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A20752 The Christian warfare wherein is first generally shewed the malice, power and politike stratagems of the spirituall ennemies of our saluation, Sathan and his assistants the world and the flesh, with the meanes also whereby the Christian may vvithstand and defeate them : and afterwards more speciallie their particvlar temptatiions, against the seuerall causes and meanes of our saluation, whereby on the one side they allure vs to security and presumption, and on the other side, draw vs to doubting and desperation, are expressed and answered : written especially for their sakes who are exercised in the spirituall conflict of temptations, and are afflicted in conscience in the sight and sense of their sinnes / by I. Dovvname ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1604 (1604) STC 7133; ESTC S1536 575,484 731

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his iustification So Rom. 4.2 Rom. 4.2 If Abraham were iustified by works he had wherein to reioyce but not with God and ver 3. and ver 3.4 Abraham beleeued God and it was counted vnto him for righteousnesse 4. Now to him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauour but by debt 5. But to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse § Sect. 6 And so much cōcerning the testimonies of scripture which manifestly proue that we are not iustified by our works Reasons to proue that w● are not iustified by our workes Rom. 8.1.33 34. The reasons which may be brought to the same purpose are exceeding many but I wil briefly touch some few only First iustification is manifestly opposed to cōdemnation they are both iudiciall words vsed in ciuill courts therefore to be vnderstood both iudicially not after a diuers maner But to condēne signifieth not to infuse any fault or crime in to the person cōdēned but to pronoūce him guiltie faulty And therfore to iustifie signifieth not to infuse righteousnes into the person iustified but to declare pronoūce repute him as iust righteous Secondly by the same meanes whereby we obtaine the remission of our sins we are also iustified made righteous but wee obtaine the remission of our sinnes not for our workes or inhaerent righteousnes or any vertue that is in our selues but by and for the alone merites obedience and full satisfaction of Christ apprehended and applyed vnto vs by a liuely faith as appeareth Rom. 3.25 And therefore by this meanes alone we are also iustified Rom. 3.25 Thirdly whosoeuer are iustified freely by grace they are not iustified by their owne merits works or inhaerent righteousnesse Rō 3.23.24 but the scriptures testifie that all the faithfull are iustified freely by Gods grace as appeareth Rom. 3.23.24 All haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God Eph. 1.7 2.8 And are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus So Eph. 1.7 By whom we haue redemptiō through his bloud euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace Tit. 3.5.7 and 2.8 By grace are you saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God and Tit. 3. not by the works of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercy he saued vs c. 7. That we being iustified by his grace should be made heires according to hope of eternall life And therefore none are iustified by their owne merits workes or inhaerent righteousnesse Lastly the apostle Paul himselfe gathereth many absurdities which would follow this doctrine of iustificatiō by works first that our faith should bee vaine and the promisse of God voide Rom. 4.14 Rom. 4.14 Secondly that Christ Iesus should die in vaine if we haue righteousnesse by the law Gal. 2.21 Gal. 2.21 Thirdly that wee should haue cause of boasting and glorying in our selues Eph. 2.9 Eph. 2.9 for if a man were iustified by his owne inhaerent righteousnesse hee should haue whereof to glory and so God should be robbed of the whole praise of our saluation Rom. 4.2 Rom. 4.2 But the Lord of purpose hath iustified vs freely of his grace and not for our workes and inha rent righteousnes that all glorying in our selues might be excluded as appeareth Rom. 3.27 Eph 2.9 Rom. 3.27 Eph. 2.9 Fourthly it would follow hereupon that we should still be vnder the curse of the law which is denoūced against all who continue not in all that is written in the booke of the law to do them as the Apostle reasoneth Gal. 3.10 Gal. 3.10 Fiftly that the obedience and satisfaction of Christ should be maymed and imperfect vnlesse it were patched vp with our owne righteousnesse the contrary whereof the Apostle affirmeth Heb. 7.25 namely that hee is able perfectly to saue all them who come vnto God by him Lastly Heb. 7.25 hereupon it would follow that wee should continually wauer in doubting in respect of our manifold corruptions and imperfect righteousnesse and should haue our soules depriued of that peace of conscience which followeth iustification by faith as it is Rom. 5.1 Rom. 5.1 Lastly with the Iewes we shall bring our selues into most certaine daūger of being reiected and cast of from being the people and Church of God if with them we goe about to stablish our owne righteousnesse in the meane time not submitting our selues to the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10.4.6 which is of faith in Iesus Christ as it is Rom. 10.4.6 CHAP. L. That faith alone iustifieth § Sect. 1 ANd thus much concerning the first point How it is to be vnderstood that faith alone iustifieth namely that wee are nor iustified by workes the second is that we are iustified by faith alone whereby we are not to vnderstand that faith by it owne vertue or as it is a facultie habite worke or action in vs doth iustifie vs but as it is the alone instrument whereby we doe apprehend apply vnto vs Christ Iesus his righteousnesse obedience by which onely righteousnesse which is out of our selues in Christ as the proper subiect thereof being offered in the word and Sacraments and applied by faith we are iustified in Gods sight Phil. 2.9 as appeareth Phil. 2.9 Secondly whereas we say that faith alone iustifieth we do not vnderstand such a faith as is alone without workes charitie and other sanctifying graces which were nothing els but imaginarie dead and but as it were a carkase of faith which breatheth not but that amongst all other graces vertues faculties of the soule faith alone and not any of thē is the instrument whereby we apply Christ Iesus vnto vs who being thus applied doth iustifie vs. That though workes do not iustifie vs yet they are necessarily required as fruits of our iustification Otherwise we affirme that other graces of Gods spirit and euen good workes which is a fruite of them all doe necessarily accōpany our iustification not as instruments or causes thereof but as inseparable effects and fruits thereof So that howsoeuer we exclude workes from the act of iustifying yet wee necessarily require them in the subiect or person iustified we affirme that faith alone iustifieth but wee denie that such a faith which is alone doth iustifie vs we maintaine that we are iustified by faith alone without works but with all we affirme that faith which is without workes doth not iustifie vs as being dead false and imaginarie This may bee made plaine by some similitudes to the being of an honest man there is necessarily required honest actions not as causes but as effects neither are his honest actions the cause of his honesty but his honesty the cause of his honest actions to a liuing man there is necessarily required as well breathing which is an action or effect
of life as the soule which is the cause thereof and so to a iustified man there is necessarily required as well good works which are the effects of iustification as faith which is the instrumentall cause thereof for faith and workes are neuer seuered in the subiect or party iustified although they are disioyned in the act of iustifying So the eye onely seeth and not the forehead but yet the eye seuered from the forehead seeth not because it is but a dead eye the hand writeth and not the body but the hand seuered from the body writeth not because it is a dead hand The foote goeth and not the head or heart but the foote which is seuered from the head or heart goeth not and so faith onely iustifieth and not hope not charitie not workes but the faith that is seuered from hope charitie and workes iustifieth not because it is but a dead faith as therefore when we say the eye onely seeth the hand onely writeth the foote onely walketh our meaning is not that these parts being alone and seuered from the rest see write and walke but that amongst all other parts the action or function of seeing belongeth peculiarly vnto the eye writing to the hand walking to the foote so when we say that onely faith iustifieth our meaning is not that the faith which is alone and seuered from other graces and the fruites of them good workes iustifieth but that amongst all other graces this act of iustifying peculiarly and properly belongeth vnto faith and not to any other grace vertue or workes § Sect. 2 Now that that faith alone in this sense vnderstoode iustifieth appeareth plainely Testimonies to proue that faith alone iustifieth vs. Rom. 3.28 both by testimonies of scripture and apparant reasons For the first it is manifest Rom. 3.28 where after long disputation concerning this poynt the Apostle expresly concludeth thus Therefore we conclude that a man is iustified by faith without the workes of the law And chap. 4. vers 5. To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnes and 4.5 So Gal. 2.16 Know that a man is not iustified by the workes of the law but by the faith of Iesus Christ Gal. 2.16 euen we I say haue beleeued in Iesus Christ that we might be iustified by the faith of Christ and not by the workes of the law because by the workes of the law no flesh shall be iustified And cap. 3.11 And that no man is iustified by the law in the sight of God it is euident Gal. 3.11 for the iust shall liue by faith 12. And the law is not of faith And hence it is that the righteousnes of Christ whereby we are iustified is called the righteousnes of faith Rom. 9.30 because faith is the onely instrument which appehendeth and applieth this righteousnesse vnto vs for our iustification § Sect. 3 The reasons to proue that faith alone iustifieth are diuers Reasons to proue that faith alone iustifieth First that which alone applieth vnto vs Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse that onely iustifieth vs but faith alone applyeth vnto vs Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse and not hope charitie or any other grace and therefore faith alone iustifieth Secondly that which onely maketh the promises of the Gospell firme and sure vnto vs that alone iustifieth vs but faith alone resting vpon Gods mercie and Christs merits maketh the promises of the Gospell firme and sure vnto vs which would be most vncertaine if they should depend on the condition of our workes and worthinesse seeing they are most imperfect and we most corrupt and vnworthie of Gods least mercie as the Apostle plainely sheweth Rom. 4.16 Therefore it is namely the couenant of grace by faith Rom. 4.16 that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure to all the seede and therefore faith alone iustifieth vs. Lastly Ioh. 3.14.15 our Sauiour Christ Ioh. 3.14.15 maketh this comparison As Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternall life From which we may thus reason As the Isralites who were stung with fierie serpents were cured not by any outward meanes of physicke and surgerie or any thing in themselues saue onely by looking vpon the brasen serpent which for this purpose was set vp by Gods commaundement so we being stung of the old serpent with the sting of sinne cannot be cured by any meanes without or within our selues but by beholding the true substance Christ Iesus signified by this shadow with the eye of faith And thus haue I proued first that we are not iustified by our workes and inherent righteousnesse and secondly that we are iustified by faith alone not as it is the chiefe and principall cause for in this respect God iustifieth not as it is the matter or meritorious cause of our iustification for in this respect the merits and righteousnesse of Iesus Christ iustifieth vs but as it is the alone instrument and onely cause in vs which applyeth that meritorious cause vnto vs whereby alone we are iustified in Gods sight § Sect. 4 Secondly the tempter will obiect that this imputed righteousnesse wee speake of is but imaginarie That the imputatiō of Christs righteousnesse is not putatiue and imaginarie and a vaine phantasie as if a man who were defiled with durt should be reputed cleane by the imputation of anothers cleanesse or as if a begger should be esteemed rich by imputation of anothers wealth To which we are to answere that the imputation of Christs righteousnesse vnto vs is no imaginarie dreame but a matter plainely expressed in Gods word as also the not imputation of our sinnes is therein specified In the fourth of the Romanes this word is vsed by the holy Ghost an eleuen times Rom. 4 3.4 So vers 3. Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse And vers 4. To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is imputed for righteousnesse And vers 6. Euen as Dauid declared the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes And vers 8. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne c. § Sect. 5 Yea will the tempter say That not our own but Christs righteousnesse is imputed vnto vs for our iustification it is true that we are iustified by imputed righteousnesse but not by the righteousnesse of Christ which is out of our selues but our faith which is formed and perfected with charitie and other graces and good workes is imputed for righteousnesse or more plainely God accepteth of the workes of the faithfull and their inherent righteousnesse though imperfect and vnworthie in themselues for and through Christ for such righteousnesse which may iustifie vs in his sight For the answering of which obiection we are to
alreadie plainely proued though we neuer haue any speciall reuelation And therefore without any such particular reuelation we may attaine vnto the certaine assurance that we are iustified in Gods sight Thirdly that which the Gospell assureth vs of we neede not to make any doubt thereof or once call it into question but the Gospell assureth vs that whosoeuer beleeueth in Christ Iesus and truely repent them of their sinnes shall be made partakers of all the gracious promises of life and saluation therein contained So Ioh. 3.16 Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life And chap. 5.24 Ioh. 5.24 Verely verely I say vnto you he that heareth my word and beleeueth him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life Matth. 11.28 And Matth. 11.28 Come vnto me all ye that labour and are laden and I will ease you And therefore whosoeuer beleeue in Iesus Christ approuing their faith to the world and their owne consciences to bee true and vnfained by the fruite thereof vnfained repentance he may assure himselfe of all the gratious promifes of the Gospell and consequently of the remission of his sinnes and his iustification for the merits and righteousnesse of Iesus Christ Lastly the Lord hath not onely after a generall manner propounded these promises vnto vs and left vs to our owne libertie to beleeue or not to beleeue them but hee hath bound vs to the performance of this dutie by his expresse commaundement Mark 1.15 1. Ioh. 3.23 Mark 1.15 Repent and beleeue the Gospell And 1. Ioh. 3.23 This is his commaundement that we beleeue in his sonne Iesus Christ that is that we doe not onely after a generall manner beleeue that he is the sauiour of mankinde but that we beleeue that he is our sauiour who hath redeemed iustified and wil most perfectly saue vs and rest wholy vpon him alone for our saluation And he that thus beleeueth needeth no other arguments to assure him that he is iustified and shall be saued for he hath the witnesse in himselfe euen the testimonie of Gods spirit crying in his heart Abba father and bearing witnesse vnto his spirit that he is the childe of God and not to beleeue this is to make God a lyer because wee will not beleeue the record that hee hath witnessed of that his sonne 1. Ioh. 5. 10. as the Apostle speaketh 1. Ioh. 5.10 Yea as before I haue shewed at large he hath added vnto the hand writing of his word which containeth also his oath for our better confirmation his sacraments whereby he particularly conuayeth and giueth vnto euery beleeuer as it were proper possession of Christ Iesus and all his benefits to the end that there should bee no place left to doubting nor any neede of any particular reuelation for our further assurance § Sect. 2 Secondly Sathan will suggest that those who are iustified are made iust That we are made iust not by infusion but by imputation of righteousnes and those who are made iust doe continually the workes of righteousnesse but thou will he say to the humbled sinner continuest still in thy corruptions and thy wickednesse cleaueth fast to thee and compasseth thee about and in stead of doing the workes of righteousnesse thou continually heapest vp the full measure of thy sinnes yea thy best actions are so stained with imperfections and so full of infirmities that they iustly prouoke Gods wrath against thee To which we must answere that indeede whosoeuer is iustified is made iust but not by infusion of inherent righteousnesse into our selues but by imputation of Christs most perfect righteousnesse as before I haue shewed for hereby our sinnes are pardoned he hauing taken them vpon himselfe and satisfied Gods iustice by suffering those punishments which wee had deserued and also he hath perfectly fulfilled the law that hee might make vs partakers of his actiue obedience and so imputing both vnto vs hath made vs perfectly iust and righteous in Gods sight So that now the Lord doth not require obedience to his law at our hands to the end that wee should be iustified in whole or in part by our owne righteousnesse neither are we to this end to obserue Gods commandements that we may offer vnto God our workes and inherent righteousnesse desiring thereby to be iustified for as I haue shewed our best righteousnesse is imperfect and mingled with manifold corruptions so as it would rather condemne vs then iustifie vs if the Lord should examine it according to the exact rule of his most perfect iustice but we offer vnto God for our iustification the most perfect righteousnesse and full satisfaction of Iesus Christ which by his merits and sufferings he hath once made for vs desiring thereby wholy and onely to be iustified and saued § Sect. 3 As for our workes and inherent righteousnesse That our works are not causes but effects of our iustification they are not causes but effects and fruites of our iustification neither is it possible that we should doe any good worke acceptable in Gods sight till we are iustified and reconciled vnto God in Iesus Christ for our workes cannot please him till our persons please him and whatsoeuer we doe before faith hath purified the heart it is sinne and odious in the sight of God but as soone as we haue faith begotten in vs presently it apprehendeth Christ and his righteousnes whereby we are iustified and then being iustified faith worketh by loue and bringeth forth in vs the fruites of sanctification which though they bee mingled with much corruption and manifold imperfections yet God in Christ accepteth of them as perfect and will crowne them with glorie and immortalitie That now the Lord doth not require of vs perfect righteousnesse Neither doth the Lord now require of vs that wee perfectly at once shake off all our corruptions but that we labour as much as in vs lieth to mortifie and subdue them according to the measure of his grace and holy spirit which he hath bestowed on vs he doth not straightly commaund that we should instantly banish and expell sinne from dwelling in vs but that we doe not suffer it to raigne in vs nor willingly obey the flesh in the lusts thereof submitting our selues vnto sinne as seruants and vassals to their Lord and maister he doth not inioyne vs that we should wholy vanquish our corruptions and obtaine a full victorie ouer them but that we proclaime open warres against them and manfully fight and striue vnder the conduct of his spirit against the flesh and the sinfull lusts thereof and when we are taken captiue of sinne that we labour to attaine vnto our former freedome in the meane time sorrowing and groning vnder the heauie waight of our corruptions and crying out with the Apostle Rom. 7. wretched man that
Gods couenant Secondly the couenant betweene God and vs wherein he professeth himselfe our God and taketh vs for his people and heires of his promises is not the couenant of workes but the couenant of grace in which hee offereth freely in Christ his grace and mercy to all who will receiue it by the hand of a liuely faith And this the Lord himselfe expresseth Ierem. 31.31 Beholde the dayes come saith the Lord that I will make a new couenant with the house of Israel that is my Church Ierem. 31.31 32. Not according to the couenant which I made with their fathers that is the couenant of workes the which my couenant they breake c. but this shall be my couenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people So the Apostle Paul saith that the promise made to Abraham and his seede was not giuen through the lawe but through the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.13 Rom. 4.13 and that it was therefore by faith that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure to all the seede For if the couenant were of workes and not of faith of deserts and not of grace we should continually disanull and make it of no effect § Sect. 3 Thirdly Our redemption not caused by our worthinesse Eph. 1.7 8. as we are elected before all times so were we in time redeemed freely and without respect of our owne worthinesse of the meere mercy and loue of God although our Sauiour Christ payed the full price of our redemption vnto God his father for vs and this appeareth Ephes 1.7 By whom we haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace 8. Whereby he hath been abundant towards vs in all wisedome and vnderstanding So that our redemption was not free vnto our Sauiour Christ for it cost him the inestimable price of his most precious bloud but it was free vnto vs without any respect of our workes and worthinesse For we were like desperate debters deeply ingaged vnto God and not able to pay the least farthing and therefore were cast into the prison of euerlasting death there to be detained till we had discharged the whole debt which being impossible vnto vs it pleased our Sauiour Christ of his meere pitie and free goodwill to become our suretie and to make full satisfaction to his father euen to the least mite that so we might be released and set free We were all of vs miserable captiues held in the thraldome of sinne Sathan and death vnable to deserue in any measure to be set at libertie for wee were the children of wrath who were not sick only but euen dead in our sinnes Eph. 2.1.5 as it is Eph. 2.1.5 But our Sauiour Christ of his vndeserued loue did pay the price of our redemption and set vs out of our captiuitie quickning and raising vs vp from sinne to newnesse of life as the Apostle setteth it downe Eph. 2.3 And you were by nature the children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.3.4 4. But God which is rich in mercie through his great loue wherewith he loued vs 5. Euen when we were dead by sinnes hath quickened vs together in Christ by whose grace ye are saued 6. And hath raised vs vp together in heauenly places in Christ Iesus 7. That he might shew in ages to come the exceeding riches of his grace through his kindnesse towards vs in Christ Iesus So that there is no worthinesse in our selues which the Lord respected for we were all alike the children of wrath and dead in our sinnes but onely of his free mercie and great loue he hath redeemed vs by Christ § Sect. 4 Fourthly Our worthines no cause of our calling as the Lord hath freely redeemed vs so also hee hath freely called vs to the knowledge of the mysterie of our redemption wrought by Iesus Christ and chosen vs amongst all nations to be his Church and peculiar people and that of his meere grace and free goodwill without any respect of our worthines as appeareth 2. Tim. 1.9 Who hath saued vs 2. Tim. 1.9 and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose of grace which was giuen vs through Christ Iesus before the world was So Moses telleth the children of Israel that the Lord had called and made choise of them aboue all other nations to bee his Church and people not for any respect of themselues or their owne worthinesse but of his free loue and vndeserued mercie Deut. 7.7.8 as it is Deut. 7.7.8 Psal 44.3 Our works and worthinesse no causes of our iustification Fiftly as the Lord hath freely called vs so being called he hath freely iustified vs not for any inherent righteousnesse in our selues but of his owne grace and goodwill through the righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ which he imputeth vnto vs. And this is euident Rom. 3.24 where it is said that we are iustified freely by Gods grace Rom. 3.24 through the redemption which is in Christ Iesus And Tit. 3.7 where the Apostle saith that we are iustified by his grace Tit. 3.7 And least wee should ioyne with Gods grace our owne workes and worthines he telleth vs that Abraham himselfe though a most righteous and holy man in respect of his sinceritie and integritie of heart was notwithstanding not iustified by his workes but Abraham beleeued God Rom. 4.3.5 and that was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.3 ver 5. he flatly excludeth works from being any causes of our iustification To him saith he that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse So that wee are freely iustified of Gods grace and goodwill without any respect of our owne works and worthinesse as being any causes of our iustification although they are necessarie and inseparable fruites thereof For the same death and bloudshed of Christ whereby we are freed from the guilt and punishment of sinne and euerlasting death doth free vs also from the death of sin to newnesse of life and doth not onely iustifie but also sanctifie vs as the Apostle plainly sheweth Tit. 2.14 Who gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie Tit. 2.14 that is free vs from the guilt and punishment of sinne to which we were subiect and purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes Sixtly our sanctification and inherent righteousnesse it selfe what is it els but the free gift of God begun increased and finished by his gracious spirit That our sanctification is the free gift of God what are the graces in vs but Gods free and vndeserued gifts what are our best works but the fruites of his
subiect and not as being ready to fall vpon vs for this difference is betweene the feare of the wicked and Gods children they like malefactors which are led out to punishment are filled with horror and feare when they thinke of the torments which they are to indure but yet did neuer feare to commit such crimes as descrued the punishments and though they should escape yet this would be no warning for the time to come but Gods children seeing the iudgements which are exercised vpon the wicked doe feare not least they should be inflicted vpon them presently but least they should so offend and deserue the like punishments first auoyding sinne that they may not receiue the wages thereof And this sonne-like feare is commended vnto vs in the scriptures as being a part of the honour and seruice which we owe vnto God as appeareth Mal. 1.6 Mal. 1.6 A sonne honoureth his father and a seruant his maister if I be a father where is mine honour if I be a maister where is my feare saith the Lord Psalm 34.9 and 112.1 So Psalm 34.9 Feare the Lord yee his saints for nothing wanteth to them that feare him And Psalme 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his commaundements In which places we are not to vnderstand a seruile and slauish feare but an ingenuous and sonne-like feare which drawes vs backe from falling into sinne and incites vs to performe all good duties of holinesse and righteousnes to God and our brethren because we would not incurre the displeasure of our heauenly father but do those things which are acceptable in his sight Lastly whereas the Apostle Peter 1. epist 1.17 exhorteth vs to passe the time of our dwelling here in feare 1. Pet. 1.17 hee doth not vnderstand such a feare as maketh vs to doubt of our election and saluation but such an one as prouoketh vs to obey Gods commandements and restraineth vs from wallowing and defiling our selues in sinne for with this feare in the verse following he ioyneth certaine knowledge of our redemption and consequently of our election and saluation knowing saith he that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as siluer and gold from your vaine conuersation c. but with the pretious bloud of Christ. So that this feare doth not take away the certaine knowledge of our election and redemption but this knowledge causeth vs to feare least we fall into sinne after we are assured of this great benefit of our redemption and thereby displease our gracious God and defile our soules after they are purged with the pretious bloud of Iesus Christ § Sect. 6 Besides these places there are others also obiected Other places obiected answered Iob. 9.21 as that Iob. 9.21 Though I were perfect yet I know not my soule therefore I abhorre my life To which I answere that Iobs scope and drift in this place is to shew that euen the most iust and holie man cannot stand before Gods iudgement seate in his owne righteousnesse and holinesse which is polluted and imperfect and that therefore it behooueth euery one to despaire in himselfe and his legall righteousnesse as not being able to iustifie him in Gods sight in respect of whose puritie euen the very heauens are vncleane that so he may wholy rely vpō Gods mercy and Christs merits and this appeareth vers 2.3 I know verely saith he that it is so that is Iob. 9.2 that God is iust and all men are sinners who are righteously punished for their demerits as Bildad had reasoned in the former chapter and therefore how should man compared vnto God be iustified 3. Verse 3. If he would dispute with him hee could not answere him one thing of a thousand And vers 20. If I would iustifie my selfe Verse 20. mine owne mouth should condemne me if I would bee perfect hee shall iudge me wicked 21. And though I were innocent or perfect that is though I seemed iust in mine own eyes and knew nothing by my selfe yet I know not mine owne soule nor what secret corruptions may lurke in it and therfore I will not hereby looke to be iustified nay in this respect I abhorre my life and cast mine owne righteousnesse from me as a polluted cloute By which manner of reasoning hee confuteth Bildads obiection who affirmed that Iob and his sonnes were punished of God for their sinnes and that iustly and therefore they were not so iust and innocent as they had seemed to this Iob answereth that it is true indeede he could not iustifie himselfe in respect of his owne righteousnesse if hee compared himselfe with Gods exact iustice but must needes condemne himselfe for a wretched sinner yet hence it followed not that therfore God thus afflicted him seeing this was the state not of him onely but of all men whatsoeuer and therefore this could not be the onely cause of his extraordinarie afflictions So that this place makes nothing against the assurance of our saluation which is grounded vpon Gods free mercy and Christs merits but against that presumption which relieth it selfe in whole or in part vpon our owne legall righteousnesse § Sect. 7 The like place to this is that saying of Paul which they obiect 1. Cor. 4.3 4. 1. Cor. 4.3 4. I iudge not mine own selfe for I know nothing by my selfe yet am I not thereby iustified but he that iudgeth me is the Lord. For answering whereof we are to know that there were diuers in the Church of Corinth who censured Pauls ministerie and disgraced his gifts a gainst which detractations he bendeth his speech and maketh an apologie for himselfe saying that hee would not take vpon him to iudge himselfe concerning the excellencie and worth of his ministerie and gifts but would leaue the iudgement and approbation thereof vnto God whose ambassadour hee was and though he knew nothing which might bee obiected against him in regard of his ministerie yet hereby hee would not looke to bee iustified in Gods presence So that if this be the sense of the words as appeareth by the coherence and the drift of the place it maketh nothing for popish doubting But let it bee granted that Paul speakes not of his ministerie but of his righteousnesse and obedience to the law yet this maketh nothing against the certaintie of our election for the Apostle speaking of his owne righteousnesse and innocencie doth disclaime it from being any cause of his iustification neither doth he say that in regard therof he doubteth as the Papists would expound him but he affirmeth directly that he is not thereby iustified and rendreth this as a reason that it is God who iudgeth him and therfore though he were vnblameable before men yea though he knew nothing by himselfe yet hee could not hereby be iustified before the iust iudgement seate of God who requires such perfection and exact obedience as can be found in no man liuing for he that but once breaketh but one
he will not rest till he hath againe reuiued and quickened vs with his holy spirite Moreouer our Sauiour hath saide Math. 12.20 that hee will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flaxe Matth. 12.20 but he will support our weakenesse with his almighty power so that though with the reed we be borne downe to the ground with the boysterous blastes of Sathans tentations yet we shal be raised vp againe Psal 37.24 according to that Psal 37.24 Though hee fall he shall not be cast off for the Lord putteth vnder his hand and he will blow vpon vs with the breath of his holy spirit till he turne our small smoke to a great flame which shall neuer bee quenched by all the malice of our spirituall enemies So Matth. 13.12 our Sauiour Christ hath promissed Math. 13.12 that whosoeuer hath to him it shal be giuen and he shall haue aboundance Neither doth he limit or define any quantitie lesse or more but indefinitely promisseth aboundant increase euen vnto the least so farre is he from taking away that which he hath once bestowed And whereas wee through our weakenesse and frailenesse are easily cast downe and fall away and therefore haue good cause if we should onely looke vpon our infirmities to doubt and despaire of perseuerance yet in respect of Gods omnipotent power watchfull prouidence and promissed assistance wee may confirme our selues in faith hope and certaine assurance of continuing vnto the end for the Lord vpholdeth all that are falling and lifteth vp those who are already downe as the Psalmist speaketh Psal 145.14 Psal 145.14 the power of God is manifested in our weakenesse 2. Cor. 12.9 his riches in our beggerlinesse his mercy and goodnesse in our frailenesse and manifold corruptions and with his holy spirit hee helpeth our infirmities as it is Rom. 8.26 Ro. 8.26 Wee haue not an high priest which cannot bee touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sinne and therfore he is able sufficiently to haue compassion on them that are ignorant and out of the way because that hee also was compassed with our infirmities and the apostle reasoneth Heb. 4.15 5.2 Heb. 4.15 and 5.2 § Sect. 5 Secondly it appeareth manifestly by Gods workes The formen point illustrated by examples administration and practise that he wil not depriue any of that sanctifying grace which he hath once bestowed though the measure thereof be neuer so small neither can we obserue either by our reading the whole booke of God or by our owne experience that any man hauing receiued the least graine of true faith hath vtterly beene depriued of it and reiected of God Euen the disciples themselues when they were reprooued for their little faith were by him strengthened and confirmed so that all the power of hell could not preuaile against it and though Sathan indeauoured to sift them as wheate yet Christs intercession was more mightie to defend them then the diuell to destroye them and his intercession a stronger propp to vphould them then the waight of Sathans tentations to ouerthrow and bring them to ruine so he who cryed out I beleeue Lord helpe thou my vnbeliefe though his faith was weak yet it perished not but rather receiued a greater increase Yea he reiected not Thomas in his wilfull doubting and obstinate incredulitie but offered all occasions of confirming his weake faith and neuer ceased till hee had fully assured him of his resurrection In a word all the saintes of God at one time or other haue had experience of this mercy power and goodnesse of God in supporting their weaknesse vphoulding them in their great infirmities and in raysing them when they were fallen to the ground and to this end our Sauiour was annointed by Gods spirite vnto the office of his mediation that hee should preach the gospell vnto the poore heale the broken harted that he should preach deliuerance vnto captiues and recouerie of sight to the blind and set at libertie them that are brused Luk. 4.18 Luk. 4.18 To this ende hee had familiar society with the fraile and weake with those who had little faith that he might increase it and no faith that he might begett it with publicanes and sinners and men full of infirmities to this purpose he calleth such as thirst and hunger feeling their owne emptinesse of grace and earnestly desiring to bee filled and satisfied and such also as labour and are heauie laden with the vnsupportable waight of their corruptions promising that hee will ease them lastly to this end he hath ordayned the ministerie of the worde and administration of the sacraments not only to beget faith where it is not but to nourish and increase it where it is weake and feeble and therefore though our faith be neuer so weake and small let not Sathan perswade vs that therefore it shall bee ouerthrowne and turned into infidelitie for the Lord hath assured vs both by his gratious promises in his word and also by the performance thereof in his works from the beginning to this day that where hee hath giuen the least measure of faith or any other sanctifying grace there he will also increase strengthen and confirme it and where he hath begunne any good worke there hee will finish and perfect it notwithstanding our fraile weaknesse and the forcible violence of all our spirituall enemies CHAP. XLVIII Of our iustification ANd so much concerning those tentations of Sathan which he suggesteth to the end that hee may frustrate our effectuall calling § Sect. 1 Of the efficient cause of our iustification Rom. 8.30 The next subordinate cause and means of our saluation is our iustification for whomsoeuer the Lord effectually calleth those also he iustifieth as it is Rom. 8.30 In speaking whereof I will first shew what it is and afterwards answere such tentations of Sathan as he suggesteth into our mindes to the end that hee may infringe the doctrine of iustification and make it vaine and vnprofitable vnto vs. For the first Iustification is an action orworke of the whole trinitie the father sonne and holy ghost whereby God gratiously and freely imputing vnto euery faithfull man the righteousnesse and obedience of Christ the mediatour doth accept of him and pronounce him to be iust and righteous for the glorie of his name and saluation of the beleeuer The efficiēt cause of our iustificatiō is God alone as appeareth by manifest testimonies Esa 43.25 I Esa 43.25 Ezec. 16.8 euen I am he that putteth away thine iniquities for my owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes So Ezech. 16.8 The Lord thus speaketh to his church and people I spread my skirts ouer thee and couered thy filthinesse 9. Then I washed thee with water yea I washed away thy bloud from thee and annointed thee with oyle 10. Rom. 4.5 and 8.33 Psal 51.4 I clothed thee with broydred worke c. whereby he signifieth
that he purged it with the bloud of Christ from all sinne and adorned it with the rich robe of his righteousnesse The Apostle likewise saith that it is God who iustifieth him who in himselfe was vngodly Rom. 4.5 and 8.33 It is God who iustifieth who shall condemne The reason hereof is manifest because it is the Lord against whom we haue sinned as Dauid speaketh Psal 51.4 And he alone is our supreame iudge who hath authoritie to absolue or condemne vs and therefore he onely can giue vnto vs the pardon and remission of our sinnes and accept of vs as iust and righteous And this worke is not peculiar vnto any one person but is commune to the whole trinitie For God the father being fully satisfied by the full satisfaction righteousnesse and obedience of Christ the sonne applied vnto vs by the holy spirit doth pardon and forgiue vs all our sinnes and pronounceth and accepteth of vs as innocent and indued with perfect righteousnesse The motiue or impulsiue cause which moued the Lorde thus to iustifie vs was not any thinge in vs or out of him selfe but of his meere mercy and free good will wherewith hee hath loued vs from the beginning as it manifestly appeareth Rom. 3.24 Rom. 3.24 Where the Apostle sayth that we are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus and Tit. 3.5.7 Tit. 3.5.7 Not by the workes of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercie he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renewing of the holy ghost 7. That being iustified by his grace we should bee made heyres according to the hope of eternal life The instrumentall causes are of two sorts first on Gods part the word and the sacraments whereby the Lord offreth conuaigheth sealeth and assureth vnto vs his mercie grace Christ Iesus with his merites righteousnesse and obedience the remission of our sinnes and euerlasting life Secondly on our part a true and liuely faith whereby wee receiue and apply vnto our selues the mercy of God Christ Iesus all his benefits resting vpon him alone for our saluation § Sect. 2 The materiall cause of our iustification is the actiue and passiue righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ The material cause his inhaerent holinesse his fulfilling of the law his death sacrifice and full satisfaction So that we are not iustified by the essentiall righteousnesse of the godhead nor by our owne workes ioyned with Christs merites nor by any inhaerent righteousnes infused of God through the merites of Christ or by any other thing in our selues or any other meere creature but by the alone righteousnesse of our mediatour Iesus Christ God and man which is out of our selues and in Christ as the proper subiect thereof and not belonging to vs till by the spirite of God and a liuely faith it be applyed vnto vs and so becommeth ours Of the formall cause The formall cause of our iustification is a reciprocall imputation or transmutation of the sinnes of the beleeuer vnto Christ and of his righteousnesse vnto the beleeuer whereby it commeth to passe that the faithfull man hath not his sinnes imputed vnto him nor the punishment due vnto them inflicted on him because Christ hath taken vpon him the guilt and punishment and by making ful satisfaction vnto his fathers iustice hath obtayned the pardon and remission of al his sinnes And also is clothed with the glorious robe of Christ Iesus righteousnesse and so appearing before God both free from all sinne and indued with perfect righteousnesse hee is iustified reconciled and eternally saued And of this imputed righteousnes the apostle speaketh Rom. 4.5 Rom. 4.5 But to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse 6. Euen as Dauid declareth the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes saying 7. Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are couered 8. blessed is the man vnto whom the Lord imputeth not sinne and 2. Cor. 5.19 2. Cor. 5.19 For God was in Christ and reconciled the world vnto himselfe not imputing their sinnes vnto them c. 21. For hee hath made him to bee sinne for vs which knewe no sinne that wee should be made the righteousnesse of God in him And the Apostle affirmeth 1. Cor. 1.30 That Iesus Christ is made vnto vs of God wisdome 1. Cor. 1.30 righteousnesse sanctification and redemption So that now Christs righteousnesse is our righteousnesse his obedience our obedience his merits our merites as certainely perfectly and effectually euen as if we our selues had bene most innocent fulfilled the law or made full satisfaction to Gods iustice By which it appeareth that in respect of our selues wee are iustified freely of Gods meere mercy grace without any respect of our owne righteousnes or worthinesse but yet through Christ and for his righteousnesse and obedience imputed puted to vs Rom. 3.23.24 both which are signified by the Apostle Rom. 3.23.24 where he said that all in themselues are wretched sinners without difference and thereby are depriued of the glory of Gods kingdome 24. and are iustified freely of his grace through the redemption which is in Christ Iesus § Sect. 3 The finall cause The finall cause of our instification is two fold the chiefe and principall is the glory of God for hereby the Lord hath most notably manifested his infinite iustice and mercy his iustice in that he would rather punish our sinnes in his onely begotten Sonne then he would suffer them to goe vnpunished his mercy in that for our sakes hee spared not his best beloued Sonne but gaue him to suffer death yea the death of the crosse that by his one oblation he might make full satisfaction for our sinnes and purchase for vs euerlasting life and also in that he vouchsafeth vnto vs the outward means of his word and Sacraments and the inward assistance of his holy spirit whereby wee are vnited vnto Christ and haue a liuely faith begotten in vs which apprehending Christ his righteousnesse and merits wee are iustified sanctified and eternally saued And this end is signified by the Apostle Rom. 3.24.25 where hee saith that God hath iustified vs freely by his grace Rom 3.24 5.21 through the redemption which is in Christ Iesus to declare his righteousnesse by the forgiuenesse of sinnes and might shew himselfe iust by iustifying him who is of the faith of Iesus And cap. 5.21 he saith that as vnder the law sinne had raigned vnto death so now grace raigneth by righteousnesse vnto eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Ephe. 2.5.6.7 So Eph. 2.5.6.7 hee affirmeth that God hath quickned vs in Christ who were dead in our sins hath raysed vs vp in him that hee might shew in the ages to come the exceeding riches of his grace through his kindnesse towards vs in Christ Iesus The
first of that which is insensible 483 CHAP. XXXIX Of that hardnes of hart which is ioyned with sense and feeling thereof 487 Consolations for such as bewaile their imperfections in hearing the word 491 CHAP. XL. Consolations for such as bewaile their wants in prayer 495 CHAP. XLI Of the infallible signes of true repentance 504 That the assurance of the remission of sinnes dependeth not on the dignitie of repentance 511 CHAP. XLII How wee may proue against Sathans temptations that wee haue true faith 513 Of the diuers degrees of faith 515 CHAP. XLIII Sathans temptations grounded vpon our want of sense and feeling of faith answered 525 CHAP. XLIIII How the weake Christian is to comfort himselfe when he is depriued of the sense of faith and other graces and sensibly feeleth the contrary corruptions 529 CHAP. XLV Of the meanes whereby our faith may be strengthened and increased 537 Of the meanes whereby we may be preserued from doubting and desperation 541 CHAP. XLVI Sathans temptations concerning smalnesse and weaknes of faith answered 549 That a weake and small faith may be a true and liuely faith 550 That all the power of hell cannot preuaile against the smallest measure of faith 551 CHAP. XLVII Sathans temptation concerning the certaintie and constancie of faith answered 554 Sathans temptation grounded on the strong faith of other of Gods children answered 555 That God both can and will vphold the weakest beleeuer 559 CHAP. XLVIII Of our iustification what it is and the causes parts therof 563 CHAP. XLIX That we are not iustified by our workes and merits prooued first by the scriptures 570 Secondly by diuers arguments 576 CHAP. L. That faith alone iustifietth how this is to be vnderstood 577 That faith alone iustifieth proued both by testimonies and reasons 579 That not our owne but Christs righteousnesse is the matter of our iustification 581 CHAP. LI. Sathans temptations mouing the weake Christian to doubt of his iustification answered 586 THE CONTENTS OF THE third Booke CHAP. I. Of sanctification what it is and the causes thereof 592 CHAP. II. Of the effects subiect obiect and time of our sanctification 598 CHAP. III. Of the parts of sanctification mortification and viuification and how they are wrought in vs. 602 CHAP. IIII. Sathans temptations whereby he inticeth vs to commit sinne answered 608 Many reasons seruing as preseruatiues to keepe vs from the contagion of sinne 610 CHAP V. Of the two sorts of preseruatiues to keepe vs from falling into sinne 616 CHAP. VI. Of some speciall meanes whereby we may be preserued from committing sinne 621 CHAP. VII Sathans temptations whereby hee discourageth the Christian in the worke of sanctification answered 624 That in the most sanctified remaine some reliques of sinne and the causes thereof 624 That our wants and corruptions should not discourage vs but redouble our care and diligence 627 Consolations to keepe vs from being discouraged when we see and feele our wants and corruptions 628 The causes wherefore God doth not perfectly sanctifie vs in this life 631 CHAP. VIII Sathans temptations drawne from our slow going forward in sanctification answered 636 CHAP. IX Sathans temptations whereby he aggrauateth our sinnes in generall answered 640 What it is to walke after the flesh and after the spirit 642 The differences betweene the sinnes of the regenerate and the vnregenerate 643 CHAP. X. That sinnes committed after repentance are pardonable 645 That all sinnes of knowledge are not presumptuous 647 That sinnes committed against knowledge are pardonable 648 Of sinnes often committed 651 CHAP. XI Sathans temptations whereby he perswadeth the Christian that he hath sinned against the holy Ghost answered 653 What the sinne against the holy Ghost is and how it may be distinguished from other sinnes 654 CHAP. XII Sathans temptations whereby he impugneth the certaintie of our perseuerance answered 656 Diuers arguments to prooue the certaintie of our perseuerance 659 FINIS THE FIRST BOOKE INTREATING OF THE POWER and policies of our spirituall enemies and of the meanes how we may withstand the one and defeate the other CHAP. I. That all the godly are assaulted with the spirituall enemies of their saluation § Sect. 1 THE Apostle hauing shewed the mysterie of our saluation and the causes thereof for the confirmation of our faith in the three first chapters of his Epistle to the Ephesians and afterwards in the other chapters hauing set downe diuers duties both generally belonging to all Christians and also particularly appertaining to men of sundrie conditions that he might moue them to repentance and amendment of life in the next place like the Lords Centinell doth discouer and giue vs warning of the approch of mighty enemies willing vs to arme our selues at all points in our owne defence and couragiously to stand vnder the standerd of Christ Iesus that we may be continually in readines to endure the encounter chap. 6.10 11 c. All that will liue like Gods seruants must prepare themselues for the spirituall combat Whereby he giueth vs to vnderstand that as soone as we seeke for assurance of saluation in Christ and endeuour to serue the Lord in a holie and a Christian life wee are to prepare our selues for a combat vnlesse we would suddenly be surprised for the spiritual enemies of our saluation bandie themselues against vs as soone as we haue giuen our names vnto God and taken vpon vs the profession and practise of Christianitie which are the liuerie and cognisance of our heauenly Lord and Master And this is manifest by the example of Gods children from time to tim● 〈…〉 though they liued in peace and securitie before th●● 〈…〉 tained into Gods familie yet no sooner were 〈◊〉 ●itted to be of Gods household seruants but Sathan and the world haue raged against them laboring both by inward temptations and outward furie either to withdraw them from Gods seruice by flattring inticements or vtterly to destroy and ouerthrow them by open violence No sooner had Abel offered a sacrifice of sweete smelling sauour vnto God Gen. 4. but Sathan stirreth vp Cain to become his butcher whilest Moses was contented to be reputed the sonne of Pharaohs daughter he enioyed all prosperitie but as soone as hee ioyned himselfe to Gods people and Church Pharaoh seeketh his life as long as the Israelites worshipped the Egyptian Idols they sate by their flesh-pots in peace and quietly enioyed the fruites of the land but as soone as they made but a motion of seruing the Lord the King stirred vp by the diuell doth rage against them with more then barbarous crueltie whilest Paul persecuted the Church of God Sathan did not so much trouble him either outwardly in bodie or inwardly in minde but no sooner was he truly conuerted to the faith and preached the Gospell but presently he setteth his wicked impes on worke to take away his life which the Lord not permitting he mooueth them to persecute him by imprisoning whipping and stoning him and not content
tied with the heauie bolts and chaines of sinne hee is retchlesse and secure but if our Sauiour by his Ambassadours in the preaching of the word loose and vnburthen vs of these chaines and bolts and by the light of his spirit so illuminate the eyes of our vnderstanding that we see the way out of Sathans dungeon of ignorance and so escape out of his captiuitie then he rageth against and pursueth vs as Pharaoh did the Israelites that either he may bring vs backe againe into his bondage or els destroy vs if we make resistance Lastly they feele not any fight betweene the flesh and the spirit because the flesh wholie ruleth them and like a flood which hath a cleere current carrieth them wholie into a sea of sinne without any stop or resistance and therfore no marueile they feele not this fight when the spirit which is one of the combatants hath no force nor residence in them § Sect. 4 Secondly That the true Christian may receiue comfort by feeling the spirituall conflict Gods children who continually feele the assaults of their spirituall enemies and see the breaches which are made in their soules with the continuall batterie of their temptations may receiue no small consolation hereby when as they consider that all who professe themselues Gods seruants and resolue to serue the Lord in holines and righteousnes are thus tempted and tried Reuel 12.17 For the Dragon is wroth with the woman that is Gods Church and her seede which keepe the commandements of God and haue the testimonie of Iesus Christ as is Reuel 12.17 and like a roring lion seeketh their destruction because they haue renounced him and fight vnder the standard of the Lord of hoasts whom hee maligneth and hence it is that whilest we liue without sense of sinne we eate and drinke and take our ease without disturbance but after we make any conscience of our waies and endeuour to serue the Lord then Sathan casteth against vs the firie darts of his temptations and we feele many conflicts betweene the flesh and the spirit with which the worldly man is neuer troubled So that when we are thus tempted and assaulted by Sathan the world and our corrupt flesh it is a strong argument to perswade vs that wee are intertained for Gods souldiers and haue receiued the presse money of his spirit for Sathans kingdome is not diuided neither doth he fight against those who are his friends and seruants but against those who wage warre against him and fight vnder the Lords standerd True it is that when his seruants haue committed such abominable and grieuous sinnes as haue made deepe wounds in their seared consciences whereby they are awakened out of their sleepie lethargie of securitie then Sathan filleth them with horrour and despaire that hee may keepe them from true repentance when he can hide from them their sinnes no longer and the Lord in his iust iudgement and for the example of others doth suffer Sathan to begin in them the torments of hell in this life but if hee can by any meanes hide their sinnes and keepe them quietly in his kingdome he will neuer vexe them And hence it is that whereas one perisheth through despaire many thousands perish through presumption and securitie Let all those therefore who feele the burthen of their sinnes and are vexed with the continuall assaults of their spirituall enemies comfort themselues for hereby they haue assurance that they are members of the Church militant into which none but souldiers are intertained and that now they begin to be Gods friends and seruants when as Sathan opposeth himselfe against them CHAP. II. Why God suffereth his seruants to be exercised in the spirituall conflict of tentations BVt here it may be demaunded why the Lord will suffer his seruants to be thus tempted and assaulted whereas the wicked are free from such conflicts I answere first for his owne glorie for whereas our enemies are strong and mighty and we weake and feeble hereby is the Lords omnipotent power manifested to all the world by whose assistance such impotent wretches conquer and subdue such furious and puissant enemies Secondly God suffereth his children to be tempted that so those spirituall graces which he hath bestowed vpon them may the more cleerely shine to his glorie For who can know whether they be Gods golden vessels before they be brought to the touchstone of temptation Who could know the faith patience and valour of Gods souldiers if they alwaies lay quietly in garrison and neuer came to the skirmish Who could feele the odoriferous smell of these aromaticall spices if they were not punned and brused in the morter of afflictions For example who would haue discerned Abrahams faith Dauids pietie Iobs patience Pauls courage and constancie if they had been neuer tempted which now to the glorie of God shine to all the world And as the Lord suffereth Sathan and his impes to trie his children for his owne glorie so also for their spirituall and euerlasting good for first hereby he chastizeth them for their sinnes past and recalleth them to their remembrance that so they may truly repent of them And this cause Iob speaketh of Iob. 13.26 Iob. 13.26 Thou writest saith he bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities of my youth Secondly hereby hee manifesteth vnto vs our secret and hidden sinnes which the blind eyes of our iudgement would not discerne if their sight were not quickned with this sharp water of temptation For so long as wee liue in peace our secure consciences neuer summon vs to the barre of Gods iudgement but when wee are roused vp by temptation wee enter into a more straight examination of our selues and search what secret sinnes lie lurking in the hidden corners of our hearts that so wee may repent of them and make our peace with God without whose assistance wee can haue no hope to stand in any temptation Thirdly the Lord hereby preuenteth our sinnes to come for when we haue experience that the most sharp weapons which Sathan vseth to inflict deepe wounds in our consciences are our sinnes this will make vs most carefull to abstaine from them least thereby we strengthen him for our owne ouerthrow And as these temptations of Sathan are in this regard so many bridles to restraine vs from sinne so also they are so many prickes to let out the winde of vaine glorie wherewith like bladders we be puffed vp as wee may see in the example of Paul who lest he should be exalted out of measure through the abundance of reuelations receiued a pricke in the flesh the messenger of Sathan to buffet him 2. Cor. 12.7 Fourthly 2. Cor 12.7 the Lord suffereth Sathan to assault vs that wee may hereby come to the fight of our owne weaknesse and infirmities when wee haue receiued many foiles and learne to relie vpon his helpe and assistance in all our dangers for so proud we are by nature that before
be refuted and repelled CHAP. I. Answeres to those temptations of Sathan whereby he perswadeth carnall men of Gods loue § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning the common affections of the Christian conflict That Sathans temptations impugne all the causes and meanes of our saluation namely his manfull withstanding Sathans encounters and also his fainting and falling into sinne Now we are to speake of the speciall temptations themselues and the meanes whereby wee may be strengthened against them Where first wee are to consider that Sathans temptations are not alwaies one and the same neither impugne one or two points onely of our faith and religion but as the causes and the meanes of our saluation are manifold so also doth he gather manifold obiections against euerie one of them if they truly appertaine vnto vs that so hee may impugne and race our faith or els doth fill vs with vaine presumption perswading vs that all the causes and meanes of saluation concurre together in vs when as in truth wee are voide and destitute of them all Let vs therefore consider of the seuerall causes of our saluation and obserue what temptations Sathan suggesteth in our minds against euery one of them The first and principall cause of our saluation is Gods eternall loue and immutable goodwill wherewith he hath loued his creatures from before the foundations of the world were laid the which loue and goodwill in himselfe did moue him to elect them to saluation whom he so loued without any deserts in themselues for how could they deserue any thing at Gods hath before they were or what good could the Lord foresee in them but that which in his eternall counsaile hee purposed to bestow and impart vnto them Sathans temptation whereby he perswadeth carnall men that they are beloued of God First therefore we will speake of those temptations which concerne the loue of God toward vs which are of two sorts the first leading vs to vaine presumption and carnall securitie the other to horrour and desperation For if Sathan see men liuing in carnall securitie frozen in the dregges of their sinnes so as in truth there is no signe that they are beloued of God he will perswade them that they are highly in his fauour and loue and therefore though they runne on in their wicked courses yet they shall be saued Doest thou not perceiue will he say that God dearely loueth thee Why consider that hee hath made thee one of his chiefest creatures whereas otherwise hee would haue made thee a toade or serpent he hath also like a tender father preserued and nourished thee from thy infancie and which is more he hath sent his dearely beloued sonne to die for thee and hee hath made choise of thee amongst many others to be a member of his Church where thou inioyest the preaching of the Gospell and the vse of the Sacraments to the end thou maist be assured of thy saluation without all question or doubting Neuer therefore take care nor trouble thy selfe concerning thy saluation vse not such strictnes and precisenes of life but take thy pleasure and follow those delights which the Lord hath bestowed vpon thee as pledges of his loue for thou art not now a slaue but a sonne and therefore maist more freely follow thine owne desire and vse thy libertie cast away all seruile feare which maketh thee take such paines in vsing all meanes whereby thou maist be assured of saluation for thou art assured of the principall namely of Gods loue and therefore thou needest not to doubt of the rest nor to debarre thy selfe of thy pleasures spending thy time in feare and care to the end thou maist get the assurance of that which thou needest not to call into question The answere to the former temptation And thus doth the diuell fill men with presumption and lull them asleepe in carnal securitie to their vtter destruction and therefore it behooueth vs to arme our selues against him that we be not circumuented And to this end let vs consider that Gods loue goeth not alone neither is it idle in those whom he loueth but as the first linke of a chaine draweth all the rest of the chaine with it so the loue of God which is the first cause of our saluation is accompanied with all the other causes which are subordinate thereunto for whom God loueth them he electeth whom he electeth those in his good time he calleth whom hee effectually calleth them he iustifieth and whom he iustifieth those hee sanctifieth if therefore we be not sanctified we are not iustified if wee are not iustified we are not called if we are not called we can haue no assurance that wee are elected nor yet of Gods loue and fauour and consequently whosoeuer liue in their blind ignorance in their infidelitie and wallow themselues in the filthie puddle of their sinnes without any true sorrow for those which are past or any good purpose of heart to forsake them in the time to come they can haue no assurance of Gods loue but are rather iustly to feare least they are in the number of those whom the Lord hath eternally reiected if they continue in this their miserable and desperate estate § Sect. 2 Neither let Sathan bewitch them with that vaine opinion of Gods loue towards them Temporall benefits no infallible signes of Gods loue because of those generall benefits which like the raine and Sunne-shine are bestowed both vpon the good and bad for what in this respect can they promise more to themselues than Esau and Saul Were not they created men according to Gods own likenes were they not preseured and nourished by God and that more liberally than many Gods owne children For Esau had so much the he professed to his brother Iacob that he had enough and was attended vpon by foure hundred men And was not Saul a mightie King who had all at commaund Were not all these in the Church of God and outwardly enioyed the word and Sacraments as well as any other and yet God himself saith that he hated Esau and had reiected Saul And therefore let vs neuer bragge of our assurance of Gods loue because of these outward and common benefits which he indifferently bestoweth both vpon the elect and reprobate but if we would be assured indeed of Gods loue let vs looke into our selues and consider if he haue bestowed vpon vs his spirituall graces faith hope patience loue of him and our brethren true repentance for our sinnes and holinesse of life and the rest and then by the fruites of sanctification we may be assured that we are sanctified and consequently iustified called elected and eternally loued of God § Sect. 3 And thus doth Sathan falsely perswade the carnall man that he is highly in the loue and fauour of God How Sathan perswadeth weake christians that th●y are not belou● of God but contrariwise when he assaulteth the weake Christian hee changeth his copie and goeth about to perswade him
spirit working in vs for by nature wee are dead in our sinnes and the children of wrath as well as the vnbeleeuing heathen or most prophane worldling Eph. 2.1.3 Eph. 2.1.3 By nature we are not able so much as to thinke a good thought or to will that which is good no more than those who remaine in the state of condemnation as appeareth 2. Cor. 3.5 Phil. 2.13 but it is our Sauiour Christ 2. Cor. 3.5 Phil. 2.13 Eph. 3.25.26 who so loued his Church that he gaue himselfe for it that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word c. as it is Eph. 5.25.26 So that when we haue attained to the highest measure of sanctification that wee can possibly attaine vnto we must in all humilitie confesse with Paul 1. Cor. 15.10 that by the grace of God we are that we are as it is 1. Cor. 15.10 Neither must wee attribute any thing in the worke of our saluation vnto our sanctification and good workes but ascribe all to the free grace and vndeserued loue of God in Christ whereby we are sanctified and stirred vp to new obedience who were altogether polluted yea dead in our sinnes so that our sanctification and worthinesse is not the cause of Gods loue and mercie towards vs but his loue and free goodwill is the cause of our sanctification and maketh vs who were vnworthie in our selues worthie in Christ of his loue and fauour And therefore we must not measure Gods loue by our worthines and abundance of grace as being a cause thereof nor despaire of his fauour and mercie when wee see our vnworthines and weaknes in sanctifying graces for these are no causes of his loue but effects and consequently when wee want them altogether though there be no cause of hope whilest we remaine in this state yet wee are not vtterly to despaire for the time to come seeing the Lord in his good time may begin his good worke in vs and when it is begun and we haue receiued the least measure of sanctification euen a desire and holie endeuour to liue in holinesse and righteousnesse wee may be assured that it is Gods worke which he hauing begun will finish and accomplish Phil. 1.6 according to that Phil. 1.6 In the meane time let vs possesse our soules with patience and with a quiet and peaceable minde labour after the increase of grace vsing all good meanes ordained of God for this purpose submitting our selues in regard of the measure of grace which wee doe desire to his good will and pleasure who will dispose of all so as shall be most for his glory and our good And in any case let vs beware that wee doe not so impatiently and violently desire encrease of more grace as that in the meane time we forget to be thankfull to God for that wee haue turning our songs of praise for Gods great benefits into murmuring and repining Let vs not be like vnto rich misers who haue their mindes so intent vpon the getting of that riches they haue not as that they forget to enioy and take comfort of that they haue let vs not resemble those vnthankful men who when they haue receiued many benefits doe still desire more and when their desires are not presently satisfied vngratefully murmure against their benefactors as though they had receiued nothing but let vs make vse of those graces which we haue receiued to Gods glory our comfort let vs desire more that we may more glorifie him with his own gifts and though our desires be not presently satisfied let vs not fall into impatiencie but submit our selues vnto his goodwill and pleasure and be truly thankfull for that portion of grace which it hath pleased him of his abundant mercie to bestow vpon vs. § Sect. 6 Lastly Our owne worthinesse no cause of our saluation Rom. 6.23 Eph 2.8 Tit. 2.11 our saluation it selfe dependeth not vpon our owne worthinesse but vpon Gods free mercy and vndeserued loue for saluation is the free gift of God and not the wages of our owne worthinesse as death is the wages of sinne as appeareth Rom. 6.23 And wee are saued by grace through faith and that not of our selues it is the gift of God as it is Eph. 2.8 And the Apostle telleth vs Tit. 2.11 that the grace of God bringeth saluation and teacheth vs to denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and that wee should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world so that our forsaking sinne and imbracing holinesse and righteousnesse is not the cause of our saluation but the grace of God by which all these effects are also wrought in vs. But most plaine is that of the Apostle 2. Tim. 1.9 where he excludeth our owne workes and worthinesse 2. Tim. 1.9 to the end he might ascribe the whole worke of our saluation to Gods grace and goodwill Who hath saued vs saith he not according to our workes but according to his own purpose and grace So Tit. 3.5 Not by the works of righteousnesse which we had done Tit. 3.5 but according to his mercie he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renuing of the holy Ghost Seeing therefore Gods loue is not grounded vpon our owne worthinesse seeing he electeth redeemeth calleth iustifieth sanctifieth and finally saueth vs of his meere mercie and free goodwill without any respect of our owne merits or good workes let vs not restraine the infinite loue of God to our deserts nor measure his vnmeasurable goodwill by the short ell of our owne merits but as the Lord hath freely loued vs so let vs acknowledge his free and vndeserued loue and relie wholy thereupon notwithstanding our vnworthinesse seeing our worthinesse is no cause of his loue but it is his loue which maketh vs and will surely make vs worthie to be beloued if we rest wholy vpon him in Christ by a true and liuely faith For so much as we despaire in respect of our own vnworthinesse so much would wee ascribe to our owne worthinesse and looke how much we attribute vnto our selues in the worke of our saluation so much wee detract from Gods free mercie and Christs merit and therefore let vs humbly acknowledge our owne vnworthinesse and become nothing in our own eyes that we may wholy rely vpon God that hee may bee all in all For well worthie are we to thirst if wee leaue the fountaine of liuing waters and dig vnto our selues broken cesternes which will hold no water Iere. 2.13 well worthie are we to fall into the gulfe of despaire if we forsake the firme pillar of our saluation Gods mercie and Christs merit relying and resting vpon the broken staffe of our owne righteousnesse well worthie are we to be damned if wee enuie the Lord the praise and glorie of our saluation desiring rather to ascribe it vnto our selues § Sect. 7 But here the tempter wil obiect that God is iust and
friends he endured tedious labours many miseries and so Dauid was persecuted whilest Saul did sit on the throne yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe was arraigned at the barre and condemned whilest Pilate and the chiefe Priests and Pharisies sate in the seate of iustice ouerswaying all at their owne pleasures and yet at the same time Iacob was beloued Esau hated Dauid chosen of God Saul reiected our Sauiour Christ the deare sonne of his heauenly father and his enemies the instruments and limmes of Sathan So that it is most true that Salomon speaketh namely no man can haue assurance of Gods loue and fauour by these outward benefits bestowed both vpon the godly and wicked neither by his aduersities and afflictions can gather that the Lord hateth him for these befall all indifferently as it pleaseth God to punish the reprobate or to chastize his owne children But though we can gather no sound argument from these outward things of Gods loue yet it followeth not that there is no other meanes to assure vs hereof for by the same reason wee may conclude that man is no better than brute beasts and that there is no immortalitie of the soule Eccles 3.19 because it is said Eccles 3.19 that the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts is the same But as the Wiseman speaketh there of their outward mortalitie alone and not absolutely in all respects and therefore he saith that they are alike to see to that is in outward appearance vers 18. and explaineth himselfe in the words following for saith hee as one dieth so dieth the other so he doth not meane here simply that there is no assurance of Gods loue but onely in respect of these outward things and therefore he addeth that in these outward respects all things come alike to all and the same condition is to the iust and the wicked Though then there is no assurance of Gods loue to be gathered out of our worldly estate yet it cannot hence be concluded that therefore there is no meanes whereby we may be assured hereof for the Lord hath giuen vnto vs his word and mercifull promises he hath giuen vnto vs his holy spirit crying in our harts Abba father and witnessing to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God Rom. 8. Rom. 8. He hath manifested his loue by giuing vs his onely sonne and begetting in vs by his word and spirit a liuely faith whereby wee may apply him and all his benefits vnto vs. Whosoeuer therefore beleeueth truly in Iesus Christ he may be assured of Gods loue and euerlasting life according to that Ioh. 3.16 So God loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten sonne Ioh. 3.16 that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life If therefore we beleeue in Iesus Christ we need not to despaire no nor to doubt of Gods loue and fauour towards vs notwithstanding our vnworthinesse nor yet in regard of the manifold afflictions which God inflicteth on vs neither in respect of those manifold infirmities which we bewray whilest the hand of God is vpon vs but wee may soundly and assuredly conclude with the Apostle Paul Rom. 8.38 I am perswaded that neither death nor life Rom. 8.38 nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come 39. Nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. And so much concerning the first cause of our saluation namely Gods loue and goodwill and also the temptations of Sathan whereby hee laboureth to impugne our assurance thereof the second cause is Gods free election which proceedeth from the other for whom he loueth those hee electeth vnto euerlasting life and happinesse it being an inseparable fruite of loue to seeke the good and felicitie of the partie beloued Election therefore is that part of Gods eternal and immutable decree whereby of his free loue and vndeserued grace he hath preordained some in Christ vnto saluation and to the vse of the meanes tending thereunto for the praise of the glorie of his grace CHAP. IIII. Of Gods election the causes subiect obiect and properties thereof IN this definition is set downe first the efficient cause or author of our election namely God himselfe the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost and this appeareth Eph. 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy c. And Ioh. 15.16 Ye haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you and ordained you that ye goe and bring foorth fruite c. Secondly the motiue or impulsiue cause of Gods election is expressed namely Gods free loue meere goodwill and vndeserued grace And this also is manifest Luk. 12.32 Feare not little flocke for it is your fathers pleasure to giue you a kingdome And Eph. 1.5 who hath predestinated vs to be adopted through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will Here therefore are excluded all other causes wherewith diuers haue imagined God was moued to elect vs as namely our owne will the foreseeing of our workes worthinesse or faith and the merits of our Sauiour Christ And that these were not the causes which mooued the Lord to elect vs it may be prooued by manifest testimonies of scripture First our owne will is expressely excluded Rom. 9.16 It is not in him that willeth or runneth but in God that sheweth mercie Secondly not the foresight of our owne workes for the Apostle plainly affirmeth Rom. 9.11.12 that before the children were borne and when they had neither done good or euill that the purpose of God might remaine according to election not by workes but by him that calleth 12. It was said vnto her the elder shall serue the younger 13. As it is written I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau And chap. 11.5.6 he saith that Gods election is of grace and if it be of grace it is no more of workes or els were grace no more grace Thirdly not the foresight of any worthinesse in vs more than in others For there is no difference for all haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God as it is Rom. 3.23 And the Apostle affirmeth both of himselfe and others that they were all dead in their sinnes and by nature the children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.1.3 Fourthly the Lord respected not our faith as an impulsiue cause mouing him to elect vs but only as an effect of our election neither was the Lord mercifull vnto vs in making choise of vs to bee partakers of euerlasting happinesse because we were faithfull but that we might be faithfull as Paul professeth of himselfe 1. Cor. 7.25 And the holy Ghost affirmeth Act. 13.46 that as many of the Gentiles as were ordained vnto eternall life beleeued Lastly although the merit of Christ was the onely meritorious cause of our saluation yet it was
meanesse an ouerruling power in perswading without rendring reason or bringing any argument besides absolute authoritie and an vniuersall iurisdiction ouer all without difference or respect and that as well in regard of the secret thoughts as the outward actions doth manifestly shew that they are not the inuention of man but the word of God indited by his holy spirit § Sect. 3 But it may bee obiected Why the Scriptures were penned in a simple lowly and plain stile that if the Lord who is infinite in wisedome were the author of the Scriptures they would haue excelled all humane writings in conceit of wit and excellencie of phrase and stile as farre as God excelleth man whereas wee see that they are penned after a most simple plaine and vnpolished manner To which I answere that it doth not become a Prince to play the Oratour when he setteth out an edict nor to vse Rhetoricall figures and alluring perswasions when he hath to deale with his subiects but rather peremptorie commandements and plaine phrases full of grauitie and authoritie without all affectation and how much lesse should the chiefe commander of King and subiect vse such a stile as sauoured any whit of humane eloquence seeing it better beseemeth his maiestie plainly to commaund than to perswade or allure with inticing speeches Secondly the Scriptures were penned by the holy Ghost not onely for the wise and learned but also for the simple and ignorant and therefore howsoeuer the Lord in the profunditie of his wisedome could haue written in such a loftie stile as would haue filled euen the most learned with admiration yet hee vseth a simple easie stile fit for the capacitie of all because it was for the vse of all and necessarie to saluation to be vnderstood of all sorts and conditions As therefore he frameth himselfe to our shallow capacitie in the penning of the Scriptures and speaketh not according to his vnsearchable wisedome but after the manner of men or els no man no not the most wise and learned could vnderstand him so he thought it fit to speake aswell to the capacitie of the simple as the wise because the knowledge of his word was no lesse necessarie to saluation to these than to the other and in his mercie and goodnesse hee vouchsafed as well milke to the babe as strong meate to those who were come to more ripe yeeres in knowledge and spirituall wisedome At which the wise and learned haue no reason to be offended seeing the saluation of one is as deare to God as of another and they may with greater facility vnderstand the Scriptures being plaine and easie which could not be vnderstood of the simple if they were penned in a lofty eloquent phrase And yet if they examine the Scriptures in the balance of a true iudgement they may finde food therein contained fit for their owne pallat and taste for vnder this humilitie they shall discerne more maiestie vnder this simplicitie more deepe wisedome vnder this vnpolished plainnesse more powerful perswasions to work vpon and incline the affections than in all humane writings whatsoeuer Thirdly humane eloquence and wittie sharpe conceits are not onely vnfitting the graue maiestie of our heauenly King but also needlesse in respect of the Scriptures themselues for what are they but Gods truth and what is more agreeable and beseeming truth than plainnesse and simplicitie For what needes beautie the helpe of painting or a precious Diamond much art to polish it seeing they are glorious in their own nature And what needs the truth of God which in it selfe shineth cleerely like the Sunne in his chiefest brightnes the goodly ornaments of humane eloquence which would but darken the beames thereof Or what needes that which is heauenly and diuine any helpe from that which is earthly and carnall to commend it to mans iudgement No no the flowers of Rhetoricke and helpe of wittie Sophistrie is more fit for Tullies orations whereby oft times a good cause is made bad and a bad one good right wrong and wrong right than for Gods diuine truth which like the Sunne shineth most gloriously when it is bare naked Lastly it is to be obserued that the Lord in his wisedome doth manifest his power in weaknesse his maiestie in basenes and his wisedome in foolishnes to the end that weaknes basenes and follie may serue as foiles to make his power maiestie and wisedom appeare to vs more glorious though in truth in themselues they are infinite and nothing can be added to their excellencie But because wee lie groueling on the earth and are readie to ascribe al to the inferiour means and nothing vnto God therefore the Lord chuseth weake and simple meanes that his own power and wisedome may be in them more manifest For example if the Lord had penned the Scriptures in such an eloquent stile as would haue rauished the readers with delight we would like fooles haue stood admiring at the curious worke of the casket and neuer opened it to looke vpon the precious iewel therin contained haue bin so much affected with the words that in the meane time we would haue neglected the matter but when this treasure is brought vnto vs but in an earthen vessell when this beautifull feature is cloathed in meane attire and the diuine wisedome of God set foorth in an humble and simple stile wee leaue shadowes and behold the substance neither doe we rest in the outward letter but search after the inward truth So also if the Lord had in the penning of the Scriptures vsed inticing eloquence or affected humane learning men would haue been readie to haue said that by the force thereof so many were drawne or inticed to embrace religion and to spend their liues in Gods seruice but when as in outward shew there is nothing but vnpolished plainnesse and simple rudenesse by which neuerthelesse the hearers vnderstanding is more inlightened his wil more powerfully inclined his affectiōs more strongly ruled than by all the eloquent perswasions which wit and learning can inuent they are driuen to confesse that the wisedome of God is hidden vnder this simplicitie his power vnder this outward weaknes and that the Scriptures haue their vertue and force not from the inticing speech of mans wisedome and excellencie of words but from the power and plaine euidence of Gods spirit who was the author and inditer of them § Sect. 4 The tenth reason The tenth reason taken from the Contents of the Scriptures which in many things are aboue the reach of humane reason to proue that the Scriptures are not the inuention of man but the word of God indited by his spirit is that many things contained therein are aboue the reach of humane vnderstanding and so deepe that mans wisedome and reason cannot conceiue them nor search them to the bottome For example though all men know by the light of nature that there is a God seeing this truth is written in large characters in the
Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith Phil. 3.9 and Gal. 3.10.11 Phil. 3.9 Gal. 3.10.11 Hee affirmeth that as many as rest in the workes of the law are vnder the curse and that no man is iustified by the law in the sight of God it is euident because the iust shall liue by faith So Rom. 4.5 To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is coūted for righteousnesse Rom. 4.5 And our Sauiour Christ teacheth vs to say and acknowledge when we haue done all to our vttermost power which is commaunded vs that we are still vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 Luk. 17.10 § Sect. 4 But vnto these and such like manifest places it is answered that the Apostle speaketh not of the works of the morall law That the former places are to be vnderstood of the works of the morall law and not of the ceremonies onely but of the ceremonies onely to which againe wee reply that no such friuolous distinction can be gathered out of the Apostles wordes nay the plaine contrary euidently appeareth by his maine scope and drift in his whole discourse of our iustification and also by some particular places His chiefe scope is to beate downe the pride of all both Iewes and Gentiles to the end that the whole glory and praise of our iustification and saluation might be ascribed to the free mercy grace and goodnesse of God alone now it is most certaine that the morall duties are in themselues farre more excellent then the ceremoniall and consequently more fit to puffe vs vp with a spirituall pride and to make vs to rest in our selues for our iustification ascribing at least some part of the praise vnto our owne workes and vertues so that if the Apostle had onely spokē of the works of the ceremoniall law mans pride should not bee beaten downe neither should God haue the whole praise of our saluation and so his discourse should be vaine as not tending to prooue inforce that for which end and purpose hee chiefly vndertakes it Againe this should nothing concerne neither the Gentils in former times nor any true Christians since the comming of Christ forasmuch as they did not nor doe not neither were nor are bound to obserue the ceremoniall law cōsequently could neuer once dreame of obtayning righteousnesse by fulfilling the ceremonies but they would rather ascribe the glorie of their iustification to their morall duties to which they found themselues bound by the law of nature written in their harts or doe find themselues bound by the morall law of God written in his worde and therfore it was necessarie for the beating downe of their pride and that they might ascribe the whole glory vnto God of their iustification and saluation that the apostles in this discourse should proue that they were not iustified neither by obseruing the law of nature written in their hartes nor yet the morall law of God reuealed in his word Whereby it manifestly appeareth that howsoeuer the Apostle excludeth the workes of the ceremoniall law from being causes of iustification yet not them alone but the workes of the morall law also § Sect. 5 But this may more manifestly appeare by particular places wherein the Apostle plainly sheweth that he speaketh not onely of the ceremoniall law The former point prooued by particular testimonies but of the morall law also In the second chapter of the Epistle to the Romanes he plainly disputeth as well of the law of nature to the obedience whereof the Gentiles were obliged as of the law giuen by Moses Rom. 3.19.20 Chap. 3.19.20 Hee sayth that all the world are made culpable before God and therefore by the works of the law shal no flesh be iustified in his sight Now if this consequence be good he speaketh not onely of the ceremoniall but of the moral duties for the former belonged not to the gentiles and therefore the neglect of them did not make them culpable nor debarre them of being iustified by their owne workes Rom. 10.5.6 Gal. 3.11.12 21.22.24 Secondly Rom. 10.5.6 and Gal. 3.11.12.21.22.24 The Apostle putteth a plaine difference betweene the righteousnesse which is by the law and the righteousnesse which is by faith and maketh a flatt opposition in the acte of iustification not betweene morall ceremonial duties but betweene doing and beleeuing Eph. 2.8.9 faith and workes Thirdly hee saith Eph. 2.8.9 that wee are saued by grace through faith not of our selues nor of workes least any man should boast himselfe If hee had spoken only of workes they might though foolishly haue wrested it to ceremonies only seeing the Ephesians were not bound to the ceremoniall law as being strangers to the common wealth of Israel as himselfe speaketh ver 12. but whē he saith also not of our selues vers 12. he excludeth al whatsoeuer is in vs from being the cause of our saluation not onely ceremoniall but also morall duties So writing to Titus he saith Tit. 3.5 Titus 3.5 Not by the workes of righteousnes which wee had done but according to his mercy hee saued vs in which place we are necessarily to vnderstand the works of the morall law for Titus being a Grecian was not bound to obserue the ceremoniall law and therefore he was not so much as circumcised as the apostle plainely affirmeth Gal. 2.3 Gal. 2.3 Fourthly Paul speaketh of that law by which wee come to the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3.20 and 7.7.8.9 as appeareth Rom. 3.20 and 7.7.8.9 But the knowledge of sinne came especially by the morall law and therefore of this law the Apostle speaketh Lastly the Apostle speaking of the workes of the law alleadgeth these sentences Gala. 3.10 Gal. 3.10 As many as are of the workes of the law are vnder the curse for it is written cursed is euery man that continueth not in all thinges which are written in the booke of the law to doe them So that he speaketh not of the ceremoniall law alone but of the whole law of Moses and of all things contayned in it and ver 12. ver 12. And the law is not of faith but the man that shall doe those things shall liue in them Which cannot be vnderstoode of the ceremoniall law alone but of the workes of the morall law yea of them especially That the Apostle excludeth as well the workes of the regenerate as of the vnregenerate Secondly it is answered that the apostle speaketh only of the workes of those who are not regenerate nor indued with faith and not of the regenerate and faithfull Which shifting cauill the apostle clearly taketh away not only by applying his speeches vnto all men without any limitation but especially in that example of Abraham which he bringeth for this purpose who though hee were long before regenerate indued with faith and exceeding plentifull in good workes yet hee flatly excludeth all his workes from being any causes of
the Father sanctifieth vs by giuing vs his sonne and sending his spirit and therefore this work is ascribed vnto him Tit. 3.5 Eph. 2.4.5 God the sonne sanctifieth vs by mortifying our sins by vertue of his bloud purging our consciences from dead workes that wee may serue the liuing God and by vertue of his resurrection raising vs also from the death of sinne to newnesse of life and lastly by his death hath merited for vs Gods spirit and rising againe hath sent him vnto vs whereby wee are regenerate and therefore hee also is said to haue sanctified vs and God is said to haue sanctified vs in him Eph. 5.26 1. Cor. 2.11 Eph. 5.26 1. Cor. 2.11 God the holy Ghost also sanctifieth vs by applying the vertue of Christs death and resurrection vnto vs and so immediatly beginneth continueth Ioh. 3.5 6. Act. 11.16 Tit. 3.5 and perfecteth this worke in vs and therefore most vsually in the Scriptures this worke is ascribed vnto him Ioh. 3.5 6. Act. 11.16 Tit. 3.5 And thus it appeareth that God himselfe is the principall and onely efficient cause of our sanctification vpon which point I haue the longer insisted to the end that wee should not in this worke rest vpon our owne strength for then wee shall be subiect to many discouragements and lie open to innumerable temptations grounded vpon our small measure and slow progresse in our sanctification as also vpon the great difficulties and manifolde discouragements which both stay vs in the birth and hinder our full growth in true godlinesse all which in respect of our owne power prooue this worke not onely hard but euen impossible for vs to be perfected and accomplished But rather that wee relie our selues vpon the Lords infinite power and gracious promises whereby wee are assured notwithstanding our owne exceeding weaknesse that he will not onely begin but also finish and perfect this good worke in vs. § Sect. 3 And thus much concerning the principall efficient cause of our sanctification The motiue cause Gods sole mercie the motiue cause which mooued the Lord to sanctifie vs was his owne mercie and Christs merits The first is expressed by the Apostle 1. Pet. 1.3 whereas it is said 1. Pet. 1.3 that God according to his abundant mercie hath begotten vs again c. The other is implied by Paul Eph. 2.5 where hee saith that God hath quickened vs in Christ Ephes 2.5 who by his death merited not onely the remission of sinne for vs but also Gods spirit whereby wee are sanctified So that it was not any good inclination vnto holinesse in vs or any thing els wherein we excelled others which moued God to sanctifie vs Eph. 2.1.3 for wee were all alike the children of wrath and dead in our sinnes but onely his owne boundlesse mercie and the alsufficient merits of Christ our Sauiour were the onely causes which moued the Lord to giue vs his spirit whereby we are regenerate and raised from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life And therefore let vs not arrogate the praise of our sanctification in whole or in part vnto our selues but ascribe all the glorie to God who is the sole author and finisher of it § Sect. 4 The instrumentall causes of our sanctification Of the instrumentall causes of our sanctification Ioh. 15.3 and 17.17 Iam. 1.18 1. Pet. 1.23 are either externall or internall the external are first the word of God of which our Sauiour speaketh Ioh. 15.3 Now are you cleane through the word which I haue spoken vnto you And cap. 17.17 Sanctifie thē with thy truth thy word is truth So the Apostle Iames chap. 1.18 Of his owne will begat he vs with the word of truth c. And the Apostle Peter affirmeth that we are borne anew not of mortall seede but of immortall by the word of God c. The word of God therefore is an instrumentall cause of our sanctification In which respect also the Ministers by whose ministerie wee are conuerted and regenerate are said to be our spirituall fathers who haue begotten vs vnto God 1. Cor. 4.15 Philem. v. 10. as appeareth 1. Cor. 4.15 and Philem. vers 10. in both which places Paul chalengeth this title vnto himselfe Another externall cause of our sanctification are the Sacraments especially the Sacrament of Baptisme whereof it is that Ananias saith vnto Paul Act. 22.16 Arise and be baptized wash away thy sins Act. 22.16 Eph. 5.26 So Eph. 5.26 it is said that Christ gaue himself for his Church that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word The which places as they are to be vnderstood principally of the washing of iustification wherby we are purged from the guilt and punishment of sinne so also of the washing of sanctification whereby we are cleansed from the sinnes and corruptions themselues The internall instrument of our sanctification is a liuely faith without which the other outward instruments are vneffectuall in those who are of yeeres neither must we think that the bare action of hearing or the outward washing take away our sins and corruptions vnlesse the word and things signified in the Sacraments bee applied vnto vs by a true faith For the word which we heare profiteth not vnlesse it be mixed with faith in those that heare it Heb. 4.2 Heb. 4.2 And vnlesse those that are capable of faith beleeue with all their heart Act. 8.37 it is to no purpose to be baptized Act. 8.37 and therefore vnto the other we must ioyne this instrument of a liuely faith if wee would attaine vnto true sanctification For faith purifieth the heart and is fruitfull in the workes of loue Act. 15.9 Gal. 5.6 as the Scripture speaketh § Sect. 5 And thus haue I set downe the efficient causes of our sanctification Of the manner how our sanctification is wrought in the next place let vs consider of the manner how this worke is wrought in vs. For the vnderstanding whereof we are to know that wee being vnited vnto Christ principally by Gods spirit and instrumentally by a liuely faith and so made members of his mysticall bodie doe participate the vertue of his death buriall and resurrection whereby not onely our iustification but also our sanctification is deriued vnto vs. For first by vertue of his death our sinnes are mortified and our corruptions crucified together with him as appeareth Rom. 6.6 Knowing this Rom. 6.6 that our old man is crucified with him that the bodie of sinne might be destroyed that hencefoorth we should not serue sinne Secondly by vertue of his buriall this death of sinne is as it were further continued and thereby our sinnes and corruptions are more and more subdued and kept vnder that they cannot rise and rebel against the spirit And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6.3 where he saith Rom. 6.3 that we are buried with Christ into his death Thirdly by vertue of
regenerate they doe not will nor yeeld vnto sinne and though they consent vnto sinne yet this consent is not absolute and intire but with some dislike grudging and resistance of the spirituall part the which dislike and resistance though sometimes it cannot easily be discerned in the very act of sinne whereas the weake motions of the spirit are violently ouerborne through the violent strength of their naturall corruptions and so ouershadowed by the cloudie mists which their vnruly passions cast before their vnderstāding that they cannot at all perceiue any dislike or resistance against the temptation yet after the sinne is committed and the good motions of the spirit are againe reuiued out of their deadly swound then doe they hate and detest that sinne which before seemed pleasant vnto them and earnestly desire with the Apostle to be freed from it Lastly the Apostle in that place doth not speake of euery particular sinne committed with full consent of will for so also the elect offend before their conuersion but of a generall and malitious apostasie from the knowne truth and a scornefull reiecting of the sacrifice of Christ once offered for sinne so that the sense is thus much that if wee wilfully and malitiously sinne by renouncing the sacrifice of Christ offered for sinne we cannot hope to be saued by any other sacrifice but are to expect iudgement and condemnation seeing such treade vnder foote the sonne of God and count the blood of the testament an vnholy thing and euen despite the spirit of grace as he explaneth himselfe in the verses following § Sect. 5 And so much concerning the first question That the christian may fall into presumptuous sinnes and that so falling he may be receiued to mercie the second is whether the christian man may fall into presumptuous sins and if hee doe whether they be pardonable or no. For the first though it must needes bee confessed that it is a fearefull case to neglect Gods iustice and iudgements because of his long suffering or to take occasion vpon the abundance of Gods mercies and readinesse to forgiue to prouoke him continually by our sinnes yet it cannot be denied but that a true christian through the strength of his inbred corruptions may fall into these presumptuous sinnes neither is there any priuiledge in the holy Scriptures to exempt them from any sinne whatsoeuer but that either before or after their conuersion they may fall into it sauing onely that vnpardonable sinne which is committed against the holy Ghost Moreouer Dauid prayeth the Lord to keepe him from presumptuous sinnes Psalm 19.13 and that he would not suffer them to raigne ouer him Psalm 19.13 where first he sheweth that of himselfe he was apt to fall into such sinnes if the Lord did not preserue him from them and secondly he implieth that the Lord might for good causes knowne vnto himselfe suffer him to commit these sinnes of presumption and therefore he further prayeth that if hee should fall into such sinnes it would please the Lord to raise him by true repentance and not suffer them to rule and raigne in him So that it appeareth that a true christian may fall into these sinnes now that hauing fallen he may rise againe by true repentance and receiue pardon and forgiuenesse it is likewise manifest For if once the Lord receiue vs into the couenant of grace and acknowledge vs for his children then nothing in the world no not the most grieuous sinnes which we can fall into can separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord Rom. 8.38 39. as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8.38 29. Secondly our Sauiour telleth vs that euery sinne and blasphemy shall be forgiuen vnto men vpon true repentance Mat. 12.31.32 sauing onely the blasphemie against the spirit which is alwaies ioyned with finall impenitencie Matth. 12.31 32. Thirdly the promises of the the Gospell are generall and indefinit excluding no fortes of sinnes whatsoeuer so they performe the condition of faith and repentance And therefore also presumptuous sinners repenting and beleeuing are assured of mercie and forgiuenesse Lastly if Dauid might fall into these sinnes then Dauid also might repent and receiue pardon seeing he was truely iustified sanctified and a chosen vessell of the Lord elected to euerlasting life § Sect. 6 And so much concerning the temptations which are taken from those sinnes which are once committed That it is a fearefull thing to fall often into the same sin willingly now we are to speake of them which he suggesteth vnto the weake conscience after the committing of one and the same sinne diuers times vpon which occasion he is readie to perswade the weake christian that he neuer truely repented otherwise he would neuer againe fall into the same sinne and the howsoeuer the child of God may fall into diuers sinnes through want of care and experience yet it is not incident to any of this number to fall againe and againe into the same wickednesse after they haue had warning and sufficient knowledge of the euils thereof For the answering whereof we are to know that in truth it is a grieuous and fearefull case to be thus ouertaken and to be so besotted with the pleasures of sinne that neither instruction nor our owne experience can make vs to see the euils of sinne and worke in vs a care to auoyde and shunne it The burnt childe as the prouerbe is dreadeth the fire he that hath been deceiued and thereby much indamaged is afterwards more warie he that hath cast himselfe into any grieuous disease through some vnholesome meates is euer after more carefull of his diet he that hath once been assaulted by his enemie at vnawares and hath receiued griesly woundes will after he is cured goe better armed and furnished that he may not againe be ouertaken of the like daunger And therefore seeing experience of all other euils doth teach vs to auoyde them what a lamentable thing is this that no warning will make vs take heede of sinne which is the greatest euill and cause of all the rest that hauing drunke this deadly poyson and been grieuously sicke thereof in our consciences wee should being recouered be inticed with the pleasant taste thereof to swallow it downe againe and that hauing receiued grieuous wounds we should after take no better heede and goe no better armed and prepared to make resistance but for want of care and watchfulnesse expose our selues againe to the like daunger of our spirituall enemies But yet we are to know that this sometimes That the child of God may fall often into the same sinne and yet be receiued to mercie through our great frailtie and corruption may be the estate of a true christian and faithfull seruant of God to fall againe and againe into the same sinne neither doth any thing priuiledge them from committing that sinne againe which they haue once committed For first the same inbred corruption still dwelleth in them