferences thereupō as that therefore because we are so compleatly justified accepted before without our believing or the consideration of any thing what ever in us that therefore sinne is nothing nor at all to be accounted of And though they say we must not sinne that Grace may abound yet too many by wofull experience have discovered what such corrupt Conclusions have tended unto Others againe fixing themselves on the necessity of Obedience and the concurrence of actuall Faith to the compleating of justification in the soule of the sinner with a no lesse dangerous reflection upon the Truth do suspend the efficacy of the death of Christ upon our believing which gives life vigour virtue unto it as they say is the sole originally discriminating cause of all the benefits we receive thereby without the antecedent accomplishment of that condition in us or our Actuall believing it is not say they nor will be usefull yea that the intention of God is to bestow upon us the fruits and effects of the death of Christ upon condition we do Believe which that we shall is no part of his purchase and which we can of our selves performe say some of them others not Doubtlesse these things are not being rightly stated in the least inconsistent Christ may have his due and we bound to the performance of our duty which might be cleared by an enlargement of the ensuing Considerations 1. First That all good things that are spirituall whatsoever that are wrought either for men or in them are fruits of the death of Christ. They have nothing of themselves but nakednesse bloud and sinne guilt and impenitency so that it is of indispensable necessity that God should shew them favour antecedently to any Act of their Believing on him Faith is given for Christs sake as was observed 2. Secondly That all the Effects and Fruits of the death of Christ antecedent to our Believing are deposited in the hand of the Righteousnesse and Faithfulnesse of God 1 Tim. 2. 5 6. to whom as a ransome Heb. 2. 17. it was paid as an Attonement it was offered before whom as a price and purchase it was laid downe It is all left in the hands of Gods Faithfulnesse 2 Cor. 5. 18 19. Righteousnesse Mercy and Grace to be made out effectually to them 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. for whom he died in the appointed time or season So that 3. Thirdly The state or condition of those for whom Christ died is not actually and really changed by his death Eph. 2. 1 2 3 4 5. in its selfe but they lye under the curse whilest they are in the state of nature unregenerate and all effects of sinne whatever John 3. 36. That which is procured for them is left in the hand of the Father They are not in the least intrusted with it untill the Appointed time do come 4 Fourthly That Faith and Beliefe are necessary not to adde any thing to compleat the procurement of forgivenesse of sins any or all but only to the Actuall receiving of it when upon the account of the death of Christ it pleaseth God in the Promise of the Gospell to hold it out and impart it unto the soule thereby compleating Covenant-justification And thus the whole businesse of Salvation may be resolved into the mediation of Christ and yet men carried on under an orderly dispensation of Law and Gospell into the enjoyment of it Acts 13. 38 39. Of the whole these degrees are considerable 1 Gods eternall purpose of saving some Rom. 5. 10. in and by the mediation of Christ Joh. 3. 16 that mediation of Christ being interposed between the purpose of God Rom. 5. 7 8. and the accomplishment of the thing purposed 1 Joh. 4. 10. as the fruit and effect of the one Heb. 2. 17. 9. 14. the meritorious procuring cause of the other This Act of the Will of God Eph. 1. 4 5. 6 7 8 9. c. the Scripture knowes by no other name then that of Election or Predestination or the Purpose
degrees than the other may have a peculiar Act or method of perswading above the other That which is now undertaken to be proved is §. 24. That God doth not make use of Exhortations as meanes for the establishing of the Saints in believing and confirming their Perseverance This is that which by us is assigned unto them and this all that the Nature of them doth require that they should be used unto the certainty of the event whereunto they are applied depending not on their Nature as such meanes but on the purpose of God to use them for that end which he hath designed and promised to bring about and accomplish Before he ventures on any opposition to the intendment of this Assertion he phraseth it so as either to render it unintelligible to himselfe and others or if any thing be signified by the expressions he useth to divert it wholly from the mind of them and their sence with whom he hath to doe Who ever said that God by Exhortations doth influence the Wills of men upon such termes as to make them Infrustrably and necessitatingly willing to Persevere Or can he tell us what 's the meaning of those termes Infrustrably Necessitatingly willing to Persevere Though t is easy to guesse at what he here intends yet t is farre above my shallow capacity to reach the sence of these expressions How any of these termes relating to the event and issue of things and in what sence they may be used I have often shewed As relating either to the manner of Gods operation in and upon the Will or the Wills elicitation of its own act any farther then by relation to that Axiome Vnumquodque quod est dum est necesse est they expresse neither our sence nor any bodies else that I know That which I shall make bold to take up for M. Goodwins intendment is That God doth not by Exhortations effectually cause the Saints to Persevere To be willing to Persevere is to Persevere to be Necessitatingly willing is I know not what Now if such an efficacy be ascribed to Exhortations as teaches the certainty of the effect so that the certainty of the effect as to the event should be asserted to depend on them as such meanes this is nothing to us we ascribe an efficacy to them in proprio genere but the certainty of that event to whose production they concurre we affirme as hath been abundantly declared to depend on other causes But the proofe of what is here Asserted outrunnes for uncouth strangenesse §. 25. the Assertion it selfe equis albis as they say For saith he if this be so that is as you have heard above how neither he nor wee know then the same Act of the Will should be both Physicall and Morall And First Why so Because Physicall Morall meanes are used for the producing of it as though sundry causes of severall kinds might not concurre to produce one uniforme effect farre enough from a necessity of receiving so much as a Denomination from each of them In the concurrence of severall causes whereof some may be Free and Contingent others Naturall and Necessary the Effect Absolutely followes its next and immediate cause alone God causes the Sunne to shine freely yet is the shining of the Sunne a necessary Effect of the Sunne and not any way free or contingent God determined the peircing of Christs side and so as to the event made it necessary but yet was the doing of it in then that did it free as to the manner of its doing no way necessary But Secondly §. 26. suppose the same act of the will should be said to be both Physicall and Morall upon severall accounts And what if every Act of the will in and about things good or bad be so And it be utterly impossible it should be otherwise Yea But then the same Act should be specifically distinguished in and from it selfe Yea but who told you so The tearmes of Physicall and Morall as related to the Acts of the will are very farre from constituting different kinds or species of Acts being only severall Denominations of the same individuall acts upon severall regards and accounts The acts of the will as they flow from that Naturall faculty or are elicited thereby are all Physicall but as they relate to a Law whence they are good or evill they are Morall the one tearme expresseth their beeing the other their regularity and conformity to some Rule whereunto their Agents are obliged Quid dignum tanto If by Physicall and Morall Mr Goodwin intends Necessary and Free being the first that ever abused those words and in that abuse of them not consistent with himselfe affirming afterwards the act of a Ministers preaching as proceeding from his Abilityes of Understanding and speaking to be Physicall or Naturall which yet he will not averre to be Necessary but Free he should have told us so and then though we would not grant that the same Act may not in severall respects be both Necessary Free the latter in respect of the manner of its performanee and nature of its imediate cause the former in respect of the Event the determination of its first Causes yet its consequent is so palpably false as to the advancing of his former Assertion that t' would have been directly denyed without any farther trouble But he adds §. 27. It must needs be Physicall because it is produced by the Physicall working of the Spirit of God which being a Physicall Action cannot produce a Morall effect Ans. By Physicall Operation of God on and with the will we understand only that which is really and effectually so as different from that which is only Morall and by way of motive and perswasion Now this we say is twofold The first consisting in the Concourse of God as the first cause and Author of all Beeings to the producing of every entity such as the acts of the wills of men are this in such a way as is not only consistent with the Liberty of the VVill in all its Acts and Actings whatever but also as is the Foundation of all the Liberty that the will hath in its actings And in respect of this Influence of God the effect produced is only Phisicall or Naturall having such a being as is proper to it as also t is in respect of the will it selfe and its concurrence in operation The other is that which Mr Goodwin here calls The irresistible force or power of the Spirit destinguishing the efficacy of the Spirit and Grace of God in their working in us to will and to do producing those effects as they are good and Gracious in reference to their Rise End and Rule whereunto they are related This then is that which by Mr Goodwin is here asserted That if there be such an effectuall reall working of the Spirit and Grace of God in us to the producing of any act of the VVills of men they cannot be Morall
in hand as the fine notions of the Spirits returne to move Believers when his motions have been rejected with the manner whereof according to his conception must be afterwards considered apart as the fall of David into Adultery and Murther if there be need to go forth to the consideration of his examples and instances and therefore I shall not longer insist upon it only the close of it consisting of an inference made from some words of Peter Martyr deserves consideration Vpon Davids sinne saith he Peter Martyr makes this observation That the Saints themselves being once fallen into sinne would alwayes remaine in the pollution of it did not God by his mighty Word bring them out of it which saying of Martyr clearely also implyes that the Saints many times sinne with their whole wills and full consents because were any part of their wills bent against the commiting of the sinne at the time when it is committed they would questionlesse returne to themselves and repent immediately after the beat and violence of the Lust being over by reason of the satisfaction that hath been given thereunto Ans. The close insinuation in Peter Martyr's words of the Saints sinning with their whole wills and the Logicke of Mr Goodwin's inference from them I believe is very much hidden from the Reader To the Theology of it I say that the Saints 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do immediately returne to God by Repentance as Peter did upon their surprisalls into sinne nor have they any rest in a condition of the Eclipse of the countenance of God from them as upon sinne it is alwayes more or lesse of Davids particular case mention may afterwards be made But the proofe that they sinne with their whole wills and full consent because they would continue in sinne did not the Lord relieve and deliver them by his word and Grace is admirable I would adventure to cast this Argument into as many shapes as it is tolerably capable of had I the least hope to cause it to appeare any way Argumentatives we deny then that Believers have any such power habitually residing in them as whereby without any new supplyes of the Spirit or concurrence of actuall Grace they can effectually and eventually recover themselves from any sinne whatever Which supplyes of the Spirit and Grace we say and have proved are freely promised to them in the covenant of Graces But what will here follow to the supportment of Mr Goodwin's Hypothesis that therefore in all their sinnes or in any of their sinnes they sinne with the full and whole consent of their wills I suppose he alone knowes Sect. §. 23 26. He endeavoures to take off that of the Apostle Rom. 7. 19 20. from appearing against him in this cause of the Saints finning with their whole wills and consents not not-willing the things they do to this end he tells us That when the Apostle saith the evill which I would not that I do his meaning is not that he did that which at the same time that he did it he was not willing either in whole or in part to do but that he sometimes did that upon a surprisall by temptation or through incogitancy which he was not habitually willing or disposed in the inward man to do But this no wayes implyes but that at the time when he did the evill he speakes of he did it with the full and entire consent of his will Ans. 1. It is probable the Apostle knew his owne meaning and also how to expresse it having so good a teacher to that end and purpose as he had now he assures us in the person of a Regenerate man that as what He would He did not so what He did He would not He hated it v. 15 16. And againe he did that which he would not and therein consented to the Law by his not willing of that he did that it was good which whether it expresse not a Renitency of the will to that which was done in part and so farre as to make the Action it selfe remisse and not to enwrappe the whole consent of the will he farther declares v. 17. telling us that there is a perfect unconsenting I or internall principle in the very doing of evill Is is no more I that do it but sinne that dwelleth in me 2. The Apostle doth not say what he was not habitually willing to but what he was habitually unwilling to that is what the bent of his will lay habitually against having actuall inclinations and elicite acts alwayes to the contrary though sometimes overcome Neither in his discoursing of it doth he mention at all the surprisall of sin upon incogitancy inadvertency but the constant frame temper of a regenerate man upon the powerfull acting striving of the principle of lust and sin dwelling in him and remaining with him which saith the Apostle doth often carry them out to do those things which are contrary to the principle of the inward man which habitually condemnes and actually wills not or rather nills the things that are so done even in their doing And this doth manifest sufficiently that when he did the evil he speakes of he did it not with the full and entire consent of his will as men do in whom there is no such principle opposite to sinne and sinning as is in him that is Regenerate there being very much taken off by the habituall principle of Grace that is in them and its constant inclinations to the contrary But he farther argues §. 24. If we shall affirme that the contrary bent or motions of his will at other times is a sufficient proofe that when he did the evill we speake of he did it not with his whole will or fulnesse of consent in such a sence is a distinguishing Character betwixt men Regenerate and unregenerate we shall bring Herod and Pilate and probably Judas himselfe into the list of men Regenerate with a thousand more whom the Scripture knowes not under any such name or relation viz. all those whose Judgments and consciences stand against the evill of the wayes and practises wherein they walke And this he proves at large to the end of the Section in the instance of Herod and Pilate proceeding against their owne Judgements and Consciences in the killing of John and of our Saviour Ans. First we do not only assert a contrary bent and inclination in the Wills of Believers at other times but also that in and under the prevalency of indwelling sinne there is in them an I that doth it not and a not-willing it from a Principle though by reason of the present prevalency of the other its actings and stirrings are not so sensibly perceived So that though they prevaile not to the totall prevention of the will from exerting the Act of sinne yet they prevaile to the impairing weakening and making remisse its consent thereunto Secondly The residue of this Paragraph is intolerably Sophisticall confounding the Renitencie of the inward
and all the wayes of it and all the fruits thereof and the Spirit lusteth against the flesh with all its wayes and fruits Fourthly it appeares then that this being the description of a Regenerate man which the Apostle gives as to indwelling sinne and all the fruits thereof that it is most ridiculous to exempt his frame in respect of such sinnes as they may fall into by surprisalls of temptations from this description of him and so to frame this distinction to the Apostles generall Rule that it holds in cases ordinary but not in extraordinary when nothing in the whole Context gives the least allowance or continuance to such a limitation It appears then notwithstanding any thing offered here to the contrary upon due consideration of it that Believers sinne not with their whole wills and full consents at any time §. 26. nor under the power of what temptation soever they may fall for a season and that because of the Residence of this principle of a contrary tendency unto sinne in their wills which is allwayes acting either directly in inclining unto good or in taking off or making remisse the consent of the will to sinne not withstanding the prevalency of the principle opposite thereunto by its committing of sinne And hence have we sufficient Light for the weakning of the Argument proposed in the beginning of this Chap. §. 27. For though it is weak in its Foundation as shall be shewed concluding to what the Saints may do from what is forbiddē them to do that prohibition being the Ordinance of God certainly to preserve thē from it yet taking it for granted that they may fall into the sin intimated yet seeing they do it not customarily not maliciously not with the full and whole consent of their wills that there is a principle in them still opposing sin though at any time weakened by sinne and the conclusion of that Argument concernes them not I say then First to the Major proposition they who are in a capacity and possibility that is an universall possibility not only in respect of an internall principle but of all outward prohibiting causes as the purpose and Promise of God of perpetrating the workes of the flesh not of bringing forth any fruits of the lusting of the flesh which are in the best willingly and ordinarily with the full and whole consent of their wills in which sence alone such workes of the flesh are absolutely exclusive from the Kingdome of Heaven they may posibly fall out of the favour of God and into destruction This proposition being thus limited and the termes of it cleared for to cause it to passe I absolutely deny the minor that true Believers do or can so sinne that is so bring forth the workes of the flesh as to leave no roome for the continuance of Mercy to them according to the tenour of the Covenant of Grace But now frame the Proposition so as the Assumption may comprise Believers we shall quickly know what to judge of it Those who are in a capacity or possibility of falling into such sinnes as deserve rejection from God or of perpetrating workes of the flesh though they do so overborne by the power of temptation nilling the things they do not abiding in their sinnes may fall totally and finally from God but Believers may so do As the matter is thus stated the Assumption may be allowed to passe upon Believers but we absolutely deny the Major Proposition in the sence wherein it is urged I shall only adde that when we deny that Believers can possibly fall away it is not any absolute impossibility we intend nor an impossibility with respect to any principle in them only that in and from it selfe is not perishable nor an impossibility in respect of the manner of their acting but such an one as principally respecting the outward removing cause of such an actuall defection will infallibly prevent the event of it And thus is the cloud raised by this fifth Argument dispelled and scattered by the light of the very first consideration of the difference in sinning that is between Regenerate and unregenerate men so that it will be an easy thing to remove take a way what afterwards is insisted on for the reinforcement and confirmation of the severall Propositions of it The Major Proposition he confirmes from Gal. §. 28. 5. 21. Eph. 5. 5 6. 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. All affirming that neither whoremongers nor adulterers nor idolaters nor the like have any inheritance in the Kingdome of God or can be Saved That the intendment of the Apostle is concerning them who live in a course of such sinnes who sinne with their whole wills and from an evill roote with whose sappe they are wholly leavened tainted throughout not them who through the strength of temptation and the surprisalls of it not without the renitency in their wills unto all sin any sin the sinne wherewith they are overtaken may possibly fall into any such sinne as did David and Peter was before declared and in that sence we grant the Proposition For the proofe of the Minor Proposition which should be that Believers may perpetrate the Workes of the flesh in the sence intended in the places of Scripture before mentioned he insists on two things First the direction of those Scriptures unto Believers Secondly the Experience of the wayes of such persons that is of Believers The Apostle tells Believers that they who commit such and such things with such and such circumstances in their commitment cannot be saved therefore Believers may commit those sinnes in the manner intended What hath been said before of the use of threatnings and denunciations of judgements on impenitent sinners in respect of Believers will give a sufficient account if there be need of any for our deniall of this consequence and for the Second that the experience of such mens waies and walking evinceth it it is a plaine begging of the thing under debate and an assuming of that which was proposed to be proved a thing unjustly charged by him on his Adversaries as though they should confesse that Believers might sinne to the extent of the lines drawn out in the places of Scripture mentioned and yet not loose their faith when because they cannot loose their Faith they deny that they can sinne to that compasse of excesse and riot intimated I cannot see then §. 29. to what end and purpose the whole ensuing discourse from the beginning of this Argument to the end of the 21. Sect. is It is acknowledged that all those places doe concerne Believers The intendment of the Holy Ghost in them being to discover to them the nature of the sinne specified and the end of the committing of them in the way intended and that God purposes to proceed according to the importance of what is threatned to those sinnes so committed with all that doe them that so they may walk watchfully and carefully avoiding not only those things