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A66111 The truly blessed man, or, The way to be happy here, and forever being the substance of divers sermons preached on Psalm XXXII / by Samuel Willard. Willard, Samuel, 1640-1707. 1700 (1700) Wing W2298; ESTC R30205 358,966 674

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3. 5. and he makes it his ●usiness to do so he fights against it he brings it to the Cross of Christ to be crucified he prays ●rd against it Psal 119. 29. he hates it v. 128. Such an one in Gods gracious account is one in whose Spirit is no Guile 2. Whether this have any influence into our pardon 〈◊〉 Justification A. There is occasion to make this enquiry here because the disputes about it which began from the first planting of the Churches by the Apostles are not yet at an end nor do Papists only continue to maintain their Doctrine of merit and the confounding of Justification with Sanctification but there are others who call themselves Protestants and are not willing to be counted Arminian neither who go about to depreciate the fre● Grace of God in pardoning and justifying of us who whiles they ascribe all to Christ as the meritorious cause yet find the matter of our Justification in us which they would have to be o●● Sanctification and New Obedience our faith and Repentance and Holiness and they make the● not only necessarily concomitant but an essent●●● part of our Justification Give me leave then 〈◊〉 clear up this matter and shew the mistake of such an opinion in the following Conclusions 1. That Justification and Sanctification are t●● distinct benefits flowing to us from Christ However vain men have confounded them yet 〈◊〉 Scripture speaks of them as divers priviledges o●● from the other so 1 Cor. 1. 30. Christ indeed 〈◊〉 made both Righteousness and Sanctification to us b●● they are two things and applied to us after 〈◊〉 different manner We are Justified relatively 〈◊〉 are Sanctified really we are Justified by Imputa●●on we are Sanctified by Infusion Justification is 〈◊〉 Garment thrown over us Sanctification is by a new principle put into us Justification is a Change in 〈◊〉 state Sanctification is a Change in our nature 〈◊〉 the one we are made legally innocent in the oth●● we are made inherently holy hence the one 〈◊〉 said to be an Act and the other is called a Wo●● by our Divines because the one passeth upon us Declaratively whereas the other operates in us Effectually 2. That both of these derive to us from the same fountain of free grace Mans whole Salvation doth so Eph. 2. 8. and both of these do appertain to it that Justification is a fruit of meer Grace we are plainly assured Rom. 3. 24. And hence pardon is to be sought of God or for his own name sake Psal 25. 11. And our Sanctification hath the same original too for it is a product of his meer good pleasure Jam. 1. 18. Grace therefore which is the same thing is given of God Psal 84. 11. God ows neither of them to us we have no way obliged him to bestow them upon us rather than others We have nothing but Sin and Guilt and pollution cleaving to us in our natural state when God comes to pardon and purifie us quickning is bestowed on them that were the Children of wrath Eph. 2. 1 3. How then should our Sanctification or being without Guile possibly contribute any thing to our Justification or Pardon 3. That they are both of them applied together in or upon our Effectual Vocation They are contemporaries for though Divines do allow them an order in the handling of them and an order of nature and accordingly give the priority to Justification yet there is no distance of time between the one and the other by their acknowledgment and they are reckoned as benefits joyntly flowing from our Effectual Calling and indeed it is in Regeneration that we pa● from death to life there it is that we are quickned● and there is a double life that we pass to according to the double death that past upon us we were dead in the Law by the Condemnation denounced on us but now we are made to live by a pardon in which we are Justified and we we● dead in trespasses and sins spiritually and now w● are made to live to Holiness by a new inspiration 〈◊〉 and if we are no sooner Sanctified than Justified how can our Sanctification afford any matter for our Justification 4. That because pardon belongs to Justification● hence it must needs have a respect to a Righteousness from whence it proceeds We have already taken notice of the difference between mens pardoning a Criminal and Gods forgiving a Sinner their pardon is not a Justification 〈◊〉 his is theirs proceeds from meer mercy his from mercy tempered with Justice theirs is entirely prerogative but his hath a respect to a Law 〈◊〉 which he must be just in it Rom. 3. 26. and th● refers not to his Soveraign Justice barely which 〈◊〉 nothing else but his Supremacy but his Relative Justice as he is Law giver and hath constitute● a way of procedure with his Creature In th● therefore there must be a Righteousness regard● by him to which he hath an eye in the very pardoning of the Sinner and that Righteousness must be such as will answer it so that mercy and truth may meet together c. Psal 85. 10. 5. That this Righteousness can be no other b● that perfect Righteousness which was required in the Covenant of Works God did in the First Covenant that was made with man in our first Parents constitute the Rule of Righteousness between him and man and to that Rule it was that the promises and threatnings were annexed and hence the procedure of Gods Relative Justice with man must be according to the tenour of that when therefore God comes to pardon and justifie a Sinner that is the Righteousness he proceeds upon the question is may this be done and the honour of the Law be salved and the resolution of it is that if there be a Righteousness to be presented for the person that will fully answer the demand of the Law and may be accepted as his there will be no injury done to the Law but if not it will suffer by it If it bate but a jot or tittle it is so far a loser and for that reason our Saviour assures us that it shall not Mat. 5. 18. 6. That the most eminent sincerity of the Children of God doth not amount to such a Righteousness And if this be so here is reason enough to deny it to be the meritorious or material cause of pardon and Justification for if it were perfect it could not merit for us a pardon because we owe it but if it be imperfect it cannot be reputed a Righteousness at all with respect to the Law-Covenant It is certain that the Righteousness which that required was such as is without the least flaw or defect and we see how straitly man was obliged if he hoped to Escape the Curse of it Gal. 3. 10. One failure spoils it and makes it become Unrighteousness Now all our Sanctification at present is imperfect and hath mixtures of Sinful defilement adhering to it It is a Ragged
And there never was an instance of so much as one that was defeated the greatest Prodigal such as he Luke 15. If he hath come to himself gone back to his Father confessed his sins and deservings and cast himself upon his Soveraign Grace hath found him so ready that he hath met him a great way off taken him into his arms and given him all the Testimonies of his pardon 3. What influence this confession hath into that forgiveness for the obtaining of it A. 1. Negatively it is neither the meritorious nor the moving cause of Gods forgiving us 1. It is not the meritorious cause of it We have already observed that it is a free favour It is indeed first merited for us before we can partake in it for it belongs to Justification we are first ransomed and then pardoned but our confession hath no hand in this It is through Christ's Blood that we obtain remission by his stripes we are healed Isa 53. 5. Confession carrieth no satisfaction in it but is a legal and full proof of our Guilt in it we condemn our selves it saith as Dan. 9 8. To us belongs Confusion the Law left no room for a pardon upon acknowledgment this is purely Evangelical 2. Nor is it the moving cause of it Among men indeed a tender heart is moved by an ingenious confession and humble sub●ission and it makes us to relent and shew compassion to a delinquent but though such affections are ascribed to God yet it is after the manner of men and warily to be understood Affections are attributed to him in regard of the Effects which flow from his fixed and unalterable will Confession is an adjunct of true Repentance and God is the Author of that as well as of the pardon Acts 5. 31. To be able truly to confess Sin is his gift 2. Positively this Confession belongs to the way in which God is wont to apply forgiveness to Sinners God designed from Eternity to forgive them but he hath laid out this Medium through which he will bring them to it How God treats with Infants is beyond our decision but in regard of such as are of years of understanding and under the Gospel there are two things observable 1. That God requires this Confession of these that hope to obtain forgiveness of him The influence therefore of one upon the other is only as it is the way of Divine Appointment to obtain it the promise so runs Prov. 28. 13. And that clause is inserted Jer. 3. 13. Only acknowledge c. God will be sought to for pardon and there can be no asking forgiveness without acknowledging Guilt Hence though this be Gods gift as well as the other yet it is whiles the Guilty Sinner is prostrating himself at the foot stool of Mercy taking shame to himself that God comes and passeth the act of pardon upon him Luk. 15. 17. In summe where God giveth a Pardon he gives Repentance and where true Repentance is there will be confession So we may safely conclude that he who is not brought truly to confess hath not truly repented of his sins and if he be still an impenitent he is certainly an unpardoned man 2. That this Confession is the way to obtain the evidence or witness of our pardon God is sometimes said to forgive when he witnesseth in us to his pardoning mercy and the reason is because the man was before in his own apprehension unpardoned though his state were good Now as it is usual for God to come in and refresh the heart with telling it its Sin is forgiven whiles the bleeding Soul is bemoaning it self with most humble confessions to him so there is matter of evidence in the confession it self and when we can truly say we have so confessed as before we have the characte● of one that hath received this grace of God and so is in a state of forgiveness whereas the want of this is just reason to make us call it in question at least to think that sin is not forgiven which is not thus confessed USE I. For Caution Take heed of abusing this truth unto presumption It is a great policy of Satan to hold men as long as he can in carnal security unto which their own natural inclination leads them and among other devices he hath to insinuate into them by this is one main engine that he useth with those that live under the Gospel and enjoy the priviledges of it to blow them up with false surmizes about God and thence to draw ungrounded conclusions about their good estate and arrogate to themselves the things that belong not to them let us then be warned to take heed to our selves and there are many that need this warning lest they rue it for ever viz. 1. All such as resolve their whole hope into the merciful nature of God not seeking his favour in his own way That God is merciful and gracious is a great truth and wo to us all if it were not so had he not written his Name in such Letters we had all been without hope But this precious truth may be abused and it is so by all those that have no other plea for Salvation but because God is merciful his natural goodness and his common love to his Creature is the only foundation on which they build thence arguing that they cannot perish and hence enquire no farther but rest here never asking how this mercy may be obtained so as to obtain a deliverance from the Curse fallen on them or what are the terms of the New Covenant on which God offers himself to be propitious to Sinners and so never study a compliance with them but count it enough that he is such a God this is derided in that Sarcasm Isa 27. 4. And this Spirit was in them Joh. 8. 32. And if we may judge of mens hearts by their practices this is the guise of all the loose Professors that live carelesly and yet confidently 2. They that instead of confessing do cover their sins and yet hope to do well enough And how many are there of these Such as seek to hide their Sins under excuses or to justifie themselves by pleas and defences or that little regard to practice Repentance upon their falling into sin but think it sufficient either to plead their infirmity or slight it over with saying we are all Sinners and none without their faults or a pretence that they allow it not in themselves though the flesh be too hard for them and hope that God will not charge it thus they prevent their deep sorrow and taking to themselves the due shame for their sins and think they are as good Christians as any and God will accept them as well as the best surely this speaks them presumptuous 3. They that encourage themselves to sin boldly on account of Gods mercy Instead of being melted into Godly Sorrow on consideration that God is so good and gracious which is the kindly effect of it