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 word_n 1,525 5 4.2834 3 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
A65753 A vvay to the tree of life discovered in sundry directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptvres : wherein is described occasionally the nature of a spirituall man, and, in A digression, the morality and perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof, is discovered and cleared / by Iohn White ... White, John, 1575-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing W1785; ESTC R40696 215,387 374

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

it must needs be granted to be the same Word of God That no other means but the voice and Word of God accompanied with his Spirit can perform these great works of melting converting and comforting the soul we have shewed already Now it may be doubted whether those effects as they are beyond the power of nature be not also beyond the power of the Word it self Seeing many hear and read that Word Object in whom we discern no such effect But many use the Word in whom it works no such effect but they remain still senslesse carelesse rebellious and carnall lovers of themselves and high minded c. and others walking in darknesse without light Isa 50.10 finding no peace nor comfort in the Word it self as if there were no balm in Gilead nor no Physitian there Jer. 8.22 Now if the power of working these effects be in the word how comes it to passe that they appear not in the greatest part of those that hear and read it To this We answer Sol. that if this effect appear in some although not in all that make use of it it sufficiently proves that it hath this power 1 t If it work it in some it proves it hath that power 2ly Where it hath not this effect 1. Either the heart is not rightly disposed Meat hath power to nourish and medicines to cure yet all are not cured by medicines nor nourished by meat To the producing of an effect besides the power of the cause is required a right disposition of the subject The high-way the stony and thorny ground we know brought no fruit to perfection which our Saviour tels us was not by any defect in the Word but by the ill disposition of the heart Mat 13.19.20 c. And the Apostle tels us that those that had not faith to mixe with the Word profited not by it at all Heb. 4.2 Again a cause powerfull enough in it self may want effect where it is not rightly applyed there are that hear the Word and understand it not Mat. 13.19 Some that understand and beleeve it not 2. Or the Word not rightly applyed Iohn 12.47 Some that beleeve it and remember it not Iam. 1.23 And lastly some that after all this apply it not at all or at least not as they ought taking hold of judgement when they need the promises of mercy or laying hold of mercy when judgement is their portion 3ly The Word works not necessarily but voluntarily Deut. 29.19 Lastly we must remember that the Word works not necessarily as fire heats but voluntarily being only mighty through God 2 Cor. 10.4 working by the Spirit which like the winde bloweth vvhere it lusteth Iohn 3.8 Thus Lydiaes heart was opened by God when others were shut Acts 16.14 And many scoffed at Saint Peters Sermons which notwithstanding converted three thousands Acts 2.41 We have then sufficiently manifested the Scriptures to be Gods Word First they contain Gods Law given to his Church which was neither fit nor possible to be given by any other then God himself Secondly because they bear the lively character of divine Majesty in the high and lofty plainnesse of style and in those powerfull commands which we finde therein And thirdly for those high mysteries which they handle which none could know much lesse reveal but God himself And lastly for the wonderfull effects of breaking converting and comforting and reviving the spirit which being works above nature must needs be wrought by a supernaturall instrument so that the Scriptures that effect them must needs be acknowledged to be the Word of God CAP. III. The Scriptures which have God for their Authour must needs be of divine Authority The former Position being once granted that the Scriptures are Gods Word no man can question their Authority whether that be of him or no. So that this evident truth needing no power at all our labour must be only to shew what we mean by that divine Authority which we challenge unto the Scriptures for the opening whereof we must first consider in generall what this name Authority imports In Scripture as well as in other Authors the names of Authority and Power are used indifferently Authority is not Power in genetall as if they were one and the same thing although in strictnesse of signification we may finde a reall difference between them For this tearm Power implies that strength by which any thing not only subsists but withall bears out it selfe against whatsoever opposeth it and besides is enabled to work any notable effect but this signification as making little to our purpose we shall omit for the present More pertinently to the matter in hand But right to rule govern this name of Power is taken for that dominion and right of ruling and governing which one hath over another to dispose and order that which is governed In this sense Power seems to bee a more generall name then Authority as is evident by the correlative tearms opposed thereunto For subjection which imports any kind of subordination of one under another seems most firly to answer to Power as the Psalmist matcheth mans dominion over the works of Gods hands with subjection or putting all things under his feet Psal 8.6 And obedience which is a voluntarily yeelding or submitting ones selfe to anothers will may bee conceived to bee more properly correspondent to Authority as the Centurion expresseth the subjection of his servants and soldiers by their readinesse to doe his will Luke 7.8 At least howsoever the names be sometimes used indifferently there is manifest difference between prescribing to a reasonable creature and between the disposing of that which is without reason Authority therefore And that most properly reasonable creatures being most properly restrained to the government of reasonable creatures is that power by which a superiour hath right to prescribe unto such as are under him By right in this description we exclude tyranny which is the usurping of authority without or against right Secondly when we place the exercise of Authority in prescribing As being only capable of prescription we imply that it properly extends onely to such as are capable of prescription which are reasonable creatures Lastly we extend it to all kinde of prescribing both to the understanding what to assent unto and beleeve and to the will what to follow and embrace All which particulars if we lay together we shall finde that Authority originally is founded in God alone and that men have no title unto it but by deputation from him as the Apostle expresly restifieth Rom. 13.1 Which reacheth 1. To the understanding what to beleeve Which only belongs unto God to prescribe 1. Seeing he onely knows things by vision 2. Onely hath light in himself To begin with that branch of Authority that prescribes unto the understanding what to assent unto as truth we know that this is a Power that no man may justly challenge seeing a rule
testimony which our Saviour calls the Revelation of flesh and blood Mat. 16.17 as the Apostle doth the other The Demonstration of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.4 and a little after The Revelation of things by the Spirit which are understood onely of spirituall men ver 10.14 15. We call that a Divine testimony which is given by the Spirit of God to that spirit which is within a regenerate person For unto any testimony two things are required First the manifesting and presenting that which is to be credited or beleeved Secondly an ability in him to whom it is witnessed to understand it otherwise the proposing any thing by discourse to a beast that wants reason to understand speech or the relating of any thing to a man that hath reason in the Greeke tongue who understands no language but English is no testimony no more then it is to a deafe man that cannot heare Wherefore to make a divine testimony there must be both a divine testimony unto a man and withall a mind in him able to understand that revelation First therefore the Spirit of God must reveale and manifest unto a man that truth that is to be beleeved as the light discovers any visible object Next there must be in that man a light planted in his heart which the Apostle 1 Iohn 5.20 tearmes An understanding to know him that is true as the light or visuall faculty is planted in the eye or else he cannot comprehend that light that shines unto him For want of this inward light it was that the Israelites who had seene with their bodily eyes all Gods wonders and by reason were forced to acknowledge that they were wrought by the finger of God yet are truly charged by Moses not to have an heart to perceive nor eyes to see nor eares to heare unto that day Deut. 29.4 The evidence then which a true beleever hath of any truth of God By way of Demonstration farre different from conviction by reason which he embraceth is the manifesting of that truth unto the spirit not onely by a form of words to the naturall understanding but beyond that by a kind of Demonstration unto the spirituall minde as the evidence of any object to the eye is by the shining of the light upon it which makes it appeare to be such as it is This kind of testifying or evidencing things in a spirituall way the Apostle calls Rom. 8.16 As representing the things themselves in their proper species the witnessing of Gods Spirit with our spirit mentioning expresly two spirits whereof if either be wanting there can be no divine Testimony The beholding of Divine truths with a such spirituall eye represented by way of Demonstration is so necessary that without it men could not be witnesses Without which beleevers could not be Gods witnesses or at least sufficient witnesses to Gods truth For he that will testifie any thing upon credit must see it with his owne eye or discerne it by some other sense of his owne Otherwise he that testifieth a truth upon another mans relation beares witnesse rather to the relator then to the truth related So that to make men witnesses to Gods truth they must not onely have it related unto them but besides further manifested by way of Demonstration and spirituall evidence that they may say with the Apostle 1 Ioh. 1.3 That we have seene with our eyes and looked upon declare we unto you Which not onely winnes much credit with others but mightily affects the person himselfe as it did Iob when he thus saw God Iob 42.5 and Abraham when he saw Christs day Iohn 8.56 It is evident then that true Faith is grounded upon a Divine testimony Whereas Historicall faith rests on an humane Testimony In the next place we must make it appeare that Historicall faith relies onely upon an humane testimony Now it cannot be denied that the truths of Divine mysteries though they cannot be found out by mans reason as the Apostle tells us they never entred into mans heart 1 Cor. 2.9 yet are they all consonant to right reason and it is as evident that the testimony of reason Embracing divine truths is an humane testimony I say then that historicall faith rests not upon the evidence or demonstration but upon the reasonablenesse of divine truths 1. For the reasonablenesse of them rather then upon Gods testimony of them which therefore mans reason cannot but assent unto For example the Creation of the World Resurrection of the body Incarnation of Christ and may be acknowledged by reason to be possible upon the supposition of Gods Almightinesse yea and fit to be done by him whose scope is to make knowne his Power Psal 106.8 and to magnifie his Word that is 2. Or if on the testimony of the Scripture yet upon an humane testimony Because he beleeves the Scriptures themselves 1. Either upon the Churches testimony of them 2. Upon the reasonablenesse of truths delivered therein his mercy promised in his Word above all his workes Psal 138.2 to set out in ages to come the riches of his grace Eph. 2.7 So that howsoever these are Mysteries of faith yet seeing Reason which is an Humane testimony may approve them it is evident that an Historicall faith beleeving these things for the Reasonablenesse of them is but meerely upon an Humane Testimonie Nay if he should goe a steppe further and beleeve any thing that is written in the Scriptures for the Testimony of the Scriptures yet still he beleeves upon an Humane testimony because he beleeves the Scriptures themselves upon Humane testimony as upon the generall consent for the Church which receives the Scriptures as the Word of God or upon the probability and reasonablenes or of the things therein delivered lastly upon the observation of the Truth of those holy writings in most things which makes them beleeved to be true in all For the Assent unto one thing for another is built upon that to which we first give our Assent As a stone in a wall though it lies immediately upon that stone that is next under it yet is indeed supported by the foundation which beares up all the building We see then a wide Difference between Justifying and Historicall faith in the cause subject and ground of Assurance we shall finde no lesse in the Object Now the generall Object of Faith we know is Gods Word and Promise which onely is a sure ground to build Faith upon as being the Word of the God of truth Deut. 32.4 A fourth difference betweene justifying and Historicall faith in the Object of both who cannot lye Tit. 1.2 or denie himselfe 2 Tim. 2.23 or change his minde Num. 23.19 So that his Word must needs be Everlasting Ps 119.144 founded for ever v. 132. upon two unfailing foundations his Everlasting Truth and unresistible Power But the particular Object of justifying Faith is Gods Promise of Reconciliation and Salvation by Christ in whom onely we are
Neither indeed are their writings compared with the Scriptures revealing the glory of God in the face of Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 so much as the light of a candle to the Sun shining at noon day As for the mystery of the Trinity it is generally acknowledged to bee a secret unsearchable by naturall reason or discoverable any way but by the revelation of the Word and Spirit Next unto God 2. The Creation of the world with the manner order of it may follow the Creation of the world which we likewise beleeve by faith Heb. 1.3 which although the Heathen upon the consideration of the creatures by the light of naturall reason were forced to acknowledge and consequently that it must be the work of a God yet that the creatures were made by Gods meere word finished in sixe days and created in such order as we finde mentioned Gen. 1. no Heathen man ever took upon him to relate neither seeing man was made the last of all creatures was it possible for him to divine what was done before he had any beeing wherefore the Scriptures so exactly describing the time means and order of the Creation must needs be the Word of the Wisdome of the Father who was brought forth ere the mountains were setled Prov. 8.25 present when he prepared the heavens ver 27. by his Father when he appointed the foundations of the earth ver 29 30. Thirdly the state of man before his fall 3. The history of mans fall and the consequents of it the whole history means and manner of his fall with all the circumstances thereof especially the corruption that it brought upon the whole nature of man which we tearm Originall sin together with the subjection of all men to the curse and wrath of God thereby and the manner how it is propagated both in the stain and guilt of it to posterity as they are things unsearchable by naturall reason so the memory of them being once lost together with the antiquities of the first times of the world or at least imperfectly and uncertainly delivered and related to posterity through so many hands as it must needs passe before the time of Moses it was impossible but the full and certain knowledge of them must be hidden from such as had no better light then that of nature to search them out wherefore we find that they are wholly passed over in all writings of Heathen men but in the Scriptures are clearly opened as far as they are necessary to be known which shews them to be the Word of God seeing they reveal these things that cannot be taught by humane reason Fourthly 4. Mans Redemption by Christ that wonderfull mystery of mans Redemption by Jesus Christ being a secret that never entred into mans heart 1 Cor. 2.19 was never so much as dreamed of by any naturall man neither doe we finde the least syllable of it in any Heathen mans bookes The truth is it seems so incredible a thing to flesh and blood that the Prophet not without cause when he begins to speak of this wonder asks who hath beleeved his report Esa 53.1 and the Apostle tels us that when it was preached the learned Grecians accounted it foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1.27 or a meere phantasie Now that which seems incredible to reason when it is known was very unlikely to be found out by reason at the first before it was known If there were no more but this that this wonderfull work proceeded meerly from the free motion of Gods will without any other cause moving thereinto then his own love and compassion as Christ himself affirms Iohn 36.16 And the Apostle 1 Iohn 4.10 how could any man divine what God purposed in his own heart before he had wrought it unlesse himself had revealed it So that it must needs be granted that this word which sets out unto us the mystery of our Redemption by Christ must be the Word of God himself Lastly 5. The benefits thereof the condition into which man is redeemed by Christ is another mystery hidden from the eyes of all that see by no clearer light then that which naturall reason yeelds them It was utterly impossible for any man Uniō with Christ Adoption Justification Renovation by the light of nature to have discovered our mysticall union into one body with Christ by the Spirit our adoption by grace to be the sons of God our Justification by faith through the imputation of Christs righteousnesse our Renovation or new birth wherein our hearts are changed by the effectuall working of the spirit Resurrection of our bodies to glory the restitution of our bodies to life again with a change from the state of corruption to incorruption of naturall and earthly bodies to spirituall and heavenly and our glorious and ever blessed condition to be enjoyed hereafter in the immediate and everlasting fruition of God in the highest heavens Wherefore we finde not so much as any mention of these things among any of the Heathen unlesse perhaps they stumble upon the immortality of the soul which yet they rather dream of then understand distinctly Wherefore the Scriptures revealing unto us so clearly all these things which naturall reason could neither teach nor comprehend must needs be acknowledged to be the Word of God It appears then hitherto 2ly Many rules of life 1. The inward disposition of the heart toward God in fear love faith that the principles of faith laid down in the Scriptures must needs be acknowledged to be revealed by God and not by man The same truth will be evidently manifested in the rules of practise if they be duly weighed To begin with the duties to be performed unto God and first with the affections and right disposition of the heart The Apostle tels us we cannot beleeve on him of vvhom vve have not heard Rom. 10.14 and the Psalmist affirms that they onely trust in him that know his name Psal 9.10 and we know that it was the lively representation of God unto him that strook that deep impression of fear into Iobs heart and made him vile in his own eyes To bee wrought in us only by the full discovery of God unto us Iob 40.4 42.5 6. The truth is those holy affections of love fear and affiance in God cannot be grounded on any other then a true and distinct knowledge of him which as we have seen already the light of naturall reason could never discover so that none can prescribe unto us the right disposing of the heart towards God in those holy affections of love fear and faith in him but the same that can reveal unto us the right knowledge of himself As for the outward duties of worship 2. And outward duties of worship that they cannot be devised by men but must be appointed by God himself the very light of nature taught Heathen men themselves Wherefore we finde that those forms of worship which they observed the wisest amongst
them either took from the Sibylls books or from some other directions pretended to be given by the Gods themselves Neither can we possibly be assured that such rites as we worship God withall In the observation of the Sabbath use of the Sacraments c. are accepted unlesse God himself prescribe them as we see he did the whole form of ceremoniall worship in the Leviticall law and the Sabbath and Sacraments both in Paradise and under the Gospel by our Saviour Christ And for the services which are to be performed to men first we finde little in the Precepts of such as are meer Moralists concerning that fountain of those duties whence they ought to flow which is love without which none of them is accepted 1 Cor. 13.3 Neither doe we finde that measure of love required by them which our Saviour commands to love our neighbour as our self Mat. 5.44 wherein he affirms we go beyond naturall men and consequently implies that we doe more then naturall reason teacheth whence it will follow that the law which requires that duty was not given by man and therefore must needs be acknowledged to be the Precept and Word of God and not of man Nay beyond all this 3. Most of all self-deniall which nature never taught we find that Gods Word requires of us the deniall of our selves and that every way both of our own vvisdome to prescribe as the Lord requires his people to do not vvhat is right in their own eyes Deut. 12.8 but what is right in the eyes of the Lord their God Deut. 13.18 and of our own ability to undertake and perform as our Saviour requires us to bring forth fruit in him vvithout vvhom vve can doe nothing Iohn 15.5 and of our own ends as the Apostle tels us that vve must bring forth fruit unto God Rom. 7.4 that he may be glorified Mat. 5.16 and therefore the Prophet cals Israel an empty Vine because he brought forth fruit to himself Hos 10.1 whence it is that our Saviour makes this self-deniall the first step to Religion Mat. 16.24 A duty that humane reason is so far from prescribing that it cannot so much as allow and submit unto it when it is prescribed and that because it cannot finde out mans emptinesse and weaknesse the ground on which self-deniall is founded or at least sensibly acknowledged Wherfore the Scriptures which require that duty which is so contrary to the principles of nature must needs be the Word of God Thus we see that the subject which the Scriptures handle is above the pitch of humane wisdome whether vve look to the grounds of faith or rules of practise which are layed down therein The true knowledge of God vvhom the world hath not known the great and glorious works of the worlds Creation vvith the time manner and order thereof And of mans Redemption after his fall and corruption thereby together with the state into which he is redeemed to be mystically united to Christ by the Spirit which gives him interest in his merits and righteousnesse makes him Gods childe by adoption and an heir of glory The duties of fear love and affiance in God all grounded on the true knowledge of him And lastly the service of love to man binding him to love his neighbour as himself yea his very enemies and above all things to deny himself So that the Scripture discovering those things which naturall reason could never finde out must needs be acknowledged to be delivered by God himself and to be his Word MARK III. Of the powerfull effects of the Scriptures upon mens hearts which discover them to be the Word of God THe two former Markes of the Scriptures which manifest them to be the Word of God appear as it were in the face and body of that sacred volume this third Mark is taken from the wonderfull and supernaturall effects that they work upon the heart and conscience which are such as cannot possibly be performed by any other then a divine Power These effects may be reduced unto three heads First the wounding and terrifying Secondly the converting and renuing Thirdly the comforting and reviving of the heart Neither of which being possible to bee wrought by the power of man as we shal manifest by and by it must needs be granted that the Scripture which produceth such wonderfull effects is not of man but of God seeing we know no cause can work an effect greater and of an higher nature then it self To begin with the first The first Effect of the Word the pricking of the heart Differing from naturall terrours the terrours and prickings of heart which are caused in men by Gods Word It cannot be denyed but there may be and are sometimes wrought in mens hearts some naturall terrours which may cause in them much unquietnesse but between such naturall passions and these spirituall agonies which are wrought by the word there will appear a wide difference if they be well examined and that more ways then one 1. In the grounds upon which they be raised 2. In the effects produced by them The grounds of naturall terrours 1. A naturall sense of sin 2. A naturall acknowledgment of Gods Justice Holinesse and Power which may be easily made manifest by observing first the grounds whence either of them doe arise And secondly the effects which the one and the other produce in those on whose hearts they make impression with the different consequents that follow thereupon Concerning the grounds upon which terrours are raised in mans heart the causes of such as are naturall appear to be evidently different from those which raise spirituall passions For we cannot be ignorant that every man by nature having imprinted in his heart some rude notions at the least both of good and evill and withall some acknowledgement of Gods Justice Holinesse and Power and having besides a conscience within his own breast sitting as Judge to passe censure upon his own ways and actions before which his thoughts accuse or excuse one another as the Apostle speaks Rom. 2.15 must needs have usually some sense of every known sin either more or lesse Whence it follows that the more the conscience is illightned and by that means awakened to look back upon a mans own sin and the wrath of God lying upon him for sin and his powerfull revenging hand pursuing him the more he must of necessity be distracted in his thoughts with fearfull terrours which may cause his life to hang before him All working in the heart fears of punishment Deut. 28.65 and to be bitter unto him and yet these terrours as arising from naturall principles are meerly naturall being caused by a naturall sense of sin and acknowledgment of Gods wrath and fear of his own danger thereby which any man may have by nature From this apprehension of the guilt of sin The grounds of spirituall terrours and fear of the punishment that follows it the causes that affect a godly
make in our own persons neither by our wealth which is no ransome for souls Psal 49.7 Either by ourwealth of by our righteousnesse 2. Or by any other creature 8. nor by our righteousnesse seeing if we could fulfill the whole law it is but duty Luke 17.10 and therefore can make no satisfaction for sins past All other creatures we finde in the same condition with our selves debtors to God for all that they have or can doe and therefore unable to satisfie for us and as unable to defend us from Gods power 2ly Pointing out the onely way of making our peace Christ Jesus 1. Holy in himself 2. Accepted of his Father 3. Satisfying his Justice to the full as they are to work our reconciliation So that our salvation by any creature appears to be utterly impossible The heart of a sinner being by this means brought to despair of help unto salvation by any creature the Word points out unto him that fountain which God hath opened for sin and for uncleannesse Christ Jesus himself the only Son of his Father the holy one in whose mouth no guile was found Isa 53.9 In whom God is well pleased who was bruised for our iniquities so far that God did see the travell of his soul and was satisfied Isa 53.12 and who in our flesh fulfilled all righteousnesse and that for us This means of reconciliation 4. Tendered to us by God himself the Scripture tels us God offers to all that will embrace it and that upon his faithfull Word which is truth it self Psa 119.142.151 Yea makes it manifest that this mercy is of inestimable value and beyond belief yet that it becomes God to doe things incredible to cause his mercies to exceed not onely the mercies of men but even mans apprehension as the love of Christ passeth knowledge Eph. 3.19 that all men may be astonished at the consideration of his mercies as well as of his judgments and generally of all his ways Rom. 11.33 Thus Gods Word shews A means 1. Suiting with Gods Justice 2. Magnifying his Mercy 3. Discovering his Wisdome that this way of saving sinners suits well with Gods justice because he pardons not without sufficient satisfaction with his mercy because it sets out the plentifulnesse of his compassion Psal 86.15 103.11 with his wisdome because this is a way past finding out as all his judgements are a great deep Psal 36.6 and consequently makes a sinner confident that a way of peace proposed by God himself ratified by his faithfull promise and of such advantage to further his own glory every way 4. And consequētly advancing his glory is really intended upon which the distressed soul is encouraged to follow that only way by which he sees hope of escaping the vengeance to come which he could never have known unlesse God had revealed it in the Scriptures Rom. 16.25 26. which must therefore be acknowledged to be the Word of God 2ly The nature of cōversion consisting Now if the grounds of mans conversion could be found no where but in the Word of God much lesse could the act it self of conversion be wrought by any other instrument then the same Word For whereas conversion is the turning away of the heart from all creatures himself and all unto God which consists in two main acts self-deniall and totall subjection to God it is evident that neither of these two can be wrought any other way then by the power of the Spirit working by the Word To begin with self-deniall 1. In self-denial impossible to nature consisting in the abandoning of ones own wisdome righteousnesse ability to doe any good desires and endeavours after his own ends in credit profit pleasure or any other way what wise man among the Heathen guided by the light of nature ever taught it much more practised it Or how is it possible that corrupt nature should conquer it self Indeed it is true that naturall wisdome hath prevailed upon men to change them from a vicious disposition to morall honesty perhaps somewhat out of conscience or more out of self-respect to grace themselves by the honour of a vertuous disposition but to deny ones self one cannot be possibly perswaded but by something that is not himself Again 2. In a totall subjection to Gods wil. it is impossible that the whole spirit of man with all the thoughts thereof should bee brought under to a free and chearfull submission to Gods will unlesse the very temper and frame of it be altered For that Gods desires should be our desires his will our will his delights our delights our wisdome in this state of corruption being enmity against him Rom. 8.7 can bee wrought by no other way Which nature opposeth And therefore must be new framed after Gods image to bring it to this subjection but by making our nature answerable to Gods Nature which necessarily requires the destroying of the corruption therof the creating of it after God in wisdom and holinesse Eph. 4.24 Col. 3.10 Now the changing and new creating of the heart is beyond mans power effected onely by him that made it at the first wherefore even in respect of our new birth we are said to be his workmanship Eph. 2.10 receiving this spirituall as well as our naturall life from him to whom it properly belongs to quicken the dead Rom. 4.17 to raise up whom he will John 5.21 as having life in himself v. 26. wherefore the renuing of the heart being a work above nature and properly the effect of a divine power it necessarily follows that the Scriptures which are found by experience to be the instruments of that high and supernaturall work must have a divine original and consequently be the Word of God The last of the divine and supernaturall effects The third supernaturall effect of the Word reviving wounded spirits To be effected only by Gods Word that wounded them wrought by the word is the sustaining reviving of distressed wounded spirits Now that this can be effected by no other means then the Word is manifest not only by experience which makes it evident that humane wisdome or eloquence can doe nothing to purpose this way but besides by the consideration of the cause whence the affliction of the spirit ariseth For seeing it is the apprehension of Gods wrath provoked by sin that breaks the heart it must needs be granted that it cannot be healed but upon a perswasion that God is pacified as we see in that wounded spirit Job 33.25 and in David 2 Sam. 12.13 which must be wrought by a message comming from God himself as it is God that must cause David to hear the voice of joy and gladnesse ere the bones that he had broken could rejoyce Ps 51.8 It must therefore be the same hand that hath smitten that must heal Hos 6.1 wherefore seeing it is onely Gods Word that wounds the soul as hath been shewed the Word that restores and heals
by vertue of another under whom it commands is humane 2. In the subject matters prescribed 1. Principles of faith The second difference between the Authority of God and man is in respect of the subjects or matters prescribed which are either principles of saith or rules of life for the former because God is true every man a lyer Rō 3.4 therefore in grounds of faith Which only God can deliver 1. Because many of them are unsearchable by man we admit no testimony but Gods alone for two reasons First the imperfection of our knowledge arising partly by the nature of the things to be beleeved whereof many are unsearchable by mans wisdome and therefore must be revealed by the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.11 12. and partly from the weaknesse of the means of our knowledge which is the information by sense that looks onely on the outward appearance 1 Sā 16.9 so that it is impossible that man should know any thing in matters of faith but by revelation from God which also he apprehends weakly and imperfectly So that in matters of faith there is no infallibility in mans knowledge and that which is depends upon the credit not of the man but of the Spirit which reveals it Another reason why mans testimony is no sufficient ground of faith 2. Because men may lye is because men may deceive as well as be deceived wherefore though they often speake truth we are not sure that they doe so always because it is not contrary to their nature to lye Whereas Gods knowledg is infallible 1. Because he hath light in himself 2. And knows by vision not by discourse as it is unto Gods Tit. 1.2 Neither of these imperfections are found in God whose knowledge must needs be every way perfect because he sees by his own not by a borrowed light which must therefore be without any mixture of darknesse 1 John 1.5 And because the means of Gods knowledge is by vision not by discourse yea by such a sight as pierceth through the very nature of all things seeing God himself is in and through all Ephes 4.6 Besides the most of the things which we beleeve 3. And must needs understād what he freely gives are things freely given us of God 1 Cor. 2.12 which therefore he must needs understand fully seeing the spirit in man understands the things of a man although no man else know them 1 Cor. 2.11 Now in the next place there can be no more question of Gods fidelity in revealing then there is of his infallibility in understanding all things seeing truth is Gods nature And can no more deceive then be deceived which therefore he can no more swerve from then from himself So seeing we finde Gods testimony every way infallible and mans uncertain it must needs be granted that it is peculiar to God alone to establish grounds of faith Againe for the regulating of mans practise 2. And rules of life onely to be prescribed by God 1. Whose will is infallibly good 2. And the duties prescribed are his services there is a wide difference between Gods and mans Authority for if we respect the substance of duty that can be prescribed by none but God alone both because onely his will is infallibly good Psal 143.10.119.39 and therefore only fit to be the rule of righteousnesse and besides because the duties commanded being all of them immediately or mediately services unto God it was most fit that God alone should appoint the duties of his own service The truth is in matters of practise mans authority hath to doe only in two things First in applying the rules of morall duties to particulars for the preservation of order and peace thereby Secondly in compelling men to obedience in such duties as are prescribed In brief then divine Authority establisheth principles of faith and prescribes the substance of morall dutie humane authority meddles not in laying down any grounds of faith at all and in morall duties prescribes not the substance but onely the order and manner of outward performance of that which divine authority hath commanded The third difference between divine and humane Authority 3. In the extent of this authority which bindes the consciēce belonging onely to God is in the extent of them both Humane authority being ordained for preservation of order and by it of peace in civill society for the furtherance and supporting of godlinesse and honesty 1 Tim. 2.2 reacheth no farther then to binde men to conform to order in the course of their practise but divine Authority having an higher scope even the renuing of the heart and bringing under the thoughts thereof to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 bindes the conscience that is both the judgement of man to allow that which is commanded as holy and just with the Apostle Rom. 7.12 and the will to choose it as good and the affections to embrace it Rom. 7.22 accordingly yea the whole man to follow it with the strength of constant endeavours after the Prophet Davids example Psal 119.106.112 Hence it follows that in obeying mens commandements he that doth what Authority requires so he perform it in a willing submission thereunto in obedience to God which the Apostle cals obeying for conscience sake Rom. 13.5 hath performed his duty neither hath cause to judge himself a transgressour though he approve not the law it self as good and holy nay though upon good ground he think the contrary to that which is commanded more fit and convenient so he think not so out of any self-conceipt rash judgement or distaste of the Authority that commands But in obeying Gods Commandements it is far otherwise For though a man fulfill the law in the outward act yet if he allow it not as holy and just if his endeavour be not to conform his will to Gods will therein if he rejoyce not in performing it as a good man doth Prov. 21.15 his own conscience ought to condemn him as a transgressour and sinner against God at least in some degree So then divine Authority bindes the conscience by a double band both of the power that commands and of the justice of the commandement but humane Authority bindes onely by vertue of the power that commands not by the equity of the commandement further then it agrees with Gods law or conduceth to order and peace for which Authority was established The last difference between divine and humane Authority 4. In the sanctions annexed to the precepts is in respect of the sanctions annexed to their laws which are proportioned to the nature and quality of the obedience required and to the power of him that requires it For Gods commands in his laws are specially inward holinesse righteousnesse love c. and that under the penalty of the curse and wrath of God 1. Reaching to the soul 2. And reaching to eternity to bee poured out on the soul as well as on the body both in this life
wholly that way when he caused it to be written he caused it to bee written wholly not only the Morall but the Judiciall and Ceremoniall too containing many observances of small value tearmed beggerly rudiments Gal. 4.9 So that he left not out the least circumstance of any legall rites to be supplyed by tradition Is now Christ lesse faithfull in Gods house then Moses was Or how is it that in this clear light of the Gospel we should be left more uncertain then the Jews were under the law and that in matters of greatest importance Purgatory the Popes Supremacy Invocation of Saints c. The truth is when men put no stint to their traditions nor give us any accompt of the number of them they give cause of suspition that they have purposely left open this back door to conveigh into the Church those humane inventions of theirs under the cloake of the Traditions of the Church which otherwise the expresse letter of the written word had excluded But we resolve to forbear controversies Onely to quicken men to a more heedfull attention to the Scriptures it was needfull to shew not only that the most weighty things that concern us far more neerly then our Lands and Revenues then our libertie or lives even our evidences for and directions to everlasting blessednesse are to be found in the Scriptures but more then that to make it appear that they are to bee found in no other books or writings Whence it must needs follow that without this word having neither firm ground to stay our faith on nor any certain rule to guide our practise by we are in this left without light without comfort for the present and without hope or expectation for time to come CAP. VI. Of the scope and end of the Scriptures which is Gods glory and mans salvation THat the honour of God which is the principall end of all his workes The first end of the Scriptures is Gods honour Prov. 16.4 should likewise be the main scope of his word is agreeable to all reason and that it is so the Scriptures themselves witnesse They testifie of Christ Iohn 5.39 that God was in him reconciling the world to himself 2 Cor. 5.19 and thereby magnifying the riches of his grace in his kindnesse towards us through Christ Ephes 2.7 and that to the praise of his glorious grace Ephes 1.6 They witnesse the Creation of the world by the word of his power and the administration of it in righteousnesse even to this day so that whatsoever Gods works witnesse of him his Majesty Greatnesse Goodnesse Compassion c. Psal 145.5 6 7 8. that his word sets out more fully and clearly and by the same means furthers our salvation by setting out the power holinesse goodnesse and justice of God moving us to fear and trust in him Psal 78.6 7. that he may bring upon us all the good that he hath spoken Gen. 18.19 How the glory of God is manifested and consequently advanced by and in the Scriptures will best appeare by particular instances Manifested in the Scriptures 1 t By describing his Nature The first evidences for God therein are the direct testimonies which are given of him describing the excellency of his nature Exod. 34.6 7. or ascribing to him some of his glorious Attributes as Isa 6.3 or admiring his wonderfull works as his servants doe Psal 104.1 that he is righteous and holy in them all Psal 145.17 as all the world acknowledgeth Psal 64.9 yea wicked men themselves Judges 1.7 nay the very Devils Mark 1.24 whose testimonies being as they are Gods professed enemies when they are for him must needs much advance his honour see Deut. 32.31 The next of the most pregnant testimonies for God whereby his honour is advanced which we finde in Scriptures are his Laws 2ly Delivering his Laws with the sanctions annexed thereunto wherein God is pleased to reveal his minde fully unto us and to give us as it were a perfect mirrour of the thoughts of his heart for whosoever in reading these Laws findes them very pure Psal 119.140 righteous and very faithfull ver 138. all of them right concerning all things ver 128. perfect every way Psal 19.7 must of necessity conclude that seeing all the streams that flow so immediatly from God savour of so much purity and perfection the fountain whence they flow which is himself must needs be more pure so that he must be a God of truth without iniquity just and right Deut. 32.4 The third cloud of witnesses 3ly By recording his Works 1. Of Creation 2. Of Providence 1. In Preserving by which Gods honour is advanced in the Scriptures are his works both of Creation and of Providence Creation for the Heavens declare the glory of God Psal 19.1 the invisible things of him being seen from the Creation Rom. 1.20 His power and wisdome in framing and supporting his faithfulnesse and mercy in preserving and providing for all that his hand hath made see Psal 33.3 4 5 6. 145.15 2. Governing wherin are discovered 1. His Truth 2. His Justice and Holinesse 16. Nay in that part of his Providence which concerns the government of all his works more especially his truth in performing all his promises justice and holinesse in rewarding every man according to his works Job 34.11 so that it shall be well with the righteous Psal 58.11 and ill with the wicked Isa 3.10 11. though brutish men understand it not Psal 92.6 as the prudent doe Hos 14.9 are so clearly set out in the Scriptures as David found Psal 73.17 that he which beholds his ways and works in them must confesse that they all praise him Psal 145.10 It is true that these works and ways of God These works of God are not clearly discovered but by the light of the Word without the light of the word doe set forth the glory of him that made them as a curious piece of work shews the skill of him that formed it But to a blinde man who hath no eyes and to him who having eyes wants light to discover the form of it neither the exactnesse of the work it self nor the skill of him that made it appear Whereas therefore men in themselves are as it were in the twilight when they bring their naturall reason to judge of Gods ways and works the word of God sets them out in a clearer light by discovering unto men not onely the workes themselves but withall the rules according to which they are wrought and end at which they aim as that the wicked are raised up aloft that they may be cast down into destruction Psalm 73.18 and flourish that they may be destroyed for ever Psal 52.7 a consideration that clears Gods justice in this particular and thereby much advanceth his honour To advance the honour of God yet farther 4ly Discovering the weaknesse of the creature the Scriptures discover unto us the weaknesse and insufficiency of the creatures that
as Psal 19.7 when it is said that the Law of God converts the soule which is the most proper effect of the Gospell it is evident that in that place under the name of the Law the Psalmist must understand the Gospell too As likewise when he tells us that his delight is in the Law of God which sustained his spirit that he perished not in his afflictions Psal 119.92 he must of necessity understand Gods promises aswell as the precepts of the Law seeing they be the promises rather then the precepts that support the soule in times of triall when we know whom we beleeve who is both able and willing and ready to make good what he hath promised as his children find by experience that there failed not ought of any good which the Lord had spoken unto the house of Israel but all came to passe Iosh 21.45 But as for the Promises especially those that concerne the Kingdome of Christ which were revealed to the Patriarchs delivered by the Prophets and lastly enlarged and more fuly and clearly opened by the Evangelists and Apostles we shall consider them apart hereafter But only the Commandements For the present we have now in hand only that which is properely and most commonly understood by the name of the Law which containe those commandements and rules of practise which God hath given to his Church for her direction and left upon record in the Scriptures Now these we know are distinguished by the names of Laws morall Judiciall Ceremoniall Morall ceremoniall and judiciall which by Moses in sundry places are promiscuously called Laws Statutes Judgements and Ordinances Of these severall sorts of Laws that which we call Morall comes to be handled in the first place Of these this which is called the morall Law because it was given by God for regulating of mens manners and conversation is of all the rest of the Laws most ancient Which is the most ancient of all Laws most generall and most perpetuall First most ancient Psal 119.160 as being given to our first Parents in Paradise As given to Adam in Paradise that is to man assoone as he had any being I grant indeed that we have no record of any other Laws given to Adam but those which we find mentioned Gen. 2. which are only some branches of the Second Commandement in the tree of life of the Fourth in the Institution of the Sabbath of the Seventh in the Law of Marriage and of the Eight in appointing them to keep Paradise which are all of them positive Laws and therefore need to be expresly set down or else they could not have been known whereas the rest of the Laws being all Lawes of nature and therefore discernible by naturall right reason for which cause they are said to be written in mans heart might be known although they were not recorded and therefore are omitted by Moses in that briefe history But that the rest of the morall Precepts were given unto Adam although perhaps not by word of mouth Either by word or written in his heart but written in his heart at the same time must needs be granted unlesse we conceive that God made Adam more imperfect then any other of his creatures for that he gave all the rest of the creatures rules of their motions and operations either imprinted in their natures if they want sense or by the direction of sense in those that have it is as cleare as the light Now that God should either give no law or which is almost one an imperfect law to man who most needed was most capable and best able to make use of a law must needs much disparage either his kindnesse to mankind or his wisdome in rendring the most eminent and serviceable of all the creatures upon earth unusefull and unprofitable at the least for most part if he had no perfect law to guide him It must therefore be necessarily granted that the whole morall Law was given to Adam that is to mankind in Paradise And consequently most universall as given to the whole nature of man in him and by necessary consequent must be acknowledged to be of all laws the most ancient and upon the same ground must necessarily be generall or universall seeing it was given in our first parents to the whole nature of man which when that law was given was wholly in them It is true that the change of mans condition by Adams fall hath seemed to cause some small alteration in the law as it is not a duty that now binds us to labour in Paradise or to abstain from the one or to eate of the other of the trees that stood in the midst of it Notwithstanding even by that law all men in generall are bound to labour in such employments as God cals them unto and to abstain from all things that God forbids and to make use of all such ordinances as the Lord appoints for the confirmation and strengthening of their faith So that those laws given to Adam bind all men still in the grounds and scope of them although they oblige not his posterity in those things which had relation to that state wherein he then stood and from which afterwards he so sodainly fell And upon the same ground it must as necessarily follow Upon the same ground those morall lawes must needs be perpetuall that those laws which were given to Adam are perpetuall to continue as long as men have a being on earth For seeing they were given to him as the root of mankind they necessarily bind his posterity in succeeding generations to the end of the world We never find any new law given to the Church in any age It is true that the law given to Adam hath been since renewed perhaps to Noah after the floud Which have been renued as may be probably guessed by that which we read concerning murther Gen. 9.6 And it may be to Abraham after God called him out from Vr of the Chaldeans seing we find him commended for keeping Gods commandements his statutes and his laws Gen. 26.5 But most fully and cleerly it was renewed and restored by Moses upon mount Sinai But not altered And that the law then published for the substance of it was no new law appears by comparing the law given to Adam which is in effect the same with the second fourth seventh and eighth commandements of the decalogue with which in a generall consideration they are all one if they be compared together That this which we call the Morall law was founded for ever as the Psalmist witnesseth Psal 119.152 and was to remain and to be observed as a rule of life unto Gods Church our Saviour himselfe witnesseth in expresse words Mat. 5.18 where he professeth that untill heaven and earth passe that is till the worlds end one jot or one tittle shall not passe from the law Wherefore whatsoever was praescribed in that law we may observe and guide our selves
mans heart differ in two respects First the terrour raised in a good mans heart by the Word is for sins of another nature then are those that trouble naturall men Secondly they are affected by them on different considerations of Gods revenging hand For the former a naturall man is usually sensible onely of sins against the law of Nature 1. Discovery of the sins of infidelity pride c. and especially sins against the second Table But the Word of God represents unto a man chiefly more secret and inward evils infidelity pride self-love sensuall affections hypocrisie hardnesse of heart and the like and causeth them to appear unto him the foulest and most abominable of all kinds of sin that can be committed In the second place that which affects a naturall man in sin is either something that accompanies the sinne as shame or danger of wrath and vengeance of which Cain complains Gen. 4.14 or the sin as it is a trespasse against man and a wrong done to him which affects him more then the sense of any dishonour done to God as Judas was sensible of nothing but betraying innocent blood Mat. 27.4 But when Gods Word smites the heart it represents to the guilty person his trespasse against God his Majesty 2. And those as trespasses against God and Holinesse which affected David Psal 51.4 His unkinde and causlesse trespassing against the God that made sustaineth and carrieth him upon Eagles wings Deut. 32.10 11.15 His frowardnesse in trespassing out of perversenesse of spirit against often warnings and against the secret checks of his own conscience His folly that thus perverts righteousnesse to no profit Job 33.27 forsaking the fountain of living waters to hew broken cisterns that hold no water Jer. 2.13 whereby he hath abased God in his heart Deut. 32.15 and set him at a lower rate then the transitory things of this life yea then his own bare lusts By all which he hath defiled his own soul is become like the beasts that perish Psal 49.20 nay worse then they Isa 1.3 so that he loaths and is ashamed of himself Iob 42.6 Ier. 31.19 Now as the considerations in sin 3. And fear of Judgement certain intolerable eternall that affect men naturally and spiritually are divers so are the apprehensions of the danger that comes by sin A naturall mans fears are like that of Belshazar Dan. 5.6 something he trembled at but what it was he understood not or like those terrours threatned Deu. 28.65 66. wherin they shal fear day night they know not why But the Word of God shews one the cause of his fear representing the purity of those eyes of jealousie which he hath provoked makes it evident that God will by no means pardon the guilty Exod. 34.7 that he cannot be beguiled will not be intreated is impossible to be escaped and yet cannot be endured as smiting with the arm of God and not of man whose breath as a river of brimstone kindles that pile of fire and much wood which God prepares for sinners Isa 30.33 whose worm dieth not neither doth their fire goe out Isa 66.24 So that by the Word the sinner sees the rod and who hath appointed it Micah 6.9 and feels it in his apprehension certain present intolerable and eternal which compasseth him so with terrours that he knows not what to doe unlesse he can make his peace with God and procure his pardon Hence it follows The consequents of these severasl kindes of passions In naturall men astonishment fretting hatred of God In spiritual mē shame grief for offending God fear of losse of his favour lastly deliberation what to doe that as naturall and spirituall terrours are raised upon different grounds so the effects and consequents of them must needs be divers which was proposed to be handled in the next place For naturall terrours produce nothing but astonishment and amazednesse so that such men lye down in their confusion fretting with indignation and murmuring in their hearts at their condition with Cain Gen. 4.13 and both fearing God and hating him On the other side the terrours raised by Gods Word in the heart produce withall a loathing of ones self as a filthy creature shame of ones own vilenesse griefe as much for his unkindnesse towards God as for his misery by sin fear of the losse of Gods favour as much as of his revenging hand indignation at ones own folly and wickednesse still acknowledging the Justice and Righteousnesse of God which produceth at last deliberation what to doe with the Prodigall son Luke 15.17 18. So then naturall terrours break these melt the heart naturall terrours are mixed with pride these produce abasement of the spirit Naturall terrours cause repining at God these indignation at a mans self Naturall terrours drive one from these unto God to sue for peace the former force him into the mouth of hell these cast him into the bosome of Christ with uncertain hopes at first and with a trembling heart as the Lepers adventured on the Syrians camp 2 Kings 7.4 yet with hope of some possibility to finde favour and with a resolution to cast himself upon God come what will Such kinde of heart-breakings which are wrought by the Word being impossible to be wrought by any naturall means argue that word that causeth them to be of God who worketh according to his own pleasure in all things what he will Thus the first work of the Scripture The secōd supernaturall effect of the Word conversiō 1 t The means whereof are manifested only in the Word shewing in pricking and wounding the heart manifestly discovers it to be the Word of God as working beyond the power of nature But the conversion of the soul by the same Word will make it yet more evident Now it appears first by the means of his conversion and secondly by the nature and kind of the work it selfe The means by which the Word draws on the heart towards this work of conversion are by proposing unto one cast down by the sight of sin and sense of Gods wrath two grounds without which that work of conversion cannot be brought to effect 1. The inability of all creatures to work our peace First the unprofitablenesse and inability of all creatures to help in that dangerous condition in which he findes himself Secondly the way of reconciliation and peace tendred by God himself to repentant sinners by the mediation of Jesus Christ his own Son The inability of the creatures to doe us good in this case is onely manifested by Gods Word 1. Of our selves to satisfie for sins passed which makes it evident that we cannot help our selves neither by flight from Gods presence which fils all places Ps 139.7 nor by resisting his power which would be like the encounter of the thorns with the sire Isa 27.4 nor by intreating making peace with him who will by no means clear the guilty Exod. 34.7 without satisfaction which we cannot