Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n faith_n justify_v sanctification_n 1,487 5 11.2350 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A65753 A vvay to the tree of life discovered in sundry directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptvres : wherein is described occasionally the nature of a spirituall man, and, in A digression, the morality and perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof, is discovered and cleared / by Iohn White ... White, John, 1575-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing W1785; ESTC R40696 215,387 374

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Creature but hold the Roote and Greennesse still it brings no fruit at all to perfection Luke 8.14 Such an one was Demas 2 Tim. 4.10 This Beleever is neither so heady nor sodaine in his affection or profession as is the former And yet although he knowes more of God and Christ and embraceth the Profession of Godlinesse with more advised deliberation and resolution then the former doth for all that for want of cleansing his heart of his inbred corruptions whereof earthly mindednesse is the chiefe he comes to nought at last The fault of this Beleever is that though his judgement be convinced of the excellency of God linesse notwithstanding he wants that cleare Spirituall Evidence of it which onely is able to winne the whole heart to embrace it and to abandon all things for it with S. Paul Phil. 3.8 And withall he never yet had a like full discovery of the vanity and emptinesse of those earthly things that bewitch his heart which causeth him to retaine the love of them still Thus he joynes the love of Christ So that he embraceth Christ with the world which the incompatible and of the world together which being incompatible and impossible to subsist together Mat. 6.24 Iames 4.4 1 Iohn 2.15 it must necessarily follow that seeing earthly affections had the first possession of this mans heart and being confirmed by long use and custome getting a stronger Root then God lines can have they will hardly give place as our Saviour tells us Mat. 19.23 and being the more prevalent of the two draw the greatest strength of the heart and of the desires after them so that Godlinesse wanting strength of affection to keepe life in it must needs grow weake and heartlesse This then being the nature of Historicall faith under which that which is Temporary is comprehended the difference betweene that and true Justifying faith appeares in these sixe things First in the cause Sixe differences betweene a True and Temporary Beleever the one proceeds from Naturall Reason the other from the Spirit of Sanctification Secondly in the subject the one may be in an unsanctified person the other is only in a man regenerate Thirdly in the kinds of assurance which is that the one is onely a Conviction in the other there is an Evidence Fourthly in the grounds of their assurance the one is a divine the other an humane Testimony Fiftly in the object the one acknowledgeth the truth of that which it apprehends the other withall finds and tasts the goodnesse of it Lastly in adherence the one embraceth Christ by mistake the other upon sound knowledge the one affects some imaginary good in Christ the other Christ himselfe with all his Heavenly treasures The one takes in the love of Christ to the love of the world the other casts out all to make roome for Christ Yet a true Beleever may faile in his practise But holds his Resolution still It is true that this true Beleever though he adheres firmly to Christ in his resolution yet he followes him not so fully sometimes in the course of his practice as S. Paul complaines of himselfe Rom. 7.15.19.23 and David Psal 119.176 which happens not onely by the lusting of the flesh against the spirit Gal. 5.17 but withall by the neernesse of the flesh to sensible objects by which the lusts thereof sodainly take fire and inflame the heart with inordinate motions ere the Spirituall part can make head against them Yet such a person holds his resolution still in generall to walke with God from whom he departs not wickedly Psal 18.21 But still loves his Law Psal 119.97 Delights in it ver 47. Rom. 7.23 Sweares to keep it Psal 119.106 and that to the end ver 111. and strives to make it good in his practise ver 59 60. Casting himselfe upon God for his assistance thereunto ver 133. This man may be likened to a Country newly Conquered And may be resembled to a Country conquered but not full quieted but not quieted wherein after the enemies Armies are broken and his strong holds taken in yet some lurking Rebells sodainly breake out and make head againe and robbe and spoile but shall never be able to winne the country out of the Conquerors hand or beate him out of the field For in a person Regenerate though the strong holds and imaginations of his heart be taken downe and brought under the Obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 yet the lusts which are rather Crucified then fully killed make head oftentimes against the spirit Gal. 5.17 but shall never be able to alter this mans judgement nor the ful resolution of his will to cleave unto Christ but he shall still conclude it is good for him to draw neere to God Psal 73.28 SECT IIII. Of Spirituall Experience the other meanes of comprehending things spiritually EXperience in generall Experience in generall described is may be described to be the Discovery by Sense and Knowledge thereby of something not evident in it selfe but manifested by some Event or Effect This generall Description of Experience may easily be applyed both unto that which is Naturall and to that which is Spirituall The later of these two being not easily understood in it self unlesse it be of those that finde it in themselves therefore hard to be expressed may not unfitly be shadowed by the former which is well understood of all 1. Knowledge acquired by Sense Experience we affirme to be a Knowledge not infused but acquired out of the Observation of the Events or Effects by Sense Whereby Reason guesseth at some inward thing that appeares not whereby Reason being informed guesseth at some inward and secret cause whence they proceed Wherefore brute beastes because they want Reason cannot properly be said to have Experience though they must be acknowledged to have something answerable thereunto as being by the helpe of Sense 2. Of things not Evident in themselves but manifested by Events or Effects moved to take or leave things which they finde agreeable or hurtfull to themselves This kinde of knowledge being grounded on sense is usually most certaine and generally most affects This Experience must be of such things as are not manifest in themselves but are onely discovered by the Effect as that Hony is sweet and Wormwood bitter because the taste by often taking them proves them to be so though neither of them can be outwardly discerned But we are not so properly said to know Snow to be white by experience because it appeares so to the eye or to know a Man by experience when we behold one whom we never saw before But when by his Actions Words and Conversation we discover the inward disposition of his minde which appeares not outwardly we are properly said to know him by experience That inward thing Which may be either a quality or the very thing it selfe if it be of a Spirituall Nature which Experience thus discovers is oftentimes a quality in
Notwithstanding it cannot be denied that when it is once rooted in the heart it may be and is further strengthened and perfected by continuall use and exercise as our naturall habits are The cause of faith is as hath beene already intimated the Spirit of Grace flowing unto a regenerate man from Christ his head 2. Infused by the spirit abiding in us and in respect of that cause as well as of the nature of it we tearme it a spirituall habit and so we finde it reckoned amongst the fruits or effects of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 And here we meet with the first difference betweene Historicall and Justifying Faith that they proceed from different causes the one being infused by the spirit of Christ dwelling in us the other the effect onely of naturall reason further inlightned at the most by the assistance of that Spirit as shall be farther proved hereafter The subject of justifying Faith 3. Into a regenerate person is onely a regenerate person For whosoever beleeves hath eternall life Iohn 5.24 into which there can be no entrance without regeneration Iohn 3.5 but in more expresse tearmes 1 Iohn 5.1 the Apostle affirmes that whosoever beleeves that Jesus is the Christ is borne of God Now historicall faith we know may be found in the Devills themselves Iames 2.19 And temporary faith which as we have intimated already is of the same nature may be in such as have no root Luke 8.13 that is as the Apostle expresseth it in another phrase 1 Iohn 3.9 No seed of God abiding in him nor is borne of God which is all one And from hence ariseth the second difference betweene historicall and justifying Faith that they are found in divers subjects the first even in the wicked the latter onely in the godly The kind of assurance which true faith is built upon 4. Which gives him an evidence we call an evidence as the Apostle also tearmes it Heb. 11.1 Who also in the same place expresseth the object of that faith by two different names given it in divers respects Things hoped for and Things not seene as also he expresseth the assurance of them by two other names Substance and Evidence Now it is true that by those different names the same things are meant for the most part although it be true that some of those things which we beleeve although they be invisible have notwithstanding a beeing in present and therefore cannot properly be said to be expressed by hope so that the things hoped for are but some of those things which we beleeve These objects Of things invisible Things invisible and Things hoped for and consequently yet to come Faith so apprehends as having withall a kinde of subsistence and visibility although in divers respects For looking at things which it beleeves it apprehends them as already having a being in the will and purpose of God and this it doth without errour as God without errour calls the things which are not as if they were Rom. 4.17 seeing they have a beeing in him although they have no subsistence as yet in themselves These and other objects which are not seen Faith makes evident that is beholds them by a spirituall sense though they be hidden from the bodily eye as Abraham in this manner is said to behold Christs day Iohn 8.56 which was not in beeing till many hundred yeares after and Moses is said to see him that is invisible Heb. 11.27 And thus is faith the substance of things hoped for and evidence of things that are not seene When we say that by faith we have a spirituall evidence And therefore makes no use of sense or reason and manifestation of things that are invisible to the outward sense we necessarily imply that this Faith makes not use in this apprehension of any naturall help either of Sense or Reason Not of Sense for things invisible cannot be the object of sense Nor of Reason which can help in this case little more then Sense seeing it receives information by Sense from whence it gathers things by way of discourse which indeed may convince a man that things are but can give him no evidence or Demonstration of the things themselves Hence it is that when a man comprehends things by Reason he may be able by discourse of Reason to inform another man of that which he knowes and by that meanes cause him to understand it as well as himselfe but in those things which are apprehended by Sense But apprehends the things themselves by spirituall sense he cannot doe so He can relate to another man what he seeth or heareth or tasteth but can neither make him see nor heare nor taste that which himselfe doth nor if he be one that never had use of those senses make him by any discourse understand either what the object is that he apprehends And therefore cannot by discourse make another understand what he feeles or how his sense is affected by it or if he have the use of the same senses make him able by his discourse to apprehend the thing it selfe which he discernes in its proper species though he may breed in him some conceit of it by an imagination of some other thing of the same kinde which that person himselfe hath apprehended by the same sense before So is it in matters of faith he that beleeves cannot many times give a reason why he beleeves nor at any time represent unto another that which is manifested unto him nor shew him what satisfying delight and sweetnesse he findes in those things which he beleeves he can onely in generall manifest unto him that he findes the tender mercies of God exceeding great Psal 119.156 his thoughts towards us precious Psal 139.17 his Testimonies wonderfull Psal 119.129 and exceeding sweet ver 103. but cannot describe that excellency or sweetnesse which himselfe finds Yet seeing those things that are beleeved are also agreeable to right reason the reasonablenes of them the beleever may manifest to another but the evidence of them he cannot shew This evidence by demonstation historicall faith wants How justifying faith hath an evidence of the things which it apprehends we have seene Historicall wants this evidence as we shall see anon as having no further assurance of what it beleeves then that which Reason suggests which may rather be tearmed a conviction that such things must be then an evidence what they be And therefore differs from justifying faith not onely in degrees but in nature For justifiing faith is built upon a divine Testimonie Whence it is evident that those two kinds of faith are of different natures not onely of divers degrees because the grounds of assurance on which they are built are as farre different as Reason and Sense To cleare this truth fully we must consider the different testimonies upon which justifying and historicall faith are built For we shall find that true faith is built upon a Divine the other upon an Humane
testimony which our Saviour calls the Revelation of flesh and blood Mat. 16.17 as the Apostle doth the other The Demonstration of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.4 and a little after The Revelation of things by the Spirit which are understood onely of spirituall men ver 10.14 15. We call that a Divine testimony which is given by the Spirit of God to that spirit which is within a regenerate person For unto any testimony two things are required First the manifesting and presenting that which is to be credited or beleeved Secondly an ability in him to whom it is witnessed to understand it otherwise the proposing any thing by discourse to a beast that wants reason to understand speech or the relating of any thing to a man that hath reason in the Greeke tongue who understands no language but English is no testimony no more then it is to a deafe man that cannot heare Wherefore to make a divine testimony there must be both a divine testimony unto a man and withall a mind in him able to understand that revelation First therefore the Spirit of God must reveale and manifest unto a man that truth that is to be beleeved as the light discovers any visible object Next there must be in that man a light planted in his heart which the Apostle 1 Iohn 5.20 tearmes An understanding to know him that is true as the light or visuall faculty is planted in the eye or else he cannot comprehend that light that shines unto him For want of this inward light it was that the Israelites who had seene with their bodily eyes all Gods wonders and by reason were forced to acknowledge that they were wrought by the finger of God yet are truly charged by Moses not to have an heart to perceive nor eyes to see nor eares to heare unto that day Deut. 29.4 The evidence then which a true beleever hath of any truth of God By way of Demonstration farre different from conviction by reason which he embraceth is the manifesting of that truth unto the spirit not onely by a form of words to the naturall understanding but beyond that by a kind of Demonstration unto the spirituall minde as the evidence of any object to the eye is by the shining of the light upon it which makes it appeare to be such as it is This kind of testifying or evidencing things in a spirituall way the Apostle calls Rom. 8.16 As representing the things themselves in their proper species the witnessing of Gods Spirit with our spirit mentioning expresly two spirits whereof if either be wanting there can be no divine Testimony The beholding of Divine truths with a such spirituall eye represented by way of Demonstration is so necessary that without it men could not be witnesses Without which beleevers could not be Gods witnesses or at least sufficient witnesses to Gods truth For he that will testifie any thing upon credit must see it with his owne eye or discerne it by some other sense of his owne Otherwise he that testifieth a truth upon another mans relation beares witnesse rather to the relator then to the truth related So that to make men witnesses to Gods truth they must not onely have it related unto them but besides further manifested by way of Demonstration and spirituall evidence that they may say with the Apostle 1 Ioh. 1.3 That we have seene with our eyes and looked upon declare we unto you Which not onely winnes much credit with others but mightily affects the person himselfe as it did Iob when he thus saw God Iob 42.5 and Abraham when he saw Christs day Iohn 8.56 It is evident then that true Faith is grounded upon a Divine testimony Whereas Historicall faith rests on an humane Testimony In the next place we must make it appeare that Historicall faith relies onely upon an humane testimony Now it cannot be denied that the truths of Divine mysteries though they cannot be found out by mans reason as the Apostle tells us they never entred into mans heart 1 Cor. 2.9 yet are they all consonant to right reason and it is as evident that the testimony of reason Embracing divine truths is an humane testimony I say then that historicall faith rests not upon the evidence or demonstration but upon the reasonablenesse of divine truths 1. For the reasonablenesse of them rather then upon Gods testimony of them which therefore mans reason cannot but assent unto For example the Creation of the World Resurrection of the body Incarnation of Christ and may be acknowledged by reason to be possible upon the supposition of Gods Almightinesse yea and fit to be done by him whose scope is to make knowne his Power Psal 106.8 and to magnifie his Word that is 2. Or if on the testimony of the Scripture yet upon an humane testimony Because he beleeves the Scriptures themselves 1. Either upon the Churches testimony of them 2. Upon the reasonablenesse of truths delivered therein his mercy promised in his Word above all his workes Psal 138.2 to set out in ages to come the riches of his grace Eph. 2.7 So that howsoever these are Mysteries of faith yet seeing Reason which is an Humane testimony may approve them it is evident that an Historicall faith beleeving these things for the Reasonablenesse of them is but meerely upon an Humane Testimonie Nay if he should goe a steppe further and beleeve any thing that is written in the Scriptures for the Testimony of the Scriptures yet still he beleeves upon an Humane testimony because he beleeves the Scriptures themselves upon Humane testimony as upon the generall consent for the Church which receives the Scriptures as the Word of God or upon the probability and reasonablenes or of the things therein delivered lastly upon the observation of the Truth of those holy writings in most things which makes them beleeved to be true in all For the Assent unto one thing for another is built upon that to which we first give our Assent As a stone in a wall though it lies immediately upon that stone that is next under it yet is indeed supported by the foundation which beares up all the building We see then a wide Difference between Justifying and Historicall faith in the cause subject and ground of Assurance we shall finde no lesse in the Object Now the generall Object of Faith we know is Gods Word and Promise which onely is a sure ground to build Faith upon as being the Word of the God of truth Deut. 32.4 A fourth difference betweene justifying and Historicall faith in the Object of both who cannot lye Tit. 1.2 or denie himselfe 2 Tim. 2.23 or change his minde Num. 23.19 So that his Word must needs be Everlasting Ps 119.144 founded for ever v. 132. upon two unfailing foundations his Everlasting Truth and unresistible Power But the particular Object of justifying Faith is Gods Promise of Reconciliation and Salvation by Christ in whom onely we are
faile to supply you with such estates as will be best and meetest for you I assure my selfe you want neither will nor resolution to set forward the workes wherein Gods honour and the welfare of this place are so much concerned Onely I desire you to embrace the first opportunities which the Lord shall put into your hand to bring your purposes to effect Say not with the people Hag. 1.2 The time is not come that the Lords house should be built Things of publike concernment ought to be our first and chiefest care which when we labour to set forwards with all our power we engage the Lord himselfe to take care of and prosper our private affaires Now the Lord stirre up the spirits of you all as he did the spirits of Zerubbabel and Ioshuah Zech. 1.14 to take his work in hand with speed and courage and be assured of the same successe that these holy men found and besides honour to your selves and comfort in your owne hearts at present the entering into the Joy of your Lord hereafter Mat. 25.21 23. Which that you may doe and finde is and shall be the prayer of Your Humble Servant IOHN WHITE To the Author Sir NOtwithstanding yours or the Printers haste and importunity I must not let these Treatises of so much worth goe out of my hands without that due testimony which my heart gives of them As the compilement of them is close and pithy so the materials full of spirituall vigor accompanied with a strength both of Harmonious and also Argumentative Reason The subjects themselves all seasonable when enjoyments of God through Scripture Revelation without us and by Faith and spirituall experience withinus is esteemed but a living upon the letter a way beneath for infant Christians to walke with God in And both these you have here with much evidence vindicated and cleared As likewise the Morality of the fourth Commandement the conscientious observation of which hath through the blessing of God following his own institutions both elevated and preserved at its height the practicall part of the power of godlinesse in this Kingdome which is laid aside by many true professors of piety as a part of the Iewish paedagogie For the particulars themselves your Description of a spirituall man is deeply fetcht from that which constitutes him such and doth genuinely distinguish him from all other by that which is most proper to his constitution and peculiar to his Faith namely The Demonstration of the Spirit And as the subject is spirituall such are your characters given and your way of reading it exceeding spirituall even according to the Apostles owne direction comparing or suiting spirituall things with spirituall and accordingly is also full of that demonstration of the spirit which you therein make essentiall and constitutive of his faith I see how ever we may differ in Ecclesiasticks and matters of outward order a little yet in spiritualls or what is more conjunct to the inward and spiritual man we agree All our lives meet not in that part of the circumference yet in this center we unite and embrace and herein I doe rejoyce and will rejoyce for ever In your first main part concerning the Scriptures your discourse beares a comely suitablenesse to the nature and scope of that subject also For as the Historicall beleefe of their authority end and use is the foundation of all so your demonstrations thereof are formed out of and framed into a congeniall Harmony and consonancy to right Reason and containe a naturall Genealogy and story of divine Truth about them whereof one is the off-spring of the other which way of setting forth divine Truths as it carries with it the greatest conviction and as your selfe in that forementioned Treatise expresse it begets Faith Historicall which hath for its ground a rationality and consonancy to reason so it is made use of by the holy Ghost as a blessed subservient to that which you make the immediate proper cause of saving Faith The Demonstration of the Spirit For your last peece The more generall notion of such an indefinite sense of the Fourth Commandement I remember you and I long since mutually pleased our selves to have singly and apart agreed in But this your so exact particular explication and demonstration of this intent of God therein exceedes what I either did then or have since imagined could have with that rationality perspicuity even to more then a probability been made forth of the words thereof I doe herein exceedingly admire the wisdome of God in penning and ordering the words of that Fourth Commandement in such a posture whereof you have made observation as that command might become a genuine and naturall root more naturall then Abraham is to Jew and Gentiles successively First to beare that last seventh day that old Sabbath the Omega of the weeke and when that should be lopt off then to give as fresh sap to the first seventh day the Alpha of the week the Lords day Sabbath It makes me say of the Commandement with an inversion what the Apostle sayes upon the like reason of that of Love It was an old Commandement and yet is still a new one Sir as the honour you have done me to commit these Treatises to the Test of my weake judgement ere you transmitted them to the presse hath cleane taken off that little of jealousy of any strangenesse by reason of these unhappy differences in comparison of former intimacy so the quickning materials hereof have fully revived in my heart that intensenesse of Christian and Brotherly love towards you with this just cause of addition and encrease That after your having sacrificed your spirits and strength in the most publique way of service to God and his Church with more then ordinary activity and selfe-denyall you still retaine such a spirituall vigor both of Grace and judgement as this issue shewes in these yeares of old age and infirmities Thus much if any stampe of mine might arise to any such a value for a private encouragement at least be pleased to accept as it is given with all faithfulnesse from Your ancient and still true and faithfull Friend and unworthy Brother Tho Goodwin A Table of the title of the severall Chapters and Sections contained in the Treatise following Cap. 1. OF the necessity of preparation to Reading Pag. 1 Cap. 2. Sect. 1. Of the Author of the holy Scriptures Pag. 7 Sect. 2. That the holy Scriptures appeare evidently to be the word of God Pag. 18 The first Marke by which it is evident that they are so The Style and Phrase of them Pag. 19 The second Marke The Subject or Matter handled in them Pag. 25 The third Marke The powerfull effect of the Scriptures on mens hearts Pag. 33 Cap. 3. The Scriptures having God for their Author must needes be of Divine authority Pag. 45 Cap. 4. That the pen-men of holy Scriptures were holy men guided in that worke wholly by Gods Spirit Pag. 57
it must needs be granted to be the same Word of God That no other means but the voice and Word of God accompanied with his Spirit can perform these great works of melting converting and comforting the soul we have shewed already Now it may be doubted whether those effects as they are beyond the power of nature be not also beyond the power of the Word it self Seeing many hear and read that Word Object in whom we discern no such effect But many use the Word in whom it works no such effect but they remain still senslesse carelesse rebellious and carnall lovers of themselves and high minded c. and others walking in darknesse without light Isa 50.10 finding no peace nor comfort in the Word it self as if there were no balm in Gilead nor no Physitian there Jer. 8.22 Now if the power of working these effects be in the word how comes it to passe that they appear not in the greatest part of those that hear and read it To this We answer Sol. that if this effect appear in some although not in all that make use of it it sufficiently proves that it hath this power 1 t If it work it in some it proves it hath that power 2ly Where it hath not this effect 1. Either the heart is not rightly disposed Meat hath power to nourish and medicines to cure yet all are not cured by medicines nor nourished by meat To the producing of an effect besides the power of the cause is required a right disposition of the subject The high-way the stony and thorny ground we know brought no fruit to perfection which our Saviour tels us was not by any defect in the Word but by the ill disposition of the heart Mat 13.19.20 c. And the Apostle tels us that those that had not faith to mixe with the Word profited not by it at all Heb. 4.2 Again a cause powerfull enough in it self may want effect where it is not rightly applyed there are that hear the Word and understand it not Mat. 13.19 Some that understand and beleeve it not 2. Or the Word not rightly applyed Iohn 12.47 Some that beleeve it and remember it not Iam. 1.23 And lastly some that after all this apply it not at all or at least not as they ought taking hold of judgement when they need the promises of mercy or laying hold of mercy when judgement is their portion 3ly The Word works not necessarily but voluntarily Deut. 29.19 Lastly we must remember that the Word works not necessarily as fire heats but voluntarily being only mighty through God 2 Cor. 10.4 working by the Spirit which like the winde bloweth vvhere it lusteth Iohn 3.8 Thus Lydiaes heart was opened by God when others were shut Acts 16.14 And many scoffed at Saint Peters Sermons which notwithstanding converted three thousands Acts 2.41 We have then sufficiently manifested the Scriptures to be Gods Word First they contain Gods Law given to his Church which was neither fit nor possible to be given by any other then God himself Secondly because they bear the lively character of divine Majesty in the high and lofty plainnesse of style and in those powerfull commands which we finde therein And thirdly for those high mysteries which they handle which none could know much lesse reveal but God himself And lastly for the wonderfull effects of breaking converting and comforting and reviving the spirit which being works above nature must needs be wrought by a supernaturall instrument so that the Scriptures that effect them must needs be acknowledged to be the Word of God CAP. III. The Scriptures which have God for their Authour must needs be of divine Authority The former Position being once granted that the Scriptures are Gods Word no man can question their Authority whether that be of him or no. So that this evident truth needing no power at all our labour must be only to shew what we mean by that divine Authority which we challenge unto the Scriptures for the opening whereof we must first consider in generall what this name Authority imports In Scripture as well as in other Authors the names of Authority and Power are used indifferently Authority is not Power in genetall as if they were one and the same thing although in strictnesse of signification we may finde a reall difference between them For this tearm Power implies that strength by which any thing not only subsists but withall bears out it selfe against whatsoever opposeth it and besides is enabled to work any notable effect but this signification as making little to our purpose we shall omit for the present More pertinently to the matter in hand But right to rule govern this name of Power is taken for that dominion and right of ruling and governing which one hath over another to dispose and order that which is governed In this sense Power seems to bee a more generall name then Authority as is evident by the correlative tearms opposed thereunto For subjection which imports any kind of subordination of one under another seems most firly to answer to Power as the Psalmist matcheth mans dominion over the works of Gods hands with subjection or putting all things under his feet Psal 8.6 And obedience which is a voluntarily yeelding or submitting ones selfe to anothers will may bee conceived to bee more properly correspondent to Authority as the Centurion expresseth the subjection of his servants and soldiers by their readinesse to doe his will Luke 7.8 At least howsoever the names be sometimes used indifferently there is manifest difference between prescribing to a reasonable creature and between the disposing of that which is without reason Authority therefore And that most properly reasonable creatures being most properly restrained to the government of reasonable creatures is that power by which a superiour hath right to prescribe unto such as are under him By right in this description we exclude tyranny which is the usurping of authority without or against right Secondly when we place the exercise of Authority in prescribing As being only capable of prescription we imply that it properly extends onely to such as are capable of prescription which are reasonable creatures Lastly we extend it to all kinde of prescribing both to the understanding what to assent unto and beleeve and to the will what to follow and embrace All which particulars if we lay together we shall finde that Authority originally is founded in God alone and that men have no title unto it but by deputation from him as the Apostle expresly restifieth Rom. 13.1 Which reacheth 1. To the understanding what to beleeve Which only belongs unto God to prescribe 1. Seeing he onely knows things by vision 2. Onely hath light in himself To begin with that branch of Authority that prescribes unto the understanding what to assent unto as truth we know that this is a Power that no man may justly challenge seeing a rule
was dictated by God himselfe unto those that wrote it from his mouth or the suggesting of his Spirit Again the work of the holy Ghost in the delivery of the Scriptures is set down affirmatively when the Pen-men of those sacred writings are described to speak as they were moved or carried by the holy Ghost a phrase which must be warily understood For we may not conceive that they were moved in writing these Scriptures as the pen is moved by the hand that guides it without understanding what they did For they not onely understood but willingly consented to what they wrote and were not like those that pronounced the Devils Oracles rapt and carried out of themselves by a kinde of extasie wherein the Devill made use of their tongues and mouths to pronounce that which themselves understood not But the Apostles meaning is that the Spirit of God moved them in this work of writing the Scriptures not according to nature Yet understandingly willingly but above nature shining into their understandings clearly and fully by an heavenly and supernaturall light and carrying and moving their wils thereby with a delight and holy embracing of that truth revealed and with a like desire to publish and make known the secrets and counsels of God revealed unto them unto his Church Yea beyond all this the holy Ghost not only suggested unto them the substance of that doctrine which they were to deliver and leave upon record unto the Church for so far he usually assists faithfull Ministers in dispensing of the Word in the course of their Ministery but besides hee supplyed unto them the very phrases method The holy Ghost made choice both of the expressions and methods and whole order of those things that are written in the Scriptures whereas he leaves Ministers in preaching the Word to the choice of their own phrases and expressions wherein as also in some particulars which they deliver they may be mistaken although in the main fundamentals which they lay before their hearers and in the generall course of the work of their Ministery they do not grosly erre Thus then the holy Ghost not only assisted holy men in penning the Scriptures but in a sort took the work out of their hand making use of nothing in the men but of their understandings to receive and comprehend their wils to consent unto and their hands to write downe that which they delivered When we say that the holy Ghost framed the very phrase and style wherein the Scriptures were written we mean not that he altered the phrase and manner of speaking wherewith custome and education had acquainted those that wrote the Scriptures Yet uttering his own expressions as it were in the sound of their voice but rather speaks his own words as it were in the sound of their voice or chooseth out of their words and phrases such as were fit for his own purpose Thus upon instruments men play what lesson they please but the instrument renders the sound of it more harsh or pleasant according to the nature of it self Thus amongst the Pen-men of Scriptures we finde that some write in a rude and more impolished style as Amos some in a more elegant phrase as Isay Some discover art and learning in their writings as S. Paul others write in a more vulgar way as S. James And yet withall the Spirit of God drew their naturall style to an higher pirch in divine expressions fitted to the subject in hand How needfull it was that the Spirit of God should solely manage and accomplish this work of penning the Scriptures hath been shewed already in the former point wherein we proved that the Scriptures must necessarily be the Word of God seeing faith can stay it self on no other foundation then a divine testimony and our services cannot be accompted a duty of obedience unlesse it be done in obedience to Gods will which can be made known no other way then by his own Word Now the inferences hold strongly thus The Scriptures are Gods own Word therefore they must be delivered by his owne Spirit seeing none else could know Gods minde as none knows the minde of man but the spirit which is in man 1 Cor. 2.11 CAP. V. Of the Subject or Matters handled in the Scriptures that the Scriptures containe all things necessary to salvation IT much concerns such as addresse themselves to the reading of the Scriptures The subject matters revealed in Scriptures are to know what subject they handle of what nature it is whom and what it concerns as being an effectual means to awaken the heart and quicken the affections of men unto that holy exercise For all experience makes it evident that men usually attend carefully to such things as most neerly concern themselves 1. Such as concern men 2. And in the highest degree and are not much moved usually with things in which they have no speciall interest And are serious in matters of importance on which their own safety or their estate depend but sleight things that are of small worth and of no great moment to their gain or losse Wherefore to move men to be serious in reading the Word it is needfull to make it evident that the subject thereof is high and heavenly exceeding mans wisdome and therefore worthy to bee throughly searched into And besides of such importance to us that upon it depends our everlasting happinesse the way whereunto and means whereof are set down therein Seeing therfore it appears that the Position proposed and the consideration thereof are so pertinent to our present purpose and therefore fit to be handled in this place it will be needfull to open it more fully and to that purpose to expresse First what is meant by things necessary to salvation Secondly how the Scriptures doe containe them Concerning the former of these two Necessary imports not 1. A naturall necessity 2. Nor meritorious by necessary we understand not a naturall necessity by which the beeing of one thing depends upon another as the effect doth upon the cause no nor a meritorious necessity by which salvation might be earned as one earns his wages by his labor in either of which senses it is impossible that any thing should be necessary to salvation which can have no cause in nature nor be earned by desert seeing it is a free gift But a necessity imposed by the will of God Rom. 6.23 Eph. 2.8 But by necessary we mean a necessity imposed by the will of God who bestowing eternall life freely had power to bestow it on what conditions he pleased and hath promised it onely under the Covenant of faith and obedience the rules whereof being contained onely in the Scriptures and therein fully they are for that cause said to contain all things necessary to salvation When we say it is onely the will of God that makes faith and obedience necessary to salvation we deny not but this will of his hath in this as
3.5 6. This phrase of infusing or shedding as hath already been intimated implies men to be meerly passive Manifesting man to bee meerely passive in receiving it in receiving this spirituall life yet not altogether as vessels are in receiving that which is poured into them To make this more evident the holy Ghost sets out that state in which grace finds us being yet unregenerate by the name of death Eph. 2.1.5 as it doth our regeneration by the name of quickning Eph. 2.5 begetting again 1 Pet. 1.3 and 1 Iohn 5.18 new birth Iohn 3.3.5 and 1 Pet. 1.23 creating Eph. 2.10 whence regenerate men are tearmed new creatures Gal. 6.15 All phrases which imply us to be as meerly passive in the act of our renovation as we were in our first creation or generation Indeed if your New birth were no more but the improving of something which we had in us before or the strengthning only of that which was weake in us it is true that man himselfe might cooperate with the Spirit of Christ in this worke But seeing it appeares to be the bestowing of that which was not at all what is there in the man to be regenerate that can cooperate with the Spirit in his Regeneration Nature can doe nothing unlesse it be to hinder and oppose the worke For we know that is enmity against God Rom. 8.7 and cannot receive the things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 At the best we know nature is but the matter which is renewed or new formed and matter as we all know can have no operation at all As for grace or spirituall life we know we had none at all till it was infused and that which is not at all cannot possibly have any operation So that it must needes bee granted that there is nothing in a man to be regenerate that can worke any thing at all in the act of his regeneration It being granted then that a man is meerely passive in the worke of his regeneration And therefore not to be discerned by us how it is wrought Though we may discerne 1 the preparations thereunto it must needs be impossible for him to discover how it is wrought as impossible as it is for one to know how he receives his owne life It is true that he may discerne the preparations to the worke such as are those terrours and agonies which oftentimes are before the worke of regeneration and are raised in a mans heart by the discovery of his owne miserable condition in which he stands and of the unability of all the creatures in the world to bring him any helpe seconded with some serious deliberations what to doe and ending in some desires and purposes to make use of some meanes for the escaping of Gods wrath if it may be Such motions as these are by which the heart is many times prepared for the worke of regeneration which may be resembled to the heating of metalls before they melt and are cast into the molde to be fashioned because in them the spirit of a man is wrought upon in a naturall way and by the helpe of naturall reason one may discerne as any creature that makes use of sense and motion cannot choose but discerne and know what it selfe doth Much more may a person regenerate 2. and first operations thereof discerne and understand the motions and operations that are performed by him after he is regenerate seeing it is evident that in them his spirit workes together with the Spirit of Christ Onely the first act of infusing and receiving grace being wrought in us and not by us yea and that in an instant and not by degrees is impossible to be discerned how it is wrought either by nature which understands not spirituall things or by spirituall sense which as we have seene already flowes from that spirituall life newly received and therefore cannot discerne what was done before it had any beeing at all Notwithstanding it is not impossible for a regenerate man to feele the very first illapse of the Spirit into the soule for it may bring that sense with it selfe although it doth not alwayes so Yet it may bring the sense of it selfe even in the instant of receiving it but not usually nor perhaps usually for though when a blinde man receives sight he must needes know that he sees as soone as he sees yet in receiving this spirituall life it is not so The giving of spirituall life and the giving of the sense of it be two distinct acts of the Spirit which may but doe not alwayes goe together Howsoever even in such persons as in the instant of regeneration feele themselves regenerate though they know what is wrought in them yet how it is wrought they cannot understand The author of this worke of regeneration is Christ by the Spirit Unto this By the Spirit of Christ the fashioning and quickning of all things that are created and continually renewed is ascribed as in the first Creation Gen. 2.2 the Spirit is said to move upon the waters that is to fashion and form that rude masse out of which all things were made that Spirit garnished the Heavens Job 26.13 And the renovation of all things by continuall propagation is ascribed to the same Spirit Psal 104.30 and more especially the infusing of the soule Gen. 2.7 Job 33.4 So that the abilities thereof are most significantly termed The Spirit of understanding Iob 32.8 of strength and courage Iudg. 14.6 of counsell and government Numb 11.25 and 1 Sam. 10.9 10. But above all the Supernaturall abilities of Grace and Sanctification are ascribed to the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12.8.9 called for that cause The Spirit of Sanctification 2 Thes 2.13 and 1 Pet. 1.2 in so much that all graces of regeneration are termed the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 This Spirit resting on Christ Isa 61.1 who is for that cause said to be anointed with the oyle of gladnesse above his fellowes Psal 45.7 and to be full of grace Iohn 1.14 as having the Spirit given him not by measure Iohn 3.34 flowes from him to all his members as the head sends out influence of life to all the body so that of his fulnesse they all receive grace for grace Iohn 1.16 that is graces answerable to his graces SECT II. Of the spirituall mans operations THe operations of a spirituall man we have in the former description expressed by the terms and phrase of Comprehending and Embracing All things Spiritually Where under the termes of Comprehending and Embracing we understand all the severall kinds of the operations of a spirituall man and by All things we note the subjects of those operations and by the last terme Spiritually we signifie the manner of those severall workings or motions Comprehending 1. Comprehending implying all the acts of the understanding is properly that act of the understanding by which we conceive such things as are represented us which is the ground of our judging of them afterwards