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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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David when he said Blessed is he in whose spirit there is no guile did take himselfe Psal 32 2. t●rdie in this evill and Bradford with others of those most holy Martyrs doe much seeke pardon of hypocrisie and carnall gospelling But sinne that raigneth not must not discourage and if we have an unfained purpose against it if we grieve for it if we seeke for strength against it it reigneth not The effect or evidence of a sound heart is that being well informed in the truth of God he doth heartily resigne himselfe to be guided and directed by the Lord in all things As Paul prayeth Phil. 1. 10. in behalfe of the Philippians that they might approve things that are excellent that they might be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ And it is noted of Ezra that he prepared his heart to seeke the Law of the Lord and to doe it and to teach in Israel Statutes Ezra 7. 10. and Judgements And from this generall spring divers particulars First Truth breeds an hatred of all false and corrupt opinions in Doctrine because sound affections require good judgement and true understanding and if the understanding that should guide and governe the inferiour powers be perverted with errour the heart must needs move out of order Folly is joy to him that is destitute Pro. 15 21. of wisedome but a man of understanding walketh uprightly or directeth himselfe straite in walking He can never shoote straight that takes his aime contrary The voice of a true heart soundeth thus in David I hate vaine thoughts but thy Law doe I love I esteeme Psal 119. 113 128. all thy Precepts concerning all things to be right but I hate every false way Secondly It hath in detestation all false and devised worship which is nothing but lying pompe and vanity Ephraim compasseth me about with lies and the house of Israel with deceit Truth Hos 11. 12. seeke neerenes and acquaintance with God but in devised worship no comfort or profit is to be found rather the heart is removed Math. 15. 9. Isa 29. 14. from God when men draw nigh to him with their lips Thirdly It worketh an universall hatred of all sinne that is of secret as well as open sinnes of lesser sinnes as well as of greater evils of such sinnes as where unto we have speciall inticements by some particular content or profit which they seeme to promise as well as of those which afford neither gaine credit nor pleasure A true heart hath a costant purpose in no one thing willingly to sinne against God but rather to indeavour the uttermost in every good way of Gods commandements And as he stands resolved against all sinne in generall both simply considered and in respect of all occurrences whereby he might be allured or cōpelled thereunto so in speciall against the sinne to which he finds himselfe most inclined or where-with he hath at any time been overtaken Incline not my heart to any evill thing to practise wicked workes with Psal 141. 4 men that worke iniquity and let me not eate of their dainties Fourthly It is joyned with a readinesse of mind to acknowledge and lay open every sinne as soone as it is knowne to be sinne and a gladnesse to have the conscience ransacked and ripped up that whatsoever is sinfull may be found out David spake it out of experience when he pronounced the man blessed in whose Psal 32. 2. spirit there is no guile Now this was a branch of that spirituall guile that he once thought to helpe himselfe in evill doing by holding his tongue as who would say he would forget it and passe it over but he was never well till he was delivered of that false trick and fell to the down-right acknowledgement of his sinne he never had comfort till he had confessed against himselfe his wickednesse This he writes for a patterne and gives his Psalme a title accordingly To give instruction and this experience taught him to intreat the Lord to pry into him as fearing himselfe that he should deale somewhat Psal 139. 23 24 over-favourably with himselfe Try me O Lord and know mine heart prove me and know my thoughts and consider if there be any way of wickednesse in me and to professe himselfe not only willing to beare but desirous to be reprehended if he should step awry Let Psal 141. 5 the righteous smite me it shall be a kindnesse and let him reprove me it shall be an excellent oyle which shall not breake my head for yet my prayer also shall be in their calamities or by how much he shall doe that the more by how much they shall reprove me the more diligently by so much I shall pray the more fervently for them When a man loves not those meanes which tend to the discovery of his heart and life and to the finding out of his secret sinnes or reprehensions whether publike or private or serious and earnest confession of sin before God there is great cause to suspect that all is not sound within Fifthly Truth dealeth not only against this or that branch of corruption which shooteth out to our disgrace or trouble but against the root it selfe As in Paul we see the Law of evill which did dwell within him was his principall matter of conflict Sixthly It zealously contendeth for the maintainance of Gods pure worship and service Judah ruleth with the Lord and is faithfull H●s 11. 12. with the holy One. Judah retaineth the pure worship of God whose service is perfect freedome and the truest dominion for he that serveth the Lord purely hath rule over Satan and his own unruly lusts Seventhly In all service the true Christian strives to approve his heart unto God and to performe it as in his presence to the Eph. 6. 19. 1 Cor. 14. 15. Rom. 6. 17. 2 Cor. 2. 17. glory of his name He prayeth with the Spirit obeyeth from the heart heares with reverence speakes as in the sight of God and doth all things with life and power Eighthly In all conditions or estates of life in all dealings secret or open publike or private at home or abroad he will carry himself as becomes the Gospell and study to be harmelesse unblameable and without rebuke before God and man Doe all things without murmurings and disputings That ye may be blamelesse Phil. 2. 15. and harmlesse the Sonnes of God without rebuke Thus a Christian servant will shew all diligence in his Masters businesse as Eph. 6. 6 7. Col. 3. 22 23. Tit. 2. 10. Dan. 6. 4. well absent as present froward or courteous and all faithfulnesse in things committed to his charge even to the least pinne though he might doe otherwise with secrecy and security from men and that willingly of conscience and not for hope of credit or gaine And not so only but he will reverence his Master and in heart be that unto him which he seemeth
by faith without the works of the Law But that they might not seeme directly to crosse the Apostle they say we are not justified by the works of the Law that is exact and every way perfect whereunto wages is due by debt but by works of grace graciously esteemed for righteousnesse when in the rigour of the Law it is not exact and perfect righteousnesse But first we reade that God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation Rom. 3. 24 25. by faith in his bloud that by the faith of Jesus we might receive remission of sinnes but we find not that he hath ordained Christ to be a propitation through works that by works we should be saved And if God have not taught any such manner of Justification it is not for us to receive it We reade of two waies of Justification by faith and works but of a third manner by faith and works both as joynt causes or con-causes we find nothing in Scripture Secondly By the doctrine of faith we are bound to acknowledge and confesse that Christ Jesus by his eternall Priest-hood is not only the sole meritorious cause of all grace or righteousnesse inherent requisite to finall absolution but these presupposed in the party to be absolved he is likewise the sole immediate cause of finall absolution or justification Without observation in some measure to all the Commandments of God we cannot enter into the kingdome of heaven but we enter not for the obedience we have performed To what use then doth our inherent righteousnesse or observance of Gods commandements serve us If it hath been sincere and ●●fained though imperfect yet the faith that brought it forth will make a sincere and faithfull plea for mercy in the day of tryall in which he that hath been an hearer only and no doer of the Law or hath done in part what God would have done but not sincerely nor faithfully shall not be heard Our imperfect obedience then is not the immediate cause of our absolution but the obedience and righteousnesse of Christ By the immediate and next cause we understand such a cause as is necessarily accompanied by the effect and without whose participation the effect never doth nor can be-fall any such a cause as whosoever is partaker of is by participation of it forth-with absolved such a cause as who so can probably hope to be partaker of he may upon the same degrees of probability hope for finall absolution such a cause as who so doubts or feares least he shall never be partaker of in this life must upon the same termes doubt or despaire of his absolution or salvation But if workes be accounted for the exact righteousnesse of the Law unto us not the obedience of Christ received by faith but the works of holinesse in us are the absolute cause of remission of sins and acceptance unto life And what else doe the words sound as they be interpreted but that as exact obedience to the Law should have been the matter or cause of Justification from justice so sincere obedience by the estimation of grace is the matter of Justification by grace They will say I know faith and workes are onely the condition without which remission cannot be obtained but faith is not a bare condition without which the thing cannot be for that is no cause at all but an instrumentall cause and workes if they be any cause of Justification instrumentall they cannot be but the matter whereupon and for which we are justified or accounted righteous Workes doe not embrace Christ but if causes of Justification they must challenge to themselves and therefore how faith and workes should be conjoyned as con-causes in Justification it is impossible to conceive seeing the one that is faith attributes all In eo q●od solvimus est aliqu●●atio meriti to the free-grace of God the other that is workes challenge to themselves the one will aspire no higher but to be the instrumentall cause of free remission the other can sit no lower but to be the matter of Justification if any cause at all For if works be accounted to us in the roome or place of exact obedience in free Justification doe they not supply the place are they not advanced to the dignity of works compleate and perfect in Justification from justice 3. If faith with workes be accepted for righteousnesse to Justification then faith justifieth not as it imbraceth the promises of mercy and by it we partake in the merits of Christs death and obedience but as it doth give assent to the truth of the Gospell and adhere and sticke to the Commandements for in that sense it is an act or exercise commanded in the Gospell and not only as it doth receive Christ and the promise of forgivenesse But in Scripture every where faith in Christ in the Lord Jesus or the Gal. 3. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 24. bloud of Christ is said to justifie not faith in other promises threatnings or Commandements 4. How can it be proved that in the matter of Justification the Apostle doth oppose faith to workes exactly perfect and compleat only and not to the workes of grace done according to the prescription of the Law as it was given to the Jewes to be a rule how people in Covenant ought to walke To him that worketh Rom. 4. 4 saith he the wages is of debt but he that worketh is not only perfectly just but he that is mercenarie that is to him that worketh for his reward as if the reward should be given him for his worke For thus the Apostle argues When wages is given to an hireling or mercenary it is of debt But Justification or life is not given of debt but of grace Therefore it is not given to him that worketh or to the mercenary Properly God oweth nothing to him that fulfilleth the Law either exactly or sincerely when they doe nothing but their duty and there is no proportion betwixt God and them but because they seeke righteousnesse and life by workes if God should retribute to them a reward he should be thought to doe it as it were of debt The Law was given to be a rule of direction to them that be in Covenant and workes of the Law are workes done according to that prescription which the Apostle here excludes from being any cause of Justification though he that walkes according to this Law being not an hearer but a doer of the Law is blessed in his deed But of this more at large in the next Chapter 5. Consider the opposition which the Apostle makes betwixt his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law and the righteousnesse Phil. 3. 9. which is of God by faith I count all things saith he but as d●ng that I might winne Christ and be found in him not having mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith If then the righteousnesse of
goe sin unpunished is simply the omission of a divine act the decree of God excepted not deficient or inconformable to any rule of Gods will but rather a peculiar exercise of divine mercy What absolutely God can will that he can justly will otherwise it might be that God can will a thing which is injust or that he can will injustly But it was possible for God to will to let sin goe unpunished it is not absolutely repugnant to his divine nature so to will If God cannot pardon sin without satisfaction Hae rationes tum demum locum obtinerent si ita De● putaretur agere ex necessitate naturae ut solo naturae impetu citra omnem intellectum voluntatis actum ageret veluti ignis calefacit ex necessitate naturae Windel de mundo Sect. 2. c. 2. Lex agendi necessitas 1. naturae 2. congruentiae Illa per quam agens ita agit ut per naturam non possit non agere estque vel sine cognitione vel cum cognitione Ista per quam agens non potest non congruenter suae naturae agere then it is necessary that he punish sin by absolute necessity or sin presupposed it is of absolute necessity that it be punished but it is not of absolute necessity that sin be punished for then God should punish it alwaies in one manner and as much as he can as naturall agents worke whereas we see by experience that God doth differently punish the sins of men in this life the lesser offendors most the greater least many times ever so as their punishments might be increased Neither can it be said that the greatnesse of punishment in this life doth lessen their punishment in the life to come for the punishments of the life to come being eternall can carry no proportion with the punishments of this life Then it was of absolute necessity that Christ should suffer so many stripes and no more be forsaken just so long and no longer continue in his agony so many houres and neither more nor lesse Sciendum est non sequi injustum ex quavis negatione justi etiam posi●is ●isdem circumstantij● Non est perpetuum ut id quod justè fiat non nisi injustè omittatur The bounty of God to reward obedience is essentiall as well as justice to punish iniquity and if God punish iniquity by absolute and naturall necessity of necessity he must reward obedience if he punish iniquity without divine constitution he must reward obedience in the same manner God may inflict a more mild punishment then sin deserveth therefore at least he may leave some degree of sin unpunished as also it is lawfull for God to men equall in sin to grant pardon to one to punish another according to his deserts To give reward above merit is not contrary to justice if it be given of our owne nor to punish mercifully and lesse then the fault deserveth if it be a fault committed against our selves And it seemes as much repugnant to justice Sunt quaedam Dei proprietates quarum exercitium tum quoad actum tum quoad tempu● modum actus imo etiam quoad objecti determinationem pendet a libera ipsus voluntate Ex promissione jus aliquod acquiritur ei cui facta est promissio at comminatione apertius dun●axat declaratur meritum poenae in peccante jus puniendi in comminante Cum bonitas misericordia Dei non minus proprietas ej●● sit quam justitia ac quamquam ex misericordia non ●gisset sed puniisset universos minimè eo mutabilis vel etiam immisericors potuerit dici similiter neque extra decreti considerationem mutabilem vel injustum dici potuisse quanquam ignovisset universis citra illam satisfactionem Quod is qui deliquit paenam meretur eoque punibilis est hoc ex ipsa peccati peccatoris ad superiorem relatione necessariò sequitur propriè naturale ut vero puniatur quivis peccator poena tali quae culpae respondeat non est necessarium simpliciter universaliter neque propriè naturale sed naturae satis conveniens Chamier panstrat Tom. 2. l. 5. c. 1● Parker de desc l. 3. Sect. 56. Wotton de Reconcil l. 1 c 4. V●ss respons ad Iud. Ravensperg cap. 28. Isa 53. 10. Psal 40. 8. Joh. 5. 19 30. to accept a surety as to pardon the punishment especially that the Son of God the party offended should take upon him our nature and make satisfaction for us And if God by absolute necessity must punish sin as it deserveth then it is simply impossible to renew the sinner by repentance or to annihilate him because then he doth not bear what punishmēt his sin doth call for from the hand of justice Justice is essentiall to God so is mercy bounty liberality but God sheweth mercy to whom he will doth good to whom he will freely not by absolute necessity only God hath obliged himselfe by righteousnesse of fidelity that is by promises and threatnings which must be fulfilled to doe this or that Sin though it hath an outward disagreement such as may be in a creature from the Creator yet it hath no inward positive repugnancy or contrariancy to Gods nature such as is betwixt fire and water for then should the divine nature inwardly in it selfe be worse for the being of sin and should necessarily nill it Sin is displeasing unto God he cannot approve it as good in it selfe but it is one thing to be displeased with or hate sin another to punish it of absolute and naturall necessity as it is one thing to approve obedience another to reward it of necessity It is most true that God doth not only hate but punish all sin but that he doth not by naturall necessity but by naturall congruity which may stand with the most free will of God determining to manifest his justice for the manifestation whereof the punishment of sin was necessary The hatred of sin and punishment thereof are joyned together as a free cause and effect not as a necessary cause and effect for God hateth sin at all times but punisheth it not ever but in his time or season But it is not materiall to dispute this matter in more words for seeing God hath determined that his justice shall take her revenge if by breach of Covenant she be wronged he cannot but punish sin according to its desert neither may he set us free from the same but so as wronged justice may receive satisfaction The decree of God is unchangeable and the sentence of God denounced against sin must stand firme for ever therefore punishment must be executed if the commandment be transgressed And the reasons of this decree be Omne agens quod agit naturaliter agit in objectum suae actionis naturaliter receptivum quare si punire esset naturale illa nimirum acceptatione quae secum sert necessitatem non possit actio
to love them saith Moses and he chose their seed after them Deut. 10. 15. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine owne blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live Ezek. 16. 6. See Ezek. 36. 32. Luk. 1. 54 55 72 78. This Covenant was made in Christ in and through whom we are reconciled unto God for since God and man were separated by sinne no Covenant can passe betwixt them no reconciliation can be expected no pardon obtained but in and through a mediatour Sinnes were never remitted unto any man no man was ever adopted into the place and condition of a sonne by grace and adoption but in him alone who is the same yesterday to day and for ever Jesus Christ true God and true man Act. 4 12. Heb. 13. 8. The fall of our first parents was occasion of this Covenant for Actus nostrae liberationis divinam bonitatem causam habet Sed aliter actus exactio nimirum paenae per modum satisfactionis ca●sam eam habet quae ad paenam exegendam irritat id autemest peccatum God suffered him to slip that he might manifest the riches of his mercy in mans recovery Mercy freeing man from misery possible might have taken place before transgression and have discovered it selfe in the preventing of sinne and so of misery but it seemed good unto Almighty God to suffer misery to enter upon man through sinne that he might make knowne the infinite riches of his mercy in succouring and lifting him up being fallen and plunged into a state remedilesse and desperate for ought he knew Besides we may conceive that Almighty God upon just grounds disdaining that such a base creature falne by pride should thus upon advantage of the mutability of his reasonable creature ruinate the whole frame of the Creation and trample the glory of his name under foot and withall looking upon the Chaos which sinne had brought and would further make if some speedy remedy was not provided did out of his infinite and boundlesse love to man though in the transgression and just and dreadfull indignation against Sathan give forth this gratious and free Covenant The forme of this Covenant stands in gratious and free promises of all good to be repaired restored augmented and a restipulation of such duties as will stand with free grace and mercy For the Covenant of Grace doth not exclude all conditions but such as will not stand with grace The Covenant which was made of free love when we lay wallowing in our blood and which calls for nothing at our hands but what comes from and shall be rewarded of meere grace is a Covenant of grace though it be conditionall So the pardon of sinne is given of grace and not for workes though pardon be granted only to the penitent and faith on our part a lively unfained and working faith be required to receive the promise The parties covenanting are two and so are the parts of the Covenant the one in respect of God the other in respect of man A Covenant there is betwixt God and man but no mutuall obligation of debt for such mutuall obligation is founded in some equality but there is no equality between the Creator and the creature much lesse betwixt the Lord most high and man a sinner If man had never offended God almighty who gave him his being and perfection could not have been indepted unto him but as he was pleased to recompence the good of obedience in the creature that never deserved punishment much lesse can God be indepted to the creature that hath offended who can neither endure his presence nor beare the weight of his wrath nor satisfie Justice nor deliver his soule from the thraldome of sinne The obligation of man to God is of double right and debt but it is of rich grace and abundant love that God doth bind himselfe unto man God doth promise in this Covenant to be God and Father by right of redemption and Christ to be Saviour of them that beleeve in God by him and in faith do yeild sincere uniforme willing upright and constant obedience unto his Commandements Jer. 31. 31 32 33 Deut. 31. 6. Ezek. 36. 25 26. Gen. 15. 1 4 5. Jer. 32. 40. 33. 9. Heb. 8. 10 11 12. Isa 54. 7. Hos 2. 19. The stipulation required is that we take God to be our God that is that we repent of our iniquities believe the promises of mercy and embrace them with the whole heart and yeeld love feare reverence worship and obedience unto him according to the prescript rule of his word Repentance is called for in this Covenant as it setteth forth the subject capable of Salvation by faith but is it selfe only an acknowledgement of sinne no healing of our wound or cause of our acquittance The feeling of Luke 13. 5. Act. 11. 18. 2 Cor. 7. 10. Ezek. 18. 27● paine and sicknesse causeth a man to desire and seeke remedy but it is no remedy it selfe Hunger and thirst make a man to desire and seeke for food but a man is not fed by being hungry By repentance we know our selves we feele our sicknesse we hunger and thirst after grace but the hand which we stretch forth to receive it is faith alone without which repentance is nothing but darknesse and despaire Repentance is the condition of faith and the qualification of a person capable of Salvation but faith alone is the cause of Justification and Salvation on our part required It is a penitent and petitioning faith wherby we receive the promises of mercy but we are not justified partly by prayer partly by repentance and partly by faith but by that faith which stirreth up godly sorrow for sinne and enforceth us to pray for pardon and Salvation Faith is a necessary and lively instrument of Justification which is amongst the number of true causes not being a cause without which the thing is not done but a cause wherby it is done The cause without which a thing is not done is only present in the action and doth nothing therein But as the eye is an active instrument for seeing and the care for hearing so is faith also for justifying If it be demanded whose instrument it is It is the instrument of the Soule wrought therin by the Holy Ghost and is the free gift of God In the Covenant of workes workes were required as the cause of life and happinesse but in the Covenant of grace though repentance be necessary and must accompanie faith yet not repentance but faith only is the cause of life The cause not efficient as workes should have been if man had stood in the former Covenant but instrumentall only for it is impossible that Christ the death and blood of Christ and our faith should be together the efficient or procuring causes of Justification or Salvation When the Apostle Rom. 3. ●● 22 28 30. Gal. 2. 16. 17. Rom. 4. 2 3. writeth that man
in a more rude forme As the time of the Sunne approacheth neerer or if further off so is the light that goeth before it greater or lesser and as the time of the arising of the Sonne of righteousnesse is more remote or nigh at hand so was the revelation that went before more dimme or cleare It was meete and expedient that when the comming of the glorious King of peace and righteousnesse did draw nigh the hearts of men should be raised up in desire and expectation of him But the better they were acquainted with his person and office the more distinctly they understood the time of his comming the more lively tast they had of the benefits they should receive by him and the greater tokens they saw of his glory approaching the more their hearts would be enlarged to desire and expect him Moreover it was the good pleasure of God to manifest the riches of his grace not all at once but by degrees as he saw it most expedient for the glory of his great Name and the good of his people in severall ages and states of the Church of which we shall have occasion to speake largely in the Chapters following But here two things must be noted to prevent some doubts that may arise First that clearenesse of Revelation is twofold One on the part of the revealer when the revealer dealeth so that unlesse he have a rude hearer or altogether malitious it may be understood of the hearer what he meaneth The other cleare even on the part of the hearer when it is so great that the rudenesse of the hearer cannot hinder that he should not perceive what is spoken but his malice only In the first sence the revelation of Christ in the Covenant of the promise was cleare but the testimony concerning the Kingdome of Christ could not be understood of a rude hearer before the accomplishment If it be objected how then could they be saved In the second place i● is to be observed that Christ doth not save as clearly knowne but as he is sincerely acknowledged But when the Revelation was sparing and darke no man can deny that Christ was truly and unfainedly acknowledged in the Church of the Iewes The word of God is the measure of faith and that is true and saving faith which believeth all things which are revealed and in that manner wherein they are revealed and therefore the faith of the Fathers was sound and effectuall because they believed what God was pleased to reveale and after that manner wherein it was revealed of God A Third difference ariseth from this for Christ with all his benefits was proposed to the Israelites under types and figures As Exod. 24. 7. 8. Heb. 10. 1 Gal. 3. 16. Heb. 8. 1 2 9. 7 8 9 10 11. Rom. 3 25. 1 Iohn 2. 2. Heb. 3. 18. 4. 1. the Prtiests Altars Sacrifices Propitiatory were all types of Christ his Priest-hood and Sacrifice and the Land of Canaan a type of Heaven the Lord leading the Iewes by the help of earthly things to heavenly and spirituall because they were but young and tender which was one cause why the Covenant was more obscure heavenly things being wrapt up under earthly But in the new Covenant Christ is offered to be seene with open face the truth substance and body of the things themselves is exhibited and all vaile of figures removed our minds are streight directed to heavenly blessednesse 4. The variety of administration doth offer a fourth difference Gal. 4. 12. 3. 13 25. for the Apostle compares the Nation of the Iewes to an heire as yet an Infant that is under Tutours and Governours The Christian Church to an heire come to ripe yeares And from this ariseth a fifth difference That as an heire not Gal. 5. 1. come to yeares not differing from a servant the Church was held under the Ceremoniall Law from which they that believe in Christ are delivered after the expiration of the time of nourture appointed of the Father Sixthly they differ in the number of them that are called to the participation of the Covenant The Covenant of promise was at Deut. 30. 8. Math. 10. 1 6. 15. 24. first concluded within the Families of the Patriarkes the rest having excommunicated themselves and then within the confines or limits of Iudea that in the Iewes there might be a most illustrious type of Election and of rejection in the Gentiles that is of the Church of God and Sathan But the partition wall betwixt Iew Gentile being broken downe the Covenant of grace was made with all Nations Seventhly the efficacy of Christ promised is lesser then of Christ Gen. 2● 18. Deut. 19. 8 9. exhibited In the Covenant of promise certaine promises concerning corporall blessings were made unto the Fathers and externall blessings were more esteemed as Symbols of spirituall and heavenly But under the New Covenant blessings spirituall and the gifts and graces of the Spirit are in more ample and plentifull manner powred upon the Church Remission of sinnes though it was certaine with God was lesse felt under the Covenant of Promise because the cloud of the Law put betwixt the mercy of God and the eye of the sould the grace of God was more obscurely revealed and the meanes of expiating sinne by the death of Christ as also because remission of sinnes was not really obtained by our surety for as yet he had not made the satisfaction promised The Spirit was powred in lesse plenty upon the faithfull because Ioh 3. 34. Ioh. 1. 16. 7. 38 39. Ioel ● 28. that benefit was to be reserved to the times of Christ who was first to receive the Spirit above measure in his humane nature and thence to derive grace unto all us The Iewes as heires were partakers of the Spirit of Adoption bu tempered with the sprit of Servitude because they were Infants under the yoke of the Law Rom 8. 15. Gal 46. the way to heaven not as yet clearely manifested But the heire come to ripe yeares is altogether led by the Spirit of Adoption The sense of future glory was also more obscure because there is more obscure mention of it and of the way thereunto in the Old Testament If we speake of some particular persons under the first Covenant they were endued with greater gifts of the Spirit then many under the New but more light of knowledge and greater plenty and abundance of Grace is bestowed upon the Church in the time of the Gospell if we respect the body of the Church and faithfull in Generall Eighthly the seales of the Covenant of promise were in number more in signification more obscure in use painfull and burdensome peculiar to some people as the Covenant was and to continue only untill the time of reformation But the seales of the New Testament are in number few in signification cleare in use easy common to all nations and to endure for ever And from
them the people of God sonnes or children of God the sonnes of the living God a peculiar people reconciled unto God justified unto life the daughters of Zion and of Jerusalem who have the Jerusalem that is above for their spirituall mother the seed of Abraham who is the Father of us all And as Jerusalem which is above is the mother of us all so is Christ said to die for us all and God to have mercy upon all Rom. 8. 32. He that spared not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all Rom. 11. 32. God hath concluded them all in unbeliefe that he might have mercy upon all Rom. 5. 18. By the righteousnesse of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life that is of all them which pertaine to the posterity of Christ by spirituall regeneration It may well be that all to whom Paul wrote that Epistle did not unfainedly believe but as they professed the Doctrine of Salvation and in some measure walked according to the policie of the new Jerusalem and as they enjoyed the Ordinances of grace whereby Christ was applied so the Apostle speakes of them as Saints and beloved and faithfull And in the same sense in other places they are reckoned amongst the faithfull beloved and elect who believe for a time and professe the doctrine of Salvation and partāke the seales of the Covenant though afterwards they fall away and as they are called beleevers converts disciples members of Christ temples and sonnes of God as they are said to be justified sanctified and redeemed so is Christ to have died for them as he is applyed in the Ordinances of grace and they partake of the benefits of his death But as for them that be not in Covenant we shall never reade that their sinnes are pardoned Act. 10. 43. Joh. 5. 24. Joh. 15. 2. Act. 15. 9. Rom. 5. 1. Rom. 9. 25 26. Col. 1. 21. Joh. 3. 36. 2 Cor. 6. 15 16 17. that they are delivered from death purged from their sinnes reconciled unto God received into favour nay the contrary is plainly affirmed of them that they are not the people of God that they have no communion with Christ that they are enemies in their minds by wicked works alienated from God that the wrath of God abideth on them that they are without God in the world which is never said of them for whom Christ died The Scripture speaketh expressely that Christ died for his Church his sheep his children his people the people or children of God those that are given unto him of the Father his brethren As the Father knoweth me even so know I the Father and I lay downe my life for my sheep Joh. 10. 15. Take heed unto your selves and to all the flocke to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own bloud Act. 20. 28. Christ is the head of the Church and he is the Saviour of the body Eph. 5. 23. Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it ver 25. He shall save his people from their sinnes Matth. 1. 21. Who gave himselfe for us that he might redeeme us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people Tit. 2. 14. As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him Joh. 17. 2. He prophesied that Jesus should die for that Nation and not for that Nation only but also that he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad Joh. 11. 51 52. For both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all one for which cause he is not ashamed to call them brethren saying I will declare thy Name to my brethren Heb. 2. 11 12. The Church and people of God in themselves considered were sinners ungodly enemies alienated from God and Christ died for them not that he found them friends or brethren or children but that Rom. 5. 6 10. he might make them such as by the participation of the benefits of his death they are made such indeed The faithfull are the seed or children of Christ which he hath brought forth with pain and travell Isai 53. 10 11. The inheritance of Christ which he hath purchased by his death given unto him of the Father that they might be redeemed from death and possessed of him for their Salvation Psal 2. 8. as the Psalmist elsewhere expounds it All the ends of the world shall remember and turne unto the Lord and all Psal 22. 27. Psal 72. 11. and 86. 9. the kinreds of the Nations shall worship before thee And if Christ died thus for his people seed inheritance sheep and Church he died not equally for all and every man for then in his death he considered none to be made his sheep or brethren before others nor did he purchase grace that one should be made the child of God rather then another For though grace be distributed in different degrees yet that being so common to them that beleeve and them that beleeve not that sometimes the greater measure is given to them that reject and cast it off it cannot be the cause why one man differs from another Many things are answered to this argument As first that it is Synodal circ Art 2. pa● 3 17. Vorst amica collat cum Piscat s●ct 26. Gal. 2. 20. not said Christ died for his sheep or brethren only and that his dying for them doth not exclude others as Paul saith Christ died for him applying the death of Christ to himself but not excluding others But the instance is not like for these words for me are not disjunctive to distinguish Paul from the rest of the faithfull but from unbeleevers or them that were not in the same state or kind This is a priviledge common to Paul with all beleevers that Christ died for him in respect of them then it is not disjunctive but in respect of them who be not partners in that prerogative it is disjunctive Therefore the example doth rather prove the speech to be restrictive then otherwise for as these words of Paul Who loved me and gave himself for me distinguish Paul from the company of unbeleevers and so are exclusive in like manner are these words of our Saviour I lay down my life for my sheep restrictive and exclusive In those Texts there is no exclusive particle expressed but the proposition for sense is restrictive For when difference or distinction is contained in some terme the Proposition is for sense exclusive no lesse then if it was expressely noted Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God him shalt thou Deut. 10. 20. serve and to him shalt thou cleave here is no restriction or exclusion expressed but in sense it is exclusive Call upon me in the time of Psal 50. 15. trouble and I will heare thee only is not added and yet for the sense the words are exclusive In thy seed shall all
profitable and pleasant answerable in some sort to the nature excellency and use of the thing known And in this case the heart is not over-ruled contrary to the full spirituall and infallible evidence of divine truth seriously thought upon unto a practicall judgement This is the learning of Christ the teaching of the Father the knowing of things which passe knowledge Christ is not known if he be not acknowledged as he is propounded what perfect Si ignorare accipitur pro non attendere dici potest voluntatem humanam vix unquam peccare sine aliqua ignoratione quia quando vo●untas peccat intellectus ut plurimum aliud agit nec attendit ad regimen voluntatis knowledge doth perfectly that imperfect knowledge doth imperfectly As the end acknowledged cannot be refused by like right neither can the meanes acknowledged the meanes I say necessary only necessary and without which there is no possibility or likelihood to obtaine the end For will is a reasonable appetite and therefore doth not stirre from such a good as is fully and spiritually represented unto it with evidence certainty profit and delight as the most universall adequate and unquestionable object of the desires and capacities of an humane soule and that both simply and in comparison for the freedome and willing consent of the heart is not lawlesse or without rules to moderate it but it is therefore said to be free because whether out of a true judgement it move one way or out of a false another yet in both it moveth naturally in a manner sutable to its owne condition If it be objected the heart being unregenerate is utterly averse unto any good The answer is that it is true the will must not only be moved but renewed and changed before it can yeeld to Christ But withall God doth never so fully and spiritually convince the judgement in that manner without a speciall work of grace upon the soule whereby the will is framed and fashioned to accept embrace and love those good things of which the minde is thus prepossessed The third help is a formall cause a free gracious disposition or Scimus non impetrari remissionem ante prece ●ed dic● decretam esse ante preces eam peti precibus quamvis sit decreta P. Malin de e●ect ex fide pag. 316. habite of faith by which the will is inclined agreeable to the disposition of it to come unto God This habite is necessary because without it the will being in bondage stained and defiled it is altogether unable to will or desire that which is spiritually good If there could be a will without such habite man might performe the act of a man spiritually alive before he was made alive So that the full answer to this question viz. what is that effectuall help whereby I come to God is this It is a mixt thing standing partly of that almighty power of his put forth for my good partly of that inward Word and inspiration by and with which his power is put forth partly in that spirit of faith and supernaturall life which his almighty power through his Word bringeth forth in my soule What was that help whereby Christ made Lazarus able to come to him out of the grave of naturall death The principall was Christs power the instrumentall his voyce the formall cause immediately helping to it or working it was the spirit of naturall life which the power of Christ by his Word restored to this dead corps which now was fallen And thus we have the effectuall help or grace by which we come actually to convert which are all given from Gods free grace and favour towards us And when God doth infuse the habite of faith into the minde of one of ripe age he doth cause him actually to beleeve as the nature of the thing it selfe and condition doth manifest For if the Spirit by inlightening the minde and renewing the heart doe perswade and move the soule effectually to embrace adhere unto and love the Lord Jesus Christ then the condition of the thing will not beare that grace should be given effectually but the act and motion of the soule must necessarily follow But though the connection of these two be indivisible yet the flexion or turning it selfe is not indivisible or in a point or moment but it may be sooner or slower more speedy in one more remisse in another The will is necessarily bowed or bended but more vehemently in one more slackly in another freely or willingly in all that are turned and yet necessarily And this first thing is well to be noted for from hence we may gather in what standeth the efficacy of grace effectuall to Conversion viz. In Gods effectuall power put forth to execute his intention which he hath of converting some actually before other some It Quaestio non est de irresistibilitate sed de insuperabilitate finali Nam quomodo traberemur gratia irresistibili cum id ipsum quod nolumus Deo resistere ●it ipsa Deigratia Illud ipsum velle resistere nihil ali●d est quam resistere doth not stand in any congruity or temperature of grace correspondent to our nature For this doth argue there is inward an incorrupted connaturall disposition to receive grace This maketh the effect of Conversion as much if not more to depend on the active capacity of the will as on the grace of God For it maketh the grace of God worke it morally and externally by perswasion only and the will of man from a power within it selfe which doth more inwardly enter the effect of Conversion then the other It may be questioned in what order doth the Spirit make us come unto God whether immediately or by some preparation going before wherein it is further to be considered what that preparation is or wherein it consisteth To the first branch of the Question it is truly answered that God doth use so to worke our comming to him by beliefe that he doth first for the most part prepare us thereunto As before we engraffe a Sciens we cut it and set it for incision and if a Timberlogg lie sunke in mudd men set to their tacklings first to draw it out of the mire before they lay it on a Cart to carry it away Thus God doth by his power often worke some preparative change in a sinner before he doth by his power and word worke the spirit of faith in them and make them come unto him So God by afflictions is said to boare the eare and prepare to conversion 2 Chron. 33. 11 12. Act 2. 37. When Manasseh was humbled in great misery he sought the Lord. Thus by conviction of sin others were pricked in heart and said What shall we doe to be saved and then speedily they received the Gospel beleeving Sometimes by extraordinary terrours rising from externall accidents yea hidden naturall causes God is pleased to bring men nearer unto him Thus the Jaylor Act. 16.
which as they are preparations fit the soul for Gods effectuall calling to be given they have their end when this immortall seed com●th to be sown in us The second Question is whether the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of will not whether grace hath its intrinsecall vertue to worke after the manner of grace or a supernaturall agent from the liberty of the will which all men deny Though if grace encline the will to a vitall and internall ac● it takes away some degrees of indifferency and addeth some weight of disposition rather to will then to nill But the Question is whether grace effectuall doe leave the will at liberty actually to resist it or no or whether it be from grace or the liberty of will that this man doth assent and not another why grace in the second act is Motion● efficacis conceptu quidditativo includitur actuale obsequiumillius qui efficaciter movetur alioqui motio illa esset sufficiens non efficax Eze. 36. 24 26. Deut. 30. 6. Col. 2. 11. Ezek. 11. 17. Jer. 24. 7. 31 33 37. Isa 54. 10. 50. 20 21. Phil. 4 13. 1 Joh. 4. 4 Ephes 3. 16. Deut. 29. 4. Isa 44. 3. effectuall to the producing of conversion in Peter and not in Judas If grace take away the stonie heart then it removeth in us whatsoever should resist or make head against the Spirit for the will cannot resist when corruption is removed and to resist the application of grace sufficient is no small part of a stony heart A cause in power only is not a cause but a cause in act applied which is then sufficient and not potent only to doe somewhat when applied in act it bringeth forth effect sufficient I say not physically but morally presupposing the actuall application of it to that purpose And on the other side if the heart of stone be not taken away sufficient grace was not actually applied of God for that speciall effect for a fleshie heart cannot be received by a stony but the stony is removed by the fleshie There is the same reason of that grace of conversion and of the grace that followeth after conversion but the grace following conversion borroweth not its efficacy from the liberty of the will That which God promiseth to doe cannot be the condition of the thing promised because the promise is precedent but God promiseth to give a new heart and to put his Spirit into the inner man and that not for their sakes but of his free-grace And this promise God did Ezek. 36. 32. fulfill daily in the Church of the Jewes but more sparingly according Isa 40. 40. Luk. 3. 6. J●●l 2. 28. Act. 2. 16 17. Ephes 1. 19. 1 Pet 1. 5. to the measure of grace the fulnesse whereof was reserved unto the times of the Messiah That which the omnipotency of God is put forth to worke in the creature that the creature cannot resist But God putteth forth his omnipotency that by the effectuall working thereof he may bring us to beleeve To say that notwithstanding Gods helping grace man may resist is to put grace in mans power not to put mans will under the power of grace to make man able to frustrate Gods counsell touching his conversion and make God a lyar in that which he hath sworne touching the gathering of his people The worke of conversion is wrought in the will not from any naturall power of suffering but from the obedience in which it is to Gods almighty power which it cannot but obey and come to any thing whereunto he will bring it For the will hath no naturall inclination to suffer any thing both for the being and manner of it above nature as in the eye now blinde there is no naturall power to receive sight And if there were a power naturall to receive conversion then there must be some agent in nature able to worke conversion for there is not found a power naturall of suffering in any thing but there is found a power correspondent working upon it But to leave the efficacy of grace to the liberty Servas beri instrumentum est sed non necesse est ●erus determinet singulos actus servi A● omnis causa subordinata ita Deo ut quodlibet instrumentum passivum agenti libero c. of mans will to chuse or refuse that doth make the will no instrument subject to Gods power but giveth it power to doe as it will when God hath done all he may unto it If God doe not apply and determine the creature to will and worke that which he worketh in the creature then the creature is the cause why God worketh and consequently why he willeth the conversion of man For Gods concourse working this or that must either goe before the will and so cause it to will or else it must follow accomplishing that which man willeth But the will of man hath no causall force on God himselfe nor doth his will follow or attend upon the will of man If the efficacy of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will then God doth not certainly fore-know the conversion of man For God cannot know this or that mans conversion certainly from eternity but he must see it certaine in himselfe willing it or in the causes of it or he must see it from all eternity as being present to himselfe out of the causes But if the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will God doth not certainly will and determine the conversion of man Certitudo mentis absque omni entis certitudine necessitate est impossibilis Quis Deo determinationem tribuerit au● rationi à Deo moraliter ad●ibitae quando tota causalitas determinativa quanta quanta est nec à Deo nec à ratione proficiscatur Joh. 6 37. Jer. 31. 34. Isa 54. 13. 1 Cor 4 7. Effectus producti in ●ec objecto non in illo non sunt tribuendi causae communiter agenti 1 Thes 2. 3. Ephes 2. 2. nor is it determined in its causes or circumstances and that he hath these things as existing forth of their causes from eternity to eternity co-existent with him is an unconceiveable absurdity God doth see what a free creature will doe being set in such and such circumstances because he doth see how his power would determine him in such and such occasions but to make him see determination when neither himselfe hath any way determined when the circumstances doe it not when nothing in the free creature doth determine him is to make him see that which neither in the creature nor in himselfe is to be seene They that are given unto Christ of the Father and taught of the Father they come unto Christ freely but necessarily withall not in respect of the liberty of will for necessity flowes not there from but the efficacie of grace they come unto Christ they are not so disposed that they might come or not come A
unto Israel And seeing repentance Act. 5. 31. Act. ●1 18. is not to desperation but to life and Salvation it cannot be without all respect of Christ in whom only we have deliverance from the condemnation and dominion of sin Repentance is the effect of Christs death and intercession As he hath purchased pardon of sin for us so repentance also otherwise we should be Isai 53. 5. partakers of some saving grace or blessing which Christ did not purchase for us The Spirit of God is not undeservedly called the Spirit of Christ as Mediatour convincing the Conscience of sin and unrighteousnesse and discovering unto the heart the grace of the Gospell The Word of the Kingdome or Covenant is the instrument of repentance as that which discovereth sin and holdeth forth hope of pardon and intreateth perswadeth and encourageth the weary and burdened to draw nigh to God by Jesus Christ FINIS A Table directing to some principall things in the foregoing Discourse A ABraham how the father of the faithfull page 50. who meant by Abrahams seed ibid. and p. 51 Adam whether to be translated into heaven if he had stood p. 10 Though he had been rewarded in justice yet not of merit ib. A double obedience required of Adam viz. naturall and symbolicall p. 10 why God forbade Adam the eating of the tree of knowledge ibid. whether Adams perfection in Innocency were naturall or supernaturall p. 11. Gods Covenant with Adam a Covenant of friendship not of reconciliation ib. Adam how he could be secure seeing his condition was mutable p. 13. Adam in Innocency whether he had power to believe p. 44 Adoption the Jewes partakers of it yet had it tempered with servitude p. 35 Acceptilation whether Christ satisfied not Gods justice fully but by divine Acceptilation only seeing he suffered but for a time 291 Affiance the ground of particular affiance is some word or promise made to a man not yet believing p. 229 Agony of Christ without any sinfull distemper 282. the effects of it 283 284. Betwixt his desires in his agony a diversity but no contrariety ib. All in Scripture sometime signifies neither all precisely nor the most part 208 B BEcause what it signifieth p. 57 The phrase from the beginning or the beginning what it imports p. 42 Believe whether every man be bound to believe that Christ died for him in particular p. 222 223. c. He that goeth on in an evil way is not immediately called to believe in Christ 223. Things that are true as promised it is not necessary that they be unless we believe 225. That man cannot believe is not through impotency of weakness but impotency of wilfulnesse 226. Belief that Christ died for all men cannot be the ground of justifying faith 228. what signe God gives of his willingnesse to have men believe when he gives them not power 245 Believers and Christs sheep how they differ 255 Bellarmine confuted who saith the faith whereby Abraham was justified was justice p. 72 But not ever an exceptive but oft an adversative 302 C CAnaan how said to be an everlasting possession p. 55 Caphar what it signifieth 279 Carnall Christians their priviledge 55 Carnall reasonings to be avoided in divinity 249 Cause an immediate or next cause what p. 70. A morall cause though not present in act yet if supposed future may have effects p. 31 Circumcision why with bloud and why ordained seeing both sexes not capable of it p. 90. what it was a seal of ibid. Circumcision not unprofitable to those that were not partakers of the spirituall blessings 91 Christ more darkly revealed in the Covenant of promise and why p. 32. Christ Mediator and Testatour both 203. for whom he died and rose again whether for all and every man with a purpose to save or for all in respect of the sufficiency of the price not efficiency 204 205 206 c. No man hindred from comming to him by any cause efficient or deficient out of himself 244. Both natures concurre in him necessarily as a formall beginning in the works of Mediation 269. How he is inferiour to the Father 271. our sins layd upon him 276 277. and he substituted for the sins of the faithfull 279. Satisfaction made by him and that reall and not by acceptilation ib. and 280 281. How the Church is said to have Christ 287. His appearing before his Father for us what it imports 296. How he is King 306. In Christs person a threefold fulnesse 317. How Christ was Mediatour before his Incarnation p. 27. Christ the common store-house in which every thing is first placed that is to be imparted to believers p. 38 Church members the Covenant externally made with every one parents and their children p. 24. 29 Church of the elect only one p. 30. sometimes the bounds of it narrower sometimes larger 203. In the latter dayes it is probable the bounds of it will be larger then heretofore ib. Commandment Gods Commandments shew whatour duty is not what God will work in every man 134 Conditions of two sorts 133 Conversion though not a bare morall perswasion yet not effected without perswasion 328. Conversion of a sinner called conviction and why 333. what is that effectuall help whereby a man comes to God 335. wherein stands the efficacie of grace effectuall to conversion 336. whether God a cause of mans non-conversion 344 Covenant severall derivations of the originall word p. 1. Covenant of salt what p. 2. Acceptions of the word Covenant p. 3 4. The essence of the Covenant wherein it consisteth 4. Covenant and law how differ ib. There may be a Covenant without verball expressions p. 5. yet there have been alwayes expressions in the Covenant with the reasonable creature ibid. The Covenant is one thing and the name of the Covenant is another p. 5. Causes why God is pleased to deal with the reasonable creature in a Covenant way p. 6. A Covenant with man in Innocency though the word Covenant not to be found p. 6. The Covenant betwixt God and man in generall described p. 7. The Authour of the Covenant God not God and man ib. The Covenant is of grace even where reward is promised of justice ib. p. 9. The subject of the Covenant is man and how 8. Covenant of works and grace no where in Scripture totidem syllabis 9. Covenant of God with man not one but manifold and sundry wayes whereby they are distinguished 8. Of the Covenant with man in Innocency p. 9. Covenant of works whether still on foot in the posterity of Adam in respect of temporall good things p. 13. Covenant of grace what 14. Impossible to be under the Covenant of works and grace at once 15. Covenant of grace divers in administrations one in substance 23. Covenant of nature and grace how they agree and differ ib. Covenant of grace to be considered as promised and as established p. 27. Covenant of promise what 28. Covenant of promise and the new
likewise in his calling to the participation of the Covenant For though this Vocation be every way free gracious and absolute as the Spirit worketh where he listeth yet in the Gospel which is the instrument of Vocation it pleaseth God to propound both the condition which he requireth and the promise which he hath made The promise as an argument to move us the rather to give our selves unto Christ and to doe what is required The prescription of what he requireth as that condition without which we cannot obtaine and by which most certainly we shall obtaine what good is promised Effectuall Vocation on Gods part is the powerfull invitation and assured drawing of the weary and thirsty soule unto Christ that in him it might finde refreshing and comfort The answer on our part is a free and willing comming unto Mat. 11. 28 29. Joh. 6. 44. and 6. 35 37. Christ that in him we might be satisfied the embracing of Jesus Christ and lodging him in our bosome And therefore that which first of all receiveth that Vocation is faith whereby we believe that if a man performe the condition he shall possesse the promise if he come unto Christ he shall be satisfied but if he performe not the thing required he shall not enjoy the promise he shall not be satisfied if he drinke not the water of life And not only so but he shall continue poore naked blinde miserable captive a prisoner an alien from the Covenant and without God in the world nay he shall be punished with contrary evils according to the nature of the Covenant divine where there is no promise without a commination contrary to it This faith is grounded upon the free and gracious Covenant whereby God is pleased to binde himselfe first unto us before he binde us unto himselfe that his promise might be apprehended as the ground of our faith upon which we should firmely beleeve And upon the Isai 55. 1 2. Joh. 7. 37. Rev. 22. 17. free and gracious invitation of Christ generally made to all and every poore thirsty languishing faintie soule parched with the sense of wrath and withered for lack of the sap or fruit of grace to come unto him for ease and sweet refreshing to the contentation and satisfying of their soules to come and drink of the waters of life freely Where let it be observed that Thirst and Drinesse in phrase of Scripture doth note the want of good things as Isai 29. 8. Psal 42. 1. Isai 32. 2. and 55. 1. Psal 143. 6. on the contrary absolute good whereby the desire of soule and body may be satisfied is usually compared to waters To thirst is from a totall defect of the Spirit of Grace or a defect of the whole Spirit of Grace tormenting the soule to desire it And so not to thirst for ever and the graces of the Spirit to remaine Joh. 4. 14. and 7. 38. in us for ever or that water to be in us a fountain of water springing up to life eternall is one and the same In Heathen authors to thirst is exceedingly to desire but for the most part that desire comes from some tormenting want Artemidorus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Cyrus willing to declare his ardent desire of doing good to others saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Sitio aliis gratificari In which signification it is used by the Latines also Cic. pro Planc Deinde sitientem me virtutis tuae deserüisti Apud Horat. Sitis argenti Apud Juvenal Sitis famae Apud Claudian Sitis praed● And the opposition that is betwixt thirst and water will evidence the same For water if we respect the use which it affordeth to the earth and to bodies doth make fruitfull barren fields purifie things polluted q●ench or water them that are drie and sweetly refresh them that boyle with heat And therefore if water metaphorically signifie comfort and refreshing wherewith the soul is recreated and rejoyced Thirst which is opposite to water doth denote a soul dried up with grief spent with the heat of Gods indignation and tormented with the vexing or molesting want of grace and consolation To be weary and heavie laden is to be faint or tired under some burden labour Deut. 25. 18. ● Sam. 17. 2. and 23. 10. Psal 6. 7. See there journey disease or work But tirednesse and fainting wearinesse and trouble are no parts of health or ●ase no more then the sight feeling or knowledge of the disease is any part of the cure wearinesse and fainting is neither part degree nor preparative to refreshing if in it self considered And here the doubt touching the precedency of faith and repentance may easily be determined For if faith be taken largely or generally for a beliefe of the promise if we repent and receive it then faith is before repentance for there can be no turning without hope of pardon nor comming home by hearty sorrow without some expectation of mercy Thus the Exhortations run Turn unto the Lord for he is mercifull and gracious Repent for the Kingdome of God is at hand But if faith be taken more strictly for that faith or beliefe whereby we receive embrace or rest upon the promise of God in Christ Jesus for pardon and forgivenesse then repentance goeth before pardon for no remission is promised to Mark ● 4. Luke 24. 47. be enjoyed but upon condition of repentance and if the penitent only be immediately capable of pardon then pardon is received by a penitentiall faith If repentance be necessary to Justification of necessity it must goe before justifying faith because faith and justification are immediately coupled together It is impossible to come unto Christ without repentance but to come unto Christ is to embrace or receive him soundly and effectually to the refreshing of the soul Comming unto Christ is a lively motion of the soul wherein arising from sin it draweth nigh or approacheth unto Christ that in him it might be satisfied The motion is one but the points are two For in drawing nigh unto Christ the soul ariseth from sin which may be called repentance Of the signification of the word I will move no question at this time but take repentance for a comming unto Christ by true godly sorrow from whom we had formerly departed by sin and wickednesse to the extreme hazard of our souls The Author of repentance is God in Jesus Christ Repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25. Jer. 31. 18. is the gift of God but the act of man It is man that repenteth and not God but it is God that giveth repentance inableth and moveth man to repent Regeneration is the act of God repentance the act of man In subject they both agree for he that is Ezek. 36. 25. regenerate doth also repent and so on the contrary but in their formall consideration and peculiar nature they are distinct Christ also as Mediatour is the principall cause of repentance for him hath God exalted to give repentance