Selected quad for the lemma: conscience_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
conscience_n faith_n good_a unfeigned_a 3,625 5 11.4478 5 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
A09277 VindiciƦ gratiƦ. = A plea for grace More especially the grace of faith. Or, certain lectures as touching the nature and properties of grace and faith: wherein, amongst other matters of great use, the maine sinews of Arminius doctrine are cut asunder. Delivered by that late learned and godly man William Pemble, in Magdalen Hall in Oxford. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1627 (1627) STC 19591; ESTC S114374 222,244 312

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

it is through want of something in themselves namely sanctified abilities in the heart which as they come not from the VVord so God is not bound to give them by his Spirit It sufficeth that God onely command them if they cannot obey whose fault is that but their owne Gods commands presuppose that strength to obey is or should bee in the creature if that through sinne be made weake God is yet just in commanding and punishing And thus much of this second question by way of knowledge let us briefly see what use we may make thereof to our practice it learnes us a threefold lesson 1. What our affections are to bee in hearing of the Word namely the same that in teachable Schollars towards a most wise Master or in sicke Patients towards the skilfullest Physitian We must be content to be ●●ld and every way submit our selves to the discretion of that our Heavenly Doctor Wee must remember we have to doe with more than man in this businesse t is the Holy Ghost that does all in all in this sacred ordinance When therefore we goe to heare let us put on all holy humble obedient and tractable affections A proud disdainfull selfe-conceited contentious minde is un●it for mans instruction most opposite to the wisedome of Gods teaching who must needs scorne to be their Master that thinke themselves to be too good to bee his Schollars Againe a malicious uncleane worldly voluptuous heart stands contradictory to the holinesse of this blessed Spirit Those proud affections hinder us in knowing these impure lusts in doing our Masters will both together or each alone make the Word utterly unprofitable unto us 2. What the duety of Ministers is in preaching the Word This is threefold one respecting the worke two the issue of it For the worke it selfe the nature and Spirituall quality thereof should teach them faithfulnesse to speake Gods Word as it ought to be spoke which is opposed as to negligence and accaused carelessenesse in the handling thereof contrary to the dignity and majesty of it so on the other side too overmuch diligence humane curiosity contrary to the simplicity and saving vertue thereof Not that a man can be too diligent in doing Gods worke or that it is easie to define precisely what and how farre humane helpes are to bee used in Divinity but yet this is apparant a singular fault there is in mens preparations to this worke who either intend not at all the saving of mens soules or if they doe they thinke themselves must doe as much in it as Gods Spirit Whence else or to what end should so much of man be mingled with that of God why so much study to please mens ●ares why so much care to winne credite to their owne persons c. Sure it cannot but be a thing very admirable to any that will observe it to heare a man standing as Gods Embassadour speaking as from his mouth in his Name to make a solemne praier for assistance of Gods Spirit in his preaching to blesse his Meditations that he hath put into his heart to make them effectuall in the hearers c. when in the meane time his conscience tells him that in his studied preparations hee sought for nothing lesse than the aide of the Spirit and his preaching tells us that he publisheth the words not of Gods but of mans wisedome In the Issue of this worke there is a double dutie 1. If it succeed well Thankefull Humility opposed to Pride that when men are converted by his Ministery hee ascribe all to God nothing to himselfe who was but the Saw in the workemans hand c. 2. If it succeed ill Contented Patience opposed to repining Thought as Why should not my Ministery be as effectuall as anothers is Let a Minister remember he onely sowes the seede God must give it a body of his good pleasure nor is it himselfe but God whom the people here cast off He may take comfort and shall have reward for his godly pain●… in the conscionable discharge of his duety albeit God saw it not good that it should bee so blessed in the effect as 〈◊〉 could desire 3. This teacheth us how to judge of our ●onversion by the Word preached namely by the inward Sanctification of the heart not by having and frequenting the publicke ordinance Silly wretches they are that so farre mis●ake themselves and the nature of these things as to think● the going to Church the hearing of the Sermon the remembring and discoursing ●f it the commending of the Preacher outward reverence to his Person and Ministery some kinde of Reformation of maners wrought out of very shame not to follow such plaine directions as they must needes confesse to be good and others allow of in opinion and practice that thinke I say these things sufficient arguments of a sound Conversion by the Word Let us not beguile our selves in a matter of this high consequence these things are outward but the effect of the Word is inward also upon the conscience in the change of the heart and sanctification thereof with all sacred affections to holinesses Looke then inwards and trie how wee are affected in and after the hearing of the Word Doe we finde an Holy feare to fall upon us when our sinnes are threatned are we willing to abide the Surgeons hand upon our tenderest sores and though it be painfull yet doe heartily rejoyce in the sharpest strokes and deepest cuts of the sword of the Spirit when it pierceth in to the dividing asunder of the Soule and Spirit marrow and joints parting us and our best beloved sinne Doe our hearts secretly rejoyce with joy unspeakeable and glorious in hearing those sure and stedfast promises of Mercy and Grace published in the Gospell Are our soules brought under the powerfull command of the majesty and authority of the Word captivating all our thoughts to the obedience of Christ so that no command of a King armed with greatest terrour can lay the like necessity of obedience upon our outward man as Gods injunctions do upon our consciences Hath the Word wrought in us an unfained hatred of that evill which we outwardly forsake a sincere love of that good which outwardly wee practise Can we truely mourne with much bitternesse and anguish when the Word discovers unto us the infinite corruptions and loathsome uncleannesse of our hearts so that we wish for nothing more in the world than to bee freed from the sinne that hangs so fast on us and to be cloathed with perfect holinesse Finally doe wee love the Word that hath begotten us preferring that food of our soules before our appointed bodily food If these things be in us we have a witnesse to our soules that the Word preached hath been unto us not onely in word but also in power and that the same Spirit which gave it unto the Church hath made it his most blessed instrument of our effectuall Conversion to God But if the case stand
men unto God Repent and beleeve th● Gospell so often used in the New Testament Let us now for conclusion at this time lay all these errors together and see what is the finall upshot of this Opinion all things being reckoned t is this That in a man unregenerate there is naturally very little or no Corruption and unto his Regeneration there is required little or no Grace That I be not thought to slander them both will appeare unto you to be true thus First that they annihilate and overthrow the Grace of God for whereas the Vnderstanding Will and Affections are in our Conversion chiefly to bee respected it is manifest that by their doctrine Grace hath no worke upon any of these Not upon the Vnderstanding to inlighten it for say they that 's done by the cleere Evidence of the things that are to be understood Not upon the Affections to rectifie their motions for say they the affections follow the understanding and are presently in order as soone as that is informed Lastly not upon the Will to incline that to embrace the Promise for that say they is left absolutely to its owne Liberty and of it selfe it may consent or dissent Where then is any worke left for Grace unlesse that glorious Grace of God in bringing a Sinner unto himselfe so much magnified in Scripture and by all men be now at last nothing but only the Revelation of the Gospell unto mankinde Which we confesse is a great grace but yet without another that 's greater is not sufficient to Conuert a sinner Thus Grace is excluded Let 's see what they thinke of mans inherent Corruption This they also extenuate and tell us that we are not so weake nor wicked as wee have beene alwayes thought to be For why our understanding needs not any supernaturall restoring of decayed sight if divine things be plainely set forth to view we can see well enough Our affections are not of themselves vitiously disposed but only through the error of the minde correct that and all is amended Finally our Wills have not rebellious inclination in them but they can of themselves without further helpe choose that which is good So that if Arminius bee not deceived in his wee may now change our opinion of ourselves and thinke that we are at least something But what then is become of that Sinne that dwelleth in us of that Vniversall Corruption and Disorder of our whole nature so much spoken of so much complained of Is it vanished T is not so well but these men have vanished away in their imaginations and have disputed so long of Gods Grace and mans Corruption till in conclusion they have lost both and are become wilfully ignorant of the one and malitious enemies to the other Hitherto the Explication of their Opinion their Errors and the generall issue of them Wee are now in the next place to unfold and confirme that truth which is to bee maintained touching this question viz. Whether it be in Mans power so to resist the grace of God as finally to hinder his owne Conversion Wee maintaine the Negative that where God purposes to save no power of man can destroy The truth hereof will plainely appeare unto us if wee shall consider distinctly how a man may hinder the Worke of Grace 1. In the Antecedents and Preparatory meanes to his Conversion 2. In his Conversion it selfe For the Antecedent preparations to bring men unto Conversion they are either Outward namely The Observation of the externall parts of Gods worship as frequenting the Word preached Prayers Sacraments keeping of the Sabbaoth attention and industry in the hearing reading and meditation of the Word or Inward the effects of the ordinary grace of God in the use of those meanes as 1. Knowledge of the will of God in the main matters of Religion concerning Faith and Practice 2. Touch of Conscience in the sense of sinne arising from a cleere discovery and conviction of a mans forlorne estate 3. A Feare and horror of Gods punishing vengeance joyned with a naturall griefe of heart that hee is brought into so much unavoydable misery 4. A thought and wish for freedome by some meanes or other 5. Some slight hope of helpe from the promise of grace so generally made as none seeme to bee excluded upon the apprehension whereof some kinde of joy will also arise in the heart All which together may cause some kinde of reformation of life in doing of many things gladly and a not unwilling abstinence from others Touching these preparations unto Conversion you are to note these three positions 1. That they are in themselves good and necessary This is to bee observed against those overbroad and unadvised speeches of some which have given occasion unto our adversaries to fasten upon us this imputation that according to our Doctrine Zelus omnis cura sludium ad obtinendam salutem adhibitum ante ipsam Fidem Spiritum renovationis vanum est atque irritum quinimo noxium magis homini quam utile fructuosum Which assertion were most dangerous because it opens a wide gappe to let in all profane contempt of the exercises of Religion man having hereby a good excuse for the neglect of all dueties of Piety because all their care and diligence in the use of them were not onely to no purpose but to an ill purpose untill such time as they were truely converted But this is a slander our Divines teach no discouraging Doctrine to blunt the edge of mens good desires and to beat them off from all religious endeavours No they presse upon men ever whilst they are unconverted the necessity and profitablenesse of all those forementioned preparations in regard 1. Of the nature of the things themselves which are good and our very necessary obedience to doe them being strictly injoyned by the commandement of God 2. Of the event that followes upon them according to Gods promise and his ordinary proceeding in the worke of grace which is such that he bestowes not his grace ordinarily but upon those that conforme themselves to the doing of those things Neverthelesse our Divines teach this also which is true and warrantable 1. That all these preparations are no Efficient causes to produce grace of Conversion in the heart however they prepare a man to bee the fitter to receive it And therefore where God is not pleased to afford his Sanctifying Spirit they prove vaine and fruitlesse 2. That how good and necessary soever these preparatory works are yet the doing of them is unto a man unregenerate an occasion of sinning And so in the consequent to him they may prove harmfull As for example When an unsanctified man heares the Word Praies performes any duety in Gods worship or in a Christian life in the doing of these things hee alwaies commits some sin or other because he wants a pure Heart a good Conscience and Faith unfained without which hee cannot but err● in fulfilling Gods commandements But
be found the safest to travel in Mens writings are infinite their opinions changeable their resolutions doubtfull and if wee begin there wee are out of the way at the first entrance and t is hazzard but wee loose truth and our selves among so many turnings and windings of errors heresies opinions conjectures quarrelsome contradictions disputes and brawling controversies as we shall meete withall Who would be so troubled in his way to heaven thus wearied and vexed with endlesse and needlesse discourses which like the envious Amalekites set upon us in our sore travell towards Canaan assaulting the simplicity of our faith disquieting the peace of conscience by strange decisions of doubtfull cases darkning the cleer light of sacred Scripture which shines dimme through such painted glasse and in briefe mingling the sincer● milke of the Word with the noisome ingredients of carnall reason and corrupt affections Surely we doe not beleeve when we read that in the 12. of Eccl. v. 12. There is no end of making of bookes and much reading is a wearinesse to the flesh if we did we would hence learne to see a fault which an eager desire of learning not wel guided drawes upon us all that would be schollars A strange curiosity to prie into all books of the same kinde thinking wee never know the truth till wee know what all men have said of it And are we certaine then wee have it It were somewhat if t were in learning as t is in bearing of a burden where many weake men may beare that which one or few cannot But in the search of knowledge it fares as in descrying a thing a farre off where one quicke sight will see further than a thousand cleere eyes It is most usuall in comparing of humane authors for the Scriptures its certaine that they alone without other helpes are sufficient for our direction in all necessary truth and were our hearts inflamed with love of their excellent holinesse and our heads a little more acquainted with study and meditation therein wee should finde by experience that more light shineth in this sunne than in all the starres of the Church which doe but borrow their light from hence For mine owne part I have alwaies wondred at the discord between the doctrine and practice of many Divines who stiffely and truly maintaining against the Papists the all-sufficiency of Scriptures for heavenly instruction doe yet in their private studies condemne them of insufficiency bestowing to say the least three parts of their times and paines in the wearisome reading of those huge volumes of Fathers Schoole-men and other Writers for one part which they spend in the meditation of the Scriptures Wee love to seeke gold among drosse when wee may have it ready tried and purified to our hands yea pure as mettall tryed in a furnace and fined seven times as the Prophet speakes Psal. 12. 6. Blame not my resolution to follow Salomons admonition By these things my sonne bee admonished and to goe to the living not to the dead to the Law and Testimony the lively oracles of God ever speaking loud enough if wee have eares to heare what the Spirit saith and plaine enough if as our Apostle speakes wee had our wits exercised to discerne both good and evill You shall doe mee wrong to conceive any such meaning by my words as if I would dash out all writings of men with one stroke or condemne all Libraries to the fire an arrogant impiety it were so to thinke or speake of mens paines in writing and Gods providence in preserving their bookes No. I touch none but those who consult onely with flesh and bloud men like themselves out of whose discourses they frame to themselves an humane divinity making such to be pillars that should bee but helpers of their faith which how likely t is to faile in time of triall I wish them to forecast betime before they feele it too late Among you my Brethren I suppose there is none who had not rather have his soule saved than his fancy pleased and therefore will bee willing to beleeve where God affirmes to obey where he commands without mans authority to convince your reason or perswade your affections And if so I am eased of the most troublesome least profitable toile the curious search and allegations of Authors which if you do expect you overburden me if I should promise I should belie mine owne knowledge and as I suppose your opinion of my meannesse Furthermore for deeper speculations new-minted Divinity or elder Heresies buried in hell with their authors or strange opinions husht up in silence it will bee a wrong to imbroile the mindes of such an auditory and to shake them with the unseasonable blasts of doubtfull disputes before they have taken deeper roote in the faith You must pardon mee I speake to those whom this exercise most concernes that are the yonguer in age and knowledge And therefore I must beseech you beloved and much respected in the Lord who are the elder and stronger in the Lords stocke to give mee leave to drive on in Iacobs pace so as I weary not nor leave behinde the more tender Lambes I dare say wee may all at last come to Canaan and yet breake no company He that gives to them that want takes not away from them that have and you know that men may bee nourished with milk though infants cannot live with stronger meate Finis Prologi THE NATVRE AND properties of GRACE and FAITH THe summe of all Christian dueties is briefly comprised under these two heads Agenda and Credenda Doing and Beleeving Which the Apostle 2. Tim. 1. 13. makes the two maine parts of all wholesome doctrine Hold fast the form of sound words which thou hast heard of mee in Faith and Love which is in Christ Iesus The Epitome of Love is the morall Law briefly contained in ten more briefly in two precepts Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart and Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe The sum of Faith more at large delivered in the Apostolicall writings is shortly drawne into that excellent compendium which wee now use and call the Apostles Creede containing the substance of Evangelicall doctrine Both these Faith and Love have one common adversary Satan by whom they have beene continually assaulted and whether more dangerously it is not easie to determine they seeme both to bee imbarked together in the same bottome and if Conscience suffer shipwrack Faith sinkes too and if Faith the most precious lading be throwne overboard I doubt how Charity will be able to make a saving voiage As Paul said of the Marriners attempting an escape in their dangerous passage so I of those Except they abide in the ship ve cannot be saved and you may observe it equally difficult to find an Hereticke vertuous or an Atheisticall vicious liver a true beleever Wherefore the divell cares not much where he begins his battery yet if I be not deceived
doe it As God commandeth and seeing the Circumstances of every good worke are a pure Conscience and Faith unfained the Cause and the Glory of God the End which give such beauty and so sweet a relish to all actions as that without them they are deformed and unsavoury in the eye and taste of the Almighty it is manifest that all the morall actions of the Heathen fell short of their Compleate perfection forasmuch as their Persons were unholy their Consciences defiled their Purposes perverse and crooked and their best Intentions finally resolving themselves into temporall worldly and selfe-considerations But if wee looke unto the substance of the worke it selfe wee shall finde little difference betweene many actions of the Heathen and of Christians there being as exact proportion and correspondence to the rules of Iustice observed by the one as by the other yea many times more by the Heathen than the other It were a consideration worth ones labour to parallell the lawes customes and famous actions of the people of God with those which we finde like unto them recorded in humane history we should see that many particulars would carry a faire resemblance betweene themselves and have the same stampe of vertue imprinted on both This morall goodnesse in Heathen men was no doubt pleasing and acceptable to God so farre forth that he liked the worke and approved of it with that common allowance which he affords to all things that beare any stampe of his owne goodnesse but not so that he liked the person and accepted of it into any speciall favour of grace For it were most absurd to imagine that the Iustice Temperance Valour Chastity of an Aristides Cato Scipio Lucretia c. shall stand condemned before God with the same censure of dislike as the rapine luxury cowardise lust c. of a Sardanapalus Caligula Messalina or such other miscreants Nay he approved of their vertue and civility as the effects of his owne grace in common bestowed on the Gentiles for a common good and in testimony of this his approbation hee prospered those persons and common-wealths among whom sobriety of life strictnesse of discipline severity of good lawes was best maintained And Heathenism it selfe could discerne the ruine of Common-wealths to spring originally from the neglect of Piety and Vertue To conclude then and summe up all touching this point Gods Nature and Attributes his Godhead and eternall Power and Providence are indeede cleerely to bee seene in the Creatures if the Heathen had eyes to see them as Adam had at first But though they be still as visible as they were yet man is blinde and cannot behold them It is very little the Naturallman hath seene not much that hee can see What hee knowes might teach him that God is to be worshipped otherwise than he doth but cannot shew him how to worship him as he ought Whatever he doth or can do in the worship of God nothing is done aright for matter or manner His Inward worship is unholy because his heart is so His Outward worship is superstitious and idolatrous because hee is utterly ignorant of Gods appointments both are false and displeasing being presented to God without a Mediatour of whom the Heathen have no knowledge Againe the Nature of their sinne and misery is above the reach of the Heathens knowledge and therefore Grace and Mercy are beyond the possibility of their desire both which yet are the first step to true Conversion Finally for their vertues they are corrupted in the roote perverted in their buddes defective in their whole practice So that unlesse we will thinke that a civill Conversation without all Sanctity of heart to be true Conversion a kinde of bare Naturall reverence of the Creator in some cold affections of Love Feare c. or an externall superstitious invented worship without all warrant from God To be Gods true right worship in part which are the things the Heathen can attaine unto it appeares to be a vaine assertion to affirme That God hath afforded sufficiency of ability to the Gentiles by the good use of Nature to convert truely to the right worship and obedience of God This of the first the second ground is That if the Heathen use the light of Nature well God is ready yea bound in justice to bestow on them Supernaturall light of grace In the examination of this we neede not be long it being supported by the former together with it it falls to the dust A meere imagination it is withour all warrant from Scripture though for it they bring that place Matth. 25. 29. For unto every man that hath it shall be given and hee shall have abundance i. e. say the Arminians Hee that hath the light of Nature and useth it well to him shall be given the Supernaturall light of grace An Arminian glosse that corrupts the Text which is to be understood of painfulness in the Ministers of the Gospell in the emploiment of such gifts as God hath endewed them withall for the benefite of the Church Which gifts and abilities being well used increase through Gods blessing but if neglected decay utterly through his secret curse as experience shewes in painfull or idle Ministers If the argument be framed only by analogy from this Text and the generall equity of it That whosoever uses any thing well shall have more given unto him besides that this is a very large interpretation which will admit of many exceptions it is to bee noted that in their deduction they mistake the proportion observed in the Text and Parable which speaketh of an increase in the Same not in a Divers kinde Hee that hath meane gifts for the Ministry and useth them well he shall have greater gifts in the same kinde But thence to collect Hee that useth Nature well shall have Grace given him is as if wee should say He that useth his health well shall have riches or honours given him things of another nature It had been true if they had said Hee that useth Naturall light well i. e. studiously in the search of all good knowledge in him that light shall be increased as it was in Philosophers but this made not to their purpose and therefore they take a wide step from Nature to Grace In Scripture therefore there is no ground for this conceit besides there are these three errors in it 1. Against Experience which shewes that grace hath not beene bestowed where they have had the best Natuturall dispositions as is plaine by rejection of the Tyrians and Sidonians and Vocation of the Capernaites though they were naturally better fitted to entertaine the Gospell than these as also by the long rejection of all the civill and learned men of the Nations of the world who though they used their Naturall reason farre better than other barbarous people yet were left destitute so many ages of all Supernaturall helpes as well as they 2. It is founded upon two false Suppositions 1. One That the
Of the former sort are those manifold allusions similitudes and other passages of Scripture about the properties of living creatures of Plants of Mineralls of Meteors and other naturall things mentioned often in Iob Ecclesiastes and divers other places And also those sundry precepts of Oeconomickes Ethickes and Politickes scattered as in the whole body of Scriptures so specially collected in the booke of Proverbes Now in these things albeit it be true that by reason of our extreme ignorance in many things which greatly prejudiceth our exactnesse of knowledge in any wee doe in part firmely rest even in these common matters upon the truth of Gods revelation yet it cannot be denied but that they are in part evident unto our sense and reason It were no hard matter for a man that hath but little goodnesse to make an exact commentary of all Philosophicall matters mentioned in Scriptures much grace needs not to the writing or understanding of such a booke as Vallosius his sacra Philosophia And there 's no doubt but a meere Moralist or Politician had he no more goodnesse in him than ever was in Mach●avoll should hee but diligently reade Salomons Proverbes the booke of Ecclesiastes and other parts of the Bible that touch upon things within his Sphere would evidently see that there is in these Scripture-precepts the most pure and exquisite reason of all true Honesty and Policy in the world But now in other points that are the more proper doctrines of Divinity of a higher and more spirituall nature some there are that can never be comprehended by any evidence of reason no not of the most illuminated in this life such are the mystery of the Trinity the union of two natures in one person in the Incarnation of Christ That there is a Catholicke Church c. Some againe there are which may be in part evidently knowne in their proper nature but yet only by such as are truely sanctified and illuminated by the Spirit of grace not by the unregenerate I need give but one instance t is a large one and takes up at least one halfe of Christian Religion and that is the whole mystery of mans Regeneration and his estate in Grace in this life Wherein a thousand particulars there are cleere and evident unto the sanctified and spirituall man which the carnall man knowes no otherwise than by rote and relation That wonderfull change which the Spirit of God workes in raising a sinner from death to life the power of a saving Faith the nature of godly sorrow for sinne of peace of conscience of joy in the holy Ghost of Gods sweetest mercies in the remission of sinnes the infinite comfort the soule finds in his favourable countenance our communion with Christ of the testimony of Gods Spirit and our Conscience in point of Adoption the whole art of our Spirituall warfarre containing the wiles and subtile methods of Satan and Corruption in tempting with the admirable power of Grace and Spirituall wisedome in making resistance and overcomming these things with the like wherein consisteth the very soule and life of Christian Religion are very riddles unto the man unregenerate when he heares them spoken of and press'd upon him his heart is overflowed with a kinde of bitter humour betweene admiration and scorne that another should speake so earnestly about that wherein hee findes no such great matter of consequence No hee knowes these things onely by the booke experience and evidence of them in his owne heart hee hath none and therefore his knowledge of these things is cloudy uncertaine hovering floting in superficiall flourishes of Rhetoricall discourse not piercing into the substance and life of the thing it selfe and where hee comes neere to it t is but the imitation and bare repetition of others inventions whereunto his owne barren head and gracelesse heart that little to adde of new store Whence it falls out in common experience that in these points of Divinity and in such cases of conscience as neerely concernes the Spirituall estate of man you shall have many a godly Minister of meane gifts but of an holy heart yea many a plaine and simple man in regard of any depth of other knowledge that yet will discharge himselfe with greater skill and dexterity and give better satisfaction than some of those that may challenge the praise and admiration of being deepe Divines and learned Teachers in Israel And this is no small fault wherewith Popish Schoolmen and Casuists are taxed by our Divines that even the words of Regeneration Sanctification c. are somewhat strange to be found in their writings and that their discourses and decisions in matters of that kind are intentionall forraine dull and heartlesse Thus we have seen touching this Object of Faith namely Gods written Revolations How far forth they are Evident and may be Knowne how farre forth they are Inevident and must be Beleeved Briefly thus All things in Scripture may be knowne by the plainnesse of the written narration else the study of Divinity were a vaine and impossible attempt All things in Scripture cannot be known by the sight and evidence of the things themselues for then were Faith utterly taken away Wherefore againe Points of Nature and Morality may be in themselves evident to all but the proper mysteries of Divinity can be in part evident onely to the Regenerate Now by this wee must learne what to judge of the Popish doctrine which makes Obscurity one essentiall property of Faith Faith say they is an assent given to any proposition revealed by God Propter authoritatem revelantis and two essentiall properties this assent hath 1. Certainty 2. Obscurity Of Certainty wee shall speake hereafter concerning Obscurity wee yeeld unto them thus farre That all the Objects of Faith are Obscure that is in the Apostles sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Things not seen and comprehended in their proper nature by our senses or understanding And so not onely the more secret mysteries of Religion as the Trinity Incarnation c. whose depth and largenesse our reason cannot compasse but all other matters Historicall or Propheticall which are easie enough to be understood are notwithstanding Obscure that is Inevident not lying open to the direct view of body or minde But this doth not please our Adversaries t is not want of evidence in the thing revealed but want of perspicuity in the Revelation it selfe which they understand by obscurity Their meaning is thus Faith is an assent to obscure Propositions that is to Propositions not understood whereof wee know not the meaning I this is it this is as a learned man speakes one roote of Popery in graine whence originally issues out that blacke darknesse of superstitious ignorance which covers the face of all that part of Christendome where Romish tyranny hath the upper hand And yet that wee may here also gratifie them a little wee confesse that Christians can for a need yeeld assent to such propositions whereof they understand not
Gods frowning countenance fly with speed into the bosome of Christ hang upon him and most importunately sues to be taken into his protection Now one favourable looke from him is worth a thousand worlds and if he will but say unto it I am thy salvation it will not exchange the comfort of that word for all the kingdomes of the earth Wherefore the soule now thinkes of nothing but Christ to live or die Christ is all in all with it him it followes with all strong cries and teares for mercie and comfort in him it apprehends plentifull redemption and all sufficiency of salvation and therefore having once laide hand fast upon him to die for it no force shall make him loose his hold This worke of Faith as it doth greatly glorifie God by ascribing the whole honour of our Salvation unto his only free Grace in Iesus Christ so God againe is pleased highly to honour it above all its fellow Graces by making it the blessed instrument of all the comfort we enjoy in this present world thereby giving us assurance of our Iustification in his sight by Christs righteousnesse Whereupon followes in their times a double comfort unto the soule 1. Peace of Conscience resting it selfe secure upon the stability of Gods promise It hath now what to oppose against the severity of Gods justice and the accusations of the Law even an All-sufficient Righteousnesse in Christ able to satisfie them both to the full whereupon it s quieted and injoyes abundance of sweetest peace being freed from those terrors which before compassed it about on every side 2. That kinde of Fiducia which wee call assurance and full perswasion of the pardon of our sins This is a fruit of that other Fiducia or Trusting unto the promise it selfe wherein stands the proper act of justifying faith And it followes it not alwayes presently but after some time haply a long time after much paines taken in the exercise of Faith and other graces For how many faithfull soules are there who stedfastly beleeve and rest themselves only upon Christ for their salvation who yet would give a world to be assured of Gods favour and fully perswaded that their sinnes are pardoned yet aske them in their sorrowes and feares can you beleeve in Christ committing your soules unto him depending only upon him and no other They will answer yea I cast my selfe upon him let him doe with me as he pleaseth while I live I le trust in him But now this although it should yet will not satisfie them they want joy in the Holy Ghost there 's no testimony of the Spirit in them they have no peace no sense and inward feeling of Gods love and therefore they cannot be assured that their sinnes are pardoned and that they be in Gods favour Whereupon they 'le be ready to fall backe and tell you they doe not nor can beleeve in Christ at all A great mistake and that which casteth many a Conscience upon the racke tormenting it with unsufferable feares where there is no cause They have no justifying faith Why Because they want full assurance of the pardon of sinnes A false argument Iustifying Faith is not to be assured of pardon But to trust wholly upon the promise for pardon Which point duly considered would helpe us to a singular remedy for the consolation of consciences distressed about point of their salvation who whilst they eagerly labour and I cannot blame them for an experimentall and sensible assurance of Gods favour doe too too much neglect that comfort which their faith would afford them in that notwithstanding their feare they are able still to commit their soules unto God as to their faithfull Creator and Redeemer These men should doe with their soules as David did with his in the like temptations Why art thou cast downe my soule why art thou disquieted within me Here was little peace and joy doubts still arising which causeth him to aske the question once againe and a third time But see how he still answers Wait on God wait on God and againe wait on God for I will yet give him thankes who is my present helpe and my God Psal. 42. 5. 11. and 43. 5. See when hee hath no comfort here 's his comfort even his faith that he can still depend upon God for comfort The further explication of this point depends upon the resolution of that practicall Syllogisme whereby certainty of Salvation is concluded which is this Whosoever beleeveth His sinnes are pardoned and hee shall be saved But I beleeve Ergo My sinnes are pardoned and I shall bee saved The Major here is of Faith The Minor of Sense and Experience The Conclusion is of both but chiefly of Faith as it followes on the premisses by infallible argumentation and partly of sense as it is founded on the inward experience of Gods grace working upon our soules Wee may take comfort in this conclusion as we are assured of it by faith even when experience and sense it selfe failes But of this more when we shall speake of the fruits and consequents of Faith FINIS Zach. 6. 13. Hist l. 6. c. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Heb. 6. 7 8. AElian Vat. hist. l. 1. c. 17. * shew much love n●rans * Whereof yet many as left unto us as the Cananites among the Israelites Ac●● 27. 〈◊〉 A clean heart a right spirit * Therefore it is our body of death which yet hath many earthly members The new man is created a perfect man though but an infant * As infidelity of our corruption Gal. 5. 22. As the Will renued is at once disposed to love our neighbour as well as to love God c. * So Tilenus with others generally makes Faith to be the instrument of Instification and Sanctification with this difference Fides Iustificationem percipit Sanctificationem etiam efficit In the one faith is an instrument only in the other an efficient cause also Tylen Syntag. part 2. disp 45. thes 41. Ob. * As who should say a dead man must first see speak and goe before he have life in him Sol. Eph. 1. 22. 4. 15. Gal. 2. 20. 1. Cor. 6. 17. None can call Christ Lord but by the holy Ghost Rom. 10. 20. Christ is made unto us life righteousnesse c. Vnlesse we will maintaine the Popish Limbus He hath loued vs and chosen vs c. Deut. 7. 7. 8. 10. 15. 1. Ioh. 4. 19. 1. Pet. 1. 3. Tit. 3. 5. 7. Eph. 1. 4. 9. 2. Tim. 1. 9. Rom. 11. 5. 9. 11. God so loved the world c. Col. 1. 13. Ioh. 6. 29. and 1 Cor. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 102. 2 23 1 Pet 1. 28. The loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost Col. 2. 9. Act. 10. 38. 1 Cor. 3. Ioh 9. 25. Anat. Armin. For in him we liue and move c. 2 Cor. 3. 5. Psal. 115. 8. Psal. 116. * Iphicrates Arist Rhet. l. 1. cap. 9. * Rom.
then will some say if it be so that the doing of every good duety is unto such a one an occasion of sinning hee ought not then to doe it because he is bound to avoide all things wherein he shall certainely sinne To which I answer that the inference were good if this avoiding the occasion of one sinne did not draw him upon another sinne that were worse But here see what a snare sinne hath laide to entrap a wicked man which way soever he turnes he falls is taken if he heare the Word he sins because he mingles it not with Faith if he hears not the Word he sins because he turnes away his eare from hearing the Law if he pray hee sins because he praies not in Faith if he pray not hee sins and is accursed because hee calls not upon the Name of the Lord. What shall he doe then I answer hee must doe his duety what God commandeth though hee cannot choose but commit a sinne in doing of it by reason of his corruption and infirmity Of two sins whereupon not God but Himselfe hath put himselfe inevitably to commit one of them Hee must choose the least rather sinning in the maner in not doing of it so well as he should than ●ailing in the matter and quite neglecting the duety it selfe For this is certaine when God commands a duety absolutely to be done it is a greater sin not to doe it at all than to doe it amisse because our disobedience is Totall in not doing but onely Partiall in doing it otherwise than we ought As for a man wilfully to refuse to heare the Word is a fouler fault than to heare it with a forgetfull and disobedient heart though this be a foule fault too but yet there is more hope of the latter than the former Wherefore we may not pretend our infirmity as a just excuse for the neglect of our duety I cannot doe it well therefore I will not doe it at all is no good collection unlesse I may be blamelesse in my omission of it which here I cannot be Ministers then are to urge upon all men indifferently the necessity of all Christian endeavours tending to their Conversion and hearers are not to balke Gods commands upon pretences of their owne sinfull disabilities God must bee obeyed as farre as we can goe if we sin t is our fault besides the intention of the commandement And who knowes whether our diligence in doing something may not be more beneficiall to us than our sinning in many things may prove hurtfull whilst God bestowes grace upon us in the use of those ordinances whereto in some sort we conforme our selves though with much sinfulnesse and infirmity This of our first position the second is this 2. That the Reprobate unregenerate in whom these preparations to grace are wrought may and doe wilfully neglect them thereby procuring their finall obduration in sin The third is this 3. That the Elect unregenerate may and doe for a time resist these preparations to Conversion thereby deserving this finall obduration but God by his speciall grace continues these beginnings unto their perfect Conversion I will handle both these positions together containing the maner how farre and by whom those meanes and preparations to Conversion may be resisted and made fruitlesse We affirme then that it is in the power of every unregenerate man whether Elect or Reprobate to neglect and oppose those gracious meanes whereby God calleth them unto Conversion This is apparant whether we respect the outward or inward meanes of Conversion For the outward in all Gods holy Ordinances they may every one of them be neglected Men have the command over their bodies to move them as they please and they may sit at home or travell abroad without worldly or wicked imployments when they should be at Church they may stop their eares talke with a companion reade some booke that pleaseth them while the Minister is in speaking they may set their thoughts aworke in their Chests in the Stewes in their Storehouses any where but where their bodyes are about any thing save the Sermon they may avoide the often use of the Sacrament and make such shift as not to appeare before the Lord scarce once a yeare men may choose whether they will sleepe or pray fast or surfet of fulnesse reade and study Gods word or mans writings Againe for the inward workes of grace all unregenerate men oppose the light of their knowledge resist the checkes of conscience by presumptuous sinnes strive to blot out the sense of sinne and to cast off the feare of the Almighties punishment they may stupifie all such motions of affections as tend to goodnesse by diverting them upon vaine delights These things and more they may doe yea and they doe also though some more some lesse For it is most certaine that no man thus ordinarily called unto grace by these meanes was ever so dutifully obedient to the voyce of Gods calling as to yeeld presently without striving and much opposition No let the best man living who hath well observed himselfe before and after his sound conversion bee brought to answer in this case and he will confesse that in all those meanes whereby God fairely woed him to convert unto him hee alwaies was strangely perverse carelesse scornfull and froward in every motion of grace till Gods spirit had thoroughly wrought upon his heart Wherefore wee affirme that Every one whatsoever doth carry himselfe so stubbornely against this Preparatory grace of his conversion as that he deserves thereby to be forsaken of God and left to finall imp●nitency Nor can that bee the cause why God converts this man and not another quia hic novam opponit contumaciam ●ll● non opponit as the Arminians falsly affirme for all are contumacious and rebellious against this grace of their vocation but the reason is because when both rebell God justly forsakes one in his rebellion and most mereifully followes the other with fresh supply of more powerfull grace till he have healed his rebellion and caused him to returne Thus then both the Elect and Reprobate resist but the Elect for a time the Reprobate finally The difference is from God The Reprobate neglect and cast off him wherefore in justice he neglects and casts off them leaving them to follow their owne wills and the counsells of their reprobate minde Being so forsaken their hearts become as hard as the ●●ather milstone their consciences scared their affections dead all sense of grace or sinne worne out of the soule and ●…all obstinacy against God fixed therein And in this sense we grant there may bee a ●…all resistency against Grace namely in the reprobate opposing and wilfully neglecting all those outward meanes of Grace all those inward workes of grace whereby they were invited and prepared to Conversion Of this rebellion doe the Scriptures in every place complaine and accuse the ungodly that when God bids them walke in the good