Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n believe_v faith_n grace_n 2,759 5 6.0361 4 true
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
A53688 The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some degressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject / by John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1654 (1654) Wing O740; ESTC R21647 722,229 498

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

antecedently to all the Grace which he worketh in us whether the Spirit be bestowed on men on the account of Christ's undertaking for them none can question but they must withall deny him to be the Mediator of the new Covenant The Spirit of Grace is the principall Promise thereof Isa. 59. 20 21. We are blessed with all Spirituall Blessings in Christ Ephes. 1. 3. Surely the holy Spirit himselfe so often Promised to us of God is a Spirituall Blessing God's bestowing Faith on us is antecedent to our Believing this also is given upon the account of Christ. Phil. 1. 29. It is given to us on the behalfe of Christ to Believe on him If then God for Christs sake antecedently to any thing that is good that is not enmity to him that is not iniquity in men do bestow on them all that ever is good in them as to the root principle of it surely his quarrell against their sins is put to an Issue Thence Christ being said to make Reconciliation for the sins of the people Heb. 2. 17. God as one pacifyed and attoned thereupon is said to be in him reconciling the world unto himselfe 2 Cor. Eph. 2. 13 24 5. 19. And in the dispensation of the Gospell he is still set forth as one carrying on that peace whose foundation is laid in the blood of his Sonne by the Attonement of his Justice and we are said to accept or receive the Attonement Rom. 5. 10. We receive it by Faith it being accepted by him Thus his death and Oblation is said to be a Sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour Eph. 5. 2. that wherein God is abundantly delighted wherewith his soule is fully satisfyed so that as when he smelt a sweet savour from the Sacrifice of Noah Gen. 8. 21. he sware he would curse the Earth no more smelling this sweet savour of the Oblation of Christ on the account of them for whom it was Offered John 17. 19. he will not execute the Curse on them whereof they were guilty Rom. 5. 10. I might also insist on those Testimonies for the further proofe of the former Assertion Rom. 6. 6. where an immediate efficacy for the taking away of sinne 2 Cor. 5. 21. is ascribed to the death of Christ Eph. 5. 25. 26 But what hath been spoken may at present suffice Titus 2. 14. The Premises considered § 14. some Light may be brought forth to discover the various mistakes of men Heb. 9. 14. about the effects of the Death of Christ Heb. 10. 14. as to the taking away of sinne 1 Pet. 2. 24. if that were now the matter before us Some having truly fixed their thoughts on the efficacy of the death of Christ 1 Joh. 1. 7. for Abolition of sin Revel 1. 5 6 doe give their Lusts and darknesse leave to make wretched inferences thereupō as that therefore because we are so compleatly justified accepted before without our believing or the consideration of any thing what ever in us that therefore sinne is nothing nor at all to be accounted of And though they say we must not sinne that Grace may abound yet too many by wofull experience have discovered what such corrupt Conclusions have tended unto Others againe fixing themselves on the necessity of Obedience and the concurrence of actuall Faith to the compleating of justification in the soule of the sinner with a no lesse dangerous reflection upon the Truth do suspend the efficacy of the death of Christ upon our believing which gives life vigour virtue unto it as they say is the sole originally discriminating cause of all the benefits we receive thereby without the antecedent accomplishment of that condition in us or our Actuall believing it is not say they nor will be usefull yea that the intention of God is to bestow upon us the fruits and effects of the death of Christ upon condition we do Believe which that we shall is no part of his purchase and which we can of our selves performe say some of them others not Doubtlesse these things are not being rightly stated in the least inconsistent Christ may have his due and we bound to the performance of our duty which might be cleared by an enlargement of the ensuing Considerations 1. First That all good things that are spirituall whatsoever that are wrought either for men or in them are fruits of the death of Christ. They have nothing of themselves but nakednesse bloud and sinne guilt and impenitency so that it is of indispensable necessity that God should shew them favour antecedently to any Act of their Believing on him Faith is given for Christs sake as was observed 2. Secondly That all the Effects and Fruits of the death of Christ antecedent to our Believing are deposited in the hand of the Righteousnesse and Faithfulnesse of God 1 Tim. 2. 5 6. to whom as a ransome Heb. 2. 17. it was paid as an Attonement it was offered before whom as a price and purchase it was laid downe It is all left in the hands of Gods Faithfulnesse 2 Cor. 5. 18 19. Righteousnesse Mercy and Grace to be made out effectually to them 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. for whom he died in the appointed time or season So that 3. Thirdly The state or condition of those for whom Christ died is not actually and really changed by his death Eph. 2. 1 2 3 4 5. in its selfe but they lye under the curse whilest they are in the state of nature unregenerate and all effects of sinne whatever John 3. 36. That which is procured for them is left in the hand of the Father They are not in the least intrusted with it untill the Appointed time do come 4 Fourthly That Faith and Beliefe are necessary not to adde any thing to compleat the procurement of forgivenesse of sins any or all but only to the Actuall receiving of it when upon the account of the death of Christ it pleaseth God in the Promise of the Gospell to hold it out and impart it unto the soule thereby compleating Covenant-justification And thus the whole businesse of Salvation may be resolved into the mediation of Christ and yet men carried on under an orderly dispensation of Law and Gospell into the enjoyment of it Acts 13. 38 39. Of the whole these degrees are considerable 1 Gods eternall purpose of saving some Rom. 5. 10. in and by the mediation of Christ Joh. 3. 16 that mediation of Christ being interposed between the purpose of God Rom. 5. 7 8. and the accomplishment of the thing purposed 1 Joh. 4. 10. as the fruit and effect of the one Heb. 2. 17. 9. 14. the meritorious procuring cause of the other This Act of the Will of God Eph. 1. 4 5. 6 7 8 9. c. the Scripture knowes by no other name then that of Election or Predestination or the Purpose
breake open their seales In the Latter are all promissory ingagements confirmed established and made unalterable wherein men either in conditionall compacts or Testamentary dispositions doe oblige themselves These are the Sigilla appensa that are yet in use in all Deeds Enfeofements and the like Instruments in Law And with men if this be done their engagements are accounted inviolable And because all men have not that Truth Faithfulnesse and Honesty as to make good even their sealed engagements the whole Race of man-kind hath consented unto the establishment of Lawes and Governors amongst others to this end that all men may be compelled to stand to their sealed Promises hence whatsoever the nature of it be and in what particular soever it doth consist the end and use of this worke in this speciall Acceptation is taken evidently in the latter sence from its use amongst men Expressed it is upon the mention of the Promises 2 Cor 1. 20. To secure Believers of their certaine and infallible accomplishment unto them the Apostle tells them of this sealing of the Spirit whereby the Promises are irrevocably confirmed unto them to whom they are made as is the case among the Sonnes of men sutably Ephes. 1. 13. he saith they are sealed by the Holy spirit of Promise Heb. 9. 14. that is that is promised unto us and who confirmes to us all the Promises of God That the other end of security also safety and preservation is designed therein secondarily appears from the appointed season whereunto this sealing shall be effectuall it is to the day of Redemption Eph 4. 30. untill the Saints are brought to the enjoyment of the full whole and compleat purchase made for them by Christ when he obtained for them eternall Redemption And this is a reall Testimony which the Holy Spirit gives to his owne abiding with the Saints for ever The worke he accomplisheth in them and upon them is on set purpose designed to assure them hereof and to confirme them in the Faith of it Unto an Argument from this sealing of the spirit thus proposed § 30. Those who are sealed shall certainly be saved Mr Goodwin excepts sundry things Ch. 11. Sect. 42. Pag. 255 256 257. which because they are applied to blurre that interpretation of the words of the Holy Ghost which I have insisted on I shall briefely remove out of the way that they may be no farther offensive to the meanest sealed one He answers then first by distinguishing the Major Proposition thus They who are sealed shall certainly be saved with such a sealing which is unchangeable by any intervenience whatsoever as of sinne and Apostasy so that they cannot loose their Faith but if the sealing be only such the continuance whereof depends on the Faith of the sealed and consequently may be reversed or with-drawne it no way proves that all they who are partakers of it must of necessity retaine their Faith therefore saith he 2 ly We Answer farther that the sealing with the spirit spoken of is the Latter kind of sealing not the former i.e. which depends upon the Faith of those that are sealed as in the beginning or first impression of it so in the duration or continuance of it and consequently there is none other certainty of its continuance but only the continuance of the said Faith which being uncertaine the sealing depending on it must needs be uncertaine also That the sealing mentioned depends upon the Faith of the sealed is evident because t is said in whom also after yee believed yee were Sealed with the spirit of Promise Ans. I dare say there is no honest man that would take it well at the hand of Mr Goodwin or any else that should attempt by distinctions or any other way to alleviate or take off the credit of his Truth and Honesty in the performance of all those things whereunto and for the confirmation whereof he hath set his Seal What acceptation an like attempt in reference to the spirit of God is like to find with him he may doe well to consider In the meane time he prevailes not with us to discredit this worke of his Grace in the least For 1. First This supposall of such interveniencies of sinne and wickednesse in the Saints as are inconsistent with the life of Faith and the favour of God as also of Apostasy are but a poore meane insinuation for the begging of the thing in Question which will never be granted of any such termes An interveniency of Apostasy that is defection from the Faith is not handsomely supposed whilest men continue in the Faith 2. That which is given for the confirmation of their Faith and on set purpose to adde continuance to it as this is cannot depend on the condition of the continuance of their Faith The Holy Ghost seales them to the day of Redemption confirming and establishing thereby an infallible continuance of their Faith but it seemes upon condition of their continuance in the Faith Cui fini Of what hitherto is said this is the summe If they who are sealed Apostatize into sinne and wickednesse they shall not be saved notwithstanding that they have been sealed and this must passe for an answer to our Argument proving that they cannot so apostatise because they are Sealed on purpose to preserve and secure them from that Condition Men need not goe farre to seeke for Answers to any Argument if such as these pure beggings of the thing in Question and argued will suffice 3. Neither doth the begining or first impression of the sealing depend upon their Faith any otherwise but as Believers are the subject of it which is not to have any kind of dependance upon it either as to its nature or use Neither doth that place of the Apostle Fph. 1. 13. After ye Believed ye were sealed prove any such thing unlesse this generall axiome be first established that all things which in order of nature are before and after have the Connexion of Cause and effect or at least of Condition and Event between them It proves indeed that their Believing is in order of nature antecedent to their sealing respecting the use of it here mentioned but this proves not at all that Faith is the condition of sealing the bestowing of Faith and the grant of this seale to establish it being both acts depending meerely solely distinctly on the free Grace of God in Christ Though Faith in order of nature goe before Hope yet is no Hope bestowed on men on the condition of Believing The truth is both Faith Sealing all other spirituall Mercyes as to the Goodwill of God bestowing them are at once granted us in Jesus Christ but as to our reception of them the actuall instating of our soules in the enjoyment of them or rather as to the exerting of themselves in us they have that order which either the nature of the things themselves requires or the soveraigne Will of God hath alotted to them neither
est Cunctis Vigor variarum Illecebris rerum trahitur dispersa voluntas Sponte aliquos vitiis succumbere qui potuissent A Lapsu revocare pedem stabilesque manere As I sayd we have the summe of Mr. Goodwin's Book in this declaration of the Judgment of the Semi-Pelagians so also in particular the state of the Controversy about the perseverance of the Saints as then it was debated I doubt not but the learned Reader will easily perceive it to be no other then that which is now agitated between me Mr. Goodwin The controversy indeed in the matter between Austin and the Pelagians was reduced to 3 heads 1. As to the Foundation of it which Austin concluded to be the decree of Predestination which they denyed the Impulsive Cause of it he proved to be the Free grace of God the measure or quality of that Grace to be such as that whoever received it did persevere it being perseverance which was given both which they denyed about the kind of faith which Temporary professours might have and fall from it which were never elected there was between them no Contest at all Of his Judgment then there were these two main heads which he laboured to confirme That perseverance is a gift of God and that no man either did or could persevere in Faith and obedience upon the strength of any grace received much less of his own Ability stirred up and promoted by such considerations as Mr. Goodwin makes the ground and bottome of the perseverance of all that so do but that the whole was from his Grace Subservient to this he maintained that no one Temptation whatsoever could be overcome but by some Act of Grace and that therfore perseverance must needs be a work thereof it being an abiding in Faith and obedience notwithstanding and against Temptation To this is that of his on Joh Hom. 53 quosdam nimia voluntatis suoe fiducia extulit in superbiam quosdam nimia volunta tis sua diffidentia dejecit in negligentiam Illi dicunt quid rogamus Deum ne vincamur tentatione quod in nostrâ est potestate Isti dicunt at quid conamur bene vivere quod in Dei est Potestate ô Domine ô Pater qui es in Coelis ne nos infer as in quamlibet istarum Tentationum sed libera nos à malo Audiamus Dominum dicentem rogavi pro Te Petre ne fides deficiat tuae ne sic existimemus fidem nostram esse in Libero Arbitrio ut Divino non egeat adjutorio c. That with both of these sorts of men the way and work of the Grace of God is at this day perverted and obscured is so known to all that it needs no Exemplification Some require no more to the Conquest of Temptations but men's own rational consideration of their Eternal state and condition with the tendency of That whereto they are tempted Others turning the Grace of God into wantonness supinely casting away all heedful regard of walking with God being enslaved to their lusts and corruptions under a pretence of God's working all in all The latter denying themselves to be men the former to be men corrupted And in plaine terms the Milevitane Councel tells us si quis finxerit ideò Gratiam esse necessariam ad vitanda peccata quia facit hominem cognoscere peccata discernere inter Peccata non peccata quá Discretione per gratiam habitâ per liberum Arbitrium potest vitare is procùl c. The light of Grace to discerne the state of things the nature of sinne and to consider these aright the Pelagians allowed which is all the Bottome of that perseverance of Saints which we have offered by Mr. Goodwin but upon that supplie of these meanes to abide and persevere in faith to fly and avoid sinne is a thing of our own performance This the Doctors of that Councel Anno 420. condemned as a Pelagian fiction As Prosper also presents it at large C 25 against Cassianus the Semi-Pelagian further cleares confirmes it so Austin againe De Bono Persev c 3 cur ista perseverantia petitur à Deo si non datur à Deo an ista irrisoria Petitio est cum illud ab eo petitur quod scitur non ipsum Dare sed ipso non dante esse in hominis potestate sicùt irrisoria est etiam illa Gratiarum Actio si ex hoc gratiae aguntur Deo quod non donavit ipse nec fecit And the same Argument he useth againe Cap 6 9 much resting on Cyprian's Interpretation of the Lord's Prayer and Cap 26 he further presseth it as to the root and foundation of this Gift of God Si ad Liberum Arbitrium Hominis quod non secundum gratiam sed contra eam defendis pertinere dicis ut perseveret in Bono quisquis vel non perseveret non Deo dante sic perseverat sed humana voluntate faciente One or two instances more in this kind amongst hundreds that offer themselves may suffice De Correptione Gratiâ Cap 14. Apostolus Judas cum dicit ei autem qui potens est c nonne apertissimè ostendit Donum Dei esse Perseverare in Bono usque ad Finem quid enim aliud sonat qui potest conservare nos sine offensione constituere ante conspectum gloriae suoe immaculatos in Laetitiâ nisi Perseverantiam Bonam quis tam insulsè desipiat ut neget Perseverantiam esse Denum Dei cùm dicit Sanctissimus Jeremias timorem meum dabo in corde eorum ut non recedant à me c. I shall adde only that one place more out of the same Book c 59. where both the matter manner of the thing in hand is fully delivered in hoc loco miseriarum ubi tentatio est vita hominum super terram virtus infirmitate perficitur qaoe virtus nisi qui gloriatur ut in domino glorietur per hoc de ipsa perseverantiâ Boni noluit Deus Sanctos suos in viribus suis sed in ipso gloriari qui eis non solùm dat Adjutorium quod Primo homini dedit sine quo non possit persever are si velit sed in iis etiam operatur velle quoniam non perseverabunt nisi possint velint perseverandi eis possibilitas voluntas Divinae Gratiae largitate donatur tantum quippe Spiritu Sancto accenditur voluntas eorum ut ideò possint quia sic volunt ideò sic velint quia Deus operatur ut velint Nam si tantâ infirmitate hujus vitae ipsis relinquetur voluntas sua ut in Adjutorio Dei fine quo perseverare non possent manerent si vellent ne Deus in eis operaretur ut velint inter tot tantas tentationes infirmitate suâ succumberet voluntas ideò persever are non possent quia deficientes infirmitate voluntatis non vellent aut non ita vellent ut
they runne themselves through Was this inded the case with David Solomon Peter and others who totally Apostatized from the Faith But if it be so if they are thus secure whence is it that it doth arise what are the Fountaines Springs and causes of this generall Security Is it from the weakenesse of the Opposition and slightnesse of all Meanes of diversion from walking with God to the End that they meet withall Or is it from the nature of that Faith which they have and Grace wherewith they are indued Or is it that God hath gracionsly undertaken to safegard them and to preserve them in their abiding with him that they shall not fall away Or is it that Christ intercedeth for them that their Faith faile not but be preserved and their Soules with it by the Power of God unto the End Or from what other Principle doth this Security of theirs arise From what Fountain do the streams of their Consolation Flow Where lye the Heads of this Nilus That it is not upon the first account I suppose cannot enter into the Imagination of any person who ever had the least experience of walking with God or doth so much as assent to the letter of the Scripture How are our Enemies there discribed as to their Number Nature Power Policy Subtility Malice Restlessenes and Advantages With what inimaginable and unexpressible variety of Meanes Temptations Baites Allurements Inticements Terrors Threats doe they fight against us Such so many are the enemies that oppose the Saints of God in their abiding with him so Great Effectual the Means weapons wherewith they fight against thē so unwearied and watchfull are they for the improovement of all Advantages Opportunityes for their ruine that upon the supposall of the Rejection of those Principles and those meanes of of their Preservation which we shall finde Mr Goodwin to attempt they will be found to be so farre from a state of no danger and litle probability of Falling or only under a remote Possibility of so doing that it will appeare utterly imposible for them to hold out and abide unto the end Had the choisest Saint of God with all the Grace that he hath received but one of the many Enemies and that the weakest of all them which oppose every Saint of God even the feeblest to deale withall separated from the Strength of those Principles and Supportments which M r Goodwin seeketh to cast downe let him lye under continuall exhortations to watchfulnesse close walking with God he may as easily move Mountaines with his finger or climbe to Heaven by a Ladder as stand before the strength of that one enemy Adam in Paradise had no Lust within to intice him no World under the Curse to seduce him yet at the first assault of Sathan who then had no part in him he fell quite out of Covenant with God Psal. 30. 6 7. I shall give one instance in one of the many enemies §. 35. that fight against the welfare of our soules and ex hoc uno we may guesse at the residue of its companions This is indwelling sinne whose power and policy strength and prevalency neerenesse and trechery the Scripture exceedingly setts out and the Saints daily feele I shall only poynt at some particulars First concerning its Neerenesse to us it is indeed in us and that not as a thing different from us but it cleaveth to all the faculties of our soules it is an Enemy borne with us Psal. 51. 5. bred up●with us carried about in our bosomes by nature Math. 5. 29 30. our familiar friend our guide and councellor deare to us as our right eye usefull as our right hand our wisdome strength c. The Apostle 7. Rom. 17 20. calleth it the sinne that dwelleth in us Iam. 3. 15. 6. it hath in us in the faculties of our soules its abode and station It doth not passe by and away but there it dwelles so as that it never goes from home is never out of the way when we have any thing to doe whence v 21. he calls it the evill that is present with him When we goe about any thing that is good or have opportunity for or temptation unto any thing that is evill it is never absent but is ready to pluck us back or to put us on according as it serves its ends it is such an Inmate that we can never be quit of its company and so intimate unto us that it puts forth it selfe in every acting of the ming will or any other faculty of the soule Though men would faine shake it off yet when they would doe good this evill will be present with them Then 2. Secondly Its Vniversality and compasse Act. 26. 18. 2 Cor. 6. 14. Ephes. 5. 8. Isa. 29. 18. 35. 5. 42. 7. It is not straightned in a corner of the soule 't is spread over the whole all the faculties affections and passions of it That which is a Ioh. 5. 6. Math. 6. 23. ch 11. 79. Luk. 11. 34 35 36. borne of the flesh is flesh t is all flesh and nothing but flesh it is Darknesse in the Vnderstanding keeping us at best that we know but in part and are still dull and slow of heart to believe naturally we are all Darknesse Rom. 2. 19. nothing but Darknesse and though the Lord shine into our mind to give us in some measure the knowledge of his Glory in the face of Jesus Christ Col. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 9. yet we are still very darke it is a hard work to bring in a little Light Luk. 4. 8. Eph. 4. 18. Revel 3. 17. upon the soule especially this is seen in particular practicall things though in Generall Math. 23. 16. we have very cleare light and eviction yet when we come to particular Acts of obedience Math. 4. 16. How often doth our light grow dimme and failes us causing us to judge amisse of that which is before us Ioh. 1. 5. 2 Cor. 4. 6. by the rising of that naturall darknesse which is in us It is perversenesse stubbornnesse obstinacy in the Will Luk. 4. 18. Ioh. 8. 34. that carries it with violence to disobedience and sinne It is sensuality upon the Affections Rom. 6. 16. bending them to the things of the World alienating them from God Rom. 7. 18. 8. 7 8. It is slipperinesse in the memory making us like leaking vessells lerem 6. 16. that the things that we heare of the Gospell doe suddainly slip out when as other things abide firme in the Cells and Chambers thereof Gen 6. 5. It is senselesnesse and errour in the Conscience lerem 13. 23. Heb. 2. 1. staving it off from the performance of that duty which in the Name and Authority of God it is to accomplish and in all these is dayly enticing and seducing the heart to Folly conceiving bringing forth sinne Iam. 1. 14 15. 3. Thirdly
whole Booke of God 2. That it is a case surmised by him suitable to his owne Hypotheses neither true in its selfe nor any way Analogous to that wherewith 't is yoked being indeed a new way and tone of begging the thing in question For instance It supposeth without the least Attempt of proofe 1. Conditionall Decrees or a disjunctive intendment of Events in God it shall come to passe or otherwise 2. A middle science conditionall as the foundation of those disjunctive Decrees with 3. A futurition of things Antecedent to any determining Act of the Will of God and 4. A possibility of frustrating as to Event the Designes and purposes of God and 5. That all medium's of the Accoplishment of any thing are conditions of Gods intentions as to the end he aymes at 6. That God appoints a series of mediums for the compassing of an End and designes them thereunto without any determinate Resolution to bring about that End 7. That the Acts of Gods Grace in their Concatenation mentioned in this place of Rom. 8. are severally Conditionall because he hath invented or faigned some Decrees of God which he sayes are so All which with the inferences from them Mr Goodwin knowes will not advance his Reasonings at all as to our Understandings being fully perswaded that they are all Abominations of no lesse base alloy then the Errour it selfe in whose defence and Patronage they are produced To our Argument then before mentioned §. 35. prooving an equall indissolveablenesse in all the linkes of the Chaine of Divine Graces drawne forth and insisted on from the equall dependance of the designe Purpose of God on the mutuall dependance of each of them on the other for the fullfillng of that Purpose of his and obtaining the End which he professes himselfe to intend this is the summe of Mr Goodwins Answer If I can invent a series of Decrees and a Concatenation of Divine Acts though indeed there be no such thing neither can I give any colour to it without laying downe and taking for granted many false and absurd supposalls and though it be not of the same nature with that here proposed by the Apostle nor any where held out in the Scripture for any such End Purpose as this is neither can I assigne any absolute determinate end in this Series of mine whose Accomplshment God ingages himselfe to bring about as the Case stands in the place of Scripture under Consideration then it is meet and equitable that laying aside all inforcements from the Text Context Nature of God the thing treated on all compelling us to close with another sence and Interpretation that we regulate the minde of the Holy Ghost herein to the Rule proportion and Analogie of the case as formerly proposed This being the summe of that which Mr Goodwin calls his Answer made naked I presume to its shame valeat quantum valere potest I shall only adde that 1. when Mr Goodwin shall make good that order and Series of Decrees here by him mentioned from the Scripture or with solid Reason from the nature of the things themselves suitably to the Properties of him whose they are And 2. Proove that any eternall Decree of God either as to its primitive enacting or temporall Execution is suspended on any thing not only really contingent in it selfe and its owne nature in respect of the immediate fountaine from whence it flowes and nature of its immediate cause but also as to its Event in respect of any Act of the will of God that it may otherwise be and so the accomplishment of that Decree left thereupon uncertaine and God himselfe dubiously conjecturing at the Event for instance whether Christ should Dye or no or any one be saved by him and 3. Clearely evince this notion of the Decrees and Purposes of God that he intends to Create Man and then to give him such advantages which if he will it shall be so with him if otherwise it shall be so To send Christ if men doe so or so or not to send him if they doe otherwise so of the residue of the Decrees mentioned by him and 4. That all events of things whatsoever Spirituall and Temporall have a Conditionall futurition antecedent to any act of the Will of God When I say he shall have proved these and some like things to these we shall further consider what is offered by him yea we will confesse that Hostis habet muros c. Of the many other Testimonies to the purpose in hand §. 36. bearing witnesse to the same Truth some few may yet be singled out and in the next place that of Jeremiah 31. 3. presents it selfe unto tryall and Examination Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawn thee It is the whole Elec● Church of the seed of Iacob of whom he speaks the foundation of whose blessednesse is laid in the Eternall Love of God Who the persons are thus beloved and of whom we are to interpret these expressions of Gods good will the Apostle manifests Rom 11. as shall afterwards be more fully discoursed and cleared He tells you it is the Election whom God intends of whom he saies that they obtained the Righteousnesse that is by faith according to the purport of Gods good will towards them though the rest were hardned God who adds daily to his Church such as shall be saved Acts 13. 48. drawing them thereunto upon the account of their being so Elected He calls them also the Remnant according to the Election of Grace and the People whom God did foreknow v 1 2. or from Eternity designed to the participation of the Grace there spoken of as the use of the word hath been evinced to be These are the Thee here designed the portion of Israel after the flesh which the Lord in his Free Grace hath eternally appointed to be his peculiar inheritance which in their severall Generations he drawes to himselfe with Loving Kindnesse And this everlasting Love is not only the fountaine whence actuall Loving Kindnesse in drawing to God or bestowing Faith doth flow as they Believe who are ordained to eternall life but also the sole Cause and Reason upon the account whereof in contra-distinction to the Consideration of any thing in themselves God will exercise Loving Kindnesse towards them for ever That which is everlasting or eternall is also unchangeable Gods everlasting Love is no more liable to mutability then himselfe And it is an alwaies equall Ground and Motive for Kindnesse On what account should God alter in his actuall Kindnesse or favour towards any if that on the account whereof he exercises it will not admit of the least Alteration He that shall give a Condition on which this everlasting Love of God should be suspended and according to the influence whereof upon it it should goe forth in Kindnesse or be interrupted may be allowed to boast of his discovery That of
condition They are no lesse obnoxious to that death from whence our Regeneration is a delivery by the bestowing of a new Spirituall life than a sinner of an hundred yeares old A returning to this condition it seemes is Regeneration Quantum est in rebus inane Thirdly The qualifications of Infants not Regenerated are meerely negative and that in respect of the acts of sinne not the habituall seed and root of them for in them dwells no good that in respect of these qualifications of Innocency that are in them by nature Antecedent to any Regeneration all which are resolved into a Naturall impotency of perpetrating sinne they are accepted in Grace and favour with God had been another new notion had not Pelagius and Socinus before you fallen upon it without Faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And his wrath abides on them that Believe not Iohn 3. 36. That Infants have or may have Faith and not be regenerated will scarcely be granted by them who believe the Spirit of Christ to cause Regeneration where he is bestowed Tit. 3. 5. And all Faith to be the Fruit of that Spirit Gal 5. 26 27. Farther for the qualifications of Infants by Nature how are they brought cleane from that which is uncleane Are they not conceived in sinne and brought forth in iniquity Or was that Davids hard case alone If they are borne of the flesh and are flesh if they are uncleane how come they to be in that estate upon the account of their Qualifications accepted in the Love and favour of him who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity If this be the Doctrine of Regeneration that M. G. preaches I desire the Lord to blesse them that belong unto him in a deliverance from attending thereunto Of the Effects of the death of Christ in respect of all children I shall not now treat That they should be saved by Christ not washed in his Bloud not sanctifyed by his Spirit which to be is to be Regenerate is another new notion of the new Gospell The Countenance which Mr Goodwin would begge to his Doctrine from that of our Saviour to his Disciples Except ye be turned and become as little Children ye cannot enter into the Kingdome of God reproving their ambition and worldly thoughts from which they were to be weaned that they might befit for that Gospell state imployment whereunto he called them wherein they were to serve him does no more advantage him nor the cause he hath undertaken than that other caution of our Saviour to the same persons to be wise asserpents innocent as Doves would do him that should undertake to prove that Christians ought to become pigeons or snakes Thus much then we have learned of the mind of M. G. by this digression 1. That no children are Regenerate 2. That they are all accepted with God through Christ upon the account of the good Qualifications that are in them 3. That Regeneration is a mans returing to the state wherein he is borne And having taken out this Lesson which we shall never learne by heart whilst we live we may now proceed I shall only adde to the maine of the businesse in hand §. 49. that so long as a man is a child of God he cannot he need not to repeat his Regeneration But that one who hath been the child of God should cease to be the child of God is somewhat strange How can that be done amongst men that he should cease to be such a mans sonne who was his sonne Those things that stand in Relation upon any thing that is past and therefore irrevocable cannot have their beings continued and their Relation dissolved it is impossible but that cause and effect must be related one to another such is the relation between Father and Sonne The foundation of it is an act past and irrevocable and therefore the Relation it selfe is indissoluble Is it not so with God and his Children when they once stand in that Relation it cannot be dissolved But of these things hitherto To proceed with that place of Scripture which I laid as the foundation of this discourse §. 50. The generall way of Lusts dealing with the soule the bringing forth of sinne whereof there are two acts expressed v. 14. the one of drawing away the other inticing is to be insisted on Upon the first the person tempted is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drawn off or drawne away and upon the second he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inticed or intangled The First stirring of sinne is to draw away the soule from what it ought to be fixed upon by its rising up irregularly to some delightfull object For a man to be drawne away by his lust is to have his Lust drawne out to some object suited to it wherein it delighteth Now this drawing away denoteth two things 1. The turning of the soule from the actuall rectitude of its frame towards God Though the soule cannot alwayes be in actuall Exercise of Grace towards God yet it ought alwayes to be in an immediate readinesse to any Spirituall duty upon the account whereof when occasion is administred it doth as naturally goe forth to God as a vessell full of water floweth forth when vent is given unto it Hence we are commanded to pray alwayes Our Saviour giveth a Parable to instruct his Disciples that they ought to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 18. 1. And we are commanded to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without ceasing or intermission 1 ●hess 5. 17. Which the same Apostle in an other place calleth praying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in every place namely as occasion is administred It is not the perpetuall exercise of this duty as the Iewes some of them have ridiculously interpreted the first Psalme of reading the Law day and night which would shut out and cut off all other dutyes not only of mens Callings and Employments as to this Life but all other dutyes of the wayes worship of God whatever But it is only the readinesse and promptitude of the heart in its constant frame to that necessary duty that is required Now he who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by lust is drawne off from this frame that is he is interrupted in it by his lust diverting unto some sinfull object And as to this particular there is a great difference betwixt the sinning of Believers and those who arise not beyond that height which the power of Conviction beareth them oftentimes up unto For 1. The maine of a true Believers watching in his whole life § 51. and in the course of his walking with God is directed against this off-drawing from that habituall frame of his heart by lust and sinne His great businesse is as the Apostle telleth us to take the whole armour of God to him that sinne if it be possible may make no approach to his soule Eph. 6. 13. It is to keepe up their spirits to a hate of
upon the face of the earth It is not of your selves that you are not industriously disturbing your own soules and others with this or that entrenchment upon the doctrine of the Gospel and the free Grace of God in Jesus Christ which not a few pride themselves in with the contempt of all otherwise minded And doth not the present state of things require the full disbursing of all that you have freely received for the glory of him from whom you have received it You are persons who not only as Doctours Teachers in an Vniversity have a large distinct disciplinary knowledge of Divinity but also such as to whom the Son of God is come and hath given an understanding to know him that is true into whose hearts God hath shined to give the light of the knowledge of his glory in the face of Jesus Christ therefore may say what shall we render to the Lord how shall we serve him in any way answerable to the grace we have received I speak not this the Lord knowes it before whom I stand with Reflection on any as though I judged them neglecters of the duty incumbent on them Every one of us must give an account of himselfe to the Lord. The dayly paines labour and travaile of many of you in the work of the Gospel the dilegence and codeavours of others in promoting other useful literature is known unto all Only the considerations of my own present undertaking joyn'd with a sense of mine own insufficiency for this or any other labour of this kind and of your larger furnishments with abilities of all sorts press me to this stirring up of your remembrance to contend for the faith so much opposed and perverted Not that I would press for the needless multiplying of bookes whose plenty is the general customary complaint of all men versed in them unless necessity call thereto Scribimus indocti doctique But that serious thoughts may be continually dwelling in you to lay out your selves to obviate the spreading of any errour what ever or the destruction of any already propagated by such waies and meanes as the providence of God and the circumstances of the matter it selfe shall call you out unto is in the desire of my soule Something you will find in this kind attempted by the weakest of your number in this ensuing Treatise The matter of it I know will have your Approbation and that because it hath his whom you serve For the manner of handling it it is humbly given up to his grace and mercy and freely left to your Christian Judgments The general concernments of this business are so known to all that I shall by no meanes burden you with a repetition of them The attempt made by Mr Goodwin against the truth here asserted was by all men judged so considerable especially the truth opposed having a more practical influence into the walking of the Saints with God then any Other by him assaulted and the defending of it giving more advantage into an inquiry after the mind of God as delivered in innumerable places of Scripture then any of the rest opposed as that a removal of his Exceptions to our Arguments and an Answer to his Objections was judged necessary by all Other reasons manifesting this endeavour to be in order and in season I have further communicated in the entrance of the Treatise it selfe In my addresses to the work I could by no meanes content my selfe with a mere discussing of what was produced by my Adversary For he having kept himselfe for the most part within the compass of the Synodal writings of the Remonstr●●ts which are already most clearly and solidly answered by one especially renowned 〈◊〉 to have tyed my selfe unto a contest with him had been merely actum agere without promoting the cause I had undertaken in the least As I account it by no meanes an ingenuous proceeding for men to beare up their own names by standing upon the shoulders of others to deport themselves Authours when indeed they are 〈◊〉 Collectours and Translatours So I am very remote from being so far in love with this way of handling controversies in Divinity as to think it necessary to multiply books of the same matter without some considerable addition of Light and strength to the Cause whose protection and promotion is undertaken On this consideration besides incident discourses which I hope through the Grace of him that supplyed seed to the sower may be of use and have an encrease amongst the Saints of God I have made it my aime and what therein I have attained is with all submission of mind and judgment cast before the thoughts of men whose senses are exercised to discerne good and evill to place each Argument insisted on upon it's own proper basis and foundation to Resolve every Reason and Medium whereby I have proceeded into it's own principles discovering the fountaine and well-head of all the streames that run in the field of this contest as also to give some clearings and evidence to our Conclusions from the several Texts of Scripture discussed by discovering the Reason of them and intent of God in them Some Arguments there are and sundry Texts of Scripture that are usually produced and urged in the defence of the cause under consideration that I have not insisted on nor vindicated from the exceptions of the Adversaries Not that I judge them indefensible against their most cunning or most furious assaults and so slighted what I could not hold for indeed I know not any one Text of scripture commonly used for this end nor any Argument by any sober man framed to the same purpose that is not capable of an easy and faire vindication but meerly because they fell not in regularly in the method I had proposed to my selfe nor would so do unless I had gone forth to the issue of my first intendment and had handled the abode of Believers with God at large from it's principles and causes as I had done that part of our doctrine which concernes the Continuance of the love of God with and unto them which the growth of the Treatise under my hand would not give me leave to do What hath been or may yet further be done by others who have made or shall make it their business to draw the saw of this Controversy to and fro which Mr. Goodwin I hope will give satisfaction as in other things so in the particulars by me omitted As to what I have to speak or at least think it convenient to speak concerning him with whom in this discourse I have much to do and the manner of my dealing with him being a thing of personal Concernment not having any influencing Aspect on the merit of the cause I shall in not many words absolve you of your trouble in the Consideration thereof My Adversary is a person whom his worth paines diligence and opinions and the contests wherein on their account he hath publikely engaged have delivered from
persevere He compares it further with the Grace that Adam received Lib. De Correp Grat Cap. 12 primo itaque homini qui in eo bono quo factus fuerat rectus acceperat posse non Peccare posse non mori posse ipsum Bonum non deserere datum est Adjutorium Perseverantiae non quo fieret ut perseveraret sed sine quo per liberum Arbitrium persever are non possit Nunc verò Sanctis in regnum Dei per gratiam Dei praedestinatis non tantum tale adjutorium Perseverantiae datur sed tale ut iis Perseverantia ipsa donetur non solùm ut sine isto done Perseverantes esse non possint verùm etiam ut per hoc donum non nisi perseverantes sint And a little after ipseitaque dat perseverantiam qui stabilire potens est eos qui stant ut perseverantissimè stent And in the eight Chapter of the same Book expounding that of our Saviour Luke 22 I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not he manifesteth how upon that account it was impossible that the will of Peter should not actually be established to the end in believing His words are an audebis dicere etiam rogante Christo ne deficeret fides Petri defecturum fuisse si Petrus eam deficere voluisset idque si eam usque in finem perseverare noluisset quasi aliud Petrus ullo modo vellet quàm pro illo Christus rogâsset ut vellet nam quis ignorat tunc fuisse perituram fidem Petri si ea quae fidelis erat voluntas ipsa deficeret permansuram si voluntas eadem permaneret quando ergo oravit ne fides ejus deficeret quid aliud rogavit nisi ut haberet in fide liberrimam fortissimam invictissimam Perseverantissimam voluntatem And in this persuasion he had not only the consent of all the sound and Orthodox Doctours in his time as was before manifested but he is followed also by the School men of all ages and not forsaken by some of the Jesuites themselves as we shall afterwards see when we have added that consideration of the Doctrine of this learned man which hath given occasion to some to pretend his consent in opposition to that which most evidently He not only delivered but confirmed There are in Austine and those that either joyned with him or followed immediately after him notwithstanding the Doctrine formerly insisted on that Actual perseverance is a Gift of God and that it flowes from Predestination as an Effect thereof and is bestowed on all Elect Believers infallibly preserving them unto the end wherein they assert and strongly prove the whole of what we maintaine sundry Expressions commonly urged by the Adversaries of the truth in hand granting many who were Saints believing and Regenerate to fall away and perish for ever I need not instance in any of their sayings to this purpose the Reader knowes where to find them gathered to his hand in Vossius Grotius Mr. Goodwin from them The seeming contradiction that is amongst themselves in the delivery of this doctrine will easily admit of a Reconciliation may they be allowed the common courtesy of being Interpreters of their own meaning What weight in those dayes was layd upon the Participation of the Sacramental figures of Grace and what expressions are commonly used concerning them who had obtained that Priviledge is known to all Hence all baptised persons continuing in the Profession of the Faith and Communion of the Church they called counted esteemed truly regenerate and justified and spake so of them Such as these they constantly affirme might fall away into everlasting destruction but yet what their judgment was concerning their present state indeed even then when they so termed them Regenerate and Believers in respect to the Sacraments of those Graces Austine in sundry places clearly delivers his thoughts to the undeceiving of all that are willing to be free This he especially handles in his book de Correp Grat Cap 9 non erant saith he filii etiam quando erant in professione nomine filiorum ● non quiae justitiam simulaverunt sed quia in eâ non permanserunt This Righteousness he esteemed not to be meerly feigned and hypocritical but rather such as might truly intitle them to the state and Condition of the Children of God in the sense before expressed And againe isti cùm piè vivunt dicuntur filii Dei sed quoniam victuri sunt impie in eâdem impietate morituri non eos dicit filios Dei prascientia Dei And further in the same chapter sunt rursus quidam qui filii Dei propter susceptam temporalem gratiam dicuntur à nobis nec sunt tamen ` Deo and againe non erant in numero filiorum etiam quando erant in fide filiorum And sicut non verè Discipuli Christi ita nec verè filii Dei fuerunt etiam quando esse videbantur ita vocabantur He concludes Appellamus ergo nos Electos Christi Discipulos Dei filios quos regeneratos that is as to the Sacramental signe of that Grace piè vivere ceruimus sed tunc verò sunt quod appellantur si manserint in eo propter quod sic appellantur Si autem persever antiam non habent id est in eo quod caperunt esse non manent non verè appellantur quod appellantur non sunt As also de Doct Christianâ Lib. 3. C. 32 non est revera Corpus Christi quod non erit cum illo in aeternum And these are the Persons which Austine and those of the same judgment with him do grant that they may fall away such as upon the account of their Baptismal entrance into the Church their Pious devout lives their profession of the faith of the Gospel they called and accounted regenerate believers whom yet they tell you upon a through search into the nature and causes of holyness grace and walking with God that they would be found not to be truly and really in that state and condition that they were esteemed to be in of which they thought this a sufficient Demonstration even because they did not persevere which undeniably on the other hand with the testimonies foregoing and the like inumerable that might be produced evinces that their constant judgment was that all who are truly really and in the sight of God believers ingrafted into Christ and adopted into his family should certainly Persevere and that all the passages usually cited out of this holy and learned man to perswade us that he ever cast an eye towards the Doctrine of the Apostacy of the Saints may particularly be refer'd to this head and manifested that they do not at all concerne those whom he esteemed Saints indeed which is cleere from the consideration of what hath been insisted on Thus far He of whom what were the thoughts of the Church of God in the dayes wherein he lived hath been
mind that many Persons not Predestinate may come to believe yet fall away and perish Now the Truth is it is properly no part of the Controversy under consideration whether or how far and in what sense men by Reason of the Profession Participation of Ordinances with the work effect of common Grace upon them may be sayd to be True Believers but the whole upon the matter of what we plead for is comprised in the Assertions now ascribed to them which that it is done upon sufficient grounds will be manifest by calling in some few of the most eminent of Them to speak in their own words what their thoughts were in this matter To bring them in I desire that one who though none of Them was eminent in his undertakings for a mixture of Divinity and Law in those dayes wherin they had their eminent rise and Original may be heard And that is Gratian who after his manner hath Collected many things to the Purpose in hand p. 2. c. 33. Q 3. de pan dis 2 Charitas saith he est juncta Deo inseperabiliter unita in omnibus semper invicta And Electi quippe sic ad Bonum tendunt ut ad mala perpetranda non redeant Potest discursus mobilitas Spiritûs sic intelligi In Sanctorum quippe eor dibus juxtà quasdam virtutes semper permanet juxta quasdam verò recessurus venit venturus recedit in fide etenim Spe Charitate bonis aliis sine quibus ad Coelestem patriam non petest veuiri sicut est H●militas Castitas justitia atque Msericor dia perfectorum corda non deseri● in Prophetiae verè virtute doctrina facundiâ Miraculorum 〈◊〉 suis aliquanda adest aliquandose suber 〈◊〉 Answering the objection of the Spirits departure from them on whom he is bestowed He distinguisheth of the respects upon the account whereof he may be said so to do in respect of some Common gifts sayth he he may withdraw himselfe from them on whom he is bestowed but not in respect of Habitual Sanctifying grace Among the School-man there is none of greater name eminency for Learning Devotion and Subtilty than our 〈◊〉 who was Proctor of this Vniversity in the yeare 1325 and obtained by general consent the Title of Doctor profundus Lib. 2 de Causa Dei Cap. 8. This Profound Learned Doctour proposes this Thesis to be confirmed in the following Chapter quod nullus viater quantâcunque gratiâ ereatâ subnixus solim liberi Arbitrii viribus vel etiam cum adjutorio Gratiae possit perseverare finaliter fine alio Dei auxilio speciali In the long disputation following he disputes out of the Scriptures and Antient writers abundantly cited to his purpose that there is no possibility of the Perseverance of any Believer in the faith to the end upon such Helpes considerations and Advantages as Mr. Goodwin proposeth as the only meanes thereof That Perseverance it selfe is a gift of God without which gift and Grace none can persevere the and specialty of that Grace he expresseth in the Corollary wherewith he closeth the Chapter which is quod nullus viator solius liberi Arbitrii vel Gratiae Viribus aut amborum conjunctim sine alio Dei Auxilio speciali potest persever are per aliquod Tempus omnino Further asserting the efficacy of special grace in and for every good work whatever His Arguments and Testimonies I shall not need to recite they are at hand to those who desire to consult them After the vindication of the former Thesis Chap. 9. 10. Chap. 11 he proposeth further this proposition to a right understanding of the Doctrine of Perseverance Quod perseverantia non est aliquod Donum Dei creatum à Charitate Gratiâ realiter differens And the Corollary wherewith he shuts up that disputation is quòd Nomen Perseverantiae nullam rem absolutam essentialiter significat sed accidentaliter relativè Charitatem videlicet sive justitiam cum respectu futurae Permansionis usque in Finem quod non improbabiliter posset dici Perseverantiam esse ipsam Relationem hujus After this knowing well what Conclusion would easily be inferred from these principles viz That Perseverance is not really distinct from Faith and Love that it as such a Grace and Gift of God that who ever it 's bestowed upon shall certainly persevere namely that every one who hath received True Grace Faith and Love shall certainly persevere He objects that to himselfe and plainly grants it to be so indeed cap. 12. And to make the matter more cleare chap. 13 he disputes that Auxilium sine quo nullus perseverat per quod quilibet perseverat est Spiritus Sanctus Divina bonitas voluntas Every Cause of bringing sinful man to God is called by them Auxilium in these three Spiritus Sanctus Divina Bonitas Voluntas he comprizeth the cheif Causes of Perseverance as I have also done in the ensuing Treatise By Divina Voluntas he intends God's eternal and Immutable decree as he manifests cap. 8.9 whither he sends his Reader His Divina Bonitas is that free Grace whereby God accepts and justifies us as his Spirtus Sanctus is Sanctification So that he affirmes the perseverance of the Saints to consist in the stability of their Acceptation with God and continuance of their Sanctification from him upon the account of his unchangeable purposes and Decrees which is the summe of what we contend for And this is part of the Doctrine concerning the Grace of God and his soveraingty over the wills of men which Bradwardine in his dayes cryed out so earnestly for the Defence of to God man against the Pelagian encroachement which was made upon it in those dayes Thus he turnes himselfe in the conclusion of his Book to the Pope and Church of Rome with zealous earnestnes for their Interposition to the Determination of these Controversyes us os iniquè loquentium saith he obstruatur flexis genibus cordis mei imploro Ecclesiam pracipuè Romanam quae summâ Authoritate vigere dignoscitur quatenus ipsa determinare dignetur quid circa Praemissas Catholicè sit tenendum Non enim sine periculo in talibus erratur Simon d●rmis exurge speaking to the Pope exime gladium amput a quaque sinistra haeretica pravitati● defende protege Catholicam veritatem Porrò etsi Dominus ipse in Petri navicula dormiat nimie●ate Tempestatis compulsus ipsum quoque fiducialiter excitabo quatenus Spirisus oris sui Tempestate sedatâ tranquillum faciat serenum Absit autem ut qui in prorâ hujus Navicula pervigil laborabat jam in puppi super cervicali dormiat vel dormitet Lib 3. Cap. 53. With this earnestness above 300 years agoe did this profoundly learned man press the Popes to a determination of these Controversyes against the Pelagians and their Successours in his Schooles The same suit hath ever since been continued by very many
this Subject of Perseverance In the entrance of his disputation he layes down the same Principles with the Former concerning the necessity of the Peculiar Grace of Perseverance to this end that any one may persevere Disput 103. Then Disp 108 He further manifests that this gift or Grace of Perseverance does not depend on any Conditions in us or any Cooperation of our wills His position he layes down in these words Donum perseverantiae in ratione Doni perseverantiae efficacia illius nullo modo dependet effectivè ex libera Cooperatione nostri Arbitrii sed à solo Deo atque ab efficaci absoluto Decreto Voluntatis ejus qui pro suâ misericordiâ tribuit illud Donum cui vult In the further proof of this proposition he manifests by clear Testimonies that the Contrary Doctrine hereunto was that of the Pelagians and Semi-pelagians which Austine opposed in sundry Treatises And in all the Arguments whereby he further confirmes it he still presses the absurdity of making the Promise of God concerning Perseverance Conditional and so suspending it on any thing in and by us to be performed And indeed all the Acts whereby we persevere flowing according to him from the Grace of perseverance it cannot but be absurd to make the Efficient Cause in it's Efficiency and operation to depend upon it's own effect This also is with him Ridiculous that the Grace of perseverance should be given to any and he not persevere or be promised and yet not given yet withal he grants in his following Conclusions that our wills secundarily and in dependency do cooperate in our Perseverance The second Principle this learned School-man insists on is that this gift of perseverance is peculiar to the Elect or praedestinate Disput 104. 1. Con Donum perseverantiae est proprium Praedstinaterum ut nulli alteri conveniat And what he intends by Praedestinati he informes you according to the Judgment of Austin and Thomas Nomine praedestinationis ad Gloriam felùm 〈◊〉 praedestinationem intelligunt Augustinus Thomas quâ Electi ordinantur efficaciter transmittuntur ad vitam aeternam cujus effectus sunt vocatio Justificatio perseverantia in gratiâ usque ad Finem not that or such a Conditional predestination as is pendent in the ayre and expectant of men's good final Deportment but that which is the eternal free fountaine of all that grace whereof in time by Jesus Christ we are made Partakers And in the pursuit of this proposition he further proves at large that the persverance given to the Saints in Christ is not a supplement of Helps and advantages whereby they may preserve it if they will but such as causes them on whom it is bestowed certainly actually so to do and that in it's efficacy and operation it cannot depend on any free cooperation of our wills all the Good Acts tending to our perseverance being fruits of that Grace which is bestowed on us according to the absolute unchangeable Decree of the will of God This indeed is common with this Authour and the Rest of his associates the Dominicans and pres●●● Jansenians in these controversies together with the residue of the Romanists that having their Judgments wrested by the abominable figments of implicite Faith and the efficacy of the Sacraments of the new Testament conveying really exhibiting the grace signified or sealed by them that they are inforced to grant that many may be are Regenerate made True Believers who are not predestinate that these cannot persevere nor shall eventually be saved Certaine it is that there is not any Truth which that Generation of men do receive admit but more or less it suffers in their Hands from that gross ignorance of the free Grace of God in Jesus Crhist the power whereof they are practically under what the poor Vassailes and Slaves will do upon the late Bull of their Holy Father casting them in sundry maine Concernements of their Quarrel with their Adversaries is uncertaine otherwise setting aside some such deviations as the above mentioned whereunto they are enforced by their Ignorance of the Grace and Justification with is in Jesus Christ there is so much of Antient Candid Truth in opposition to the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians preserved and asserted in the writings of the Dominican Fryers as will rise up as I sayd before in Judgment against those of our Dayes who enjoying greater Light Advantages do yet close in with those and are long since Cursed Enemies of the grace of God To this Dominican I shall only adde the Testimony of two famous Jesuites upon whose understandings the light of this glorious Truth prevailed for an Acknowledgment of it The first of these is Bellarmine whose disputes to this purpose being full and large and the Authour in allmens hands I shall not transcribe his assertions arguments but only referre the Reader to his l. 2. de Grat. l. Ar. Cap. 12. Denique ut multa alia Testimonia c The other is Suarez who delivers his thoughts succinctly upon the whole of this Matter Lib. 11. de perpetuitat vel Amis Grat Cap. 2. Sect. 6. saith he de praedestinatis verum est Infallibiliter quòd gratiam finaliter seu in perpetuum non amittunt unde postquam semel gratiam habuerant ita reguntur proteguntur à Deo ut vel non cadant vel si ceciderint resurgant licèt saepius cadant resurgant tandem aliquando ita resurgunt ut amplius non cadant in which few words he hath briefly comprized the summe of that which is by us contended for It was in my Thoughts in the last place to have added the concurrent witness of all the reformed Churches which that of the most eminent Divines which have written in the defence of their Concessions but this Trouble upon second considerations I shall spare the Reader my selfe for as many other reasons lye against the Prosecuting of this Designe so especially the uselesness of spending-Time and paines for the demonstration of a thing of so evident a truth prevailes with me to desist Notwithstanding the Indeavours of Mr. Goodwin to wrest the words of some of the most antient Writers who laboured in the first Reformation of the Churches I presume no unprejudiced Person in the least measure acquainted with the systeme of that Doctrine which with so much paines diligence piety and Learning they promoted in the world with the clearness of their Judgments in going forth to the utmost compass of their Principles which they received and their constancy to themselves in asserting of the Truthes they embraced owned by their Friends and Adversaries until such time as Mr. Goodwin discovered their selfe Contradictions will scarce be moved once to question their Judgments by the Excerpta of Mr. Goodwin Cap 15 of his Treatise so that of this discourse this is the Issue There remaines only that I give a brief account of some concernments of the
assurance they have that those who are borne of God cannot shall not sinne unto deaths 1 Joh. 3. 9. seeing their own interest in that estate and condition may be clouded at least for a season and their consolation thereupon depending interrupted might occasion thoughts in them of very sad consideration but whilest besides all the beams raies that ever issued from a falling starre all the leaves and blossomes with abortive fruit that ever grew on an unrooted tree all the goodly turrets and ornaments of the fairest house that ever was built on the sand 1 Joh. 5. 7 8. there are moreover three that beare witness in Heaven the Father Sonne and Spirit and three that beare witness on Earth the Water Bloud and Spirit 1 Joh. 2. 20 21 whilst there is a teaching anoynting and assuring earnest a firme sealing to the day of redemption a knowledge that we are passed from death to life 2 Cor. 1. 21 22. the temptation arising from the Apostasie of Hypocrites is neither so potent nor unconquerable 2 Cor. 5. 5. but that by the grace of him through whom we can doe all things Ephes. 1. 14. it may be very well dealt withall Ephes. 4. 30. This I say Rom. 8. 16. supposing the ordinary presence and operation of the spirit of grace in the hearts of believers with such shines of Gods countenance upon them as they usually enjoy Let these be interrupted or turned aside and there is not the least blast or breath that proceeds from the mouth of the weakest enemy Psal 30. 6 7. they have to deale withall but is sufficient to cast them downe from the excellency of their joy and consolation The evidence of this truth is such § 8. that M. Goodwin is forced to say * Verè fidelit uti pro tempore praesenti de fidei conscientiae suae integritate certus esse potest ita de salute sui de salutiferâ Dei erga ipsum benevolentiâ pro illo tempore certus esse potest debet Farre be it from me to deny but that a man may very possibly attaine unto a very strong and potent assurance and that upon grounds every way sufficiently warrantable and good that his faith is sound and saving Cap 9. Sect 9. but unto this concession he puts in a double exception First That there is not one true believer of an hundred yea of many thousands who hath any such assurance of his Faith as is built upon solid and pregnant foundations I must by his leave enter my dissent hereunto and as we have the liberty of our respectiue apprehensions so neither the one nor the other prove any thing in the cause Setting aside causes of desertion great temptations and tryalls I hope through the riches of the grace and tenderness of the love of their father Act. Synod p. 182. decl sent Thes. 7. the condition is otherwise then is apprehended by M. Goodwin with the generality of the Family of God The reasons given by him of his thoughts to the contrary doe not sway me from my hopes or byas my former apprehensions in the least His reasons are First Because though the testimony of a mans heart and conscience touching his uprightness towards God or the soundness of any thing that is saving in him be comfortable and chearing yet seldome are these properties built upon such foundations which are sufficient to warrant them at least upon such whose sufficiency in that kind is duely apprehended For the testimony of the conscience of a man touching any thing which is spiritually and excellently good is of no such value unlesse it be first excellently inlightned with the knowledge nature proprieties and condition of that on which it testifieth and Secondly be in the actuall contemplation consideration or remembrance of what he knoweth in this kind Now very few believers in the World come up to this height and degree First Ans. 1. There is in this reason couched a supposition which if true would be farre more effectuall to shake the confidence and Resolution of beleevers then the most serious consideration of the Apostasies of all professors that ever fell from the glory of their profession from the beginning of the World and that is that there is no other pregnant foundation of Assurance but the testimony of a mans own heart and conscience touching his uprightness towards God and therefore before any can attaine that assurance upon abiding foundations they must be excellently inlightened in the nature properties and condition of that which their consciences testifie unto as true faith and uprightnesse of heart and be cleare in the disputes and Questions about them being in the actuall contemplation of them when they give their Testimony I no way doubt but many thousands of believers 1 Cor. 1. 26. whose apprehensions of the nature properties and conditions of things Jam. 2. 5. as they are in themselves are low weake and confused yet hauing received the Spirit of Adoption bearing witness with their spirits Rom. 8. 16. that they are the Children of God 1 Joh. 5. 10. and having the Testimony in themselves have been taken up into as high a degree of comforting and cheering assurance and that upon the most infallible foundation Imaginable 1 Joh. 5. 6. for the spirit witnesseth because the spirit is truth as ever the most seraphically illuminated person in the World attained unto Yea in the very graces themselves of Faith and uprightnesse of heart there is such a seale and stamp impressing the image of God upon the soule as without any reflex act or actuall contemplation of those graces themselves have an influence into the establishment of the soules of men in whom they are unto a quiet comfortable assured repose of themselves upon the love and faithfulnesse of God neither is the spirituall confidence of the Saints shaken Math. 7. 25. much lesse cast to the ground by their conflicting with feares Math. 16. 18. scruples and doubtfull apprehensions seeing in all these conflicts they have the pledge of the faithfulness of God Psal. 77. 10. that they shall be more then conquerours 1 Cor. 1. 9. Though they are exercised by them 1 Thes. 5. 23 24. they are not dejected with them 1 Cor. 10. 13. nor deprived of that comforting assurance and joy which they have in believing Rom. 8. 37. But yet suppose that this be the condition practically of many Saints of God that they never attaine to the state of the primitive Christians 1 Pet. 1. 8. to whose joy and consolation in believing the Holy Ghost so plentifully witnesseth nor doe live up to that full rate of plenty which their Father hath provided for them in his Family and sworne that he is abundantly willing they should enjoy and make use of Heb. 6. 17 18. what will hence follow as to the businesse in hand I professe
debilitate and overthrow an acquired habit whereunto it is opposite 2. Meritoriously by provoking the Lord to take them away in a way of punishment for of all punishment sinne is the morally procuring cause Let us a little consider which of those wayes it may probably be supposed that sinne expelles the spirit and habit of grace from the soules of Believers 1. For the spirit of grace which dwells in them it cannot with the least colour of reason be supposed that sinne should have a naturall efficient reaction against the spirit which is a voluntary indweller in the hearts of his he is indeed grieved and provoked by it Ephes. 4. 30. Heb 3. 10 11. Isa. 63 10. but that is in a morall way in respect of its demerit but that it should have a naturall efficiency by the way of opposition against it as Intemperance against the Mediocrity which it opposeth is a madnesse to imagine The habit of Grace wherewith such believers are indued §. 26. is infused not acquired by a frequency of Acts in themselves the root is made good and then the fruit and the work of God It is a new Creation planted in them by the exceeding greatnesse of his Power as he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead which he also strengthens with all might and all power to the end Is it now supposed or can it rationally be so that vitious acts acts of sinne should have in the soule a naturall efficiency for the expelling of an infused habit Col. 2. 12. 2 Cor. 5. 17. Ephes. 1. 19. Col. 1. 11. and that implanted upon the soule by the exceeding greatnesse of the power of God That it should be done by any one or two acts is impossible to suppose that a man in whom there is an habit set on by so mighty an impression as the Scripture mentions to act constantly contrary thereunto is to think what we will without troubling our selves to consider how it may be brought about Farther whilest this Principle life and habit of Grace is thus consuming doth their God and Father look on and suffer it to decay and their spirituall man to pine away day by day Eph. 1. 23. Col. 2. 19. giving them no new supplies nor increasing them with the increase of Gods hath he no pitty towards a dying child Eph 4. 16. 1 Thes 3. 12. or can he not help him doth he of whom it is said that he is faithfull and that he will not suffer us to be tempted above what we are able Phil 1. 6. 1 Cor. 10. 13. but with the very temptation will make way for us to escape let loose such floodgates of Temptations upon them as he knows his grace will not be able to stand before but will be consumed and expelled by it what also shall we suppose are the thoughts of Iesus Christ towards a withering member Heb 2. 17 18. 3. 15. 7. 25. a dying brother a perishing child a wandring sheep where is his zeale and his tender mercies and the sounding of his bowells are they restrained Isa 40. 11. 63. 8. Will he not lay hold of his strength and stirre up his Righteousnesse to save a poore sinking creature Ezek 34. 4 12. Also He that is in us is greater then he that is in the world and will he suffer himselfe to be wrought out of his habitation and not stirre up his strength to keep possession of the dwelling place which he had chosen So that neither in the nature of the thing it selfe nor in respect of him with whom we have to doe doth this seem possible But secondly §. 27. Sinne procureth by the way of merit the taking away of the Spirit and removeall of the Habit graciously bestowed Believers deserve by sinne that God should take his Spirit from them and the Grace that he hath bestowed on them They doe so indeed it cannot be denied but will the Lord deale so with them Isa 48. 9. Will he judge his house with such fler and vengeance Is that the way of a Father with his Children untill he hath taken away his Spirit and grace although they are Rebellious Children yet they are his Children still and is this the way of a tender Father to cut the throats of his Children when it is in his power to mend them The casting of a wicked man into Hell is not a punishment to be compared to this the losse of Gods presence is the worst of Hell How infinitely must they needs be more sensible of it who have once enjoyed it Isa 49. 15 16 Isa 66. 13. then those who were strangers to it from their wombe Certainly the Lord bears another Testimony concerning his kindnesse to his Sonnes and Daughters Ierem 2. 14. Hos. 2. 14. c. then that we should entertaine such dismall thoughts of him He chastises his Children indeed but he doth not kill them he corrects them with rodds but his Kindnesse he takes not from them notwithstanding of the attempt made by the Remonstrants in their Synodalia I may say that I have not as yet met with any tolerable extrication of those difficulties more to this purpose will afterwards be insisted on 3. That which we intend when we mention the Perseverance of Saints is their continuance to the end in the condition of Saintship whereunto they are called Now in the state of Saintship there are two things concurring 1. That Holinesse which they receive from God and 2. That Favour which they have with God being justified freely by his grace through the blood of Christ and their continuance in this condition to the end of their lives both to their reall Holinesse and gracious Acceptance is the Perseverance whereof we must treat The one respecting the reall estate the other their relative of which more particularly afterwards And this is a briefe delineation of the Doctrine §. 28. which the Lord assisting shall be explained confirmed and vindicated in the insuing discourse which being first set forth as a meere Skeleton its Symetry and Complexion Its Beauty and Comelinesse Its Strength and Vigor Excellency and Vsefulnesse will in the description of the severall parts and branches of it be more fully manifested Now because Mr Goodwin §. 29. though he was not pleased to fixe any orderly state of the Question under debate a course he hath also thought good to take in handling those other Heads of the Doctrine of the Gospell wherein he hath chosen to walke for the maine with the Arminians in Paths of difference from the Reformed Churches yet having scatterd up and downe his Treatise what his conceptions are of the Doctrine he doth oppose as also what he asserts in the place roome thereof and Upon what Principles I shall briefly call what he hath so delivered both on the one hand on the other to an account to make the clearer way for the proofe of the Truth which
must fall and be of none effect because the Jewes beleived not whereof he gives a full account afterwards when he expresly takes up the objection and handles it at large Cap. 9 10 11. The summe of the Answer he there gives as a Defensative of the faithfullnesse of God with a non obstante to the Infidelity of some of the Jewes amounts to no more nor lesse then what is here argued by us asserted viz. that notwithstanding this their incredulity and Rejection of the Gospell the Foundation of God standeth sure God knoweth who are his that the Promise his Faithfullnesse wherein came under Debate was not made to all the Jewes but to them that were Chosen according to his Purpose as he expresly disputes it at large beyond all possibility of Contradiction Cap. 11. As shall afterwards be further argued and hath in part been already discovered I verily believe never did any man produce a Testimony more to the disadvantage of his owne cause both in generall and in particular then this is to the Cause Mr Goodwin hath in hand Neither doth he advance one step further in the confirmation of the sence imposed on the Apostles words §. 42. by comparing them with the words of the same Apostle v. 13. of the same Chapter If we Believe not yet he continues Faithfull he cannot deny himself wherein againe contrary to the whole drift of Mr Goodwins Discourse the Faithfullnesse of God in the Accomplishment of his Promises is asserted to be wholy independent upon any Qualification whatever in them to whom those Promises are made Though we are under Sufferings Temptations and Tryalls very apt to be cast downe from our Hope of the great Things that God hath prepared for us and Promised to us yet his Purpose shall stand however and our uubeliefe shall not in the least cause him to withdraw or not to goe through with his ingagement to the utmost The faithfullnesse of his owne nature requireth it at his hand He cannot deny himselfe What remaines Sect. 14. §. 43. Wherein he labours further to give strength unto or rather more largely to Explicate what he formerly asserted is built upon a criticall Consideration of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which without any one example produced from any approoved Author we must believe to signifie a bond or instrument of security given between men by the way of Contract And what then suppose it doe Why then contrary to the whole scope of the place and constant signification of the word in the Scripture it must be interpreted according to the Analogy of that sence Why so Doth it remove any difficulty on the other hand Doth it more suite the Objection for its removeall whereunto it is given that we should warpe from the first Genuine Native usuall signification of the word to that which is Exotick and Metaphoricall Yea but we are enforced to embrace this sence because that here is a seale set to this Foundation and men use not to set Seales to the foundation of a House And is it required that Allusions should hold in all prticulars and Circumstances even in such as wherein their teaching property doth not consist The tearmes of Foundation Sealing are both figurative neither will either of them absolutely be squared to those things in Nature wherein they have their Foundation The Purpose of God is here called his Foundation because of its Stability Abidingnesse Strength and Vse in bearing up the whole Fabricke of the Salvation of Believers not in respect of its lying in or under the Ground or being made of wood or stone And in this sence why may it not be said to be Sealed Spirituall Sealing holds out two things Confirmation and Conforming by impression and in them consist the cheife politicall use of the Word and thing not in being a Labell annexed to a writing And why may not a Purpose be confirmed or be manifested to be firme as well as a Contract or Instrument in Law Having also its conforming virtue and Efficacy which is the naturall effect of Sealing to implant the Image in the Seale on the things impressed with it in rendering them concerning whom the Purpose of God is answerable to the Image of his Sonne in whom the Purpose is made and that patterne which he hath Chosen them to and appointed them for What followeth to the end of this Section is but a new expression of what Mr Goodwin pretends to be the sence of this place The Foundation of God is the Gospell or the Promise of God to save Believers the Seale is his taking notice of them to save them and to condemne them that Believe not and therefore questionlesse Believers need not feare that they shall fall away though there be not the least intimation made of any thing that should give them the least comfortable or chearing security of preservation in Believing only 't is said he that believeth shall be saved which yet is not an absolute Promise of Salvation to Believers and he that believeth not shall be damned which one disjunctive Proposition declarative of the connexion that is between the Means and the End Mr Goodwin labours to make comprehensive of all the Purposes of God concerning Believers it being such as wherein no one person in the world is more concerned then another If the Foundation here mentioned be only God's Purpose or rather declaration of his Will for the Saving of Believers and the Damning of Unbelievers what Consolation could be from hence administred in particular unto persons laboring under the Scruple mentioned formerly hath not as yet been declared Let us then proceed to further proofe of the Truth in hand and the vindication of some other places of Scripture whereby it is confirmed That which I shall next fix upon §. 44. is that eminent place of Ioh. 6. 37 38 39 40. All that the Father giveth me shall come to me and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out for I came downe from Heaven not to doe mine own will but the will of him that sent me and this is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should loose nothing but should raise it up againe at the last day and this is the will of him that sent mee that every one which seeth the Sonne and believeth on him may have everlasting life and I will raise him up at the last day Our Saviour acquaints us with the designe wherewith he came from heaven it was not to doe his owne will that is to accomplish or bring about any private purposes of his owne distinct or different from them of his Father as he was Blaspheamously charged by the Jewes to doe but he came to doe the will of God the Will of him that sent him The Will of God which Christ came to fulfill is sometimes taken for the Commandement which he received from the Father for the Accomplishment
that Believers receive the spirit of Adoption to cry Abba Father which being a worke within them cannot be wrought and effected by Adoption it selfe which is an extrinsicall Relation Neither can Adoption and the Spirit of Adoption be conceived to be the same He also farther affirmes it 1 Cor 2. 12. we have received the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given us of God We have so received him as that he abides with us to teach us to acquaint our hearts with Gods dealing with us bearing witnesse with our spirits to the condition wherein we are in reference to our Favour from God and Acceptation with him and the same he most distinctly asserts Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into our hearts crying Abba Father The distinct Oeconomy of the Father Sonne and Spirit in the work of Adoption is clearly discovered He is sent sent of God that is the Father That name is Personally to be appropriated when it is distinguished as here from Sonne and Spirit That is the Fathers work that work of his Love he sends him He hath sent him as the spirit of his Sonne procured by him for us promised by him to us proceeding from him as to his personall subsistence and sent by him as to his office of Adoption and Consolation Then whether the Father hath sent the spirit of his Sonne where he is to abide and make his residence is expressed it is into our Hearts saith the Apostle there he dwells and abides And lastly what there he doth is also manifested he setts them on worke in whom he is gives them priviledges for it Ability to it Incouragement in it causing them to cry Abba Father Once and againe to Timothy doth the same Apostle assert the same truth 1 Epist. 3. 14. the good thing committed unto thee keep by the Holy Spirit which dwelleth in us The Lord knowing how much of our Life and Consolation depends on this Truth redoubles his Testimony of it that wee might receive it even wee who are dull and slow of heart to believe the things that are written 3. Whereas some may say §. 3. it cannot be denyed but that the Spirit dwels in Believers but yet this is not personally but only by his Grace though I might reply that this indeed and upon the matter is not to distinguish but to deny what is positively affirmed To say the Spirit dwells in us but not the Person of the Spirit is not to distinguish de modo but to deny the thing it selfe To say the Graces indeed of the Spirit are in us not dwell in us for an Accident is not properly said to dwell in its subject but the Spirit it selfe doth not dwell in us is expressly to cast downe what the word sets up If such distinctions ought to be of force to evade so many positive and plaine Texts of Scripture as have been produced it may well be questioned whether any Truth be capable of proofe from Scripture or no. Yet I say farther to obviate such Objections and to prevent all quarrellings for the future the Scripture it selfe as to this businesse of the Spirits indwelling plainely distinguisheth between the Spirit it selfe and his Graces He is I say distinguished from them and that in respect to his indwelling Rom. 5. 5. The Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost that is given to us The Holy Ghost is given to us to dwell in us as hath been abundantly declared and shall yet farther be demonstrated Here He is mentioned together with the Love of God and his shedding thereof abroad in our Hearts that is with his Graces is as clearely distinguished and differenced from them as Cause and effect Take the Love of God in either sence that is controverted about this place for our Love to God or a sence of his Love to us and it is an eminent Grace of the Holy Spirit If then by the Holy Ghost given unto us yee understand only the Grace of the Holy Ghost He being said to be given because that is given then this must be the sence of the place The Grace of the Holy Ghost is shed abroad in our Hearts by the Grace of the Holy Ghost that is given to us Farther if by the Holy Ghost be meant only his Grace I require what Grace it is hereby the expression intended Is it the same with that expressed the Love of God This were to confound the efficient cause with its effect Is it any other Grace that doth produce the great worke mentioned Let us know what that Grace is that hath this power energie in its hand of shedding abroad the Love of God in our Hearts So Rom. 8. 11. He shall quicken your mortall bodyes by the Spirit that dwelleth in you This quickning of our mortall bodies is generally confessed to be and the scope of the place inforceth that sence our Spirituall quickning in our mortall bodyes mention being made of our bodyes in Analogie to the body of Christ by his death we have life and quickning Donbtlesse then it is a Grace of the Spirit that is intended Yea the habitual principle of all Graces And this is wrought in us by the Spirit that dwelleth in us There is not any Grace of the Spirit whereby he may dwell in men antecedent to his Quickning of them Spirituall Graces have not their residence in dead soules So that this must be the Spirit himselfe dwelling in us that is here intended and that personally or the sence of the words must be The Grace of quickning our mortall bodyes is wrought in us by the Grace of Quickning our mortall bodyes that dwels in us which is plainely to confound the Cause and Effect Besides it is the same Spirit that raised up Jesus from the dead that is intended which doubtlesse was not any inherent Grace but the Spirit of God himselfe working by the exceding greatnesse of his Power Thus much is hence cleared Antecedent in order of nature to our Quickning there is a Spirit given to us to dwell in us Every efficient Cause hath at least the precedency of its effect No Grace of the Spirit is bestowed on us before our Quickning which is the preparation and fitting of the subject for the receiving of them the planting of the Roote that containes them vertually and brings them forth actually in their order Gal. 5. 22. All Graces whatsoever come under the name of the fruit of the Spirit that is which the Spirit in us brings forth as the Roote doth the fruit which in its sodoing is distinct therefrom Many oher instances might be given but these may suffice 4. There is a Personallity ascribed to the Holy Ghost in his dwelling in us and that in such a way §. 4. as cannot be ascribed to any Created Grace which is but a Quality in a subject and this the Scripture doth three wayes 1. In
height under their pressures that we have great cause of rejoycing in them all Yea but whence is this Do these Graces readily come forth and exert themselves with an efficacy suitable to this triumphing frame The ground spring of all is discovered v. 5. it is because the Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost that is given to us From this fountaine do all these fresh streames flow the Spirit that is given us that sheds abroad the Love of God in our Hearts and thereby sets all our Graces on worke He oyles the wheeles of the soules obedience when we neither know what to do nor how to performe what we know 5. This indwelling Spirit § 27. gives Restraint Restraining Grace doth mainly consist in morall perswasions from the Causes Circumstances and Ends of things When a man is disswaded from sinne upon Considerations taken from any such head or place as is apt to prevaile with him that perswasion so applyed and intended of God for that end is unto him restraining Grace By this meanes doth the Lord keepe within bounds the most of the Sonnes of men notwithstanding all their violent and impetuous lusts Hell shame bitternessee disappointment on the one hand Credit Repute quietnes of Conscience the like on the other binde thē to their good Behaviour God through these things drops an awe upon their Spirits binding them up from running out unto that compasse of excesse and ryot in sinning which otherwise their lusts would carry them out unto This is not his way of dealing with the Saints Jer. 31. 34. he writes his Law in their hearts and puts his feare in their inward parts that they may not depart from him making them a willing people through his owne Power Psal. 110. 3. By his effectually remaining Grace he carryes them out kindly chearefully willingly to do his whole will working in them to will and to do of his owne good pleasure yet notwithstanding all this often times through the strength of Temptation the subtilty of Sathan and his readinesse to improve all Advantages to the utmost the treachery and deceitfulnesse of indwelling sinne and corruption they are carryed beyond the bounds and lines of that principle or Law of Life and Love whereby they are lead What now doth the Lord do They are ready to runne quite out of the pasture of Christ doth he let them goe and give them up to themselves Nay but he sets an hedge about them that they shall not find their way He leades them as the wild Asse in her month that they may be found he puts a Restraint upon their Spirits by setting home some sad considerations of the evil of their hearts and wayes whether they are going what they are doing and what shall be Issue of their walking so loosly Even in this life what shame what scandall what dishonour to themselves their profession the Gospell their Brethren it would prove and so hampers them quiets their Spirits and gently brings them againe under obedience unto that principle of Love that is in them and the Spirit of Grace whose yoake they were casting off whereby they are lead Many times then even the Saints of God are kept from sinnes especially outward actuall sinnes upon such outward motives reasonings and considerations as other men are Peter was broken loose and running downe hill apace denying and forswearing his Master Christ puts a restraint upon his Spirit by a looke toward him this mindes him of his folly unkindnesse his former rash confidence and ingagement to dye with his Master and sets him on such Considerations as stirred up the principle of Grace in him to take its place and rule againe and in obedience thereunto he not only desists from any farther denyall but Faith Repentance Love all exerting themselves he goes out and wept bitterly It is so frequently with the Saints of God though in lesser evills by neglect and omission of duty or inclination to evill and closing with temptations they breake out of the pure and perfect Rule and Guidance of the Spirit whereby they ought to be lead instantly some Considerations or other are pressed on upon their Spirits taken perhaps from outward things which recovers them to that obedientiall frame from whence through violence of Corruption and Temptation they had broken Like an Hawke sitting on a mans hand eating her meat in quietnesse is suddenly by the originall wildnesse of her nature carryed out to an attempt of flying away with speed but is checkt by the string at her heeles upon which shee returnes to her meat againe We have an innate wildnesse in us provoking and stirring us up to runne from God Were we not recovered by some clog fastned on us for our Restraint we should often runne into the most desperate paths And this Restraint I say is from the indwelling Spirit He stirrs up one thing or other to smite the Hearts Conscience when it is under the Power of any Temptation to sinne and folly So it was with David in the Attempt he made upon Saul when he cut of the lappe of his Garment Temptation opportunity had almost turned him loose frō under the power of Faith waiting and dependance on God wherein lay the generall frame of his Spirit he is recovered to it by a blow upon the heart from some dismall Consideration of the Issue and scandall of that which he was about 6. We have hereby also the Renewall §. 28. daily Renewall of sanctifying Grace Inherent Grace is a thing in its owne nature apt to decay and dye it is compared to things ready to dye Rev. 3. 2. strengthen the things that remaine saith Christ to the Church of Sardis that are ready to dye It is a thing that may wither and decline from its vigor and the soule may thereby be betrayed into manifold weaknesses and backslidings It is not meerely from the nature of the Trees in the Garden of God that their fruit failes not nor their leaves wither Psal. 1. 4. but from their Planting by the Rivers of water Hence are the sicknesses weaknesses and decayes of the Spirit mentioned in the Scripture Should he who had the richest stock of any living be left to spend of it without new supplies he would quickly be a Bankrupt This also is prevented by the Indwelling Spirit He is the fatnesse of the Olive that is communicated to the branches continually to keep them fruitfull and flourishing He is that golden Oyle which passes through the Branches and empties it selfe in the fruitfulnesse of the Church He continually fills our Lamps with new Oyle and puts new vigor into our spirits Psal. 92. 10. thou liftest up my horne as the horne of an Vnicorne I am anoynted with fresh oyle or renewed supplies of the Spirit And this Psal. 103. 5. is called a renewing of Youth like the Eagles a Recovery of former strength and vigor new power and ability for new duties and
oppose or a wilfull perverting of it contrary to his owne science conscience Is that the Doctrine you oppose Is it so proposed by those who through Grace have laboured to explaine vindicate it Doth not the maine weight of the doctrine turne on this hinge that God hath promised to his Saints true Believers such supplies of the Spirit and Grace as that they shall never degenerate unto such loose and profane courses as are destructive to Godlinesse Doubtlesse that Doctrine is of a most spotlesse untainted innocency which its Adversaries dare not venture to strangle before they have violently treacherously defloured it And thus Mr Goodwin leaveth his Arguments in the dust like the Estriches egges under the feet of men to be trampled on with ease The residue of this Discourse onwards to the next Argument §. 7. beingspent in the answering of pretended Objections put in against himselfe in the behalfe of the Doctrine of Perseverance not at all called out by the import of his present Arguments Discourses I might passe them over but in as much as that which is spoken thereunto tendeth to the further clearing of what formerly hath been evidenced concerning the suitablenesse of the Doctrine contended for unto the promotion of Holinesse I shall farther consider what he draweth forth on this occasion Sect. 33. he giveth us an Objection and a foure fold answer theruuto pag. 333 334 335. That which he calleth an Objection he laieth downe in these words If it be objected and said yea but Assurance of the Unchangeablenesse of God's Love towards him that is Godly is both a more effectuall perswading motive unto Godlinesse and more encouraging to a persevering in Godlinesse then a doubtfulnesse or uncertainty whether God will be constant in his Affection to such a man or no Certainty of reward is more encouraging unto action then uncertainty Ans. If any one hath been so weake §. 8. as to make use of this plea in behalfe of that Doctrine it seemeth to defend which I scarcely believe it will I doubt not be an easie taske to undertake that he shall be no more admitted or entertained as an Advocate in this cause The assurance of the Unchangeablenes of Gods Love to them that are Godly is but one part of the Doctrine in hand that such as may perhaps be cōmon to it with that W ch is brought into competition W th it It is the Assurance of the Unchangeablenes of Gods Love to a man to keepe him up to Godlines to preserve him in that state Condition of Holines to the end of the certainty of the continuance of the Love of God unto him on that account in that way that is that great Gospell motive to Obedience wherein as its peculiar our Doctrine glorieth as hath formerly been manifested Perhaps Mr Goodwin doth not think that any man is bound to lay more blocks in his owne way then he judgeth himselfe well able to remove and therefore he framed that Objection so that he might be sure to returne at least a specious answer thereunto and this he attempteth accordingly and telleth us in his first Paragraph three things 1. That the Doctrine teaching the Saints defection §. 9. doth also maintaine the Vnchangeablenesse of the Love of God to them that are Godly Ans. But what Love I pray you is that which when it might prevent it will yet suffer those Godly ones to become such ungodly Villaines and wretches as that it shall be utterly impossible for the Lord to continue his Love to them Is the Love you mention indeed a Love to their Persons or only an Approbation of their Duties and Qualifications If the First whence is it that God ceaseth at any time to love them Doth he change and alter his Love like the Sonnes of Men Why they change therefore he changeth also That God changeth not and therefore we who are subject to change are yet preserved from being consumed we have heard But that upon the change that is in men God also should change we are yet to be instructed and the Immutability of God hath taken greater hold upon our understandings and in our hearts then that we should easily receive any thing so diametrically opposite thereunto If the Love mentioned be only an Approbation of the Qualifications that are in them and of the Duties that they doe performe then is it no more a Love to them or to their persons then it is to the persons of the most profligate wretches that live The object is Duty solely where ever it may be found and not any person at all for it is an Act of Gods approving not purposing or determining Will. This is not our sence of the continuance of the Love of God to them that are Godly so that there is no comparison betwixt the Doctrines under contest as to the Asserting of the Love of God to Believers or to them that are Godly Wherefore he saith 2. That the Doctrine he opposeth §. 10. Promiseth Gods Love and the unchangeable continuance of it unto men though they change to Prophanenesse Though this is said over and over an hundred times yet I cannot believe it because the Doctrine openly affirmeth the continuance of the Love of God to them that are Godly to be effectually and eventually preventive of any such prophanenesse as is inconsistent therewithall and therefore much more vaine is that which he affirmeth in the third place 3. Namely that the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints doth not so much absolutely promise the Love of God to them that are Godly as it promiseth it conditionally to them that are prophane in case they have been Godly that is it teacheth that God promiseth the certain continuance of his Love to him that is Godly on condition he cease to be so and turne prophane Claudite jam rivos pueri we have enough of this already 2 ly He addeth yet §. 11. Neither is certainty of reward in every sence or kind more encouraging unto Action then uncertainely in some kind to promise with all possible Assurance the same reward or prize to him that shall not runne in the race which is promised to him that shall runne is not more encouraging unto men thus to runne then to promise it conditionally upon their running which is a promising of it with uncertainty in this respect because it is uncertaine whether men will runne in the said race or no and consequently whether they shall receive the said prize or no upon such a promise Vncertainty of reward is then and in such cases more encouraging unto action then certainly When the certainty of obtaining or receiving it is suspended upon the Act not when it is assured unto men whether they Act or no. Ans. 1. Perswade your servants your labourers if you can of that great encouragement that lyes in the the uncertainty of a reward above that which may be had from an Assurance
on the wills of men M. G. discourse and judgement 24. Considered 25. Effects follow as to their kind their next causes 26. The same Act of the will Physicall and Morall upon severall accounts Those accounts considered 27. God by the reall efficacy of the Spirit produceth in us Acts of the will morally good that confirmed from Scripture 28. Conclusion from thence 29. Of the termes Physicall Morall and necessary and their use in things of the nature under consideration Morall causes of Physicall effects 30. The concurrence of Physicall and Morall causes for producing the same effect the efficacy of Grace and exhortations 31. Physicall and necessary how distinguished Morall and not necessary Confounded by M. G. 32. M. G. farther progresse considered 33. What operation of God on the will of man he allowes All Physicall operation by him excluded 34. M. G's sence of the difference between the working of God and a Minister on the will that it is but graduall 35. Considered and removed All working of God on the will by him confined to perswasion perswasion gives no strength or ability to the person perswaded 36. All immediate acting of God to good in men by M G. utterly excluded 37. Wherein Gods perswading men doth consist according to M. G. 1 Cor. 3. 9. considered 38. Of the concurrence of diverse Agents to the production of the same effect 39. The summe of the 7 Section of Gh. 13. The will how necessitated how free 40. In what seuce M. G. allowes Gods perswasions to be irresistible 41. The dealings of God and men ill compared 42. Pauls exhortation to the use of meanes where the end was certaine Acts 24. c●df●dered God deals with men as men exhorting them and as corrupted men assisting them 43. Of Promises of Temporall things whether all conditionall 44. What condition in the Promise made to Paul Act. 27. 45. Farther of that Promise its infallibility and meanes of Accomplishment 46. The same considerations farther prosecuted 47. 48. Of Promises of Perseveran●e and what relations to performe in conjuction 49. M. G. opposition hereunto 50. Promises and protestations in conjunction 1 Cor. 10. 12 13. discussed An absolute Promise of Perseverance therein evinced 51. Phil. 1. 12 13. to the same purpose considered M. G. Interpretation of that place proposed removed 52. Heb. 6. 4 5 9. to the same purpose insisted on 53. Of the consistency o● Threatnings with the Promises of Perseverance 54. M. G. opposition hereunto 55. Considered and removed What Promises of Perseverance are asserted how absolute and infrustable Feare of Hell and punishment twofold The feare intended to be ingenerated by threatnings not inconsistent with the Assurance given by promises 56. Five Considerations about the use of Threatnings the first c. 57. Hipocrites how threatned for Apostasy of the End and Aime of God in Threatnings 58. Of the proper End and Efficacy of Threatnings with reference unto true Believers 59. Feare of Hell and punishment how farre a principle of Obedience in the Saints 60. Of Noahs feare Heb. 11. 7. 61. M. G's farther arguings for the Efficacy of the feare of Hell unto Obedience in the Saints proposed considered removed 62. 1 Ioh. 4. 18. cons●dered 63. Of the Obedience of Saints to their heavenly Father compared to the obedience of Children to their naturall Parents M. G's monstrous conception about this thing 64. How Feare or Love and in what sence are principles of Obedience That which is done from Feare not done willingly not chearfully 65. How Feare and what feare hath torment 66. Of the nature and use of Promises Close of the Answer to this Argument IT will be needlesse to use many words unto the Discourse of the first Section §. 1. seeing it will not in the least prejudice our Cause in hand to leave Mr Godwin in full possession of all the Glory of the Rethoricke thereof For although I cannot close with him in the Exposition given of that expression 1 Tim. 6. 16. God inhabiteth Light inaccessible some thing in my weake apprehension much more glorious divine being comprised therein then what it is here turned aside unto Neither am I in the least convinced of the truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the former Discourse in the close of the whole asserting a deliverance to be obtained from our thoughts of the Doctrine of the defection of the Saints which he intimateth to be that it is anti-evangelicall tormenting and bringing soules under bondage by a narrow and unprejudicate search into it finding my selfe every day more and more confirmed in thoughts of that kind concerning it by my engagement into such an enquiry which hath been observed in this present Discourse as farre as my weakenesse will permit yet it being not in the least Argumentative but for the whole frame and intendment of it Commune exordium and that which any man of any opinion in the world might make use of I shall not insist upon it His second Section containeth his first Argument §. 2. drawne forth in the defence of his Doctrine of the possibility as he calleth it but indeed what it is we have heard of the defection of Believers Of this I presume he intended no more use but as a forlorne to begin a light Skirmish with his Adversaries ordering it to retreat to his maine Body advancing after or desperately casting it away to abate the Edge of his Combatants Weapons it is so weake and feeble and therefore I shall be very briefe in the consideration of it thus then he proposeth it That Doctrine which rendreth God free from the unrighteousnesse which the Scripture calleth the respecting of persons of men is a Doctrine of perfect consistence with the Scripture and the truth The Doctrine which teacheth the possibility of the Saints declining and this unto death is a Doctrine of this import Ergo. Ans. 1. §. 3. The first proposition must be supposed Vniversall of else the whole will quickly be manifested to be unconclusive If it be only Indefinite and so equivalent as it lieth to a particular the conclusion is from all particulars and of no force as Mr Goodwin well knoweth Take it universally and I say it is evidently false and might easily be disproved by innumerable Instances Not that any errour or falsehood can indeed give God the Glory of any one of his Attributes but that they may be fitted and suited for such a service were not their throates cut and their mouthes stopt by the Lies that are in them which Mr Goodwin's Doctrine is no lesse lyable to then any other and not at all exempted from that Condition by its seeming subserviency unto Gods Aprosopolepsia Doth not the Doctrine of Justification by Workes even in the most rigid sence of it according to the tenor of the old Covenant absolutely render God free from the Unrighteousnesse of Accepting of Persens And yet for all that it hath not one jot the more of Truth in it nor is it the
lesse Anti-evangelicall This foundation then being removed what ever is built upon it mole ruit su● Neither is it in any measure restored or laid a new by the reason of it given by Mr G. viz. That the Scripture affirmeth in sundry places that God is no accepter of persons for he that shall hence conclude that what ever Doctrine affirmeth directly or by consequence that God is no Aceepter of persons what ever other abomination it is evidently deeming with all is yet true and according to the minde of God shall have leave notwithstanding the antiquated Statute of our Vniversity against it to goe and reade Logicke at Stamford On this account do but provide that a Doctrine be not gnilty of any one crime and you may conclude that it is guilty of none For instance That Doctrine which impeacheth not the Omnipresence of the Diety is true according to the Scripture for the Scripture aboundeth with cleare Testimonyes of the Presence of God in all places Now the Doctrine of the Vbiquity of the humane nature of Christ doth no way impeach the omnipresence of the Diety therefore it is true and according to Scripture I might supersede all further considerations of this Argument having rendered it altogether uselesse and unserviceable in this warfare by breaking its right legge or rather cruteh whereon it leaned but something also may be added to the Minor because of its reflection in the close of its proofe upon the Doctrine we maintaine intimating an inconsistency of it with that Excellency of God spoken of namely that he is no Accepter of Persons Prosopolepsia §. 4. or Accepting of Persons is an evill in Judgment when he who is to determine in causes of righteousnesse hath respect to personall things that concerue not the merit of the Cause in hand and judgeth accordingly This properly can have no place in God as to any bestowing of free Grace Mercy or Pardon There is Roome made for it only when the things that are bestowed or wrought by it are such as in Justice are due it being an Iniquity solely and directly opposed to distributive Justice Exod. 23. 2 3 6 7 8 9. that rendreth to every one according to what is Righteous and due Iob. 31. 34. That with God there be no Accepting of Persons there is no more required but this that he appoint and determine equall Punishments to equall faults and give equall Rewards to equall deservings If he will dispose of his pardoning Mercy and free Grace to some in Christ not to others who shall say unto him what dost thou May he not do what he will with his owne So he giveth a peny to him that laboureth all day he maygive a peny also to him that worketh but one houre Now suppose that Mr G's Doctrine render God free from this or rather chargeth him not with it yet if withall it calleth his Truth Righteousnesse Faithfulnesse Oath and Immutabillity into question shall it passe for a Truth or be embraced ever the sooner But the sting of this Argument lieth in the Taile §. 5. or close of it in the Reflection insisted on upon the common Doctrine of Perseverance as it is called viz. that it teacheth God to be an accepter of Persons This is Mr Goodwin's way of Arguing all along When at any time he hath proposed a proofe of the Doctrine he goeth about to establish finding that as somthing heavy worke to lye upon his hand and not much to be said in the case he instantly turneth about and falleth upon his Adversaries in declaiming against whom he hath a rich and overflowing Veine There is scarce any one of his Arguments in the pursuit and improvement whereof one fourth part of it is spoken to that head where in he is engaged But wherein is the Common Doctrine of Perseverance guilty of this great crime §. 6. It teacheth that He that believeth shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be damned It teacheth that God hath allotted equall punishments to equall Transgressions and appointed equall Rewards to equall wayes of Obedience That the Wages of every sinne is death and that every sinner must dye unlesse it be those concerning whom God himselfe saith Deliver them I have found a Ransome Job 33. 24. that he is a like displeased with sinne in whomsoever it is and that in a peculiar and eminent manner when it is found in his owne Indeed if this be to impute Acceptation of Persons to God to say that he hath Mercy on whom he will have Mercy and whom he will he hardeneth that he is tender to his owne as a Father to his only Child that serveth him and will recover them being faithfull in his Promises from their sinnes and heale their backeslidings though he suffer others to lye wallowing in their rebellions and pollutions all their dayes that he will not give pardon to any finner but upon Faith and Repentance but will give Faith and Repentance to those whom he hath chosen and given unto Jesus Christ to be saved If this I say be acceptance of Persons our Doctrine owneth the imputation of ascribing it to God and glorieth in it we being ascertained that God taketh all this to himselfe clearely and plentifully in the Word of Truth The summe of what our Author gives in §. 7. to make good his charge upon the common Doctrine of Perseverance is That it affirmeth that though Saints and Believers fall into the same sinnes of Adultery and Idolatry and the like with other men yet they are not dealt withall as other men but continued in the Love and Favour of God To wave the consideration of the false impositions by the way on the Doctrine opposed as that is that it teacheth the Saints to fall into and to continue in them to the significancy of that expression never so long under Abominations and to joyne Issue upon the whole of the matter I say 1. That in and with this Doctrine and in perfect Harmony and Consistency therewith Rom. 1. 32. we maintaine that the judgement of God is the same in respect of every sinne in whomsoever it is and that he that doth it on that account is worthy of death and 2. That the sentence of the Law is the same towards all cursing every one that continueth not in all things written in the Book thereof Deut. 27. 26. to doe them 3. That in and under the Gospell wherein a remedy is provided in reference to the rigour and severity of both the former Apprehensions yet the Judge of all dealeth with all men equally according to the tenor of it He that Believeth shall be Saved and he that Believeth not shall be damned Men in the same condition shall have the same recompence of reward But you will say Doe not the same sinnes put men into the same condition and deserve the same punishment in one as in another Ans. 1. They doe deserve the same punishment God
any one can be certaine of it upon such supposals as are here mentioned such a perswasion would not be from him that calls them Nor Thirdly That the End can be obtained without the use of meanes though by them it shall certainely be so But Fourthly That all the hope of their Perseverance is built on the Promises of God to preserve them by and in the use of meanes So that in Truth there is no need of any farther processe for the removing of the Argument insisted on but only a disclaimer of the Doctrine by it oposed if it be that which is here exprest That indeed which Mr Goodwin hath to dispute against §. 12. if he will deale fairely and candidly in the carrying on of his designe is this That the certainty of an end to be obtained by meanes suited thereunto doth not enervate nor render vaine the use of those meanes appointed for the accomplishment of that end The Perseverance of the Saints is the thing here proposed to be accomplished that this shall be certainely effected and brought about according to the Promises of God for the effectiug of it God hath appointed the meanes under debate to be managed by the Ministry of the Gospell that the Promise of God concerning the Saints Perseverance to be wrought and effected as by others so by these meanes in their kind doth not invalidate or render uselesse and vaine the use of those meanes but indeed establishes them and ascribes to them their proper efficacy is that which in this Doctrine is asserted and which Mr Goodwin ought to have disprooved if he would have acquitted himselfe as a faire Antagonist in this cause The Promse we say that Hezekiah had of the continuance of his Life Isa. 33. 5. 21. did not make uselesse but called for the plaister of figges that was appointed for the healing of his sore I might then as I said save my selfe the labour of farther ingaging §. 13. for the casting downe of this Fabricke built on the sandy foundations of falsehood and mistake But because something may fall in of that which followeth more indeed to the purpose than an orderly pursuit of these Assertions laid downe in the entrance would require that may more directly rise up against the cause in whose defence I am ingaged I shall consider the whole ensuing Discourse which without doubt will administer farther occasion for the Illustratihn or Confirmation of the Truth in hand He proceeds then The reason of the Minor is §. 14. because a certain knowledge and perswasion that God will by an irresistable hand of power preserve a man in the state of Grace how desperately carelesse negligent or wicked so ever he shall be clearely disolves the usefulnesse and necessity of all other meanes whatsoever in reference to this end If I know certainely that the corne which I have sowen in my field will whether I wake or sleepe grow and prosper would it not be a very impertinent addresse for any man to come to me admonish me in a serious grave manner to take heed I sleepe not but keepe my selfe waking least my corne should not grow or prosper or that it may grow prosper if my corne growes thrives prospers by the irresistable hand of God by the course of a Naturall standing providence my watchfulnesse in order to a procurement of these things is absolutely vaine c. Ans. That this is not the Doctrine which Mr Goodwin hath undertaken to oppose hath been more than once already declared That he is not able with any colonr of Reason to oppose it unlesse he first impose his owne false vaine inferences upon it them upon his Reader for the Doctrine it selfe from his constant course of proceeding against it is also evident What advantage this is like in the close to prove to his cause in the Judgment of considerate men the event will discover The Assertion of the stability of the Promises of God in Jesus Christ given to Believers concerning his effectuall preserving them to the End from such sinnes as are Absolutely inconsistent with his Grace and Favour according to the tenour of the new Covenant or such continuance in any sinne as is of the same importance by his Spirit and Grace in the use of meanes doth no way tend to the begetting in any a certaine Knowledge Assurance and perswasion that God will continue them in a state of Grace how desperately carelesse or wicked soever they shall be What is intended by the frequent repetition of this grosse Sophistry §. 15. or what successe with the intelligent Christian ponderers of things he can hope for thereby I am not able to guesse Neither is any improvement in the least given to what the intendment of this Argument is so farre as the Common Doctrine of Perseverancc is concerned therein from the comparison insuing instituted between the growth of Corne and the walking of Believers in Obedience before God For notwithstanding the Identity in respect of the comparison of that expression Irresistible which indeed is proper to neither there is a wide difference betweene the growing of corne in a meere naturall way and the morall actings of an Intelligent Rationall Creature What ever operations of God are about and in the one or the other yet they are suited to their Subejects about which they are God carryes on the growth of corne by a way of Naturall and necessary causes but his acting of Rationall Agents is by such wayes and meanes as may entirely preserve their Liberty that is preserving them in their being and leaving them to be such Agents As then God causeth the corne to grow by the shining of his sunne and the falling of his raine so he causeth Believers to persevere in Obedience by Exhortations Promises and Threatnings and such wayes and meanes as are suited to such Agents as they are The fallacy of this Discourse lyes in an insinuation that God by his Effectuall or as they are called irresistible operations for the preservation of Believers in Gospell Obedience a thing he hath undertaken over and over to performe doth change their nature and render them not free and intelligent Agents fit to be wrought upon by the proposall of suitable and desirable Objects to their understandings but meere bruit and naturall principles of all operations flowing from them a conceit as grosse and ridiculous as certainely destructive to all the efficacy of the Grace of God All the rest of this Section as farre as it concernes us is only an affirming this way and that that an Assurance of the End to be obtained by the use of meanes renders those meanes altogether uselesse which when he proves the Controversy may be nearer to an issue than otherwise he hath any Reason to hope that t is or will be to his advantage Sect. 4. Leaving the farher confirmation of his Argument he enters upon the removeall of a plea insisted on §. 16.
That is they cannot-have any goodnesse in them beyond that which is entitative And so farre are we now arrived All efficacious working of the Spirit of God on us must be excluded or all we do is good for nothing Away with all Promises all Prayers yea the whole Covenant of Grace they serve for no other end but to keepe us from doing good Let us heare the Scripture speake a little in this cause Deut. 30. 6. The Lord thy God will circumcise thy heart and the heart of thy seed to Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule that thou maist live Jere. 31. 33. the 32. 39. This shall be the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their Hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people Chap. 32. 39. I will give them one heart and one way that they may feare me for ever for the good of them and their Children after them Ezek. 36. 26. A new heart also will I give you and a new Spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh and I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes and ye shall keepe my Judgements and do them Act. 16. 14. God opened the heart of Lydia that shee attended to the things spoken of Paul Phil. 1. 29. It is given to you in the behalfe of Christ not only to Believe on him but also to suffer for his sake and Chap. 2. 13. For it is God which worke the in you both to will and to do of his owne good pleasure as also Ephs. 1. 19. That ye may know what is the exceeding greatnesse of his power to us ward who Believe according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead and 2 Thess. 1. 11. We pray alwayes for you that our God would fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodnesse the worke of Faith with power So also in 2 Cor. 5. 17. If any man be in Christ he is a new Creature for Ephes. 2. 4 5. God who is rich in Mercy for his great Love wherewith he Loved us even when we were dead in sinnes hath quickned us together with Christ Causing us Chap 4. 24. to put on that new man which after God is Created in Righteousnesse and true Holinesse with the like Assertions John 3. 3 James 1. 18. 1 Pet. 1. 23. John 5. 21. 2 Cor. 3. 5. c What may be thought of these and the like expressions §. 28. Do they hold out any reall effectuall internall Worke of the Spirit and Grace of God distinct from Morall perswasions or do they not If they do how comes any thing so wrought in us by us to be Morally good If they do not we may bid farewell unto all Renewing Regenerating Assisting Effectuall Grace of God That God then by his Spirit and Grace cannot enable us to act Morally and according to a Rule is not yet proved VVhat followes Saith he So farre as Exhortatious are meanes to produce these Acts §. 29. they must be Morall for Morall causes are not capable of producing Naturall or Physicall effects But if Mr Goodwin think that in this Controversy Physicall and Necessary as applyed to effects are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is heavenly wide Physicall denotes only their being Necessary a manner of being as to some of them which have Physically a beeing The tearme Naturall is ambiguous and sometimes used in the one sence sometimes in the other sometimes it denotes that which is only sometimes that which is in such a kind By a Physicall effect we understand an Effect with respect to t is reall existency as by a Morall effect an effect in respect of its Regularity And now why may not a Morall cause have an influence in its owne kind to the production of a Physicall effect I meane an influence suited to its owne Nature and manner of operation by the way of motive and perswasion What would you think of him that should perswade you to lift your hand above your head to try how high you could reach or whether your Arme were not out of joynt Secondly §. 30. It hath been sufficiently shewed before that with these Exhortations which worke as appointed meanes Morally God exerteth an effectuall power for the reall production of that wherento the Exhortation tends dealing thus with our whole soules suitably to the Nature of all their faculties as every one of them is fitted and suited to be wrought upon for the accomplishment of the End he aimes at and in the manner that he intends Briefely to every Act of the VVill as an act in genere entis there is required a really operative and Physicall concurence of the Providentiall power of God in its owne order as the first Cause To every Act as good or gracious the operative concurrence and influence of the Spirit of Grace which yet hinders not but that by Exhortations men may be provoked and stirred up to the performance of Acts as such and to the performance of them as good and gracious This being not the direct Controversy in hand §. 31. I do but touch upon it Concerning that which followes I should perhaps say we have found Anguem in herba but being so toothlesse and stinglesse as it is to any that in the least attend to it it may be only tearmed the padde in the straw Physicall and Morall are taken to be tearmes it seemes Equipollent to Necessary and Not-necessary which is such a wresting of the tearmes themselves and their knowne use as men shall not likely meet withall Hence is it that Acts Physicall and Necessary are the same Every Act of the most free agent under Heaven yea in Heaven or Earth is in its owne Nature and Being Physicall Acts also are Morall i. e. good or evill consequently in order of Nature to their existence of which Necessary or Not-necessary are the Adjunct manner in reference to the Rule or Law whereunto their conformity is required How Morall and Not-necessary come to be tearmes of the same import Mr Goodwin will declare perhaps heareafter when he shall have leisure to teach as much new Philosophy as he hath already done Divinity In the meane time we deny that any influence from God on the wills of men doth make any Act of them Necessary as to the manner of its production And so this first Argument for the Inconsistency of the use of Exhortations with the reall efficiency of the Grace and Spirit of God is concluded That which followes in this Section to the end §. 32. is a pretended Answer to an Objection of our Authors owne framing being only introduced to give farther Advantage to
expresse himselfe against any reall efficiency of the Spirit or Grace of God in the hearts or on the wills of men Not to insist upon his darkening the Discourse in hand from his miserable confounding of those tearmes Physicall and Morall formerly discovered I shall as neare as I can close with his aime in it for the more cleare consideration thereof First he tells us That the operation of God on the will of man is in respect of its proceeding from him Physicall but in respest of its nature and substance t is properly Morall But First § 33. if a man should aske Mr Goodwin what he intends by this Operation of God on the will of man to the end intended I feare he would be very hard put to it to instance in any particular It is sufficiently evident he acknowledgeth none in this kind but what consists in the Exhortations of the VVord Secondly having told us before that Physicall is as much as Necessary and Morall as Not-necessary How comes it about that the same operation of God the same Act of his Power is become in severall regards Physicall and Morall That is Necessary and Not-necessary is Mr Goodwin reconciled to the Assertion That the same thing may be said to be Necessary and Not-necessary in sundry respects Thirdly how comes the same Act or Operation in respect of its manner of proceeding from its Agent to be Physicall and in respect of its Substance to be Morall Or is any act Morall in respect of its substance or is its Morality an Adjunct of it in respect of the regard it hath to some Rule farther End It is an easy thing for any to heape up such crude Assertions in the meane time not to know what they say nor whereof they do affirme But the reason why the Acts of God intimated are Morall is because they perswade the Will only or work perswadingly not ravishingly or necessitatingly that is in plain termes There is no operation of the Grace or Spirit of God in the working of any good in the Heart or Wills of men but only what consisteth in perswasion of them thereunto For any reall efficiency as to the communication of strength inworking in us to will and to do t is wholly excluded God only perswades men have the power in themselves and of themselves they do it let the Scripture say what it will to the contrary For those termes of Ravishingly or Necessitatingly which are opposed to this Morall perswasion whereunto the operations of God for the production of any good in us are tied up and confined wee have been now so inured to them that they do not at all startle us When M. Goodwin shall manifest That God cannot by the greatnesse of his power work in us to Will without ravishing our wills if we guesse aright at the intendment of that expression he will advance to a considerable successe in this contest not only against us but God himselfe But an objection presents its selfe to our Author §. 34. which he sees a Necessity to attempt the removall of least an Apprehension of its truth should prove prejudiciall to the receiving of his dictates And this it is That if it be so that God worketh on the will of man by the way of perswasion only he doth no more then the Ministers of the Gospell do who perswade men by the Word to that which is good To this he tells you That it indeed followes that God Ministers work on the Will of man in the same way with the same kind of efficiency but yet in respect of degrees God may perswade more effectually than a Minister That all really efficient §. 35. internall working grace of God was denied by M. Goodwin was before discovered there only t is more plainely asserted All the workings of God on the Wills of men unto good are meerely by perswasion Perswasion we know gives no strength addes no power to him that is perswaded to any thing it only provokes him and irritates him to put forth exert and exercise the power which is in himselfe unto the things whereunto he is perswaded upon the motives grounds of perswasion proposed to him and the whole effect produced on that account is in Solidum to be ascribed to the really efficient cause of it howsoever incited or stirred up whereas then men by Nature are dead blind unbelieving enemies to God he perswades them only to exert the power that is in them thereby to live see believe and be reconciled to him And this is to exalt the free grace of God by Jesus Christ We know full well who have gone before you in these paths but shall heartily pray that none of the Saints of God may follow after you into this contempt of the work of his Grace But Secondly If nothing but Perswasion be allowed to God in the work of mens Conversion § 36. in the carrying on of their obedience to the end Wherein doth the Perswasion of God consist in distinction from the Perswasion used in from the Word by Ministers which it is pretended that it may excell though t is not affirmed that it doth many degrees Let it be considered I say in what Acts of the will or power of God his perswasion so distinct as above mentioned doth consist Let us know what Arguments he useth by what Meanes he applies them how he conveyes them to the Wills of men that are not coincident with those of the Ministry I suppose at last 't will be found that there is no other operation of God in Perswading men as to the ends under consideration but only what lies or consists in the perswading of the Word by the Ministers thereof God looking on without the exerting of any efficacy whatever which is indeed that which is aimed at is really exclusive of the Grace of God from any hand in the Conversion of sinners or Preservation of Believers 3. He doth not indeed assert any such Perswading of God § 37. but only tels you that from what he hath spoken it doth not follow that God doth no more then Ministers in Perswading men And that when two perswade to one and the same Action one may be more effectuall in his perswading than another but that God is so or how he is so or wherein his peculiar perswasions do consist there is not in his discourse the least intimation Fourthly There is in men a different power as to Perswasion some having a faculty that way farre more eminent and effectuall than others according to their skill and proficiency in Oratory and Perswasive Arts this only is ascribed to God that he so excells us as one man excells another But how that Excellency of his is exerted that 's not to be understood But there is proofe tendered you of all this from 1 Cor 3. 9. Where Ministers are said to cooperate with God which they cannot do unlesse it be with the same
import any such thing as is aimed at from the Text nor the word abide but to the whole proposition the seed of God abideth in him as produced to confirme the former assertion of the not sinning of the Persons spoken of there is nothing spoken at all I shall therefore briefely confirme the Argument in hand by the strength here communicated unto it by the Holy Ghost and then consider what is answered to any part of it or objected to the interpretation insisted on That he that sinneth not neither can sinne in the sence explained shall never fall away totally or finally from God is granted That Believers sinne not nor can sinne so or in the manner mentioned besides the Testimony of the Holy Ghost worthy of all acceptation in the cleare assertion of it we have the Reason thereof manifested in the discovery of the causes of its truth The first Reason is Because the seed of God abideth in them A tacite grant seemeth to be made that fruit sometimes may not visibly appeare upon them as the case is with a Tree in winter when it casts its leaves but its seed remaineth Grace may abide in the habit in and under a winter of Temptation though it doth not exert its selfe in bearing any such actuall fruit as may be ordinarily visible The Word of God is sometimes called seed incorruptible seed causatively as being an instrument in the hand of God whereby he planteth the seed of Life and holinesse in the heart That it is not the outward word but that which is produced and effected by it through the efficacy of the Spirit of God that is by seed intended is evident from the use and nature of it And it is abiding in the Person in whom it is Whatever it is it is called seed not in respect of that from whence it cometh as is the cause and Reason of that appellation of other seed but in respect of that which it produceth which ariseth and insueth upon it and it is called the seed of God because God useth it for the Regeneration of his Being from God being the principle of the Regeneration of them in whom it is abiding in them even when it hath brought forth fruit and continuing so to doe it can be no other but the New Creature New Nature inward Man new principle of Life or habit of Grace that is bestowed upon all Believers whence they are Regenerate quickned or borne againe of which we have spoken before This seed saith the Holy Ghost abideth §. 67. or remaineth in him Whatever falling or withering He may seeme to have or hath this seed the seed of God remaineth in him The principle of his new life abideth some exceptions are made as we shall see afterwards to the signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remaineth and instances given where it signifyeth for to be and denoteth the essence of a thing not its duration That to abide or remaine is the proper signification of the word I suppose will not be questioned That it may in some place be used in another sence is not dispuited All that lyeth under consideration here is whether the word in this place be used properly according to its genuine and first signification or no It supposeth indeed to be also but properly signifieth only to abide or remaine Now if nothing can be advanced from the Text ot context from the matter treated on or the paralell significancy of some expression that is in conjunction with it that should inforce us to carry it from its proper use and signification the instancing of other places if any such be wherein it is restrained to denote being and not duration is altogether impertinent to the businesse in hand When an Argument is urged from any place of Scripture to pick out any word in the Text and to manifest that it hath been used improperly in some other place and therefore must be so in that is a procedure so farre from an ingenious Answer that it will scarce passe for a tolerable shift or evasion To remaine then or to abide is the proper signification of this word nothing is in the least offered to manifest that it must necessarily in this place be diverted from its proper use According to the import of the word the seed of God remaineth in Believers now that remaining of the seed is the cause of their not sinning that sinne or in that manner as the Apostle here denyeth them to be liable to sinne For that is the Reason he giveth why they cannot sinne even because the seed of God remaineth in them Mr Goodwin granteth that this seed remaineth in Believers alwayes unlesse they sinne by a totall defection from God Of not sinning the sinne of totall de●ection from God the remaining or abiding of this seed is the cause Whilst that abideth they cannot sinne that sin for it is an unquestionable cause uncontrouleable of their not so doing This seed therefore must be utterly lost and taken away before any such sinne can be committed Now if the seed cannot be lost without the commission of the sinne which cannot be committed till it be lost neither can the seed be lost nor the sin becommited The same thing cannot be before and after its selfe He that cannot go sucha journey unlesse he have such a horse cannot have such a horse unlesse he go such a journey is like to stay at home In what sence the words cannot sin are to be taken was before declared That there are sins innumerable whereinto men may fall notwithstanding this seed is confessed Under them all this seed abideth so it would not do under that which we cannot sin because it abideth but because it abideth that sin cannot be committed The latter part of the Reason of the Apostles assertion §. 68. is for he is borne of God which is indeed a driving on the former to its head and fountaine What it is to be borne of God we need not dispute It was sufficiently discovered in the mention that was made before of the seed of God God by his Holy Spirit bestowing on us a new Spirituall Life which by nature we have not and in respect of whose want we are said to be dead is frequently said to beget us James 1. 14. And we are said to be borne of God He is the Soveraigne disposer dispenser and supreme fountaine of that Life which is so bestowed on us which we are begotten againe unto and are borne with and by And Jesus Christ the Mediatour is also said to have this Life in himselfe Joh 5. because he hath received the spirit of the father to give to his for their quickning who taketh of his and thereby begeteth them a new And this Life which Believers thus receive and whereby indeed radically they become Believers is every where in Scripture noted as Permanent and abiding In respect of the originall of it it is said to be from above
from Heaven of the will of God of God As to its principle to be not of flesh or bloud or of the will of man or of any thing done by us but of the seed of God incorruptible seed seed that abideth in respect of its duration to be eternall and that it may so be to be safeguarded being hid in God with Christ. In this place Receiving this Life from God is placed as the cause and cannot sinne as the effect He cannot sinne for or because he is borne of God The connexion that is between this cause and effect or wherein the causality of Being borne of God to a not sinning doth consist needs not be inquired into That it hath such a causality the holy Ghost hath asserted and our Argument resteth thereon If that be the nature of Regeneration or being borne of God that it doth exclude Apostacy then he that is Regenerate or borne of God as every Believer is cannot so sinne as to Apostatize or fall totally from God But that such is the nature of Regeneration whereby any one is borne of God the holy Ghost here declareth For he denyeth Apostacy upon the account of Regeneration He cannot sinne because he is borne of God which is that which we intended to demonstrate from this text of Scripture To evade the force of this Argument §. 69. M. Goodwin as hath been declared undertaketh to give an Exposition of this place of Scripture turning every stone and labouring to wrest every word in it The severall significations of the words in other places are set out and suppositions made of taking them this way or that way but in what sence the scope of the matter treated on the most usuall known common acceptations call for their Vse in this place nothing is spoken neither is any cleare Answer once attempted to be given to the words of the Text speaking out and home to the conclusion we intend or to the Argument thence deduced What I can gather up from Sect. 31. and forwards that may obstruct the thoughts of any in closing with the Interpretation given I shall consider and remove out of the way 1. Then he giveth you this Interpretation of these words sineth not or cannot sinne Every one that hath been borne of God sinneth not i. e. Whosoever hath by the Word and Spirit of God been made partaker of the Divine nature so as to resemble God in the frame and constitution of his heart and soule doth not under such a frame or change of heart as this make a trade or practice of sinning or walking in any course of inordinatenesse in the world Yea saith he in the latter Proposition every such person doth not only or simply refraine sinning in such a sence but he cannot sin i. e. He hath a strong and potent disposition in him which carryeth him an other way for he hath a strong Antipathy or aversenesse of heart and soule against all sinne especially all such kind of sinning Ans. 1. What is meant by being borne of God the way whereby any come so to be the Vniversality of the expression requiring a necessary cause of its verity with the like attendencies of the Proposition have been before declared 2. What M. Goodwin intendeth by such a frame and constitution of spirit and soule as may resemble God with his deniall of the bestowing on us from God a vitall principle of Grace wherein the Renovation in us of his image should consist hath in part also been already discovered will yet farther be so in our consideration of his rare notion of Regeneration its consisting in a mans returnall to the innocent and harmelesse estate wherein he was borne 3. That sinneth not is sinneth not that sinne or so sinneth not as to break his Relation to God as a child hath been already also manifested and the Reader is not to be burthened with Repetition 4. In the interpretation given of the latter phrase he cannot sinne I cannot so sinne against the light of the Text as to joyne with M. Goodwin in it It is not the Antipathie of his heart to sinne but the Course of his walking with God in respect of sinne that the Apostle treateth on His internall principaling against sinne he hath from being borne of God and the abiding of his seed in him of which this that he cannot sinne is asserted as the effect He cannot sinne that is he cannot so sinne upon the account of his being borne of God Thence indeed he hath not only a potent disposition another way and Antipathie to evill but a vitall principle with an everlasting enmity and repugnancy to and inconsistency with any such sin or sinning as is intimated and that he cannot sinne is the consequent and effect thereof and is so affirmed to be by the Holy Ghost Nextly §. 70. M. Goodwin giveth you the Reason of this Assertion used by the Apostle why such an one as of whom he speaketh sinneth not and cannot sinne Now the Reason saith the Apostle why such a person committeth not sinne in the sence explained is because his seed the seed of God by whom of which he was borne of him remaineth in him i. e. is or hath an actuall and present being or residence in him and that in this place it doth not signify any perpetuall abiding or any abiding in relation to the future is evident because the abiding of the seed here spoken of is given as the Reason why he that is borne of God doth not commit sinne i. e. doth not frequently walke in any course of known sinne now nothing in respect of any future permanency or continuance of being can be looked upon as the cause of an effect but only in respect of the present being or residence of it The Reason why the soule moveth to day is not because it will move or act the body to morrow or because it is in the body to day upon such termes that it will be in it to morrow also much lesse because it is an immortall substance but simply because it is now or this day in the body So the Reason why Angels at this day do the will of God is not because they have such a principle of holinesse or Obedience in them which they cannot put off or loose to eternity but because of such a principle as we speake of residing in them at present therefore when John assigneth the remaining of the seed of God in him that is borne of him for the reason why he doth not commit sinne certaine it is that by this remaining of the seed he meaneth nothing else but the present residence or abode thereof in this Person and if his intent had been either to assert or imply a perpetuall residence of this seed in him that is borne of God it had been much more proper for him to have saved it for a reason of the latter proposition he that is borne of God cannot sinne then to have subjoyned it
from any Love of God whether it be from the common Love of God to man as men and if so why are not all men endowed with those qualifications If from his peculiar Love how come they to be the effects and causes of the same thing Or whether indeed this assertion be not destructive to the whole Covenant of Grace and the effectuall dispensations of it in the bloud of Christ And to his second Testimony I shall adde no more The third place insisted on is that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 9. 27. Hence he thus argueth §. 21. If Paul after his conversion unto Christ was in a possibility of being or becoming a Reprobate or cast away then may true Believers fall away both totally and finally for finally ever includes totally But the Antecedent is true Paul after his conversion was in the possibility mentioned ergo the Major Proposition I presume will passe without controle Ans. That Mr Goodwin is not able to make good eitheir of the Propositions in this syllogisme will evidently appeare in the conclusion of our examination of what he drawes forth new and old to that purpose of the Major he gives you only this account It will passe I presume with out controulc but by his favour unlesse cleared from ambiguity of expressions and fallacy it is not like to obtaine so faire a passage as is presumed and fancyed Though the terme of possibility in the supposition and may be in the inference seeme to be equipollent yet to render them of the same significancy as to the Argument in hand they must both be used in the same respect but if a possibility of being a reprobate that is one rejected of God by a metonymy of the effect be ascribed to Paul in respect of himselfe and the infirmity of his owne will as to abiding with God in which case alone there is any appearance of truth in the Assumption of this supposition and the terme of may be in respect of Believers falling totally finally away respects the event purpose decrees or Promise of God concerning it in which sence alone it is any step to the purpose in hand I deny the inference and thereby at the very entrance give checke and controule to Mr Goodwin's procedure That which is possible to come to passe that terme possible affecting the end or comming to passe must be every way and in all respects possible this is the intendment of the inference That which is possible in respect of some certaine causes or principles the termes of possibility affecting the thing it selfe whereof it is spoken in its next causes may be impossible on another account in this sence only is there any colour of truth contained in the supposition so that the Major Proposition of this Syllogisme is laid up and secured for doing any farther service in this case The Minor is §. 22. But Paul after his conversion was in a possibility of becoming a Reprobate or cast-away Ans. He was not in respect of the event upon the account of the purpose and promises of God of him and to him made in Christ though any such possibility may be affirmed of him in respect of himselfe and his own will not confirmed in Grace unto an impossibility of swerving Now this Proposition he thus farther attempts syllogistically to confirme That which Paul was very sollicitous industrious to prevent he was in a possibility of suffering or being made But Paul was very sollicitous and industrious to prevent his being made a cast-way as the Scripture in hand plainely avoucheth he kept under his body and brought it in subjection in order to prevent his becoming a cast-away Ergo He was in danger or possibility of being made a cast-away The reason of the consequence in the Major Proposition is because no man of understanding will be sollicitous to prevent or hinder the coming to passe of such a thing the comming to passe whereof he knowes to be impossible Ans. Once more The major is questioned Paul might and ought to labour in the use of meanes for the preventing of that which in respect of himselfe he might possibly run into God having appointed those meanes to be used for the prevention of the end feared and avoided although in respect of some other preventing cause it was impossible he should so do He who complained that in him that is in his flesh dwelleth no good that he had a law in his members leading him captive to the Law of sinne and sinne working in him all manner of concupisence for whose prevention from running out into a course of sinning God hath appointed meanes to be used might use those meanes for that end notwithstanding that God had immutably Purposed and Faithfully Promised that in the use of those meanes he should attaine the end aymed at And the Reason Mr Goodwin gives for the confirmation of the consequence is no other but that which we have so often exploded viz. That a man need not ought not to use meanes for attaining of any end though appointed and instituted of God for that end and purpose if so be the end for which they are ordained shall certainely and infallibly be compassed and accomplished by them Our Saviour Christ thought meet to use the ordinary wayes for the preservation of his life notwithstanding the Promise of keeping him by the Angels and Hezechiah neglected not the meanes of Life notwithstanding the infallible promise of Living so long which he had received Paul was carefull in the use of meanes to prevent that which inhimselfe it was possible for him to runne into though he had or might have assurance that through the faithfulnesse and power of God in the use of those meanes as an antecedent of the consequent though not the conditions of the event he should be preserved certainely and infallibly from what he was so in himselfe apt unto So that whatever be the peculiar intendment of the Apostle in this place taking the terme 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the largest sence possible and in a significancy of the greatest compasse yet nothing will regularly be inferred thence to the least prejudice of the Doctrine I have undertaken to maintaine And this may suffice as to the utmost of what Mr Goodwins Argument from this place doth reach unto §. 23. There is another and that a more proper sence of the place and accommodated to the context and scope of the Apostle wherewith the Doctrine indeavoured to be confirmed from hence hath not the least pretence of communication And this ariseth as was before manifested from the scope of the place with the proper native signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here translated a cast-away The businesse that the Apostle hath in hand from v. 15. of the chapter and which he presses to the end is a relation of his own principles wayes and deportment in the great worke of the preaching of the Gospell to him committed in the
Ephes. 1. 7. in whom we have redemption through his bloud even the forgivenesse of sinnes or the Intercision of that Obligation unto punishment which attends sinne in reference to the sinner and his subjection to the Law of God and the righteousnesse thereof As the oblation of Christ respecteth God and his justice to whom it is given as a price and Ransome and whereof it is an Attonement so it is and is called or we are said to receive thereby Redemption As it respects them who receive the benefit of that Redemption Rom. 1. 5. it is the forgivenesse of sinnes Forgivenesse of sinnes as t is compleated and terminated in the Consciences of Believers requireth the interposition of Faith 1 Cor. 1. 30. for the receiving of Christ in the Promise who of God is made unto us Righteousnesse but in respect of the procurement of it and the removing all causes Rom. 4. 4. upon the account whereof sinne should be imputed unto us that is perfected in the oblation of Christ hence he is said to beare our sins in his own body on the Crosse 1 Pet 2. 24. and being once on him either he was discharged of them or he must for ever lye under the burthen of them They were on him on the Tree what is then become of them If he were freed of them and Justifyed from them as he was Isa. 50. 8 9. how should they ever be laid to our charge And yet this freedome from condemnation for sin for all the Elect which God himselfe so clearly asserts Rom. 8. 32. 33. c. doth not in the least set them free from the necessity of Obedience nor acquit them from contracting the guilt of sin upon the least irregularity or disobedience Secondly we are said to doe together with Christ those things which he doth for us in his own person Rom. 6. 5 8. and that upon the account of that benefit which by those his personall performances 2 Cor. 5. 15 16. doth redound unto us and which being done Col. 3. 1. the Quarrell about sinne as to make an utter separation between God and our souls Rom. 6. 7. is certainly removed Thus we are said to dy with him to be raised again with him and with him we enter into the holy place this whole businesse about sin being passed through for he that is dead is justifyed from sin Now all this being done by us and for us in by our head can we hencesorth dy any more shall death any more have dominion over us This the Apostle argues 2 Cor. 5. 15. we judge saith he that if one dyed for all then were all they that is all those for whom he dyed dead or dyed likewise they were dead in and with him their sponsor as to the curse due for sin that henceforth they might live to him that dyed for them Thirdly the Compact or agreement that was between the Father and the Sonne as Mediator about the businesse of our Redemption in his blood manifests this Truth Psal. 40. 8. The Father required at his hands that he should doe his will Isa. 53. 10 11. fulfill his pleasure and counsell make his soule an offering for sinne and do that which the Sacrifices of Bulls Goates shadowed out Heb. 10. 5 9 7. but could never effect upon the performance whereof he was to see his Seed and to bring many Sonnes to Glory Heb. 2 10. A covenanting and agreement into an uncertaine Issue and event as that must be of God and the Mediator if the Salvation of the persons concerning which and whom it was be not infallibly certaine ought not at any cheap rate or pretence to be assigned to infinite Wisdome In the Accomplishment of this undertaking whereunto Christ was designed the Father dealt with him in strict aud rigid Justfce Rom. 8. 32. There was neither composition about the debt 2 pet 2. 4. nor commutation about the punishment that he had taken upon himselfe 2 Cor. 5. 21. Now doth not exact Justice require that the Ransome being given in Gal. 3. 13. the Prisoners be delivered That the debt being paid Heb. 2. 9. the bond be cancelled as to any power of imprisoning the Originall debtor That punishment being undergone and the Law fulfilled the offendor goe free Especially all this being covenanted for in the first undertaking doubtlesse wrath shall not arise a second time The right knowledge use and improvement of this Grace being given bounded directed by the Gospell it is safegarded from abuse by that which God calls his owne Wisdome Fourthly §. 13. it appeares from what God bestowes upon his Elect upon the Account of the undertaking of Christ for them in the pursuit of the Eternall purpose of his Will antecedently to any thing whatsoever in them that should ingage him to do them the least good when God comes as a friend to hold out unto bestow good things upon men I meane good in that kind of Mercy which is peculiarly suited to the bringing of them to the enjoyment of himselfe it is evident that he hath put an end to all enmity and quarrell between him them Isa. 59. 20. 21 Now antecedently unto any thing in men God for Christs sake bestowes Rom. 8. 11. with the greatest act of friendship imaginable Gal. 5. 22. no lesse than the holy Spirit on them 1 Cor. 7. 4. By him they are quickned 2 Cor 3. 5. their Faith is but a fruit of that Spirit bestowed on them John 15. 3 5. If they have not any sufficiency in themselves as much as to think a good thought Ephes. 2. 1 2. nor can doe any thing that is acceptable to God being by nature dead in trespasses and sinnes which at present the Scripture affirming it I take for granted then assuredly God doth give his Holy Spirit to the Saints whereby he workes in them both to will and to do of his owne good pleasure Phil. 1. 13. antecedently to any good thing in them Col. 1. 12. that is well pleasing unto him Every thing that men do must either be brought forth by the strength and Ability of their owne naturall facultyes assisted and provoked by motives and perswasions from without or it must be of the operation of the Spirit of God there is not another principle to be fixt on The first at present I take for granted is not the fountaine of any Spirituall acting whatsoever John Gal Neither can any Gracious act be educed radically from the corrupt naturall faculty Gen. 8. 21. however assisted or advantaged It must be the Spirit then Job 14. 4. that is the sole principall cause and Author of all the movings of our soules towards God Mat. 12. 33. that are acceptable to him in Christ Now the cause is certainely before the effect and the Spirit in order of Nature is bestowed upon us