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A33955 A cordiall for a fainting soule, or, Some essayes for the satisfaction of wounded spirits labouring under severall burthens in which severall cases of conscience most ordinary to Christians, especially in the beginning of their conversion, are resolved : being the summe of fourteen sermons, delivered in so many lectures in a private chappell belonging to Chappell-Field-House in Norwich : with a table annexed, conteining the severall cases of conscience which in the following treatise are spoken to directly or collaterally / preached and now published ... by John Collings. Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1649 (1649) Wing C5305; ESTC R24775 174,484 300

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God We are not to live by faith upon the incertainty of sense All that that speakes is not Gospel but we have a more sure and certain livelihood even the unchangeable goodnesse and infallible goodnesse of a God that cannot lie nor repent Sense is deceiving truth is infallible doth sense say God doth not strengthen me and doth Gods word say these things I could not doe if God did not strengthen me whither it be now better to believe God or deceivable sense judge thou Fourthly Learn to acknowledged Gods little finger thou doest not finde God lending his whole hand perhaps not strengthening thee in such a measure to act grace in such a degree but know the least stirring of the soul in a spirituall manner to a spirituall action is from God flesh and blood could not doe it find ou● out Gods little secret workings look for these thou wilt finde some of them in thy soule Fifthly and lastly Act contrary to thy minde we bid the sick man eat against his stomack thou sayest I cannot pray I cannot believe why I doe not find God giving me an heart to it doe it against thy minde thou shalt finde strength to doe it and comfort from doing of it This learned Mr Rutherford gives great Reason for as 1. Because it is ordinarily seen that a Christian may begin to pray with sad and fleshly complaints of unbeliefe yet going on the breathing of the holy Ghost will fill the sailes c. if we be doing the Lord will be with us 2. Our indisposition is a sinne and doth not free us from our duty 3. Ruth We are to pray against weaknesse and indisposition Christ dying and for strength and freedome of spirit 4. We are commanded in the day of trouble and temptation to pray Psal 50. 15. Math. 6. 13. ● 5. It is a sinfull omission in us not to pray and act not to doe what we can though we feele a weaknesse c. and severall other Reasons he gives p. 486. 487. c. Now doest thou not feele the strengthening influence of Gods Spirit carrying thee on to thy duty yet doe it that is the way to come to have a feeling stirre up the grace of God that is in thee 2. Tim. 1. 6. God complained Esay 64. v 7. That there was none that cal'd upon his name or stirred up himself to lay hold upon him It is the ordinary practice of Free-grace to send in sense and strength upon thy endeavours yet freely not as merited by them And thus I have shortly dispatcht all that I have to say to this scruple of conscience where the soule complaines for want of feeling c. The Fourteenth SERMON LUKE 17. v. 5. Lord increase our faith YOu may remember my design is to direct you to such meanes as may encrease your Faith The first which I propounded was To remove such scruples as hinder the progresse of our souls in the work of believing the soule conceiting either that it ought not to believe or else that it doth not believe The latter sort of which as I have shewed you ariseth either from an ignorant mistake of the nature and act and degrees of faith or from a mis-judging of the effects of faith Where a mistake of the nature and acts of faith is the cause by way of satisfaction I propounded to your consideration these two things 1. That there are divers acts of faith every of which is not necessary to Justification 2. That faith is of so good a nature that it will consist in the soule with many doubtings and weaknesses I have shewed you how true faith will and may consist with many doubtings and with what weaknesses it may consist in respect of knowledge assent reliance and assurance to summe up this businesse fully I have only by way of conclusion to discover to you in what the doubtings which may be in Gods dearest Saints differ from the doubtings of unbelievers and reprobates This is my work at this time Alas saith a poore soule but I am afraid that my doubting is not such a doubting as is incident to the Saints of God but such as Devils and reprobates have doubting of despaire not opposite only but contradictory to faith c. How shall I know whither my doubts bee such as may consist with faith in a gracious soule yea or no c CHAP. XIV How to know whither our doubtings be such as may consist with true faith in a gracious soule IN regard of this it will bee necessary that I should difference doubts and shew you wherein the Christian may be comforted being assured his doubts are not such as are inconsistent with true faith for thy comfort therefore know that there is a vaste difference betwixt the doubts of Gods people and the doubts of reprobates apparent in these five particulars First they differ in their ground and principle from which they arise The principle from which the doubts arise which are in the Saints of God is infirmity Rom. 4. 19. 20. The Apostle sayes Abraham staggered not at the Promise of God through unbeliefe but was strong in faith giving glory to God He doubted not through infidelity saith Mr Ball but he doubted of infirmity when he took Hagar to his bed for the raising of him a seed Gen. 16. v. 2. 3. and God Gen. 15. v. 4. had directly promised him an Heire yea so many children that the Starres of heaven should be a lesser number yea did he not doubt Gen. 17. 17. when the Lord had promised him a sonne hee laughed and said in his heart shall a child be born to him that is an hundred years old and shall Sarah that is ninty yeares old beare I know St Austine sayes Abrahams laughing was risus exultantis non derisio diffidentis the laughing of one that rejoyced and not the scorning of one that distrusted but with all due reverence to that learned and pious man I doe not think that he hath fully solved the knot I doe not think it was a mocking of distrust nor yet that it was a bare laughter of rejoycing I humbly conceive there was an exulting but yet mixt with a little doubting or disputing he rejoyced considering the faithfulnesse of the word but yet his sence through infirmity quarrelled with his faith about it In the joy of his heart he said as Mary upon the like tidings Luk. 1. v 38. Behold the servant of the Lord let it bee now unto me according to thy word and yet through infirmity he said How can these things be and therefore in the very next words v. 18. he sayes unto God O that Ishmael might live before thee which words as they plainely expresse Abrahams good will and wishing to Ishmael yet under correction to better judgements I conceive also from a comparing of the words before and immediatly after that they intimate a kinde of doubting of Gods fulfilling his word As if Abraham should have said Lord I am
promises made to us for sufficiency for this life Ser. X. 17. Whether a beleever may not hang tremblingly upon the promises and yet hang truly upon them what things may cause a trembling faith in the soule sometimes 18. Whether a Christian may not truly beleeve and yet not be able at all times fully and truly to appropriate the promises of Jesus Christ to himselfe in particular 19. Whether the true beleever may apply particular promises 20. Whether the true beleever at sometimes may not be unable to apply temporall promises when and why 21. Whether a true beleever at sometimes may not be unable particularly to apply spirituall promises if they be conditionall 22. Whether the true beleever at sometimes may not be unable to apply spirituall promises though absolute Ser. XI 23. What things must be wrought in that soule that by a particular application of faith layes hold upon any promise 24. Whether and how a Christian may and ought to apply all the promises so as to bring them as salves to his particular sores 25. Whether Conditionall promises suppose that I must fulfill the conditions before I apply them Ser. XII 26. Whether a Christian may not have saving faith yet no assurance 27. Whether and how perswasion comes into justifying faith and is necessary to every true faith 28. Whether a Christian may conclude he hath had faith of assurance or hath if it be weake and inconstant in degrees * 29. Whether assurance when lost may be recovered againe Ser. XIII 30. Whether it be a sufficient ground for me to conclude I have no faith if I thinke I doe not feele the strength of God carrying me out to those duties which I should doe and graces which I should act 31. Whether any Christian feeles strength alwayes alike and what causes there may be of his not feeling Gods strength alwayes alike acting in his soule 32. What a Christian ought to doe when he doth not feele the strength of God enlivening him and inabling him to act spirituall duties Ser. XIV 33. Whether and how a Christian may know whether those doubts which arise in his soule be such as a true beleever hath or no better then such as unbeleevers and reprobates have 34. Whether the principle of doubting in the beleever be unbeliefe or infirmity An Index of the Contents of the following Treatise SERM. I. CHAP. I. THe Coherence of the Text division of it and 8. Doctrines raised from it p. 1 2 3 4 The Doctrine insisted upon viz. That as the best of Christians have weaknesse and imperfection in their faith so it is their nature and duty to be sensible of it and to labour and strive against it p. 4 The Doctrine proved in its 3. branches by Scripture p. 5 3 Reasons of the first branch why Christians have weaknesses Ib. 1. Because the state of Mortality is imperfect Ib. 2. Christians condition here is inconstant Ib. 3. Corruptions renew daily Ib. 3. Reasons of the 2. branch Why the true Beleever will be sensible of his weaknesses Because 1. He is alwayes laying his heart to his eye p. 6 2. He is alwayes laying the square to his heart Ib. 3. He is not self-opinionated Ib. 3 Reasons of the 3. branch Why the Christian will strive against his weaknesses 1. Because the spirit works in him p. 7 2. Because he levels his arrowes at perfection Ib. 3. He knowes the more he hath of faith the more he hath of Christ Ib. Uses 1. To comfort weake Christians p. 8 2. To exhort all to labour to increase their faith p. 9 1 Direction to remove those things which hinder faith p. 9 10 1. Scruples and doubts hinder faith 2. Notes of a weake faith p. 10 What we must doe to remove scruples that hinder faith p. 11 What are the causes why many conceive they ought not to beleeve Ib. 1. Cause The too irregular eying of preparatory qualifications they thinke they are not enough humbled Ib. The question disputed Whether faith goes before repentance or repentance before faith p. 12 13 14 15 c. The termes opened and the question rightly stated p. 12 13 Six things granted to them that hold the Negative and the question againe rightly stated p. 14 The Affirmative proved by 3 Arguments by Scripture and experience p. 15 16 17 18 7. Objections answered and the truth vindicated p. 19 20 21 22 23 24 An answer to the Objections of the Jailor and Lydia's examples Master Shepheards answer to those examples p. 24 25 SERM. II. CHAP. II. HOw to comfort the soule under that trouble I am not enough humbled The complaint p. 26 Something spoken by way of premise p. 27 28 29 Severall considerations to comfort the soule under this trouble p. 29 30 1. Though God hath called for humiliation yet he hath not set a measure p. 29 2. No man is able to set a measure p. 30 6 Notes concerning Gods various dealings in humbling soules Ib. What soules God ordinarily humbles deeply and yet how various his dealings with them are p. 30 31 32 3. Consid If the end be wrought we need not trouble our selves about the meanes p 33 2 Ends of Humiliation To make sinne bitter and loathsome p. 33 34 To put the soule in a capacity of beleeving p. 35 5 Notes of Doctor Sibbs to know when humiliation is sufficient 34 A 3d end of humiliation is to inhance the price of Christ in the soul p. 36 4. Consid Thou mayest misjudge thy humiliation Ib. 3. Notes concerning the measuring of it p. 36 37 38 1. We must measure length and breadth as well as depth p. 37 2. We must measure inside more then outside Ib. 3. We must give an allowance for the time to come p. 38 5. Consid Humiliation is not a ground of Faith p. 41 Nor Acceptation p. 39 40 There may be a spice of Popery in a desire of deep humiliation p. 39 40 2. Directions to Christians under this temptation p. 43 44 45 1. By the Nature of God In his Covenant p. 43 44 45 In his Christ in his dispensatiōs of grace p. 46 In his promises Ib. Consider to what maner of sinners God hath dispensed out his grace Ib. 2 Things to be gathered from the Holy-Ghosts various expression of the worke of humiliation in the Saints p. 47 3 Notes concerning the promises p. 48 49 1. The promises require no more of us then they engage God for to us 2. No promises are made to the measure of humiliation but to the thing p. 49 3. Gods originall promises of first Grace and humiliation are absolute not conditionall p. 49 2. Direction By the nature of humiliation p. 50 The Nature of humiliation may be considered in its 1. Originall Ib. 2. Manner of working Ib. 3. End Ib. 3. Direct Labour after more humiliation p. 51. Want of humiliation is the cause of so many hypocrites p. 51 Meanes to get our hearts more humbled p. 52 3. Meanes given by
Master Shepheard Ib. Severall directions given by Doctor Preston in this case Ib. 3. Directions given in this case p. 53 1. Consider the nature of thy sinne in 6 particulars Ib. 2. Consider the mercy of God in 3 particulars Ib. 3. Fly to God by Prayer p. 53 54 SERM. III. CHAP. III. HOw to satisfie such Christians as thinke they ought not to beleeve because they doe not know they are elected The Complaint of the troubled soule p. 56 Something spoken to it by way of promise p. 57 The truth concerning Election premised in 5 Conclusions Papists and Arminians wound truth to heale conscience by lying charmes Ib. 8. Considerations propounded for soules thus troubled p. 58 59 c. 1. Consid Faith is not an apprehension of particular Election but an application of generall promises p. 59 60 61 62 2. Consid That thy faith only can discover to thee thy Election p. 62 The Covenant is only shewed by God to his Saints p. 62 63 3. Consider the phrase of Scripture expounding how our Election may be made knowne to us p. 63 4. Thou hast no ground to conclude against thy Election but thy unbeliefe p. 64 65 5. Cons Those that God elects to the end he elects to the means p. 65 66 We must have a sense of faith before we can have a sense of our Election p. 66 6. By this stumbling as we perplexe our selves so we call Gods wisdome in question a wayes and slander the charters of free grace p. 67 7. If we will beleeve Gods decrees cannot hinder us of heaven p. 68 8. Heaven and glory are worth an adventure whether we be elected or no. p. 68 69 S●RM IV. CHAP. IV. HOw to comfort poore soules that dare not beleeve because of their unworthinesse in respect of their many and great sins 7. Considerations to comfort the soule under this affliction p. 72 73 c. 1. Gods grace is full enough of heighth and length and depth and breadth Christ cannot be brought to pant for breath of free grace p. 72 73 74 75 2. Consid There 's no defect of will in God to save the highest or greatest sinners p. 76 77 78 79 There is not only power but eagernesse in Christs will to save the greatest sinners p. 77 75 Christs eagernesse to save sinners proved by 12 particulars p. 77 78 79 1. He speaks 2. He sweares 3. He pleads 4. He expostulates with us upon denyals 5. He appeales 6. He wishes 7. He professeth he knowes not how to destroy them 8. He weeps 9. He invites 10. He comes from heaven to earth on this errand 11. He dyes for great sinners 12. He sends messengers to treat and parly with great sinners p. 77 78 79 3. Consid God hath pardoned and Christ hath washed as great sinners as thou art that were so either actually or habitually p. 80 4. Consid Infinite mercy never did its utmost yet God can pardon greater sinners then he hath pardoned p. 81 82 5. Consid There is as much reason on thy part why Christ should pardon thee as there was in any of the Saints why he pardoned them p. 83 6. Consid God never married any for a portion nor refused any for want of one p. 84 7. Consid Christ shall attaine his designe in pardoning sinners more fully by how much the greater sinner thou art p. 84 85 Christ gets most glory by pardoning great sinners p. 85 1. He glorifies his power and patience and riches of mercy p. 84 2. He gets glory from them They will love much p. 85 3. Others by their example will be perswaded to turne Ib. The whole case concluded with a story out of Eusebius p. 86 87 SERM. V. CHAP. V. HOw to satisfie a soule doubting that it hath sinned the sinne against the Holy-Ghost The complaint stated 89. Something spoken to it by way of premise 90. 1. There is such a sin 90. Why it is called the sinne against the Holy-Ghost 90. 2. It is unpardonable 91. 3. Elect ones cannot commit it p. 91 This scruple proceeds from ignorance p. 91 92 12. Considerations tending to comfort the soule under this wound and to informe us concerning the nature of this sinne p. 92 93 94 95 c. 1 Consid None could ever tell what this sinne was p. 9● Various opinions of it 92. The Schoolmen and Papists opinion of it 92 Their 6 species of it disproved p. 92 93 How bsasphemy against the Holy-Ghost may be taken p. 93 How far we may discover what this sinne is p. 94 2. Consid None can be guilty of it but such as have had a great measure of knowledge p. 94 95 3. Consid It must be a setled sinne of our owne continued in without repentance not a transient suggested thought for which we grieve p. 96 97 4. Consid Every sin against knowledge is not this sin p. 97 What manner of sinning against knowledge it must be Ib. 5. Consid A bare deniall of the truth of God with which we are enlightened and the grace of God infused into us is not this unpardonable sin p. 98 What manner of deniall of truth is an ingredient into this sin Ib. 6. Consid Every envy at and hatred of our brethren and their goodnesse is not this sin p. 99 What manner of envy and hatred is an ingredient into this sin p. 100 7. Consid It must be joyned with a totall falling away from the truth Religion and profession of Jesus Christ Ib. 8. Consid Others would complaine of it as well as thy self if thou hadst sinned this sin p. 101 9 Consid Thy complaining and grieving for it is a signe thou art not guilty of it Ib. 10. Consid The sin against the Holy-Ghost is not unpardonable in respect of Gods mercy or its greatnesse p. 102 How and why it is said to be unpardonable Ib. 11. Consid It cannot be a block for thee in the way of beleevingly because though it doth take away from thee the power yet it doth not excuse thee from the duty of believing 103 12. Thou canst not conclude thy selfe to have sinn'd this sin if thou hast sinn'd it before thy dying houre Ib. The conclusion of the Case With a generall description of the sinne against the Holy-Ghost p. 104 105 SERM. VI. CHAP. VI. HOw to satisfie such poore soules as are conceited they doe not believe when they indeed doe 2 Causes of such Complaints 1. A mistake in the nature and Acts of faith p. 108 2. A misjudging of the effects of faith Ib. 2 Things propounded in order to satisfaction to such scruples as arise from the first cause Ib. 1 Thing viz. That there are many acts and degrees of faith and every act is not required to justifying faith Ib. 2 Thing That true faith is of so good a nature that it will consist in a soule with many doubts and weaknesses Ib. Various opinions concerning the justifying act of faith Knowledge is supposed to faith no
the Christians Faith Now all of Faith is First either the Doctrine of Faith Or secondly the practice of Faith The Devil hath mustered his forces against both first against the Doctrine of Faith It is a note of Chemnitius as learned an observer of hereticks and heresies as any that there have been more dangerous heresies about the Doctrine of Faith then any one Doctrine in Christian Religion He knows dirt in the fountain will pollute the streams Secondly Nor hath he lesse but indeed far more malice against the practice of Faith he understands well enough that it is not knowing and having but acting Faith that doth the Christian good This makes him do what he can to perswade the soul to rest in a false faith and hinder the soul from beginning to act a true Faith or darken the souls sence of Faith or if all will not do yet he will turn every stone to hinder the growth and increase of Faith that every Christian had need with the Apostles here pray Lord increase our Faith The occasion of these words is an hard lesson that christ had been teaching his Disciples ver 3. 4. concerning forgiving injuries they must forgive four times in a day upon this the Apostles say unto the Lord increase our Faith The words are a prayer in which you may observe 1. The Supplicants the Apostles 2. The Supplicated the Lord. 3. The Supplication increase our Faith We may consider the prayer either in it self absolutely or with the former words relatively Relatively and so we may learn this Doctrine First That hard duti●s and strength to them must be done and got by prayer from God 2. Mark what they pray for as the means to convey strength into their souls to this duty That is Faith note Secondly That Faith in the soul is that which quickens and instrumentally strengtheneth the soul to difficult duties of obedience and especially to this duty of forgiving injuries Thirdly If we consider the words in themselves absolutely as a prayer we may not these things 1. That even the Apostles had need pray they are not got beyond prayer the best of Christians are under the duty of prayer 2. They say to the Lord All our prayer ought to be directed to God 3. The prayer it self is Lord increase our Faith for an increase of Faith in it we have something suggested and implied and that is That they were sensible their faith was weak The best of Christians are and ought to be sensible as of their imperfection in all graces so especially of the gra●e of Faith 2. We have something here exprest they pray for an increase of Faith First they pray to God to the Lord It is God onely that can increase Christians Faith they pray for it The way for us to have our Faith increased from God is to pray to him Lastly the Apostles pray Lord increase our Faith It is the duty not onely of the weakest but even of the strongest Christians as to be sensible of weaknesse so to labour and pray for the increase of their Faith I intend not to handle all these in their order but to pick out one of them be build a large discourse upon I shall pitch upon the eighth The Apostles praying for their increase of Faith argued their sence of the weaknesse and imperfection of their Faith The Doctrine is this Doctr. That as the best of Christians have weaknesse and imperfection in their Faith and it is their nature to be sensible of it yea and their duty 〈◊〉 so it is also their duty to labour and strive against it This I might make good from Scripture from severall places in the severall Branches 1. They may have weaknesse and imperfection in their Faith Mat. 6. 30. ca. 8. 26. ca. 14. 31. in all which places Jesus Christ checks even those which were his Disciples for their little Faith and yet in checking them for little Faith he acknowledgeth they had some Faith So 2. For the second Branch it were easie to prove that the childe of God will be sensible of the weaknesse of its grace especially this grace of Faith take but one instance of it Mar. 9. 24. Lord I beleeve help my unbelief and so 1 Cor. 13. 9. 12. And for the third Branch that they will labour and strive against it he prayed Lord help my unbelief Mar. 9. 24. The Apostles pray Lord increase our Faith to which we may adde that known place Phil. 3. 13. I count not myself that I have attained to it but one thing I do I forget that which is behinde and indeavour my self to that which is before c. Besides the experience of the children of God is abundant proof for every particular I might also give many reasons First why the Faith of Gods children is weak As First Because the state of mortallity is imperfect 1 Cor. 13. 9 10 11 12. Secondly Because of the inconstant condition of a gracious heart h●●e It is not alwayes high water or full moon in a gracious heart the sun will be in the eclipse sometime and the moon in the wane Now we ordinarily beleeve by sight it is an hard thing to make Faith out-run the eye Ye have seen faith Christ therefore you beleeve Joh. 20. Thirdly Another cause may be the multitude of our renewing corruptions The bowl of Faith runs nimbly if the ground of the soul be even but so long as the ground that it runs on is rugged we must expect Faith should meet with rubs and be a short cast sometimes and sometimes more home Doubts and fears are rubs in the way of Faith and all Christians know that they are the creatures of mortallity and the attendants of corruption There is a great deal of reason you see why the Apostles Faith should be weak In many things we sin all and the more we sin the lesse we beleeve There is much reason too may be given why the weak if true beleever should be sensible of his weaknesse As First If we consider that it is his work to be constantly laying his heart to his eye The workman by laying the timber to his eye often sees how far it differs from the square the Christian by laying his heart to his eye sees the crookednesse of it and how much it wants and the irregularity in the best Christian in not so little but the examining eye will discover it easily Secondly If we consider that as the beleever lays his heart to his eye often so he lays the square to his heart alwayes The Carpenters eye may deceive him if he thinks it doth he lays the square to it and that mends the errour of his eye The square of a Christian is Gods Word the Christian lays it to his heart considering how much faith that requires and discovering how much disagreement there is between his heart and that Psal 119. 105. Thy word is a light to my feet and a lanthern to my paths Psal
19. 11. By the judgement of the Lord David was made circumspect And Thirdly if we consider that the Christian is not self-opinionated He cares not for false glasses and is more apt to behold his graces in a diminishing then a multiplying glasse the sincere Christian concerning himself is as ready to miscall a mountain a mole-hill as the hypocrite is to misjudge every mole-hill a mountain almost as ready to miscall his good evill as the other to nickname his evill good And for the third Branch of the Doctrine That as it is the duty of Christians to be sensible and groan under the defect of Faith so it is their duty and they will not stand still but strive and pray for an increase of it Much reason might be given for that too As First From the nature of the spirit of God that worketh and dwelleth in them Faith is the spirits work 1 Cor. 12. 9. Flesh and blood never revealed it Now the spirit is a quickning spirit 1 Pet. 3. 18. It is life Rom. 8. 10. Now where there is a principle of life there will be growth It is a working spirit that phrase we have often The spirit which worketh in you c. Now the spirits work is not to undo what it hath done but to work further and more Secondly If we consider The end of the Christian in the acting of all his graces Phil. 3. 13. The Apostle expresseth it fully Perfection is his butt he knows he must draw his bow with all his strength and his arrow to the head if he means to reach the butt and he shall not hit it neither The Christians voice is Heb. 6. 1. Let us go unto perfection It is the hypocrite sets himself bounds in Religion and sayes hither will I go and no further And to adde no more Thirdly The Christian knows that the more he hath of Faith the more he hath of Christ he knows that there is a depth of sweetnesse in Christ that can never be ●adomed something more to be understood when he understands as much as he can of him when the soul hath as much as its narrow hand can grasp of him whole Christ is too big to be enclosed in mortall arms Now the soul knows that Faith is the hand must squeeze that essence of sweetnesse the arm that must claspe him and he knows that the longer his arm of Faith is the more he shall graspe of him though he shall never be able to comprehend immeasurable Christ Eph. 3. 16 17 18. This makes him alwayes complain of his dwarfishnesse that his hand of Faith is not big enough and his arm of Faith is not long enough he cannot get in so much of Christ into his soul as he would do this makes him pray for an increase of Faith and so often complain of the shortnesse of his arm he cannot beleeve as he would This makes him say with our Apostle here Lord increase my Faith I come now to the application and here is matter of Consolation and Exhortation For all Christians 1. Cons especially those that are most sensible of the weaknesse of their Faith There have been and are more dwarfs besides thee Christian Perfection is a white was never hit the best archers come an handfull short It is indeed the mark at which every one ought to levell his arrows but all the souls of Christians like the arrows of Ionathan have flown some over into glory some short some on this hand some on that none hath hit the mark Be of good comfort Christian weak Faith is Faith little ones are true children of the Father that casts none away that comes though creeping to him Heaven hath room for babes as well as men A childe may pull the latch of heavens door and go in and be welcome to the knee of the King of Glory to the bosome of him Isai 40. 11. Who feeds his flock like a shepheard and carries the lambs in his bosome Jesus Christ hath his arms full of tender sucking lambs or at least that were so upon the earth The youngest Christian if he be an heir is of age to take up his land in heaven nonage is no bar The Garden of God hath more slips then old stocks in it now indeed they are become stocks but here they were but tender slips while Christ took them up out of the land of grace and transplanted them But Secondly E●hor Is it so that the best of Christians have but a weak Faith in comparison of that perfection we ought to aspire to and that it is the duty of Christians to be sensible of it and pray and strive against it Let us all then look upon it as our duty Let us pray Lord increase our Faith Let us strive after that we shall never attain to even perfection Heb. 6. 1. Now here many directions might be given The first I will give shall be to remove those things which hinder the growth of it as scruples cavillings c. From hence shall I take my rise for a subject which with the blessing of God I do intend for some time to insist upon to satisfie the souls of some poor Christians in those scruples which may perplex them touching this grace of Faith The removing of which will not a little conduce to the increasing of this grace in their souls I will begin with the first And here though I spend many Sermons I trust I shall not be tedious having intended to make it my work in these Lectures to satisfie doubting Christians in cases of conscience and to begin with those which concern this radical grace at which the Devill bends so much of his force and malice Therefore wouldest thou grow in Faith Direct 1. remove those scruples which hinder the beginning and progresse of Faith in thy soul There are two notes of a weak Faith in a gracious soul 1. A sence of no Faith 2. A fear of a false Faith First A sence of no Faith Many a soul doth beleeve that perswades it self it neither doth nor ought to beleeve you shall often meet with Christians and especially in the beginning of their conversion that will cry out O they cannot beleeve nay what have they to do to beleeve Faith were but a presumption in their soul if they could hatch it up Or if not so Secondly Yet you cannot make them think that they do beleeve no Faith and they are strangers c. Now as it is in the diseases of the body the cure is scarce wrought untill the cause be first discovered and removed so it is likewise in the troubles and disquietments of the soul we shall scarce be able to remove them out of the souls way unlesse we first finde how they came there and if we can but truely understand the cause we shall easily remove the effect In generall we must know these complaints are to be understood concerning the Acts of Faith I dare not or cannot or do
not beleeve that is apprehend and apply and rest upon Christ as my Saviour We speak not of Faith as it is an infused habit and the gift of God to us but as it is an inherent grace and operative in us Now then we will 1. Enquire what the causes of such complaints in gratious souls may be 2. We will consider how to satisfie the soul in such troubles and scruples For the first complaint I cannot I dare not rest upon Christ and beleeve in him There are many causes of it which I shall speak to One ordinary cause of it is Scrap 1. The souls to much eying of preparatory qualifications I do not say the souls eyeing but the souls too much eying of them Hence it is that if you ask a poor soul under that trouble what 's the reason thou darest not rest thy self upon Christ Faith is a pretious flower that grows as well in the poorest beggars as the greatest Princes garden The meanest arm may as boldly lean on Christs shoulder as that which is gayed with gold-lace Alas saith such a poor soul Gods justice proceeds according to method First he useth to pull down and then to exalt First to lay the soul low licking the dust then to say to it I am thy salvation Alas I was never enough humbled I never saw hell yet would God rend my heart in pieces I could beleeve he would bind it up would he humble me c. Now in order to the satisfaction of a soul under this trouble it would be first enquired 1. Whether humiliation goeth before Faith or no. 2. If it doth what may comfort a soul under this affliction of spirit and what it ought to do in relation to its peace For the first it is a question variously tossed and determined understood and concluded in these times in which God hath cast our lot some utterly denying any such work some too eagerly contending for measure some limitting Gods dealings others misinterpreting if not wilfully mistaking the terms It will not therefore I trust be a lost labour first to enquire the truth of that question which is ordinarily thus termed Quest Whether Faith goeth before Repentance or Repentance before Faith Now for the fuller determination of it I shall first explane the terms Then conclude the truth and prove it by Scripture and Reason And lastly answer those Objections ordinarily made against it First I will spend a little time to open the terms which when rightly explaned I am confident will put the question out of question to those Christians that have any experience of the Lords dealings for the ambiguity of every term hath onely darkned the clearnesse of this truth First let us understand what is meant by Faith both in the kinde and in the act There are divers kinds and divers acts of Faith There is an historicall Faith which consists onely in the knowledge and assent to the truth of an History There is a Faith of miracles There is a temporary Faith and there is a true justifying Faith The question is onely to be understood of the latter which hath also severall Acts. First 〈◊〉 Secondly Relyance Thirdly Perswasion The question is to be understood of the second Act Whether God gives the soul power comfortably and truely to relye upon Christ and the promises for salvation before he hath wrought repentance in the soul Secondly the term Repentance is subject to ambiguity too Repentance is sometimes taken largely for the whole work of conversion and so Godly sorrow is an effect of it sometimes strictly and when we speak of Repentance in the question we onely understand the first parts of it consisting in conviction contrition and humiliation by which the soul is carried out into a loathing of it self both for its sins and in its righteousness And the question is Whether God doth not work in a soul a sorrow of heart and loathing of it self for sin before the soul hath power to rest upon Christ for salvation and relye upon him as its Saviour Lastly we must safely understand what is also meant by going before First we do not understand by going before a precedency in Gods hidden operation he at once infuseth the habits of grace into the soul But secondly by going before we understand a going before in a gratious Act and in a comfortable apprehension Neither farther is the question to be understood as if we thought Humiliation went before Faith as a work wrought by our own strength We acknowledge Humiliation to be a work of Gods speciall grace in the soul And the question is plainly thus Whether God ordinarily gives a poor soul power to act Faith by relying upon Christ and the promises of life and salvation before in some measure he hath brought the soul to be sensible of its lost and undone condition We say he doth not We will grant to our Brethren that are unsatisfied concerning this truth First That a man must beleeve before he can mourn But how not by any saving act of justifying Faith He must beleeve there is a sin-pardoning Saviour that hath fulnesse and freenesse of mercy and enough in his fulnesse for him and that though he hath sinned yet there is hope in Israel concerning this thing Then he puts his mouth in the dust if so be there may be hope Secondly we will easily grant that a man must have saving and justifying Faith before the work of repentance and humiliation will be perfect in his soul As we maintain it to be a precedent work so we denye it not to be a subsequent effect Thirdly we will grant that it is not a work to be done by our own strength it is Gods work onely our dispute is concerning Gods usuall order in working The same spirit that works a power in the soul of dependence upon Christ takes also away the heart of stone and gives an heart of flesh Fourthly we will grant that the habits of these graces are both together in the soul We onely question which God gives the soul power to act first Fiftly We dispute not concerning the measure but concerning the thing We do not question whether the soul must be thus far or thus much or thus long humbled before God will give it power to act Faith by a comfortable reliance on Christ We onely say it must be humbled Sixtly We do not limit the workings of God and say it is so necessary on Gods part that he cannot give the soul power comfortably to apply Christ and the promises but we say it is not his usuall course and ordinary may of dispensing grace to do it Yet his dealings are various he works not alike to all he may and sometimes doth go out of his beaten road The question is not concerning a necessity on Gods part but onely concerning a necessity on our part not concerning his miraculous power but his gracious will nor concerning any extraordinary operation but concerning his ordinary way of dispensations
and fell down at their feet and said sirs what must I do to be saved Take the great convert Paul Act. 9. what astonishing sorrow was he swallowed up in he was even humbled to the grave before you read of his Faith Let every Christian examine his own experience whether ever he should have received or prized Christ if he had not first been strucken with the sence of his own misery Enough hath been said for it let us hear a little what can be said against it 1. Obj. No man will be humbled except he beleeve what shall make me run to God and mourn except I beleeve he will pardon Answ We do not dispute of any Faith but a justifying Faith To beleeve and be perswaded I may be pardoned is not a distinguishing act of a justifying Faith this was granted before t is one thing to beleeve I may be pardoned so may an hypocrite T is another thing to beleeve I am pardoned or to relye on Christ for pardon this is proper to a justified person nor can he beleeve he is pardoned till he is humbled 2. Obj. Repentance is the effect of Faith now the cause must alwayes go before the effect Answ We distinguished before of Repentance Repentance hath two parts The aversion of the soul from sin and the conversion of the soul to God the latter part of it is onely an effect of Faith the former part of it the turning of the soul from sin is also an effect but not onely an effect it is begun before Faith though it be not ended till our life be at an end Secondly The turning of the soul from sin and the imbittring sin to the soul is an effect of Faith or rather a consequent of Faith viz. a generall common Faith in the beginning but not alwayes a consequent of saving justifying Faith 3. Obj. Christ must work this humiliation or it is good for nothing now if Christ be in the soul working humiliation then there is Faith Therefore Faith must go before humiliation Ans First Though Christ work this humiliation in the soul yet it doth not follow that Christ is in the soul for it may be a work of common grace and Christ is not in every soul upon which his common grace works But secondly to answer more fully I am of the minde of Master Shepheard and Master Hooker that although there be an humiliation which is indeed the work of common grace which an hypocrite may have yet there is an humiliation which is the work of special grace and that this likewise precedes the exercise of Faith And although it is true that Christ cannot be in the soul but in the same instant the soul is in Christ for Faith is the marriage grace yet it doth not follow that the soul is inabled by an act of Faith to apply Christ to it self assoon as Christ is in the soul and the habit of Faith is infused into the soul and therefore the question is stated not concerning the habit of Faith but concerning the act of Faith viz. Whether God gives the soul power to receive relye upon and apply Christ or receive any comfortable apprehensions of Christ and the soul in respect of us who can onely judge of the habit by the act cannot be said to have Faith before it hath acted humiliation or repentance The question is not which the soul must have first in respect of Gods gift but which it acts first for our apprehension 4. Obj. The preaching of this puts souls upon di●pair and hinders Faith they do not beleeve because they cannot finde that they are so humbled as God requires Ans 1. The sun must not be hid because it hurts fore eyes What is the truth of God must not be concealed because wicked men and seducers grow worse and worse Secondly No ●oul that is elected can dispaire if God hath given them to Christ the Devil shall never pluck them out of his hand the word must be preached though to some it must prove the savour of death unto death To the Gentiles foolishnesse Thirdly We do not say they must repent to such and such a degree mourn so many tears we dispute not how much sorrow there must be but maintain there must be some Fourthly True sorrow ought not to hinder Faith for the end of it is onely to bring the soul to be willing to exercise the grace of Faith by comming to Christ resting and relying upon him for salvation c. 5. Obj. But God works not his acts of speciall grace after the manner of men he works them together therefore faith and repentance are together wrought Ans We dispute not how God works them but how the soul acts them not which is in the soul first but which appears out of the soul first Iacob and Esau may be twins and in their mothers womb together but shall it therefore follow that they shall come out together may not Esau put out his hand before Iacob and be seen first by the mother and world too 6. Obj. But this is to take away free grace to say God will not save a poor creature before it be thus and thus humbled Ans 1. It is not to take away the freenesse of grace but to teach men to take heed that they do not turn the grace of God into wantonnesse it does not destroy free grace to enjoin qualifications and conditions of Gods own making Secondly You may as well say it destroyes free grace to say none shall be saved but those that beleeve which is the expresse language of Scripture He that beleeveth not is damned already Thirdly Free grace is established hereby For 1. Is it not free grace to give a soul Christ if it will but mourn and be humbled and beleeve is it not a free gift to give a kingdom unto me upon condition I will throw away a knife with which I was about to cut my own throat 2. We do not say that this humiliation and precedent sorrow doth deserve any such free grace for the performance of the action therefore the grace is still free 3. We say that free grace works this humilation a man can as well break a rock as break his own heart without the work of this powerfull spirit and the spirits operations are free even like the winde that blows where it listeth Ioh. 3. 8. We exalt free grace and make it yet more free onely we would not have men turn the grace of God into wantonnesse to their own confusion and therefore their vain objection that this brings us again under the covenant of works do this and ye shall live falls in pieces of it self for we neither hold that it is in the power of any creature to do this to break his heart and mourn for sin nor yet that any shall merit any salvation by doing of it we abhor that doctrine of merits that God justifies either for any works of grace acted of our own or for the
Lord increase our Faith I Am discovering to you upon what grounds many Christians think they have no warrant to beleeve and rest upon Jesus Christ and labouring to satisfie such poor Christians in such cases and under such perplexities of spirit I have shewed you already two usuall causes First A too irregular eying of preparatory qualifications thinking that they are not humbled enough Or secondly A too unwarrantable prying into Gods secrets conceiving they are not elected and upon this score utterly refusing to obey that great Gospel command Beleeve to both these I have spoke something already to the latter the last day I am intended by the blessing of God and as he shall inable me to speak something this day to a third cause commonly alledged by Christians why they conceive they ought not to beleeve viz. Because of their own unworthinesse in respect of the greatnesse and multitude of their sins that have stained and possibly do yet pollute their soul Alas saith a poor soul would you have me lay hold on Iesus Christ what with my filthy hands what can such a rotten sinner that hath been so auncient in sin can I think you have warrant whe● I have given the Devill my youth to beleeve Iesus Christ will take the fag end of my life No no call to the young person to beleeve that is not yet withered and rotten with sin call to those that have lived honestly and civilly not to such profane wretches as I have been Now to answer this cavill Let me bend my discourse at this time and propound certain considerations which duly weighed may comfort a soul under this trouble and put it upon its work and duty of beleeving and convince it that it is its duty Cap. 4. How to satisfie a poor soul doubting whether it may beleeve or no because of its many and great sins past or its continuing corruptions and so deemeth it self unworthy FIrst of all consider Gods grace is enough for thee This scruple of thy spirit ariseth from scant streightned thoughts of rich incomprehensible grace Be convinced therefore that there is a fulnesse enough in the ocean of infinite grace to swallow up thy soul however loaded with a burthen of sin observe but how the Scripture setteth out infinite love take one place for all Eph. 3. 17 18 19. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by Faith that you being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the bredth and length and depth and heigth and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge that you might be filled with the fulnesse of God Mark how the Apostle expresseth free grace by all dimensions are thy sins in the heighth there is an heighth of love are they in the depth there is a depth of love are they long broad are they all yet there is mercy enough in this Christ for such is his love that it passeth knowledge are they a mountain why who art thou O great mountain before Zerubbabell thou shalt be made a plain do thy sins cry up to heaven his mercies are above the heavens are thy sins more in number then the haires of thy head his mercies are more in number then the sand which lieth on the sea shore Now this is easie to be conceived if we do but conceive and know that the mercies of God are infinite God is an infinite God and every mercy of his is as inconceivable as himself is His love passeth all understanding saith the Apostle have no low thoughts Christian of the heighth of free grace which reacheth up to the heavens yea and above the heavens Is the filthy garments of thy wickednesse of a larger extent thinkest thou then the long white robe of his righteousnesse Who was made for thee righteousnesse wisdom sanctification and redemption Is the fountain set open for Iudah and Ierusalem for sin and for uncleannes so shallow that thou canst not bath in it Mistake not Christian it is a bath of capacity to hold all filthy souls be their uncleannesse what it will if they will but come and wash and be clean those that have the rottenest wounds the fil●hiest sores the most unsound ●arkasses may fetch balm from Gilead enough to heal their wounds When Christ was upon the earth the Evangelist tells us Matth. 4. 24. They brought unto him all sick people that were sick of divers diseases and torments and those which were possessed with devils and he healed them When vertue went out from Christ to heal the poor woman 〈◊〉 ●ouched the hemme of his garment it went 〈◊〉 ●im as light goeth out of the sun that there is 〈◊〉 for what goeth out Christ never had any vertue went out of him so as by such emission he lost any How many Saints think you since old Abrah●m who was the father of the faithfull to this day have touched the hemme of his garment vertue went out and healed every one and yet his garments are all oily with mercy and grace still How many drops of blood have thirsty Saints had from Davids time to this hour and yet the fountain of cleansing blood hath not a drop lesse in it Grace in Christ is like the heat of the fire or light of the sun take how much you will of either you shall not rob either narrow not the breadth of incomprehensible love when thou hast measured for beleevers ten thousand yards there shall not be a nail lesse on the piece of free-grace The sea though a thing infinite will hardly be measured out by quills much lesse shall the unfadomable ocean of infinite love be measured by drops for the washing poor souls from the stains and filth of their sins The boy could tell the father he would have done emptying the sea into an hole with a spoon before he should have opened the Doctrine of the Trinity And sooner shalt thou get all the light out of the body of the sun and hear out of the fire then put Jesus Christ to pant for his breath of free-grace Oh that sinners had but as willing leggs as he hath capacious arms we see hands are washed every day and have been these thousands of years now how long can we think it would yet be should we get the dirtiest hands we could make before all the seas rivers fountains and streams in the world would be exhausted yea though they should wash seven times a day infinitely sooner Christian then the fountain of free-grace shall be exhausted with all the buckets that come to draw the water of life from it Seest thou a steeple as Pauls in London or the like of a very great heighth seest thou the highest mountain that seems to have married the clouds and sit in their lap Suppose now that mountain or steeple in the deepest place of the ocean how much wouldst thou see on it nay were another on the top of that there would not be a spier of grasse nor a
this sin how wilt thou know it is finall before thou diest canst thou not yet repent and beleeve strive then Christian God may give thee power and call thee in at the eleventh hour V. Aust T. 10 Ep. 11. de Verbis Domini p. 46. copiose just at thy dying hour as the theef upon the crosse which if he does thou hast unjustly and cruelly condemned thy self and belyed thy own soul To ●umme up therefore all in a word You hear Christians beleeving yet remains your great duty It stands firm beleeve and you shall be saved You have seen one block more thrown out of your way I have shewed you this temptation or suggestion cannot hinder where by the way you have accidentally heard something of the nature of this unpardonable which being well understood by Christians will be enough to satisfie Christians against this doubt And from all that hath been said concerning this You may gather this discription of the sin against the Holy-ghost which is consonant to the sense of most sober and Orthodox Divines concerning it and conteins the marrow of what most of our Divines have said concerning it Take it thus It is for a man that hath been first enlightened by the Holy-ghost A Discription of the sin against the Holy-ghost With secondly Fundamentall Gospel truths Thirdly 1. A subjecto Distinctly Against first knowledge And secondly Deliberation Thirdly Directly Fourthly From the degree Freely and wilfully Fifthly Openly Sixthly A causa procreante Maliciously Seventhly Desperately Without any provocation but the corrupt wickednesse of his own heart drawn out occasionally upon the making known of some Divine Evangelicall fundamentall truths or propagating of them he himself being convinced that they are the truths of God In his heart to envy the credit of the truth amongst others and out of his malice to God From the acts of it whose the truth is and to the truth because it is true to blaspheme and revile the truth of God and oppose it in others malitiously and to blaspheme those gifts of the Holy-ghost From the object of it and that truth which he had formerly been convinced of and received From the end of it and to set himself in such malicious opposition against it as to desire and do what in him lies to spoil the credit From the consequents of it and extinguish the light of the truth and destroy the friends of it because they are so and in this wickednesse to go on making a generall defection from God and the wayes of God and maliciously persisting in such opposition without any repentance and finally perishing in it despairing of Gods mercy if at any time he should have any kinde of remorse This I conceive is a full description of it which if such Christians as ordinarily complain of this burthen would learn they would quickly finde their complaint groundlesse If any yet remain unsatisfied in I shall refer them to a little but full Book concerning this subject called A Discourse of the sin against the Holy-ghost composed by Master Bradshaw in which they shall finde as much as can be said upon this subject Here I shall break off And now I have done with answering the Scruples of those that think they ought not and pretend they dare not beleeve Either 1. Conceiting they are not enough humbled Or 2. Because they do not know they are elected Or 3. Because they conceive themselves unworthy Or 4. Upon a conceit they have sinned the unpardonable sin against the Holy ghost I should now come to a second note of a weak Faith which is a fear of a false Faith which is ordinarily a note of a true Faith O they are confident they do not beleeve so many are their doubtings so little is their perswasion and assurance so weak the actings of their graces are but of this hereafter SERM. VI. LUKE 17. 5. Lord increase our Faith I Am still upon the work of removing such obstructions as hinder the work of Faith in the soul I have done with those of the first sort viz. such as are praevious that make the soul stumble at the threshold while it conceives it may not and pretends it dare not beleeve I am now come to a second sort that are gone a step further then these they will tell you that they are convinced beleeving is their duty and their great duty and the duty for the omission of which they fear they shall perish But they cannot they do not beleeve they may cheat themselves with a presumption but they want such a certainty of perswasion and such a fulnesse of assurance as is requisite to true Faith they are full of ignorance and weaknesses c. Cap. 6. How to satisfie those that are conceited against the work of Faith in their souls viz. against the truth of it NOw for satisfaction to such Christians let us search out the cause of such complaints I conceive there may be a double cause 1. A mistake in the nature and acts of Faith 2. A misjudging of the effects of Faith First The complaints of such a soul which yet all this time truely beleeves may arise from a mistake concerning the nature and acts of Faith and therefore the way to satisfie it will be rightly to inform it concerning them and to this end I shall but propound to such a soul to consider these two things 1. That there are many acts and more degrees then one of true saving Faith 2. That true Faith is of so good a nature that it will and may dwell with many doubtings and weaknesses in a poor soul These two things cleared I trust many souls will be satisfied for commonly the mistake is grounded upon ignorance conceiving there is no Faith but Faith of assurance and that Faith comes to be no Faith if but a dram of doubting be mingled with it c. Consider therefore I say First That true Faith hath severall acts and severall degrees A fulnesse of perswasion is not the least act or degree of Faith no not of true justifying Faith There are notes under that Ela. There is great quarrelling concerning the nature and essence of true justifying Faith some will have it to be a bare knowledge Thus saith the Apostle The devils beleeve and tremble Some will afford us a little more and tell us that Faith consists in an assent but beyond this they will not stride some in too full opposition to these denying any certainty of perswasion and assurance to be have described Faith by an assurance and full perswasion which is the highest and not the direct but the reflex act of Faith when indeed the very essence of justifying Faith lieth betwixt these in an act of adherence to and reliance upon Jesus Christ To Faith we grant a knowledge is required of Gods word But this we say is rather supposed to Faith then an act of true justifying Faith First The lowest act of Faith
to salvation The going out of the soul unto Christ and the whole application of it self to the promises of salvation made in and by him and whosoever doth this sincerely and with a faithfull heart is passed from death to life and shall never perish neither in this life nor in the life to come it puts its trust in him that never fails them that do so There is indeed a third Act of Faith Which is an act of assurance and full perswasion commonly called by Divines The reflex act of Faith Now this Act of Faith Is when the soul is fully and throughly perswaded that Iesus Christ hath actually pardoned all its sins and that it is his and he is hers This is not that Act of Faith concerning which the Apostle speaks Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by Faith we have peace with God It is rather a consequent of justifying Faith that peace which floweth to the soul as a fruit and a sweet effect of justification and that this is not that Act of Faith which justifieth is plain Because the soul must be justified before it can put forth it self in this Act. This is a comfortable but not a necessary Act of Faith and is more properly called fides justificati then fides justificans the Faith of a justified person then justifying Faith It is good and speciall justifying Faith for the soul heartily and sincerely to desire and thirst and hunger after the pardon and forgivenesse of its sins through the free grace of Iesus Christ and confidently to rest upon the promises of free remission and pardon But it is another pitch of Faith and of an higher nature to be confidently assured that all my sins are really and fully pardoned It is one thing to beleeve that my sins how many and how great soever shall be taken away and that God will smile upon me and we shall not finally perish And another thing to be fully assured that now God is well pleased with us and all our sins are blotted out Yea it is one thing to be perswaded that our names are in the white book of election and our sins decretally pardoned which was from eternity and meritoriously pardoned which was if ever in Christs death And another thing to beleeve that God hath acquitted us actually from the obligation to death that is in them God so pardons in time and in the Act of justification It is truth we ought to strive after a Faith of assurance but we are not necessarily obliged to an assurance upon our justification Faith precedes actuall and formall justification in our consciences it is the instrument to apprehend it Now the Gospel doth not when it calls to me to beleeve oblige me to a lye If before I am justified I should be tied to beleeve I am actually justified the Gospel would oblige me to that in order to my justification which I cannot upon warrantable grounds beleeve till after my justification So that we cannot conclude that we have not true justifying Faith that we do not beleeve because we cannot be confident God hath actually and formally in the court of our consciences acquitted us from the guilt of our sins for the essence of justifying Faith doth not consist in that And yet we may not altogether shut out confidence and perswasion out of the justifying Act of Faith give me therefore leave to adde a word or two concerning it The Seventh SERMON LUKE 17. v. 5. Lord increase our faith YOu may remember that I have told you that in order to the increasing of faith we must labour to remove those blocks and scruples which hinder the progresse of faith in the Soule And to this end I have spent severall houres in satisfying poor souls in those scruples which often lye in faiths way in a gracious soule I have done with such as are previous to faith and make the soul think it dare not and ought not to beleeve The last day having set the soule so farre on of its way that it is convinced it ought to beleeve but complaines That it doth not it cannot beleeve I came to search out the cause of such complaints which I shewed was ordinarily either First a mistake of the nature and acts of faith or Secondly a misjudging it self from the effects of faith I began with the first and propounded to such Christians these two considerations First That faith hath divers acts and the highest was not necessary to a justifying faith Secondly That Faith is of so good a nature that it will consist with many doubtings and weaknesses and yet retaine its truth For the first of these I shewed you the last day what were the severall acts of true faith and what act was necessary to justification and what act was not necessary I shall repeat nothing of what I then said but go on CHAP. 7. How to satisfie such poor Christians as think they doe not truly beleeve because they have many doubtings and weaknesses ALas Complaint saith a poor Christian I am confident my faith is not true but false I am so full of doubtings and feares and every act which I should think an act of faith is so weak c. To this Complaint now I shall apply my second consideration viz. That true faith is of so good a nature that it will keeping its truth consist with much weaknesse in the severall acts and dwell in a soule where many doubts are This is my Thesis Now concerning this divers have treated so largly that I shall be very brief and rather repeat what they say following them then lead you a worse way of my own Sedgwicks doubting Christian I finde Mr. Sedgwick who hath made it his work in his Book called The doubting Christian to handle this very point and hath done it fully laying down foure or five conclusions by way of premise for the right understanding of this point I shall name them to you First It is without question that all Doubtings are ●infull they are the smoakings of our corruptions they are begotten of sinne the depravation of our originall light with which God in innocencie enlightned Adam that is the cause and they hinder grace and hinder us in our duty c. Secondly They be no part of faith in that a man doth beleeve he doth not doubt Faith and Doubting may dwell under the same roofe but they marry not nor mingle any bloods together they are not at all of a family Faith is of the family of Heaven Doubtings are of the family of Hell they are inmates but have little acquaintance one with another none at all with one anothers natures they are two things though in one soule Thirdly They cannot consist at the same instant with the act of faith Ib. p. 16. for it is impossible that Faith should formally doubt the beleever while he beleeveth and in what he beleeveth doth not doubt I cannot at the same time lay my hand upon the Rock and
and notwithstanding all this truly and really rely and rest Now these kinds of misgivings may arise from severall causes God may please for his ends to keep the soule in darknesse to keep it humble and to keep it in a strict way of adherence c. But I shall rather meddle with the subordinate and instrumentall causes and assigne three or foure causes The first may be blindnesse and ignorance there may be yea is a great deale of darknesse in the soule there was a thick darknesse surprized Adams understanding when he fell and this still clouds all the children of Adam we are not able to discerne or judge of the nature of the internall acts of the minde we cannot come to a certaine knowledge of them as they are in themselves but as I said before must judge them by the effects the soule doth not understand what affiance is and this makes her question whether she doth rely or no and not think she doth being never ready to think well of her selfe A second cause may be the Devils temptations such winds will make strong houses shake sometimes It is Satans great designe to keep the soule from beleeving and if he cannot keep the edifice of Faith from being built in the soule yet he will keep it if possible from standing sure Luke 22. 31. Simon Simon saith Christ Satan hath desired to winnow thee like wheat the word signifies to shake up and downe as in a fan wheat is used the kernells scarce ever lie still Satan is almost alwayes shaking the Christian by the shoulders he desires to winnow them and as with Iob because he had no power over his life he executed his power to the utmost upon the comforts of his life So he deals with the soule because he hath no power over the life of Faith therefore he will execute his power to the utmost over the soul that it may never come to have the comfortable sense of Faith and no wonder if when he brings his rammes to batter the poor mud wall of a Christian shakes especially considering how smooth an Orator he is to perswade and how subtill a Sophister he is to prove Even as it is as easie with a good Logician to make a poor simple creature beleeve so as he cannot deny that the Sun doth not shine so it is an easie thing with the Devill to perswade the soule that it doth not rest and rely when indeed it doth especially if we consider Thirdly What a misgiving nature and suspicious frame there is ordinarily in the hearts of Beleevers They are alwayes fearing and suspecting lest they should not doe their duty they know that in many things all sinne and they are afraid lest they should cozen and deceive themselves now when Satan takes a flint and a steele and falls a striking and he meets with such a box of ready dry'd tinder no wonder if hee quickly strikes fire Besides A fourth cause may be melancholy cloudy vapours that for the present the soule is darkned with and can see nothing with a cleare sight but is like a man in a phrenzie And a fifth cause may be a Christians wilfulnesse when the Christian will take no evidence of his faith by the effects of it The best evidence that we either have or can have of the truth of our faith and of our justification is the effects of Faith now if it comes to this that the soule will not take any evidence of the truth of the act of Faith but onely under the Broad Seale of Heaven the apprehension and assurance and full perswasion of it the soule may live without comfort a great while if with Thomas it must see the wounds and holes Now here 's many a good soules condition he questions the truth of his Faith we come to him and tell him could there be such an hungring and thirsting after the Word that thy eare is unsatisfied with hearing unlesse thou didst beleeve this was the word of God and rest upon it as the Word of truth Could there be such a care to please Christ and a feare of offending him to be found in thy whole life and conversation if thou didst not rely upon him for salvation Could there be such a willingnesse to part with all thy estate for Christ and rather then thou wouldst deny him or not enjoy him in his Ordinances if thou didst not rely upon God as thy portion No the soule will not look upon this as a sufficient evidence but cryes out All this an Hypocrite may doe sanctification is imperfect mine is hypocrisie No would God seale it to me then I would beleeve it Now where this is found the soule may for a long time sit in darknesse and see no light yea it may be go down to the grave in its owne thoughts like Erasmus hanging betwixt Heaven and Hell But I proceed Fourthly Thou mayst not at all times trust with alike confidence and yet at all times truly trust The truth of trust and affiance is one thing the degrees of it another the truth of Faith never grows more or lesse the degrees of Faith do as the least drop of water is water so the least dram of faith is faith as much as the highest degree of it This the experience of every Christian will tell you sometimes they will say I think if the Devill had hold of me I could trust God for Heaven Though hee kills me saith Iob yet I will trust in him that was not Iobs temper alwayes and yet without question Iob did alwayes beleeve Paul was not in the same temper Rom. 7. that he was Rom. 8. 38. Peters crying Master save me or else I perish did argue his faith was under water more then his head Davids temper Psal 27. 1 2 3. was not the same with his temper 1 Sam. 27. 1. In the first he would not bee afraid of an Host encamping round about no though the Host consisted of ten thousand Psal 3. 6. But in that place 1 Sam. 27. 1. tells us hee was afraid of one Saul and that after many experiences So a poor Christian is ready to think O I do not truly trust and rely upon God c. Sometimes I think if I had not a bit of bread nor a drop of water yet I would not feare my faith should be like that Hab. 3. 17. Another time my heart is so farre from it that though I have for the present enough yet my base heart can hardly keep from covetousnesse sometimes I think that if God would take me away in a massacre I should not yeeld my blood with a repining word another time I so doubt of my interest in Christ that I should not know how to dye upon my bed but am crying Lord take me not away with the wicked Christian thus thou mayest be David Psal 3. would not be afraid of his soules going out of his body if ten thousand swords were ready to cut out a passage for
there is a waking heart though there be no waking eye the soule as well as the body in sleep is bereaved of sense wait but till the morning and the soule will confesse it seeth and hath recovered its senses again Thus for thy comfort know Christian that thou couldst not justly expect to feele alwayes alike for first God doth not dispense alwayes alike and secondly if he did dispense alwayes alike yet a benummed ashy winter-sleepy soule hath not that beauty ●or that sense which a lively healthy well-tempered clear-spring-awakened soule hath Fifthly consider That Gods strength may be then seen in thee when it is not seen and felt by thee The gracious soule is not alwayes nay is very seldome a competent Judge of it self the high Christian may often have a very low yea too low an opinion of himselfe the Christian is his own worst construing Book and especially too at some times if Paul may be judge of himself sometimes he is the least of Saints and the chiefest of sinners and unworthy to bee called an Apostle If David may be judge of himselfe Psal 22 v. 6. He is a worm and no man yea the very reproach of men So if many Christians may be judges of themselves Alas they cannot pray they cannot love God they cannot beleeve they feel nothing of the rength of God carrying them out when if standers by may be judges there is a great deale of the strength of God manifested in their hearts and carriages of their lives and God is gloriously discovered in carrying out their hearts so gloriously and sweetly and firmely for him as he doth take a true Christian and this is a sure rule that God and Gods people have far better opinions of him then he hath of himselfe now this may comfort thee when other better and more experienced Christians by thy own confession then thy self can see more in thee then thou canst feele the body in a dead swound feels no life in it selfe but all its vitall motions and functions are hindred now therefore at such a time others in the roome are Iudges of its life or death they by observing the warmth of the body the motions of the pulse or applying a glasse to the mouth of the swounding person do perceive life in the man that to his owne sense and perhaps to the sense of some others is a dead carkasse Sixthly and lastly consider that it is no Argument to warrant thee not to beleeve because thou doest not feele God carrying thee out by his armes of strength in such a manner to spirituall duties and the acts of spirituall and saving graces as thou desirest or perhaps expectest the reason of this is plain because it is my duty as well to beleeve for strength as for any thing else Sure I am Gods promises are as much for strength to act grace as for any thing else and the promises of God are the object of my Faith it is my duty to beleeve the promises I will strengthen thee saith God I will help thee and uphold thee with the hand of my righteousnesse thou sayest this cannot I believe Why because God doth not strengthen me and help me carry out my heart in an act of Faith Thus thou beggest the question the question is not whither thou oughtest to believe when thou feelest God carrying thee on to believing c. But whither thou oughtest not to believe that God will strengthen thee and carry thee out to acts of believing and loving c. But some may say What doth this differ from Free-will doctrine Can I believe unlesse God doth strengthen me to believe Why doe you call upon a man to lay hold when he complaineth that he wants hands or upon a man to walk when he tells you he cannot find that he hath any legs Mistake not Christian God hath said I will strengthen thee I will help thee and uphold thee with the hand of my righteousnesse Now I say it is thy duty to believe this promise of strength help and I confesse that it is not in thy power to believe this promise but God must strengthen thee and help thee before thou canst believe this promise that he will strengthen thee and help thee but yet I doe not call upon one that hath no hands to lay hold nor upon one that hath no legs to walk but upon one that saith he doth not feele his legs I call upon him to walk and I call upon one that doth not know and feele that hee hath hands to lay hold c. And this is sense and warrantable Divinity Faith is not sensible and visible to a Christian in the habit but only in the acts I call to thee to shew forth the habit of faith Now it shall not excuse thee from this duty that thou canst not feele thou hast any habite of Faith the habite of this pretious grace is invisible Thus have I given thee some considerations which duly weighed and considered may comfort thy soule under this perplexity I have only one thing more to doe and that is to speak a word or two of direction to such soules to shew them what to doe that they may be comforted in which I will be briefe First then by way of direction Finde out the cause and remove it the causes may bee various I cannot name them all but the great and ordinary causes may be first Gods will secondly thy own temper 1. Gods will he will not please perhaps to lead thee with so strong an arm at one time as at another hee will try how thou wilt live by faith sense is bread he will have thee not to live by bread only but by every word that commeth out of the mouth of God Now sence and feeling that is bread if this be the cause as it was in Peter thou must not dispute but submit to it 2. The cause may be in thy self it may be thou art under some violent temptations of Sathan or under the clouds and darknesses of some sinnes or corruptions or thy expectation of feeling or sense may be too high or thou mayest be wilfull and not feel when thou mayest These causes must bee removed by faith repentance endeavour obedience c. Hath sin benummed thee be humbled for this sinne and thou shalt feele Art thou in desertion believe and hope and thou shalt feele again It is a known maxime Take away the cause and the effect will cease But Secondly Wait for feeling this is is a part of thy duty in relation to this want especially caused by Gods will Is 40. 31. They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength like the Eagle Psal 27. 14. Wait on the Lord be of good courage and he shall strengthen thine heart wait I say on the Lord wait with faith and hope and patience Thirdly Learn to live upon Gods Word Man shall not live by bread only but upon every Word that commeth out of the mouth of
and strong immediatly after a desertion In desertions ordinarily it is none or but weake p. 217 2. Ordinarily it is very high when his Saints are in greatest distresses call'd to suffer Martyrdome c. p. 218 219 3d. Concl. Thou mayest have had and again have a true assurance and full perswasion though thou for the present hast none at all p. 219 220 SERM. XIII CHAP. XIII HOw to comfort that soule that conceives it hath not true faith because it doth not feele Gods strength carrying it out to those duties and acts of grace which it ought to act A distinction of feeling It may be 1. Of Peace 221 2. Of Strength Ib. Something spoken by way of consolation to poor souls under this scruple of spirit 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 c. 1. Consid Not-feeling doth not argue a not-being p. 223 2d Consid The truth of Gods love to us is not so easily to be discerned in the very acting and working of God as in the effect of such acts and operations p. 235 236 237 3d. Consid Feeling at the best is but a deceivable or a disputable evidence p. 237 238 4. Consid No Christian feeles strength alwayes alike nor hath cause to doe it p. 239 That of God to the soule which is not seen is alwayes alike That which is seen not so Ib. Causes why God is not felt alwayes alike in the soule p. 240 1. Cause His soft goings sometimes in the cause Ib. 2. To trie whether a Christian can stand alone upon the true legges of faith without the woodden legs of sense Ib. 3. The soule may be benummed and have lost its feeling Ib. 5. Consid Gods strength may then be seen in thee when it is not seene or felt by thee p. 241 242 6. Consid It is no argument to warrant thee not to believe because thou dost not feele God carrying thee out by his armes of strength in such a manner to spirituall duties and to the acts of spirituall and saving graces as thou desirest and perhaps expectest p. 242 243 We must believe for strength as well any thing else p. 243 This di●●ers from the Arminian Doctrine of free-will Ib. 5 Directions teaching Christians what to doe under this Affliction p. 244 1. Direct Find out the cause and remove it Ib. 2. Causes may be 1. Gods will Ib. Then submitting removes it Ib. 2. Thy own temper Ib. Under temptations 2. Some known sins 3. Thy expectations may be too high Ib 4. Thy wilfulnesse may be the cause These causes must be removed 1. Faith 2. Loving Expectations 3. Repentance c. 2. Direct Wait forfeeling p. 244 3 Direct Learn to live without bread on Gods Word p. 245. 4. Direct Learn to acknowledge Gods little finger Ib. 5. Direct Act contrary to thy mind Sick men must eat against their stomack p. 245 5 Reasons of Master Rutherfords why we ought to performe duties under an indisposition even against our mind p. 245 246 SERM. XIV CHAP. XIV HOw to know whether our doubtings be such as may consist with true faith in a gracious soule 5 Particulars in which the doubtings of believers differ from the doubtings of Unbelievers and Reprobates p. 248 249 250 251 1. They differ in the Principle unbeliefe is not the Principle of doubting in the Believer but Infirmity p. 249 250 251 The exposition of that place Rom. 4. 19 20. p. 250 251 252 2. They differ in the occasion from whence they arise p. 253 Severall occasions of doubting in Gods people different from the occasion of Unbelievers doubtings p. 253 254 3. They differ in the Object The Object of the Christians doubting is something in himselfe The Object of the Unbelievers doubting is ordinarily something in God p. 254 255 The Reasons of it p. 255 256 257 4. They differ in their duration and continuance p. 257 258 5 Notes concerning believers doubtings p. 259 260 261 1. They are most and strongest in the morning p. 258 2. They may be in the day time p. 259 3. If they be they are fewer and weaker The reasons of it p. 259 260 4. They are transient clouds that passe and return not p. 260 5. They have none but they conquer in fine p. 261 5. They differ in their Effects p. 262 263 The effect of Unbelievers doubting is a forsaking and declination from God p. 261 262 They commonly produce in Gods servants these five effects 1. A complaining unto God p. 263 2. A craving satisfaction from God p. 264 3. A striving against them Ib. 4. A waiting for God Ib. 5. A closer walking with and adhering unto God p. 264 265 LUKE 17. 5. And the Apostles said unto him Lord increase our faith WHen the Jaylor fell down at the Apostles feet Acts 16. 30. and said What shall I do to be saved The Apostle answers Beleeve in the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shall be saved When Ruler feared Christ saith Be not afraid onely beleeve Mar. 5. 36. When the poor man came for mercy for his son Mark 9. 32. Christs tells him If he could beleeve all things were possible to him When we pray if we can but beleeve we shall receive we shall surely not fail Many glorious things are spoken of this mother of graces that faith seems to be the whole duty of man Demosthenes was askt how many things were necessary for an Orator he answers three First action secondly action thirdly action meaning action was more than all And when a certain Prince askt a great Commander what was necessary for War He answers him three things money money money meaning that that is the ligaments and nerves of War And truely if any should ask me what is the unum necessarium the one thing necessary for a Christian I would say faith if he should ask me again I would say faith if the third time still I should say beleeve To the first pray for ●aith to the second use faith to the third grow and increase in faith Faith and beleeving is the whole duty of a Christian in a safe sence for it supposeth humiliation and it commandeth newnesse of life Preparatory qualifications are but faiths harbingers to prepare a room for faith and the works of sanctification are but faiths retinue fed from Faiths table and accordingly maintained as Faith is more or lesse strong and able to maintain them This hath made the Devil more beleaguer the castle of Faith then all the other petty holds comparatively that christian maintaineth against him That as the King of Aram 1 King 22. 31. said to his thirty and two Captains over his chariots Fight neither with small or great save onely against the King of Israel so the Devil seems to make it his great designe to fight and to have given it as his sole or chiefest injunction to the Captains of his Chariots to all his forces and all his instruments to fight neither with small nor great but onely against the King of graces
drink Though I begd my bread and wanted water all the dayes of my life O that I had the robes of his righteousnesse to cloth my soul though I went naked O give me Christ O give me Christ above all for all instead of all or else I dye Here now be comforted the end is wrought again and thou hast no ground not to beleeve because thou art not enough humbled The cause must not destroy the end The end of humiliation is as you have heard What serves humiliation for but to bring thee to it If thou beest already by humiliation brought that thou art grieved for sin past that thou hatest sin present that thou loathest the thoughts of embracing sin for the time to come that thou art made willing to close with Jesus Christ that thou prizest him above all the earths contentments whatsoever thou hast no ground nay thou sinnest in letting thy Faith stumble upon this threshold 4. Consider that it is possible thou mayest mis-judge thy self in this point of the measure of humiliation too The fountain of humiliation is often so deep that we cannot fadom it the well may be deep though we see but a little of it First Consider that in thy humiliation you must measure length and bredth and all Secondly Consider thou must measure inside as well as outside Thirdly You must remember it is not done though it may be done enough for thee to apply a promise and rest upon Iesus Christ and receive and apply him to thy soul First Many Christians mistake upon this Principle Why doest thou think thy humiliation is not enough They will answer you alas I was never in such a depth of amazing sorrow as Paul was as I have heard such and such a Christian was they were even in the jawes of hell My work was a slight work to theirs Half so much broad-cloth of a great bredth will make a suit as well as so much again of some that is not half the bredth the bredth makes amends for the length of the other Others God hath given them deep sorrow but short perhaps he hath given thee long sorrow but not so broad and deep there may be as much water in a shallow pond that is broad as in a deep well that is straight It may be thou hast been divers moneths weeks years under thy sorrow though it was not such an heart-rending sorrow as others might be They had sorrow that even rent their heart in pieces but it lasted not so long as thine before they had joy God measured out their measure in depth and thinc in bredth Secondly Consider if you will measure your humiliation right you must measure both inside and outside Possibly you judge you are not humbled enough because you have not shed so many tears as others have you measure it onely in the outside alas many tempers are not so disposed to tears as others Suppose two men were wounded the one bleeds nothing or little at all the other bleeds that the blood stains all his apparell runs down the streets you see scarce a drop of blood come from the other but the wound closeth will you therefore say that the one bleeds not so much as the other nay surely you will say that he bleeds more desperately he bleeds inwardly The seat of humiliatiō is the heart not the eye Humiliation is not to be measured by wet handkerchiefs the swoln face is not alwayes the outside of a most broken heart possible your heart weeps your soul is ready to burst with groanings but you want the vent of your eyes they are tongue tied The measure of your humiliation for all this may be greater then the other Thirdly Possibly some may say O but can I think that God requires no more tears no more sadnesse for those thousands of sins that I have in my life time committed against him Consider therefore Christian that your humiliation is not past when you have apprehended and applyed Christ to your souls You must reserve some tears for the time to come you have humiliation-work after Faith Zach. 12. 10. Though the seven Devils be cast out and Mary be set by Christ yet she may wash his feet with the tears of her eyes and wipe them with the hairs of her head She may come again and stand behinde him weeping you have to do to look upon him whom you have pierced and mourn As the man that takes physick it works before he takes his broth but that sets it working again and more So though before you apply Jesus Christ there will be some humiliation yet your receiving him and resting upon him by Faith doth not stop up your fountain of tears you shall have a mourning time after that save an handkerchief to wet then Fifthly For thy comfort consider that humiliation ought not to be 1. A ground of Faith 2. Is not a ground of acceptation The first will depend upon the latter First Consider thy humiliation is not a ground of thy acceptation Thou art not therefore accepted because thou art thus and thus humbled If we watch not our nature saith reverend Sibbs There will be a spice of Popery which is a naturall Religion in this great desire of more grief as if when we had that we had something to satisfie God withall and so our minde still runs too much upon works If free-grace did not clarifie tears and the greatest sorrow we could have for sin those bitter waters would be more filthy then the puddles of the street If the blood of free-grace doth not cement a broken heart and accept it and merit for it hell is its desert and portion for all any merit in it It is a good piece of a prayer Psal 20. 3. The Lord accept thy sacrifice or make far thy sacrifice or turn thy sacrifice into ashes A broken and a contrite heart is the Lords sacrifice which he will never despise Psal 5● 17. But the Lord must 1. Turn it into ashes 2. Make it fat 3. Accept it And therefore this can be no sufficient remora in thy way of Faith For couldst thou make thy head a fountain of water and thine eyes rivers of tears they should merit no salvation heaven is not to be bought with sighes nor art thou therefore accepted because thou art humbled but even thy humiliation must have an acceptation otherwise God should save us not for his own sake and for his Name sake as indeed he doth but for our tears sake for our humiliation sake for our works sake for Christians must warily consider that God doth not save his people and accept his children for those works which his own spirit worketh in them This is a Doctrine of Popery who to wash their hands of the Doctrine of merits wherewith they are charged tell us they hold no such matter as that a Christian may be saved by his own works but God gives him grace to work good works and for them he accepts for
of the soul reading its name written in Gods book from all eternity an apprehension of our particular election c. But as these do unwarrantably wound tender consciences so the other are bad chirurgions to heal such wounds If I mistake not we shall finde cordials enough to refresh such swooning spirits without buying them at so dear a rate as the ●ale of a dram of pretious truth Therefore leaving these premises to be held and maintained as the sure pillars of eternall truth I come in the next place to propound some considerations that may comfort and satisfie poor souls thus unwarrantably troubling themselves salva veritate Dei the head of truth yet remaining without a wound or scar That is my next work and to that end consider First Thou sayest If I knew I were one of those that God had elected then indeed I had some ground in order to my salvation to relye upon the promises but unlesse I be elected such reliance will be rather a fond and unwarrantable presumption then a warranted and well-grounded Faith First Consider Christian That Faith is not an apprehension of particular election but an application of generall promises Thou art mistaken without any ground in the object of true Faith Christ calleth upon all to whom the Lord Jesus Christ is preached Isai 55. 1. 2. in his Gospel 1 Ioh. 7. to beleeve He every one that thirsteth come and buy Iohn was sent to bear witnesse of the truth Ioh. 6. 29. that all men through him might beleeve Joh. 6. 29. Christ layeth it as a duty upon all the people That they should beleeve on him whom God had sent Now can we imagine that the meaning of Christ was that they should beleeve that all of their names from eternity were in the Court-rolls of eternity The Gospel obligeth all that hear it to beleeve but doth the Gospel lay an obligation upon any to beleeve a lye Faiths object is the promises of the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ It is Faiths work in the soul not to close with the decree of God and to bosome that but to close with the promises and imbrace them It is Faiths work to eye Christ in a particular apprehension through the prospective of a promise not to eye Christ as the souls faviour through the mystery of Gods predeterminate purposes Heb. 10. 23. Let us hold fast the profession of our Faith without wavering Hebr. 10. 23 well but upon what grounds the next words tell us For he is faithfull that hath promised the sure word not the sure decree of God is the object of our justifying Faith Now where hath God left thee such a line of promise as this Thou shalt be elected to glory or I will elect thee to glory God hath said I will pardon I will heal I will ease you and these words God calls thee to rest upon as sure and faithfull words God hath said He that beleeveth on the son Joh. 2. 36. hath everlasting life but he hath never said He that beleeveth in my decree hath everlasting life Indeed if our election were that which were to be the first thing to be beleeved it were something to scruple a Christian and it would be enquired into how we should know that we are elect for it is necessary that we have some certainty of knowledge of that which is to be beleeved that it should be evident to us but there is no such matter The promises of the Lord Jesus Christ are our object which not being particular but generall make our way smooth As for example we have a promise Ioh. 3. 16. Joh. 3. 16. Whosoever beleeves in him shall not perish but have eternall life This promise now it is thy work to beleeve viz. that beleeving in him I shall not perish but have everlasting life Doest thou say how shall I know this promise is made to me what ground hast thou for that question when as in the promise there is no restriction Whosoever beleeves The writing runs To all persons to whom these presents comes what should they do beleeve in the Lord Iesus rest and relye upon the Lord Jesus Christ for eternall life The generall promise is by thee particularly to be applyed Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden saith Christ and I will ease you This is now thy duty to come unto Christ but sayest thou I cannot come I do not know I am elected Christian does Christ say Come unto me all you that are elected and I will ease you No he saith Come unto me all you that are weary Mat. 5. 29. Suppose a man had an intention to give to such a particular number of persons such a quantity of money and were resolved with himself to give to none other but those yet should make a Proclamation that whosoever came to him acknowledging their poverty Simile he would relieve in the mean while secretly with himself determining ☜ not to give a penny to any but those whose names he had in his book and who should come and knowing that none of the rest would come but be too proud to come and take it were it warrant enough for any to refuse coming upon this score I hear he hath made a book and though he makes a generall offer yet he will give but to a few persons and for my part I do not think I am one of them If he wil send me word I am one of those whose name is in his book I care not though I go It is thy case Christian apply it in secret wilt thou not beleeve and go to Christ because thou doest not know thou art particularly elected fear lest for this cause salvation be denyed thee But so much for the first Secondly Consider That thy election cannot be known to thee till thou doest beleeve Papists say It cannot at all 〈◊〉 known assuredly to thee till thou comest to see thy name in heaven thy self but that is false but this is truth that till thou doest beleeve thou canst never know whether thou beest elected or no. The eternall decrees of God are only demonstrable to us a posteriori from the effects who hath ascended up unto heaven at any time to search the records of eternity First Ioh. 6. 46. All that is recreated of God is by the Son Ioh. 6. 46. No man hath seen the father save he which is of God he hath seen the father Nor can any thing be known of the father Mat. 11. 27. but by the Son Mat. 11. 27. Now where hath the Son revealed the fathers secret decrees any where when there was but a question concerning the time of those great things mentioned Mat. 24. 36. Mat. 24. 36. ver 1. Christ tells them ver 36. Of that day and hour knoweth no man no nor the Angels nor the Son Mark 13. 32. but the father onely Whether the Son as man did not know Gods
of glory was there any Esa 43. 25. Esa 43. 25. I saith God am he that blotteth out transgressions for mine own names sake God for his own sake elected them therefore Christ died for them Christ of his own good will powred out his blood for them therefore he gave them power to beleeve and come to him here is all the cause ab extra from without still And is there lesse cause in Christ for thee then there was for them look in his Gospel promises or is there lesse cause in thee then a mere nothing But I shall make this more full in a sixth position which I shall commend to thy consideration which is this Sixtly That God never received any soul because it had a portion to set it off Thou sayest O I cannot beleeve c. why I am not worthy of salvation I am a great sinner I have been an auncient sinner Well then suppose that thou never hadst to thy knowledge committed actuall sins but wert as thou thinkest clean and spotlesse then thou couldst come to Jesus Christ and think he would accept of thee Thy money perish with thee doest thou think that Christ that gift of God can be purchased with the money of thy merits Doth Christ take any souls because they are worthy or doth he therefore take them that he might make them worthy doth Christ therefore take a filthy mired sinner because it is unclean or that he might wash it from it uncleannesse God gives his Son thou mistakest if thou thinkest he can be bought of thee either for love or money canst thou make Christ rich with the coblers ends of thy righteousnesse thinkest thou he that hath the inexhaustible treasury of righteousnesse doest thou think he cares for thy farthings wilt thou bring thy drops to the bottomlesse ocean of his bloody merits Your penny-worths cannot roll about that everlasting wheele of free-grace the decree of election nor bow nor break Christs free-heart to save you more then another The Garden of free-grace Christian hath never a weed of humane merit in it no nor yet is there a space to set it in The Robe of Christs righteousnesse is rich and full enough and needeth not the dunghill patches of thy merits That new-cloth will not endure to be patched with thy old rags Christ is a Noble-Bride-groom that would take a portion with his spouse if she could bring a proportion for him Adam if he could have got it up might have been married to God with a dowry But for as much as now that cannot be perfection is not attainable Christ scorns thou shouldst say Thou hast brought him a farthing The men of the earth shall not make him rich The first marriage-contract God made with man he demanded a portion and proffered the jointure of glory But when man with all his scrapings could not pay it Come saith Christ I will take thee with nothing then Do all or take all is Christs Dilemma to the children of men Lastly Consider That by how much the greater and more abominable sinner thou art by so much shall the Lord Christ attain his ends more fully which he aims at in saving any souls Doest thou ask what that is It is his own glory the glory of his free-grace God when he declares his free-grace to any soul makes a particular Proclamation Come let all the world see the power of my mercy and the good will that is in my bowels that I can wash such a stained soul that is nothing else but sin that I will pardon such an old inveterate sinner Now by how much thy sins are more and greater by so much God more sets out the vertue of his balm in healing such old putrified stinking wounds Secondly God knows such sinners once pardoned and changed will more glorifie him They that have much forgiven will love much Thirdly Luk. 7. 47. God shall have glory from such a sinner in that others by his example shall be kept from despair and quickned to leave their sins and trust in Gods mercy Psal 34. 6. and 51. 13. Come therefore beleeve rest on Christ Let not thy unworthinesse thy great thy many sins keep thee from Christ Eusebius in his third book of Eccles Hist cap. 20. hath a story of Iohn the Apostle who at Ephesus finding a young man of a goodly body gracious face and servent minde commended him to one of the Bishops or Elders to take care of him The Elder accordingly did instruct him and at length baptized him This young man afterwards became very wicked and dissolute seduced by wicked companions First became a companion of their feasts and cups and then of their theeving and robberies at last grew to a very great heigth of disorder and outrage and became a robber on the mountains Eusch Eccles hist l. 3. c. 20. Iohn returning to Ephesus enquiring for the young man of the Elder hears this news Saint Iohn after rebuking the Elder for his negligence rode to the mountain which this young man now grown to be a Captain of robbers kept Saint Iohn being taken of the theevish watch desired to be brought to their Captain and accordingly was when he saw him coming and knew it was Iohn he was stricken with shame and fled away Saint Iohn pursueth after him crying My son why flyest thou from thy father O son tender my case be not afraid as yet there remaineth hope of salvation I will undertake for thee with Christ I will dye for thee if need be as Christ dyed for us I will hazard my soul for thine trust to me Christ hath sent me He hearing this stood still trembled and wept embraced Saint Iohn and wept bitterly The Apostle when he had promised and protested to procure pardon for him of our Saviour prayed upon his knees kissed him and brings him to the Church preacheth to him fasts with him and leaves him not before he had restored him a penitent beleever Is this thy condition Christian hast thou been well principled and hast thou forget all the Sermons and admonitions given or preacht to thee and art thou turnd dissolute disorderly guilty of all wickednesse and now in stead of coming to Christ by Faith doest thou wouldst thou fly from him See thy Christ pursuing thee calling inviting Ah why doest thou fly from me that dyed for thee turn turn beleeve be not afraid as yet there remaineth hope of salvation in my merits I will under-take with my father for thee I have dyed for thee I will hazzard my favour with my father for thine trust to me O now stand still tremble weep pray turn trust in the Lord Iesus Christ Thou art unworthy but Christ is worthy he hath grace sufficient for thee He hath a good will to save thee yea eagerly bent to thy salvation he perswades he swears he pleades he appeals he wishes groaning he professeth he knows not how to destroy thee he weeps over thee he invites thee he
seed of Abraham to whom the promise is made Gal. 3. 29. And if ye be Christs that is such as by faith are united to Christ then are yee Abrahams seed and heires according to the Promise And this will be further evident if you consider in the third place That the whole Covenant of which every promise is but a branch or member was made originally and primarily with the Lord Iesus Christ for all beleevers Gal. 3. 6. Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made but as of one Gal 3. 6. and to thy seed which is Christ Beza and Piscator and many other Expositors would have that place understood not of Christ personall but of Christ mysticall as if it had not been to be understood that the promise was made betwixt God the Father and the Person of Christ but with the Church which is the mysticall Body of Christ But learned Mr. Rutherford disproves that Exposition and proves that the promise was indeed made with the Person of Christ from the 17. v. for it was made with that Christ Rutherfor● Tria●l of Faith p. 51 52 53 54. 1. In whom the Covenant was confirmed 2. In whom the Nations were blessed 3. In whom we receive the Promise through faith Mr. Rutherfords 〈◊〉 reasons t● prove the Covenant and Proses were made to Christ for us v. 14. 4. With that Christ that was made a curse for us v. 13. Which must needs be understood of a personall not a mysticall Christ and it is plain saith he from Heb. 1. 5. compared with Psal 89. 26. I will be to him a father and he shall be to me a sonne And secondly The Covenant made to the fathers and David and his seed is fulfilled to Christ and his seed Act. 13. 34 35. And thirdly he was the second Adam Now as the Covenant of works was made with the first Adam for him and his seed and hee was the publike covenanting person for all his posterity So Christ was the second Adam and the Covenant was made with him for all those that should be his seed 1 Cor. 15. 22. And fourthly All that is required in a Covenant we finde betwixt God and Christ God demanded he should lay downe his life and for it he promiseth that hee should see his seed and God should give him many children Isa 53. 10. Christ consenteth to come and lay down his life and doe his Fathers will Isa 40. 7. Ioh. 20. 8. So that whatsoever promises were made for spirituall and eternall mercies to the Jewish Church or any members of it are still applicable to the Church and Children of God under the New Testament for the Promises were not made to them as Jewes but as Christians though not known under that name which was first given to them at Antioch that is Act. 11. 26 such as were heires of Christ and children of Christ for the Promise was made originally to Christ to him and to his heires that is those which should beleeve in his Name so that the promises have made so farre an influence upon us as Christ hath and they had no other upon the Iewes But yet for the true understanding of the promises it must further be understood that there were some promises only made to the Person of Christ and not to descend to his children as that Phil. 2. 9 10 11. and Heb. 1. 5. 13. and Is 53. 10. Psal 110. 2. Ps 2 8 9. There are other promises which are made To him and his even as there is a difference in bonds some run onely to the person of the man others run to him his heires executors administrators or assignes And first saith Mr. Rutherford I will be thy God The Mother-Promise is made to him Psal 89. 26. Ioh. 20. 17. and to his people too Ier. 32. 38. Zach. 13. 9. And speciall promises secondly are made first to him and then in proportion to us as grace to him is promised and in proportion to us Ier. 32. 39. Eze. 36. 26. 27. Ioh. 1. 16. 2. Iustification is promised to him not personall but of his cause as Mr. Rutherford distinguishes Isa 50. 8. and justification of our persons to us Ephes 1. 7. Ier. 1. 32 33. 3. Victory and dominion is promised to him Psal 110. 12. 1 Cor. 15. 25. and to us Ioh. 16. 11. 14. 30. 4 The kingdome and glory is promised to him Phil. ● 9 10. and to us Luk. 12. 32. Ioh. 17. 24. 5. For his resurrection after three dayes Psal 6. 10 11 to us after a longer time Ioh. 11. 266. ●8 39. For these things more fully I shall referre you to Mr. Rutherfords tryal and triumph of faith p. 54 55. so that you see clearly that whatsoever promises were made to the Jewes either to the Church or to the persons of the beleeving Iewes are to be applyed to us because they were primarily and originally made with Christ to whom we have as great a title and in whom we have as great a share as they have And that is the second rule to help you for the cleare understanding of the Promises I will adde but one more which together with these will meet with all mistakes which in my little experience I have met with in troubled spirits concerning the understanding of the Promises Thirdly that is this though some promises are conditionall yet none require of us a fulfilling of the conditions by our owne strength This is that which troubles many poor soules and is a great ba●e to their faith and staves them off from applying of the Promises O but I cannot fulfill the conditions of the Promise I cannot be heavy laden and weary I cannot hunger and thirst c. I told you before what promises were ordinarily proposed conditionally in Scripture viz. Promises of second mercies in order to our salvation as the promises of justification Isa 55. 1 2. ease peace which follow after vocation Rom. 8. 30. Mat 11. 29 Ho every one that thirsteth c. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for they shall be satisfied Matth. 5. v. 6. Now here doth many a poor soule stand Alas saith a poor Christistian I perish I perish We say to the soule in such a complaint Heark what Christ sayes Come unto mee all ye that are weary and heavy-laden and I will ease you Mat. 11. 29. And againe Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and he that hath no money come yee buy and eate c. Incline your eare and come unto mee heare and your soule shall live and I will make an everlasting covenant with you even the sure mercies of David Isa 55. 1 3. And againe Isa 1. 16 ●7 ●8 Wash you make you cleane put away the evil of your doings before mine eyes cease to do evil learne to do well Come now and let us reason together though your sinnes be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though
them how p. 253. And in the object how 255. And in their duration how p. 259. They are in them most in the morning p. 258. They may have some such clouds in the day p. 259. Those in the day are fewer and weaker then those in their morning why 259. 260. They differ in the effects five different Effects mentioned in Believers p. 262. 263. 264. 265 E How to satisfie those that think they ought not to believe because they think they are not Elected p. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. The truth concerning Election in five particulars p. 57. Papists and Libertines Errours concerning it p. 58. It is not the object of our faith p. 59. 60. 61. It cannot be known in particular till we believe p. 62. 63. And till we know we believe p. 66. It is a piece of sense p. 66. It is unto the meanes as well as the end p. 65. 66. Nothing but unbeliefe can justly make us think we are not Elected p. 64. Clear Evidence for assent not absolutely necessary to true Faith p. 148. Difference of Evidences p. 150. F Faith may be weak in the best p. 5. 6. Reasons of it p. 3. 5. 6. A direction for the encrease of it p. 9. Notes of a weak Faith p. 10. How it is to be ta●en in the Question whither Repentance goes before Faith p. 12. That Question truly stated p. 15. Faith in some sence must goe before humiliation p. 19. Faith preached without humiliation how farre dangerous p. 24. It is not the apprehension of particular Election but the application of generall promises p. 59. 60. It s object is revealed promises not hidden Decrees p. 160. True Faith will consist with much weaknesse in its severall acts p. 122. 123. The severall acts of Faith p. 115. 116. 117. Iustifying Faith set out in Scripture by six words p. 116. 155. Satisfaction to such as doubt the work of Faith in their souls p. 108. 109. c. It may be saving and strong without assurance p. 212. 213. How it is certaine without assurance p. 214. 215. Falling in what degree it must be to make up the sin against the Holy Ghost p. 100. Feeling double of strength and peace p. 222. What each is 222. Not Feeling doth not argue not being p. 223. Feeling at the best is but a disputable and deceivable Evidence p. 237. 238. It is in none alwayes alike Reasons of it p. 239. 240. Not Feeling is no just excuse for our not believing p. 242. 243. Causes of not Feeling how to remove them p. ●44 Feeling must be waited for p. 44. Fundamentals what are so properly so calld a difference of Fundamentals p. 127. G Gods wisedome and goodnesse and Charters of Free-Grace how slandred p. 67 God gets great glory by pardoning great sinners p. 84. 85. Going before how to be understood in the Question whither faith goeth before repentance p. 13. Grace enough in God for the greatest sinners p. 72. 73. Free-Grace hath lookt upon as great sinners as wee are p. 80. Infinite Free-Grace never yet did its utmost p. 81. 82. H Hatred of God and Gods people in what degree it must be to make an ingredient into the Sinne against the Holy Ghost p. 99. 100. Heaven and Glory are not so inconsiderable but they are worth ventring for p. 68. 69. Humiliation whither it goes before Faith or no p. 12 13. 14. It doth how proved by Reason Scripture and Experience p. 16. 17. 18. It is a work of speciall grace how Christs works it what followes from that p. 20. it doth not hinder the freenesse of grace it is it selfe a fruit of it p. 22. It was in Paul a case of Conscience concerning it largely handled p. 26. 27. 28. 29. It doth ordinarily goe before faith p. 28. 29. It is cald for in the thing but God hath set no measure p. 29. Nor can be set by man p. 30. It is various in divers p. 30. Three sorts of persons God uses to humble deeply p. 30. His dealings with those are various p. 30. 31. A note to be gathered from the Scriptures sparing relation of Lydia's Humiliation p. 31. Moveable dispositions usually not so deeply humbled p. 32. Various comforts for them that finde not themselves so deeply humbled as others p. 32. 33. Three ends of Humiliation p. 33. 34. 35. 36. If wee finde the Ends of it wrought we need not bee troubled about the measure of the meanes p. 33. 34. 35. 36. It works in the soule a loathing of sinne that 's one end of it p. 33. Five rules of Dr Sibbs to know when it is sufficient p. 34. It makes us in a capacity to receive Christ p. 35. It inhanceth our value of Christ p. 36. The measure of it may be mis judged p. 36. How wee must measure it to judge of it aright p. 36. 37. It must be measured both in length and breadth p. 37. inside 〈◊〉 outside p. 37. The whole work of it is not done when wee begin to believe p. 38. It is not a ground of Faith nor acceptation p. 39. 40. 41. 42. Directions for such Christians as conceive they are not enough humbled p. 43. 44. 45. 46. Humiliation how its nature ought to be considered so as to comfort a troubled soul p. 50. It must be more and more laboured after p. 51. Mr Shephards opinion of it p. 51. Severall directions given by Dr Preston and Mr Shephard and the Author for increasing this work in the soule p. 52. 53. 54. Prayer the surest direction for it p. 54. I Ignorance how farre and in what particulars it is consistent with true Faith p. 127. 128. 129. 130 c. Ignorance 1 in some fundamentals 2 in circumstantials 3 in the History of Scripture 4 in substantialls and fundamentals so farre that we cannot dispute them or make them out in particulars may be consistent with true Faith 127. 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. Provided wee bee not content with but strive against such Ignorance p. 133. Justification is not formally before faith reasons for it p. 209. Justifying Act of Faith what it is and the six words Mr Ball expresseth it by in his Treatise of Faith p. 116. K Knowledge no act of saving Faith p. 125. In what degree and manner it must be in those that can be guilty of the Sinne against the Holy Ghost p. 97. 98. A low opinion of our owne knowledge a good signe p. 126. L Lydiae's conversion without any humiliation cannot bee proved foure answers to the objection drawn from her example against precedent humiliation Mr Shepards opinion of it p. 24. 25. M Melancholy oftentimes is a cause of a Christians doubting p. 164. Misbelief no Vnbeliefe p. 147. Misunderstanding of Scripture not impossible to a Bel●●ver p. 147. O 8. Objections answered made against that truth viz. that Humiliation ordinarily precedes Iustifying Faith in the Act p. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. Opposition of truth in what degree and of