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

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the first and sixth Chapters to the Rom. but also by the example of Nicodemus who at the first was neither regenerate nor knew nor could learne what it meant which made him to come unto Christ by night being ashamed to come in the day but after that Christ had taught him Free Iustification by the similitude of the brazen Serpent lifted up in the wildernesse freely healing us Then he was a new man enflamed with zeale to defend Christ before the faces Iohn 7. 50 51 52. of the Rulers even at mid-day Iohn 7. 50 51 52. For Christ first makes us righteous by the knowledge of himselfe in the holy Gospel and afterward he createth a new heart in us bringeth forth new motions and giveth unto us that assurance whereby we are perswaded that we please the father for his sake also he giveth unto us a true judgement whereby wee prove and try those things which before we knew not or else altogether disliked So that take a kettle of A plaine comparison cold water which we would have to be hot it would be a foolish part to set it beside the fire and then charge it to be hot and to threat it that else it shall be spilt but put fire under it then will it begin to be warme but if it grow not hot enough put more fire under and if there lie a green stick or block that keepeth away the heat yet put under more fire and then it wil burne up the block and make the water throughly hot So our soule is this block our affections are like to water as cold to God as may be but if we call unto people for Sanctification zeale and works the fruits of the same only with legall terrours not putting under the fire of Iustification we shall either but little move them or else with a constrained sanctity make them worse hypocrites twofold more the children of hell than they were before Mat. 23. 15. but if we put under the Matth. 23. 15. fire of Christs love in freely and gloriously justifying us this burneth up all lets and maketh us hot indeed and zealous to good works Tit. 2. 14. Tit. 2. 14. Againe how inseparably Justification as the cause Iustification Sanctification inseparable and Sanctification as the effect goe both together may be represented by this Similitude Take a piece of carrion as bigge as the top of ones finger that smelleth very foule and wrap it up in a great piece of musk the musk not only taketh away the foule sente from mens nostrills smelling then nothing but musk but also causeth the carrion it selfe by little and little being overcome of the more forceable cause to lose its owne bad sente and begin to smell sweet of the musk So we being wrapped by the mighty power of Gods imputation in the righteousnesse of Christ it doth not only take away the stink of sin Ioel 2. 20. from the I●e● 2. 20. no strils of God but also maketh us by little and little to leave this corruption and sanctifieth us more and more to all holinesse of conversation So that our works doe not purifie us but when as before we are pure justified and saved we work those things which may bring profit to our neighbour and honor to God This joyfull knowledge of Justification is that Freeing truth freeing truth whereof Christ spake saying you shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Iohn 8. 32. Iohn 8. 32. Cal. 5. 1. For by the Law is the knowledge of sin by faith is the obtaining of the grace of Justification is the healing of the fault of sin by the healing of the soule is the freedome of will by the freedome of the will is the love of righteousnesse by the love of righteousnesse is the doing of the Law All these things which I have knit thus together have their testimonies in Scripture The Law saith thou shalt not lust faith saith heale my soule for I have sinned against thee The grace of Justification saith Behold thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come unto thee and thou hast healed me freedome of will saith I will sacrifice a free-will offering unto thee the love of righteousnesse saith The Law of thy mouth is dearer unto me than thousands of gold and Psal 119. silver the doing of the Law saith I have sworne and am stedfastly purposed to keep thy righteous Lawes How Iustificatus per si●lem qu m●do ●otest m● ju●●e de●nceps operari can a man then being justifed that is made just and righteous by faith choose but work justly and righteously This is the liberty wherein Paul also testifieth wee are made free saying Stand fast in the liberty wherein Christ hath made us free Gal. 5. 1. He speaketh not of Gal. 5. 1. a civill liberty much lesse of a carnall and fleshly liberty Luther ibid. whereby people of the world will doe what The true Christian liberty they list but of a spirituall and divine liberty reigning in the conscience there it resteth and goeth no further and it is a freedome from the Law sin the dispeasure of God death hell and damnation Yea this Christian liberty swalloweth up at once and taketh quite away the whole heap of evills the Law sin death Gods displeasure and briefly the serpent himselfe with his head and whose power and in the stead thereof it placeth righteousnesse peace everlasting life and all goodnesse Now since enimies are overcome and we be reconciled unto God by the death of his Sonne it is certaine that wee are righteous before God and whatsoever we do pleaseth A happy change him by which meanes the schoolmaster-like bondage and terrours of the Law are changed into the liberty of the conscience and consolation or joyfull newes of the Gospel revealing the righteousnesse of Christ wherewith we are both justified and quickened Yea this joyfull knowledge of Iustification is the meanes whereby we put on Christ two wayes according to Christ put on two wayes Luther in Gal. 3. 27. the Law and according to the Gospel according to the Law as it is said Rom. 13. Put yee on the Lord Iesus Christ that is follow the examples and virtues Rom. 13. of Christ doe that which he did and suffer that which he suffered as Peter saith Christ hath suffered for us 1 Pet 2. 21. leaving us an example that we should follow his steps But the putting on of Christ according to the Gospel A new creation consisteth not in imitation but in a new birth and a new creation First to God-ward by putting on by 1 towards God faith Christs innocency his righteousnesse his wisedome his power his saving-health his life and his spirit Thus is Adams old coat cast off and abolished before God and we apparelled with remission of sins righteousnesse peace consolation joy of the spirit salvation and life
Then besides this renewing by the holy Ghost to this heavenly righteousnesse and life 2 to men-ward there ariseth in them also by this new birth to men-ward a new light and a new flame there arise in them new and holy affections as the fear of God true saith assured hope c. There beginneth in them also a new will And this is to put on Christ truly and according to the Gospel Now when wee have first by faith inwardly put on Christ as a Robe of righteousnesse and salvation then A threefold respect of a Christian doe wee put him on outwardly as the apparrell of example and imitation Thus must every true Christian bee considered in a threefold respect first what he is with God or before God secondly what hee is with himselfe or to his feeling and thirdly what hee is to his neighbour First with God or before God he is the Woman cloathed with the Sun that is shining perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God and every way full and compleat wanting nothing by reason of Iustification Secondly with himselfe and to his own sense and feeling hee is like one of those antient healed Leapers under the old Law healed indeed but having the remnants of the old scurfe to rub off by Sanctification Thirdly with his Neighbour hee is like one of those hot coales of the Altar burning with the holy fire of zeale and casting out the light and heat of Faith and love to the heating of others Again it is the joyfull knowledge of Justification Luth. in G●● 3. 10. which maketh a man of a co●rupt bad Tree to become a good ●ree first perfectly good to the eyes of God by Iustification and so bringing forth the good fruit In Gal. 2. 18. to the eyes of men of Sanctification For Christians are not made righteous in doing righteous things but being first freely made righteous by faith in Christ then they doe righteous things So that good works ought to bee done not as the cause but as the fruits of o●e freely made righteous and when we are made righteous then we cannot but doe them for after that a man is once justified and possesseth Christ by faith and knoweth that he is Righteousnesse and Life doubtlesse hee will not be idle But as a good tree he will bring forth good fruit for the believing man that is the justified man hath the holy Ghost given him as it is shewed before to dwell in him but where the holy Ghost dwelleth hee will not suffer a man to bee idle but stirreth him up to all exercise of pietie and godlinesse then I doe indeed good works I love God I pray and give thanks to him I exercise charity toward my neighbour Therefore weighty is that saying of Christ either make the Tree good and the fruit Matt. 12. ●3 The ●i●● of the M●nist●●● good or else make the Tree evill and the fruit evill That is let the Ministers chiefe aime be to fill the peoples hearts with joy that they are freely made perfectly good Trees in the sight of God by Iustification and the people bee sure that they are first such in the sight of God indeed or else they shall bee sure to have but little good fruit by Sanctification some Homil. o●● A●nes de●● choack-peares peradventure that may look faire without but be all rotten within Again the joyfull knowledge of Iustification is the receiving of the most great and pretious promises by which we are made partakers of the Divine nature 2 Peter 1. 4. the very forgetfulnesse of which pretious 2 Pet. 1. 4. promise namely that wee are purged or made cleane from our old sinnes is as Peter saith the cause 8. 9. of all idle unfruitfull and blind professing of the Gospel of Christ 2 Pet. 1. 8 9. for this joyfull and Iustification is as the b●an●●● of ●●e Sunn● glorious benefit of Iustification being the bright beames Solis justitiae of the Sun of righteousnesse Iustification i● a● the beams o● the Sun Christ Jesus and shining into our dark hearts doth sanctifie and regenerate us to the Image of God again even as the Sun beames shining upon silver or upon a clear looking-glasse doe cause the very silver or glasse it selfe to cast forth some glimmering beames and this Paul testifieth saying That the ministration of righteousnesse doth so exceed in glory that we beholding as in a mirror or looking-glasse This glory of God with open face are changed into the same Image from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord. Whereupon S. Iohn directly saith thus My little children let no man 1 Ioh. 3. 7. deceive you he that doth righteousnesse actively that is doth cast forth the beames of Sanctification is righteous passively that is justified with Christs righteousnesse as the Sunne of righteousnesse Christ Iesus who shineth upon him with his beames of Iustification is righteous 1 Ioh. 3. 7. But if the Sunne of righteousnesse be so clouded from us that the beames of Justification which exceed in glory bee by want of preaching or receiving it stopped that it shineth not into our dark hearts then our soules can return back again no beames of Sanctification Thus wee see how this joyfull knowledge of Iustification the worth and glory of the same being discerned seene and enjoyed with a true and right faith maketh both Pastors and people to shine forth with bright shining beames of great glorifying of God And thus also we put a difference between a counterfeit Difference between a true and conterfeit faith faith and a true faith the counterfeit faith is that which heareth of God of Christ and of all the mysteries of his incarnation and our redemption which also apprehendeth and beareth away those things which it heareth yea and can talk goodly thereof and yet there remaineth nothing else in them but ignorance of the worth and excellency of Christs benefits yea none are so blind as such as God testifieth by his Prophet saying Who so blind as my servant Esay 42. 19. 20. whereby there remaineth nothing else Esay 42. 19 20. in the heart but naked opinion and a bare sound of the Gospel for it neither reneweth or changeth the heart it maketh not a new man but leaveth him in Id. in Gal. 5. 13. the vanity of his former opinion and conversation And this is a very pernicious faith the morall Philosopher is much better than the hypocrite having such a faith these understand the Doctrine of faith carnally Grace turned into wantonnesse and draw the liberty of the spirit into the liberty of the flesh this may wee see in all kinds of life as well of the high as of the low all boast themselves to be Professors of the Gospel and all brag of Christian liberty and yet serving their own lusts they give themselves to covetousnesse pleasures pride envie and such other vices no man doth his duty
also All c●●a●ures were ●●thout sin but man was righteous and had the Image of God that we bee made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God is for the full satisfaction of his justice because as God made us at the first not only clean from all sinne as he made his other creatures as the sheep the Horse the Lamb the Birds and such like all which he saw in their kinds to be exceeding good but also above all his other creatures hee made us in Adam perfectly holy and righteous in his own Image and saith by his Law revealing his constant will and nature herein Cursed is every one that continueth not in that righteousnesse in all things So his Justice is not Iustice is not satisfied till man ●eturn to his ●●●●ity fully satisfied untill he behold us not only clean from all sinne but also perfectly holy and righteous in his sight and therefore the Apostle testifieth that as by the disobedience of one man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one man must many bee made righteous Rom. 5. 19. Rom. 5. 19. Thirdly it is necessary for the glory of Christ who that he by himselfe may perfectly heale us of the evill and losse brought upon us by Adam it is requisite that hee doe not only free us from all sinne but also that hee make us perfectly holy and righteous in his fathers sight Whereupon ariseth Pauls comparison in the fifth to the Romans between Adam and Christ That as Adam brought upon all his sinne and thereby death So doth Christ to heale perfectly this sore bring upon all his righteousnesse and thereby life Whereby the Apostle testifies That the Gentiles that followed not righteousnesse have attained unto righteousness Rom. 9. 30. Rom. 9. 30. Fourthly it is necessarie that not only our sinne be abolished but also that we be made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God for our behoofe and urgent necessity because as by suffering our punishment and making us by his blood clean from all sin he hath thereby taken away the punishment and all the evils both temporall and eternall that were due to our sins So that we may bee made worthy and meet Righteousness the cause of all good things for eternall life and capable of all the blessings of the Gospel both temporall and eternall it is necessarie that he make us perfectly holy and righteous in his Fathers sight the necessity whereof is plainly expressed by the Apostle Rom. 5. 21. where he saith That Grace doth reign by righteousnes unto eternall life Rom. 5. 21. through Iesus Christ our Lord As if hee should say Grace indeed now reignes to procure all blessings and benefits both temporall and eternall upon us But how By righteousnesse But where shall we have it freely by Jesus Christ our Lord that is that the Grace of God may bee of force to procure unto us all blessings Christ must of necessity first make us with his righteousnesse perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely all which necessities the Doctrine of our Church delivered by the first Restorers of the Gospel in this Land doth seeme to shut up in this one short sentence That it had not been enough to be delivered by his death from sin except by his resurrection Ho●●●● of the 〈◊〉 wee had been endued with a perfect and everlasting righteousnesse Now then let us proceed to describe what this second part of Free Justification is which is as followeth The second part of Free Justification is a wonderfull The d●fi●ition of the second part o● f●ee justification mysticall work and benefit of the Gospel by which we being by the power of Gods imputation cloathed with the wedding-garment of Christs perfect righteousnesse are so endued or rather thought not inherently and actively yet Evangelically and passively so mystically formed with Christs own perfect righteousnesse that we have not only all our sinnes together with the imperfections of our sanctification ever whilst we are in this life dwelling in us incomprehensibly swallowed up and utterly abolished as is before shewed in the first part but also we are without the help of any good works to make us righteous made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely Shining now in this life with Christs good works more glorious in perfect holinesse and righteousnesse inwardly in the sight of God than the ●unne shines gloriously in our eyes when he shineth in his brightest hue by which only we are made worthy of and do take possession of all the rest of the benefits and unsearchable treasures of the Gospel as these Scriptures and the rest following doe abundantly prove Seventy weeks viz. of yeeres are determined upon the holy City that is the Church what to doe not only to finish trangressions and so to reconcile iniquities and to seale up and make an end of all sin but also to bring in everlasting righteousness Dan. 9. 24. whereupon Daniel 9. 24. the learned Interpreters say thus Here are two benefits rehearsed which should come by the Messiah The first is the taking away of sinne The other is the bringing in and giving of a perfect and everlasting Righteousness For saith another sinne is finished or come to an end iniquitie is clean put out and there is preached to the whole world an everlasting righteousness They which doe beleeve in Christ by faith in him are purified and have gotten and attained an everlasting righteousness But for the better understanding of this description of this second part of Justification let us briefly open those foure points that are used to explaine and fully to cleer a matter as first the efficient The foure causes of this second part of Justification cause of our Justification secondly the formall cause thirdly the materiall cause and fourthly the finall cause all in this head point of salvation very necessary the marking First the efficient cause of our Justification is twofold The first primary efficient cause who is it that undertaketh to justifie and make us so perfectly holy and righteous is God himselfe the Father the Sonne The efficient cause and the holy Ghost these are the first efficient cause of our Justification which evidently sheweth the full ablenesse of these workmen and how easily this work may be brought to passe and wrought upon us and how dangerous a matter it is to extenuate diminish or any way to disparage this excellent work the description of whose working is under a similitude notably expressed by the Prophet Ezekiel saying In the day that thou wast born when I passed by thee I saw thee cast out and polluted in thine own blood and I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood thou shalt live yea even when thou wast in thy blood I said unto thee thou shalt live Then washed I thee with water yea I throughly washed away thy blood For I even I
is not of lesse force and efficacie to make him righteous than was the disobedience of Adam to make him unrighteous this man hath the true faith and him doth God acknowledge count and pronounce righteous and so doth quit him from all faults that can be objected against him and thereby free him from all the guilt and punishment due to his sinnes By all which it is cleerer than the noone day That before a man can be free from all guilt and punishment of sinne and from the power of the same he must not only bee barely counted but must first be though objectively and passively yet truly and in very deed made perfectly holy and righteous spot of sinne in the sight of God freely And therefore that the true Beleever is not only truly and indeed made righteous but also perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely remaines to bee proved by the expresse Word of God and unanimous consent of all the best and faithfull Dispensors of Gods Gospel in the next Chapter CHAP. XI That the true Beleever is not only made righteous but also compleatly fully sufficiently and perfectly righteous in the sight of God freely NOw that the excellency of Free Justification is such and so great that it doth not onely make the justified person meerely righteous but also compleatly fully sufficiently and perfectly righteous in the sight of God freely although it might be proved by many proofes of Scriptures yet I will insist with the consent and Foure place● of Scripture proving that the ju●●fied are compleatly and 〈◊〉 righteous reasons of the learned but onely in soure and that with as great brevity as weighty a matter can possibly require THe first is Ephes 5. 25 26 27. where the Apostle 1. Ephes 5 25 26 27. appropriating the worke there spoken of only to Christ and his blood and therefore belongs properly as I shewed before to Free Justification saith thus Christ gave himselfe for his Church for what cause to sanctifie it and hath made it clean by the washing of water through the word But to what end or purpose hath he so done To make it to himselfe a glorious Church How glorious Not only not having now at this present time one spot or wrinkle of sinne or any such thing as is before shewed in the first part to Free Justification which is wonderfull but also holy yea unblameably holy Can possibly the wit and understanding of man wish and desire a more perfect holinesse than to be so unblameably holy in the sight of God who is of so pure and perfect eyes Whereupon the testimony of Polanus in his partitions treating of Free Justification is worthy the marking saying after this manner We must be perfect in Gods sight and that in all the degrees of true and entire righteousnesse Ephes 5. 27. but so Ephes 5. 27. perfect we cannot be but Christ Colos 2. 10. whose true and entire righteousnesse in every respect is imputed unto us which thing Vrsinus also agreeing with others propoundeth in the place alledged for thus he writeth The Repentant persons are perfect mark are perfect in the sight of God not onely in the parts of true pietie all which are begun in them by sanctification but also in the degrees of true and entire righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto them as it is said Col. 2. 10. Coloss 2. 10. In him wee are marke wee are compleat and perfect Where we see that the righteousnesse of Christ being the forme that makes us righteous in the sight of God is not onely absolute and perfect in it selfe but also formes and makes us perfectly righteous in the sight of God And this is yet more fully expressed by Hemingius upon 1 Iohn 1. 7. saying Non satis est c. Heming upon 1 lohn 1. 7. It is not enough to have our sins forgiven and cleansed away unlesse also righteousnesse be bestowed upon us therefore the obedience of the Law is required in Christ that it may be imputed unto us whereby we appeare plenè justi fully just and righteous in the sight of God Where let us mark that he saith not that Christ may appeare fully righteous in the sight of God for us but that we may appeare fully and perfectly just and righteous in the sight of God freely The same is confirmed by other faithfull Expositors and Dispencers Marlor P. Mart. in 1 Cor. 1. 8. of Gods mysteries upon 1 Cor. 1. 8. saying Vnto Beleevers without all controversie is imputed the righteousnesse of Christ by which it is brought to pass that we appeare prorsus sancti irreprehensibiles in conspectu Dei altogether holy and unblameable in the sight of God Can any man wish any more than to be altogether holy and unblameable in the sight of God The cause whereof to be onely Free Iustification is plainly expressed by Master Downham in his Treatise upon Justification saying The Beleever is cloathed with the most glorious robe of Christ Iesus his righteousnesse and so appearing before God both clean from all sin and endued with a perfect righteousnesse he is justified reconciled and eternally saved And this making of us perfectly righteous in the sight of God is Gods forgivenesse and pardon which is not like mans forgivenesse but is great and glorious like God the forgiver which few understand and by not understanding the same doe run into divers absurdities and yet is plainly taught and testified by Acts 13. 38. 39. Saint Paul Acts 13. 38 39. where when he had said Be it known unto you men and brethren that through this man is preached unto you the forgivenesse of sins that we might understand that Gods forgivenesse is not a weak and slender thing like mans forgivenesse that doth not make the thing forgiven any whit the better but that Gods forgivenesse is a strong mighty and powerfull thing that makes the creature forgiven perfectly holy and righteous in his sight he presently addeth in the next verse by way of exposition what he meaneth by Gods forgivenesse saying Even from all things from which ye could not be iustified that is made perfectly righteous by the Law of Moses By him every one that beleeveth is justified that is made perfectly righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely And this Calvin also plainely witnesseth saying upon the same Calvin upon Acts 13. 38 9. place of Acts 13. after this maner You see that after mention of sorgivenesse of sins Iustification is added in place of an exposition And this the Apostle seemes to presse Rom. 3. as a peculiar priviledge of the New Testament to be revealed under the time of the Gospel Where speaking ver 25. of remission of sinnes that are past through the forbearance of God he sheweth that now under the time of the Gospel that forgivenesse is revealed to be the righteousnesse of God made manifest without the Law even the righteousnesse
that Justification makes us so sufficiently and perfectly righteous in the sight of God seeing David calls it hereupon a great and plentifull Redemption Psal 130. 7. And Paul calls Free Justification Psal 130. 7. The receiving of the abundance of Grace and of the gift of righteousnesse Rom. 5. 17. raigning in righteousnesse Rom. 5. 17. unto eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord verse 21. And although it is true that the children Verse 21. of God may bee called Saints to menward for their sanctification yet the true cause that makes them Iustification maketh Saints to God●ard Saints in the sight of God is Justification because by it alone they are made thus sufficiently and perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely by the blood of Christ only as the Apostle to the Hebrewes plainly testifieth saying Wherefore Iesus that he might sanctifie the people that is make them Saints that is perfectly holy and righteous with his own blood suffered without the Gate Then let us not give this precious name of Saints principally to our own holy walking by sanctification but to the blood of Christ in our Justification because sanctification is so farre from being the cause of making us Saints to Godward that properly it doth but declare that we are Saints to manward wherein men are much and often deceived taking them for Saints which are no Saints But the right rule is that which Luther giveth saying thus When I was a Monk I did oftentimes most heartily Luther in Gal. 5. 18. wish That I might once be so happy as to see the conversation and life of some Saint or holy man But in the meane Luther deceived in his opinion of Saints time I imagined such a Saint as lived in the wilderness abstaining from meat drink and living only with rootes of hearbs and cold water which laboured to attaine such perfection that they might be without all feeling of temptations and sins and this opinion of these monstrous Saints I had learned not only out of the books of the Sophisters Schoolmen but also out of the books of the Fathers as Hieron and such like But now in the light of the Gospel we plainly see who they are whom Christ and his Apostles call Saints not they which live a sole and a single life or in outward appearance do other great and monstrous works or such only as are canonized in the Popes Kalendar for Saints in heaven But they which being called by the sound of the Gospel and Baptized doe believe that they be justified and clensed by the death of Christ So Paul every where writing to the Christians calleth them Saints holy the children and heirs of God and such like Whosoever therefore saith he doe beleeve in Christ whether they bee men or women Al● bel●evers are Saints bond or free are all Saints not by their own works but by the works of God which they receive by faith To conclude saith he they are Saints through such an holinesse as they freely receive not through such an holinesse as they themselves have gotten by their own industry and good works Where we see that he ascribeth all the cause of being Saints unto their Justification although he shewes afterwards That sanctification unseperably follows Justification and declares the same For thus he saith further So Ministers of the Word the Magistrates of Common-Weales Parents Children Masters Servants all are true Saints if first and before all things they assure themselves that Christ is their wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Secondly if every one doe his duty in his vocation according to the rule of Gods Word and obey not the flesh but represse the lusts and desires thereof by the Spirit in some measure though not all in like measure And against the corrupters of this order and doctrine hee pronounceth an Anathema thus And let him bee holden accursed whosoever shall not give this honor unto Christ to beleeve that by his death and word he is Iustified and sanctified and so made a Saint for can we rejoyce in this precious name with greater glory to Christ than to ascribe it to the blood and righteousnesse of Christ and with greater assure●nesse and fulnesse to our own selves than to that meanes by which we are made complete and perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely Nay if we will rejoyce in that which God speaketh he gives us in this glory of Free Justification yet greater matter of rejoycing not being content in this happy state of his own righteousnesse to call us Saints holy ones and the righteous every where in his word but also being translated by this benefit God calleth the justified by the name of righteousnesse it selfe into Christ hee calls us in a wonderfull vehemencie of our excellent perfection even Righteousnesse it selfe and not simply righteousnesse it selfe but the righteousnesse of God as the Apostle testifieth 2 Cor. 5. 21. saying Hee that knew 2 Cor 5. 21. no sinne was made sinne for us but wherefore or to what end and purpose That we being translated into him might bee made The righteousnesse of God Where we see that the Apostle is not content to say that we are made righteous no nor prefectly righteous but by a vehement speech that which is farre more even the righteousnesse of God being a figurative speech when wee are not content to use the Concrete but to expresse the excellent perfection of a thing we use the Abstract as to say hee is not only patient but very patience it selfe or not only very meek but even meeknesse it selfe so saith the Apostle that wee are made even the righteousnesse of God the Chrysost in 2. Cor. 5. 21. excellency of which speech Chrysostome perceiving bursteth forth with this just admiration saying Qualis sermo quaemens ista commendare poterit that is what a saying is this what understanding can sufficiently commend set it forth For saith he he hath made the righteous one a sinner that he might make sinners righteous Nay he saith not so neither but that which is far more for he is not content to name the qualifying but as it were the very substance it self for he saith not he was made a sinner but sin and hee saith not that we might be made righteous but Righteousnesse it selfe yea and the Righteousnesse of God for it is of God shewing that it hath no spot or stain in it from whence all sinne vanisheth away as also that God wholy performes it thereby declaring the magnificence of the gift What can be spoken more excellently of this passing excellent new creation for further proofe whereof hence wee may see the cause why God having justified Abraham he is not content to call him righteous but even righteousnesse it selfe saying Esay 41. 2. Who raised up Iustice or righteousnesse Esay 41. 2. from the East and
Colos ● ●2 13. of the Saints in light Coloss 1. 12. 13. 5. The me●n●s of our glor●h atioa Fiftly and lastly this free Justification is the only immediate cause and meanes of our finall glorification and of setting us in the right and assurance of eternall lise Therefore doth the Apostle say Whom God justifieth them he glorifieth Rom. 8. 30. Hence it is also Rom. 8. ●0 Rom 5. 18. that hee doth call it the Iustification of life Rom. 5. 18. Because to the Enjoyers of it by faith it doth freely and undoubtedly bring life and eternall salvation which the same Apostle againe testifieth when hee saith Grace doth reign indeed but how By righteousnesse or through righteousnesse unto eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord Rom. 5. 21. As if he should say Rom. 5. 11. Grace indeed doth infallibly bring eternall life and yet by this only meanes that men of necessity bee first justified and freely made perfectly holy compleatly righteous before God or else grace it selfe reigneth not unto eternall life Hereupon S. Chrysostome saith Chrysost in Rom. truly thus For where righteousnesse is there necessarily doth everlasting life goe withall and also infinite other Radix vitae Calv. ex Marlo Sicut ●eccatum non nisi mort●m parere potest ita donum illud Dei n●f●ra scilicet justificat●o vitae aete●nae bea●i●●dinem nobis a ●sertivel si mavis quemadmodùm mortis causa pcccatum est c. good things even as where there is sinne there is death for righteousnesse is more than life seeing it is the very root of life Herewithall agree the modern Expositors saying thus As sinne cannot but bring forth death so that gift of God namely our Iustification bringeth upon us all blessednesse and eternall life or if you had rather thus As sinne is the cause of death so the righteousnesse which is freely given us by Christ hath restored unto us eternall life Faith therefore of Free Iustification is sure of eternall life and so sure that it glorieth and rejoyceth in eternall life because Free Iustification only doth make us fit or worthy or sufficiently meet Luther in Gal. 1. 6. to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light by which only God hath delivered us out of the power of Id in cap. 1. 17. darkness and hath translated us into the kingdome of his Colos 1. 12. 13. deare Son Colos 1. 12. 13. For thus are we translated out of sinne into righteousness out of Gods wrath into his well-pleased favour out of cursednesse into blessednesse out of death into life for when sinne is taken away in the place thereof commeth righteousnesse in the place of wrath reconciliation and grace and free and well-pleased favour in the place of death life and in the place of damnation salvation CHAP. XVI Of the other foure fruits or effects declaring the Vtility and Majesty of Free Iustification THe third maine point shewing the Majejestie The third effect is Peace and loy in the conscience and Utility of Justification is That whereas the want or the ignorance of it is the losse of all true peace and joy in God so the right knowledge and apprehension thereof is the lively spring of joy and of a good conscience bursting forth into a joyfull confession and glorifying of God both in heart and tongue See this is that sweet Song of Mary Luke 1. 46 47. Where she saith My soule magnifieth the Lord and my Spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour for seeing the imperfections of our Sanctification are in this life so great That all our Righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloath If wee know not assuredly that by this glory of Justification all our sins which simply of themselves as the Image of the Devill God so cloatheth are quite and clean abolished from before him and that wee are perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God wee cannot have but rather doe disanull that Peace and great joy unspeakable and glorious That Justification by such perfect abolishing of all our sinnes from before God and free making as so perfectly rigteous in the sight of God doth hereby bring unto us For which the Gospel is expresly called joyfull newes from heaven without which joy we are not sure that we are delivered out of the kingdome of Satan which is sinne and death but by this joy the faithfull soule the true Bride of Christ may feele it selfe to be entred with Christ into the Eride-Chamber which is the kingdome of heaven For the kingdome of God is righteousnesse and peace and joy in the holy Ghost And whosoever in these things serveth Christ are accepted unto God and are approved of men Rom 14. 17. 18. But if thou ask how Rom. 14 17 thou maist attaine so great righteousnesse as may bring such peace and joy The Apostle answereth That being justified that is freely made perfectly holy and righteous by faith we are so compleatly righteous and become so just and saved That having no need of any works hereunto at all but through faith only obtaining true righteousnesse sufficiently Wee have peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5. 1. For seeing only sinnes doe breed displeasure between Rom. 5. 1. Sola pe cata simult●tem pariant ●●st ua●ex impi●s pe●ateribus c. Phil. 1 7. Incredibi'e gaudiu● Marlo in Rom. 5. 1. God and man after that of ungodlinesse and sinners we are made just and righteous from hence it must needs bee that forthwith true peace doth presently arise and this peace that is to say quietnesse and tranquilli●y of minde and securitie of conscience which doth passe all understanding Phil. 4. 7. and doth breed in the hearts of the faithfull incredible and wonderfull joy indeed the Law sinne and failing in works terrifieth the conscience oppresseth it with feares and heavinesse of spirit and plucketh it from the assurance of righteousnesse of life and all goodnesse Luth. Gal. 4. 2 3. therefore let us not suffer the Law in any case to beare rule in our conscience especially seeing it cost Christ so great a price to deliver the conscience from the Schoolmaster-like slavery of the Law let the godly learn therefore that the Law and Christ are Why the Law is not to beare rule in the conscience two contrary things whereof the one cannot abide the other for when Christ is present the Law may in no case rule but must depart out of the conscience Idem in Gal. 5 22. and leave the bed which is so straight that it cannot hold two as Esay saith and give place only to Christ Let him only reign in righteousnesse in peace in joy and life that the conscience may sleep and repose it selse in Christ the Bridegroomes bosome without any feeling of the Law sin and death for the fruits of the The voyce of the Bridegroome spirit are not only love but also joy
faithfully no man charitably serveth the necessity of his brother the griefe hereof maketh mee sometime so impatient that many times I wish such Swine which tread pretious pearles under their feet were yet still People of Gomorrah n●t governed by the Gospel of peace remaining under the tyrannie of the Pope For it is impossible that this people of Gomorrah should be governed by the Gospel of peace But wee tell such carelesse contemners although they beleeve us not but laugh us to scorne that if they use their bodies and their goods after their own lusts as indeed they doe for they neither help the poore nor lend to the needy but beguile their brethren in bargianing snatching and scraping unto themselves by hook and by crook whatsoever they can get we tell them I say that they be not free brag they never so much of their liberty neither are they in Mount-Zion that Celestiall Heb. 12. Rom. 14. 17. Revel 22. 15. Ierusalem Heb. 12. the Kingdome of heaven Rom. 14. 17. but without Revel 22. 15. and have lost Christ and Christian liberty are become bond-slaves of the Divell and are seven times worse under the name of Christian liberty than they were before under the tyrannie of the Pope for the divell which was driven out of them hath taken unto himselfe seven other fiends worse than himselfe and is returned into them againe Therfore the end of these men is worse than the beginning because they are worse Idolaters under the name of Christ than they were before under but the Pope But to conclude let every one of us remember that saying of S. Paul that Circumcision that is all outward forme of true religion and of the true worship of God availeth nothing nor uncircumcision that is all outward wisdome polity and excellency whatsoever availeth nothing before God but faith that maketh a new creature First new before God by Justification Secondly new to ones own selfe by Sanctification And thirdly new to our neighbours by love out of a pure heart Thus doth a Christian first fulfill and accomplish the Luth in Gal. 5. 23. The Law two wayes fulfilled Law inwardly by faith for Christ is the perfection and fulfilling of the Law unto righteousnesse to all that doe believe Rom. 10. 4. and then outwardly by works thus is he justified in heaven and earth the Gospel justifieth him in heaven and the Law on earth Rom. 10. 4. and thus is this new creature created unto the Image of God in righteousnesse and true holinesse which inwardly is perfectly righteous in the sight of God with an heavenly righteousnesse by Iustification and outwardly is holy and cleane in the flesh by Sanctification And as many as walk according to this rule peace shall be upon ●al 6. 16. them and mercy as upon the Israel of God Gal. 6. 16. FINIS Free Justification was first enjoyned to be diligently taught for the Reformation of the Church by King Henry the eighth but was by King Edward the sixth and Queene Elizabeth principally established by Parliament and singled out from all the rest of the established Articles of Religion and reduced into Sermons and Homilies to be after the Peoples sight of their lost estate and wofull misery by sin principally taught and chiefly knowne and understood of all the Subjects and Commons of the Land for these foure causes especially FIrst because it is the onely immediate cause and means of our peace with God For Being justified by faith we have peace with God Rom. 5. 1. and our assurance of free salvation by Jesus Christ and therefore is called the Justification of life Rom. 5. 18. For Whom God justifieth them he also glorifieth Rom. 8. 30. Secondly because it is the ordinance of God and cause contrary to the judgement of Popish and Carnall Reason that powerfully causeth people to leave their sinnes and to live a true sanctified and godly life Titus 2. 11. to 15. Rom. 5 and 6. Chapters Thirdly because it is the chiefest cause and meanes to discover and suppresse the Romish Antichrist Popery Arminians Brownists Anabaptists Familists and all other Superstitions Sects Errors and Schismes out of the Land and to establish unity peace and concord in matters of Religion and of assurance of free salvation and makes every man to keepe in a lawfull vocation and to doe it profitably in love Galat. 5. 13. Fourthly to direct Ministers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to goe with a right foot to the truth of the Gospel Galat. 2. 14. in sound preaching and pure declaring of the Word of God by true faith of Free Justification Because saith the established Doctrine of our Church sincere Preachers ever were and ever shall be but a few and their preaching of Gods Word most sincere in the beginning by processe of time waxeth lesse and lesse pure and after is corrupt and last of all quite laid downe and left off because Free Justification is a Doctrine hardly learned in a Church and soone lost againe Galat. 1. 6. and yet is the true strength happinesse and safety of the whole Land Esay 52. 1. to 6. Hereupon the fifth part of the Sermon against disobedience and rebellion established by Queene Elizabeth teacheth the Commons that such Bishops or Ecclesiasticall persons as by pride and ambitious rule doe by termes of Error Schisme or Heresie hinder this maine light of Gods Word from the people and the chiefest Traytors in the Land And the sixth and last part largely teacheth that such Subjects and Commons to whom through ignorance of Gods Word this light of righteousnesse and Sun of understanding doth not shine although they may bragge as did sometimes the Jewish Clergy and people that they cannot lacke knowledge yet are such by the blind dead faith Traytors to God Traytors to their King Traytors to their owne soules and bodies and Traytors to the whole Land and Country And hereupon the testimony of the learned Protestant Writers is most true saying Sicut sola fide in Christum veram Justitiam Salutem consequrmur it a nihil difficilius quam hoc hominibus persuadetur nihil Satan praesertim candidus ille Satan aquè oppugnat Certaine fundamentall Positions or Doctrines of Religion tending to peace and to the reducing of Popish Arminians and Anabaptisticall Ministers and people to the true saving faith and to the established Protestant Doctrine of the Church of England by the Godly authority and publique consent of Parliament to be faithfully taught and diligently observed and kept of all the subjects for the quieting of their consciences in the assurance of their free salvation by Jesus Christ and for the suppressing of the Romish Antichrist in all Superstitions Errors Sects and Schisms for the beating down of sin and all vitio●snesse of life out of the Land for the maintaining and keeping of peace and unity in the matters of Religion by the pure preaching of the Law and of the Gospel as followeth in these five Poynts
The holy Ghost is God and it is he only that sheweth us our sinnes ergo he himselfe must needs see our sinnes in us p. 158 3 The Lord by his spirit doth daily mortifie our sins in us Rom. 8. But he seeth those sins in us which he doth mortifie ergo Free Justification doth not make us so perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in Gods sight that he seeth no sin in us p. 163 Three severall offices of the Trinity shewn forth in our Iustification p. 153 Mortification of sin distinguisht p. 169 The foundation of Enemites Anchorites and Nunneries p. 172 CHAP. IX COntaining an Antidote against doubting to kindle and work faith in us and to be a preservative against all objections whatsoever 1. of the world 2. the flesh and 3. the Devill p. 174 Where we must mark first the causes of all doubting p. 175 2 The remedies against the same as 1 The nature and definition of true Iustifying faith must be marked described Rom. 4. 17. to 25. p. 176 The description of Abrahams faith ibid. 2 The second spirituall weapon is that we are to arme our selves against sense sight feeling and natuturall Reason and how this may be done p. 180 3 The third spirituall weapon to overcome all doubting is not to forsake our Baptisme but much and often to meditate upon the foure things containing the very essence of our Baptisme p. 185 4 The fourth spirituall weapon is that wee are to sence our selves against the greatest multitude of all sorts round about us by the dead faith boldly wrangling against the Ministers of Christ and how wee may be fenced against the same p. 198 5 The fifth weapon against doubting is to have often before our eyes the great dignity and excellency of believing Free Iustification p. 235 6 The last weapon or remedy is to set before our eyes the inconveniencies and evills of doubting which are eight p. 241 1 To make God a lyar ibid. 2 To make God for sworn and our selves Covenant-breakers ibid. 3 To make God a deceiver p. 242 4 To rob God of the prayse of his Almighty power ibid. 5 To rob him of the glory of his perfect Iustice ib. 6 To rob God of the honour of his grace mercy and rich boun●y p. 220 7 To spoyl Christ of the glory of his Name Iesus and secondly of the glory of his God-head and thirdly of his Kingly Priestly Propheticall Offices p. 243 8 Vnthankfully to reject and loose the free-giving graces of God c. ibid. The Christians tryumph against all sinne by true Iustifying Faith p. 250 The difference between the literall and spirituall knowledge p. 215. p. 224. 226 Three priviledges of Faith laid open p. 235. CHAP. X. DEclaring the second part of Free Iustification making the true Believer compleatly sufficiently and perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God p. 253 1 Foure reasons shewing how inseparable this second part is from the former part ibid. 2 What this second part of Free Iustification is p. 257 3 It is opened and explained by the foure causes of it p. 258 The manner of the Iustification of the Elect p. 271 The righteousnesse of Christ making us holy and righteous objectively and passively illustrated by two lively similitudes p. 274. infra That the forme of Christs perfect righteousnesse doth not only give us the name but the very being of persons made perfectly righteous proved by Scriptures p. 293 395 300 303 CHAP. XI PRoving that the true Believer is not only made righteous but also compleatly fully and sufficiently and perfectly righteous in the sight of God freely p. 313 This is proved by foure places of Scripture and by the consent and Reasons of the learned ibid. Our righteousnesse exceeds the righteousnesse of the Angels 320 The naturall civill and religious works of Believers are made perfect in the sight of God p. 322 How the New Testament surpasseth the Old p. 335 God calleth righteous men Righteousnesse in the Abstract p. 341 CHAP. XII SHewing that the justified children of God are so perfectly and excellently righteous before God that they are made unutterably glorious in the sight of God p. 343. p. 354 Whereof the Arke is a lively Type p. 346 Two evident Reasons declaring the same p. 345 A true and godly looking-glasse to be often used of Christians p. 348 CHAP. XIII STrengthening Faith against naturall reason and unbeliefe p. 361 2 The objections of unbeliefe are two the first is propoun●ed and answered ibid. With foure strong and sufficient Arguments to resell the same p. 375 The second objection with the Particular answers to it is in p. 384 Helps to strengthen our weak Faith p. 385 A threefold Remedie against our sinnes to believe occasioned by the inestimablenesse of the treasure p. 391 CHAP. XIIII OF the Vtility and Majestie of Free Iustification p. 401 Declared in six excellent fruits or effects ib. 1 Illumination fourefold p 402 For by Justification men see 1 The foulnesse of the least sinne ibid. 2 The perfection of Gods justice p. 404 3 The true meaning of the tenth Commandement and so of all the rest p 405 The treasures and glory of Gods Kingdome p 406 2. It not only delivereth us from the fivef●●●●●nishment of sinne Chap. 2. But putteth us also in possession of six glorious benefits p. 407 1 Reconciliation with God ibid. Whereof there be two comfortable fruits 1 Protection against all evill p. 415 2 Procuration of all good p. 415 Heaven opened and all Creatures leap for joy p. 410 A paradice of Gods loving protection p. 416 Two uses of our perfect reconciliation p. 420 CHAP. XV. 1 OF the foure other benefits wrought upon us by Free Iustification p. 423 2 The giving of the holy Ghost ibid. 3 Vnion into Christ p. 429 Where it is evidently proved that this union is not imaginary but reall and substantiall ibid. Six similitudes illustrating this Vnion p. 419 4 Adoption p. 431 5 Lastly assured glorification p. 445 CHAP. XVI OF the other foure fruits or effects declaring the Vtility and Majesty of Free Iustification p. 447 1 Peace and joy in the conscience ibid. 2 A good judgement and right discerning of all spirits and doctrines p. 440 3 It rooteth up coveteousnesse and the love of all vaine pomp p. 452 The last and maine point shewing the Vtility and Majesty of Iustification is Sanctification and true Evangelicall repentance p. 457 Ten differences between Iustification and Sanctification p. 459 For Justification worketh 1 True love of God ibid. 2 Of this love ariseth true griefe at sinne and zeale against all sinne p. 460 3 It causeth the true feare of God and cheerfull obedience p. 461 4 True trust and confidence in God p. 443 THere are some faults escaped in Printing as Objections for Objectors abolish for abolishing see for so possible for impossible and some others but most of them so small and literall that we are confident
despising of God appearing in all that Majesty and a contemning of that high authority of the law-giver so terribly appearing yea the sinner by his lust and concupiscence against the law doth as it were trample under the feet of his affections all that Majesty of God that was manifested in such fearefull thundering and lightening Is it any marvell then that God said unto David Why hast thou despised me in doing that which is evill in my sight 2 Sam. 12. 9 10. 2 Sam. 12. 9 10. Secondly hereby sinne is become rebellion against God as Daniel confessed saying We have sinned and broken thy Commandements and have rebelled against thee Dan. 9. 5 6. But how horrible Dan. 9. 5 6. Rebellion is Samuel declareth saying Rebellion is as the sinne of witchcraft and transgression is wickednesse and idolatry 1 Sam. 15. 23. And thus the Law entring 1 Sam. 15. 23. upon sinne doth make the fault thereof so greatly to abound Rom. 5. 20. that sinne is made out of measure Rom. 5. 20. sinnefull by the Commandement so terribly forbidding it Rom. 7. 13. so that in sinne these six evills Rom. 7. 13. doe concurre first a despising and contempt of the 1 Contemptus majestatis Dei● 2 Superba contumacia adversus Legem majesty of God forbidding the least sinne in such terrible thundering and lightning Secondly a proud stubbornesse against the law and revealed will of God 3 Nefanda imaginis Dei conspurcatio destructio 4 Imitatio Satau●● hostis Dei improba prodit●●ne defectione 5 Intolerabilis ingratitu●o 6 Imago Satanae Thirdly an horrible defiling and destroying of the image of God wherein man was created Fourthly an imitation and doing like the Devill the enimy of God by a wicked treason and revolting from God Fifthly an untolerable ingratitude and unthankfulnesse of the creature against the Creator Sixthly that which in it selfe is a foule and abhominable thing that sinne is the very image of the Devill which for men to beare that were made to the image of God nothing can bee more detestable the least sinne for the horriblenesse of it though it be but in thought only defiling us and all our good works and holy walking and making them in the sight of God like a menstruous cloath Mark 7. 23. Esay 64. 6. now if Mark 7. 23. Esay 64. 6. our good works be by sinne so loathsome how horrible then are our evill works have we not just cause to cry out every one of us and say with David Bee mercifull to my sinnes O Lord for they are great Psal 25. 11 The second maine thing to work this true feeling The second maine thing concerning sinne of our lost estate is to look into the multitude of our sinnes which we daily commit in thought word and deed by breaking all Gods tenne Commandements which wee must know not only in a grosse confused generality but take notice of particulars in each Commandement wherein we have offended both in leaving undone that which we should have done and by doing that which we should not have done if not in the grosse act which the world and light of nature condemnes yet in the spirituall breach which as we have heard is horrible before God For the Law Rom. 7. 14. Ioh. 4. 24. is spirituall saith S. Paul And God is a spirit saith Christ and must be obeyed and worshipped in spirit and truth and herein we may see our sinnes to be many and innumerable concerning which although I referre thee to such Catechismes as lay open Gods tenne Commandements at large for the fuller sight hereof yet to sharpen thy stomack unto Free Justification and because the Paschall Lambe must bee eaten with sowre herbs give me leave to give thee a glimse of this pure glasse of the Law that thou maist see some few spots of thy foule leprosie in the spirituall breach of all Gods Commandements As in the first Commandement namely Thou shalt have no strange gods before me containing the inward A pithy opening of the 10 Commandements worship of God though herein differing somewhat from the Gentiles thou confesse but one God which also the Devils doe yet look how many profits and pleasures doe steale away thy love feare trust and obedience from God to the committing of sinne so many idols in this lost state hast thou in the sight of God yea look how many sinnes thou dost commit in thought word and deed in a day so much thou corruptest in thee the pure inward worship of God and so many idols art thou guilty of and so many strange Gods hast thou in the sight of God Secondly in the second Commandement contayning the outward worship of God although peradventure thou makest not grosly to thy selfe any graven Image of God the father nor any Picture of Christ as the Papists doe yet look how often and how many allurements have enticed thee to neglect either the preaching or the zealous hearing of the word being offered either in season or out of season look how often thou hast neglected to bow thy knees in solemne prayer to God three times a day with Daniel David and Peter for the holy Ghost to be given thee look how often thou hast neglected to conferre as the prudent Sergius Paulus did with the faithfull minister and with other faithfull children of God to be resolved of such doubts of the assurance of thy Justification and salvation as may arise in thy minde look how often thou hast neglected either the administring or receiving of the holy Sacraments so many Images art thou guilty of that have stolne away thy heart from the zealous performance of the pure outward worship of God Thirdly in the third Commandement although peradventure thou art not guilty of grosse blaspheming of God yet look what zeale thou wantest in life for the threefold works of God upon thee as namely of Creation Redemption and continuall preservation look how often in word thou hast sworne by thy faith and troth by the fire by the light by bread or any other creature of God so often art thou guilty Christ being witnesse Mat. 5. of taking Gods Mat. 5. 34 35 36. name in vaine look how often thou hast rashly taken up and used the titles of God as Lord and Iesus and Christ who is God blessed for ever c. look how often thou hast unreverently used the properties of God as his grace to practise vanity his mercy to sinne his Judgements to cursing and hast abused his providence in crying out upon luck and fortune and such like look how often in the creatures thou not marking the power of God in making the creatures his wisedome in fitting them to thy necessities his goodnesse in giving them unto thee but turning them from their right use as the drink to drunkenesse thy tongue to lying and such like so abusing them to sinne and vanity so often art thou souly guilty of
death taking away the sinnes of the world he reconciles men unto God as if he should say whatsoever unrighteousnesse there is that may alienate or estrange men from God by Christ it is taken away this is Hoc su●mum est be●●sicio● um ex quo reliqua pendent the summe of all bessings upon which all the rest depend out of this fountaine doe the streames of all good things flow forth upon us But how doth Christ Object take them away Objectively and passively to us that Answ is we being no agents and doers in this businesse but meere patients because his righteousnesse wherewith he cloathes us doth as perfectly abolish from before God all our sinnes as the Sun beames abolish darknesse out of a dark house as Christ testifieth by the Prophet Esay saying I even I have put away thy transgressions like darknesse and abolished thy sinnes as a Esay 43. 25. 44. 22. Tollendi ver●●● bifariam exponi potest c. Velquod peccata aboleat Marlor ibid. mist Esay 43. 25. and 44. 22. For this word Tollendi may be expounded two manner of wayes either that Christ hath taken upon himselfe the burthen wherewith we were oppressed as 1 Pet. 2. 24. or else quod peccata aboleat that hee doth cleane put out and abolish our sinnes For Christ taking upon him our sinnes they could Luth. serm upon Christs Resurrection not remaine and abide upon him what then became of them they must needs vanish away and be utterly Oportet ea evanesc●re ac penitus occid●re ac in nihi●umredigi is instar Christi peccati exp●rs est abolished and brought to nothing whereby faith worketh so mightily that he that beleeves that Christ hath taken away his sinnes is as cleane without sinne as Christ himselfe And it is no matter that we feele sinne and death still in us as if Christ had not taken them away because Luth. ibid. God thus stablisheth the faith of his power and therefore that there may be place for faith wee feele the contrary for it is the nature of faith to feele Fi●●s ejus naturae est ut nihil sentiat sed missa facta ratione ●laudat oculos c. nothing but letting goe reason shutteth her eyes and openeth her eares to that which is spoken by God and cleaveth to the word spoken both living and dying and thus glorifieth the Word of the Lord Act. 13. 48. which Act. 13. 48. Etsi peccatorum semus in no●ts velctus est ideo solummodo ●t nos ad fidem adigat fidem cumulatiorem reddat c. indeed doth the deed And therefore although the feeling of sin is left in us only to the end to drive us to faith and to make faith the more abound yet hath Christ taken away our sins from before God and utterly abolished them For one Adam brought one sinne into the world but Adam unus unum peccatum Iste vero unus non solum illud unum sed cuncts abstubt August Hic mentio sit maculae à qua purgamur Christ being but one hath taken away not only that one but also together with it hee hath taken away all that he found added thereunto Where also is mention made of the blot or staine from which wee are made cleane This blot or staine the Apostle calleth sin that is the breaking and violating of the Law of God which as before is shewed of all things is the most wofull most foule and extremely Heming in 1 Ioh. 1. 7. abhominable wherewith God is horribly angry and is most abhominable both in the sight of God and of the holy Angels This then is the staine or blot whereof Christ by Atque haec est maculae à qua purgamur Heming ibid. taking away our sins doth make us cleane signified given ratified and sealed to the true seed of the faithfull by their washing in baptisme For this is the efficacy of that purging and clensing which is wrought upon us by the blood of Christ Abomni maculae omnium peccatorum Heming ibid. and given sealed unto us in our Baptisme Namely that he makes us cleane not onely from this or that spot of sin but also from all spots of all sins Sive magna sunt sive parva sive multa Hic Agnus tollit universa Luth. Perk. c. Heb. 10. 14. Luth. Serm. in Lu●e 2. ver 21. That is whether they be great or whether they be little whether they bee many even all past present and to come this Lamb of God taketh away all For with one sacrifice hath Christ made perfect for ever all them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. This is to preach the Gospel which who so heareth and beleeveth hee truely knowes and acknowledgeth the finger of Iohn and him whom he pointed to even Christ that Lamb of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world Yea all sin as sins of commission and sins of omission Luth. serm of Originall sin actuall sins and originall sins all are done away For because originall sin is worse and more horrible than any actuall sin because it is the spring Originate peccatum quod sons origo omnium peccatorum sit c. and fountaine of all other sins therefore hath God so ordained that no man shall come to salvation unlesse hee bee pure and cleane from this sinne and therefore hee gave the 10th Commandement wherein he forbiddeth this originall sinne and wills that wee Deus ita ordinavit utremo sa utem consequi nisi hujus pec a●● purus sit c. be as clean againe and righteous as Adam was before his fall but because we cannot performe this thing therefore hath he given his own Son for us unto death that hee might both from this sin and from all sins flowing from this originall sinne free us by his blood and so make us cleane Then hereupon doe arise in us good and holy desires and affections contrary to the former pravitie and corruption as namely humilitie puritie gentlenesse and all other vertues and then all good works are practised and that also with a willing heart The author and cause of all which is this grace of Justification by which alone this originall sin is done away and we made clean and acceptable before God Which Christ actually fulfilled when bleeding out his blood and life upon the Crosse he cryed out it is finished or perfected Iohn 19. 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the blood of Iesus Christ the Sonne of God doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make us cleane from all sinne 1 Iohn 1. 7. Thus doth our good Physitian Jesus Christ most effectually cleanse the spirituall leaprosie of our sins because by his own blood he hath made us cleane from all sinne For that saying of S. Iohn that the blood of Christ doth make us cleane from all sin is to be understood as preventing an objection for whereas S. Iohn
you and your consciences perfect in holinesse and righteousnesse freely to God-ward and in the sight of God as the Apostle testifieth saying that the blood of Christ hath made our consciences so cleane that we are made holy and perfect concerning the conscience Heb. 9. 9. 14. whereby Heb. 9. 9. 14. being once purged with Christs blood wee have no more conscience of sinne Heb. 10. 2. 14. that is no more Heb. 10. 2. 14. accusations terrors and condemnings of conscience for sin because as it was said before Being justified by faith that is made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely wee have peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ Whereupon ariseth a threefold boldnesse as first Abrahams A threefold boldnesse ariseth from true justifying faith friendship and familiarity with God secondly a boldnes to promise to our selves from God all good things both temporall and eternall and thirdly boldnesse to pray for the same with assurance to receive whatsoever we ask because the prayer of a righteous man that is made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely cannot but availe much I am 5. 15 Iam 5. 15 16 17 16 17. And as our consciences are thus made good to God-ward by Justification so secondly they are made good to men-ward by Sanctification because when we see that the least sin is such an infinite horrible thing in the sight of God that we must needs be made cleane from all spot of sin in the sight of God though it cost the price of the blood of the Son of God to effect it then we keep his Commandements and doe those things that are pleasing to God zealously in the sight of men also Therefore to conclude with S. Iohn This is the Commandement of all Commandements that we beleeve in the name or power of Iesus Christ that of unjust he makes us just that is perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely by which we practise all Commandements and so doe manifest that wee have the holy Ghost and are not hypocrites neither towards God by Justification nor towards men by Sanctification To the next Scriptures viz. that God saw sin in the justified Church of the Corinths and punished them for the same 1 Cor. 11. and also in the Churches of 1 Cor. 11. 30. Asia Revelat. 2. and 3. ergo the children of God are Rev. 2. and 3. objected and cleared not made so perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely that God sees no sin in them I say that as this is a Papisticall cavill also objected against the Protestants defending the perfection of free Justification so doe I answer with the Protestant Antagonists that these examples when people and whole Churches are alleaged as the Corinths the Churches of Asia and the Church of the Hebrews and such like they alter the question and come not within the compasse of that whereof we speak for it is one thing to speak of the Justification Iustification of a Church and a particular man different of the whole body of a people and another thing to speak of the Justification of one particular man because a true particular child of God is justified absolutely but an whole Church or Nation is not justified absolutely but respectively Some in the same and sometime the greater multitude falling away and are collectively reproved being Reprobates in which sense Paul said that all Asia was turned away from him 2 Tim. 1. 15. Againe othersome may bee 2 Tim. 1. 15. in the dead generall calling of Christianity of Gods election but not yet effectually called nor justified Bearing a name that they live but they are dead Revel 3. Revel 3. 1. 1. Such were they of whom the Apostle speaketh saying some have not the knowledge of God I speak this to your shame 1 Cor. 15 34. Such also were the luke-warme 1 Cor. 15. 34. Laodiceans that were not yet cloathed with the white raiment that their filthy nakednesse do not appeare whom yet in love for the Election sake Christ rebuked and willed to get on the white garment that their filthy nakednesse might not appear before Revel 3. 17 18 19. him Revel 3. 17 18 19. Againe other some although they be justified and thereby all their sins utterly abolished out of Gods sight yet they finde the fruits effects benefits experience and comforts of the same but weakly according to their weak faith wherby they are exercised with many crosses and afflictions to the raising up of their faith to apprehend more fully the Grace of Justification that hath abolished all their sins out of Gods sight such as it appeares were those Corinthians of whom the Apostle speaketh in that eleventh to the Corinthians saying For this cause many of you are sick and many weak c. For what cause namely because you discern not the Lords body Here was weak faith according to which they found agreeable that great axiome of the Gospel Bee it unto thee according to thy Matt. 15. 2● faith But fourthly and lastly some are absolutely justified and these are they that are here spoken of properly such were those few names in Sardis which had not defiled their garments that is they had not mixed and corrupted Free Iustification whereby they walked with Christ in white that is in the glory of the same for they thereby are worthy Revel 3. 4. Such also are those Revel 3. 4. Revel 7. 9 13. great multitudes of all Nations spoken of Revel 7. which were cloathed with long white Robes viz. Of Christ righteousnesse and had Palmes of victory over sin death the Devill and all euils in their hands of faith And cry with a loud voyce that is joyfully and zealously saying salvation commeth of our God that sitteth upon the Throne and of the Lamb that is withdrawing utterly from their works and ascribing the whole cause and glory of their salvation only and alone to God the Father and to his Sonne Iesus Christ And they have washed and enlarged their long Robes that is they have extolled dignified and magnified the glory of Free Iustification as Paul did 2 Cor. 3. 7 8 10 11. saying If the 2 Cor. 3. 7 8 10 11. ministration of condemnation were glorious much more doth the ministration of righteousnesse exceed in glory And againe I count all things losse and doe judge them to bee dung that I may be found in Christ not having mine own righteousnesse of sanctification by my walking after the Law which is but dung but the righteousnesse which is of God by the faith of Iesus Christ Philip. 3. 9. moreover Psal 3. 9. these have made their long Robes white in the blood of the Lamb that is they beleeve that the blood of Christ hath made them in the sight of God from all sin whiter than snow Psal 51. 7. and
Iosephs afflicted of his brethren sold into Egypt and in Egypt for his faith and chastitie and filiall fear of God plaine evidences of his Free Iustification though not as yet cleerly revealed and manifested Rom. 3. 21. Rom. 3. 21. was cast into prison expresly testified by the holy Ghost to be for the tryall and exercise of his faith Psal 105. 19 22. The like is to bee seen in the three Psal 105. 19 22. Children of Israel cast into the hot fierie Oven and of Daniel cast into the Lyons Den and many others to be seen as in a cleer Looking-Glasse in the eleventh to the Hebrewes whose faith by much exercising in troubles was made so strong that they brought forth much and wonderfull fruit Hence of this second sort of afflictions doe arise farre greater prayses than of the first sort as that they fashion us like to the Image of Christ that they are more precious than gold that they manifest and declare the rich graces wrought in us by Justification and the spirit of God For when we see sinne in our flesh and feele crosses and afflictions as it were punishments upon us for the same then to beleeve that the blood of Christ hath made us in the sight of God clean from all sinne 1 Ioh. 1. 7. and that we have not one spot or wrinkle of 1 Ioh. 1. 7. sinne in the sight of God or any such thing is a mighty tryall and manifestation of our faith in the blood of Christ and a wonderfull giving to Christ the glory of his death and resurrection Rom. 4. 20. but who and Rom. 4. 20. how few when afflictions come do here stand as Saint Paul speaks Rom. 5. 2. But then if we do so this causes Rom. 5. 2. God to return with all experimentall comforts and blessings unto us as three places of Scripture for confirmation Three Scriptures opened and explained of all this are worthy the opening as three sufficient witnesses by which every word must stand As first Rom. 5. 1 2 3 4 5. where the Apostle saith 1 Rom. 5. 1 2 3 4 5. Being justified by faith that is made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely Wee have peace towards God that is all beating blowes and anger is ceased through our Lord Iesus Christ for saith the Prophet Hee was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastiment of our peace was layed upon him that is all correction and chastisement for all sin needful for the making of perfect peace between God and his justified children was layed upon him and with his strips we are Esay 53. 5. healed wherein we stand and rejoyce under the hope of the glory of God And not only so but we glory in afflictions also knowing that they are not now whippings corrections and punishments for our sinnes as before the blood of Christ had made us clean from all sin for surely a a child hath little cause to glory in his whipping for his faults but hath rather shame and dejection but we glory because now they are changed into a new nature and use namely to work patience that is a quiet contented suffering and enduring to have our faith tryed whether wee will contrary to our present sense and feeling give this glory to Christs blood that hee hath justified us that is made us perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely whereby God saith unto us as hee said unto Abraham Now I know that thou beleevest in my Sons blood then this patient enduring of tryall bringeth forth experience that by Gods gracious deliverances from those afflictions his Sons blood hath made us clean from all sin in the sight of God as Ezekiah said being healed of his sicknesse Now I know that thou hast cast all my sin behind thy back Then this experience bringeth forth a sound hope and trust in God that is a flat promising unto our selves from God and a very expectation of all good things and blessings both temporall and eternall And this hope makes us not ashamed that is shall not be frustrated because the love of God in justifying us with his Sons blood being thus experimentally powred abroad into our hearts by the holy Ghost assureth us that if hee spared not his own Son when wee were sinners to justifie us much more being now justified that is no sinners in his sight will hee with him give us all things also Rom. 8. 32. Thus we see how the wedding-garment Rom. 8. 32. of Christs righteousnesse put on in Justification doth not only make us compleat freely in the sight of God Coloss 2. 10. but also the faith hereof being exercised Coloss 2. 10. with crosses and afflictions makes us in our own feeling and experience compleat to our selves more and more The second proofe confirming this yet more plainly is Iam. 1. 2 3 4 5 6. saying Brethren count it a matter Iames 1. 2 3 4 5 6 explained of all or exceeding joy when yee fall into divers temptations or tryalls marke how he baptiseth crosses and afflictions as it were with a new name taken from the change of the nature of them by the Gospel and from the end and use of them calling them temptations and tryals as when it is said God tempted Abraham Gen. 22. 1. so crosses and afflictions are to tempt Gen. 22. 1. and try us whether we will beleeve when we seeme to feele the contrary that his Sonnes blood hath made us perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in his sight freely But to what end doth he so try us it followes Knowing that the triall of your faith worketh patience that is a quiet and contented waiting by reason that sinne the cause of all evill is done away to see a good issue and the fore-said experimentall use of them and this patient waiting brings forth that perfect work that thus we may be perfect not only inwardly mystically and freely to Godward in Christs perfectnesse Coloss 2. 10. Heb. 11. 4. but also grow perfect Coloss 1. 10. Heb. 11. 4. and entire lacking nothing to our selves-ward and in our own experimentall feeling declaratively and outwardly And if any man lack this wisdome of thus rejoycing exceedingly for these causes in afflictions let him ask it of God but let him ask in Faith that is in assurance that Christ is hi● sufficient wisdome and hath made him sufficiently perfect to God-ward in Christs own compleat perfection in that foundation of all experimentall blessings that Christ hath justified him that is made him perfectly wise holy and righteous and so entire and lacking nothing to God-ward and herein waver not because it is Christs own glory for he that wavereth in this efficacie of Christs blood is like a wave of the Sea ●ost of the wind and carried away to the robbing of Christ of
am he that putteth away and abolisheth thine iniquities and will remember thy sinnes no more Esay 43. 25. Ierem. 31. 34. A●d not only so But Esay 43. 25. Ierem. 31. 34. also I cloathed thee with broydred work I girded thee about with fine linnen and covered thee with silk I decked thee also with ornaments and I put bracelets upon thy hands and a chaine on thy neck thus wast thou decked with gold and silver and thus wast thou perfect through my beauty which I put upon thee All which as a learned Writer treating of Free Justification truly saith signifieth that God purgeth us with the blood of Christ from all sin and adorneth us with the rich robe of his own righteousnesse and thus hee and none but hee by himselfe alone makes us in his own sight perfectly holy and righteous freely Yea how absolutely God resumes this work wholy and only into his own hand is notably expressed Why God only worketh righteousness by the Apostle with Gods intent and reason why hee so reserves this work only in his own hand saying That hee may shew declare or manifest at this time what his righteousness namely wherewith hee justifieth us farre passing the righteousnesse of men or Angels That he might be just that is declared to bee just in that none can please him but such as are righteous in his sight with such a perfect holinesse and righteousnesse and that he only may be a maker of him righteous that beleeveth in Iesus Rom. 3. 26. and hence Rom. 3. 26. it is that this righteousnesse wherewith we are made so perfectly holy and righteous in Gods sight is so often by S. Paul called the righteousnesse of God both because ●od alone worketh it u●on us and because it alone makes us approvedly righteous in the sight of God as where S. Paul saith Rom. 3. 21. 22. But now is Rom. 32. 22. the righteousness of God made manifest without the Law having witness of the Law and of the Prophets to wit the righteousness of God by the faith of Iesus Christ unto all and upon all that do beleeve Upon which place the true Orthodox exposition of Chrisostome is worthy the marking who faith thus Paul expresseth two great matters in this place both that thou art made righteous and that also without the Law thou attainest these good things moreover he said not simply righteousness but the righteousness of God declaring the gift to be the greater for the dignity of the giver and the promise easily to be effected and done Another reason why God reserves this work in his own hand to be wrought only by himself is because it is too great and too glorious a work for any meere creature to doe it or to have any hand in it for what work can bee more excellent than to make a creature righteous in the sight of God seeing also it is the cause of removing all evill and the procuring of all good unto the creature and this is testified by Augustine saying Quid magnificentius quàm justificare impium hoc est ex impio justum facere that is what is more magnificent than to justifie a wicked man that is of a wicked man to make him just and righteous And therefore the conclusion of Zanchius upon this point is most true saying Solus etiam est qui potest c. that is It is only God alone that of a man conceived of uncleane seed can make him cleane Iob 14. 4. especially say I Iob 14. 4. in this case of making him above sense and feeling perfectly righteous in the fight of God freely The second efficient cause of our Justification together The second efficient Cause of our ●ustification with the meritorious meanes more immediatly working and effecting the same is Christ as he is the Mediator both God and man who as it is Revel 1. 5. washing us from our sinnes in his owne blood and Revel 1. 5. procuring unto us thereby a perfect righteousnesse cried out upon the Crosse It is finished that is the prophecie of Daniel prophecying that seventy weeks of yeers should be fulfilled before iniquity should be sealed up and finished and sin made an end of and abolished and everlasting righteousnesse brought in is now accomplished and finished but how By the slaying saith Daniel of the Messiah so that it is Christ and the blood of Christ that hath by himselfe purged us from our sins and made us righteous freely Heb. 1. 3. and therefore saith the Apostle Heb. 1. 3. we are justified freely by his grace but how through the Redemption that is in Christ Iesus Rom. 3. 24. his Rom. 3. 24. blood alone justifieth us and therefore very aptly speaketh Augustine saying there have been are and shall be many just men just us autem justificans nemo nisi Christus that is but both just and also justifying and making others righteous there is none but Christ Vpon the truth whereof ariseth that unlike likenesse between Adam and Christ which the Apostle speaks of Rom. 5. wherein none must participate Rom. 5. nor be any Agent or doer with Christ namely that as by the disobedience of one man Adam many were made perfect sinners before they have done or thought any evill work as namely Infants which are perfect sinners before they begin to speak or think any evill all their evill actions afterwards but shewing how evill one man Adam hath made them so by the obedience of one man Christ are many made perfectly righteous before they speak or think any good work all their good works of Sanctification done afterwards but shewing how perfectly good Christ hath made them to Godward freely Whereupon the exposition of Chrysostome upon that place is very proper saying Chrysostomes Exposition thus As Adam unto all that came of him although they had not eaten of the tree became the author of sinne and death So Christ unto all that are of him although they have not lived righteously became a procurer of righteousnesse and life even that righteousnesse which by his Crosse he freely gives unto us all hence he is called Iehovah our righteousnesse that is the only cause making us righteous and also Mel●hisedec The second maine point to bee considered and Secondly the Formall cause marked in our perfect Justification is the Formall Cause or the very forme it selfe making us perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God wherein two things are to be marked first what it is secondly the excellency 1 What it is 2 The excellency of it of it for the first namely what this formall cause forming us perfectly righteous is we must observe that it is the perfect obedience both active and passive of the Mediator Christ which being made under the law he performed in fulfilling the whole law for us perfectly whereof Christ spake when ●e said unto Iohn the Baptist Let it be so now for thus it
becommeth us to fulfill all righteousnesse Mat. 3. 15. Math. 3. 15. so that the perfect holinesse and righteousnes not of the Godhead but of the humane nature of Christ wherein he performed perfect obedience both active and passive in fulfilling the whole law of God is the formall cause of our Justification which only after the nature of the forme dat nomen esse that is giveth unto us not only the name but also the true being of righteous men in the sight of God and that it is this obedience of Christ alone that is the only forme that makes us perfectly righteous in the sight of God is flatly expressed by the Apostle Rom. 5. 19. saying Rom. 5. 19. that as by the disobedience of one man Adam many were made sinners so by the obedience of one man Christ shall many he meanes both Jewes and Gentiles present and to come bee made righteous Upon which place the words of the learned Expositors are very effectuall saying thus The Apostle flatly pronounceth that we are made righteous with Christs righteousnesse and withall sheweth what manner of righteousnesse it is when he calleth it obedience saying By the obedience of one man many are made righteous where it is to be marked what it behoveth us to bring into the sight of God if we will by works be made righteous namely the obedience of the Law and Perfect obedience our righteousnesse that also not in one or two parts perfect but in all points absolute which because we are not able to attaine unto by our holy walking therefore this of meere grace he communicateth unto us And this I say is only that which formes us and makes us perfectly righteous in the sight of God which Luther Luther in his Treatise of threefold righteousnesse in his Treatise of threefold Righteousnesse handles notably the short summe whereof is thus As there is a sinne that is essentiall originall and another mans which yet makes us sinners whereof is mention Psal 5● Behold I was borne in iniquity and in sinnes hath my mother conceived me and whereof Christ speaketh saying An evill tree cannot bring forth good fruit And Rom. 5. By one mans disobedience many are made sinners Rom. 5. and againe By the offence of one man the fault is come upon all men unto condemnation So there is a justice or righteousnesse contrary to this which likewise is essentiall originall and another mans and yet makes us righteous which is the righteousnesse of Christ whereof Christ speaketh Iohn 3. 3. Except a man be borne again Iohn 3. 3. of water and the holy Ghost in this free righteousnesse figured in beholding the brazen Serpent he cannot see the kingdome of God and Rom. 5. By the righteousnesse Rom. 5. of one man is the free gift of righteousnesse come upon all men unto Iustification of life and againe By the obedience of one man are many made righteous this is as I said our Lot our capitall Foundation our Rock and our whole Substance in which we rejoyce and glory for ever wherein we are made the righteousnesse of God 2 Cor. 5. 21. and wherein Christ is made unto us wisdome 2 Cor. 5. 21. righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. and whereof the Apostle saith Other foundation may 1 Cor. 1. 30. 1 Cor. 3 11. Rom. 1. 17. Rom. 10. 10. no man lay 1 Cor. 3. 11. This is made ours by faith Rom. 1. 17. The just by faith shall live and againe Rom. 10. 10. With the heart man beleeves unto righteousnesse This is bestowed upon us in Baptisme this is that which properly the Gospel preacheth Rom. 1. Rom. 1. and it is not the righteousnesse of the law but the right ousnesse of free grace By this a man is made Lord of all things because his righteousnesse hath looked downe from heaven and herein mercy and truth are met together righteousnesse and peace have kissed each other truth shall spring out of the earth for without this mercy a man in all his righteousnesse is an hypocrite and without this righteousnesse his conscience is unquiet this grace makes a man true and just and this true righteousnesse brings peace thus Christ frames all them that belong to him with this same one righteousnesse of his owne strange and undeserved of others and makes them just righteous and saved that as by another mans sinne we were made sinners lost and damned so by another mans righteousnesse we are made righteous and saved and therefore I called this righteousnesse an essentiall righteousnesse and eternall and as Daniel saith everlasting because when a man hath it it alwayes abides and remaines neither doth sometimes faile as the actuall righteousnesse doth as it is said Psal 111. Psal 111. 3. 3. his righteousnesse endures for ever and ever Only Christ is eternall and everlasting and therefore his righteousnesse is everlasting and yet ours and makes us everlasting This is the mercy of God the Father this is the grace of the new Testament wherein the Lord is sweet to them that taste him In this must we be saved and in no other for there is no other name given under heaven by which we must be saved Acts Acts 4. 12. 4. 12. and therefore said David deliver me in thy righteousnesse But as there is another sort of sinne called actuall sin which is the fruit of originall and these whether they arise in thought word or deed are our owne proper sinnes so contrary unto this there is a righteousnesse called actuall righteousnesse flowing from faith and from the foresaid essentiall righteousnesse and this is our righteousnesse and our owne proper righteousnesse not because we alone doe work it but because we work together with the foresaid first righteousnesse called the righteousnesse of another hitherto Luther but this first righteousnesse called the righteousnesse of another is the forme that makes us perfectly righteous in the sight of God as we see before wherewith Zanchius speaking by the same spirit although he differ a little in words yet agrees all one in sense saying thus The formall cause that is to say the righteousnesse wherewith we are justified or made righteous is twofold A twofold righteousnesse the one by which we are reputed and also are truly and perfectly righteous to God-ward whereof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5. saying By the obedience of one are many made righteous this is our true righteousnesse But saith he there is another righteousnesse which being communicated unto us by the spirit of Christ and indeed inherent in us and shewing it selfe outwardly by works consisteth of the mortification of the old man and quickening of the new man of an hatred of sinne and love of righteousnesse by which we are just but how before men and are acknowledged and counted for righteous before them And this righteousnesse we affirme to be an effect of that former and although the Apostle doth not separate this
and sinne in the same is the spirituall darknesse as it is every where called in the Word of God that blindeth and darkens this house of mens soules as the Prophet saith Esay 60. 2. Behold Esay 60. 2. darknesse shall cover the earth and grosse darknesse the people And againe If we say that we have fellowship with God and walke in darknesse we lye 1 Iohn 1. 6. And againe Hee that is in darknesse walketh in darknesse and knowes not whither he goeth because the darknesse hath blinded his eyes 1 Iohn 2. 11. 1 Ioh● 11. 2 Secondly Christ Jesus is like the Sun that shines in the Firmament having all true and full light and righteousnesse inherently and actively in himselfe only and for this cause is expresly called by the Prophet Sol justitiae the Sunne of righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. Mal. c. 4. 2. saying But unto those that feare my name shall the Sunne of righteousness arise with health in his wings Thirdly his righteousnesse by the power of Gods imputation conveighed to be in us and upon us so effectually cloathing us both within and without is ●●e the beames of this Sun of righteousnesse beating in upon us and thereby without our mortifying of our selves or any other working or labour of outs utterly abolishing all our sinnes from before God and making us perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely as the Sun-beames doe utterly abolish the darknesse out of a dark house and make the house all light freely as Christ testifieth by the Prophet Esay 44. 22. Esay 44. 22. saying I and not you with your labour of mortification even I will put away your sinnes as darknesse and abolish your transgressions like a mist and as the walls of the house cannot of their own nature being corpora opaca but cast forth all day long a shadowish darknesse that would obscure and make the house all dark and yet the Sun-beames doe continually all day long swallow up and abolish that darknesse and make the house light freely all day long So our natures corrupted with sinne although they can doe nothing else continually but cast forth to our sense and feeling the shadowish darknesse of innumerable sinnes both in thought word and deed all day long yet this Sun of righteousnesse by the full revealing and exhibiting of free Justification being risen upon us doth shine upon us with that continuall day spoken of Rev. 21. 25. Revel 21. 25. And thus Christs righteousness by the power of Gods impuration cloathing us both within and without doth although mystically above our sense and feeling yet spiritually and truly continually abolish all our sins from before ●od freely and doth make us perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely all day long and continually for which cause S. Iohn speaking of the power and operation of Christs blood freely justifying us speaketh in the present time saying The blood of Iesus Christ the Sonne of God doth make us clean from all sinne Where although this work is so perfectly done and wrought at one instant upon the faithfull that he might have spoken in the preterperfect time as the doctrine first Reforming our Church from Popery often times in divers Sermons speaketh to the glory of Christ blood saying The blood of Christ the Sonne of God hath made us clean from all sinne and as Saint Iohn himselfe speaketh Revel 1. 5. saying Revel 1. 5. Christ the faithfull witnesse hath washed us from our sinnes in his own blood yet to shew that this work is so perfectly done that it is ever in present action continually making and keeping us thus perfectly clean in the sight ●od therefore he useth the act of the present time saying that it doth make us cleane from all sinne as the Sun-beames beating into a dark house at six of the clock in the morning have at that instant abolished the darknesse that was there before and have made the house all light and yet it doth make it and doth keep it light all day long so wee being by the power of Gods imputation cloathed with Christs righteousnesse it not only hath made us perfectly cleane from all sinne in the sight of God but also doth make us and doth keep us clean all day long And this is testified by the faithfull Expositors upon that place saying Verbum praesentis temporis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth make us clean continuum actum significat that is the Verb of the present time signifieth a continuall action but wherefore because although ever and anon we doe by new sinnes as much as lyes in us even cut off our selves from the love and favour of God yet this continuall and perfect imputation doth continually abolish all our sins and ever and continually retaine and keep us in perfect righteousnesse and fellowship with God which is more plainely testified by the Author to the Hebrewes saying With one sacrifice he hath made perfect for ever or continually them that are sanctified Fourthly and lastly faith beleeving that this wedding-garment of Christs righteousnesse doth make us thus perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely is like the windowes and doores of the house letting in this light into the soule whereupon it is said Act. 14. 27. That God had opened the doore of Acts 14. 27. Faith unto the Gentiles because although the Gospel doe shine by preaching never so brightly unto men yet if this door of Faith bee not opened but remaines fast shut up they still abide in the grosse darknesse of their sins but if the door and windowes of faith be opened then the beames of Christs righteousnesse beating in doe abolish all the darknesse of their sinnes from before God and make them all light which sheweth also that it is not faith that justifieth us actively of it selfe as it is a virtue as the Papists hold but passively as it lets in the imputation of Christs righteousnesse into the soule for if the door of the house be wide open and yet there be no Sun as being not yet risen to shine in the Firmament that may cast in her beames into the same the house abideth still dark though the doores and windowes be open never so wide but if the Sun shine and cast her beames upon the house and then the doore and windowes thereof be open then doe those doores and windowes by passive receiving in the light make the house all light even so doth faith by receiving the imputation of Christs righteousnesse make a man all light in the Lord and yet not inherently to his sense and feeling and actively for then his sanctification should be perfect which is not so in this life but in that he is made all light that is perfectly righteous by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse ●● is all light indeed both without and within but yet mystically light that is above sight sense and feeling and altogether objectively and passively light in
Prophet Malac. 3. 17. I will spare them as a man spareth his sonne M●l 3. 17. that serveth him not as the Papists conceive for their sanctification sake and goodnesse of their works nor yet sparing them as other semi-Papists childishly conceive for their good will and good endeavours because they doe like a childe the best that they can and because their imperfections be but infirmities nor that hee will as he hath now more fully revealed in the Gospel accept of the imperfect works of his children whilst they are imperfect seeing he hath now revealed by his sonnes death what an horrible thing the least imperfection is in his sight that they are so loathsome as a menstruous cloth in his sight causing him to take his full stroak at them in his sonnes blood to wash away and abolish the imperfections of them out of his sight but because in new tincture of his Sons blood and righteousnesse hee hath made them perfectly holy and righteous in his own sight freely therefore hee likes and accepts them For that Justification makes not only our persons but also our works perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God is not only evident by the former Scriptures but also testified by all the best faithfull Dispensers of Gods mysteries who say with one consent after this manner Postquam facti sumus Christi participes non ipsi solum justi sumus sed opera nostra justa reputantur coram Deo that is after that we are made partakers of Christ not only we our selves are righteous but also our works are reputed and counted righteous before God what not righteous indeed but only imaginarily reputed and counted righteous Nay but because Gods counting is not a bare imaginary thing but a reall working of the thing as he reputeth and counteth therefore as wee our selves are so reputed and counted righteous that coram Deo reipsa justi sumus wee our selves are in truth just that is perfectly righteous before God so also God so counts our works perfectly righteous before himselfe that they are reipsa in very deed and truth perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely that is not in the worth and perfection of our doing them by sanctification but in the making of them perfectly righteous in Christs righteousnesse by Justification But what is the reason that our works that as they Quest proceed from us are so full of spots and staines are made so perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God The learned answer thus Propterea scilicet quia quicquid Answ est in illis imperfection is obliteratur Christi sanguine that is Therefore verily because whatsoever imperfection All the imperfection of our works is done away by the blood of Christ is in them is done away and abolished by the blood and righteousnesse of Christ And by this meanes only doe our works please God and for this cause only all the large promises made in Gods Word unto our works are truly verified and fulfilled upon us meerly because wee doing them in comfort faith and thankfulnesse that we are justified all our works are thereby justified as well as we and made so perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God that they fully please God and pull down all blessings and benefits whatsoever both spirituall and temporall freely upon us only for and by Free Iustification thus perfectly blessing both us and our works As it is cleerly testified by the foresaid learned Dispensors of Gods mysteries saying thus Qui enim jam Christi Iustitiâ sunt induti ii non sibi modo propitium habent Dominum sed operibus quoque suis c. That is for they that are cloathed with Christs righteousness have God pleased and favourable not to themselves only but also to their works the spots and staines whereof lest they should come in any reckoning are abolished with Christs purity unde nullis sordibus infecta opera justa reputantur that is from whence our works are counted righteous seeing they are tainted with no spots of uncleannesse and foulnesse and by this meanes and not otherwise doe mens works please God This learned Calvin also prosecuteth in the 7. 8 9 ●●d 10. Sections of the 17. Chapter of the third book Calv. in the 7. 8. 9. 10. Sections of the 17. Cap of the third Book of his Institutions of his Institutions with cleer demonstrations saying thus when the blot and fault of imperfection is abolished which is of force to defile our good works the good works which the faithfull doe both are and bee taken for righteousnesse yea after this manner for a full and perfect righteousnesse And thus wee may saith he truly say that by only faith not only wee but also our works are justified that is as I have proved before made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely and so truly pleasing God Holy faith justifies our works And this the holy Ghost in the example of the sacrifice of Abel doth plainly and expresly teach Heb. 11. 4 saying By faith Able offered unto God a more excellent Heb. 11. 4● sacrifice than Cain by which he obtained witnesse that he was righteous where wee see that not only Abel himselfe was just and righteous that is excellent but his gifts were excellent and that also excellent to God-ward God himselfe as the Text saith testifying of his gifts that they were excellent which Title they could not have with God except they were in truth perfectly holy and righteous in his sight not for the perfection of Abels doing them but freely because as also it is said of Noah hee was made heire of that righteousnesse which is by faith verse 7. This is the righteousnesse of Christ which is so mighty in operation that by it God not only as Calvin speaketh pretioso justitiae suae colore nos tingit that is with the precious tincture of his own righteousnesse doth be-die us our own selves but also with the same precious tincture doth be-die all our good works and wholelife and conversation making not only us our selves but also all our works perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely and yet not by these works made with this tincture perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God to deserve heaven as the Papists fondly conceit because a Christian hath heaven freely by the Free Justification of his person before hee hath moved himselfe to doe any good work because hee is as Christ testifieth translated from death into life by beleeving only Ioh. 5. 24. But the works of the Beleever Iohn 5. 24. are with this tincture and die made thus perfectly The works of the Beleevers are made perfect that they may be a sacrifice of thanksgiving to God holy and righteous in the sight of God freely that they may thus be a welcome and acceptable sacrifice of prayse and thansgiving before God
Moon or rather a candle for brightnesse so farre doth our glorifying of God directly to his own eyes the first way by joyfull embracing the greatnesse of his benefits passe the glorifying of him by works to the eyes of men the second way Because the first is meerly passive in us suffering God to glorifie himselfe upon us by working his inestimable benefits freely upon us The second is declarative and active in us by which wee declare the free goodnesse of God freely bestowed upon us The first is inward spirituall and divine wholly tending to the prayse of God first creating as it were the glory of God in us For whereas it is the nature of unbeliefe as Brentius well describes to be very curious and inquisitive and at the smallest appearance contrary to the promise doubts of God speaking it one while making question whether the Word be the Word another while making question of the meaning of the Word another while ☞ looking to the fewnesse and simplenesse of them that hold the Word another while looking at the multitude and greatnesse of them that hold otherwise but ever seeking some witty evasion whereby it may seem to do honestly in not believing the Word of God as it plainly speaks And sorobs God of the glory of his truth and of his power and with seeming wit makes him a liar So on the contrary side faith resting upon the naked and plain word spoken because it seemes contrary to reason and outward sense and feeling it flies to the truth and power of the Promiser making him true in his speaking and able to perform it and so gives him the glory of his Living and Being and true working in us whereby as Luther truly speaks faith is as a man would say the Creator of a certaine Divinity not in the substance of God but in us and so by putting us in possession of Gods bounteous divine benefits doth truly make us divine people And for this first kinde of glorifying God is Abraham so often called in the Word the friend of God But the second kind of glorifying God is outward more fleshly and humane not creating and making but shewing after a grosser manner to the eyes of worldly men that we are made divine persons whereof S. Peter speaks saying By the exceeding great and precious promises you are partakers of the Divine nature But how manifested and declared In that saith he yee flie the corruption that is in the world through lust 2 Pet. 1. 4. And this second active kinde of glorifying God because we are Agents in it and doe it by the spirit greatly inclines to the glorifying of man as S. Paul speaking of the sanctified works and holy life of Abraham saith What shall we say then that Abraham our Father hath found concerning the flesh For if Abraham were justified that is made righteous in the sight God by the holy works of his sanctification he had wherein to rejoyce or glory viz. before men but not before God But what saith the Scripture Abraham believed that God himselfe took in hand to make him righteous by clothing him with his Sons righteousnesse whereby he was made spiritually divinely heavenly and perfectly righteous not for mans account which counteth of righteousnesse by halfes but in Gods account whose count is perfect and counts it not righteousnesse except he himselfe alone by himselfe doe make his creature perfectly and gloriously holy and righteous from all spot of sin in his own sight freely This Abraham believed enjoyed the benefit thereof and gave glory to God and therefore was called the friend of God because he glorified him in this principall glory wherein hee will be glorified in the greatnesse of his benefits freely bestowed which especially in his Gospel are correspondent and agreeable to his great and glorious nature and therefore being above humane capacitie and to reason impossible is principally glorified by taking them by faith and this faith seeing and discerning the greatnesse and glory of them makes the true Believer to rejoyce with joy unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1. 8. 1 Pet. 1. 3. But alas here wee may take up Luthers complaint That this knowledge and benefit of Christ to come the Saints of the Old Testament rejoyced more in and so glorified God more for the same than wee now doe when hee is so brightly and comfortably revealed and exhibited unto us Indeed saith hee we do confesse that this knowledge of Christ and of the righteousnesse of faith is an inestimable treasure but wee conceive not thereby such a full joy of spirit as the Prophets and Apostle did But what is the reason hereof Because saith Luther in another place They did not consider so coldly the promises made unto the Fathers as wee doe but did reade them and weigh them with great diligence But they that understand not this benefit of fee Justification whereof the Gospel specially intreateth and so doe prize no other righteousnesse besides the righteousnesse of works works when they heare this righteousnesse of faith pressed and the excellencie thereof advanced they are offended objecting that it is so farre from glorifying God two wayes that it makes men secure and carelesse to all good works But what saith the Doctrine of our Church is the cause hereof Even this as Luther also testifieth Because they understand nothing of Free Iustification or else they understand it carnally for their minds are occupied with other cogitations and fantasticall imaginations of their own works therefore things seeme unto them strange matters and no meanes to glorifie God neither passively by faith nor actively by works but the children of wisdome will imitate the Prophets and Apostles who because they conceived the great glory thereof and felt true joy of spirit for the same therefore saith Luther did they especially Paul so plentifully set forth and so diligently teach the Article of Justification For saith he this is the proper office of an Apostle or as one may say the essence of a Minister of the Gospel to preach among people the unsearchable riches of Christ Ephes 3. 8. especially Ephes 3. 8. the cause and fountaine of all the rest namely Free Justification wherewith as David saith Psal Psal 119. 32. Gal. 5. 1. 119. 32. when our heart is set at liberty Galat. 5. 1. wee will runne the way of Gods Commandements Hence it is that the Prophet Ieremy also set out so magnificently the glory of Free Justification as it should be fully revealed under the time of the Gospel saying I will make them cleane from all their iniquities whereby they have sinned against mee and whereby they have rebelled against mee c. Yea saith he in an other place Ierem. 31. I will make a new covenant with Ierem. 31 33. the house of Israel and this shall be the Covenant That I will so forgive their iniquities that I will remember their sinnes no more And it shall bee to mee a name a
saying thus Who so dwelleth in the secret of the most High that is as Luther well expounds it Vnder Free Iustification which none can work upon us but the most high God and indeed is the secret of secrets to the blind world He shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty that is hee shall bee protected and defended under the most comfortable shade of Gods most loving providence who is of Almighty power to preserve and keep him So that the faithfull soule saying unto the Lord in confidence of this reconciliation by Free Justification Oh my refuge and my Fortresse my God in him will I trust Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the hunter which is the Divell and all his instruments and from the noysome pestilence of their contagious practises He will cover thee under his wings of Fr●e Justification and thou shalt bee safe under his feathers of his gracious providence and protection his truth of perfect reconciliation shall be thy shield and buckler c. as it followes in the whole Psalme For hee shall give his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy wayes thou mayst have some crosses and troubles But thou shalt tread upon the Lyon and Adder the young Lyon and the Dragon shal● thou trample under thy feet Why Because by faith of free Justification hee hath set his love upon mee therefore saith God will I deliver him I will exalt him because he hath known my name He shall call upon mee and I will heare him I will bee with him in trouble I will deliver him and glorifie him With long life will I satisfie him and shew him my salvation is not this a joyfull perfect excellent and blessed reconciliation Hence likewise is the whole 121. Psalme verified upon us Psal 121. testifying that the creatures that have mighty operation in mans body and are high above our reach shall yet notwithstanding doe us no harme saying The Sun shall not smite thee by day nor the Moon by night the Lord shall preserve thee from all evill yea hee shall keep thy soule the Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy comming in from henceforth and forever What would wee have more Yea hence are all the other comfortable excellent protectors spoken of every-where in the Word of God verified upon us whereupon the Prophet saith Psal 5. 11 12. Let all them that trust in Psal 5. 11. 12. thee rejoyce and tryumph for ever and cover thou them and let them that love thy name rejoyce in thee why Because thou Lord wilt blesse the righteous which none are before God but by free Justification and with favour wilt compasse him as with a shield defending and keeping him from all hurt to the least haire of his head Matth. 10. 29. 30. can we possibly wish a greater Matth. 10. 29. 30. and perfecter and more protecting reconciliation But as this first part of Justification doth thus protect and defend us from all evill and hurt So the second part brings upon us by this perfect reconciliation all manner of good things that are truly needfull and necessary for us as God himselfe testifieth Ierem. 32. 40 41. saying I will make an everlasting Ier. 32. 40. 41. covenant with them that I will never turn away from them to doe them good Yea saith he I will delight and rejoyce over them to doe them good Hence is the whole Psal 23. verified upon us namely That the Psal 23. Lord is our Shepherd because he is made such unto us only and truly by free Justification And therefore can we lack nothing Hee will feed us in green pastures and lead us forth by the waters of comfort Hee restoreth our souls and leads us by Justification freely in the pathes of righteousnesse for his name sake Therefore he concludes Surely goodness and mercy shall follow us all the daies of our life Hence it is that Christ said Take no distrustfull cark and care for your belly what you shall eat nor for your body what you shall put on For after all these things doe the Gentiles with such doubtfulness and distrusting care seek after But your heavenly Father knowes that you have need of all these things But seek yee first the Kingdome of God If you ask how I answer By making your selves sure of his righteousnesse which by making you perfectly righteous in the sight of God freely is only able to reconcile and set you in perfect peace with God and then all these things shall be cast upon you Matth. 6. Whereupon we see the truth of that Matth. 6. 33. saying of David Feare the Lord yee his Saints but how are we Saints Two manner of wayes as is shewed before First by Justification that makes us perfect Saints to God-ward freely and Secondly by sanctification that makes us Saints to men-ward in sincerity Well what then For saith hee They that feare him lack nothing The Lyons do lack and suffer hunger but they that feare the Lord shall want nothing that is good Psal 34. Which perfect reconciliation with God Psal 34. 10. Iacob found so effectuall that hee said boldly unto his Brother The Lord hath had mercy on me and therefore I have all things Gen. 33. 11. And Luther upon the Gen. 33. 11. voyce from heaven saying This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased shewes that this rich mercy and perfect reconciliation with God by which we have all things was testified by God himselfe at the Baptisme of his Sonne to be without measure exhibited saying thus Nothing else was heard seen here but love Incredible sweetnesse good will and the infinite and incredible favour of God towards us nothing but unmeasurable and bottomless goodness and placability all the whole vast heaven seemed not to distill drops but to poure and raine down whole showers and floods of most sweet honey and sugar and to power down meer and infinite favour of God abundantly upon us that we may think of and expect nothing else from him but the best good things and most rich mercy and wel-pleasing reconciliation yea saith he againe For this one cause would God sound these words from heaven with his own voyce that he might perswade us certainly and that we might infix it deeply in our minds That in Christ and for Christ his beloved Son omni nos beneficiorum genere cumulare velit c. That it is his will to lade us with all manner of benefits and embrace us as was signified in receiving the prodigal child with a true fatherlike and well-pleased affection of love to cover us with the best garment nourish us make merry with us and defend and save us and to drive away all things that goe about to deprive us hereof Which words of Luther although they seeme for sweetnesse and fulnesse of honey and sugar to be incredible yet wee need not doubt thereof because S. Paul himselfe