Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n apostle_n faith_n grace_n 1,407 5 5.8253 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A01033 A treatise tending to cleare the doctrine of iustification. Written by Io. Forbes, pastour of the English Church at Middelburgh, for the instruction of his flocke: and now published by some of them for the good of others Forbes, John, 1568?-1634. 1616 (1616) STC 11136; ESTC S102456 151,671 206

There are 21 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

1. vers 19. and out of whose fulnes we all receive grace Iohn chap. 1. vers 16. therefore he is said to fill all in all things Eph. chap. 1. vers 23. and to be the first borne amongst many Bretheren Romanes chap. 8. vers 29. and to have the preeminence in all things Coll. chap 1. vers 18. and to be the first fruites 1 Corinth chap. 15. ver 23. The third obiect is our selves who out of Christs fulnes have received grace For even in vs it may be seene what is the riches of the glory of the inheritance of God and what is the exceeding greatnes of his power Eph. chap. 1. vers 18. and 19. Thus our life and salvation is first in God himselfe as in the first fountaine and in him it is ours by the eternall purpose and Decree of his good will and pleasure Secondly it is in Christ as the Mediator betwixt God and vs to whom belongeth the birthright and all the blessings thereof and that not only in consideration of his divine nature in respect whereof he alone is only Sonne and heyre of all things but also in consideration of his humane nature in the which by personall vnion thereof with his divine nature hee is become the Sonne of God and our Brother and is made head both of Men and Angells Thirdly life and salvation is in vs who are in Christ through whom as the appointed meane we receive from God all saving graces for nothing cōmeth to vs from God immediatly but mediatly through Christ in whom only all the promises of God are yea and amen 2 Cor. cha 1. ver 20. And therefore the Decree of God is first accomplished in him as our head and Prince of our salvation who must bring the rest of his Fathers children vnto glory Heb. ch 2. ver 10. as being the first fruites of them that sleepe 1 Cor. cha 15. ver 20. and our forerunner vnto heaven Hebr. chap. 6. vers 20. Of this it is evident that nothing of all Gods Decree is accōplished in vs vntil first it be accōplished in Christ And in whatsoever order God performeth al things in him in that same order doth he also performe thē in vs so that whatsoever blessing is first accomplished by God in Christ the man must needes be the first in order both in Gods Decree and dispensation towards vs. Now albeit in all these three obiects our happines bee to bee considered yet in none of them can we so cleerlie perceive it as in Christ who is the only Image of the invisible God Colloss chap. 1. vers 14. in whom onely God is manifested For all that ever we are to see of God either in this life or in the life to come we are to see it only in Christ for which cause the Ministers of the Gospell are said to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ 2 Cor. ch 4. ver 6. And as God himselfe so also his grace is only to be seene in the Lord Iesus Therfore saith the Apostle 2 Tim. c. 1. v. 9. 10. that the grace of God which was given vs in Christ before the world was is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Iesus Christ And as touching our selves whatsoever grace or glory commeth vnto vs by the sight of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ it is in vs but in part which in him is fully And many things yet rest vnaccomplished in vs which are accomplished in him having in vs no other subsisting but that which faith giveth them Wherefore the Apostle speaking of the glory wherewith God hath crowned man which yet we cannot see in our selves sendeth vs to Iesus as to the cleerest light whereby to perceive the accomplishment of that which is written touching man in the 8. Psalm Hebr. ch 2. vers 6. and for this cause saith Augustin that Christ himselfe is the cleerest light of predestination and grace Whose humane nature did by no preceeding merit either of faith or workes purchase that it should be received in vnitie of person by the Sonne of God so that that Man should bee the only Sonne of God for Christ the Man as he is Man is made the Sonne of God of meere grace who according to his divine nature was from everlasting the only begotten Sonne of God Seeing therfore that in Christ the cleerest sight of predesti and grace is to be had if we would know in what order God doth adopt iustifie vs we must first cōsider in what order God maketh Christ adoption righteousnes vnto vs. For if he make him our brother in order before he make him our redēption of righteousnes thē surly our adoptiō in order must go before our iustificatiō Concerning Christ it is cleere in the Scripturs that it is so whether we respect Gods election before all time or his performing therof in time for the one that is the dignity of Christ as man to be the Son of God is performed in the incarnatiō the other wherby he is made our righteousnes is therafter accomplished in his suffring For when the word was made flesh that flesh in subsisting and personalitie was made the Son of God never having frō the first moment of cōception any subsisting a part of it own but only that of the second person of the Trinitie beeing not so much as cōceived by the H. Ghost in the wombe of Marie but in vnitie of person with the eternal Son of God Therfore iustly do the Fathers call this benefit gratiam Vnionis that is the grace of Vnion Thus in the very first action of Dispensation toward the Son of Marie the grace of siliation shineth cleerely before all other grace After which in order followeth the action of God making him our righteousnes when as he made him now being his Sonne in our nature sinne for vs which he could not haue bene made for vs vntill first he was our brother Like as we can have no right to his redemption except we first be his brethren For brotherhood is the foundation of redemption in so farr that according to the Lawe and Ordinance of God Christ can not offer vp him selfe a ransome for any vnto God but such as are his bretheren Neither can any have part or portion in his oblation whose brother he is not For hee that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one wherefore he is not ashamed to call them Brethren Hebr. chap. 2. vers 11. This ground is made manifest by the lawe of God whereby it is ordayned that the first borne of every man and beast that is the male that first openeth the wombe and the first ripe of all fruites shall be offered and consecrate to the Lord that in the consecration thereof all the rest comming of the same Wombe or being of the same Masse or Kinde might likewise bee consecrated to God For as sayeth the Apostle
to the faith and assurance of the remission of our sinnes by making him sinne for vs and woundinge him for our transgressions So to conclude this point albeit all blessing bee in Christ and he be made of God wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemptiō yet all this shal be in vaine to vs except we beleeve because there is no meanes in the world whereby to obtaine possesse Christ or any blessing in him except faith only For as concerning the Word and Sacraments they are not so much the meanes of our possessing Christ as the meanes of our faith whereby we possesse Christ The third vse and end wherefore faith is given is keeping preserving vs in the possession which it hath brought vnto vs and that both because through faith wee are kept vnto salvation as saieth Pet. 1. Epi. 1. 5. and also because by it wee keepe Christ and all his blessings in our heart For which cause the scriptures place our victorie over Satan sinne and the world in our faith Ioh. 1. Epi. ca. 5. ver 4. 5. and the Apost Paul placeth the chief strength of a Christlan in his faith as that whereby we are made able to quench all the fierie dartes of the Divell Eph. 6. 16. so that there is no enemie of our salvation so great neither any temptation so vehement and fierie which by faith wee are not made able to overcome Thus faith wrought in our heartes by God is of a stronger might and power then the Divel himselfe and all the powers and principalities of darknes therfore Pet. 1. Ep. 5. willeth vs to resist the divel by being stedfast in the faith thereby to teach vs that in a stedfast faith there is strēgth to overcome him The examples of the great power of God which is ●n them that beleeve set downe in Heb 11. doth su●●iciētly cleer the truth hereof who only by faith are said to have performed suffered so strange wonderful things as no power that ever nature hath given vnto man was able either to performe or suffer This also is manifest if we marke another pointe which is the Saintes recouering of them selves when they have appeared to have bene overthrowen by Sathan in sinne who notwithstanding have by the strength of faith onely recovered victorie over Sathan and sinne So when as in our practise and obedience to God we fall most fearfully yet by faith we not onely overcome our owne guilthines but also all the feare of Gods iust deserved wrath for our guilthines so that our verie sinnes cannot seperate our heartes that beleeve from Christ nor remove the favour of God from vs. For whatsoever blessing wee have once obtayned by faith by that same saith wee are made able to holde it fast to the ende and the faithfull heart sayeth as Iob chap 27. ver 6. I will keepe my righteousnes and will not forsake it and my heart shall never cast it away all my dayes Vpon this ground it is that the Apostle willeth Timothie to fight the good fight of faith 1. Tim. chap. 6. vers 12. because indeed our faith hath the greatest labour in our spiriruall bataile For when all other grace faileth vs yet faith must vpholde vs otherwise we could not possibly but perish For what should have become of Pieter after his fearefull fall if faith had not sustained him This point is yet more cleere if we marke the strength of faith in other two thinges The first is if we shall consider the examples of the children of God who have drawn from God manifold great blessinges by faith as their vncurable diseases to bee cured their dead to be raysed c. Of which a lively example wee have in Math. chap. 9. and Luke chap. 8. in the Woman that had an ishewe of bloud 12. yeares longe and in the wordes of Christ vnto Iairus Luke chap. 8. ver 50. where he saith Feare not beleeve onely and shee shal be saved The other thing to be considered of vs is when God himself seemeth to set him selfe against his children and they are compelled to wrestle with God as with their owne enimie yet by faith they overcome say with Iob 13. 15. Though hee slay me yet will I trust in him And this was liuely shadowed in the Lord his wrestling with Iacob Gen. chap. 32. where it is saide of the Lord that when he sawe that he could not prevaile against Iacob he touched the hollowe of his thigh c. therefore saieth the Prophet Hose cap. 12. ver 3. 4. By his strength hee had power with God and had power over the Angell and prevayled And this the Lord setteth downe expresly to shew vs that the power of God in him that beleeveth is able so to strengthen him that nothing is able to overthrow him To conclude this point that which Angells by nature could not doe in heaven and that which Adam could not doe in Paradise a poore fraile wretch beleeving in the Lorde Iesus is made able to doe by the power of God which dwelleth in his heart by faith for the verie weaknes of God is stronger then Men and Angells and it pleaseth the Lorde to magnifie his strength in our weaknes that the excellencie of this worke may be knowen to be of him and not of vs. For this cause as the Scripture calleth faith our victorie and our shield so the Fathers likewise cal it and moreover the key whereby the treasures that are in Christ are opened vnto vs the ladder by the which we climbe vp from earth to heauen Now the last vse and end wherefore Faith is given is practise that is to make vs able to doe the will of the Lord and obey his commandements for man whose imaginations are nothing but vanitie and that continually and is of no strength of him selfe to performe any good worke neyther is nor can be subiect to the lawe of God having his minde continually sett on evill workes having no goodnes at all dwelling in him is by this supernaturall gift of faith made able to doe the will of the Lord from the hearte for thereby not onely is his darkened vnderstanding illuminate that he may know what is that good acceptable and perfect will of God but also his rebellious will subdued to will and to doe the will of the Lord and his whole affections sanctified to love the lawe of God and to delight in it more then in all treasures and to esteeme it more precious then gold For by faith he is buried with Christ and also hee is raysed vp with Christ by the faith of the effectuall working of God who raysed Christ from the dead Colos chap. 2. ver 13. For which cause also the Apostle Paul to the Ephe. ca. 2. shewing what is the exceeding power of God in thē that beleeve saieth That we that were dead in sinnes are through the grace of God by faith quickened raysed and made to sit together in heaven in Christ
creatures These have bene the causes of my vnwillingnes to give any thing in write and that now being overcome by your request I doe follow a plaine maner of declaration of my minde without contention with anie or direct disputing against anie as being resolved to have no parte in the noysome wrangling of this contentious age But as one desirous to walke honestlie in all things I endevour to keepe mee within the measure of my owne faith and to benefitt the Church of God with that which he hath given me not hindring nor envying that others who have receyved more do more good in our common Lords worke Of whom as hee who is onely able to give it I most humbly crave the gratious direction of his spirit in this and all my labours with his blessing therevpon to your comfort and theirs who shall have the vse thereof His grace be with you Middelburgh 20. Iuly 1615. Yours in the Lord Jo. Forbes A Table of things contayned in this Treatise according to the order of the Chapters CHAPTER I. FOure groundes proponed which serve to make vs conceyve aright of the nature of the benefits dispensed vnto vs by God in Christ 1. The knowledge of Gods Decree 2. Of Christ as Mediator 3. Of the order of the benefits 4. Of their difference Chap. II. Of the two chief things to be considered in Gods Decree to wit the substance and chief cause of it The twofold description of Gods Decree or Predestination And of that which is the most proper Chap. III. Of the substance of Gods Decree consisting in three things 1. the persons who are ordayned 2. that wherevnto they are ordayned 3. the meane whereby Of which the first two are spoken of in this chapter Chap. IV. The third part of the substance of Gods Decree touching the meane of adoption that is IESVS CHRIST Chap. V. Of the cause moving God to decree that is the will of God cleared from the Persons who are ordayned vnto adoption Chap. VI. The same cause cleared from that thing wherevnto they are ordayned Chap. VII The same cleared from the meane whereby they are ordayned to be adopted Chap. VIII Of the second groūd which is touching Christ the Mediator Chap. IX Of the third ground touching the order of Gods benefites specially of Adoption and Iustification and of five things serving to cleare the same Chap. X. Of the first of those fiue touching the order of subsistinge of the persons of the Trinitie Chap. XI Of the second of these five touching the severall obiectes wherein the grace of God is to be considered Chap. XII Of the third of these five touching the difference of order betwixt Gods dispensation and our perception Chap. XIII Of the fourth of these five touching the different extent or largenes of Gods benefites amongst them selves Chap. XIIII Of the last of these five touching the covenant of God Chap. XV. Of the first reason why most men place Iustification in order before Adoption Chap. XVI Of the second reason why most men place Iustificatiō before Adoptiō drawen from Io. 1. 12. examined in the first point that is touching the persons there described Chap. XVII The examination of the same reason from the second and third pointes therein to be considered that is the benefit bestowed and him who bestoweth it Chap. XVIII Of the fourth and last ground serving to cleare the nature of Gods benefites touching the difference of these benefits and first of the divers manner of speach vsed in scripture touching them 2. Of these things wherein they agree and vse hereof Chap. XIX Of the twofold distinction of the benefits 1. according to the maner that we enioy them 2. according to their particular nature Chap. XX. A proposition of the doctrine of Iustification things therein to be intreated And first of the divers opinions of men touching iustification in generall Chap. XXI The foure principall points controverted 1 touching the efficient cause 2. touching the materiall cause 3. touchinge the formall cause 4. touching the subiect iustified and the first handled Chap. XXII Of the second point touching the materiall cause of Iustification the different opinions of men reduced to foure principall and examination of them Chap. XXIII Of the true matter of our righteousnes what it is wherein the first handled shewing that Christ only is the matter therof Chap. XXIIII Of the second point touching that wherein Christ is our righteousnes the different opinions of men therein and the truth examined by six grounds out of the word Chap. XXV Of those things in Christ which are required to make that wherein he is our righteousnes to be righteousnes both in his Person Priesthood and actions Chap. XXVI Of the formall cause of iustification cōsisting in three things 1. in Gods giving 2. in his imputing 3. in the maner of both that is by grace The gift being two fold the first which is faith is first intreated of in foure pointes and first what kinde of gift it is Chap. XXVI Of the second point touching faith to whom it is given and in what part or facultie it is wrought Chap. XXVIII Of the third point touching faith what it is of the divers significations of it of the true signification of it when it is said to be imputed vnto righteousnes of the particular nature thereof both as it is wrought by God in our hartes and as our heartes worke by it Chap. XXIX Of the fourth and last point touching faith that is the end vse wherefore it is given vnto vs consisting in foure things Chap. XXX Of the second gift which God giveth in iustifying which is Christ crucified Chap. XXXI Of the second point touching the forme of Iustification consisting in imputation the signification of the word the thinges that are said to be imputed and what it is that in iustification is imputed Chap. XXXII Of the third point touching the forme of iustification consisting in the grace of God Chap. XXXIII Of the obiect of iustification both what man is in him selfe and what by grace when he is iustified Chap. XXXIIII Of the finall cause of iustification Chap. XXXV Of the description of iustification considered in the particular points thereof gathered out of the former grounds FINIS A Treatise tending to cleare the Doctrine of Justification CHAPTER I. THE Evangelist Luke willing to make Theophilus to acknowledge the certaintie of those things whereof he had bene instructed did search out perfectly all thinges from the beginning and then did write vnto him frō point to point According to whose example for giuing the more full assurāce to mindes desirous of knowledge it shall not be amisse being to treat of the true nature of the Iustification of a sinner that we first beginning at the very foundation do shortlie speak of those points vpon the knowledge whereof chieflie dependeth the light and evidence of this matter Amongst divers others there are foure principall groundes vpon the
therefore doeth the Apostle say Rom. chap. 11. ver 7. that the Election hath obtayned it to shew vs that the cause of obtayning the promise all blessings therein contayned dependeth neither vpon Christ as Mediator nor vpon Man but vpon the Lords free choice who giveth Christ for whō and to whom he will and therefore is Christ him self called the gift of God Iohn chap. 4. ver 10. and Iohn chap. 3. ver 16. because even he is given vnto vs of grace according as the words of Iohn declare manifestly saying God so loved the world that hee gave his onely begotten Sonne And although all power bee given vnto Christ both in heaven and earth yet in dispensing of life he is limited by the Fathers will and therefore saith him selfe that al power is given him to this end that he may give eternal life not to all simply and indifferently but to all that the Father hath given him Iohn chap. 17. vers 2. And that because such is the Fathers will as Christ him self witnesseth Ioh. cha 6. ver 39. This is the will of my Father that sent me that of all which hee hath given me I should loose none and the reason why hee restrayneth his dispensation of life vnto the Fathers will whose will and pleasure is that he should save only those whom he had given vnto him is declared by Christ him self in the verse immediately preceeding saying I am come downe from heaven not that I should doe myne owne will but the will of him that sent me which wordes plainly teach vs that the dispensation of life dependeth not vpon the will of Christ as he is Mediator much lesse vpon the will of Man but only vpon the good wil pleasure of God And this is cleere in all the blessings bestowed vpon vs in Christ of al the meanes which God grants vs to bring vs to the communion of the blessings which all are said in scripture to be according to the will of God and to be given vs freely by grace as namely the revelation of the mysterie of godlines Eph. chap. 1. ver 9. preachers to reveale it Eph. cha 3. ver 7. c. and Gala. chap. 1. ver 15. 16. also the benefit of our calling 2. to Timot. chap. 1. vers 9. also our beleeving and by faith assenting to the calling of God 1. to the Corint cha 12. ver 9. 11. and Ephe. chap. 2. ver 8. Phil. chap. 7. ver 29. and 2. chap. ver 13. Rom. chap. 11. ver 7. Ioh. chap. 6. ver 36. 37. and 44. 45. and Math. chap. 11. vers 25. 26. and Mat. chapt chap. 13. ver 11. Also the gift of perseverance 1. to the Corinthi chapt 1. vers 8. 9. and Iohn chap. 10. verses 28. 29. and 1. Epist of Iohn chapter 2. vers 27. and chapter 3. vers 9. 1. to the Corinthians chapter 15. vers 57. and 58. 1. epist to the Thess chap. 5. ver 23. 24. and 2. epist to the Thessal chapter 16. verse 17. and I eremy chap. 31. vers 32. 33. and chap. 32. ver 40. so forth of all the remanent benefites of God and namely of our Iustification for we are iustified freely by grace And therefore even the righteousnes of Christ whereby we are iustified is said to be the gift of God that of free grace Rom. chap. 5. vers 15. 16. 17. For of whatsoever worth vertue value the satisfaction made by Christ be of in Gods sight far exceeding al vnworthines and weaknes of all mankinde yet it is no farther extended nor given to any moe but such as is the good will pleasure of God Neither is it contrarie vnto this that all the blessings of God are said to be in Christ and we said to be blessed with all spirituall blessings in him For neither he nor they in him are made ours for any cause either in him or vs but onely by the will good pleasure of God which is manifest by the saying of the Apostle Ephe. chap. 1. ver 6. which is That God by his grace hath freely made vs acceptable to him selfe in his beloved Sonne Which wordes doe evidently witnes that although GOD give vs no blessing but in Christ yet the cause moving God is only his owne grace and good pleasure which excludes all other cause whatsoever either in Christ or in vs. Neither is this to be vnderstood of the benefites themselves onely but also of their measure which also dependeth wholy vpon the purpose and good pleasure of Gods will Which is cleare by the speech of Christ in the 20. chapt of Math. ver 23. And Marke chap. 10. ver 40. where he sayeth To sit at my right hande and at my left hande is not myne to give but to whom it is prepared of my Father Moreover this is not onely to be vnderstood of the blessinges them selves and of their measure but also of all the circumstances concerning their dispensation Which wholy depend vpon the will of God who hath assigned the seasons which were ordeyned before and the bounds of mens habitatiō Act. chap. 17. vers 26. And who hath put the times and seasons in his owne power Actes chap. 1. vers 7. and hath appointed a day of grace to every one that shal be called Hebr. chap. 3. ver 13. and 15. and Hebr. chap. 4 vers 7. 8. and 9. so that the reason that one is called from the wombe another in his mid-age another in the houre of his death why the Gospell is salvation first vnto the Iewes and next vnto the Gentiles why Christ did come at such a time died at such a time and the Gentiles not called till such a time is the onlie appointmēt of Gods will who as saith the Apostle Ephe. chap. 1. vers 11. Doth all things according to the counsell of his owne will Thus it is manifest that not onely the blessings in Christ the measure of them but all circumstances of these blessings either in respect of persons place time or maner doe depend wholie vpon the counsell of Gods will CHAPTER VII IT resteth now thirdly that we trye the truth of this same ground in the third point of the substance of Gods Decree that is in the Meane whereby we are predstinate vnto adoption which is Iesus Christ of whom it is manifest in the Scriptures that he is the Meane of our happines by the same will of God as is evident by the Apostle Coloss chap. 1. vers 19. 20. For it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnes dwell and by him to reconcile all things to him selfe making peace by the blood of his crosse For first there was no cause in Christ why hee should haue beene made Man and sinne for Man Secondly there was no cause nor reason in vs which could move the Father to give him to the death for vs or which could move him to become our brother and to lay down his life
efficient cause which is God alone for he is the Father of lights from whom commeth down all good gifts and every perfect donation Iam. chap. 1. vers 17. This may be confirmed by particular testimonies of Scripture touching every particular benefite as of Faith Adoption Iustification Peace or Reconciliation Sanctification Glorification and our whole Redemption For they are neither bred in vs by nature nor acquired by our industrie nor ministred by humane education but are all the gifts of God The second thing wherein they all agree is the cause which moueth God to give them which is nothing but his grace and good pleasure For none of them is obtayned by our desert or meritt For as sayeth the Apostle 2 Tim. chap. 1. vers 9. God hath saved vs and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose and grace and this likewise is cleere by particular testimonies of the Scriptures touching every one of these benefites The third thing wherin they all agree is the meanes through which God of his grace doth give them which is Iesus Christ the Sonne who is made of God vnto vs all these blessings For in him all fulnes dwelleth and out of his fulnes we all receive grace Which point also is most evident throughout all the Scriptures in everie particular benefite The fourth thing wherein they all agree is the instrument by the which God maketh vs to apprehend them all in Christ which is Faith only The fift thing wherein they all agree is that they are inseparable one from another so that none can have one of them but he must needs have all for whom he calleth them he Iustifieth and whom he Iustifieth them he glorifieth Rom. chap. 8. vers 30 And as sayeth the Apostle by the grace of God which is given vs in Christ Iesus we are made riche in him in all gifts 1 Cor. cha 1. ver 4. 5. And the same Apostle gives thankes to God because he hath blessed vs with all blessings in Christ Eph. ch 1. ver 3. The last thing wherein they all agree is that they are never taken away againe from those that receive them For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. ch 11. ver 29. And whom Christ loved hee loveth to the end Iohn chap. 13. vers 1. Now followeth the third thing to be considered of vs which is touching the vse arising vpon those former 6. points which wee are to marke for our right vnderstanding of the nature of Gods saving benefites and this vse is sixe fould The first is that none of these blessings is in vs by nature nor from nature nor any power or facultie in nature but are all the supernaturall gifts of God The second vse is that we are to acknowledge the good will of God and his free grace to bee the only cause moving God to give these benefites For by his grace he hath made vs freely accepted in his beloved so that even what in Christ hee gives vs he gives it freely of grace so that all respects is removed why God should bestowe his blessings in Christ except his owne grace in himselfe Which we are carefully to marke that we may keepe our selves from the error of these who confound either the subordinate meane through which or the subordinate Instrument by which God bestowes his blessings with the cause moving God to bestow them For although Christ be the meane through which faith be the instrument by which God gives all spirituall blessings yet the cause moving him to give all is his grace For hee gives Christ and the righteousnes that is in him and faith freely to whom he will and withouldes them from whom he will Thus although the subordinate meanes in and by which God dispenseth his blessings are not to be separate from his grace yet they are never to bee confounded with it but even Christ himselfe and all blessings in him and the merit of his sufferings and faith by the which wee apprehend all are still to bee distinguished from the grace of God which is the only cause why eyther Christ himselfe or the meritt of his suffrings or faith to apprehend it is given vs of God Therefore in Gods working the Scriptures still ioyne these three together to wit grace Christ and faith Faith as the instrument whereby we apprehend and Christ as the subiect in which wee apprehend the blessings of God and the grace of God as the only cause moving God both to giue faith and Christ by faith and in Christ al these blessings So that it is a greevous sinne against the grace of God for the prayse of the glory whereof the Lord doth bestowe vpon vs all spirituall blessings when we spoyle it of this prayse due to it alone by making any other thing to bee the moving cause why God doth blesse vs. As likewise it is a great sinne when separating this grace from the subordinate meanes wee doe despise the meanes and turne the grace into wantonnes The third vse is that no where except in Christ alone is any of the saving blessings of God to bee found And therefore it never can be accompted to be Gods Adoption Gods Righteousnes Sanctificatian Reconciliation or Redemption which is placed in any thing without Christ Wherevpon it must follow that they erre farre from the trueth who place their righteousnes either in their faith or workes or who place reconciliation in their owne satisfaction For though Christ be the obiect of faith yet it hath the being of it in mans hart concerning works and our own satisfactions It is cleere that they are not in Christ who notwithstanding is all in all things and filleth all in all things The fourth vse is that without faith God by his grace communicates noe blessing in Christ in ordinarie dispensation Therefore they must erre who thinke that Christ and the blessings of God in him may be apprehended by the externall bodily action of man in receyving the Sacraments that is as they call it by the very externall worke wrought This likewise teacheth vs to perceive their error who doe make Faith which is but the apprehending instrument to bee the blessing it selfe thereby apprehended in Christ Of which sort they all are who place the matter of our righteousnes in the act of our beleeving The fift vse is to teach vs to be wise in iudging of our selves whether we be truly in the state of grace or no for he that is destitute of any one of these saving blessings he is destitute of them all whatsoever foolish confidence he have to the contrarie For as sayeth the Apostle Peter 2. Epi. chap. 1. vers 3. God through the knowledge of him that hath called vs hath given vnto vs al things that appertayne to life and Godlines And therfore Iames sheweth that it profits nothing that a man say he hath faith if he have no workes And Iohn 1. Ep.
according as it is set downe in the truth of God And intreating of these three we shall touch by the way everie one of these points mentioned in doing whereof if we shall insist somewhat more largely then shall seeme expedient to riper iudgements yet we hope that heerein we shall easily be pardoned seeing we take this paynes not for the instruction of those that are of greater iudgement then our selfe but for the helpe and cōfort of the simplest sorte Who in this mayne point of salvation may through the diversitie of opinions be brought in danger of destruction For seeing there is no hope of life to anie but such as are iustified by the righteousnes of God which is by the faith of Christ it must followe that this Iustice being taken away and any other whatsoever put in the place thereof all ground and certeyntie of salvation must needes bee also taken away To come then to the first point there be foure principall different opinions beside the opinion of Osiander which beeing odious to all we need not to speake of The first is of those who devide the worke of Iustification betwixt God and man Christs merit and mans merit faith and works grace debt the Law the Gospell but in divers respects and considerations For in respect of that which they call the first righteousnes which they esteeme nothing but a preparation of a man to iustifie himself by a formall righteousnes infounded in vs by grace they give place to God as the author worker and to his grace as the cause moving him and vnto Christs sufferings as the cause meriting that grace vnto faith as the benefit in founded into vs by grace and vnto the Gospell as the instrument whereby this benefit is wrought in vs. Yet with God his grace they ioyne man in this worke ascribing vnto him freedome of will so that God by his grace man in his will concurre in the worke God by his grace helping mans will to beleeve But in respect of that which they call the second righteousnes wherein they place the merit of eternall life they seclude God from beeing the Iustifier and ascribe iustification to man him selfe they seclude grace and establish workes of free will they seclude Christ and the merit of his obedience and place them selves and the merit of their owne workes they seclude beleeving and establish working and for the Gospell place the Law The second opinion is of those who in iustification make God to be the Iustifier and that of his grace and that by faith but as our worke of our free will yet not of the Law but of the Gospel secluding Christ and his obedience wholy from our righteousnes as likewise the Law and the workes thereof So they give to God the worke of Iustifying but the matter of their righteousnes they wholy ascribe to their owne worke and act in beleeving and place grace in nothing but in Gods gracious accepting of mans imperfect faith in place of the perfect righteousnes of the Law and attribute vnto the merit of Christes obedience this gracious acceptation of our faith as though hee had dyed and suffered not for our Iustification but to merit and obtayne at Gods hande that our owne worke of beleeving should bee graciously accepted as perfect righteousnes albeit in it selfe imperfect and where they may seeme to agree with the papist in asscribing righteousnes to their owne working they thinke that they doe sufficientlie purge them selves from that blott by this subtill evasion that they doe not attribute their righteousnes to a worke of the Lawe but to a worke of the Gospell The third opinion is of those who attribute the worke of Iustification vnto God but place their righteousnes partlie in their faith as their owne worke and partly in the obedience of Christ and make two actions of God in Iustifying In the one whereof they give place vnto grace in the other not The first action is the imputation of our imperfect faith for righteousnes and that by grace The second action is the imputatiō of Christs perfect obedience for the supplying of that which is wanting in our imperfect faith for righteousnes and that by Iustice All these three opinions doe attribute Mans righteousnes either wholy or in parte to his owne working The first and last doe ioyne grace merit together in Iustification Which things are most contrarie to the truth of God whether the workes bee of nature or of grace of the Law or of the Gospell The fourth and last opinion is of those who attribute the worke of Iustification to God alone and placeth our righteousnes onely in Christes obedience and doe acknowledge saith to be nothing but the applying and apprehending instrument of Christes obedience and the Gospell to bee the instrument of faith and all to be of grace because God giveth Christ to bee righteousnes vnto vs by grace and imputes his obedience vnto vs by grace and by grace giveth vs faith and vnto faith the Gospell so that they attribute the whole prayse of the Iustification vnto God and place the whole matter of righteousnes in the obedience of Christ secluding all workes of men eyther of the Lawe or of the Gospell and acknowledge the grace of God to be the onely cause moving God to iustifie vs by Christes obedience as likewise of the giving of vs faith to apprehend it and this opinion only agreeth with the trueth CHAPTER XXI NOw we come to these things wherein especially stands the chiefest controversies whereby the trueth of Iustification is most darkened which we will reduce all to these foure points The first shal be touching the efficient cause of Iustification The second shal be touching the materiall cause of it The third shal be touching the formall cause The fourth shal be touching the subiect that is iustified Vnder these foure are comprehended the chiefe controversies touching this matter For touching the finall cause there is no great disagreement therefore we have no need to speake much of it yet notwithstanding because it serves to cleare that which we have so much insisted in before touching the order of Adoption and Iustification we will speake something thereof after the other foure First then touching the efficient cause of Iustification the controversie is only with the Papistes for in this point albeit they agree with vs in parte or rather in shew yet they disagree from vs in the chiefest substance of this question For wee saye that God onely doeth Iustifie but they albeit they graunt the first Iustification to God in parte yet they asscribe the second Iustification wherein they place the merit of eternall life wholy to man him selfe Now for discussing this controversie wee have three thinges that may sufficientlie cleare our iudgement therein The first is the manner and forme of the Scripture phrase touching the Iustification of a man The second is the testimonie of the Scripture declaring who it is that
Iustifies a man The third is the nature of the worke it selfe Touching the first the Scripture speaking of Iustification even whereas it is supposed to bee by the workes of the Lawe speakes passivelie of man and never activelie to shewe it is a worke which he him selfe doeth not but which is done vnto him by another as for example Rom. chapt 3. vers 20. by the workes of the Lawe shall no flesh bee iustified And againe Gal. chap. 2. ver 16. Knowing that a man is not Iustified by the workes of the Law And againe Gall. chap. 5. vers 4. And yee are abolished from Christ who soever are Iustified by the Lawe As likewise when Iustification is attributed vnto faith the same passive forme of speach is vsed as Rom. chapt 3. vers 28. VVe conclude then that a man is Iustified by faith without the workes of the Lawe And againe Rom. chap. 5. ver 1. Being then Iustified by faith c. And Tit. chap. 3. ver 7. That beeing Iustified by his grace c. Which forme of speech is most cleerely vsed Matt. chap. 12. v. 37. For by thy wordes thou shalt bee iustified and by thy wordes thou shale be condemned All these testimonies doe shew plainlie that the worke of Iustification is not the worke of man him selfe but of some other And therefore Christ Luke chap 16. 15. layes this to the Pharises charge as a speciall iniquitie saying Yee are those who iustifie your selves And that this is to bee vnderstood not only of a man in iudging him selfe but also of one man in iudging an other it is plaine by the Apostles doctrine Rom. 14. 4. 10. 13. where he takes al power from all men of iudging one another and to conclude this point the Apostles testimonie touching him selfe is sufficient 1. Corint cha 4. ver 3. whereby he cleereth both these pointes to witt that no other man had power to iudge him and that he had no power to iudge him selfe saying I passe little to be iudged of you or of mans iudgement no I iudge not my owne selfe In which places all power of iudging as it is referred either to iustifying or condemning in pardoning or not pardoning sinne in the absolving or not absolving from sinne is vtterly taken from all men whether in respect of them selves or others Touching the second grounde which cleereth who it is that Iustifies there is nothing whereof the holy Scripture giveth more cleere testimonie then of this still affirming that is is God onely who Iustifieth as is manifest Rom. chap. 8. ver 33. where expressely it is sayde It is GOD that Iustifieth and in that same Chapter 30. verse it is saide Those whom hee hath predestinate those hee hath called and whom hee hath called those also hee hath iustified which place sheweth playnely that it can belong to none but to God alone seeing that he who iustifieth must bee he who calleth and hee who calleth must be he who predestinateth which is onely God And againe the same Apostle giveth a cleere testimonie heereof Rom. chapt 3. ver 30. saying For God is one who shall iustifie circoncision of faith and vncirconcision thorough faith The like testimonie is conteyned 1. Corinth cha 4. vers 4. where the Apostle sayeth Hee that iudgeth mee is the Lorde Therefore sayeth the same Apostle Rom. chap. 14. ver 12. That every one of vs shall give accompt of him selfe vnto God Nowe wee come to the third ground which consisteth in the nature of Iustification it selfe which is not as some interprete it to be the making of vs inhesively iust by renovation or change of our nature as though the word Iustificare that is to Iustifie did signifie Iustum facere that is to make just By which opinion our Iustificatiō and our Sanctification are confounded and made one thinge As though to Iustifie were the action of GOD in regeneratinge and recreatinge vs whereas it is the worke of God in iudging vs. so that Iustificar● doeth signifie Iustum pronuntiare that is to pronounce righteous which is manifest by two reasons The first is because in Scripture Iustification is opposed to condemnation as is cleere by the testimonie cited before Mat. 12. 37. The second reason is taken from the description of Iustification set downe in the Scriptures where sometymes it is defined to consist in the remission of sinnes sometymes in the forgiving of wickednes in the covering of sinne and not imputing of iniquitie sometyme by the imputation of righteousnes Which all doe prove manifestly that Iustification is the Action of him who is the Iudge of mankinde in absolving man from sinne and the punishment thereof Of this it followeth that vnto God onely it belongeth to Iustifie and that for two speciall reasons The first is because the Lord is the onely Iudge of all Hebr. 12. 23. And therefore Acts 17. 31. it is sayd He hath appointed a day in the which he will iudge the world in righteousnes Of which day the Apostle also speaketh Rom. 2. 5. 16. and the reason heereof is given by the Apostle Rom. 14. 7. 8. to witt because hee is our onely Lord to whom we both live and die and therefore according as in that same place the Apostle concludes VVe all shall appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ and every one of vs shall give accompt of him selfe to God Whereby it is cleere seeing God is the onely Iudge of the world that to iustifie and to cōdemne must onely belonge to him The second reason is seeing Iustification consistes in remission of sinnes and not imputing of iniquitie it followeth that not any except God alone can iustifie because none save God alone can forgive sinne as is cleere Mark 2. 7. and Luke 5. 21. therefore doeth the Lord him selfe saye Esa 43. 25. I even I am he that putteth away thy iniquities for myne owne sake And againe 44. cha vers 22. I have put away thy transgressions like a Cloud and thy sinnes as a mist Likewise David doth attribute the not imputing of iniquitie to the Lord Psal 31. 2. saying Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquitie which also the Apostle cleerely sheweth 2. Corinth 5. 19. saying That God was in Christ reconciling the world to him selfe not imputing to them their sinnes Now whereas it might seeme that in treating of the efficient cause of Iustification we should speake not onely of God himselfe but also of his grace yet because the question touching his grace doeth also fitly belong to the formall cause therefore wee referre it vnto that place CHAPTER XXII NOw followeth that we speake of the materiall cause and in this pointe out of the former thinges it may be easilie gathered that there be foure different opinions The first is that the workes of the Law done by man are the matter of our righteousnes The second is that the onely act of mans heart in beleeving is the matter of it The third is that
to serve vnto our iustification by that wherein he is made our righteousnes And secondly if we shal distinguish the matter of our righteousnes it selfe in Christ from the action of God in iustifying by it wee shall perceyve evidently that the matter of our righteousnes consisteth only in the death and bloud of Christ and that all the rest of Christes obedience doeth serve not as the materiall but rather as the subordinate efficient causes of our iustification And so all the three former opinions touching the obedience of Christ may well agree in one when the question is concerning the action of God in iustifying and not concerning the particular matter of the righteousnes which God imputes vnto vs vnto iustification For there is no parte of Christes obedience which is not as it is said in the schooles causa sine qua non that is a cause without the which wee cannot be iustified For if he had not bene a man and a iust man and a Priest and such a Priest as we have said yea if hee had not risen from the dead and ascended vnto heaven and made intercession for vs his death and bloud could never have iustified vs. And yet still his death and bloud is the only matter of our righteousnes but so as it is the bloud of such a sacrifice offred by such a Priest vpon such an Altar in such a Tabernacle carried in by the same Priest after resurrection from the dead into the heavens And as by vertue of the same bloud the same Priest sittinge at the right hande of God maketh intercession for vs. Thus the matter is not of such moment being rightly waighed and charitablie considered that it needed ever to have bred such bitter contention amongst brethren in the Church of God CHAPTER XXVI HAving thus spoken of the materiall cause of our righteousnes it followeth now that we speake of the formall cause In the which three thinges are specially to be marked for clearing vnto vs how and in what manner wee are made the righteousnes of God by the death and bloud of Iesus Christ our Lord. The first is Gods giving vnto vs. The second is Gods imputation of that which is given vs. The third is the cause moving him both to give and impute For God iustifieth vs by gift by imputation and by grace Neither can the true forme of our iustification bee knowne of vs a right except we acknowledge all these three in it For mā hath no saving grace which he hath not receyved of God according to the saying of the Apostle 1. Cor. chap. 4. ver 7. For who hath seperate thee or what hast thou that thou hast not receyved and if thou hast receyved it why gloriest thou as if thou hadst not receyved it And to the same purpose saith I am 1. chap. 17. All good giving and every perfect gifte is from above Therefore also our righteousnes speciallie is called a gift and a gift by grace Rom. chapt 5. ver 15. 16. 17. as also Rom. chap. 6. vers 23. but the gift of God is eternall life Where the word gift if that place be rightly vnderstood doth signifie righteousnes given vs of God Secondly howsoever many confounde imputation and giving as one thinge as in some sense they may both bee taken for one yet it is expedient for our sounder knowledge that wee distinguish them For howsoever nothing is imputed which is not given yet many things are given which are never saide to be imputed Yea moreover in which imputation hath no place Beside the imputation of a thing if we shall rightly consider it doth alwayes presuppone the thing imputed to be in our possession either by nature working or gift as by Gods grace wee shall heare hereafter And therefore in the forme of our iustification Gods giving of a thing vnto vs is to be distinguished from his imputing of it Specially if we marke one thing which is flat contrarie sayings and yet of equall force vsed by the spirit of God in the description of iustification For sometimes it is defined by imputation of righteousnes and sometimes by not imputation of sinne Thirdly in the manner and forme of our iustification grace is specially to be considered because both the givinge and imputation of the thing given is of meere grace Therefore are wee saide to bee iustified freely by grace so that the perfect forme of our iustification consisteth in this that is in Gods gracious givinge and gracious imputinge of thinge given vnto vs to bee our righteousnes So that whosoever make our iustification to consist without giving of righteousnes or without imputing the thinge given or esteeme eyther the matter of our righteousnes which is given vs to be given otherwise then by grace or to be imputed as righteousnes vnto vs otherwise then by grace doe destroy the true forme of the iustification of a sinner before God And because this is a pointe of speciall moment and bringeth great light in the matter of iustification wee will speake severally of these three pointes And first touching the action of Gods giving Secondly of the action of Gods imputation Thirdly of his grace as the only cause of both Touching the first there be two thinges which are given vs of God vnto iustification The I. is faith The II. is Christ both these giftes of God are necessarie vnto iustification as we shall see by Gods grace hereafter when we speake of iustificatiō it self Therfore in this place wee will onely speake of faith as it is the gift of God in which we have these pointes to be marked First what kinde of gift it is Secondly to whom it is given Thirdly what faith it selfe is And fourthly to what ende and vse it is given First then that it is a gift and the gift of God it is cleere in the Scriptures according as wee have showen before of all the saving graces of God and therefore it is called by the Apostle Heb. chap. 7. vers 4. a heavenly gift and in Ephe. chap. 2. ver 8. it is expresly called the gifte of God And the same Apostle Phil. chap. 1. ver 29. teacheth vs that to beleeve in Christ is a gift given vs. Therefore 1. Cor. chap. 12. It is uombred amongst the giftes of God by his spirit So that in this there is no great contradiction but the speciall question is what kinde of gift it is that is whether it bee a naturall or a supernaturall gift Depending either vpon the naturall power which God hath created in man or vpon the supernaturall power of God For clearing hereof We are to consider that which in the scriptures is spoken concerning faith First touthing the ground and cause of our beleeving Secondly touching the propertie that is attributed vnto faith and which still is in him that beleeveth And thirdly touching certaine effectes attributed vnto faith Besides these things which heereafter will shewe them selves when we treate both to whom faith is given and
signified by the Lord Ier. 32. when he promiseth that he would put his feare in their heartes that they should not departe from him and most cleerly Eze. cap. 36. 26. 27. A newe heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stonie heart out of your body and will give you a heart of flesh and I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my Statutes For this cause it is that Christ calleth them blessed who honger and thirst for righteousnes For it is most certaine that the earnest desire of the heart to enioye Christ and his righteousnes c. is an vndoubted token of Gods saving grace and of his effectuall calling in the which he bestowes this as a supernaturall gift vppon the elect as the seconde effect of his working power whereby hee changeth our willes which are of them selves rebellious and maketh them willing to come vnto Christ and to obey his voyce Therefore is it saide That God is the worker both of the will and of the deed of his good pleasure in vs Phil. cap. 2. 13. so this is the second parte of that supernatural gift of faith when as our will maketh choise of that which is the will of God and wee submit our willes to his will in all thinges which is most contrarie to the nature of fleshe For as sayth the Apostle Rom. chap. 8. ver 7. The wisedome of the fleshe is not subiect to the Law of God neither can be Therefore doeth the Prophet David say That the man is blessed whom the Lord choses and causes to come Psalm 65. 4. It is for this same cause that David prayeth so often that God would incline his heart to his statutes The thirde parte of Gods workinge in givinge Faith vnto vs is the sanctification of our affections to make vs to love Christ above all thinges and that by the powring of his love in our heartes by his holy Spirit For as hee inclineth our myndes to mynde heavenly thinges by insinuatinge his mynd towardes vs in Christ Iesus into our myndes as by the sense and feelinge and proofe of his good will towarde vs in all thinges hee drawes out willes vnto his will So by the sense of his love in his giving his deare Sonne to the death for vs while wee were his enimies hee enflames our heartes with the love of him againe so that with our affection wee are set vppon Christ more then all thinges and are content to lose all things that we may gaine him Therefore saith Christ Math. cha 10. ver 37. He that loveth father or mother better then mee is not worthie of me c. And Luke chap. 14. ver 26. If any man come vnto mee and hate not his Father and Mother VVife and Children and Brethren and Sisters yea and his owne life also he can not be my Disciple Wherein it appeareth most plainly that faith is a gift supernaturall seeing it bringeth a supernaturall love into the heart which overcommeth all the love and affection which can be in nature especally when it overcommeth the love of man to him selfe and his owne life Fourthly the Lord by working faith doeth imprinte his knowledge and his will and love to vs in our memories working such a stedfast impression in our hearts of his mercie and grace towards vs in Christ as can never be defaced therefore the wicked in the booke of God are noted by this name they that forget God whereas the childrē of God have him alwayes before theit eyes Thus the Lord when he worketh faith in our hearts he worketh it in all the powers of our soule filling the whole heart with such supernaturall vertue and power in all the faculties thereof whereby the heart which of it selfe naturally could never be able to knowe or to desire or to love or to keepe any heavenly thing belonging vnto life and godlines is made able both to knowe and to will and to love and with the will and affection to apprehende and to keepe constantly the Lord Iesus and all blessings in him vnto eternall life And all these pointes are wrought by God in the heart of everie one of his elect particularly as in them selves so also concerning them selves so that their knowledge and assurance of the trueth of the things reveyled touching Christ and redemption in him is not a generall notion perswasion of the heart that God hath given his sonne to be a Redeemer to mankinde and that he hath performed redemption in his death for such a faith not onely the reprobate but Sathan him selfe hath but it is a particular sight and assurance of every mans owne heart concerning him selfe that God hath elected him for him in particular hath given Christ to bee a Redeemer and hath made him particularly vnto him wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption For it is not my faith-concerning the minde of God vnto others nor yet of the minde of God conceyved generally toward all his elect but the particular knowledge and assurance of his minde concerning my selfe that doeth saue mee For the iust shall live by his owne faith Habac. chapt 2. ver 4. But this will appeare more cleerely in the next point while we consider Faith being newe wrought in our hearts howe we are saide with our heart to beleeve In this point we have to consider First that it is the man him selfe who beleeveth Secondly that it is his heart whereby he beleeveth And thirdly beleeving is the action which man performeth with his heart As for the first man is said to beleeue because that this supernaturall gift is given him of God and that in his heart it is effectuall in him in all the points forespoken for by Gods enlightning of him he sees and by his teaching he vnderstandes and by the Lords enclining of his will he willeth and by the Lords sanctifying of his affection he loveth and by the Lords imprinting and writing in his minde and sealing by his spirit whatsoever he reveyleth vnto him he both possesseth retayneth and keepeth Christ and all the blessings promised in him so that faith actively considered is nothing but the motion of mans hearte which is wrought in him by the spirit of God and therfore in substance nothing els but the very action of GOD in man but considered in a divers manner that is passively as it is wrought by God in him and actively as he by this working of God in all the powers of his soule apprehendeth and receyveth grace from God so that the action of man in beleeving with the heart is nothing but his knowing acknowledging of things by Gods making him know and acknowledge them and his willing them by Gods making him to will them and his loving by Gods making him to love them and his apprehending and retayning them by Gods making of him to apprehende and reteyne them GOD imprinting writing and
the worde knowledge is put which is when it signrfieth the naked and bare vnderstanding of thinges that are reveyled but it is taken for an infallible science when as the heart knoweth God and knoweth him vndoubtedly to be God and when as it knoweth Christ and knoweth him vndoubtedly to bee the sonne of God and when it knoweth Gods trueth and knoweth it vndoubtedly to be the trueth of God therefore saieth Iohn the Baptist Hee that receyveth his testimonie hath sealed that God is true Iohn chap. 3. ver 33 And againe Iohn 1. Epi. chap. 5. ver 10. Hee that heleeveth not God hath made him a liar because he beleeved not the record that God witnessed of his soune Neither is this all which is meant by the knowledge of faith but a third thing is yet to be added for the full vnderstandinge thereof For besides the sight and knowledge of the thinges which are reveiled by God and also besides the knowledge of the vndoubted veritie and trueth of them it is required that wee knowe them to bee reveyled by God vnto vs and knowe the vndoubted trueth and veritie of them toward vs in our particular person that is that whatsoever God reveyle to vs he reveyleth it vnto vs as a thing which he hath appointed for vs and when he giveth vs the sight and knowledge of the vndoubted veritie of the things reveyled he maketh vs assuredlie to knowe that they shal be truely verily accomplished in our persons conforme to that ground which we have laide downe before concerning faith that is that what we beleeve we must beleeve it concerning our selves in particular according as it is said of Abraham that he beleeved God that he should bee the Father of many Nation●s And as Iob speaketh of him selfe chap. 19. verses 25. 26. 27. I am sure that my Redeemer liveth and I shall see God in my flesh whom I my selfe shall see and my eyes shall beholde and none other for mee According to which certaintie the Apostle Paul speaketh also of him selfe Rom. chap. 8. and for this maner of knowledge which commeth by faith the Fathers doe call faith the eye whereby we see the invisible things of God as also the ingravē forme of the sonnes of God and for this same cause it is called by the Apostle Heb. chap. 11. the evidence of things which are not seene where by the word evidence is vnderstoode that faith doeth not onely shew them but by evident demonstration confirme the vndoubted veritie of them and that to vs in particular so that it letteth me not only see life eternall in Christ and this eternall life to belong to all that are in Chtist but particularly it letteth me see my selfe in Christ and this life to belonge to me in him and that so certainlie as nothing in heaven nor earth can bee more certaine and thus much for the first vse of faith The seconde ende wherefore faith is given is possession and this confirmeth evidently and plainely the former ground touching knowledge that it is so to be vnderstood as we have spoken For the knowledge of faith is never without possession according to thar saying of Christ Ioh. cha 14. ver 17. speaking of the spirit whow the world can not receyve because it seeth him not neyther knoweth him but yee knowe him for hee dwelleth with you and shal bee in you According to which ground it is that Ioh. sayth Hee that beleeveth in that sonne of GOD hath the witnes in him self 1. Epist chap. 5. ver 10. Thus faith maketh vs to know nothing but that which it also maketh vs to possesse therefore doeth the Apostle pray to God for the Ephesians that Christ might dwell in their hearts by faith chap. 3. vers 27. For as the heart of man can never know Christ by it owne light but by the supernaturall light of faith so it can never apprehend Christ nor any blessing in Christ by any natural power that is in the will affection thereof Therefore God giveth to his elect the supernaturall gift of faith in their hearts that his elect whose heartes could never by any naturall strength ever attaine to the possession of Christ nor ever desire to have him nor yet embrace him with vnfayned love as their only treasure righteousnes and life might chose him and count all things but dunge to gaine him forsaking them selves and their owne righteousnes and to love him and embrace him with such affectiō that they prefer him to all things evē to their owne life so that man by faith is not only made to know his redeemer but also to possesse him and all blessings in him And for this cause is it that in the scriptures we are saide to be the children of God by faith in Christ to be iustified by faith in him to bee saved by faith in him and as saith the Apostle Peter beleeving in him we carrie about with vs the end of our faith the salvation of our soules 1. Epist 1. 9. And for this working of faith it is called by the Apostle the subsisting of things hoped for Hebr. 11. 1. because it giveth a certaine being and subsisting vnto things that are yet invisible and are yet only expected and hoped for and maketh thē to subsist in our hearts therfore saith Christ he that beleeveth is alreadie translated from death to life and hath everlasting life Ioh. 5. 24. Thus we see that faith being taken away the heart of man should never be able to possesse nor apprehend Christ nor righteousnes or any other spirituall blessing in him Therefore because it is the effectuall instrument of Gods supernaturall power in our heartes whereby we apprehende and possesse Christ and all blessings in him The Fathers doe call it the hand of a Christian as also the mouth of a Christian and likewise the bound of a Christian because by faith as by a hand we lay holde on him and by faith as by a mouth wee receyve him into our heartes and by faith as by a bande that never can be broken wee are so vnited to him and hee with all the benefites that are in him vnto vs that we never can possibly bee seperated from him nor he or his blessinges from vs for this cause is it that Augustine sayth Beleeue onely and thou hast eaten him And for cleering of this grounde it is that these phrases of speech are vsed to wit that Christ is the ende of the lawe vnto righteousnes to all that beleeve that the promise is given to them that faithfully beleeve That the Gospell is the power of GOD vnto salvation to everie one that beleeveth c. all to teach vs that neither the Gospell can helpe vs to salvation neither is the promise made ours nor Christes righteousnes belongeth vnto vs except we beleeve because there is no mean to make any thing conteyned in the Gospell especially the promise or Christ him selfe to be ours but faith onely And for this same
grace Imputation by debt is When the thing imputed is a naturall thing consisting either in the disposition and properties naturall which are in vs or then the fruites and effectes flowing from our owne naturall powers And in this sense is it that the scripture saith That to him that worketh the wages is not imputed by grace but by debt Rom. chap. 4. ver 4. Imputation by grace touching things in vs is whē the thing imputed is not natural but a supernaturall thing being neither parte nor portion of our nature nor of any power of facultie in nature nor wrought by any power in vs but supernaturally placed in vs by God and given vs above and beside all that is by nature in vs. in this sense faith is said to be imputed to vs. For as a man can with his body or a member of his body vse an instrument such as a sword a knife an axe or a sawe which are no parte or power nor facultie of his body or hande to performe things which he could not otherwise doe by his body or by his hande Even so the soule heart of a mā can vse a spiritual instrumēt such as is faith albeit it be no parte power or facultie of the hearte to performe such things as by it selfe it could never possibly have performed and therefore such a supernaturall instrument whereby our heartes worketh not being any parte nor power of vs nor any thing wrought in vs by our selves nor acquired nor purchased by vs but given vs by God and placed in our heartes by him can not properly be said to bee ours notwithstanding that it be in vs neither can the worke which it doth be properly saide to be our worke except by Gods gracious imputation onely For this cause it is that in the Scriptures that which is by faith is saide to be by grace Rom. chap. 4. ver 16. as likewise that the righteousnes of faith is not our owne righteousnes but the righteousnes of God Phill. chap. 3. ver 9. Rom. chap. 3. ver 21. 22. and that not onely in respect of the righteousnes it selfe which is given vs of God but also in respect of the meane and instrument whereby we receyve it which also is given vs of GOD. Nowe we come to speake of the thirde pointe that is concerning the thinges which are said to be imputed to vs in the worke of our iustification and these be two according to the two giftes that God giveth vs to this ende that wee may bee righteous The first is faith which is the supernaturall instrument given vs of God to apprehend our righteousnes The second is the righteousnes it selfe apprehended by faith that is Christ crucified or his bloud shed for vs For although the Lord hath given vs faith and Christ Iesus his sonne yet albeit we have them we have them not as our owne but by the imputation of God So that Gods gift maketh possession but his imputation maketh our right in proprietie in the thing possessed We say that both faith and Christes obedience is imputed because the scriptures hath these two phrases First that faith is imputed vnto righreousnes and also that righteousnes is imputed Which two phrases are not to be confounded but for the cleere vnderstanding of our iustification are still to be distinguished To make this manifest we are first to consider that vnto our iustification we must first have righteousnes for God iustifieth no man that hath not righteousnes For to iustifie the wicked and condemne the righteous are both abhomination vnto the Lord Prov. chap. 17. ver 15. Esai chap. 5. ver 23. therefore before God iustifie vs wee must have righteousnes in our possession Secondly there is but one of two righteousnes that man can posses that is eyther his owne righteousnes or the righteousnes of God for no third righteousnes is set downe in the booke of God whereby a man can bee iustified so that one of these two we must have before God iustifie vs. Both these pointes are cleere in that one saying of the Apostle Phil. chapt 3. ver 9. Not having myne owne righteousnes which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ even the righteousnes which is through GOD by faith Which sentence sheweth first that wee must have righteousnes and secondly that there is but one of two to bee had that is eyther our owne or Gods Thirdly this place sheweth vs where these righteousnes are Our owne righteousnes is conteyned in the Law the righteousnes of God is conteyned in Christ Lastly not only this place but divers others of the scriptures sheweth vs that as the righteousnes conteyned in the Lawe is obteyned by our owne doing of the workes of the Law and that by our owne strength so the righteousnes of God which is conteyned in Christ is obtayned by beleeving and therefore in the scriptures iustification is saide eyther to be by workes or by faith for as working is the way and meane to attayne to the righteousnes of the Lawe so faith is the meane and instrument whereby we attayne to the righteousnes of Christ And therefore as the righteousnes of the Law is called our owne because the meane whereby wee possesse it that is our working is our owne so likewise the righteousnes of Christ is said not to be our owne because the meane and instrument whereby we obtayne it which is faith is not our owne For both these righteousnesses have their owne proper subiectes wherein they subsist before wee possesse them that is the Law and Christ For mans righteousnes is conteyned in Lawe and Gods righteousnes is conteyned in Christ and therefore mans righteousnes is called the righteousnes of the Law Gods righteousnes is called the righteousnes of Christ as also whē man is iustified by his owne righteousnes he is said to bee iustified by the law and when he is iustified by the righteousnes of God he is said to be iustified by Christ And because man by working the thinges conteyned in the lawe attayneth to the righteousnes of the law therefore is hee said to be iustified by the workes of the lawe even so because by beleeving he attayneth to the righteousnes of Christ therefore is he saide to bee iustified by faith Thus he that worketh and he that beleeveth is opposed Rom. chap. 4. ver 5. in respect of the opposit meanes whereby they attayne to righteousnes the one of the law by working the other of Christ by beleving Wherevpon the last point followeth that is that the righteousnes of the Lawe is called man 's owne righteousnes because he attaynes to it by that which is his owne that is by his owne naturall power doeing of him selfe and by the strength that is in him selfe naturally without any helpe of any supernaturall power or meane given him to assist him to doe the things contayned in the lawe And the righteousnes of Christ is saide by the Apostle not to
adoption but also as the propitiation for sinne in his bloud which is the ground of Gods iustifying him For as God first openeth our eyes to see Christ to bee the sonne of God and by making vs to beleeve that maketh vs partakers of adoption so secondly by opening our eyes to see him to be ordayned by God a propitiation for sinne in his bloud and by making vs to beleeve that he layeth the foundation of our iustification in our heartes which is finished and accomplished by his gratious and free imputation For vnto the iustification of a sinner by the obedience of Christ in his death not onely faith but also the imputation of faith and that by grace must preceed before that Christ or his obedience can bee our righteousnes not that there is any defect or insufficiencie in Christes obedience but because neither faith hee nor his obedience is iustly ours vntill that by the free imputation and accompt of GOD they be made ours This we are carefully to consider that wee doe not confound the sufficiencie of Christes obedience our right therevnto as many perverslie doe in these dayes for the sufficiencie which is in Christ and his obedience vnto righteousnes is restrayned according to Gods gratious giving and imputinge faith and his obedience by faith and his imputation gift and grace are restrayned to his calling for the promise of God is restrayned to his calling as is cleere Acts chap. 2. vers 29. and all vertue in Christ vnto salvation is likewise restrayned vnto his calling as is cleere 1. Cor. chap. 1. ver 24. and his callinge is restrayned to his Decree and his Decree is restrayned to his purpose of which it appeareth evidently that all sufficiencie of Christes merit how great and infinite soever is no larger in right and efficacie then his calling and so consequently then his Decree and purpose For Gods promise is no larger then his calling and his calling no larger then his Decree and his Decree no larger then his purpose Heerevpon it followeth that Gods purpose is no larger then his applying by ●ustifying and glorifying seeing his iustification is as large as his calling and his calling as large as his Decree and his Decree as large as his purpose This is yet more evident by his promise which wee have shewen to bee of no larger extent then his calling of which it must followe that his purpose can bee of no larger extent then his applying because his calling and applying must bee of equall extent and his purpose of equall extent with his calling Of all these thinges it is manifest that the subiect of Gods iustification is the man indued with faith and this is to bee marked against those who esteeme the beleeving man in the foreknowledge of God to be the subiect of Gods Decree CHAPTER XXXIIII THE next pointe that we have to speake of is touchinge the finall cause of iustification in the which wee purpose to be short seeing it is not a matter controverted but yet it serveth to cleare the trueth of that going before concerninge the ordet of Gods benefites It is receyved vniversallie of all that the finall cause of righteousnes is life for there is no way to attayne vnto life but by righteousnes and for this cause iustification is called The iustification of life Rom. chap. 5. vets 18. and for the same cause it is saide That they who receyve that aboundance of grace and of the gift of that righteovsnes shall reigne in life Rom. chap. 5. ver 17. therefore is salvation called the end of our faith Pet. 1. Epist cha 1. ver 9. Carrying about with you the end of your faith even the salvation of your soules And this is according to the plaine speech of God Ezek. chap. 18. If a man be iust he shall surely live saith the Lord but the soule that sinneth shall die And againe in the same chapter ver 20. The righteousnes of the righteous shal be vpon him and the wickednes of the wicked shal be vpon him selfe And againe In his righteousnes that he hath done he shall live By these testimonies it is plaine that the end of righteousnes is life according to the saying of the Prophet Haba The iust shaell live by faith in the 2. chapter ver 4. and therefore eternal life is called the hope of righteousnes Gall. chapt 5. ver 5. For wee through the spirit waite for the hope of righteousnes through faith And in this same sense is the saying of the Apostle to bee taken Rom. chap. 8. ver 23. VVee doe sigh in our selves wayting for our adoption even the redemption of our bodyes as may easilie bee perceyved by the wordes following wherein hee giveth the reason of this our waytinge when hee sayeth for by hope wee are saved c. where our Adoption is put for our salvation or glorification or redemption in that sense wherein redemption is taken 1. Corinth chap. 1. ver 30. and this is needfull to bee marked to let vs see how diversly Adoption is taken in the holy scriptures of God And that wee may see the trueth of that which wee have saide before concerning the difference betwixt beeing a sonne by faith and by prerogative for as sayeth Iohn 1. Epist chap. 3. ver 2. we are now the sonnes of God but it is not made manifest yet what wee shall bee where he plainly distinguisheth betwixt beeing a sonne and being a glorified sonne for by faith wee are the sonnes of God Gall. chap. 3. ver 26. and yet by faith wee are not the glorified sonnes of God but yet still wayte for our Adoption that is our glorification And this diverse sense of Adoption is evidently cleered by the diverse sense of redemption wherein it is taken in the Rom. chap. 8 ver 23. and Heb. chap. 9. ver 15. For Rom. chap. 8. it is taken in one sense with Adoption that is for the glorification of our bodyes But in the 9. chap. to the Heb. it is taken for iustification which place also confirmeth eternall life to bee the end of our iustification whyle it is sayde that Christ is the Mediator of the New Testament for this cause that through death which was for the redemption of the transgressions that were in the former testament they which were called might receyve the promise of eternall inheritance And this same is made manifest by the Apostles order set downe Rom. chap. 8. where hee sayeth whom he iustifieth them also hee glorifieth For as calling is the fruite of predestination and iustification the fruit of calling so glorification is the fruite of iustification CHAPTER XXXV THus we are brought to the conclusion of the maine point touching iustification what it is which in the scriptures is described shortly and succinctly somtimes by the not imputatiō of sinne somtimes by the remission of sinne somtime by the covering and hiding of sinne somtime by the imputation of righteousnes sometime by the imputation of faith vnto
Christ onely being the immediate and absolute necessarie Meane appointed of God for the enioying of these blessings as being the onely matter substance of them in him selfe The word Sacraments and Faith being in them selves neither part nor portion of the Matter and substance of these benefites but onely the signes or seales or instrumentes of enioying him who alone is the substance And that onely vnto such as are partakers of the outward dispensation of the covenant others who die before they either heare faith preached or are made partakers of the Sacraments such as are many children of the faithfull such also as are called like vnto the thiefe in the last houre being adopted of God and iustified through Christ without them and therefore when in the Scriptures the spirit of God doth indifferently attribute our adoption iustification salvation c. vnto Christ and vnto ●aith yet they are not of a like large extent nor alike relatiue in all persons adopted iustified and saved c. For albeit actuall beleeving doth necessarily imply Christ yet to be adopted and iustified through Christ doth not alwayes in all persons necessarily imply actuall beleeving seeing that faith commeth of hearing the word preached and therfore is to be restrayned to such as are by outward dispensation called which all that are adopted and iustified are not for we are to distinguish betwixt these two things that is to be partakers of the covenant and to bee partakers of the outward dispensatiō of the couenant and therefore when it pleaseth God by outward dispēsation to call those who are within the covenant these meanes are then necessarily required vnto salvation For we are bound to these outward Meanes when it pleaseth God to vse them towards vs for our calling but God is no wayes bound to them nor his grace in Christ but that he may freely by his grace without them performe his Decree through Iesus Christ in vs after the manner knowne to him selfe whose wayes are past finding out els if those meanes were absolutely necessarie in all who are within the covenant then certainly the children of the faithfull who according to the Scriptures are within the covenant dying without externall dispensatiō of the covenant should contrarie to the scriptures not be accounted holy Of this it followeth that whē it is said in scripture that without faith it is vnpossible to please God that wee are to vnderstand that saying prudently least we fall in a dangerous error so as to esteeme the children of whom cōsisteth the kingdome not to be acceptable to God who notwithstanding are baptised as belonging to God in Christ and heyres of that righteousnes which is by faith although they haue never heard saith preached Of all these things we may easily perceive that seeing Christ who is the matter of our righteousnes life is not the cause why but the Meane whereby God doth decree to adopt vs iustifie vs c. that faith which is no material but instrumental Meane can much lesse be the cause why but a meane wherby God doth predestinate vs to be adopted iustified and glorified otherwise faith which is powerfull onely in respect of Christ should be of greater respect with God then Christ himself which were abominable to thinke In danger of which sinne many notwithstāding do fall in defining both Gods decree and our iustification When as they distinguish not first betweene the thing which is decreed and the cause moving God to decree that which he decreed Secondly whē they distinguish not in the thing which is decreed that whervnto we are ordeyned from the Meane wherby God doth ordayne to adopt vs. thirdly whē in the meane they distinguish not betwixt that which is absolutly necessarie in all within the covenant frō those things which only are necessarie in such as not only are within the covenant but also are called by outward dispensation thereof and which are not substantial partes of our righteousnes but accidentall meanes therof except we will say that to be iustified by Christ and by faith is one and the same thing in proper and not borrowed speach which is impossible except we hold that faith in proper and not figurative speach doth signifie Christ These oversights cause some to make faith the cause moving God to predestinate vs to adoption c. and others to esteeme faith not to be the Meane and that instrumentall that in some case only but the very matter of our righteousnes and that not in borrowed or figurative but in simple and proper speach of which matter we shall have occasion to speak heereafter CHAPTER V. THis much being spoken of the substance of the Decree we are next to consider what is the cause that moved God to make this Decree Where we are to observe that we doe not speak of the final cause which is the prayse of the glorie of Gods grace neither yet of the Materiall cause and that which in the schooles is called causa procataretica that is the formost after the first or after the beginning which in the substance of Gods Decree we haue already declared to be Christ but the cause we inquire of is that which in the schooles is called proegumena that is to say which goeth before all causes and doth leade order guide al the rest Which the Apost setteth down in these words according to the good pleasure of his will by which words it is evident that nothing either in Christ as Mediator or in Man himself or any thing els without God but only Gods owne will in him selfe was the cause that did move God to predestinate such as are predestinate and to predestinate them vnto that wherevnto they are predestinate that is adoption and to predestinate them to be adopted by no other Meane except through Iesus Christ alone so that both Gods action of decreeing the persons who are predestinate and the thing wherevnto they are predestinate the Meanes whereby they are predestinate doth depend vpō no cause without God but vpon the cause that is in God him self and vpon no cause in God him selfe except only his will Which sometimes is called in the scriptures his Mercie his love his grace his purpose his gift his good pleasure and counsell of his will And for the clearer vnderstanding of this point we are carefully to marke these two phrases conteyned in the description of predestination The first is that God is said to have predestinate vs in him selfe The seconde is that he is said to haue predestinate vs according to the good pleasure of his owne wil. By the first of these sayings the spirit of God would teach vs that God went not without him selfe neither consulted with anie thing but him self neither looked to any thing that was not in him self when he did predestinate vs. and so cōsequently that the Decree of God or predestination is an action of God not in Christ the Mediator nor in vs that are
Christ onely who being ordeyned of God the Meane of al his mercie to Mākinde he commeth in as Mediatour betweene God vs in all things decreed of God for vs so as we are to expect nothing of all that is decreed concerning the vessels of honour whether it bee in making of vs sonnes or making vs cōforme to the Image of his Sonne in righteousnes and glorie but only in and through Iesus Christ our Lord in whom alone all the promises of God are yea and amen For he is the first borne among all the sonnes of God and the beginning and first begotten of the dead for it is the Fathers will that in all things hee have the praeeminence Rom. chap. 8. ver 29. Col. chap. 1. ver 18. Thus albeit God in him selfe and of him selfe ordayne vs to great dignitie and manifold vnspeakeable blessings yet this honour doeth he reserve vnto his only begotten sonne that of all these blessings we shall enioye none except in through him onely so that it is true that we are ordayned to nothing without Christ but not in that deceitfull sense whereby the mindes of many are deluded as though he were the cause why GOD doth ordeyne vs to adoption The Scripture teacheth vs farre otherwise distinguishing betwixt the cause why God decreeth vs to adoption and the cause why he ordeyneth vs to this adoption through Christ onely Setting downe the cause of the Decree to be his owne will good pleasure in him selfe And declaring the cause why he ordeyneth vs to be adopted through Christ to be this that Christ might be the first borne among manie brethren and that he might have the praeeminence in all things wherevpon it followeth that albeit he be not the cause why we are ordeyned to adoption yet notwithstanding seeing it is Gods will to performe towards vs his gracious purpose and good pleasure of his wil only in and through Christ that of necessitie we must first enioy him before we can enioy any thing of that that is decreed And therefore it was the Fathers will that in him should all fulnes dwell Coloss chap. 1. vers 19. That out of his fulnes we all should receyve Iohn chapt 1. vers 16. And for this same cause is it said That God hath made him wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption and that vnto vs 1. Corinth chapt 1. verse 13. For whatsoever God hath made Iesus Christ the Mediatour he hath made him that for our cause so that the love of God to vs and the good pleasure of his wil towards vs is the cause why Christ is made of God the meane of our salvation And therefore in the consideration of Gods Decree Christ as Mediatour commeth in order after the consideration of that wherevnto we are ordayned although in the executiō and performāce of Gods Decree Christ in vs must goe before all other things ordayned for vs for that is the nature of all Meanes which are subordinate to that whereof they are appointed to be Meanes Thus God first in order purposeth and decreeth what to doe to vs and secondly by what Meanes but when hee performeth his Decree he first prepareth the Meanes and then accomplisheth thereby his purpose and decree towardes vs. For if the Lord had never ordayned vs that are men to bee made his sonnes he had never ordayned his sonne to bee made a Man this is cleere by the Apostles speech wherein he declareth the cause why the sonne of God did take mans nature vpon him Hebr. chap. 2. ver 14. saying For asmuch therefore as the children were partakers of flesh and blood even he likewise tooke part with them And thereafter shewing the cause why not only he tooke our nature● but also did take it with the same infirmities sinne only except wherewith our nature is indued he vseth these speeches For it became him in all thinges to be made like to his brethren Hebrewes chap. 2. vers 17. according to which grounde it is saide in another place That God sent his Sonne in the flesh in the similitude of sinnefull flesh Roman chap. 8. vers 3. This point is evidently cleare by the same Apostles speech Galath chap. 4. verses 4. and 5. when hee sheweth the ende wherefore God sent his sonne in the flesh saying VVhen the fulnes of tyme was come God sent foorth his owne Sonne made of a woman c. that we might receyve the adoption Letting vs see that in Gods execution hee giveth vs the adoption to the which he ordayned vs by the same Meane thorough the which he ordayned to give it vs. Thus we may see evidently that that parte of Gods Decree touching the Meane of our adoption doeth in order of Decreeing depende vpon the former parte touching the adopting of vs but in order of performing the sending of Christ made of a woman and made vnder the Law and made righteousnes sanctification and redemption c. doth goe before our adoptiō For he was not made the cause of eternall salvation to his owne till he was perfited Hebr. chap. 5. vers 9. For which cause the Apostle sayeth Hebr. chap. 2. vers 10. when hee gives the reason why he was made to taste of death That Christ being to bring many children to glorie it became him for whom are all these things and by whom are all these thinges to perfite or to consecrate the Prince of their salvation through afflictions This shall be yet more cleare if wee consider who it is that is appointed the Meane of our adoption that is not the Father nor yet the holy Ghost but the Sonne only and that because hee onely is that vnto the which wee are ordayned For this grounde we must holde that what so ever wee are made by grace it must firste bee in GOD him selfe and then made ours by our communion and fellowship with GOD. Now this blessing of sonne-shippe which is ordeyned vnto vs is no propertie of the Father nor yet of the Holy Ghost but of the seconde person onely who by that propertie is distinguished both from the Father and from the Holy Ghost and therefore although the Father and the Holy Ghost doe with the Sonne not onely ordeyne vs to adoption but also adopt vs yet they neither ordeyne vs to adoption neyther doe adopt vs through any but the Sonne alone for the Father and the Holy Ghost are not the Sonne neither can be because their personall properties are incommunicable howsoever their naturall properties bee common yea one and the same in all three because the nature of all three is most simply one and the same Of which it commeth to passe that we being adopted thorough Christ and so consequently called to the communion of Christ in that which he is by subsisting that is sonnes wee are also made partakers of the Divine nature as sayeth the Apostle Peter that is we are made like to all three in that which they are by nature for all three have but
partly faith and partly Christes obedience is the matter of our righteousnes The fourth and last is that onely Christ in his obedience is the whole matter of our righteousnes The vanitie of the first 3. opinions will more fully appeare when we speake of the formal cause of iustification when we shall treat of Iustificatiō it selfe as likewise when we shall cleere the truth of the fourth opinion therefore we wil speak the more shortlie of them now Against all three this ground generally serveth to witt that no man is iustified before God by any worke inherent in himselfe or done by him selfe whether it be of nature or of grace or whether it be a worke of the Lawe or of the Gospell The reason is If man be iustified in any sorte by workes Iustification can not be by grace according as sayeth the Apostle Rom. 11. 6. If it be of grace it is no more of workes els were grace no more grace and if it be of workes it is no more grace els were worke no more worke Thus none of these three formost opinions can stande excepte we will destroy the grace of God and abolish it altogether frō the worke of Iustification for grace and workes even though they bee of grace can never stande together in the worke of our Iustification Which also manifesteth the grosse impietie of all these three opinions in placing faith either in whole or in parte in our righteousnes as it is our owne worke seeing by no worke of his owne can man possibly be iustified For otherwise it cannot be but Christ must have died in vaine Secondly our righteousnes consisteth not in Gods acceptation of any thing that proceeds from vs to Godward but in Gods imputation of that that comes from him to vsward by his gift as is cleere Rom. 5. 15. 16. 17. where our righteousnes is still called the gift of God we are saide to receyve righteousnes as a gift Whereby it is most evident that no worke of the Law nor faith as it is the worke of our heart can possibly be our righteousnes For our act of beleeving is an action passing from vs to God-ward and being attributed as it is by them to mans free will is no lesse the worke of man then any other worke of the Law what soever But our righteousnes is called in the Scriptures the righteousnes of GOD and not of man because it goeth not from vs towardes him but it commeth from him to vs. Thirdly it is manifest by the Scriptures that no man is iust in him selfe but in another For among men there is none righteous no not one Psal 14. But if that whereby hee is iustified which is the matter of his righteousnes bee in him selfe he must not onely bee iust but iust in him selfe which both doe playnely contradict the trueth of God which plainlie denies that there is any man righteous and that any man is made righteous in him selfe but whom soever God iustifieth he iustifieth them in Christ and maketh them the righteousnes of God in him 2. Corinth 5. 21. Fourthly the nature of Iustification consisting in the remission of sinne it can not possibly stande in that that is the direct contrarie But all these three opinions maketh it stande in the contrarie that is in Gods acceptation of obedience For whether the Lorde iustifie vs for doeing the workes of the Lawe or for fulfilling the condition of the Gospell required by God of vs vnto Iustification it is alwayes for and by our obedience that he iustifieth vs. so that Iustification shall never consist in pardoning of sinne and covering of iniquitie but by the contrarie in the acceptation of obedience Which saying is so impious that nothing can be devised more contrarie to the grace of God and mans salvation These groundes serve generally to shewe the wickednes of all these three opinions Nowe we come to speake somwhat concerning the first alone against which these groundes conteyned in scripture shall sufficiētly serve of which divers make against the rest also First that which excludes not mans gloriation can not have place in his righteousnes for God will have no flesh to glory in his sight in any thing except in him alone wherevppon it followeth that no man can bee iustified by the workes of the Law For as sayeth the Apostle Rom. chap. 3. vers 27. gloriation is not excluded by the lawe of workes For if Abraham was iustified by workes hee hath wherein to glory Rom. chap. 4. vers 2. and the reason heere of is declared in the fourth verse saying That to him that worketh the wages is not compted by favour but by debt Wherevpon it followeth that if man bee iustified by workes he hath wherein to glorie because he is not iustified by grace but by deservinge and Gods iustifying of him is not a worke of his favour but a worke which hee is indebted to doe And this is the same very thing which the Romish Church doeth meane by their merit ex condigno whereby Gods free grace iniustification is quite overthrowen Secondly man can not be iustified by that which makes the death of Christ of none effect but as sayeth the Apostle Gallat chapter 2. verse 21. If righteousnes bee by the Lawe then Christ hath died without a cause Which place doeth evidently convince them all of errour and proove them all to bee enimies to the crosse of Christ and to his death that make righteousnes to bee by any other thinge then by his death for if Christ died without a cause if righteousnes bee by the Lawe he must have much more died in vaine if it bee by any other thing For righteousnes is not to be found in any other thing but either in the Law of God or Christ By this we may perceyve that the opinion of those men who place our righteousnes in faith properly taken as it is the acte of our heart without relation of it as an apprehending instrument vnto Christ is much more pernitious then the opinion of the Papistes and that by cleere evidence of both their doctrines cōpared together For the Papist placeth his righteousnes in that which conteynes in it selfe perfect righteousnes in deed so that if their other ground could holde wherein also the other sorte doeth agree with them that is that it were in mans power to fulfill the Lawe certaynlie they should be iustified by the works of the Law For the doers of the Lawe shal be iustified Rom. 2. 13. And if there had bene a lawe given which could have given life surely righteousnes should haue bene by the Lawe sayeth the same Apostle Gal. 3. 21. But these other men doe place their righteousnes in that which they them selves confesse to be imperfect and not to contayne in it selfe perfect righteousnes For when faith is not relatively or instrumentally taken in respect of Christ apprehended by it it can never contayne perfect righteousnes and so the Lord can never
of the Testament which God hath appointed vnto you Exo. 24. 8. Heb. 9. 20. Nowe it is playne that Iesus Christ in his bloud is our peace and reconciliation with God For no bloud save his bloud alone can purge vs from our iniquities and iustifie vs. And there is no Mediator betwixt God and vs save hee alone For as sayeth the Apostle 1 Timoth. chap. 1. vers 5. There is but one Mediator betwixt God and Man even Iesus Christ the Man Whereby it is playne that none can make a firme and stable covenant of peace betwixt God and vs but hee alone neither can he make this covenant sure by any other meane except his death and blood shedd because no other thing in heaven or earth can purge vs and obtaine remission of sinnes and iustifie vs. Therefore is it said 1 Pet. chap. 3. vers 18. That Christ once suffered for sinnes the iust for the vniust that he might bring vs to God Vpon which respect it is that by him we are said to have accesse to the Father Ephes 2. 18. and 3. 12. Now vpon all these grounds we have to gather of what covenant Christ is Mediator that is whether of the covenant of workes or of the covenant of grace or which is all one thing whether of the covenant of the Law or of the Gospell For God hath never made any other covenant of Peace with man then these two So that in one of these two must consist both our Iustification and Peace with God and of which soever of these covenants hee is Mediator and which of them soever hee hath confirmed by his death in that only must consist our righteousnes and peace But it is manifest by the Scriptures that he is not Mediator of the old but of the new Testam as is cleere by the Apostle Heb. 9. 15. where he sayeth For this cause is hee also the Mediator of the newe Testament And againe Heb. 12. 24. and vnto Iesus the Mediator of the new Testament And this is confirmed by the same Apostle Heb. 7. from the nature of his Priest-hood For as the Apostle there witnesseth in the 12. verse where the Priest-hood is changed of necessitie the Law also must be changed Therefore it must follow that Christ beeing a Priest not after the order of Aaron vnder the which the Law was given but after the order of Melchisedech that he cannot possiblie bee the Mediator of the old Testament that is of the covenant of the Law and therefore in that same chap. ver 22. it is said that Iesus is the Mediator of a better Testament then the Law Herevpon followeth this conclusion that it is not only a vaine opinion but also an impossible that any flesh can ever be iustified by the workes of the Lawe For no covenant whereof Christ is not the Mediator and which hee hath never confirmed by his death can ever possibly serve to our Iustification but of the covenant of workes or of the law Iesus is no wise Mediator neither hath hee died and shed his bloud to confirme it Therefore by the covenant of workes no flesh shall ever bee iustified and have accesse vnto God CHAPTER XXIII NOW for the second and third opinion the discussing of them is coincident with the points following and especially in the next point which concerneth the 4. opinion that is that only Christ is the matter of our righteousnes Whereof now we are to speake which beeing sufficiently cleered is enough to overthrow all other opinions whatsoever Now to make it manifest that in Christ alone is the matter of our righteousnes wee are first to divide this point in two and secondly to set downe the confirmations of both The two partes wherein this point is to be divided be these First that nothing in heaven or in earth in man or without man is the matter of mans righteousnes before God except only Christ The second is touching that wherein in particular Christ is our righteousnes Now for the confirmation of the first point we have these six grounds shortly to be considered First nothing can be our righteousnes but that only which is made by God righteousnes vnto vs. For he is only righteous and the only Author of all righteousnes For as there is no man righteous so there is no man that can make any thing to be righteousnes either to himselfe or to others And therefore wee are to consider what it is that God the Creator and ordayner of all the righteousnes of men hath ordayned and made righteousnes to vs. Nowe in all the trueth of God nothing is ever said to bee made of God vnto vs righteousnes except Iesus Christ alone Neither is there any thing whatsoever that is called our righteousnes whereby wee are iustified by God except Christ alone and his obedience Wherevpon it must follow that he only must be the matter of our righteousnes Therefore is it said by the Apostle 1 Cor. 1. 30. that hee is made of God vnto vs Wisdome Righteousnes Sanctification and Redemption And in the Prophete Ierem. 23 6. This name is given him of God as the name by the which the children of God shall call him while it is said And this is the name whereby they shall call him The Lord our righteousnes And againe chapter 33. vers 16. And hee that shall call her is the Lord ou● righteousnes Secondly that only must be our righteousnes which only is all in all things and only filleth all in all things For he that is vnto vs all in all things must needes be our only righteousnes and hee that filleth vs all in all things must needes fill vs likewise in righteousnes Now Christ only in the Scriptures of God hath both these attributed vnto him The first is shewen cleerly Collos 3. 11. And the second is cleerly shewen Eph. 1. 23. Therefore is it that the Apostle Peter Act. chap. 4. vers 12. sayeth That there is not salvation in any other For among men there is given none other name vnder heaven whereby we must be saved And for this same cause doth the Apostle say That we are made the righteousnes of God in him 2 Corinth chap. 5. vers 21. As likewise that in him wee are made perfect or complete Col. chap. 2. vers 10. Therefore also doeth the Apostle blesse God the Father for blessing vs with all spirituall blessinges in Christ Ephes chap. 1. vers 3. And if with all blessinges then also vndoubtedly with righteous in him except wee will denie righteousnes to bee one of the spirituall blessinges of God Therefore the Scripture admitteth nothing to bee ioyned with him neyther hath the Father ordayned any thing to have parte or place with him in the matter of our righteousnes For it hath pleased the Father that in him all fulnes should dwell and that out of his fulnes wee should receyve what soever grace wee receyve from God And this is a parte of that preheminence which Christ
hath in all thinges so that whosoever placeth the matter of his righteousnes in any thinge but Christ denieth flatly that hee hath preheminence in all things Thirdlie nothing can bee the matter of our righteousnes which is not the matter of our redemption For as sayeth the Apostle Rom. chapt 3. vers 24. VVee are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ IESVS Therefore is it that in the Scriptures Redemption is so often interpreted to bee remission of sinnes which is in effect righteousnes as Ephes chapt 1. vers 7. and Colos chapt 1. vers 14. Thereby shewing vs that our righteousnes consisteth of that same whereof consisteth our Redemption And it is cleere and manifest throughout all the holy Scriptures that we have Redemption in Christ alone Therefore in the same places cited before the Redemption whereby wee are iustified is saide to be in Christ IESVS and wee are saide to have Redemption in him Wherevppon it must needes followe that seeing our Redemption is in him alone our righteousnes must also bee in him alone For although in the holy Scriptures it bee saide that wee are iustified by faith yet it is never saide that we are redeemed by faith or that our Redemption is in faith Whereby it is most evident that when the spirit of God sayeth that wee are iustified by faith or that God doeth iustifie vs through faith or that hee imputes faith vnto righteousnes that these speeches are never to bee vnderstood of faith materially as though faith properly taken were the matter of our righteousnes before God except wee will say likewise that faith is the matter of our redemption which no man is so ignorant as once to imagine For nothing can bee the matter of our redemption and so consequently of our righteousnes which is not made of God sinne for vs and a propitiation for sinne For it is saide expresly that God made our Saviour Christ sinne for vs that wee might bee made the righteousnes of God in him 2 Corinth chapter 5. verse 21. and Christ is said to have redeemed vs from the curse of the Lawe by beeing made a curse and malediction for vs. Gallath chapter 3. verse 13. All to shewe vs that nothing can bee the matter of our Righteousnes and of our Redemption which is not made both sinne and the curse due to sinners for vs. Which two thinges were lively and openly shadowed in the Lawe The first Levit. chapt 16. by the live Goat where it is saide And Aaron shall put both his handes vpon the head of the live-Goat and confesse over him all the iniquities of the Children of Israel and all their trespasses in all their sinnes putting them vpon the head of the Goat and shall send him away by the hand of a man appointed into the wildernes so the Goat shall beare vpon him all their iniquities And this the Prophet Esay expresseth plainly when he sayeth that the Lord laid vpon Christ the iniquities of vs all and that he bare the sinne of many chap. 53. As also Peter when he sayeth that Christ himselfe bare our iniquities in his owne body vpon the tree 1 Pet. 2. 24. The second was shadowed vnto vs in the ordinance of God concerning all offerings for sinne In which when the trespasser had laid his hande vpon their head the Priest was commanded to kill them before the Lord and to burne them with fire Levit. 4. Which also the Prophet Esay expresseth when he sayeth that hee was wounded for our transgressions he was broken for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was vpon him chap. 53. As also Pet. when he sayeth that hee suffered for sinnes the iust for the vniust Now there is no man so foolish as to thinke that these things can bee attributed vnto faith or yet to the workes of the Law or to any thing whatsoever except vnto Iesus Christ alone Therefore nothinge save he alone can possibly be the matter of our righteousnes seeing nothing except he alone was ever made of God for vs either sinne or a propitiation for sinne by death Fourthly nothing that is not the matter of our peace and reconciliation with God can possibly be the matter of our righteousnes For nothing can procure peace vnto vs but that only which iustifieth vs and covereth our iniquities For there is no peace for the wicked sayth the Lord and it is our iniquities that seperates vs from God Esay 57. 21. and 59. 2. Therefore the Apostle sayeth Rom. 5. 1. that beeing iustified we have peace toward God For the cleanging of vs from sinne which is the cause of hatred makes vs to be reconciled vnto God Now the Lord Iesus only in the Scriptures is called our peace and in him only God reconciled the worlde vnto himselfe and that by iustifying vs and this peace reconciliation is said to be made by the bloud of his crosse because therein only we have remission of sinnes and therein onely is Christ ordayned a propitiation for sinne Wherevpon it followeth that seeing nothing is our peace but Christ onely nothing can be our righteousnes but he only For nothing but righteousnes makes peace betwixt God and man Fiftlie righteousnes and life are ordayned to be brought into the world as sinne and death were brought into the worlde therefore is it that Adam in respect of the effectes that come from him to all men is saide to be the Type of Christ in the effectes that flow from him to his members For it is saide that as by one man sinne entred into the world so by one man righteousnes shal be brought into the worlde And as in Adam all die so in Christ shall all be made alive According to which ground it is also saide That as we have borne the Image of the earthlie so shall wee beare the Image of the heavenly Wherevpon it followeth that nothing in the world except Christ can be the matter of our Righteousnes as none in the worlde save onely Adam is the Authour of sinne in vs otherwise the trueth in Christ touching righteousnes should never answer to the Type in Adam concerning sinne Therefore as sinne commeth from Adam alone vnto vs all as he in whom wee have all sinned so from Iesus Christ alone commeth righteousnes to all that are in him as he in whom they have all satisfied the iustice of God In which comparison if we had eyes to marke it faith never hath the place of our righteousnes but answeres in our participation of righteousnes in Christ to that which is the ground of our being partakers in the sinne of Adam For as wee were one with Adam and in respect of origine and nature were in him and so by being in him and one with him did all in him and with him transgresse the commandement of God even so in respect of faith whereby onely we are vnited vnto Christ and spiritually made one with him and ingrafted in him wee
Jesus therefore also saith Iohn 1. Epist 5. That the commandements of God are not greevous to him that is borne of God And he addeth this reason takē from the former ground which is because by faith they overcome the world and all thinges whatsoever within them or without them opposeth it selfe vnto their obedience For this cause the obedience of the Saints is called the obedience of faith Rom. cha 1. ver 5. and obedience to the Gospel is called obedience to the faith Acts cha 6. ver 7. And for the same reason whatsoever is not of faith is said to be sinne Rom. cha 14. 23. as also That without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. chap. 11. 6. which sentence sheweth cleerely the trueth of this point that there can be no strength in mans nature to performe any thing according to the will of God of it selfe but that all his strength and abilitie to doe according to Gods minde is from IESVS Christ dwelling in his hearte by faith By whose helpe strengthening vs we are able to doe all things as saith the Apostle of him selfe Phil. chap. 4. ver 13. Vpon the same respect it is that the Apostle interpretes his owne saying That Christ liueth in him in this speech The life that I nowe live in the flesh I liue it by the faith which is of the sonne of God Galat. chap. 2. ver 20. shewing vs that to haue Christ living in vs and to liue by the faith of Christ is all one thing albeit in divers considerations for our life is the life of Christ properlie because indeed from him alone floweth al goodnes and in him is the vertue of our well doing but our life is the life of faith not properlie but because it is the meane by the which onely Christ who is our life dwelleth in our heartes and liveth in vs. This thing it is that maketh one and the selfe same action externally performed according to the cōmandement by two diverse persons to be acceptable obedience to God in the one and abhominable wickednes and sinne in the other according to the speech of the Apostle touching the sacrifices of Cain and Abel because the one did offer in faith the other not Now in respect of this fruit and efficacie of faith the Fathers doe call faith the seale of our election conforme to that of Peter 2. Epi. chap. 1. who willeth vs by the vertue that is in our faith to make our calling and election sure as also they call it the soule of our soule because as our soule quickeneth our bodies so doth faith our soules also they call it the root of a good life by which all fruit is good and without the which all fruit is rotten and corrupted Of all these things which we have spoken of faith wee may easily perceive that faith is neither a parte nor portiō of any naturall power or facultie in man neither the effect or work of anie power or facultie naturall in man neither serving for any naturall vse in any naturall thing vnto man but that it is a gift supernaturall given freely by God and wrought supernaturallie above al naturall power in our hearts vnto a supernaturall end that we might be able to obtaine and to performe things which by nature it is impossible that we either cā obtain or do And this supernatural gift is placed in our harts by God as the effectual instrument mean of his power whereby ro make vs able to be capable of heavenly and supernatural things and to performe heauenly and supernaturall obedience to God Of which it is evident that faith is the first blessing in order of all the blessings of God also that no other blessing is eyther possessed by vs or preserued in vs but by it alone so that it is not so much any parte of the matter of our blessednes as it is the mean instrument of it so that our righteousnes life and glorie doth not consist in it but rather subsisteth in vs by it Of these things we may collect what faith is both as God worketh it in vs as our hearts worketh by it as God worketh it in our harts it is a supernatural gift wrought by God of his free grace in al the powers of our soule to be the effectual instrumēt of his power in vs whereby our heartes are made able both to perceyve to embrace and constantly to keepe Christ and all spirituall blessings in him belonging to life godlines of life as also to be able to walke worthie of our heavenly calling As our heart worketh by it faith is the very motion of all the powers of our hart wrought by the former working of God in them whereby our heartes now beleeving lay holde vpon the promise and vpon Christ crucified for vs and vpon righteousnes and life in him and whereby all these are brought into our heartes and wee possessed with them and whereby the things possessed are kept in our heartes in the middest of all temptation overcomming all our spirituall enemies and whereby our hearts doe serve God so as to please him And vpon this worke of faith follow these effectes in our soules First our heartes reioyce bo●● in the sight of the salvation and in the hope of the glory of God Psalm 105. 4. 5. Rom. chap. 5. ver 2. Secondly our hearts are filled with a confident boldnes towardes God that wee dare drawe neare vnto him confidentlie and call him Abba Father Rom. chap. 8. ver 15. Gal. chap. 5. ver 6. Ephe. chap. 3. ver 12. Heb. chapt 4. ver 16. and chap. 10. ver 16. Thirdly our heartes are filled with the peace of God and a good conscience Rom. chapt 5 ver 1. Iohn chap. 14 ver 1. so that in patience we possesse our soules wayting for that blessed hope and that appearing of the glorie of that mightie God and of Iesus Christ our Saviour and this is the first gift that God in iustifying giveth a ma● CHAPTER XXX NOW it followeth that we speake of the seconde gift whereby we are iustified and that is Chri●t Iesus himselfe For God first giveth vs faith vnto righteousnes and then by faith he giveth vs Christ as our righteousnes therefore is Christ also called the gift of God and that in two respectes First in respect of Gods sending him into the worlde to suffer the death of the crosse and by his death to redeeme vs in which respect it is saide That God so loved the world that hee hath given his onely begotten sonne c. Iohn chap. 3. ver 16. Secondly in respect of Gods particular giving of Christ now crucified vnto the beleeving heart according to which the Apostle speaketh Coll. chap. 2. ver 6. As therefore yee have receyved Ghrist Iesus the Lorde walke in him and Rom. chap. 5. Our righteousnes is called the gift of God For which cause also Christ is said to dwel in our heartes by faith and of
by it may make vs righteous before him or be righteousnes vnto vs in his sight Thus this sentence rightly vnderstoode giveth no advanvantage eyther to the Papistes to prove that by workes we are iustified or yet vnto others who doe make the very act of our beleeving to be our righteousnes but rather doeth evidently convince both these opinions of manifest etror The first because faith is no worke of ours neither yet is the matter but the meane only of our righteousnes The second for the same foresaid reason for it is not the act of beleeving but the thing purchased and possessed by the act of beleeving which is our righteousnes before God And thus much concerning imputation CHAPTER XXXII NOW we come to the third pointe touching the forme and manner of our iustification which consisteth in the grace of God for we have said before that God iustifieth by gift by imputation and by grace therefore giving and imputing doth not simply make the full forme of our iustification but it is further required that both gift and imputation bee by grace Therefore are we said to be iustified freely by his grace Rom. chap. 3. ver 24. Tit. chap. 3. ver 7. Now we are first to consider what is meant by the name of grace and secondly to consider how we are iustified by grace Touching the name of grace leaving that generall signification of grace whereby it is extended to all Creatures in respect of the goodnes of God in some measure vnto all we will only treate of these two significations of grace where it is taken in the worke of our salvation The first signification of grace is when it signifieth the free favour love and good will of God in God him self and his good will towards man which from himselfe and of him selfe without any respect of any thing without him selfe moveth him to make man gracious and acceptable to him selfe in which sense it is taken Tit. chap. 2. ver 11. For that grace of God that bringeth salvation to all men hath appeared And Rom. cha 3. ver 24. Being iustified freely by his grace And Ephe. chap. 1. ver 6. To the praise of the glory of his grace c. And chap. 2. ver 5. By whose grace ye are saved Secondly the name of grace is taken for the benefits and gifts which God of his grace doth bestowe vpō vs in Christ in which sense it is takē 1. Pet. cha 4. ver 10. Let every man as he hath receyved the gift minister the same one to another as good disposers of the manifolde graces of God In which sense our righteousnes is called grace Rom. chap. 5. ve 17. much more shall they which receyve that aboundance of grace and of that gift of that righteousnes c. and not onely righteousnes but all the remaynant blessinges which wee receyve from God in Christ and therfore they are all called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is gratious gifts or giftes of grace Rom. chapt 12. ver 6. 1. Cor. chap. 12. ver 4. And as grace is taken in this sense Christ him selfe and his death and mediation c. may iustly be accompted grace Therefore is hee also him selfe called the gift of God moreover faith love hope peace ioye patience perseverance life and salvation are all comprehended vnder the name of grace as it is taken in this sense In which sense the foolish Papistes doe call it gratia gratum faciens that is the grace that maketh vs acceptable or gratious whereas it is cleer by scripture that it is grace taken in the first sense whereof it evidently appeareth that the papists are vtterly ignorant whereby we are made acceptable vnto God as Eph. cha 1. ver 6. To the praise of the glorie of his grace by the which he hath made vs freely accepted in his beloved And this is the grace which onely should bee called the first grace because it goeth before all other grace taken in the seconde sense yea before the gracious Decree or Predestination of God eyther of vs to adoption or of Christ to bee our Redeemer as wee have showen before But the ignorant Papist calleth the very gift of GOD whereby a mans hearte is drawen backe from evill and stirred vp to goodnes the first grace Which opinion were not amisse in respect of the grace that is dispensed to vs if hee did acknowledge the particular love of God and his grace remayninge and resident in him selfe towarde his elect to goe before it as the cause but the reason of his stumblinge is this the foolishe opinion of the vniversalitie of grace when as they esteeme Gods grace generally to bee extendede alike to all and have no light nor iudgement to discerne betwixt the generall and vniversall grace of God to all Whereby hee maketh his Sunne to arise vpon the evill and the good and sendeth raine vpon the iust and vniust Math. chap. 5. ver 45. and that speciall grace and love of God which moveth him to love Iacob when he hated Esau of the same lumpe whereof he maketh all mankind to make certaine vessells vnto honour while as the rest are prepared for dishonour This being shortly spoken of the signification of grace wee have next to consider in what sense wee are said to be iustified by grace First we are to marke that we are not said to be iustified by grace in the second sense wherein grace is taken howsoever the thing whereby we are iustified be a grace for in this phrase grace is not referred to any of the thinges that are given vs and imputed to vs vnto righteousnes but vnto the manner and forme of Gods giving them and imputing them And that we may knowe this more cleerlie we are to vnderstand that grace taken in the first signification hath a three-folde place in the worke of our iustification First it hath place in the efficient cause in which sense it is taken 2. Tim. cha 9. VVho hath saved vs and hath called vs with a holy calling not according to our workes but according to his purpose and grace For the grace of God is the cause moving God to predestinate call iustifie and glorifie and of this wee have spoken of at length before in the cause of Gods Decree Secondly the grace of God hath place in the formall cause in which sense we are said to be iustified by grace Thirdly it hath place in the finall cause in which sense it is taken Ephe. chap. 1. ver 6. 12. where he is saide to doe all to vs Vnto the praise of the glory of his grace When it is referred to the manner of Gods iustifying vs it is opposed specially to two thinges First the word grace secludeth all price given by vs to God for iustifying vs. Secondly it secludeth all merit of ours from the worke of our iustificatiō so that it importeth as much as that in our iustification whatsoever God doeth he doeth it freely of his love and gratious
favour Man neyther any wayes deservinge it by his worthines nor paying any thing to God for it and that this is the meaning of the worde it is most evident by this other word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is indifferently put for grace the one being sometimes interpreted by the other as Rom. chap. 3. ver 24. Being iustified freely by his grace where the word which is rendered freely is dorean which word secludeth both price and merit Concerning price it is cleere Math. chap. 10. ver 8. Yee have receyved freely give freely And 2. Thess chap. 3. ver 8. Neither tooke we bread of any man freely Concerning merite it is likewise manifest that this word secludeth it by Ioh. chap. 15. ver 25. They hated me freely that is without cause or deserving so that this word maketh iustification to be a worke of God freely done And this we marke that we may know it secludeth not the merit of Christ although that merit be imputed to vs by grace and by this consideration we shall learne to reconcile two sayings of scripture that seeme to be repugnant The first is Esay chap. 52. ver 3. Yee shal be redeemed without monie The other is 1. Cor. chap. 6. ver 20. For yee are bought for a price The one seemeth to make our redemption free without price the other seemeth to say the contrarie Yet both are true for in respect of man him selfe hee hath paide no price at all to God for his redemption but as concerning Christ he hath given a deare price even his life bloud for our redemption So the word Grace secludeth not the merit of Christ nor the price that he hath payed for vs nor ought els ordayned of God by his grace as causes and meanes subordinate to his grace for our iustification but onely secludeth whatsoever thinge is in man or can proceed from man who hath nothing of him selfe whereby to deserve righteousnes neither hath any thing to give to God to obtayne righteousnes For who hath given to God first that he should recompence him Rom. chap. 11. vers 35. And this third pointe of the forme of our iustification is necessarie to be added to the other two First for the right knowledge both of Gods giving and imputing of faith and Christ to our iustification Secondly for preserving vs from the errours of those who mistake the true meaning of the word grace in our iustification Concerning the first there is a distinctiō of the giftes of God and also of the imputation of God Touching the giftes they be eyther such as are natuall given by God indifferently to al are belōging to our natural life or thē they are gifts supernatural belonging to a supernatural life The first sorte the Lord giveth by naturall meanes as by procreation by naturall generation and by his generall providence extended over all But the second he giveth not but by speciall grace and by a speciall providence and particular love in the Lord IESVS there being no ground nor cause in them to whom hee giveth them why they should have thē nor any meanes in their power to procure them Thus faith and Christ by faith are given vs of God not for any worthines in vs nor for any thing given to God by vs but the Lord giveth vs both faith and Christ vnto iustification freely of his meere grace Secondly touching imputation there is an imputation by debt and an imputation by grace therefore that it may bee knowne that neither faith nor Christes merite is imputed to vs by debt the scripture plainly sheweth that this imputatiō is by grace that is first that faith which is now givē vs secondly that Christ who is givē vs by faith is ours not by any right that we have vnto thē by iustice that accompting of them ours is not by debt but of meere mercy grace so that our whole iustificatiō in al that is either given vs or imputed vnto vs to iustifie vs both in the giving in the imputing is of Gods free grace The secōd vse of the knowledge hereof is to preserve vs from their errors who take the name of grace in our iustification for the gifts of grace inherent in vs be it faith or sanctification or the fruites of our righteousnes And secondly from their error who take the name of grace for a gratious acceptatiō of our imperfect faith whereas grace in iustification is relative to the giving imputing of faith not to the accepting of it For in respect of faith given by grace and imputed by grace wee are said to be iustified by grace not in respect of Gods accepting of it at our handes by grace And thus much concerning the forme of our iustification CHAPTER XXXIII IT olloweth that we now speake of the obiect of iustification that is the man whom the Lord doeth iustifie who is two maner of wayes to be confidered First as he is in him selfe by nature Secondly what he is by grace before he be iustified As concerning him selfe wee have two places of scriptures which doe manifestly instruct vs what man is in him self when God iustifieth him The first is Rom. 4. 5. where God is said to iustifie the vngodly the other Rom. 5. 10. where God is said to have iustified vs while we were enemies and this sheweth the vanitie of the Papists who wil have a man formalie iust before he be iustified Touching that which he is by grace it is in many parts of the scripture evidently declared that he must beleeve before he be iustified that is must have faith wrought in his heart in that sorte that he may be iustified for like as Acts 14. it is saide that Paul perceyving that the creeple mā had faith to be made whole he did heale him even so the Lord first giveth vs faith to bee made iust and then iustifieth vs. For we are to consider that although faith bee the instrument of Gods power to make vs able to apprehende Christ and all his blessings in him yet in the worke of iustification it is particularly to be restrayned both as it is wrought by God in our heartes and as our heartes worketh by it vnto the particular benefite of righteousnes in Christ like as in all the rest of the benefites faith is alwayes to be particularly restrayned to every one of them in the particular apprehension of them Moreover we see the truth of this same in the order set downe by the Apostle Rom. 8. when he sayth whom he hath called them he also hath iustified whereby it is evident that God iustifieth not a man vntill first he hath obtayned that degree of grace which God bestoweth vpō a man whē he calleth him of which it followeth that he must have Christ reveyled vnto him he must likewise be come to Christ must have embrased him by faith and that not only as the sonne of God for in that point of faith consisteth his
righteousnes sometime by the making of a man righteous by the obedience of Christ sometime by the making of Christ sinne for vs and vs the righteousnes of God in him and somtime by healing of vs by Christ his stripes and all these are to one effect the iustified man is sometimes shortly described in one worde the iust by faith sometime in relatiō to the action of God more amply he that hath received the aboundance of grace of the gift of that righteousnes which is by one man Iesus Christ somtime he whose sinnes are remitted to whom sinne is not imputed and whose sins are covered c. out of which and the consideration of the points preceeding wee may gather a more full and cleare definition of the action of iustificatiō in this maner Iustification is that seconde gratious action of the free dispensation of GOD in Christ towarde those whom accordinge to his foreknowledge and purpose hee had predestinated to bee Adopted through Christ whom nowe hee hath adopted through him havinge effectuallie called them to the fellowship of Christ by faith by the which action he maketh them who in them selves are sinners to bee righteous in Christ crucified that is whom albeit he knew no sinne hee had made sinne for them and that by the free imputation of Christs obedience and satisfaction vnto them as their owne righteousnes even as they them selves had performed it and by the imputation of faith which he hath given vnto them as their owne to this end that the righteousnes of God which they possesse no wayes but by faith might be their owne righteousnesse and so they might have remission of sinnes in his bloud of Christ whom God had not onely ordayned but also made a propitiation for them in his bloud In this definition we cal iustification first the action of God because it is he only which iustifieth Secondly wee call it the action of his dispensation to distinguish it from the action of Predestination or of Gods Decree in it selfe Thirdly wee call it the second action of his dispensation to distinguish it from the first action which is our calling preceeding it Fourthly wee call it a gratious and free action because it is dispensed for no merit or deserving of those which receyve it neither for any thing given by them to God before whereof it should be the recompence but is given freely of his grace Fiftly Wee call it the worke of God in Christ to distinguish it from the Decree of God which is a worke of God in him self and to shewe iustification to be a worke of externall dispensation which wholy is performed by God in Christ in whom all the blessings of grace are comprehended as our filiation or iustification and glorification in whom and through whom only God maketh vs his sonnes righteous and glorious he being made of God vnto vs wisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption And these five pointes are to bee considered in the nature of this action The next thing that is to be considered is the subiect that is iustified And this we make not simply to be a man foreknowne and fore-purposed neither yet a man simply predestinate but moreover a man effectually called and made one with Christ by faith and in that vnitie the sonne of God For a man simply and nakedly foreknowne is the onely obiect of Gods Decree and Predestination For those whom hee foreknew hee predestinate sayeth the spirit of God And a man predestinate is the only obiect of Gods calling according to his purpose For whō hee had predestinate them also hee called sayeth the spirit of God And the man now called effectually to the faith of Iesus as the sonne of God and promised seed in the which all the nations of the world should be blessed is the onely obiect of Gods iustification like as a iustified man is the onely obiect of Gods glorification Thus to goe backward againe the Lord in glorifying a man hath before him especially his righteousnes for none but the iust shall live next in iustifying a man hee hath particularly before his eyes his vnion with Christ by faith without the which not any man shal be iustified of God And in giving this blessing to bee one with Christ by faith and so in that vnitie the sonne of God in which cōsisteth the calling of God Hee onely hath before his eyes the man predestinate to be Adopted through Christ that is the man whom hee hath ordayned to call that is to Adopt and to make his sonne by faith in Christ And in predestinating a man to this blessinge hee had not any thing before his eyes but his owne foreknowledge of the person of that man his purpose or the good pleasure of his will which are all one in substance and different onely in respect The will of God which limiteth all the actions of his power seeing hee doeth all thinges accordinge to the counsell of his owne will being the highest and the first cause of all thinges created and done by GOD in the world of the which no cause possiblie can bee given and therefore it is in some respect the cause of Gods purpose or counsaile which therefore is called the counsaile of his will although his will and his counsaill in effect bee both one For his will is his purpose and his purpose is his will in all thinges and especiallie in the whole worke of his grace towardes the vesselles of mercie vnto the which his purpose is especiallie restrayned oftentimes in the booke of God which purpose is nothing save a setting of such persons before him from all eternitie as hee him selfe willeth or pleaseth which may cleerlie be perceyved by the holy bread set vpon the Table in the Sanctuarie being twalfe in number representinge the twalfe Tribes of Israell that is the whole elect of God which are called the shew bread in the vulgar translation the worde beeing the same which is called the purpose of God as is cleere by Christ his owne wordes Math. chap. 12. ver 4. Luke chap. 6. ver 4. that is the bread of the purpose of God or of the setting before the face of God And therefore the action of the Priest in settinge those bread vpon the table before the Lord is called by the Apostle Heb. chap. 9. ver 2. Prothesis ton arton that is the setting before or the presenting of bread to shewe vs that by that worde which is commonly called the purpose of God which was shadowed in that type of the Lawe is to bee vnderstood the eternall action of God in settinge before himselfe as in the sight of his owne eyes the persons of such as hee willed And in the same sense the same word is referred vnto Christ Rom. chapt 3. ver 25. whether it be referred to Gods eternall purpose touching the humane nature of Iesus Christ in setting it particularly before him as that which should be the onely expiation of the sinnes of his