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A37598 The honey-combe of free justification by Christ alone collected out of the meere authorities of Scripture and common and unanimous consent of the faithfull interpreters and dispensers of Gods mysteries upon the same, especially as they expresse the excellency of free justification / preached and delivered by Iohn Eaton ... Eaton, John, 1574 or 5-1641. 1642 (1642) Wing E115 344,226 528

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also All c●●a●ures were ●●thout sin but man was righteous and had the Image of God that we bee made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God is for the full satisfaction of his justice because as God made us at the first not only clean from all sinne as he made his other creatures as the sheep the Horse the Lamb the Birds and such like all which he saw in their kinds to be exceeding good but also above all his other creatures hee made us in Adam perfectly holy and righteous in his own Image and saith by his Law revealing his constant will and nature herein Cursed is every one that continueth not in that righteousnesse in all things So his Justice is not Iustice is not satisfied till man ●eturn to his ●●●●ity fully satisfied untill he behold us not only clean from all sinne but also perfectly holy and righteous in his sight and therefore the Apostle testifieth that as by the disobedience of one man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one man must many bee made righteous Rom. 5. 19. Rom. 5. 19. Thirdly it is necessary for the glory of Christ who that he by himselfe may perfectly heale us of the evill and losse brought upon us by Adam it is requisite that hee doe not only free us from all sinne but also that hee make us perfectly holy and righteous in his fathers sight Whereupon ariseth Pauls comparison in the fifth to the Romans between Adam and Christ That as Adam brought upon all his sinne and thereby death So doth Christ to heale perfectly this sore bring upon all his righteousnesse and thereby life Whereby the Apostle testifies That the Gentiles that followed not righteousnesse have attained unto righteousness Rom. 9. 30. Rom. 9. 30. Fourthly it is necessarie that not only our sinne be abolished but also that we be made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God for our behoofe and urgent necessity because as by suffering our punishment and making us by his blood clean from all sin he hath thereby taken away the punishment and all the evils both temporall and eternall that were due to our sins So that we may bee made worthy and meet Righteousness the cause of all good things for eternall life and capable of all the blessings of the Gospel both temporall and eternall it is necessarie that he make us perfectly holy and righteous in his Fathers sight the necessity whereof is plainly expressed by the Apostle Rom. 5. 21. where he saith That Grace doth reign by righteousnes unto eternall life Rom. 5. 21. through Iesus Christ our Lord As if hee should say Grace indeed now reignes to procure all blessings and benefits both temporall and eternall upon us But how By righteousnesse But where shall we have it freely by Jesus Christ our Lord that is that the Grace of God may bee of force to procure unto us all blessings Christ must of necessity first make us with his righteousnesse perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely all which necessities the Doctrine of our Church delivered by the first Restorers of the Gospel in this Land doth seeme to shut up in this one short sentence That it had not been enough to be delivered by his death from sin except by his resurrection Ho●●●● of the 〈◊〉 wee had been endued with a perfect and everlasting righteousnesse Now then let us proceed to describe what this second part of Free Justification is which is as followeth The second part of Free Justification is a wonderfull The d●fi●ition of the second part o● f●ee justification mysticall work and benefit of the Gospel by which we being by the power of Gods imputation cloathed with the wedding-garment of Christs perfect righteousnesse are so endued or rather thought not inherently and actively yet Evangelically and passively so mystically formed with Christs own perfect righteousnesse that we have not only all our sinnes together with the imperfections of our sanctification ever whilst we are in this life dwelling in us incomprehensibly swallowed up and utterly abolished as is before shewed in the first part but also we are without the help of any good works to make us righteous made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely Shining now in this life with Christs good works more glorious in perfect holinesse and righteousnesse inwardly in the sight of God than the ●unne shines gloriously in our eyes when he shineth in his brightest hue by which only we are made worthy of and do take possession of all the rest of the benefits and unsearchable treasures of the Gospel as these Scriptures and the rest following doe abundantly prove Seventy weeks viz. of yeeres are determined upon the holy City that is the Church what to doe not only to finish trangressions and so to reconcile iniquities and to seale up and make an end of all sin but also to bring in everlasting righteousness Dan. 9. 24. whereupon Daniel 9. 24. the learned Interpreters say thus Here are two benefits rehearsed which should come by the Messiah The first is the taking away of sinne The other is the bringing in and giving of a perfect and everlasting Righteousness For saith another sinne is finished or come to an end iniquitie is clean put out and there is preached to the whole world an everlasting righteousness They which doe beleeve in Christ by faith in him are purified and have gotten and attained an everlasting righteousness But for the better understanding of this description of this second part of Justification let us briefly open those foure points that are used to explaine and fully to cleer a matter as first the efficient The foure causes of this second part of Justification cause of our Justification secondly the formall cause thirdly the materiall cause and fourthly the finall cause all in this head point of salvation very necessary the marking First the efficient cause of our Justification is twofold The first primary efficient cause who is it that undertaketh to justifie and make us so perfectly holy and righteous is God himselfe the Father the Sonne The efficient cause and the holy Ghost these are the first efficient cause of our Justification which evidently sheweth the full ablenesse of these workmen and how easily this work may be brought to passe and wrought upon us and how dangerous a matter it is to extenuate diminish or any way to disparage this excellent work the description of whose working is under a similitude notably expressed by the Prophet Ezekiel saying In the day that thou wast born when I passed by thee I saw thee cast out and polluted in thine own blood and I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood thou shalt live yea even when thou wast in thy blood I said unto thee thou shalt live Then washed I thee with water yea I throughly washed away thy blood For I even I
that which is worse by a perverse and preposterous judgement wee refuse the better things and approve the worse Yea in one and the same Authors we attribute and apply that authoritie and Title of holinesse to their worser things which they have deserved for their best things spoken after the Spirit and not after the flesh and naturall light of reason My second answer to this objection that other Ministers doe speak and seeme to hold the contrarie is this that it is an undoubted truth that although all brethren in the Ministry may bee enlightened with one and the same truth yet all are not ●enlightned All are nor enlightened with the same measure of truth with one and the same measure of truth who thereupon may disceptare that is argue about a matter but not dissentire that is bee of a contrary judgement and resolution flatly to hold the contrary And it is possible that one man may have laboured more and so see further in some one point than another though he come behinde many others that are rich in all other gifts and of excellent learning who yet should shew themselves to be of Cains brood and Devils incarnate if wee should willingly and wilfully envie an higher talent in our brother in some one gift non omnia possumus omnes and wee bee all of us set and appointed by God to bee by our particular gifts mutuall helpers of another but not hinderers and enviers one of another And thirdly I answer that although some one or more of seeming great learning will in the heigth of their owne conceit and in the opinion of their great learning oppose themselves against this common consent of the learned Orthodox writers and so flatly hold the contrary yet is their great knowledge and great learning no sufficient cause to drive thee into wavering and doubting of the excellency of Christs benefits because the holy Ghost hath so sufficiently armed us against this scandall in teaching so plentifully in his word that there is a twofold knowledge A twofold knowledge or learning the one a literall knowledge or a literall learning and the other a spirituall knowledge the understanding and marking of which point because it is of so great use that thereupon depends in a manner the whole essence of salvation both to discerne in what state thou thine owne-selfe dost stand that makest this objection who peradventure maist bee learned and of great knowledge and also to keep thee from many scandals and delusions by others that seeme to be of great learning and knowledge therefore to leave us without all excuse is the holy Ghost most diligent to describe these two knowledges unto us very largely First the literall knowledge is described Rom. 2. 1 Literall Rom. 2. 17. from verse 17. to the very end of the chapter after this manner Behold thou art called a I●w that is thou art called to bee a member of the Church of God even of one called and professing Gods revealed glorious truth and restest in the Law that is thou takest the word of God and the doctrine from heaven to be thine only rule and warrant and wilt not as thou sayest goe one haires breadth from the word yea and gloriest in God namely that he is thy Father Saviour and Redeemer and knowest his will that is thou art skilfull in the word of God and canst try the things that differ and are excellent by reason thou ar● instructed and very learned in the word of God Neither only hast thou thus knowledge enough for thy selfe and for thine owne use alone but also art a rich store-house for others for thou art confident and takest upon thee to be a Guide to the ●linde a Light to them that are in darknesse an Instructer of them that lack discretion a Teacher of the ignorant and hast the whole forme of knowledge and of the truth in thy breast is it possible that the exquisitest knowledge that is can be more gloriously described and yet all this is there shewed to the end of the chapter to be no knowledge indeed but only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a meere shadow or shew of great knowledge and of the truth quans vulgo apparentiam vocant which as Calvin Calvin ibid. saith men commonly call an appearance of knowledge because as the Apostle saith in divers verses following it consisteth but in the letter only that is is meerly literall learned by good wit and good memory but is not by the working of the spirit of God in spirit and in truth being agreeable with that which the Apostle saith in another place habent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is they have a shew of very godlinesse but they deny the power of the same for they had which is the Apostles scope in this description a confession of the forgivenesse of their sinnes by Gods mercy in the Messiah but they had not a joyfull spirituall feeling knowledge of the excellency of Free Iustification which is the soule of all this great knowledge and when the soule is away all the rest is nothing else but a dead carcasse of knowledge as the Apostle shewes in all the whole Epistle following Chap. 9. 30 31. and 10. 2 3. Whereby they that are in this literall knowledge although they seeme to bee greatly enlightned in the whole word of God and to be excellent learned men yea and very zealous with a legall zeale Rom. 9. 31. and 10. 2. yet because they are in Rom 9. 31. and 10. 2. this point destitute as Calvin speaketh interiore luce of the true inward spirituall light it is incredible to think how blinde they are in understanding the excellency of Christs benefits so that none is so blinde as such as are in this literall knowledge as it is plainly testified by the Propher Esay 42. 18 19. saying Heare Esay 42. 18 19. yee deafe and look yee blinde that you may see Who so blinde as my servant or deafe as my messenger that I send yea who so blinde as the perfect that is that by this literall knowledge think themselves perfect and who so blinde as the Lords servants yea such in this literall knowledge are not only more blinde than the very plough-boy but also more blinde and ignorant than the oxe and the asse that the plough-boy drives before him as the same Prophet witnesseth saying The oxe knowes his owner and the asse his masters crib but Israel hath not knowne my people as by this literall knowledge they professe themselves hath not Esay 1. 3. Object understood Esay 1. 3. But how then will some man say may these blinde men seeming so learned in this literall knowledge be discerned from such as are truly enlightened I answer this the same Prophet Esay Answ plainly expresse●h in the former place saying thus Two manner of wayes how we may see know many things and yet not keep them Seeing many things but thou keepest them
The holy Ghost is God and it is he only that sheweth us our sinnes ergo he himselfe must needs see our sinnes in us p. 158 3 The Lord by his spirit doth daily mortifie our sins in us Rom. 8. But he seeth those sins in us which he doth mortifie ergo Free Justification doth not make us so perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in Gods sight that he seeth no sin in us p. 163 Three severall offices of the Trinity shewn forth in our Iustification p. 153 Mortification of sin distinguisht p. 169 The foundation of Enemites Anchorites and Nunneries p. 172 CHAP. IX COntaining an Antidote against doubting to kindle and work faith in us and to be a preservative against all objections whatsoever 1. of the world 2. the flesh and 3. the Devill p. 174 Where we must mark first the causes of all doubting p. 175 2 The remedies against the same as 1 The nature and definition of true Iustifying faith must be marked described Rom. 4. 17. to 25. p. 176 The description of Abrahams faith ibid. 2 The second spirituall weapon is that we are to arme our selves against sense sight feeling and natuturall Reason and how this may be done p. 180 3 The third spirituall weapon to overcome all doubting is not to forsake our Baptisme but much and often to meditate upon the foure things containing the very essence of our Baptisme p. 185 4 The fourth spirituall weapon is that wee are to sence our selves against the greatest multitude of all sorts round about us by the dead faith boldly wrangling against the Ministers of Christ and how wee may be fenced against the same p. 198 5 The fifth weapon against doubting is to have often before our eyes the great dignity and excellency of believing Free Iustification p. 235 6 The last weapon or remedy is to set before our eyes the inconveniencies and evills of doubting which are eight p. 241 1 To make God a lyar ibid. 2 To make God for sworn and our selves Covenant-breakers ibid. 3 To make God a deceiver p. 242 4 To rob God of the prayse of his Almighty power ibid. 5 To rob him of the glory of his perfect Iustice ib. 6 To rob God of the honour of his grace mercy and rich boun●y p. 220 7 To spoyl Christ of the glory of his Name Iesus and secondly of the glory of his God-head and thirdly of his Kingly Priestly Propheticall Offices p. 243 8 Vnthankfully to reject and loose the free-giving graces of God c. ibid. The Christians tryumph against all sinne by true Iustifying Faith p. 250 The difference between the literall and spirituall knowledge p. 215. p. 224. 226 Three priviledges of Faith laid open p. 235. CHAP. X. DEclaring the second part of Free Iustification making the true Believer compleatly sufficiently and perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God p. 253 1 Foure reasons shewing how inseparable this second part is from the former part ibid. 2 What this second part of Free Iustification is p. 257 3 It is opened and explained by the foure causes of it p. 258 The manner of the Iustification of the Elect p. 271 The righteousnesse of Christ making us holy and righteous objectively and passively illustrated by two lively similitudes p. 274. infra That the forme of Christs perfect righteousnesse doth not only give us the name but the very being of persons made perfectly righteous proved by Scriptures p. 293 395 300 303 CHAP. XI PRoving that the true Believer is not only made righteous but also compleatly fully and sufficiently and perfectly righteous in the sight of God freely p. 313 This is proved by foure places of Scripture and by the consent and Reasons of the learned ibid. Our righteousnesse exceeds the righteousnesse of the Angels 320 The naturall civill and religious works of Believers are made perfect in the sight of God p. 322 How the New Testament surpasseth the Old p. 335 God calleth righteous men Righteousnesse in the Abstract p. 341 CHAP. XII SHewing that the justified children of God are so perfectly and excellently righteous before God that they are made unutterably glorious in the sight of God p. 343. p. 354 Whereof the Arke is a lively Type p. 346 Two evident Reasons declaring the same p. 345 A true and godly looking-glasse to be often used of Christians p. 348 CHAP. XIII STrengthening Faith against naturall reason and unbeliefe p. 361 2 The objections of unbeliefe are two the first is propoun●ed and answered ibid. With foure strong and sufficient Arguments to resell the same p. 375 The second objection with the Particular answers to it is in p. 384 Helps to strengthen our weak Faith p. 385 A threefold Remedie against our sinnes to believe occasioned by the inestimablenesse of the treasure p. 391 CHAP. XIIII OF the Vtility and Majestie of Free Iustification p. 401 Declared in six excellent fruits or effects ib. 1 Illumination fourefold p 402 For by Justification men see 1 The foulnesse of the least sinne ibid. 2 The perfection of Gods justice p. 404 3 The true meaning of the tenth Commandement and so of all the rest p 405 The treasures and glory of Gods Kingdome p 406 2. It not only delivereth us from the fivef●●●●●nishment of sinne Chap. 2. But putteth us also in possession of six glorious benefits p. 407 1 Reconciliation with God ibid. Whereof there be two comfortable fruits 1 Protection against all evill p. 415 2 Procuration of all good p. 415 Heaven opened and all Creatures leap for joy p. 410 A paradice of Gods loving protection p. 416 Two uses of our perfect reconciliation p. 420 CHAP. XV. 1 OF the foure other benefits wrought upon us by Free Iustification p. 423 2 The giving of the holy Ghost ibid. 3 Vnion into Christ p. 429 Where it is evidently proved that this union is not imaginary but reall and substantiall ibid. Six similitudes illustrating this Vnion p. 419 4 Adoption p. 431 5 Lastly assured glorification p. 445 CHAP. XVI OF the other foure fruits or effects declaring the Vtility and Majesty of Free Iustification p. 447 1 Peace and joy in the conscience ibid. 2 A good judgement and right discerning of all spirits and doctrines p. 440 3 It rooteth up coveteousnesse and the love of all vaine pomp p. 452 The last and maine point shewing the Vtility and Majesty of Iustification is Sanctification and true Evangelicall repentance p. 457 Ten differences between Iustification and Sanctification p. 459 For Justification worketh 1 True love of God ibid. 2 Of this love ariseth true griefe at sinne and zeale against all sinne p. 460 3 It causeth the true feare of God and cheerfull obedience p. 461 4 True trust and confidence in God p. 443 THere are some faults escaped in Printing as Objections for Objectors abolish for abolishing see for so possible for impossible and some others but most of them so small and literall that we are confident
had said that by receiving the Gospel and Word of life wee have joyfull Fellowship with God If wee walk in the light as hee is in the light one may object and Object say seeing God is the most pure light or righteousnes with whom is no darknesse of sinne when we have endevoured to walke in the light of righteousnesse and to avoyd the darknesse of sinne never so much yet seeing wee are even conceived in iniquitie and feel our selves even sinks of sin how can any mortall man have any such fellowship with so pure and cleane a God as S. Iohn writeth To which hee answereth Answ Your walking in the light is not the cause of your Fellowship with God but onely shewes that you are in the true light or righteousnesse of free Justification wherein the righteousnesse of Christ doth so abolish out of Gods sight all the remnants of sin that daily dwell in you and all the imperfections of your holy walking that thus your joyfull Fellowship with so cleane and pure a God holds most firme and sure even because the blood of Christ the Sonne of God doth make you perfectly clean from all sinne August Haec est vera pax c. purgatis reconciliatis sicut maculati a●●nati c. Heming 1 Ioh. 1. 7. For this is true peace and firme knitting us with our Creator in that wee are made cleane and so reconciled againe by the Mediator of life as wee were made foule and so estranged from him by the Mediator of death But now the excellency of this first part of Justification which the holy Apostle calls the deep things of 1 Cor. 2. 10. God 1 Cor. 2. 10. which deeply considered calls us out of the dead faith and makes us to give our selves wholy to God by faith and to our neighbour by love to walk in all Gods Commandements zealously this excellency I say of this first part of free Justification namely how truely and utterly our sinnes are abolished out of Gods sight and how perfectly cleane the blood of Christ doth make us from all sin the holy Ghost doth expresse it unto us by six principall and most emphaticall phrases or similitudes wherein first observing this rule that the similitudes of the Scriptures must have a truth correspondent to the similitude and secondly marking how these six phrases Six Emphaticall Scripture phrases describing the first part of Iustification exceed one another in perfectnesse and sweetnesse we may ascend as it were by certaine steps or staires to the full heigth of comfort and joy The first phrase is this Look how farre the East is from 1 Psal 103 12. the West so farre hath God removed our sins from us Psal 103. 12. The sence and summe whereof is this that having Summa est longè laté que pro orbis magnitudine effundi misericordiam Dei super fideles Ne quid impediat cursum ejus Aboleri prorsus corum peccata Calvin Ibid. Nisi enim peccata à nobis removerentur locus divinae ergo nos miscricordiae esse non potest Muse Ibid. said in the eleventh verse That look how great and wide the world is from East to West from Heaven to Earth so largly is the mercy of God powred out upon the faithfull lest there should bee any thing to hinder the course of this large mercy in the twelfe verse the Prophet addeth that their sinnes are utterly abolished For unlesse our sinnes bee removed away from us there can bee no place for such large mercy of God to come upon us The second phrase expressing more fully this perfect abolishing of our sins is this That there is no God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like unto our God that taketh way iniquity and casteth all our sinnes into the bottome of the Sea Micah 7. Mich. 7. 19 19. 18. 19. The meaning whereof is That God doth cast all Projicit in mare veluti talentum plum●i c. ut ampliùs no● compar●ant Pel. Ibid. the sins of the faithfull into the bottome of the Sea like a talent o● lead from our eyes that from thenceforth they may never appear before God any more For God doth so remove away the sins of the faithfull Deus removet è conspectu ita ut ampliùs non redeunt in conspectum out of his sight that they may never return into his sight any more Because Christ himselfe did set upon sin and did prevaile over it and with his righteousnesse swallowed it up and it was enforced to be extinguished of him Luth. Serm. in Ioh. 20. no lesse and no otherwise than a spark of fire cast into the wide Sea And thus hath God cast all our sins into the bottome of the Sea The third phrase expressing yet more fully the perfect abolishing of all our sinnes out of Gods sight is this That Christ gave himselfe for us to make us holy and hath made us cleane that he might make us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to himselfe a glorious Church How or wherein glorious Answ That is not having now at this present Non dicit non habituram sed non hab●ntem time as the Greek and Latine Participle of the present time doth signifie one spot or wrinkle of sinne or any such thing Ephes 5. 25 26 27. Eph. 5. 25 26 26. For thus teach we That the Church hath not one spot or wrinkle of sin but is perfectly righteous by free Justification and Faith only in Christ which serves to approve her to the eyes of God Againe shee is holy in life and conversation but this latter way is unperfect and serves to approve her to the eyes of men And thus doe alledge this place Augustine Luther Zanch. Downham Willet Hall Heming and many others saying thus The Church is made cle●n that shee may have August Mu●datur ut non hab●at maculam Non potest h●bere caput illud nisi coadignum co●pus condignam uxor●m haec est Sponsa Christi non habens maculam per lavacrum en●m ●uferuntur peccata Interna purg●tio no spot that head can not have a body but agreeable and sutable unto himselfe such an husband doth not marry a wife but like unto himselfe therefore hee saith That hee might make her to himselfe a glorious Church not having now one spot or wrinkle nor any such thing for by her baptisme her sins are taken away For when a man is baptized he receiveth this benefit of grace signed and sealed unto him as with the very seale of God whereby the inward washing and making cleane which is wrought by the blood of Christ is given ratified and sealed to him that is baptized if afterwards being come to yeeres his unbeliefe do not seclude him from the benefit Therefore that saying of S. Paul is to be holden fast Qua●e ●irmiter tenendom H●ming in 1 Ioh 1 7. firmely who testifieth That Christ so loved his Church that
That Paul was a man as perfectly justified as any and yet he complaines of sin in himselfe and Rom. 7. 24. Objected saith O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me ergo The children of God are not made so perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God that God sees none in them To which I answer that all ought to have that feeling Answ in themselves that Paul had but yet the argument followes not because it is not Saint Pauls intent in that place to discribe in what state he and the justified children of God doe stand in the sight of God but what he and all the true children of God by the imperfection of their sanctification doe feele in themselves For hee there describing the battle that is in Gods children betweene the flesh and the spirit doth shew that whilst they looke into themselves and compare the imperfection of their sanctification with the perfection of the spirituall Law of God they doe finde and feele no good thing in themselves but meere wretchednesse which makes them so much the more to goe by faith wholy out of themselves and in the sight of God to be found only in Christ and in his righteousnesse Phil. 3. 9. Whereby all those sins and Phil 3 9. imperfections of their sanctification that they feele in themselves as a menstruous cloath are above their sense and feeling utterly abolished out of Gods sight by justification and they made from all spot of sin perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely Which the Apostle testifies in another place saying He that knew no sinne was made sin for us that we being translated into him might be made the very righteousnesse of God 2 Cor. 5. 21. this is their state in the sight of 2 Cor. 5. 21. God For indeed as I said before in the answer to the first objection what place is there for faith to beleeve that we are thus perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God if we did not feele the contrary in ourselves and how may they that are of faith with faithfull Abraham bee blessed Galat. 3. 9. if they feele no Gal. 3. 9. wretchednesse in themselves which feeling must continue untill having gotten the victory by faith they triumph in the experience of Gods truth And therefore should these objectors not only fixe their eyes upon the battel but looke also upon the ensuing victory for after this battel betweene feeling and faith presently followes the victory the Apostle not only giving thanks to God that he was delivered by Christ Rom. 7. 25. but also shewing wherein that victory did Rom. 7. 25. consist both in the cause of it and in the effects of triumphing the effect of triumph in these words Now then there is no judgement no punishment no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus The cause why followes because the righteousnesse of the Law though not inherently and actively of us yet objectively and passively is fulfilled in us Rom. 8. 4. whereby Rom. 3. 5. 4. above our sense and feeling we are made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely Which as I said before contrary to their sense and feeling is the state in which they stand Rom. 5. 2. compleat Rom. 5. 2. in the sight of God Colos 2. 10. Colos 5. 10. 1 Iohn 3. 20. Objected Clered and expounded The next place of Scripture by which they will seeme to triumph is 1 Iohn 3. 20. where Saint Iohn saith If our hearts condemne us of sinne God is greater than our hearts and knowes all things Which objection although I might easily without absurdity put off with the former distinction betweene Gods knowing and seeing yet because the true meaning of the Apostle makes strongly for the present truth which they think by misunderstanding the same to make strongly against it therefore is this place to be further opened Herein lying their error that they apply this to the justified children of God which is spoken of the wicked and hypocrites for Saint Iohn setting downe in all that Epistle the markes of discerning true Christians from hypocrites both the verse going afore and the verse following after doe plainely shew that the twentieth verse is spoken of hypocrites The true meaning whereof is this If our hearts that is our consciences doe accuse and condemne us of willing practising any sinne it declares first that we are blinde and see not what an infinite horrible thing the least sinne is in the sight of God that it cannot be abolished but by the blood of the Son of God and yet dare willingly practise it Secondly the accusation terrors and condemning of conscience for the same shew our unbeleefe that we doe not truely trust Christ that he with his blood alone hath made us cleane from all sin in the sight of God and so rob Christ of his glory not beleeving that by cloathing us with his owne righteousnesse of unjust he hath made us just that is perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely whereby all accusation terrors and condemning of conscience would cease and end in peace for being justified by faith wee have peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5. 1. Thirdly by Rom. 5. 1. our willing practising of any sin we are unthankfull for so great benefits literally professed and so being blinde unfaithfull and unthankefull in Gods covenant we are hypocrites and then that sin that our evill condemning conscience doth accuse us of being not abolished is much more odious in Gods sight yea although wee flatter our selves thinking and seeming to our selves to be for all this true Christians yet God knowes and sees all our unbeliefe distrust unthankfulnesse and hypocrisie much more than wee our selves doe and must needs much more condemne us than our owne accusing evill consciences he being so infinite in knowledge and perfect in justice and as the fountaine of righteousnesse hating so infinitely all unrighteousnesse But then in the next verse follows the antithesis or contrary description of a true Christian saying Beloved if our conscience doth not condemne us then have we boldnesse towards God that is if the peace of conscience casting out the accusations terrors and condemnings of conscience doe reigne in your heart then it shewes plainly that in truth Phil. 4. 7. Colos 3. 15. you yeeld to Christ the glory of his blood and righteousnesse in making both you and your consciences of unjust just that is perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely and so are no hypocrites in the Covenant of God because he hath made you good consciences quitting and excusing you of all sin two manner of wayes First by Justification that not only cleeres your conscience from all sin and condemning terrors for the same but also makes
feare of blowes and beating whilst it is not marked that this filiall feare is by the fall and corruption of nature lost in naturall children whereby their Parents are constrained to use the servile feare and to drive their children from evill and to doe their duties with blowes corrections and beatings whereby they serve them not onely with much eye-service but also very aukwardly oftentimes When wee Preachers doe neglect to ground in the peoples hearts great joy for the greatnesse of the free-given treasures of Christ that should work and cause this filiall feare loving inclination and dutifull and truly filiall affections and goe about to square Gods children according to the corrupt pattern of naturall children corrupted with the slavish feare with blowes and beatings wee must needs quench in them the true filiall feare and stablish in them the servile feare that should be cast out 1 Ioh. 4. 18. cause in the children 1 Ioh. 4. 18. of God this eye-service which if it be naught in sanctified servants to their earthly masters as the Apostle saith Ephes 6. 6. how abhominable is it much more in Ephes 6. 6. the children of God to their heavenly Father and makes but hypocrites Tenthly this Doctrine that God sees sinne in his justified children to whip correct and punish them for the same is the very instrument and Engine that confounds the New Testament in respect of the legall government of the morall Law with the old that is finished Heb. 8 9 13. by bringing back haeredem adultum Heb. 8. 9. 13. the full-grown Heire to be again haredem pupillum the Heire in his non-age it brings back again the full growne Heire to bee whipped againe under the School-master after faith that we are made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely is come Expresly contrary as I said before to the words and doctrine of the Apostle Gal. 3. 25. It Gal. 3. 25. strips the Queene and Bride of her wedding-garment Revel 19. 7 8. of the vesture of the gold of Ophir by Revel 19 7 8. which shee is all glorious within with her cloathing of broidred gold Psal 45. 9. Ephes 5. 27. to stand naked to Psal 45. 9. ●phes 5. 27. be whipped with rods of crosses and afflictions for sin for sin is nakednesse It makes not the New Testament in the administration of righteousnesse and of the spirit above the Old Testament to exceed in glory 2 Cor. 3. 7 8 9 10. whereby the least preachers in the 2 Cor. 3 7 8 9 10. kingdome of heaven that should be greater than Iohn Baptist doe come so short of him and of unperfect Apollos Act. 18. 25. That Luther cals such justly first Act. 18. 25. Taske-masters because as the Taske-masters in Egypt they lay many precepts and tasks upon the people which for want of the spirit that comes by the preaching of Free Iustification whereof they speak but little Gal. 3. 2. the people are not able to doe and being not Gal. 3. 2. done they all to beat them with the whippings and corrections and lashes of the Law and it comes to the poor people accordingly because it is unto them according as they beleeve and they must beleeve as they are taught but they are not taught by such kinde of Teachers as people that are made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely so that all that they doe must bee done for joy and thankfulnesse that they are made so perfectly holy and righteous from all spot in the sight of God freely Which is to preach powerfully the glad tidings of good things Rom. 10. 15. Secondly hee calls such Rom. 10. 15. patchers because they doe not only patch unto the wedding-garment of Christs righteousnesse making his children perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely the old patches of the duties of the morall Law to make them good and better and better and more holy and more righteous every day in the sight of God by the holy walking of sanctification as they call it but also by the lashes of the Law doe whip them thereunto Hereby secretly laying the foundation of meriting works and the first corner stone in building of all Popery and Anabaptisme Eleventhly this Doctrine that the justified children of God must bee kept from sinne and driven to holy walking for feare of correction and punishments doth quite marre the true nature of sanctification for then it is true sanctification when it is done with willing cheerfulnesse and meere thankfulnesse for Free Iustification and the other great benefits of the Gospel freely bestowed and already possessed and thereupon bringing forth great joy and zealous obedience but if wee bee driven thereunto by corrections and whippings it is not free and cheerfull obedience but it is made compulsive but all that thankfulnesse whereunto wee with whippings are compelled is no thankfulnesse and indeed all such obedience is not worth a a butten except it be willing and cheerfull for joy of Free Iustification and then it is true sanctification indeed Psal 110. 3. Esay 55 5. Psal 110. 3. Eay 55. 5. 12 Twelfthly and lastly Summa Summae the upshot of all is this That when we Preachers of the Gospel not feeling in our hearts the vigour and power of the free-given treasures of Christ doe not trust to nor rely upon the pressing of them as sufficient where they are felt and injoyed operative causes of all holy walking and godly conversation then wee degenerate and decline thereby to the legall teaching of the Old Testament more agreeable to the light of nature described before of constraying men to holinesse and righteousnesse with legall arguments of large blessings if they doe well but with terrors of corrections and punishments for their evill doings which either doth little good at all or at the best makes but self-deceiving legall zealous hypocrites and so goe not with a right foot to the truth of the Gospel Gal. 2. 14. and purity Gal. 2. 14. of the first Primitive preaching of constraining men to holinesse adn righteousnesse by joy and love by preaching with joyfull inflamed hearts and fiery tongues Acts 2. 4. the exceeding excellency and glory Act. 2. 4. of the unsearchable riches of Christ which as it was the true course of the first manner of preaching of the Gospel in the Primitive Church as is evident in all these Scriptures Act. 8. 8 38 39. Act. 13. 38 39 Acts 8. 8. 38 39 13. 38 39 42 44 52. 1 Pet. 1. 8. Epes 3. 8. 42 44 52. 1 Pet. 1. 8. and which S. Paul defines to be the very essence of a Preacher of the Gospel Ephes 3. 8. saying in the person of all true Preachers of the Gospel vnto me the least of all Saints is given this grace that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ
Restorers of the Gospel in this Land saying The worldly Doctrine of our Church wisemen scorne the Doctrine of Christ as foolish to their understandings yea will some say to some of that blinde time nay say the foresaid faithfull witnesses These scorners have ever beene and ever wil be to the end of the world And therefore let us that have one sparke of the true feare of God if we cannot understand the sense and reason of the sayings of the holy Scriptures yet let us not be scorners jesters and deriders for that is the uttermost token and shew of a Reprobate of a plaine enimy to God and his wisedome c. And therefore if we will be profitable hearers and readers of holy Scriptures we must first deny our owne selves and keepe under our carnall senses Reason must give place to Gods holy Spirit c. For indeed by gaine-saying wrangling jesting deriding the things which men understand not what doe they else but stumble at the stumbling stone laid in Zion which the Apostle teacheth is chiefely done in gaine-saying and wrangling against Free Iustification as these Scriptures testifie Rom. 9. 30 31 32 33. Rom. 9. 30 31 32 33. Rom. 10. 3 4. 10. 21. and Rom. 10. 3 4 10 21. whereby they pull that stone upon their owne heads which falling upon them will grinde them to powder Mat. 21. 44. And yet when Christ Matth. 21. 44. in the excellency of his benefits is powerfully preached the greatest multitude stick not violently to rush upon him with their contradictions wranglings derisions and calumniations the reason whereof Calvin truely expresseth saying thus Whereas all the Calvin mysteries of God are to fleshly reason Paradoxes yet is reason of such impudency that she will not stick to set up her bristles against the same and to purse that which she doth not understand with malapert and saucy gaine-sayings and wranglings And although it dares not for shame of the world oppose it selfe directly and grossely against the person of Christ yet if Christs words may not be wrested to sort agree with naturall reason they shall be condemned to be very foolish his Ministers that pronounce and maintaine them to bee very absurd in their opinions if no worse so that although it is true that a Minister ought to be exceeding watchfull that he speake especially in this carping age very circumspectly of God and his mysteries left by any meanes he give an occasion to the wicked to calumniate Gods truth yet it is most true that Calvin testifies proving it in the example of Paul that there was never such warinesse and sobriety of speaking in the servants of God which could make silent uncleane and poisonous tongues because it is most true which againe he noteth upon those words of Paul Rom. 3. 5. I speake as a man that Saint Paul sairh not Rom. 3. 5. I speake as the wicked but I speake as a man wherein sharply taxing humane reason he shewes that it is the proper nature thereof to be alwaies wrangling against the wisedome of God and calumniating his faithfull Ministers that teach the same And therefore Luther set it downe for an unfallible marke that Galat. 5. 11. the Gospel is not truely preached and is not the Gospel indeed if it be so brewed and so fitted agreeable to reason that all approve of it and yeeld unto the meaning of it peaceably for then indeed how should the Prophesie of old Simeon be verified that Christ should be set up for a signe and marke of contradiction Luke 2. 34. how should he be a stumbling Luke 2. ●4 stone and rock of offence laid in Zion how should wise Festus judge Paul to be mad Acts 26. how should Ac●s 6. Christ be to the Gentiles foolishnesse yea the deep things of God which Beza expoundeth to be but the excellency of Christs benefits being judged of naturall wise men to be foolishnesse is it possible for the wisedome of the world to hold her peace from speaking against foolishnesse especially if the foolishnesse of Christ dare offer to preferre it selfe above their wisedome and to conclude how else should Christ be not only the rising but also the fall of many in Israel The truth whereof is notably testified by the Doctrine of our Church delivered by the foresaid first restorers of the Gospel in this Land saying thus The holy man Simeon saith that Christ is set forth for the fall and rising of many in Israel and as Christ Iesus is a fall to the Reprobate which yet perish by their owne default So is his word yea the whole Book of God a cause of damnation unto them through their owne incredulity And as Christ himselfe the Prophets the Apostles and all the true Ministers of his Word yea every jot and tittle in the holy Scripture have beene is and shall be for ever more the savour of life unto eternall life unto all those whose hearts God hath purified by true faith so likewise Christ himselfe the Prophets before him the Apostles after him marke all the true Ministers of Gods holy Word marke further yea every word in Gods Book is unto the Reprobate the savour of death unto death The reason whereof Calvin upon those words of the Evangelist From that time many of Iesus his Disciples went back and walked no more with him most truely expresseth Cal●in in Ioh 6. 66. Nunquam enim ●anta poterit caut●o adbiberi quin multis saying thus Never can there be so great wariness used but that the Doctrine of Christ is an occasion of scandall to many because the reprobate devoted to destruction scandali occasio sit Christi doctrina quia reprobi exitio devoti venenum ex cibo salu●errimo se●●x melle s●gunt doe draw poyson out of most wholsome meat and doe suck gall out of honey And mark saith Luther where this fall is even in Israel that is in that people that will seeme to bee Christs own people and being in the Chruch as the Apes and Peacocks were in Solomons Familie that is apish Saints and painted Peacock-Iusticiaries will prosesse nothing lesse than to be contradictors of Christ yet thus is Christ ever oppugned of the greatest multitude both in his word and in his true Ministers under the name of greatest friendship with Christ Briefly Luther well notes that a wise Minister doth ayme but at the gathering of the Elect by the example of S. Paul who said I suffer all things for the Elects sake that some may be saved as for the rest that are the greatest multitude he or rather Christ himselfe divides them but into two sorts Swine and Dogges between which there is only this difference that a Swine if one go about to drive him from the mire or from his s●vill only gives a grunt and away hee goes to the rooting in the earth so prophane and worldly men if one goe about to drive them from sinne
men they doe nothing else but with their cavills sophisticating and calumniations under a colour of cleering the truth paint over and hide their own ignorance bemuddy the cleer truth disquiet the minds of the simple and trouble mens consciences and so are the true and proper authors of dissention and sects And this Paul complained of not only respecting the present times but also foresaw in spirit that there should bee an infinite number of such in the Church even to the Worlds end for when God sendeth faithfull labourers into his harvest by and by Satan raiseth up his ministers also who will in no case bee counted inferiour to those that are rightly called here straightwaies riseth dissention the wicked will not yeeld one haires-bredth to the godly for they take themselves that they far passe them in wit in learning in godlinesse in spirit and in all other vertues And on the other side the godly although The godly in matters of charity are flexible but unyeelding in matters of faith in matters of charity they are as flexible as a reed enduring all things and suffering all things yet in matters of faith knowing that a little leven doth leven the whole lump they dare not and much lesse ought they to yeeld to the wicked lest the doctrine of faith doe come in danger For alas the faithfull Minister knowes that the Gospel is not delivered unto us that we should thereby seek our own praise and glory or that the people should honour or magnifie us which are the Ministers thereof but to the end that the benefits and glory of Christ might be published and known and that the Father might be glorified in the bounty and riches offered unto us in Christ his Son who thereby enricheth us with his heavenly and eternal good things as for the other they regard not this but to get praise and liking and estimation with the people doe rather sophisticate and wrangle against the benefits of Christ thus provoking one another and envying one another which is a sure token that neither such Teachers nor such Hearers doe live and walk after the spirit but after the flesh and works thereof and so consequently with the Galathians to hold the truth they with the Galathians doe loose the true Doctrine Faith Christ and all the gifts of the holy Ghost and by kicking against the benefits of Christ become worse than the heathens and prove meere minist●rs of Satan some of them never failing from time to time to accuse the benefits of Christ not only of error but also of heresie and blasphemie Whereupon comes most truly to passe that Luther saith in the former alleaged place That he that will preach Christ truly and confesse him to be our righteousnesse must be content to heare that he is a pernicious fellow and that he troubleth all things because it cannot be but that Ismael must persecute Isaac and yet Ismael was outwardly and in his own opinion a lover of religion he sacrificed and exercised himselfe in well-doing therefore he mocked his brother Isaac and so persecuted him But Isaac again persecuteth not Ismael Whereupon the same faithfull Dispenser of Gods mysteries concludeth with a weightie saying That who so will not suffer the persecution of Ismael let him not professe himselfe to be a Christian But if those that lie in this literall knowledge bee such meere mocking and persecuting Ismaelites untill God opens their eyes and converreth them let any man judge whether they bee any just cause by their sophisticating and wrangling to stop our faith and to make us to doubt and waver in the excellency of Christs benefits though they excell in all literall learning and in the legall zeale shining as I said before in the righteousnesse and glorious workes of the Law and holy walking never so much THe fifth Remedy to overcome doubting to grow The fifth Remedy against doubting strong in saith is to set often before our eyes the dignity glorious nature and exceeding excellency of beleeving namely that the beliefe that the blood of Christ doth make us cleane from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely is such a good worke in the sight of God as passeth all other good workes whatsoever nay rather if all the good workes and holy walking that were even done or shall be done in the world were heaped together and compared with this one work of beleeving yet all they joyned together are not comparable to beliefe which is not only testified by Christ himselfe in his answer to the Jewes when they asked him dreaming of workes What shall we doe that we may worke the workes of God He answered and said This is the worke of God that is the work of all workes that ye beleeve on him whom he hath sent namely to justifie and make you freely righteous in the sight of God but also many reasons grounded upon the very heart and Essence of the Gospel confirm the same as especially may appear by these three maine priviledges of faith As Three maine priviledges of saith 1 It giveth exceeding glory to God foure wayes to Iustice First for the exceeding honor glory that we give to God the Father that also foure manner of wayes as first this beliefe laying hold only of Christ his righteousnesse as only able and ful sufficient to make us from all spot of sinne perfectly righteous in Gods sight freely makes us as Chrysostome saith to conceive a right and high estimation of God for his perfect justice of hating all sin and loving perfect righteousnesse in that he could bestow no benefit upon us as a benefit excepthe had first given us so wonderfully his own Son to justifie and make us perfectly righteous in his own sight and so we give him the praise honour glory of his justice Secondly if we beleeve and take 2 Of truth fast hold of this benefit that God by washing us in his Sonnes blood hath made us cleane from all spot or wrinkle of sinne in the sight of God freely thus perfectly blessing us Galath 3. 8. we give him the glory Galat. 3. 8. of his truth having so gloriously and manifoldly promised the same and by beleeving doe set to our seale that God is true Iohn 3. 33. Thirdly if so farre beyond Iohn 3. 33. our carnall sense and feeling and outward appearance 3 Of power and all outward likelihood we beleeve that God by clothing us with his owne Sons righteousnesse hath made us cleane from all spot of sin in his owne sight freely truely performing upon us such unlikely to present sense and feeling yea and impossible things wee give him the glory of his omnipotent Rom. 4 19 20. power Rom. 4. 19 20. Fourthly by beleeving that God by cloathing us with the wedding-garment of 4 Of rich grace his Sons perfect righteousnesse hath made us perfectly holy righteous from all spot and wrinkle of sin
am he that putteth away and abolisheth thine iniquities and will remember thy sinnes no more Esay 43. 25. Ierem. 31. 34. A●d not only so But Esay 43. 25. Ierem. 31. 34. also I cloathed thee with broydred work I girded thee about with fine linnen and covered thee with silk I decked thee also with ornaments and I put bracelets upon thy hands and a chaine on thy neck thus wast thou decked with gold and silver and thus wast thou perfect through my beauty which I put upon thee All which as a learned Writer treating of Free Justification truly saith signifieth that God purgeth us with the blood of Christ from all sin and adorneth us with the rich robe of his own righteousnesse and thus hee and none but hee by himselfe alone makes us in his own sight perfectly holy and righteous freely Yea how absolutely God resumes this work wholy and only into his own hand is notably expressed Why God only worketh righteousness by the Apostle with Gods intent and reason why hee so reserves this work only in his own hand saying That hee may shew declare or manifest at this time what his righteousness namely wherewith hee justifieth us farre passing the righteousnesse of men or Angels That he might be just that is declared to bee just in that none can please him but such as are righteous in his sight with such a perfect holinesse and righteousnesse and that he only may be a maker of him righteous that beleeveth in Iesus Rom. 3. 26. and hence Rom. 3. 26. it is that this righteousnesse wherewith we are made so perfectly holy and righteous in Gods sight is so often by S. Paul called the righteousnesse of God both because ●od alone worketh it u●on us and because it alone makes us approvedly righteous in the sight of God as where S. Paul saith Rom. 3. 21. 22. But now is Rom. 32. 22. the righteousness of God made manifest without the Law having witness of the Law and of the Prophets to wit the righteousness of God by the faith of Iesus Christ unto all and upon all that do beleeve Upon which place the true Orthodox exposition of Chrisostome is worthy the marking who faith thus Paul expresseth two great matters in this place both that thou art made righteous and that also without the Law thou attainest these good things moreover he said not simply righteousness but the righteousness of God declaring the gift to be the greater for the dignity of the giver and the promise easily to be effected and done Another reason why God reserves this work in his own hand to be wrought only by himself is because it is too great and too glorious a work for any meere creature to doe it or to have any hand in it for what work can bee more excellent than to make a creature righteous in the sight of God seeing also it is the cause of removing all evill and the procuring of all good unto the creature and this is testified by Augustine saying Quid magnificentius quàm justificare impium hoc est ex impio justum facere that is what is more magnificent than to justifie a wicked man that is of a wicked man to make him just and righteous And therefore the conclusion of Zanchius upon this point is most true saying Solus etiam est qui potest c. that is It is only God alone that of a man conceived of uncleane seed can make him cleane Iob 14. 4. especially say I Iob 14. 4. in this case of making him above sense and feeling perfectly righteous in the fight of God freely The second efficient cause of our Justification together The second efficient Cause of our ●ustification with the meritorious meanes more immediatly working and effecting the same is Christ as he is the Mediator both God and man who as it is Revel 1. 5. washing us from our sinnes in his owne blood and Revel 1. 5. procuring unto us thereby a perfect righteousnesse cried out upon the Crosse It is finished that is the prophecie of Daniel prophecying that seventy weeks of yeers should be fulfilled before iniquity should be sealed up and finished and sin made an end of and abolished and everlasting righteousnesse brought in is now accomplished and finished but how By the slaying saith Daniel of the Messiah so that it is Christ and the blood of Christ that hath by himselfe purged us from our sins and made us righteous freely Heb. 1. 3. and therefore saith the Apostle Heb. 1. 3. we are justified freely by his grace but how through the Redemption that is in Christ Iesus Rom. 3. 24. his Rom. 3. 24. blood alone justifieth us and therefore very aptly speaketh Augustine saying there have been are and shall be many just men just us autem justificans nemo nisi Christus that is but both just and also justifying and making others righteous there is none but Christ Vpon the truth whereof ariseth that unlike likenesse between Adam and Christ which the Apostle speaks of Rom. 5. wherein none must participate Rom. 5. nor be any Agent or doer with Christ namely that as by the disobedience of one man Adam many were made perfect sinners before they have done or thought any evill work as namely Infants which are perfect sinners before they begin to speak or think any evill all their evill actions afterwards but shewing how evill one man Adam hath made them so by the obedience of one man Christ are many made perfectly righteous before they speak or think any good work all their good works of Sanctification done afterwards but shewing how perfectly good Christ hath made them to Godward freely Whereupon the exposition of Chrysostome upon that place is very proper saying Chrysostomes Exposition thus As Adam unto all that came of him although they had not eaten of the tree became the author of sinne and death So Christ unto all that are of him although they have not lived righteously became a procurer of righteousnesse and life even that righteousnesse which by his Crosse he freely gives unto us all hence he is called Iehovah our righteousnesse that is the only cause making us righteous and also Mel●hisedec The second maine point to bee considered and Secondly the Formall cause marked in our perfect Justification is the Formall Cause or the very forme it selfe making us perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God wherein two things are to be marked first what it is secondly the excellency 1 What it is 2 The excellency of it of it for the first namely what this formall cause forming us perfectly righteous is we must observe that it is the perfect obedience both active and passive of the Mediator Christ which being made under the law he performed in fulfilling the whole law for us perfectly whereof Christ spake when ●e said unto Iohn the Baptist Let it be so now for thus it
from the former yet he placeth our true Justification and the making of us righteous to God-ward in the former thus saith Zanchie But in another place he shewes that this righteousnesse of Christ is the only formall cause of our Justification and salvation yet more plainly namely upon those words of the Apostle That Christ died in the body of his flesh to make us holy and unblameable and without fault in Gods sight Colos 1. 22. he saith thus Zanchie on Colos 1. 22. Here we have the formall cause of our salvation which is holinesse of life and true righteousness by which it is brought to pass that we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without fault and unblameable in the sight of God But this saith he cannot be the righteousness of our works and holiness of life begun in us because that is unperfect as David himselfe said Enter not into judgement with thy servant for no flesh is righteous in thy sight only the righteousnesse and holinesse of Christ is perfect in the sight of God and this being imputed unto us is the ●ormall cause of our salvation Thus it being sufficiently shewed what the formall cause of our Justification making us thus perfectly righteous in the sight of God is now let us mark a little the excellency of it both in the nature and in the operation of it First concerning the nature of it although 2 The excellency of the formall cause is both in the nature and operation that doth shew the excellency of it which is said before namely that it is an obedience and a fulfilling of the Law in all points absolute yea and a perfect everlasting righteousnesse yet the thing that shewes it to be exceeding excellent is because it is a righteousnesse that passeth the righteousnesse not only of men but also as Calvin truly saith even of Angels because it is the righteousnesse of that person that is not only man but also God for which cause it is called often in the new Testament the righteousness of God and amongst other places most emphatically Rom. 3. 21 22. where S. Paul beginning to Rom. 3. 21 22. write of it saith thus But now is the righteousness of God made manifest without the law having witness of the law and of the Prophets to wit the righteousness of God by the faith of Iesus Christ unto all and upon all that doe beleeve Why it is called the righteousnesse of God Where it is twice together called the righteousnesse of God not only because God is the free giver of it and because God himselfe approves of it as the only 1 Because of the person both God and man righteousnesse pleasing God but also because it is the righteousness of that person that is very God and therefore of wonderfull operation and efficacie as it is plainely testified by the learned Dispensers of Gods mysteries saying thus This righteousness is called the righteousnesse of God not only because it is the free gift of God and because God by giving the same shewes himselfe to be righteous that is faithfull and true and because it is opposed to the righteousnesse of man but also because it is the righteousnesse of that person that is both God and man And therefore a farre more excellent righteousnesse many wayes than that which Adam had in the state of innocency for that was the righteousnesse of a meere man this is the righteousnesse of him that is both God and man Then for the effects The righteousnesse of Secondly the effects of Christ● righteousnesse Christ is meritorious of eternall life it overcame death subdues the Devill none of which Adams righteousnesse could doe And again Christs righteousnesse is eternal and immutable but Adams righteousnesse was Thirdly immutable but temporarie and mutable Fourthly wee are in Christs righteousnesse Restored to a more excellent Fourthly restoring to an everlasting estate state than wee lost in Adam which was but terrene and mutable but by this Justice and perfect righteousnesse we receive an heavenly everlasting and immutable kingdome Hence it is that S. Paul prized this righteousnesse so highly saying touching the righteousnesse which is in the Law I was unrebukeable But I count all things losse and doe judge them but dung that I may be found not having mine own righteousnesse which is after the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ even the righteousness which is of God through faith Philip. 3. 8 9. therefore I conclude the excellency of this point with that excellent note of learned Beza that these things being diligently considered doe manifestly declare what is meant by that word the Righteousnesse of God Namely that perfection and high integritie with which whosoever is endued he is presented before God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as S. Paul saith Coloss 1. 22. that is so holy that hee is Coloss 1. 22. unblameable and one that cannot be reproved of any fault The third point to be marked in our perfect Justification The third cause is the subject matter and is twofold is the Subject of this righteousnesse or the Matter formed with this righteousnesse and it is to be observed that this subject or matter formed with this righteousnesse is twofold either the subject or matter inherently legally and actively formed with this righteousnesse or the subject and matter Evangelically and freely formed and made righteous with this righteousnesse First the subject or matter inherently legally and actively formed with this form of perfect righteousness is the manhood of Christ ●esus because it is Christ only who comming not to destroy but to fulfill the Law Mat. 5. 18. was to this end conceived of the Mat. 5 18. holy Ghost and being formed perfectly righteous in his mothers wombe was thus borne inherently and perfectly righteous and in the residue of his whole life afterwards fulfilled the whole Law actually workingly and perfectly for which cause the Apostle saith that he was made under the Law Gal. 4. 8. because hee Gal. 4. 8. actually fulfilled both actively and passively the whole Law for which cause also he is inherently and actively called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That holy and just one Acts 3. 14. and Acts. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 19. the Lamb without spot or blemish 1 Pet. 1. 19. But secondly concerning the subject or matter Evangelically and freely made righteous Two thing doe here offer themselves to bee marked of us first who they bee that are thus Evangelically and freely made Two things to be marked all light and perfectly righteous and secondly the manner how they are thus Evangelically and freely formed and made all light and perfectly righteous in the sight of God Concerning the first we are to observe that none 1 The Elect called are made thus righteous are made thus perfectly holy and righteous but such of the Elect as are effectually called because although all the
only are meer patients suffering another ab extra even God to work all in us as may be further cleered in the manner Two similitudes how by two fit similitudes lively representations as First take a drinking glasse that is blue or red and put water or drink into the same and in some glasses I my selfe have seen that the drink or water in the same looseth to the present view it s own colour and becomes as blue or red as the glasse it selfe and yet not inherently and actively for the bluenesse or rednesse is inherently agently operatively and actively only in the glasse but yet whilst it doth abide in the glasse it becomes communicatively and passively as blue or red as the glasse it selfe but what is the reason hereof because as I my selfe have observed the glasse doth conveigh by the force of the light certain beames of its own colour into the drink and so makes it to lose its own colour and to be of the same colour that the glasse is of Where it is pretty to observe that the liquor in the glasse hath lost its colour and hath not lost it First the liquor hath not lost it inherently and to it selfe because if it be put out of the glasse it is found only in its own colour But yet hath lost its own colour in two respects first in respect of the glasse which it is in that hath by conveighing her beams into it made it own colour and secondly to the view of the beholder it is truly abolished and gone and nothing remaines but the colour of the glasse Now although the truth represented by this similitude passeth the representation as farre as a substance passeth the shadow yet it is sufficient for a shadow and is a notable representation of the truth because that Gods powerfull imputation after a more reall mighty and effectuall manner doth the same in truth that is but resembled in this shadow and faith that went so far as to say wash thou me and I shall bee whiter than snow goes higher than any similitudes can reach unto and seeth the soule being cloathed with Christs righteousnesse to be although not inherently yet lesse imaginarily and colourably but truly and reipsa in very deed made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God so effectually that the very power thereof begins inherently to change the heart by sanctification also to the eyes of men more and more whereas wee see that the bluenesse or rednesse of the glasse worketh no inherent change upon or in the drink but because faith reasoneth and concludes from the power of God thus That if so poore and silly a creature as a piece of glasse be able by the force of the light to cast her beames into it and to make the liquor to lose to the view and sight of men her own colour and to look whilst it is in the glasse of the same colour that the glasse is of were it not impiety and flat blasphemie not to grant that Christ can much more being true and Almighty God translating me out of Adam to bee a member in himselfe by cloathing me both within and without with his own righteousnesse conveigh much more by the power and force of his spirit his own righteousnesse to bee thought not inherently and actively yet objectively and passively in us so by this means abolish all our sinnes from before God and make us only perfectly holy righteous in the sight of God freely herein consisting the Analogie of the truth with the similitude that Christ by reason of his Godhead and power of his spirit doth that in truth above our reason sense and feeling which the red glasse doth only in shew that is make us in truth perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely not imaginarily colourably as the Papists fondly cavill but really truly and reipsa in very deed like the working of an Almighty Creator this faith I say shall finde by the very fruits of sanctification flowing from the same that he is not made only colourably righteous but that he is verè reipsa truly and in very deed with Christs righteousnesse made perfectly holy righteous in the sight of God freely Hence for the lively representation of this truth do so many Divines both learned and judicious so much use this similitude saying thus As he that beholdeth any thing through a red glasse doth take it to bee red as is the colour of the glasse so God the Father beholding us in his Sonne doth take us to bee of the same nature and quality that he is that is perfectly righteous for which cause he saith to his Spouse in the Canticles though she felt and complained that shee was black and full of infirmities to her sense and feeling and own inherent active righteousnesse yet saith Christ that knowes better what in this respect he hath wrought upon her than shee her selfe Behold thou art faire my love behold thou art all faire and there is no spot in thee And for this cause it is that he loveth us and sets his heart upon us and will not bee removed from us c. Which is not for the shadow but for the true substance of his own righteousnesse though not inherently to our sense and feeling and actively yet by Gods imputation objectively and passively conveighed into us so utterly abolishing our sins from before God and making us not imagina●ly but truly and reipsa in very deed perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of ●od freely A second similitude illustrating this truth yet The second similitude more fully is this Let an house or shop be made towards the East and let the Sun beat upon the same all day long yet whilst the windowes and doores are fast shut up the house still remaines dark and unprofitable because the walls being corpora opaca dark bodies can cast forth nothing but darknesse but let the windowes and doors be opened then doe the Sun-beames beat in and dispell all the darknesse that was there before and the house is made all light and profitable to the use of man But yet it is not inherently and actively light as the Papists conceit of their manner of Justification for if that light did come actively out of the walls then the house would not at the least immediately be beholding to the Sun without it in the Firmament but the house would be inherently and actively light immediately enlightning its own selfe but in that it is enlightned by the Sun-beames the house is all light in deed yet no Agent and Doer in making its selfe light but is altogether passively and objectively light so is it in the case of our Justification and being a similitude much used by the holy Ghost it passeth all other humane similitudes by running contrary to the old proverb quatuor pedibus for First mans soule and body is like this house or shop of Gods wonders
Antagonists doe evidently prove both by Scripture and by the common consent of the ancient Fathers as Chrysostome Augustin and others That as Christ was truly made an Host or Sacrifice for sin which is the effect of sinne so the cause thereof went before which was because by the power of Gods imputation Christ so truly took our sinnes upon him and was so really in the sight of God cloathed in the same that although not inherently and actively How Christ was made a sinn●r for so he was alwayes and ever the Lamb of God without spot or wrinkle but yet really he was made a true sinner and so God having made him by his imputation really a sinner in his sight did count him a sinner and did rend and teare him upon the Crosse and dealt with him in wrath as if he had committed our sinne himselfe and dyed with bearing our sinne in his own body upon the Crosse as Peter saith 1 Pet. 2. 1 Pet. 2. 24. 24. And yet notwithstanding to avouch our Saviour Christ to bee so a sinner is not as the Papists collect and cavill to say that hee was averted from God the slave of the Devill and Sonne of Perdition because these are consequents only of inherent corruption and sin whereof Christ was inherently utterly free but as hee passively was made a sinner and passively tasted of these things as the Author to the Hebrews speaketh and as he truly cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Whereupon that saying of the ancient Dispensor of Gods mysteries Oecumenius is true saying thus Christus vehementer peccator erat c. that is Christ was greatly a sinner as who did take upon him the sinnes of the whole world and make them proper to himselfe and so was truly made a sinner for that Christ was a sinner saith he heare the Apostle saying Hee made him sinne for us Which words of the Apostle Luther hearing with the right eare overthrowing the whole world of sophisticall Papists by proving that in plaine places of the Scripture speaking in the maine points of our salvation the plaine proper and grammaticall words of the Scripture are the true proper sense of the Scripture saith upon these words thus These words of Paul are not spoken in vaine That God made him sinne for us which knew no sinne that wee in him might be made the righteousnesse of God 2 Cor. 5. 21. And again that place of Esay 53. saying God layed upon him the iniquity of us Esay 53. all we must not make these words lesse than they are but leave them in their own proper signification For God dallieth not in these words but speaketh earnestly and of great love to wit that Christ this Lamb of God should beare the sinne of us all But what is it saith he to beare the Sophisters answer to be punished very well But wherefore is Christ punished Is it not because hee hath sinne and beareth sinne Yes hee hath and beareth all the sinnes of all men in his body not that hee himselfe committed them but for that hee received them being committed or done of us and layed them upon his own body thus was he made a sinner for us and hereupon became as the Apostle saith a curse for us But some saith hee will say It is very absurde and Object slanderous to call the Sonne of God a cursed sinner I answer if thou wilt deny him to be a sinner and to bee Answ accursed deny also that hee was crucified and dyed for it is no lesse absurde to say that the Sonne of God as our faith confesseth and believeth was crucified and suffered the paines of sinne and death than to say that he is a sinner and accursed But if it be not absurde to confesse and beleeve that Christ was crucified between two Theeves then it is not absured to say also that hee was accursed and of all sinners the greatest and why Because saith he we must as well wrap Christ and know him to be wrapped in our sinne in our malediction in our death and in all our evills as hee is wrapped in our flesh and in our blood For unlesse saith he further hee had taken upon himselfe my sinnes and thine and the sinnes of the whole world the Law had no right over him which condemneth none but sinners only and holdeth them under the curse Thus mighty is Gods imputation of our sin upon his Sonne Christ and as Christ by the power of Gods imputation though not inherently and actively yet objectively and passively was made in the sight of God really a sinner and cursed so on the other side are we by the power of Gods imputation of his Sonnes righteousnesse made though not inherently and actively yet objectively and passively really righteous and blessed as Chrysostome testifieth saying Hee made the just a sinner that he might make sinners just that is perfectly righteous in the sight of God freely THe fourth place of Scripture proving that wee Scrip. 4. Heb. 10. 14. Proving that we are not only co●nted but truly made righteous are not barely counted but truly made righteous in the sight of God is Heb. 10. 14. Where the Apostle saith that Christ with one offering hath made perfect for ever them that are sanctified that is such as are put apart unto salvation and declare the same by sanctification although their sanctification bee very unperfect yet by Justification God doth not imaginarily count them righteous but perfectos reddidit hath made them in the sight of God perfectly righteous continually and forever where we see that we must not with the Papists draw Gods imputing of his Sonnes righteousnesse unto us to an humane imaginarily counting righteous but reduce our imaginary counting to be an Almighty a reall making us righteous yea and perfectly righteous in the sight of God And therefore very aptly upon this place doth the Doctrine of our Church in the third part of the Sermon concerning prayer doctrine of our Church and the first Restorers of the Gospel amongst us say in the third part of the Sermon concerning prayer speaking against praying for souls in Purgatory after this manner The death and blood of Christ if we apprehend it with a true and stedfast faith purgeth us and cleanseth us from all our sinnes in the sight of God For saith Saint Iohn The blood of Iesus Christ hath clensed us from all sinne Also Paul saith We be sanctified and made holy mark how he saith not counted holy but made holy by the offering up of the body of Iesus done once for all Because as the said Doctrine of our Church saith in another place If we confesse our sinnes God is faithfull and righteous to forgive us our sinnes and to make us clean from all sinne and not only made holy but also Paul addeth more saying With the one oblation of his blessed body and precious blood he hath made perfect for ever and
of God conveyed by the faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all that doe beleeve whereby God doth more fully declare at this time the perfection of his iustice and righteousnesse that he is iust and a maker of him iust and perfectly righteous that beleeveth in Iesus Again this is yet more fully expressed by the Author to the Hebrews ch 10. where citing the Prophesie of Ieremy that under Heb 10. 17. the time of the Gospel God will so forgive the iniquity of his people that hee will remember their sinnes no more he shewes that this is the meaning of this perfect forgivenesse That by one offering Christ hath made perfect for ever all them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. Heb. 10. 14. Such a wonderfull and glorious thing is Gods forgivenesse And because the blessednesse of the Church and of the children of God and the assurance of their salvation doth consist in the forgivenesse of their sins therefore doth the Apostle in this first alledged place of the Epistle to the Ephesians so gloriously describe both by the causes by the nature and by the effects this forgiveness and remission of sins saying Christ gave himselfe The cause the nature and the effects of our forgivenesse described for his Church there is the cause of forgivenesse to sanctifie it and hath made it cleane by washing of water through the word there is the nature of Gods forgivenesse with the meanes and instruments of convaying the same then followes the force operation and efficacie of this forgivenesse to make it to himselfe a glorious Church not having at this present time one spot or wrinkle of sin or any such thing but to be holy and without blame All which declares what a powerfull operative Gods forgivenesse is powerfull and glorious wonderfull and glorious work Gods forgivenesse is and how short wee Ministers come of laying forth as the Apostle doth the excellency of Gods remission and forgivenesse of sinnes being both perfect and glorious in its owne nature and also making the true beleevers perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely As it is notably expressed in Erasmus his Paraphrase upon the same Erasmus his Paraphrase upon Ephes 5. 26 27. place worthy for the evident cleering and concluding of this point to be repeated againe and againe saying thus That this might be brought to passe Christ gave himselfe unto death to make clean his Church and so of a defiled one he hath made her pure and holy and whereas she was uncleane and foule hee hath made her faire and beautifull having washed her clean in the streame of his own blood and hath made her to himselfe a glorious wife even the Congregation not having now one spot or wrinkle nor any such thing but be in every point mark in every point both faire and faultlesse for he hath cleansed her adorned her and made her perfectly trimme mark again perfectly trimme in every point THe second proofe of Scripture evidently proving The second place of Scripture proving that we are being justified fully righteous in Gods sight ●● Colos 1. 22. that Justification makes the true Beleever perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely is Colos 1. 22. where the Apostle saith unto the called and justified Colossians after this manner And you which were in times past strangers Is that all nay and enimies to God Why because your minds were set on evill works hath he now reconciled that is he hath set you in his perfect love againe this is an happy change and alteration but how and by what meanes is this brought to passe In that body of his flesh through death to make you holy and unblameable and without fault and as our new Translation saith well unreproveable in his sight In which saying is expressed such perfect making of us holy and righteous in the sight of God That if all the children of God being troubled in their consciences for the horribleness vileness of their sin should lay their heads together to sue at Gods hand for a perfect abolishing of all their sins out of Gods sight and for a perfect making of them compleatly righteous in the sight of God they could not invent a more full and perfect happinesse than is here granted them for can the heart of man wish more than to be so holy as to bee without all blame and without all fault and unreproveable as the originall Greeke words import And that also as Zanchius well observeth non simpliciter sed in Zanchius Colos 1. 22. conspectu suo that is not simply and barely but in the sight of God whose eyes as it is in Rev. 1. in Rev. 1. 14. are Rev. 1. 14. as a flame of fire that is with unresistable purity searching the heart and reines Must not the Ecphonesis or Chrysostome upon Ephes 5. 26 27. acclamation of Chrysostome upon this place needs be true saying Et sanèmagnum est c. Surely it is a great matter that he hath given us a righteousnesse that makes us so perfectly righteous as to be able to stand in his sight Whereupon the collection of Zanchius Zanchius upon the place upon this place must needs be true also saying Haec non potest esse justitia operum sanctitas in nobis inchoata c. that is This cannot be the righteousnesse of works and inherent holinesse begun in us why because saith he that is unperfect and of which David speaketh saying Enter not into judgement with thy servant O Lord for in thy sight shall none living be found righteous Onely Christs holinesse and righteousnesse is perfect in the sight of God This therefore being imputed unto us is the formall cause of our salvation qua fit ut in conspectu Dei simus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is by which it is brought to passe that Zanch. ibid. we mark how he saith not Christ for us but we are without all blame and without all fault and unreproveable in the sight of God Of which most happy and joyfull estate the learned in the Gospel doe give two Two reasons of our happy estate are from the cause and from the effects of it principall reasons the one taken from the cause of his happy condition the other from the effect of the same First the cause why we are so perfectly holy and righteous that we are unblameable and without fault in the sight of God is because we being though mystically yet truly cloathed both with in and without with the wedding garment of Christs righteousnesse have though not inherently and actively yet Evangelically and passively more than an Angelicall righteousnesse in us as Calvin testifies upon Iob. 15. 15 16. saying All our filthinesse being washed away Calvin upon Iob 15. 15 16. with the blood of Gods Sonne and his righteousnesse imputed unto us being thus cloathed with
Prophet Malac. 3. 17. I will spare them as a man spareth his sonne M●l 3. 17. that serveth him not as the Papists conceive for their sanctification sake and goodnesse of their works nor yet sparing them as other semi-Papists childishly conceive for their good will and good endeavours because they doe like a childe the best that they can and because their imperfections be but infirmities nor that hee will as he hath now more fully revealed in the Gospel accept of the imperfect works of his children whilst they are imperfect seeing he hath now revealed by his sonnes death what an horrible thing the least imperfection is in his sight that they are so loathsome as a menstruous cloth in his sight causing him to take his full stroak at them in his sonnes blood to wash away and abolish the imperfections of them out of his sight but because in new tincture of his Sons blood and righteousnesse hee hath made them perfectly holy and righteous in his own sight freely therefore hee likes and accepts them For that Justification makes not only our persons but also our works perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God is not only evident by the former Scriptures but also testified by all the best faithfull Dispensers of Gods mysteries who say with one consent after this manner Postquam facti sumus Christi participes non ipsi solum justi sumus sed opera nostra justa reputantur coram Deo that is after that we are made partakers of Christ not only we our selves are righteous but also our works are reputed and counted righteous before God what not righteous indeed but only imaginarily reputed and counted righteous Nay but because Gods counting is not a bare imaginary thing but a reall working of the thing as he reputeth and counteth therefore as wee our selves are so reputed and counted righteous that coram Deo reipsa justi sumus wee our selves are in truth just that is perfectly righteous before God so also God so counts our works perfectly righteous before himselfe that they are reipsa in very deed and truth perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely that is not in the worth and perfection of our doing them by sanctification but in the making of them perfectly righteous in Christs righteousnesse by Justification But what is the reason that our works that as they Quest proceed from us are so full of spots and staines are made so perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God The learned answer thus Propterea scilicet quia quicquid Answ est in illis imperfection is obliteratur Christi sanguine that is Therefore verily because whatsoever imperfection All the imperfection of our works is done away by the blood of Christ is in them is done away and abolished by the blood and righteousnesse of Christ And by this meanes only doe our works please God and for this cause only all the large promises made in Gods Word unto our works are truly verified and fulfilled upon us meerly because wee doing them in comfort faith and thankfulnesse that we are justified all our works are thereby justified as well as we and made so perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God that they fully please God and pull down all blessings and benefits whatsoever both spirituall and temporall freely upon us only for and by Free Iustification thus perfectly blessing both us and our works As it is cleerly testified by the foresaid learned Dispensors of Gods mysteries saying thus Qui enim jam Christi Iustitiâ sunt induti ii non sibi modo propitium habent Dominum sed operibus quoque suis c. That is for they that are cloathed with Christs righteousness have God pleased and favourable not to themselves only but also to their works the spots and staines whereof lest they should come in any reckoning are abolished with Christs purity unde nullis sordibus infecta opera justa reputantur that is from whence our works are counted righteous seeing they are tainted with no spots of uncleannesse and foulnesse and by this meanes and not otherwise doe mens works please God This learned Calvin also prosecuteth in the 7. 8 9 ●●d 10. Sections of the 17. Chapter of the third book Calv. in the 7. 8. 9. 10. Sections of the 17. Cap of the third Book of his Institutions of his Institutions with cleer demonstrations saying thus when the blot and fault of imperfection is abolished which is of force to defile our good works the good works which the faithfull doe both are and bee taken for righteousnesse yea after this manner for a full and perfect righteousnesse And thus wee may saith he truly say that by only faith not only wee but also our works are justified that is as I have proved before made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely and so truly pleasing God Holy faith justifies our works And this the holy Ghost in the example of the sacrifice of Abel doth plainly and expresly teach Heb. 11. 4 saying By faith Able offered unto God a more excellent Heb. 11. 4● sacrifice than Cain by which he obtained witnesse that he was righteous where wee see that not only Abel himselfe was just and righteous that is excellent but his gifts were excellent and that also excellent to God-ward God himselfe as the Text saith testifying of his gifts that they were excellent which Title they could not have with God except they were in truth perfectly holy and righteous in his sight not for the perfection of Abels doing them but freely because as also it is said of Noah hee was made heire of that righteousnesse which is by faith verse 7. This is the righteousnesse of Christ which is so mighty in operation that by it God not only as Calvin speaketh pretioso justitiae suae colore nos tingit that is with the precious tincture of his own righteousnesse doth be-die us our own selves but also with the same precious tincture doth be-die all our good works and wholelife and conversation making not only us our selves but also all our works perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely and yet not by these works made with this tincture perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God to deserve heaven as the Papists fondly conceit because a Christian hath heaven freely by the Free Justification of his person before hee hath moved himselfe to doe any good work because hee is as Christ testifieth translated from death into life by beleeving only Ioh. 5. 24. But the works of the Beleever Iohn 5. 24. are with this tincture and die made thus perfectly The works of the Beleevers are made perfect that they may be a sacrifice of thanksgiving to God holy and righteous in the sight of God freely that they may thus be a welcome and acceptable sacrifice of prayse and thansgiving before God
that Justification makes us so sufficiently and perfectly righteous in the sight of God seeing David calls it hereupon a great and plentifull Redemption Psal 130. 7. And Paul calls Free Justification Psal 130. 7. The receiving of the abundance of Grace and of the gift of righteousnesse Rom. 5. 17. raigning in righteousnesse Rom. 5. 17. unto eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord verse 21. And although it is true that the children Verse 21. of God may bee called Saints to menward for their sanctification yet the true cause that makes them Iustification maketh Saints to God●ard Saints in the sight of God is Justification because by it alone they are made thus sufficiently and perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely by the blood of Christ only as the Apostle to the Hebrewes plainly testifieth saying Wherefore Iesus that he might sanctifie the people that is make them Saints that is perfectly holy and righteous with his own blood suffered without the Gate Then let us not give this precious name of Saints principally to our own holy walking by sanctification but to the blood of Christ in our Justification because sanctification is so farre from being the cause of making us Saints to Godward that properly it doth but declare that we are Saints to manward wherein men are much and often deceived taking them for Saints which are no Saints But the right rule is that which Luther giveth saying thus When I was a Monk I did oftentimes most heartily Luther in Gal. 5. 18. wish That I might once be so happy as to see the conversation and life of some Saint or holy man But in the meane Luther deceived in his opinion of Saints time I imagined such a Saint as lived in the wilderness abstaining from meat drink and living only with rootes of hearbs and cold water which laboured to attaine such perfection that they might be without all feeling of temptations and sins and this opinion of these monstrous Saints I had learned not only out of the books of the Sophisters Schoolmen but also out of the books of the Fathers as Hieron and such like But now in the light of the Gospel we plainly see who they are whom Christ and his Apostles call Saints not they which live a sole and a single life or in outward appearance do other great and monstrous works or such only as are canonized in the Popes Kalendar for Saints in heaven But they which being called by the sound of the Gospel and Baptized doe believe that they be justified and clensed by the death of Christ So Paul every where writing to the Christians calleth them Saints holy the children and heirs of God and such like Whosoever therefore saith he doe beleeve in Christ whether they bee men or women Al● bel●evers are Saints bond or free are all Saints not by their own works but by the works of God which they receive by faith To conclude saith he they are Saints through such an holinesse as they freely receive not through such an holinesse as they themselves have gotten by their own industry and good works Where we see that he ascribeth all the cause of being Saints unto their Justification although he shewes afterwards That sanctification unseperably follows Justification and declares the same For thus he saith further So Ministers of the Word the Magistrates of Common-Weales Parents Children Masters Servants all are true Saints if first and before all things they assure themselves that Christ is their wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Secondly if every one doe his duty in his vocation according to the rule of Gods Word and obey not the flesh but represse the lusts and desires thereof by the Spirit in some measure though not all in like measure And against the corrupters of this order and doctrine hee pronounceth an Anathema thus And let him bee holden accursed whosoever shall not give this honor unto Christ to beleeve that by his death and word he is Iustified and sanctified and so made a Saint for can we rejoyce in this precious name with greater glory to Christ than to ascribe it to the blood and righteousnesse of Christ and with greater assure●nesse and fulnesse to our own selves than to that meanes by which we are made complete and perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely Nay if we will rejoyce in that which God speaketh he gives us in this glory of Free Justification yet greater matter of rejoycing not being content in this happy state of his own righteousnesse to call us Saints holy ones and the righteous every where in his word but also being translated by this benefit God calleth the justified by the name of righteousnesse it selfe into Christ hee calls us in a wonderfull vehemencie of our excellent perfection even Righteousnesse it selfe and not simply righteousnesse it selfe but the righteousnesse of God as the Apostle testifieth 2 Cor. 5. 21. saying Hee that knew 2 Cor 5. 21. no sinne was made sinne for us but wherefore or to what end and purpose That we being translated into him might bee made The righteousnesse of God Where we see that the Apostle is not content to say that we are made righteous no nor prefectly righteous but by a vehement speech that which is farre more even the righteousnesse of God being a figurative speech when wee are not content to use the Concrete but to expresse the excellent perfection of a thing we use the Abstract as to say hee is not only patient but very patience it selfe or not only very meek but even meeknesse it selfe so saith the Apostle that wee are made even the righteousnesse of God the Chrysost in 2. Cor. 5. 21. excellency of which speech Chrysostome perceiving bursteth forth with this just admiration saying Qualis sermo quaemens ista commendare poterit that is what a saying is this what understanding can sufficiently commend set it forth For saith he he hath made the righteous one a sinner that he might make sinners righteous Nay he saith not so neither but that which is far more for he is not content to name the qualifying but as it were the very substance it self for he saith not he was made a sinner but sin and hee saith not that we might be made righteous but Righteousnesse it selfe yea and the Righteousnesse of God for it is of God shewing that it hath no spot or stain in it from whence all sinne vanisheth away as also that God wholy performes it thereby declaring the magnificence of the gift What can be spoken more excellently of this passing excellent new creation for further proofe whereof hence wee may see the cause why God having justified Abraham he is not content to call him righteous but even righteousnesse it selfe saying Esay 41. 2. Who raised up Iustice or righteousnesse Esay 41. 2. from the East and
c. Gal. 5. 22. This is the voyce of the Bridegroome and of the Bride that is to say sweet cogitations of Christ wholsome exhortations pleasant Songs and Psalmes praises and thanksgiving whereby the godly doe instruct stirre up and refresh themselves Therefore God loveth not heavinesse and dulnesse Heavinesse must be abandoned and why of spirit he hateth uncomsorrable doctrine heavie and sorrowfull cogitations and loveth cheerfull hearts for therefore hath he sent his Sonne not to oppresse us with heavinesse and sorrow but to cheere up our soules in him Mark what great joy all the Prophets doe prophesie of and even extort at our hands for the first comming of Christ so do the Psalms so doth Christ and so doe his Apostles not only exhorting us but even commanding us to rejoyce Rejoyce thou Daughter of Zion bee joyfull thou Daughter of Ierusalem ●ach 5. for behold thy King commeth to thee Againe for the fruits of his comming Rejoyce yee heavens for the Esay 44. 12 23. Lord hath done it Shout yee lower parts of the earth burst forth into prayses yee mountaines why what is done and wherefore must there be such great joy For I have put away thy sinnes as darkness and thy transgressions as a mist And thus hath the Lord redeemed Iacob and will be glorified in Israel And albeit wee Luth. Se●m in Phil. 4. 4. fall sometimes into sinnes which by nature bring sadnesse and sorrow with them yet forasmuch as they cannot bring so much hurt as Christ if we believe in him bringeth power of abolishing them with profit and safety Joy in the Lord ought alwayes to have the first place with us and farre to overcome the sorrow and sadnesse that commeth by reason of our sinnes Hence doth the truly faithfull soule the Bride of Christ burst forth into this extasie saying I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord and my soule shall bee joyfull in my God Why Because hee hath cloathed me with the garments of Salvation What garments are those He hath covered me with the Robes of righteousness he hath decked Esay 61. 10. me as a Bride tireth her selfe with her Iewells Esay 61. 10. And hereupon saith Luther Beholdhow for this knowledge Luth. in Gal. 3. 13. and benefit of Christ to come the Saints of the Old Testament rejoyced more than we now doe when he is so comfortably revealed and exhibited unto us Indeed we do acknowledge that this benefit of Christ the righteousnesse of faith is an inestimable Treasure But wee conceive not thereby such a full joy of spirit as the Prophets and Apostles did Hereof it commeth that They especially Paul doe so plentifully set forth and so diligently teach the Articles of Justification for this is the proper office of an Apostle and of a Minister of the Gospel to set forth the glory and benefits The proper office of a Minister of the Gospel of Christ to the working of this joy and therefore doth S. Paul define a Minister to be but an help to the peoples joy 2 Cor. 1. 24. When such a rejoycing 2 Cor 1. 24. faith possesseth the heart and the Gospel is so received indeed then God appeareth sweet and altogether loving neither feeleth the heart any thing but the favour and grace of God it standeth with a bold and strong confidence Luth. serm in Phil. 4. 4. it feareth not least any evill come unto it it being quiet from all feare of displeasure is merry and glad of so incomparable grace and goodnesse of God given unto it freely and most abundantly in Christ Wherfore there must needs forthwith proceed from such a faith love joy peace gladnesse giving of thanks praise and a certaine marvellous delight in God as in a most deare and favourable Father which dealeth so fatherly with us and poureth forth his gifts so plentifully and in so great measure upon them also which doe not deserve them Behold of such joy Paul speaketh here which ●ruly where it is there can be no place for sin or feare of death or hell yea nothing is there but a joyfull quiet and omnipotent trust in God and in his favour wherefore it is called joy not in gold silver delights singing health knowledge wisedome power glory friendship favour no nor in works holinesse and such like but joy in the Lord wherefore Paul speaketh saying Rejoyce in the Lord alway and againe I say rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. And Peter Phil. 4. 4. testifieth that the faithfull by beleeving did rejoyce 1 Pet. 1. 8. with joy unspeakable and glorious For in this righteousnesse wherein I am made passively righteous I Luthers argument in Galat. have no sin no feare no sting of conscience no care of death for where Christ is truly seene indeed there must needs be full and perfect joy in the Lord. Wherefore if any man feele himselfe oppressed with Luther in Gal. 2. 20. heavinesse and anguish of heart he must not impute it unto Christ although it come under the name of Christ but unto the Devill who oftentimes commeth under the colour of Christ and transformeth himselfe into an Angel of light for if there be any feare or any griefe of conscience it is a token that this passive The cause of feare and sadnesse of heart righteousnesse wherewith I am freely made perfectly holy and righteous is withdrawne that grace is hidden and Christ is darkned out of sight wherefore we must Luther in serm of the lost sheep in Gal. 4. 7. fight against sadnesse and heavinesse of spirit caused by the law and give no place to the Devill who would by the law break up the bride-chamber of Christ and thrust himselfe into his place that is take away from the conscience her joy and comfort whereby he may not bee able cheerfully to lift up his heart and head before God ever remembring that the Kingdome of heaven into which we by our effectuall calling are translated as the Bride of Christ into his bride-chamber is righteousnesse and peace and joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. Rom. 14. 17. Fourth Effect Good judgement right discerning of all spirits The fourth effect or fruit declaring the utility of Free Iustification is that it worketh a good judgement and right discerning of all Religions works and worships to the utter overthrowing of all Superstitions Sects and Schismes and doth reduce people from their contentious and dangerous by-paths and doth rectifie their blinde legall zeales mentioned Rom. 10. 3. Rom. 10. 3. declining to sundry Sects and contentious opinions and brings them to the pure and sincere worship of God in spirit and truth that is in one faith only and one Baptisme Ephes 4. 2. to 6. unto which they Ephes 4. 2. to 6. cannot be wonne but by understanding the excellency of Free Iustification and how compleat they are made by it alone before God Colos 2. 10. but will be carried Colos 2. 10. away