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A09031 A plaine exposition vpon the whole 8. 9. 10. 11. chapters of the Epistle of Saint Paul to the Romans Wherein the text is diligently and methodically resolued, the sence giuen: and many doctrines thence gathered, are by liuely vses applyed, for the benefit of Gods children performed with much variety, and conuenient breuitie: being the substance of neere foure yeeres weekedayes sermons.: By Elnathan Parr, Bachelor in Diuinity, and preacher of Gods Word. Parr, Elnathan, d. 1622. 1618 (1618) STC 19319; ESTC S114074 348,782 462

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bee armed with Faith not all the poisoned darts of the Diuell can hurt it But alas will some say How shall I auoid hell being most worthy to be damned for my whoredome pride drunkennesse blasphemie c How shall I euer come to heauen who neuer haue kept the Law These thoughts especially trouble in the houre of tentation and death but as Paul and his company Act. 27.43,44 though in great danger yet swamme to the shore and escaped so though the floods of tentation swell and there be no bottome yet by Faith wee swimme to land and are safe My Brother Consider that thou shalt not goe to heauen for thy worthinesse but for Christs When thou hast done all thou canst thou art vnworthy to be saued Doest thou beleeue that Christ dyed and rose againe for thee Then is it as possible for Christ to dye againe as for thee to goe to hell He that hath satisfied the Law is freed but thou hast so done in Christ Therefore as when Ionas was cast into the Sea it calmed so thy Conscience may now be calmed by the death and Resurrection of Christ of whom Ionas was the Type Also if Christ be ascended and thou beleeuest it is as possible to plucke him out of heauen as to hinder thee from thence for all beleeuers doe sit together with him in heauenly places Ephes 2.6 He that denies that we doe euen now possesse heauen in Christ denies Christ to be in heauen Vse 3. Faith is most necessary and vsefull If euer thou hast felt the sting of sinne in thy soule thou knowest the power of Faith If thou hast not felt it thou shalt and then what a hell without Faith The fiery darts of Satan are quenched by Faith Ephes 6.16 Thou remembrest what a wretch thou hast beene how thou hast blasphemed his Name broken his Sabbaths despised his Word c. Can thy stomake digest these things Canst thou practice such things and thy Conscience not checke thee Though by the custome of sinne thou hast stupified thy Conscience yet it will be made sensible and then it will affright thee Yea then what thoughts of hell of Di●…ls of euerlasting torments arising from the guiltinesse of sinne Wouldst thou ouercome these Beleeue This is our Shield our Victory euen our Faith 1. Ioh. 5.4 and to approue thy Faith repent vnfainedly Which is as sure a demonstration of Faith as Faith is a cause of the peace of Conscience Keepe Faith and a good Conscience As Conscience cannot be good without Faith so nor Faith liuely without good Conscience As a Lampe yeelds no light without Oyle so nor Faith comfort without good Conscience Many beleeuers neglecting the care of a good Conscience haue lost not their Faith but the power of it to pacifie Conscience though Faith cannot bee cast away yet it may suffer shipwracke and the peace which is by Faith may bee lost as Dauid and other of Gods children haue done for their libertie in following their owne lusts and it may bee questioned whether euer Dauid after his Adultery obtained the glorious feelings he had before by his Faith Beleeuest thou Beware of sinne lest GOD chastise thee not by taking away thy Faith but the comfort of it without which life is tedious As in Cordials often distemper weakens the receipt so Faith loseth the power to comfort when we make a pack-horse of it by our often sinning Thy peace is from Faith thy misery from sinne Euen as wormes breed of putrified meate so distresse ariseth from a polluted minde Sinne weakens Faith and giues the Diuell aduantage who without it is as able to hurt vs as the Law to iustifie a sinner If thou thinkest of Heauen thinke of Faith and a good Conscience if thou sinnest thinke of hell and euerlasting torments If thou beest godly feare not hell if profane hope not for heauen For the wicked shall bee turned into hell and all that forget God but beleeuers and righteous people shall be saued Psal 9.17 Ioh. 3.15 VERSE 9. That if thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt beleeue in thy heart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt be saued 10. For with the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made vnto saluation OVr owne righteousnesse and the righteousnesse of Faith haue beene compared The righteousnesse wee attaine by doing is vncertaine and impossible the righteousnesse we attaine by beleeuing is certaine and possible Certaine because it expels doubts possible because the Word of Faith is neere vs in our mouth and heart This of Faith hee explaines in these two verses shewing that in the righteousnesse of Faith it is onely required that wee should heartily beleeue and confesse the Resurrection of Christ verse 9. which is amplified by an Apostolicall determination verse 10. If thou shalt confesse with thy mouth and beleeue with thy heart There are two things required of him that would be saued The confession of the mouth and the beleeuing of the heart and we haue in these verses two things to be considered 1. The duty required 2. The end The duty is two-fold Of the mouth which is called Confession of the heart which is named Beleeuing In the duty of the mouth wee haue three things First the Action Confession Secondly the Subiect the Mouth Thirdly the Obiect the Lord Iesus Auricular Confession is not here meant Tho. Aquin. in locum Confession is three-fold Of sinnes of Benefits of the Truth this last is here vnderstood namely that mayne Truth Saluation onely by Christ To confesse Christ hath a large sence to acknowledge him to be our Lord and so to vse him that is to submit our affection to him as to our chiefe Lord by right of Creation Prouidence Redemption to call vpon him to obey him and if neede bee to restifie our acknowledgement vvith our best blood And shalt belieue c. Here are also three things 1. The Action Beleeuing 2. The Subiect the Heart 3. The Obiect That God raised vp Christ c. This is not onely to assent to the truth hereof which the Iewes doe not the diuells doe not denie but to embrace the benefits and to rely vpon it Resurrection not exclusiuely but by a figure comprehending things Antecedent and Consequent but this principally is named not as adding to the price but as sealing to the conscience the sufficiency of his death The confidence of a good Conscience beeing grounded vpon the Resurrection of Christ 1. Peter 3.21 That Christ died the Iewes and Heathens do belieue Christians onely belieue that he rose againe Thou shalt be saued That is thou shalt be iustified as before Thou shalt liue for both the righteousnes of the Law and of faith haue eternall life as the end propounded and promised vnto them but with a different successe By that none attaine the end because it hath a condition possible to none By this all
Indefinite Proposition is equiualent to an Vniuersall 2. The Restruction of the generall Whosoeuer belieueth Whosoeuer concludes all Belieuers Belieuers excludes all vnbelieuers 3. The obiect of Faith In him To belieue on Christ is not onely to belieue that Christ is and that what he saith is true but to rest vpon his Righteousnes for Iustification and to trust him with our Saluation as Paul 2. Tim. 1.12 I knowe whom I haue belieued On him notes Faith and Confidence 4. The effect of Faith Not ashamed The contrary denied for the direct effect As if he had said Shall be saued For the denying of one contrary is the affirming of the other They shall not be frustrate of their end therefore not ashamed Ob. But wee account it a good thing to be ashamed and the contrary a fault Diogenes thus incouraged a young man blushing Feare not it is Vertues colour Yet the Philosophers wisely distinguish of it counting it a grace in young folkes but old folkes should commit nothing which might make them blush A. Here is a Figure The word is not vsed in the ordinary signification hee meanes not that beleeuers shall not be ashamed of their faults for none are more and the wicked are noted to be shamelesse Ier. 3.3 but the sence is they shall not misse the end of their faith and so be ashamed A man boasts of a matter and in the end vp starts iust nothing then is he ashamed as profane people bragge of their hope to bee saued but when their Crakes faile they shall bee confounded vvith shame Esay saith Shall not make haste that is shall not betake themselues to shamefull courses to bring their desires to passe but shall wait vpon God and in the end haue assured deliuerance but as such who runne hastily often stumble and fall and so are ashamed so they which will not stay Gods leisure fall into many inconueniences vvhich cause their shame doctrine He that beleeueth is sure to be saued Ioh. 3.18 Psal 22.4 Rom. 5.5 1. Pet. 1.6 The promises are called sure Rom. 4.16 The counsell of God stable and the consolation thereby strong Heb. 6.17,18 Vse 1. Whosoeuer trust in any thing but in Christ shall be ashamed The Iewes of their confidence in the Lawe The Papists though they now bragge and face out the matter that they be the only men and the true Church shall one day bee ashamed of their religion because they build their saluation on a rotten foundation as masses pardons indulgences pilgrimages prayer to Saints their owne merits c. They are like him in the Gospell who began to build a Tower but not being able to finish it was ashamed Those which trust in horses and armed men in the day of battell shall be ashamed They also which with King Asa trust in the Physicians and not in God in the day of sicknesse so they which trust in their riches contrary to the commandement of the Spirit whom Christ calls fooles 1. Tim. 6.17 Luke 12.20 These also who seek in losses to Wizards and not to God Many trust in outward things without God but there are few who trust in God without outward things Vse 2. There is much feare and doubting where faith is but in the end beleeuers shall not be ashamed This makes them confident against the obloquy and reproach cast vpon them by the world The children of God are laughed to scorne as the Philistims mocked Sampson What then Though Saul loue not Dauid nor his Religion yet he will speake of Gods testimonies before Kings wil not be ashamed Psal 119.46 and though the Gospell bee spoken against in euery place yet Paul will not be ashamed of it Rom. 1.16 This also comforts against the guiltinesse of sinne which is the true cause of shame following it as the shadow doth the body How profane wee were before our conuersion and how weakely we haue walked since our conscience knowes and is ashamed Here is our helpe faith obtaines pardon of sinne and therefore we shall neuer bee put to shame for our faults we are sinners but as when the light comes the darknesse departs and the more light the lesse darknesse so faith driues away shame and the more wee beleeue the lesse doe we feare confusion and shame Peter walked vpon the water and shamed himselfe for he began to sinke What was the cause Not the winde or waues but the defect of Faith Abraham beleeued and left his countrey and offered vp Isaac and yet was not ashamed Ob. Abraham had a great Faith but my faith is little Ans If thou hast true Faith though neuer so little thou shalt not be ashamed A childe cannot take vp his meate so strongly nor eate so much as doth a man yet that little which he takes weakely and eates nourisheth him as well as more meat doth a man So though thou be but a child in Faith thy Faith shal saue thee as wel as Abrahams Faith saued him For a man is not saued by the quantitie of his Faith but by the preciousnesse of that which Faith receiues which is the righteousnesse of Christ which a weake and little Faith will as sauingly apprehend as a strong Faith as a Begger that hath a shaking weake hand can make shift to take an almes as well as he that hath not such infirmitie Ob. But I am pestered with much doubting and cannot be rid of doubts A. Like enough But doest thou beleeue Beleeue still It is not the commendation of Faith to bee without doubtings but to ouercome them Thou shalt ouercome in the end and shalt not be ashamed Hee that kils his enemy at the first blow shewes himselfe valiant so doth he also shew a great deale of valour who being often knockt downe and wounded yet stands to it So though the field seeme doubtfull betweene thy Faith and doubting yet in the end thou shalt ouercome and thy victory shall be famous Make precious account therefore of thy Faith and labour to increase it A certaine Captaine d Epaminondas being in a hote skirmish was striken downe sore wounded and taken vp for dead as soone as he came to himselfe hee first asked if his Target were safe being loth his enemies should get that so looke to thy Faith for the Diuell thy enemy will looke to it and thou shalt not be ashamed Vse 3. Wicked men and vnbeleeuers are miserable because of the shame which followes them There can bee almost no stronger Argument against sinne then to say it will make ashamed then which there is nothing more grieuous to a generous minde therefore diuers haue rid themselues of their liues that they may be rid of their shame as Samson For to dye is naturall but to liue in shame is more then nature can endure and yet the wicked must eternally endure it Some like shamelesse beasts glory in their shame seeking no corners nor muffling themselues as Thamar but as Absolon
renue our freshnesse This is our comfort against our great guiltinesse and manifold infirmities he repents not of his loue to vs but keepes vs with watch and ward as vnder locke and key to saluation Hee finisheth the good worke hee beginnes If hee keepe not the Citie the watchman watcheth in vaine if hee keepe the Citie the enemie watcheth in vaine Vse 5. There are three sorts of men goe to hell 1. Such as continue in sinne a man need no great skill to reade their doome 2. The second are such who haue onely a shew of Religion these are hypocrites 3. Such who haue true grace but it is temporarie and continues not A man may haue true grace without saluation but not true sauing grace True grace is then sauing when it continues This distinction of grace is gathered out of the Hebrewes where Paul saith Heb. 6. That a man may be inlightned partake of the holy Ghost and taste of the good word of God and of the powers of the life to come and yet be a cast-away Now such graces were true but temporarie so the stony and thornie ground had true grace but not continuing which is the note of good ground Examine then the grace thou hast Thou hast true ioy and sorrow as at a Sermon thou art truly affected with that which thou hearest being mooued to ioy at the hearing of the promises and it may bee to mourning at the hearing of the threatnings against thy sinnes Doe these things continue or art thou Sermon-sicke as a man is sea-sicke sicke at sea and well at shore a penitent within the Church and prophane without If these continue not they are no sauing graces Thou hast true feare as in the time of thunder or other danger but it may be thy feare is ouerblowne with the cloud thou wert truely afraid but it must continue if a sauing grace In prosperitie many beleeue in God and in aduersitie flye to the Diuell This may be true faith but is not sauing Sauing faith is like a true friend who failes not in aduersitie which makes a man say Though he kill me I will trust in him Thou hast true loue as to the world and to godlinesse in godly folke but it may be thou louest these as Saul loued Dauid Dauid must be sent for and who but Dauid How long till the euill spirit come vpon Saul so many loue these things till the ill spirit come vpon them and then they shew that they haue not sauing grace Many haue true resolution as in time of sicknesse to amend their liues they will speake so well then as a man would think they spake as they meant and so they do as they meane then but their meaning changes and when they are recouered their minde is altered therefore such resolutions though true yet are not sauing We loue stuffe in our garments that will last and mettall in a horse that will last some horse will at first setting out stand vpon no ground and yet be starke tired before noone we like not such a horse nor doth God like such professors whose graces doe not continue VERSE 30. For as yee in times past haue not beleeued Or obeyed God yet haue now obtained mercy through their vnbeleefe 31. Euen so haue these also now not beleeued Or obeyed that through your mercie they also may obtaine mercie HEere is the last Argument to proue the Conuersion and generall calling of the Iewes which is furrher confirmed vers 32. The Argument is taken from the like dealing of God with the Gentiles God after a long time of infidelitie receiued the Gentiles to mercie therefore will hee also at last receiue the Iewes for according to the rule of things like there is the same iudgement The impiety of the Gentiles was no impediment to their mercie neither shall the infidelity of the Iewes to theirs One accounts this Argument probable not necessary Piscator but the Confirmation vers 32. makes it very necessary In these verses as in all similitudes are two parts First A proposition verse 30. Secondly A reddition or application verse 31. In the Proposition are three things 1. The state the Gentiles were in in times past They haue not beleeued God There is a double infidelitie Naturall Iudiciall the Gentiles were vnder both Infidelitie may also be considered as opposed to Christianitie so we Christians are not vnbeleeuers or as opposed to faith and so we are borne vnbeleeuers 2. Their present estate Terminus ad quem They haue now obtained mercie that is Faith which hee should haue spoken but he rather chose to say mercie both because faith is of mercie as of the cause and also because the proper act of Faith is to receiue mercie 3. The meanes whereby we come out of an vnbeleeuing estate to a beleeuing namely the vnbeleife of the Iewes Which was medium occasionale the occasion not giuen but taken by the goodnesse of God doctrine The Gentiles were Infidells Eph. 2.12 but by the vnbeleife of the Iewes they are receiued to mercy conuerted as appeares in our experience Vse 1. Forget not what thou wert in times past an vnbeleeuer a profane wretch for we haue all run the race of the Prodigall sonne It is Gods grace if it be otherwise with thee now Be thankfull It may be within these few yeares thou wert a drunkard a blasphemer an vncleane person How if God had taken thee away in thy sinnes who hath suffered others not so greeuious sinners as thy selfe to perish in their iniquities Let this binde thee to thy good behauiour for euer and spurr thee on to more godlinesse If now thou shouldst liue as those which haue receiued no mercy it must be a foul shame to thee Saint Paul sayth 1 Tim. 1.15 this a faithfull saying and worthy of all men to be receiued that Iesus Christ came into the world to saue sinners O it s a sweet saying indeed for else we had bene all damned This is picked out to be read at the receiuing of the Lords supper for the comfort of penitent sinners a sentence worthy to be written in letters of gold write it vp in thy heart And remember that Paul sayth also Tit. 3.8 this is a faithfull saying and worthy of all affirmation that they which beleeue in God should be carefull to shew foorth good workes As that is a faithfull saying so is this a faithfull As thou desirest the sweetnesse of the former so see thou performest the dutie of the latter for as the former comforts the conscience so this latter directs the life Vse 2. Faith is a sweete mercy so is the word of God the meanes of that faith alas for the poor Indians who know not God in Christ who are without the word who worship the diuell how wretchedly do they liue how desperately doe they die we account them miserable as they are indeed But doe you thinke that we may not find some
Antecedent To them which are in Christ 2. the Predicat or Consequent Condemnation 3. the Bond negatiuely set downe There is no. The whole Proposition in the naturall order is thus To them which are in Christ there is no condemnation This order is inuerted for more Elegancy and force The Arguments disposed in this proposition are the cause and the contrary effect The contrary effect negatiuely deliuered of the cause The cause beeing in Christ The contrary effect Condemnation The proper effect Iustification set down negatiuely for our greater comfort because wee are more sensible of the euill things we are freed from which wee haue deserued then of the good things we haue by Grace There is therefore now Anselmus Some make this particle Now an Aduerbe of Time in a double relation First to the time past thus before when you were out of Christ your estate was damnable but now it is otherwise Secondly to the time to come viz. Of the glorification of the body thus Now there is no condemnation then there shall be no concupiscence But it 's better taken for a note of inference from somewhat going before thus Those which are iustified are not vnder the Law but vnder Grace Now then it followes that there is no condemnation to such There is no condemnation Condemnation is a sentence or Doome giuen by a competent Iudge concerning the punishment of an offender the contrary whereof is Absolution Acquitting Iustification The Iudge is GOD. The delinquent to be arraigned sinfull Man the Court double Inferior of Conscience Superior of Christ To them which bee in Christ In Christ and by Christ differ by the first effectuall Vocation by the second Iustification is vsually set forth To bee in Christ is to bee vnited vnto him which vnion is spirituall not corporall Hee in vs by his Spirit wee in him by our Faith The meaning ariseth from the coniunction of the Subiect and Predicat by a Negatiue Bond for though they are ioyned in the Proposition yet they are really separated To them which are in Christ That is which beleeue and so are effectually called there is no condemnation not before men for such are most subiect to reproachfull censures but before God either at the Barre of their owne Conscience or at the Barre of Christ at the last day The terror of damnation is vnspeakeable specially before the Iudgement seat of CHRIST for if the iudgement of a guilty Conscience be so fearefull as wee cannot be ignorant much more is the iudgement of God who is greater then our Conscience Ioh. 3.20 doctrine Those which are in CHRIST by Faith shall not bee condemned Iohn 3.5.16,36 Marke 16.16 Ephes 5.23 Vse 1. Hee saith not There is no sinne or nothing worthy to be damned but there is no condemnation for he that saith he hath no sinne deceiues himselfe 1. Ioh. 1.8 And the Apostle in the 7. Chapter confessed the remainder of sinne which manifests it selfe too often in our words deeds and desires contrary to the Law by which if the most righteous man be examined he must appeare worthy to be damned and hath need enough to vse Dauids Prayer Psalme 143.2 Lord enter not into iudgement with thy seruant Vse 2. There is no Condemnation to Them Here appeareth the Prudence of the Apostle who when hee in the 7. Chapter spake of the force of inhabiting Sinne expressed it in his own person that we might know there is no man so holy in this life who is exempted But when hee speakes of Comfort to such hee speakes in the person of others lest wee should imagine that onely some principall and choise Christians did enioy this benefit It is the fashion of Christians distressed in Conscience to exempt themselues from the communion of this comfort as if it belonged to others not to themselues Vpon this Paul professedly changeth the manner of his speech Doest thou beleeue in Christ with a true though weake faith Thou shalt be saued Hold fast this faith For euen as a halfe-penny is currant lawfull money as well as a shilling so is the least true Faith of his weight and allowance before God Therefore Paul elsewhere saith There is laid vp for Mee a crowne of righteousnesse Yea for Thee an holy and famous Apostle Nay saith Paul 2. Tim. 4.8 not for mee onely but for them also who loue the appearing of Christ Vse 3. Miserable are the vnbeleeuers and impenitent There is no Condemnation If Paul had stayed here many would haue applauded him O how would the Drunkard and Blasphemer c. haue reioyced and all the rout of wicked ones If Thou beest such how doest thou wish in thy heart that it were true But heare and tremble thou Profane There is no Condemnation to them which are in Christ This is the Childrens bread it is not for Dogs that is for Impenitent sinners What then shall become of them which repent not Woe vnto them For they shall perish they shall be damned for them is reserued the blacknesse of darknesse for euer euen vtter Darknesse where there is nothing but weeping and gnashing of teeth Who can tell the Misery the Flames the Anger the Vengeance which shall fall downe vpon the heads of the wicked as a tempest of Thunder When thou art glossing and quaffing thinke of this Damnation When thou art puffed vp with Pride thinke of the shame and Confusion following When thou art Coueting think of the wrath thou treasurest vp against the day of Wrath. Of these things we dayly speake and write and yet thou wicked wretch turnest not as if it were a triflle to be damned to be separated from the Saints from Christ from God a trifle as if it were a light thing to haue eternall fellowship with the Diuell and his Angels Yet yet conuert that if it be possible thou mayst escape Damnation Yet leaue thy Whoredomes c. While the doore of grace is open He which now stoppeth his eare O how shall he in That day call to the Mountaines and Rockes to couer him Preuent this damnation by repentance and though other fall into hell labour thou to bee in the number of them to whom there is no Condemnation Vse 4. Great is the Blessednesse and Securitie of the Godly I say Securitie not Carnal whereby the feare of God is shaken off but spiritual wherby the feare of damnation is ouercom There is no Condemnation to them they haue peace with God with themselues Vnderstand you blessed of the Father your happinesse and reioyce My life for yours you shall not perish That tormenting flame shall not touch one hayre of your heads As the garments of the three men smelt not of the fire so you shall bee most free Remember this golden this most diuine Sentence and in all distresses of Conscience conquer yee But thou wilt say Alas I am led captiue vnto sinne what hope therefore Indeede in thy selfe there is none but in Christ
Christ but as the Thiefe hath the True mans purse Alas what shall it profit him when hee shall come to hold vp his hand for his robbery So if thou haue not Christ thou art an vsurper euen of that which thou possessest by a lawfull ciuill right and shalt be called to account for the same Thou mayest haue gold and siluer without Christ but no comfort without him Whom if thou hast thou mayst eate with peace and drinke with peace and with peace and comfort possesse gold siluer house lands rich apparell for they are thine owne in Christ If thou beleeuest thou canst want nothing which is good for thee for all temporall blessings and spirituall are annexed to the person of Christ whom they possesse by Faith Walke therefore cheerefully in thy calling and be not anxious nor disquiet thy selfe with carking care Quid haesitas super possessionibus horum Dominum omnium habeas Chrysost What doest thou doubt about possessions when thou possessest the Lord of all Hee that hath giuen that which is greater to his enemies how should it bee that he should deny lesser things to his friends The Prodigall Childe doubteth not of bread inough if hee can obtaine his Father So we can be in no want if we want not Christ VERSE 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It is God that Iustifieth IN this Verse Paul begins to arme Gods children against the second sort of speciall tentations which arise from the presence of euill This euill is either in our selues in the Creatures or supposed to bee in God In our selues our sinnes In the Creatures violence and death In God mutabilitie of his loue The first of these is remoued in this Verse and the next namely that which ariseth from our faultinesse For our sins there are two that hurt vs. 1. The Accuser 2. The Iudge In this Verse Paul sheweth that no Accusation can hurt vs in regard of our sinnes In the 34. verse that No Iudge In this Verse is a Position set downe by way of Interrogation and a Reason The Position None can accuse the Elect. The Reason because God Iustifieth them Some reade all in both these Verses 33 34. with Interrogation thus Who shall accuse Shall GOD which Iustifieth c. But our reading is best and most approued Who In generall Who What Diuell or Man Sarauius Shall lay to the charge Shall accuse shall sue shall call into the Law shall endite shall arrest that he may accuse This is very Emphaticall There is no place for accusation much lesse for finding guilty and condemning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of what should Gods children be accused Of old sinnes not of false things but of such whereby Satan and our Consciences the Accusers may bring vs to desperation The Elect of God The Election saith Chrysostome not well Ambrose giues the sense thus None can or dare retract the Iudgement of God for he confidently prouoketh all Aduersaries if they dare come forth to accuse not that there is no cause but because God hath iustified vs. Therefore it is here subioyned as a Reason It is God that iustifieth They are iustified therefore it is vaine to accuse them and it is God that Iustifieth them If God doe it none can reuerse it for none is equall with God doctrine No Accusations can hurt or preuaile against them whom God iustifieth Esay 51.8,9 Vse It is ordinary for wicked men to traduce and accuse the Children of God of hypocrisie pride couetousnesse c. But whom doest thou accuse Euen those whom God iustifies It is false that thou chargest them with all or it is True If false then thou art a Slanderer If True then thou shewest thy selfe malicious to impute and to obiect that which God hath pardoned and of the which hee hath acquited them Take heed thou playest not the Diuels part who is stiled the Accuser of the Brethren As it was said to Peter That which God hath cleansed account not thou vncleane So them whom God iustifieth take heed thou accuse not No accusation can hurt beleeuers Who shall accuse them Who Inow I warrant you The Diuell and wicked men who will sift vs as a man sifts his corne and search into vs as Laban searched Iacobs stuffe and when they can finde nothing worthy of Accusation they will inuent false things But thou wilt say Alas that which the Diuell and the world accuse me of is too true mine owne conscience also accuseth me Be it so but doest thou beleeue and repent Then God Iustifyeth thee not onely from false but against true accusations Bee they true or false they shall neuer hurt vs for he from whom there is no appeale hath acquited it Thou must neither deny nor forget thy guiltinesse that the more thou doest vnderstand thy disease the more thou maist praise thy Physician But if thou haue Faith which is the cause and Repentance which is the fruite of Iustification no Accusation can endan-ger thy peace Vse 3. Miserable art thou prophane wretch for as God will admit no Accusation against the Elect thus iustified and sanctified so he will refuse no iust and legall accusation against the prophane and obdurate which censure of the iust and terrible Iudge must needs fill the conscience of irreligious and reprobate men full of horrour and confusion What must needs be the torment of thy soule when thine own Conscience the Law the diuel himselfe shal most eagerly accuse thee before the Iudge of the quicke and dead Mala. 3.5 Nay God himselfe will bee a swift witnesse against thee Yea the very insensible creatures shall accuse the wicked The dust of the Preachers feete shall accuse the contemners of the Gospell Mat. 10. The couetous mans rusty gold and siluer Iam. 5.3 the Vsurers vniustly gotten goods shall accuse him Habac. 2.11,12 The drinke O drunkard which thou hast swilled in shall rise vp in iudgement and accuse thee If it be possible Repent that thy conscience may be freed from hellish Desperation VERSE 34. Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that dyed yea rather that is risen againe who is euen at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for vs. AS in the 33. verse Paul tooke away the danger of Accusation so in this he taketh away the feare of Condemnation Here are 2. parts 1. a Position None can condemne the Elect to condemne is to adiudge to death or other punishment This position is set downe by Interrogation for the more force 2 A Reason Which is because Christ is dead The Interpreters for the most part do place the force of the Reason in the Intercession of Christ which they oppose to Condemnation as if the Apostle did vse a Traiection for the more strong consolation of Beleeuers Beza But vnder correction I thinke the reason principally to bee in the death of Christ by which we escape death and the Resurrection
but the truth that the Iewes because they beleeue not in Christ are not Iustified The fortifications raised for defence are easily razed The first in this 9. Chapter the second in the tenth and the last in the eleuenth VERSE 1. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience also bearing me witnesse in the holy Ghost 2. That I haue great heauinesse and continuall sorrow in my heart IN this nynth Chapter Paul shewes that though the Iewes be reiected yet the promise failes not which was originally neuer meant to any vnbelieuing either Iewe or Gentile And therfore he expounds the promise made to the Iews vpon that occasion falling into the doctrine of Predestination of the reiection of the Iewes calling of the Gentiles which before he enters into he premiseth a Preface to prepare the minds of the Iews to the patient reading of the same So that in this Chapter are two parts 1. A Preface in the fiue first verses 2. The Treatise it selfe concerning the stability of the promise of God notwithstanding the casting off of the Iewes Because it was odious to the Iewes to heare of their reiection and that the Gentiles should bee admitted to fauour Therefore Paul in the Preface protesteth solemnely both of his loue to his Nation and exceeding hearts griefe for their Reprobation that it might appeare these things to be spoken not of malice and spleene as they were ready to interpret but of conscience towards God and his Truth which was his office to deliuer In the Generall from this Preface a note may be obserued for Ministers Vse 1. Ministers are to speake the Truth though it displease yet with sobriety of wisedome after the example of Paul so as we may if it be possible with gentle and louing means winne the affections of the Auditors both to vs and our doctrine In this two sorts of Ministers much faile First those which are so tender studious to please that they are loth to speake any but sweet words though men rot in their sinnes Secondly those which are as farre on the other extreme accounting all prefacing and louing speaking to bee dawbing and no sentence to be zealously deliuered vnlesse Damnation and Damned be at the end of it vvhereby many times they driue them farther from Christ whom they would haue conuerted vnto him Let such imitate Pauls discretion here who might haue been rough with these stubborne and obstinate Iewes and haue spoken hardly to them being haters and Persecutors of Christ and his members but hee chuseth rather to speake mildly as beeing likely to doe more good So he aduised Timothy 2. Tim. 2.24.25 The seruant of Christ saith he must be gentle towards all men euen euill men instructing them with meeknes So he practised himselfe with his kind words so insinuating into King Agrippa his affections that he had almost perswaded him to be a Christian Acts 26.28 when rough words might haue much exasperated his mind Vse 2. Hearers would be also admonished not to prescribe their Teachers what they shall preach For some ignorantly either desire neuer to heare of their sinnes because of their great profanenes Or out of a pride and presumption of their own righteousnesse aboue others All preaching which is not declamatory and inuectiue against sinne is cold preaching vvith them Pray for thy Teacher and be content to heare thy sinne reproued and aboue all desire to heare of Christ Iesus and the mercy of God in him the next and immediate cause of conuerting a sinner The summe of the Preface in the fiue first verses is a protestation of his loue manifested by his exceeding griefe for their Reiection Or a protestation of his griefe issuing from his loue In it there are two parts 1. A Complaint 2. A Iustification of it The Complaint is in the second verse first to be handled The Iustification ver 1. 3. 4. 5. VERSE 2. That I haue great heauinesse and continuall sorrow in my heart IN this Complaint principally is to be cōsidered that which hee complaines of which is his great griefe which must needes argue great loue Conceruing which griefe are tvvo things 1. The greatnes of it 2. The Cause The greatnes is set forth three wayes 1. By a Comparison expressed in a vvord signifying the paines and sorrow of a vvoman in trauell a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. By the Continuance of it It was without intermission 3. From the feat of this sorrow It was not outward or in the face in a few Crocodiles teares but in the heart and therefore a sharpe and dangerous sorrow The Cause is not expressed for the horror of the thing his minde trembled to name it and it would haue beene full of Enuy. But it is easily gathered out of the matter following namely for the Reiection and Reprobation of the Iewes doctrine The children of God grieue for the hardnes of heart and condemnation of the wicked So they are described Ezec. 9.4 So did Ieremy Ieremy 9.1 So did Dauid Psalme 119.53 So did Christ Ioh. 11.33 Q. Is it lawfull so to mourne their destruction being the execution of Gods iust Decree which wee are cheerefully to reproue and reioyce in A. In the punishment of sinners when wee looke vpon the glory of Gods Iustice we ioyfully approue it When on the destruction of the Creature we lament it As the Cameleon is coloured according to that which is next it so the mind putteth on affections after the nature of the thing it doth contemplate As a Iudge when malefactors are arraigned before him is moued with indignation as they are malefactors and with compassion as they are miserable men so is it in this case Vse 1. Because Paul loues the Iewes hee grieues for their downefall for griefe ariseth from the hurt of the thing wee loue If we loue not we are not moued and according to the degree of our loue is the measure of our griefe Dauid exceedingly grieued for Absolon for he loued him exceedingly Examine thine affection in spirituall things thy loue by thy ioy and griefe Doest thou loue the Word of God then thou wilt reioyce to heare it and that it should haue free passage and wilt grieue if it be hindered or ill reported of If thou doest not thus thou louest it not Thou sayest thou louest Gods glory then is it meat musike to thee to see men to feare God to keepe his Sabbaths c. and as a dagger at thy heart to heare men blaspheme and to see men follow after vngodlinesse otherwise thou louest not God not his glorie Vse 2. The Iewes resist Pauls doctrine through the hardnesse of their hearts This caused both his griefe and also their Reiection If the Husbandman plow euery yeere and sowe but his seed rots vnder the clots and neuer comes vp he cannot but grieue so Paul when his doctrine hath no successe The thriuing of the flock is the glorie of the Shepheard and
most contrarie to this of the Apostle here who affirmeth that Iacob was elected before hee had done any workes that Election might be not of Workes but of him that calleth Arminius expounds these words of him that calleth thus Armin. in analis ca 9. ad prim script ad Gellium Succanum that the purpose of Gods election might bee not of workes but of Faith whereby it is obeyed to him that calleth This Glosse corrupteth the Text and is like an old piece sowne to a new garment For first this quite crosseth the meaning of the words and in effect it should be thus not of workes but of him that is called for they also absurdly hold that Faith is of our selues Secondly when there is an opposition betweene Faith and Workes it is in the point of Iustification and Faith not opposed in regard of it selfe but of the righteousnesse of Christ by it apprehended as it is a vertue it comes vnder the account of workes which in as much as they hold there must needs follow a confusion in the sense Gods election is without Faith as the cause of it not without it as the meanes appointed to Iustification and saluation So also Reprobation is without sinne as the cause discretiue impelling not without it as a condition without the which God reprobateth not as for instance God considers Esau Iacob falne in Adam His authoritie and power is this Hee may saue both and he may damne both and that iustly if hee will Or he may elect Esau if hee will and reprobate Iacob But what hath he done Hee hath chosen Iacob Why Because hee would Hee hath passed by Esau and reprobated him Why Because he would And this will is iust because Esau hath deserued it But so hath Iacob also True but it pleased God to forgiue Iacob in Christ and not Esau as a man hauing two debtors may forgiue the one and require the debt of the other without any iniustice Vse 2. This Doctrine affords comfort in tentation Thy vnworthinesse may dismay thee but remember that thy Election depends not vpon thy worthinesse but vpon the will of God Let this Doctrine also prouoke thee to thankefulnesse and due praises Which two vses Saint Augustin makes of his preaching this Doctrine There is great cause thou shouldst praise God if thou bee elect for it is of his mercy not of thy deseruing In regard of thy selfe there was no difference betweene thee and a Reprobate If now there be God found it not in thee but put it into thee Consider Esau and Iudas in what art thou better then they Thou art of the same Nature hewne out of the same Rocke of the same wooll as I may say and making Nothing hath parted thee but the knife of Gods Election Nothing in thee more then in Iudas to make him Elect thee Thou seest many commit lewd things some whoredome some drunkennesse some murder Thou hatest these sinnes what is the cause The grace of Gods Election If God should haue left thee to thy selfe thou wouldst haue proued a Iudas or a Iezabel Giue glory to God which hath discerned thee and seeing he hath put a difference betweene thee and the Reprobate manifest thou this difference by thy godly life doctrine The Doctrine out of the third part The Predestination of God is sure Ioh. 13.1 2. Tim. 2.19 as this is affirmed of election so holds it also of Reprobation Vse 1. Great comfort followes the Elect Their state is as sure as God is sure As none can be saued but they which are predestinated to it so they most certainly for God neither can deceiue nor be deceiued So certaine saith one Nullo detriment●… minui potest summa praecognita l. de voc Gent. 1. c. vlt. inler opera Amb. In sensu diuiso non in sensu composito The. Sum. 1. p. q. 23. art 23. is the number of them which are predestinated that it can neither be increased nor by any detriment be diminished In deede if we consider an Elect by himselfe without the Decree of God hee may dye in sinne but if wee consider him with the Decree of God he cannot If our Saluation did not for the certainty of it depend on God but on our selues it were hazardable and wee must needs despaire and runne madde in trouble because wee are mutable The foundation is in God The markes in vs. God hath not reuealed to men whether they bee Elect or Reprobate 'T is not written in euery ones forehead but this is written in the Word 2. Pet. 1.10 that we must make our election sure not in it selfe but in our assured knowledge of it which may be done à posteriori as they say that is by certain effects of election which are infallible markes of the same There are two speciall markes of election noted by Saint Paul 2. Tim. 2.19 Faith and Repentance If thou hast Faith thou art Elect for only such beleeue which are ordained to life Repentance also approues thy election For we are elected that we should be holy and God hath ordained vs to walke in good workes and to be clothed with righteousnesse and the obedience of a new life If thou sayest Alas what shall I doe I finde not these markes in me but the contrarie as Ignorance Contempt of the Word Profanenesse Whoredome Pride Drunkennesse c. I answere thee Yet despaire not but vse the meanes and submit thy selfe to them and if thou beest elect they shall become effectuall to worke in thee all such graces vnto life Some as Spiders gather poison out of this hony Either of malice or as I would rather iudge of Ignorance blaspheming this Doctrine and saying If there be Predestination and so certaine then let vs neuer trouble our selues about Faith and Repentance For if I be predestinated to bee saued my sinnes cannot damne mee if to bee damned my care cannot saue mee To affirm this is horrible blasphemy for it is in effect to say that God who hath giuen vs his word to teach vs to liue wel hath therein opened to vs a Doctrine of carelessenesse and dissolutenesse Which is to deny the wisedome and purity of God Also they consider not that by the same act God both predestinates a man to life and to the meanes of obtaining it which are Faith and Repentance without which he hath predestinated to saue none A man hath a grieuous wound will he say if God hath appointed it shall heale It will heale though I vse no playster Will a man neglect to eat because God hath appointed how long he shall liue Did Hezekiah so for the terme of those fifteene yeeres because of Gods appointment Will a man on the top of an house refuse the ordinary meanes of safety and leape down vpon these termes Will we not on these termes trust our bodies and shal we our soules In bodily things will wee ioyne the meanes and end together whatsoeuer Gods predestination be and
of a Reprobate thou wert in the same condemnation Consider the torments to which the Reprobate and the riches of Glory to which thou art reserued How doth God deale with vs as though we were Princes children who indeed are beggars brats Hee takes a Reprobate and scourgeth him with Scorpions to fray thee from sin and to shew thee his loue When thou feelest thy selfe dull to praise God consider how God hath discerned thee from the Reprobates then whom in thy selfe thou art not better so much as a hayre If God had saued all it had beene an Infinite mercy and an Infinite cause to praise him but Now seeing many are damned to them which are saued it is the more cause of thanksgiuing The Sunne is glorious and beautifull but if the Moone and euery Starre had as much brightnes it would not be so admired So this makes the mercy of GOD to the Elect so much the more admirable by comparison of his wrath on the Reprobate On the contrary it is augmentation of torment to the Reprobate to see how God vseth his Elect to heare how graciously Christ speakes to them Come ye blessed to behold Them goe triumphing to heauen and themselues thrust downe with the Diuell to hell To see what they lose shall more torment them then that which they feele This shall euen cut them to the heart as may by proportion bee gathered out of the Gospell Luke 13.28 There shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth saith Christ to the Reprobate Iewes when yee shall see the Elect in the Kingdome of heauen and your selues thrust out Apply this to all occasions of mercy to thy selfe which thou obseruest others to want Wouldst thou be stirred vp to praise God for our long peace Compare England with France the Low-Countries this will doe it Wouldst thou for the Gospell be prouoked to thankefulnes Consider their misery that liue in Turky or vnder the darknesse of Popery Thou hast riches vnderstanding health the vse of thy limbs c. When thou seest a man Lunati que or a poore lame cripple begging a penny of thee Remember that God offereth him to thee not onely that thou shouldest be compassionate to relieue him but also to make him thy glasse to behold the mercy of God to thy selfe who could haue put him into thy estate and thee into his Be from hence thankfull lest God cast thee into such an estate for he can do it that so by a hard comparison thou maist learne to be more sensible of his goodnes which thou hast receiued Thus did God declare i●… Ierusalem by his Prophet that they should serue Shishak that they might see the difference of his seruice and of the kingdomes of the earth 2. Chron. 12.8 Consider wisely be thankfull VERSE 24. Euen vs whom he hath called not of the Iewes only but also of the Gentiles HItherto hath beene shewed that the promise was neuer made nor meant to the only carnall seede of Abraham Now followes the other part of Pauls Answere that it is made to the Elect of all Nations And he falls into it from the occasion of that which is vers 23. deliuered of the vessels of mercy and glory For in this verse he shewes who they be and by consequence who are Abrahams seede to whom belong the promises and that by an effect of election which is Calling This calling is enlarged by a distribution of the Subiect viz. Iewes and Gentiles The Argument or summe of the words is That the seede to whom the promises pertaine are the Elect which are not the Iewes only but the Gentiles also nor all the Iewes but only the Elect. The first is approued verse 25 26. The last verse 27 28 29. Then followes a collection from these things verse 30. to the end of the Chapter Euen vs whom he hath called Calling is an action of Gods loue whereby he calleth men to saluation It is two-fold 1. Outward when we heare the Word preached with the eare of the body 2. Inward when God bends the heart to beleeue the promise offered and swayeth the whole man to obedience Pareus This is here meant not of the Iewes only but also of the Gentiles Not all the Iewes nor all the Gentiles but of the Iewes and Gentiles the Proposition being partitiue some singulars of both doctrine They which are effectually called are elect vessels of glory for the execution of the decree of election begins in Calling Rom. 8.30 Tit. 1.1 Ioh. 10.16 Act. 13.48 Vse 1. In time past they sang God is knowne in Iewry his name is great in Israel at Salem is his Tabernacle and his dwelling at Sion Psal 76.1.2 Psal 79.6 Ierem. 10.25 Luke 2.32 Acts 10. Then were the Prophets bold to say Powere out thy wrath vpon the Gentiles Yea wee were as dogges But now he that is the glory of Israel is the light also of the Gentiles Peter could not vnderstand this without a vision The Iew the elder brother could not endure his younger bretheren to be entertained but they had no reason for it for neither did we grutch their glory neither doth our admittance but their owne infidelity exclude them from God Truth it is that in all times of the Iewes excellencie some few of the Gentiles were receiued into the fellowship of the promises as Iob Iethro Ruth c. for the saluation of some and for a witnesse vnto all but now the multitude of the Gentiles receiue the Gospell Vt quibusdam esset in remediū omnibus in testimoniū Amb. de voc Gen. Whether Iew or Gentile such as are called are the elect of God It is not the hauing or wanting of the prerogatiue of Nation Sex Condition c. that makes or marrs In Christ saith Paul Galat. 3.28 not in a Christian Common-wealth is neither Iewe nor Gentile c. But all rich poore masters seruants Iewes Gentiles haue an equall right in Christ vvhich I thinke was shadowed Exod. 30.15 Where the rich shall not passe nor the poore diminish Art thou rich if thou beest not effectually called thou shalt bee damned Art thou poore If thou beest effectually called thou art rich A poore man wanting grace is twise miserable and a rich man belieuing hath a double portion Nemo dicat ideo vocauit me deus quia colui eum Quomodo coles si non voceris Augu. There is nothing in vs which is the cause of effectuall calling He calleth vs. Good desires and thoughts c. follovv calling as calling followes Election and Election the mercy of God Wee are the subiect of Calling but power to obey the Calling of God wee haue not till God hath created it in vs. As water being by nature cold may be made hot and yet it hath no naturall inclination to heat so the Flesh hath no eares to heare nor eyes to see but as GOD createth them Neither doth God giue vs a power and wee educe it into act but
a Minister be ignorant of the Scriptures or a Physician of the difference and cause of diseases the complexion of his simples c. it excuseth not So for a Christian to be ignorant of Gods righteousnes and the way of Iustification before him is most dangerous So is it for a man to imagine he knowes when hee is most ignorant which is as if a drunken man should thinke himselfe sober or a sicke man well Stop the fountaine of these inconueniences by sound knowledge as a blind man so an ignorant man must needes erre out of the way As a man expects not a voice from fishes so nor from ignorant men vertue If the vvoman of Samaria had knowne who it was that offred her vvater Iohn 4.10 she would not haue mocked him If the Iewes had knowne many of them the Lord of life 1. Cor. 2.8 they would not haue crucified him If the Papists many of them knew better they would accordingly professe Our profane persons if they knew the rigour of Gods iustice the heat of his anger the burning of hell they would not I thinke so shamelesly carry themselues Vse 3. Trust not in thine owne righteousnesse in they ciuill and harmelesse carriage there is no more goodnesse in it then life in a dead carkasse It is like a childes baby made of clouts there 's not more difference between such a puppet a strong man then between our righteousnesse and that vvhich may iustifie vs before God Vse 4. They which receiue not Christs righteousnes are Rebels then are the Papists Rebels so are all they which seek not after faith Whatsoeuer gifts of nature thou hast thou art a rebel if thou belieuest not the Word and receiuest not the righteousnesse of God offred thee therein A more open rebell is a drunkard blasphemes c. Alas vvhat shal becom of these A Iew is better then such a one so is a Papist they can say something for themselues and many of them are free from such notorious crimes Surely such shall be dealt withall as rebels and because they will not repent and be subiect to the righteousnes of God in faith they must be subiect to the reuenging iustice of God in torments VERSE 4. For Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to euery one that beleeueth THe Iewes are zealous of the righteousnesse of the Lavv yet are ignorant of Gods righteousnes and submit not vnto it for God gaue the Law not to make vs righteous but to make vs seeke Christ the end of the Lavv that wee might be righteous in him Here Paul brings an Argument to shew that Iustification by faith establisheth the righteousnesse of the Law That which aimeth at and attaineth the end of the Law destroyeth it not But faith attaineth the end of it which is Christ Therefore And as hee which runneth not to the end of the race misseth the prize so the Iewes misse of Iustification because they haue not Christ the end of the Law In this verse are two things 1. A Proposition 2. The amplification The Proposition Christ is the end of the Lavv both Ceremoniall and Morall The Iewes sought to be righteous by the obseruation of both these The end The end of a thing is either Mathematicall or Morall The Mathematicall end is the vtmost part of a thing in which the length or continuance is determined as a point is the end of a line Death the end of life the day of Iudgement the end of this vvorld The Morall end of a thing is the scope and perfection of it Now Christ is the end of the Law both waies The Mathematicall end both of the Ceremoniall and Morall but diuersly Of the Ceremoniall by a direct signification of the Morall by an accidentall direction The Ceremonies signified Christ and ended at him The Morall Law also after a sort leades to Christ Properly the Morall Law leades sinners to the Curse but by account to Christ as the disease leades to the medicine or Physician He is also the morall end of both For hee is the body of those Ceremonies and shadowes and hee perfectly fulfilled the Decalogue for vs and that three waies 1. In his pure conception 2. In his godly life 3. In his holy and obedient sufferings and all for vs for whatsoeuer the Law required that we should Bee Doe or Suffer hee hath performed in our behalfe Therefore one wittily saith Aretius that Christ is Telos the end or Tribute and we by his payment Ateleis tribute-free vve are discharged by him before God Christ is both these ends but principally the last is heere vnderstood The Amplification is by a double determination 1. For vvhat 2. For vvhom 1. For righteousnes to be done or imputed This first and more principally also for the other 2. For whom Described 1. by quality for Beleeuers 2. By generality Euery Beleeuer Q. Is Faith and Christs righteousnes of the Law A. In substance the righteousnesse of the Law and the Gospell are all one For none can be iustified by any other righteousnes then that which the Law requireth They differ onely in the manner of performance the Law exacting it to be done by our selues the Gospell offering it done by Christ to be apprehended by faith Iustifying faith is not directly of the Law for the Law knoweth no Grace but indirectly it is as the Law commands obedience to God doctrine God hath giuen the Law in writing to bring men to Christ that beleeuing in him they might be iustified by his righteousnesse Gal. 3.24 Vse 1. Humane lawes are branches of the Morall law therefore not abolished by Christ and that is an vniust lawe whose end is not Christ Vse 2. For righteousnesse to the beleeuer not to the worker we are not iustified by doing but by beleeuing Vse 3. All beleeuers admitted to Iustification none excluded for faith is a supernaturall grace of which all are equally capable if God bestow it Vse 4. A beleeuer is happy for he hath Christ and so the righteousnesse which the Lawe exacts He hath the perfection of the Lawe which beleeueth in Christ Talis est ille qui in Christum credidit die qua credidit qualis ille qui vniuersam legem impleuit Com. Hieron ad Script Yea such a one is euery beleeuer in the day that he beleeues as he should be if hee could as perfectly keep the Lawe as the very Angels Satan would discourage poore sinners from the scant measure of their sanctification But if thou beleeuest be comforted for thou hast liuery and seysin of all the promises of the Lawe in the first moment of thy faith It cannot hurt thee it curses onely vnbeleeuers and bad liuers hauing a full blow at them to their condemnation Seeke faith and the increase of it more then gold for it is much more precious inriching the conscience with peace comfort and confidence euen in the houre of death Many lament outward
is the Gentiles whom the Iewes accounted beasts and not men euen dogges As a man diuorcing an adulterous wife and in her face taking her bondmaid to be his wife and adorning her with the garments and iewels of his former wife must needs make her pine with enuy ielousie So God threatens the Iewes whō he had chosen to be his Spouse that he would cast them off for their wickednes and bestow their priuiledges on the Gentiles Or as a Mother sometimes for a fault done by her little one thrusts it from her and saith it shall be her child no longer taking vp a strangers child into her lap so doth God threaten the Iewes Here 's the difference we doe it not seriously but God doth This is then as if the Lord should say You haue chosen another husband I will chuse another wife You another God euen your Idols I another people euen the Gentiles You haue angred me giuing my honor to Idols and I vvill anger you giuing your prerogatiues to the Gentiles doctrine God will forsake them which forsake him 2. Chro. 15.2 Iam. 4.8 Vse 1. To be out of the Couenant is to be of no account The Gentiles in regard thereof are said to be No people and a foolish Nation If a King haue an Army of many thou-sand dead men or cripples there is no reckoning to be made of them So no reckoning of men vnconuerted for they are dead in their sinnes very beasts without reason till they be enlightned Ob. But are not many vnregenerate men great Politicians A. Yes they are but in the account of God they are very fooles and beasts The Gentiles had many learned Philosophers and wise men for gouernment before their Calling yet God saith they were a foolish Nation The beginning of wisedom is the feare of God Prou. 1.7 Vse 2. There are many that despise scoffe the childrē of God for their simplicitie and holy profession let such remember that euen by those whō they iest at God wil anger them either in this life or at the day of Iudgement The time shall come that thou shalt gnash with thy teeth to see them saued thy selfe damned them carried to heauen thy selfe haled to hell As thou hast laught them to scorne so shall they laugh at thy destruction Vse 3. Liue England according to thy knowledge and bring forth fruit worthy of the Gospel which thou enioyest and thou shalt liue long else God will cast thee off and anger thee Now we are the people of God let vs obey him lest he make vs no people As a Master deales with a naughty seruant plucking his Liuery ouer his eares and turning him out of dores so God will take from vs his Word and Sacraments our Liuerie and cognizance if we reuerently profit not by them but despise them Now God honours vs aboue many nay aboue any Nation O what griefe enuy anger ielousie must it needes breed if euer the day should come that wee should see the Turks or other Infidels possessors of these fauours and our selues turned off There would be no griefe to this The Gentiles got the kingdome of the Iewes and all their wealth but for all this they enuied not them so much as that God should be the God of the Gentiles and not of the Iewes The losing of their Temporalties was not so much vnto them as the losing of their Spiritualties Thus hee dealt with the Iewes and thus will he deale with vs if we despise his Gospel not belieuing nor obeying it But if wee forsake not God he will neuer forsake vs it can neuer be shewed by any obseruation that God began first VERSE 20. But Esayas is very bold and saith Esay 65.1 I was found of them that sought me not I was made manifest vnto them that asked not after me HEre hee brings the Testimony of Esay a great Prophet of the bloud royall whom the Iewes greatly honored This Testimony in effect is the same with that of Moses it onely differs in words In it are to be considered two things First The manner of the Testimony Secondly The matter of it The manner is that Esay witnesseth boldly or audaciously this being to be taken in the better part not as a fault It was not safe to preach as Esay did for the Iewes were not patient to heare their downe-fall and of the aduancement of the Gentiles therefore he had need be of a bold spirit and this boldnesse like enough cost him his life For by the cōmandement of Manasses he was put to a cruel death being as it is said t Hierom. li. 15 in Esai in fine sawne asunder with a woodden saw doctrine Ministers are boldly to preach the truth Paul requireth so to be prayed for Ephe. 6.19 And so he enioynes Titus 2.13 Vse 1. Ministers may not feare the faces of men lest God destroy them They may not be timorous nor clawbacks neither of these can be faithfull They must be men of courage to stand for God and the truth against all opposites though they haue Iohn Baptists reward for their labour Art thou opposed in thy ministery Tu contra audentior ito be the more bold with discretion and wisedome and let not thy very life be deare vnto thee to fulfill the ministration thou hast receiued of the Lord. Acts 20.24 Vse 2. As it is our parts boldly to preach so it is your parts meekly to heare and cheerefully to follow that which is taught Iam. 1.21 The matter of the Testimony is two-fold First of the Calling of the Gentiles in the rest of this verse Secondly the Reiection of the Iewes verse 21. In these words are two things First a description of the Calling of the Gentiles Secondly an amplification of it The description I haue beene found and made manifest To finde God is to know him to finde fauour with him to haue him and enioy him as our portion which they doe which beleeue and repent I haue beene made manifest that is not declared in shadowes and Ceremonies but plainely These are set downe in the time past for the future because it was then as sure to be done as it is now done The Amplification is from the deniall of the cause of finding They sought not They asked not or minded him not For we read of the wisest of the Gentiles as Pythagoras Plato Aristotle c. that they trauelled and sought into euery corner of the world for Philosophy and to talke with learned men but wee neuer read that they came into Iury to seeke God And yet God was found though not of them in particular yet afterwards of the Gent●…es in generall Or here is a description of the Gentiles A Gentile is such a one who seekes not after God This is our glasse for wee are Gentiles doctrine Our conuersion and calling is not from our owne wisedome merit labour but from the mercy of God 2. Tim. 1.9 Iam. 1.18
Eliah there were seuen thousand reserued so also now The like times of the Church are wisely to be compared But the present estate of the Iewes is the same with that of the Israelites therefore as then so now a reseruation is made and by consequence their reiection not totall Heere we haue two things 1. A Proposition 2. An Amplification The Proposition that in the time of Paul though the Iewes were generally cast off yet there was and is a reseruation Obseruation When thou hearest of persecution and of killing vp the Prophets and professors be of good-comfort God will saue seuen thousand He will reserue one Eliah as in the dayes of Ahab one Athanasius as in the time of the Arrian Heresie one Wicliffe one Husse one Luther in the most darksome and hideous times of Antichrist The Amplification is from the cause of this Reseruation which is Election set foorth also by the eause of it which is Grace Through the Election of Grace not actiuely to be vnderstood on mans part as Chrysostome but actiuely on Gods part and passiuely on ours nor is Election to be heere expounded faith the seale of it as some but the decree called election of Grace that is gratious or free election doctrine The cause why some are reserued in dangerous times is their Election For as saith so perseuerance is proper to the Elect Act. 13.48 and 20.21 Vse 1. As to be preserued from Idolatry when true Religion is abolished and persecuted so in these dayes to be kept from sin and to stand when a thousand fall on one hand and ten thousand on another is a comfortable note of Election Iniquitie abounds Neglect not so faire an occasion of making thy Election sure If God bestow his grace on thee stoppe thee in the way of sinne make thy heart bleed for the transgressions of the time and preserue thee in his feare thou art elected for if thou wert a reprobate he would not haue such care of thee but giue thee quite ouer to follow the swinge of thine owne lusts vnto perdition Therefore by thy life thou mayest know for God hath not elected vs to serue the Diuell but himselfe Vse 2. If persecution come seare not many suffered constantly in the dayes of Iesabel and seuen thousand could not be found being hidden as a treasure by God So in Queene Maries daies many were taken and burned and many were sought after and could not be found for God couered them with his hand and smote the eyes of them which sought their liues as he smote the Sodomites sometimes when they sought the dore of Lots house Resolue thus If such fiery times should come and God should call thee out and suffer thee to bee found he will also so strengthen thee that thou shalt glorifie him in thy sufferings If God giue thee not such strength he will so hide thee from thy persecutors that though Iesabel her selfe search all the corners of the Land for thee as narrowly as Laban searched Iacobs stuffe yet shee shall not finde thee VERSE 6. And if by Grace then is it no more of workes otherwise Grace were no more Grace But if it be of workes then is it no more grace otherwise worke is no more worke THese words as was before said are an amplificatiō of the summe of the 5. vers namely that the Reseruation is according to election of Grace from whence this Consectary takes place If by election of grace then not by workes Though this doe not much pertaine to Pauls Argument in hand yet by the direction of the Spirit he takes that little occasion offered to speake something in commendation of Grace because he had to deale with the Iewes which stood greatly vpon their owne Righteousnesse which indeed was one of their maine diseases and therefore he neglects not by the way to touch this sort and to giue them a iog for remembrance that we are saued by grace not by workes Pauls example must teach Ministers a point of wisedome which is to take notice of the speciall sinnes of their Auditors and in the course of their teaching if any occasion offer though it lie not so plaine in their way to giue them a memento Paul breakes out here into a new question that he might meete with the Iewes in euery corner When Ministers speake against the sinnes of their Auditors O say they he findes not that in his text but we know by the direction of Gods Spirit and by the warrant of Pauls example if we find such in you how to find it in our text to reproue you for it and yet not to be guiltie of rouing or digressing But to the Consectary If election and preseruation be of grace it is not of workes This is proued by the nature of grace and workes which are contrary and destroy one another And it is set downe with inuersion of the termes That which is of grace is not of workes else grace were not grace that is free That which is of workes is not of grace else works were not workes that is did not make indebted The mysterie in this verse plainly appeares if we vnderstand what is meant by grace and what by workes The Schoolemen and Iesuites distinguish grace into grace making gracious and grace freely giuen Aqin Sum. p. 2. q. 111. art 1. The first they say is charitie a grace whereby we are conioyned to God the second is faith and the rest of Christian vertues But first both these are coincident for charitie also is a grace freely giuen Secondly they make this grace to be in man they know no other and therefore Bellarmine and the rest when they write of this subiect they write de gratia hominis of the grace of man but the Scripture onely speaketh of the grace of God and of the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ Grace is taken three wayes First for the free fauour of God the alone cause of our election which is subiectiuely in God one of the imminent vertues of the Deitie being his essence This is meant here Secondly for the energie operation and working of this grace which Austen calleth the mouing of mercie Motum miseric Aust lib. 3. Hyp. the lesuites call it an helpe or grace preuenting or following of grace preuenting is that place Eph. 2.8 of following 1. Cor. 15.10 of both together 2. Cor. 12.9 Thirdly for the gifts of grace which haue a different appellation ordinarily in Pauls Epistles as faith hope loue patience and this is distributed into habituall grace and actuall This in no wise is here to be vnderstood nor either of the parts before spoken of from the Schoole For charitie and faith are workes but we must haue a grace opposite to workes Workes are either good or bad bad workes not here vnderstood but good Ob. But grace and good workes are agreeing as the cause and the effect Ans To speake properly the anger of God is contrary to his grace
and vnto workes are no workes or bad workes contrary So that the contrarietie here to be holden is not simply but in the case of iustification and saluation Vnderstand not here workes themselues but the merit of workes and yet not the merit of all workes as Christs but of Our workes And then the rule of contraries here takes place that one being put the other is taken away The nature of grace is to be free the nature of workes to be of due debt so that if it be free it is not of debt else were grace no grace if it be of due debt it is not free else were workes no more workes The legerdemaine of the Papists is here to be noted who leaue and wipe out the last halfe of this verse And if of workes then not of grace else workes are no more workes blasphemously saying that it is superfluuos But we can easily spie out the reason of this their doing namely because their doctrine of merit is hereby ingulated As they haue dealt with the bookes of other writers so haue they attempted here purging and curtailing off that which makes against them And then they would make vs beleeue that their absurd vulgar Translation is perfecter then the originall Greeke text it selfe As if a man hauing but one eye or oneleg should thinke all others deformed that had two eyes or legs The summe is that what is of grace is not of workes and è diuerso doctrine Election and saluation are of grace not of merite Act. 15.11 Ephes 2.8.9 Tit. 3.5 and this that God might haue al the glorie but if it be of merit then corrupt flesh will boast Vse 1. The Popish conceit of Merit of their workes of congruitie which they say it is fit that God should reward and of condignity and supererogation which it is iust that God should reward is by this text like chaffe blowne away and blasted The finite creature cannot merit of the infinit Creator The Papists haue three shifts for this 1. They say that Paul is to be vnderstood of the workes of Nature not of grace If so then the Pharisee also the Pelagian is not to be blamed for he acknowledged his goodnes in which he trusted to bee a gift of God Luk. 18.11 I thanke thee Lord that I am not c. And all merit is contrary to grace Besides our Sauiour bids his disciples Luk. 17.10 when they haue done all they can to thinke themselues vnprofitable seruants I trow they will not deny that the Apostles were in the state of Grace 2 Their second euasion is that saluation is of grace indeed but also of workes making a mingle-mangle of grace and workes which is as if a man should attempt to make fire and water agree But Saint Augustine takes away this in a word Grace saith he is grace no way if it be not free euery way It is all of grace or no whit at all of grace This golden saying is digged out of this mine 3 They exclaime against vs that we are enemies to good workes Why doe they so Not because we doe those euill works which they auoid but because we doing good works which they neglect yet ascribe our saluation only to grace They deale with vs as the Pharisies with Christ He tels them that Harlots shall goe before them into the kingdome of heauen and they presently say that hee is a friend of Publicans and sinners and an enemie to good workes Concerning good workes this wee hold that they are necessary to saluation not by a necessity of efficiency but of presence and that in three respects 1. Of worship for God is serued by doing them 2. Of good conscience which is lost by the neglect of good works 3. Of duty to our neighbors who is hereby to be wonne to God we must do good works if we will be saued but we must not looke to be saued by their merit Vse 2. Many ignorant soules say they hope to be saued by their seruing God and their good prayers They know no other Diuinity but this which is Popish and naturall These are not past grace they are not yet come at it Alas if there were no other way to come to heauen but this no flesh should be saued but only the humanity of our Lord Iesus The Diuels prime desire is to draw thee to abominable courses if he cannot preuaile this way but thou wilt be doing good workes this will please him if thou wilt be conceited of meriting thereby For a trust in thine owne righteousnesse will bring thee to hell as well as vnrighteous living Trust perfectly on the grace of God saith Peter 1. Pet. 1.13 if wee trust to any thing else it wil lay vs in the dust and bee as a broken reed which if a man leane vpon it the shiuers runne into his hand Vse 3. Gods children onely discerne a world of wickednesse in themselues for which they are much cast downe comfort thy selfe God elected thee freely to saluation and not for thy worthinesse If we were to be saued for our workes then wee had cause to doubt because of their defects This must be wel learned it is soone said but not so soone practised if a man haue fruit of his own planting he thinkes there is no fruit like to his So by nature wee are opinionated of our owne goodnesse Hence is it that God suffers many times euen his deare children fouly to fal to cure them of this pride as Peter or to suffer them to be sore tempted and buffeted that they may giue God the glory as Paul Vse 4. This teacheth vs humility because all is giuen of meere grace Vse 5. The grace of God teacheth to be gracious not gracelesse because of the mercies of God we must offer vp our selues to his seruice Rom. 12.1 Then cōclude thy selfe to be of the number of the saued when thy conuersation is godly If you sayest thou hopest to be saued by Gods grace and yet liuest in vile sinnes thou art a presumptuous and blasphemous Atheist Presumptuous because thou lookest to be saued in an estate to which is threatned damnatiō blasphemous because thou deniest God in thy life whose grace thou wouldest seeme to implore VERSE 7. What then Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for but the election hath obtained it and the rest were blinded Or hardned IN these words and so to the end of the 10. verse is the last part of Pauls answer which is the determination of the question in hand namely that God hath cast away onely the reprobate Iewes but the Elect obtaine the promises God casteth away the chaffe but loseth not one kernell of good corne Paul enters vpon this in this 7. verse by a Prolepsis for thus some Iew might obiect If God cast not away the Elect and yet they obtaine saluation not by workes but onely by free grace Then Paul you make a faire hand