Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n good_a reward_n work_n 2,765 5 6.8633 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A92854 The humbled sinner resolved what he should do to be saved. Or Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ the only way of salvation for sensible sinners. Discovering the quality, object, acts, seat, subject, inseparable concomitants and degrees of justifying faith. The agreement and difference of a strong and weak faith; the difficulty of beleeving, the facility of mistake about it, and the misery of unbelief. The nature of living by faith, and the improvement of it to a full assurance. Wherein several cases are resolved, and objections answered. / By Obadiah Sedgwick, Batchelour in Divinity and late minister of the Gospel in Covent Garden. Sedgwick, Obadiah, 1600?-1658. 1657 (1657) Wing S2375; Thomason E900_1; ESTC R203520 234,690 315

There are 10 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the Law of God requires under the paine of eternal damnation The perfection of good works according to the strict exigence of the Law consists especially in two things 1. One is that a man be able to performe them with all of his heart and with a plenary love without the intervening or sliping in of any evil inclination or motion which abates that due and required intension or in any measure sprinkleth or tainteth them with any defilement 2. Another is that a man is to perform good works in that manner with a perpetual and constant ten our or course all his life Those two are the ingredients of perfection as appears by that of Christ Thou shalt love the Lord c. And that of Paul He is cursed that doth not continue in all that is written c. Gal. 3. 10. These are the conditions of works legally good and which must justifie a man if he will be justified according to the legal Covenant But who can performe such perfect and good works Adam might have done them and Christ did but what one sinner can who can say my heart is cleane and that we do not in many things offend all Paul cries out I am carnal but the Law is spiritual The good that he would do he could not do and the evil which he would not do that did he do Good Lord how often are we at a losse in our most retired meditations and how our hearts lie flat on earth when our eyes look towards heaven in prayer For one good work that we do how many bad which we should not do like boyes for one faire line twenty with blots and blurs or like the Archers whereas they hit the mark once they misse it a hundred times Let us but cast the accounts of our ill works with the good and we shall finde with shame and sorrow that our good works are not equal with our bad in number nor so strong in dignity to wipe out the bad but the bad as they are more for number so their cry of gilt is more meritorious to cast both our persons and all our works before the judgement seat of God then the good to ingratiate or merit for us 2. What proportion 'twixt our works and 'twixt our pardon and salvation If Jacob be lesse then the least of outward benefits Good God! how far more unworthy are we of the spiritual yea of the Eternal When we have done all we have not done more then duty and that can never be merit which is but duty nay when we have done all we can we have not done our duty we are but unprofitable servants and that which failes of duty comes short of dignity or merit It is true that God commands accepts delights in will graciously reward good works what for their own sake No for his mercies sake he will save the man whose heart is holy and whose life is fruitful What for the works sake No but for his Christs sake It cannot be denied but that there is some relation 'twixt good works and salvation as between the meanes and the end but there is not that relation as 'twixt an efficient cause and an effect for the efficient cause of our salvation is only Gods grace and favour Nor as 'twixt a meritorious cause and the reward for the meritorious cause of our salvation is only the obedience of Jesus Christ Nor as 'twixt an apprehensive cause may I use such an improper speech for that only is faith the instrument of our salvation c. There is not in regenerate men such an adequation or full 3. Noe ability to keep the whole Law wholly answerablenesse of duty as to keep and fulfil the Law as it is the Covenant of life and salvation There are divers Arguments to cleare this I will touch one or two 3. Reasons 1. Imperfect actions do not fulfil a perfect Rule no more then a short line answers a long copy or a line partly crooked doth that which is streight But the duties which regenerate men perform are imperfect actions for as much as they flow from an imperfect agent viz. from the soul of a Christian which is partly spiritual and partly carnal not wholly spiritual nor wholy carnal even from this doth the Apostle conclude the impossibility for us to fulfil the Law Rom. 8. 3. viz. from the weakness or infirmity of the flesh that is of the old man not yet fully purged and changed 2. If any man could perfectly fulfil the Law then some man had no need of Christ either to be his Redeemer or to be his Intercessor for a Redeemer and Intercessour is in case of transgression and failing and so Christ should be to a regenerate person at least an idle and fruitlesse intercessour for as much as it doth appertaine to his intercession to pacifie and reconcile and ingratiate but what use of this where all things and services are just already as they should be without any animadvertency of the Law against them But Christ is an Intercessor even for the Saints He makes intercession for us saith Paul Rom. 8. and Saint John implies that an Advocate is for a sinner only for him 1 John 2. 1. If any man sinne we have an Advocate c. If for a sinner only then for a transgressor of the Law and if for a transgressor of the Law then not for one who doth perfectly fulfil it 3. If the just must live by faith Then he cannot perfectly fulfil the Law for then he might live by his works but the just shall live by his faith Gal. 3. 11. That no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for the just shall live by faith Mark the place shall live by faith If it comes to the matter of life and death then farewel works Cursed is every one that doth not continue in all that is written to do them If he will save his life he must get him faith to fly to mercy and Christ yea and mark of whom he speaks this It is not of a person unconverted but it is of the just even the just must live by his faith that is By Christ on which faith doth rest not by his own merits works obedience Now put all this together there are but two ways to save a man either by faith in Christ or else by the observance of the Law But none can observe the Law so as to be justified by it Because 1. His holinesse is short 2. His works ineffectual 3. His performances unanswerable Ergo to beleeve in Christ is the only way Every mouth is stopped by the Law and all the world is to become gilty before God Therefore by the Deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of sin Rom. 3. 19 20. Suppose a man had many great debts and several poore friends and he seeks to one of them good sir be
righteou●nesse but this is a rotten opinion Because first it makes void the righteousnesse of Chris● by his blood we are justified Rom. 5. 9. By his obedience are we made righteous verse 19. If this doth justifie us then faith as an act doth not unlesse we will be doubly justified Secondly no works of ours before or after grace do justifie us but the act of faith is one of these E●go 3. Correlatively that is with relation to Christ and his righteousnesse and in this respect faith is the onely way one saith well faith doth not justifie as an action but as a passion his Bucer meaning is this not faith apprehending but the thing apprehended by faith doth justifie It is true I must by faith apprehend Christ if I will be saved but it is not the apprehension which saves but he who is apprehended is the cause of my salvation If I were like to be drowned in the water I must put forth my hand to him who stands and reacheth out his hand unto me yet it is not the meer putting forth of my hand which saves me from drowning but his hand which is laid hold on by mine which draws me forth and so I am preserved both must meet but the cause is in him 4. Instrumentally or in respect of office you know well how to distinguish 'twixt actions a man doth as a man and actions which a man doth as an officer If a man be condemned and ready for execution and one comes from the King with the message of pardon the delivering of this message is an act of his employment and office not of his absolute nature as a man only Thus it is with faith it sends out some actions as an absolute grace and it performes others as a grace in office as an instrument designed and deputed It justifies us in this latter respect not that it is the matter or cause which cleares all for us with God but because it is the instrument laying hold on him who doth this for us As the hand is said to cloath the body not that the hand is any cloathing for a man doth not weare his hand but because it is the instrument to put on our cloathing or as the cup is said to quench our thirst not that the mettal of the cup can go down and satisfie that natural appetite but because it holds that wine or liquor which doth quench so doth faith justifie a sinner not as the object not as the cause but as the instrument that is as the hand of the soule laying hold on the Robes of Christs righteousnesse putting on that garment of his and as an instrument receiving and holding and bringing to the soul that precious blood of Christ which onely can immediately satisfie God and appease a thirsty conscience 2. Againe we must distinguish of the manner and peculiar habitudes or respect of things unto salvation some things A twofold reference of things have a reference to salvation by way of proper causality which have in them a meritorious reason for the proper dignity of which a person is justified and saved And in this respect we say that beleeving in Jesus Christ is the only method and way of salvation Not that faith can from its own worth dispute and challenge from God but because Jesus Christ who is the object of faith hath as a cause merited our pardon justification and salvation Other things have a reference by way of order As suppose a man were to be Knighted by the King to obtaine this Knighthood he must come to the Court and stoop down on his knee and so receive that honour This accesse to the Court and humbling on his knee is not a matter of merit or cause but only of order and condition In this latter respect we deny not but good works look towards s●lvation and are required thereto Not as any cause Christ only is the cause but as conditions and orderly steps and wayes which we must tread if we will be saved via ad regnum non causa regnandi Bernard When we say that beleeving in Christ Jesus is the onely way to be saved you must not understand it so as if no other grace were required from a man but faith only but thus There is no other grace which layes hold on Christ who is the cause of salvation but faith only As it was with the father of the Prodigal when he met his sonne falling down on his knees he presently forgave him but before he brought him into his house he did cloath him with other garments So doth God our Father upon our humbling and believing freely confer on us remission of sins for his Christs sake yet before he brings us to heaven he doth invest our souls with the singular graces of his holy Spirit yea though justification be not sanctification yet where God doth the one he ever bestowes and works the other Therefore I pray you remember to distinguish 'twixt these two justification and sanctification The person justified and to be saved Though this be most true that there is no other meritorious cause of our justification and salvation but only Christ and there is no other instrument to lay hold on this but faith yet this is as true that the person justified and to be saved hath more graces in him besides his faith though there be not a co-operation of faith and other graces to justifie yet there is a co-existance of faith and other graces in the person justified Thou must have a good heart as well as a good Christ and an holy life as well as a precious faith or else thou shalt never come to heaven You know that in the body of man there be Eyes to see and Eares to hear and Hands to take and Feet to go of all these which are in the body yet no members are deputed to see but the eyes neverthelesse the eye must not say of the eares I have no need of thee nor the hand to the foot I have no need of thee it is granted that no member sees but the eye eates but the mouth walks but the feet layes hold on but the hands Their offices are singular yet their con-corporation is necessary So no grace but faith pitcheth on Christ layes hold on him as the cause of salvation yet there is need of other graces in the person to be saved There must be love and repentance and godly sorrow and true fear and lively hope and patience and zeal c. The estate is changed only by the blood of Christ but if we will be saved the person must also be changed by the Spirit of Christ. SECT I. THese things being thus premised I shall now give you some arguments by which the truth of the assertion shall appear First there is no other way to be saved but this viz. to believe on Jesus Christ Ergo it is the only way Three things I take as granted Hypotheses First that there is a
another thing for thee to be a servant of sin Not who assaults me but whom I love and serve he is my Lord. When the heart goes off from Christ to the approbation and love and habitual obedience of sin now sin is thy Lord But if by faith thou hast sworne fealty to Christ then though all temptations begirt thee though the insolencies of corrupt nature break in upon thee to captivate or to alienate thy heart from service to Christ yet amidst all oppressions yea under all the knocks and buffettings and interruptions by sinne the heart cries out I acknowledge no Lord but Christ him I would obey him I honour I love his I am and I yet hate those sins which yet I cannot conquer SECT V. FOurthly a fourth tryal of true faith is this It makes the heart humble and lowly Every unbeleeving heart is proud and hath high imaginations and stands upon its own bottom It hath no sound experience either of God or of it self But true faith casts a man quite out of himselfe it sees no ground of confidence and excellency from any thing in our selves Faith hath a double aspect 1. One is upon us 2. Another A double aspect of faith is upon God and Christ When faith looks down upon us alas it findes no matter of boasting in the world for either it findes sinnes which should abase our hearts or else imperfections which should curb our pride or wants which should shew unto us our indigence and dependance The Evil which it findes may confound us and the good which it findes may make us ashamed not only because it is so short and defective in what we ought to have but also because we have not answered the giving of that good with just thanks or we have not improved that good to the advantage as we might have done When faith looks upward to God and Christ there it sees all the causes of all our mercy and of all our happinesse have we pardon of sinnes why saith Faith the cause of this is in Gods love Have we righteousnesse why saith Faith the cause of this is in Christs merits Have we any gifts any acceptance any remembrance from heaven why saith faith the cause of this is only in Christs blood All that I have is given me and the cause of all that giving is utterly out of my self so that the soul sits down now and sayes O Lord in my selfe I am nothing nay of my self worse then nothing but what I am I am that by thy grace All I have is thine my bread my health my life my body my soul all thine If any love if any mercy if any Christ if any grace if any comfort if any strength if any stedfastnesse if any performances if a good work if a good word if a good affection if a good thought why all is thine thou only art the cause I am lesse then the least of thy mercies and what is thy servant that thou shouldest look on such a one as I am Thou madest me and thou boughtest me and thou calledst me and thou justifiest me and thou savest me Though faith makes thy condition high yet it makes thy person low Thou shouldst by faith be not high minded but feare Rom. 11. 20. why not high minded because standing by faith Because this standing of faith is not of our selves but in God but in Christ Faith is the foot of the soul but heaven the grace of heaven the strength of heaven is the ground upon which the foot doth stand SECT VI. FIfthly true faith is fruitful James 2. 18. I will shew thee my faith by my works ver 21. Was not our father Abraham justified by works verse 22. seest thou how faith wrought by his works and by works was faith made perfect The Apostle in that Chapter speaks of a double faith A double faith One was a counterfeit faith a shadow as it were which had the looks but not the substance it was a dead faith which hath the limbs but not the soul and life But how did it appeare that this faith was dead did it not speak many good words yes saith Saint James It gave g●od words praeteria nihil no good works It could say to the poore be ye cloathed and be ye warme but gave nothing to cloath or to feed why saith he this mans faith is vaine ●hat is he hath not the true quality of faith and it will stand him in no stead Another was a lively and justifying faith It had in it the true nature and property of faith but how did that appear The Apostle answers by Works You know that there is a great difference 'twixt these two viz. the justifying of a mans person before God and the justifying of a mans faith before the world That which justifies my person before God is only faith in Jesus Christ and that which Justifies as one particular my faith before men not to be a dead but a living faith is the acting of good works Hence that of Paul Tit. 3 8. This is a faithful saying and those things I will that thou affirme constantly that they which have beleeved in God might be careful to maintain good works these things are good and profitable unto men Right is the speech of Saint Augustine sequuntur justificatum though non precedunt justificandum As in a clock the finger makes not the clock to Austin go but the clock it and yet the motion of the finger without shews whether the clock goes within So although works do not cause or infuse justifying faith nor yet cause our Justification yet they do cleerly manifest whether we have such a faith as doth indeed justifie or not Obj. You will say the work of Faith is to look up and to come and to deal with God only and therefore to breath out good works which respect men seems not to be any testimony of faith Sol. I answer 1. The Apostle there expressely distinguisheth the lively and the dead faith by works as if he said it is so 2. There is if you will let me distinguish so as it were a double act of faith One is proper and personal and this is circumscribed to that Heavenly employment of receiving or presenting in and through Christ Another is Grateful and this is extended to the sending forth of good works Not as if it were a work of superarogation for faith findes the doing of good works under many commands and also the rewards of them under many promises but because faith sees also a sweet and reasonable equity that if God be good to me in Christ I should be good to some for Christs sake And verily as the worklesse person doth not now own Christ by faith so hereafter Christ will not own him by mercy depart from me Obj. But yet you will reply good works cannot be a sure testimony of faith because many evil men may performe them and some beleevers have not wherewithal
bound for me alas saith he all my estate will not reach or extend to satisfie half of what thou owest Then he goes to another Sir be you pleased to engage your self Alas saith he I am so poore that the Creditor will not take my word Even thus it is when a man will runne to something in himself to justifie him before God alas saith holinesse I am not able enough and saith good works God may finde reason enough to discard us Therefore saith Faith To Christ To Christ None but Christ SECT II. SEcondly All that can justifie and save a man is only to be found in Christ as in the meritorious cause Ergo the only way to be saved is to be beleeve in Jesus Christ Hence is Christ called Heb. 2. 10. The Chaptaine of our salvation Heb. 5. 18. The Author of eternal salvation There be two things which if a man had he should be saved one is the forgivenesse of his sinnes Ergo saith David Ps 32. 1. Blessed is the man whose transgression is forgiven whose sin is covered ver 2. Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity Another is the possession of a most compleat righteousnesse by which he might stand and appeare perfectly just before the judgement seat of God so that if divine justice should look on it with the exactest eye yet it were every way unspotted and full Now these two are to be found only in Christ and by him First Remission of sinnes It is the purchase of his blood onely and therefore often in Scripture assigned thereto Thou canst not with all thy teares wipe off meritoriously the least of thy sinnes nor with all thy grace buy out the pardon of thy present failings All Remission is by blood by the only blood of Christ Secondly the righteousnesse which justifies and saves us is only in Christ He is made righteousnesse to us 1 Cor. 1. 30. and Rom. 5. 19. As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous see verse 21. Grace reignes through righteousnesse unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. I know that this Point of imputed righteousnesse is the great quarrel 'twixt us and the Church of Rome I shall therefore reserve the handling of it to the Uses where I may more fitly clear our doctrine Now put things together Whatsoever will save us is in Christ And faith is the only grace to conjoyne us with Christ and therefore To believe in Jesus Christ is the only way to saved SECT III. THirdly Salvation is by grace only Eph. 2. 5. Rom. 11. 6. And it is a free gift Rom. 5. 15. The free gift the grace of God and the gift of grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many and v. 16. the free gift is of many offences to justification and v. 18. the free gift came upon all men to justification of life Now if it be so then here 's roome for beleeving For Faith brings nothing of its own but receives all as gift from God It is the receiving grace Lord give me thy Son Lord give me the pardon of my sinnes Lord give me a righteousnesse Lord give me eternal life all these things are gifts and faith only receives these gifts Ergo. SECT IV. FOurthly Salvation is only conferr'd in such a way whereby God only may have the glory of it Though God doth bestow great matters on us for our good yet all the end of them is for his own glory To commend the riches of his grace and mercy Ephes 2. 7 8. so v. 9. Not of works least any man should boast that is he should vaunt and say I have got heaven by my own merits I have my wages for my labour and my happinesse for my penny Now the way of beleeving is the only way of acknowledgeing a God and of emptying of our proud imaginations whatsoever faith hath it hath taken the same out of a gracious hand All is almes which comes to faith and it will confesse I have nothing and am nothing but what I have received and what I expect I expect it for his sake who promiseth it not for my sake who receives it and thus faith puts all the glory on God SECT V. FIfthly neither would our salvation be sure nor our comfort sure if we were to be saved any other way then by believing in Jesus Christ Salvation would not be sure because First our happinesse would be no more sure now being in our own hands out of Christs then was Adams left to himself Secondly we would never be sure of salvation by any thing against which God might take just exception No sure comfort because conscience troubled with the sence of sin could never be pacified with imperfections and sins That which will not satisfie God can never pacifie conscience But saith the Apostle Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by faith we have peace with God faith findes one who was delivered for our offences who pacified God to the utmost who was without spot whose righteousnesse is full imputed to us accepted for us and so hereupon doth graciously quiet and still the heart We must distinguish 'twixt the root and fountaine and ground of our comfort and between the testimonies of our interest in the root of our comfort only Jesus Christ is the ground of a Christians comfort and therefore saith Paul God forbid that I should rejoyce in any thing but in the crosse of Christ If at any time we behold holinesse or any part of it in our hearts we take comfort in it not as the ground but as in the testimony because it doth manifest our interest in him who is our comfort our peace our joy our salvation our all in all Thus much for the Explication and confirmation of this great assertion viz. That to beleeve in Jesus Christ is the only way of salvation Now I descend to the useful Application of all to our selves CHAP. VIII The preaching and hearing of the Gospel of singular use THe first Use shall be for Information which consists in many profitable consectaries or inferences which will flow from this truth If beleeving in the Lord Jesus Christ be the only way to be saved Then first hence it will follow That the preaching of the Gospel is worthy the while it is of necessary and singular consequence Peruse that place Rom. 1. 16. I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Chrict for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that beleeveth verse 17. for there is the righteousnesse of God revealed from faith to faith as it is written the just shall live by faith The Apostle presents two arguments of his honourable estimation and confident preaching of the Gospel 1. One is that it is the power of God to salvation that is it is the instrument which God useth and into which he doth imprint a power to save men It is called the power of
enemy to deal with It is thy Father to whom thou art bending the knee 3. He hath a mighty intercessor look as Jesus Christ is the mighty Redeemer for the persons of men so he is the mighty intercessor for the services of men and he ever lives to make intercession If thy wants be never so great yet thy God is able to supply them and if thy infirmities be never so many yet thy intercessor is able to cover and expiate them Thy services as thine ● carry with them a prejudice there was iniquity in the holy offering but then Aaron did bear the iniquity of them so thy Priest thy Christ thy intercessor he doth take off by the Application of his merits whatsoever is amisse and offensive and he doth ingratiate thy requests and procures audience and acceptance for thee Therefore now if thou be a beleever then in thy prayers come confidently to God if thou canst finde a promise and a Christ and a faith thou mayest cheerfully put up thy petitions to heaven What should hinder us from being confident Is God unwilling No he hath engated himself unto thee Is God unable Why He is able to do abundantly above all that we are able to ask or think Doest thou feare thy own distance Why but thou comest to a Father and thou comest by the blood of a gracious of a beloved of a powerful Mediator and Intercessor Hebrews 4. Having such an High Priest we may come boldly to the throne of grace See Heb. 10. Doest thou feare because of enmity Christ hath slaine that or because of infirmity Christ will cure that CHAP. XV. The Agreement and difference of strong and weak faith BUt now some may reply These are sweet comforts Obj. to beleevers but as the Eunuch to Philip of whom speaks the Prophet this of himselfe or of some other So here why to whom are these comforts to all or to some choice beleevers are they common comforts to every beleever or peculiar to the eminent and strong only This scruple hath made way for a singular point I will satisfie it by opening four particulars Sol. 1. The common unity of all true faith in respect of the habit yet the intensive diversity in respect of acts and degrees 2. The proofs of a strong faith with the instances of a weak faith in truth 3. The concordance of faith in all fundamental Comforts 4. The inequality of strong and weak faith in many true yet not essential consequences and consolations Concerning the first which respects the common unity of faith in respect of the habit and the diversity of it in respect of the acts and degrees Observe these things for the unity of faith SECT I. FIrst that all true faith though in a comparison of faith with faith in several subjects it may admit of several diversities and differences yet they consent and agree in these things viz. First in the immediate and special cause weak faith as faith comes not from one cause and strong faith from another cause but both the one and the other from one and the same cause viz. the blessed Spirit of God Not onely the flames but the sparks of fire are kindled by that Spirit which blows where it lists As in the Orchard the tree which stands strong and the tender plant which stands trembling both of them were at first set by one and the same hand so the faith which is now well grown and that faith which is as yet tender and full of doubtings both of them are the peculiar fruits of Gods sanctifying Spirit Though this childe in the cradle cannot runne and move as well as that in the field at work yet the father begat the one as well as the other and owns them both by vertue of one equal relation The day of small things are not despised by God who sees weaknesse in the strongest Faith and Truth in the weakest and is the Parent both of this and that 2. In the remote and singular cause You know that Gods free grace and love is the first wheele of all singular good unto men out of it came that great gift of Christ and that great work of Election from whence doth flow all the graces which sanctifie and bring to glory As many as were ordained to eternal life beleeved Now all faith is a drop out of this fountaine the weak faith is a fruit of that great love of God Acts 13. 48. electing us in Christ as well as the strong and is though not so sensibly evident yet as really a true testimony of our election The reason whereof is this not grace restrictively considered but grace in the whole latitude of it is the fruit of Gods election my meaning is this not only Graces as eminent as raised and elevated to some more perfect quality and pitch but grace in the whole compasse of it from the conception of it to the perfection of it from the dawning to the full day from the nature to the act from the acts to the degrees all of it in nature in parts in totum solidum all of it whether more or lesse strong or weak all is out of the same grace of Election It was not one love which elected him who is therefore now strong in beleeving with Abraham and another love which elected him who is now weak in beleeving with the father of the childe No but it was one and the self-same love which produced this and that faith yea that electing love was intensively one in producing of both It was as equally high towards this person as towards that and was as equally causative of the faith that is weak as of the faith which is strong being habitually considered and also in relation to the grace of Gods love in election 3. In the ordinary and usual instrumental cause the same womb of the word brought them both forth being efficaciously assisted by that Almighty Spirit That word which discovered misery and impotency and necessity to the one did so to the other That word which revealed the Covenant of grace and mercy in Christ to the one did so to the other beleever also That word which did assure the one that if he would come in and accept of Christ be should be saved did also of this assure the other That word which did encline the heart of the one to trust upon Gods promise and so to accept of Christ did likewise being quickened with the same Spirit draw and perswade the other 4. In the lively nature of beleeving look as the strong and weak man though they do differ in the measure of power yet they do agree in the nature of man though they differ in respect of working yet they agree in respect of being And as the sick man and the healthy man though they vary in their temper yet they agree in their nature though they differ in livelihood yet not in life So though the strong and weak faith differ exceedingly in
its own estate for soundnesse As Gideon said in another case If the Lord be with us why is all this evil befallen us so where the faith is weak the soul is often in suit with God yea but if God were my God had I an interest in Christ were my estate good could it be with me thus could it be thus within me thus without me thus upon me c. 3. The more quick and hastening that the soul is for answer and satisfactions the more impatient of Gods delayings this is a signe that it is now weak in faith For did it throughly beleeve it would not make haste were it perswaded fully of Gods goodnesse which makes the promise of his wisdom which will take the fittest time for the grant it would now quietly wait and expect But an over-hastening when the soul will scarce allow any time 'twixt the petition and the speeding of it but I must presently have it or else God is not my God or else my state is bad I say hasty eagernesse to be answered and quick conclusions from Gods silence do shew much weaknesse of faith in the soul There is an importunity which may come from faith and this is a holy pressing of a promise yet with submission and patience And there is an hastinesse which comes from feare As if God would not alwayes be in a good mind towards us as if the present testimonies must be the only arguments of his love and intentions These two things will usually meet in a man whose faith is weak One is he will be hasty to be answered Another is he will be faint if delayed 4. The more inclining the heart is to the life of sense the weaker is the faith like Thomas unlesse he seeth the print of the nails c. he will not beleeve John 20. 25. So unlesse Christians have promises budding they will hardly beleeve that there is fruit growing on them unlesse I feele the sensible favour of God I will not beleeve that he loves me unlesse I reade my pardon I will not beleeve mercy unlesse I discerne sensible meanes I will not beleeve helps unlesse I feele sin slaine in me I will not beleeve that God will subdue it All these in promises affect not and support not the heart It is a signe of a weak childe that must still be carried in the armes When a mans perswasions cannot be wrought by the naked word of promise without some sensible pledges and pawne he is very weak When he is puzling his heart in an endlesse maze of disorder viz. he would have the things of the promise and then beleeve the fidelity of the promise this argues weakness The abstractions of things from sense when God gathers up all a mans estate or any particular good only into his promise into his own hand and saith now canst thou beleeve that I will be good unto thee I promise thee to be thus and thus wilt thou now trust me wilt thou adventure thy soule now upon my word of pardon and mercy upon my word of gra●e and help so to do would evidence much strength Now you may observe a manifest difference 'twixt strong and weak faith If strong faith seeth its estate in the promise it hath enough it goes away rejoycing if weak faith hath not some of the estate in its own hand as well as in Gods hand it is troubled and afraid 5. The more hardly a beleever comes to be perswaded and assured of Gods undertakings in Covenant his faith is weak When one word of God is not enough but God must say it once and twice and yet againe more clearly As Gideon would have one signe the fleece must be wet and the earth dry and then another signe the fleece must be dry and dew lie upon all the earth Judges 6. 37 39. This shewed weaknesse in his faith so doth it in a Christian when not one or two promises and scarce all of them with all the arguments in God and in Christ can perswade him that God will be merciful to him or that Christ belongs to him 6. The more easie the soule is to let go that assurance the weaker is faith in it when a soul is like a weak hand clasping a staff and the staffe is easily wristed out so the soul le ts go that promise which did revive it and that Christ which seemed to embrace it this argues weaknesse as in Peter when he beleeved that it was Christ on the sea upon Christs Word he ventures out but when the waves met him he begins to sink his faith was weak Why didst thou doubt O thou of little faith said Christ to him Though Christs Word drew him out of the ship yet it did not hold him up all alone And the Disciples We trusted it had been he who should have redeemed Israel So when a temptation comes upon a soul and the soul is ready to be led by it to credit it against Gods promise and Gods testimony in the conscience this aptnesse to let go our hold argues much feare and much feare argues weak faith 7. The more apt the soul is to insist on personal and inherent qualities and abilities as media fiduciae meanes of perswasion this shews that the faith is weak when something in us makes us the more confident as when it is unapt to beleeve unlesse it can discerne such an inherent strength of graces to mourne and to pray or to keep down sinne or keep off temptation Object It is true these abilities are testimonies but yet they are not Media Sol. They are evidences of a solid faith but they are not meanes or causes of beleeving The means or causes are Gods promises which ought alone to be our foundations and encouragements Now when a person is unapt to beleeve that God will do these things for him unlesse these things be done this is weaknesse Good things when they are done they are matters of thankfulnesse and when they are promised they are matters of faith They say in Logick that demonstratio à posteriori is the weaker demonstration that à priori is much stronger for this depends on the cause and that on the effect So is it in beleeving A beleeving à priori from the perswasion of what God saith from his goodnesse and truth is more strong then a beleeving à posteriori that is from a fruition or apprehension of what God doth 8. The more dull and uncheerful the heart is this shews the faith to be weak A sad Spirit and a weak faith usually are companions for a strong faith breeds much peace in the conscience Rom. 5. 1 2. and rejoycing 1 Pet. 1. 8. In whom though now ye see him not yet beleeving ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory such a faith as this hath got to much assurance but uncheerfulnesse of heart argues either as yet the want of all assurance or assurance very weak 9. The more anxious and careful the soule is
and to be disposed as the Lord pleaseth If he will have me to enjoy well if to want well if to abound well if to be abased well I would be as he would have me to be and I would be estated as he would have me to be estated If he thinks good to bestow a faire estate upon me I desire to be humble and thankful If he thinks good to limit me to a meane estate I desire to be humble and contented If he keeps me in a free condition I desire to love him if in a perplexed condition I yet desire to fear and serve him though I would be careful and diligent yet I would not be anxious and vexing I dare to trust him with my soul to preserve sanctifie uphold comfort save it I trust him with my body to preserve enable change and dispose it I trust him with my whole estate to give it alte● it increase it lessen it keep it blesse it as may make most for his glory and my good Secondly To live by faith is to depend upon God for all You all conjecture That First God is an alsufficient goodnesse he is goodnesse it selfe And whatsoever good the creature is capable of or doth actually participate he is the sole cause thereof meanes which be next at hand and neare our eyes are but pipes and stewards but God he is the fountaine and Lord. Secondly he hath put all Covenant good for his servants into promises The promises are nothing else but a deed of gift sealed with the truth of God There hath God freely undertaken whatsoever belongs to grace or glory to this life or to that which is to come doest thou want this or that Why whatsoever is fit for thee to have that I promise in the Name of my Sonne to give unto thee saith God Now to live by faith is to cast anchor at heaven gates it is to cast the soul upon Gods promises in Christ to rely on God for any good which God hath promised and undertaken this I want and this God hath promised he hath undertaken the supply and I will trust upon him for it Though I feel no such thing nay though I feel the contrary yet I do not cast away my confidence Though fig-trees blossome not though olives faile and hindes are gone yet if my supply appears in any word of promise I take heart and say yet my condition is good all is well and sure My God hath undertaken it for me and in his Word will I trust which is good and true he will not faile me I shall have whatsoever is good and that too in a good time This only in general SECT II. Quest 2. Sol. TO what states the life of faith may extend You know that there are two eminent states of our life 1. One is spiritual which respects all the exigencies varieties windings turnings changes defections eclipses tryals and hardships of the soul Whatsoever accidents may befall an holy soul about the heavenly condition that appertaines to the spiritual state all the supplies of grace of strength of comfort of assurance of assistance against temptations corrections troubles all enlivements and quicknings of the Spirit about all sorts of duties and services active or passive 2. Another is temporal which is not onely the terme of our natural breathings but also the sundry and manifold occurrences which befal us in the employments of our life all the accidents and interruptions crossings checkings contrarieties either in our bodies or calling or wealth or persons or children or servants or good name Briefly the temporal state comprehends all whatsoever may weaken or wast or distract All or any of our temporal contentments delights desires ends as also all our temporal supplements for the being or well-being of this poore and short life of ours as health strength friends food liberty estate peace and quietnesse c. Now then living by faith extends to both The just shall live by his faith said the Prophet Hab. 2. 4. of the Jews in the temporal state and I live by the faith of the Sonne of God said Paul in Gal. 2. 2. speaking of his spiritual state So that faith bears up soul and body and is both for heaven and earth It serves to fetch in the blood of Christ the redemption by Christ pardon of sinne Gods favour all grace and comfort to the soul And it serves to fetch in also health to the body riches to the estate plenty peace friends what not When I am sick I yet trust in God for health when poor I yet trust on God for sufficiency when under reproach I yet trust on God to clear my innocency when under discomforts and forsakements I yet trust on God for favor and countenance In all my distresses and reproaches I have yet his Word for my supplies and helps upon which I rest and thus I live by faith so far as the promises extend so far doth living by faith extend SECT III. Quest 3. NOw more particularly what it is to live by faith on Christ Sol. I will tell you what I think of it It is an holy work and course of a beleeving person wherein he doth depend on Christ and To live by faith in Christ make use of h●m for all the conditions and exigencies of the soul about its sp●ritual state For the opening of this description I will touch upon three things 1. The particular conditions and exigencies of the soul by reason Three things of which it hath need to live by faith 2. The fulnesse and fitnesse and fidelity of Christ for the supply and help of a beleeving soul 3. The conjunction of both these together which is the very living by fai●h on Christ Fi●st the particular conditions and exigencies of the soul you must know this That to live by faith presupposeth two things on our part defect and insufficiency There is something lyes upon us which should not and we cannot help our selves and therefore we go abroad by faith this is to live upon the market Now there are many things which ly upon our souls 1. The sense of guilt this is a great matter it makes the very heart oft-times to tremble it is an heavy burden when a man sinnes against an holy and just God the least of them provoking and damnable This is a time of trouble for a man sees much in debt and nothing in stock he is not able to pay a● far●hing all that he is or can do can never answer divine Justice This is one exigence now which makes a man capable to live by faith to look out to Christ and to try what he will do for him a miserable sinner as you shall heare anon 2. The sense of unrighteousnesse Why God requ●res an holy conformity to his divine will in heart and in life that our nature should be as he requires and our wayes as he commands but when the soul is able actively to reflect on it selfe and look on God
for a soul which is bitterly sensible of its wonderful and continual emptinesse Till the Angel came and opened Hagars eyes to see the fountaine she gave up her child for dead so unlesse we have faith to open our eyes to see the fountain of grace and mercy in God and Christ I tell you that in many of our exigencies we shall throw away all all as dead and lost and hopelesse 2. Againe It is nothing but faith which gives spirit unto us from a bare promise one word of God is security enough to faith If a Marriner can get to the top of the Mast and descry but a point of land he is now glad all is well faith is said to see the promises afar of Heb. 11. well saith faith to the soul now as Paul to them which sayled with him be of good cheer thou shalt yet do well grace and mercy and help will come God hath promised it and Christ will make all the promises Yea and Amen and now the soul lives because of that good and faithful word c. Secondly If we consider God himself there is sufficient reason why we should live by faith There be six arguments which we may behold in God to envite 6. Things and perswade us to live by faith First his Alsufficiency I am God alsufficient said he to Abraham What 's that That is I am an absolute and independent essence in respect of my self infinitely perfect and enough and have enough and enough to satisfie all the world Take all the particular creatures in the world and view into their natures and conditions you shall finde every one of them to be imperfect to be depending to be replenished with wants even one man for his own particular is covered over with innumerable wants the wants of his soul are many so of his body so of his estate what then and how many are the necessities of every man But now God is alsufficient that is he hath enough to supply every man He can open his hand fill every living thing Thou openest thy hand said David Ps 145. 15. and satisfiest the desire of every living thing and he is able to make all grace abound saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 9. 8. He is rich to all that call upon Rom. 10. 12. He is able to do Eph. 3. 20. exceeding abundantly above all we can ask or think My God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Jesus Christ Phil. 4. 19. The Sunne you see hath light enough for a whole world and a fountaine hath water enough for a whole countrey Why all good is in God both originally and eminently and causally that is he is goodnesse it self and all goodnesse fulnesse without want strength without weaknesse holinesse without blemish yea and the universal cause of goodnesse and therefore infinitely able to supply and help and do good there is no one necessity but he is able infinitely to succour it and many yea all necessities are not to be compared to the unfathomed greatnesse and exceedingnesse of his fulnesse and alsufficiency 2. His Command As God is an absolute and full good all our helps do center in him as in their compleat cause so he hath commanded us to live upon his alsufficiency by faith How often do you read those charges Trust upon the Lord commit thy way to the Lord rest upon him stay upon the God of Jacob cast thy care on him As if God should say unto the sons of men I am he and there is none else besides me who can do you good there is not any good in all the world which you want but I am able to supply it I am alsufficient for wisdom for holinesse for mercy for power for grace for comfort for peace If you want water you would go to the Spring and if you want light you would look up to the Sunne and if you want any good why will you not look up to me who am goodnesse it self I tell you that I am a God and have the greatnesse and the fulnesse of a God Nay and I charge and require you when you need any thing come to me for it I am the Master of all the families of the earth and the Lord of all good It is my expresse will that you come unto me and that you put your trust on me that you beleeve on my alsufficiency that you live upon that stock which is in my fulnesse Nay I shall take it exceeding ill if you rest your selves or live on any other 3. His Promises Consider this two wayes 1. Generally his promises of good wherein is ground to trust 2. Particularly His promises to them that will and do trust Psal 37. 3. Trust in the Lord and verily c. Isa 26. 3. Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusteth in thee So Isa 57. 13. This puts life to all the rest for though God were never so able to do good and though his commands were never so urgent to live on him for all our good yet if he had not made over this good unto us we might maintain secret feares and discouragements But now God hath promised all good unto us that is he hath firmly and graciously made it over As if he should say all the good that I can do I will do it for thee all the ample fulnesse in me is to replenish thee it is to supply thy wants and necessities and I assure thee in the Word of a God it is so Psalme 84. 11. The Lord is a Sunne and shield the Lord will give grace and glory no good thing will he with-hold from them that walk uprightly Ver. 12. O Lord of Hosts blessed is the man that trusteth in thee There is not any one particular want which is fit to be stiled a want and fit to be supplied in this life for soul but God hath by promises particularly engaged all his sufficiency to help and supply it Doest thou want an holy heart a returning heart an heart to hate sinne to mourn for sinne a beleeving heart an upright heart a meek and patient heart a joyful heart doest thou want any grace more grace pardon of sin assurance of pardon strength against sin strength for any duty active or passive wantest thou any convenient and fit good for thy body for thy name for thy estate for thy children for thy family any good for life at death after death Not any one of these which God hath not distinctly promised If you knew a man to be sufficient to have an estate worth ten thousand pounds and all free you will presently trust him for an hundred pounds or if such an one should command any in his need to come to him and borrow this would draw many to him but if he should take a man out particularly and say to him Friend my estate is thus great I have a great estate and I pray thee if
an unbelieving heart But faith makes the soul well pleased because it presents the soul with such a good as cannot only satisfie but also exceed it God is an infinite goodnesse he who can satisfie more then a world may well content one mans heart and Gods favour is a satisfying good I shall be satisfied with thy favour said David and to this doth faith entitle yea this it doth reveale to the soul And I will tell you one thing that he who cannot be contented with a God and his favour with a Christ and his blood with a Covenant and its fulnesse he will never be content with any thing if alsufficiency be not enough to thee when can emptinesse and vanity please and satisfie thee What if a man hath but a little Garden yet if he hath a large Parke and ten thousand Acres of Arables and the Kings royal favour to grace all this I tell you this would sparkle his spirit it would breath a well-pleasednesse in him Thou complainest that thou hast but little of earthly things I grant it and a little may be enough enough depends more on quality then quantity but then though the Garden be but small yet the Park is large though thy portion in externals be not so great yet this with a great and all sufficient God and a blessed Saviour and a heaven to boot is enough and enough If the wife saith she hath but a small joynture yet if she hath a rich and tender husband she is to be blamed if she saith she hath not enough Faith viewes the Christians estate not as it is in its hand but as in her husbands hand in Christs and then all is well enough 4. It assures of universal and reasonable supplies The Lord is my Shepheard I shall not want so David Psal 23. 1. follow him a little in that Psalme and you shall see what God hath done Time past for him he made his pastures green and his waters still vers 2. O what a freshnesse and what a calmnesse doth faith make in the state His soul is taken care for and at the worst when he was in the valley of the shadow of death yet he was quieted from fear because his faith saw God there yea and found him there to uphold and comfort That for what was past Then for his present condition See ver 5. His table is prepared for him as if he took no care no anxious care he needed not to trouble himself Present thou preparest a table for me and not a mean table neither my cup runneth over nor yet a dull and uncheerful table thou anointest my head with oyle so that faith for the present findes food and cheer enough too But then for the future condition will this hold out See what faith findes in reversion ver 6. Surely goodnesse and mercy shall follow me all the dayes of Future my life Goodnesse perhaps that respected his temporal estate Mercy perhaps that respected his spiritual 1. One his body 2. Another his soul and both these shall follow him as the shadow that followes the body they should be still at hand but how long not for a day only but all his dayes not all the dayes of his dignities abilities health but all the dayes of his life Nay yet againe surely they shall follow me It was not a speech of fancy but of certainty it was out of all doubt and peradventure surely mercy and goodnesse shall c. So Psal 84. 11. The Lord God is a Sun and a shield the sun is the parent of light so is God of all good The Sun is the cause of all fruitfulnesse and cheerfulnesse so is God of all blessings and he is a shield to a Sunne for the doing of good and a shield to secure and protect from evil The Lord will give grace and glory Grace is the best thing which a man can nave on earth and Glory is the highest thing which a man can have in heaven But these he will give they shall not be bought but freely bestowed No good thing will he withhold c. As it he should say if grace be not enough for earth if glory be n●t enough for heaven think then of any other good thing there is not any other good thing which shall be withheld that is which shall not like the rain which ceaseth to be withheld poure down upon you Will you heare the Prophet say a word to this to this future supplies for them who live by faith then read Jer. 17. 7. Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord whose hope the Lord is Here we finde the beleever at his work of trusting or living by faith and at his wages too Blessed is the man that trusteth c. Indeed the Prophet speaks a great word he is blessed more cannot be said but let 's see how he proves that ver 8. For he shall be as a tree planted by the waters and that spreadeth out her roots by the river and shall not see when heat cometh but his lease shall be green and shall not be careful in the year of drought neither shall cease from yielding fruit If faith plants the tree in a springing soyl if it beholds the tree to spread and grow and bear in all weathers though heat cometh in al times though drought cometh yet the leafe is green and fruitful and ceaseth not to yield doth it not then assure us of supply for the fu●ure hath it not a good Store-house an ample treasury for the beleever What should I say more may not faith say that to the soul which God hath said to faith if so then we may well rejoyce for the present and be void of care for the future for God hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee H●b 13. 5. Thou hast mercy and shalt still have mercy Thou hast grace and shalt still have grace Thy part in Christ and still shalt have it supplies of all good and still shalt have them 3. The life of faith is the only getting and thriving life What the Apostle sp●ke of godlinesse that we may say of Faith It is great gaine for it hath the promises of this life and of the life which is to come Profit is that which most men look upon it is the cry of most who will shew us any good and faith hath a singular art of getting I observe that the g●od of a Christian in some respect hangs in the promises as water doth in the clouds and look as the boysterous windes rather drive away the clouds and rain though a few drops may sl●p down but it is the sweet heat of the Sunne which makes the cloudes to open themselves and give out their store So the only way to drive away the promises as it were to remove them with their blessings is not to believe not to trust and the only way to make them to yield out their precious treasures is to believe to
Ordinance as for other ends so for this That the matter might be out of doubt out of controversie that Christ is ours and sinne is pardoned in his blood 3. Be much in prayer If a man would gaine assurance he must be much in prayers to perswade and assure the heart David found marvellous loving kindnesse but then he cried in supplications Psalme 31. 21 22. Thou must pray earnestly for mercy earnestly for pardon and most earnestly for Christ And thou must use diligence Remember this that in all thy endeavours for assurance thou must use diligence a cold hearing a cold reading a cold praying will not bring the soul to it No you must be most diligent and fervent in them and so c. 4 Again with all these there must be joyned strong upright care to please God This know that sinne separates but uprightnesse gathers God and the soule together To him that ordereth his conversation aright I will shew the salvation of the Lord Psalme 50. 23. Why Light is sown for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart Psal 97. 11. See that of the Prophet Isa 64. 5. Thou meetest him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousness those that remember thee in thy wayes Unevennesse of heart or way it is a flaw and it is that which cuts us off after many prayers it renews our doubtings again and we are as far to seek as at the first but if the heart be plaine if it be sincerely set for God desirous to please him in all things this a compendious way of assurance the Word falls in directly to settle and confirme such a soul The steps of the Words direct us to the sight of our God 5. Lastly you must be much in the exercise of faith There be two parts of it which you must improve One is you must against all sense and feeling and against all the contradict●ons of reason and unbelief cast the soul on God in Christ and rest on him to be your God and on Christ to be your Lord and Saviour and that your sins shall be pardoned Then you must wait you must not limit God but seek still I will hearken said David what God the Lord will speak for he will speak peace to his Saints Psalme 85. 8. See Isa 64 4. Since the beginning of the world men have not heard nor perceived by the eare neither hath the eye seen O God besides thee what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for Him The Lord will wait that he may be gracious blessed are they that wait for him Isa 30. 18. so Isa 25. 9. It shall be said in that day Lo this is our God we have waited for him c. This is the Lord we have waited for him we will be glad and rejoyce in his salvation For Psal 147. 11. The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him in those that hope in his mercy So that this is the summe of all walk with all uprightnesse and with an humble penitent and believing soul cast your sins upon God in Christ trusting in him alone for the favour of God pardon of sinnes and eternal salvation and wait upon God for all this in the use of the means and constant diligency in prayer you shall at length have your hearts desire you shall hear from God thus much I am thy salvation and from Christ as much Be of good cheer thy sinnes are forgiven thee FINIS AN ALPHABETICAL Table A Affiance THe neer relation betwixt Christ and a beleever is the ground of Affiance p. 254 Anointing vid. Christ Antecedent The difference betwixt an Antecedent and a cause p. 90 What antecedents go necessarily before faith p. 91 There is no concluding the presence of the habit of faith from the common antecedents of faith p. 91 Assent Assent how one beleever differs from another therein p. 121 122 Assisting Assisting vertue from Christ p. 143 Assurance Three things granted about assurance p. 38 39 How assurance is an act of faith p. 39 Assurance of Christs willingnesse an encouraging ground to beleeve p 196 A double assurance of Christs willingness p. 196 Assurance a fruit of an eminent faith p. 93 Assurance easily let go argues a weak faith p. 134 The improvement of faith to a full assurance p. 259 What the assurance of faith is p. 260 Assurance is the conclusion of an evangelical sylogisme p. 260 Assurance is a victorious conclusion against the strength of doubtings p. 261 Assurance is an asserting or perswading act p. 262 Two kinds of assurance touching our personal interest in Christ and the difference of them p 263 Assurance of saith directs to a personal evidence of particular interest in Christ and his benefits p. 265 Every beleever may be assured thereof p. 266 Arguments to evince it Ibid To be assured how far it is a duty p 267 A Christian is obliged to assure his heart that Christ is his p. 268. Arguments to evince it Ibid Want of assurance hinders thankfulnesse p. 268 Arguments to perswade to labour for assurance p. 269 The things about which assurance is conversant are of greatest consequence p. 269 Assurance will marvellously quiet and settle the soul p. 271 Assurance arms the heart against future temptations p. 270 Assurance sweetens all other blessings to us p. 273 Assurance sweetens all our crosses p. 274 Assurance makes all kind of duty to flow and to rise p. 275 Assurance is a bathing spring to all our graces p. 277 Assurance doth ease us of the world and mounts the soul above it p. 278 279 Means by which the soul may get up to this assurance p. 280 Atheisme Natural Atheisme a hindrance to saith p. 168 How to be removed p. 169 Atheisme what it is p. 168 B Beleever Believing Believing in Christ what it doth import p. 29 The general nature of believing in several propositions p. 30 The difference betwixt knowledg opinion and belief p. 30 31 Believing as restrained to a divine and theological consideration what it is p. 31 Vid. Faith In what sense beleeving in Christ is the only way to be saved p. 54 The difficulty of believing in Jesus Christ p. 79 The facility of errour and mistake about believing and what makes it so p. 84 Comfort for all true believers p 109 Believers are in a true and sure way to heaven p. 110 Every Beleever hath a sure interest in Christ p. 140 Every Beleever hath a beneficial interest in Christ What these benefits are p. 140 141 Motives to beleeving p. 158 God deals mightily with the soul to believe in Christ p. 165 We are no● losers by beleeving on the Lord Jesus Christ p. 166 Boldness Beleevers may with boldness approach the throne of grace p. 116 This boldness cures sinful modesties and unbeleeving fears p. 116 C Certainty The difference betwixt reflexive certainty and real certainty of interest p. 140 Change An inward change an infallible testimony of a living faith p. 98 There is a change produced