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A36343 A door opening into Christian religion, or, A brief account by way of question and answer of some of the principal heads of the great mystery of Christian religion wherein is shewed by the way that the great doctrines here asserted are no wayes repugnant, but sweetly consonant unto the light of nature and principles of sound reason / by a cordiall well-wisher to that unity and peace which are no conspiratours against the truth. Cordiall well-wisher to that unity and peace which are no conspiratours against the truth.; Cordiall well-wisher to that unity and peace which are no conspiratours against the truth. Of the sacraments. 1662 (1662) Wing D1909; ESTC R26732 293,130 633

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and goodnesse of God which leadeth men that is is apt and proper to lead men yea and doth actually lead or bring some men unto Repentance and consequently to blesse them with the great blessing of forgivenesse of sins or justification Act. 3.19 Act. 5.31 Luk. 24.47 2 Pet. 3.9 hath alwaies been and is yet daily exercised towards and amongst the Heathen Sixthly That though there be neither Salvation nor Justification in or by any other then Christ only Act. 4.12 Yet both the one and the other may be obtained by him without the knowledge of him or belief in him by name and that the generality of the godly Jews of old were both justified and saved by him upon these tearms neither knowing him nor believing in him by his Name Seventhly and lastly that though many Heathens have neither heard the sound nor seen the sight of the letter of the Gospel yet there is none of them but have frequently had the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as the Apostles word is in a like case Rom. 2.15 that is the effect or import of the Gospel preached or at least plainly intimated unto them otherwaies according to that of the Apostle Act. 14.16 17. Yea that patience and goodnesse of his which he exerciseth liberally towards them from day to day and by which he leadeth them unto Repentance as we lately heard is constructively preaching or a providential preaching of the Gospel or an holding forth of terms of reconciliation unto them The result from these particulars is that the Heathen are in some respect under the charge and command of the Gospel being all commanded to Repent Act. 17.30 and not altogether or only under the rigorous and exacting power of the Morall Law and consequently that such a Faith is required of them which God will impute unto them for Righteousnesse as he imputeth the Faith of those who live under the Orall Ministry of the Gospel unto them although it be not so well formed so articulate and distinct as this I might here add that it is the more generall and declared opinion of the best Protestant writers even theirs who are more hardned in their judgments against the Heathen then some others as well as of the ancient Fathers that God hath some that are his and that shall be saved in every Nation under Heaven This concession supposeth that God doth not bind himself with so much severity to the Orall Ministry or visible letter of the Gospel but that he sometimes worketh in men such a Faith which will both justifie and save them by preaching it unto them by the light of nature the goodnesse and bountifulnesse of his providence and works of Creation Quest 8. Why doth the Apostle call the giving of the Law the ministration of Death and of Condemnation 2 Cor. 3.7.9 When as you lately shewed from the Scriptures that Gods intentions therein were Evangelicall and gracious and the same Apostle likewise said elsewhere as you cited him that the end of the Commandement was love out of a pure heart and a good conscience and Faith unfeigned Answ As the Temple though one and the same building yet aspected the Heavens contrary waies one end of it looking towards the West the other towards the East one side towards the South the other towards the North so many actions and dispensations of God in respect of the contrary tempers and behaviours of men who are concerned in them are proper to produce not only differing but even opposite effects which in that respect are both of them said to be intended by God in his said dispensations though not with intentions of the same order God's intentions in sending Christ into the world were Evangelical and gracious in the highest Christ himself declaring them accordingly For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved Joh. 3.17 Yet in another place he saith For judgment am I come into this world c. Joh. 9.39 And Simeon concerning him whilest he was yet a child Behold this Child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel and for a sign which shall be spoken against Luk. 2.34 Gods sending Christ into the world was a proper dispensation and means to save those that should believe on him and it was no lesse proper to render those inexcusable worthy death that should reject him Therefore the Salvation of some and the judgment or condemnation of others are both asserted as the intentions of God in that great dispensation of sending him but the former the Salvation of men as his primary or antecedent intention the latter the Condemnation of men as his secondary or subsequent In like manner the giving of that Law being a dispensation and means proper both to awaken the consciences of men that are yet in their sins to consider that they are under the curse of God and so to provoke them to inquire after a way of deliverance and when they have found it to walk carefully and conscientiously in the prescripts of it and likewise to feal up and fully ratifie the condemnation of those that shall despise the Gospel or neglect to make diligent search how to escape the curse so peremptorily denounced in the Law against them ● in respect of the former Gods intentions in it may truly be said to be Evangelical and the end of it to be love out of a pure heart c. in respect of the latter it may as truly and properly be called the ministration of condemnation and of death Quest 9. How doth it appear that the Decalogue or Morall Law is binding unto any other persons or people but unto those of the Jewish Nation only considering that the Preface or Introduction to it relateth peculiarly unto them and seemeth to contain if not the only yet the principal ground of that obedience or subjection which is due from men unto it God spake all these words saying I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the House of Bondage Exod. 20.12 Answ That the Decalogue or Law we speak of bindeth to the observance of it at least as farre as it is Morall the consciences of all those that are under the band or engagement of the Gospel who as was lately though briefly proved are no fewer then the universe of mankind is evident from hence viz. because it is in the several parts or precepts of it incorporated as it were with the Gospel and made one substance or body of Doctrine with it Yea Gospel-exhortations and the duties herein enjoyned are sometimes pressed upon the consciences of Believers by the authority of the Law as requiring the same things of them 1 Cor. 9.8.9 Mat. 7.12 Mat. 22.37 38. 1 Joh. 3 4. Jam. 2.10 11. And the Lord Christ himself expresly saith That he came not to destroy the Law or the Prophets the Authorized Expounders of it nay he addeth I