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A20752 The Christian warfare wherein is first generally shewed the malice, power and politike stratagems of the spirituall ennemies of our saluation, Sathan and his assistants the world and the flesh, with the meanes also whereby the Christian may vvithstand and defeate them : and afterwards more speciallie their particvlar temptatiions, against the seuerall causes and meanes of our saluation, whereby on the one side they allure vs to security and presumption, and on the other side, draw vs to doubting and desperation, are expressed and answered : written especially for their sakes who are exercised in the spirituall conflict of temptations, and are afflicted in conscience in the sight and sense of their sinnes / by I. Dovvname ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1604 (1604) STC 7133; ESTC S1536 575,484 731

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tedious If the oxe whilest he is yong be accustomed to the yoke hee draweth in it quietly and with no great paine but if he runne long in the pasture vnbroken and vntamed when he is brought to the yoke he strugleth and striueth and therewith gaulling his necke draweth with exceeding payne and irksomenesse and so if in our youth we accustome ourselues to beare the yoke of obedience it wil be easie and pleasant but if we vse delayes we shall grow stubborne and stifnecked like vntamed oxen and the bearing of Christs yoke through our impaciencie and the rebellion of our nature will gaule and vexe vs. Thirdly the sooner wee turne vnto God the more ioy peace and comfort shall we haue in the whole course of our liues for what ioy may bee compared with the ioy in the holy Ghost Pro. 15.15 what peace is like the peace with God the peace of conscience when as we are sure that we are now friends who before we were enemies and children of God and heires of his euerlasting kingdome of glory who in time past were children of wrath and fire brands of hell what comfort in the world can be imagined like vnto the consolation of Gods spirit which is able to make all afflictions light and euen death it selfe sweet and pleasant vnto vs but this ioy peace comfort doe all companie our true conuersion vnto God and therefore who would deferre it for one day seeing it bringeth such inestimable benefits and such surpassing pleasures as none sufficiently vnderstand them but they who feele inioy them Whereas on the other side if we deferre our cōuersion in the meane while wee are continually subiect to the checkes and terrours of an euill conscience in feare of Gods iudgements and eternall damnation and though in outward shewe wee may bee exceeding merie and pleasant yet our mirth is ful of sorrow and our ioy of bitternes and of such laughter wee may say thou art madde and of this ioy what is that which thou doest as the Wise man speaketh Eccle 2.2 for it is but Sardonicus risus laughter from the teeth outward which is straight controuled with some inward pange or checke of conscience Fourthly the sooner wee turne vnto the Lord the longer time we shall spend in his seruice which in truth is perfect liberty now what can bee more delightful vnto any Christian heart then to serue our creatour from the daies of our youth to shew our thankfulnesse to God our redeemer for all the inestimable benefits which he hath bestowed vpon vs by causing our lights to shine before men and by glorifying his name in our godly Christian liues what can be more pleasing to a thankfull mind then to take all occasions of expressing thankfulfulnesse to him vnto whom we are so much bounden Lastly as by our speedy conuersion vnto God we liue in sweete comfort and ioyfull peace so also wee securely expect death and giue it entertainement when it commeth with cheerefull countenance for being conuerted vnto God we are at peace with him and in his loue and fauour wee are assured that the curse of the law is nayled to Christes crosse that he was condemned that we might be iustified and put to death that wee might liue eternally that he is gone before vs into heauen to prepare vs a place there and now sitteth at the right hand of his father to giue vs ioyfull entertainement when we come vnto him that he hath taken away the sting of death which is sinne and hath made a soueraigne medicine against this poyson with his precious bloud and therefore being conuerted vnto God we need not to feare death nay rather wee may wishe with the Apostle to be speedily dissolued that we may be with Christ seeing that is best of all As it is Phil. 1.23 neyther need wee to feare the destruction of this earthly tabernacle seeing wee are assured that we haue a building giuen vs of God a house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens as it is 2. Cor. 5.1 Moreouer we shall not need to feare either suddaine death or an euill death for it cannot be suddaine to them who are alwaies prepared Nee potest malè mori qui benè vixit August neither can he die ill who hath liued well On the other side those who deferre their repentance and turning vnto God when death approcheth are filled with horrour feare when as they see that they are still subiect to the curse of the law and euery minute in danger of Gods fearfull iudgements when as the waight of sin presseth them Sathan and their owne conscience accuseth them death waiteth on them to bring them to euerlasting death hell and destruction And therefore seeing so many benefits accompanie our speedy conuersion both in life and death and so many euils follow our delayes let vs not be moued by Sathans tentations the sweetenesse of sinne nor with the alluring vanities of this deceitfull world to deferre our repentance from day to day but let vs now harken whilest God yet calleth vs and take the good and acceptable time when he offereth it vnto vs. § Sect. 4 The eight motiue to perswade vs to speedy conuersion The 8. motiue because repentance deferred to olde age is not so excellent or acceptable is that our turning vnto God being deferred to our olde age or till the time wee lie sicke on our deathbeddes is not so excellent in it one nature nor so acceptable vnto God as if it were performed in the time of our youth for what great matter is it if wee leaue our sinnes when they are readie to leaue vs to renounce the world with the riches honoures and pleasures thereof when they are readie to abandon vs to imbrace mortification when as our bodies are mortified with sickenesse and brought to the gates of death to giue to the pore when wee can keepe our goods no longer to forgiue our enemies when as we can not offer them any further wrong or violence to cōmend our wiues and children into the hands of God when as we our selues can no longer defend and prouide for them to cease to sweare and blaspheme Godes name when as soone after wee shall cease to speake moreouer how can wee thinke that this will be acceptable vnto God when as wee doe not come vnto him before all the world forsakes vs nor craue his helpe till wee are abandoned of all other succour nor offer to come into his seruice before wee are ready to goe out of the worlde and that rather for feare of punishment and hope of reward then for any loue we beare to our Lord and maister But let it be granted as in trueth it cannot bee denied that whensoeuer wee truely repent vs of our sinnes and turne vnto God he wil receiue vs to mercy should wee take occasion hereof to deferre our conuersion and to continue in our sinnes should his loue and mercy towardes
cause of our mortification which is the vertue and efficacie of Christs death and buriall Rom. 6.4.5 communicated and applied vnto vs by the spirit of God whereby wee are ingrafted into the body of Christ and so made partakers of the power and vertue of Christs death which being deriued vnto vs doth not onely take away the guilt and punishment of sinne but also doth mortifie and kill our naturall corruptions which heretofore wholy ruled and ouerswaied vs. Secondly the forme manner and progresse of this worke is here expressed namely the weakning subduing and killing of our corruption by little and little so that this worke is not perfected at once and in an instant but by degrees first it is weakned and the power thereof somewhat abated so as though it beare sway in vs yet it doth not wholy ouerrule vs without resistance as it was vsed to doe in the time of our ignorance then being further enabled by vertue of Gods spirit working in vs we preuaile against it so that though it often rebell yet doe we subdue it and obtaine victorie Lastly obtaining a greater measure of the spirit we mortifie and kill it that is though we doe not vtterly depriue it of life and motion yet we giue it such a deadly wound that it neuer recouereth his former strength but still pineth and languisheth till with the death of the bodie it also dieth and is wholy abolished Now whilest it is in this consumption and neere vnto death hauing a long time before been weake oftentimes it seemeth to recouer strength and to offer some violence vnto the regenerat part but this must not discourage vs as though now it were on the mending hand and like to be restored to it former health and strength for as it fareth with those that lie vpon their deathbead so it is with our sicke flesh and the corruptions thereof after that nature seemeth spent and the power thereof wholy decayed oftentimes falling into some grieuous fit wherein there is a fight betweene life and death their strength seemeth redoubled and farre greater than euer it was but bee of good comfort it is no signe of health but a pange of death which neare approacheth And thus you see the death of sinne and our naturall corruption Now as in the death of the body there is a certaine progresse therein namely when the dead carcase is also buried so also there is not only a death of sinne Rom. 6.4 Col. 2.12 and 3.3.5 but also a buriall the which is wrought by the vertue of Christs buriall applied vnto vs by Gods spirit whereby it commeth to passe that sinne which is already slaine and dead doth so remaine and continue so that this buriall of sinne is nothing else but the further progresse and continuance of our mortification Of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6.4 Rom. 6.4 We are buried then with him by baptisme into his death c. So Col. 2.12 § Sect. 3 And thus haue I shewed what our mortification is That the worke of mortification is hard and necessarie which as it is a worke most hard so also most necessary the difficulty appeareth by the name which is borrowed from the practise of Chirurgeons who before they cut off any member doe first mortifie it that after they may take it away with lesse sense of paine And this is implyed by our Sauiour Christ whereas hee inioyneth vs if our right hand or eye offend vs to cut it off and plucke it out and plainely expressed by the Apostle Paul Col. 3.5 Mortifie therefore your members which are in the earth fornication vncleanenesse Col. 3.5 the inordinate affection euill concupiscence and couetousnesse c. where calling these sinnes by the name of members he intimateth thus much that they are as deare vnto vs as the members of our body and also that it is as vnpleasant and painefull vnto vs to forsake our naturall corruptions as to be depriued of the hand eye or foote But though this worke be most hard yet it is most necessary for the best things that are in the flesh and vnregenerate part euen the wisedome thereof is death and enmitie against God Rom. 8.6 7 8. because it is not subiect to the lawe of God neither in deede can be Rom. 8.6 7. neither can we doe any thing pleasing vnto God so long as we are in the flesh as it is verse 8. Lastly if we liue after the flesh we shall dye euen the euerlasting death of body and soule but if wee mortifie the deeds of the body by the spirit wee shall liue euen the life of holinesse and righteousnesse vpon earth and the life of glory and eternall happinesse in Gods kingdome And therefore if it be necessary to be in amitie with God whose louing kindnesse is better than life Psalm 63.4 or to performe obedience vnto the lawe of God or to doe any thing pleasing in his sight or to escape death and damnation or to inioy life and eternall saluation then is it also necessarie to mortifie the flesh and the lusts thereof how hard and vnpleasant soeuer this worke seemeth vnto vs. So that the difficulty must not discourage vs but rather double our diligence and because it is a paine intollerable to part with our sinnes so long as they remaine like liuely members of the body of our flesh therefore as Chirurgians to make the paine tollerable to the patient doe first vse meanes to mortifie themember which they purpose to cut off so let vs vse all good meanes to weaken the strength of sinne and to mortifie our carnall affections and then we shall suffer them to be quite cut off and taken from vs without any extraordinarie passion or sense of paine § Sect. 4 And so much concerning our mortification Of Viuification what it is and the causes thereof wherein the spirit of God communicating and applying vnto vs the vertue and efficacie of Christs resurrection doth raise vs vp from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life The cause of our viuification is the vertue and efficacie of Christs resurrection applied vnto vs by Gods spirit the which vertue flowing from his deitie was first powerfull in his owne flesh raising it out of graue and giuing it victorie ouer sinne and death and being deriued from our head and communicated vnto vs who are members of his body it doth also reuiue vs who were dead in our sinnes and inableth vs to leade a new life in holinesse and righteousnesse according to the rule of Gods word This appeareth Rom. 6.4 where he saith that we are buried with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the father so we also should walke in newnesse of life Phili 3.10.11 So Philip. 3.10 11. where Paul desireth not onely to bee clothed with the righteousnesse of Christ applied by faith for his iustification but also to know and
losse or crosse maketh me mourne weepe and waile when by my sinne I haue offended God I cannot shed a teare nor shew any true signe of hartie sorrow and such is mine vntowardnes and corruption that in stead of forsaking my sinne I am readie to fall againe vpon the next occasion And therefore I cannot haue any faith or full assurance of Gods promises made in Christ seeing they are all limited and restrained to those sinners which repent and amend That the desire of Gods graces is accepted for the graces which we desire That therefore these mourning soules may receiue some comfort let them know first that if they haue an earnest desire of repentance faith and the rest of Gods graces if they haue a good purpose to leaue and forsake their sinnes and to spend their liues in the seruice and worship of God if they are displeased with their corruptions and according to the measure of grace giuen pray vnto God desiring the assistance of his holy spirit whereby they may more and more mortifie the old man and crucifie the flesh and the lusts thereof if they hate the sinne they commit and loue the good which they cannot doe if they can grieue because they are no more grieued for their sinnes and be displeased with themselues because their sinnes doe no more displease them then may they be assured that they are Gods children who are acceptable vnto him in Iesus Christ For he respecteth not so much our actions as our affections nor our workes as our desires and indeuours so that he who desires to be righteous is righteous he that would repent doth repent hee that striueth to leaue and forsake his sinnes hee rep●teth of him as if he had left and forsaken them they that would neuer fall nor bee foiled by their spirituall enemies God esteemeth as his inuincible souldiers and valiant worthies who were neuer vanquished For the Lord accepteth the desire for the deede and if there be first a willing minde 2. Cor. 8.12 it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that a man hath not as it is 2. Cor. 8.12 So he is accounted blessed not who hath attained vnto perfect inherent righteousnesse indeede Matth. 5.6 but he who hungreth after righteousnesse Matth. 5.6 that is who hath a sence and feeling of his wants and imperfections and withall an earnest desire to haue his wants supplied § Sect. 3 But yet we must not imagine The conditions required vnto that desire which is acceptable that euery flickering and vnconstant desire proceeding from suddaine passion and some extraordinary occasion is pleasing vnto God for so euery worldling might imagine himselfe to be in the state of grace but vnto this desire I speake of there are diuers things required As first that this desire be ioyned with an holy indeuour and earnest striuing and labouring in the vse of the meanes whereby wee may attaine vnto those graces which we doe desire for it is not sufficient that wee wish for faith repentance and other graces vnlesse we indeuour to attaine vnto them and to this end carefully vse all good meanes ordained of God for the obtaining our desires Secondly this desire must not be suddaine like a flash of lightening vanishing away as soone as it entreth into vs but we must constantly perseuere in it till it be satisfied Thirdly it must not bee a slight and indifferent desire as though we would haue these graces if we could easily attaine vnto them otherwise wee doe not greatly care whether wee haue them or no but it must bee very earnest at least sometime though not alwayes So as we may say with Dauid My soule longeth after thee O Lord as the thirstie land Psal 63.1 And As the Hart brayeth for the riuers of water so panteth my soule after thee O God as it is Psal 42.1 Fourthly this desire is true and pleasing vnto God when as it proceedeth from a sense of our owne want and penurie in regard whereof we are truely humbled And hereof it is compared to hungering and thirsting in which two things concurre first a sence of want which afficteth vs and a desire to haue it supplied Fiftly it is not sufficient that we haue a continuall and earnest desire of our saluation vnlesse wee desire as earnestly the subordinate causes and meanes tending thereunto namely vocation iustification sanctification faith repentance and the rest of the graces of Gods spirit for euen Balaam himselfe did wish that he might die the death of the righteous but his desire was not acceptable to God because he wished not also to liue their life he desired to die like them that he might be saued but hee desired not to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life whereby he might haue been assured of saluation If therefore wee would haue our desires acceptable to God they must be ioyned with an holy indeuour to obtaine those spirituall graces which we doe desire they must be constant earnest and proceede from a true sence and feeling of our owne want and be referred as well to the meanes as to the ende and then the desire of grace is the grace it selfe the desire of faith is faith the desire of repentance is repentance not in it owne nature but in Gods acceptation who accepteth the will for the deede § Sect. 4 And in truth this is the chiefe perfection of our righteousnes The Christians perfection consisteth in desiring and labouring after perfection when as we feele our imperfections and labour earnestly after more perfection for Christiani sumus potius affectu quàm effectu We are Christians rather in our affections and desires than in our workes and abilities neither doth the Lord bestow vpon his children the full measure of his spirit and the graces thereof in this life but onely the first fruites which are as it were but an handfull of corne in respect of the whole field and the earnest to assure vs of the rest which is but as a peny in respect of many thousands which are confirmed vnto vs thereby Rom. 8.23.2 Cor. 1.22 and 5.5 as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8.23.2 Cor. 1.22 and 5.5 True it is indeede that God bestoweth his spirit and the graces thereof vpon some of his children in greater measure and vpon some in lesse euen as the first fruites may be a greater or lesser handfull and the earnest is sometimes a peny and sometimes a shilling sometimes more and sometimes lesse but yet the greatest measure which any receiue is but as an handfull of the first fruites and an earnest peny in respect of the maine summe and full measure which the Lord hath hereby assured vs that he wil bestow vpon vs in his kingdom and hee that hath receiued the least earnest hath as full and perfect assurance of the whole bargaine which God hath couenanted to make good vnto vs as he who hath receiued the greatest according to the
nature of an earnest to which the measure of grace here receiued is compared But wherein doth this measure of grace and chiefe perfection of a Christian consist in this life Surely not in their workes for they are all imperfect and so full of corruptions that they are odious in Gods sight being considered in themselues and examined by the rule of his exact iustice neither in their inherent righteousnes and begun sanctification for when they are at the holiest they are polluted with the reliques of originall corruption which bring foorth the fruites of actuall transgressions and make vs vnable to doe the good we would in that manner and measure which we should and therefore those which are most righteous are not in this respect acceptable to God but herein the perfection of a christian consisteth when as seeing his imperfections wants and sinnes he is grieued and truly humbled with the sight and sense of his owne miserie and wretchednesse and disclaiming and reiecting his owne righteousnes and good workes doth flee vnto our Sauiour Christ hungring after his righteousnes and by a liuely faith applying vnto his wounded soule his merit and obedience doth looke for saluation in him alone and lastly when as in obedience to his commandement and in true thankfulnes for his infinite mercies he hath an earnest desire to glorifie his name by a godly and Christian life striuing and endeuouring continually to forsake his sinnes to mortifie his corruption and to attaine vnto more and more perfection in righteousnes and holines For Maxima pars Christianismi est toto pectore velle fieri Christianum It is the greatest part of Christianitie to desire with the whole heart to become a Christian § Sect. 5 If therefore we doe keepe the couenant of the Lord nay if we but thinke vpon his commandements to the end we may doe them the louing kindnes of the Lord shall endure for euer vpon vs as it is Psal 103.17.18 if we can from our harts say with good Nehemiah Nehem. 1.11 Nehem. 1.12 O Lord I beseech thee let thine eare now hearken to the prayer of thy seruant and to the prayer of thy seruants who desire to feare thy name the Lord will heare vs indeed and graunt our requests If with the Prophet Dauid we haue but a respect to Gods commandements with a care to fulfill them we shal not be confounded Psal 119.6 as it is Psal 119.6 If wee but desire to obey Gods commandement the Lord will accomplish our desire and quicken vs in his righteousnes 40. though we be dull yea dead vnto all goodnesse as it is vers 40. Rom. 7. If with the Apostle Paul wee doe the euill which we would not and consent to the law that it is good delighting therein in the inner man then though we are with him led captiue vnto sinne yet it is not wee that offend but sinne that dwelleth in vs that is our old man our corrupt and vnregenerate part That neither the name nor actions of the flesh can properly be ascribed to the spirituall man which cannot fitly be called by our name because it is mortified alreadie in some measure and shall be fully abolished by the spirit of God neither doth it liue the same spirituall life with vs seeing it is not quickened by the same spirit and therefore as those who haue diuers soules which giue vnto them life and motion are themselues diuers and also called by diuers names so the new and old man liuing as it were by diuers soules the one being quickned with Gods spirit the other by Sathan whereof it commeth to passe that the more the one liueth the other dieth the more strong the spirit is the weaker is the flesh and the actions of both are quite contrarie therefore they may fitly be called by diuers names neither can the actions of the flesh bee ascribed to the spirit properly seeing they are contrarie the one to the other For as if a science of a crab tree and another of a pepin tree being grafted into the same stocke doe both bring foorth their seuerall fruites the one crabs the other pepins it may fitly be said this tree bringeth foorth either pepins or crabs because they grow in the same stocke but yet it cannot bee truly said that the crab tree science bringeth foorth pepins or the pepin science crabs so because the flesh and the spirit are ioyned together in the same bodie and soule we may in this respect say that this man sinneth or doth that which is good but yet whē we speak of the regenerate or carnall man properly and seuerally as we cannot truly say that the flesh doth any good so neither can we truly affirme that the spirit and regenerate man doth commit that which is euill but as the Apostle speaketh sin which dwelleth with him And though the flesh be the farre greater part yet doth it not denominate giue the name to the christian his actions because it is partly mortified partly in mortifying and partly to be mortified that is deputed and destinated to death and destruction and also because it is the worse and more vnworthie part without compare and consequently not to giue the name for as wine mixt with water is called still wine though the water exceede the wine in quantitie because it is the more excellent substance so the flesh being mixt with the spirit though it be in greater quantitie it doth not giue the name to vs and our actions but the spirit as being our most excellent and worthie part and of it wee are called spirituall regenerate and new men though the least part be spirituall regenerate and renewed If therefore we are regenerate and haue in vs the spirit of God and the graces thereof in the least measure wee may boldly say with Paul that it is no more we that do offend God but sinne that dwelleth in vs neither shall we receiue punishment but the flesh that is our vnregenerate and corrupt part which shall be mortified and fully abolished by the spirit of God as for the spirituall and regenerate part it shall daily bee more and more strengthened and confirmed in the spirituall life and the more punishments afflictions and torments the flesh hath inflicted on it the more shall the spirituall man grow vp in grace and goodnes till our corruption being by little and little mortified and in the end fully abolished by death we shall be perfect men in Christ liuing a spirituall and euerlasting life in all glorie and happines in his kingdome When therefore the Lord suffreth Sathan to afflict vs in our goods bodies and in our soules and consciences as hee did Iob it is not because hee hath forsaken vs and giuen ouer his whole interest hee hath in vs to this wicked spirit but as the Apostle speaketh in another matter he deliuereth vs vnto Sathan to be afflicted for the destruction of the flesh 1. Cor. 5.5 that the
Ephes 4.14 therefore without holinesse there is no assurance that we are elected seeing he hath sworne that all those whom he hath redeemed and saued out of the hands of their spiritual enemies hell death and the diuell Luk. 1.74 75. shall worship him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of their life what hope of redemption and saluation can they conceiue who liue in impietie and vnrighteousnesse seeing by Gods oath they are excluded from both whilest they continue in this state CHAP. X. Of the signes and infallible notes of our election § Sect. 1 ANd thus haue I set down the meanes whereby we may be assured of our election The first signe an earnest desire after the meanes of our saluation now let vs consider of some speciall signes which are infallible notes of those that are elected The first signe is an earnest desire after the meanes of our saluation and a conscionable endeuour in vsing them after we enioy them For the end and the meanes are neuer separated in Gods decree and therefore those that carefully vse the meanes may be assured that they shall attaine vnto the end For example the hearing of Gods word is the chiefe meanes of our conuersion being made effectuall by the inward operation of Gods spirit and as thereby we are begotten vnto God so also it is that bread of life wherewith our soules are nourished and strengthened in all spirituall graces So that whomsoeuer God hath elected those he hath decreed to call ordinarily by these meanes and by the same also to furnish with his graces being called Whosoeuer therefore labour to purchase this precious pearle whosoeuer hunger after this heauenly Manna and are content to enioy it not only when it is good cheap but also when it is very chargeable whosoeuer enioying it do attentiuely and diligently heare it and receiue it with delight they vse the meanes of their saluation and therefore may bee assured that they are elected for the meanes the end go together And that this is a note of Gods child it appeareth Ioh. 10.3 4. where our Sauiour saith that his sheep heare his voyce Ioh. 10.3.4 And Matth. 13.45 he compareth the true member of the kingdome of grace to a Merchant Matth. 13.45 who rather then he would want the precious pearle of Gods word selleth all he hath to buy it Those therefore who make this precious account of Gods word and carefully diligently and attentiuely heare it when they enioy it may to their comfort assure themselues that they haue an vndoubted signe of their election And on the other side those who had rather bee without it than enioy it those who wil bestow no cost to obtaine it nor forgoe any pleasure or commoditie that they may heare it nor when they do heare it are affected with any delight but are glutted with loathing satietic hearing no part of the sermon with any pleasure but the conclusion onely they can haue no assurance of their election because they neglect the means of their saluation which are ioyned with the end in Gods eternall decree The like also may bee said of other meanes as the receiuing of the Sacraments meditating in Gods word the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse and the rest § Sect. 2 The second signe of those that are elected The second signe the spirit of supplication is the spirit of supplication when as they can powre foorth their soules in feruent and effectuall prayer vnto the Lord confessing their sinnes and imploring his grace and mercie for this is a notable fruit of Gods spirit working in vs which we cannot by any naturall meanes attaine vnto for of our selues wee know not what to pray as we ought Rom. 8.26 but the spirit helpeth our infirmities and maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed as it is Rom. 8.26 Prayer therefore is a most inseparable fruite and vndoubted signe of Gods spirit and Gods spirit certainly assureth vs of our election and adoption for it beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the sonnes of God Vers 16. as it is vers 16. So Rom. 10.13 it is said Rom. 10.13 that whosoeuer call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued But this prayer must proceede from faith for as it followeth How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued and must be perfourmed in spirit and truth and not with deceitfull lips for it is to no purpose to draw neere vnto God with our mouthes Esa 29.13 if our hearts be farre from him Esa 29.13 § Sect. 3 The third signe of those who are elected and adopted to be the children of God The third signe is when we are weaned from the loue of the world and minde heauenly things is when as their hearts are somwhat weaned from the world and seated in heauen minding the things that are aboue and when their tongues being set a worke by the heart doe gladly entertaine godly and religious conferences for there as the treasure is there will the heart be also and with whatsoeuer the heart is affected the tongue is delighted Now that these holie meditations and religious discourses are signes of the child of God hereby it plainly appeareth in that they cannot possibly proceede from our corrupt nature to which they are irksome and tedious but from the spirit of God dwelling in vs and guiding and directing vs in our thoughts and words and whosoeuer are thus led with the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God as it is Rom. 8.14 Rom. 8.14 He that is right heire to a roiall kingdome and not yet possessed thereof is neuer wearie of thinking on it nor glutted with such discourses as tend to the extolling the riches and glorie which there attend him or shew the meanes whereby he may be assured to come into speedie and peaceable possession of his right and so those who are elected by God and adopted to bee the heires of his euerlasting kingdome of glorie are neuer satisfied in meditating and speaking of the riches and ioyes of this heauenly inheritance or of the meanes whereby they may bee assured vndoubtedly to obtaine it whereas those who haue no such interest nor hopes thinke and talke of these things with loathsome wearinesse as being matters not concerning them and therefore when such thoughts come into their mindes they vanish as suddenly as a flash of lightning and when they are present at any spirituall discourses the time seemeth long and they sit vpon thornes vntill they bee ended and they remaine dumbe as though they were tongue-tyed vnlesse they take occasion to interrupt such holie conferences and to diuert them to some worldly affaires § Sect. 4 The fourth signe of the childe of God who is elected to saluation The fourth signe is the sight of sinne and sorrow for it is when he seeth his sinnes and imperfections and truly repenteth of them that is bewaileth those
which are past and endeuoureth to forsake them in the time to come For naturally we are blinde and yet doe not perceiue our blindnesse we are most sinfull and miserable and yet doe not see our sins and miserie but with the proud Pharisie and iusticiarie Papist wee thinke our selues righteous and with the Church of the Laodiceans we imagine that we are rich and haue need of nothing not knowing that wee are wretched miserable Reuel 3.17 pour-blind and naked vntill it please the Lord to annoynt our eyes with the eye-salue of his spirit whereby we are enabled to discerne the pure gold of Christs merits which only maketh rich from the drosse of our owne workes and the white raiment of Christs obedience from the polluted ragges of our owne righteousnesse And though wee see our sinnes yet naturally wee are not sorie for them nay we delight our selues with their remembrance or if we sustaine any griefe it is not for the sinne but for the punishment which either wee feele presently inflicted or feare as being hereafter threatned vntill it please the Lord to adopt vs for his sonnes and to giue vs the spirit of adoption which mooueth vs to grieue and sorrow for our sinnes not so much for feare of punishment as for son-like affection because by our sinnes we haue dishonoured and displeased our gratious and louing father and because wee cannot wholie mortifie them so long as wee continue in this life we lamentably crie out with Paul Wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death And because we know that we shal be neuer freed from it altogether so long as wee liue wee wish earnestly with the Apostle that we may be speedily dissolued being contented to part with our liues because wee can no otherwise part with our sinnes Whosoeuer therefore hath this sorrow for sinne hee may be assured of his election and saluation for 2. Cor. 7.10 as it is 2. Cor. 7.10 this godly sorrow causeth repentance vnto saluation not to be repented of whereas worldly sorrow causeth death and all the promises of life and eternall happinesse are made onely to such repentant sinners and to them onely they appertaine And as Gods children are grieued for their sinnes past so doe they hate and detest them as in all others so especially in themselues which hatred causeth them to flee from them and auoide all occasions which might cause them to fall into the like wickednes striuing and endeuouring to mortifie their lusts and euill concupiscences and to leade their liues in holinesse and righteousnesse because herewith their heauenly father is well pleased Whereas the wicked man if hee bee not restrained with a seruile feare of Gods iudgements or of temporarie punishments goeth on in his sinnes with pleasure and delight adding drunkennesse vnto thirst and drawing iniquitie vnto him with the cords of vanitie Whosoeuer therefore haue this son-like care and holie endeuour of forsaking their sinnes and betaking themselues to serue the Lord in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse they may bee assured that they are elected and adopted to be the sonnes of God but those who haue no such purpose can neuer haue this assurance for if they were the sonnes of God they would be affected like louing children to such a gratious father § Sect. 5 The fift signe of the childe of God elected to saluation The fift signo is an hungring desire after Christs righteousnesse Ioh. 7.37 Reuel 21.6 is when as feeling his owne miserie and wretchednesse he earnestly desireth and euen as it were hungreth and thirsteth after Christs righteousnesse looking for life and saluation in him alone for such as these our Sauiour Christ calleth vnto him Ioh. 7.37 If any man thirst let him come vnto me and drinke and to such he promiseth euerlasting happinesse Reuel 21.6 I will giue to him that is a thirst of the well of the water of life freely of which whosoeuer drinketh shall neuer be more a thirst Ioh. 4. but it shall be in him a well of water springing vp vnto euerlasting life And to this we may adde also an high and incomparable estimation of Christ and his righteousnesse after that wee are assured of them whereby wee prise and value them so much aboue all worldly things that with Paul we esteeme them all but drosse and dung in respect of gaining Christ Phil. 3.8 Phil. 3.8 and are content not onely with the Merchant to sell all wee haue that we may buy these precious pearles but also to suffer tribulation anguish persecution famine nakednesse perill sword yea death it selfe Rom. 8.35 rather than wee would be separated from the loue of Christ as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8.35 § Sect. 6 The sixt signe of the childe of God The sixt signe is the inward fight betweene the flesh and the spirit is the inward combat which they feele betweene the flesh and the spirit whereby on the one side they are drawne vnto sinne and on the other side incited vnto holy obedience now delighted in the lawe of God and yet soone after led captiue vnto sinne one while rowing against the tide of their carnall affections and another while carried violently downe the streame by reason of their weakenesse and the strength of their in-bred corruption For naturally we goe al one way without any stop opposition or resistance euen the broad way which leadeth to hell and destruction naturally we serue sinne and willingly subiect our selues to liue in the bondage of our spiritual enemies vntil the Lord doe with his holy spirit renew our will and sanctifie our affections working in vs an earnest desire to come out of this miserable captiuitie that we may attaine vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God which renewing and sanctification because it is done but in part therefore is it opposed by the contrary corruption which wee haue by nature so that what the spirit loueth the flesh hateth what the spirit imbraceth the flesh abhorreth what the spirit would haue vs doe the flesh hindreth and inforceth vs to leaue vndone with whatsoeuer the spirit is delighted with that the flesh is vexed and displeased and this spirituall fight is in all Gods children as appeareth Rom. 7.23 Gal. 5.17 which should bee so farre from discouraging vs Rom. 7.23 Gal. 5.17 that nothing more can assure vs of our election for naturally we are all flesh wholy submitting our selues to be ruled by Sathan neither is there any fight or opposition in vs for Sathans kingdome is not deuided against it selfe and whilest the strong man wholy keepeth the house all that he possesseth is in peace vntill our Sauiour Christ by the operation of his spirit thrusteth him out of his possession and seeketh to rule in vs by the scepter of his word and then the diuell rageth and striueth to keepe his hold and the flesh stormeth desiring still to serue his old maister When therefore we feele
charitie iudge the best when they see not euident reason to the contrarie or it may bee vnderstood of hypocrites as they are in their owne opinion or according to their vaine boasting and so those that are in shew or in their owne opinion redeemed by Christs death may bee reprobates and condemned but not any who are redeemed in truth Secondly those hypocrites that are in the outward visible Church are said to be redeemed in respect that they are numbred for a time amongst the faithfull till they bewray their hypocrisie and depart from the communion and fellowship which they haue outwardly with the Saints though they are not in truth redeemed vnlesse they be of the Church and members of Christs bodie § Sect. 6 Lastly it is obiected that as in Adam all die euen so in Christ shall all be made aliue That al are not redeemed by Christ who perished in Adam 1. Cor. 15.22 as the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 15.22 but all died in Adam and therefore all are made aliue in Christ I answere that the Apostle here vnderstandeth all the faithfull of whose resurrection he here disputeth and it is as much as if he had said as al the faithfull died in Adam so al shall be made aliue in Christ or though it bee vnderstood of all that they died in Adam yet it prooueth not that all are redeemed by Christ for then the sense is thus much as Adam deriued death vnto all his by natural propagation so Christ hath deriued life to all his by grace and this appeareth in the verse following where hee saith that first Christ rose and afterwards they that are of Christ shall rise at his comming now they onely are Christs who are led by his spirit and therefore they who haue not their part in the first resurrection whereby being sanctified they rise againe from the death of sinne to newnesse of life shall not haue their part of the second resurrection whereby they rise to inherite those ioyes which Christ hath purchased for them But it may bee further vrged that if all doe not liue in Christ who died in Adam Adams sinne shall bee of more force than Christs death and satisfaction and Adam shall be more strong to destroy than Christ to saue I answere that their power and strength is not to bee measured by the number of those who are destroyed and saued but according to the manner whereby they were destroyed and saued or according to the vertue and force required to sauing and destroying for it is far more easie to hurt many than to helpe a few to kil a multitude than to restore one to life for euen bruite beasts can kill and destroy but neither man angel nor other creature can giue life saue God alone and so it was no hard matter for Adam to plunge al mankind into the gulfe of perdition but to saue and deliuer vs out of this wretched estate neither he nor any other could perfourme saue Christ alone and therefore though our Sauiour had freed and restored to life but only one and Adam by his sinne destroyed all yet Christs death was stronger and of more vertue in sauing than Adams sinne in destroying Secondly I answere that Christs death is as sufficient for the redemption of all the world as Adams sinne for their condemnation in respect of the infinite value and price thereof if as Adams sinne was deriued vnto all by naturall propagation so Christs death and merits were applied vnto them by faith for there is no want of vertue in this precious salue to heale but the cause why it healeth not is because it is reiected and cast away through incredulitie Thirdly Christs death is of far more vertue and force than Adams sinne in that it bringeth vnto vs farre better things than we lost in Adam for we lost by Adam but earthly benefits but wee haue deriued vnto vs by Christ heauenly glorie and euerlasting happinesse Adam cast vs out of the possession of the earthly paradize but Christ giues vs possession of the heauenly Ierusalem Adam made vs of the seruants of God the bondslaues of Sathan but Christ made vs of the bondslaues of Sathan the sonnes of God and heires of his kingdome CHAP. XV. That all who are redeemed are also sanctified § Sect. 1 ANd thus I haue taken away the ground of Sathans first temptations Sathans temptation to perswade men to all licentiousnesse whereby hee mooueth carnall men securely to continue in their sinnes because Christ hath redeemed and will saue the wicked as well as the godly by prouing that Christ hath redeemed the faithfull onely The second temptation which he vseth to the same purpose he thus frameth Christ hath redeemed all at least who beleeue in him be their sinnes neuer so many and grieuous and therefore thou maist continue in thy sinnes with pleasure and delight and satisfie the lusts of thine owne flesh only beleeue and thou shalt be saued for Christ requireth no other condition Neither is there any other end of Christs comming but that he should by his suffring take away thy sinnes and therefore why shouldest thou vexe and torment thy selfe in embracing bitter mortification and newnesse of life and in shunning thy sweete and pleasing sinnes seeing Christ redeemeth the greatest sinners as well as the least The answere To this we are to answere that there are no sins so innumerable in multitude and so hainous in their qualitie and nature which will exclude vs from the benefit of our redemption wrought by Christ so we applie his death and merits vnto vs by a true and liuely faith but yet notwithstanding this can be no encouragement for any to continue in their sinnes for first we are to know that none haue part in this redēption wrought by Christ but those onely who are made partakers thereof by a true and liuely faith which is neuer separated from the fruites thereof true repentance and holinesse of life neither is it possible that any should bee assured of Gods loue but this assurance will make them to loue God againe and this loue will worke in their hearts a zeale of his glorie and a care to glorifie his name by causing the light of their godly liues to shine before men it is not possible that any who truly beleeue that that they are redeemed with the precious bloud of Christ should not highly esteeme and bee exceedingly thankfull to Christ for this inestimable benefit which none can doe who tread the bloud of Christ vnder their feete and voluntarily cast themselues into the bondage of sinne out of which we are redeemed with so precious a price and so scorne this benefit and despite our Sauiour who hath bestowed it it cannot bee that any should bee so foolish as to sell their soules vnto sinne for euery vaine pleasure and trifling commoditie if they bee assured that Christ redeemed them with the price of his precious bloud which was of more value than many worlds
not know his time but as the fishes which are taken in an euill nette and as the birds that are caught in the snare so are the children of men snared in the euill time when it falleth vpon them suddainly when the euill seruant shal say in his heart my maister doth deferre his comming and shall beginne to smite his fellowes and to eate and drinke and to be drunken that seruants maister will come in a day when he loketh not for him and in an howre that he is not aware of and will cut him off and giue him his portion with the vnbeleeuers as our sauiour hath taught vs. Luke 12.45.46 And we know what hapned to the rich man who saide vnto his soule soule thou hast much goods laid vp for many yeeres liue at ease eate drinke and take thy pastime euen the same night God said vnto him O foole this night will they fetch thy soule from thee and then whose shall those things be which thou hast prouided Luke 12.19.20 § Sect. 4 Moreouer how many may we obserue in our owne experience who haue deferred their repētance frō day to day thinking to repent either in their old age or in the time of their sickenesse That many purposing to repent in old age are cut of in the meane time by Gods iudgment and haue beene preuented and cut of by Godes iudgment doe we not see that many haue beene taken away with suddaine and violent deaths many depriued of the vse of their sences memorie and vnderstanding in the time of their sicknesse and haue so dyed mad franticke and sensles many who come to their old age and yet are further from repentance then in the time of their youth And this cōmeth to passe by the iust iudgment of God for what can be more righteous then that the Lorde should contemne them at the houre of death who haue contemned him their whole life that they should loose their memorie and vnderstanding in the time of sickenes who haue continually abused them to the dishonour of God in the time of their health that they should dye impenitent who haue liued in impenitencie that they should forget God when they are readie to goe out of the worlde who would neuer remember him whilst they were in the worlde that God should withdraw his grace when they are sicke which being often offered they despised when they were in health And this the Lord threatneth Pro. 1.24 Because I haue called and yee haue refused I haue stretched out mine hand none would regard v. 25. but ye haue despised all my counsayle and would none of my correction v. 26. I will also laugh at your destruction mocke when your feare cōmeth v. 27. when your feare commeth like suddaine desolation and your destruction shall come like a whirlewind c. and v. 28. then shall they call vpon me but I will not answere they shall seeke me early but they shall not find mee v. 29. because they hated knowledge and did not choose the feare of the Lorde So Zachar 7.11.12.13 the prophet saith that because the people refused to harken pulled backe their shoulder and stopped their eares that they should not heare but made their hearts as an Adamant stone least they should heare the words of the lord sent in his spirit by the ministerie of the former prophets therfore came a great wrath from the Lord of hostes whereof it came to passe that as hee cried and they woulde not heare so they cried and the Lord would not heare their crie And therefore when the Lord calleth let vs answere Lorde I come let vs not delay our conuersion from day to day but seeke the Lord whilest he may be found and call vpon him whilest he is neere let the wicked now forsake his wayes and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations and returne vnto the Lord and he will haue mercy vpon him and to our God for he is very ready to forgiue as it is Esay 55.6.7 But if we contemne the ministerie of his worde and when God calleth to refuse answere if wee harden our hearts against the meanes of our conuersion quench the good motions of his spirit when he putteth them into our mindes surely it will come to passe that as we neglect the Lord so he will neglect vs and though hee call vs today yet he will not call againe to morrow but will let vs die in our sinnes without repentance Let vs remēber the fearefull example of Esau who contemning his blessing and birthright afterwards when he would haue inherited the blessing was reiected for he found no place to repentance though he sought it with teares as it is Hebr. 12.16.17 And of the 5. foolish virgins who neglecting the opportune time of prouiding oile for their lamps afterwards went to buy when it was too late Matth. 25. for the bridegrome passed by and they were shut out of dores Call to mind the fearefull example of Pharaoh who still hardening his hart against Gods word sent vnto him and confirmed by many miracles and wonders at last was destroyed with his whole armie So Herode hauing hard Iohn Baptist willingly and perfourmed obedience to some things which he had learned yet because he did not turne to the Lord with his whole heart nor repented of his incest was neuer after called againe but left of God to his owne hardnesse of hart the like may be said of Pilate Agrippa Foelix Iudas Demas Iulian the Apostata who hauing not harkened to the Lords call but quenched the good motions of his spirit afterwards were giuen ouer of God to a reprobate sense to their euerlasting ruine and destruction So likewise when as the Lord gaue the false prophetesse Iesabel a time to repent Apoc. 2.21.22 and shee repented not he threatneth his heauie iudgements against her in a word this is manifest in the examples of carnall secure men in these dayes who hauing abused Gods mercy and long suffering and deferred their conuersion from day to day at last they are taken away in Gods heauie displeasure and as they liued like beastes so commonly they die like beastes and therefore as wee loue the saluation of our soules let vs harken when the Lord calleth and not harden our hearts against the good motions of his spirit for if we be like these men in our wicked practise there is no hope we should be vnlike them in fearefull punishments § Sect. 5 Thirdly we are to consider that our conuersion and turning vnto godly vnfained and true repentance The 3. motiue because repentance is Gods gift is the gift of God from whom euery good and perfect gift descendeth as it is Iam. 1.17 And therfore we are to accept of this gift whē he offereth it vnto vs for God doth not promise his giftes and graces with condition that we may receiue them when we list but when he offereth them Psal 95.7 To day if yee will heare his voice harden not
betweene God and vs that is if we truely and vnfainedly repent vs of our sinnes and a rest and rely on Iesus Christ for our saluation by a liuely faith wee may be assured that God on his part will not goe one iote from his word nor breake the couenant which he hath made with vs. For he hath not onely made this his couenant with vs by word of mouth but he hath also committed it to writing and not contenting himselfe herewith that there might be no place left to doubting hee hath confirmed and ratified his hand writing by adding thereunto his seales which are the Sacraments as first the seale of Baptisme whereby he assureth vs that being outwardly receiued into the body of the Church and inwardly ingrafted into the body of Christ wee haue all our sinnes and filthy corruptions washed away with his precious bloud as the outward filth of the body is washed and purged by the washing of water The vertue of which spirituall washing is not limited and restrained to the time past or present as though it washed away onely our originall corruption as some haue foolishly imagined but extendeth it selfe to the whole course of our liues So that if falling into many and greeuous sinnes we vnfainedly repent vs of them and apply Christ Iesus and his merites vnto vs by a true and liuely faith we may be assured of the pardon and forgiuenes of them all for this was promised sealed and confirmed vnto vs in our Baptisme Secondly the Lord hath further cōfirmed this his couenant by the Sacrament of his Supper for he hath therefore instituted and ordained it that thereby we should be put in mind of our sauiour Christes death and suffrings to the end that we may gather more and more assurance that our Sauiour gaue his blessed body to be crucified and shed his most pretious bloud that hee might take away the curse of the law and naile it vnto his crosse free vs frō his fathers anger by bearing it himselfe and by his death deliuer vs from euerlasting death and by his bloudshed wash away all our sinnes and corruptions And hence it is that the Apostle calleth the wine in the Lords supper the new Testament in Christes bloud 1. Cor. 11.25 because thereby the new Testament is sealed and confirmed vnto vs. And therefore whensoeuer wee receaue the Sacrament of the Lords supper the Lord doth thereby certainly assure vs that our sinnes in Christ are pardoned and forgiuen and that he hath receaued vs into his loue and fauour yea the Lord hath not onely ratified confirmed his couenant with vs concerning the remission of our sinnes with his owne hand writing and seales annexed but also by his oath For God willing more abundantly to shew vnto the heires of promise the stablenesse of his counsaile bound himselfe by an oath that by two immutable things wherein it is impossible that God should lye we might haue strong consolation as the Apostle speaketh Heb. 6.17.18 And therefore vnlesse wee would conceiue of God that hee is vntrue of his word a couenant breaker yea a periured person which were most horrible blasphemie once to imagine we may vndoubtedly assure our selues that he will pardon and forgiue vs all our sinnes be they in number neuer so innumerable nor so hainous in their nature and qualitie if wee will turne vnto him by vnfained repentanee and lay hould vpon Christ Iesus our sauiour by a true and liuely faith § Sect. 4 But let vs more particularly consider of some of the speciall promises of God Of particular promises whereby wee may be assured of the remission of our sinnes contained in the couenant of grace that so we may gather vnto our selues more full consolation and firme assurance of the pardon and forgiuenesse of our sinnes The Prophet Dauid who had in himselfe often experience of Gods mercy telleth vs Psal 32.10 that whosoeuer trusteth in the Lords mercy shall compasse him The Prophet Esay exhorteth the wicked to forsake his wayes and the vnrighteous his owne imaginations and to returne vnto the Lord assuring them that he will haue mercy vpon them for he is very ready to forgiue Esay 55.7 The Lord himselfe also doth make this gratious promise Ezech. 18.21 But saith he if the wicked will returne from all his sinnes which he hath committed and keepe all my Statutes and doe that which is lawfull and right he shall surely liue and not dye 22. All his transgressions that he hath committed shall not bee mentioned vnto him but in his righteousnesse that he hath done he shall liue 23. Haue I any desire that the wicked should dye saith the Lord God or shall he not liue if he returne from his wayes vers 32. For I desire not the death of him that dieth saith the Lord God cause therefore one another to returne and liue yee and cap. 33. ver 11. As I liue saith the Lord I desire not the death of the wicked but that the wicked turne from his way and liue So Mal. 3.17 the Lord professeth that hee will spare his people and children as a man spareth his owne Sonne that serueth him Now we know that a louing father is ready to forgiue to receaue into his grace and fauour his repentant Sonne though he hath very often offended him so surely the Lord who is infinitely rich in mercy wil much more forgiue his children when they turne vnto him nay he is not onely ready to receaue them into his grace and fauour but it filleth him as I may say with exceeding ioy and delight when his repentant children forsake their sinnes and euill wayes and turne vnto him by vnfained repentance as it appeareth most euidently in the parable of the prodigall Sonne of the strayed sheepe and the lost groat Moreouer our Sauiour Christ had his name Iesus giuen him of God by the minister of an Angell because hee saueth his people frō their sinnes as appeareth Math. 1.21 he therfore came into the world not to cal the righteous but sinners to repentance As it is Matt. 9.13 and he inuiteth and calleth vnto him all those who are wearie and heauie laden with the burthen of their sinnes promising that hee will ease them Matt 11.28 yea so certaine it is that they shal haue remission of their sinnes and euerlasting hapinesse who truly repent and beleeue that our sauiour Christ saith they haue it already as though they were in present possession Iohn 5.24 Verily verily I say vnto you he that heareth my word and beleeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life So chap. 6.47 and chap. 11.26 whosoeuer liueth and beleeueth in mee shall neuer die The apostle Peter also plainly affirmeth that God would haue no man to perish but would haue all men to come to repentance Seeing therefore the Lord hath made so many gratious promises in the Gospel to all
vnto vs. with Sathans temptations drawne from the reliques of our sinnes the strength of our corruptions and the imperfections and small measure of our sanctification let vs further consider first that these reliques of sinne shall not bee imputed vnto vs nor come in iudgement before God to our condemnation because by faith we are vnited vnto Christ and so made partakers of the vertue and merits of his death and passion whereby he hath satisfied Gods iustice for our sinnes so that they cannot now condemne vs nor draw vpon vs any punishment and likewise wee are made partakers of his perfect righteousnesse and obedience to the law which as a rich robe doth couer and hide our patched ragges of imperfection So then though we see the reliques of sinne and our manifold imperfections let vs not be discouraged hereby from labouring in the worke of sanctification but rather striue and endeuour to mortifie our sinnes and aspire to more and more perfection And if besides our purpose wee be led captiue of sin let vs remember that we haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the iust 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 and that he is the reconciliation for our sinnes so that though they make vs condemne our selues in our own consciences yet they shall neuer condemne vs before God And this the Apostle Paul sheweth vnto vs for hauing in the seuenth chapter of his epistle to the Romanes declared that the faithfull haue remaining in them the flesh and reliques of their old corruptions which powerfully hinder them from doing the good they would and moue them to commit the euill which they would not least any hereby should be discouraged in the sight and sense of his corruptions hee presently addeth in the beginning of the eighth chapter that notwithstanding the flesh and the corruptions therof which before he had spoken of remained in vs yet there was no condemnation to those who were in Christ Iesus and hee yeeldeth this reason because the law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus had freed them from the law of sinne and of death that is because the power and vertue of the spirit of God which is the author of life by vniting vs as members vnto the bodie of Christ in whom we liue and by sprinkling our consciences with his precious bloud had deliuered them from the force and power of sinne and death so that now it could not condemne them nor oblige and binde them to guilt and punishment as in former times Seeing therefore the sting of sinne is taken away that it cannot condemne vs let vs not so feare it as that it should moue vs desperately to cast away our weapons not daring to encounter it for though this our enemie may assault vs yet it cannot ouercome vs though it may wound vs yet it cannot kill vs though it may giue vs a foyle yet in the end wee are sure of victorie if we manfully resist and labour to subdue it § Sect. 6 Secondly let vs consider that the Lord doth not require of vs vnder the Gospel such exact and perfect righteousnes That the Lord in the Gospell requireth not perfect obedience to the law as was required vnder the Law which is altogether impossible to our corrupt nature and was neuer to be found in any man our Sauiour Christ excepted but onely that wee striue and labour to attaine vnto it he doth not require of vs that we should at once free our selues from the flesh and the corruptions thereof but that we endeuour to mortifie it according to the measure of grace and strength which wee haue receiued from him he doth not require of vs that wee be without sinne but that sinne doe not rule in our mortall bodies that wee should like slaues obey it willingly in the lusts thereof and that also wee hating and abhorring it doe continually make warre against it and subdue it by little and little seeing we cannot at once wholy vanquish it He doth not now require of vs that we should performe perfect obedience to the law which Christ hath performed for vs but that we doe our best endeuour and though we cannot attaine to our desire Rom. 7.12.22 yet at least that wee be delighted in the law of God concerning the inner man and consent vnto it that it is good holy and iust In a word this is the Christian mans righteousnes which God requireth that he hate sinne and loue godlines that hee desire and endeuour to mortifie the flesh and corruptions thereof and labour to leade a new life in holy obedience and if contrarie to his desire and purpose he doe the euill which hee hateth or leaue vndone the good which hee loueth that he sorrow and grieue for his sinnes and imperfections and making confession hereof before the throne of grace doe implore mercie and forgiuenesse in Christ Iesus And if wee offer vnto God this righteousnesse it will be acceptable vnto him notwithstanding our manifold imperfections for hee measureth our deede by our will and esteemeth more of our affections than of our actions August Nec intuetur Deus quantum quilibet valeat sed quantum velit quicquid vis non potes Deus factum computat He respecteth not what we can doe but what we would do and that which we could performe and cannot he esteemeth it as though it were performed So that hee reputeth him righteous who earnestly desireth and laboureth to be righteous and him perfect who acknowledging and bewailing his imperfections striueth to attaine to more perfection Wherein he fitly may be compared vnto a tender louing father who esteemeth of the least endeuours of his beloued sonne more than of the best actions of a seruant because hee regardeth not so much the excellencie of the action as the person and cheerefull will of the agent § Sect. 7 Now the reasons why the Lord being perfectly iust will notwithstanding accept of our imperfect righteousnesse VVhy the Lord accepteth of our imperfect righteousnesse is first because we being made members of Christs bodie our persons are acceptable vnto him and therefore our workes also not in their own worthines or for their own merit but in and for Christ are accepted the corruptions and staines of them being washed away in his bloud and the imperfections of them being couered with Christs perfect righteousnesse And thus being adorned in the garment of our elder brother Christ Iesus we obtaine the blessing of our heauenly father Secondly our righteousnesse and holinesse doth proceede from the spirit of God dwelling in vs and from hence our workes being imperfect in themselues doe receiue their dignitie excellencie and estimation in Gods sight as being the fruites of his own spirit howsoeuer mingled with our corruptions § Sect. 8 Thirdly let vs remember that our sinnes and corruptions which we hate and labour to mortifie will neuer mooue the Lord to reiect and cast vs out of his loue and fauour That
not in all that is written in the booke of the law to doe it Galat. 3 10. Rom. 8.8 Gal. 3.10 that they who liue according to the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8.8 that the burthen of sinne cannot be light seeing it pressed out of Christ himselfe a bloudie sweate c. On the other side if hee aggrauate the hainousnes of our sins to the end hee may draw vs into despaire of Gods mercie let vs say Ezec. 18.23.32 it is written I will not the death of a sinner saith the Lord but that he repent and liue Ezech. 18.23.32 And that Iesus Christ came into the world to saue sinners 1. Tim. 1.15 Matth. 9.13 1. Tim. 1.15 And that he came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9.13 Ioh. 3.16 If he tempt vs to the loue of the world and to the seruice of this vnrighteous Mammon let vs answer him Matth. 6.24 that it is impossible to serue two masters of such contrarie disposition as it is written Matth. 6.24 That if wee loue the world 1. Ioh. 2.15 Iam. 4.4 the loue of the father abideth not in vs 1. Ioh. 2.15 That the amitie of the world is enmitie against God Iam. 4.4 Contrariwise if renouncing the world and endeuouring to serue the Lord in vprightnes and in truth hee seeke to draw vs from our integritie by threatning afflictions and persecution wee are to strengthen our selues and resist him with the sword of the spirit remembring that they are blessed which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake Matth. 5.10 1. Tim. 3.12 for theirs is the kingdō of heauen Mat. 5.10 That all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecutiō 1. Tim. 3.12 That whosoeuer loseth any thing for Christs sake Matth. 19.29 shall receiue in recompence an hundreth fold more and haue euerlasting life to boote Matth. 19.29 If he tempt vs to the neglect of Gods word wee are to tell him that all Christs sheepe heare his voyce and follow him Ioh. 10.27 Ioh. 8.47 Ioh. 10.27 That whosoeuer is of God heareth Gods words Ioh. 8.47 that they who know God heare his ministers whereas he that is not of God heareth them not 1. Ioh. 4.6 And if he obiect that wee cannot heare it without great labour and cost wee are to remember that whosoeuer is a wise Merchant fit for the kingdome of God will rather sell all he hath to buy this precious pearle than be without it Matth. 13.44 45 46. Mat. 13.44.45 On the other side if he tempt vs to content our selues with the bare hearing thereof neglecting obedience thereunto we are to tell him that not the hearers of the word Rom. 2.13 but the doers thereof shall be iustified Rom. 2.13 that they who are hearers of the word and not doers also doe deceiue themselues Iam. 1.22 if they thinke hereby to haue any assurance of eternall life Iam. 1.22 That not euery one who saith Lord Lord that is Matth. 7.21 maketh a goodly profession of religion shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but he that doth the will of the father who is in heauen Matth. 7.21 So when he tempteth vs to pride wee are to say vnto him Sathan I may not yeeld vnto thy temptation for it is written God resisteth the proude but giueth his grace to the humble 1. Pet. 5.5 1. Pet. 5.5 If he tempt vs to couetousnes we are to resist him saying it is written 1. Tim. 6.10 that the desire of money is the roote of all euill 1. Tim. 6.10 If to carking care wee are to tell him that the Apostle exhorteth vs to cast all our care on the Lord for he careth for vs 1. Pet. 5.7 1. Pet. 5.7 If to vnthriftie mispending of Gods gifts and carelesse consuming of our estates wee are to tell him that he that prouideth not for his familie 1. Tim. 5.8 is worse than an Infidell 1. Tim. 5.8 § Sect. 3 And thus may we repell the violence of all Sathans temptations and giue him the soyle if wee will take vnto vs the sword of the spirit That it behooueth vs to be skilfull in handling the sword of the spirit and skilfully vse the same in the fight for it is not sufficient that we haue this sword lying by vs nor to be able to shew the goodnes thereof in discourse if in the meane time we neuer draw it out to fight the spirituall combat but let it rust in the scabberd but we must alwaies haue it readie for the combat and as it were naked in our hands that wee may strike home and cut off all the temptations of Sathan and the lusts of our owne flesh when they doe assault vs. And to this end we must be skilfull in the vse thereof for though a man haue an excellent weapon yet if he know not how to vse it it will little helpe him either to defend himselfe or offend his enemie so if a man haue this two edged sword of Gods word and haue no skill to rule it he will strike flatlong and not cut and sometime wound himselfe in stead of hurting his enemie yea so politike a warriour is Sathan against whom we fight that if wee be not skilfull in the vse of this sword he will turne the edge and point thereof against our selues and so in stead of defending vs it will like the sword of Goliah be readie for the enemie to cut off our owne head And therefore it behooueth vs to come into Gods schoole continually that there we may learne how to vse and handle this sword of Gods word so cunningly that wee may resist Sathan in all his assaults and giue him no aduantage in the fight Otherwise he will vse it to our own ouerthrow for if hee durst fight against our Sauiour Christ with his owne weapon the word of God whose knowledge was exquisite and without measure saying It is written how much more busie will he be in vsing it against vs who haue not attained vnto the least part of his skill The folly of those who neglect this spirituall weapon Whereby appeareth first the carnall retchlesnesse of many men who as though there were no enemie to assault them haue not this weapon in their houses at all or if they haue yet they bestow more time in prophane exercises than in studie how to vse the sword of the spirit for their owne defence or at least trusting to their owne skill as sufficient in it selfe they seldome come to the Lords schoole where they might learne to vse the weapon of Gods word for their best aduantage Secondly hereby appeareth the wicked practise of the enemies of Gods truth who take from Gods people this sword of the spirit which the Lord hath giuen vnto all for their defence Neither doth the Apostle in this place exhort onely the Clergie to take this weapon but all Christians whatsoeuer who are assaulted with their
despaire of victorie Sathan shall not neede to fight against vs for we will ouercome our selues fainting before the fight and casting away our weapons as soone as Sathan doth but muster his forces and march against vs. And therefore let vs so much feare the temptations as that we doe not securely contemne them and not so much feare them as that we should despaire of victorie let vs feare them so much as that thereby we be stirred vp with more care diligence to resist and ouercome them but not somuch as that we should cowardly faint distrusting Gods helpe let vs feare them in respect of our weaknes and their violence but let vs boldly striue against them trusting in Gods almightie power merciful promises of his aide and assistance being hereby assured of certaine victorie § Sect. 7 Lastly The ninth meanes to obiect Christ against all temptations Matth. 9.13 Esa 53.5 if we would withstand Sathā we must obiect our Sauiour Christ against al his temptations for if we apply him vnto vs by a liuely faith he will be our sheeld and buckler to defend vs from all Sathans blowes For example if Sathan tell vs that we are miserable sinners and therfore in the state of damnation we are to answere that our Sauiour Christ came into the world to saue sinners that he was wounded for our transgressions broken for our iniquities c. and with his stripes we are healed and so he which knew no sin 2. Cor. 5.21 was made sin for vs that we might be made the righteousnes of God in him If he say that we are subiect to the curse of the law Galat. 3.13 we are to answere that Christ hath redeemed vs frō the curse of the law when he was made a curse for vs. If he obiect that we are subiect to Gods wrath we are to tell him that Christ did beare his fathers displeasure that he might make our peace Col. 1.21.22 and whereas we were strangers and enemies because our minds were set on euill works he hath now reconciled vs in the body of his flesh through death If he tell vs that we are his bondslaues we are to answere that we were so indeede in time past but our Sauiour christ hath paied vnto his father the price of our redemption 1. Cor. 1.30 hath set vs free If he affirme that we are vniust and therefore shall be condemned before Gods iudgment seate we are to answere that Christ who was innocent was condemned that we who are guiltie might be acquitted that though we are wicked in our selues yet we are most iust being clothed with his righteousnes that he that came to saue vs shall come to iudge vs and therefore we neede not doubt of mercie if wee pleade his merits forsaking the plea of our owne righteousnesse and renouncing all selfe confidence If he say that we shall be held captiue of death and neuer rise to take possession of our heauenly inheritance we are to answere that our Sauiour Christ hath broken the bonds of death and led captiuitie captiue that he is risen againe being the first fruites of them that slept Ioh. 14.2 and is ascended into heauen to prepare vs a place there If he obiect that Christ and all his benefits doe not appertaine vnto vs for euery man shall liue by his owne righteousnes Ezech. 18. and the soule that sinneth shall die the death we are to answere that by the spirit of God and a liuely faith Christ is become our head and we his members so that he is ours and we his and our sins he hath taken vpon him bestowed on vs his righteousnes he is become our husband and we his spouse and therfore as he hath cōmunicated himself vnto vs so likewise al his benefits his merits righteousnes sanctificatiō euerlasting happines § Sect. 8 But if Sathan will not thus be answered we are not to entertaine any further disputation with him but to send him to our Sauiour Christ who hath taken vpon him to be not onely our redeemer and our mediator and intercessor vnto God his father That to auoyde Sathans importunitie we must leaue to dispute with him and send him to our aduocate 1. Ioh. 2.1 but also our aduocate to pleade our cause and to answere all suites made against vs both by Gods iustice and the handwriting of the law and also by Sathan and all his adherents as it is 1. Ioh. 2.1 Seeing therefore our Sauiour Christ who is the wisedome of his father hath taken vpon him the defence of our cause in all our suites let not vs our selues be ouer busie in disputing with this wrangling sophister but send him for an answere to our Sauiour Christ who hath fully satisfied his fathers iustice in all which it had against vs and cancelled the handwriting of the law whereby we were obliged and bound and therefore much more able is he to answere al accusations which this cauelling accuser hath against vs. Neither are we to doubt but that our Sauiour will be our aduocate to pleade our cause especially considering that it doth principally concerne himselfe and his owne glorie and sufficiencie For the questions and causes controuersall betweene vs and Sathan are not about our owne worthinesse merits righteousnes and satissactions all which we renounce and cast away from vs as polluted cloutes in respect of being any causes of our iustification and saluation but concerning Christs righteousnes merit and the sufficiencie and efficacie of his death and obedience for the saluation of al repentant sinners which do apply them vnto themselues by a liuely faith and therefore we may assure our selues he wil defend his owne cause against all Sathans obiections and imputations § Sect. 9 But if Sathan continue his importunitie If we will auoide Sathans importunitie we must imploy our selues in holy exercises and will admit of no answere we are as much as in vs lieth to banish his temptations out of our mindes and not to thinke and meditate on them and to this end we are continually to exercise our selues in feruent prayer desiring the Lords gracious assistance whereby wee may be enabled to withstand all the assaults of our enemie as also to heare reade and meditate in Gods word and diligently to vse holy conferences with our christian brethren and painfully to imploy our selues in the workes of our callings that so we may haue no leasure to entertaine Sathans temptations For as a vessell which is alreadie full can receiue no more and whatsoeuer is powred thereinto spilleth vpon the ground so when our mindes are replenished with holy thoughts and occupied in godly and honest exercises there is no roome left for Sathans suggestions and therefore as soone as they offer to enter we presently reiect them Whereas on the other side if we spend our times in idlenes and doe not diligently exercise our selues in the duties of christianitie and of our seuerall
XIIII Sathans temptations concerning our redemption wherewith he moueth the worldling to presumption answered § Sect. 1 ANd thus haue I shewed what our redemption is The temptation now let vs consider of those temptations of Sathan which he suggesteth into the minds of men whereby he laboreth to depriue them of this great benefit and to keepe them still in his captiuitie or to pul them back againe when they are escaped And these are of two sortes the first leading to securitie and presumption the other to doubting and desperation For if he haue to deale with worldlie men who were neuer truely conuerted vnto God hee laboreth to perswade them that they are redeemed by Christ and therfore though they liue in their sinnes yet they shall bee saued for Christ came into the world to saue sinners but when he assaulteth the true christian who is indeede the redeemed of the Lord then he moueth him to doubt and despaire either of the sufficiencie or of the efficacie of the worke of our redemption wrought by Iesus Christ That he may continue the worldly man in his carnall securitie and fond presumption he vseth two principall reasons the first that the redemption wrought by Christ is vniuersall and effectuall for the saluation of al the world out of which he frameth this temptation Christ hath shed his precious blood and suffered death for all the world and hath redeemed all mankinde which were lost in Adam out of the bondage of Sathan death and hell why therefore shouldest thou be so strict in flying sinne with which thou art so much delighted why dost thou striue against the streame of thy corruptions and wherefore shouldest thou take any great paines in the workes of holines and righteousnes which are so bitter and vnpleasant to thy taste and appetite for Christ came into the world to saue all men and not those onely who are so strict in their waies he came to redeeme the whole world gaue himselfe as a sufficient ransome for all men and therefore doubtlesse he will not lose his labour nor spill his blood in vaine he wil not willingly let any perish whom he hath purchased at so high a rate and redeemed with so deare a price he is also so powrefull that nothing shall be able to pull them out of his hand Ioh. 10.28 as himselfe affirmeth Ioh. 10.28 and so wise that hee would not shed his blood for those whom he would not saue And who can imagine that God who is most iust will impute those sinnes vnto thee for which Christ hath suffered inflict death on thee for whom Christ died and require that debt againe which is alreadie discharged Or who can imagine that God who is immutable should shew such inconstancie as to send his sonne into the world to suffer death for the redemption of those whom hee now will not saue for if he would who could resist his will or withstand his power And therefore if he hath redeemed all surely he will saue all and consequently thee amongst the rest though thou liue as thou list and follow the lusts of thine owne heart for thy sinnes and vnbeliefe cannot make his purpose voyde nor annihilate the worke of thy redemption nay the more thy sinnes abound the more his grace will abound also § Sect. 2 For the answering of which temptation we are to know The answere to the former temptation that vniuersall redemption which is the ground and foundation thereof is an idle dreame of mans braine which cannot be iustified by the word of God which is the touchstone of al truth neither hath our Sauiour Christ redeemed any other than those whom hee effectually calleth vnto the sauing knowledge of their redemption indueth with true faith and vnfained repentance iustifieth sanctifieth and lastly saueth if we respect the purpose of God and the will of our blessed Sauiour although indeede the price he gaue for our redemption was of sufficient value for the sinnes of all the world if it were applied by a liuely faith But because this doctrine hath many enemies Testimonies of Scripture alledged against vniuersall redemption it is not sufficient to propound it vnlesse I proue it and therefore I will shew first by testimonies of scriptures and after by strong reasons that our Sauiour Christ hath died for and by his death redeemed those onely whom hee indueth with true faith and vnfained repentance and not for al the world as they imagine Matth. 20.28 it is said that he came into the world to giue his life a ransome for many Matth. 20.2 and 26.28 and 26.28 that his blood was shed for many for the remission of sinnes And Esa 53.11 that Christ should iustifie many by bearing their iniquities So that he hath not giuen his life a ransome and shed his blood and by bearing their iniquities iustified all but many that is part of all Luk. 2.34 Simeon saith Luk. 2.34 that Christ was appointed by Gods decree for the fall and rising againe of many that is for the fall of many reprobates and the rising againe of many who are elected and therefore not for the redemptiō of all So Christ saith that he layeth downe his life for his sheepe Ioh. 10.15 and therfore not for wolues and goates Ioh. 10.15 and 15.14 for his friends Ioh. 15.14 therfore not for his wicked enemies for vs that is for the companie of the faithfull beleeuers Rom. 8.32.33 and therefore not for the sinagogue of Sathan and wicked vnbeleeuers Rom. 8.32.33 Matth. 1.21 So Matth. 1.21 he is said to be the Sauiour of his people and not of aliants and strangers and to haue giuen himselfe for his Church Eph. 5.25 Eph. 5.25 and not for those who haue no fellowship in the communion of saints that he should die for the nation that is as Iohn saith for al Gods childrē Iewes and Gentils Ioh. 11.52 Rom. 3.22.25.26 Ioh. 11.52 and therfore not for the wicked and the children of Sathan So that Apostle Rom. 3.22 saith that the righteousnes of God that is the righteousnes of Iesus Christ imputed vnto vs by God or the righteousnes of Christ God and man is manifested vpon all and vnto all that beleeue and vers 23. that God hath set forth Christ to be a reconciliation through faith in his blood and verse 26. That he is the iustifier of him which is of the faith of Iesus Where the imputation of Christs righteousnesse reconciliation with God and iustification is restrained to the beleeuers onely And to the same purpose is that of the Apostle Heb. 5.9 Heb. 5.9 where Christ is said to be the author of eternall saluation vnto all that obey him and therefore not vnto them who continue in their rebellion not obseruing his will nor submitting themselues to bee ruled by the scepter of his word And as by these places it is apparant that Christ and his benefits are restrained to the faithfull so also
in other places the vnbeleeuers and such as continue in their wickednes are flatly excluded from the participation of them Ioh. 3.18 He that beleeueth in him shall not be condemned Ioh. 3.18 but he that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie vers 36. And vers 36. He that beleeueth in the sonne hath euerlasting life and he that obeyeth not the sonne shall not see life Rom. 2.9 but the wrath of God abideth on him So Rom. 8.9 If any man haue not the spirit of Christ the same is not his and consequently it followeth that if he be not Christs then Christ and his benefits belong not vnto him 1. Ioh. 3.8 And the Apostle 1. Ioh. 3.8 plainely affirmeth that he who committeth sinne that is he who liueth in sinne without repentance is of the diuell and that he who is borne of God that is regenerate by his spirit sinneth not that is liueth not in his sins neither committeth them with full consent of will And Paul willeth Timothie to instruct his hearers 2. Tim. 2.26 that they might come to amendment out of the snare of the diuell whereby it is manifest that those in whom sinne raineth are not of Christ but of Sathan and that notwithstanding Christs death they are still in the snare of the diuell til they come to amendment of life because the blood of Christ is not effectual to free any out of their spirituall bondage till it be applied vnto them by a liuely faith § Sect. 3 And thus it appeareth by plaine testimonies Reasons to proue that redemption is not vniuersall that the redemption wrought by Christ belongeth onely to the faithfull which also by vertue of Christs death bloodshed haue their sinnes and corruptions in some measure mortified and not vnto the wicked who liue and die in their sinnes without repentance Now I will also confirme this truth by strong reasons First those who were neuer knowne of Christ that is acknowledged for his were neuer redeemed by his precious bloodshed neither is it probable that the father would giue his welbeloued sonne and that the sonne would giue himselfe for the redemption of those whom in his eternall councell he had decreed to reiect or as all confesse whom he foresaw should perish but our Sauiour will professe to the workers of iniquitie that he neuer knew them Matth. 7.23 Matth. 7.23 and therefore he neuer gaue himselfe for their redemption Secondly for whomseouer Christ hath offered a sacrifice vnto his father for them also he maketh intercession and is become their aduocate neither is it probable that Christ would die for those for whome he will not intreate and that he would offer the sacrifice of his body for those for whom he would not offer the sacrifice of his lips Besides it was the office of the same high priest to offer sacrifice and to pray for the people and consequently of our Sauiour Christ 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 as appeareth 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 where he is said as well to be our aduocate as the propiciatory sacrifice for our sinnes and the Apostle Paul Rom. 8.35 saith Rom. 8.35 that as Christ died for vs so he maketh intercession for vs but our Sauiour Christ flatly excludeth from all participation of the fruite of his intercession all those who are of the world that is Ioh. 17.9 all meere worldlings Ioh. 17.9 I pray not for the world but for them which thou hast giuen me and the Apostle saith that as he perfectly saueth Heb. 7.25 so also he maketh intercession for those who come vnto God by him that is true beleeuers onely and therefore for them alone he hath offered himselfe a sacrifice vnto his father Thirdly Christ hath died for those alone in whom he hath attained vnto the end of his death for whatsoeuer attaineth not his end is done in vaine which argueth want of wisedome or power in the agent and efficient neither of which without blasphemie can be ascribed vnto Christ who is in both infinit but the end of Christs death that is the eternall saluation of those for whom he died is attained vnto onely in the elect and faithfull Mark 16.16 Ioh. 3.36 for as it is Mark. 16.16 He that shall beleeue shall be saued but he that will not beleeue shall be damned And Ioh. 3.36 He that beleeueth in the sonne hath euerlasting life and he that obeyeth not the sonne shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him And therefore Christ hath died for those alone who beleeue and bring forth the fruites of their faith in obedience and not for the vnbeleeuers and disobedient Forthly if all were redeemed by the death of Christ then should they also be saued for what should hinder them from saluation who are redeemed seeing they haue receiued the pardon and remission of their sinnes as appeareth Ephes 1.7 In whom we haue redemption through his blood Eph. 1.7 Col. 1.14 euen the remission of our sinnes Col. 1.14 And consequently whosoeuer are redeemed are iustified and also heires of eternall blessednes for blessed are those whose iniquitie is forgiuen Psal 32.1 and whose sinne is couered as it is Psal 32.1 Seeing also Christ who hath redeemed vs is stronger than Sathan and all the power of hell and therefore al their spiritual enemies conioyned together cānot pluck those whom he hath redeemed out of his hand violently and against his will neither can we with any probable shew of reason imagine that he would willingly lose those whom he hath redeemed with the inestimable price of himselfe neither will it stand with the iustice of God to impute the sinnes of any to their condemnation for which Christ hath fully satisfied nor to exact that debt againe which hee hath paid and therefore if Christ had died for all God in his iustice could not chuse but saue all and Christ might well say to his father to what purpose haue I died if thou destroyest those whom I haue saued what profit is in my bloud if thou condemnest those whom I haue redeemed Lastly if hee died and by his death redeemed all then also he died for and redeemed the Pagans Turkes Atheists and Epicures who were out of the Church and couenant of grace and so iustification redemption and saluation should be out of the Church and be extended to those whom God neuer receiued into his couenant which is quite contrarie to the whole course of the scriptures where it is said that all who are saued are also added vnto the Church Act. 2.47 and that Christ hath giuen himselfe onely for his Church Act. 2.47 Eph. 5.25 Eph. 5.25 Yea if Christ died for all and by his death redeemed them then it must necessarily follow that hee had redeemed euen those damned soules who were in hell before his comming which is most absurd to be imagined for if they were redeemed how did they againe fall into condemnation seeing they being once become
and power in punishing their sinnes which they commit with greedines but he is glorified when hee mercifully deliuereth repentant sinners out of the bondage of sinne and Sathan who are wearie of their captiuitie and desire nothing more then freedome that they may in the rest of their liues serue him their redeemer in the duties of holines and righteousnes And therefore they who liue in their sinnes without repentance continuing still traytors to God seruants of Sathan can haue no assurance of their redemption for the Lord hath therefore bought vs 1. Cor. 6.20 with a price that we should glorifie him both in our bodies and soules and therfore those who in sted of letting their lights of holines and righteousnes shine cleerly before men that their heauenly father may be glorified doe nothing els but dishonor him by their sins and wicked conuersation shew plainely that the redemption wrought by Christ doth not as yet appertaine vnto them § Sect. 4 Fourthly Three degrees of our redemption which alwaies concurre we are to know that the worke of our redemption wrought by Christ consisteth of three parts or degrees for first Christ redeemed vs by paying the price of our redemption and thus he is said in the Scriptures to haue redeemed vs with his blood Secondly he redeemeth vs when as he applieth this benefit of our redemption vnto vs in particular and doth thereby free and deliuer vs from the diuell sin and death so as we are no longer in their bondage subiect to their power and gouernment although we be continually assaulted and often foyled by them thirdly he redeemeth vs when as he perfectly freeth vs not onely from the power and gouernment but also from the assaults and molestations of all our spirituall enemies and giueth vs eternall peace in his kingdome The first was wrought immediatly by himselfe when as he paied a sufficient price for our redemption and thereby fully satisfied his fathers iustice the second he worketh by his owne spirit whereby he doth dispell out of our minds and hearts the darke mists of ignorance and infidelitie and by the glorious light thereof doth illuminate our vnderstandings with the beames of true knowledge and a liuely faith so that we know acknowledge and beleeue that Christ is our sauiour and redeemer and are assured that he hath freed vs from the bondage of our spirituall enemies after which assurance hee begetteth in vs an earnest desire of beeing more and more freed from them actually and an holy indeauour of withstanding all their assaults and temptations whereby they labour againe to bring vs into their captiuitie and withall enableth vs with some measure of strength to withstand and ouercome them and reneweth and confirmeth this strength receiued when in the conflict of temptation we are weakned and haue receiued the foyle that we may rise vp againe and afresh maintaine the fight Lastly our Sauiour Christ redeemeth vs when as he perfectly freeth and deliuereth vs from our spirituall enemies at his second comming when as we shall not onely not be ouercome nor foyled of them but also not so much as once assaulted And of this redemption our Sauiour speaketh Luk. 21.28 Luk. 21.28 When saith he these things begin to come to passe then looke vp lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth neere And these are the three degrees of our redemptiō which alwaies follow one another for for whomsoeuer Christ hath giuen himselfe as the price of their redemption to those also hee giueth his holy spirit which doth illuminate the eyes of their vnderstanding blinded with ignorance and sanctifieth their will and affections working in them a desire and holy indeauour of seruing the Lord in holines and righteousnes and of withstanding the temptations of the flesh the world and the diuell And whomsoeuer he thus redeemeth out of the power and gouernment of their spirituall enemies those he will perfectly redeeme and deliuer from all their malicious attempts and giue them the eternall peace of his kingdome But those who haue not their part in the second degree that is those who continue in their blind ignorance and in the naturall pollution of their will and affections willingly subiecting themselues to the seruice of sinne and Sathan and stubbornly withdrawing their stiffe neckes out of the yoke of holy obedience vnto Gods commaundements they can neuer haue any assurance that Christ hath redeemed them by paying the price of his blood nor will deliuer them at his second comming out of the bondage of Sathan in which they haue liued all their life time with pleasure and delight for whomsoeuer hee ransometh with the price of his blood those he freeth out of the gouernment of their spirituall enemies sinne death and the diuell and therefore they that still liue in sinne as our Sauiour saith Ioh. 8.34 Ioh. 8.34 1. Ioh. 3.8 Rom. 6.16 yea the seruants of Sathan also as the Apostle teacheth 1. Ioh. 3.8 For their seruants we are to whom we obey whether it be of sinne vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnes as it is Rom. 6.16 and those who still remaine in the seruice and slauerie of sinne and sathan haue no part in the first redemption wrought by the shedding of his blood nor shall haue any part in the last redemption at his second comming to iudgement § Sect. 5 Lastly That Christ hath redeemed the whole man we are to know that Christ hath redeemed the whole man body and soule and hath freed and deliuered euery part and facultie of them out of the bondage of our spirituall enemies that all and euery of them may performe seruice vnto God For example our vnderstandings were captiued in the darke prison of ignorance and blindnes and appeareth Ephes 4.17.18 but our Sauiour Christ redeemed vs Eph. 4.17.18 and hath dispelled these mists of darkenes with the preaching of the Gospell which like a glorious sunshine hath appeared vnto vs and by the operation of his holy spirit he hath caused the scales of ignorance to fall from the eyes of our vnderstanding so that we can see the misterie of our redemption and worke of our saluation wrought by him Luk. 1.77.78 as it is Luk. 1.77.78.79 Our wils which were so inthralled that wee could not so much as desire any thing pleasing and acceptable vnto God Phil. 2.13 hath our Sauiour redeemed and freed out of this spirituall bondage and by the good motions of his holy spirit doth so rule and incline them that to will is present with vs and we are delighted in the law of God concerning the innerman as the Apostle speaketh of himselfe Rom. 7.18.22 Rom. 7.18.22 And though the law of our members and corruptions of the flesh doe rebell against the law of our minde leading vs captiue to the law of sinne yet doe we abhorre this sinne and earnestly desire to be freed from it and to serue the Lord in holines and righteousnes indeauoring
had their beginning for the most part long since the time of Abraham as their owne histories manifestly declare Neither did any other religion of the heathen continue one and the same for that which one receiued another reiected that which one confirmed another changed and time hath worne them all out leauing scarce any small remnants or reliques of them And therefore all other religions sauing that which is deliuered in the scriptures are false and counterfet and this only the truth of God § Sect. 3 2. Reasons taken from the puritie and perfection of the Scriptures Secondly the puritie and perfection of the scriptures doe euidently shew that they are the word of God indited by his holy spirit for they manifest vnto vs the onely true God and propound him alone vnto vs to be worshipped expressing also the manner and meanes of his seruice from which we must not decline on the right hand or on the left but all other religions teach vs either to worship many Gods which is a thing absurd in reason and contrarie to the light of nature as diuers of the wisest philosophers well discerned or to worship the true God not according to his reuealed will but according to their false imaginations erroneous superstitions Now nature reason and experience it selfe teach vs that there is no wise King but will set downe rules and lawes according to which he will be serued and obeyed and not leaue it to euery ones fantasie and vaine imagination and shall we thinke God lesse wise then man that he should not haue a perfect law for the gouernment of his people but suffer euery man to follow his owne blind conceite and ignorant superstition § Sect. 4 3. Reasons taken from the sinceritie of the writers of the Scriptures Thirdly the sinceritie and vprightnes of the writers of the holy scriptures is a manifest argument that they were guided and directed by Gods spirit for they deliuer nothing in their owne name but in the name of the Lord not arrogating any praise vnto themselues but ascribing all glorie vnto God neither did they in their preachings or writings seeke themselues or ayme at any worldly benefit nay rather they were content to be contemptible subiect to scoffes and taunts yea to offer themselues to death and depriuation of all worldly felicitie for the truth of God which they had deliuered And whereas diuers of them might haue liued in all pompe if they would haue followed the times winked at the sinnes of rulers and suppressed the word of the Lord which they had receiued of him they chose rather to suffer persecution yea death it selfe then they would keepe backe any of the counsell of God as appeareth in the example of Esay Ieremie Ezechiel Michaeas Zacharias A●nos and many others of the Prophets and Apostles Neither doe they in their writings abstaine onely from seeking their owne glorie and praise but also set downe those things which might tend to their discredit to the end God might be glorified in their infirmities the truth confessed and preserued and the Church of God benefited when by seeing the weakenes of the most strong they are kept from presuming on their owne strength and from desparing in Gods mercie And thus Moses concealeth not the fall of our grand parents the drunkennes of Noah the incest of Lot the lie of Isaack the whoredome of Iudas nay which more neerely concerned him he plainely reuealeth the horrible and bloodie sin of his grandfather Leuy Gen. 49.5.6 and Simeon in murthering the Sichemites and the curse of their father Iacob pronounced against them for this their outrage Genes 49.5.6 which could not in humane reason but be dishonorable to his stocke progenie and offensiue to all who were of that tribe furthermore he displayeth the corruptions imperfections and often rebellions of that people whose saluation hee preferred before his owne soule he spareth not to set downe the Idolatrie of his own brothur Aaron nor the sinne of his sister Miriam in murmuring against him nor of Aarons sonnes in offering with strange fire Nay hee leaueth the remembrance of his owne sinne of impatiencie and vnbeliefe for which hee was debarred from entring into the land of promise vnto all posterities as a perpetuall note of his owne weaknesse and infirmitie Neither sought he at al his own glorie and the aduancement of his posterity but the glory of God the good of the church as may hereby appeare in that when the gouernment was established in his hand he doth not make his owne sonnes his successours but Iosua his seruant because God had so appointed it The like may be said of Ieremie who hath in his prophecie left recorde of his murmuring and impatiencie Ierem. 20. Iere. 20 Of Ionas who hath set downe his owne rebellion punishment and repining against God Of the apostle Paul who hath not spared to call himselfe a cruell persecuter and chiefe of al sinners Now we know that naturally we desire to conceale the faults of our friendes and kindred and we count him an euill bird that defileth his owne nest naturally we seeke our own praise and the aduancement of our children and can brooke ●othing lesse than that our faults should bee diuulged and become table talke and therefore this detection of their owne and their friends falles and faults could not proceed from nature or any worldly policie but from the direction of Gods spirit which ouerruled their affections and tooke away all partialitie § Sect. 5 The fourth reason taken from the concent of the diuers writers of the Scriptures Fourthly the wonderfull concent which is amongst the diuers writers of the Scriptures doth euidently shew that they were guided and directed by one and the same spirit of God for whereas it is truly said of other men Quot homines tot sententiae Looke how many men there be and so many mindes there be wherof it commeth to passe that euery writer almost varieth from another gainsaying and confuting that which another hath deliuered that so out of the ashes of their credit and reputation they may build a monument of their owne fame the quite contrarie is to be obserued in the writers of the scriptures who successiuely writing one after another the space of diuers thousand yeeres doe notwithstanding consent together in the same truth the later ratifying and confirming that which the former had deliuered without any alteration opposition or emulation as though they were diuers hands set on worke by the same soule which could not possibly come to passe vnlesse they were ouerruled by Gods spirit § Sect. 6 The sift reason taken from the wonderfull preseruation of the Scriptures against all oppositions Fiftly the mightie oppositions which haue been made by the diuell and his wicked impes against this doctrine of the scriptures and yet al in vaine doe euidently shew that they are Gods word and truth the patronage and protection whereof he hath himselfe
and foysted in by some cunning fellow after the things were come to passe The like obiections also he maketh against the rest of the Scriptures as that either there was not any such Moses or if he were that he was but some cunning fellow who writ of miracles and wonders neuer done to gaine credit to his law which he had published or if he wrote nothing but truth in his time yet we know not whether these books which goe vnder his name are perfect as he left them or depraued and corrupted hauing many things altred added detracted according to the pleasure of those who haue had the keeping of them And so also hee obiecteth against the other parts of holy Scriptures To this I answere that as it were great absurditie to call in question the writings of Cicero Seneca Plutarch and other Heathen men whether they were penned by any such men or no because the next age receiued them from the authors themselues and deliuered them to the next insuing and so by tradition from hand to hand they are come vnto vs so it is no lesse absurditie to call into question whether the scriptures were written by the Prophets and Apostles who liued in their seuerall times seeing the Church hath receiued them from time to time and deliuered them to their successors to this day Moreouer the law published by Moses was not in secret or in a corner before some few witnesses but in the presence of sixe hundred thousand men besides women and children and the strange miracles and workes of God full of wonder which hee wrought for the better confirmation of his law giuen were done and perfourmed in the presence of many thousands who made relation of them to their posteritie and they to theirs to this day Neither was it easie to be corrupted altred or changed seeing the lawgiuer did straightly charge all men that they should not adde detract or alter any thing vpon paine of present death in this world and euerlasting death in the life to come who therefore would incurre the danger of such fearfull punishment for the satisfying of his fruitlesse phantasie Moreouer this book of the law was safely kept in the Tabernacle and after in the Temple in the Arke which was placed in the holy of holiest and diuers authenticall copies written out of it for euery one of the twelue tribes which were euery Sabbaoth day read and expounded in their Sinagogues yea so familiar were these writings with the Iewes that they were written in their houses and vpon their garments so as it was not possible for any man to falsifie them but it would presently bee espied Yea will the tempter say but though they could not be depraued or corrupted yet they might at first bee inuented by some more subtill than the rest and so thrust vpon men vnder the authority of God himselfe as being the writings of his Prophets and Apostles To which I answere that there is no probabilitie of truth in this obiection for I would faine know in what age this man should write In the time of Moses how then could he write the historie of the Iudges who succeeded him In the time of the Iudges how then could he write the historie of the Kings What then could he write these things in the time of the Kings and so faine a relation of such things as went before why then it is necessarie that hee should haue liued in the time of the last Kings or els he could not haue penned their historie also but before this time there were many copies abroad of the Scriptures in diuers nations by reason that the Iewes were scattered abroad through their captiuitie where they as constantly professed their religion as in their owne countrey Besides if these writings had been fained in what age could they come to light but men diligently inquiring into them as being matters importing no lesse than their eternall saluation or condemnation would haue found them counterfeit For if they had been penned in the same age wherein the things were done who would haue beleeued them if they did not assuredly know that they contained nothing but certaine truth If in an after age who would haue straight subscribed vnto them vnlesse they had by tradition from their ancestors bin assured that such things were done in former times Furthermore it is not probable but that the Iewes would haue made mentiō of such an author if they had known him or if they had by some accident found them written in this forme it is not likely that they would haue been so simple as to haue built their faith so firmely vpon them that they would rather chuse to suffer all torments than be brought to denie any one part of them § Sect. 7 Lastly it is obiected that in the time of Antiochus That the books of holy Scripture perished not in the time of Antiochus the books of the Scriptures were by his tyrannie and extreame crueltie wholy abolished and these which we haue afterwards inuented by the Iewes to grace their religion To which I answere that this obiection is so sotrishly foolish that it sauoureth not of common sense much lesse of any force of reason for seeing now there were extant almost innumerable copies of the Scriptures what meanes could be inuented by with and rage vtterly to suppresse them especially seeing the Iewes made farre more precious account of them than of their liues so that for the profession of this truth they were content to suffer euen in this tyrants time cruell deaths Besides if they had been all destroyed and abolished in his time how came it to passe that presently after his death they were againe as it were pulled out of the ashes and reuiued Or how could others be put in their place seeing innumerable men liued before and after his persecution who had the sight and perusing of the same bookes before they were suppressed and afterwards againe when they came to light Lastly though it should be granted that all the bookes of holy Scriptures had bin vtterly defaced in al the dominions of Antiochus yet this were nothing for the tempters purpose for the Iewes were now scattered far and wide and had their Sinagogues and schooles in sundrie nations where he had no authoritie therfore though he had destroyed all the copies of the Scriptures in all places of his kingdome yet there were many in other places where hee bare no sway Neither were they now in the Hebrew tongue alone but also translated into the Greeke by the 70 Interpreters at the request of Ptolomey Philadelphus and the translation carefully kept in his Librarie long before the time of this Antiochus By al which it is more then manifest that the Scriptures are the same which were penned by the Prophets and holy men of God inspired with his diuine spirit confirmed with so many and wonderfull miracles and sealed with the bloud of innumerable Martyrs To this which hath
and all sanctifying and sauing graces And hence it is that the minister himself findeth not the word which he deliuereth effectual for the begetting of faith or any grace in him which notwithstanding is powerfull in many of the hearers for these purposes because the Lord vouchsafeth not the assistance and inward cooperation of his holy spirit with the outward ministerie of the word vnto him which notwithstanding he mercifully granteth vnto others Seeing then the ministerie of the word is Gods owne ordinance which he maketh effectuall to whom hee will by the inward operation of his holy spirit by whomsoeuer it is deliuered and seeing those ministers which are most holy and vertuous cannot at their pleasure infuse grace into their hearers for Paul may plant and Apollos may water but God giueth the increase 1. Cor. 3.5 so that neither the one nor the other are any thing in themselues without Gods blessing seeing also those who are loose and vicious if they truly preach the truth it selfe cannot by their badnesse hinder Gods ordinance but that comming from their mouthes it will be effectuall for the conuersion of men vnto God and the eternal saluation of those that beleeue for though vnto himselfe it be but a dead letter yet the spirit of God may giue life vnto it in those who receiue it and though he preacheth for glorie or gaine or for enuie and strife yet we must with the Apostle reioyce that Christ is preached any manner of way Phil. 1.15.18 and reape the fruite thereof to our eternal comfort Lastly seeing the wisedome of God thinketh it good to send ambassadours of both sorts sanctified and vnsanctified and oftentimes maketh the word in the mouth fo a faithfull and godly minister the sauour of death vnto death and the same word in the mouth of one who is voide of grace and sanctification the sauour of life vnto life to the end that we should not depend vpon man but wholy rest and relie our selues vpon Gods owne ordinance giuing and ascribing vnto him the whole glory and praise of our conuersion and saluation let not Sathan perswade vs to thinke the worse of the pure word of God because of his corruption who deliuereth it for what were this but to refuse a comfortable ambassage from a gracious prince because we dislike the qualities of the ambassadours what were this but to scorne to receiue a kind letter from a louing father because the carrier doth displease vs what is this but to refuse a rich treasure because it is brought vnto vs in an earthen vessell which is fraile and brittle what is it but like proud beggers to refuse the bountifull almes of a mercifull prince because it is deliuered vnto vs by an Amner which is couetous and hard harted Yea what is it but to crosse our Sauiour Christs expresse commandement who commanded all to heare euen the Scribes and Pharisies who sate in Moses chaire Matth. 23. and to do after their words though not after their workes In a word what is it els than to pin Gods ordinance vpon mans sleeue and to make the preaching of the Gospell Rom. 1.16 which is the power of God to saluation vnto euery one who beleeueth to depend vpon the weake strength of fraile flesh either to bee made effectuall by his worthinesse or to bee made vaine and vnprofitable by his vnworthinesse CHAP. XXIIII Sathans temptations taken from sundrie opinions sects and religions answered ANd thus Sathan may be answered §. Sect. 1. Sathans temptations perswading vs to professe no religion when he taketh occasion of discrediting the Gospell and hindring the course thereof by obiecting the wickednesse and worldly prophanenesse or the infirmities and fraile weaknesse of the Ministers thereof But if he cannot thus preuaile he leaueth their liues and commeth to their doctrine Doest thou not see will he say that there are innumerable sects and contrary factions amongst those who professe Christianitie some Papists some Protestants some Arians some Anabaptists some Pelagians some Libertines some Familists some Donatists many other who all cite and alledge Scriptures for the defending of their contrarie opinions confidently affirme that they only haue the truth amongst them how therfore canst thou know which is truth and which is falsehood who interpret the scriptures aright and who wrest and misconster them or if thou wert disposed to be religious what religion wilt thou professe in this great confusion to what Church wilt thou adioyne thy selfe seeing one is contrarie to another and thou knowest not which is in the truth If thou beest wise therefore keepe thy selfe quiet and let all alone harken not to any of them or if thou dost beleeue them not ouer hastily be of that religion which will best stand with thine aduantage or if thou wilt needes serue God follow thine owne conscience haue a good intention in that thou doest and it is enough but professe not one religion more than another till thou seest those who are learned agree amongst themselues for vntill then thou canst haue no assurance that thou professest the truth For the answering of which temptation we are to know that the scriptures haue foretould vnto vs that there should be sects diuisions 1. Cor. 11.19 1. Tim. 4.1 2. Pet. 2.1 heresies false teachers euen vnto the end of the world as appeareth 1. Cor. 11.19 1. Tim. 4.1 2. Pet. 2.1 And the experience of al times both vnder the law vnder the Gospel may sufficiently teach vs that wheresoeuer the truth of God is published and preached there it is opposed by innumerable sectaries and heretikes which by the malice and subtiltie of Sathan are stirred vp to impugne and discredit the true religion and therefore if Sathan can still keepe vs blindfoulded in ignorance and restraine vs from the confession and profession of our faith till there be a generall vnitie and agreement in the true religion without all opposition or gainesaying then he hath attained his desire for so shall we neuer ioyne our selues in the communion of the saints nor bee true members of the Church professing practizing the religion of Iesus Christ seeing the diuell will not cease to stir vp his wicked instruments false Prophets secraties and heretikes to the end they may oppugne and contradict the truth when it is sincerely preached and make it frutelesse in the hearts of vnbeleeuers seeing also our Sauiour hath taught vs that his Church is but a little flocke which is assaulted and grieuously vexed not onely with Lyons Tigers and open enemies but also with Foxes and Wolues in sheepes clothing and secret enemies who vnder the shew and profession of religion seeke to vndermine and bring it to ruine And the Apostle also hath forewarned vs that there must be heresies among vs 1. Cor. 11.19 that they who are approoued might be knowne 1. Cor. 11.19 Though therefore there be many sects and heresies many false religions and but one truth
which the Lord wilimprint in them and wee are moued to denie our selues and to cast away our owne righteousnesse and to rest and relye vpon Christ Iesus alone for our iustification and saluation which is quite contrarie to our naturall disposition but it were a miracle of miracles that all these things should be wrought in vs by sicknesse which the Lord hath not ordayned for this purpose when as the meanes appointed by God himselfe the ministerie of his word which is Gods owne ordinance could neuer worke them in vs. It may bee indeed that Gods hand lying heauy vpō vs in the time of sicknesse and fearing worse iudgements in the life to come we may be moued hereby to make a goodly shew and to vowe great reformation if we might bee restored to our health It may be that with Pharaoh we may make a fained confession of our sinnes and promise to amend if this iudgement may be remoued or that we may with Achab outwardly humble our selues before God to the end we may escape those fearefull punishments which are threatned in his word but it is a thousand to one if we then truly repent who haue liued our whole time in impenitency or then turne vnto God if wee were not before that time effectually called and conuerted for as wee liue so wee commonly die neither is it likely that hauing led our liues like wicked Balaam we should die the death of the righteous that hauing alwaies hitherto been thornes and thistles we should now bring forth sweet figges and pleasant grapes when wee are ready to be cut downe and to be cast into the fire that hauing all our life sowed the seedes of wickednesse we should at our death reape the fruit of godlinesse And therefore as the Apostle exhorteth let vs not be deceiued God is not mocked for whatsoeuer a man soweth that shall he also reape for he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption but he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirite reape life euerlasting as it is Gal. 6.7.8 Let vs now turne vnto God while he calleth vs and graunteth vs the meanes of our conuersion the ministerie of his word now is the acceptable time now is the day of our saluation and if wee will now turne vnto God and truly repent whilest we might continue in our sinnes we may be assured our repentance is true and vnfained and not pressed out of vs with sence of present paine nor forced with feare of future punishment and that turning to God wee shal be receaued to grace and mercy seeing we then offer to serue him when wee might haue serued Sathan the world and our owne corrupt flesh CHAP. XXX Two letts which hinder worldlings from speedy repentance remooued § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning these Motiues whereby wee may bee perswaded to speedie repentance The first let is the misaplying of Gods mercy and gratious promisee all which the worldly secure man wardeth and beareth of with a double fence so as they can neuer beate him downe with true humilitie nor pearce his heart with vnfained sorrow for sinne the one is by alleadging Gods mercy manifestly declared vnto vs in the sweet promises of the Gospel the other by obiecting the example of the conuerted thiefe who though hee had spent his whole life in sinne and wickednesse yet at the last hower was receiued to mercy For the first Ezech. 13.32 33.11 Math. 9.13 Math. 11.28 hath not the Lord will they say protested in his word that he desireth not the death of a sinner but that he turne from his way and liue hath not our Sauiour tould vs that he came not to cal the righteous but sinners to repentance and doth he not inuite such vnto him as labour vnder the heauie burthen of sinne promising that hee will ease them And hath not the Apostle Paul taught vs 1. Tim. 2.4 that Gods will is that all men should be saued and come to the knowledge of his trueth Seeing therefore God is so mercifull why should we doubt of our saluation Why should we feare to deferre our repentance follow our pleasures and delights for a time seeing the Lord will receiue vs to mercy whensoeuer we turne vnto him The first let remoued I answere first that though al this were certaine true and not to bee doubted of yet it is a most vnthankefull part and horrible ingratitude against our gracious God and louing father to take occasion of his mercie the more to offend him as before I haue shewed Secondly I answere that as God hath shewed his mercy in the gratious promises of the Gospell so also he hath as plainely declared his iustice in the seuere threatnings of the law and he is as true in the one as in the other And therefore all the question is who shal tast of his mercy and who of his iustice seing that is promised to some and this threatned against others or rather in truth it is without all question for the Lord hath plainely shewed in his word that hee will extend his mercy to all repentant sinners and to them onely and that he will declare his iustice in powring out his iust iudgements vpon the wicked who liue in their sinnes and especially vpon those who take occasion of Gods mercie to continue in their vnrepentancie despising the riches of his bountifulnes his patience long suffering for hereby they heape vnto themselues wrath against the day of wrath and the declaration of the iust iudgmēt of God as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 2.4.5 Though then there be neuer so many sweet promises in the gospel yet they who continue in their sinnes without repentance can reape no true comfort by them because they are not made to them but to repentant sinners and on the other side though there be neuer so many terrible threatnings denounced in the law yet the paenitent sinner need not to feare them seeing they are threatned onely against those who continue in their impaenitencie though God be of infinit mercy let not the wicked man who liueth in his sinnes presume seeing it is sufficiently declared in pardoning the sinnes of repentant sinners Neither let him who is truly paenitent despaire because God is of infinite iustice seeing it is sufficiently manifested in punishing the sinnes of those who continue in their vnrepentancie let not him who is turned vnto God from his wicked waies feare Gods iustice for it is fully satisfied in Christ and therefore it shall neuer attach him neither let him who continueth in his sinnes without repentance hope in Gods mercy for it doth not belong vnto him nor yet in the sweet promises of the Gospell which though they be neuer so generall yet are they alwaies to be restrained to the condition of the couenant of grace faith and repentance And this is manifest in the places before alleaged which worldly men so much abuse to nourish in them carnall
securitie for whereas the Lord saith Ezech. 33.11 That he will not the death of a sinner he addeth in the next wordes but that he turne from his way and liue so that the Lord speaketh not of all sinners but of those who turne vnto him from their wicked waies So our sauiour Christ saith Math. 9.13 that hee came not to call the righteous that is those who are iust righteous in their owne conceipts but sinners to repentance so that whosoeuer are called vnto Christ that in him they may haue saluation are called also to repentance And Math. 11.28 our sauiour doth not call all sinners vnto him without difference but those onely who are wearie and heauy laden that is who find their sinnes irksome and grieuous vnto them and desire nothing more then to be freed of this vnsupportable burthen And the Apostle Paule likewise 1. Tim. 2.4 doth not say simply that God would haue all men to besaued but that he would also 〈◊〉 haue them come to the knowledge of the truth that is to the knowing acknowledging beleeuing of the principles of Christian religion cōcerning God themselues and the worke of redemption wrought by Christ Let therefore no carnall secure man take occasion to presume vpon Gods mercy in regard of the sweet and gratious promises of the Gospell for vnlesse they turne vnto God from their euill waies and truely repent them of their sinnes vnlesse they are wearie and heauie laden desiring nothing more then to be eased of their heauie burthen vnlesse they come out of their blind ignorance and attaine to the knowledge of the truth the gratious promises of the Gospell do not appertaine vnto them § Sect. 2 Secondly whereas they alleadge the example of the thiefe conuerted at the hower of death we are to know that this is but one particular act of Gods mercy The 2. let is presumption vpon the example of the conuerted thiefe and therefore we can make thereof no generall rule especialy seeing to this one we may oppose many thousands of those who hauing deferred their repētance to the last hower haue beene taken away in their sinns and impaenitencie It is true indeed that if with this thiefe we truelyturne vnto the Lord by vnfained repentance and shew our faith by the like liuely fruites he wil pardon our sinnes and receaue vs to mercy according to his gratious promises but this faith and repentance are not in our owne power but the free gifts of God which hee very seldome bestoweth on those at the hower of death who haue neglected contemned them their whole liues sometimes indeed hee calleth and conuerteth some at the last hower to shew the infinite riches of his mercy but most commonly he leaueth those who haue deferred their repentance to die in their impaenitencie that they may be examples of his iustice And to this purpose Austine speaketh well there is saith hee mention made in the Scriptures of one whome the Lord receaued to mercy that none might despaire and but of one that none might presume It is the maner of princes to send their gratious pardon sometimes to those who are led out to execution but if any will wilfully offend in hope hereof or hauing offended wil deferre to sue for his pardon to the last hower surely he is well worthy to be hanged both for his offence and also for his presumption so the Lord mercifully pardoneth some few when death is ready to cease vpon them and to transport them into the eternall torments of hell fire to shew the riches of his grace but if any shall take occasion hereby the more to offend against his maiestie or hauing offended deferreth to sue for pardon by powring out the teares of vnfained repentance vntill his last hower hee is vndoubtedly vnworthy of any grace and mercy and in all likelihood he shall be deliuered vp to suffer eternal torments Moreouer as this act of mercy in receiuing this thiefe to grace was very extraordinary so was it reserued as being most fit for the time of Christes passion for as great Princes at the time of their coronation pardon such notorious offences the like whereof they wil hardly euer after remit to the end that their clemencie and mercy may appeare to all so our Sauiour Christ the glorious king of heauen and earth being ready to lay downe the forme of a seruant and to take vpon him the crowne of endlesse glory and maiesty gaue his gratious pardon to this greeuous offender that his infinite mercy and goodnesse might be manifested vnto al men that so they might breake of their sinnes by vnfained repentance and by a liuely faith come vnto him looking and expecting for life and saluation onely in this their sauiour and redeemer and as cunning Surgeons hauing made a soueraigne salue do vpon the next occasion make experiment thereof by curing some griesly and desperate wound that so they may commend it to all who shal haue need to vse it so the Lord hauing made a pretious plaister and soueraigne salue to cure all soules who being wounded with sinne will apply it vnto them by a liuely faith presētly tooke occasion of curing there with this poore theefe grieuously wounded with sinne that all others in his state seing the vertue thereof might more earnestly desire it and more carefully seeke after and apply it to their wounded soules And therefore seeing the occasion of this cure was altogether extraordinary the action is not like to bee ordinarie the occasion being remooued and the mercy of God and vertue of Christes death and bloodshed being sufficiently manifested to al the world Thirdly we are to know that the estate of these men is farre vnlike and much more desperate then the state of the conuerted theefe for hee was in all likelihood neuer before this time called and presently he harkeneth vnto the voyce of Christ and willingly intertaineth the good motions of his spirit but these men being often called haue refused to come and haue quenched the good motions of Gods spirit he persisted in his sin ignorantly hauing not heard the doctrine of the Gospell whereby he might be inuited to come vnto Christ by a liuely faith and might turne vnto God by vnfained repentance these haue often heard these glad tidings and haue neglected and contemned them hee continued in his sinnes through ignorance neither did hee vngratefully resolue to serue the diuell his whole life reseruing the time of his old age and sicknesse for the seruice of God only for his own aduantage but these men hauing bin oftē instructed in the law of God and wayes of godlinesse notwithstanding wittingly and wil fully persist in their sinns presuming vppon repentance and hope of mercy at the last houre intending then to turne vnto God not for any loue they beare him but for feare of hel torments and eternall damnation lastly his repentance was most vnfayned and exceeding earnest and his faith brightly shined presently after his
repentant and beleeuing sinners let vs vnfainedly turne vnto the Lord and apply Christ and his meritts vnto vs by a true liuely faith and then we may assure our selues that he will pardon and forgiue vs al our sinnes and receaue vs gratiously into his loue and fauour § Sect. 5 But against this which hath beene alleaged That al Gods promises are made indefinitely to all that beleeue Sathan wil be ready to obiect to the afflicted conscience that these promises were made to the prophets apostles and holy men of God but not to such haynous and rebellious sinners who haue most iustly deserued that God should poure out vppon them the violls of his wrath and those fearefull punishments threatned in the law because of the innumerable number of their sinnes and the outragiousnesse of their wickednesse and therefore such haue nothing to doe with the sweet promisses of the Gospell but are to apply vnto themselues the terrible threatnings denounced in the law against such grieuous sinners For the answering of which tentation wee are to know that the Lords promises made in the Gospell are general indefinite and vniuersall excluding none who turne from their sinnes by vnfained repentance and beleeue in Christ Iesus resting on him alone for their saluation Neither is there any limitation or exception of this or that sinne for be they neuer so greiuous and manifold yet if wee performe the condition of faith and repentance the Lord will make good his promises vnto vs. For the first namely that the promises of the gospell are indefinite and generally made to al who repent and beleeue it shall manifestly appeare if wee consider the particulars Esa 55.1 the Lord calleth all vnto him indefinitly saying to euery one who thirsteth come to the waters and yee that haue no siluer come buy and eate Come I say buy wine and milke with out siluer and without money so that though we haue no worthinesse and righteousnesse of our owne yet if we thirst after the mercy of God and righteousnesse of Christ and come vnto God by vnfained repentance and vnto our sauiour by a liuely faith our thirst shall be satisfiyed and all our wantes supplyed So Ezech. 33.11 the Lord solemnely sweareth that hee will not the death of a sinner but that they turne from their wicked wayes and liue where hee speaketh not of this or that sinner but of all without exception who turne vnto him Our sauiour Christ likewise maketh this indefinite promise Marke 16.16 that whosoeuer shal beleeue and be baptised shal be saued and Iohn 3.14 he saith that as Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lift vp 15. that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternal life So that as al who were stunge of the fyrie serpent were healed if they looked vpon the brasen serpent neither was their any exceptiō or distinctiō between those who were deeply or but a little pearsed with the sting for if they were stūg they died if they vsed not the remedy ordained of God though their wound were but small and shallow but if they looked vp to the brasen serpent according to God ordināce they were cured though their wound were neuer so deadly and desperate so those who looke not vpon Christ Iesus hanging on the crosse with the eye of faith are sure to fall into euerlasting death and damnation bee their sinnes neuer so few and on the other side they who lay hould vpon Christ and beleeue in him are sure to bee saued though their sins bee neuer so many and grieuous So in the 16. verse it is said that God so loued the world that hee hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life and ve 36. He that beleeueth in the sonne hath euerlasting life c. So that here is no exception of sinnes for the promises are made indefinitely to all that beleeue In like maner our Sauiour hath promised Iohn 6.37 That whosoeuer come vnto him hee will not cast them away and ve 40. he assureth vs that it is the will of his father who sent him that euery man who beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life And the Apostle Peter Actes 10.43 saith that vnto our Sauiour Christ giue all the prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeue in him shall haue remission of sinnes And the Apostle Iohn likewise saith 1. Ioh. 2.1 that if any man sinne wee haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world that is for whosoeuer repent and beleeue of euery kingdome countrey and nation So that by all these places it is cleare and euident that none are excluded from being partakers of Gods mercifull promises but those who exclude themselues through their infidelitie and vnrepentancie § Sect. 6 Neyther is there any sins so innumerable in multitude so hainous grieuous which will debarre vs from receiuing the benefit of Gods mercie and Christs merites so wee repent and beleeue That our sins cannot debarre vs of Gods mercy so we repent and beleeue as may appeare also by plaine testimonie Esay 1.18 the Lord thus speaketh to the Iewes whom hee had described to bee rebellious and most outragiously wicked Come now saith the Lord let vs reason together though your sinnes were as crimson they shal be made white as snow though they were red as scarlet they shal be as wooll The Apostle Paul likewise witnesseth Tit. 2.14 that our sauiour Christ gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie And the Apostle Iohn saith that the bloud of Christ cleanseth vs from all sinne and if wee acknowledge our sinnes he is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes 1. Ioh. 17.9 and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse So that here is no mention made of any sinnes which are excepted or which exclude vs from Gods mercy Christs merits so that we repent beleeue neither are the promises of the Gospell limited or restrained in respect of the number or greeuousnesse of our sinnes so we performe the conditiō of faith and repentance for whosoeuer is hartily sorie for his sinnes past and purposeth for the time to come to leaue and forsake them whosoeuer doth beleeue Gods promises and resteth vpon Christ Iesus alone for his saluation by a true and liuely faith he may be certainly assured that the Lord hath pardoned and forgiuen all his sinnes and receaued him into his grace and fauour though his sinnes be neuer so many and hainous and on the other side whosoeuer continueth in his vnrepentancie and infidelitie shal be condemned though his other sinnes be neuer so few and small neither will all our other sinnes debarre vs of Gods mercy vnlesse they bee ioyned with vnrepentancie and vnbeliefe for obserue
calleth vnto them and hee in whose power it was euery minute vtterly to destroy them first of all desireth a parley he who might well abhorre to vouchsafe them his presence earnestly desireth conference with them saying ver 18. Come now and let vs reason together saith the Lord though your sinnes were as crimson they shall bee made as white as snow though they were red like searlet they shall be as wool § Sect. 6 The example of the Israelites in the time of our sauiour Christ In like manner in the time of our sauiour Christ the same Iewes most wickedly rebelled against the Lorde for when the Lord in his rich mercy sent the promised Messias to deliuer them out of the handes of their enemies they would not receiue him nay they continually afflicted and persecuted him they mocked and reuiled him they haled him before the iudgment seate and caused him to bee condemned who came to iustifie and acquite them they buffeted and whipped him and preferred a wicked murtherer before him who preferred their saluation before his owne life lastly in most ignominious sort they crucified and killed him After all which outragious wickednesse offered against the Lord of life they continued in their hardnesse of heart and impaenitencie neuer acknowledging their fault not desiring pardon nay rather as they had persecuted the head our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ so when they could offer no more wrong vnto him in his owne person they were ready to satisfie and glutt their malicious rage in persecuting his poore members Now what more hellish impietie was euer committed what more outragious sinne was euer heard of who would euer haue imagined that there was any hope of pardon for such rebellious bloudy wretches but O the infinite and bottomelesse depth of Gods mercy whilest their wickednesse was fresh in memorie and their hands still imbrewed in the guiltlesse bloud of this innocent Lambe when as they continued in their course and ran headlong forward in their wickednes without any sence of sin or desire of pardon the Lord sent his apostles vnto them to bring them to repentance and to assure them that their sinnes were pardoned Act. 2.38 Seeing therefore these obtained the remission of their sinnes who needs to doubt of pardon who earnestly desires it for did the Lord gratioussy offer forgiuenesse to such rebellious wretches and will hee not graunt it to lesse offenders if they desire it did he offer them mercy before they sought it and will he denie mercy vnto any who earnestly seeke and sue for it Doth hee seeke to draw men to repentance and to turne vnto him and will he not receiue them when they doe repent was he so exceeding mercifull in times past and shall we now thinke his arme shortned or his mercy abated Nay assuredly he is immutable euer like himselfe one and the same most gratious most merciful full of all goodnesse and compassion towards all them that come vnto him And therefore if we turne from our sinnes by vnfained repentance wee may assure our selues though they be neuer so many and grieuous they shal be pardoned and we receaued into Gods loue and fauour § Sect. 7 To these examples of whole multitudes Particular examples of Gods mercy we may ad the examples of particular sinners who haue beene receyued to mercy and obteined pardon though their sinnes haue beene many and grieuous as Matthew Zacheus Leui who were sinfull Publicans that got their liuings by pilling polling oppression and extortion men so notoriously wicked that Publicans and sinners are ioyned together as though they were sinners by profession and therefore as Synonima or diuers words of one signification they interprete one another And yet such was the riches of Gods mercy that euen these professed sinners were conuerted and receiued remission of all their outragious wickednesse The like may bee said of Mary Magdalene who though shee had beene a woman of lewde behauiour and loose life though she were possessed of many diuels and commonly noted for an infamous and notorious sinner yet vpon her true repentance obtained the remission of her sinnes and whilest she washed the feet of our sauiour Christ with her teares hee purged and cleansed her body and soule from the filthy leprosie of sinne with his owne most pretious bloud whilest she wiped them with the haires of her head he beautified and adorned her with the rich robe of his righteousnesse Yea she was receiued into an high degree of fauour with our sauiour Christ so as shee had in some things the preheminence before his chiefe Apostels for after Christes rising againe he first vouchsafed her his presence and vsed her as his messenger to certifie the rest of his resurrection So likewise the Apostle Paul before his calling was not onely no louer but a bitter and fierce persecuter of the truth and of all the professours thereof imprisoning stoning and cruelly murthering the Saints of God but behold and admire the wonderfull mercy of God euen whilest his imbrued hands were yet red with the bloud of Gods faithfull children and whilest his heart was so full of burning rage that hee breathed out still threatnings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord it pleased God wonderfully to conuert him to assure him of the remission of all these his horrible sinnes and to make him of a bloudie persecuter a most excellent preacher of his Gospell and of a rauenous deuouring wolfe a most vigilant and painefull shepheard To these wee might adde the example of the theefe who though he had spent his whole life wickedly prophanely yet was conuerted at the howre of death and receauing the pardon of his sinnes was presently assured of euerlasting happinesse But I shall not need to heape vp many particulars onely I can not passe that notable example of Manasses one of the most outragious sinners and prophanest wretch that euer liued as the holy Ghost hath described him in the 21. 2. Kings 21. chap. of the 2. booke of the Kings For there he affirmeth of him that he was a most horrible idolater a most malitious enemy and cruell persecuter of Gods truth a defiler of Gods holy temple a sacrificer of his owne children vnto idols that is diuels a notable witch and wicked sorcerer a bloudy murtherer of exceeding many the deare Saints and true Prophets of the Lord one who did not runne headlong alone into all hellish impietie but also ledd the people vnder his gouerment out of the way to doe more wickedly then did the Heathen people whom the Lord distroied before the children of Israel and in a word wrought more abominations and outragious wickednesse then the cursed Amorites and Cananites of whom notwithstanding the land surfetted and spued them out for their crying sins And yet this Manasses this wretch more like a diuell incarnate then a Saint of God repenting him of his sinnes from the bottome of his heart was receaued I cannot speake
and the Lord withdraweth his assisting hand from the proud to the end that hee may learne to be more humble by his grieuous falles yea he resisteth him and therefore how is it possible that he should stand but contrariwise he giueth grace to the humble and filleth him who acknowledgeth his own emptinesse with good things 1. Pet. 5.5 Luk. 1.53 but the proud who is full in his owne conceit he fendeth emptie away § Sect. 14 That we may be moued to rest on Christ alone Secondly he leaueth in vs corruptions and imperfections to the end that wee should not rest in our owne righteousnes for our iustification and saluation which though it were as great as Adams in the state of innocencie yet it were no sure ground to rest vpon but in the alone righteousnesse of Christ Iesus which is all-sufficient and a foundation so vnremoueable that all the power of hell cannot ouerturne it nor any that are built vpon it Vpon which sure pillar wee would hardly relie so long as we haue in our hand the reede of our owne righteousnesse wee being naturallie inclined rather to seeke for saluation in our selues than elsewhere § Sect. 15 That we may be exercised in the Christian warfare Thirdly he leaueth in vs these spirituall enemies that wee may exercise our selues in fighting against them and so bee kept from idlenesse the mother and nurse of all euill and as he would not at once cast out the Canaanites before the Israelites but by little and little least the land should grow vnto a wildernesse and the wilde beasts should multiplie against them so he would not suddenly cast out our spirituall enemies but suffreth vs to preuaile against them by little and little least giuing our selues vnto idlenesse when there is no opposition made against vs there grow in vs as in a wildernes the noysome weeds and thornes of sin and the wild beasts of all outragious wickednesse which would deuoure and vtterly destroy vs. Whereas contrariwise when wee are assaulted outwardly with the forces of sathan and the world and inwardly with the flesh and our natural corruptions we haue enemies against whom wee may exercise our faith affiance hope patience courage and all other graces which we haue receiued and by exercise increase them wee fight the Lords battailes like his valiant souldiers and being assisted by his holie spirit wee obtaine victorie and with our conquest a more excellent crowne of eternall glorie Reuel 2.26.27 and 3.21 as appeareth Reuel 2.26 27. and 3.21 § Sect. 16 Lastly he suffereth vs to be molested and vexed with the reliques of our sinnes That we may be moued to loath the world and to long for eternall life that hereby he may make vs to loath this world and vale of miserie wherein we can doe nothing but breake the commaundements of our deare louing father and may be moued to desire that heauenly life in Gods kingdome when hauing laid aside all corruption we shall be indued with all perfection and be fully enabled to performe such obedience vnto God as he requireth For seeing sinne is not fully vanquished till it be subdued by our death nor we euer at rest and free from the assaults thereof till we rest in the graue therefore the children of God are content to forsake the world because they can no otherwise forsake their sinnes and desire rather to indure death than they would haue sinne to liue with them as appeareth in the example of the Apostle Paul Phil. 1.22.23 Phil. 1.22.23 § Sect. 17 And thus haue I shewed the wisedome and power of God who turneth euen the sinnes of his children to their good The conclusion of the former point which are in their owne nature euill and therefore though we are continually to bewaile them to desire by al meanes to be freed from them yet we are not desperatly to sinke vnder them not daring to encounter them seeing now they cannot condemne vs nay not so much as hurt vs but rather are so ordered by Gods all-wise prouidence that they serue for the manifestation of his glorie and furthering of our saluation so that we doe not with willing delight nor slauish feare yeeld vnto them but to the vttermost of our power make resistance and desire and indeauour to ouercome them § Sect. 18 Now in the fist and last place let vs consider The last consolation taken from our assured victorie against sinne that though our flesh be neuer so strong and the innumerable corruptions thereof seeme vnresistable and though on the other side our spirituall man seeme neuer so weake and feeble yet we are not hereby to be discouraged seeing the regenerate part shall most certainely obtaine the victorie in the end though in the conflict it receiueth many foyles And though this little Dauid seeme in the eyes of a carnall Saul to be farre to weake and altogether vnable to encounter that great Goliah the flesh with the powerfull lusts thereof yet in the end it will most certainly preuaile and get the conquest because the spirit is the Lords champion which goeth out in the name of the Lord to sight against his enemies the flesh the diuels souldier who is Gods enemie That is strengthened and supported with the power of God which being insinit is vnresistable this by the power of Sathan and the world whose power is finite and so restrained and ouerruled by Gods might that they cannot stirre without his leaue and permission Vnlesse therefore we would blasphemously imagine that the flesh and his assistants are of greater power than God himselfe or that God will suffer this disgrace that his champion should be ouerthrowne by his professed enemies we may most certainely assure our selues that we shall get the day and obtaine a famous victorie And therefore let not Sathan discourage vs by setting before our eyes our owne weaknesse and the mightie oppositions which are made against vs but arming our selues with the christian armour and trusting wholy in the power of Gods might let vs valiantly incounter our spirituall enemies and neuer giue ouer fighting till by death we haue giuen vnto them a finall ouerthrow and so shall we be crowned with an vnualuable crowne of immortall glorie CHAP. VIII Sathans temptations drawne from our slow progresse in sanctification answered § Sect. 1 ANd so much for answering Sathans temptations Sathans temptation grounded vpon our little profiting in christiantie drawne from the reliques of sinne which remaine in vs and the small measure of our sanctification the second temptation whereby he laboreth to discourage the weake christian from going forward in his course of true godlinesse he taketh from his slow progresse and slacke proceedings in sanctification vpon which occasion he thus assaulteth him Thou laborest much will he say and toylest thy selfe with intollerable paines that thou maiest become a sanctified man but all in vaine for though thou hearest the word often and readest much
what sharper spur to pricke vs forward in the course of godlinesse than to know and consider that by our sanctification and holinesse of life we are certainely assured that God hath elected vs to be heires of the vnspeakable ioyes of his kingdome and that by our wickednesse and profanesse wee haue no lesse certaine assurance that we shall haue our portion for euer in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone for if wee liue holily like true christians on earth we shall liue happily like glorious Angels in heauen but if here we lie forzen in the dregges of our sins without any sense of sorrow for those which are past or any desire and purpose of heart to forsake them in the time to come we shall be thrust from the Lord amongst the workers of iniquitie and the wrath of God shall pursue ouertake and consume vs. What sinne therefore can be so pleasant to our taste which this consideration will not make more bitter than wormewood what dutie of holinesse and righteousnesse so displeasant and grieuous which this will not make sweete and delightfull § Sect. 11 Now that we may not deceiue our selues with a counterfait holinesse Diuers kinds of counter sait holinesse which giue no assurance of our election in sted of true sanctification we are to know that this assurance of saluation doth not proceede from euery kinde of holinesse but from that which is true and vnfained for there is an holinesse of the tongue seuered from the holinesse of the heart in shew but not in deede in professiō but not in practise there is an holinesse in performing outward duties of Gods seruice seuered frō righteousnes towards our bretherē there is an holines in leauing some or the most sins without any desire or purpose to forsake some one or two sins by which we receiue greatest pleasure or profit there is an holines in tything mint and cummin which neglecteth the waightie things of the law and which maketh cleane the outside of the platter cup leauing the inside full of rapine and excesse and outwardly maketh a glorious golden shew when as within there is nothing but putrefaction and rottennes there is an holines which consisteth in the pharisaicall censuring of poore publicanes and in extolling our owne vertues The first kinde is of those whom the prophet reproueth Esa 29.13 Esa 29.13 who drew neere vnto God with their lips when as their hearts were farre from him and of those whom the Apostle brandeth 2. Tim. 3.5 2. Tim. 3.5 who make a shew of godlinesse but in their liues deny the power thereof in which ranke many professors also in these daies may fitly march The second kinde is of those who are content to serue God in the outward duties of his worship because they finde them good cheape yea often gainefull but cannot away with righteousnesse because that is sometimes painefull and sometimes requireth cost And these men in stead of making godlinesse their gaine make a gaine of godlinesse The third kinde is Herods holinesse who heard Iohn gladly and did many things yet could not abide to leaue his incest and such holinesse is in some now adaies who will be content to leaue all grosse outward sinnes so they may continue in their couetousnesse or voluptuousnesse The fourth is the holinesse of those pharisies which are most zealouse in ceremonies and their owne traditions but key colde in those duties which most concerne Gods glorie and their neighbours good The last kinde was the holinesse of the auncient pharisies and is the holinesse of our new brownists who place the most of their religion in censuring and condemning the corruptions of the Church and misdemeanors of priuate men not looking into their owne sinnes of hellish pride bitternesse enuie and want of charitie § Sect. 12 But none of these no nor yet all these ioyned together will euer giue vnto vs any sound assurance of our election The fruites and properties of true sanctification but it is that true sanctification indeede which beginneth not in the mouth but in the heart and sanctifieth our will and affections making vs to loue and to imbrace to our vttermost power vertue and godlinesse and to abhorre and flee from sinne and iniquitie and from the heart it proceedeth to the tongue and hands making the word of God and all holy conferences honie in the mouth and inciting vs to the practise of that which we professe It alwaies approueth golden pietie to be pure and without mixture of the drosse of hipocrifie by the touch stone of righteousnesse it is as carefull in approuing the heart and secret actions vnto God as the outward actions vnto men it causeth vs to hate as well one sinne as another and that sinne most of all into which we are most prone by nature to fall though it bring neuer so much pleasure and profit it embraceth afflicted godlinesse when it is attended with losse pouertie and shame as well as when it is waited vpon with gaine pleasure and the praise of men it is very charitable in censuring the faults of others but most seuere and strict in iudging and condemning the sinnes which our selues haue committed And therefore if our sanctification haue these properties we may most certainly be assured thereby that wee are elected and shall be saued but if these be wanting it is but a counterfeit holinesse which affoordeth no such assurance The miserable estate of those who haue not so much as a shew of godlinesse Now if this be true what hope can they haue who haue not so much as a shew of godlinesse how desperate is their state who euen in outward apparance shew nothing but wickednesse and prophanesse If the figge tree which beareth faire greene leaues be accursed what curses what miscrie and wretchednesse are they to beare and suffer who haue not so much as leaues that is an outward profession of godlinesse If Herod be a damned wretch in hell who heard Iohn the Baptist willingly and did many things according to his doctrine because he nourished one sinne in his bosome what fearefull condemnation are they to expect who contemne and neglect Gods word not thinking it worth the hearing and cannot finde in their hearts to submit themselues to the obedience of any part thereof neither will be brought to forsake any one sin wherewith they are delighted till it leaue them And yet such is the blind ignorance carnall securitie and vaine presumption of such men that they will not sticke to bragge that they are sure of Gods loue and that they are elected to saluation though there bee no shew of reason whereupon they may probably ground their foolish perswasion But the truth is that whilest they continue in this damnable estate consolation it selfe can not giue vnto them any true comfort for without sanctification there is no hope of election or saluation and seeing the Lord hath elected vs that wee should be holie