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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A74767 Gods gracious thoughts tovvards great sinners. Homes, Nathanael, 1599-1678. 1647 (1647) Thomason E385_22; ESTC R201472 32,054 44

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had those thoughts of grace and favour 2. God is pleased to propose to us his Justice conditionally upon our obstinacy against mercy So all along the Scripture But holds forth his offer of mercy absolutely without any condition of ours Isai 55.1 Isai 43.25 Revel 22.17 If at any time there be any sound of a condition it is one of his own making and in-making in us subordinate not opposit to free grace Ephes 2.8 And he that thinks to save thinks to give faith 3. God is pleased to signifie to us that he loves to have his mercy rejoyce over his justice Jam. 2.13 Grace glorieth It is the glory of Gods mercy that it preventeth judgement 4. In that God hates sinne and hath justice to punish it he hath provided a Saviour to remove the guilt and filth of sinne 1 Cor. 1. last save one 2 Cor. 5. last He made Christ taking our nature upon him and sanctifying it and making atonement in it to be sin for us that we might be made the righteousnesse of God On him he laid the iniquities of us all Isai 53. And on us he laid the righteousnesse of God 2 Cor. 5. last The righteousnesse of God therefore good enough to be acceptable to himselfe and great enough being infinite to appease him for the finite unrighteousnesse of man 5. And lastly God doth love to dignifie the second Adam above the first yea to make Christ the plaister more soveraigne then Adam the soare can be malignant Rom. 5. 1 Cor. 15. It 's the businesse of those two Chapters The upshot of all is set down in golden Letters Rom. 5. Two last verses Where sinne abounded grace did much more abound That as sinne hath reigned unto death so might grace REIGNE mark the phrase through righteousnesse unto eternall life by Jesus Christ our Lord. By which it appeares that as heretofore sin did reigne over us so now Gods gracious favour through Christs righteousnesse should reigne over our sinnes And that the benefit might be imparted to poore sinners abounding with sinne God would make his grace of favour much more to abound Of which see more in that glorious Scripture 1 Tim. 1.14 2. Exercise faith upon the birth of these thoughts of mercy Namely that as they are conceived from Gods most excellent sweet nature so they are brought to the birth of a gracious predestinatiō appointment purpose or choosing Rom. 8.29 Whom he did foreknow out of those thoughts of mercy that were conceived in his sweet nature he did predestinate and appoint What to doe or be To be made conformable to his Sonne Christ Jesus They should be according to their capacitie in no worse condition then his Sonne Jesus Christ Ephes 1.3 4 5. Hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly places or things in Christ According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world having predestinated us unto the Adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will See here the good will of God is the rise of predestination and predestination is the rise of choosing of purpose see presently Those purposes of God are free unconstrained unnecessitated they arise out of his own free nature and good will Ephes 1.11 In whom that is in Christ wee have obtained an inheritance being predetion did according to the purpose of him that worketh all things according to the Counsell of his own will Observe he saith not according to the Counsell of his understanding As if he would know find and consider something in us But according to the Counsell of his own will His good will and sweet inclination to poore sinners is that which puts forth these thoughts of grace and favour So that as in Isai 43.25 He assures us that as he can love himselfe so he can blot out sinnes So here he doth warrant us that as he cannot be of another nature but as the Angel sang Good will to men he is of a sweet and mercifull disposition so he purposeth salvation to poore sinners 2. These purposes of favour are unmoveable and unchangeable 2 Tim. 2.19 Neverthelesse though false-hearted Hymeneus and Philetus fall off the foundation of God standeth sure having this seale The Lord knoweth who are his So that against all feares of change this becomes an assurance that whom he loves he loves to the end Joh. 13.1 With him saith James is no shadow of changeing And this second particular the birth of Gods gracious thoughts with the properties answers many objections that might arise For God is not unresolved to save them whom he loves in his everlasting thoughts as a man is unresolved oft times whether to have her whom he loves God is unmoveable from his purposes of mercy by any thing that is in us or from us Object But in Gods purpose and predestination lyes also his reprobation and that breeds doubts and feares in us Answ 1. It is true that when God electeth some consequently he passeth by others But this preterition passing by or non-election doth onely leave men to shift for themselves it doth not passe any condemnation upon them that are omitted For it were unjust with God to our understanding to purpose to condemne his creature without an eye and relation to some wrong the creature should doe him So that it is some other thought beyond that of passing by that reprobates which wee call predamnation or fore-condemning Which is that God foreseeing any man to sinne obstinately and perpetually against the means of grace offered to him on him God puts forth a purpose of condemning him God doth elect freely because we cannot doe the least imperfect good as all is imperfect but from the gift and power of Gods goodnesse But reprobation is for the desert of sinne because wee can as Adam did most freely and fully sinne of our selves A Magistrate rewards some subjects freely though they have done some good For they had their life livelihood education c. under their good government to doe that good And the good it selfe is a sufficient allurement vertue being lovely enough in it selfe and a sufficient reward of it selfe every vertue yeelding at least a certain Inward quietation of minde as the Heathen Philosopher confesseth as also an outward honour among Civill honest men and therefore Honor dicitur ab honestate Honour hath its derivation of name and thing from honesty But the Magistrate cannot with any justice condemne or punish any Subject nor have a purpose so to doe but as he hath an eye upon and evidence of that mans transgressing By the same proportion with infinite more exactnesse God doth purpose and elect to salvation freely but cannot purpose to reprobate any to condemnation but upon sure evidence that such will sinne impenitently against the meanes of grace 2 Chron. 36.11 12 13 14 15 16. Pro. 29.1 But you will say that Gods passing by those that are not elected doth put a necessitie that