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A15527 Saints by calling: or Called to be saints A godly treatise of our holy calling to Christ, by the gospell. With the seuerall gifts proper vnto the called: and their counterfeits in the hypocrites which are not partakers of this effectuall calling. Written by Thomas Wilson, minister of Gods word, at S. Georges Church in Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1620 (1620) STC 25796; ESTC S103067 273,228 442

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this poore testimony of my thankfull minde who daily mention you in my prayers that all sauing blessings may be powred on you and continued to you till my sonne through Gods mercy prospering in his studies may expresse a morefull measure of a gratefull mind vnto you all to whom he hath beene and may yet be so much bounden which the Lord of his fauour in his good time enable him well to performe Fare ye well From my House in Canterbury the 10. of Iuly 1620. Yours euer euen to his vtmost Thomas Wilson An Aduertisement vnto the Reader COurteous and Christian Reader there bee foure seuerall things which I purposed to effect in this whole Dialogue Treatise First for the Matter to deliuer so neere as my iudgement could attaine all those workes of the Spirit euen in their particulars which are peculiar vnto Gods elect children who liue to be partakers of an outward effectuall Calling that when the manifold riches of Christ his grace should be in some sort discouered and laide foorth to their eye to view and looke vpon them it might stir them vp to a marueilous loue and thankefulnesse towards him who hath called them to such riches honour Also that finding themselues endued and blessed with such graces as they shall learn from the Word to belong onely to the chosen of God it may settle them in the perswasion and full assurance of their election to life Secondly for the Manner Because euerie one of the workes of Christ in his elect hath his counterfet in the reprobate which liue in the Church and partake onely in a generall vocation therefore I haue somewhat endeauoured to descry what the truth of euerie grace wrought in Gods Children and to discouer it from that apparence and shadow which an Hypocrite hath of the same grace for this purpose that whether the godly Reader would proue himselfe and make triall of his owne sincerity either in the whole worke of Christianity or in some special part or duty thereof heere he may find what may further him Thirdly for the Order I haue followed so precisely and truly as euer my skill would direct mee that very order of causes in this whole Treatise which God himselfe doth keepe in the bestowing and working of the graces propounding them to the Reader to be considered as they haue necessary and naturall coherence one with another and dependance one vpon another setting causes afore effects and giuing cheefe place to the principall effects By this meanes the carefull Christian in the search of himselfe shall by effects be able to finde out causes the roote by the fruites and how to value each grace and fruite according to his proper worth Also the Conscionable Minister which hath not as yet thought vpon such an order and shall approue of this as good sound may in his teaching helpe himselfe to deliuer such things first as by order of nature ought to haue precedency for the better edification of their hearers Finally as touching the Persons for whose sake I wrote this Dialogue I meant it though not onely yet cheefly for the godly vnlettered Christians to further them in this knowledge how to examine their owne estate before God As for the more Learned they can helpe themselues in this part of our Christian science or else may fetch direction from other manner of Lights then mine Whatsoeuer it is that I haue performed I pray thee good Reader take it in good part make thy profit of it and praise God for all Farewell Yours in the Lord Thomas Wilson The particular Contents of the whole Dialogue diuided into ten Portions The first Part entreateth of Calling 1. OF common and outward Calling 2. Of inward effectuall calling 3. Of differences betweene them 4. What effectuall Calling is 5. Of the meanes thereof by the Word of God 6. Time of Calling that it is diuers and vncertaine 7. Persons who for the most part are vncapable thereof 8. Of what quality and estate be the persons which be commonly called with a true effectuall Calling 9. Effectuall Calling may be knowne of them in whom it is 10. Of the tokens whereby it is knowne 11. Meanes whereby such are prepared to Calling who as yet are not called 12. Of the sundry wayes that God taketh in the worke of Calling 13. The ends or finall causes of a true Calling 14. The mouing cause thereof 15. Differences amongst those which are called in the act of their Calling 16. Election to be iudged of by Calling 17. Rash iudgement about the calling of other men to be auoyded The second Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the Graces which flow from Calling 1. ALl sauing Graces come together at one time with our Calling 2. One Grace before another in order of causes 3. Of illumination of the Minde the first worke of Grace 4. Opening of the heart 5. Of the engandring of faith and what workes of the Spirit goe thervnto The third Part of the Dialogue entreateth of a true and liuely Faith 1. A Liuely faith is a fruite of effectuall Calling 2. A gift proper to the Elect. 3. What it is and how it differeth from the faith of hypocrites and wicked men 4. Of the parts of Faith and of the properties thereof 5. Of application by Faith how it is proued and what things belong to it The fourth Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the degrees of Faith 1. A Little Faith and a great Faith a weake and strong Faith 2. Wherein they are like each other 3. The least measure of Faith what it is 4. That it must and doth labour to encrease it selfe 5. Of a strong Faith what it is 6. Of the seuer all measures thereof and which is the highest degree of beleeuing 7. By what steps Gods Children climb vp to the greatest degree of beleeuing in this life The fifth Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the rarenesse and fruitfulnesse of faith 1. OF the rarenesse of Faith or the fewnesse of beleeuers 2. Of the signes or causes thereof both common and proper to this age 3. Of the efficacy and fruitfulnesse of Faith in generall 4. Of the manifold encouragements to beleeue 5. Of discouragements and how the obiections of Satan and our corruption against beliefe in Christ are to be repelled The sixth Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the fruites of faith in particular 1. OF vnion with Christ that there is such a gift and that it is by faith 2. Two things necessarily required to the working of this vnion 3. The nature and neerenesse of it expressed by Scripture similitudes 4. In what respect this vnion with Christ is necessary for vs. 5. Of the great and seuerall fruites thereof 6. Of Iustification the second maine fruite of Faith 7. What Iustification signifieth 8. In what sense wee are instified by Faith 9. Of the double righteousnesse of Christ actiue and passiue 10. Of the two parts of Iustification forgiuenesse of sinnes and imputation of Iustice.
11. What a worthy gift or instification is 12. Of Sathans malice against this doctrine Experto crede The seuenth Part of this Dialogue entreateth of the neerest effects of Iustification by Faith 1. IS reconciliation with God 2. Peace of conscience 3. Accesse into the grace of God 4. Standing in this grace 5. Hope of heauenly glory 6. Reioycing vnder this hope of despaire and presumption 7. Ofioy in tribulations 8. Sense of Gods loue in the heart 9. Glorying concerning God The eighth Part of the Dialogue entreateth of another fruite of Faith called Sanctification 1. SAnctification what it is how it is by faith 2. The parts and causes of it 3. The degree and measure of it 4. Of the spirituall combate betweene the flesh and the Spirit 5. ' Of Repentance the consequent of Sanctification 6. Ofrenewed Repentance the beginning and signes of it 7. Of encouragements to Repentance 8. Of the hinderances of Repentance how to be remoued 9. Of good workes the fruites of Repentance the causes end and vses of them The 9. part of the dialogue of particular good workes c. 1 Of loue towards God what it is to loue him 2 By what rule our loue is to be guided 3 Whence it springs and what bee the effects and tokens of it 4 Of the feare of God 5 How it differs from that fear which is in the wicked 6 Of the fruits of the true feare of God and of the measure of it 7 Of trust in God what it is 8 What be the grounds of it 9 How the trust of the godly differeth frō the vain confidence of the wicked 10 Encoragements to trust in God 11 Of prayer and thankefulnesse 12 Differences betweene bad good men in these duties 13 Of the word Sacrament 14 Of the religious vse of Gods name and Sabbath 10. part of the dialogue of patience 1 Afflictions the obiect of patience 2 Of common afflictions 3 The godly more afflicted then the wicked and why 4 The generall grounds of patience 5 Of chastisements c. 6 The fruites which by chastisement come to children c. 7 Of trials first by conflict of conscience with sin 2. of martirdome 8 What martirdome is 9 The condition of dying for Christ. 10 Preparation to martirdome 11 Of resolution in the suffering of martirdome 12 An answer to obiections that flesh and blood makes against martirdom 11. part of the dialogue of workes as concerne our neighbour 1 Of righteousnesse and loue vnto our neighbour 2 Our neighbour is our enemy as well as our friend 3 Difference betweene a Neighbour and a Brother 4 The actions of brotherly loue 5 Brotherly kindnesse The last part of this dialogue of peace other effects of loue 1 Of peace the kinds thereof 2 It is proper to the godly 3 Of humility 4 Of Grauity 5 Of Gentlenesse 6 Of long suffering c. 7 Of goodnes and meekenesse 8 Meeknes in iudgment affection 9 Selfe preseruation 10 Of truth in speeches promises 11 Of contentednes 12 Duties concerning superiours and inferiours A receit against Hypocrisie 1 Hipocrisie what it is 2 Sundry kinds of hipocrisie 3 Particular or vniuersall hypocrisie 4 Dwelling or raigning 5 In profession or conuersation 6 Grosse or subtile hypocrisie 7 Causes of hipocrisie both common especiall 8 Sundry effects of hipocrisie 9 Tokens of hypocrisie 11 The cure of hypocrisie A Confortatiue for sincerity and vprightnes 1 Who be vpright and what vprightnesse is 2 How sincerity doeth differ from hypocrisie 3 Sincerity how it is gotten 4 How it is to be preserued 5 How to be tried in a mans selfe 6 Reasons to stirre vs vp to seeke and keepe sincerity Finis A DIALOGVE between APOLLOS AQVILA touching the Workes of Christ proper to the Elect that is such workes as none but the Elect haue or can haue Apollos GOod Friend Aquila now that wee haue such opportunitie of place being heere in a pleasant greene field and are at such good leysure wee should doe well to passe our time away in some wholsome communication which may tend to our edification in godlinesse Aquila It is a very good motion For seeing time is a thing so precious as we must giue a reckoning to God of euery minute of our time and hauing in the former dayes of our life spent so much of our time either in doing nothing or in doing other things or doing other things then pertaineth to vs to deale in it is therefore meete that we should now redeeme the time and the litle remainder of it to bestow it well as wee may reape a present benefit and an euerlasting good for surely vpon the well-husbanding of our time heere there will follow a blessed haruest of a glorious 〈◊〉 heereafter But whereof shall we talke what shall be the subiect of our speech Apollos I heard you say that when the workes of Christ which as the King of his Church hee worketh in the elect alone such as are giuen to him of his Father were taught openly to you and to the rest of your good neighbors that you held it a doctrine very worthy the teaching as being of great vse for Gods Children Will ye that I try your memory and put you to call to mind the principall and maine heads of that doctrine Aquila I did indeed iudge it to be a matter very profitable and still do so iudge and me thought vvhen I heard so many seuerall fruites of the Spirit giuen vs together with our Calling distinctly and in good order propounded to our consideration that it was as if one should haue led me vnto a garden planted set forth with variety of sweete and delicate flowers whereof I might take enow to delight my senses withall both while I was there and afterwards Therefore if it please you to aske me I will answer you as farre as I beare away that which I heard Apollos Let me then heare from you what these graces are which Christ Iesus doth worke peculiarly in the elect Aquila They may al be brought to these two heads The first is an effectuall calling Secondly the fruits that arise and spring from thence or the gifts which doe accompany and come from that calling Apollos How proue ye that there is a calling proper to the elect seeing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Gospel That there are many called which are not chosen Math. 20 16. It may be also that there bee some chosen which haue no calling Aquila It is true some may be called which were neuer chosen and it is alsotrue that none are chosen but they be called because it is written Whom he predestinated them he called Ro. 8 30. By which it is apparent that there is one calling which is common to the Elect and to such Reprobates as line within the bosom of the militant Church and this calling is outward only and there is an inward calling which flowes from the grace of predestination and is proper
all meanes both priuate and publike for support and helpe of it lest any tempt God by refusing the meanes whereof all haue need continually Beside this each faith little and great may bee knowne of him in whom it is vnlesse it be in a great storme of temptation or at the instant and about the time of their first conuersion else Christ would not haue asked particular men if they did beleeue nor Paul would haue saide of himselfe I know whom I haue beleeued nor exhorted others to examine themselues if they be in the faith 2 Cor. 13. 6. 2 Tim. 1. Yet moreouer in each faith this is common that the things beleeued are aboue compasse of naturall reason for if we consider the things which the Word setteth forth to be beleeued as for example that the World was made of nothing that a dead body turned into dust shall liue againe that a Virgin remaining a Virgin can be a Mother that God and man is one person that so many thousand beleeuers so far distant are one body that Saints in Earth are one with Christ in Heauen and eate drinke him without diminishing that one offence of one man condemned the whole world that the righteousnesse of one man maketh millions to be iust that God is then a Father when hee shewes himselfe an enemy in these and many such like things faith can beleeue them because God hath spoken them when blinde reason cannot see Lastly one faith is as sufficient to saue as another a little as wel as a great because a weake faith can looke vpon Christ and lay hold on him no lesse truly then a strong and great faith euen as a weake and sore eye might behold the brasen Serpent to health as well as a sound and cleere eye but though there be such great and manifold likenesse betweene faith and faith yet this letteth not but that there is a difference amongst the godly as touching the diuers measures of their faith euen as much as betweene the hand of a babe and of a man betweene a young plant and a growne tree The most wise God distributing his graces as it pleaseth him to some thus to some otherwise so as none haue cause to disdaine such as be infirme if themselues be strong for it was God who established them nor any to enuie others if haply they doe not so abound in wisedome and faith as others doe because it was God that so disposed euery man his portion But the strong must apply themselues to helpe the weaker bearing with infirmities and the weaker with reuerence and loue to honor such as goe before them Euen as the foote doth not lift vp it selfe against the head nor the head doth not despise the foote but each member respecteth and cherisheth one another to the preseruation of the whole body so let beleeuing Christians in respect of God who doth all in them of his good pleasure worke out their saluation in feare and trembling euery one being thankefull to him for their owne measure knowing that they haue nothing but what is giuen thinking themselues happy to haue at all any measure of liuely faith and in respect of themselues to walke in mutuall loue one supporting and comforting another in all loue and modesty as becommeth Saints Aquila Whereas yee haue shewed many things wherein the two measures of faith doe accord and be alike let it not be offensiue to you that I put you in mind of one correspondency between them which it should seeme you thought not vpon and that is this It is common to each degree of faith first to beleeue the promise before they come to any experience feeling or comfort from the apprehension of Gods mercies as in the woman of Canaan who verily beleeued that Iesus was the Messias and would minister helpe to her distressed daughter which was vexed with a Diuell as the Story shewes Mat. 15. 23. when as yet shee had not onely no experience but rather all things went crosse and contrary to her Therefore it was a fault in Thomas who would haue his senses the guide of his faith Except I feele and see saith he I will in no wise beleeue Ioh. 20. 25. whereas our Sauiour pronounced them blessed who beleeue and see not For it is not in supernaturall and diuine as it is in humane and natural things where by our sense and experience we are led but in heauenly matters first of all Gods children giue credit to the promise striuing against in-bred distrust they doe beleeue God to be true who hath spoken the word so as they waite vpon God till in his time he giue the feeling and comfort of that which they trust to be truly promised a marke worthy to be thought on because many esteem of faith by feeling iudging themselues to haue no faith because they want comfortable and ioyous feeling which is not faith but a fruit and consequent of faith in some more in some lesse and sometime none at all as in time of some great triall Apollos No Aquila I am not offended that yee did admonish me hereof I rather thanke you and wish you still to admonish me not withstanding this matter I knew would come further to be spoken of in the prosecution of this doctrine touching the seuerall degrees of faith But to goe forwards I thinke good to deliuer vnto you seuerally the difference betweene these two measures of faith more distinctly fully as their likenesse and agreement hath beene opened And first for the least measure and degree of faith it is this when Christians cannot certainly distinctly say I beleeue my own saluation and the pardon of all my sinnes but being displeased with themselues for their sinnes they doe vnfainedly constantly desire the pardon of them all and their reconciliation with God aboue the whole World yea aboue a world of worlds And this their desire of faith it is a degree of faith the seed and beginning of faith stirred vp by the Spirit of adoption Rom. 8. 26. pleasing God as faith it selfe hauing great promises made to it Mat. 5. 6. Ioh. 7. 37. As that indicious Diuine Master Perkins hath sufficiently proued both in his reformed Catholike and in the Book intituled the Graine of Mustard seede Therefore to let passe the confirmation of that point it is to be now shewed who be the persons in whom this weake faith is to be found which I find to be of two sorts The first is of such who haue but little knowledge by reason whereof their faith must needs be infirme Examples hereof we haue in Scripture in Rahab the Samaritanes Ioh. 4. 42. the Apostles of Christ at their first calling and Cornelius whereof some of them did onely know the promise touching a Messias and did not so much as know Iesus to be the Christ. Others which knew this yet were ignorant by what meanes he should effect the Worlds redemption hauing their heads troubled with conceit
ours for our Iustification For as Adams disobedience done in his owne person is yet the fault of all his Progeny euen to the subiecting them vnto death by Gods imputing it vnto them so is the obedience of Christ in his nature actions and sufferings though it sticke inherently in his manhood yet it is verily ours for forgiuenesse of sinnes and for our accounting righteous by Gods imputation of it vnto vs. The reason why this imputation is so requisite in the worke of our iustification it is apparent because the righteousnesse of Christ being without vs in the humane nature of Christ it can no otherwise become ours for the absoluing vs from our sinnes and getting vs to be accepted as iust in Gods sight then by a free imputation of it vnto vs. God accounting all the righteousnesse of his Sonne vnto the elect sinner to be his owne with the whole merit of it at what time hee beleeueth on his Sonne by a liuely and true faith And this the Scripture plentifully and plainely teacheth that as on Gods part there is this action of imputing Christ his iustice vnto vs so on our part there is required faith to beleeue the promise hereof made vnto vs by his Sonne Therefore it is so often saide that we are iustified by faith and Christ his righteousnesse is called the righteousnesse of faith in many Texts of Paul his Epistles Which is not so to be taken as if either faith were a part of righteousnesse which is wholy in Christ his doings and sufferings or as if the quality and action of faith did deserue remission of sinnes for it is vnperfect as all other graces are in vs and it selfe with the weake action of beleeuing needeth pardon from God neither as any mouing cause of our righteousnesse for it is the onely meere grace and vndeserued loue of God which moues him to offer and giue vs his Sonne with his righteousnesse Therefore it is written We are iustified by grace but we are saide to be iustified by faith as by an Instrument or hand created in the soule by the holy Ghost for this purpose that it may receiue apprehend or lay hold on the perfect iustice of Christ as it is promised and giuen vs of God in his Word of Grace euen the Gospell of Christ. As it is written that by faith we receiue the Sonne of God and the promise of the Spirit and the righteousnesse of God This way and meane of receiuing Christ his iustice by faith being ordained of God as meetest for our humbling and the praise of his owne free grace For when wee are brought once to see that we can bring nothing of our owne to iustifie vs hauing in vs manifest and manifold guiltinesse from Adam and our selues and an vtter emptinesse and depriuation of all righteousnesse and so are driuen to goe out of our selues to borrow and take from another euen from Christ his perfect iustice in his workes and passions performed and haue all this reckoned vnto vs for our owne both for remission of sinnes and for being accounted perfectly rightcous and that done freely by the gracious loue and fauour of God freely giuing his Sonne for vs to death offering him in his Gospel preached freely freely bestowing him with his righteousnesse vpon vs beleeuing in him and also freely working that faith by which alone it is whereby wee receiue both Christ and his iustice the due meditation 〈◊〉 must needs make greatly as for the abasing of our selues who are vtterly by this meanes put from all matter and cause of glorying and reioycing in our selues before God so also for the honour and commendations of Gods infinite loue and grace thus enriching vs with the most perfect righteousnesse of his Sonne vnto the full pardon of all our sinnes and freedom from the whole curse due to them and to the obtaining of such absolute iustice whereby we may stand iust before the seuere iudgement seate of God and worthy of eternall life through the same For this is a necessary consequent of our iustification or righteousnesse imputed euen the right of eternall life restored as it is written The iust by his faith shall 〈◊〉 where the Apostle argueth that righteousnesse is by faith because wee liue by faith Here are then two effects of faith one consequent to the other Faith bringeth vs to Iustice Iustice hath life annexed to it Hence it is saide Rom. 5. 17. That by the gift of this righteousnesse being receiued the Elect reigne in life that is they are made partakers of true and euerlasting life which no more can be seuered from righteousnesse then death from sinne which made the Apostle say that hee did liue because he did beleeue in the Sonne of God For then he began to liue the life which is eternall in Heauen at what time his faith did grapple on Christ his righteousnesse for this is the compact of God to giue life vnto him which keepeth the Law Doe this and liue which the faithfull doe in the person of Christ to whom they are ioyned by faith and therefore the right of life belongeth vnto them So as they can no more be depriued of eternall life in Heauen then Christ who already enioyes it Thus by the double righteousnesse of Christ imputed to the faithful both death damnation is auoided and euerlasting life and blessednesse is attained Apollos By this which you haue spoken so amply of this second fruite of faith to wit of Iustification before God it may appeare that they are deceiued which will haue it to consist onely in remission of sins whereas beside our absolution from sinne by the sufferings of Christ there is also an accounting of Christ his actiue righteousnesse vnto vs for our perfect iustice Secondly that they are in an errour also which doe teach it to be a grace or quality powred into our selues whereby wee leade a iust and holy life by which they say one is iustified Also the ignorant Christians seemeth to be in wofull case who neuer vnderstand what this great benefit meaneth But especially Gods children already called may herein see their owne most happy condition by their calling to the faith of the Gospell For as it fareth with a bondman ransomed out of bondage by his Emperour and aduanced to great dignity and riches or with a poore miserable man imprisoned for debt vnto his Prince and is not onely pardoned his debt but hath a very great treasure heaped vpon him being one which had neuer deserued well nay many wayes very ill of his Prince and from whom his Prince could neuer looke for any benefit and commodity to himselfe yet now by this most franke liberality and grace of his Soueraigne is suddenly of extreme poore and contemptible made very rich and glorious Euen so it fareth with Gods Children being through guilt of sinne and corruption of Nature and by actuall
to Satan and sinne with great case nay with maruellous ioy and alacrity osspirit as it is to be seene in Lydia Acts 16. 15. who as one feeling nothing lesse then anguish did cheerefully entertaine Paul vpon her new birth and calling The Samaritanes Acts 8. 9. at their conuersion by the preaching of Philip had great ioy it being in this case as in the naturall birth where some come into this World with great facility and others with very great danger and according to this different proceeding of God in this worke it is that some of the Elect doe sooner and far more easily see their owne calling then others doe The consideration of this second point is for comfort of them who being certainely called yet are troubled that the strength of grace is so little their infirmities so many their ioy and cheerefulnesse very small which should not so greeue them if they would remember that this case hath beene the condition of others and withall that the troubles and griefe which they finde in themselues by reason of their wants doth argue and proue to them their owne conuersion to bee true and sound which should more preuaile to comfort them then the sight of any defect and weakenesse to discourage let them reioyce in the truth of the grace which cannot reioyce in great measure of grace The third thing which I adde is this that election necessarily bringeth forth a true calling to Christ as a proper effect of it Therefore all good Christians are by their calling to iudge of their owne election and consequently of their owne saluation for as they must needes be saued which are elected because God changeth not and nothing can hinder his purpose so they are certainely elect who be effectually called It is not then for any to search curiously into Gods counsel and to begin there to find the assurance of their owne saluation but wee are to begin at another end and as wee discerne iudge of the roote by the fruite of the fountaine by the water which runneth from it and of the cause by the effect so we must rise vp to the sight of our election by the worke of our calling which is an hand to conduct vs into Gods Counsel-house Thus Paul the Apostle hauing taught and established that heauenly doctrine of Predestination Rom. 9. at the 24 verse hoe declared that the witnesse of it is to be sought not out of our selues in Gods secret will which is an obiect too excellent for our weake eyes directly to look vpon but in our selues to wit in our vocation to be Gods people which before were not his people Also Ioh. 6. 37. it is laide downe as a note whereby to know who be giuen to Christ of his Father in his eternall election that such shall come vnto him and see him All that the Father giueth me saith Christ shall come vnto me Now this comming vnto him is vpon their obedience vnto his call To be short for in a plaine matter few proofes be best as Christ proued the Iewes to whom then hee spake not to be the elect sheepe because they refused to heare his voyce and to beleeue so he describeth his sheepe which are chosen indeede by this marke that they heare and follow Wherefore as in vaine they presume of their election who neuer were called to faith in Christ so whosoeuer by the due tokens which you before haue laide forth and are about to doe hereafter when ye come to the effects of calling shall finde their owne effectuall calling to be soundly and surely wrought let them gather thereby vnfallibly their election to life Be of good comfort say the people vnto the blinde man in the Gospell the Master calleth thee so I say to these take to ye good heart for Christ the Master hath called you Not more certainely by the rayes and beames doe ye know the Sunne to be a lightsome creature then yee may determine of the loue of Gods gracious purpose towards you from euerlasting by this fruit of it in your effectuall vocation by the Gospell The fourth thing omitted by you it is this that the times of calling being so vncertaine wee should neuer cast away our hope of others who doe liue vnder the meanes though they liue wickedly vnlesse God doe giue vs any apparent signe of their reiectiō from grace as in 〈◊〉 Iulian and others otherwise to keepe vs from iudging especially of the finall estate of any because wee cannot tell what to morrow day may bring forth Therefore the Ministers of the word are still to be sowing and casting abroade their seede early late they know not which will take place this or that the people still to approach to Gods house to heare the word of God calling them They cannot tel which shal be the houre of their calling which as it cannot be preuented one minute so being once come all the strength of hell cannot holde them from obeying the voyce of their caller Aquila Sir I thanke ye for your good remembrance of these things which indeede were gone from mee May it please you now we will resort home for it very neere draweth to night and deferre other things to another time Here endeth the first part of the dialogue touching our effectuall calling The second Part of this Dialogue concerning the Graces which accompany and come from this effectuall Calling Aquila SIR ye are againe wel met here I thanke ye for your last conference in this place my mind hath been the more quiet euer since euen as my body fareth the better after a wholsome moderate repast or sweete rest may it please you that we should spend another houre in that sort setting on there where we left and broke off Apollos I am well pleased with your motion both that we should feed one another with the fruites of our lippes and that we go forward in that argument which wee haue begun Howbeit wee will alter our course whereas I put you to answere my questions and so put you to the more paine I will now take vp that burthen and you shall haue the easier and lighter ende of the staffe doe you aske and I will answer Aquila It pleaseth you to fauour me yet I iudge it no lesse hard to propound wise questions then to make true answeres One that hath any good measure of knowledge may better or as well replie when matter is offered by questions to worke vpon as to inuent and deuise still to propound new matter but I will agree to your order on this condition that where my questions shall be short or vnpertinent ye will correct faults and supply wants to make them more fit and full Tell me then what is the first sauing Grace which the holy Spirit workes in our Calling Apoll. All the sauing graces of the Spirit are wrought in the Elect to be giuen them simul semel at once and together In respect of time there is not
therefore the grosse ignoraunce of these times doth argue the rarenes of faith in this age The which is further testified by the cōtempt of Gods publike worship the prophanation of his Sabbath which doth alwayes as an handmaid accompany and waite vpon ignorance God being serued by some for meere fashion and 〈◊〉 or because of the Lawes compelling it and by others not serued at all the Tauernes or Ale-houses or Stew-houses or gaming places being the Church they keepe This plainly sheweth how rife infidelity is whereof this is yet a further demonstration euen mens fayling in Gods priuate worship either not praying at all with their family but lying downe like Asses and rising like Hogges or else performing it negligently with coldnesse and want of deuotion But amongst sundry tokens of the rarenesse of true beleeuers in the Church of God these two are the most notorious The former is the vnfaithfull dealing of one man toward another men being so full of craft and subtilty so cunning and exercised to beguil as one can hardly tell where to trust 〈◊〉 shall one finde a true and plaine-hearted man These being the dayes wherein affiance cannot be put in a friend nor confidence in a counsellor as the Prophet fore-tolde Mic. 7 5. This want of ciuill faith doth bewray the want of Christian faith For did men truly beleeue in God they would surely be carefull to deale so as that they might deserue to be beleeued of men Our keeping of our promise with men it being a speciall fruite of our faith in Gods promises Ps. 5 4. Gal. 5 22. yet where is he in a maner to be found that maketh conscience of a promise Yea bonds oathes will scarse hold men they are so slippery and vntrusty The other thing is the generall hatred of true beleeuers of faithfull Christians who of al others are most scorned and reuiled by all sorts of people Amongst whom there is a certaine strife and emulation who should excell others in malice towards them If men did beleeue in God and loue him which begetteth they would loue such as are begotten of him 1 Iohn 5 1. If this bee the marke of a man translated from death of vnbeleefe and sinne to the life of grace and faith that they Loue the Brethren 1 Iohn 3 14. as it is there written Hereby we know we are translated from death to life because wee loue the brethren then surely this ouer-common hatted despising of the godly together with the great vnmercifulnes and cruelty which reigneth euery where doth sufficiently proue the truth of that which is before spoken in the Word that Christ when he comes should scarse finde any faith vpon the earth Luke 18. and this is it which hath bene the condition of all times Few there be that enter the straite gate Math. 7. Many called and few chosen Few also beleeued the reportes of the Prophets So few that feared God as that the holy Ghost hath enquired for such as are rare to be found Where is the man that feareth the Lord Againe Psal 90 12. In Noahs time but his family alone and therin was a Cham. Afterward the house of Abraham of Isaac who worshipped God aright yet there was an Ismael and an Esau. What was Iacobs family or the Israelites to the rest of the world Yet among them were many hypocrites and wicked men Aquila You haue well established me in that which I conceiued about the fewnesse of beleeuers but I pray you Sir declare vnto mee what may be the true causes thereof and what benefit may come by this consideration Apollos Some of the causes be common to all times some proper to this age wherein we liue Of the former ranke the want of the Word the seed of faith or where the Word is the want of sound Interpreters the hands which scatter abroad the seede of the Word the withdrawing of grace where Interpretors be for all encrease commeth from God who if hee pull backe his grace it is in vaine for Paul to plant or Apollos to water To these wee may adde the corruption of mans heart prone to vnbeleefe and reason especially corrupted is an especiall enemy to faith as nothing more For the wisedome of the flesh is not nor will be subiect vnto God Rom. 8. 7. Satan he euer makes one alwayes labouring by one meanes or other to make frustrate the Word because he knowes that his kingdome is so much decayed as the Word preuaileth to draw men out of vnbeleefe vnto faith therefore hee sets all his wits and wiles aworke how hee may harden men in infidelity But the maine and soueraigne cause of this fewnesse of true beleeuers which be in the world it is the decree of god who hath not ordained all to life eternall which is the end and therefore not vnto faith which is the meane to bring vnto that end and these are more then a good many for the saued are fewer then the other which are not saued Mat. 7. 13 14. Now for the causes proper to this age I take them to be these foure especially First the extreme rage of Satan who perceiuing his time to be but short rageth so much the more striuing with all his cunning and might to hold men in the fetters of infidelity and keepe them backe from Christ to this end both lessening and cutting away the meanes where hee can and hindering meanes where they bee Another thing is abundance of iniquity ouerflowing in all places as a deluge this last age being as a common sinke into which all the filth of all foretimes runneth which occasioneth God as a iust Iudge to punish men with hearts slow and hard to beleeue Thirdly to the encrease of vnbeleefe it helpeth not a little that there is in the Church amongst professors such differences in matter of faith and religion a great stumbling blocke And lastly the loose liues of such as be Preachers of the faith auaileth much to hold men in their vnfaithfulnesse and sinne for the benefit which is to be made of this consideration it is this so much the more to encrease a care in men to labour for the gift of faith by how much it is more rare Were it so common as Nature is or as the Word and knowledge is there were the lesse need of any thought or trauane this way but being a thing so precious renowned much talked of in the World and little felt and enioyed and there being no Christ nor happinesse without it it standeth vpon so much the more to giue all diligence that they may bee found rather amongst the little handfull of beleeuers then in the multitude of Infidels which walke the broade way of vnbeliefe and iniquity Also this admonisheth vs as to sweate about the getting of faith by vse of all the meanes afore mentioned so to be exceeding thankefull to
and hope Rom. 15. 4. Therefore let faint sinners plucke vp their feeble hands that hang downe and their weake knees and the rather calling to minde that they haue by vowe in their Baptisme and by promise often iterated in the profession of Christianitie bound themselues as to doe the cōmandements so to beleeue the promises of God And better it were wee had neuer made such a vow then to breake it hauing once made it Eccl. 5 5. But what encoragement shold this be to thinke not onely of that band wherewith we haue obliged our selues to God to beleeue him vpon his worde which as a pure virgin neuer was defiled with any vntruths but also to weigh the bond wherewith God hath bound himselfe to vs not onely in our Baptisme but namely in the Lords Supper where vnder his seale hee assureth euery true beleeuer that examineth himselfe and so eateth and drinketh that he is as verily partaker of Christ and of his passion with all the fruits thereof to remission and mortification of sin as he is partaker of the outward pledges of his body blood they being particular testimonies of assurance to euery one of his owne saluation by Christ according to the tenor of the couenant so as a token from a most trusty friend cānot more confirme our perswasions of his loue towardes vs then the Lords Supper duly receyued may warrant and assure our heartes of the especial loue of God in Christ for our eternal happinesse Vnto all this we may adde as a spurre to quicken vs the great and diuers hurtes which will redound to our selues if we beleeue not God and the maruellous dishonour that thereby should be offered to himself For if once vnbeleefe take roote in our hearts a bitter root or roote of bitternesse it will prooue For by it all our actions naturall ciuill religious indifferent good actions will be defiled and made hatefull to God For Whatsoeuer is not of faith it is sinne Rom. 14 23. And without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11 3. and to him whose minde and conscience is vncleane thorow infidelity and sinne all things are vncleane Titus 1 5. And what a matter this is let any man duly consider of it that as faith gets all sinnes both to bee forgiuen and to turne to our good Rom. 8 28. so infidelity gets all our best workes to become naught to turne to harme to vs and offence to God Neither this onely but through vnbeleefe we do euen bind vp the hāds of God and seale vp the fountain of his liberality that it should not flow vpon vs either in earthly benefites or heauenly graces His protections and deliuerances in our dangers and against our enemies are withhelde As it is sayde in the Gospell Christ could doe no great workes there in Capernaum because of their vnbeleefe so our vnbeleefe doeth after a sort disable God at the least it depriues vs of his gracious good things and great preseruations Neither onely doth it keep good things from vs but pulleth down euill things yea euen vpon Gods Children their particular and partiall vnbeleefe draweth many and greeuous iudgements from heauen Moses for his distrust died in the Wildernesse and might not be suffered to enter the Land of Canaan Deuterono cha 4 4. Also Zachariah otherwise a iust man yet for his vnbeleefe sake was stricken dumbe and for manie moneths was not able to speake Luke chap. 1. vers 22. If the vnbeleefe of the godly being but an infirmitie of faith were so sharpely chastised what marueile if the infidelity of the wicked being a meere absence of faith do cause vnto them many heauy plagues in this life Examples whereof are rife in the Book of God and in common life but the chiefe hurt of incredulity is that it shutteth out from the blessed and glorious kingdome of God For without shall be fearefull vnbeleeuers Reuel 21. 8. yea and throweth downe head-long into eternall perdition to suffer vengeance in flaming fires because they obey not the Gospel of Christ For he that beleeues not the wrath of God is vpon him Iohn 3. 36. and such shall be condemned Marke 16. 16. So as if obtaining of all promised good things cannot be offorce sufficient to stirre vp our dul hearts to embrace the promises yet when the manifold and certaine euils which befall men for want of faith be thought vpon this should helpe to awake our heauy mindes to make vs abhorre euery vnbeleeuing thought chiefly considering that the danger to our selues by yeelding to vnbeleefe is nothing though it be much most fearefull being compared to the dishonour that will thereby redound to God for by our vnbeliefe he is spoiled as much as in vs is of his essence being namely his mercy truth and power which is to make him no God For if we make him a lyar as euery one doth which beleeueth not in the onely begotten Son of God 1 Ioh. 5. 10. then we strip him and rob him of his chiefe glory yea of his very essence Nay which is yet more feareful we doe equal match him vnto Satan as if there were no more truth in his sayings then in the father of lies as on the one side then they doe much glorifie God that doe beleeue his word witnessing of him that he is true in his promises able for performance Rom. 4. 21. yea they do themselues a speciall honour for they doe make God a testimoniall as it were and set to their hand seale that he is faithfull Ioh. 3. 33. So on the other side they do exceedingly dishonour themselues and God also which doe through infidelity cast away his promises Thus you haue heard good friend Aquila the best encouragements which I can thinke of to quicken a fainting faith which if they hit vpon a presuming heart will make it more presumptuous but if they meet with a beleeuing humbled heart for whose sake I haue collected them then they will be as drie sticks heaped vpon a dull dying fire to reuiue and cheere it Now that ye are so well acquainted with the vsuall discouragements hinderances of faith you hauing had so many strong assaults made against your faith if you wil deliuer them and also shew how they may be repulsed ouercome it will doe well in my opinion and so wee will shut vp our conference about faith Aquila I haue a good mind to doe the one that is to lay forth the obiections which the flesh Satan make against the stedtastnesse of faith to shake it but for the other you that haue truly opened the encouragements can also tell how for to fit them for the resistance and beating backe of hinderances First how shall I be assured that the gracious promises offorgiuenesse by Christ and other promises of the Gospell are from God and not deuised by men Apollos Tell me haue you not been moued to doubt whether there
not make them ashamed Rom. 5 5. therefore they may surely and with certainty expect eternall glory in heauen Otherwise their hope would bring shame and confound them if they should misse of the thing hoped for Againe the beleeuers are said to reioyce vnder this glory Rom. 5 2. Now there is no reioycing with godly wise men but in things of certainty which be assured There is therefore certainty in their hope otherwise how could they pray vnto God and call him Father For his children shall certainly be saued and they may certainly looke for it and how could faith be a certain perswasion of the truth of the promise if hope were but an vncertain and wauering looking for the accomplishment of the thing promised Finally hope staying it selfe vpon the infinite truth mercy and power of God which cannot deceiue alter or faile therefore Christian hope of glorious happinesse is no opinion but a very certaine and steddy expectation Aquila Sir let me heere interrupt you a little without your offence Seeing the nature of hope is but to looke for something which as yet wee haue not and is to be had heereafter as the Apostle Rom. 8. argueth to wit when he saith Hope which is seene is no hope wee hope for such things as we see not whence then is that certainty and assurance which is affixed and ioyned vnto hope there being many things hoped for to bee had of vs heereafter which yet men neuer haue Apollos Neighbour Aquila this was well timely mooued For certainty is not of the nature of hope which being generally taken and in it owne nature is no more then as you haue saide an expecting of some future thing which is yet for to come therefore certainty or vncertainety goeth with hope according to the nature of the things hoped for which if they haue contingent causes so as they may come to passe or not then the hope of such things is euer with vncertainty and no better then a doubtfull opinion Hence it is that humane or ciuill hope which is of worldlie things which haue no certaine causes but may be or not be is euer with doubt and vnassured As for example when one hath promised to come to my house such a time to make merry with me or to pay me money I may say I hope such a man thus promising will come at the appointed time but this hope cānot make me sure For vpon good cause he may alter his mind or fall sicke or my selfe may haue necessary lets But now it is otherwise with Christian hope which is certaine and assoreth a man of the things hoped for as spiritual blessings and protection on earth and celestiall glory in heauen Which things because they are very certaine proceeding of most certaine causes as the vnchangeable mercy and truth of God purposing and promising eternal life with all things which belong thereunto and bring thither and hauing already giuen the elect in the worke of their calling and iustifying them by faith in pacifying their consciences by the feeling of their sinnes forgiuen and allowing them accesse into his grace and by other fruites of his couenant sure demonstration and experimentall knowledge of his truth and mercy Hence it is that they may with vndoubted certainty and doe assuredly looke for that which is yet behinde euen their glorious perfection in heauen And notwithstanding there bee in them still remaining corruption by strength whereof they often faile and offend by many sometime very great sins yea and their owne will is changeable yet seeing it is so that vnto beleeuers repenting all sinnes are forgiuen and God himselfe neuer changeth howsoeuer his children are subiect therunto yet he so reneweth them as he confirmeth their will and putteth strength into them by the might of his grace that though they may change cease to trust in God yet they are kept from it Hence it is for all the multitude of their iniquities and mutablenes of their mind that their hope is neuer vtterly quailed danted but standeth firme as mount Syon or as an hill of Brasse so as not onely for the present but euer for hereafter their hope shall be firme and good Which truth as it much correcteth the error of them which seuer assurance from hope of glory make of it but an opinion and wauering conceite as of a thing which they may haue or misse of a thing not to bee meruailed seeing some in part at least ground their hope vpon the merit of workes and vpon their seruing of GOD weake grounds to beare vp certaine expectation of glory so it ministreth much comfort to the faithful which haue receiued this Christian hope insomuch as whatsoeuer their afflictions enemies or sinnes be yet they cannot misse of glorious blisse in the end For God is faithful which hath promised and hauing also begun a good worke in them hee will finish it vntill the day of Iesus Christ. Finally whosoeuer hath this hope of the glory of God let him purge himselfe euen as hee is pure For if we looke for such a glory as is heauenly wee ought to be very diligent that wee may bee found of him in peace without spot and blamelesse Aquila You haue satisfied me in this fifth fruite of hope and by that which you haue deliuered I doe well obserue how three sorts of persons be hugely deceiued The first is of them who in some part doe build their hope vpon their owne good doings who must needes alwayes floate as a boate vpon the water with continuall vncertainties and doubtings of their saluation for that they can neuer be sure when their workes are sufficient and when they be free from being in some mortall sinne doe still perplex their hearts beside the great sinnes which they commit against God in whom alone the hope of his children is to be fixed as an anchor in the bottome of the water insomuch as they are pronounced accursed which hope in ought saue God and mens workes they are not good therefore popish hope is an accursed hope Indeede good workes and a iust and godly life may be vnto the Saints a secondary helpe and as it were some prop to stay their hope in this regard that to such persons as liue so is the promise of eternall life made but God his infinite mercy trueth and his Almightinesse manifested in the death and resurrection of his Sonne is the true and onely foundation of hope Thankes be vnto God saith Saint Peter who hath begotten vs to a liuely hope through the resurrection of Christ from the dead The second sort is of such as in their ignorance or mistaking thinke and speake no otherwise of Christian hope then of humane and worldly hope as if their hope of glory had no more certainty in it then hath their hope of a faire day when they see the morning cleere or of a good haruest when they see corne come vp in the blade and well eared
with Christ and his afflictions suffering and dying with him they haue the Lords owne worde for their warrant that they shall also liue and reigne with him in glory So as with consideration of these things namely their conformity with Christ and that their light and momentany sufferings shall be turned into a glory immortall and weighty hence it is that looking for it looking vpon it and not vpon their temporall calamities they are very comfortable and coragious the ioy of good things to come swallowing at lest mitigating much the greefe of euil things present Aquila Sir you might now as I thinke proceede vnto the two last pointes of Iustification but that I would intreat you to loose two or three knots One is whether Gods children may imbrace worldly comforts And the second is sithence the hope of glorie breeds in them such ioy euen to the solacing gladding of their hearts in most irkesome and painfull sufferings how commeth it that sometimes some of the best and most faithfull men do strangely despaire and are not onely without hope and ioy but exceedingly appalled and danted despairing and full of discomfite Apollos Good friend albeit something hath by occasion bene said to this point twice or thrice heretofore if ye remember when wee spake of peace of conscience and of standing in grace and else-where yet I will answer your demand touching the despaires of the faithfull if first I speake somewhat of worldly comforts which as it pleaseth God sometime to afford his owne children and that in a good measure giuing them also power to apprehend them so there is great feare and danger of being deceiued by them as we see in the wofull examples of Salomons fall and Ezekiahs sinne and sundry others which haue lost the sense of spirituall ioy by being too much caried away with worldly ioyes not keeping a measure in them Therefore Gods children are to bee admonished of these few things about their ioy in earthlie comforts 1. First that simply considered it is common vnto them not onely with the vngodly but euen with sensuall beasts who are delighted when they haue things liking to their nature Thus wee see the Calues and Lambs to skip and sport themselues the very horse reioyce when he hath good prouender 2. Secondly too much worldly ioy when the hart is much and often cheered with pleasures of life is very perillous a great enemy to godlinesse hauing bene the baite wherein many a good soule hath bin caught so as there needs great caution to be taken about the well vsing of it especially it being so hard for vs to gouerne either our passions of greefe or ioy of feare or loue 3. Thirdly therefore prayer is to bee made vnto God to guide them in their mirth and to enable them to obserue a due measure therin that the heart be not deceiued thereby 4. Fourthly in the midst of mirth and worldly ioy when the heart beginnes to cheare much some sin of our life committed or some iudgement of God which we haue bene vnder for sinne or some threatning of the word against some of our sinnes would bee called to minde to checke the immoderatenesse of our affection and so to temper and take down our mirth that it be not with excesse 5. Fiftly as Chirurgeons are faine in some cases to diuert the course of blood for the healths of their patients so let Christians endeuour to turne theyr worldly mirth into a godly spirituall mirth by considering with themselues seriously that those earthlie pleasures and worldly comforts wherein their heart is delighted are the fruites of their redemption pledges to them of better things to come and so to learne to reioyce in the vse of them as testimonies of Gods loue and fauour in Christ. 6. Sixtly it would do well in their ioy for worldly things to thinke how sodainly and soone they may be lost and all turned quickly into the contrary Also to remember the afflictions of the Church of some chiefe members therof which mourne now when they reioyce that by a fellow seeling of others miseries their owne ioy may be layed and brought into better compasse 7. Seuenthly let them further call to mind how often they reade of Christs teares and sighings for sins miseries of others how sildome or neuer they reade of his laughter and mirth Which though no doubt he had and did partake of it being a man like to vs in all things saue sin and to reioyce is in it selfe no sinne yet likely it was sparingly and surely no mention is made of it in the story of the Gospell He was at some feasts indeede but no word of his mirth there 8. Lastly our mirth as it would bee by all good meanes moderated so there would care be taken that it be referred to a good end which hath a great stroke in the goodnesse of any action namely to take our worldly comforts with this purpose and mind that we may be the more apt to praise God with cheerefulnesse of heart and to goe through the laborious and irksome trauels of our calling with more alacrity and liuelinesse Thus there will not onely bee no harme in our worldly mirth whereof to repent but it will proue an helpe to vs vnto godlinesse and be as an hand-maide to that spirituall reioycing vnder the hope of glory Now to your other knot how it falleth our that beleeuing Christians notwithstanding their hope and ioy in God yet are sometime filled with despaire and discomfort if I should say no more but that they may often thanke the abuse of worldly ioy as the cause of those heauy gnawings of despaire which come ouer their stomacks I should say something and which were too true howbeit I will deliuer to you more fully what I iudge of the despaire of the beleeuers And first I iudge it a very strange worke of God that it should fall out that a true beleeuer should despaire considering that the hope which is put into his heart as an anchor sure and stedfast hath such firme ground-worke as the constant truth the omnipotent power the vnchangeable mercies of God the Father also the precious death perfect obedience powerful resurrection of Christ our Mediatour finally the sanctification and graces of the holy Spirit which as the first fruites of the Spirit as the earnest of our inheritance the beginnings of life eternall the peculiar ornaments of Christs Spouse serue to be as vnder helpes and props of hope there being also the Ministry of the Word and Sacraments and many other meanes to confirme hope I say that for all this they should be sometime in that case as if they had neuer heard of God of life euerlasting or had not known what hope had meant it is very strange indeede Yet all experience both old and new telleth vs that as in the Elect before their calling there is a meere want and priuation of hope so after their
one thing or being one with Christ and as iustification and imputation of righteousnesse remission of sinnes be often vsed to signifie one thing the absolution of a sinner before the tribunall of God so there be certaine words as regeneration renewing or renouation and sanctification which import one selfe-same action and worke of the Spirit euen that whereby the corruption of sinne as touching the dominion and the power which it doth exercise before our calling is destroyed till it selfe at length bee wholy abolished and in stead thereof a new quality of holinesse put into the faculties of the soule that it may begin to loue and doe such things as are pleasing vnto God till it come at last to perfection by certaine degrees This worke or action of the Spirit it is called renouation or renewing because of that new grace and quality powred into the mind and will the former corruption which is called the olde man being killed As in the first worke of creation hee that was nothing before was made a man so in this worke of renouation or new creation hee that was naught before is made good as if a new man were borne Hence also it is called Regeneration or new birth indcede not properly nor fitly for our regeneration is the same with our incorporation or vnion with Christ wherby we become his members euen one body with him For as by generation we haue our being in this World and take the essence or nature of our Parents to become their Children so by regeneration wee haue our being of Christianity to become the members of Christ sonnes of God being before children of wrath and members of Sathans kingdome sonnes of Adam Thus doth our Sauiour himselfe teach vs to vnderstand it for hauing saide Iohn 1. 12. That such as beleeue in Christ are the sonnes of God he presently addeth Which are borne not of bloud c. but of God To declare this vnto vs that our new birth or regeneration is the making of vs the sonnes of God by faith and not the furnishing vs with such qualities and properties as belong to such as bee already sons Howbeit for as much as most Diuines and best learned men doe confound regeneration and sanctification I doe therefore follow that commonly receiued iudgement and by regeneration vnderstand that framing of the heart to Gods Image in righteousnesse and true holinesse which because it is an immediate consequent of our new birth wherein wee are begotten to be sonnes and daughters of God and as it were the putting of another and new nature into vs euen that diuine as Peter calleth it therefore is vsually called by the name of new birth Now for the last word of sanctification whereas that word is somtimes generally vsed in Scripture to signifie all that euen whatsoeuer it is that we haue from or is done in vs by Christ and is as much as our 〈◊〉 from the rest of this sinfull World to remaine and be vnto Christ as a thing consecrate to him yet in this argument where we distinguish it from vnion with Christ and iustification it is that speciall worke of the Spirit renewing vs in the spirit of our mind vnto a new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and holinesse of truth as Saint Paul speaketh Ephesians 4. 23 24. Or more briefly it is that worke of God whereby our corruption by little and little is abolished and holinesse perfected by degrees For in this worke though Christ minister a power to the beleeuer by his Spirit against sinne to master it and to doe the will of God yet it is not absolute at the first so as by it all sinne should be vtterly done away not at all to be in the soule and a strength giuen perfectly to worke good for then the Law might be fulfilled of vs in this life and then wee should iustifie our selues and 〈◊〉 died in vaine and we neede not his mediation to make our workes accepted But whereas in sinne beside the guilt and condemnation wherein we are wrapt and from which our Iustification hath freed vs and in stead thereof hath put vpon vs righteousnesse vnto life there is also in it a tyranny dominion and power which by the iust iudgement of God it exerciseth euen ouer the very Elect who are the seruants of sinne and doe willingly offer the faculties of their soules and parts or members of their body as weapons and instruments to fight and warre 〈◊〉 corruption that the will and lusts the desires and motions of sinne may be done as it is to be seene Rom. 6. 13. 17 c. Now in this worke of our Sanctification there is strength force giuen to the beleeuing soule against this tyranny of sinne to beate it downe and subdue it to keepe it as vnderling that howsoeuer it dwell and remaines there egging to euill and still soliciting and prouoking against God yet it wants now much of his former vigour and might so as it cannot reigne and rage with full swinge as it was wont to carry vs headlong after all vngodlinesse vnrighteousnesse this we get by our Sanctification Apollos Now let me entreate you to open the seuerall parts of it with the causes and hereafter wee may consider of the measure Aquila This is it which I was minded to doe in the next place after I had shewed what the whole worke of Sanctification is then to lay it out into his parts and by the members laide out particularly the better to discouer the whole body of this worke Diuines vse to make two parts and that according to Scripture The first is 〈◊〉 or crucifying of the old man which hath two degrees First the death of sinne Secondly the buriall of sinne which is the progresse of the death of sinne In respect hereof the faithfull are saide to be crucified with Christ and their body of sinne to be crucified with him Rom. 6. 6. And also to be dead to sinne to be baptized into his death to be dead with him to be buried with him Rom. 6. 2 3 8. The second part of our Sanctification is our walking in new nesse of life or quickening the new man or liuing to God Rom. 6. 4. In which respect wee are said to be raysed vp together with Christ and to liue with him Phil. 3. 1. Rom. 6. 8. Here then we haue with the parts of Sanctification the true cause thereof deliuered to vs which I will for better vnderstanding thus declare and set forth according as I conceiue of it The first part of Sanctification is the death of sinne or dying to sinne which is when that the strength of our sinnefull corrupt Nature is taken downe and by degrees weakened as the body of Christ languished by degrees vpon the Crosse so as sinne cannot bring forth such euill fruites in thoughts words and deedes as it did while wee were vnder the power of it This is
a dying to sinne and liuing to righteousnesse Apollos I will tell you what I conceiue of it that Repentance is a fruite of Sanctification a consequent of it which doth immediately follow it and is ioyned to it as a companion the difference I will expresse it to you by a similitude as you may vnderstand it better In the worke of Sanctification the holy Spirit doth as it were shape a new garment for the soule which as it hath a robe without to wit the perfect iustice of Christ to put on by faith so it hath other garments of lesse worth which be inherent and sticke within it selfe and this is the quality of holinesse created in the soule which we are willed to put on as Col. 3. Put on the new man Againe As the Elect of God put on compassion meekenesse c. And in 〈◊〉 6. 13. Keepe your garments pure and without spot Now as in a new garment there happens rents and breaches so our holinesse by strength of corruption striuing against it and Sathans temptation doth take some rents and breaches daily which are to be made vp and restored by repentance Sanctification is as the building of an House our soules and bodies thereby are made the Temples and habitation of God Ephe. 2. verse last 1 Cor. 6. Houses being wind and weather-beaten will take decayes and neede reparations Now repentance is the repairing of those wrackes and harmes which our selues take by the assaults of sinne and Sathan Take yet another comparison In Sanctification wee haue giuen to vs the skill and power to warre against sinne Sathan and the World and weapons put into our hands wherewith to defend our selues and to offend them Now our weapons wil waxe dul and need sharpening our selues take blowes and 〈◊〉 and neede curing this doth repentance which 〈◊〉 the weapons and makes whole our selues after hurts receiued I haue now shewed you what my iudgement is of the thing you propounded Aquila Yea I vnderstand it and will examine it and then rest in it if I find no iust matter of exception meane time I yet see not but that ye are right But tell me Sir what Repeutance doe you meane For Repentance euen in Scripture phrase is attributed sometime to reprobates and wicked men as where it is said that Iudas repented him Math. 27. 1. 2. And there was a certaine repentance euen in Cain Esau Achab Symon Magus and others as the Story of Scriptures euidenceth Beside the Elect which yet are in their sinnes and want all true sauing grace the holy Ghost vseth to exhort them to repentance as Acts 3. 19. To those that killed Iesus Peter saith Repent and returne And Acts 17. 30. to the supersticious Athenians Paul saith God admonisheth all men euery where to repent See also Acts 14. 15. by which it may appeare that there is a repentance in some which are neuer sanctified and others haue a repentance before their sanctification Apollos This was well moued for it is true that Repentance hath sundry acceptions in the Word of God which is the cause that Diuines write diuersly of this point and somewhat confusedly sometime for not duly distinguishing those workes of God which he diuersly worketh in men as hee pleaseth To shew you what I comprehend of this matter this word Repentance is in Scripture either taken in euil part or in good part when it is taken in the euill part then it signifieth a greefe of minde conceiued onely for punishment of sinne when yet the sinne it selfe is not a whit loathed and hated but still well liked of Thus is Iudas saide to repent who because of the present horrour which his sinne bred in his conscience and through the feare of future iudgement wished that vndone which hee had done and so repented but his heart nothing changed to abhorre his couetousnesse When it is taken in good part then it is either Legall or Euangelicall Legall Repentance I call that when by the ministery of the Law the Spirit is effectuall to worke a sight of sinnes both secret and grosse and of the curse and punishment due thereunto together with a certaine greefe and feare in regard of that sinfull and wofull estate which the sinner seeth by the Law himselfe to lie in This in the Elect is a preparatiue to the grace of conuersion and alwayes goeth afore which though in it selfe it be not true sauing grace yet it is the beginning the entrance and way to it in all the chosen and this is meant in part in all those exhortations made to vnconuerted elect persons Repentance Euangelicall is either generall or speciall generall repentance which is a turning from all sinne at once is that whereby a sinner being by precepts and threats of the Law stricken with terror and humbled vpon sight and some sense of his owne damnable state through sinne is by grace conuerted and changed in his minde and will so as of an euill man hee become a good now truly hating all his sinnes as offences of a good God reconciled in his Son and not only for punishment sake and louing righteousnesse vnfeinedly This is called passiue Repentance or conuersion and is in truth the same with Sanctification wherof ye may reade in these Texts Acts 11. 18. Acts 20. 21. Luke 24. 47. Speciall Repentance Euangelicall it is that whereby a sinner that beleeueth forgiuenesse of his sinnes and is sanctified or conuerted and already made good doth repent particularly of such sinnes which by occasion in the course of his life he falleth into this is of Diuines called particular Repentance Actiue and renewed Repentance and they doe distinguish it from the former And thus it is taken in all places of Scriptures where the Saints are saide to repent or exhorted to repent as 2 Cor. 7. 9. Reuel 2. 5. and 3. 19. Mathew 18. 3. And thus in this sence doe I speake of it at this time taking it for the repairing or renewing of those daily decayes and slips which doe arise in the practise of godlinesse For as in a garment namely a beggers garment there is alwayes something to be amended and in an house though well swept and cleansed yet there will still be something to be purged out and in an healthy body there fal out infirmiries to be cured so in the life and conuersation of euery good Christian there will be still something to be repented of and amended Our frailety and Sathans malice being considered there would indeede that care and watchfulnesse be vsed that as neere as euer may be those pure garments of our righteousnesse holinesse be kept cleane and vndefiled and our Temples of body and soule to be preserued holy yet as a materiall garment be it neuer so well lookt vnto gathereth spots and the house which is kept most neatly and curiously will haue dust and sulledgy so in the best Christians somewhat will be alwayes amisle and therefore the whole life of a Christian
vse what meanes they list good or bad without choyse Good things must be compassed by good meanes Good hath no neede of euill to helpe it And the Apostles rule is sound that euill is not to be done that good may come of it Rom. 3. 8 no not the least euill to procure the greatest good It was 〈◊〉 sinne that shee would draw the promised blessing vppon Iacob by a deceit And Dauids sinne that he would counterfeit himselfe an Idcot or franticke man against the dignity of his person to deliuer himselfe from the Philistines Also it was Lots infirmity to seeke to deliuer the men which came vnto him by prostituting his Daughters to the Sodomites lust A good action is spoyled by wicked meanes as well as by a bad ende Howsoeuer God at his pleasure may so order the successe of such actions as it shall proue good yet the party must be more humbled for the sinne doing amisse then lifted vp with the happy issue of the deede Moreouer it would not be forgotten that in doing good duties a great care is to be had of circumstances as time place persons and such like Wherein great wisedome is required to be able to discerne of these how to doe good things meetely and fitly according to time and other circumstances for the missing or failing but in a circumstance through lacke of discretion and good insight or fore-sight rather hath caused many good workes to miscarry and haue full heauy successe Of all this it followeth that no euill man can do a good work If the tree be euill the fruite will be euill Mal. 12. And that good men neede wonderfull care and circumspection as also feruent prayer for great aide from God to be enabled to doe such things as shall be good when they are done but here withall let it be obserued that when they haue done all and brought with them all the conditions of a good worke yet their worke will still haue both wants and blemishes As cleere water that passeth thorow a muddy chanell or pure liquour put into a musty caske takes corruption from them so our workes as they passe through our vnderstanding and will which are not renewed but in part and are partly flesh therefore draw filth and vncleannesse from our inbred corruption to the defiling of them yea and iustly deseruing that they should be refused and we also the doers as certainly they would be if with the eye of rigorous and exact iustice God should behold them Whence it is that no godly man can be iustified by his workes for the workes of the Law doe make vs righteous before God when they are fully performed without any the least default for then euen by the compact of Gods owne mouth saying Doe this and liue Gal. 3. there belongs vnto them as a debt eternall life But sithence none euer kept the Law thus since mans fall saue Christ therefore Righteousnes is not to be sought by the Law which rather reuealeth our vnrighteousnesse and Gods wrath against the same And as it is impossible the Law should iustifie vs because of the infirmity which is in vs whereby we are hindered from answering the strictnesse of it so we neede not fetch Righteousnesse from the Law because we haue it by grace imputing freely to the beleeuers the doings and sufferings of Christ for our perfect iustice with God besides our good workes following our Iustification as fruites effects they cannot goe before as causes of it Wherfore all Christians are to be admonished to lay aside all opinion of their owne Righteousnesse as not thinking euer to obtaine life from God by their good doings be they neuer so many or worthy when as one sinne alone spoyles all the righteousnesse of our workes euen as one droppe of Inke doth spoyle a whole goblet of Wine And hauing vtterly renounced all affiance in our works to put no manner of confidence in them for saluation let them striue to catch fast hold vpon that Righteousnesse of Christ which alone hath power to merit eternall glory to euery one that beleeueth in the name of Christ that abandoning the righteousnesse which is by the Law wee may be found in Christ hauing bis Righteousnesse which is by faith Rom. 10. 2. Aquila But Sir if it be so that such 〈◊〉 doe sticke to out best workes as you say that they cannot 〈◊〉 vs and merite ought at Gods hand vnlesse it 〈◊〉 eternall death how commeth it that God is so much pleased with them as to liken them to a fruite and to an odour of sweet smell and to sacrifice and sweet 〈◊〉 and many other such comparisons there bee in holy Scripture which declare the workes of godly Christians to be highly pleasing to God And withall seeing we cannot if we had a world of good workes by them all obtain purchase forgiuenes of one sin or the possession of heauenly ioy no not so long as for one hour to what purpose then are we so to labour in the doing of them as we are often commanded to doe with very great charge of great care to be shewed vsed in the working of them and there to come no good of them towards our saluation it should seeme it is labour lost Apollos Though there be in the most perfect worke of any Child of God here vpon earth so much fault both through the want that is in it and the blot that sticketh to it selfe loue pride hypocrisie and other corruptions being blended and mixt with it as that God might worthily cast the doer into hell if mercy set apart he should iudge it extremely and therefore iust cause of being deeply humbled is ministred to euery godly man for his choysest actions euen for them to entreate the Lord not to enter into iudgement with him marking narrowly that which is amisse yet the good workes of the faithful euen the very least of them are very pleasing and acceptable to God as the Word euery where beareth good witnesse both in particular of some of his childrens workes as that of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. 4. God had respect to Abel and to his offering and Noahs sacrifice that God smelt a sauour of rest Gen. 8. 21. Of Abrahams offering his sonne ye see likewise what testimony there is of it Gen. 22. verse 12. 16. And also in generall of all good workes done by which of his Children soeuer that they are sacrifices accepted of him through Christ 1 Pet. 2. 5. And such sacrifices as God is well pleased withall Heb. 13. 16. And certaine it is that God would not command the doing of them not make such liberall promises to them being done were it not that hee hath a pleasure in them and liked well of them and sundry are the respects for which he is so delighted euen with the vnperfect and stained workes of his Children First because they are his owne worke in them as it is written Ye are the
workemanship of God created to good workes c. Ephe. 2. 10. His owne Spirit framing them to doe good inspiring them with the motions and will and enabling them with the power to doe them As it is written The will and the deede are both of God Phil. 2. 13. Hence are good workes called Fruites of the Spirit Galat. 5. 22. Thereby to teach vs that good workes being wrought in the regenerate by the operation of the Spirit therefore they are accepted and pleasing to God euen as fruite is pleasant to the taste Secondly he liketh them as parts of his owne Image which he loueth wheresoeuer he findeth euen as a father doth loue a sonne that is like himselfe Beside as they are done of his faithfull children in whom he is pleased and be testimonies of their faith and tend to the setting foorth of his owne glory so they are gratefull to him And to the end that he may take delight in them he purgeth away all the spots which through our corruption doe sticke vnto them wiping them away by the effectuall application of the bloud and death of Christ which hath the force of intercession in Heauen comming between the iustice of his Father and mans 〈◊〉 which still abideth in his members So as being cleansed by the imputation of Christ his sacrifice and perfect obedience to the working beleeuer hereof it commeth to passe that God beholdeth in their workes nothing saue that which is his owne being all forgiuen and couered the rest being his he is maruellously delighted in it yea so farre as to crowne it with an euerlasting reward First hee giues the power to doe good then crownes his owne gift The places of Scripture are well knowne to euery one exercised therein where the Lord promiseth reward yea great reward not alone to the greatest workes of Christianity as suffering reproaches scornes losses death for Christ but euen to the meanest and lowest as to the feasting of the poore Luke 14. 12. to the giuing of a 〈◊〉 of cold 〈◊〉 to a Disciple or Prophet for Christ his sake Mat. 10. 42. And at the last day the feeding of the hungry clothing the naked visiting the imprisoned Christians shall haue the Crowne of immortall glory and blessing Mat. 25. awarded to them no lesse then to the feeding and guiding the Church which is the weightiest and worthiest worke of godlinesse 1 Pet. 5. 5. Whereby it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 well God liketh of the voperfect good deede of his Children when for a few workes done in a moment and of no great value he is content to render glory euen an immortall weight of it Aquila This it is that moueth many to thinks that there is in good workes a power to merit because a reward is promised to them but what may be the reason that seeing there is no merite in any mans worke yet workes should be rewarded Apollos Besides the consideration of imperfections spiritual pollutions which be in our best workes as we haue heard which hath caused the godly that they would not trust to their owne godlinesse but haue euer appealed to the mercy seate of Christ Iesus furthermore our workes are not our own but come from his free Spirit and are a due debt which wee owe to God our Creator and Redeemer so as we haue done but what we ought when wee haue done all Luke 17. There being also no equality betweene the infinitenesse of heauenly blisse and our finite labours in well doing therefore there can be no merite in them neither is there any cause to looke for any merite from them there is sufficiency enough of merit in the works and passions of our Lord to deserue for vs eternall glory Howbeit it pleaseth God to make vnto our workes a gracious promise of reward in his Word which speaking according to our capacity who giue rewards to men in the end of the day after all their labour and worke is finished as in them who wrought in the Vineyard Mathew 20. Thence it is that eternall life being bestowed on the faithfull after all their labours and trauaile taken in the seruice of their most good God in the end and euening of their life is called a reward and a reward it is not a merite A reward freely giuen for his goodnesse promise sake to them that beleeue in his Sonne there being not any temporall benefit no not a peece of bread which otherwise commeth to their hand then by free mercy and not a reward of debt and desert as if either the worthinesse of the worke simply considered or as it is dipped and died in the blood of Christ could binde God to vs make him a debter it being that which Christ hath done in himselfe and not that which he hath wrought in vs that hath merited our saluation in heauen and all things which belong thereunto Yet such is the bounty of our heauenly Father that as naturall Parents by promised gifts and rewards stirre vp their children to do what otherwise is their duty so hee prouokes and quickens the slow dulnesse of his children and by rewards as spurres in their sides egges and excites thē to the doing of that which otherwise by duty they are manifoldly and strongly bound to doe And these rewards they are neither meane nor few but both worthy and many yea sundry and of diuers kinds first bodily or worldly for godlinesse hath euen the promises of this life secondly spirituall to wit encrease of spirituall graces as it is written To him that hath more shal be giuen and he shall haue abundance Lastly eternall euen the Crowne of life the Paradise of God rest from labour the tree of life which are promised to such as ouercome Reuel 2 7. and 3 5. and 14 13. Now the intention of God in offering such great manifold recompence being this to quicken his owne vnto all manner of loue and obedience towards him it is therefore very meete and lawfull yea necessarie that Gods children should by such encouragements hearten themselues in their course For howsoeuer it be fit and requisite that the will of our heauenly Father and his glory be first lookt vnto that our loue to his word and to the praise of his name do set vs on worke to do our duties as we may haue this testimony that in our seruice of God and in all the good workes which wee do we seeke not our selues but the pleasing and praise of God by doing that which he commandeth yet afterward and as it were in the second place we may turne our eyes vnto the reward promised vs thereby to helpe our slacknesse and slownesse to good considering that our labour in the Lord shall not bee in vaine but bring foorth a great haruest of comfort and blisse in the end wee reaping eternall ioyes of those things which heere we did sow to the spirit As Moses encouraged himself to care
our good workes which they shall see may be moued more readily to hearken to that truth that worketh so mightily in vs. Therefore Peter counselleth faithfull wiues by their good workes to winne their vnbeleeuing husbands 1 Peter 3. 1. Also 1 Cor. 7. 16. For how knowest thou O woman whether thou shalt saue thy vnbeleeuing Husband But if any be vnconuerted and belong not to God these by our good workes shal haue their mouthes stopped that they cannot speake euill of vs or of our Religion For so is the will of God that with well doing we may stop the ignorance of foolish men 1 Peter 2. 15. Towards such as be already conuerted and become faithfull our good workes haue their proper vse either to confirme and strengthen them if they be weake in the faith as Christ saith to Peter Confirme thy brethren Luke 22. 32. Or else to comfort and reioyce such as be strong as Iohn reioyceth because the elect Lady and her children walked in the truth 2 Iohn 2. And Paul is greatly comforted by the faith and godlinesse of the Philippians Philip 3. 5. Insomuch as that which is spoken of the Vine and the fruite thereof Iudg. 9. 13. agreeth better to good workes the fruites of our faith that by them God and men are cheered Which should exceedingly worke preuaile with all good men to doe them and to doe them yet more cheerefully and plentifully not onely because as we vse to say of things we buy there is the more to put into the Inuentory so the more good workes we haue the more there is to further our reckoning but that our name may shine as the Sun in brightnesse our faith and saluation be sealed our God glorified our Religion beautified our Neighbour edified in his soule by godly admonition refreshed in his body and bowels by the fruits of our mercy and loue finally Sathan and our aduersaries confounded And for the better furthering of our selues in the practise of them let vs further remember these few things that our life is short oportunity will be taken away from vs therefore while we haue time let vs doe all the good we can considering that we haue lost much time already and heretofore haue done many things to the displeasure and discredite of so gracious a God Moreouer we haue receiued many fauours from God namely remission of all our sinnes and adoption by Christ sanctification by his Spirit with infinite other benefits for soule or body Let these mercies encrease constraine our loue to well doing and set vs on fire with zeale of good workes seeing Christ purgeth vs from our iniquitie to the end that we should be a peculiar people feruently giuen to doe good Titus 2. 14 15. And as we like to see other things fruitfull our Kine and Sheepe our Orchards our Fields so let it be our care and loue to see our selues fruitfull as it were our shame and reproach to be barren that wee may be like vnto Iesus Christ our head of whom it is written in the Gospell That he went about dooing good c. and that hee did all things well that we treading now in the steps of his faith and loue obedience and patience wee may at length reigne with him in glory For such as follow him now in the pathes of godlinesse shall hereafter sit with him at his Table in his Fathers Kingdome whither Christ Iesus safely and speedily bring vs for his name sake Amen The ninth part of the Dialogue Of particular good Workes first concerning God Of the Loue of God Apollos NOw Neighbour Aquila your constancy in following this conference makes me thinke you are like him of whom it is written That where hee beginnes a good worke he will finish it You haue taken in hand a good worke and you are desirous to accomplish it and to tell you truth so am I too and now that we draw toward an end let vs keepe close to it till we arriue where we would be there is nothing so hard but constant labour will ouercome it at last Aquila Constancy in any thing aduisedly taken vp is a very commendable thing but Sir according to your counsell let vs fall to our worke● Wee haue spoken of good workes generally wee are now to handle some especiall good workes which are more excellent and necessary and whereupon all the rest doe depend what choyce shall we make what good workes shall we single out from the rest therein to spend our time Apollos My aduice is this Whereas good works be all duties whereby either God or our neighbour be serued and benefited and the duties which we owe to God are cheefe as cause and ground of the rest first we will cull out such principall good workes as concerne God immediately namely the loue of God 2. his feare 3. of trust in him 4. thankesgiuing 5. prayer 6. reuerence towards his name 7. sanctifying his Sabbach and lastly of patience in suffering and then wee will descend to such fruites of faith and repentance as do belong to our neighbour For the first and great commandement is to loue God with all the heart and next to loue my neighbor as my selfe Aquila I do well approne of this order not onely because I know no better but because I iudge it to bee the best and fittest Let me then heare you tel me what it is to loue God wherefore wee stand bound to loue him and what it is that begets in vs the loue of God And then if ye wil declare the measure and manner of this loue how much it ought to bee and how it may be discerned to be in vs withall of the effects which this loue will be get in his children Apollos Loue is such an affection of the heart as desireth to be knit and neerely ioyned to the thing or party loued This is the nature of loue so to carry the heart with desire vnto that which is loued as nothing will content till it be enioyed and had The trueth of this may appeare in that loue which is inordinate and also in all well gouerned loue The theefe the adulcerer the gamester the couetous are by their loue such as they beare to their booty their whores their game and gaine so possessed as they are then quyet and not before when they haue and bee ioyned in one to that which they loue as their parting from the thing loued and losing it is their greefe yea sometime their death so their being with it and hauing it is their contentment and ioy and life Stories and experience afford vs sufficient proofe heereof We see the Gamester neuer well but when hee is at dice or cardes or other game The Fornicator is neuer at rest vnlesse he bee with his harlot The Couetous man is best pleased when he lookes vpon or fingereth money Now in well-gouerned loue it is right so whether it bee naturall or humane or
vs to discerne it for the loue of others especially of our enemies which proceeds from the loue of God it is the true touchstone and triall of it yet may it please you to deliuer some more and more plaine notes and tokens of our loue to God as euery one who will not bee deceiued may haue wherewith to proue to himselfe the soundnesse of his affection this way and in declaring of this ye shall make knowne what workes and duties are fitting for them to doe who haue and professe to haue the loue of God and so by one bush stop two gappes and plaster two walles with one trowell Apollos It is true which you say the proper effects are best meanes to iudge of the cause and the selfe-same effects which be markes of our loue be also duties and workes which such as loue God are bound to doe which if they be not done will testifie that all profession of the loue of God is but dissimulation Such persons as doe in truth beare a louing heart to God it will leade them to an hearty loue of his Word which is to be seene in Dauid a man if any other very full of loue towards God the zeale of whose name had euen eaten him vp Psalme 119. 139. And this hee witnesseth herein that his Word was his delight Oh saith he how doe I loue thy Law Psalme 119. 79. My delight is in thy Commandements verse 47. Thy Testimonies are better to mee then thousands of gold or siluer verse 72. They were as sweete to his soule as hony is to his mouth verse 103. Now whereas hypocrites seeme to haue the loue of the Word it is but in seeming for they loue it onely for knowledge sake the desire whereof is a thing agreeable to Nature but Gods Children loue it because it is the trueth of God and their appointed food and nourishment whereby they are to be fed to life eternall And further their loue to it doth breed which is not to be found in any hypocrite an earnest and vnfeined desire care and endeauour to doe it and practise it wherein they well declare how well they loue God As it is written If ye loue me keepe my Commandements Iohn 14. 15. And yet more plainely afterwards verse 21. Hee that hath my Commandements and keepeth them that is to say striueth what he may to keepe them this is he which loueth me see verse 23. to the same purpose All which signifying thus much that Christ Iesus taketh triall of our loue towards himselfe by our louing and out of loue labouring to doe his will reuealed in his Word As on the one side our loue to him is manifested by hating and flying such euils as he hath forbid according to that is saide in the Psalme Ye that loue the Lord hate the thing that is euill Psalme 97. 10. And Psalme 119. 128. I esteeme all thy Precepts most iust therefore I hate euery euill way So on the other side the delight we haue in seeking to know the Word for this end that wee may be the doers of the good things commanded therein it is a good and sound proofe of our loue to God the Authour of the Word who will be loued in his Word and trusted in his word and feared according to his word whereof wee conclude That loue of God which is seuered from loue and obedience of his Word to be hypocriticall It is also an infallible marke and duty of sound loue towards God to loue him in his Children and his children in him as was touched before when not for pleasure we haue in them or profit by them or for alliance or acquaintance sake or any morall perswasion but principally for their adoption sake and for the likenesse which they haue with God by their grace of sanctification wee haue our affections more set towards them then towards any other which are not such yea though they be our naturall brethren and sisters Moreouer all loue hath a simpathy or fellow-feeling causing mutual ioy or griefe according to the nature of the things which happen so it is here Gods Children as they greeue to see God disobeyed and dishonoured his Word hindered or abused so they reioyce to haue him pleased and honoured or his Word and kingdome aduanced Example whereof we haue in Dauid Psal. 69. 9. also in Iohn 2 in Paul and Barnabas and others who haue beene moued in Gods cause as in their owne and more taking to heart things which hapned either with or against Gods name then their owne a true note of true loue This is also a property of loue willingly to praise whom wee heartily loue as hatred appeares by discouering faults and fraileties and vpbraiding in reprochfull sort such as offend with their infirmities so loue delights to lay open and commend the perfection of that which is loued This is to be seene in mariage loue and in the loue of friends so it is also in Christian loue it stirreth vp to the searching out and commending of the excellencies of God I will loue thee dearely O Lord my strength saith Dauid the Lord is my rocke my fortresse and he that deliuereth me Psal. 18 1. Dauids loue which he bare to God in his heart filled his mouth and his Pen too with the praises of his God Whereof also there is an example in the Spouse of Christ in Canticles 5. 10. My beloued saith he is white and ruddy the fairest of ten thousand shee loued much and therefore shee praised much Adde vnto all this that loue doth not onely mention with ioy gladnesse the praises of God but as we vse to say shew me your loue by your gifts it is content to be at cost with God and to bestow gifts for his sake for Gods Children out of their loue vnto God they doe first giue themselues vnto God euen their soules and bodies to doe him seruice in practise of all duties commanded Euen as the Israelites brought their sacrifices freely to offer them vnto God vnder the Law so the faithfull willingly offer themselues a liuing sacrifice vnder the Gospel Rom. 12. 1 2. They giue also their graces and set them on worke towards him and their brethren as they receiue of God whatsoeuer graces they haue so they doe returne them vnto him to honour him and serue their brethren with them The hypocrite as he loues God for his benefits and so long as hee doth bestow good things on him but let God once take away his blessings the cause of his loue and then his loue faileth him his blessings and the hypocrites loue liue and die together so the gifts and graces which the hypocrite hath are referred not vnto God to glorifie him therewith but to the pleasing profiting and praysing of themselues as their owne conscience will tell them if they will hearken vnto it and beleeue the testimony thereof It is otherwise with the godly who in the
Spirituall things Repentance a note of a person to be saued not any cause of saluation 3. Vnrepentance hath vnfitnesse for any seruice of God or any good worke Vnablenesse to take any profit by the meanes of saluation 4. Repentance hath the contrary 5. Consideration of a iudgment day 6. Repentance the ioy of Angels and men 7. Good consequents of Repentance Hind erances of Repentance Example of the oyle in the cruise Also Danieis pulse Rom. 6 22 23 Reuel 7. Mat. 5. Lu. 23 Math. 25. 1 Tim. 5. Psal. 51. Ecclesiastes 2 Cor. 7. 11. True Repentance is a turning from euery sinne to do euery good worke Iames 2. 10. Eccles. 10. 1. Simile Simile Simile Exod. 17. 14. Simile Es. 〈◊〉 3. Perfection is here set agaiust hypocrisie A double perfection 1. Of measure 2. Of parts Mar. 6. 20. 2 King 10. 31. Acts 8. 13. Simile Simile Worthinesse put for meeknesse and vnworthily for vnmeetely 1 Cor. 11. 27. Heb. 6. 7. Luke 19. 1 2 3 4 5. Luke 23. Iames 2. 26. What a good worke is How many things required to a good worke 1. Good matter Deut. 12. verse last 2 Kings 26. from verse 16. till verse 21. 2. Perso good that the manner may be good Simile Simile A threefold act of Faith in euery good worke 1 Pet. 2. 5. 〈◊〉 3. 14. 3. Good end Actions are measured by their ends Simile 4. Good meanes Good things must haue good meanes Gen. 27. Shee sinnes by impatiency 1 Sam. 21. 13. Psal. 34. 1. 5. Circumstances 〈◊〉 3. Good workes please God and why Woe be to the most cōmendable life of any man if it be iudged without mercy saith Augustine Philip. 2. 13. Deus in nobis coronat sua dona Good workes merit not and why Debitum non est meritum Merita nostra Domini misericordia meritum meum mors 〈◊〉 Christe Bernard A reward due vnto good workes and Why A reward of fauour not of debt Rom. 4. 4. God is not obnoxious 〈◊〉 his creature Heb. 1 3. Simile 2. Pet. I II. Our merite is misery It is sufficient for our merite to know we do not merite Vse of good workes 1. Vse of good workes in respect of God See M. Iohn Shaw his trea tise of Maries blessednesse Fol. 89 90. 2. In respect of the Gospell 3. In respect of our selues Simile 4. In respect of other men Vnconuerted 1. Elect. 2. Not Elect. 〈◊〉 1. Weake 2. Strong First of the workes of the first Table Mat. 22. Loue of God what it is to loue 1. Commandement What it is to loue God Why God is to be loued How much God is to be loued By what rule our loue is to be guided Whence our loue to God springeth 2 Cor. 5 14. What be the effects and signes of our loue to God More proofes of the sound loue of God Such as loue God do loue his word which they shew forth by 1. hearing 2. marking 3 remembring 4. laying it vp in their hearts 5. delighting in it 6. by meditation 7 praise 8 and practise or keeping it Hypocrites delight in knowledge but not in the thing to wit Christ known Their loue to Gods Children it is both in affect and effect in word and in worke * A feeling suffering together Acts 14. They rent their cloathes c. Amor sui diffusivus Iames is reported to haue made his knees hard 〈◊〉 Camels knees with labour in prayer 2 Sam. 15. * Dauids mourning Pe ters teares Christs agony doe manifest this truth Prayer a fruit and token of our loue Of the feare of God The feare of God how it belongs to the wicked Rom. 2 verse last Feare of God twofold Exod. 20. 20. 1. A seruile feare of this feare it is true which is commonly saide Whom wee feare we hate and wish they were not 2. Filial feare Simile Simile Psal. 112. 1. Prou. 26. 27. Prou. 8. 13. Of Ezra it is said hee feared God greatly God must be feared accordingly Trust in God proper to the faithfull Heb. 3. Heb. 10. Psal. 53. Tim. 1. 6. Psal. 18. Psal. 112. Psal. 32. What it is to trust in God Ground of trust in God The godly vse meanes but haue their trust in God onely Wherein the trust of the godly differs from the trust of the wicked Markes for triall of our trust in God Encouragements to trust in God Simile Of Prayer and thankfulnesse 2 Commandement Difference betweene good and bad in Prayer and thanksgiuing Col. 3. 17. Marke 9. Rom. 7. 16. Mat. 5. 16. 1 cor 10. 31. Note this When ones minde is vncleane it defiles his best workes Eccle. 4. verse last Exod. 19. Luke 11. 15. Mat. 5. 6. Simile The true vse of Gods Name 3. commandement As men vse their holy day cloathes And for the titles words properties Sacraments workes of God their care is to mention them with a godly reuerence 4. commandement The true vse of the Sabbath And with what 〈◊〉 they beare their absence from the Assemblies see Psal. 84. 1 2 41. Patience a vertue proper to a true Christian. Afflictions the obiect of Patience Simile Tentatio seductionis 2. Probationis Punishment Correction Triall Of Chastisements 2 Simile First ground of patience 2. God smiteth not for euery offence 4. He correcteth with wisedome and loue Kepentance furthered by chastisements Dan. 9. Luke 15. 〈◊〉 7. Humility furthered by chastisements 1 Pet 4. Esay 57. Of Tiyals 〈◊〉 14. 28 〈◊〉 30. Esay 43. * This Righteousnesse is commutatiue and distributiue * This Righteousnesse is habitual or actuall * Hence it is that such righteous persons as these doe turne away from their righteousnes and so lose themselues their labour Eze. 18. Sincerity or truth is in all graces as a common adioynt or quality The fixt commandement Loue. What brotherly loue is How our Neighbour may be loued without iniury to God An enemy is a neighbour and a brother if he be a christian Difference betweene a neighbour a brother Degrees of Loue. Rules to guide our loue Reasons why wee ought to loue Properties of Loue. Actions of Loue. Difference betweene Faith and Loue. Brotherly kindnesse Foure kinds of Peace Prouerbs 17. Humility Micah 6. 8. col 3. 10. Grauity Gentlenesse It is reported that Peter he wept so often as he 〈◊〉 the mildnesse and gentlenesse of his Lord. Luther Long sufferance peace Forgiuing offences Goodnesse Meekenesse Mercy Philip. 3 18. Prou. 12. 10. Neh. 13 14 31 Gouernment of the tongue for speech and silence Prou. 10. Selfe-preseruation Seuenth commandement Vprightnesse towards our Neighbours goods Psal. 15. 3. 7. Eze. 18. Ninth commandement Truth vprightnesse in speech 〈◊〉 in keeping of promises Iob 1. verse last Three doubts Master Luther confesseth that hee was not troubled great ly with this vice Philarguria Pleonexia 〈◊〉 Honesty Zeale a Election b calling c Meanes of calling d Illuminatiō e Opening the heart f Faith g Vnion with christ h Iustification i Sanctific atiō k Spirituall conflict l Repentance m Good workes n General graces o Vprightnesse p Particular gifts q 〈◊〉 r Encrease or growth s Glorification
Mathew 19. 17. Christ onely hath right to eternall life in Heauen because he alone is perfectly iust others come thither by his right 1 Passiue righteousnesse Ephes. I. Rom. 4 last verse Tit. 2. 1 Tim. 2. Heb. 9. 1 Cor. 11. ver 32 33. 1 Pet. 1. Rom. 5 verse 3. 4 5. Simile 2 Actiue righteousnesse Two parts of actiue righteousnesse He that made Adam without sin could giue Christ our Nature without our sinne which is but an accident to our Nature 1. He did all 2. He did all perfectly 3 To a right end Iohn 5 4 Being constant in doing all was commanded 2 Cor 5 v last Acts 3 14 1 Pet 3. 1 Cor. 1 30. This righteousnes being in Christ it doth become ours by an action of God called imputation of which afterwards * As sanctifie to make holie rectify to make right mollifye to make soft glorifie to make glorious c. Iustification what it is An imputation of Christs whole righteousnesse to the beleeuing man 1 Imputation Esay 53. Galat. 3. 2 Cor. 5 verse last Rom. 5. 19. Of imputatiō Reade Rom. 4. The merit of right is eternal life 2 Faith These two actions meete both together at one time God then accounting and imputing all Christs iustice to a sinner when he truly beleeueth Rom. 4 verse 22 23 24. In what meaning wee are iustified by faith Iohn 1. 12. Gal. 3. 14. Rom. 3. 27. Why God would haue his Elect so iustified by faith in Christ. Two parts of Iustification 1 Remission of sinnes 2 Accounting iustice to vs. Eternall life the fruite of imputed righteousnesse Rom. 1. 17. Galat. 2. 20. This is Popish error in their second iustification they say it is of faith and workes The first iustification with the Papist is remission of sinnes apprehended by faith Second iustification after their doctrine whereby of iust already by the first iustification he becomes more iust this is by our owne works in part This second iustification being in truth our sanctification there being but one onely iustification taught in the word which for the beginning middle and ending by faith are knowne Phil. 3. vers 9 10. See and reade Luthers Preface before his Commentary to the Galathians Rom. 5. v. 1 2 3 4 6. 11. Peace with God containeth 1. reconciliation with God 2. and peace of conscience First fruite of iustification by Faith 1. Reconciliation Esay 0 6. Ephes. 2 14. Colos. 1 20. What it is 2. Peace of conscience What. 2 How it differs from false peace of the wicked 2 How peace of conscieuce is to be got 4 How preserued 5. How farre lost 6. By what meanes lost How recouered Rom. 8. 26. Psal. 51. 17. 3 Fruite of Iustification As we neede not Saints to intercede for vs or merits to commend vs to God 4 Fruite of iustification Stand in the way 〈◊〉 sinners Stand fast Iohn 13. 1 2. Ieremy 32. Iohn 10. 28. Rom. 8 25. Iohn 16. Let them look vpon what ground they stand which think the grace of God may be finally lost and wholly Standing in grace opens no window to security So as where security reigneth it is a sign that such are not in the state of grace 5. Fruit of Iustification hope of glorie 1. Glorie of God Reuel 7 21. 2. Hope of Glory 3 Why it is certaine 4. How certainty comes to be ioyned to hope 1 Peter 1. 3. 1 Peter 1. Psalme 51. 6. Fruite of iustification Ioy spirituall Ioy by hearing 7. Ioy in tribulations Of worldly ioy Rules and cautions for worldly ioy Let Salomons example proue this cause the godly to feare worldly comforts Grounds of hope Of the despaire of the faithfull The occasions As in Dauid hath God forgotten to be mercifull The ends of Gods counsell in it The effects of Hope Hope differeth from presumption Wicked men haue no hope in God Hope ioyned with some presumption 8. Fruit of Iustification 1 Iohn 4. 19 20. 9. Fruite of Iustification * Seeing the sinnes of the Elect could not hinder their reconciliation by the death of Christ their sinnes done after reconciliation cannot keepe them From hope of saluation and in this regard also they doe glory Iustification and sanctification both together Sanctification it is by faith Iustification and Sanctification be as two twinnes which came together into the world of the beleeuing heart Iustification being the elder fister * Therefore Sathans temptation is thus to be returned I beleeue therefore I am sanctified I haue my sinnes forgiuen therfore I am renewed Renewing Regeneration Sanctificatiō 2 Pet. 1. 5. 2 Pet. 1. 2. Parts of Sanctification Cause of Sanctification Rom. 7. 4. Rom. 6. 6. Of all men 〈◊〉 Adam before his 〈◊〉 and the man Christ voide of sinne all others haue sin euen til death * Before their sanctification the Elect and finne do agree as husband wife afterward they are at variance as two enemies The manifold profit which is to be taken by finne 1. Watchfulnesse 2. Prayer 3. 〈◊〉 4. Charity to the 〈◊〉 To Enemies 5 Humble confession Psal. 32. 5 6. Psal. 34. 1 2. Modesty and lowlinesse in our whole life 7. Experience of Gods power 8. Sins made remedies of sinnes 9. Giue aduantage against Sathan We had neede to make some vse and benefit of sin for wee take a great deale of harme by it How Sanctification differeth from a ciuill life Markes of Sanctificatiō This would not be forgottē that a 〈◊〉 man though hee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet in some 〈◊〉 sinne will beare with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who though he cannot bee free from sins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 none but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an enemy cuen to his darling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if it offend 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his hand if it offend Causes of spiritual combat Rom. 6. 9 10 11. Difference between Repentance Sanctification Repentance hath sundry acceptions what they be Godly sorrow beginning of renewed Repentance Godly sorrow whence it ariseth Wherein Repentance consisteth 7. Signes of renewed Repentance 1. Care Clearing 〈◊〉 3. Anger 4 Feare Blessed is the man that thus feareth 5. Desire 6. Zeale 7. Reuenge Meanes to quicken our daily Repentance 12. Cautions about Repentance Prou. 28. Some scruples about Repentance Of this kinde was fornication thought to bee among the Corinthians 1 Cor. 6. Held in those times for nosin but some indiffrent thing So many amongst vs thinke of interest for lone of money He is no sinner who wold be no sinner M. 〈◊〉 Peccata vastantia conscientiam Scrupis Sinnes of 〈◊〉 lapse in the obiections against faith in Christ for for giuenes of our sinnes Repentance vpon great extraordinarie fals is se dome without teares 1 Sam 7. Mat 26. Luke 7. Psal. 119 57 69 112 115. Rom. 7 15 16 17 18. Psal. 51 1 2 3 Of encouragements to Repentance 1. Truth of our faith Christianity discried by our Repentance 2. Great promiles made performed to repenting sinners Of earthly things Esay 1. Of