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A40515 Select sermons preached upon Sundry occasions by John Frost ... ; now newly published together with two positions for explication and confirmation of these questions, I. Tota Christi justitia credentibus imputatur, 2, Fides justificat sub ratione instrumenti. Frost, John, 1626?-1656. 1657 (1657) Wing F2246; ESTC R31718 315,416 365

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exquisiteness in Arts and Sciences to look up to God for higher spiritual supernatural discoveries I shall compass the greatest part of my designe in the choice of this subject at this time which I shall endeavour in the Application having first handled the points Doctrinally which I shall now enter upon The Socinian in this an enemy of mans nature as in the whole model of his doctrine he is of Gods grace denies all natural whether innate or acquired knowledge of God The Remonstrant advanceth the light of nature too high while he asserts the improvements of it to be sufficient to reach a saving discovery of God either immediately or as those who speak with the greatest modesty assert mediatly and dispositively ut disponantur homines ad praedicationem Evangelii as the Dort-Remonstrants determine as obliging God to the bestowing and disposing men to the receiving farther and saving discoveries from God Each of these doctrines is suited and fitted to comply with that model of Divinity which these Doctors have broached and vented to the world The Socinian must not acknowledge man at first to have been created after the image of God in righteousness and knowledge which Smalcius therefore calls Idaea quaedam in cerebro nata lest he be necessitated Contr. Frantz disp 2 to confess his immortality in that state and so death to have come into the world as the punishment of sin for then he must consequently confess the necessity of a satisfaction by Christ for that punishment in order to mans recovery to the compleating of which this Divinitie must be acknowledged as necessarie both which the Socinian blasphemously denies Now as consistent to all this it is his interest to deny all natural knowledge of God which we truly assert to be the reliques and remains of that Divine image which God drew upon mans soul in his first creation The Remonstrants in order to uphold the Doctrine of universal Redemption must of necessitie assert an universal sufficiencie of means allowed to all and consequently to those who never heard of the Gospel which their English Advocate knew well and therefore roundly asserts that men may by the light of nature gather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the effect and substance of the Gospel and page 11. of the Pagans debt and dowrie that the words of the heavens day and night which they speak in the ears of all nations are the words of eternal life as well as those which our Saviour himself did speak Surely S. Peter was of another minde who when our Saviour seems to charge him with an intention of Apostasie makes him this reply John 6. 68. Lord whither shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life but of this more anon Thus you see while the Socinian would blow out the candle of the Lord the Remonstrant indeavours to set it up instead of or to usher in the Sun of righteousness I shall speak briefly to the first of these as introductoric to the second which I chiefly intend Discoveries of God may be made by the light of nature two waies First By those inbred and implanted notions those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are the remains of the image of God in decayed nature those principles which discovered themselves in the very Heathen which are partly speculative the first of which is that there is a God partly practical the first of which is that this God is to be worshipped This is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle takes notice of in the Rom. 2. 15. Rom. 1. 18. very Heathens which he elsewhere calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which still remained impressed upon their hearts the imprisoning which in unrighteousness left them without excuse which it could not have done had there been not remains of natural light to awaken and convince conscience to a self condemnation Had there not been some natural practical knowledge of good and evil conscience could not accuse but upon apprehensions of a Deitie as the supreme judge of the violations of some law known to them The justice of God in punishing sin was one of those natural truths which the light of nature discovered which the Apostle calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 known to the Heathens The very Barbarians could conclude against Rom 1. 32. Paul as a murderer liable to the vengeance of God when the viper hung upon his hand By these common notions I mean Acts 28. 4. not the intelligent faculty nor yet the species of things impressed in the minde as if all knowledge were nothing but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which was Plato's opinion nor yet any Idea which God hath formed of himself in the minde of man but some habitual notions and principles as the remains of that habit of knowledge which was part of the image of God upon man in his first creation which lie indeed as sparks under the embers till cherished and blown up by acts of reason improving them unto actual knowledge In respect of which Aristotles Rasa tabula may go for a truth But the general consent of Nations who had sine doctrinâ anticipationem quandam Deorum as Tully speaks their wholesome laws for the worship of God their industrious Idolatire that they would rather Lib. 1. de nat Deor. debase their nature to stocks and stones to their stinking garden-Gods then worship none are pregnant arguments of apprehensions of a Deitie by the light of nature which is the same in all men quoad prima principia secundùm rectitudinem secundùm notitiam as Aquinas determines as to the first principles both of knowledge 1 2 2 dx 2u 94. arl 4. and practise The Socinian thinks he sufficiently confutes all this by saying That the Heathen had it solâ famâ onely by report and tradition but Tully tells us they had it duce naturâ and the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by nature The first principles of which may be born down and obscured Rom. 2. 14. by Passion custome in sin Satans blinding mens minds especially if to all these be added Gods giving men up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the abuse of this natural light as we read he dealt with those Heathens Rom. 1. 28. but they can be no more wholy abolished then reason it self I like the determination of Ale●sis in this Parte 32. 2u 27. membr 3. art 1. point who asserts the light and Law of nature to be delibilis quoad effectum but indelebilis quoad naturam which he fitly illustrates by the Eclipse of the Sun in which the light is obscured but not extinguished Men may arrive at that senslessness and stupiditie as to live without actual apprehensions of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but none can be without those principles which dictate and if improved would Ephes 4. 19. lead them into some knowledge and discoveries of God I call to witness the secret lashes of those who most endeavour to stifle and
at vers 11. and therefore we must not quarrel with the wisdome of God in it 2. the end for which God hath designed this variety viz. our profit at vers 7. there are not the meanest gifts but an humble self-denying Christian may make use of and profit by 2. This prejudice reflects dishouourably upon God and takes his glory and gives it to the instruments God will have the glory of his power and mercy to be magnified and therefore sometimes uses the meanest gifts to the greatest ends As this advanced his glory at the first that the Gospel should be propounded by such inconsiderable persons as a few fisher-men God consulted his glory when he put this heavenly treasure in earthen vessels 2 Cor. 4. 7. Look not on glittering of the sword but to the hand that weilds it look up from men to God as S. Peter spake to the men of Israel Act. 3. 12. concerning the cure wrought upon the lame man Why gaze ye on us it was not we but God God often uses feeble instruments that himself may have the greater glory and layes aside great parts when men begin to glory too much in them The same truth is John 3. 8. preached by all and the Spirit bloweth where he listeth 3. Perhaps he denies his abilities for thy good He could be Seraphicall and in the clouds but he stoops and descends to thy capacity and denies himself that he may gain thee S. Paul was wrapt up into the third heaven and could speak with tongues more then all 1 Cor. 14. 18. and yet desired to speak rather to edification Judge charitably it is likely the Minister denyes his excellency as desirous that thou shouldst be brought in love with the naked truth of the Gospel and not with the dresse it comes in that the Gospel may come by its own power and efficacy upon thy soul therefore he studies a familiar plainness 4. The abler thy Preacher is if thou profit not so much the more by him the greater will be thy condemnation Satisfie not thy self therefore with this that thou livest under an able Minister men may affect this more for their credit then aiming thereby atttheir profit nor let this exalt thee in contempt of others thy account will be the greater and if thou profitest not so much the more very sad How sad will it be for Jerusalem who had Christ preaching amongst them yet refused and rejected him and those against whom the Apostles shaked of the dust of their feet for the not-entertaining of the Gospel and for you Brethren who enjoy as much of Gospel-light as ever appeared upon the world if you shall be found unprofitable at that day when many who have lived under less means shall be found improved suitable to the means they lived under and so consequently rewarded and you who have been under the richest dews of heaven be found unfruitfull you shall be dispatched with the unprofitable servant Matth. 25. 30. Take you and cast the unprofitable servant into outer darkness there shal be weeping and gnashing of teeth Away then with these prejudices which must needs make the word unprofitable while one quarrels with the method another with the expression a third with the matter a fourth with the delivery the word is like to profit little Seventhly The seventh ground is hardness of heart That natural hardness which is in every one of us much hinders the working of the word of God in us that heart of stone resists the divine impressions of the word and therefore God when he promises to write his Law in our hearts he first promises to take away this heart of stone Ezek. 36. 26 27. One thing in the stonie heart is impenitrableness and this makes men threatning-proof and judgement-proof they tremble not at the one nor are broken by the other And this especially when the soul comes to be hardned by custome in sin the seed you know which fell on this ground perished Hardned Pharaoh slighted all Moses's messages and remains hard under varietie of Gods judgements both threatned and inflicted Observe the exhortation of the Apostle Heb. 3. 13. To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts as if he had said If once your heart be hardned it will be to little purpose to exhort A hard heart may be moved by the word of God but still remain and afterward message of God but still remain and afterward grow more obdurate Pharaoh is a sad example whom every message of God hardned more As rain may wet a stone outwardly but still it retains it's innate hardness so it is possible a hard heart may seem outwardly to melt into some tears the effect perhaps of a mans natural temper and constitution yet remain hard and unbroken as it was with those in the Prophet Jerem. 5. 3. Thou hast smitten them yet they have not grieved c. Notwithstanding the varietie of Gods providences the Prophets solicitations to return they remained hard The Scripture calls this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 11. 8. the spirit of slumber so deep and dead a slumber that the threatnings of the word cannot raise or awaken them out of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle speaks of the Ephesians in chap. 4. 19. they feel no impressions of the word upon them nay it makes them to rage against it as the Jews did Acts 7. 51. Ye do alwaies resist the holy Ghost that is speaking by the Prophets and Apostles as appears verse 32. The hard earth must be broken up e're your seed will thrive in it so must the hard heart that the seed of Gods word may take rooting in it The word is the instrument of the Spirit to break up the heart and therefore compared to a hammer that breaks the rock in pieces Jerem. 23. 29. and till this be done there can be no profiting by the word Josiah was of a tender heart and so melted at the word of God in 2 Chron. 34. 27. so must all be who intend savingly to profit by the word There is indeed a hardness of heart which excludes all possibilitie of profiting by the word I mean when God seals up men judicially under unprofitableness for their former resisting and opposing the word of God Of which I understand that place John 12. 40. He hath blinded their eyes and hardned their heart that they should not see c. This was Pharaoh's case when he had hardned himself God at last hardned him so that he refused the messages of God to him by Moses till he was utterly ruined when mens consciences as the Apostle saith are cauterized and seared they grow insensible under the word of God and the shinings of the Gospel as the Sun the clay more hardens them as it fared with the Jews Ezek. 2. 4. for all his oft speaking unto them they were impudent or as it is in the margin Hard of face Eighthly The eighth ground is unbelief This
to make him throughly perfect 2 Tim. 3. 17. Nay it is so perfect a rule that the most specious observances and most glorious performances and most exact works are no way acceptable unto God if not commanded in and regulated by this word They may have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a shew of wisdome in will-worship as the Apostle speaks Coloss 2. 23. to the pleasing of men but not to the glory of God God gave Moses a pattern for making the Tabermacle and David of the Temple God hath set us a perfect rule of worship and holiness in his word and nothing pleaseth him but what is according to that rule When our Saviour told the woman of Samaria John 4. 22. We know what we worship We that is the Jews the ground sure was because the Jews had a particular appointment of God for their worship which the Samaritanes had not Therefore nothing must be imposed upon Christians as obligatory to conscience though something for order and decencie 1 Cor. 14. 40. as Divine commands or as the immediate worship of God or as duties essentially necessary in order to salvation This is justly abhorred as the Tyranny of the Church of Rome and as an infringement of Christian libertie and as a detracting from the perfection of the word of God Non ex arbitrio Deo serviendum est sed ex imperio What Tertullian saith of the Heathen worship I shall say of all will-worship which is besides the word of God Ex religione superstitio compingitur eò irreligiosior quantò Ethnicus paratior Men in this case are laboriously superstitious and take a great deal of pains to be irreligious It seems to be a strange expression Hos 8. 14. Israel hath forgotten his maker and buildeth temples but sure the reason is because God had appointed but one Temple To be righteous without or beyond the word of God is to be righteous overmuch and to make our selves over-wise indeed wiser then God himself which is forbidden Eccles 7. 16. Be not righteous overmuch neither make thy self over-wise why shouldest thou destroy thy self To offer to God observances not prescribed in his word is but with Nadab and Abihu to offer strange fire unto the Lord Levit 10. 1. strange because God had not commanded it The use whereof before we pass further shall be First An encouragement to search What encouragement must it be to men to dig in a mine when they may finde a fulness of what may supply all their necessities there is such a fulness in Scripture-mines Doest thou want information in matters of faith Here is a fulness of Saving truth Or doest thou want direction for thy life and walking with God here is a perfect rule of holiness Secondly When you have searched it walk according to this rule Take the word of God to regulate your lives by this is an evidence and note of a true upright sincere Christian to take the word of God as his rule So David describes them Psal 119. 1. Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord that is a note that they are undefiled upright and sincere This evidenced Jobs uprightness Job 23. 10 11 12. And yet how few walk by this rule some by the fashions of the world custome and example of others education the invention of men and the like but David had another rule Psal 119. 113. I hate vain thoughts but thy law I love And there is a new lately unheard of generation now start up who neglecting the Scriptures pretend to be wholly led and guided by a light within them Let us if you think it worth the while examine this opinion and I think it may be confuted sufficiently by Mat. 6. 23. If the light that is in thee be darkness how great is that darkness Whence these things are obvious to be collected 1. That it is possible the light within a man may be darkness as the light which the Heathens had within them was who had their understanding darkned Ephes 4. 18. and as the light of every natural man is I Cor. 2. 14. 2. That if it be so it is a miserable darkness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How great is that darkness that is he that followeth such a light is in a lamentable deplorable condition as he that followeth the light of some Meteor in the night which leads him into ditches 3. This light within as being every mans pretence and in most men a false light and in one contrary to another must be tryed and then presently it supposeth some certain rule by which it must be tryed otherwise we shall never be secured from delusion and errour and this rule can be no other then the infallible word of God All that light is darkness which is not lighted at the Lamp of Scripture so the Prophet Isaiah tells us expresly Isai 8. 20. If they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Therefore as David so all Christians should walk by that light Psal 119. 105. 4. If this opinion supposeth a light naturally set up in every mans soul which by following its direction may bring them to heaven then this is plain down right Pelagianisme and speaks the grace of God needless and tells God that he was at an unnecessary expence of wisdome and mercy when he gave us Scripture which the Apostle tells us is onely able to make us wise unto salvation in 2 Tim. 3. 15. 5. God hath no where commanded us to walk by any such rule as a light within By the Prophet David he sends us to his word Psal 119. 9. Wherewith shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed according to thy word and S. Paul would have all walk by the same rule Phil. 3. 16. 6. Suppose it a true law and light an effect of regeneration yet not a rule because imperfect for still the Prophet remits us to that law written in the volume of the book of God Psal 40. 7 8. and by it it does evidently appear that there is no law or light within the heart to be accounted of but what is agreeable with and consonant to the law written in the volume of the book But however be it what light it will be which these pretend to walk by I shall demonstrate to you that those are not in the light but in darkness from 1 John 2. 8 9 10. And certainly into the number of those whom the Apostle there mentions it is no uncharitableness to put these whose constant practise is to spit hell and damnation in every mans face though such as walk holily and umblameably But you will say Is not every man concerned to follow the light and inward guidance of his own conscience I answer No unless his conscience be rightly informed and regulated by the word of God For conscience is but Regularegulata and though he cannot disobey a false light of conscience without sin
so nor follow it without sin neither so that the obligation which an erroneous conscience lays upon a man is not to act contrary to it but he ought to get that false light extinguished and his conscience better informed and a true light set up from the word of God Notwithstanding this therefore and all other pretended lights or rules contrary to or besides this I shall close this argument with that of the Apostle Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule Peace be on them and the Israel of God The second argument or ground for Scripture-search is Scripture plaineness and perspicuity It is the desire and plot of the Church of Rome to fasten an imputation of obscurity upon the Scripture that hereby she may with the more plausible pretence exalt Peters pretended successour in the infallible chair as an unerring interpreter and also discourage the people from reading them as perswading them that the treasure lies too deep for them to finde and therefore it is to no purpose for them to search but this is to bring a false report upon the Scripture as the spies did upon the land of Canaan All truths necessarie to salvation are plainly laid down in Scripture whence the Scripture is so oft compared to a light as in Psal 119. and Prov. 6. Indeed here we must distinguish between the mysteriousness and obscurity of the things revealed and the manner of the revelation Scripture-mysteries indeed are obscure and deep in which respect S. Peter observed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some things hard to be understood in S. Pauls epistles 2 Pet. 3. 16. but the revelation of these mysteries are plain to those that use the means as devout prayer serious meditation frequent reading and the like This is that which David saith Psal 119. 129. Thy testimonies are wonderfull there is the mystery but in verse 130. The entrance of thy word giveth light there is the perspicuity Some things are less plain ob futuritionem because they foretell things to come as Prophesies and some ob majestatem for the loftiness of them as to instance The mysterie of the Trinity is incomprehensible yet most plainly revealed in 1 John 5. 7. what greater mystery then for God to take flesh for a childe to be born of a virgin yet these most clearly revealed in Scripture 1 John 1. 14. and the other Luke 2. 6 7. Thus that which is obscurely insi●●ated in one place is clearly revealed in another at least in those things that be absolutely necessary to salvation for to this very end Nihil continetur fidei necessorii quod Scriptura per sensum literatem alicubi non manifest● tradit Aquin p. 1. q. 1. a. 10. it was written John 20. 31. Yet Scriptures are dark and obscure as to us 1. Because of our pride and though God be said to resist the proud yet he teaches the humble Psal 25. 9. 2. Because of mens unbelief 2 Cor. 4. 3. The Gospel is hid to them that are lost So that while men-are in a state of unregeneracy they are amidst all their acquired knowledge in the dark as to any true saving knowledge of Scripture-mysteries they have no relish of these things A carnal eye cannot see those things which eye hath hath not seen they being the things of the Spirit therefore Christ councels us to buy of him eye-salve Revel 3. 18. without which we can see but little The cloud was light to the Israelites but dark to the Egyptians so is the word of God light to the true Israelites that is believers but dark to unbelievers the dark side of the cloud is towards them who are conversant onely in the letter 3. Because of our weakness and infirmity The mysteries of the Gospel are profound our capacities but shallow we may say of them as the woman of Samaria said of Jacobs well John 4. It is deep and we have not to draw with 4. Because of our curiosity as not content to know onely what God hath revealed 5. Because of our idleness and carelessness in searching Difficultas non est ex re ipsa sed ex nostra oscitantia saies Paraeus He that rides post cannot take a map of the countrey he rides through so he that makes too much hast in reading the Scriptures cannot take an exact account of them To the best by reason of the remainders of their natural blindness it is not so plain as it is in it self therefore Scripture is more perspicuous to some then to others some are better scholars then others in this school according to the means of grace God hath bestowed upon them Ephes 4. 7. and according to the diversity of the Spirit working in opening their eyes but they who understand most have reason to say with the Apostle We know but in part 1 Cor. 13. 9. and to pray with David Psal 119. 18. Open thou mine eyes The use of this will be two-fold First Here we learn the unexcusableness of mens ignorance of Scripture Thou can'st not pretend that it doth not concern thee for Christ hath bidden thee search it nor yet make the obscurity of it a plea for all saving truths lies obvious and plain in it There is indeed strong meat for grown Christians but here is milk too for Babes in knowledge here are mysteries to exercise the acutest wits depths for the profoundest judgements but what may make thee wise to salvation is so plain that a man of the meanest capacitie may apprehend it therefore especially amidst so many means of knowing it as publick reading and preaching the ignorance of it in any is inexcusable Secondly Pray to God for the Spirit to be your teacher in these Gospel-mysteries that you may all be taught of God as it is in John 6. 45. Without this you will be in the dark and grope at noon-day The Sun is most perspicuous yet we cannot see it without its own light the things of the Spirit revealed in Scripture are clear and perspicuous in themselves but will not be so to us without the light of the Spirit There is indeed an external perspicuity of Scripture in the words this may be made out to the worst of men by the improvement of natural abilities and by accomplishment of Arts nay the devils may have a clear understanding of this but then there is an internal perspicuity of Scripture evidenced to the soul by the enlightning of the Spirit of God shining into the heart so irradiating the minde with a Divine light that it sees through the veil of the letter and discovers the mystery of the word This light conveys an experimental taste and a sweet relish of the truths of the word of God In a word the Scripture is plain though we want light to see it the Sun may shine though a blinde man cannot perceive it but now the Spirit brings a suitable light into the soul proportioned to these Scripture-truths which were indited and can onely be evidenced by