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A30241 CXLV expository sermons upon the whole 17th chapter of the Gospel according to St. John, or, Christs prayer before his passion explicated, and both practically and polemically improved by Anthony Burgess ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1656 (1656) Wing B5651; ESTC R13734 964,431 860

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and this is to be done by the holy Ghost The matter is so great that unless the Spirit of God inable us besides all our study and learning we are not able to keep it yea a Deacon must not be ordained unless he hold fast the mystery of faith in a pure conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 Oh then let none have low thoughts about that which God hath appointed an Office for and therefore given them the titles of the light and salt and nihil est sole sale utilius Fourthly It 's of special consequence to be preserved in the pure faith because the more godly and endeared any are to God this priviledge they shall have to be kept in the truth at least so as not damnably to erre Insomuch that a sound judgement in Religion will distinguish a godly man as well as an unblameable life Mat. 24. Our Saviour speaking of false prophets with what powerfull pretences they should prevail saith If it were possible they should deceive the very elect If it were possible You see by this that there are such false waies in Religion that are inconsistent with salvation and therefore the elect man shall not fall into them no more than into grosse and abominable sins viz. so as totally to lose Heaven and salvation Yea John 10. our Saviour describes his sheep and goats not by their lives but by their attending to the true Doctrine My sheep hear my voice and a stranger they will not hear yea they will flee from him vers 5. So that a godly man doth hang his godliness about his intellectuals as well as morals He is not onely to consider Am I diligent in prayer Do I walk conscionably in my wayes But am I also a lover and prizer of the true Doctrine of Christ Fifthly It 's of great moment to be preserved in the pure Doctrine because that is the foundation and necessary pre-requisite to holinesse The will can never apprehend that which is bonum if the understanding do not first show what is the true good The apprehensive faculty must guide the appetitive If the eye be dark the whole body is as our Saviour afterwards prayeth Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is truth Gods truth is only instrumental to holiness Errours can no more nourish spiritual life then chaff or stubble yea or poison can nourish a man bodily For as false Sacraments such as the Popish cannot increase grace because they have neither institution or promise so is it also for errours and therefore the same persons that had thrust away a good conscience they could not endure or abide it the same made shipwrack of their faith they put it away 1 Tim. 1.19 They had some good conscience once though not truly sanctified but this they repell they do not love it any more it 's against their interests their worldly advantages their lusts and carnal affections Can we then have too precious thoughts of Gods truths seeing they onely are blessed to a mans true godliness Sixthly It 's a mercy to be kept in the truth because of the proueness and readiness that is in men to be lead aside by errours Gal. 2. I wonder you are so soon carried away so soon Let there come a false teacher and he can quickly do more hurt and pervert mens mindes then the Apostle Paul could do good Wonder not if you see some seducer come to a Town and in a moment corrupt mens mindes and make them his Disciples and so overthrow that building which a faithfull Minister hath been many years building up you see it was of old so Paul though an Apostle neither by man nor of man yet found it so and at another time he complaineth how ready they were to become even slaves to false-teachers they might abuse and domineer over them you suffer if a man buffet you c. onely the true Apostles they could not bear them We see then why it is that a goodly field may suddenly be overrunne with tares a hopefull Church the body of Christ be all over with a Gangrene and made deformed There is a proneness in a man to erre in his judgement as well as in his life Happy then is he whom God keeps Seventhly Errours of judgement are damnable as well as sinfull practises It 's true some errours are fundamental some superstructive onely and so one kinde is not as damnable as another but thus it is in Saints also some are compared to a gnat some to a Camel but as we say of the least sinne it deserveth hell so of the least errour for as no sinne is in it self little because God is not a little but infinite God so no errour is in it self little because it 's against the same glorious God Hence Gal. 5. Heresies are reckoned as the fruit of the flesh among other grosse sinnes and can there be more terrible words spoken against any sort of wicked men then the Apostle Peter doth 2 Pet. 2.1 thunder out against some false Teachers that should privily bring in damnable heresies whose damnation sleepeth not Oh then tremble to lose thy soul among errours as well as sinnes For the Apostle 2 Pet. 3. saith Ignorant men wrest the Scriptures to their destruction Damnation is in perverting of Scripture yea 1 Cor. 3. we see there that even hay and stubble errours of a lighter nature make the salvation of a man difficult he shall be saved yet so as by fire Austin and Syrinensis distinguish between the Haeretici and Credentes haereticis the seducers and seduced The former are in a condition more exposed to vengeance then the latter howsoever errors in Religion as well as corrupt practises tend to hell Austin questioned who was worse a Christian believing truly but living wickedly or an heretick living unblameably but believing unsoundly Non audeo dicere I dare not determine it But Salvian a pious ancient Writer inveighs more against the prophane Christian and as for the unblameable heretick Errant saith he sed piè errant haeretici sunt sed tibi non sibi and thus Bernard reckoning up the three little ages of the Church the first under persecutions the second under heresies the third under corrupt manners makes this latter the more bitter But we cannot absolutely pronounce which of these two is the worse in some respects one exceeding the other Eighthly It 's a blessed thing to be kept in the truth because of that heavy censure the Scripture inflicts upon heretical persons to avoid them to turn from them not to bid them Godspeed John 2. They must not receive such into their house or have any familiarity with them and they are to avoid an heretick yea the Apostle would have us hold such accursed though they were Angels or Apostles themselves and Gal. 1. The same reason viz. a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump which is brought as a ground to cast out the incestuous person is also applied to a corrupt doctrine
they be indeed the devils fools What is this but to renounce God and to renounce your baptisme If you have lost your goods you will go and lose your souls to We reade of Ahaziah 2 King 1.6 when his childe was sick he would go to Baal to know whether his childe should recover or no but with what a dreadfull message doth Gods Prophet entertain him telling him his childe should die withall saying Is it because there is not a God in Israel that thou doest so May not we say so when you go to the devils instruments witches wise men and sorcerers Is it because there is not a true God in heaven Some have questioned whether such as compact with the devil and use familiar spirits can possibly repent and be saved they doubt whether they are in a capacity of ever having eternall life but that is too rigid for we reade of Manasses a great sinner in this kinde one that was given to witchcraft and used a familiar spirit yet he prayed and humbled himself and God accepted of him So we reade of some converted by the Apostles preaching that brought in all their conjuring books and burnt them Act. 19.19 Though therefore no doubt is to be made but upon their repentance God will forgive yet it is a great and a grievous sinne it 's a renouncing of God and your Baptism Take heed then of ever doing so and if thy heart hath been so gracelesse and wicked heretofore oh abhorre thy self let thy conscience cry out I have committed a great and abominable sinne thou art the chiefest sinner of many thousands We ought to have no communion with the devil though he had power to foretell and so do good to thee as he hath not any further then God may reveal to him When the devils confessed Christ was the true Son of God he rebuked them and would not own such a confession So Paul also Act. 16.16 would not own a confession though true because by one possessed by the devil Be ashamed of the name of a Christian and renounce thy baptism if thou shouldst over do such sins again SERMON XVIII The Necessity of the Knowledge of Christ Jesus as well as of God the Father JOH 17.3 And Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent WE now come to the second Object of this knowledge necessary to salvation and that is Christ This latter Object is added because of the Jews and some Heretiques who though they acknowledge the only true God yet because they are eirher ignorant of or deny Christ therefore they are not in the way to salvation The object to be known is described 1. By his proper Name 2. By his appellative or name of office 3. From the Original and Cause of it His proper name is Jesus Though some learned men have affected to go out of the ordinary way in giving the true root of this word yet certainly the most common derivation of it is most true viz. that it comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to save as the Angell plainly interprets it his Name shall be called Jesus because he shall save his people from their sinnes Mat. 1.21 It 's the same with Joshua who was so called because he delivered the people out of their temporal miseries and brought them into Canaan being herein a Type of Christ 2. His Name of office Christ as much as anointed I shall not say much of this word now Though the word be attributed to others yet Jesus is properly called the Messias he is the Vnctus unctorum the anointed of the anointed and this doth especially demonstrate the Priestly and the Kingly office of Christ 3. There is the Original or Fountain of this office It 's from God the Father Now when the Father is said to send him it is not to be understood as if it were against Christs will no but he voluntarily and readily undertook this Office likewise so that if we did know and acknowledge such a person as was called Jesus yet if we did not also acknowledge him to be the Christ the Mediatour appointed by God our knowledge would be insufficient Obs That the knowledge of one true God is not enough to salvatian without the knowledge of Christ also They are both put together and none may separate them Hence it 's so often in Scripture commanded that we should beleeve in Christ That be who beleeveth shall not enter into judgement and our Saviour makes the knowlege of him and the Father inseparably joyned together Ioh. 8.19 To open the Doctrine Consider 1. That we cannot have any knowledge about Christ either that there is such an one or what he is but only by Revelation We told you about God there was a threefold Knowledge by nature by the Creatures by the Scriptures And therefore whereas it might be and is easily granted by all that none can be saved without the knowledge of the true God yet both of old and of late there have been those who have held that the Nations that know not Christ may be saved It 's true they are divided among themselves for some say the Gentiles have some implied or confused knowledge of Christ or else God revealeth it to them extraordinarily but others positively say the knowledge we have by nature and meer light of reason is enough to conduct to heaven As for Cornelius the Centurion whom they instance in the first Heathen converted and baptized under the New Testament it is plain that he had a knowledge of Christ though imperfect Neither is that expression of Peter upon Cornelius his admission Act. 10.35 where he saith God is no accepter of persons but in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse shall be saved any waies favouring salvation without Christ For now the partition wall being broken down and the Gospel to be preached to all Nations which was represented in the vision of a sheet full of clean and unclean beasts the Knowledge of Christ was likewise therewith to be propagated It 's true the Apostle saith they that sinne without the Law shall be judged without the Law Rom. 2. God will not judge them by that they knew not and so they that sinne without the knowledge of the Gospel they shall not be judged for not beleeving in Christ and not receiving of him to whom he was never tendred but then they have a law of conscience within them by which they shall be condemned so that by the Scripture we cannot say there is any other way of salvation but by the Name of Christ and Faith in his Name yea that Text Act. 4.12 is plainly excluding any other way of salvation There is no other Name under Heaven whereby we must be saved Howsoever men may tropically explain and say how can we think so merciful a God can suffer so many thousands and thousands who never heard of Christ to perish yea their poor Infants who committed no actual sinne We must submit to the
is insufficient to salvation Therefore it 's a pernicious assertion of Venator the Remonstrant that the Heathens they had the Light as it were of the Starres The Jews of the Moon The Christians of the Sunne and all might be saved by their respective Lights 4. God is manifested by the Scriptures in a common way of Light Many men by an Historicall faith beleeving the Scriptures must also beleeve a God for there is no such clear evidence any way as by that and thus we may judge of most Christians they know there is a God they beleeve him to be because the Word doth so fully affirm it Lastly There is a knowledge of God in a practicall obedient way so to know him as to fear him to obey his Commandments to walk humbly before him and to depend upon him and this is the manifestation or knowledge the truly godly only have and the number of these is very few so that if you set aside those who know God only upon a natural conscience or by education or by a general historical Faith The residue who know him by speciall illumination and sanctification are like the gleaning after harvest so that we may hence conclude that whatsoever parts learning understanding men have in Religion yet till inwardly sanctified they know not God They are wholly estranged from him They live without God in the world Eph. 2. God is not in their thoughts in their hearts neither have they any enjoyment of him Oh that we could make every Auditor sensible of this I live in the world I know much I have great acquaintance but yet am a stranger to God Now these following particulars will plainly discover that the godly only do truly know God R. 1 First Because though men have this speculative knowledge yet they do not love him and delight in him above all things It 's Gods command that we should love him with all our heart our minds and strength yea above Father Mother life and every thing that is dear Insomuch that the Scripture saith Whosoever loveth the world the love of the Father is not in him 1 Joh. 2.15 Now whence is it that we love these poor empty comforts more then God Is it not because we do not know God Had we clear manifestations of the goodnesse excellency and fulnesse that is in God our whole heart would be ravished with him As it is with the glorified Saints in heaven they have an immediate vision of God They behold him in this glorious beauty and hence it is that they cannot sinne The understanding seeth such infinite perfection in God that they abhorre all things that would divert from him As the eye dazled with the Beam-light of the Sun cannot behold any thing else As he that hath eaten honey findeth all things else unsavoury As the Saints in heaven do thus so the Saints on earth do in part and in some good measure They beholding the Image of God 2 Cor. 4. are transformed into the same Image The more we know God as revealed in the word the more our hearts pant after him as you see David often manifesting the breaking of his heart after God Well then by this you see that few know God if they did how could they leave the Ocean for a drop how could they part with God for every fading creature thy lusts thy sins are more then God in thy thoughts and affections Oh pray for a knowledge of God in Christ The blinde man doth not admire the glory of the Sunne because he cannot see it ignoti nulla cupido R. 2 2. No wicked man though never so great a Scholar knoweth God if he doe not fear him if he stands not in an holy awe and reverence of him who would not fear thee Isa 10. O thou King of Nations for to thee it appertaineth and sanctifie the Lord God let him be your dread Our Saviour likewise Fear not them that can kill the body Mat. 10.28 but I tell you whom you shall fear c. You see then that if we did rightly know God how pure and just he is how full of wrath and vengeance against impenitent sinners we would cry out with Joseph upon every temptation How can I do this and sinne against God I cannot I dare not Thus Paul Knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men 2 Cor. 5.11 Did men know the greatnesse and the terrour of God the power and Majesty he is cloathed with That no sinner though never so great can stand before him any more then the stubble before the fire That he can immediatly raise hellish torments in thy conscience That he can bid thee go out of this Church a trembling Cain a despairing Judas Did I say People know this God to be so great how could they riot it in all excesse as they do as our Saviour told the Woman Joh. 4. If thou hadst known who it is that asked water of thee thou wouldst have given him Had you or did you know that the God whom you offend all the day long is so great and terrible in Majesty it would have been a stop to all thy bold impieties but men know not God R. 3 3. Only the godly know God because they only are carefull to obey his Commandments and to walk in the way he requireth 1 Joh. 2. If we say we know him and keep not his Commandments we are lyars and abide not in the Truth Their knowledge of God and a carefull obedience to his commands cannot be separated The Apostle saith all others are but lyars and hypocrites Dost thou boast of knowledge and yet break his Sabbath wallow in the lusts of the flesh Thou art a lyar thou dost not know God Hence it followeth in my Text I have manifested thy Name to my Disciples and they have kept thy Word Oh then never talk of thy knowledge never speak of what thou readest or what thou understandest unlesse also thy obedience to Gods will be as manifest so that when we see any prophane wicked man indued with great parts you may say Lo there is such an one though he knoweth all Points in Religion though he knoweth every Chapter in the Bible yet he knoweth nothing of God for whereas God saith Be not drunk with wine c. and Wo be to those that are strong to drink yet every week if not every day he is drunk Though God saith Swear not at all yet some cannot speak without an Oath scarce Oh that these things might enter into you If you know God you would obey him you would say I dare not I must not do this or that God whom I know and serve commands the contrary Therefore the Prophet Hosea when he speaketh of much wickednesse in a Land swearing and whoring and injustice he saith There is no Knowledge of God in the Land Hos 4.1 Argum. 4 4. The godly man only knoweth God because he only hath these gracious effects of Gods grace upon his heart
several waies faith helpeth to keep us Vse of Exhortation to the godly above all keepings to keep faith up The Just is to live by faith and we are to walk by faith and all the while we do so we stand immovable upon a Rock If thou growest secure or revolting if thou beginnest to decay all is because thy faith weakens The streams must dry up when the Fountain doth If the branches wither there is some defect in the Root Vse 2. of Instruction That it 's no wonder if wicked men grow worse and worse if they stumble and fall and never rise more if they become like the Blackmore and Leopard that cannot change their skins for they have no true lively faith in God and so have not whereby to be staid up Till God make a wonderful change in them expect no other but he that is filthy will be more filthy still SERMON LVIII The Greatness of the Mercy of being kept sound in the Truth And the Damnableness of Errour demonstrated JOHN 17.11 Keep through thy own Name those whom thou hast given me WE are now come to the last Interpretation which is part of the compleat sense here intended in this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that is to take Name for that pure and sound Doctrine whereby God in a saving manner is known Thus Name is used at the 6th verse I have manifested thy Name which is explained by the word they had kept And then the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is taken properly Keep in thy Name in thy Truth and Word which I have manifested to them For there is a two-fold keeping of Gods Word Obedientially by conforming our lives to it and Doctrinally by preserving the truth of it In this sense Timothy is exhorted to keep 2 Tim. 1.14 the good thing committed to his trust gold he hath received he must look this be not debased by erroneous dross Observe That it 's a special mercy to be kept in the truth and pure faith we have received Faith and Unity our Saviour prayeth for agreement in errour is not true peace and faith without Unity will like a live-coal quickly die of it self alone In these times of Errours and Heresies this Doctrine hath more than ordinary usefulness in it and therefore diligently attend to the grounds why it 's a special mercy to be kept sound in the faith and that we are more to rejoyce that our souls are kept from deceitfull errours than our bodies from infectious diseases And First It 's a special mercy because of the frequent and diligent Exhortations given to all that they fall not from the truth that they make not shipwrack of their faith 2 Pet. 3.17 The Apostle having spoken before that some wrest the Scriptures to their own destruction he bids even the godly beware a word used in matter of great concernment and where there is great danger lest they also be lead aside Therefore errour is not the way to Heaven and the Errour of the wicked it is called Wickedness is shewed in corrupt Doctrines as well as in prophane lives so as to fall from their stedfastness if you begin to shake to doubt it 's a sinne we must not fall from our stedfastness There is a notable place also Jude vers 3. when the Apostle gave himself diligently to write of salvation what doth he pitch upon to strive for the true Faith and he doth not barely write but exhorts his affections as well as his judgement are set on work and it 's not simply to believe or keep the faith but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be in an agony as they that are in a fight or race The faith should be as dear to us as our lives and the word implies a difficulty to keep it because of violent enemies to take away this live childe and put a dead one in the room Lastly you have the character of this faith it was once delivered so that new Revelations are not to be expected But we are to enquire What was once delivered Thus you see a Christian must not be cold and lukewarm in the truths of God but he must with all his soul imploy himself about it Secondly True Doctrine is a special mercy because one main end of the Scripture is to inform and keep us therein As God made the Sunne a fountain of all light and the Starres shine with a borrowed light from it so hath God put all spiritual light into the Scriptures and with this Sunne both Pastour and people are to be cloathed The Scripture is not only a rule of our life but of our faith principally 2 Tim. 3.16 The Apostle there reckoning up the admirable use and end of the Scriptures puts this in the first place That it is profitable for Doctrine How then dare a man say it 's no matter what Religion I am of all the doctrinal Disputes are but Scholastical Subtilties Is not this to blaspheme the perfection of the Scripture and is it not horrible ingratitude to God who giveth his Church the Scriptures as the most glorious Jewel it can enjoy This was the Jews priviledge to them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 9. Thirdly It 's a special mercy to be kept in the truth because the Lord hath appointed Officers in the Church for this end among others to preserve and propagate the truth If it be then of such esteem with God ought it not to be also with us And wherein doth Gods regard to his truth more appear than in ordaining Officers in his Church whose main work and imployment should be to disseminate this pure seed wheresoever they come Ephes 4.14 There we have Offices given to the Church and one end is that believers be not tossed up and down with every winde of doctrine And though Timothy as some expound that place had prophesies concerning him what a glorious instrument he would be in the Church of God yet Paul doth again and again exhort him to keep the same doctrine he had delivered to him 1 Tim. 9.20 O Timothy keep that which is committed to thee That compellation is insinuating and argueth much affection in Paul and there is a reason even in the very expression of faith he cals it depositum as Aristotle observeth it 's a greater sinne to imbezil or alter that than any thing we have borrowed because this is committed to our Justice but a depositum to our faithfulness The Depositor doth rest upon us as trusty men So that by this all the Ministers of God are to be awakened Christian faith and doctrine is committed to you as the preservers of it The Priests lips are to preserve knowledge and the people are to require it at their hands The Apostle 2 Tim. 1.14 as if verbum sapienti sat est were not true in this matter doth again re-minde him to keep the good thing committed to him See with what esteem he speaks of the true Doctrine
godly are sometimes raised up for the effecting of a particular mercy they stand in need of Lastly There is this Justifying or saving Faith which hath for it's proper object Christ crucified and so by resting upon him brings reconciliation with God and peace in the conscience It 's true some distinguish between justifying faith and saving as if all that faith which did justifie did not also save but that is built upon that dangerous foundation as if there might be Apostasie from the true faith Now whether this distinction be exact and in what sense it is to be made good I shall not here dispute but take it for a necessary truth Secondly When we say That faith justifieth as it resteth on Christ and receiveth him we do not deny or exclude assent to all other divine truth revealed in Gods word Justifying faith doth necessarily suppose historical or dogmatical faith So that although they be two distinct kinds of faith yet in a justified person all those acts of faith proceed from the same root and habit that principle of faith whereby I am inabled to rest on Christ makes me also firmly to assent to every truth of Gods word yea this dogmatical faith is the foundation of justifying and did men exercise stronger acts of historical faith it would much conduce to our justifying faith and strengthen that did we believe more firmly that Christ came to be a Mediatour then this would quicken up to peculiar confidence in him Therefore the devil hath temptations against both sometimes he assaulteth us in the matter to be believed and sometimes about our application of what we do believe Therefore we are not to oppose these special acts of faith against the general Thirdly This phrase of believing in Christ doth plainly denote a fiducial act of the will and heart as well as the assent of the understanding And this is greatly to be observed that we are not to look upon believing as a disposition to assent to the things of God as true but we do by believing incline the whole heart to trust and rest on Christ in whom we do believe It 's greatly disputed Whether this fiducial application or confidence be of the formal nature of faith or an effect and consequent only of it but I shall wave that at this time It 's plain that to believe in doth denote some cordial and fiducial motion of the soul to the object as it 's center and on that which gives us firm rest Hence faith is called receiving of Christ it 's said to be the eating of his flesh and drinking of his blood It 's called the imbracing of the promises and opposite to this believing is fear Luk. 8.50 and diffidence and wavering So that it 's plain faith hath a fiducial assent with it therefore it 's called believing with the whole heart Act 8.37 The heart believeth Rom. 10.9 as well as the understanding Fourthly Hence it is also That faith is made by some Divines not a simple but an aggregate or compounded habit that it is not in one faculty seated but in two that it is both in the minde and the will And howsoever some have argued against this as being contrary to all Philosophy for one habit to be in two faculties yet the most learned Schoolmen do confess it no absurdity for with some free-will is seated partly in the understanding and partly in the will as also prudence a moral vertue is partly in the minde and partly in the will and all do confesse That though to believe be an immediate act of the understanding yet to this there is required pia affectio in voluntate and indeed seeing as the Apostle saith there is a captivating of the understanding in it's carnal reasons when we do believe that cannot be without some prevalent power upon the will So that we are to look upon Faith as a compounded habit which doth partly work upon the minde by enlightning that and partly upon the will by enclining and strengthning that Fifthly The ground why justifying faith must needs comprehend both is Because that in the promises of the Scripture there is a two-fold object to move our faith for every promise hath in it that which is true and so it requireth assenting acts and then it hath that which is good and so it requireth fiducial and imbracing acts Wonder not then if faith extend it self to two distinct powers of the soul seeing it also reacheth to two distinct objects truth being the object of the understanding and good the object of the will The Apostle comprehends both in that speech 1 Tim. 1.15 This is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation a faithfull saying there is the truth to be believed and worthy of all acceptation there is the good to be imbraced Therefore believing is not a bare speculative assenting to the truth but it is also a sweet quieting and composing of the heart to receive the good promised Hence it 's called receiving Joh. 1. and eating and drinking Joh. 6. it 's compared to the branches receiving moisture from the vine Joh. 15. Sixthly As the Scripture expresseth faith relating to the object believed not to the proposition so at other times it doth expresse the proposition Hence it hath often 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put to it Doest thou believe that I am the Son of God or that I am sent from the Father This is a proposition to be believed but you must know that faith as it justifieth is not properly in that we believe such a proposition to be true viz. That Christ is God or that he will give eternal life to such as believe but the ens incomplexum that is Christ himself in his Person and Offices is the object of our justifying faith Therefore Christ himself is said to dwell in our hearts by faith Eph. 3. Even as the woman is married to the person of her husband and not to the articles of agreement upon marriage and this is that which makes faith to be so powerfull and noble in it's efficacy because Christ is hereby received in the soul who is the authour and fountain of all spiritual operations So that as when the Sun ariseth in our hemisphere it cannot but give light and heat so also when the Sun of righteousness ariseth in our hearts there is the Spirit of Christ also accompanying him in Sanctification and Mortification Seventhly To justifying faith there are these things required some whereof are antecedent and concomitant others essential and constitutive of it As 1. There must be some explicite knowledge of Christ and understanding of him in his Person and Offices Whether knowledge be an act included in the essence of faith or whether it be preparative and antecedent is disputed Howsoever it 's certain None can believe that doth not know the thing he believeth Henc● it is that faith is so often in Scripture called knowledge It 's true indeed faith hath not