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A10615 The golden chayne of salvation. Written by that reverend and learned man, maister Herman Renecher. And now translated out of Latine into English; Aurea salutis catena. English Rennecher, Hermann.; Allibond, Peter, 1559 or 60-1628. 1604 (1604) STC 20889; ESTC S101212 181,755 288

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thee with knowledge and iudgement against the common Adversary as also very sweet and comfortable points to comfort thy conscience against those same strong temptations of Sathan concerning the assaults of diffidence or distrust On these two heads especially dependeth the matter and subiect of this booke which if it please thee to peruse thou shalt finde in it no doubt matter to thine edifying and contentment We have taken this paynes for the good and benefite of those which vnderstand it not in the tongue wherein it was written but for others it shall be best for them if they please to reade it in the Originall wherein it was written as wherein indeed it hath the best grace both by meanes of the elegant style and composition thereof as also because there are sundry termes and words of Arte which can hardly be familiarly expressed or resolved by our idiome or dialect This I say gentle Reader have we by the Lords assistance both attempted and atchieved in regard of the goodnesse of the Treatise and a good thing the more common and vniversall it is the more commendable and the better it is The same reasons which do vrge that the holy Scriptures should be written in a knowne tongue doe likewise proportionally enforce that divine and godly Treatises vpon severall passages and places of Scripture should be made familiar vnto the vnlearned and common people as whereby they may be the better enabled to vnderstand the Scriptures and so to be furthered in their Salvation So that if thou censure the translating of such Authours thou wilt very easily drawe vpon thee the blemish and suspition of Popery it selfe Thou must not thinke gentle Reader that the Lord would have it to be amongst vs now Gen. 11.7 as hee himselfe caused it to be amongst them which built the tower of Babel whose language was so confounded that they perceyved not one anothers speech but that God would have it so to be in his Church now as that every man should say Acts 2.11 Wee heard them speake in our owne language the wonderfull works of God But I trust I shall not neede to make excuse for this our small labour but rather presume of thy loving and friendly acceptance thereof whereof perswading my selfe I commend thee to the tuition of the almighty promising thee that if thou wilt by thy good endevours so breake the shell of an vnknowne tongue or language as that eyther my selfe or the Church may by thy good meanes come vnto the sweete kernell of any good Treatise I would give to God the glory and to thee thy due prayse And so I doubt not but that thou wilt walke according to that vpright rule set downe by our Saviour Christ Whatsoever yee would that men should doe vnto you even so doe you vnto them Mat. 2.12 for this is the Law and the Prophets Farewell The summarie Contents of this Golden Chayne WHerein consisteth mans eternall happinesse or everlasting woe Chap. 1. Fol. 1. The five linkes of this Chayne are 1. Gods foreknowledge 2. his predestination 3. his calling of men 4. his iustifying them 5. his glorifying them Chap. 2. Fol. 4. That God exerciseth those whom he calleth in continuall affliction thereby to conforme them to the image of his Sonne Chap. 3. Fol. 9. How many wayes the foreknowledge of God may be taken and the vse thereof Chap. 4. Fol. 12. Distinction betwixt predestination and foreknowledge and of how many degrees it consisteth Chap. 5. Fol. 18. Of Adams fall and Gods foreknowledge therein Chap. 6. Fol. 23. The causes of predestination the definition thereof and difference betwixt it and Gods providence Chap. 7. Fol. 34. The divers kinds of predestination and properties of election Chap. 8. Fol. 40. Election whereon dependeth salvation is the chiefe foundation of a Christians faith Chap. 9. Fol. 43. Of Gods wonderfull mercie mixed with his iustice Chap. 10 Fol. 49. Gods free mercie is the true cause of Election Chap. 11. Fol. 54. The Papists fiction of faith and good workes foreseene confuted Chap. 12. Fol. 63. The horrible offence of the Papists touching faith and good workes foreseene by vnanswerable arguments confuted Chap. 13. Fol. 71. The proprieties of Election The faith of the Elect vnmoveable Chap. 14. Fol. 84. The Consciences of the Elect are by this doctrine strengthened most stedfastly Chap. 15. Fol 94. The strong comforts of the Elect touching their salvation Chap. 16. Fol. 98. The doctrine of Election is most necessary to salvation Chap. 17. Fol. 103. God is debter to no man therefore hee may save or damne whom it pleaseth him Chap. 18. Fol. 119. The reprobate have not to blame God but their owne sinnes for their damnation Chap. 19. Fol. 126. The horrible damnation of the reprobate turneth to the good of the Elect. Chap. 20. Fol. 137. That the Elect cannot become reprobates nor the reprobates ever be elected Chap. 21. Fol. 142. In reprobation of the more parte Gods great iustice appeareth as in electing the fewer Gods infinite mercy And how men should examine themselves Chap. 22. Fol. 147. How many things necessary to be knowne in the doctrine of Election Chap. 23. Fol. 152. A passage from predestination vnto vocation as from the cause to the effect And how diversly vocation is vnderstood Chap. 24. fol. 159. The Papists confuted touching mans strength and how farre free will extendeth Chap 25. Fol. 171. Of free Iustification knowne by Vocation and what it is to be iustified after the phrase of the Gospel Chap 26. Fol. 182. What thing Iustification is with the three properties thereof Chapter 27. Fol. 191. What benefites come through Iustification by faith and to whom the same doe properly appertaine Chap. 28. Fol. 207. How to amend our corrupt nature and to restore the Image of God in man Chap. 29. Fol. 210. The obedience of the Godly though vnperfect is accepted of God The meaning and true vse of good workes Chap. 30. Fol. 223. Why God accepteth of the vnperfect workes of his Elect and calleth his owne free gift our reward Chap. 31. Fol. 233. The great commodities both publike and private comming by the studious care of good workes That the Protestants doe not reiect good workes Chap. 32. Fol. 244. Regeneration is begun in this life though vnperfectly and without it is no Salvation To whom it belongeth Chap. 33. Fol. 251. By what bands the Elect are vnited to God by what signes they are knowen and how assured of Salvation Chap. 34. Fol. 255. The effects and benefites of Predestination Chap. 35. Fol. 262. How the Linckes of this Chayne must be considered and how vnseparable they are Chap. 36. Fol. 265. The world shal fade away but the gifts of this Chayne are everlasting Chap. 37. Fol. 268. The effects of Election and of reprobation are contrary What benefites of God common to both and what not and Gods iudgement touching both vnchangeable Chap. 38. Fol. 270. The Conclusion exhorting to
rageth and is angry against God and his wicked affections breake forth openly like vnto wilde and vntamed beasts and run out like wilde horses and the more severely that God forbiddeth any evill the more egerly doth miserable man rage and resist it so that a man may sooner wring oyle out of an hard stone then that a man not regenerate should do any good thing that should please God or be avayleable for his salvation Seeing then that man in his whole nature and will is a foe and an enemy to God I see not by what meanes he may deserve life at Gods hands Moreover seeing that man was drenched through sinne in so deepe a pit and bottomlesse gulfe of damnation that he could not vnderstand nor comprehend it therefore also he had perished for ever in it if God by his grace had not plucked him out of it and delivered him through Christ his only begotten Sonne For miserable man is so blinded through sinne that he cannot vnderstand his owne evill much lesse can he cure it Sinne therefore as an vnavoydable destruction lurketh in mans nature as in a deepe pit of hipocrisy and if God had not revealed it in his lawe and withall found a remedy for it in his Gospel man altogether ignorant of his mystery had runne headlong into eternall destruction Againe the least sinne that is in the nature of it is so vgly that it redoundeth to the dishonor of God and deserveth his fierce indignation the greatnes whereof no creature is able to suffer and overcome as a man may see in the Angels that fell and were condemned So that man had for ever perished in his misery if God by the death of his Sonne had not drawne him out of it This vntowardnes of mans nature and backwardnes to all good doth wonderfully set forth Gods mercy and proveth it to be free because God in choosing man being such as he is vnto life doth declare his free bounty and vndeserved mercy Vpon this mercy of God is grounded the hope and consolation of all the faithfull wherefore although they excell in no worthines nor have any merites which they may bring vnto God yet this one thing may be sufficient for them to come to all happines namely that God in his nature is good and mercifull and so far forth good and mercifull as that he would rather help and advance vnto happines miserable men such as were almost past help then those that were of great account and trusted in their owne strength They therefore which trust that God will be their Saviour even for his owne free goodnes sake it necessarily followeth that they have their faith grounded vpon and correspondent vnto the grace of the Gospell But they which trusting in their owne merits thinke that God will be their rewarder have their hope in no wise framed according to the tenor of the Gospell so that they waver in doubtfull and hurtfull perplexities till being at the length overcome they are at the last cast downe and swallowed vp of desperation This therefore is the mutuall and continuall relation betweene a Christian mans faith and Gods free bounty that an humble and prostrate sinner should by fayth lay hold on Gods mercy though he bring nothing else vnto God but a contrite and a broken heart Psa 51.17 for he exacteth this one thing and requireth nothing else Therefore out of this mercy of God miserable sinners may suck this most sweete comfort that by theyr humble and lowly confession and loathing of their sinnes they have Gods exceeding mercy prepared and exhibited vnto them as a certayne and present remedy for all theyr evils Also heere is a thing worthy to be noted that God who of his vndeserved favour did deliver miserable mankinde from so great a mischiefe doth teach and commaund vs by his example that to our power we should helpe those that are in misery Yea and the greater that their misery is the more should every of vs know that we are bound vnto God for to helpe them and if wee do not helpe them as much as we can when neede requireth by that wee shewe our selves to be enemyes and adversaryes to God For they which are wicked against God can not be good towards men And they do indeede declare that they are man-sleyers in the sight of God For if others should forsake them likewise and not helpe them they should decay and perish in their misery and so they are the occasion and cause of theyr death as farre-forth as in them lyeth and therefore are iudged and shall be condemned of God as manifest man-sleyers This the Scripture setteth downe in expresse words saying that iudgement mercilesse shall be to him that sheweth no mercy Heere the wicked and fond fiction of the Papists concerning faith and good works foreseene which they dreame to be the causes of election are confuted as false by playne testimonies of holy scripture CHAP. 12. NOw whatsoever the Papists doe talke of concerning fayth and godlinesse fore-seene is nothing else but a most vayne dreame and foolish fiction For in that they say that God from everlasting knew such or such that they would be good and that they would deserve election by their good workes it is to forge a weake and fond fable about which they may trifle at their pleasure and without feare For God is so the cause and beginning of all good that the least drop of goodnes cannot any where be found of which he is not the onely author and finisher The Papists in this doctrine are confuted by many places of holy scripture and are convinced of manifest vntruth For holynesse and a godly life are the fruites and effects of election For God did elect his from everlasting not because they would be good in themselves and worthy of their election but he elected them being evill that afterwards by his grace they might become good This the Scripture doth testifie in manifest and expresse words when it sayth that God hath chosen vs Ephes 1.4 that wee should be holy and without blame before him through love Heere we may cleerely see that God did not finde such as should be elected good but that being elected of him he maketh them good So that integrity of life and good workes do follow election as the true effects thereof and go not before it as the cause And if good workes should be the cause of election man should have chosen God and God should not have chosen man so salvation should be mans merit and not Gods gift and election should be not because God is mercifull but because man is good and iust Againe the Papists in setting vp workes foreseene as the cause of salvation deny God to be God and make his grace of no account For God alone is good Iam. 1.17 and the only fountaine of goodnes Therefore whosoever thinke that they have the very least good thing in them without God do deny him to be
the only author of all good and so deny him to be God For God cannot be God except he alone be set vp and acknowledged the onely fountayne of all goodnes For what manner of God should he be if not the only author and sole effecter of all goodnes But if the Papists should be vrged somewhat neerer and harder as namely out of what fountayne those works foreseene should slow and have their beginning if they answere from mans nature and free will they are farre deceived and are blinder then the very Moles For mans whole nature with all the parts thereof eyther of soule or body even vnto the least drop of his bloud is so corrupted and defiled with sinne that all his thoughts and whatsoever proceedeth from him any manner of way is only evill Gene. 6.5 and against God So that mans nature after his fall neyther will nor can do any thing else but strive and wrastle against God and that with a continuall and earnest desire This the holy scripture doth not only testify but also experience proveth to be so for men when they are left to themselves do not only not acknowledge their sinne but also thinke that there is nothing in them but that which is good and holy although they have nothing in them but that which is polluted and defiled with much vncleanenes And againe this corruption and vntowardnes of man hath taken so deepe roote in the nature of man as that it cannot be plucked vp by mans power therefore the amendement of mans nature doth farre exceede mans power For the restoring of Gods image is a farre greater and harder worke then the first creation of man And as no man could create himselfe so also could no man by his owne power amend his evill nature nor change his perverse will into good Therefore seeing man in his whole nature is depraved and that he cannot change nor amend his corrupted nature whatsoever the Papists do talke of workes foreseene is not so much theyr owne vayne fiction as the mischievous invention of the Divell Surely God from everlasting did foresee good works and knew them very well but yet no other but such as he himselfe determined to worke and bring forth in man By these good workes man can deserve nothing at Gods hands because they are his gifts and benefits God bestoweth life and salvation vpon man for his owne everlasting goodnes sake and not for any good deedes which he himselfe worketh in his children These good workes are the manifest effects and infallible testimonyes of his mercy By all this it appeareth that the Papists vnderstand nothing rightly nor soundly in the doctrine of Election for to vnderstand a thing rightly is to know it by the true and proper cause thereof But they know not Election by the true and proper cause thereof Therefore they vnderstand not Election at all or if they vnderstand it of meere malice they hide it and will not manifest it Wherefore the Papists do wander amisse beside their purpose and talke of a thing they know not much more ridiculously and foolishly then if a Shepheard or a Neate-heard should out of Astrology describe the rising and the setting of the Starres or out of Geometry measure out all the scituations and distances of places without the knowledge of eyther science Therefore the Papists when they refuse Gods free bounty as the first and proper cause of salvation and substitute faith fore-seene as a false and fayned cause thereof they runne into a grosse fallacy from that which is no cause as if it were a cause and so fall into a dangerous error And this fallacy is committed as often as for a true and naturall cause of some thing there is assumed that which is no cause of it as the Papists do heere in imagining and bringing forth good workes fore-seene as the cause of election whenas those good workes are not apt nor fit to bring forth salvation For those good workes which they dreame of neyther are nor can be produced or shewed in that sort as they do imagine Therefore they doe not onely bring a false cause but that which is no cause at all A false cause is that which is not fit to effect that for which it was purposed but is the cause of some other thing and so when in place and time convenient it is applyed vnto a thing that agreeth with the nature and quality thereof it may bring forth some-what But no cause is that which can bring forth nothing because it selfe is nothing For those good workes foreseene which the Papists so bragge of and build election vpon are not at all neyther indeede can be as is shewed before and to expect something from that which is nothing is extreame and ridiculous madnesse by which they mocke God and deceive men But seeing they fayne that to be the cause of salvation which is not at all nor can be they intangle themselves in a manifest contradiction and make themselves a laughing stock for very children But if GOD infinitely good and wise had not found out and shewed vs a better cause and way to salvation then the Papists have woe had it beene vnto mankinde Therefore farre be from vs that dreame of the Papists as the palpable invention of the Devill and most manifest breake-necke of mans Salvation because it derogateth from the grace of God and vndermineth and subverteth the Gospell for the foundation of it And let all the godly reverence and adore the mercy and goodnes of God which the scripture every where setteth downe for the onely and most true cause of salvation Also mans purpose when once it beginneth to bee good is holpen indeede by the grace of God But heere wee must diligently marke and observe that this purpose of man could not be good if the grace of God had not gone before and made it good Col. 1.21 2. Cor. 3.5 Gen. 6.5 Ephe. 1.18 Eze. 36.26 1. Ioh. 5.20 Luk. 24.45 For the whole nature and minde of man in himselfe and in his owne nature is onely bent vnto evill so that hee cannot have the least thought vnto any goodnes and so mans purpose is alwayes evill in it selfe but then it beginneth to bee good when God enlightneth his minde by the power of his spirit and changeth and renueth his will Furthermore it is GOD onely that of vnwilling maketh willing and of a stiffe-necked man maketh him more tractable and milde This hee teacheth by the Apostle to the Philippians Phili. 2.13 where he sayth it is God which worketh in you both the will and the deede even of his good pleasure Heere Paule sheweth that man by his owne power is not fit eyther to begin or finish any good worke but that all the power both of willing and doing good proceedeth from Gods onely free mercy because hee of an evill will maketh a good will and turneth and inclineth vnto good mans heart which is most proane vnto evill
Hence it is clearely proved that God could foresee no good thing in man but that which hee himselfe doth worke in him Therefore the Papists in this poynt doe betray theyr owne grosse ignorance or wicked malice in that they are not ashamed to affyrme and to defend that Gods fore-knowledge is contrary to his grace especially seeing that wee heare nothing throughout the whole Scripture in the doctrine of Election but onely Gods good purpose and meere mercy and concerning workes fore-seene and mans merites there is not a word spoken Therefore the Papists seeing that they wrest this word of fore-knowing from the true and naturall sence thereof into a strange and mischievous vnderstanding by a glosse of their owne interpretation and vnderstand not the propiety of the phrase they fall into an errour of ambiguity of wordes and through the likenesse of words bring in a fallacy and by theyr like kinde of speaking as with a cloake they hide the colour of their mistaking of the word and as much as they can suppresse and diminish the truth Out of this which is spoken may be gathered not darkly nor doubtfully but cleerely and plainely what is the disposition of the Devill and wicked men which because they are enimyes vnto God and do hate him they cease not to darken and obscure his glory wheresoever they may And in this respect they shew their malice two manner of wayes First in that they do most earnestly hate and detest that which most especially pleaseth God and is acceptable vnto him Secondly in that they only love and most desire those things which God hath in the greatest hatred and abomination So likewise the Papists in this matter are most against that which pleaseth God most and on the contrary side do most approve and desire that which God hateth For God is most delighted with this and this is his certaine will that the elect should attaine salvation by his only free mercy But the Papists pleasure is that the elect should be saved by their owne worthines and merits Againe God doth reiect and altogether exclude mans merits in the matter of salvation but the Papists like of them and make them the causes of election salvation So that betwixt God and the Papists there is a most manifest and vehement contrariety Therefore they are not lovers of God but his sworne enimies And that they are such they do sufficiently declare by this in that they make works foreseene the causes of salvation In which thing they commit two grievous offences namely first in that they set nothing by the first and true cause in respect of their owne merits and so erect an imaginary and false cause thereof Secondly in that they labour to withdraw mankind from God and having withdrawne thē from him as much as in them lieth sell them as bondslaves to the devill So that the Papists on the one side are cruell and iniurious against men and on the other side sacrilegious and blasphemous against God because they alwayes hinder his glory and derogate from his Maiesty as much as their ability can stretch vnto On the contrary S. Paul although before his conversion he was in the Iewish profession vnreproveable and after his conversion farre more holy then all the popelings yet he to the Philippians Phi. 3.6.8 not onely constantly and boldly excludeth all workes and merites as well going before as following after faith but also accounteth them for dung that in steed of them having gayned Christ of an vngodly and wretched man he might become iust and rich Heere also we must know that the Papists as they do forsake God and resist his grace so also they do not onely shut vp the dore of his mercy against themselves but even pluck on their owne necks an horrible curse and most certayne destruction For cursed is he sayth Ieremy Iere. 17.5 that trusteth in man Therefore this glosse of the Papists concerning good works fore-seene is to be reiected as wicked and blasphemous because it is not onely not found in all the holy Scriptures but also is most extreamely contrary vnto them For God in the electing of man had respect vnto himselfe and had no regard vnto works eyther past or to come which the Apostle to the Ephesians delivereth in expresse words Ephes 1.5 saying he hath predestinated vs whom he hath adopted through Iesus Christ in himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will In that he sayth in himselfe he teacheth that God in choosing vs saw nothing but himselfe which he made any account of Therefore Gods goodnes and love is the onely roote of our election Whereas he sayth according to the good pleasure of his will that is put downe for the better cleering and expressing of the truth and by that we are taught that Gods free goodnes could not but with great difficulty by perswasion have beene beaten into vs. And what I pray you could God foresee in vs in our election seeing that our whole being Act. 17.28 and what good thing so ever we have 1. Cor. 4.7 we have received it and inioy it by him onely Wherefore that the true cause of election may be held of vs we must in no wise frequent the schoole of the Papists but we must search and follow the holy Scripture which is the onely Schoolemaister and the most faithfull expositor of eternall salvation Sathan hath inspired and suggested into the Papists this opinion of workes foreseene that by it he might withdraw men from the true cause of their salvation and so cast them headlong into eternall destruction For Sathan well knew that mans whole salvation would fall to the ground except it were wholy fetched and derived from God Surely there cannot be given vnto mankinde a greater nor more pernicious hurt then this opinion is and there is no vice worse then this divelish pride which snatcheth from God his chiefest honour and stealeth away the prayse of his mercy Therefore this more then frantike opinion of faith foreseene is vtterly to be cast off and refused Heere is shewed by cleere and vnanswereable arguments how horribly and grievously the Papists do offend against Gods divine Maiesty by their pestilent opinion of faith or workes foreseene CHAP. 13. FOr the Papists in that divelish opinion do offend against God against his Maiesty many waies and do commit many sacrilegious offences First they do offend against the fatherly goodnes free mercy of God For Gods mercy is the onely fountayne of all goodnes in such sort that there is no good which may any where be found but it floweth and springeth of that fountayne Moreover God is so good and mercifull that he will be acknowledged and honoured for no other vertue nor property more then for his free goodnes and mercy Hence it commeth to passe that the holy scripture when it speaketh of Gods mercy doth heape and recken vp as it were in a catalogue many words signifying one and
taught that the doctrine of election and the knowledge thereof is so necessary for Christians as that it ought to be propounded vnto them and insisted vpon by the publique ministery for without it they cannot have a true knowledge of the grace of God neyther can they be certayne of their salvation nor manfully resist the temptations of the devil They therefore which desire that this doctrine should be scilenced or suppressed they do take away the chiefest comfort from the Church of God and therein grievously offend CHAP. 17. NInthly this decree of election is necessary to be knowne for without the knowledge of it we can not have a true and saving knowledge of the grace of God neither can we determine or define of any thing certaynely or soundly concerning salvation nor resist the Devill and his temptations For as often as hee tempteth our faith and indeede he tempteth it very often so often ought wee to have recourse vnto election as vnto the onely strong foundation of our salvation and wee must most certaynely determine and set downe with our selves that wee are freely elected vnto salvation and that we cannot fall away which if wee do not wee cannot acknowledge GOD for our Father and CHRIST for our Redeemer nor hope and looke for eternall life by the grace of the one and merite of the other Whosoever therefore doth truly acknowledge and soundly beleeve that God is his Father and Christ his redeemer and doth place and ground all his faith and all his hope and confidence of salvation in him alone hee may knowe as verily that he is chosen of God as God both in his essence and nature and in his word and promise is true and faithfull For this sentence and promise of Christ is not onely true but also more stedfast then the frame of heaven Iohn 3.16 Whosoever beleeveth in me sayth Christ shall not perish but hath everlasting life This faith which doth acknowledge and lay hold vpon Christ is the first and chiefest effect and fruite of salvation Therefore Gods election and the knowledge thereof is the onely strong foundation on which a Christian and saving faith may safely leane and remayne constant against all the assaults and temptations of Sathan Wherefore seeing that election is as a strong and invincible fortresse against all the subtilties of Sathan against the assaults of the world and against all the doubts and waverings of the flesh the knowledge thereof is very necessary for vs. Agayne the doctrine of election is very necessary to be knowne of vs for this cause because it is one of the chiefest causes of our salvation This the scripture delivereth and expresseth playnely and expressely that wee are therefore called and drawne vnto Christ and vnto salvation because that we were first predestinate and elected For they onely and none other are called vnto Christ Act. 13.48 and indued with true faith through him which were fore-ordeyned vnto salvation Therefore hee which denyeth and reiecteth the doctrine of election hee denyeth and reiecteth the grace of God and can have no hope of his salvation But that wee may know and vnderstand the true cause of salvation there is nothing more necessary to bee knowne of vs then the decree of election For God hath ordayned and appoynted it from everlasting for the onely fountayne of salvation and hath revealed it and layd it open in his word They therefore which dreame that there is no Election they deny and reiect God and his grace because that without grace and mercy and that infinitely free God is not God Moreover this Decree is necessary for vs to know for this cause because it teacheth vs true and profitable humility And that it setteth out and declareth vnto vs on this manner in that Salvation cannot begotten and attayned at any hand by our owne workes and endevours because it is set out of the reach and power of all mortall men but much rather that wee are miserable and sinners and that so as that of our owne strength we are not able to bring no not the least thought tending vnto good which may bee acceptable or well pleasing vnto God Whatsoever therefore of our owne power wee shall vndertake or doe eyther by thought worde or deed we do offend in it and do draw vnto our selves deservedly iust and eternall damnation and have deserved it so often in the iust iudgement of God as we have conceyved any thing in thought or done any thing either in word or deed yea and more often For albeit that no evill works either outward or inward were committed of vs yet our corrupt and depraved nature doth convince vs all and find vs guilty of most iust damnation Therefore this our most miserable estate and most desperate condition doth make vs much ashamed and confounded and ought to humble and debase vs with much meekenesse For men are then wont to blush for shame and to be humbled when they are compelled to confesse acknowledge their own misdeeds they being many and great so that they cannot defend nor excuse them so they begin to be out of liking with thēselves distrust themselves are in despayre as concerning their own merits which despaire is profitable for them For as long as men be perswaded that they can doe any good whereby to attayne Salvation so long they remaine and abide stiffe in theyr owne conceit and doe not distrust themselves as indeed they should nor are not truely humbled before God as they ought to be For the flesh alwayes suggesteth to a man that there is some good thing in him which went before the grace of God for which he should bee elected and saved and so thinketh that the grace of God is dispensed and given according vnto mans desert and so presupposeth some naturall or morall good thing to be in him or else thinketh that hee can prevent the grace of God with some preparation or some good desires and by so thinking can never come to bee saved For God will save and blesse man with his grace not by the halfes but wholy that so all the glory and prayse may redound vnto God as vnto the onely author of Salvation For God doth not promise nor impart his grace vnto any but to such as are in despayre and out of hope in regard of themselves For man is then capable of the grace of God when as he thinketh himselfe not onely voyd and destitute of all goodnes but also replenished and over-whelmed with all vngodlinesse Wherefore if a man desire to be saved hee will suppose no good thing to be in himselfe as if he could doe any thing for his Salvation but being throughly humbled and deiected will flie onely to the incomprehensible goodnesse of God and will know that his whole Salvation dependeth vpon the wil and good pleasure of God This humiliation from the heart is the first step to Salvation Psal 145.14 for the Lord vpholdeth such as fall and
the onely strong anchor which fastneth and preserveth the ship of Christian fayth in the heavenly Sanctuary as in an haven most sure from all the dangers of stormes agaynst all the rage of hell and the turbulent motions of the world So that no floods nor no tempests can arise and swell so great as by which this anchor may be loosed and the ship broken and drowned Also this Chayne is as a strong engine to destroy all the loftinesse of men which doth arrogate any thing as proper vnto it selfe and it is as a sharpe sword to stabbe and quell theyr presumption and pride which doth extoll and lift vp it selfe more then it should Lastly it is as a long and golden line which stretcheth it selfe from one part of the heaven vnto an other that every of the Elect wheresoever may lay sure holde vpon it and very well apply it vnto themselves Therefore as is sayde before in a word or two he that desireth to profit in the knowledge of this Chayne and to confirme himselfe in it fruitfully must above all things take heede that he begin not at the highest cause of Predestination that lieth hidden in the counsell of God but that hee ascend by little and little as it were by degrees from the last effects thereof vnto the first cause so that he begin at regeneration from thence that hee goe to iustification from thence vnto true faith from that vnto vocation from this vnto eternall election from that let him passe and ascend vnto the gratious will of God that effecteth all these things There must hee settle and ground the anchor of his fayth But God beginneth a contrary way in descending vnto vs For hee beginneth at the first cause and proceedeth through meanes vnto the last effect vntill he bring and draw vs vnto himselfe Of the effects of reprobation which are contrary vnto the effects of Election Also what benefites of God the Elect and reprobates have common and what not And that the iudgement of God concerning both is stedfast and eternall CHAP. 38. NOw the effects of Election being set down and declared the effects of reprobation are briefely to be set forth For the effects of Election cannot rightly bee vnderstood vnlesse the opposite effects of reprobation be likewise weighed and considered that so one contrary may be more illustrated and made more playne by an other Now certaine effects are common vnto the reprobate with the Elect as namely Creation and other both many and great temporall blessings and helpes of this life as food and apparel and the rest of the blessings of this life which belong rather to the body then the soule But of those blessings that belong vnto Salvation the reason is farre otherwise they are in a continuall opposition and contrariety For the Elect are called vnto Christ by grace the reprobate are deprived of that grace whereas the Elect are inlightned conuerted vnto God there the reprobate are blinded and hardened whereas these hate sinne and depart from it there they give themselves over vnto it and continue in it where these are raysed vp vnto heavenly glory and are indued with everlasting life there they arise vnto iudgement and are cast into everlasting torment So that the reprobates remayne hardened in their sinnes and strangers from God Therefore by these notes and infallible tokens God doth poynt at as it were with his finger what manner of iudgement is prepared for them and doth distinguish them from his children whom hee hath begotten agayne This is in a generallitie true of all but it is a dangerous thing to conclude this of any one in particular For many of the Elect beeing oftentimes indued with fayth even in the agony of death are converted vnto Christ in the last gaspe of life Both these come to passe thus God so willing and disposing them hee bringeth some vnto repentance through his compassionate goodnesse and bringeth not others according to his iust iudgement that in the one we may perceive his vndeserved grace in the other his iust iudgement and theyr deserved punishment as Augustine sayth In Epist ad Sixtum This condition on both sides is stedfast For God is eternall so likewise the decrees of Election and reprobation are everlasting and vnchangeable therefore none of the Elect shall perish neyther shall any of the reprobates be saved Let no man hence take occasion to live licentiously because the condition of both is vnchangeable for that Predestination is a cause to every man why hee should stand fast Tom. 7.1244 but vnto none a cause why he should fall sayth Augustine These things come necessarily to passe on both sides God so disposing the matter and cannot happen otherwise because no other efficient cause can bee found in them but onely the free and righteous will of God For there is nothing without God which may moove him to this or that thing So that God willeth a thing and directeth it vnto the end because it so pleaseth and seemeth good vnto him So he alone and none other is the onely cause of his will for none can prescribe any thing vnto him because no man is superior or equal vnto him Therefore in as much as he saveth some by grace and condemneth others in iustice wee ought to seeke no other cause hereof but onely his determinate will and absolute good pleasure And that hee hath ordayned certayne vnto destruction it is as certayne as God himselfe is God For if he were willing simply and absolutely to save all and every one then surely he would give all men all things necessary vnto Salvation but he giveth not all men all thinges necessary vnto Salvation therefore hee will not save all and every one For he that denies a man the meanes to attayne vnto some end doth much more deny him the end it selfe For he that bestoweth not the lesser vpon a man how will hee bestow that which is greater A short conclusion of this worke shewing the chiefe vse thereof and exhorting every of the godly vnto thankefulnesse and sinceritie of life CHAP. 39. THe vse of this doctrine is very great and above all most wholesome First that all the prayse and glory of our Salvation should bee wholy attributed vnto God onely in that he of his mercifull goodnes hath vouchsafed to chuse vs miserable sinners vnto everlasting Salvation and to adopt vs for children through Iesus Christ when as hee had a thousand most iust occasions for which he might worthily condemne vs and whenas there was not one cause in vs wherefore hee should give vs no not the least droppe of cold water So that by choosing vs altogether most vnworthy hee hath made vs worthy through the worthinesse of his Sonne Therefore this free and everlasting Election hath the goodnesse of God and the merite of Christ and the worthinesse thereof for his sure foundation and ground For if the Sonne of God had not beene willing to suffer and satisfie for our sinnes and if God had not beene willing to impute this his satisfaction vnto vs for righteousnesse not one of vs had beene elected vnto Salvation but every one had beene condemned vnto everlasting death So that in this Election the great and incredible goodnesse of God and the most vehement and affectionate love of God towards vs doth appeare as in a most cleere mirror Secondly all that embrace the pure doctrine of the Gospell and doe by a true fayth beleeve in Christ and persevere in him have strong and excellent consolation from hence in that they are elected from everlasting vnto eternall Salvation without any merite eyther foregoing or following and that this blessed and saving Decree concerning our Salvation is vnchangeable and therefore that they can no more fayle and be prevented of Salvation and heavenly glory then God can be separated from his Godhead For as God is everlasting and vnchangeable by nature so also that his Decree and good pleasure concerning the Salvation of the Elect is everlasting and vnchangeable For the vnchangeablenesse sake of this Decree all and every of them which truely beleeve in Christ have most strong and certaine consolation with which they may comfort and refresh themselves in adversitie and other spirituall temptations Wherefore all idolatrie and superstition all hypocrisie and vnbeleefe all false doctrine and desperation being condemned and set aside let vs from the bottome of our heartes and inward affections give thanks vnto God and to his Sonne because that wee are freely elect by God from everlasting and fully redeemed by Christ from all evill and shall so remaine elected and redeemed for ever without any disturbance Let vs therefore all and every of vs with the whole affection of our minde heartily with one mind and one mouth beseech the most merciful Sonne of God our Redeemer that hee would purge vs from the filthinesse of our sinnes by the power of his spirite and renew and fashion vs dayly more and more vnto his owne Image that by living holy and without blame here we may walke faithfully and constantly in his holy commandements and in the true path of the Elect vntill we come vnto the price of our high Calling and to that heavenly Glory and blessed Life to come where abounding in great and vnspeakeable gladnesse no trouble or sorrow beeing mixed with it wee shall triumph with gladsome countenances and ioyfull hearts and possesse vnspeakeable ioyes world without end Amen * ⁎ * To God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost be given all praise and glorie for ever Amen
Apostles purpose to exhort the godly to an invincible patience and an vndaunted perseverance that being susteyned with a certayne hope and constant assurance they should wayt for an happy issue out of all theyr miseries yet notwithstanding he layes open the true fountaynes and springs from whence salvation flowes and springs foorth and sets downe the fyrst causes from whence it is derived poynting at them as it were with his finger And surely in every word of that place there is not onely great importance and singular grace but also the words themselves are for the most part compleat and perfect oracles and conteyne in them whole sentences I have thought good therefore briefly to runne over and compendiously to expound them But before I set vpon the exposition of the words the order and course of the causes of Salvation must seriously be weighed and considered For the causes in regard of their coherence are raunged and displayed by Saint Paule by a most divine skill and a most exquisite and logicall methode For in the first place he setteth downe the foreknowledge of God as the first and soveraigne cause Then he proceedes vnto predestination as being next to that Next he turneth his course and manner of teaching to the effects of both these as to the subordinate and second causes For God by his foreknowledge foresawe all things from before all beginnings Nothing is exempt from this foreknowledge of God but all things and every one thing is contayned and comprehended in that After this hee descendeth from this generall and common fore-knowledge of God as from a large and vnlimited voyce vnto predestination as vnto a more speciall kinde included in this fore-knowledge and so hee proceedes from a generality vnto a more certayne and particular kind For the foreknowledge as in the larger signification it is taken for his providence is Gods eternall decree by which he determined to make the world and all that is therein and to make his glory manifest vnto reasonable creatures namely vnto men and Angels by the governement of the things which hee had made But predestination chiefely is referd and restreyned vnto mankinde which God by predestination hath divided into two kindes of men so that of his owne sole and vndeserved grace he hath chosen some from eternitie whom he would make his heyres in Christ and bring to everlasting salvation and hath appoynted other some vnto everlasting punishment and destruction to the which also he brings them by his iust iudgement from their owne deserts Then the Apostle proceedeth vnto the subordinate causes of salvation and sheweth by what meanes and degrees the elect on the one side come to eternall life and the reprobate on the other side are brought to eternall torments as hereafter in the declaration hereof shall clearely and plainely appeare Furthermore also I thinke this worthy the observing to shew in what order Saint Paule hath disposed and placed the causes of Salvation in respect of time And he hath digested them with such arte and method as that he hath divided them into three distinct differences of times For certayne of them do farre surpasse and exceede all transitory times as Gods foreknowledge and predestination these two causes of Salvation were from eternity appoynted of God without any beginning Certayne of them are made and remayne in time and in these succeeding ages as vocation and iustification the former of which is wrought by the outward preaching of Gods word and the inward working of the holy spirit in the heart and will of man and the latter is gotten and bestowed vpon man by the onely merites and power of Christ his passion So these two causes doe arise in this life and in our age Certayne of them are mixt so that partly they are wrought in this life partly in the time to come after this life as namely they which are begun heere and finished there as glorification and those things that depend thereof This glorification consisteth in the true image of God and the conforming of our will with his will And this image of God and fashioning of our will with his will ariseth and springeth from true and effectuall regeneration And regeneration beginneth in this life presently vpon our vocation and is increased and continued through the whole course of our life vntill at the last it be throughly consummated and finished in an other life Therfore these inferior second causes are as it wer certaine means interposd degrees by which the holy men of God by his eternall counsell are brought to the full possession and fruition of everlasting life and salvation as heereafter shall be shewed in the handling of them In the next place these causes do as aptly agree together betweene themselves in their order and placing as the links of any chayne so that no one of them can be moved out of his place but the whole rancke and order of them will be broken and fall to nothing The order therefore and placing of these causes is in the manner of a golden and princely Chayne whose linkes hang together so artificially and workemanlike that not one linke can be taken away without the breaking of the whole Chayne And this Chayne is nothing else but an excellent glasse of Gods goodnes and mercy for the holy Ghost hath made and linked together this Chayne of the best and chiefest of Gods benefits and it is the highest honour and incredible glory of Gods children with which they are beautified in this life and shall be crowned like Kings in that life eternall which is to come and shall shine more bright then the Sunne it selfe in his chiefest glory And to conclude this Chayne is as it were a golden and celestiall hooke wherewith the Sonne of God letting it downe from heaven draweth his elect from out this world as out of a raging and tempestuous sea and bringeth them into his heavenly and everlasting rest as into an harbor most safe from the danger of any storme and into a most pleasant place of refreshing and freedome from all miseries Lastly the Linkes of this Chayne are in number five in every of which what and howe great benefites of God are conteyned and included in the declaration hereof shall hereafter be shewed These thinges I thought good for certayne causes to set downe as some briefe and compendious Preface before I would handle the exposition of the words which now beeing finished I doe betake my selfe orderly to those thinges which as yet remayne to bee handled and discussed Now the holy Spirite vouchsafe to bee present with me by his holy inspiration and direction and to guide me that am to speake of such high and hidden Mysteries of Heavenly thinges and so inlighten and direct my vnderstanding by his bright-shining Light that those things which shall be spoken concerning the chiefest Articles of Christian Fayth and Principles of Religion may be so spoken of me that they may tende to the Honour and
vpholdeth by his mighty Power against all the sleights of Sathan and against the devices and iniuries of his instruments These and such like vnvsuall workes and more then marveilous wonders of God are so cleare and manifest that no man can doubt of them though never so little except hee desire willingly and obstinately to bee blinde and ignorant Now of these things that are spoken here it may clearely and strongly be gathered and prooved that there is Predestination And these things shall suffice concerning the first thing now we must speake something of the second To predestinate therefore is to purpose and determine something with ones selfe that it should have a being before such time that it be or doe any thing and withall it is the setting apart and ordeining of that thing vnto some certayne ende This belongeth not peculiarly onely to God himselfe but also ought to have relation vnto every wise and prudent man which before hee take in hand to bring to passe any thing is wont seriously and advisedly to have some consultation concerning the end for which he will bring that thing to passe But when this is attributed vnto God it is also very large and is extended generally vnto all creatures which God from everlasting by his certaine decree hath ordeined and disposed to this or that vse and ende before they were created But here when we speake of Mankinde and their ende this word of Predestination is to be referred vnto that deepe and hidden Counsell of God by which hee hath from everlasting firmely decreed and appointed what hee would have done with every particular man Further that the nature of Predestination might the more rightly be vnderstood it must be explaned by certayne degrees The first degree therefore of Predestination is That God from euerlasting before the foundations of the world were layd decreed to create Mankinde in true holinesse and righteousnesse according to his owne Image And that this is so the Scripture witnesseth in many places and the event it selfe confirmed it by experience of the deed done The second degree of Predestination is whereby God in his most iust and most wise iudgement determined to permit and suffer that Mankinde should be tempted of the divell and should fall into sinne and eternall destruction Here is inserted a certayne Digression of the Fall of our first Parents which although they consented vnto the Serpents perswasion by their owne proper and voluntary Will and so fell from God yet this their falling away was not altogether without Gods eternall purpose CHAP. 6. AS God from everlasting did fore-see and ordayne all other things so among these this Fall of Mankinde in the person of our first Parents and all other evilles which followed and flowed from thence So that hee was willing to suffer and not to hinder this Fall that it might be done by others and not by himselfe otherwise it had beene even as easie for him to have kept our first Parents from falling as it was to create them For looke how easie it is for him to doe that which he willeth so easie likewise is it for him to hinder that which he willeth not as Saint Augustine sayth Lib. de corrept grat ca. 96. Neyther was it any iniustice in him but altogether iust in that hee did not keepe them from falling but suffered them to bee overcome by the Serpents perswasion and so to fall into eternall Death For God was not bound vnto them that hee should preserve them and keepe them from falling because hee did not promise it Nay God was not bound vnto them to create them according vnto his owne Image because hee is a most free Agent therefore much lesse was hee bound vnto them to save them from falling Yea our first Parents of their owne voluntarie and free-will without any constraynt did treacherously fall away from God and so falling away did infect both themselves and all their posteritie with sinne and made them alliable vnto eternall Destruction But God not vnwillingly but willingly permitted them to fall otherwise if any thing though never so little could be brought to passe God not being willing thereunto then God should not be God Our first Parents therefore in regard of themselves did that which God would not have them but in respect of the omnipotencie of God they could by no meanes doe it Wherefore it is not to be doubted but that God doth righteously in suffring those things which are done wickedly Lib. de corrept grat capit 100. as S. Augustine sayth And although God do suffer this or that evill to be committed and not hinder it yet for all that hee doth not of himselfe bring to passe that evill nor allowe of it But good things which are conformable to his heavenly wisedome those he fore-saw from everlasting and decreed to bring to passe and effect them Therefore God by himselfe is the first cause and the only effecter of these things because that good things spring and flow forth out of the power of his divine Providence as out of the onely fountayne that is never dryed vp But evill things although God also fore-saw them from everlasting and knew that they would come to passe yet hee himselfe neither approoveth them nor furthereth them nor helpeth them nor bringeth them to passe directly but by his iust iudgement suffereth them to bee committed and done by others Therefore God is not to bee counted as the first cause and effecter of them but Sathan himselfe and mans free-will do beginne them and end them So that Sathan and wicked men are the true and proper causes of evill All things therefore whatsoever are done although they be done by Gods Providence from which nothing can be exempted yet some of them are done his Providence effecting them and some of them are done his Providence permitting apoynting and directing them to their proper ends Therefore all evill and wicked deeds whatsoever are committed and done Gods providence not effecting but suffering them because that God decreed not that he would himselfe effect them from everlasting but because he decreed to suffer and not to hinder them to be done of others So that God not vnwillingly but willingly suffered our first parents to sinne They therefore which attribute vnto God a permission which should be contrary to his will they deny him to be omnipotent For he that permitteth any thing to be done which by no meanes he would have done surely he is not of such power as to let and hinder that which he would not have done Therefore what things soever God suffereth to be done he suffereth them willingly for nothing can possibly be done if he be vnwilling or against it Hence it followeth not that God alloweth and approveth sinnes in themselves as they are things simply evill and contrary vnto his will but rather he hateth them with his whole will and nature and except he mercifully pardon them he revengeth and punisheth
them with eternall torments This therefore must firmely be resolved vpon that al those things which are brought to passe either by God he himselfe effecting them or which are done by other by his permission are not exempt from his providence but are brought to passe by his iust iudgement And God seeing he is the onely and soveraigne goodnes could not but make man good at the first and like vnto himselfe For every piece of worke vsually is like and correspondent to the workeman because that every cause bringeth forth an effect like it selfe So that it is often seene that a good cause generally and naturally bringeth forth a good effect and an evill cause likewise an evill and corrupt effect But when God by his eternall and vnchangeable decree had appointed mankind for the manifestation partly of his mercy and partly of his iustice it was therefore necessary that man should be created such a one by God as should be meete and fit to attayne vnto those ends for which he was created Therefore although man were created by God good and without sinne yet notwithstanding he was created good and without sinne in such sort that of good he might become evill otherwise God could have neither manifested nor exercised his iustice nor mercy in him and those ends which were fore-knowne and appoynted of God from everlasting had fallen to the ground and had not come to their proper effect and purpose Man therefore was to be created of God not necessarily good but changeably so that in respect of the things that happened in his way he might be changed and become otherwise But if he had bene created necessarily and vnchangeably good he had been rather a God then a creature For vnchangeablenesse in it selfe is the propriety of God alone and cannot be found in any creature which alone is or may be changed But God only is one and the same alwayes constant ever like himselfe and is never changed And howsoever the holy Angels are already and holy men shall be in the world to come placed in such degree of goodnes as that they may by no meanes fall from it into the contrary yet in both these this vnchangeablenes is not a naturall propriety but is and shall be the free gift and benefite of God Moreover God was not the proper author of this change in man from God to evill For he created man such an one that if he would himselfe he might have remayned without sinne For as his will was made free by God so he also of his owne accord without any outward constraint or compulsion chose the evill that was forbidden by God and by choosing that did contrary to the will of God and so sinned But if God should have made that change in man from good to evill certainely he should have been no lesse accounted the cause of the evill then if he had created it from the beginning For if he had eyther constreyned man to do evill by some forced and violent motion or by any other meanes inclined his will to this evill certaynely God himselfe had sinned together with man yea had sinned much more then man For there remayneth more evill in the cause that doth compell then in the cause that is compelled But in as much as man of his owne accord leaned vnto the perswasion of the Devill and withall of his owne free will without any outward compulsion desired the evill that was forbidden by God and so fell from God this change therefore from good to evill did arise from Sathans perswasion and from mans will freely choosing and committing the evill Therefore Adams free will and the Devils motion are the true causes of mans misery So that although our first Parents were created by God according to his owne image in holines and righteousnes both in body and minde and had free will given vnto them yet this their free will was not sufficient of it selfe to retayne Gods image and originall righteousnes because they were overcome by temptation and sinned But if the participation and ayde of the divine grace had vpheld them they had not fallen but had remayned innocent as at the first they were created Therefore although man was deceived by the temptation and subtilty of Sathan and brought into sinne yet notwithstanding because that of his owne free will he did assent and agree vnto the perswasion of the Devill therefore he himselfe was the first and chiefest cause of his owne ruine and decay for Sathan may perswade a man to evill but he cannot by force draw or compell any man to evill Therefore this willing revolting from good to evill is the cause of originall corruption which first began to be in the first mans will and afterward that infection and corruption by the iust iudgement of God descended and was derived vnto all and every of his posterity which hath made them altogether and every one apart by himselfe subiect to Gods iust iudgement and guilty of eternall damnation and that so that God the continuall enemy and revenger of all evill may iustly suffer all and every of them to be destroyed and to perish in that corruption without doing iniury to any of them because he is indebted to none of them So that the first man was so created of God and so left vnto the free choyse of his owne will that he might remayne in his innocency or fall from it if he would himselfe Although therefore that to fall and not to fall were vnto man indifferent and contingent and eyther of them as well one as the other might have happened and fallen out yet of these things which were otherwise meere matters of contingency that only fell out which God from everlasting had foreseene and decreed that it should happen So that those things which in respect of man are doubtfull and of their owne nature apt to fall out on either side which may happen or not happen or which may come to passe otherwise then man had purposed these very same things I say in respect of God are certayne and determined so that they cannot fall out otherwise then God from everlasting hath fore-ordained Hereby it is manifest that in things that pertayne vnto man if a man respect the counsell and end of man they are as it were matters of chaunce But if a man consider Gods decree and the end appoynted of him there are no matters of chance at all in inferior things nor in any thing els whatsoever For the creatures which are said to be second causes by reason of the want of wisedome do not foresee and know the future events of things and if peradventure they do foresee any yet they have them not in their power nor are indued with any such ability as to accomplish them and bring them to their wished and appoynted end wherefore many things oftentimes fall out and happen contrary to their intent and meaning and even their setled counsels are many times broken off and
holy although he willeth those things which the vngodly do because God willeth them with a farre other manner of counsell and end then the vngodly do will and do them So in the death of Christ the action of the wicked was so evill that in respect of them it could not be worse nor more vile for they slew the innocent and killed the Lord of glory and intended in that one consent and outrage of theirs to hinder the salvation of mankinde yet that very same action in respect of God was so good and holy that no other coulde bee better nor more holy because he by the death of his sonne would redeeme miserable sinners from eternall death and translate them into heavenly glory and eternall life Wherefore wicked and vniust men oftentimes vnwittingly and intending some other thing doe fulfill and performe the good and righteous will of God Yet notwithstanding afterward God iustly punisheth condemneth them because they pursue their owne wicked desires and vngodly enterprises and respect not nor regarde Gods will at all They preferre their owne perverse affections before God and before his will So the actions of Almighty God and of wicked men differ by their diverse purposes and are distinguished one from another in their diverse ends So also at this day God suffereth many sinnes to bee committed of wicked men throughout sundry Nations and in the greatest kingdomes where he doth not vouchsafe them his word nor reforme them by his spirite and doth not enlighten their mindes with the knowledge of himselfe nor governe and incline their willes and affections so that they may propose to themselves this principall end as their onely marke namely to endevour to execute Gods knowne will earnestly and continually and to frame and fashion themselves their life and their manners vnto it as vnto a continuall rule to walke by and to honor God by their obedience in eschewing of evill and dooing of good these things except God worke in them by his word and spirite whatsoever they intend or doe howsoever before men it may seeme good and iust yet all that in the sight of GOD is nothing else but vglie and execrable sinne For God doth not at all regard nor respect the outward workes except the integrity of the heart go with them and appeare in them therefore where that wanteth there sinnes are accounted for no sinnes and vertue with vices and one thing with an other are confounded and so there will be but little difference betweene honesty and dishonesty Heere the author returneth to his purpose and ioyneth the third degree of praedestination then the causes of praedestination are vnfoulded next the definition of it is given and lastly praedestination is distinguished from providence CHAP. 7. THese things it seemed good to touch by the way and lightly to handle concerning permission which is the second degree of predestination now we must come vnto the third degree of predestination Thirdly to predestinate heere is nothing els then to purpose to choose some and to adopt them for sonnes in Christ out of the vniversall company of wicked men For God by his mercifull foresight did ordayne and appoynt from amongst sinfull men and such as were past cure in respect of themselves to receive some vnto mercy without any merit of theirs to redeeme them through Christ and by him also to bring them vnto eternall life But heere more properly and peculiarly is meant the other acceptation of this word election as in the definition heereof a little before we have declared This word election is taken diversely in the scripture so that sometimes it hath reference vnto some office or duty and sometimes to life eternall After the former manner Saul and Iudas were elected the one of which was chosen to a Kingdome and the other to an Apostleship neyther of them to eternall life But seeing that no definition can rightly be made or vnderstoode vnlesse the causes of which it is compounded and made be well perceived and knowne therefore I thinke I shall not do amisse if first I lay open the causes of predestination before I set downe the definition of it As for the efficient and first moving cause of predestination there can no other be set downe and appoynted but onely the eternall and onely purpose and good pleasure of God For God onely is hee which by his most wise counsell and iudgement doth discerne betweene men and men and hath decreed from everlasting what shall become of every man God hath lively expressed and declared this in his word manifestly and playnely for men considered in themselves and by themselves are all alike corrupted so that some are no whit better then other some Therefore in the iudgement of man some cannot be preferd before others because there is one and the selfesame condicion of all But God the highest iudge of all hath elected some men to eternall life in Christ and hath in his iust iudgement appoynted others to everlasting destruction and whome he hath chosen vnto salvation those hath he chosen by his owne meere mercy and vndeserved grace hee regarded nothing that is without himselfe but whome he hath elected he did onely for himselfe and in himselfe and not for any other cause Moreover he could finde nothing in those whome he hath chosen that might be worthy of election because they were all defiled and strangers from God also he could foresee no good thing in them as proceeding from them for which they should be chosen If he foresaw any good thing in them himselfe wrought it wholy and altogether in them For there can be found no good thing in them nor elsewhere of which God is not the sole author and onely effector Therefore what good thing so ever is and abideth in them that God himselfe wholy beginneth and finisheth in them And he beginneth and finisheth nothing in them but he decreed from everlasting that he would begin it and finish it in them For if in time he should worke any thing in them how little soever which he decreed not before time then should there be found manifest change in God which should do some thing by a new will and not by his eternall will Those things which the Papists pratle of here concerning workes foreseene whose cause and beginning should be man are vayne and frivolous fictions which after in their places shall more largely be confuted and reiected seeing the efficient and first moving cause of election is onely and alone Gods mercy and goodnesse hee by his bountifull and more then fatherly good will hath from everlasting made and finished the whole decree of Election Ephes 2.5 moreover Election is altogether the free and vndeserved favour of God For all men by nature were wholy corrupt and the children of wrath therefore in them God could foresee nothing at all but extreame and most absolute wretchednes They also which take the name of election which is found in many places of the
kindes of praedestination and by what proprieties election which is one of the kindes of praedestination is described which that they might more largely be explaned they are devided into certayne severall Chapters even as they seeme to have most affinity amongst themselves CHAP. 8. SEeing then that praedestination hath two kindes or parts which in their effect and ends do much differ the one from the other to which by reason of their divers obiects and contrary ends one and the selfe same thing can not be attributed nor given vnto them it is behoovefull therefore and necessitie doth require it also that for the more clearenesse and perspicuity sake every of them should be handled severally The order of teaching therefore requireth that in the first place we should speake of the Election and Salvation of the Godly and next of the reiection and destruction of the wicked Election is the eternall free and vnchangeable purpose and good pleasure of Gods Will whereby God hath decreed with himselfe to convert vnto Christ some separated from out of the whole company of Man-kind and in him to save them and through him to give them everlasting Life This Definition as well for the matter of it as the maner and ende we finde expressely set downe in Saint Paul to the Ephesians where the Apostle sayth Cap. 1. vers 4.5 He hath chosen vs in him namely in Christ before the foundations of the worlde that we should bee holy and without blame before him through love who hath predestinated vs into the adoption of children by Iesus Christ vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his Will Whereas hee sayth In him that is in Christ he hath chosen vs before the foundations of the world he expressely pointeth at this eternall Counsell for as much as God from all eternitie hath by his determinate Counsell fore-ordayned some men vnto Life eternall Whereas hee sayth In Christ hee sheweth the meanes whereby of vnworthy he made vs worthy to wit that Salvation wholy is gotten and bestowed vpon vs through Christ for he made satisfaction for our sinnes by the sacrifice of his Death and by the power of his Spirite turneth vnto himselfe vs that were gone astray and draweth vs vnto him and grafteth vs into himselfe by a true faith being grafted into him doth mercifully and mightily preserve vs in this life and doth dayly renew and fashion vs more and more according to the Image of God vntill at length wee having put off this flesh and layde aside all other infirmities hee may bring vs into eternall Life Therefore although God hath separated and chosen into the fellowship of Salvation men which in themselves were wholly defiled and most vnworthy from among others to whom in respect of themselves they were every way alike yet by electing them in Christ of most vnworthy hee hath made them most worthy through his worthinesse Whomsoever therefore God hath loved from everlasting those he determined to make deare vnto himselfe in Christ their Redeemer and Saviour As often therefore as in the Scripture there is mention made of the eternall love and election of God so often as concerning the causes of the execution of both there is vnderstood and presupposed Christ the Mediator as the onely ground and sure foundation of them both But that this Definition of Election may the more easily be conceyved and more playnely be vnderstood of every one the Proprieties thereof must orderly be set downe and layd open As for the Proprieties of Election although all of them are not contayned in this short abridgement of the Definition because vsually the Definitions of things are made of more generall words which vnder them contayne the more particular yet all of them are eyther contayned as vnderstood vnder these or doe necessarily follow them in the order of attayning of Salvation and do depend of them like as the Linkes of any Chayne are combined one within an other Here is a most strong Foundation layde for the Fayth of Gods Children for as much as Election and so consequently Salvation that dependeth of it can by no meanes be annihilated and perish because it is stayed grounded on the eternall good pleasure of God CHAP. 9. THe first Propriety therefore of Election is the eternal Decree which was beyond and before all ages in as much as God in his infinite goodnesse did thinke of the Salvation of Mankind before he had created any thing This circumstance of eternal time doth declare that God alone did of himselfe bring to passe the worke of our Salvation according vnto the good pleasure of his will This decree of Election he did only once make before all beginnings which alwayes after remayneth firme for ever and continueth vnchangeable throughout all succeeding ages It is not contrary to this Decree whereas the Prophets say that God yet chooseth Sion and Ierusalem For such an election is the manifestation the continuance and the applying of that heavenly eternal election For God in mans iudgement seemeth then to elect a man when he calleth him blesseth him and maketh him partaker of his Grace And of this Eternity there is often mention made in the holy Scripture that all merits and all other meanes whatsoever to which men are wont to bind attribute their salvation might be wiped out of the number of the causes of salvation that the goodnes of God alone might only be acknowledged honored for the sole cause of our salvation Ephes 1● So Paul manifestly and in expresse words affirmeth that we were chosen in Christ before the foundations of the world were laid 2. Tim. 1.9 that God hath called vs with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his purpose grace which was given vs in Christ Iesus before the world began By these the like testimonies of scripture are taught that Gods Decree touching our Salvation is no new nor sudden thing but eternall and without any beginning And that God is the onely cause of our Salvation and that he had no regard of our merites or worthinesse because there were none at all for as yet wee our selves were not created As often as there is mention made in the Scriptures of the causes of Salvation wee are called vnto this eternall Election as to the fountayne of Salvation and that for sundry causes These are the especiall causes why God in the matter of our Salvation reduceth vs to his eternall Counsell First that we might know that there is no change in God for if after Sinne committed he had be thought himselfe of compassion towards vs and had taken no care for it before hee might surely seeme changeable as he that willed and appoynted one thing before sinne and another thing after sinne But seeing that God from everlasting hath decreed and ordained Salvation for vs long before sinne was committed hereby is prooved manifestly the setled vnchangeablenesse and continuall constancy of his
Will Therefore the everlasting good pleasure of God is the onely vnmooveable ground of our Salvation so that our Salvation is subiect and in danger to none of the devices of Sathan to no troubles of the world nor to no waverings of the flesh because it hath a most strong foundation vpon Gods everlasting Decree Secondly this circumstance of eternall time hath prevented the entrance of Sathans temptations For if God should have taken the first care of our Salvation after the Fall of man was committed and had not thought of it before then surely this Will of God might seeme to have a beginning And Sathan might thereby take occasion maliciously to alledge against God and to perswade vs that the Will of God concerning our Salvation is not certayne and constant because that as it had a beginning so it might likewise have an ende and wee being prone vnto all diffidence might quickly have thought it had beene so and by this meanes might have beene in doubt of our Salvation Therefore God by his provident goodnesse hath timely prevented these temptations and sleights of Sathan and hath found out an excellent remedy for our diffidence teaching vs that his Decree for our Salvation is no sudden thing nor limitted within the listes of momentany time but eternall and vnchangeable So our fayth is then builded and grounded vpon a strong and vnmooveable foundation when we heare and know that our Salvation was ordayned and appointed of God from everlasting Lastly this Note of eternall Time is profitable for this purpose namely to withdraw and reclaime vs as well from all regard or respect of our owne merits and worthinesse as also from the opinion of the intercession of other men for vs. For God did know that the divellish opinions of our owne satisfaction and merit would often times steale vpon vs so that wee should thinke that there is some goodnesse in vs by which we should be gratious and acceptable before God For man doth not willingly humble and cast himselfe downe thus farre as to attribute all the prayse of his Salvation vnto the Grace of God only These things and the like the holy Scripture doth prevent and dispell shewing that God hath elected vs from everlasting before we were and hath given vs Salvation in Christ and so doth condemne vs of foolishnes and vngodlinesse if wee now created would get or deserve our Salvation by any other meanes For such is the vntowardnesse and blindnesse of mans disposition because that wretched men are so bewitched of Sathan by sinne that when there is any speech of Salvation and everlasting Felicitie they would gladly beginne from themselves Hence they frame to themselves divers preparations by which they strive to prevent and deserve the favour of God But by what meanes I pray you can they deserve any thing which are not at all And what good works or merits of theirs could there be before the world was made and before their owne Creation Therefore the eternall Election of God doth every where throughout the whole Scripture proove that this Mercy is the free gift of GOD and that hee for his owne sake onely was mooved to elect vs. So that this eternall Election doth not onely set farre aside all respect of mans worthinesse but also throweth man downe even to Hell together with all his merites if hee should bee dealte withall according to his owne desertes and Gods iust iudgement Here therefore is set downe a continuall contrariety and opposition betweene mans merite and worthinesse and Gods eternall Election yea such and so great an opposition that the affirming of the one is the manifest deniall of the other Looke how much therefore the Scripture attributeth to Gods Election 2. Tim. 2.9 so much it detracteth from mans worthinesse For this cause the holy Scripture hath set that eternall Election and mans worthinesse as two things extreamely contrary one to an other teaching vs that a man may sooner and easier wring oyle out of a Flint stone or strike fire out of the middest of the Ocean then that God should finde any thing in mans Nature worthy of his Election They therefore which seeke for Salvation or the least parte thereof without the eternall Election of GOD they doe not onely seeke Life in death and Salvation in the middest of condemnation but also they seeke God without GOD and by such seeking shall finde nothing else but hell fire and eternall punishment because that one and the selfe same thing cannot proceede from divers causes For God onely is good and so good that hee can finde no good elsewhere at any time or in any place but onely in himselfe and contrariwise mans Nature is so wicked and depraved that out of it can proceede nothing but wicked deedes and vngodly practises But of this hereafter wee will speake more largely It is therefore the vndeserved and altogether the free goodnesse of God in that hee from everlasting ordained and appointed eternall Salvation for vs when wee were not as then created And therefore of so good and bountifull a God who would not hope well Moreover seeing God hath elected vs to Salvation and Life everlasting hence it manifestly appeareth that none could bee our Intercessour to God for vs. Because then there was no man beside God onely and alone which was the whole cause of our Election Hence likewise as out of a most cleare Glasse we may see what care God hath of our Salvation because that from everlasting he did so providently prevent and turne away all the hindrances of our Salvation So the incredible and more then fatherly goodnesse of God is chiefely made knowne in this namely that he was carefull for our Salvation before we were And let these thinges suffice to bee briefely compiled concerning the first Proprietie of Election The second Proprietie of Election is that Election is an high and hidden Decree not onely because God from all eternitie before the foundation of the world before any thing was created did fore-ordaine and appoynt it with himselfe but also in respect of those things which are contayned and ordayned in that eternall decree which are so deepe and hidden in the meaning and vnderstanding of them that they doe not onely farre out-strippe mans capacity but also doe as farre exceed the vnderstanding of the Angelles themselves as the highest Heaven is distant from the lowest earth For the manner of redeeming and saving of Mankinde is so deepe and secret that the very Angels themselves cannot surmise the least of it much lesse consider and determine of it For this cause it is often called in the Scripture the Mysterie that is hidden in God Ephes 3 9. Col. 1.26 because it is manifest and knowne vnto God onely and because no Creature can know it but by Revelation And so it is called by Paul to the Romans Cap. 16.25 the secret Mysterie that is vnknowne to the Creatures In this great and secret Consultation the Sonne
say he ordayned Christ from everlasting to bee the Mediator for the Salvation of the world that he might reconcile God vnto the worlde by the Sacrifice of his death Here beholde and admire the inestimable Mercie of God in that hee had rather his owne Sonne should die then that all Mankinde should perish Here agayne beholde and reverently embrace the incomprehensible goodnesse and mercy of the Sonne of God towardes wretched man in that hee accounted the Salvation of Mankinde more precious then his owne life Christ himselfe having respect to this sayth in Saint Iohn Iohn 3.16 So GOD loved the Worlde that he sent his onely begotten Sonne that by him hee might restore and bestow vpon Mankinde Life that was lost and Salvation that was past hope Therefore this provident Wisedome of God was wonderfully necessary for Mankinde and very profitable yea and in such sort that without it all Mankinde had perished So that the Wisedome of God is to be adored and reverenced of vs and ought continually to bee the onely rule and measure of our wisedome and that so as that all other wisedome without it should be base and of no value and be no more regarded then meere folly and foolishnesse it selfe And for as much as God of his infinite Wisedom found a meanes to deliver vs from such a bottomlesse depth of miserie hence should the Godly entertayne and conceyve great hope in all their adversities For seeing hee hath found out a most wise meanes and way out of so deepe and intricate a mischiefe out of which the wisedome of men nor Angelles could give no direction how to escape therefore surely hee can very easily deliver vs from any dangers of this life how great soever they bee for in his hand are many and incredible meanes of delivery So that where there is no counsell nor meanes of delivery with man there is there a certaine issue and ready way with God Therefore in these dangers which threaten assured death presently and savour of nothing else but of the open grave and vn-avoydable destruction in these GOD most wise hath many meanes of helpe and deliverance from them For it is an easie thing with him to make an issue where there is none sooner then in the twinkling of an eye if it bee his pleasure This then is our onely hope and strong consolation in our extreame temptations and troubles that wee have God for our Helper and Deliverer which in the middest of death can stretch forth his handes and restore vs to life and hath many more meanes to helpe vs then there are Creatures in the whole vniversall worlde And thus farre of the thirde Proprietie of Election The free and vndeserved Mercy of God is the true cause of Election and that is greater by many degrees then that the greatest Sinner can or ought rightly to doubt of it though never so little much lesse despaire of it CHAP. XI THe fourth Proprietie is that Gods Election is altogether a mercifull free and voluntary Decree that is to say that God had no other reason to induce him to choose miserable man but onely his owne meere mercie and favourable good-will as is aforesayde in the causes of Predestination This Mercy of God is not any affection in God which beginneth of a sudden sometimes and sometimes endeth of a sudden neyther is it any Passion which sometime increaseth and sometime decreaseth for if there were any such succeeding change in God God should in no wise be God but it is an eternal and a most ready good Will to do good vnto miserable men Therefore this eternal good Wil in God himselfe is the onely and sole cause why he elected miserable man to the attainement of Salvation Aske nowe what is the reason that he hath receyved this or that man into favour and hath pardoned his sinnes and remitted the punishment and there can no other cause bee rendred but even Gods vndeserved Mercy And hee is sayde to be mercifull to him whom he vouchsafeth his favour and grace such a favourable and gratious affection of his good Will to speake after the manner of men is called Mercy which in God is nothing else but an eternall and gratious purpose to have mercy on those on whom hee will have mercy that is to say to give them freedome from their misery This is alwayes one and the selfe same in God which never altereth but standeth and abideth continually in one state and degree For the names of these affections that are given vnto God from the Passions that are in man doe not set forth any Passion or Change in God but paynt out vnto vs his vnspeakeable liking or hatred of those thinges which then are in hand So this Mercy of God is no new or sudden motion and affection in God but his eternall and vnchangeable Proprietie which as it is once such it is alwayes without which God cannot be God As often therefore as any man thinketh of God let him remember his vnspeakeable goodnesse and readinesse to helpe which can in no meanes be separated nor dis-ioyned from God But many times those things that are proper vnto man are attributed vnto him because his Properties cannot be comprehended of man and therefore they are shadowed forth vnto man by the properties of man as it were through a Lattice and so are made knowne vnto him So God doth after a sort represent vnto vs as in a Glasse his spiritual and heavenly Mysteries and hidden Decrees by the speech or affections of man And thus God for his vnspeakeable Loves sake toward Mankinde doth not thinke much to descend from his greatnesse and from the Throane of his Maiestie and debase himselfe so lowe as to apply himselfe to the capacity of a rude and frayle man And from hence is seene better then in any Glasse how great care God taketh for the Salvation of Mankind This Mercie is that most speciall goodnesse of God which is not bounded and restrayned within the limites of this life but stretcheth and reacheth vnto all Eternity so that it bringeth with it everlasting Life and eternall Salvation and contayneth and includeth those onely which are elected from everlasting and those that shall be blessed for evermore This differeth very much from the generall Mercy of God by which hee cherisheth and maintayneth all living Creatures for it is one thing to have a care over all living Creatures to provide thinges necessary for them and mercifully to guide and governe them So that although God in his Fatherly care doth not forsake even the bruite beastes but careth for each of them yet more especially God declareth his goodnesse in Mankinde For he doth good not onely to the righteous and godly but also to the vniust and vnthankefull For hee maketh the Sunne to rise vpon the good and the badde Mat. 5.45 Luke 6.23 sayth Christ in Matthew and in Luke Such benefites of God are temporall and common to the Godly and to the
the selfe-same thing saying that God is gratious Exod. 34.6 Ioel. 2.13 Ionah 4.2 mercifull long-suffering abundant in goodnes and truth so looke how many words are ioyned together for to set forth Gods fatherly love so many mouthes as it were and toongs hath God sounding from heaven by which as with the words of a father our mercifull God inviteth and allureth men vnto his mercy By these so many prayses of Gods mercy we are taught not only that God is the sole fountayne of all goodnes but also this is likewise shewed that we are not so hardly perswaded of any thing as to know and beleeve that God will be gratious and mercifull vnto vs for the praysing of Gods mercy is for the most part a reproofe of mans incredulity The scripture therefore with these prayses of Gods goodnes as with so many wedges doth drive out and expell mans vnbeliefe But the Papists heere do most grievously offend in that they fayne God to be other then indeed he is So that they bewray their owne vnbeliefe and malice in that they attribute and trust more in themselves and their owne workes then in God infinitely mercifull Otherwise they would leave this fable of workes foreseene and rest themselves wholy vpon Gods mercy But they shall surely feele though then too late when God commeth vnto iudgement that they deceive themselves and others by these their fayned and lying workes For he that peevishly resisteth Gods mercy is worthily deprived of it Secondly they doe grossely offend against Gods Iustice because they are not ashamed to bring before God most iust their fayned and defiled works as if they were good perfect as if God were blind wanted iudgement discretion to discerne betweene good and bad betwixt perfect works and vnperfect Surely the Papists in this respect doe like those which take a false cause in hand and yet to make it good they labour to blindfold and corrupt the Iudge with bribes that they might obtayne that by deceyt and bribery which by Iustice and Equitie they could not attayne So the Papistes with their workes fore-seene as with so many rewardes labour to corrupt God and to turne him from the right and draw him to the wrong cause and so doe not onely make God like vnto an vniust Iudge but also much worse For choyce giftes and bountifull rewardes are vsually brought vnto a Iudge that hee may the easier bee corrupted to favour vniust causes But the Papistes bring vnto God not perfect workes but filthy and abominable sinnes For God as wee have sayde before could foresee no good workes but those which he himselfe wrought in man but of these the Papists dispute not in this place We have shewed before that man not partly but wholy take him at the best is corrupted and depraved through sinne Therefore all workes which man of himselfe doth or bringeth forth by his owne proper and native vertue can in no wise be good nor acceptable vnto God For from a corrupt and wicked man can proceede nothing but corrupt and wicked deedes for the effects are vsually like the causes Such therefore as the cause hath beene such effects likewise must needes proceede and follow thereon Therefore as out of an vncleane fountayne there proceedeth an vncleane streame and as from an evill tree there groweth evill fruite so also by a corrupt and wicked man can be wrought nothing but corrupt and wicked deeds and endevours For the effectes can not bee better nor more excellent then their causes So that when the Papistes make such workes the cause of Election doe they not after a sorte turne God into a sinfull man doe they not make him the patrone and allower of wickednesse wherein is seene their Sathanicall blindenesse and divelish madnesse So that out of this Fiction of the Papistes as out of a glasse manifestly appeareth what a terrible and dangerous mischiefe it is lewdly to stray out of the worde of God and to whirle vp and downe in franticke speculations and to fayne and suppose false causes for true Agayne if God from everlasting could have foreseene that very good and perfect workes would proceede from man yet those by no meanes could haue beene sufficient to deserve or get Salvation by For an eternall and infinite life cannot be attayned as a reward for a temporall labour and finite worke because there ought to be a iust proportion betweene the labour and the hyre that according as the labour was so also should the wages be payd So that for a great labour there is vsually allotted and appoynted a great reward But Life eternall and heavenly Glory is a farre greater and more excellent good thing then can bee deserved by mans labour or industrie nay Life eternall doth in the worth greatnesse and excellency of it farre exceede and surpasse the heavens and the whole world nay nothing that is created may iustly be compared vnto it So that as there is no comparison betweene a temporall desert and an eternall benefite so also is there no proportion betweene an infinit good a finite worke Whosoever therefore braggeth of his owne workes let him take heed that he be not punished rather then rewarded Thirdly they offend against the Wisedome of God in that they endevour to shewe an other way to attayne Salvation then hee hath revealed in his word For God will have his Mercy and free Election to bee the onely way and gate into eternall Life That the Scriptures teach manifestly in divers places saying Blessed are all they whose sinnes are forgiven Psal 32.1 Rom. 4.6 7 8. and to whom the Lorde imputeth not sinne But the Papistes preferre theyr good workes fore-seene to bee the cause of Salvation rather then Gods goodnesse So they would erect and set vp their owne righteousnesse which God bestoweth not vpon them by faith neyther hath Christ merited by his Passion Wherefore they do not obey Gods divine wisedom and counsell neyther will they be subiect vnto it which in the ende shall fall out evill for them and turne to theyr destruction For they which despise and cast off Gods counsell doe loose his mercy and are condemned as Augustine sayth in one place Wherefore their wisedome is not onely vayne but also tending to destruction which are wise against God But surely such wisedome speaking properly and according to divinity is not to bee called wisedome but the subtilty of Sathan and craftinesse of wicked men whereby they mocke God delude men For the wisedom of God is so the fountaine and spring of all wisdom that no other living creature can have any greater wisedome then God doth communicate and bestow vpon him Looke therefore howe much wisedome God doth worke and preserve in a man so much wisedome hee hath and better or more wisedome hee cannot have They therefore which will be more wise then God would have them their wisedome commeth not so much of God as of the divell Therefore the superstitious and
blasphemous Papists seeing in this poynt their wisedome is contrary to God are not to bee accounted wise men but sottes and fooles For it were better for them that they had no wisedome at all and that they were more blockish then fooles then thus to resist and rebell against the wisedom of God Therefore whatsoever they talke of concerning works fore-seene and our owne merits it is a meere and manifest illusion of the divell and a most certayne ship-wracke of their owne Salvation Moreover in this they greatly offend in that they are not afrayd to turne the great and excellent gifts of God to the dishonour of him and to the honour of the divell For they abuse their wisedome by which men do excell beastes against God and against their owne Salvation For to this ende God would have man to bee wise and indued with reason that by the worde of the Gospell hee might acknowledge God to be his Creator and Christ his Redeemer and that he might honor God and attayne Salvation by meditating vpon eternal life But they apply the strength of their wisedome to this namely to the invention and coyning of those things which are repugnant to the will of God so they of their owne accord and of set purpose doe convert those helpes which are good in themselves vnto hurtfull impediments Therefore this wisedome of the Papistes which is exercised about workes fore-seene and about merites is not onely carnall but also divelish because it is contrary to the will of God As farre as right differeth from wrong so much doe the Papists differ from God because all their wisedome doth make open warre against the wisedome of God whilest they set vp their works fore-seene against his grace For they strive earnestly for this to make the grace of God not altogether free but partly deserved and so doe derogate from the mercy of God But prayse and glory be to God because he hath prevented vs by his free goodnesse and aboundant grace and hath predestinated vs vnto eternall life freely and not for our workes or merites fore-seene And surely it is a grievous thing to heare that the Papistes are so fallen from the word of God and that they without the wisedome of God and Christ his spirite boast themselves to bee Christians For if they had the spirit of Christ and did submit themselves to the wisedome of God they would know as instructed by the word of God that we were freely elected by God from everlasting and that they should not thinke nor determine of Election otherwise then God hath revealed and prescribed in his word and beeing regenerate by the spirite of Christ they would have a care of Gods glory and not be the servants of Sathan But now their whole study and wisedome consists in this to iudge of what pleaseth them according to their owne iudgement and discretion And so indeed doe shew that they are altogether strangers from the spirite and Gospell of Christ and that they doe wholy detest it Farre therefore be from vs this studie and doctrine of the Papistes being as the shoppe and illusion of the divell yea let it be from a Christian heart farther then the heaven is distant from the earth Fourthly they offend against the trueth of God in that they affirme that workes fore-seene are the cause of our Salvation For God hath ordayned Iesus Christ from everlasting that hee should make satisfaction for our sinnes and redeeme vs from all iniquity fayth Peter 1. Pet. 1.20 Moreover the Sonne of God himselfe affirmeth often in the Evangelists Iohn 3.36 that all which beleeve in him have eternall Life Iohn 5.24 and shall not come into condemnation For hee is that Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world Heb. 9.12 he suffered once for vs and by suffering purchased for vs eternall Redemption Therefore in the vertue of his Passion our whole Salvation and Life consisteth These and the like testimonies of Scripture doe ascribe Life eternall vnto the Sacrifice of Christ onely as to a meritorious cause For God is true and therefore will perfourme those things which hee hath promised faythfully and truely But hee hath promised in the Scripture in divers places that the onely Sacrifice of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the onely price of our Redemption from all our sinnes For by Isaiah he promiseth expressely that his Servant meaning Christ should by his knowledge iustifie many because hee hath vnder-gone and borne theyr iniquities Therefore howe much soever the Papistes doe attribute vnto workes fore-seene so much doe they necessarily detract from the merite of Christ because those workes fore-seene and these merites of Christ are such contraries as that one and the selfe same thing cannot bee attributed to them both But the Scripture of God which is the onely and most simple trueth doth every where ascribe the cause of our Election vnto Gods free Bounty and likewise ascribeth Redemption and Salvation that proceedeth and commeth thereof vnto the onely Merite of Christ Therefore it doth not onely leave no roome for theyr workes foreseene but doth also convince them of falshood and reiect and condemne them as manifest wrongs against Christ For whatsoever is not of Grace that is deadly and tendeth to damnation But these works fore-seene of the Papistes are not of Grace for they say that they are the vertues of humane nature therefore those workes fore-seene are deadly and tend to damnation Wherefore seeing they bring destruction with them these workes are wholy to be reiected on the contrary Christ his Merites seeing they bring Salvation with them are with heart and minde readily to be embraced But if the Papists did beleeve God when he promiseth and did rest themselves onely vpon his word of trueth they would let goe their workes fore-seene But seeing they do produce them they doe manifestly declare that they put more confidence in their workes then they doe in God or in his worde And so they offend against the trueth of God before which they preferre their owne workes and merites fore-seene and doe perversely accuse God of infidelity and falshood For if they did beleeve that God were faythfull and constant in perfourming of his promises they would never fly vnto workes fore-seene as to the helpers of his Grace Fiftly they doe offend against the Omnipotency of God because they presume and vndertake thinges that are farre above theyr strength and power For God is onely omnipotent and hee is the onely effecter and beginner of all power and strength in such sorte that no Creature can bee more powerfull nor able to doe or perfourme more then God hath given him ability and force to doe Wherefore every creature can bring to passe and perfourme so much as it is enabled by the strength that God worketh and preserveth in it But God giveth not infinit strength and omnipotency vnto any creature for so of a creature hee should make him God and
give his glory to another which by the Prophet Esaias he flatly denieth to doe saying Esay 48.11 I will not give my glory to another that is God will not cause that any Creature should have infinite strength or infinite wisedome For of ones selfe to perfourme and bring forth those workes which may merite Election and eternall life is not in the power of any creature For life eternall is a farre more excellent good and greater worke then mans strength is able to compasse That life is heavenly and infinite and therefore not to bee gotten or procured but by an heavenly and infinite power For as wee have sayde before there is no comparison nor proportion betweene an infinite good thing and a finite worke and merite Therefore when as the Papists brag that they are able to make themselves worthy of their elelection by their owne proper workes and merits they doe more foolishly and fottishly then if they should take in hand to build and set vp a new heaven and a newe earth with mallets and other tooles For albeit that this bee altogether impossible for them to doe yet that other is farre more hard and much more impossible For God the onely Almighty One was able to create the Heaven and the Earth and all that is contained in Heaven and in Earth by his word onely without any difficulty but he could not redeeme Mankinde from eternall damnation but by the precious blood of his Sonne So the Scripture calleth them that shall bee saved the Chosen in Christ namely in that hee hath redeemed them by his blood and restored Gods Image in them Wherefore seeing that Salvation could not bee recovered by any other meanes but by the most bitter death and passion of Christ hence it clearely followeth that there-obtayning of Salvation doth farre exceed the strength and power of any creature whatsoever Wherefore it is most false and wicked which the Papists dreame of that man is elected vnto Salvation for such or such good works foreseene Because those workes cannot pacifie the exceeding great wrath of God nor make satisfaction for the sinnes of man For as we have sayde before they are altogether repugnant and contrary vnto God therefore they doe not pacifie him but offend him and provoke him the more to anger Surely the whole masse of the worlde may farre more easily bee stayed vp with a staffe of reede then Salvation can bee gotten or obtayned by the power of man But that fiction concerning workes fore-seene should have the more likelyhood of trueth if they did bring forth such workes to deserve Salvation as were truely good but they can bring forth no such for as wee have sayde before man is wholly corrupt and wicked therefore there can bee expected from him nothing but corrupt and wicked deedes Lastly by theyr workes fore-seene they doe manifestly tempt God as if he were not able to save his Elect and bring them to happinesse by his meere grace being apprehended by fayth vnlesse they should put to theyr owne good workes as helpers and furtherers of his Grace And surely by offering theyr workes they shew that they are in doubt whether the Grace of God bee able and sufficient to save them and so denie God to be God For God cannot bee God vnlesse hee bee absolutely good and infinitely mercifull otherwise he should be imperfect and conditionally good such an one as the Papistes doe make him to bee with theyr good workes and merites fore-seene And a greater dishonour cannot redound vnto God then for a man to doubt of his infinite goodnesse and free mercy and God cannot be iniured more then if a man should preferre his owne workes fore-seene before the mercy of God as if by them God could bee mooved or turned this way or that way like man Certaynely whomsoever he hath not chosen for his owne mercy sake him wil he not chuse hereafter for any fore-seene good works of his owne For it is all alike to choose a man to Salvation for his owne workes as if God should cease to be God For if God should choose a man for his workes there would bee found manifest change in God and so God should cease to bee God but they which thinke themselves vnworthy of Election and yet doe truely and constantly beleeve that they are from everlasting elected vnto Salvation by the free mercy of God they give vnto God his deserved honour For a greater honour cannot be given vnto God then that hee is much more good and mercifull vnto vs in Christ then if wee had never sinned at all For hee that beleeveth in Christ and layeth hold on him by a true fayth hee hath the love of God and shall as truely and certaynely attayne life everlasting for his Passion sake as God in his Nature is everlasting and vnchangeable in his Will But the Papists which make their owne workes and merites the cause of theyr Election doe labour to abolish his mercy and to establish theyr owne integrity and righteousnesse as if God had chosen man not because he himselfe was God and mercifull but because man was thought acceptable and approoved of God for such or such good workes fore-seene when as the Gospel teacheth the cleane contrary Luke 18. that before Gods iudgement seate no workes nor merites of man may be suffered to approach but that a lowly and humble prayer powred out in the blood and merites of Christ shall bee heard and accepted Therefore the least imagination or establishment of mans merit is the manifest abolishing of the grace of God and the merits of Christ and a most certayne hazard and losse of eternall life By these things that are spoken it appeareth evidently enough that this fiction of workes fore-seene is as an il favoured head which hath many vnseemely members vnder it For where one absurdity is graunted a great many must needes followe after 2. Tim. 2.17 For errour is as a fretting canker For where the least chincke is opened to errour there the very greatest Monsters of errours throng in by troopes other most vngodly sins are heaped together vpon them So out of this false opinion as out of Pandoraes box there do flie horrible reproaches and blasphemies agaynst God For they which doe misvnderstand and falsely expound one place of Scripture it must needes follow that they mis-interpret and misvnderstand many places Because that all the Articles of Christian fayth are so artificially lincked together that one of them cannot be hurt but all the rest are wronged neyther can one bee taken out from amongst the rest but the whole rancke and order of all the rest will be broken and fall to nothing Certaynely the Papists being the subtile teachers and patrones of good workes fore seene doe openly declare that they neyther know the strength of sinne nor the vntowardnesse of our corrupted nature nor the iustice and wrath of God against sinne and so they are most ignorant of that which it
lifteth vp such as bee downe but hee which thinketh there is any goodnesse in himselfe striveth agaynst humblenesse of minde and is an enemy vnto the grace of God and is a secret adversary against God and prowdly set against his owne Salvation But Predestination bringeth down a man that it may lift him vp agayne by the grace of God For the least thought of the least goodnesse in man is repugnant against the grace of God Therefore this must first be taken away and driven out that the grace of God may take place Furthermore the Decree of Election is necessary for vs to know for this cause also because that it edifieth and buildeth vp our fayth strongly and surely and maketh vs most certayne that Salvation cannot fayle vs. For there is no better nor fitter meanes for the building vp of our fayth then free Election which doth consist in the eternall and vnchangeable Decree and good pleasure of God so that Salvation which dependeth thereupon cannot be intercepted or taken from vs by any creatures For therefore Salvation is certayne vnmooveable because it is grounded vpon the Counsell of God and is reserved and kept vntouched agaynst all the assaultes and subtilties of Sathan Heere therefore wee ought to know that Salvation proceedeth from two distinct causes First it floweth from the love of God as from an heavenly fountayne and then it is purchased by the blood and merites of Christ Christ ioyneth both these causes together saying God so loved the world Ioh. 3.16 that hee gave his onely begotten Sonne that all which beleeved in him should not perish but have everlasting life Vpon this therefore is our whole Salvation and the vnfallible hope and safety thereof settled and grounded in that God the most Mighty hath given vs vnto his Sonne as his owne proper goods and doth iustifie vs in him and doth not suffer vs beeing iustified Ioh. 10.29 to bee taken out of his hand Hence is the Salvation of the Faythfull stedfast and sure Therefore this doctrine of Election seeing it is the onely gate vnto righteousnes the onely way vnto God and the onely entrance into heaven it is not as some falsely thinke the occasion of desperation the breake-necke of Salvation and as it pleaseth some the deepe pit of perdition neyther is it a subtill and dangerous speculation as others report which tyreth mens minds without any fruite and beguileth and deceyveth them with vayne words but it is a sound and profitable doctrine which tendeth vnto godlinesse and to a serious feare of God and chiefely it is profitable to represse and keepe vnder the pride and arrogancy of man For what thing can more ravish vs with the love and admiration of Gods exceeding great goodnesse towardes vs then Gods free and more then fatherly Election in that of his aboundant grace and mercy he hath appoynted certayne Salvation for vs before we were and stayed not so long till wee came vnto him and desired Salvation of him Was it not a mercie above all mercies in that hee ordayned Salvation for vs which beleeve in Christ and embrace his Gospel before he had created vs Was not this also a singular and inestimable mercie above all mercies in that he hath elected vs in Christ and adopted vs for sonnes which were in our selves altogether wretched and vnworthy and deserved rather to be condemned then to bee saved was it not an honour above all honours in that of the children of wrath hee made vs the children of God and the brethren of Christ Is not this noblenesse above all nobility and dignity above all dignity to have God for our Father to have Christ for our brother and to heare his Church as our mother and to be a true and lively member thereof This doctrine of Election is not onely the chiefe part of the Gospel but also the foundation of the Gospel and the issue and chiefe poynt of our Salvation For Augustine of the Predestination of Saintes Cap. 15. doth expressely teach that Christ himselfe was predestinate that he should be our Head and Redeemer and we were predestinate that we should be his members So that seeing Christ is the chiefe and singular light of Predestination and the same is the Head and Foundation of the whole Gospel Therefore the whole Gospel doth flow and depend from nothing else but from Predestination together with Christ For the whole worke of the Gospel is in this one thing and there it is called Gospel that is ioyfull tidings because it witnesseth vnto men that theyr sinnes are forgiven and pardoned through the death of Christ without any respect had vnto theyr workes that so they might be freely iustified and absolved and delivered from theyr sinnes in the iudgement of God And this iustification proceedeth from Predestination as from the first fountayne of Salvation as Paul in this his chaine doth expressely teach saying that those onely are iustified which are predestinate before of God Therefore free iustification cannot bee helde and maintayned except free predestination be first granted and defended Wherefore seeing that Predestination is the cause and originall of iustification it is in no wise to be concealed or suppressed but ought publikely and openly to be published and preached freely without restraint throughout the whole worlde that this exceeding and infinite goodnesse of God towards men might be made manifest and knowne vnto them that they might learne to distrust themselves and to put their confidence in God that they might seeke for Salvation and finde it not in themselves nor by theyr owne merits but in God and from his goodnesse The Sonne of God himselfe and his holy Apostles and also the Prophets haue taught and stood vpon this doctrine publikely in the whole assembly of the Church The Scripture of both the Testaments is full of this mattter especially the Gospel of saint Iohn is as a cleare glasse wherein Predestination is represented and published abroad For there is no Chapter in that Booke where there is not mention of Predestination eyther in expresse words or in the sence and meaning of it And although there have beene alwayes some from the beginning of the Gospel which perswaded by the allurements and wisedome of the flesh have thought that the doctrine of Predestination should not be openly taught and published abroad because they feared that it would be the occasion and mistresse of desperation or of a dissolute life yet they are in no sort to be beleeved nor followed For the causes which they alledge although at the first sight they may seeme to have some colour or weight yet indeed they do but cast a miste before our eyes and are of no importance For the danger which they feare is vayne and almost none at all For Predestination is the true cause the absolute matter of our greatest hope and sweetest consolation 1. Pet. 1.20 in that God our heavenly Father from eternity hath ordayned his onely begotten Sonne
be created of him vnto destruction By this most fit example we are taught that it is in the free choyse of God onely to make a difference betweene men and by his wisedome to ordeyne and appoynt what shall be done with every one So that God doth love and choose most freely whomesoever he loveth and chooseth as also he doth refuse and condemne most freely whomesoever he refuseth and condemneth For this is the force and liberty of predestination namely that God hath freewill to save and choose that man whom of his meere grace he chooseth and saveth so also that he hath free liberty to reiect and condemne whomesoever in his iust iudgement he will have refused and condemned So that this is the eternall and vnchangeable will of God of his vndeserved favour to choose and save some and in his iust iudgement to cast others off from all mercy and to condemne them This will of God in both these decrees is most absolute and simple which hath no other cause so that he saveth some because it is his pleasure and wil and he condemneth others because it is his pleasure likewise Therefore it is at Gods free choyce to shew or deny mercy to whomesoever he will It is in his power to have mercy on whom he will Rom. 9.18 and whom he will to harden And he taketh mercy of his owne great goodnes only and hardneth with no iniustice that he that is saved should not boast of his owne merits and he that is condemned should complayne of nothing but of his owne deserts In Euchiriad Laurentium ca. 99. as Augustine sayth So there is no cause above Gods will but that is in the highest degree that vnto vs it might be in steed of all causes So the will of God is the first and chiefest determiner of our election and of all other things Therefore the onely absolute will of God ought to suffice every one as the most weighty cause and the chiefest reason of every thing So that it is an execrable wickednes to aske the causes of the will of God seeing that is the first and the onely sufficient of all other causes which hath no other cause above it Lib. de pradestina sanc 1.9 wherefore Saint Augustine sayd most truly and most rightly Call not into question why God chooseth this man or reprobateth that man except thou wilt fall into errour for this will of God is sure and constant because hee hath created mankinde Rom. 9.22 partly to shew his free mercy and partly to declare his iustice for he were vnmercifull if he should condemne all and on the other side hee might seeme vnmindfull of his iustice if hee should save all Therefore God created men such that they might fall that by their fall he might shew what the benefit of his mercy and the iudgement of his iustice were able to do of which reade Augustine in his booke De correp grat And this ought not to trouble the godly because that all are not appoynted to salvation and but a few onely shall be saved for they know and beleeve having learned it by the word of God that all have fallen into most iust condemnation and why all men are not delivered from thence is not in mans power to determine and iudge but must be left wholely to the iudgement and wisedome of God Further it doth hence appeare that all are not elected because that the scripture affirmeth in many places that some onely are elected and the rest reiected Agayne the scripture sayth manifestly that he hath mercy on whom he will Rom. 9. ●8 and whom he will he hardeneth Agayne if all were elected the Gospell of the sonne of God should be preached every where throughout the whole earth and faith should be given at randam to all and every one Cap. 1.1 For Paule to Titus teacheth that faith is proper to the elect But the Gospell is not preached through all parts of the earth 2. Thes 3.2 and faith is not given to all men therefore all men are not appoynted vnto salvation And that faith is not given vnto all men it is evident Mat. 25.46 because many shall be condemned and go away into everlasting paine Agayne it may hence appeare that all are not elected and shall be saved because that election or choosing is of some and not of all for if all were received there were no election so that there are some elect and some reprobates But they which have a true and a lively faith in Iesus Christ our onely Saviour and do put their whole trust and confidence of salvation in him alone they are the very elect for to this end are they elected of God that by the power of the spirit they should beleeve in Christ and in him obteyne salvation And let such embrace with thankefull hearts the incomparable goodnes of God towards them and freely with their mouth make the same knowne vnto others praysing God And although God hath not ordeyned every one vnto salvation but hath appoynted some vnto eternall destruction yet there is no accepting of persons with him as if God did elect and save this or that man for any outward good things such as are riches honours noblenes of birth cuntry comely proportion beauty excellent knowledge and learning and other things of the like sort these things albeit among men they are in great estimation yet with God they are of no account For God respecteth and esteemeth the sincerity of the heart and the innocency of life although that as concerning the decree of election he respecteth not these neither but these outward good things howsoever they be most pretious and to be esteemed as the good gifts of God and his name ought to be praysed for them yet in the matter of election he setteth nothing by them for they are not of such worth as that any for them should be elected vnto eternall life If they were the cause of election it would manifestly follow that everlasting salvation might be attayned by the goods of nature or by the study and merits of man Wherefore they which heere make a question of the accepting of persons do neyther know themselves nor the iustice of God rightly as they ought to do and do grievously offend herein because that in this matter they stick not to liken and compare God with lying and deceiveable men who often times are blinded with the outward hew of things and are withdrawne from the right way so that they give their verdit and sentence in the behalfe of vniust causes Moreover they fall into a fallacy full of ignorance or else of wickednes for they foyst in fayned and imaginary causes in stead of true and necessary causes as if they should set mouse-doong to sale in stead of pepper For if those outward good things were the cause why these or these should be chosen then surely oftentimes the worst should be elected and the
to the law and Christian charity For the law commandeth and charity willeth that there be no hurt done to any man but good vnto all but there is no good but hurt done vnto them which are ordeyned vnto this miserable condition and cursed estate therefore it is repugnant to charity and contrary to the lawe I answere God is not bound nor subiect vnto the lawe so that he gave that commandement to men only and not to himselfe Agayne the iustice of God is altogether infinite whose greatnes the shallownes of mans capacity cannot conteyne nor search out therefore it is not to be measured by the law and rule of civile iustice For there is no consequence from an infinite thing vnto a finite thing because there is no proportion betweene them Therefore a man in this matter must renounce all naturall reason and submit himselfe wholy vnto the onely wise God knowing that the iustice of God cannot be examined or comprehended by the shallow conceit of man nor be measured according to the rule of civill iustice Therfore it were extreme madnes blasphemous impiety not to attribute more wisedome vprightnes vnto God then man can vnderstand or imagine Surely this were to erect and worship a vaine idoll in the steed of God or rather to deny God himselfe Moreover there are certaine particular works of God which are not to be reduced to the generall rule of equity as for example the fact of Abraham who in his obedience vnto God would have killed his sonne and have sacrificed him vnto God when as notwithstanding the law sayth Thou shalt not kill The holy man of God knew that God was not subiect to the law but that it was given vnto men onely so that he did not examine the speciall commaundement which he had received concerning the sacrificing of his Sonne according to the lawe but simply obeyed the commaundement of God and desired to execute it with a ready and good will By this example we are taught first that God sometimes doth decree somewhat in his secret will which he prescribeth not in his lawe Secondly that we must obey this his secret will when God commaundeth though the lawe after a sort commaund the contrary otherwise the will of God revealed in his word is the onely continuall rule of good life So there may be some worke which God doth not therefore will because it is iust but it is therefore iust because he willeth it and thinketh it good Furthermore although of two men of which neyther had done any thing he hath predestinated the one vnto life the other vnto death and that before the foundation of the world yet this predestination is no lesse iust then if both had bin created and committed many great offences But it apeareth manifestly that reprobation was decreed before all time and not ordeined in time both from the nature of God and also by the holy scripture From the nature of God it appeareth because God doth nothing with a new will but all things by his everlasting will whatsoever therefore God doth in time that did he determine to do before all time otherwise there should manifest change be found in him if he should do the least thing in time which he did not determine to do before time from everlasting By the scripture it is evident because that every where as well in the doctrine of reprobation as election it reduceth vs vnto the eternall counsell of God that men might certaynely be perswaded that nothing happeneth vnto them in this life which was not ordeyned and decreed for them by God from everlasting So that that happeneth to them in time which God hath fore-ordeyned before time Moreover although the reprobates be reiected from this mercy of salvation by the iust and eternall iudgement of God yet they are not condemned but for their owne sinnes and misdeeds by which they deserve and pull vpon their owne heads the iust wrath of God and eternall destruction Therefore although they are not reprobated reiected for any infidelity or wicked deeds foreseene but because God hath so willed it and decreed it iustly yet they shall not be condemned but for their owne vngodlines To conclude as there is no merit foregoing in election so also is there no desert foregoing in reprobation but both do proceede and flowe from the good pleasure of God Now heere remayneth to be shewed briefly for what causes the reprobates are subiect and liable vnto iust condemnation The first cause of their destruction is the corruption of their nature this is so great that it is fully sufficient for to condemne them iustly as we may see in the death and condemnation of infants and little children that are reprobated who although they be polluted with fewe or none actuall sinnes yet for the originall corruption of their nature they are thrust hedlong into everlasting destruction Therefore this corruption of nature is the first and meritorious cause of damnation Agayne God vouchsafeth not to bestow vpon them the mercy of regeneration but leaveth them by his iust iudgement in their former depravation of nature Neyther can God be accused or charged with iniury because he doth not reforme nor better them for God doth not owe them so much because he hath not promised it vnto them and therefore is not bound to perfourme it And as for the promises although by the publike ministery of the Church they be pronounced vnto all that heare in generall yet indeed and effectually they do properly pertayne and belong vnto the elect only for whatsoever God hath promised in the Gospell and in the matter of salvation they onely obteyne and enioy Agayne the promises do not declare what God hath decreed and determined concerning every one but do shew how he is affected towards them that beleeve therefore they belong to none but to the beleevers so that God oweth nothing to the reprobates but deserved wrath and iust indignation Therefore in that he doth not call them nor draw them to Christ nor iustify them in him nor create faith in them it is for this cause because he hath not chosen them so that when the cause is denyed them the effects must needs be denyed them also For to whomesoever he vouchsafeth not election he also denyeth those blessings and benefits which are the effects of election These being by the iust iudgement of God thus left to themselves are hardned daily more more so that they feare not to commit great detestable sinnes and iniquities neither stand in awe of Gods vengeance but nuzsle themselves in their sinnes with delight and love and commit sinnes willingly and that so proudly and securely as if God the avenger of wickednes did winke at them and would take no account of them for their lives passed These God doth not only reiect and repell from all saving grace and all the effects thereof but also in his iust iudgement doth deliver thē over being so reiected partly
vnto them are most profitable furtherances of their salvation Therefore the afflictions which are sent of God vnto his children are to be accounted and esteemed in steed of a great blessing because that in them Gods more then fatherly goodnes is seene because when his children refuse to come vnto him being called by the loving voyce of the Gospell then he ceaseth not to seeke them vp but draweth them vnto him with his rod as it were against their wills otherwise they would consume away and perish in their miseries From whence may be noted againe that our mercifull God is more desirous to save miserable sinners then they are to be saved by him otherwise he would not so carefully sometimes by this and sometimes by that meanes seeke their salvation So that when God doth visit his children with these or those afflictions he doth then give them an inward taste of his fatherly good will towards them and so chastiseth them with his left hand and refresheth and susteyneth them with his right hand Thus in their common miseries they have a lively sence and experience that God is mercifull vnto them Thirdly he that will soundly edify himselfe in this doctrine and well fortifie and strengthen himselfe on every side against all the assaults of Sathan he must conteyne himselfe within the compasse and bounds of the word of God that is and shall be a true rule for him to learne by and the vtmost limit of his proceeding But he that without the word will rush into the hidden secrets of so deepe a mistery his proceeding shall not onely be in darkenes out of the way but also shall be overcome of this so secret and hidden mistery every man must therefore deale wisely and warily in this matter for if a man with a foole-hardy enterprice should covet to climbe vp such an high and steepe hill he may quickly catch an hedlong fall backward Surely whosoever desire to pry into that secret decree without the light of Gods word they shall twinde themselves into an endlesse laborinth in which they shall ever erre and never finde issue out seeing that secret counsell of God doth infinitely farre exceede all the vnderstanding and capacity of the Angels for the Angels themselves as Peter witnesseth 1. Pet. 1.12 do desire to looke into the Gospell and if the Gospell be closed vp and hidden from the Angels which alwayes behold the face of God how much lesse are they able to search out or vnderstand that hidden decree of predestination which was decreed and ordeyned before they were created for he that is ignorant of the lesser cannot have notice knowledge of the greater Therefore the word of God is the onely way which can bring every man safely and readily vnto the finding out of those things which they may know and vnderstand in this mistery of predestination So that where God hath opened his sacred mouth to teach there let man also open his eares to learne and where he hath closed vp his holy mouth there must also all way and meanes of enquiry be stopped by man and where God ceaseth to teach there let not man be desirous to learne and know any more Therefore when God maketh 〈…〉 then let man also make an end of learning and so that hee may be safe from all errour and danger let him follow God going before him in his word and that shall be vnto him as a most cleere shining light to finde out those things which are to be knowne concerning predestination Fourthly and lastly to be assured of our election and salvation and to reape fruite thereby wee must not begin at the first cause namely the causes and first beginnings of election for all meanes of learning and knowledge that way is not onely debard and shut vp from vs on every side but even from the Angels themselves but wee must learne and come to the knowledge of the certainety of our salvation from the later as it were by the effects But of this heereafter shall be spoken more largely and playnely when all the linkes of this chayne are handled and what those effects of election are which may throughly confirme vs and make vs sure of our election and salvation as most true and infallible arguments wee shall heare heereafter more at large when wee have spoken of vocation iustification and glorification So hitherto wee have spoken of the foreknowledge of God and those things which pertayne vnto it likewise of predestination and those things which belong vnto it Now those things which remayne to be spoken follow orderly one by one in this chayne which we have in hand Heere is a passage made from the doctrine of predestination vnto vocation as from the cause to the effect and is shewed how the secret predestination of God is made knowne vnto the elect by vocation In vocation first the ambiguity of the word is expressed how many wayes it is taken and how it is divided Then is shewed by what meanes it is done CHAP. 24. NOw in Paules chayne vocation followeth and the Apostle proceedeth from the cause vnto the effects and sheweth how this secret predestination is revealed and applyed vnto men therefore vocation is the third linke of the chayne of salvation which is set next to predestination in an order most convenient for by this God doth give open testimony of his will and sheweth whom he did elect and meane to save before all ages Predestination indeed in a generality and vniversally doth pronounce that some men are elected from everlasting vnto salvation and that some are iustly appoynted from everlasting vnto destruction but vocation doth open and reveale this hidden decree of God vnto every of the elect they are enlightned and regenerate by the spirit of God and so it is manifested how that of vnworthy they are made worthy the remnant are forsaken iustly in their wickednes and ignorance that being vnregenerate they may perish and be damned But the Apostle sheweth that the grace of God is to be considered of the elect two manner of wayes Fi●…●ee setteth forth the incomparable favour and 〈◊〉 of GOD towards them in the word 〈…〉 Secondly in this word vocation he comprehendeth and as it were poynteth at with his finger vnto the elect the great gifts and excellent benefits which slow from predestination as from a bottomlesse fountayne for God will make himselfe knowne and impart himselfe vnto the elect by his benefits in which his lively image and shape appeareth for God cannot be searched out and knowne of any man in his hidden essence nnd secret predestination Therefore the Apostle doth heere orderly declare and recken vp certayne meanes and severall wayes by which the elect are drawne vnto Christ and brought vnto life everlasting and so sheweth that our whole salvation and whatsoever is necessary and pertayneth vnto it doth depend and proceede from Gods eternall election Concerning vocation somethings must be spoken more at large for our better
iustification and salvation that without it God will not be mercifull and favourable no not to any one They therefore which do behold this victory of Christ with a true faith have wherewith they may fortifie themselves against the assaults of Sathan they have whereby they may set light by his sleights and subtilties they have wherein they may place their faith and hope in Christ alone and in his merit onely In this iustification howbeit we are iustified and acquitted of our sinnes by the onely merit of Christ yet there is no let but that the three holy and inseparable persons of the Trinity may have and execute their severall actions in it For the Father is therefore sayd to iustifie vs because that of his owne meere grace and free love 1. Pet. 1.20 Gal. 4.4 he hath from everlasting fore-appoynted his onely begotten Sonne to redeeme vs and sent him at the time appoynted The Sonne is therefore sayd to iustifie vs because that for his incomprehensible and vnspeakeable goodnes sake towards vs vouchsafing by the power of the holy ghost to take mans nature vpon him he was obediēt vnto his Father even vnto the death of the crosse Phil. 2. and so satisfied the iustice of God for vs and delivered vs from all the power of the Devill by making amends for our sinnes The Holy Ghost also is sayd to iustifie vs as farre forth as he doth beget in vs true and stedfast faith by which we may apprehend and apply vnto our selves the righteousenes that is purchased by the obedience of the death of Christ Therefore this free remission of sinnes is the onely very fourme of iustification by which iustification is that which it is and is distinguished from all other false and fained satisfactions and sacrifices of which sort the Papists doe invent many and offer them vnto God And the finall cause of iustification is the prayse and glory of Gods goodnes and the everlasting happines and excellent blessed estate of those which are thus iustified Now there was nothing else which moved God to iustifie vs but his owne love towards vs and the obedience of Christ and our misery But the instrumentall cause is a true and a lively faith laying hold on and applying to it selfe the obedience of Christ and righteousnes purchased thereby and relying with a good conscience vpon the sole mercy of God and the onely merit of Christ This iustification is then avayleable and acceptable vnto vs whenas every of vs doth stand as guilty before the heavenly iudge and being carefull of his acquitall doth of his owne accord humble and prostrate himselfe as vnworthy And this is profitably done when a man doth seriously weigh and consider with himselfe the perfection and severity of Gods iustice on the one side and the multitude and greatnes of his sinnes on the other side For by such a consideration hee is seriously humbled with the feeling of his misery and rightly prepared to desire and embrace the mercy of Christ So that by how much the more every of vs shall be severe in condemning himselfe by so much shall we finde God more mercifull and more easy to be intreated for then will a man be capable of the grace of God and benefite of Christ when hee shall knowe himselfe and his whole nature to bee full of vncleanenes and filthines and shall condemne it For he which iudgeth himselfe vnworthy of the grace of God as one sayth him doth God receyve into favour and maketh him worthy through Christ But they which swell and are filled with the opinion of their owne righteousnes and hunger not after the righteousnes of God they perish in their miseries and never come vnto true righteousenes Againe they which being hardned with the custome of sinning and drunken with the delight of their vices do extenuate their faults and securely despise the iudgement of God they shut vp from themselves the gate of mercy What manner of thing Iustification is where are set forth the three proprieties thereof namely that it is free perfect and everlasting and withall there is refuted the opinion of the Papists concerning the merit of works being contrary to the first propriety CHAP. 27. NOw we must lay open what manner of thing iustification is and the quality thereof consisteth especially in three things first that it is free for the remission of sinnes is not for any merits of man but it is a meere grace and an vndeserved mercy promised for Christ his sake alone For God findeth nothing in a man whom he iustifieth but an horrible sinke of sinne and extreame misery The scripture every where affirmeth that Christ only is the author of all grace and the whole hope of our salvation consisteth in the bloud of Christ alone Without the merit of Christ there can be no iustification for he alone hath deserved righteousenes for vs and having deserved it he giveth and imputeth it vnto vs. They therefore which desire to be righteous without the merit of Christ are altogether without God and prophane And they which dreame that they are iustified partly by grace and partly by merit are Pelagians or Papists the followers of their heresie but they which beleeve that they are iustified by the onely merit of Christ are true Christians These by beleeving and receiving the righteousnes of Christ purchased by his death as the righteousnes of an other are iustified indeede but they which by theyr workes and merits do affect theyr owne righteousnes shall never attayne vnto it The Papists therefore have forged a certaine kinde of merit which is weake of it selfe but when it is dipped in the bloud of Christ it is effectuall and forcible and so they say that a man is partly iustified by grace and partly by workes But this cannot be because that grace and merit are two manifest contraryes from which one and the selfe same thing cannot be brought forth For this is the nature and rule of contraryes that from contrary causes contrary effects proceede likewise Moreover wee are all debtors for wee are obliged and bound vnto God so that he may iustly challenge as his due whatsoever good thing can proceede or be perfourmed of vs. Now that which may be demaunded of vs as duty that can not merit But Christ sayth that what good thing soever we do or can do Luk. 17.10 all that how much soever it be is our duty wherefore there is no merit at all Agayne the cause of iustification to wit eternall election in Christ is free therefore likewise iustification it selfe must needes be free for there cannot be more in the effect then there is in the cause thereof Therefore the Papists whilest that they dreame of any merit in vs they do commit a manifest fallacy from that which is no cause as if it were a cause for they remove the merit of Christ which is the perfect and true cause of iustification and set in the roome thereof the merit
the word he sheweth vs what things he wil have done or not done by vs and by his Spirite there is strength ministred vnto vs to performe them This regeneration is especially wrought continued in the mind will and heart of man So that God sheweth forth and declareth his goodnesse towards his children here three manner of wayes First hee doth enlighten and dispell the blindnes of the mind by the Sun-shine of his Spirit For whatsoever man savoureth of his owne selfe Rom. 8.6 7. is enmity against God bringeth death with it This blindnesse of mans mind is not simply the ignorance of God and of himselfe but it is a stubborne rebellion and prowd presumption against God So that by how much a man excelleth and is indued with the greater quicknes of nature by so much the more doth he resist and strive against God himselfe and his owne Salvation Because such an one feareth not to charge the wisedome of God with extreame folly For all men as long as they are not renewed with this new and heavenly light do thinke the holy mysteries of God to be foolishnesse So Paul whilst hee preached Christ crucified vnto the Grecians sayth 1. Cor. 1.23 that to them he preached foolishnes So that the enlightning of this rebellious and hurtfull blindnesse is a great and inestimable benefite of God After this inlightning followeth a right iudgement and opinion of God of his will and of his workes because that then men begin to know God rightly and to iudge of him accordingly when they be inlightened by the spirit of God Secondly it changeth and reformeth the will of man which is extreamely contrary vnto the law of God And of evill it maketh it good and of vnwilling and stubborne it maketh it ready and obedient Phil. 2.13 So the will of man doth then begin to be good when it is reformed and renewed by God Here also the infinite goodnesse of God sheweth it selfe whilest that it maketh man of an adversary and foe to become a friend and heyre of heavenly glory which otherwise in himselfe is so corrupted and depraved that hee hath mind to nothing but evill and hateth God extremely This will of man howsoever by nature it be so wicked and perverse as to resist and withstand God and his will yet no will can be so wicked and stubborne but God if he will can mollifie it and make it good as Augustine sayth well Now God will doe this in the Elect Ezech. 36.26 27. because that of his owne accord hee hath promised that he will doe it Thirdly it converteth and reneweth the stubborne vnapt and disobedient heart and so doth weaken and debilitate the strength of sinne in his children and doth create in them an earnest study and desire to live godly and maketh them altogether forward vnto all piety Lastly it stirreth vp in them good workes and endueth them with sincere and holy behaviour Phil. 2.13 So God worketh in them both to will that which is good and doe that which is right So that all power to live godly proceedeth and commeth not from theyr owne power but from God onely which worketh in them effectually by his Spirit For this spirituall renewing is called in many places of the Scripture by an excellencie The creation and worke of God because that it is his worke to illuminate the blind vnderstandings of men with the knowledge of himselfe and to change theyr crooked willes and hard heartes and to frame them vnto the obedience of his owne will For these are so hard and difficult workes that they can bee brought to passe and effected by none other but by God onely Therefore the Lord by EZechiel promiseth that he will cause that we shal walke in his commandements shewing that regeneration and power to doe well is a worke farre surmounting all creatures The vse of this doctrine is divers First that the grace of God by which onely the Elect are changed into new creatures may be maintayned agaynst that divellish invention of free will which the Papists dreame of But here the Papists offend grievously for looke how much they attribute vnto the power of man so much doe they detract from the grace of God and merit of Christ For the grace of God and the power of man are in this matter two contraries which cannot be maintayned of one and the selfe same subiect at one time Therefore Saynt Austine in one place sayth very well that that is not free which the grace of God hath not made free For the Scripture as we have sayd before doth not leave a man so much as a good thought which is the least part of a good worke 2. Cor. 3.5 For such is the blindnesse and frailty of mans wit that it is not onely vnable to conceyve and bring forth of it selfe any thing rightly or truely but also that it frameth and inventeth to it selfe many and most dangerous errors even from most true principles An evident example of this we may see in the free-will of the Papists But that most fond dreame of theyrs vanisheth like a vapour by this doctrine of regeneration and the spirit of God onely is prooved to bee the onely beginning and true cause of every good worke Agayne seeing God doth regenerate man and make him fit for good works that other fiction which the Papists have dreamed concerning workes fore-seene is overthrowne and beaten to pieces For seeing no man can doe good except by the grace of God hee be changed into a new creature it thence followeth that God could fore-see no other workes in man but such as hee himselfe should worke in him whence a man may easily gather which considereth the matter any thing at all that this opinion concerning workes fore-seene is a meere and forged fable Moreover the Papists and the more grosse sort of Vbiquitaries do in this place after their manner erre and invent a new fiction whenas they thinke that there is some secret and hidden power in tne water of Baptisme which is able to convert and renew a man And from thence they labour to inferre that they which are baptized are regenerate in the very act of Baptisme This vnsavory invention is the fosterer of noysome errours But the falshood thereof is found first in this that it evidently appeareth by the holy Scriptures that all are not regenerate which are baptized as we may see not onely in Simon Magus but also in many others eyther openly wicked or hypocrites vnder hand and secretly which although they have beene baptized and receyved Baptisme as a true marke of their regeneration yet theyr lives sufficiently declare that they were not regenerate For although that the Sacraments are meanes or instruments by which the holy Ghost is effectuall in the Ministery of the Church yet in his power and efficacy hee hath not tyed himselfe vnto them neyther doth hee so worke by them that that working should alwayes shew it selfe
and exercise the strength thereof in the very act of administring them Agayne they doe offend and sinne exceedingly and out of measure agaynst the office of the holy Spirite and the blood of Christ For the holy Spirite is the onely efficient cause and principall worker of regeneration and the bloud of Christ is the meritorious cause thereof therefore they attribute that vnto the outward water of baptisme which is due only vnto the holy spirit the bloud of Christ so fall into a fallacy from that which is no cause as if it were a cause for they do cast that vnto the false and fayned cause which ought to be attributed vnto the true and proper cause and so as much as in them lyeth do overthrow and vndermine the principall heads of Christian religion And whereas they inferre that the purer and preciser sort of Divines do deny that Baptisme is the washing of the new birth Tit. 3.5 as Paul to Titus speaketh This is an vnsavory and a vile cavill for they doe not onely admit and like of those words of Paul in their true and naturall meaning but do receive them as a most sound confirmation and strengthening of our cause for Paul there playnely pronounceth that the power of the holy spirit doth effect and worke regeneration in vs. But our adversaryes do misvnderstand those words of Paul and do abuse them whilest they wrest them into an other sence as seducers vse to do and apply them amisse and so do fall into a fallacy of the ambiguity of a word whilest they interpret that ill which they apply worst of all Among true and sound Divines it is a thing firmely resolved and agreed vpon that the Sacraments do not bring grace but do for the strengthening of faith seale vp that which was bestowed before as we may see in Abraham Rom. 4.10 as in the common example and father of all them which beleeve Lastly they erre not a little by this their most vayne fiction whilest that they place the first beginning of salvation and the ground thereof in the water of baptisme for so they forge and frame the causes of salvation from the instruments that are vsed as meanes and from the manner of applying them but with deepe silence they do passe by and with wonderfull craft neglect the true and proper cause of salvation namely everlasting and free election and the onely merit of Christ that they might the more easily deceive and cast a mist before the eyes of the ignorant For there is no greater nor more plentifull occasion to beguile and deceive then where false and imaginary causes are supposed for true and proper causes Moreover this regeneration heere is alwayes defective and imperfect and a small beginning of a new life and a certayne onset vnto it This is prooved by manifest testimonyes of Scripture and also by dayly experience of the godly The testimonyes of Scripture say that we ought to be changed into the image of God from glory to glory 2. Cor. 3.18 Rom. 1.17 and to go forward dayly more and more from faith to faith Also that the children of God ought to walke in his commaundements Eze. 36.27 Tit. 2.14 and to keepe his statutes and to be zealous of good workes These and the like places of Scripture doe teach vs that the elect are not the first day polished vnto the highest perfection but that by little and little as it were by degrees they are brought from one vertue vnto an other vntill after this life they shall come vnto the highest perfection for they are not perfect which must be changed from one glory to another and goe forward from faith to faith Secondly they which walke in the commaundements of God are yet in the way and are not come vnto the end of theyr race therefore they are vnperfect For wayfaring men are often weeryed and now and then stumble and fall by reason of these or these lets and hindrances so also the regenerate men beeing as it were weeryed in the course and study of godlines doe slip often and fall into these and these sinnes Therefore the Apostle Saint Iohn sayeth playnely 1. Iohn 1.8 that they which say they have no sinnes deceive themselves and the truth is not in them Also the most holy Prophets do playnely and freely confesse of themselves that theyr best workes are poluted and stayned with many and great imperfections Esay 64. for in them alwayes the dregges of sinfull flesh remayne and abide and very often the sparkles of theyr lewde affections doe breake forth and shewe themselves but these hinder them not because they have a promise of a pardon These things the testimonies of Scripture teach vs that the children of God do onely obtayne some beginnings of a new life heere so that regeneration heere is maymed and vnperfect For the holy spirit doth so illuminate and renew the mindes of the elect 1. Cor. 13.9 that heere they doe know but in part and doth so change and refine their wills that they can will and do that which is good but in part as long as they live in this life So that whether a man respect the vnderstanding of the regenerate or whether a man consider theyr will hee shall easily finde that they are vnperfect for they which are renewed still day by day are not as yet wholy renewed but the children of God as long as they live heere are renewed day by day therefore they are not as yet perfect nor wholy renewed Besides these there are many other tokens whereof the scripture is very plentifull as which are wrought successively by the children of God eyther in reioycing at the benefites of God or sorrowing at theyr owne sinnes and surely these do bewray theyr imperfections So that infirmity alwayes abideth and dwelleth in them with which they must strive even vnto the death of the body with an entercourse of going backward and going forward as Augustine sayth in one place Secondly dayly experience it selfe doth convince and prove the imperfection of the godly For the most holy men of all ages have offended and sinned very often which they could not have done if they had not bin vnperfect for they which by regeneration are quite perfected are set out of all danger of sinning any more furthermore God hath no where promised that he will indue his children in this life with exquisite perfection therefore they cannot be made perfect heere for God doth not perfourme more in this worke of regeneration by the power of his spirit then he hath declared in the revealed word of promise and they themselves by their owne power cannot make themselves better and more holy then God will have them to be Also the most holy Apostles themselves say Iames. 3.2 that in many things they sinne all Iohn also in his Epistle pronounceth most plainely saying 1. Iohn 1.8 If we say that we have no sinne we deceive