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A47309 The practical believer, or, The articles of the Apostles Creed drawn out to form a true Christian's heart and practice in two parts. Kettlewell, John, 1653-1695. 1688 (1688) Wing K380_VARIANT; ESTC R36226 263,804 566

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and prejudicial as well as Criminal and inexcusable carelesness for Men so sloathfully and irreligiously to neglect the daily opportunities of Publick Prayers as God knows the generality do yea though under this neglect they do serve God at home and have Prayers daily in their own Families Quest. You speak of Communicating in Prayers tho' there be no Sermon Answ. Yes for certainly no man that comes to Church to serve God if he understand what that is can come more for Sermons than for Prayers sake 'T is for Prayers principally that we are to come to the House of God for my House is the House of Prayer says God Isa. 56. 7. and Mat. 21. 13. In these it is that God's Worship doth chiefly consist And by these especially the Saints of all Times and Places thought to worship God. And these above all our other Services our Mediator is careful to offer up to God from us that which he is represented as presenting at the Golden Altar from the Publick Assemblies being the Prayers of the Saints Rev. 8. 3 4. And therefore it shews a very untaught and ignorant as well as an Irreligious and Prophane Objector to pretend he will not go to Church because there is nothing but Prayers for that is one of the chief things for which he should go thither and the very Life and Spirit of our Service and Performance there Quest. But if we are bound thus not only to Unity of Doctrine but likewise to preserve Unity of Publick Worship and Communion what shall we think of Schism that is rending and dividing the Church either the whole Church or that part where we live and thereby makeing two Churches out of one Is it a Sin to Erect new Churches and separate in these Acts of Prayers and Sacraments from the Body of a Church or Nation Answ. Yes most certainly and a very great one except there be a just Cause of Separation For so at Corinth St. Paul told them whilst one was for Paul and another for Apollos and there were Divisions among them they were Carnal and walked as men 1 Cor. 3. 3 4. And at Rome he bids them mark those who cause Divisions and Offences and not adhere and associate with but avoid them Rom. 16. 17. And this he spoke of Schism whilst it was only an imperfect Birth not gone on to open Separation but only to such unquiet practices and making of Parties as would shortly end therein For so under all the Corinthian Sidings and Divisions he declares that they came together still in the same Church and met to partake in the same Worship yea and Supper of our Lord 1 Cor. 11. 18 20. Quest. What is a just Cause of Separation Answ. A Necessity of sinning if we joyn with them Which always is when some sinful things are imposed by any Society of Christians as 〈◊〉 Conditions of their Communion We are to maintain the Churches Peace only so far as lyes in us but we have no Power or Liberty to sin for it The Church it self is called Holy and therefore we must not think to shew our selves its true Members by acting unholily When without sinning we cannot continue with them the voice of the Scripture is come out from among them and be ye separate and touch not the unclean thing 2 Cor. 6. 17. Quest. And when doth a Church impose such sinful things Answ. When it will not allow us to be of its Communion without Believing or Professing Errors of Faith or committing sins in Practice As the Church of Rome doth by casting all out of its Communion who will not believe that Churches Infallibility and Transubstantiation which are Errors in Faith nor Adore the Host Worship Images Pray to Saints and An-Angels and the like which are sins in Practice Quest. It is no breach of Church-Unity then nor Act of sin to separate from such Imposers of unlawful things Answ. No but an adhering to Christ and his Apostles and the Universal Church of all Ages who disclaim these Corruptions In these Particulars the imposing Church separates her self from Christ and the Catholick Church and therefore we keep the Unity of the Catholick Church in adhering to it against her who makes 〈◊〉 upstart Combination and proves a Schismatical Divider Quest. If there is no just Cause of Separating but when we must needs commit some sin in joyning with a Church then it is never just to Separate for things indifferent Answ. No because they lawfully may be done and have no sin in them For all sin is the transgression of a Law 1 Joh. 3. 4. and therefore there can be no sin in indifferent things since they would be no longer indifferent but unlawful if there were any Law against them We are to keep Peace as much as lyes in us and indifferent things certainly do since they are no where forbidden to us Nay in these things a good Christian should be easie not only in submitting to Church-Laws but in complying with Innocent Church-Customs St. Paul thinking it Argument sufficient in a little Case to say we have no such Custome nor the Churches of God 1 Cor. 11. 16. Quest. Is it unjust also to Separate from a Church on pretence the Establish'd Means there are less Edifying Answ. Yes for the Means were less Edifying in the Assemblies at Corinth Many spoke confusedly at once which was not a doing Things to edifying 1 Cor. 14. 26 27. And many spoke in strange Tongues which could not Edifie their Hearers because they did not understand them v. 16 17. But under this less Edifying State it was not lawful to divide Whilst there are Divisions among you are you not Carnal 1 Cor. 3. 3. All Christians must seek to Edifie the Church as well as themselves and the Church is Edified by Unity and Peace Follow after the things which make for Peace for with them we must Edifie one another Rom. 14. 19. Quest. I see there is a just Cause of Separation when a Church imposes any Sins or Errors as Conditions of her Communion But what if a Church that is Defiled with these is yet so Moderate as not to impose them may she not for all that be so far corrupted with them that on account thereof all Good Men who would take due care of their own Souls ought to leave her Communion Answ. Yes if she errs so foully in Faith as to overthrow or go off from the Foundation Or if her Corruptions have so overspread and poison'd all the necessary Parts of her Worship that there is no joyning in her Prayers and Sacraments without joyning in the Corruptions too that are Embodied with them In these cases be ye Separate saith the Scripture and touch not the unclean thing 2 Cor. 6. 17. and come out of her my People that ye be not Partakers of her Sins and that ye receive not of her Plagues Rev. 18. 4. Quest. One Case you say is in Errors of Faith which overthrow the
dead I believe in the Holy Ghost the Holy Catholick Church the Communion of Saints the Forgiveness of Sins the Resurrection of the Body and the Life Everlasting Amen Quest. Doth this Creed contain all points of Doctrine necessary to be believed by every Christian Ans. Yes for it was given for a Confession of Faith that should fit Men for Baptism and shew any Person to be a Christian and they had better have made no Rule or Confession of Faith at all than an imperfect one Quest. What do you make the first Article in this Creed Ans. I believe in God the Father Almighty maker of Heaven and Earth Quest. How doth it appear that there is a God Ans. From this vast World that he has made Even as we are unquestionably assured of the Being of a Skilful Architect where we see a stately and well contrived House erected or of a learned Author from an excellent and well-penned Book or of an Ingenious Artificer from a Watch of exact and various Movements or other elaborate and curious piece of Workmanship And this shows us not only that there is a God on whom we and all this created World depend but also that he is most Wise Powerful and Good because the greatest Power Wisdom and Goodness are every where apparent in the contrivance and formation of it For the invisible things of God even his eternal Power and Godhead are clearly seen from the Creation of the World being understood by the things that are made as S. Paul says Rom. ● 20. Quest. Indeed nothing in reason seems more obvious than that all this World must have an Architect and that we and all the things about us which every where spring up and perish could never make our selves and that things of such admirable Order Harmony and Usefulness could not any one and much less all of them be put together by blind and uncontriving chance And therefore methinks this proof of God's Being from the voice of his Works must needs convince all his reasonable Creatures Ans. Yes and ever since the World began so it has There is neither speech nor language where their voice is not heard their ●i●e is gone out through all the earth and their words unto the end of the world Psal. 19. 3 4. On this or other Arguments all People in every Age and Nation believed and acknowledged that there is a God and delivered down that Belief to those who followed them And therefore no Person can ever oppose this and pretend to reason since thereby he sets up himself against all People of every place and time and against what passed for the plainest and most uncontestable Principle of humane reason ever since there was any such thing So that if therein he has reason he has it to himself alone and all the present World besides yea and all Ages too that went before him had none Quest. What things are we to know and believe concerning God Ans. First His God-head and Divine Attributes Secondly His Providence Quest. There is nothing in all Religion more necessary or useful for us than to have a right apprehension of Almighty God. Is he like any thing which we behold with our Eyes or feel with our Hands or discern by any Bodily Senses Ans. No in Scripture indeed he is said to have Ears and Eyes and Hands and Feet But therein as the Jewish Rabbins say the Law speaks of God with the Tongue of the Children of Men. And we are to understand not that he has any such parts but only that he has as full perceptions and performs the same things as we do by them The invisible God whom no man hath seen or can see 1 Tim. 6. 16. is a Spirit says our Saviour John 4. 24. And this must teach us in all our Services which we pay to him never to think of putting him off with outward Shows Gifts and Ceremonies but to be inwardly affected in all we do or say and always to offer him our Hearts and Spirits For he being a Spirit must be worshipped as Christ said in spirit and in truth John 4. 24. And moreover never to make any Bodily Images and representations of him or fancy to give him Worship and Honour by them since a pure unbodied Spirit is not represented but belyed not honoured but debased by any such thing Ye saw no manner of similitude of God when he came and spake to you said Moses to the Jews therefore take good heed left ye corrupt your selves in making any of him Deut. 4. 15 16. And thou shalt not make to thee any likeness of any thing either in Heaven or Earth to bow down to them said the Law Exod. 20. 4 5. Quest. But although we cannot see him with our Eyes yet we may apprehend several things of him in our minds And one you say is his God-head what mean you by that Ans. His Sovereignty or being the Supreme Being that depends on none and that all other things depend upon Particularly Men who were at first made by him and still absolutely depend on him In him we live move and have our being Act. 17. 28. Quest. If he depends on none he must be an eternal Being which never had beginning Ans. Yes because there was nothing before him to give beginning to him So that if he had not been from all Eternity he could never have been at all Quest. And if all things else but especially all Men do absolutely depend on him that will make all careful to serve and please him and found Religion Ans. Undoubtedly so it should And where it is not only believed but seriously laid to heart so it will. Quest. What are the Divine Attributes or Properties of God which will show us how he stands affected and what will please him Ans. He is all Holiness Goodness Justice Faithfulness Wisdom Almighty every where present and can never change Quest. What is meant by God's Natural Purity and Holiness Ans. His absolute exemption from all sin in himself and his perfect aversation and immutable hatred of it in all others He can take no pleasure in wickedness he hates all workers of iniquity and therefore evil shall not dwell with him Psal. 5. 4 5. Quest. If this be his unalterable Nature he can never be reconciled to Mens sins nor take delight in any Man whilst he goes on to be a sinner Ans. No as soon may we hope to bring Light and Darkness Snow and Fire to dwell together So far is he from living with it that he cannot endure to look upon iniquity Habak 1. 13. Quest. Since God's Holiness bespeaks such absolute abhorrence of all vice and wickedness I see it implies something more than barely his affectation of External Decency or his hatred to be treated rudely and unmannerly Ans. Yes so it doth It implies that too For God's Holiness often notes his supereminent Power and Greatness And to use this peerless Majesty or any things
that it shall never be destroyed by them The Promise is That the Gates of Hell that is the Powers of Satan and all his wicked instruments shall not prevail against the Church Matt. 16. 18. Quest. What must Christ's protecting his Church teach us Answ. To trust him with Religion and not sin to save it in the most perillous times He is more concern'd for his Church than any of us are or can be and he knows how to protect it without the help of our sins or our acting wickedly for it So that in all such times we are to practise Religion and do our duty and then recommend and trust the Preservation of it to his care Quest. If we would own Christ as our King then I perceive we must obey his Laws and Ministers and commit our selves to him in well-doing as the Protector of his Church Answ. Yes Quest. And will none partake of the Reconciliation of his Priesthood but they who thus believe him as their Prophet and obey him as their Lord Answ. No for Faith and Obedience are necessary to our Peace with God and there is no injoying the benefit of one without embracing him in all his Offices Quest. To believe in Christ then or to acknowledge Jesus to be the Christ is to own him for the Prophet of the Church by hearkning to his Word and Ministers for the Priest of God by hoping in him and applying to God by him for Reconciliation and all other mercies and for the King of his Church by obeying both his Laws and Officers and in a course of well-doing trusting both our selves and our Religion to his Protection here on Earth Answ. Yes Quest. What is meant by that which follows in the Creed his being God's only Son Answ. Our meaning is in respect of his Nature that God begat him as a Father doth a Son of like nature with himself so that he is God as well as Man. For he is equal with God Phil. 2. 6. The true God 1 Joh. 5. 20. and over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9. 5. Which last was the special Character and Title of the true God in the common stile and expression of the Jews Who from their Custom when the Priest in the Sanctuary rehearsed the Name of God of answering Blessed be his name for ever came in their common speech to call him The Blessed One which phrase the Scriptures often denote him as in Mar. 14. 61. 2 Cor. 11. 31. Rom. 1. 25. And agreeable to his having this Divine Nature we find the Divine Works as Creating and Sustaining and Divine Honours as Worship and Prayers and Baptism in the Name of the Son as well as of the Father ascribed to him in Holy Scripture Quest. Why was it requisite our Redeemer should be God Answ. 1. To give Merit to his Sacrifice which was infinitely advanced in regard his Blood was the Blood of God Act. 20. 28. How much more shall the Blood of Christ purge your Consciences who offered himself thro' the eternal Spirit Heb. 9. 14. As its being committed against God was the extreme aggravation of our sin So must its being performed by God be equally an enhansement of his Reparation 2. To several other purposes as to his having Power enough to conquer Death and Hell and save us from all our Spiritual Enemies to fit him for a capable and competent Judge of all men seeing into their Hearts and Thoughts which is one of God's Prerogatives To recommend Vertue as much as was possible by an example since in him it appears that all the things required of us are worthy of the most excellent Natures yea are not below the practice of God himself Quest. What other meaning is there of it Answ. Another is in respect of his Power because he is invested with all the Authority and Power of God. For Son of God signifies sometimes the same as the Christ that is one whom God hath commissioned to act in his stead He shall be great and the Son of the Highest and God shall give him the Throne of his Father David Luk. 1. 32. And thus Jesus Christ is God's Son for he hath given him all Power both in Heaven and Earth Matt. 28. 18. and committed all Authority to the Son that all should honour the Son as they honour the Father Joh. 5. 22 23. Quest. And being the Son of God in this sense that is having Soveraign Power from him he is our Lord Answ. Yes in respect of this derived Power and of his own Soveraign Divine Nature of his invaluable Merit and Purchace and of our voluntary Compacts and Submissions on all accounts that can found a just Dominion and Lordship over us God has given him a Name above every Name that every Tongue should confess Jesus Christ is Lord Phil. 2. 9 11. To us there is one Lord 1 Cor. 8. 6. Quest. And being God not only in Power but also in Nature must we not all worship him and pray to him and trust in him as God Answ. Yes for at the Name of Jesus every Knee shall bow Phil. 2. 10 and all must honour the Son as they honour the Father Joh. 5. 23. This is done by all good Christians and Saints on Earth who are styled They that call upon the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 1. 2. And also by those who are glorified in Heaven who sing their Hallelujah's as to God the Father so also to the Lamb Rev. 5. 11 12 13 14. Yea by the Angels too for when he bringeth his first-begotten into the world he saith and let all the Angels of God worship him Heb. 1. 6. And this Divine Honour if he were not a God in Nature as well as in Power he could never claim nor receive from them Quest. If Christ is our Rightful Sovereign Lord then we must give up our Wills to his and perform faithfully whatsoever he orders Answ. Yes Why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things that I say Luk. 6. 46. Nay since he is our Lord and we are his Houshold-Servants we must not as he says be the Servants of Men that is so wholly given up to their Service as that we cannot mind his or serve their pleasure when it interferes with his Laws or comply with their Meen and Customs when they are contrary unto his or sooth and flatter their weak Minds and feed their sickly Humours like timerous or mercenary Slaves No man says our Saviour can thus serve two Masters Matt. 6. 24. Ye are bought with a price saith St. Paul be not ye therefore the Servants of men 1 Cor. 7. 23. And if I yet pleased or soothed up men I should not be the Servant of Christ Gal. 1. 10. Quest. Since he is our Lord we should not think any thing too mean or ill for us which he thought not so for him but compose our selves to his Behaviour willingly following where he has gone before it
and exacted more than can possibly or at least ordinarily be performed Or labour under some other cloudy and afflicting Error or distemper of mind which hinders a most comfortable Religion and peaceful Piety from creating any Joy or Comfort in them Quest. But when there are none of these intrinsick impediments to interpose betwixt his Joy and them doth not he sometimes Arbitrarily and without any provocation withdraw himself and hide his Face as if he were displeased with them Which withdrawing is oft given as the cause of many Good mens Grief and Dejection and is what some call Spiritual Desertion Answ. At this rate indeed all Spiritual Comfort must needs be most variable and uncertain as depending not on any Constancy of good and comfortable Dispositions in themselves but on the Arbitrariness of such unprovoked withdrawings to try Experiments upon Men. But this I think is all humane invention the Scripture on the contrary teaching us that when Sinners purify their hearts and draw nigh to him God doth not withdraw himself and shrink away but draws nigh to them Jam. 4. 8. It is an imputation on this good Spirit not at all agreeing with his inclination which is to be an immutable lover of goodness and of good men to be unalterably pleased with them whilst they do what is pleasing to him and to delight in having them take pleasure and joy in him It seems very opposite to his Office and Undertaking For his Work and Office as I have shewn is to engender Peace and Comfort as well as Goodness in the hearts of his Servants And since that is his business he will be as constant in pursuing it and no more withdraw his Comforts than he doth his Graces from them without being justly provoked thereto by some act of their own Nay on the contrary when their own melancholly humours or mispersuasions have intercepted his joyful presence from good men he is ready with the light of his Countenance to break thro' that darkness and in great pity very often restores that Comfort to their minds which their own errour or distemper had driven from it So that these arbitrary and unprovoked desertions whether in Grace or Comforts as they have no foundation in Scripture but there meet with opposition so are they not suitable to the Holy and good Spirit 's natural Genius or his Undertaking and Office He always loves and delights in good men and never voluntarily withdraws himself but is always driven from them CHAP. IX Of the Holy Catholick Church and the Communion of Saints The Contents No assurance of Salvation by Christ but in his Church This Church Holy. And Catholick Admission into it by Baptism when regularly perform'd in any one valid in all Churches Excommunication is so too This Church is one Body by external visible unity Of the Communion of Saints in this Church Of their visible union in Faith or Doctrine And in Pray●rs and Devotion Of communicating in Publick Prayers A Sin to separate without just cause Imposing Sins or Errours as Conditions of Communion is a just cause Not Lawful to separate for Things indifferent Nor for better means of edification Just to separate from a Church that doth not impose her Corruptions when her Errors in Faith overthrow the Foundation That is when she ceases to own the one true God. Or denys Jesus to be the Christ or Salvation by his Merits and Mediation Owning Jesus to be the Christ implies owning the Articles of the Apostles Creed which contains all Fundamentals Whilst any Churches hold to this Creed which is the Foundation Errors in other things do not unchurch them But such Erroneous are in a worse state than Orthodox Christians Nor is her Communion to be deserted meerly for such Errors tho' very gross if she doth not impose them Just to separate from a Church of a corrupt Worship when sinful things pollute her Publick Offices Or when good Devotions are put up in a strange Language Not for Rites and Customs about indifferent Matters Nor just to separate for scandalous Members where a Churches constitution is faultless Nor tho' it neglect Discipline which should reform them Of keeping Fellowship with the Apostles by submitting to our lawful Bishops their Successors Christians to communicate in Affections in Alms and Temporal good Things Quest. WHat is the Ninth Article in the Creed Answ. The Holy Catholick Church the Communion of Saints Quest. Is there no assurance of Salvation by Christ but in his Church Answ. No for Baptism whereby we are made members of the Church is compared to Noah's Ark whereinto all were to enter that would not perish with the World 1 Pet. 3. 20 21. Christ is represented to us as the Head of his Church and the Saviour of the body Eph. 5. 23. And God daily added to the Church such as should be saved saith St. Luke Act. 2. 47. In the Church all good men have a sure claim to God's favour by Promises and Compacts which ingage him in Faithfulness But out of it they stand to courtesie and can build at best only on presumptions and uncovenanted mercies the Covenant which God seals with us respecting his Church and being proposed and ratified in the Word which it preaches and in the Sacraments which it dispences Quest. Must not this make all careful to be Members of this Body and keep in Comm●nion with Christ's Church who profess Christianity Answ. Most certainly as without which by their Religion there is not only a want of the set means and opportunities but also of all express Contracts and Promises of Salvation Our Saviour Christ has appointed not only the Christian Religion which all are to believe and practise but the Christian Church too wherein they are to profess that Faith and Communicate as Members And the same Baptism that lists us Professors of his Religion makes us Members of his Church also Quest. Why is the Church called Holy Answ. Because it is a Body of men that is Holy that is separated from the rest of the World and dedicated to A●mighty God. Ye are a chosen Generation an Holy Nation a Peculiar People 1 Pet. 2. 9. And because whatever they prove in reality their Religion is a Profession of Holiness as their Baptismal Vow which is made at their entrance on Christianity sufficiently declares To the Church at Corinth called to be Saints 1 Cor. 1. 2. Quest. Why is it called Catholick Answ. To shew its Universality and that it is not confined to one Nation or Place as the Jewish Church was And the Catholick Church notes the whole Body of Christians diffused through all places and enduring through all times The Church is also call'd Catholick in relation to the Faith it holds which ought to be the same in all Places And in this sense particular Churches are sometimes stiled Catholick meaning thereby that they are Orthodox and live in the Faith and Communion of the Catholick Church not of any Heretical Combinations Quest.
Advertisement THere is lately Re-printed An Help and Exhortation to Worthy Communicating Or a Treatise describing the Meaning Worthy Reception Duty and Benefits of the Holy Sacrament And Answering the Doubts of Conscience and other Reasons which most generally detain Men from it Together with Suitable Devotions added By John Kettlewell Vicar of Coles-hill in Warwickshire The Second Edition Printed for Robert Kettlewell and are to be Sold by the Booksellers of London and Westminster Price Bound 2 s. 6 d. THE Practical Believer OR THE ARTICLES OF THE Apostles Creed Drawn out To form a True Christian's Heart and Practice In Two Parts LONDON Printed for Robert Kettlewell and are to be Sold by the Booksellers of London and Westminster 1688. THE Practical Believer The First Part. OF THE NATURE and CERTAINTY OF Christian Faith AND The Knowledge of God OR AN Explication of the Divine Attributes and Providence Febr. 28. 1687. Imprimatur Liber cui Titulus The Practical Believer c. Guil. Needham RR. in Christo P. ac D. D. Wilhelmo Archiep. Cant. à Sacr. Domest London Printed for Robert Kettlewell and are to be Sold by the Booksellers of London and Westminster 1688. THE PREFACE Reader I Here present thee with a Discourse upon the Holy Christian Faith which as we all profess seriously to believe so should we carefully endeavour to answer and adorn with an Holy and Christian Practice In this I have endeavoured to give such accounts of Almighty God as may encourage all good Men to love and serve him and deter all evil Men from presuming on his Favour or provoking his Displeasure I have drawn out the consideration of his Providence into the usual cases and occurrences and shown how we may live upon it and give our selves the true comfort and advantage thereof in all events and transactions And all the other Articles of the Creed I have endeavoured to set off in such particulars as we are most concerned to know and which may give them the greatest life and power with us In the whole I have aim'd to lay before thee the summ of Christian Doctrine that in an Age which abounds with unchristian falshoods we may keep stedfast in Christian Truths and that among all the Truths of Christianity we may lay out our Care and Zeal on those which are most important and worthy of all acceptance My great design in this Treatise is to lend what help I am able to those that sincerely desire and seriously set themselves to live as they believe and to make Faith a Governing Grace showing how we may serve our selves of it and give up our Souls to be ordered and directed by it in all our manifold and most important cases and concerns And looking all along at this mark in passing through all the Articles of the Creed I have not sought to fill up a Book by inserting all that may be truly or pertinently said But have applied my self to instruct thee in such as I thought the leading and governing Notions to inculcate those which seem to me the most concerning and powerful Truths to set off such particulars about them as seem fittest to affect us or lie nearest unto Practice and to note wherein we are to follow and attend to them in the course and various exigencies of our lives And hoping this may prove beneficial to the instruction and use of plain Christians who have neither leisure to peruse nor capacity to retain larger Volumes I have endeavoured to treat of these things with convenient brevity But withal to comprize so much not only of necessary but profitable Doctrine as may be sufficient to any Man's guidance and encouragement who will set himself diligently to learn and walk in the light of it I am not without hopes that this Discourse may in some degree or other serve the end for which it is sincerely sent abroad viz. of doing some honour and service to the ever Blessed Trinity and making an admirable and most efficacious Faith more lively and powerful in some that profess it And if thou good Reader shalt reap any benefit by it as thou wilt not fail to give God the praise for suiting and supplying thy necessity by the weakness of any he employs so one thing I heartily request of thee which is all the return that in this World I either expect or desire that thou wilt thus far remember the poor instrument of thy Mercy as in the fervency of thy Devotion to put up one Prayer to our common Father for his Salvation who with a very ready and willing mind has taken all this pains to promote thine THE CONTENTS PART I. Of the Nature and Certainty of Christian Faith c. CHAP. I. Of Christian Faith. WHat is meant by Faith in Christ. When this suitably affects us it justifies or avails to Righteousness An account of several particulars of Christian Belief with the respective Affections and Practices that are suitable to them All these are reasonably to be expected from them though they do not follow where Men will act inconsistently to their Principles and against Reason Faeith with its suitable effects the same as Faith and Repentance On this account such effects ascribed to it when alone as are due only to it and Repentance in conjunction This Faith with its suitable effects was that which justified the Old Testament Worthies And is to justifie all good Christians When S. Paul opposes justifying-Faith to the Deeds of the Law he speaks of the Deeds of the Jewish Law. That which fits Faith for these effects and distinguishes the Faith of Saints and Sinners is First The sincerity of it Secondly Its strength and firmness This consists in its being assured And honest or seated in one that makes conscience to keep his word And resolute In what sense Faith may be called an act of Recumbency or leaning and rolling on Christ for Salvation And the hand to receive and apply him 'T is no part of Faith to believe our sins are pardon'd nor of infidelity to doubt of it Of the innocence many times of such doubts And of some good Mens confidence of their own forgiveness p. 1 CHAP. II. That Jesus is the Christ from Ancient Prophecies Among those Prophecies which prove Jesus to be the Christ First Some prescribe the time of his coming This they mark out by the nearness of such notable Occurrences and Revolutions as would fall under all Mens observation And by fixing the very Year he should appear in Accordingly there was a general expectation of him at that time His coming not put off beyond the time appointed for the sins of the People An account why the Jews who read these clear Notes of the time in their own Prophets are not convinced by them Secondly Others assign many peculiar and visible Notes whereby he may be demonstratively pointed out from all other Men. As 1. His being born of a Virgin. This in some sense spoken of a Virgin of that time but principally
must beget fear and reverence p. 232 ERRATA PAG. 19. lin 12. for accepted read was accepted p. 34. l. 29. for And half Faith r. An half Faith. p. 36. l. 13. for such as do r. such do p. 41. l. 1. for of sufficiency r. of the sufficiency p. 70. l. 24. for men in Bethlehem r. men of Bethlehem p. 113. l. 17. for do danger r. no danger p. 150. l. 15. for this peerless Majesty r. his peerless Majesty p. 154. l. 7. for in wickedness contracting r. i● wickedly contracting The Practical Believer PART I. Of the Nature and Certainty of Christian Faith c. CHAP. I. Of Christian Faith. The Contents What is meant by Faith in Christ. When this suitably affects us it justifies or avails to Righteousness An account of several particulars of Christian Belief with the respective Affections and Practices that are suitable to them All these are reasonably to be expected from them though they do not follow where Men will act inconsistently to their Principles and against Reason Faith with its suitable effects the same as Faith and Repentance On this account such effects ascribed to it when alone as are due only to it and Repentance in conjunction This Faith with its suitable effects was that which justified the Old Testament Worthies And is to justifie all good Christians When S. Paul opposes justifying-Faith to the Deeds of the Law he speaks of the Deeds of the Jewish Law. That which fits Faith for these effects and distinguishes the Faith of Saints and Sinners is First The sincerity of it Secondly Its strength and firmness This consists in its being assured And honest or seated in one that makes conscience to keep his word And resolute In what sense Faith may be called an act of Recumbency or leaning and rolling on Christ for Salvation And the hand to receive and apply him 'T is no part of Faith to believe our sins are pardon'd nor of infidelity to doubt of it Of the innocence many times of such doubts And of some good Mens confidence of their own forgiveness Question SInce Men are made to live for ever and have Souls capable of Eternal Salvation What must they do to save them Answer Believe in Christ and repent For Faith and Obedience which where Men have sinn'd before is call'd Repentance are the conditions of Salvation Quest. Is Faith in Christ one thing necessary to Salvation Ans. Yes He that heareth my word says our Saviour is passed from death unto life and shall not come into condemnation John 5. 24. He that believeth the Gospel and is baptized shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be damned Mark 16. 16. Quest. Will all Faith save Men Ans. No for the Devils themselves believe says S. James Jam. 2. 19. But the saving Faith is only that which suitably affects us and works Repentance Repentance as well as Faith being necessary to Eternal Happiness Quest Since Faith is in it self one part of the condition of our Happiness and instrumental also to work the Rest it is necessary to understand well what it is and wherein a saving Faith differs from other sorts of Faith. Pray what is meant by Faith in Christ Ans. In general it is the believing all that is declared to us by Christ and sometimes more particularly some things that are declared of him The believing what is said by him is called Faith in Christ as his Authority and Credit is the Ground and Reason of our Belief and the believing things said of him as he himself is the object of it And when this belief suitably affects us and we so resolve and practise thereupon as may be reasonably expected from Persons under such Persuasions then is it imputed to us for Righteousness Quest. Is Faith in Christ believing all that is declared to us by Christ or a giving trust and credit to his Word Ans. Yes and so the Scriptures intimate when they call it faith of Christ that is of his Teaching and Directing and as it is sometimes in the Original faith to Christ that is to him testifying and declaring and Faith or belief of the Gospel and of the truth the Gospel being that Word of truth which on his Credit and Authority he testifies and declares to us Besides Faith or Belief in Christ is expressed in Scripture by these several Phrases of hearing and receiving the word of Christ of receiving the word of God of receiving Christ of receiving the testimony of Christ of coming unto Christ. All which as is evident from the places alledged being made only so many other words for believing show plainly that Faith or Belief is the crediting of his Word and assenting to those things that are declared by him Which declarations for their surer derivation to After-times were all put in Writing by his Holy Apostles and Evangelists before their Deaths and are all contain'd in the Holy Scriptures Quest. Indeed if Faith in Christ be a belief of Christ's word it plainly implies hearing and receiving it and that Word being sent down to us by him from God receiving it is a receiving the word of God and believing it on Christ's Authority is receiving his testimony But how do the two other Phrases of receiving Christ and coming unto Christ shew the Faith they denote to be a belief of his Word Ans. To receive one notes different things as it is apply'd to different cases Men receive a Guest when they entertain him in their Houses a Ruler when they become his subjects a Friend when they admit him to intimacies but a Prophet and Teacher under which notion Christ claims belief when they credit his Doctrine and Message And because they who thus believ'd him came personally to attend and learn of him and associated themselves with him as they that retain'd to and followed him therefore was this belief of him in a literal sense a coming to him Quest. Doth Faith in Christ signifie also in Scripture the believing some things concerning Christ Ans. Yes and those too such things as are apt to beget trust and confidence in him For so though the Devils know and believe the truth of all Christ has declared yet S. James says they want the right Faith because they only tremble at it and cannot hope in the least that ever he will do them any good Jam. 2. 19. Quest. What are we thus particularly to believe concerning Christ Ans. Not only in the general That he is the Son of God and the Christ or Messiah for professing whereof S. Peter was pronounced Blessed Mat. 16. 16 17. but also particularly to believe that he died for our sins to reconcile us unto God by his Death whence it is especially called faith in his blood Ro. 3. 25. That he rose again from the dead which whoso believes in his heart says S. Paul shall be saved Rom. 10. 9. And that he is now ascended into Heaven and seated on the
right Hand of God there to intercede and mediate for us till at last he shall come again to judge the World and eternally reward or punish all according as their lives have been good or bad Quest. So that I perceive Faith in Christ is our believing the Gospel and all things contained therein concerning God our Selves or another World upon Christ's Authority And particularly believing what he therein declares concerning his being the Christ and Son of God who died ro●e again ascended to God's right Hand and shall return again to judge the World as is also expressed in the Creed And that for the sake of his death to expiate sins God will be reconciled to Sinners upon their true Repentance Ans. Yes this is the true Faith in Christ upon profession whereof the Apostles at first enter'd Men as Disciples S. Peter without more ado Baptizing the three thousand that gladly receiv'd the Word wherein he had declared to them these very things Act. 2. 41. And the Christian Church ever since admitting them to Baptism upon their professing Faith of the Apostles Creed which contains the same particulars Quest. By this I perceive what Faith in Christ is Pray what wants this to make it saving and available unto Righteousness Ans. Only that it suitably affect us or work in us such Godly Affections Purposes and Practices as may justly be expected from Men of such persuasions Quest. Pray what are these suitable affections Ans. They will best appear by running over briefly some of the chief of those particulars which we believe on the word of Christ and which are to produce them in us Quest. We believe that God is our Father who at first made us and still preserves and provides for us with Paternal care and tenderness How must this affect us Ans. With Love Honour and dutiful Obedience If I be a Father where is my honour Mal. 1. 6. Quest. We believe him to be infinite in Justice and Almighty in Power able and ready as to con●er whatsoever is desirable on those that fear so to inflict whatsoever is dreadful on those that affront him What should this beget in us Ans. Reverence and godly fear Fear him who when he hath killed hath Power to cast both Body and Soul into Hell yea I say unto you fear him Luk. 12. 5. Matth. 10. 28. Quest. We be●ieve him to be perfectly Righteous that is most Holy and Just and True and Faithful and Merciful and Patient and pleased only with what is so How ought we in reason to be influenced by this belief Ans. Made Holy and Righteous as he is that so we may be like him the Supreme Object of all imitation and find favour in his Eyes If we know that he is Righteous we know that every one that doth Righteousness is born of him 1 Jo. 2. 29. Quest. We believe his Providence orders all events What should we do upon this Ans. Be content under all that happens and say as the Holy Psalmist I opened not my mouth because thou didst it Psal. 39. 9. or as old Eli It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good 1 Sam. 3. 18. Quest. We believe that this Providence will never leave nor forsake those that fear God Heb. 13. 5. that it will make all the evil they meet with here to work for their good Rom. 8. 28. That the desire of the Righteous shall be granted Prov. 10. 24. That they shall not want any good thing Psal. 34. 10. And that when they seek first the kingdom of God all other things shall be added to them without their being solicitous about them Matth. 6. 33 34. What would one in reason expect from Men so persuaded Ans. That they trust in the living God 1 Tim. 6. 17. that they lay aside all distracting solicitude and tho●ghtfulness for outward things Matth. 6. 25 31 34. That they be careful for nothing but making their case known to God cast all their care upon him who careth for them Phil. 4. 6. 1 Pet. 5. 7. Quest. We believe he will not forget his word although the performance of it be long delaied but remember it faithfully and in due time give it effect What should this work in us Ans. Patience and Perseverance of Hope whereof all have need that after they have done the will of God they may receive the Promise It being God's way for some time to exercise Mens Faith of a Promise before he accomplish it Heb. 10. 36 37. Quest. We believe he is able to fulfil it when it is most improbable and unlike to take effect there being no word impossible with God Luk. 1. 37. and that he will do it What should be the effect of this Ans. To beget in us a firm Faith and unshaken confidence in his Promise such as Abraham's was for having a Child when both He and his Wife were past Age for Children and of having a numerous Issue by him when at Gods command he was just about to slay him Rom. 4. 20 21. Heb. 11. 19. Quest. We believe that for Christ's sake God will give good things to those that seek to him for them and that if they ask it shall be given Matth. 7. 7. What should follow upon this opinion Ans. Prayer and Devotion So that whatsoever Temporal or Spiritual Blessings Men stand in need of they should seek to God the Author and by Jesus Christ the procurer of them Quest. We believe that Jesus is the Son of God and the Christ that was to come into the World. What would any serious and considerate Man do that is so persuaded Ans. Confide in him and worship and submit to him as a most just Object of our Homage Trust and Adoration Quest. We believe this same Jesus to be our Lord. What should he in reason do who believes and professes that Ans. Keep his Commandments and observe his Orders For why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things that I say Luke 6. 46. Quest. We believe that he came down from Heaven in love to us to restore us to God's Favour and Eternal Happiness What would any ingenuous Person do that is convinced of this Ans. Love him most dearly that so loved us and thank him most heartily and intirely for having done and suffered so much for our sakes Quest. We believe the cause of his dying so painful and ignominious a Death upon the Cross was not any ill that he had done himself but only our sins and that at last they will bring us to Eternal Death unless we repent of them What can be expected of all that have this persuasion Ans. Irreconcileably to hate sin and to repent and sin no more lest they come to ●eel the same at last intolerably and that too without all hopes of remedy in their own Persons We must die to sin says the Scripture since he died for it Rom. 6. 6 8 11. And if we judge that he died for us his love
it in the Holy Scriptures As when it is said to quench the ●●ery darts of the wicked Eph. 6. 16. to overcome the world 1 Jo. 5. 4. to puri●ie the heart Act. 15. 9. to be the Grand Parent of all Righteous doings which are therefore called an obedience or righteousness of faith Rom. 4. 11 13 c. 16. 26. And when the good deeds of the best Men such as Noah Abraham Moses Daniel c. are attributed to it Heb. 11. Quest. And is it from this effecting all Virtues that it stands adorn'd with all Privileges and that such Promises are made to it when named alone as are due only to it and all others in conjunction Ans. Yes such as that thereby we are the children of God Gal. 3. 26. and abide in the Son and in the Father 1 Joh. 2. 24. and have Christ dwelling in us Eph. 3. 17. That it justifies us Rom. 5. 1. makes us righteous Rom. 10. 10. gains the remission of sins Rom. 3. 25. saves us Joh. 5. 24. All which though they manifestly require Repentance and Obedience are yet in the places cited ascribed to Faith because as opportunity serves and objects call for them it is productive of them both Quest. You have fully shewed what are those suitable affections which Faith is to work in us And thereby I perceive plainly that Faith with its suitable effects is the same in other words with Faith and Repentance which at first you said was the way for Men to save their Souls But will not Faith save us and be imputed unto us for Righteousness till we are thus affected with it and act according to our persuasions Ans. No without this it did not save good Men in old Times nor will now save us Quest. The Old Testament Worthies both before the Flood and after were accounted Righteous and saved by their Faith as the Scripture testifies But was not Faith accepted of them unless it thus influenced and affected them Ans. No 't is plain it was not from the particular accounts of those Worthies Quest. Pray make that out in instances which will be a clear proof in this case Ans. First Noah became Heir of the Righteousness by Faith by believing in a sinful and secure Generation that God would bring the general Flood upon the World. But that was when he fear'd and acted as one so persuaded or being moved with fear prepared an Ark at God's command to the saving his own house from it By which Fear and preparation of the Ark upon his Faith as S. Paul notes he condemned the world and became heir of the Righteousness which is by faith Heb. 11. ● Again Moses was accepted for believing the poor Israelites who were then all oppressed slaves in Egypt to be for all that the People of God. But that was as in pursuance of that belief he refused to be called the Son of Pharaoh's Daughter the greatest Honour and Worldly good he had in Egypt and chose rather to side and bear affliction with them Yea further as at God's command and in confidence of his Presence with them he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King who as he must needs think would be most highly incensed at his carrying away so great a Body of a Laborious and Drudging People from him Heb. 11. 24 25 26 27. His Faith is also cried up for believing God would pass over all the Houses of the Israelites when he went to slay all the first-born among the Egyptians But the acceptance of this as S. Paul notes was as through that Faith he obey'd God to keep the Passover and the sprinkling of blood upon the lintel and the two side posts of their Doors which God had made the condition and token of their being preserv'd verse 28. 'T is celebrated lastly for believing God's Promise to divide the waters of the red sea and make them stand as a Wall on either side till he was passed over But all the Praise of this belief was as in virtue of it he ventur'd himself and People betwixt those Mountains of Water and passed through as if it had been dry land as God directed verse 29. Thirdly The Harlot Rahab was preserv'd as S. Paul and justified as S. James says for believing that the God of Israel was stronger than all Gods and had given Jericho to the Israelites But that as we are expresly told was only as in pursuance of that belief she turn'd to that side which she saw God espoused and concealed the spies and sent them away in peace James 2. 25. Heb. 11. 3● Lastly Abraham whilst he dwelt in Mesopotamia accepted for believing that God would give him another land wherein he should grow to be a great nation But that was when in vertue of that belief at God's command he left his own country and obey'd to wander not knowing whither he went in search of that Seat and Inheritance which God had chosen for him Heb. 11. 8. He was especially justified for believing God when he promised to make his Son Isaac a numerous and blessed people But this was as in Power of that Faith he stuck at nothing but at God's command readily offered him up when he was tried accounting that God was able to raise him up even from the dead to verifie that Promise to him Heb. 11. 17 18 19. His offering up Isaac in virtue of that Faith fulfilled that Scripture which saith Abraham believed God and it was imputed to him for Righteousness as S. James saith Jam. 2. 21 23. Quest. I see plainly from these instances that Faith when it had these suitable effects was the thing God imputed for Righteousness to the Old Testament Worthies They were all Righteous through Faith not whilst Faith was only an idle belief and speculative Notion but when they feared and acted as any rational and considerate Man would do under such persuasions What have you to add more to shew the same of us Christians Ans. The Faith that will avail and save us we are plainly told is a Faith that 1. Affects our Hearts and renews all within us It must beget Hope and Trust in God the Devils faith being rejected because they only tremble at God's Word and dare not trust it will do them any good Jam. 2. 19. It must produce Charity which says S. Paul fulfils the Law of the Second Table and leads into every other Duty For Charity is the end of the Law out of faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1. 5. and the Faith which avails to the hope of righteousness is a Faith which worketh by love Gal. 5. 5 6. In summ lastly it must cleanse the Heart whence as our Saviour observes all evil doth procede purging out the Old Man of Pride Anger Envy Lust c. and planting therein the New Man of Humble Pious Pure and Virtuous Tempers in its stead purifying the heart as S. Peter says Act. 15. 9. and 1 Pet.
1. 21 22. 2. Reforms our Practice The Numbers that believed acceptably turned unto the Lord saith S. Luke Act. 11. 21. The Faith which availeth worketh by love says S. Paul Gal 5. 6 it overcomes the world saith S. John 1 Jo. 5. 4. it makes us free from sin says our Saviour Jo. 8. 32. It must carry us on to good deeds as it did Abraham to leave his country Heb. 11. 8. and to sacrifice his son Jam. 2. 21 22. and as it did Rahab to receive the spies verse 25. A working Faith is the only Faith that lives for faith without works is dead Jam. 2. 20. as the body without the spirit is dead so is faith without works dead verse 26. It is the only Faith that profits for if a man say he hath faith and have not works what doth it profit verse 14. It is the only Faith that saves and justifies If a man shows faith without works can faith save him Abraham was justified by works verse 21. and Rahab was justified by works verse 25. ye see then how that by works a man is justified together with Faith and not by faith only verse 24. Quest. If there is no Justification by any Faith but what reforms the heart and practice I perceive in the question of Justification we must no longer oppose Faith and Obedience but take care to secure both it being as S. Paul saith a working faith or as S. James faith and works together that justifies us Ans. Very right Quest. But doth not S Paul when he speaks of our justification say it is by saith without the deeds of the law Rom. 3. 28. Ans. Those deeds are the deeds of the Jewish Law chiefly such distinguishing ones as Circumcision Sacrifices Jewish Holy-Days and observing the Mosaick differences of clean and unclean Meats These some Zelots for Moses pressed upon the Gentile-Converts in many Churches saying Except ye be circumcised after the manner of Moses ye cannot be saved Act. 15. 1. And when some started up at Rome to press the necessity of the same to Justification there S. Paul opposes all such deeds and tells them they must not seek to be justified as Jews but as Christians So what he rejects are Mosaick deeds or any others under such qualifications as the Jews obtruded and cried up for Righteousness Quest. Pray what are those Ans. First They set up a mere Humane Righteousness in outward Acts. This is Righteousness in Civil Courts where the Judges are Men that cannot see the Heart but judge and pronounce according to Overt-Actions And the Law of Moses being the Law of their Common-Wealth whose Breaches were triable in their own Courts they esteemed themselves Righteous in the eye of their Law as the World doth in case of other Political and State Laws when they are not liable to be brought in Trouble or Indicted upon them before any of their own Tribunals This sense of their Legal Righteousness was currant among the Doctors And Josephus a learned Jew who lived and flourished in the Apostles own Days asserts it in no less an instance than that of Sacriledge wondering at Polybius an otherwise Praise-worthy Writer as he says for ascribing God's exemplary Vengeance on Antiochus Epiphanes to his Sacriledge only design'd upon the Temple at Elymaïs Whereas says he If he only intended but did not execute and effect it he did not deserve to be punished for it And accordingly in S. Paul's accounts of the Jewish Righteousness he is careful still to call it a Justification or Righteousness of works as consisting only in things brought on to act and practice And measuring themselves thus only by External acts as cognizable before Humane Courts the orderly Livers among them made no more scruple of asserting their Righteousness in the Eye of their Law than any good Subjects do in pleading their innocence as to the Laws of them several Countries As we find the young man did to our Saviour when he posed him upon the Ten Commandments saying all these things have I kept from my youth up Matth. 19. 18 19 20. And as S. Paul did in setting off his Jewish Confidences saying That touching the Righteousness which is in the Law he was blameless i. e. not to be blamed before any of their Tribunals Phil. 3. 6. Quest. But did not some things in the Jewish Law extend to Mens Hearts and Spirits Particularly among the Ten Commandments is there not One viz. the Tenth which forbids all inward coveting of what is our Neighbours Ans. Yes but there being no notice taken of these nor punishments inflicted for them in their Courts the Doctors as may appear from what I have said looked on them rather as Counsels of Perfection than strict Laws of Righteousness Or if as Laws yet such the Breaches whereof were sufficiently atoned by their Daily or Annual Sacrifices which sanctified as S. Paul saith to the purging of the flesh i. e. to indemnifie them before Men as to their Carnal Secular Interests though not to clear them before God or make them perfect as pertaining to the conscience Heb. 9. 9 13. Quest. What other Qualifications did the Jews cry up in those Works which they depended on to make them Righteous Ans Secondly Their merits For they set up a proud boastful Righteousness which should challenge the reward by way of merit and equivalence not being content to reap all the Benefit unless they could also arrogate all the Glory and Honour of it to themselves Quest. Whereon could they pretend to erect this Ans. On two Foundations First The Power of natural free-will affirming their good deeds to be wrought in virtue of their own strength without which whatever Glory there might be in them it could be none of theirs They thought they had Ability enough for all the Righteous works they were to do upon the stock of Nature and needed no inward and enlivening Grace but a meer external Revelation or dead Letter as their Law is stiled in Scripture And all this Power they ascribe to Natural free-will since the fall For the good which Adam did before it say they was as a pure intelligence out of necessity of Nature But his eating of the forbidden tree of the Knowledge of good and ill brought him and his Posterity down to free will or an indifferency to either Which liberty they make most absolute ever since and accordingly interpret that common saying among them All things are in the Hand of God but the fear of God to note such absoluteness of our free-will to good as has nothing to controul it Secondly On the intrinsick worth and value of their own deeds making them to deserve Heaven by way of equivalence They were the great affecters and aspirers after merits saying That happiness by way of reward is far greater and more magnificent than by way of mercy And they were the great asserters of them claiming the reward on such deeds as excluded
their works without any need of Redemption by Christ's Sacrifice as I have already shewed Quest. And S. Paul though he denies such Jewish works asserts works after the Christian Faith wrought in us by God's Grace and accepted through Christ's Sacrifice to justifie and make us Righteous Ans. Yes in the very same Verse wherein he rejects the Law of works that is Jewish works he declares we are justified by another Law viz. the Law of Faith in performing what it imposes Rom. 3. 27. And the Faith which avails to Righteousness in Christ Jesus he says is a working Faith Gal. 5. 6. And the same S. Paul speaking of the Faith which justified the Ancient Worthies particularly notes those correspondent Affections and Practices which it produced in them to make them Righteous As Noah's holy fear and obedience in building of the Ark though all the while he was laughed at for his pains by a merry and secure World and Moses's quitting the highest hopes and honours of Egypt to associate with the persecuted People of God and Abraham's leaving his Country and sacrificing his Son at God's command and all the other instances above-mentioned Quest. By what you have said I plainly perceive that a working Faith or a Faith that suitably influences and affects us is the Faith that always did and always must recommend Men to Almighty God Which when the Scripture contents it self barely to imply the effects it simply calls Faith when it would speak out and express both it calls Faith and Repentance Ans. Very right Quest. But since all Faith doth not atchieve these noble feats and all Graces do not grow upon this single stock in all Believers Pray what are the great properties that fit Faith for these effects and distinguish the Faith of those that show these Fruits from the Faith of those that want them Ans. They are reducible I think to these Two the sincerity and the strength of it Quest. What mean you by the sincerity of this Faith Ans. First That it be real and unfeigned Not a meer pretence of Faith under which Infidels may disguise themselves among Christians to be trusted or emploied Nor a meer outside profession which unthinking Men may chuse and put on as they do their Cloathes without looking for any further reason than to be in the fashion and which they can as easily and readily alter again as they do their Habit when the Mode shall turn But a real inward belief and persuasion It is an unfeigned Faith that S. Paul commends in Timothy 2 Tim. 1. 5. and an unfeigned Faith out of which flows charity 1 Tim. 1. 5. and the Faith or Wisdom which makes Men pure and peaceable c. says S. James is without Hypocrisie Jam. 3. 17. So that they are never like to be fruitful Believers who follow Jesus as some Jews did only to run in with the Crowd or for the sake of the Loaves more than out of inward Convictions Secondly That it be Hearty and Affectionate Not a meer speculative Opinion and careless Notion as of things wherein we are not much interested but a moving and influencing perswasion wherewith all the powers of the Soul are affected Our Opinions must form our Passions and advance into Love Desire Hope Fear Care Endeavour and the like according to the different nature and power of the things believed The Belief that saves says S. Paul is a Belief with the heart as well as with the head Rom. 10. 9. And the Faith which avails to Righteousness works by love Gal. 5 5 6. And therefore they are never like to prove fruitful Believers who read and credit the Story of Jesus and the things of Christianity as they would the Story of Caesar or Alexander of the Assyrian or Persian Empire as things that are very remote in Place or Time and being of little concern to them do not much either delight or afflict them Such indifferent and unconcern'd Believers are like to make no better than Christian News-mongers whose Christian Faith furnishes them only to talk and tell stories Quest. Besides this sincerity is it necessary to a saving and effective Faith that there be moreover a good degree of strength and firmness in it Ans. Yes for such a strong Faith it was that made Abraham and other Holy Men obey God whereupon they were accepted Abraham says the Scripture was not weak or sickly but strong in Faith whereby he gave glory unto God Rom. 4. 19 20. the Faith that fits us for Christian Privileges and the Blessings of Baptism as Philip told the Eunuch is a belief with all the heart Act. 8. 37. If good Fruits do not spring from Faith it is because there is but little of it why take ye thought O ye of little faith Matth. 6. 30. 8. 26. or because there is very small or no life in it Faith being as dead as the body is without the spirit when it stands alone and no vital motions or effects stream from it Jam. 2. 17 20 26. Quest. I perceive this strength of Faith is necessary to enable it to do its work and conquer all that doth oppose it But in what doth this strength consist Ans. In three things especially 1. That it be assured and confident 2. That it be honest or seated in one that makes conscience of being just to his word 3. That it be resolute Quest. Must the Faith that produces these suitable effects be assured and confident Ans. Yes for a wavering Opinion will not accomplish its work It must make us forego many grateful things and undergo many ungrateful ones and attempt many that are very difficult and laborious And Men will not run these ventures and bear these losses on uncertain hopes but only on firm and certain expectations And therefore right and acceptable Believers are exhorted to draw near to God with full assurance of faith and to hold fast their profession without wavering Heb. 10. 22 23. and to shew diligence to the full assurance of hope t● the end Heb. 6. 11. And half Faith makes such Believers to be like King Agrippa only half and almost Christians Act. 26. 28. Quest. Must it also be honest that is ha●e a ●●●d Conscience accompanying it and be seated in one who is careful to be just to his word Ans. Yes as it implies the owning of Doctrines and Propositions so it leads to ingage in Promises and Undertakings the good performance whereof includes not only Understanding and Knowledge but also Honesty and good Conscience So that a fruitful Faith must not be a bare skilfulness in Opinion but also a trustiness and integrity in discharging a Profession It effects Obedience only in just and upright tempers that make Conscience to perform their promises to fulfil their pretences and answer all just expectations Among all those several sorts of hearers by whom it was received the word believed brought forth fruit only in an honest and good heart as our Lord himself notes
Luke 8. 15. And to draw us near to God with a full assurance of faith we must joyn a true heart and a clean conscience Heb. 10. 22. and the charity which the Law requires flows then only from an unfeigned faith when 't is accompanied with a pure heart and a good conscience 1 Tim. 1. 5. And therefore in Simon Magus it bore no Fruit because his heart was not right in the sight of God Act. 8. 13 21. So that we must not wonder if we see a crue Faith prove barren and producing no obedience in a dishonest and false Man. Since it is not Faith alone but Honesty that must make a Man careful to remember and perform his undertaking and false unjust Persons how right soever they may be in their belief and apprehensions will be as like to break their word with God as they are with their Neighbours Quest. Must it also lastly be resolute and fully fixed after all things are well considered That so when any hardships arise in the way of Faith we may not be soon staggered in mind and put to deliberate anew whether or no to go on in it Ans. Yes when they want this resolvedness Men are not like to hold on in a way of difficulties and such as do every where occur in Faiths race Every true Believer must have cast up all the cost and pains of his way beforehand as our Saviour tells us in the Parables of the wise builder and of the king going to war Luke 14. 28 31. They must stand prepared to run all hazards and sustain all losses setting Faith above all things else and resolving to stick to it whatever prove its trials and discouragements And such Believers as these the Scripture calls grounded and settled in the faith Col. 1. 23. and rooted built up and established in it Col. 2. 7. And the believers or receivers of the word who fell off in tribulation are said to have had no root in themselves Matth. 13. 21. A deliberate resolution is a sure Ground-work and what is built on that may be like to stand a Storm and after all the Assaults that are made upon it remain unshaken Quest. So that the Faith whereon all the fore-mentioned Fruits are like to grow must not be a meer pretence of Faith but sincere and undissembled it must not be ●n empty profession and formal out-side out inward in the apprehension of the mind ●t must not be a wavering Opinion but confident and well assured it must not ●e a speculative cool and unmoving Notion but hearty concerning and affectionate it must not be in a careless forgetful and failing but in a conscientiously careful just and performing Man it must not act on an irresolute heart which will be easily daunted or soon staggered but one that upon good reason and after due deliberation is fully fixt and resolved to follow it Ans. Yes the Faith that influences the Heart and Life and stands in all times and trials must be thus qualified And the Faith which is either dissembled formal wavering unaffecting careless or irresolute some one or other of which the Faith of all Sinners is is like to have no such Blessed Fruits proceding from it As Simon Magus's had not whose heart was not right ●or Agrippa's whose Faith was but almost ●or the Temporary Believers whose faith ●ell away because it wanted root So that these different attendants and various qualifications of Faith make the difference in its Fruits and Effects and distinguish the Faith of Saints from the Faith of Sinners Quest. It has been often said of Faith by some that it is an act of Recumbency or leaning and rolling our selves on Christ for Salvation Are such Phrases applicable to Faith in a literal and common understanding of them Ans. No for Faith is an act of our Spirits and though Bodies lean and rest on Bodies yet Spirits have none of these Bodily Gestures and Affections When such words are used in expressing mental acts they are Metaphors which are applied to them on account of some Similitude and Resemblance Quest. What acts can the Faith of a Man's mind exert about a Person which may answer these forms of recumbing or leaning upon him Ans. Either Believing some Doctrine which he teaches or relying on some Promise which he makes These may be set off by the acts of recumbing leaning and rolling For as these are ways of Bodies resting and depending so are those of a Man's mind's doing the same upon any Person They acquiesce and rest on his Judgment in what he says and on his Fidelity in what he promises which gives them the same ease and settlement as the acts of rolling leaning and recumbing do to Bodies Quest. Faith is also called by some the hand of the Soul that reaches at and apprehends and applies Christ's Merits What is there in this Spiritual Grace that can answer these expressions Ans. Reaching at them is assenting to some Propositions about them And laying hold of and applying them is consenting and complying with some Overtures or fulfilling some terms and conditions whereby they become our own Putting out these mental acts has the same effect and use to our Souls as stretching out the hand to apprehend and apply things has to our Bodies that is to bring the thing desired down to our selves Quest. So that to roll and lean upon Jesus Christ is in plain English only to believe what he says and to rely upon what he promises And to apprehend or lay hold on Christ and apply his Merits in clearer and more intelligible Language is only to fulfil the Gospel-terms or to have Faith with its fore-cited effects that is to believe and repent whereby his benefits become ours Quest. Yes that I take to be the true meaning and explication of these obscure Phrases I confess I am a great lover of plain and intelligible Speech And above all things else I love to hear Men speak plain in the great Truths of Religion and Points of Salvation wherein there is the most need of all to inform and edifie Men's understandings And therefore I heartily wish these dark and intricate words were less used or wholly laid aside in these important matters they being words of Mens invention which the Holy Scripture no where uses about them and such words too as I am sure do more amuse than instruct those that hear them But if any think fit still to use them or meet with Faith set off by them in Books or Discourses this and no more in a true sense and in plain intelligible English I think is the meaning of them Quest. If Faith in Christ be a Faith in his Word then is it no part of Faith for any Man to believe his sins are pardoned nor of Infidelity to doubt of it because particular Men have no word of his for that Ans. Very right He tells us in the general he will pardon Penitents but in his Word he has not descended to
tell particular Men they are truly Penitent having reserved that to be declared at the last judgment Besides every Man must have true Faith before he can be pardoned Faith and Repentance being the conditions of Pardon But no Man must believe his sins are pardoned before they are pardoned since that were plainly to believe a falshood Quest. But since all doubting of the Pardon of our Sins and the Favour of God implies distrust how will it stand with Faith in God Ans. The belief that our Sins are pardoned implies our trust and confidence of two things One is of God's Power and Fidelity in fulfilling his Promises The other is of sufficiency of our own care in performing his Terms Now Faith implies trust and confidence only in the former of these Quest. Is Faith only a confidence and trust in God not in our selves and implies a good opinion only of his Power and Faithfulness but not of our own fitness Ans. Yes and so of Abraham it is said when he believed That he gave glory to God Rom. 4. 20. His Faith consisted as the Apostle notes in what regarded him he being counted righteous for believing that what God had promised he was fully able to perform verse 21. When once Men have the greatest assurance of those Divine Properties they are said to have the greatest Faith though at the same time they think meanly and are most distrustful of themselves So the good Centurion was having such confidence in Christ's Power that he thought a word of his mouth would recover his Son without giving him the trouble to come in person and at the same time thinking so meanly of himself that he judged his house unworthy to receive him And of this Christ declares I have not found so great faith no not in Israel Matth. 8. 8 10. Quest. I perceive 't is no part of any Man's Faith to believe his sins are pardoned nor of Infidelity to doubt of it But though such doubts are not the sin of Infidelity against God yet are they not always sinful and blame-worthy upon some other account Ans. No but oft-times expressions of virtue and serve to recommend us the more to God as being acts of humility and self-abasement of modesty and poverty of Spirit which set no Man further off but bring him nearer and interest him the more in his favour The fearful humble Publican who durst not presume on any favour but with dejected eyes stood afar off went home justified of God rather than the proud Pharisee who justified himself Upon which our Saviour adds that every one who exalts himself shall be abased and every one that humbleth himself shall be exalted Luke 18. 10. to 15. God is nigh saith the Psalmist to the broken of heart and contrite of spirit Psal. 34. 18. He dwells with the contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and revive the heart of the contrite ones Isaiah 57. 15. He looks to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit and trembles at his word Isaiah 66. 2. to lift up those that humble themselves in his sight James 4. 10. and to bless the poor in spirit Matth. 5. 3. Indeed dejection sadness and tormenting fears are a backner of good endeavours and accuse God as if he were an hard uncomfortable Master very difficult to please and Religion as if it were a sowre melancholy service so that faithful hearts must not affect or harbour fear to these degrees But when they maintain a comfortable hope 't is generally more commendable to lean to the side of humble fear than of arrogant self-flattery to be too lowly and modest rather than too presumptuous and boasting Quest. And is it not more safe too Ans. Yes fear begets care whereas security slackens watchfulness and abates endeavour And therefore the Apostle advises those who would expect to stand not to think highly but fear Rom. 11 20. and to work out their salvation with fear Phil. 2. 12 13. And he was a wise Man that said Happy is he that feareth always but he that hardneth his heart against fear shall fall into mischief Prov. 28. 14. The wisest and the best way generally is to be fully assured of what concerns God but fearful and jealous of what depends upon our selves Quest. But have not some good Men great confidence of God's favour And since that is the priviledge of the most consummate Saints and gives the greatest peace and joy in God and comfort in believing which the Scripture speaks of must it not be a most justifiable as it is really a most blessed and desirable thing Ans. Yes if their confidence is not beyond their grounds and under this comfortable assurance of their present claim to Happiness they preserve an humble sense of their own defects and unworthiness and a fear of their falling from it by afterfailures And this comfortable assurance is vouchsafed to some extraordinary good Souls as their special priviledge as fears and doubts are continued to others for their exercise And different Persons are either indulged more happy injoyment from God or so exercised as to make them more acceptable and dear to him both these ways Quest. You have said enough to explain the nature and to set off the excellency and usefulness of Faith. But lest after we have taken the pains to walk by it it should fail all our expectations in the end pray show me something of the certainty of it Ans. That depends on the Authority of Jesus Christ who is the Author of our Faith. And all must needs be true that he Says and sure that he Promises because he is the true Messiah or the Christ of God who was to come as his Great Prophet to make known his mind unto the World. CHAP. II. That Jesus is the Christ from Ancient Prophecies The Contents Among those Prophecies which prove Jesus to be the Christ First Some prescribe the time of his coming This they mark out by the nearness of such notable Occurrences and Revolutions as would fall under all Mens observation And by fixing the very Year he should appear in Accordingly there was a general expectation of him at that time His coming not put off beyond the time appointed for the sins of the People An account why the Jews who read these clear Notes of the time in their own Prophets are not convinced by them Secondly Others assign man peculiar and visible Notes whereby he may be demonstratively pointed out from all other Men. As 1. His being born of a Virgin. This in some sense spoken of a Virgin of that time but principally of Messiah and then only fully accomplished when Jesus came This cleared from exceptions 2. His having the Spirit of Miracles resting on him 3. His Death with the particular manner and circumstances of it And his returning to Life again 4. His putting an end to the Jewish Sacrifices and Mosaick Covenant and bringing in a New one and a better to
of David and upon his kingdom to order and to establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for ever verse 6 7. Now this Person whose Title and Character is Wonderful The mighty God The everlasting Father The Prince of Peace and whose government on the throne of David was to be perpetually increasing is plainly no other but Messiah And he being the Person promised by Isaiah to be born of a Virgin that Prophecy however answered in some parts before could never be fulfilled and accomplished but in him Quest. But you said before it had respect to the Virgins Son of that time and was in part effected then And if it must still be meant of Christ and made good in him again some hundreds of Years after this makes the same words to be designed for several meanings yea such as must be verified at far distant times which seems a strange thing Ans. This is most usual in the Scriptures and especially in Prophecies which are often spoken of one Person next in view and near at hand in whom they are fulfilled in part but of another further off who though he lies hid till he is shown by the event is yet the Person chiefly meant whereof the other was only a Figure or Type and in whom they are fully to be accomplished Thus God's Promise to David 2 Sam. 7. 12 c. Of setting up his seed for ever after him and saying I will be his Father and he shall be my Son though it were spoken immediately and in part of Solomon as is most apparent yet was chiefly intended and fully made good in Christ. And the words of David about God 's not leaving his soul in hell c. Psal. 16. 8 9 10. though seemingly spoken and in part verified of his own Person were yet meant and fully accomplished in Christ's Resurrection whereto S. Peter applies them Act. 2. 29 c. And so when God said unto him Thou art my son and I will give thee the Heathen Psal. 2. 7 8. which had its full effect in Christ according to S. Paul's interpretation Act. 13. 33. And the same S. Matthew assures us of the Virgins Son which though it might have some regard to a Child of that time yet was then only fulfilled when Christ came Matth. 1. 21 22 23. Quest. But if this Virgins bearing a Son be meant of Christ How could it be given to Achaz and the House of Judah for a sign since he was then afar off and not to come till long after that Generation Ans. Because it was meant of another too who was to be conceived at that very time and would prove a sign to them And as this inferiour accomplishment would be a sign of this answerable Deliverance in that Age so would the miraculous Birth of Christ when it should more eminently fulfil this Prophecy be a much more illustrious sign of an incomparably greater to their Successors And this also answers the end of its being given here for a sign which is not limited to any Person or Time but indefinite to the House of David Hear says the Prophet not O! Ahaz but O! house of David c. verse 13 14. Besides in Ahaz's time the Faith of Christ's being born of a Virgin whilst only promised would give it the virtue of a sign as well as the sight of it when performed The end of it was to assure them that the Kings of Syria and Israel should not prevail against them verse 4 7 9 10. And this if they believed it 't was apt to do as an argument from God's intending for them a greater kindness to his readiness in performing a less for sending Messiah to be born of a Virgin and to be God with us must argue a greater power and kindness than would suffice to work this deliverance from these invading Princes And after all it is not unusual in the Scriptures to beget Faith and confidence by such signs as are remote and far off as God did to Moses Exod. 3. 12. and to Hezekiah and the Jews Isaiah 37. 30. Quest. By this I perceive this Prophecy of a Virgin bearing a Son was intended of Messiah But was it fulfilled in Jesus when he came Ans. Yes most miraculously For his Mother that bare him was a pure Virgin as appeared both from her own account and Joseph's her reputed Husband both Persons of known Integrity and unquestionable Credit And when after her espousal Joseph doubted of her Chastity because she was found with Child before their coming together an Angel is dispatched from Heaven to clear her Honour and to assure him that what was conceived in her was not any Humane Production but of the Holy Ghost Matth. 1. 18 19 20. The Holy Ghost as another Angel explained it to her self coming upon her and the power of the Highest overshadowing her when she objected the impossibility of her being a Mother because she was a pure maid Luke 1. 34 35. All which was so unquestionable and notoriously made out to the Apostles and Primitive Christians their greatest Enemies finding no pretence to cavil and start doubts upon it that they universally and firmly believed it and thought it a point of so great account as to deserve a place and make one Article in that short Summary and Abridgment of Christian Faith called the Apostles Creed For in that one thing we profess to believe concerning Jesus is That being conceived by the Holy Ghost he was born of the Virgin Mary Quest. No wonder it found a place there for it is a sign not more strange than convincing being of it self alone sufficient to prove Jesus to be the Christ since in this he has no Competitors the like I think being never known or pretended of any other Man. But besides this are there not other notable things set down by the Prophets as belonging to him which may serve still further to discover him Ans. Yes Secondly That an extraordinary Spirit not only of Wisdom and Goodness but also of Might or miraculous Power should not only descend now and then by fits but make a settled abode and rest upon him Concerning the branch that shall grow out of the root of Jesse says the Prophet the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and might the Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord Isaiah 11. 1 2. And when once the former Prophecies had pointed out the exact Year and place of his appearing this sign of it self had been enough to discover him For being thus extraordinary not only for Wisdom and Piety but also for Might and miraculous Power when any would survey all the Men in Bethlehem in search of Messiah at the prefixed time he infinitely above all others must needs draw all Mens Eyes to him Quest. Are there any more things still belonging to him which confirm the same Ans. Yes Thirdly That he should be
nearest to us God can turn them off by a thousand ways nay make them serve as means to accomplish our advantage Quest. Since he is to give the end of all actions may we not safely trust him with that and do what we ought to do though thereby we foresee danger of displeasing others or of prejudicing our worldly interests Ans. Yes we must be careful to do our duty that is our part and trust him with events for that is his God oft surprizes us with issues so that a Man cannot foresee the end of his own way which frequently will be better than he expects it And this in the most perillous and threatning times should teach all Men to be more thoughtful and concerned for the exact doing of their duty than for escaping the cross which may seem to accompany it For if then they can be so happy as to consider wisely and perform what they ought they may leave Providence to give it a good effect and take care they be no losers by it Quest. And since we can bring no business about but by God's Blessing must not this teach us never to seek to gain our end by any sin Ans. Most certainly for that is the way to offend God and move him not to bless but to blast our design If we hope to succede as I have observed from Solomon we must commit our work to him and that can be only in well-doing we must acknowledge him and then not seek help from any sin since that were to renounce him Let thine eyes look straight on so as to aim only at just ends and ponder the way of thy feet so as to take none but lawful methods and then thy paths shall be established Prov. 4. 25 26. Quest. And the same you will say of driving Trade by false Weights and Measures or by belying Wares or setting exacting Prices or otherwise using indirect Arts or deceitful Speeches and Pretences Ans. Yes for all these in God's Eyes are an abomination and so can never bring down but may well stop a Blessing Which every Man ought seriously to consider who believes a good Trade to be of God's sending Quest. If we are to have all the good effect of our pains and projects from God we must have it at his time And ought we not to think his the best Season Ans. Yes he sees what opportunities are fittest and brings about a good event with most advantage to those that wait his time and trust him with it as he did to Joseph the rule over his brethren and to David the possession of the kingdom I the Lord will hasten it in its time Isaiah 60. 22. He will arise and have mercy upon Sion when the time of favour yea the set time is come Psal. 102. 13. And this must teach all Men in any hopes or pursuits of good never to be too hasty or by any indirect or evil ways of their own to take the matter out of God's hand but patiently to wait his time and stay till he sees fit to fulfil their expectation He that believeth will not make haste Isaiah 28. 16. Quest. But when Providence is slow in bringing longing desires to pass and lays fair opportunities in their way may not Men turn aside a little to anticipate and prevent God's orderings Ans. No for that is to take the matter out of God's hand where it must needs succeed to best advantage and thereby endanger both the loss of God's favour and all the concurrent Mercies depending on those methods whereby in his own time he has determined to promote or save us Joseph when the keeper of the prison had put the keys into his hand might very probably have made his own escape But had he impatiently catched at that opportunity before God's time he had not been preferred as he was when God delivered him And his Father Jacob when he would hastily snatch the promised birth-right by a falshood underwent therefore great hazards and a long banishment all which would probably have been saved had he patiently stayed till God's Wisdom had found a way for it Quest. If God must thus give success to all means then no design can take effect though never so wisely laid or powerfully backed if it crosses the designs of his Providence Ans. No neither such as are managed by the deepest Counsel and Advice for there is no wisdom nor counsel nor understanding against the Lord Prov. 21. 30. Nor such as are pushed on by the most violent and powerful force For though the horse is provided against the day of battel yet safety is from the Lord verse 31. And therefore let Men always take care wisely to fix their hearts and hopes on such things as they have reason to believe God will support and then be confident that though to try their Faith and Patience he may suffer them to be endangered or distressed for a while as he suffered Joseph to be imprisoned and David to be persecuted and the Church in the * Revelations to be obscured and driven from places of habitation and resort into the wilderness yet at last he will visibly stand by the things he doth espouse and make them prove too hard for the most Politick or Puissant adversaries Quest. If no work can take effect without God then no work of our Enemies And may not this comfort us to think that whilst he designs well for us no contrivance or power of Men or Devils can harm us Ans. It may most justly As it did holy David who when his Enemies devised to take away his life made this his support that whatever they contrived his times were in God's hand Psal. 31. 13 15. This says Isaiah is the heritage of God's servants no weapon shall prosper that is formed against them and every tongue that shall implead them in judgment shall they condemn Isaiah 54. 17. So that no craft or cruelty can destroy whilst God is minded to preserve us Quest. I perceive we must acknowledge God the Donor of success to every work or design but is it he also that gives promotion Ans. Yes both riches and honour come of him in his hand is power and might and in him it is to make great and to give strength to all 1 Chron. 29. 12. Promotion cometh neither from the east nor from the west nor from the south But God is the judge he puts down one and setteth up another Psal. 75. 6 7. And therefore no Man must ever seek to exalt himself by any sinful or indirect means as vile flatteries and sinful compliances and serving wicked turns and undermining others and the like For if promotion is not wholly in the will of sinful Man but depends on the over-ruling Providence of God these certainly are not the way to make an interest Quest. When a Man is a rising then I perceive it is in no wise safe to step aside or take up the least sin though it seem to
it is also free in the second so as not to require in us any Terms or Conditions Answ. No for the main instances of God's Grace that is of his gratuitous and undeserved Gifts are the forgiveness of sins the saving assistances of his Spirit and Eternal Life And all these are given tho' not for any of our Deserts yet upon Conditions Quest. Is forgiveness of sins one instance of God's Free Grace Answ. Yes we are justified that is acquitted in judgment or have our sins pardon'd freely by his Grace Rom. 3. 24. and we have forgiveness according to the riches of his Grace Eph. 1. 7. Quest. And this Grace of Forgiveness you say is granted to us on Conditions Answ. Yes on Condition of our true Repentance For we are to Repent that our sins may be blotted out Act. 3. 19. And Christ was exalted to be a Saviour to give Repentance and Remission of sins Act. 5. 31. And when he sends out his Apostles to publish this Grace he orders them to preach Repentance and Remission of sins in his Name to all Nations Luk 24. 47. Quest. The saving Assistance of God's holy Spirit is another eminent instance of Grace and is most commonly called so in common speech but is that given too upon Conditions Answ. Yes on condition of our own care and concurrent endeavours For tho' the first motions and suggestions of the Spirit which make the first step in our Conversion may prevent our endeavours yet the continuance of them on our Hearts and their encrease to a saving pitch that will govern our Lives and guard us against Temptations depends upon our own Concurrence To him that hath that is improves what God bestows shall more be given but from him that hath not i. e. doth not profit with it as the wicked Servant did not who went and hid his Talent shall be taken away even what he hath Mat. 25. 25 29. And when St. Paul tells us God works in us both to will and to do he tells us withal that we must be Fellow-workers and work out our own Salvation Phil 2. 12 13. Quest. Is Eternal Life another instance of Free-Grace Answ. Yes it is an instance of it and the Crown and consummation of all the rest It is called the Gift of God Rom. 6. 23. and the Free gift of God Rom. 5. 15 16 18. Quest. And is it also bestow'd upon Conditions Answ. Yes upon condition of our Obedience to the Laws of God. Being made perfect thro' Suffering Christ became the Author of Eternal Salvation to those that obey him Heb. 5. 9. And blessed are they that do his Commandments that they may have right to the Tree of Life Rev. 22. 14. Quest. The Grace we have by the death of Christ then is free as you say only as that excludes all our Deserts but not as it excludes all Terms and Conditions Answ. Very right And this is plain by that way wherein God makes over all that Grace to us which is by the New Covenant For what is given by way of Covenant is given upon Terms because Covenants differ from absolute Grants and imply Articles on both sides And thus the Benefits of the Gospel are given to us For Christ's sake we shall receive Remission of sins the Assistance of the Spirit and Eternal Life tho' we never deserved them but we shall not receive them unless we Repent and obey in order to them Quest. By this I perceive the Grace of Christ is no encouragement to sin or slothfulness and that his dying for our sins will not save us from dying for them our selves unless we repent of them Answ. Undoubtedly it will not Quest. But as soon as ever we repent we may believe and trust that we shall be saved by it Answ. Yes and this is the true Faith in his Blood that is a Faith that our Life shall be spared and we reconciled to God for the sake of it God hath set forth Christ a Propitiation for the Remission of sins that are pass'd thro' Faith in his Blood Rom. 3. 25. But this Faith belongs not to any whilst they continue in sin and are wicked men but only when they begin to obey and serve him Quest. From what you have said it appears that Christ's great aim in dying for us was to reclaim us from our sins and make us holy and good men and that he purchased Reconciliation and the favour of God only to shew us it would not be in vain and to encourage us to become so Answ. Yes so it was For he gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie to himself a peculiar people zealous of good works Tit. 2. 14. And he bare our sins in his own Body upon the Tree that we being dead to sin should live unto righteousness 1 Pet. 2. 24. Quest. You say Christ died to atone and satisfie for sins that God might pardon us when we repent of them But why did he not think Repentance enough without a Ransom Why would he not pardon Penitents unless Christ would die to make satisfaction for them Answ. Because the requiring such a satisfaction shewed his perfect hatred of sin which is for the Honour of his Holiness and the strict care of his Laws which maintains the Reputation of his Justice and took off all hope of impunity if men shall go on still to transgress and so was the greatest discouragement to future offences All which would have been otherwise had he been easie in forgiving and admitted of a Reconciliation without a Ransom Quest. How doth the requiring such a satisfaction shew his perfect hatred of sin for the Honour of his Holiness Answ. Because he would not remit the Punishment of it but upon the highest Ransom and because when he undertook to answer for it he would not spare it in his own Son so that his hatred to it could not be overcome even by his love to him Nay moreover because when in consideration of his infinite Merits and their Repentance he returns into favour with them yet to shew his absolute detestation of their former sins he will not receive even the Prayers and Devotions of Penitent Sinners at their own Hands or treat with them in person but requires a Mediator to offer up and transact all for them And withal admitting no other either in Heaven or Earth for that Advocate but only his own eternal and most dearly beloved Son To shew that when they offered the greatest Consideration yet in indignation at their former Provocations he would have no deangs with them by any person less great and dear than him Quest. How doth it shew his strict care of his Laws for the Honour of his Justice Answ. Because he would not dispense with the threatnings of those Laws where he had no less a Reason than the Salvation of all men the greatest and most considerable part of the visible Creation without a valuable recompence Quest. How doth
Quest. I see the Holy Ghost endowed the Apostles with strange Gifts of Miracles But could they work these Miracles at any instant of time when they would or were some Preparations required to them Answ. There was required to them 1. Always Faith in him that wrought them And 2. sometimes particularly in miraculous Cures Faith in the Person that received them or whom they were wrought upon Quest. What was the Faith required in him that wrought them Answ. A Perswasion that God's Power would assist him and perform the Miracle by him For that they might never offer at this in vain which would have exposed both themselves and their Religion whensoever God would enable them to work a Miracle he first possessed their minds with a firm Belief and Assurance of it And this is the Faith so oft required of Wonder-workers in the Scriptures Though I have all Faith so that I could remove Mountains 1 Cor. 13. 2. And if ye have Faith as a Grane of Mustard-Seed ye shall say to this Mountain Remove hence to yonder Place and it shall Remove and nothing shall be unpossible unto you Mat. 17. 20. And this Faith is reckon'd as one of the extraordinary Gifts of the Spirit To another Faith by the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 9. Quest. What was the Faith that sometimes but more especially in the cure of Diseases was required on him that received a Miracle or the Person it was to be wrought upon Answ. A Perswasion that God would enable the Wonder-worker to do the cure for or shew the Miracle upon him This also was another Requisite For Paul stedfastly beholding the Creeple and perceiving he had faith to be healed said to him stand upright Act. 14. 9 10. Believe ye that I am able to do this said Christ to the blind Men according to your Faith so be it unto you Mat. 9. 28 29. If thou canst do any thing said the Father of the Demoniack have Compassion on us and help us Jesus said unto him if thou canst believe I can all miraculous Things are possible to be done to him that believeth Mar. 9. 22 23. And in his own Country 't is said Christ did not many Miracles because of their unbelief Mat. 13. 58. or as St. Mark he could not do them God it seems suspending this miraculous aid in the case of such whose unbelief rendred them unworthy of it Mark 6. 4 5. Quest. What is the third and last of those extraordinary Gifts which the Holy Ghost bestowed upon the Apostles Answ. The Gift of strange Tongues whereby they who were all Jews were able in an instant to Publish that Religion God had revealed to them over all the world and be understood by men of every Language Quest. Was this given to the Apostles Answ. Yes visibly at the day of Pentecost when the Holy Ghost descended upon each of them in the shape of Cloven Tongues like as of Fire and they spake with other Tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance and talked to Parthians and Romans Cretes and Arabians and to the devout men from every Nation under Heaven at that time gathered together to Jerusalem to every man in the Tongue wherein he was born Acts. 2. 1. to 12. And at the imposition of the Apostles hands it was generally bestowed on others afterwards As on the Disciples at Ephesus at the imposition of Paul's hands Acts 19. 2 6. on Cornelius and his Gentile Friends at Peter's Preaching for while he yet spake to them the Holy Ghost fell on all them that heard the word and they spake with Tongues and magnified God Acts 10. 44 45 46. And so on others in great numbers particularly in the Church of Corinth Quest. To what end were they thus endowed with all Languages Answ. To enable them to Preach to all Nations for they were Commission'd to teach all Nations Mat. 28. 19. And they could not teach them without speaking to every man in his own Language And therefore wheresoever they came the Spirit immediately made them as perfect in the Language of the Place as they were in their own Mother Tongue Quest. Had not some the Gift of Tongues who were not sent out to men of another Language Answ. Yes as particularly in the Church of Corinth for there many would speak in the Assemblies where all or most were Greeks in Strange Tongues which because the Church did not understand St. Paul directs such gifted Linguists to Pray for another Gift of interpreting Tongues to make such enthusiasms intelligible to their Hearers 1 Cor. 14. 2 5 13. In these strange Tongues they Preached v. 6. and Prayed to God v. 14. And this being an offering up both inspired Prayers and in inspired Tongues which are both his extraordinary Gifts is called Praying and Singing by or with the Spirit v. 14 15. Quest. To what end then served these strange Tongues in such Churches all of one Tongue Answ. Not to make known Religion indeed because the hearers did not understand them But they serv'd to express the Speakers Devotion and so edified himself 1 Cor. 14. 4. and as a Sign to confirm our Religion and so were an argument as all other Miracles were to prove it true to Infidels Tongues are for a sign not to them that believe but to them that believe not v. 22. Quest. Was there any Guilt subservient to this of speaking with strange Tongues Answ. Yes the Gift of interpreting those strange Tongues when spoken either by themselves or others Quest. But I pray you what need of that did not they that spoke these strange Tongues understand themselves Answ. Yes he that spoke in an unknown Tongue edified himself 1 Cor. 14. 4. and he that gave Thanks in it gave Thanks well as St. Paul says v. 17. But in this exercise of strange Tongues the heat of Enthusiasm and Divine Rapture was sometimes so great that the Speaker could not interpret himself as he spoke nor remember it after that heat was over so as to give an explication to those that heard it And this defect the Gift of interpreting Tongues supplyed which Gift St Paul directs those who had the other of speaking with strange Tongues to beg of God in order to their greater usefulness Let him that speaketh in an unknown Tongue pray also that he may interpret i. e. do it with such consistency and moderation of mind as to be able afterwards to give the same in other more intelligible words v. 13. and orders that when any spoke with Tongues who were not thus qualified to explain themselves they should speak not all at a time as they sometimes did but by course and have one still to second them to interpret their strange speech v. 27. Quest. By this I see what are the extraordinary Gifts which the Holy Ghost bestowed upon the Apostles viz. the Gift of inspiration whereby they should be infallibly instructed in their Religion of Tongues and utterance whereby they should intelligibly and undauntedly
express and declare it and of Miracles whereby they should undoubtedly prove and demonstrate it to all the World. Answ. Yes Quest. When Christ promised the Holy Ghost to his Apostles he calls him by the Name of Comforter Joh. 16. 7. What is meant by that Answ. First that he should be an Advocate which is one sence of the word Paraclete to plead the Cause of Christ and his Religion against all that opposed them This he did most convincingly in the miraculous Gifts already mentioned And in this sence Christ says of him that when he is come he will reprove or convince the world of Sin of Righteousness and of Judgment Joh. 16. 8. Secondly a Comforter which is another sence of it to support them under all that troubled them This is plainly another sence since he tells them of sending the Comforter because sorrow had filled their hearts v. 6. And this Office he fulfill'd by assuring them their Lord whose death they lamented was now alive again by supplying his Place in making their defence and giving them assistance and direction and by shewing them an happy end of all their Troubles and preparing them for the Kingdom of Heaven Quest. Is the unpardonable Sin against the Holy Ghost a Sin against these miraculous Gifts of his Answ. Yes for it was against the Gift of Miracles and casting out Devils the Pharisees sin'd when he cautions them against this dreadful sin saying the sin against the Holy Ghost shall never be forgiven Mat. 12. 24 32. Quest. And what is the unpardonable sin against them Answ. Slandering or Blaspheming them as the Pharisees there did when they attributed them to Magick and said he cast out Devils by Beelzebub v. 24. for it is expresly called speaking against the Holy Ghost v. 32. and Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost v. 31. And this he said saith St. Mark because they said he hath an unclean Spirit Mar. 3. 30. Quest. What is meant by never forgiven in this world nor in the world to come Answ. Not being pardonable under any dispensation or Religion either Jewish or Christian for the Jews looked on the days of Messiah as a later state and dispensation of the Church to succeed their own on which account it is called the last days Is. 2. 2. Heb. 1. 2. and the last time 1 Joh. 2. 18. and the World to come Heb. 6. 5. And some sins were to be atoneable among Christians for which there was no atonement among the Jews since by Christ they were to be justified from those Things from which they could not be justified by the Law of Moses Acts 13. 39. And therefore when Christ says this Blasphemy shall not be forgiven in this World nor the World to come that is the same as neither to be forgiven in the Jewish State while it lasted nor the Christian neither Moses nor He having provided any Sacrifice or expiation for it Quest. Is Blaspheming God the Father or the Son unpardonable Answ. No whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man it shall be forgiven him Mat. 12. 32. yea all manner of other Sin and Blasphemy shall be forgiven unto Men v. 31. Quest. Why then will the Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost never be forgiven Is he more worthy than either the Father or the Son Answ. No that is not the reason But these his Gifts are the last means of begetting Belief in men and without Faith and Repentance wrought by Faith there is no Pardon If men would not believe but revile the Son when he was among them after he was taken up the Holy Ghost was to come and be his Advocate and by all the miraculous Gifts I have mentioned gain credit from them But if instead of believing him they shall go to Blaspheme and Revile him and slanderously call all his stupendious Gifts magical Tricks and works of Satan God is resolved to endeavour no more with them nor ever to bring them to Believe and Repent without which there is no Pardon So that it is unpardonable because after it God has decreed that Faith and Repentance shall be impossible Of Apostates says St. Paul who committed this sin it is impossible to renew them again to Repentance Heb. 6. 6. Quest. These miraculous Gifts were wonderful vouchsafements did not they evidence all that enjoy'd them to be in Favour with God and in a justified state Answ No for they were bestowed promiscuously on good and bad Balaam loved the wages of unrighteousness yet he was a Prophet 2. Pet. 2. 15 16. Judas was the Son of Perdition but he wrought Miracles as well as the other Apostles Mat. 10. 1 4 5 8. And at the last Day many will plead that in Christ's Name they Prophesied and cast out Devils and did Wonders and yet he will bid them depart from him because they wrought iniquity Mat. 7. 22 23. 'T is obedience not miracles that will save our Souls it being not the workers of wonders but workers of Righteousness that God accepts of And thereupon our Saviour bid his Disciples rejoyce not for that the Devils were subject to them but rather because their Names were written in Heaven Luk. 10. 17 18 19 20. Quest. Thus much may suffice for the understanding of the extraordinary Gifts of the Holy Ghost But besides his bestowing these Gifts you said he has appointed several Offices for the Planting and Establishing Christ's Church and Religion what are those Offices which he is the Authour of Answ. He gave some Apostles the highest and most extensive power in the Church and some Prophets who foretold future Things Expounded old and utter'd new Prophesies and some Evangelists who writ the Gospels or preach'd the Word in unconverted Places where it was never heard before and some Pastors and Teachers or Bishops and Presbyters to govern and instruct the Church All which he gave for the perfecting of the Saints the Work of the Ministry and the edifying of the Body of Christ Eph. 4. 8 11 12. And God hath set in the Church first Apostles secondarily Prophets thirdly Teachers after that Miracles Governments c. 1 Cor. 12. 28. Quest. For what end were these Offices appointed Answ. For the Government and Edification of the Church and the Work of the Ministry in the Word and Sacraments and Prayers They were given saith St. Paul for the perfecting of the Saints for the Work of the Ministry and for the edifying of the Body of Christ Eph. 4. 12. Quest. And were all these Offices to last through all Ages of the Church Answ. No Apostles Evangelists and Prophets were Temporary Offices which lay in founding of the Church and revealing Christ's Religion by Inspiration from himself And this Church being once founded and built and this Revelation being once committed to Writing it remains a lasting Thing and so needs not to be repeated a second time And therefore when once they had perform'd this Work in all after Ages there was no further need of them
not an ill Man have some Good in him And have not several practised some Virtues who yet were void of the Spirit and saving Grace Answ. Yes For Herod an ill Man heard John Baptist gladly and did many things Mark 6. 20. And the Foolish Virgins kept pace in some Points with the Wise Mat. 25. 1 2. Either that general Grace which is common to all Persons or their particular Inclination or Interest or Natural Conscience can carry on Men who are Enemies to God in the main to the Performance of some Duties And therefore I said these Vertues are a Sign of the Spirit and of Saving Grace not when some few or more of them meet by chance in an otherwise evil Man but only in those who have a general Care and Conscientious Regard to all of them Quest. You have shewn how these Graces are the Fruits of the Spirit and the Gift of God. But since God's Spirit is thus to work them in us may we not leave God's Work to himself and think our selves free from any Care or Pains about them Answ. No by no means For he that made us Men will not also make us Saints without our selves He created us by himself alone but will renew and save us only through our Concurrence with him Quest. In carrying on this Work of God what must we do towards it Answ. Our Heart and Will must go along with it and our Care and Endeavour too t Quest. When God's Spirit begins any Grace or Vertue in us must our Heart go along with it and are we readily to embrace and make choice of it Answ. Yes for he will not force an unwilling Mind into Goodness And therefore our own Wills are call'd upon when we are press'd to become Good. I have set before you Life and Good Death and Evil Chuse Life Deut. 30. 15 19. And when we obey such Calls some good Tempers of our Wills are noted as the Cause of it The Word and Grace accompanying it brought forth Fruit because it wat received in an honest and good Heart Luke 8. 15. And if we refuse them and continue Bad our own Wills still are charged with it Ye will not come to me that ye might have Life Joh. 5. 40. and Why will ye die O House of Israel Ezek. 18. 31 32. Quest. And when our Heart is thus bent upon any Graces and Good Things must our Care and Endeavour also be put forth in attainment of them Answ. Yes for God gives these Graces as a Blessing upon our own Care and Pains and works them in us when we work with him So that they are to be the Fruit of our Industry as well as of his Bounty God calls to us Make you clean Isa. 1. 16. Turn your selves Ezek. 18. 30 32. as well as we pray to him Turn thou us Jer. 31. 18. and Give us clean Hearts Psal. 51. 10. Quest. But is not God before-hand with us and gives us some Grace before we endeavour any thing I was found of them that sought me not saith the Prophet Isa. 65. 1. Answ. Yes the Grace of outward Revelations and Opportunities These prevent our Care and are given before we ask them In this Kingdom for Instance we have the Light of the Holy Scriptures the Guidance and Care of Pastors the Benefit of Publick Assemblies and the Protection of Laws for Christianity which is not so in Heathen Countries And we have the Scriptures in our own Language and Purity of Doctrine and a truly Primitive Edifying way of Worship which is not so in many Christian Nations And all these with other Advantages came to us unasked we did not seek them but were born to them And of these Isaiah speaks who is not treating of inward Assistances but of outward Revelations which God would make to the Gentiles who made no inquiry after them but had the Revelations brought to them For the Heathen World did not seek out to the Apostles but the Apostles sought them Quest. And doth not he prevent us too with good Desires and inward Motions Answ. Yes he doth with the First Motions and Beginnings of his Grace But as for the Ripening of these and our growing up to a Mastery over our Lusts and a Saving Pitch that requires our own Care and Endeavours which these First Stirrings of Grace must awaken in us And when we do so endeavour after them God will still give more Grace and by his Spirit effect in us such Virtues as we labour after but he will withdraw what he has already given if we are idle and labour not at all For concerning this Improvement of God's Grace by our own Care and Pains our Saviour says To him that hath shall be given and he shall have abundance but from him that hath not i. e. hath not improved what God bestowed shall be taken away even what he hath Mat. 25. 29. Quest. God's Giving then is only an Encouragement for our Seeking since he gives those Graces as he gives our Food and Maintenance not to idle careless Men but only to such as diligently and wisely labour after them Answ. Very true and therefore we are press'd to work them out our selves by that very Reason work out your own Salvation for it is God that worketh in you both to will and to do Phil. 2. 12 13. Quest. What way should we seek these Graces of the Spirit that by God's Blessing we may attain them Answ. First Pray for them If any man lack Wisdom let him ask of God who giveth to all Men Liberally and upbraideth not and it shall be given him Jam. 1. 5. And God will give the Holy Spirit to those that ask him Luk. 11. 13. Quest. And must we pray in Faith that is ask with an expectation to Receive them Answ. Yes for God cannot bear to see us question his kindness or distrust his Promise Our distrust is enough to make him deny us any thing but we are sure to receive the Graces he has promised if we dare confide in him Whatsoever ye shall ask Believing you shall receive Mat. 21. 22. And if any man lack Wisdom let him ask of God. But let him ask in Faith nothing wavering Jam. 1. 5 6. Quest. What other ways of seeking these Graces would you direct to Answ. Secondly a frequent and serious use of the Holy Sacrament That is no unfruitful Ordinance but conveys Spiritual strength into our Souls as Bread doth to our Bodies This the Scripture intimates when Christ's Eucharistical Body is called Bread Joh. 6. 51 55. And when the eating Bread and drinking Wine is called the Communion of his Body and Blood that is the Communication of all those Graces and Benefits to us which were purchased by them 1 Cor. 10. 16. Quest. Have you any other Rules Answ. Yes Thirdly with Prayers and Sacraments we must joyn a Diligent use of wise and likely means of attaining the Desired Graces When we seek to God for Daily Bread and maintenance it
Foundation What mean you by the Foundation of Faith Answ. Such points of it as are the very Bottom and Ground-work of the Christian Covenant whereinto we are all Baptized and whereon the Church is Erected They are such Articles as are the Root of all that Worship and Obedience we are to pay to God of all that Submission Trust and Adoration we are to shew towards Jesus Christ and of all that Labour and Success we are call'd to here in the Prosecution of an Holy Life All the Points of our Christian Faith are a-like True but all Truths are not a-like useful nor all useful Truths a-like necessary 'T is necessary for us to believe all when we are sufficiently shew'd that Christ has taught them But 't is moreover necessary for us all to see he has taught some which are not only to be Believed because they were Revealed but were therefore Revealed because necessary to be Learned and Believed of all that retain to him And these Points which are not only Profitable but necessary to the Worship and Service of God by Jesus Christ and to the maintenance of the Christian Covenant and of the Church which is Built upon it are called Fundamentals Quest. Can you shew me what points are such Answ. One is the common foundation of all true Religion Mosaical and Natural as well as Christian and that is the Belief of the one True God not only of his Being but also of his Providence and Care to Reward those that seek him Thus St. Paul sets down Faith towards God as one Article to be first laid Heb. 6 1. For he that comes to God in any way saith he must believe that he is and that he is a Rewarder of them that diligently seek him Heb. 11. 6. This Faith in the one true God is overthrown not only when Men overlook or deny him but also when they joyn any Gentile Gods who were Apostate Spirits in Copartnership with him For every true Church must have Repentance from Idols towards God as well as Faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ Act 20. 20 21. And this is Life eternal says our Saviour to know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent Joh. 17. 3. And he is Antichrist saith St. John that denies the Father and the Son 1 Joh. 2. 22. If she cast off the Belief of the one true God the common Principle of all true Religion she is the Congregation of some Faln Spirits which set up for false Gods and not the Church of the Great God of Heaven As well as if she have not Faith in Christ she is no longer Christian. Quest. But when a Church professes Faith in the one true God the common Ground-work of all true Religion What is the Particular Foundation of the Christian Religion Answ. Belief of Jesus being the Son of God and the Christ and of Salvation by his Merits and Mediation When Peter confessed Jesus to be the Christ the Son of the living God our Saviour said upon this Rock will I build my Church Mat. 16. 16 18. And St. Paul says the Foundation which he had laid and other than which no Man can lay is Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3. 11. And the compass of saving Knowledge marked out by our Lord himself as I noted is together with the Knowledge of the one true God to know Jesus Christ whom he has sent Whilst any Church retains this Faith in Christ it is Christian and has Right to Baptism as St. Philip declar'd to the Eunuch who was Baptized upon his making this Confession Act. 8. 37 38. But if it denys this Authority of Christ and its dependance upon him for salvation it is thereby unchurched and becomes unchristian like Jewish Mahometane or Heathen Churches and is put out of the ordinary way of Salvation there being no Name under Heaven given among Men whereby we may be saved but his alone Act. 4. 12. Quest. But doth not this Grand Article of Jesus being the Christ and Saviour imply in it sundry other Articles Answ. Yes if we Believe Jesus to be the Christ we must believe all the Holy Scriptures as his Word and they contain all Articles But it more especially implies his Incarnation Passion Resurrection and other great Articles of the Creed which must be expresly owned by every one that rightly understands it And accordingly in the various Repetitions of this Grand Article and Representations of the saving Faith one or other of these is oft-times added and given as the instance of it Believing Jesus to be the Christ the Son of God you may have Life through his Name saith St. John shewing the necessity of this main Foundation Joh. 20. 31. But St. Paul speaking of this Grand Doctrine says I determined to know nothing among you but Jesus Christ and him Crucified setting out the knowledge of Christ in the knowledge of his Passion 1 Cor. 2. 2. And if thou confess the Lord Jesus and believe God raised him from the Dead thou shalt be saved exemplifying the saving knowledge of Jesus in the Belief of his Resurrection Rom. 10. 9. And when he commanded us to preach him saith St. Peter he commanded us to preach and testifie that it is he who is ordained of God to be the Judge both of quick and dead illustrating the Preaching Christ by preaching the Judgment to come Act. 10. 42. Every Spirit that confesseth Jesus Christ is come in the Flesh is of God And every Spirit that confesses it not is Antichrist and not of God saith St. John explaining the Confession of Jesus Christ by the Confession of his Incarnation 1 Joh. 4. 2 3. And speaking of the Record or Witness God had given to the Christian Doctrine he thus declares the matter attested by him This is the Record God hath given us Eternal Life and this Life is in his Son. He that hath the Son hath Life and he that hath not the Son of God hath not Life Setting off the Christian Religion and the Saving Faith by the Belief of the Life everlasting 1 Joh. 5. 10 11 12. And as for the Belief of the Holy Ghost the necessity of that and of our Dependance on him to make any man a Christian our Saviour has sufficiently expressed by ordering our very Baptism which initiates us into Christianity to be into his Name Mat. 28. 19. All these Points are the very Ground and Foundation of our Subjection to the Father Son and Holy Ghost the Parties we contract withal in the Christian Covenant of all our Adoration Trust and Submission to the Blessed Jesus of our worshipping and serving God by him and of all that Holiness of Life which must gain us the Divine Acceptance on all which Accounts they are necessary and Ground-work Articles of Christian Faith and properly call'd Fundamentals Quest. By this it may seem as if the Believing Jesus to be the Christ were in more explicit words to believe the Apostles Creed since that sets
Scandalous Prophanations of the Lords Supper were sickly and weak and fell asleep at present 1 Cor. 11. 30 32. And the Man of God from Judah being pitiably seduced by a Dissembling Prophet without any thing that appears of an Evil intent and having first faithfully and boldly declared God's Message against Jeroboam's Altar we may reasonably hope was mercifully spared as to the other World. But yet here God met him by the way and devoured him by a Lion for yielding to a Seducer to eat Bread against the Word of the Lord 1 King. 13. And this ought mightily to restrain us all from acting any great dishonour to God or crying Offences for which God may judge us in our Persons Estates or Families in this World when upon our true Repentance he acquits us in the next Penitence is not so good a Preservative against the sting of these as innocence is For such Offences do always justly expose us to Temporal Calamities and sometimes make it necessary for us that we should be severely corrected in this World. Which consideration ought to restrain all that regard either their own or their Families welfare in this World from ever being guilty of them Quest. When are these punishments relaxed and what is the time of Pardon Answ. The solemn full and irreversible declaration of it is at the Day of judgement But before that God pardons the sins of good Men in this life giving them a general pardon of all sins in Baptism and of all particular Failures afterwards as they repent of them So on David's repentance for the matter of Uriah Nathan told him God had put away his Sin 2 Sam. 12. 13. Quest. Is this forgiveness in this World perfect and irreversible so that when once any sins are struck off they are never more placed to account Answ. No but limited and suspended on Terms viz. mens perseverance in repentance for if after their pardon they fall off and relapse into the same wickedness they shall be unpardon'd all again and stand accountable for all former Transgressions If the Righteous man turn from his Righteousness to iniquity saith God in Ezekiel all the Righteousness he hath done shall not be mention'd to him but in his Sins that he hath sinn'd shall he dye Ezek. 18. 24. 33. 12 13. And when the Debtor to whom his Lord had pardon'd all his great Sums had render'd himself unworthy of that grace by his merciless usage of a small Debtor among his fellow Servants his incensed Lord cancel'd the Pardon and exacted all the dispunged Accounts And so says Christ will my Heavenly Father do with you in like case Mat. 18. 24 27 30 34 35. Quest. Do we believe the forgiveness of all Sins Answ. Yes except the Sin against the Holy Ghost and willful Apostacy from the Faith of Christ for which there is no forgiveness Quest. I have seen already that there is no Pardon for Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost But is there none also for willful Apostacy from Christianity Answ. No for if we sin willfully i. e. by willful Apostacy after we have received the knowledge of the Truth there remains no more Sacrifice for Sin i. e. Christ's Sacrifice is not designed to expiate such offence Heb. 10. 26. Quest. Is that Sinning willfully willful Apostacy from Christianity Answ. Yes For these Sinners saith the Apostle tread under foot the Son of God i. e. affirm Christ to be still in the Grave not risen from the Dead and count the blood of the Covenant or Christ's Blood an unholy Thing i. e. as the Blood of a Malefactor and say it was justly shed and do despite to the Spirit of Grace i. e. despite the Holy Ghost which confirm'd Christianity and reject all his Miracles as Satanical delusions v. 29. So that these Sinners were plainly Apostates who ceased to own and had begun to accuse Christ as the Jews and Heathens did And the same Apostacy St. Paul speaks of in another place when he tells us if Christians fall away i. e. from their Christianity whereby they Crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh or joyn in Condemning him with his Crucifiers it is impossible to renew them again unto repentance Heb. 6. 4 5 6. Quest. But all other Sins you say we may believe and trust to have the pardon of Answ. Yes thro' the merits of Christ and the mercy of God. So Christ Commissions his Apostles to Preach Repentance and Remission of Sins to all Nations Luk. 24. 47. And if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father and he is the Propitiation for our Sins 1 Joh. 2. 1 2. And all manner of Sin and Blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men but that against the Holy Ghost which shall never be forgiven Mat. 12. 31. Quest. You would have no Sinners then to despair of Mercy or think their Sins greater than Christ's merits or God's grace and too big to be forgiven Answ. No by no means For Christ by his most precious death has gain'd a full Pardon for the greatest Sins and sends out his Apostles to Proclaim it to the greatest Sinners David was guilty of Adultery and Murder Paul was a cruel and bloody Persecutor and Blasphemer Peter was perjuriously false and denyed his Master But all these were forgiven and none need or must despair as if when they Repent God had not pardon enough in store Quest. These indeed are instances of the greatest sins But is there forgiveness for them when they are committed with the most aggravating Circumstances Answ. Yes For David's Murder and Adultery was with much deliberation and contrivance and against so many struglings and reluctances that thereby he became almost quite hardned and of a seared Conscience And Peter's denyal was repeated several times and those considerably distant to allow space enough for remorse and that too with false Oaths and bitter imprecations But both these obtain'd mercy on their true repentance Quest. You say on true Repentance Is all this forgiveness then upon some Terms and Conditions Answ. Yes for God's grants of grace are as in consideration of Christs Sacrifice so also of our Faith and Repentance And therefore neither to Infidels nor impenitent Persons Quest. Upon what terms must we believe God will forgive us any willful Sins Answ. When we repent of them and forgive others Quest. Will he not pardon them 'till we repent and amend them Answ. No for to all the willful Sinners of the World the Apostles were to Preach Repentance and Remission of Sins And of these 't is said he that confesses and forsakes his Sins shall find mercy Prov. 28. 13. Quest. But when we have repented and left these Sins will he not forgive us still unless we forgive others that have trespass'd against us Answ. No there is no forgiveness neither for impenitent nor uncharitable Persons For if ye forgive men their Trespasses your Heavenly Father will also forgive you But if ye forgive not men
grace and were aimed all for boasting as S. Paul says of them And several Rules of estimate and valuation they had to secure this to themselves one was from the number and tale of their good deeds if they had but done one more good than bad actions to make their merits preponderate their demerits Another was from their weight and importance if they had either the Skill or good Fortune to make choice of such as God set most by which might be put in the Scale against several others Nay such in their account was the desert of every good work if they continued to keep any one of their Sixteen hundred and thirteen Precepts out of Love to it and not from any worldly respect though at the same time the rest were neglected Or if when they had nothing else to produce they could but say they were the natural Seed of Abraham a ground of Jewish confidence tax'd by S. John the Baptist and were literally circumcised they thought there was enough in them to merit the future reward And being thus liberal in undervaluing what came from God and over-valuing what they did for him whilst they thus set their own rates they were sure not to want desert enough for the greatest recompences Yea so far as to make out their common saying that all Israelites shall have a portion in the world to come And for all these things sufficient testimonies are produced by learned Men out of their own Writings Quest. So that I perceive the Jewish deeds set up for Righteousness by their Doctors were the deeds of their own Law especially those distinguishing Laws which were peculiar to themselves And those not any secret and spiritual but only external acts such as fell under the cognizance of their own Courts of Justice Which were cried up for Righteousness as performed in virtue of their own strength and meriting the reward by their own worth and excellence Ans. Very right And the asserters of such works must needs be under a great surprise to hear of Justification by Gospel-duties Extending not only to Overt-Acts but their Hearts and Spirits which were to be performed by the help of God's inward Grace and rewarded through Christ's merits and God's merciful acceptance And their way of meriting acceptance by meer external Mosaick works performed in vertue of their own free-will and Humane strength being in all its points a way of their own setting up but disowned and rejected by God S. Paul calls their own Righteousness and opposes to the other of being esteemed Righteous through Christ's merits and God's merciful acceptance on Faith and Obedience to the Gospel wrought by the help of God's Grace which he calls God's Righteousness and the Righteousness of faith Phil. 3. 9. Rom. 10. 3 5 6. Quest. Do the Apostles in their disputes of Justification with the Jews set themselves to beat down these points Ans. Yes and more especially S. Paul both at Rome and Galatia and other places For in this matter they declare how by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified so that the Gentiles must not live like Jews but only by faith and obedience of Christ or faith working by love so that the natural Jews must live as Christians That this Obedience avails when it is not only with the outward but also with the inward Man containing together with the external Practice a renewal of the mind a circumcision of the heart and spirit and a new creature That 't is wrought in us not through meer humane strength but the internal grace of God so as to be truly the fruit of ●he Spirit and the renewal of the Holy Ghost And that the Gospel offering such inward Grace is thereupon a ministry of the Spirit and a ministration of Righteousness but that the Law wanting it is therefore only an external Revelation a ministration of the letter of death and condemnation which seeing it could not give the life it required but only an outward direction how to lead it therefore Righteousness could not come by it That this is counted Righteousness only in virtue of Redemption by Christ and of the merit of his Sacrifice first purchasing the pardon of our sins and then the acceptance of our services Christ being the end of the law for Righteousness and we being justified through the redemption that is in Jesus whose blood is a propitiation for our sins and who is made to us of God redemption and righteousness That in him God accepts and rewards it not for its own merits but out of his meer bounty and free grace without and infinitely beyond its deserts We being justified freely by his grace And that this way as God's free Grace is exalted so all Jewish boasts are excluded Lastly instead of the Jewish barter and exchange in weighing out good against bad actions or merits against demerits they tell us that he who continues to offend in one point is as liable to be condemned though not to so sore a punishment as he that is guilty of all And that he who sincerely endeavours to keep all after he has done the most must say he has done no more than his duty and is still an unprofitable servant All which with sundry others every where observable by any careful peruser of the Apostolical Writings are directly levelled against the foresaid Jewish Tenets Quest. And such Jewish Deeds you say are the deeds of the law which S. Paul opposes Rom. 3. 28. Ans. Yes Quest. Indeed the Apostles Disputation there of Justification is evidently against the Jews Ans. Yes and the way whereby they sought to be justified was by the Law of Moses That they cried up as the great Rule and Dispensation of Righteousness and Perfection they stumbled as he declares at that stumbling stone Rom. 9. 31 32. And they looked to be justified by it in virtue and merit of their own works as I have shew'd not through the merit of Christ's Sacrifice and the Grace of God pardoning their offences which made S. Paul declare to all who would be justified by the Law that Christ was become of none effect to them and that they were fallen from grace Gal. 5. 2 4. Quest. But is it clear he speaks of such Jewish deeds Ans. Yes because as I say such were set up by the Jews against whom he argues Nay as he adds they were such as would make it necessary for all Men to turn Jews For that way says he God would be the God of the Jews only and not of the Gentiles verse 29. Besides they are such works as are a ground of boasting verse 27. and make the reward reckoned out of debt or desert without grace or being beholden for it Rom. 4. 4. excluding grace as being inconsistent with it Rom. 11. 6. And so the Jews believed and taught of theirs accounting Heaven a just and deserved Wages for