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A57373 Believers evidences for eternall life collected out of the first epistle of John which is catholique : explained and confirmed by very many subservient signes, or undernotes grounded upon Scriptures and illustrated by testimonies both of ancient fathers and modern writers whereby persons truly regenerate may divers wayes discover their present state of grace and title unto glory / by Francis Roberts. Roberts, Francis, 1609-1675. 1655 (1655) Wing R1579; ESTC R29322 150,624 294

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Indifferent as things left at liberty Rom. 14. 2 3. For matter they practise Righteousnesse who practise things Good or Indifferent But they practise unrighteousnesse who practise things Evil. Ye are of your father the Devill and the works of your father you will do Joh. 8. 44. II. Who do that which is materially righteous from a right Ground and Principle Such as are mens Principles within such are their Practices without Mat. 12. 33 34. Iehu did for matter that which God required but not from a right ground 2 King 10. 30 31. The right ground and principle from which all holy and righteous acts should flow is threefold viz. 1. A pure heart 2. A good Conscience And 3. Faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1. 5. 1. A pure heart viz. not absolutely and compleatly purified from all sinne which in this life is impossible 1 Ioh. 1. 8. Thus Who can say he hath made his heart clean Prov. 20. 9. But comparatively and respectively purified So purified as no carnal mans heart in the world is purified 1. Purified by the blood of Christ sprinkled upon the heart by way of Iustification Zech. 13. 1. Psal. 51. 7. Act. 15. 9. 2. Purified by the Spirit of Christ his gracious habits as principles of purity being infused This is by way of Sanctification 1 Cor. 6. 11. So faith is a principle of purity Act. 15. 9. He that hath such a pure heart mingles not with sin but works it out and seperates from it as honey works out the waxe wine the lees mettal in the furnace the drosse Such regard not iniquity in their heart Psal. 66. 18. Here 's a right ground of righteous practices Hast thou such a pure heart 2. A good Conscience viz. not metaphysically or naturally good so every mans Conscience is good But spiritually and supernaturally good Conscience is supernaturally ●…ood 1. When it is by Christs blood purged from dead workes to serve the living God Heb. 9. ●…4 2. When it is habitually exercised to inoffensivenesse to God man Act. 24. 16. compared with Act 23. 1. 3. When Conscience endeavours to be compleatly universally good In al good conscience Act. 23. 1. 4. When conscience approves it selfe good even in the sight of God Act 23. 1. 1 Pet. 3 21. 5. When upon all this Conscience gives a comfortable testimony of the Hearts simplicity and godly sincerity able to support under greatest distresses and afflictions 2 Cor. 1. 8 9 10 11 12. Actest thou now from such a good Conscience 3. Faith unfeigned without hypocrisie Without faith there 's no pleasing of God Heb. 11. 6. Faith washes all our duties and acts of obedience in the blood of the Lamb and so ●…enders them acceptable to God 〈◊〉 Pet. 2. 5. Faith is then unfeigned 1. When it hath the true nature of Faith in it viz. Assenting to Gods truths revealed 1 Ioh. 5. 10 11 and Applying particularly those Truths assented to Ioh 1. 11 12 Gal. 2. 20. 〈◊〉 When it produceth effects of a living Faith viz. Good works without which fruits whatsoever faith is pretended it is but feigned faith a dead faith Jam. 2. 20 26. Hast thou such a Faith whence all thy righteous actions spring III. Who for form and manner do righteousnesse in such sort as God requires not only doing Bona good things but doing them Bene well God loves as some note to be served with Adverbs rather then with Nouns or Verbs Now Religious and righteous acts are then wel performed when they are done 1. Spiritually and heartily with heart and spirit not with body only This God requires Prov. 23. 26. Ioh. 4. 24. 1 Cor. 6. 20. This the godly perform Rom. 1. 9. Psal. 25. 1. Phil. 3. 20. The carnal meer corporal service God condemns Ezek. 33. 31 32. Mat. 15. 7 8. 2. Sincerely and uprightly as in the sight of God and approving our hearts to him Gen. 17. 1. as David Psal. 18. 22. 66. 18. Paul 2 Cor. 2. ult Peter Joh. 21. 15 16 17. 3. Obedientially because God commands the duty therefore in conscience and love to the command obedience is performed as in Noah Heb. 11. 7. Abraham Heb. 11. 8 17 c. David Psa. 40 8. 119. 143. Paul Rom. 7. 22. 4. Universally fully without reservations and exceptions Hypocrites may do many things as Iehu 2 King 10. 30 31. Herod Mar. 6. 20. But the gracious spirit hath respect to all things required as in David Ps. 119 6. Caleb Num. 14. 24. Zechary and Elizabeth Luk. 1. 6. 5. Constantly Perseverance in well-doing crowns well-doing true zeal like the fire in the sanctuary never goes out See Psal. 1. 2 3. Psal. 92. 13 14. 119 20. Hypocrisie lasts not like paint or varnish it will wash off Job 27. 10 Mat. 13. 20 21. 1 Joh. 2. 19. Dost thou practise Righteousnesse now Spiritually Sincerely Obedientially Universally Constantly IV. Finally Who practise Righteousnesse for right ends viz. Gods glory primarily 1 Cor 10. 31. Their own and others spirituall or eternall good secondarily Mat. 5. 16. 1 Pet. 4. 2 3 4. Rom. 2. 7. Low base ends spoile the highest undertakings as in Iehu 2 Kings 10. Pharisees Mat. 6. 2 5 16. K. Saul 1 Sam. 15. 30. VII True love of the Brethren may be a 7th Signe or Evidence of our Regeneration In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the Devil whosoever doth not righteousuesse is not of God neither he that loveth not his Brother 1 Joh. 3. 7. Again he saith Beloved let us love one another for love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God 1 Joh. 4. 7. And further he addeth We know that we have passed from death unto life because we love the Brethren He that loveth not his Brother abideth in death 1 Joh. 3. 14. This Evieence of Brotherly love will be more judiciously and comfortably improved if we consider 1. The generall clearnesse of it 2. What Brethren are here intended 3. Some under-notes or discoveries of this Brotherly love I. The generall clearnesse of this Evidence Experience tels us that usually the weakest and most timerous Christians who can find small or no comfort in other Evidences of their gracious state yet can discerne some glimmerings here in their love of the brethren And this one discovery hath supported many because they evidently and experimentally feel in their own hearts that they cordially love the Brethren He that loves his brother said Augustine better knowes his love wherewith he loves then his brother whom he loves II. What Brethren are here intended Answ. There are 1. Brethren by Nation Act. 7. 23 25. Rom. 9. 3. 2. Brethren by nature descended of the same naturall parents or parent Mat. 1. 2. 3. Brethren by office 2 Pet. 3. 15. 2 Cor. 1. 1. Col. 1. 1. Philem. 1. 4. Brethren by grace and supernaturall Regeneration Philem. 16. Here understand Brethren in the last sense for Brethren by grace 1. Partly inasmuch as
kill me c. This is the minimum quod sic viz. the lowest step of Assurance and is so of the nature of faith that faith cannot be without it in the weakest beleever Every true believer hath this assurance 2. A Certainty of Evidence or Experience When by the reflection of conscience and faith upon themselves and their owne acts or by the Testimony of the Spirit of God we evidently see we are in a gracious State experimentally discerning what God hath done for us and that upon such and such grounds effects of grace or other discoveries As being new creatures walking in the light walking after the spirit not after the flesh loving the brethren c. This some call Assurance of Internall vision Agustine counts this a clear evidence saying that our faith is conspicuous to our owne minde and that a man holds his faith by certaine knowledge and attestation of conscience And saith Ambrose He that hath the sense of faith in his heart knowes that Christ is in himselfe This Assurance is usually attended with much comfort and sweet joy upon the soule that hath it Yet every Christian reacheth it not as the former though all should contend earnestly for it It seems to pertaine rather to the well-being then to the meere being of faith and grace 3. An unstaggering certainty or a Full assurance when there 's such a full perswasion that overcomes all doubts feares staggerings of unbeliefe as in Abraham the father of the faithfull This is the maximum quod sic viz. The highest Pinacle of Assurance in this life next unto celestiall enjoyment and very few attaine unto it II. Of the Tryall of Assurance The Tryall of the truth of our assurance is of great importance and necessity For 1. Many Christians have some degree of assurance who think they have none at all Let such but be convinced of what they have they are comforted 2. Many have no true assurance at all who yet pretend thereto most of all Carnall men and hypocrites As Israel Solomons foole the selfe-justifying Pharisee and the Laedicean Angel Such should be convinced of what they want that they might be humbled and replenished All graces and so Assurance have their countefeits we had need try them lest we take shadows for substances Copper for gold Try Assurance by the 1 Qualification of the subject assured 2. Grounds or Causes of Assurance 3. Fruits or effects of Assurance I. The subject of Assurance must be duly qualified ere he can be capable of Assurance Persons are previously and preparatorily qualified for Assurance 1. By kindly humbling of the soule breaking of the heart and troubling of the conscience with feares about their naturall condition The spirit of bondage to fear goes before the spirit of adoption witnessing with our spirit our Son-ship More or lesse thus God deals with all that come by assurance Where 's thy true humbling 2. By furnishing the humbled broken heart with saving faith First we believe then are after sealed with the Spirit of promise Where 's thy true faith 3. By giving them the Spirit they must first have the Spirit of God ere by the Spirit they can know the things given them of God Hath God truly given thee his Spirit II. The Grounds or Causes of assurance must not be 1. Ignorance of our miserable state 2. Nor carnall confidence upon common things viz. worldly prosperity outward acts of religion or common inward gifts of the Spirit Illumination Taste of the good Word of God c. those and like are the false grounds of hypocrites But Grounds of true assurance are either 1. Divine Testimony by audible voice Thus Christ assured the Palsie-man and the penitent woman of pardon and the Convert thiefe of Paradise But this vocall Testimony was extraordinary To expect the like now or else to reject other grounds of assurance were to tempt God 2. The lively exercise of faith reflecting upon its own acts and ●…seeing it selfe believing Faiths acts are 1. Direct and these either 1. Receptive of Christ or 2. Operative from and by Christ received 2. Reflexive when faith returnes upon it selfe looks back upon its own acts thus receiving Christ thus working as Paul knew whom he had believed Doth thy faith thus act 3. The Testimony of our owne sanctified spirituall heart or conscience according to the Word of God of our good spirituall estate The spirit of man is as the candle of the Lord searching all the inward parts of the belly knows what 's in him This Testimony of our sanctified conscience is usually obsolved by Ratiocination or discourse in a Practicall experimentall Syllogisme thus The Proposition being taken out of the Word viz. Some eminent Scripture Signe or Character of grace as in 2 Cor. 5. 17. Acts 15. 9. 1 Iohn 1. 7. and 3. 14. He that loves the brethren is passed from death to life this is dictated by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. The Conservative Treasury of conscience treasu●…ing up such Principles The Assumption is drawn from our owne ●…nown state and experience in the things of Christ c. As But I love the brethren This is made by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. Con●…cience as conscious of a mans state and frame ●…f heart The Conclusion containing the hearts sen●…ence hereupon Therefore I am transla●…d from death to life is made by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iudgment or judiciary sentence of con●…ience upon the Premises Doth thy con●…ience thus assure thee by the Word 4. The Testimony of the Spirit of God which purposely given us to this end that we ●…ay know the things that are given us of ●…od Now the Spirit becomes the Author ●…d ground of our Assurance 1. As a Seal ●…aling us after we believe by his holy and heavenly impression 2. As an earnest of our eternall inheritance First-fruits of the true Canaan or Handsell of heaven 3. As a joynt witnesse with our spirits and consciences both clearing up our spirituall evidences to our minds and opening our minds to discerne them as a teaching unction enabling us to know all things Hast thou such a Testimony from the Spirit of God III. The fruits or effects of true assurance distinguishing it from counterfeit assurance Presumption are these and such like 1. True assurance whereever it be mightily incites to selfe-purifying to accurate sanctification in heart and life Now we are the Sons of God but we know that whe●… he shall appeare we shall be like him An●… every man that hath this hope in him purifie●… himselfe even as he is pure See this selfe-purifying hereafter more fully opened Presumption encourageth in sin and impurity 2. True assurance stirres up fervent d●… fires and longings in such hearts after th●… Gospel of Jesus Christ They that once ha●… truly tasted the
demonstrates Iames 2. 14 to the end Now faiths principal acts are these 1. Cleansing and purifying the heart from all inward filthinesse so as not to approve it or mingle with it Acts 15. 9. 2. Calming and pacifying the conscience as once Christ said to the windes and waves so faith in Christ saith to the troubled and perplexed soul Peace and be still and there is a great calme Rom. 5. 1 2 3. Phil. 4. 7. 3. Acting and working by love with a chearful respect and delightful enlargement to all Gods Commandements Gal. 5. 6. 1 Iohn 5. 3. 7. Finally Faith having attained to this spiritual strength and activity contends after a fuller perfection even after a full assurance Col. 2. 2. Heb. 10 22. Heb. 6. 11 18 19. which full-assurance is obtained by faith's reflecting upon its own acts and seeing it self believe I know whom I have believed 2 Ti●… 1. 12. and though every believer reacheth not this full assurance nor any one retaines it at all times yet the nature of faith contends and leads all unto it most genuinely whence Calvin was not afraid to say that full assurance can no more be plucked from faith then heat or light can be severed from the Sun Qu. 2. Whence may it be evinced that whosoever doth thereby thus beleeve is born of God Answ. From many grounds take a few for all 1. This believing thus described is a receiving of Christ and a believing on his Name but every one that receives Christ and believes on his Name is born not of bloods nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1. 12 13. What need to be said more punctually 2. This Faith thus described is one of the fruits of the spirit enumerated as contra-distinct from the works of the flesh Gal. 5. 22. Consequently they that have this Faith have the regenerating Spirit in them whence this and the other fruits flow and so are born of God 3. This Faith and beleeving here described is such as whereby the believer pleaseth God Heb. 11. 6. Consider well the former particulars Therefore they that so beleeve are regenerate in the spirit and not in the flesh for they that are in the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8. 8. 4. Finally they that believe in Christ as hath been described shall be saved Mark 16. 16. Joh. 3. 16. Therefore they must needs be borne of God for Except a man be ●…orn againe he cannot enter into the Kingdome ●…f God Joh. 3. 3 5. The not committing of sin is the proper●…y of such as are truely regenerate He that ●…mitteth sin is of the devil for the devil ●…nneth from the beginning for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the workes of the devil Whosoever is ●…orn of God doth not commit sin for his seed ●…maineth in him and he cannot sin because he 〈◊〉 borne of God 1 Joh. 3. 8 9. This note about ●…ing is for greater cleerenesse and more ●…phaticalnesse laid down Affirmatively ●…d Negatively by that detecting the children of the divil by this the children of God Contraries parallel'd serve to illustrate one ●…nother 1. Affirmatively ver 8. where consider ●…st The Position it selfe He that committeth 〈◊〉 is of the devil i. e. He is the child of the 〈◊〉 and the divel his father as Ioh. 8. 44. and ●…lkes according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the Aire ●…e spirit that now worketh in the children of ●…obedience Eph. 2. 2. For this phrase is 〈◊〉 the divel is here opposed to that is born 〈◊〉 God ver 1 9 2. The confirmation of it by double Argument viz. 1. From the devils ●…ostasie for the devil sinneth from the begin●… i. e. The devil sinned from the beginning of the world compare Ioh. 8. 44. wi●… Iude 6. He was the very first sinner in th●… world and the cause of all other sinners 〈◊〉 the world He drew his Apostate Ange●… with him hence probably that phrase the D●… vil and his Angels Mat. 25. 41. He deceive●… our first parents in the Serpent and 〈◊〉 brought sin upon all the world Gen. 3. An●… still he as a roaring Lyon walketh about see●… ing whom he may destroy 1 Pet. 5. 8. Nor●… it said he sinned but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sinne●… from the beginning i. e. indefinently an●… with one continued act as some we●… observe Sin is the devils continuall trad●… without cessation or intermission No●… the devil being such a sinner from the begi●… ning they that commit sin as meer natu●… men do must needs be the children of th●… devil This the first Argument 2. From Chris●… office or the end of his first coming into th●… world viz. To destroy the workes of the d●… vil Sinne is the proper work of the dev●… Christ destroyed both By the vertue a●… sufficiency of his merit for all his elect at onc●… Rom. 8. 3. And By the vigour and efficien●… of his Spirit Rom. 8. 2 13. for every one 〈◊〉 his elect respectively when effectually calle●… So that hence it must needs follow th●… those persons in whom the dominion a●… power of sin is not subdued by Christ b●… they still commit sin they so continuing 〈◊〉 still remain the children of the devil th●… present state is damnable 2. Negatively verse 9. where also note 1. The Position it selfe containing the Character of such as are borne of God Whosoever is borne of God doth not commit sin which also may thus be converted Whosoever commits not sin is borne of God 2. The Confirmation of the Position by a double Argument 1. A causâ conservante from the conserving cause in him that keeps him from sinning for his seed remaineth in him By seed here 1. Some understand the ●…raduction of the divine essence to the Saints whom therefore Beza deservedly brands as most ridiculous fanatick persons for this ●…bsurd dream 2. Some understand by seed the Spirit of God by whom we are regenerated and our corruptions and flesh subdued so that we walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit the streame of Interpreters runnes this way 3. Some finally by ●…eed understand the Word and Spirit together the Word effectually applyed and actuated by the operation of the Spirit and this seems fullest For the Scripture compa●… the word to seed because it is Gods instrumentall Ordinance for our Regeneration Being borne againe not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever 1 Pet. 1. 23. And this Word of God abiding in the heart written there is a most prevalent Antidote against Sinne. Thy Word have I bid in my heart that I might not sinne against thee Psa. 119. 11. So that the regenerate sinnes not because his seed remaineth in him i. e. Gods Wordcast into the heart by the operation of the Spirit making a man to spring
of Baptisms 4. and of laying on of Hands 5. and of the Resurrection of the dead 6 and of Eternall judgment ver 1 2. These are very comprehensive principles in which all other Evangelicall truths may be well comprised These seeme to be the heads of the Apostles Catechisme in the primitive Church Secondly Here are also reckoned up many common gifts and Graces of the Holy Ghost and that so comprehensively also that all the common graces of the Spirit may be easily included therein viz. 1. Enlightening 2. Tasting the heavenly gift 3. Partaking of the Holy Ghost 4. Tasting the good word of God 5. and the powers of the world to come ver 4 5. Thirdly here is intimated a possibility of falling away both from all these truths and all these common Graces of the Holy Ghost to that unpardonable Sinne ver 4 5 6. This falling-away is afterwards by this same Apostle called Sinning wilfully after the receiving of the knowlodge of the Truth Heb. 10. 26. Which may well imply both falling from truth and grace Thus that judicious Calvia understands the Apostle here not of some Particular but of an Universall defection the Faith of Christ and grace of Christ being wholly cast off And elsewhere he saith It is to be noted there is a double falling-away Particular and universall He that in any kind or severall wayes offends he fals from the state of a Christian man therefore all sins are so manyfals But the Apostle doth not here dispute of Theft or Perjury or Murther or Drunkennesse or Adultery but he notes an universall defection from the Gospel when a sinner offends not God in some one respect but withdrawes himself from his grace altogether And that this may be the better understood the Antithesis betwixt the graces reckoned up and this falling away is to be observed For he fals away that makes defectian from the Word of the Lord that extinguisheth the light of it that deprives himselfe of the taste of the heavenly gift that forsake the participation of the Spirit And this is to r●…sounce God totally Now we see whom he sec●…des from hope of pardon viz. Apostates who withdraw themselves from the Grace of God and the Gospel of Christ which they had formerly embraced which befals no man but he sins against the Holy Ghost So he Thus also those learned Interpreters Beza and D. Paraeus understand here An universall Apostasy let the Reader consult their words Thus also Master Deering in his excellent Lectures on the Hebrewes counts this an universall Apostasy of which here the Apostle speakes because his book is scarce I have here annexed his words in the Margin So that this falling away is not Partial but universall 2 A Finall Apostasy A departure from God Christ grace the Church without returne A ruine without repaire An Apostasy to the end of a mans life without recovery A backsliding for ever David fell but David rose againe Peter fell and that fearfully but it was but for a while for a few houres He went out and wept bitterly Mat. 26. 75. but this falling-away so as to sinne against the Holy Ghost is not only universall but also Finall For 1. It is impossible to renew them againe unto repentance Heb. 6. 4 5 6. And they that so fall as to fall beyond the possibility of rising againe by repentance must needs fall finally 2. There remaines no possibility of pardon to such He that shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost hath never forgivenesse but is in danger of eternall damnation Mark 3. 29. Luk. 12. 10. If we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes Heb. 10. 26. And where there 's no place for pardon that 's finall offence 3. Death eternall is the certain and inevitable reward and event of this sinne See 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mark 3. 29. Heb. 10. 27. Thus this falling away is not onely universal but Finall 3. A wilfull and malicious Apoctasy viz. Not Apostasy or falling away through meer ignorance inconsideratenesse or infirmity against the deliberate Resolution and habitual disposition of heart and will or through violent push of temptation which may be incident even to the best of Saints But an obstinate falling away out of a mans owne free spontaneous Election against knowledg and conscience out of a malicious wilfulnesse of spirit fixedly and peremptorily resolved to cast off the truth and wayes of God whatever God or man shall say or do to the contrary Such is their Apostasy that sin against th●… Holy Ghost as these words intimate For if we sinne wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins Heb. 10. 26. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated sinning wilfuly implies thus much in the judgement of learned men Here saith Pareus He understands not every sin but secession from the Church nor every secession out of infirmity feare or ignorance but that which is done wilfully and Philosophers tell us those things are done wilfully which are done neither through violence nor ignorance but by the spontaneous motion of the will He understands therefore a Defection not extorted by Tyrants through violence or admitted through feare or ignorance because he presently addes after we have received the knowledge of the Truth but wilfully i. e. maliciously committed by deliberate will and counsell So he To the like purpose also that learned Beza expoundeth this word This word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ultroneously is said of them who do any thing without any cause or shew of cause Therefore it agrees to them not who simply sin knowingly for then farewell David and Peter And by this reason who should not be an hundred thousand times mancipated to eternall death but to them who professedly and universally departed from Christ are delighted in impiety and make war against the knowne Truth as did Saul Julian the Apostate Arius and others of execrable memory Thus their falling away is wilfull i. e. Not onely committed with knowledge but also with free consent obstinacy yea and maliciousnesse of will And this interpretation is the more confirmed by the Apostles subsequent expressions of treading under foot the Sonne of God of counting the blood of the Covenant an unholy thing and of doing despight to the Spirit of Grace vers 29. in the forehead of which actions malice is engraven in Capitall Letters Thus this falling away is not onely universall and finall but also wilfull and malicious These three Properties of this grand Apostasy viz. 1. Universalnesse 2. Finalnesse and 3. Maliciousnesse must be taken conjunctim non divisim joyntly altogether not dis-joyntly or severally one from another if by them we would describe the Sin against the Holy Ghost and rightly understand the Scripture about it for its possible that men may fall totally and finally and yet not commit this sin against the Holy
fetched to anoint the Priests And Daniel describes Christs coming to be the proper time for anointing the most Holy Dan. 9. 24. 3. The Receptacle of this unction from Christ in whom it should abide ye have an unction 4. The effect of this unction upon them Teaching them all things viz. All things necessary to salvation If now we have this unction from Christ teaching us all things we are of the people of God Signes that we have the Unction of the Spirit from Christ teaching us all things 1. When this unction the Spirit teacheth us with a Scripturr-knowlede not with Enthusiasmes or orher by-wayes Thus he taughr David Ps. 119. 99 104. Thus Timothy 2 Tim. 3. 14 15. Hence called the Spirit of Truth because he acts upon us by and according to Scripture-Truth Iohn 14. 17. 2. The Spirits teaching is cleare and certaine in necessaries to salvation Prov. 22. 20 21. Ioh. 6. 69. 1 Cor. 2. 15. 3. The Spirits teaching is of a Growing nature The more he instructs us the more we desire to be instructed of him Prov. 1. 5. 15. 14. 18. 15. David though he knew so much yet wonderously thirsted to know more Ps. 119. 27 73 125 144. 4. The Spirits teaching meekens and humbles a mans Spirit Iam. 3. 13. Psal. 25. 9. for it manifests still more and more ignorance and sinne Eph. 5. 13. Carnall knowledge swels puffes up 1 Cor. 8. 1. 5. The Spirits teaching floats not onely in the Head but kindly soaks into the Heart and forcibly works upon the Affections Josh. 23. 14. Psal. 34. 8. stirring up the heart to trust love joy c. in spirituals Ps. 9. 10. 1 Ioh. 4. 8. 1 Pet. 1. 8. 6. The Spirits teaching is Practical Brings not only to knowing but to doing It is very effective alters and changes a man wonderfully and diverts his course from sinne to sanctitie See Ephes. 4. 20 21 22 23 c. 2 Cor. 3. 18. Iob. 28. 28. Psal. 119. 104. Prov. 15. 21. Psal. 111. 10. Iam. 3. 17. Ier. 22. 16. 7. The Spirits teaching makes men come to Christ and believe in him Joh. 6. 44 45. Make it evident thou comest to Christ believest in him thou art taught most effectually Finally The true teaching of Gods Spirit wonderfully strengthens and preserves against temptations and snares Prov. 24. 5. See Prov. 2. 10 11. compared with vers 12. 15 16. Search and consider hath this Teaching Unction thus illuminated and instructed thee doubtlesse thou art of the number of Gods Church taught of God II. The Testimony of an upright Heart or Conscience touching our reall and true love of the Brethren My little children let us not love in word neither in tongue but indeed and in truth And hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him For if our heart condemne us God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things Beloved if our heart condemne us not then have we confidence towards God 1 John 3 18 19 20 21. Here are 1. An exhortation to reall and true Brotherly love ver 18. 2. A Demonstration hereby that we are of the Truth viz. Borne of God who is Truth or Having the truth of God in us ver 19 3. The Confirmation of this Evidence By the testimony of our conscience concerning it in the sight of God and shall assure our hearts before him verse 19. This is further streng●…hened by arguing from the double act of a well-guided conscience viz. 1 Accusing If conscience condemne us for not lo●…ing the brethren truly or for any other thing much more will God condemne us ver 20. 2. Excusing If Conscience cleare us we have confidence towards God viz. that we are of the Truth The Testimony of our heart and Conscience for us or against us is most Comforting or corroding How was Iudas tortured with an accusing conscience Matth. 27. 3 4 5. How was Paul in deepest tryalls supported with an excusing conscience 2 Cor. 1. 12. The Heathen could say A cleare conscience is as a wall of Brasse The Proverb saith A good conscience is a continuall feast With this Augustine comforted himselfe against Secundinus the Manichee who aspersed him saying Think thou of Augustine what thou pleasest so conscience only accuse me not in the sight of God Canst thou now in thy conscience oppeale to God about thy love of the brethren as sometimes Peter about his love of Christ Lord thou knowest all things thou art greater then my conscience thou knowest that indeed and in truth I love thy children Hereby thou mayest know that thy selfe art of the truth Signes of true brotherly love see in chap. 2. Sign VII p 168 to 173. III. Finally Perseverance with the faithfull in Christ and in the truth They went out from us but they were not of us for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us But they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us 1 John 2. 19. He speakes of Ebion Cerinthus and such like Anti-Christian Hereticks who apostatizing from Christ and his truth departed from the Church They were once in the Church but never truly of the Church for then they would have persevered Their Apostasy therefore evidenced their Hypocrisie Whereas contrariwise Perseverance is a sure Argument of our Sincerity and that we are indeed anointed with the Spirit of truth The anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you But as the same anointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lie And even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him 1 John 2. 27. In which words as the Apostle testifies that they shall persevere in Christ that are truly taught by the anointing which is truth and no lie So he declares that they were never of the true number of Gods people that through heresie and schisme depart from the Communion of the Church and the Faithfull As Iude intimates These be they who separate themselves sensuall having not the Spirit Jude vers 19. False rotten Professors will thus Apostatize but true sound members will persevere in the truth with the faithful for Reasons formerly alledged Dost thou now backslide and separate through heresie or schisme from communion with the true Church of Christ How canst thou think thy selfe to be of the true number of Gods people Notably Cyprian Whosoever separated from the Church is joyned to an adultorous Church is separated from the promises of the Church Nor shall he come to the rewards of Christ that leaves the Church of Christ. He is an Alien he is profane he is an enemy He cannot have God for his Father that hath not the Church for his Mother If any could escape that was without Noah's Arke then may be escape that is without the Church And afterwards he addes Let no man think that the
4. 21. Signes of true brotherly love See in Cap. II. p. 168 to 173. and Chap. 8. throughout CHAP. VI. Evidences or Signes of our true love to God and to Jesus Christ. I. FIrst Our true love to God flowes from Gods love to us Love breeds love as naturally as light breeds light and fire breeds fire We love him because he first loved us 1 John 4. 19. All equity saith Bernard dictates that the beloved should love the lover Had not God first loved us we should never have loved him being naturally God-haters Rom. 1. 30. and 8. 7. But when once God pleaseth to shed abroad his love in our hearts Rom. 5. 5. giving us some sense or taste of his love to us viz. of his Electing love Rom. 9. 13. Col. 3. 12 of his Redeeming love Gal. 2. 20. Rev. 1. 5. of his Regenerating love Tit. 3. 4 5 6. of his Adopting love 1 John 3. 1 2. c. How can we chuse but love him againe and love him much Luk. 7. 47. I desire to love thee said Bernard and love to desire thee O amiable Lord most worthy to be beloved And thus I runne to apprehend that wherein I am apprehended viz. That I may perfectly love thee at last who hast loved us first But how or wherein did God love us first he expresseth thus saying Whatsoover he did whatsoever he spake on earth to reproaches spittings buffetings Crosse and the grave was nothing but Gods language to us in his Son by his love provoking and stirring up our love Wouldest thou know now whether thou lovest God Search diligently whether God loves thee in Christ what application hath he made of his love to thee what true effect dost thou find of the special love of God or Christ upon thee Signes of Gods speciall love of Christs peculiar love actually applyed to us 1. Is this love of God shed abroad in thine heart by the holy Ghost that thou hast an inward cordiall experimentall taste of Gods love Rom. 5. 5. 2. Hath this love of God effectually regenerated and renewed thee by the Spirit Tit. 3. 4 5 6. 3. Hath this love of God adopted thee that thou art numbred among the Sonnes of God 1 Ioh. 3. 1 2. 4. Hath this love of God sanctifyed thee and made thee holy Col. 3. 12. 5. Hath this love of God brought thee to live the life of faith yea rather to have Christ living in thee Gal. 2. 20. 6. Doth this love of God and Christ sweetly overpower constraine and even compell thee to be chearefully serviceable to him in thy place and calling 2 Cor. 5. 13 14 15 16. II. Secondly The rejecting or casting out of base sinfull servile feare evidenceth our true love to God and Jesus Christ. There is no feare in love but perfect love casteth out feare because feare hath torment He that feareth is not made perfect in love 1 Joh. 4. 18 19. Quest. But what fear is it now which is thus inconsistent with love which love casts out Answ. Feare may be considered either 1. Objectively as it is the object feared so it denotes 1. God Psal. 76. 11. called the Feare of Isaac either because Isaac yielded feare to God or because God struck Isaac with feare when he would have blessed E sau Gen. 31. 42 53. 2. Gods Word The rule of feare Psal. 19. 9. True love casts out neither of these but keeps and cherisheth them in the soul. 2. Subjectively As feare is subjected in us Thus feare denotes 1. The naturall affection or Passion of feare Arising upon some apprehension of some evill as imminent and hardly to be avoided This feare is in it selfe neither morally good nor bad but as sanctified or mixed with diffidence c. Meer humane feare was in Christ yet without sinne Heb. 5. 7. Love casts not out this feare for that were to put off humane nature 2. Feare the sanctified affection whereby the Saints are afraid to offend God their heavenly Father for his mercy goodnesse c. through the love and reverence they beare to him for his eminency and to true piety Psal. 130. 4. and this feare springs from love 3. A sinfull servile slavish feare whereby we inordinately slavishly feare either God Rom. 8. 15. as the Samaritans for his Lyons 2 King 17. 25 32 33 34. or the creature Matth. 10. 28. This is the feare that love casts out Love hath boldnesse and confidence in it feare is full of diffidence and cowardlinesse Hath thy love to God cast out this base feare that 's love indeed Signes that Hagar is ejected that slavish feare is cast out 1. The Spirit of adoption Son-like Spirit removing base fear Rom. 8. 15. 2. The Spirit of supplication crying with filial boldness and confidence Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4 6. 3. The soules pacification by justifying faith This allayes tumultuous feares That diffusion of the love of God in the heart and quieting of conscience by faith are companions are twins in the same soul Rom. 5. 1 5. 4 True awfull religious feare of God swallowing up base fears of the Creature Mat. 10. 28. Isa. 8. 12 13. 5. Magnanimous courage and resolutions from love and zeale to Christ and his Cause against sharpest sufferings and persecutions Cant. 8. 6 7. Acts 20. 23 24 and 21. 13 Rev. 12. 11. Such hath beene the love of Saints and Martyrs to Christ that they have not feared to owne and confesse Christ in worst of times nor feared to go with Christ both into prisons and to death Who will flee persecution said Tertullian but he that feares who feares but he that doth not love And elsewhere He that feares to suffer cannot be his that suffered but he that feares not to suffer he is perfect in Gods love III. Thirdly Not loving the world nor the things that are in the world excessively inordinately discovers the love of God planted in our hearts Love not the world neither the things that are in the world If any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him viz. neither Passively He is not beloved of the Father nor Actively He loves not the Father 1 Iohn 2. 15 16. For 1. God and the world are two such contrary Masters and each of them are so able to take up the whole man that they cannot be intensively loved both at once but the love of the one will prove the hatred of the other Matth. 6. 24. Iam. 4. 4. 2. God requires our whole love to himselfe Luke 10. 27. and he is so jealous a God that he can endure no corrivall with himself in our hearts and affections Excellently Bernard The Spirit of Christ hates the lover of the world flies from him whom he knowes to love any thing besides him He will be so loved as nothing should be loved besides him He will be perfectly loved that will be alone loved He will have
Believing that Jesus is Christ is a Signe we are borne of God p. 23 c. Two acts of faith in believing that Jesus is Christ Assenting Applying p. 23 24 25. Seven characters of true faith in Christ laid down gradually p. 25 to 28. Foure reasons why they that thus believe in Christ are borne of God p. 28 29. Three acts of faith p. 27. Faith tends to full assurance p. 27 28. How faith overcomes the world See World Fall Regenerate fall not totally nor finally p. 53 54 c. Foure reasons why it is impossible they should finally fall p. 55 56. Familists Their errour about sinne in the regenerate p. 33. Feare many sorts of feare p. 303. what ●…are love casts out Five Signes that slavish feare is cast out p. 204 205. Fellowship with God c. See Communion Full assurance See Assurance G God See Love of God and Knowledge Grace Not every sinning against grace received is the sinne against the Holy Ghost p. 89. How even the people of God may possibly sinne against grace in five degrees p. 89 90. Grievous Eight Signes that Gods Commandements are not grievous to us p. 210 211 212. See Obedience H Habituall Five Signes of sinning habitually The Regenerate sin not habitually p. 46 to 52. Hearing Apostolical Doctrine Seven Signes of it p. 198. 199. Heresie See Errour Holy Ghost A case of conscience touching that Sinne against the Holy Ghost and whether they that are born of God may fall into it p. 60 c. What persons are in danger of sinning against the Holy Ghost not the truly Regenerate not Pagans out of the Church p. 61 to 69. But Hypocrites in the Church p. 69 c. Six Characters of those persons that are in danger of this sin p. 70 to 77. What the sinne against the Holy Ghost is for Names p. 78 to 81. For nature here variety of opinions p. 81 82. Negatively what it is not in seven observable particulars p. 82 to 92. Affirmatively what it is p. 92 93 c. It s described and the description in all the parts of it fully proved p. 95 to 117. Six Aggravations of the sin against the Holy Ghost p. 117 to 124. Twelve Differences betwixt the sinning of the Regenerate of them that sin against the Holy Ghost p. 124 to 127. Hope of Conformity to Christ in glory Five Signes of it p. 173 174 175. Hope of glory makes us purifie our selves See ●…urifie I Ignatius His strong desire to die for Christ p. 161 162. Illumination is threefold p. 70 71. Iohn what it signifies p. 1. which Iohn wrote Iohn's first Epistle p. 1 2. See Epistle Iulian the Apostate blasphemed Christ p. 114. his Education Persecution of Christians and fearfull end p. 116 117. K Keeping Gods Commandements See Obedience Know In what sense the world knowes not the children of God p. 21 22 23. To know implyes sometimes an act of the minde alone sometimes of minde and will p. 22. Knowledge Every sin against Knowledge is not the sin against the Holy Ghost p. 85 86. Foure Signes of true knowledge of God and Jesus Christ p. 193 to 200. Threefold knowledge of God p. 194. See Doctrine L Life In what cases we may lay downe our lives for the brethren p. 232 233. Light Walking in light not in darknesse a Signe of Communion with God p. 224. Signes of walking in light c. p. 224 225. Love Gods love Foure Signes of Gods love to us p. 5 to 21. Gods love to us acts three wayes especially p. 5 6. How great Gods love in giving Christ for us p. 6 7. How or wherein God hath loved us first p. 10. Gods loving us first a mighty motive to us to love God p. 10 11 12. God loved us first p. 200. Six Signes of the actuall applying of Gods love and Christs to us p. 201 202. Our love to God Seven eminent Signes of our true love to God p. 13 to 21. Five other Signes of true love to God and Jesus Christ p. 200 to 214. Love to God casts out servile feare p. 20●… c. See Fear Is a Signe of Communion with God p. 221 222. Makes us Gods house p. 222. Five Signes of dwelling in Gods love p. 223. Love of God and world cannot dwell intensively at the same time in the same heart p. 9 205 206. See world Love of the brethren an evidence of Regeneration p. 168 169. Three Signes of not loving them p. 170. Seven Signes of true love to them p. 170 to 173. Eight more Signes p. 228 to 233. Testimony of our heart or conscience touching this love p. 183 to 185. Brotherly love a Signe of spirituall life p. 191 192. A Signe of true knowledge of God p. 199. A Signe of true love to God p. 213. These Bernards two wings p. 213. A Sign of Communion with God 228. Manichees their errour about sinne in the regenerate p. 33. Martyrs Their admirable courage in Cyprians time p. 152 153 155. Divers speeches of Martyrs glorying in their sufferings p. 160 161. Motions Not every sinning against gracious motions is the sin against the Holy Ghost p 87 88 89. N New-birth See Regeneration O Obedience is threefold p. 195. S●…x Signes of true obedience to Gods Commandements p. 195 196 197. Keeping Gods Commandements cheerfully a Signe of our true love to God p. 208 209. and why p. 210. Eight Signes that his Commandements are not g●…evous to us p. 210 211 212. Keeping Gods Commandements a Signe of our Communion with God p. 227. Overcoming errour See Errour Overcoming the world See World P Pelagians Their errour about sin in the Regenerate p. 33 34. Practising of sinne p. 46 47 48. See sinne Practice of righteousnesse See Righteousnesse Presumption what it implies p. 43 44. Five Signes of Presumption or sinning presumptuously p. 43 to 46. Primitive truth See Truth Purifie Hope of glory puts Saints upon selfe purifying as God is pure How p. 175 176. Six Signes of true self●…-purifying by hope of glory p. 177 178 179. R Recompence of reward How faith eying the recompence of reward overcoms all the troubles of the world in five singular acts p. 158 to 162. Regeneration Nine remarkable Signes of Regeneration most largely opened p. 21 to p. 180. Regenerate persons never fall into that sin against the Holy Ghost proved by three Reasons p. 62 to 67. Reign of sin two Signes of it p. 39 40. Relapses into sin dangerous yet not desperate p. 89 90. Righteousnesse Practising righteousnesse a Signe of Regeneration p. 162. Five grounds of it p. 163 164. Four sorts of signs of true practising Righteousnesse Matter Ground Manner End p. 164 to 168. S Seed What the seed remaining in the regenerate is p. 31 32. Separation from the tr●…e Church of Christ and Communion of Gods people how dangerous p. 98 and 185 186 187. Sin against the Holy Ghost See Holy Ghost Sinne. He that commits sinne is of the devill p.