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A62378 An exposition vvith notes on the whole fourth chapter to the the Romanes wherein the grand question of justification by faith alone, without works, is controverted, stated, cleared, and fully resolved ... / by William Sclater, Doctor in Divinity, sometimes minister of Gods word at Pitminster, in Summerset ; now published by his son, William Sclater, Batchelar in Divinity, minister at Collompton in Devon. Sclater, William, 1575-1626.; Sclater, William, 1609-1661. 1650 (1650) Wing S918; ESTC R37207 141,740 211

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unto them and taken notice of so far as that he was for it esteemed righteous We shall best understand the meaning by comparing the self-same phrase as it it is extant Psal 106.31 Phineas his executing judgment was counted to him for righteousness to all generations for evermore that is he for that fact or by means thereof had the esteem of a righteous man amongst men unto all posterity So Abrahams faith was counted to him for righteousness before God that is he for believing or by means of faith was esteemed or reckoned righteous before God This as far as I conceive is the proper meaning of the phrase If that hypallage seem harsh thus conceive it His believing was reckoned unto him to righteousness that is came into reckoning so far with God on his behalf or for his benefit that thereby he obtained righteousness Faith then is of that reckoning with God as that to Abraham yea to every man endued thrrewith he allowes the esteem of a righteous man understand faith as it s before described For the better understanding of this conclusion let us see a little how faith obtains this blessing of righteousness at Gods hands or what is the reason of the connexion of righteousness with believing Bellarm. de just if lib. 1. cap. 17. Divers are the explanations Papists impute it sometimes to the merit and worth of the very habit or act of faith as if it deserved at Gods hands justification and had the force of a proper efficient cause meritoriously to procure it Against it are these Reasons First Bernard Ser. 1. de Annunciat Hereof we may say as Bernard of other good works or as he terms them merits that it s not such as as that for it righteousness should be due to the believer of right or as though God should do us wrong except he gave to us believing righteousness for this as all other good qualities or actions is the gift of God and therefore man is rather a debtor to God for it then God to man Secondly Besides this how holds the difference assigned by the Apostle betwixt the worker and the believer in the manner of obtaining righteousness if righteousness belong to the believer as a reward of debt If righteousness belong to the believer of debt as a reward of believing then vainly doth the Apostle alledg this as a difference betwixt the believer and the worker that the one hath righteousness paid as of debt the other given as of grace but the difference is sure authenticall Ergo. Their arguments will be fitlyest answered when we come to set down the opinions of our own Divines Sometimes they thus conceive it that faith is the beginning of righteousness Bellarm. qua supra and the inchoate formall cause of righteousness that is part of that righteousness whereby we are made formally righteous and that they would prove out of this text because to him that believeth in him that justifyeth the ungodly his faith is counted to righteousness But they would deceive us with a false glosse for that is not the meaning that faith is counted our righteousness but that its taken notice of so far as that to the believer righteousness is imputed A mean therefore it is of obtaining righteousness not righteousness it self except by righteousness they will understand that of sanctification 1 Ioh. 3. Wherefore we acknowledg it to be a part but what is that to the righteousness of justification whereof the question is 2. After their own glosse its righteousness only aestimativè not therefore formally Sometimes again they make righteousness depend on faith as a preparation thereto in part necessary to dispose the subject to receive justification that is as they term it the infusion of charity and other graces whereby we are made formally righteous Versipelles Where may we finde you Is it the form of righteousness and yet but a preparation to righteousness Ob. The form inchoate not compleat Answ But I demand Is it before the other graces of God in time Or are they togethes with it infused If so how then make you yet a preparation only to righteousness when as together with it other gifts which make up righteousness compleate are infused Let us leave them and come to explications of our own Divines Some thus Righteousness or justification hath its connexion with faith by an order that God hath been pleased to set down in the Covenant of grace which is this that whosoever shall believe in Christ shall be justified and saved This condition now performed on our parts justification is ours and we are as righteous in Gods esteem as if we had all the righteousness of the Law performed by our selves Now this is an evident and clear truth that in the Evangelical Covenant faith is the condition of justification But first if faith justifies us as a condition performed by us fain I would know how we may maintain that doctrine of our Churches concerning sole faith and its being the only thing in us that avails to the attainment of justification for if we view the tenour of the Covenant of grace faith is not the only condition required of us to justification and remission of sins for repentance also is a condition required in that covenant to the same end Mar. 1.15 Repent and believe the Gospel Act. 2.38 Repent and be baptized for remission of sins but faith must so justifie that in that work no other thing may share with it no not repentance it self Ergo Besides this if the act of faith qua actus be that for which we are justified how doth the Apostle describe our righteousness to be without works vers 6. How sets he the worker and believer in direct opposition in the articles of justification Perhaps it will be said that works of the law only are excluded not this which is a worker of the Gospel Answ It should seem that not only works of the law but universally all works are excluded because whatsoever may occasion boasting in man is exclnded Rom. 3.27 Now as great occasion of boasting is left to man in the act of faith as in any work of the law whatsoever Nay may some mansay for faith is the gift of God and the exercise of faith meerly his work Answ The same may as truly be said of love patience c. These being also gifts infused of God and their actions even every act of them meerly his works in us even as meerly as the act of faith It remains then that we enquire whether in the other explanations of our Divines more likelihood may be found Usully it s thus conceived to justifie namely as it is an instrument to apprehend that righteousness for which we are justified even the * 1. Cor. 1.30 righteousness of Christ whether of this life or death or both it is not pertinent to this place to enquire but in this respect righteousness is ascribed unto it And here we are asked whether we
faith in Christ If a man have works his works are taken notice of and recorded and withall his reward is thus registred after the Covenant of the Law Righteousness of Debt If a man want works but have faith his faith is recorded and to him also is ascribed or imputed the same reward though out of another cause Righteousness by favour The thing we have in the word of God and perhaps it is Allegorically expressed by allusion to the customs of men This I am sure is truth in the Legal Covenant If a man do the Commandments he shall live in them and the doers of the Law shall be iustified This also is true in the Evangelicall Covenant He that believes shall be saved and if a man believes in Christ his faith shall be reckoned of to iustification The reward is all one that God intends to both they differ 1. In the condition 2. In the ground of payment Righteousness is ascribed to the Worker of Debt to the Believer of Grace God should do the worker wrong if he should not approve him as righteous that hath fulfilled the Laws But it s his mere grace that to a believer he will ascribe righteousness sith his righteousness is merely precaria performed by another and by him nothing brought but faith to receive it and tender it unto God and that faith also merely the work of God If I fail in expressing my self or explaining the Apostle yet let no man blame my desire of both but further my weakness with his help that the Apostle may be understood Sense The sense then is this as I conceive it To him that hath works such as the Law prescribes and brings them unto God righteousness is ascribed or set on his reckoning as wages belonging to him of debt and not of grace VERS 5. But to him that worketh not We must beware that we mistake not the Apo●●e as if he promised righteousness to him that believes and neglected good works Jam. 2.26 For the Apostle James hath taught us that faith without works is dead and if a man say he hath faith and have no works can that faith save him And the Apostle describing faith justifying as it is in the justified man saith it worketh by love Gal. 5.6 What is then the sense To him that worketh not that is hath no such works to bring before God as for them to claim righteousness thereby or as Ambrose expounds Ambros ad loc Non operanti id est qui obnoxius est peccatis quia non operatur quod mandat Lex To him that hath no works because he is a transgressour of the Law But believeth in him See here say some how faith justifying is described To be rather an affiance in the Justifier then an assent to the Gospel Answ Rather see here affiance meeting with assent in the person of the believer they agree in the subject differ for all that in their nature In him that justifieth the ungodly Doth the Lord then justifie the wicked Answ Surely though he be God that forgiveth iniquity and sin yet will he in no case clear the wicked Exod. 34.7 and Prov. 17.15 He professeth that he is as abominable that justifieth the wicked as he that condemns the righteous Answ Hereto answers are diversely conceived according as the terms admit distinction First thus Wicked men are of two sorts some such as continue impenitently in their sinns some that by grace repent and believe in Christ Of the first sort its true God justifies them not that is acquits them not while they so continue and yet wicked men repenting and believing in Christ that is ceasing to be wicked God clears and holds innocent for to such he forgives iniquity transgression and sinne Paraeus ad loc Exod. 34.7 or thus Justifying of a wicked man is either against the orders of Justice without receiving sufficient satisfaction for the trespasse or else upon receit of sufficient satisfaction In the first sense God justifieth not the wicked in the second he mercifully justifieth us having received satisfaction in the death of his Son Las●ly Justification hath divers significations sometimes it signifies to make just sometimes to declare just or to absolve In this last sense God justifies not the ungodly that is absolves him not whiles he so continues but yet he makes an ungodly man righteous Of the first kind of justification understand Moses of the second Paul His faith is counted for righteousness See explication ad vers 3. Observ The things out of this passage of Scripture observable are these First the direct opposition of Faith and Works in this Article of justification If it be by Faith it s not of Works If by Works not of Faith that howsoever it be true their concurrence is certain their agreement amiable in the life of the justified yet their contrariety irreconcileable in the procurement of justification Not to be long in the manifestation of it First the Apostles argument hath else no force in the case of Abraham except their opposition be such as is mentioned 2. Besides this view it in the contrary principles from which the two kinds of justification proceed The Worker is justified of debt the believer of grace that look what opposition there is betwixt favour and debt the same is betwixt justification by Works and justification by Faith Like see Rom. 11.6 Now were it not a point of acute Sophistry to teach us how to deny the Apostles argument and to tell him the consequence is not good because they are able to assigne a medium Witty I confesse but with such wit as S. James tells us to be * Jam. 3.15 devilish Such as it is let us hear it forsooth they point us to this medium of participation It is partly by Faith partly by Works I say not any man is so impudent as in plain terms to contradict the Apostle but surely this in the issue shall be found their answer howsoever with distinctions they colour the matter Let us hear them Justification by Faith and justification by Works indeed are opposite if ye understand in both the same justification but there is a first justification and a second the one is by Faith the other by Works Again works are of two sorts works of Nature works of Grace betwixt justification by works of Nature and that by Faith there is indeed an opposition not so in that by works of Grace For these distinctions and the vanity of them see suprà ad ver 2. Annotat. ad cap. 3. This once is evident out of this place that the Apostle imputes the justification of Abraham now regenerate unto his Faith and betwixt the justification that Abraham had being now in grace and that of works placeth the opposition Besides this what means the Apostle to befool the Galatians for expecting the perfection of this benefit by the Law which was begun by the Gospel Gal. 3.3 Would he not thereby teach us
that whole justification is perfected in Faith And for works of grace though as hath been said they agree with faith well in the heart of a Christian yet justification even by these works is opposite to that of Faith Phil. 3.9 More I adde not onely I advise them that labour to mingle Moses and Christ Faith and Works in this point of justification to remember what Paul hath pronounced Gal. 5.4 with a solemn protestation That as many as look for justification by works whether in whole or in part are fallen from grace and Christ shall nothing profit them This opposition also is to be remembred against all such as teach us to expect justification by faith as it is a work the opposition is none that I can conceive betwixt the justification by the work of faith and the work of love The next thing here offered to our notice is a distinction of rewards and it lies thus There is a reward paid as Debt there is another given of Favour And it is of some use in that grand question betwixt us and our Adversaries touching the merit of good works which from no ground they ofter infer then from this Because they shall be rewarded To this the answer is Not every work that hath a reward is by and by meritorious except the reward be paid as debt to the work Now the reward that is given to our obedience is given of favour not paid of debt and that we prove thus First because the same that is called the reward of obedience is said withall to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a free gift of God A reward and yet a free gift How if paid of Debt not given of grace besides saith Bernard Mans merits or good works are of no such quality or worth as that eternall life should be due to us for them of right or as if the Lord should do us wrong except he gave it us Nam ut taceam Bern. Serm. 1. ce Annunc quòd merita omnia Dei dona sunt ità homo magìs propter ipsa Deo debitor est quàm Deus homini quid sunt merita omnia ad tantam gloriam as S. Bernard His reasons are these Man is debtor to God for his good works because they are his gifts not God to man 2. The reward exceeds by many degrees the worth of the work Therefore is not a reward of debt but of favour If they shall reply and say God should wrong us except he thus rewarded us I answer Not us but himself the debt not growing from the worth of our works but from the grace and truth of the Promiser Debitor factus est Deus non aliquid a nobis accipiendo sed quòd ei placuit promittendo S. August De verb. Apost Serm. 16. To him that worketh not but believeth The sense see supra So then God hath not left sinfull man Observ without a means of justification though he want works such as the law required to righteousness for what through want of works we fail of he hath provided by faith shall be obtained even righteousness such as may stead us at the barr of Gods justice A point worthy of our attentive consideration for the magnifying of Gods mercy and furtherance of our comfort It was grace enough in God that he was pleased to create us in so excellent a condition only through desire to communicate himself unto us and for it he might justly claim obedience to any his commandements especially proportioned to our abilities even without any promise of farther recompence but loe that nothing should be wanting to our encouragement when he propounds a law to be obeyed he also covenants with him to crown his obedience with immortality This do and thou shalt live Lev. 18.15 Rom. 10.5 But see mans great unthankfulness to God and unmercifulness to himself not contented with the happiness presently enjoyed nor with the hope of immortality promised he affects not to be like God as he was but to be equall unto him in knowledg Gen. 3.5 He throws off the yoak of obedience and thereby deprives himself justly of all the happiness he had or could hope for plunges himself into misery endless easeless and remediless except God in mercy provide an escape Now behold the unsearchable riches of the mercy and love of God toward man loath that he should perish he enters another course for his recovery sends his own Son out of his bosome in the similitude of sinfull flesh by obedience unto death to satisfie justice that there might yet be a way for his mercy to overflow in the salvation of his chosen and in him enters a new league with man for restoring righteousness and salvation under a condition so reasonable as none more could be devised believe only in him that justifieth the ungodly thy sins are pardoned righteousness restored salvation recovered Lord what is man saith David considering a blessing far inferior that thou so reckonest on him or the son of man that thou so visitest him Psal 8.4 Our hearts must needs be dull and dead if these things work not in us more then acknowledgment even admiration of Gods endless mercy Well this was Gods mercy towards us Vse 1 Now sure I doubt not but those that have felt in any degree the misery to which the Law hath sentenced them and withall how impossible it is for the law to restore them inasmuch as its weak through the flesh can willingly say Amen to that thinksgiving of the Apostle Thanks be to God for his unspeakable gift 2 Cor. 9.15 That our hearts may be yet more inflamed to this duty consider we I beseech you the preferment and property God hath given man in this mercy even above Angels creatures by naturall condition more excellent then he Heb. 2.16 Angels sinned God sent them no Mediator they fell by not obeying God hath made them no promise of rising by believing Man sinned God sent his Son to propitiate man fell by disobedience hath promise of restoring by believing Let them perish everlastingly with hellish Angells that acknowledg not this mercy or that renouncing the righteousness of faith seek to establish their own in works of the Law Vse 2 Now as this serves for the magnifying of Gods mercy so no less for the multiplying of our comfort and nourishing our hope of righteousness yea though we have no works such as the law prescribes to justification for behold another mean of righteousness provided for sinners even faith in him that justifies the ungodly And therefore what do we vexing and breaking our hearts for sins once committed now repented A mustard seed of faith commands a mountain of sin to the bottome of the sea What if Moses be so strict that none but exact justice will serve to justification One greater then Moses is here that tels us faith is available to righteousness And to the end the conscience of sins after faith received might not overthrow hope of
l. 4. Homo non quaerit salutem â Sacramentis quasi ab eis sed per ea à Deo Haec enim praepositio A * Scotus ad lib 4. dist 1. denotat Causam agentem per verò notat causam instrumentalem Well let us yeild them to be organa whether Morall or Physicall It pleaseth not Bellarmine Bellarm de effect Sacram. lib. 2. cap. 11. that they should be causes Morall though he confesse a stream of their own Writers run current that way But they must be Physicall instruments that is such as properly and by inherent vertue work or cause justification And if any ask what that vertue is that God hath put in them to effect this grace He answers It is nothing but Gods moving or using of them to that purpose For by this that God useth the Sacramentall action to produce grace he doth elevate it above the nature and makes it reach to an effect supernaturall Now I might be long in shewing the contrary judgement of his own side some making them means or instruments of grace per modum continentiae because they contain the grace they signifie some by concomitance onely c. I will propound the sentence of Scotus onely whom ye shall find thus to resolve There is not saith he in Sacraments aliqua Causalitas activa propriè dicta respectu gratiae but they are said to be causes of grace improperly inasmuch as the receiving thereof is an immediate disposition to grace mox For thus hath God disposed and set down the order and hereof he hath certified the Church that to him that in due manner receives the Sacrament he will give the effect thereby signified This I trow is far from Bellarmines conceit But let us further examine his conclusion In all ordinary Physical instruments which God useth to effect his purposes by there is besides Gods use of them a vertue and power and fitness given them to produce what he useth them unto as meat to nourish clothes to warm Sun to cherish the earth c. and shall Sacraments be ordinary Physical instruments and yet lack this inherent vertue What Philosophy yea or Divinitie so teacheth Besides this Sacraments all suppose those habits wherein they make justifying grace to consist Acts 8. Matth. 28. to be in him that receives them they must have faith or at least 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before Sacraments may be applied unto them and shall we think they are elevated by this use and motion they speak of to work what is already wrought Lastly if they wrought thus Physically as it were potions methinks then every one to whom they are applyed must needs receive their effect unavoidably and so Simon Magus must receive the grace of the Sacrament as well as Simon Peter which if it be absurd as absurd it is to make them Physicall instruments or Active causes of this grace which they call justifying To conclude this whole question May it not be granted that Sacraments are instruments or means of grace Answ No doubt yes but instruments morall onely that is such as whose vertue sticks not in them but onely because where they are duely used God is present by covenant to work grace supernaturall So Scotus ut suprá so some of our Divines Yet more nearly 1. Consider what grace they are ordained to work as means 2. How they concur to the working of it The grace they work is 1. Confirmation in perswasion of justification 2. Care and increase of sanctification c. How work they it Answ Occasionally onely quatenus they represent Gods actions Christs person and benefits our duty c. by which representations Gods spirit worketh in our hearts in these or the like discourses God hath in the Gospel promised remission of sins to all those that believe in Christ and for further assurance hath been pleased to ordain Sacraments as it were his seals set to his covenant wherein I see represented the death of Christ that procured pardon of sinns and in the Ministers action delivering the Sacrament to me Gods act in delivering Christ and his benefits to me is resembled Now his promise is that if I bring faith to the use of the Sacraments the things they signifie are mine How then assumes conscience I believe what God in the Gospel promiseth what in Sacraments he seals unto me and thence follows as a conclusion my faith confirmed c. Now what say our Adversaries to this manner of Sacraments efficacy Forsooth if in this manner onely they have their efficacy there shall then be no difference betwixt Sacraments of the Old Law and those of the New Testament Answ What none at all Bellarm. de effect Sacram. lib. 2. c. 8. They confesse elsewhere that we agree with them in the differences thus far 1. The signes are others 2. The number less 3. The facility more 4. Clearness of signification greater 5. Manner of signifying different 6. Endurance of new longer Object Yea but in the point of efficacy there is left no difference For thus theirs were effectuall by stirring up faith by their significations and by the devotion of the receiver which they call The work of the Worker Observ Is that the matter then hear what I think the Apostle here teacheth or at least warrants us to teach by collection That Sacraments of the Old Testament were the same with ours in matter signified in use ends and efficacie What is Baptisme unto us more then a signe of our initiation into the Covenant Gen. 17.7 Rom. 4.11 Deut. 30.6 A feal of the righteousness of faith An occasionall mean of sanctification The same was Circumcision to Abraham and to all his posterity in the ordinary measure of efficacy there might be some odds in efficacy and manner of it none at all that can be assigned For 1. In their Sacraments they had Communion with Christ They ate the same spirituall meat 1. Cor. 10.3 4. drank the same spirituall drink that we do though under other signes or elements Object Rhenenses ad loc Bellarm. de effect Sacram. lib. 2. c. 17. August de utilit Poenit. cap. 1.2 Nay rather say Papists the same amongst themselves not the same with us Answ Then let us hear Augustine Eundem inquit cibum spiritualem manducaverunt quid est eundem nisi quia eum quem etiam nos mox Eundem non invenio quomodo intelligam nisi eum quem manducamus nos Inst What Paul there speaks of were not Sacraments Answ How then fit they Pauls intention which is apparently this to take from this people vain confidence in Sacraments 2. What means Paul to say of their passage through the sea c. it was a baptizing of them Cyprian Epist 76. August in Psal 77. Hear ancients Cyprian Mare illud Sacramentum Baptismi fuisse declarat beatus Apostolus Paulus dicens Nolo vos ignorare fratres c. 1. Cor. 10. Augustine Per mare transitus
obedience except thou mayest thereby be justified Is not that love of God in sending his Son to dye for thy sins that he might make thee zealous of good works enforcement sufficient to all obedience except thou mayest part stakes with Christ in the glory of thy salvation Hear Paul The love of Christ constraineth me to all faithfulness in my calling 2 Cor. 5.14 2. And is it nothing that by this means we make our calling and Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 3. Nothing that others by seeing their spotless conversation are occasioned to glorifie God Mat. 5.16 In a word that nothing might be wanting to quicken our dulness the Lord hath been pleased by promise to binde himself to recompence even of slenderest duties tendred to him in sincerity Mat. 10.41 A reward thou shalt have accrewing not from worth of thy works but from grace of the promiser Will not that satisfie Not at all except they may merit Heaven as if they should say they had rather have no salvation then be beholden to Gods bounty for the bestowing The Apostle methinks thunders against such meritmongers They are fallen from grace and Christ shall profit them nothing Gal. 5.4 Lastly Hence learn to detest as greatest enemies to thy salvation all such as teach to seek it by the law of such saith Paul let them be Anathema Aut utinam exscindantur Gal. 5.12 Of all Hereticall and false Teachers this last age hath afforded I know none more pernicious then these two 1. Libertines that teach to neglect obedience as in every respect unnecessary 2. Justitiaries that press obedience as available to justification The first sort are odious to all except Epicures The latter by how much the more strictly they urge obedience and that so fittingly to the humor of nature by so much the more pernicious As much excludes from Heaven the intention of meritting by performing as the neglect of the Lawgivers authority in omitting obedience These are enemies to the Dominion The other professed adversaries to the grace of God VERS 16 17. Therefore it is of faith that it might be by grace to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed not to that only which is of the Law but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham who is the father of us all Vers 17. As it is written I have made thee a Father of many nations c. HItherto hath been shewen that justification is not by works Followes now farther confirmation of the affirmitive part that it is by faith The arguments here laid down are from the ends and scope which the Lord propounds to himself in our justification and salvation First The glory of his grace Secondly Our comfort Thirdly And both these are intended to all the seed All these severall arguments are artifically linked together by the Apostle and as it were entwyned one in another by mutuall dependance Let us view them severally It must be by faith that it may be by grace If the inheritance be ours by grace and not by debt then must it be by faith but it is ours by grace Ergo. The force of the consequence we will shew after we have a little explaned the text The verb suppositum are both wanting It is by faith What must be by faith Either the promise or the inheritance the inheritance rather see vers 13.14 What is the verb to be supplyed whether it is promised or it is attained whether we will the sense no whit varied by either The parcells here to be considered are two First That the inheritance is attained by grace Secondly That except it be attained by faith it cannot be ours by grace It were impertinent perhaps on this occasion to run out into that question Whether by grace we are here to understand the gifts of grace in us or the favour of God towards us The best Interpreters amongst the adversaries oppose it to debitum and expound it liberality Cajetan Sasbout By grace then understand we Gods free and undeserved favour without any of our works or debt accrewing from God to us by merit see vers 4 and Rom. 11.6 Observ The point is that our righteousness and salvation is of Gods free favour Hereto after a sort agree our adversaries but yet latet anguis Whether meerly of grace or mixtly of grace and merit Who so is conversant in their writings shall finde them so sharing the matter betwixt grace and merit that he would think the spirit of Pelagius to be revived in them He seeing how odious his barefaced heresie was teaching that a man without help of Gods grace might live without sin began to colour it with equivocating and in terms to joyn with orthodox teachers and to give place to the necessity of grace assisting in the fulfilling of the Law whereupon said Austin finding but the term of grace and mercy by cunning concession inserted by Pelagius Augustine de natur grat cap. 11. Laetitiâ repente perfusus sum quòd Dei gratiam non negaret per quam solam homo justificari potest But what was this grace of God admitted by Pelagians Nothing else but freewill which our nature receives from God without any precedent merits and the law or doctrine of God Augustin de Haeres Haer. 88. whereby we are taught what we should do and in doing hope for With like cunning deal our adversaries Justification and salvation they are of grace But what is grace the gift of charity in us How of grace because not without it but prinbipally and originally from it Let us enquire whether this can be the sense of the Apostle in ascribing the inheritance unto Gods grace or whether his purpose be only to make grace a sharer with our merits and not rather so to give all to grace that he excludes all debitum that may accrew to us in respect of our works See Annotat. ad cap. 3.24 Freely by grace that is meerly by grace and vers 27. So that all boasting in our selves may be excluded In a word See 1. Our state before calling it is such as wherein no merits except for the truth of the point merita mala as Austin terms them Augustin de grat lib Arbitr cap. 5. can have place whence is that of Paul so often repeated not of works of righteousness Tit. 3.5.2 Tim. 1.9 2. After calling works imperfect Rom. 7.3 The good that is in them meerly the work of Gods grace whence that of Austin Si donasunt bona merita tua non deus coronat merita tua tanquam merita tua sed tanquam dona sua Augustin de grat lib. Arbitr cap. 78. And again Si vita bona nostra nihil aliud est quam dei gratia Sine dubio vita aeterna quae bonae vitae redditur Dei gratia est ipsa enim gratis datur quia gratis data est illi cui datur The labour would be long and endless almost to
point at all the dreams and devices of the enemies of Gods grace with their cunning shifts in that no less then Sacrilegious diverting the more part of the glory of mans salvation from Gods grace to our selves Fitter occasion will hereafter offer it self only I say as Augustine Augustin tract in Ioh. 3. seeing God gives freely let us love freely quia gratis dedit gratis ama noli ad praemium diligere deum The Second point followes That it may be of grace it must be of faith This way of justification and no other preserves the glory of Gods grace entire Let us see how say some because grace is promised and given only to the believer Paraeus ad loc that is a truth But the Apostles purpose in this argument is not to shew the necessity of faith to the obtaining of grace but rather to the maintaining of the glory of Gods grace in the matter of our righteousness and salvation Let us enquire therefore how this means of justification by faith stablisheth grace and how that other by works either overthrows or empairs it May we say as some of late because faith is a free gift of God in us The like may be said of charity But take faith correlatively thou shalt see easily how this means of justification alone and no other makes grace glorious For if all our title to righteousness and salvation accrew to us only for the obedience sake of Christ apprehended by faith who sees not how entirely the glory of all belongs to the grace of God But I wonder how Papists with all their skill can uphold the concurrence of works in procuring our title to righteousness and salvation and not overthrow or clip at the least the glory of Gods grace Perhaps because our works proceed of grace but Dic sodes are they meerly of grace or partly of the power of nature Their common consent is that though grace be a principall yet naturall abilities have their partnership in every good work So much as they ascribe to nature so much they derogate from the grace of God See Annotat. ad cap. 3. vers 27. S. Bern Ser. 67. in Cantic 28. Deest gratiae quicquid meritis deputas as S. Bernard The Second argument followes That the promise may be sure and that to all the seed Whether we make this a second argument or a confirmation of the minor in the former is not much materiall If a new argument thus is the frame If the promise must be sure then must the inheritance be of faith But the promise must be sure Ergo. Take it the other way It is of grace Why Because else the promise cannot be sure I rather conceive it as a second argument though linked thus artificially with the former In it we have also two points First That the promise is sure Secondly That except the inheritance be of faith the promise cannot be sure Sure Whether in it self in respect of certain accomplishment or to us in respect of our apprehension and undoubtfull perswasion This later some insist on and thus give the sense If the inheritance depend on any thing except faith and grace we can never have any assurance to obtain the promise but must needs be filled with uncomfortable doubtings and uncertain waverings And that is a truth but not here directly taught The Apostle speaking of the certainty of the promise rather in it self then to our apprehension and perswasion though by Consequence this follows from the former Observ The Point is That the promise of inheritance is firm and shall have certain accomplishment Read for this Heb. 8.6 where the Apostle compares the two covenants together and shews that of grace to be preferred especially in respect of the certainty of it and of our attainment of the blessings therein conveyed And view 1. The Mediatour Christ in whose bloud it is ratified Heb. 10.2 The removall of impediments by mercifull pardon of sinnes and imperfections Heb. 8.3 The certain donation of graces necessary to attainment and our confirmation therein ibidem the certainty of accomplishment is easily discerned The more solid is our Hope and the more firm should be our faith and confidence as the Apostle inferres Heb. 10.23 So that neither violence of afflictions nor prevailing of heresies nor conscience of our own weaknesses and imperfections to which pardon is promised Heb. 8. nor any doubt of perseverance in state of grace should make us waver 2 Tim. 2.19 For he is faithfull that hath promised not onely salvation but pardon of sinnes donation of spirit perseverance and perfecting the work of grace to the day of the Lord Jesus Christ It is true there are duties required of us to the obtaining of the promises as faith and perseverance in faith obedience and perseverance in obedience but that God that requires them hath covenanted to work them Jer. 31. and 32.40 The next point is The necessity of faith and the property it hath peculiar to it self in making firm after a sort the promise the truth of this point will the better appear if we shall consider a little the consent and difference of the two Covenants Their agreement is this in both is promised Salvation and Blessedness of the Law it is said That if a man do it he shall live thereby as of faith he that believeth shall be saved Their difference stands 1. In the condition the Law requiring perfect obedience to be performed in our own persons threatning a curse to every transgression Gal. 3.10 The other Covenant requiring faith of the Messiah and sincere endeavour of obedience A second difference the Law requires perfect obedience promiseth neither ability to perform it nor pardon to any imperfection The Gospel so requires faith that it promiseth to work it so new obedience that withall the Lord covenanteth to make us walk in his statutes Ezek. 36. Yea and to pard on imperfections Jer. 31. Heb. 8. And besides delivers all these promises as ratified unto us in the bloud of Christ These things thus briefly laid together shew how faith onely makes the promise sure because to the believer promise is made 1. To remove impediments by pardon and sanctification 2. To enable to do and to persevere in doing whatsoever the Lord in the Covenant of grace requires to salvation Who can shew like promises made to the Worker that not without cause said the Apostle It must be of faith that the promise may be sure it being impossible by the Law to obtain the promises The third Argument from the extent of the promise both in the making and accomplishment It is made and must be sure to all the seed not onely to that of the Law but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham therefore it must be of faith and not of the Law The minor hath its proof in the latter end of the verse and is also further confirmed and illustrated vers 17. Abraham is the father of all
was fully assured 2. The matter subject of his perswasion or the Proposition to which Abraham thus fully assented That what God had promised he was able to perform where we may also conceive to be implyed the grounds of Abrahams so firm believing The promise and power of God Observ From the First we observe That faith in her strength Beza Paraeus ad loc Calvin Instit and perfection hath firmness yea fulness of assurance others otherwise conceive the note and thus collect That fulness of perswasion is of the nature and essence of Faith That none of Gods children erre to their discomfort thinking they have no truth of believing because they want fulness of perswasion thus much understand That in exact defining the custome is to consider virtues c. Abstractly from their subjects 2. In such abstraction to express their nature in terms importing their greatest excellency and perfection 3. Virtues morall and Theologicall they describe not as they are in our practice but as they ought to be by Gods prescript What now if faith in us be doubtfull yet in it self and according to its own nature it is a full perswasion What though in the disposition and beginnings it be wavering yet in the excellency and perfection it is of infallible certainty What if our practice of faith be weak yet God requires perfection of it and our striving must be to perfection prescribed Vse Thus let us use it As an occasion to humble our selves for our doubtings Augustin Epist 29. ad Hieron for that which Augustine saith of charity is as true of faith profectò illud quod minus est quàm debt ex vitio est yet thus much withall Let us not so far deject our selves as to think we have no truth of faith because we want perfection and fulness of assurance yet may faith be in truth where that measure is not attained See Annot. ad vers 20. as the truth of humane nature in an infant wanting the strength of grown men The matter of Abrahams perswasion followeth That what he had promised he was able also to perform The points observable are 1. That faith even justifying is an assent rather then affiance having for his object terminum complexum whereof see Annot. ad vers 3. 2. Take notice of two speciall grounds for faith to rest on the promise and power of God both joyntly considered establish faith sever either from other thou makest faith either phantasticall or wavering Hereof see Annot. ad ver 17. VERS 22. And therefore it was imputed to him for righteousness THe fruit of Abrahams faith is here expressed that is his justification The depravations of this Scripture by Adversaries are many Let us briefly take view of them The first is from the illation Therefore it was imputed c. Hence they collect that faith avails to justification virtuously and by way of merit Man is justified by faith not because it apprehends the promise but because it obteins remission of sinns suo quodam modo etiam mereatur how infer they the conclusion out of this Scripture The Apostle in this place saith Bellarmine Bellar. de just lib. 1. cap. 17. sets down the cause why Abrahams faith was reputed justice to wit because by believing he gave glory to God therefore for the merit of that faith he justified Abraham Where first let us weigh how they utterly crosse the intention of the Apostle in his whole discourse which is to exclude all merits of men from justification can we imagine he excludes the merit of other works to substitute the merit of faith 2. Besides that it is easily observable that the Apostle maintains a continuall opposition betwixt faith and merit as ver 4. To their argument thus we answer That the Apostles illation indeed implyes a sequel of justification upon the performance of faith yet none such as is caused by the merit and excellency of the gifs or work of faith above other works and this is that deceives them that they can conceive no connexion betwixt our offices and Gods benefits but what the worth and merit of our performances causeth Know we therefore 1. That there is an infallible connexion betwixt faith and justification so that every one believing is without faith justified But 2. If the reason of this connexion be demanded it is apparently Gods covenant and promise therefore shall every believer receive remission of sins because so runs the promise in the covenant of grace Believe and thy sins shall be forgiven August de verb. Apost Serm. 16. Augustines speech for the generall let be remembred Debitor factus est Deus non aliquid à nobis accipiendo sed quod ei placuit promittendo Abraham believed and was therefore justified the cause if we seek is the promise of God not the worth of his faith which 1. Is a duty 2. Gods gift 3. In us imperfect And if Abrahams faith were the meritorious cause of his justification I demand whether as faith or as such faith that is whether in respect that he believed or in respect that he believed in this full measure was he justified If in respect of his measure then methinks it will follow that only such measure of faith sufficeth to justification so the disciples of Christ so doubtfull and wavering in many main articles till after Christs ascension must be reputed for that time unjustified if faith simply in what measure soever then can it not be meritorious sith in the beginnings it is so ful of imperfection Thus I conclude Faith is an antecedent no cause properly of justification justification a consequent of believing no effect issuing out of the virtue and merit of faith Trelcat Instit de justific the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore notes not the cause of the consequent but of the sequel or consequence saith a learned Divine Their second collection is this Rhemens ad loc That faith justifying is a generall faith whereby we assent to the truth of Gods speeches in generall Bellarm. de justif lib. 1. cap. 11. and no such speciall faith or affiance as Protestants require to justification Their reason The faith whereby Abraham was justified was no other then this A general perswasion of Gods faithfulness and power at large Ergò Answ The question hath been largely handled ad vers 3. whither I refer the Reader To their argument thus I answer their antecedent is untrue Abrahams faith was not of Gods truth and power in generall onely but of both applyed to the particular promised From these generals he concluded the particular touching the seed in whom all nations should be blessed In his believing and the matter of it we must conceive something propounded and considered as a conclusion somthing as an argument or premisses inferring the conclusion to both which Abraham assented To the conclusion by virtue of the premisses The conclusion was particular I shall have a seed in whom all
word Father then to the verb found And thus read Abraham our father concerning the flesh but methinks the trajection is too harsh and besides the conclusion shall want one principall term that best serves to express the things in hand and therefore I rather refer it to the verb and thus read Abraham found not by the flesh or as pertaining to the flesh According to the flesh That is saith Ambrose S. Ambrosius ad loc by his Circumcision fittingly to what we may suppose the Apostle to preoccupate and yet in as much as ye count Circumcision is a work he affirms it as well of morall works as of circumcision Say others as Cajetan by flesh that is Cajetan ad loc by righteousness which stands in works and are done by the flesh that is by the body Others as Theodoret by his own strength Theodoret ad loc Illyric in clavi Zanch. de tribus Elohim lib. 3. cap. 1. and good vvorks done thereby Generally I thus conceive it that Abraham obtained not righteousness by any work Ceremonicall Morall or whatsoever can be imagined to assail to righteousness except faith in Christ so finde I the use of the word in the same case Phil. 3.3 4 5 6 9. Where under this name of flesh comes circumcision our own righteousness which is by the Law or whatsoever is or may be opposed to that righteousness which is by the faith of Christ The whole explination amounts to this summe Abraham obtained not righteousness by any his own works See we the confirmation The argument is taken from an inconvenience issuing out of that supposition If Abraham were justified by works he hath whereof to glory But he hath not any thing whereof to glory at least with God Ergo he was not justified by works Let us see what our adversaries have to say against this full argument of the Apostle For ground of their answer they attempt an inversion of the Apostles syllogisme and thus conceive him to reason Sasbout ad loc If Abraham were justified by works then had he no glory or boasting with God he might indeed by that means procure the commendation of a man excellently righteous but with men only not with God but Abraham had cause of glorying and boasting with God Ergo was not justified by works This cross frame of the argument Augustin in prefat ad Psal 31. Ambros ad loc I could not without indignation read were it not that it hath great Authors to give it countenance for Reverence to them let us afford it tryall First then consider that the Apostle in this argument hath apparent respect to that ground laid down Rom. 3.27 That is that we are to be justified by such a mean as whereby boasting may be excluded according to which ground he here concludes That Abraham was not justified by works for if that were true then had he cause of boasting Is it not now too grosse blindness so to conceive the Apostle as if he would give Abraham cause of boasting Secondly besides this the proposition thus conceived is apparently false For if Abraham were justfied by works then sure he had cause of boasting even before God for what greater cause of glorying even before God then this That he hath wrought works to his justification and may therefore say he is not beholden to God for his greatest blessing justification as having purchased it by his own works of obedience see Rom. 3.27 Thirdly add hereunto that the assumption is apparently false for Abraham if the Apostle could judg had no cause of boasting with God his justification being as ours meerly of grace through faith in Christ Jesus leave we therefore that dream and see whether their other answers have more waight Say some Catholiques we must here understand observation of Legall Ceremonies as Circumcision Sabbaths New-Moons c. Not works of the Law Morall Answ To this idle exception see my Annotation in Rom. 3. But bring we this distinction into the Apostles argument and see whether boasting be excluded If Abraham were justified by works ceremoniall then had he cause of boasting belike not so if by works morall and how I wonder do works Ceremoniall give greater cause of boasting then works Morall is their dignity now greater then works of Morall obedience Fidem vestram Papistae Behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to hearken then the fat of rams 1 Sam. 15.22 I will have mercy and not sacrifice Hos 6.6 Mat. 9.13 sexcenta hujusmodi Bellarm. de Iustific lib. 1. cap. 19. blush at such idle evasions which your own Bellarmine willingly disclayms and confutes by Fathers Besides this according to this answer boasting is only in some part taken from Abraham namely in respect of his observance of Ceremonialls for Morall obedience is still left him for matter of boasting but boasting on any pretence is excluded in Pauls intention Ergo. Hear Hierome Ex operibus legis Hierom ad Ctesiphont Adv. Pelag. ultramed non justificabitur om nis Caro quod nè de Lege Moysis tantùm dictum putes non de omnibus mandatis quae uno legis nomine continentur idem Apostolus scribit dicens consentio Legi Dei c. iterum scimus quòd Lex spiritualis est c. We know saith Paul that the Law is spirituall Rom. 7.14 What Law I wonder if not that Morall Let us see yet whether other playsters will salve the sore Bellarm. qua supra works of Abraham are of two sorts some Praecedentia fidem going before faith some Facta per fidem done by faith the Apostle understands works done before faith and regeneration not those done in and by faith Let us bring this into the argument If Abraham were justified by works done without faith by the meer power of natural free will then had he cause of boasting not so if by works done in faith Answ And why not I marvail when works done by grace according to their opinion are done partly by strength-naturall of free-will so much then as free-will helped in the doing so much cause of boasting Abraham had of himself But Abraham had no cause of boasting c. 2. What if it be apparent that the Apostle speaks even of works done by Abraham now believing and regenerate then methinks these works must also be included in the Apostles intention Certainly if we consider the testimony alledged out of Gen. 15. in the next verse to prove that Abraham was not justified by works it will easily appear that Abraham was long before this regenerate and believing and had many works of faith whereas yet the testimony of righteousness is given him not for working but for believing It was a work of faith that Abraham did in following the Lords call out of his countrey Heb. 11.8 Other works of piety and love see Gen. 12.8 13.8 9. 14 16 20 c. Yet not these works done in faith but faith
was imputed to righteousness True saith Bellarmine Abraham was now regenerate and had done many good works of faith and yet the Apostle when he saith he was justified by faith and not by works rejects not his works done in faith from power of justifing but those only which he might have done not of faith For even they who have faith work sometimes not of faith as when they sin or do works meerly Morall without relation to God In a word the Apostle speaketh conditionally and according to their opinion which ascribed righteousness to their own strength Answ Now what is to be willfully blind if this be not was it ever heard of that a man should be justified by works not which he had done but which he might have done or think we the Saints of God to whom he wrought or the Iews that perhaps disturbed them were ever so shameless as to ascribe justice to works finfull or meerly Morall such as heathens performed It s apparent that the Apostle fits answer to Iewish objections who urged works of law written for matter of justification yea in likelihood works done in grace for whereto else comes in the example of Abraham so worthy a Saint of God Certes if of works meerly naturall there had been question example of Abimelech or Socrates or Aristides had been as pertinent to the purpose Lastly say others the Apostle speaks not de justificatione Pii but Impii not of that justification whereby a man of a righteous man is made more righteous but he speaks of justifiing a wicked man which is done by faith Answ Concerning this distinction see Annotat. in Chap. 3. But it is their opinion that he speaks of the first justification only surely Sasbout confesseth that the testimony out of Genesis treats only De augmento Iustitiae non de justificatione Impii And that is apparent to every confiderate Reader This mist of cavills thus dispelled let us now resume the Apostles conclusion and lay it for a ground that Abraham was not justified by any works of any law in any state by him performed Use Hear this now yee justitiaries that dare obtrude your menstruous merits to Godsjustice and for them claim righteousness at his judgment seat Behold Abraham that mirrout of good works as well as of faith yet stript of all right and claim to righteousness by any his obedience and dare any of his children challenge more at God hands then Abraham the pattern of justification Bring to the ballance your voluntary poverty building of temples pilgrimage vvorks of mercy or if there be any vvork that you think more glorious and see if they be not found lighter then vanity it self to those of Abraham that one vvork of obedience in offering his Son Isaac upon the altar vvhich of the sons of men can parallel I spare amplifications because they are extant in the Apostle and particularized in Ambrose De Abrah Patriarch lib. 1. Cap. 8. VER 3 4 5. For what saith the Scripture Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt but to him that worketh not but believeth on him that justfieth the ungodly his faith is counted for righteousness VVHether the words be conceived as proof of the Minor or of the principall conclusion it is not much materiall the issue being all one The argument proving it is taken from the manner or meanes of Abrahams justification which was meerly gracious the Scripture affirms that Abrahams believing was counted to him for righteousness Gen. 15.6 Ergo he had no cause of boasting because that not to the worker but to the believer only faith is imputed unto righteousness The consequence of this Enthymeme hath its proof from the place of unlikes That the force of the proofe may be better conceived let us view a little the terms of the comparison The persons compared are he that worketh and he that worketh not but believeth The things wherein they are compared as unlike is the manner or means whereby these severally obtain righteousness The worker that is he that hath works to be justified by he hath righteousness reckoned to him as wages not granted out of favour but paid as of debt He that hath no works but believes hath righteousness counted to him not of debt but of favour as if he had said that yee may see how Abrahams having faith counted righteousness left him no cause of boasting observe this difference betwixt the worker and believer viz. He that hath works to bring before God hath righteousness ascribed unto him of debt not of grace because that by his works he hath purchased righteousness as wages and so by consequence hath cause of boasting him that justifieth the ungodly it s otherwise this faith is of grace imputed to righteousness Abraham therefore being of this latter sort not a worker but a believer and by consequence hath faith of grace counted to him for righteousness surely had no cause of boasting for this matter of justification This having the better judgment of the learned I take to be the naturall resolution of the text Let us now turn back to the words and enquire their sense and what instructions they afford for our use In verse the third are two things 1. The Judg whom Paul appeales unto 2. The sentence of the judg For what saith the Scripture Holy Apostle thou forgottest thy self that didst appeal to Scripture to give sentence in a matter of dobut For we are taught by men of unerring spirits the Scripture is Mutus Index a dumbe judg not able to utter what may resolue us in matter of doubt Now how much better were it that these men were dumb then to use their tongues in manner so blaspheously derogatory to him that inspires the Scripture For be it that in property of speech the Scripture is speechless yet contains it not directions sufficient to determine doubts or needs it any more then mans minde to conceive and his tongue to publish what it contains Or hath the Church any other authority about the Scripture save only to declare what Gods Spirit therein speaks Must the sense needs be locked up in the Popes breast and the Scripture taught to mean only what he determines 2. Is it so strange and abhorrent from common language that the Scripture should be said to speak In common assemblies what more usuall How saith your record What saith the Law 3. How ever I hope Gods Spirit may be said in Scripto speak to his Church without any great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inasmuch as he doth therein utter what his meaning is And writing doth the office of speech thus far that it serves to express the conception of our minde As David said of his tongue it was the pen of a ready writer Psal 45.1 So may we say of the pens that the Lords holy scribes used they were the tongues of a ready speaker
gift disparate from it not in act and office only but in the very subject and seat where it resides More see to this purpose Suprà The Third opinion is of them that make it only an affiance and resting on God and his Christ as propounded in the gospel for justification and remission of sins And for this opinion these Reasons are brought First For that the phrase wherein usually it is expressed imports rather confidence and affiance then assent or perswasion as Ioh. 12. alibi But finde we it not as often expressed in a phrase that signifies assenting Secondly Because they cannot else finde a difference betwixt faith justifying and that which may be in hypocrites and divells What say they to that particularity of assenting Gal. 2.20 and appropriating the generals to our selves a thing as impossible for hypocrites or divels to perform as that other of affiance and what to that Eph. 3.12 that makes this confidence a fruit of faith justifying The last tenant is of those that make it partly an assent particular partly an affiance and for that opinion are these Reasons First For that the phrases of speech wherein it is expressed seem to import both Secondly They are both required as necessary to justification not only as dispositions but after a sort as ingredients not only as qualifications of the person but our means of justifications Thirdly Because they concur in every person justified as he is justified Now Of these three last which is the truth I dare not peremptorily determine For my part I profess my self to think with them that make faith justifying and assent rather then affiance especially for that place Eph. 3.12 Howbeit I may not deny but that the affiance spoken of in an inseparable companion of that assent perhaps also as conferring something to justification yet this I am well assured of First Faith properly so called hath its seat in the understanding Secondly According to Etymology imports a perswasion Thirdly In use of Scripture most frequently signifieth giving credit rather then putting confidence Fourthly And if there be any truth in that our Divines affirm concerning the office of faith in applying Christ to our selves most likely it should be an assent rather then affiance applying or appropriating of Christ to us being no more but this an acknowledgment that Christ is such to us as the Scripture describes him a Redeemer a Saviour a Mediatour of reconcilement and Author of righteouiness and salvation which acknowledgment is an act of the understanding not of the will Fiftly Besides this the opposites or defects of faith are apparently in the understanding and import defect of assenting as doubting Sixtly The perfection and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as I may term it of this grace is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fulness of assent and perswasion the grace it self for substance therefore is of the same nature Let us view a little how the Apostle in this Chapter expresseth that faith of Abraham which to him was imputed to righteousness In this verse it s thus enunciated Abraham believed God that is gave credit and assent to what the Lord promised touching a seed and vers 22. He was fully assured or perswaded that he which had promised was able to perform and this perswasion was imputed to him for righteousness All which laid together sway my judgment to theirs that teach faith justifying to be such an assent as in the third opinion is expressed rather then affiance and of the nature of faith justifying thus far There remains yet one thing before we proceed to the fruit of Abrahams faith expressed in the next member And that is to enquire how fitly this testimony is alledged to the purpose of justification the promise being in shew only of a temporall blessing namely a numerous seed and no mention made of Christ the Mediator whom faith justifing as it is such respects Answ Answers here are diversly conceived the likeliest I will propound First It s thus answered that Abrahams faith whereby he believed the promises both touching the reward vers 2. and touching the seed cannot be imagined to have been without respect to Christ the Mediator inasmuch as all the the promises of God are yea and Amen in Christ 2 Cor. 1.20 That is have their accomplishment and ratification in and for Christ Secondly That the seed mentioned in the promise is rather to be understood of the spirituall seed then of the carnall posterity of Adam and the head thereof is Christ as the Apostle interprets Gal. 3.16 The fruit of Abrahams faith follows It was counted to him for righteousness The difference in the reading out of the Hebrew originall is little or nothing Hebrew thus he imputed or counted it for righteousness out of the septuagint it s rendred positively it was counted for righteousness For the sense of the words if it be enquired What was it that was counted righteousness It s answered faith as appears both by the text Gen. 15.6 as also vers 5. Was counted unto him for righteousness For better understanding the text let us consider the word first severally and alone according to the native signification and use of Scripture 2. Conjunctly according as thereof sundry phrases are raised The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifies usually two things First To repute or esteem and make reckoning of Secondly to impute or ascribe In the first sense Psal 8.4 What is man that thou reputest or esteemest him Christ was reckoned amongst the wicked that is esteemed as they Isai 53.12 In the second sense the use is also frequent Philem. vers 18. If he hath wronged thee or oweth the ought impute that is ascribe it to mee and set it as it were upon my score the speech being borrowed from Merchants The phrases of speech arising from conjunction of this word with others are divers in Scripture In this Chapter faith is said to be imputed to righteousness or reckoned for righteousness wages is said to be reckoned or imputed righteousness to be imputed to a man sins to be imputed or not imputed to the committer The First phrase is of all the rest of most difficult explication Conjectures of others that have any probability I will propound some thus Faith was counted for righteousness that is instead of righteousness as if it supplyed the stead of the righteousness of the Law in this point of justification and this exposition they would approve by likeness of phrase in other things as they conceive it As Rom. 2.26 Uncircumcision is counted for circumcision that is instead of circumcision Rom. 9.8 The Children of the promise are counted for the seed that is instead of the seed But why not thus rather they are counted the seed for so they are apparently not reckoned iustead of the seed but counted or esteemed the leed they being the seed with which the Covenant is made Others thus Faith is imputed to righteousness that is ascribed
finde faith to have any such act or office as to apprehend and receive Christ and his righteousness Answ Amongst other places that is pregnant Rom. 5.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est oblatam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fidei videlicet manu Beza Where believers are deseribed to be such as receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness that receive to wit by faith as by a hand the gift of righteousness that is the righteousnes of Christ given unto us After this sentence we see how faith alone justifieth namely because faith only hath fitness to receive the gift of righteousness This laid also for a ground boasting is excluded in every respect which after all other explanations is left in some respect unto men Thus also is the comfort of conscience left provided for when Gods children shall be taught out of the word of God that the righteousness whereby they are justified before God is so absolute and every way perfect as is that of Christ and that it sufficeth them to justification that they receive it whether by strong or weak Faith the virtue of Righteousness being stil the same when it is received in what measure soever it be received As the alms given is of the same benefit whether the hand that receives it be steady or shaking so it be received The summe of all is this sith Faith is accepted to Justification neither in respect of the Worth of it to procure it nor yet as being the Form of righteousness nor as a Preparation nor as a Condition It remains that it justifieth Instrumentally onely or because it apprehends that for which we are justified namely the merit and Righteousness of Christ For Use of this point let it be this It affords Comfort to every weary soul groaning under the burthen of sinne and pressed with the Terrours of the Almighty and affrighted with the Curse of the Law due to Transgressions If thou believe in the Lord Jesus and hast received this grace by faith to receive his righteousness offered in the Gospel thy sins are forgiven and shall never be imputed to Condemnation Thou standest as just in Gods sight as if thou hadst in thine own person performed exactly the whole obedience that the Law requires And let no man say it is true if they could firmly believe as Abraham but their faith is so weak and wavering that even for it Condemnation is due them Answ For this Consider that it is not the strength of Faith that justifies not Faith as an Act wherein our Righteousness stands but it is that which Faith apprehends that justifies even the obedience and righteousness of Christ That apprehended truly in what measure soever covers all defects not onely of Legall obedience but even of Faith it self A second thing here observable is this That whereas to Abraham that had now long time been Regenerate and in state of grace had done many works of Piety and obedience Yet Faith is still counted to Righteousness it follows well that whole justification is absolved in Faith and that Faith is not onely the beginning of Righteousness but the very complement thereof And Bellarm. qua supra it is to be observed against that errour of Romanists that to evade the direct testimonies of Scripture against Justification by works and for that by Faith alone have devised a distinction of Justification It is say they Concil Trident Sess 6. of two sorts The First whereby a man of unjust is made just and that stands in two things 1. Remission of sins 2. Infusion of gracious habits whereby the heart of man is disposed and inclined to actuall justice The Second is that whereby a man of Righteous becomes more righteous encreasing the habits infused by exercise of them in doing good works The First of these is ascribed to Faith The Second to good works Now To omit that in this Doctrine they confound things to be distinguished namely Justification and Sanctification There is no ground for this distinction of justification in Scriptures nay grounds many against it For 1. If good works have this force to make us more justified in the sight of God how comes it to pass that Abrahams Iustification is still ascribed to faith For that the place Gen. 15.6 is to be understood de secunda justificatione Sasbout confesseth Sasbout ad locum Besides this the Apostle Phil. 3.9 apertly declares his whole justification both in his first Conversion Kemnit in Exam. in that time wherein he wrote yea at the day of Resurrection to be wholly and meerly absolved in Faith And surely if there were such virtue in the exercise of Good works as to make us more justified in the sight of God Saint Paul did fondly count so basely of them as to call them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dung and loss Add hereunto that the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.4 speaking of the righteousness wherein he lived after his Conversion yet plainly disclaims opinion of justification thereby he was privy to himself of no insincerity in his calling having since his calling lived in all good conscience yet saith he I am not hereby justified What shall we say he speaks of his first justification as if it could possibly be thought that the works not yet extant could be the means of that justification which he had before he had works More I adde not We will now proceed to that which followeth VERS 4. Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt The applying of these verses to the Apostles purpose see in the Analysis Sense To him that worketh That is say some that presumes of his works others that deservs by his works Thus rather To him that hath or brings works to God The wages or reward What is the wages here mentioned Paraeus Some take the Apostle to reason out of a principle in Civil life by similtude applyed to this purpose but the Antithesis bears it not Wages here understand Synecdechicè put for estimation of righteousness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is say some is not imputed but the Catachresis is too hard and abhorrent from all custome of speech Cajetan Is notreckoned that is not paid saith Cajetan What if we say the speech is borrowed from the custome of Common life on this manner That the Lord should be imagined after the manner of men to keep his book of accounts wherein the records both the behaviours of men and the wages due unto them according to the same It s not much unlike that we fiud Mal. 3.16 Let us for the purpose imagine the Lord the great distributor of reward according to the double covenant of works and grace to have referred all men to two ranks viz. Workers and Believers to resolve with himself to crown both with a sentence of righteousness according as they bring to him either works such as the Law prescribes or
Hierome S. Hieron epist ad Ctesiph Hoc testimonium sub nomine pietatis novâ argumentatione deludunt aiunt enim ad comparationem Dei nullum esse Perfectum Perfectly righteous they might be according to that required in the Law not so in comparison to the Essentiall righteousness of God Hear Hieroms answer quasi hoc scriptura dixerit as who say this Scripture affirmed so much No saith Hierom but when it saith None shall be justified in thy sight hoc intelligi vult quòd etiam qui hominibus sancti videntur Dei scientiae atque notitiae nequaquam Sancti sunt Homo enim videt in facie Deus autem in corde That is This is the meaning That even they that seem to men Holy to Gods knowledge are not so For man looks on the face God on the heart One reason more I propound against their conclusion and so proceed The Righteousness whereby a man stands just before God according to the Law must be for the matter Right for the measure Pure for continuance Firm The terms are Bernards It must be Recta according to Rule Pura Bernard de verb. Esa ser 4. free from stain Firma without wavering or interruption He seems in fit terms to express the Apostle citing that testimony of Moses Gal. 3.10 and certainly if our Righteousness fail in any of these by sentence of the Law we are under the Curse The assumption let us hear out of Bernard Nostra si qua est humilis justitia recta forsitan est sed non pura nisi forte meliores nos esse credimus quàm patres nostros qui non minùs veraciter quàm humiliter aiebant omnis justitia nostrae tanquam pannus menstruatae mulieris quomodo enim pura justitia ubi adhuc non potest culpa deesse Ours 1. no better then our Fathers 2. Not free from fault therefore not pure or perfect And I wonder much how Papists sticking so close to their distinction of first and second justification can maintain the perfection of inherent righteousness For is there a second justification whereby we are made more righteous it is apparent therefore that inherent righteousness is never perfected in this life Perfectio viae Patriae It is idle when they distinguish perfection into that of the Way and the other of the Countrey For if by it we are justified in via according to the Law we must by it also be perfected in via inasmuch as no righteousness but perfect is approved by the Law I conclude therefore That the righteousness whereby we stand just according to the Law is not inherent righteousness Lastly If the righteousness whereby we are thus just stand in the habits of faith hope charity patience meekness c. How is it that the Lord when he justifies an ungodly man believing is said to count his faith to righteousness vers 3 4. perhaps because that is our righteousness Ex parte Apage Then when Paul concludes Abraham not to have been justified by works because he was justified by faith his meaning is this Abraham was justified by faith in some part ergò by works in no part How easie were it to denie his consequence Thus though in part of Faith yet he must be in part also of Works and so the Argument follows not And again The state of the question so largely disputed in this Epistle betwixt faith and works must be this Whether we be justified in part of Faith But these are absurd 2. If therefore faith be counted our righteousness because it is so In part Why I wonder Faith more then Chariey or Hope c. Why saith the Apostle so oft Faith is counted to Righteousness never so of Charitie perhaps Denominatio fit ex parte potiori Apage I dare say by their notes 1 Cor. 13. they will never abase Charity so farre as to give Faith the preheminence in this point of justification Perhaps now it will be exspected that I should answer their objections in this point but that hath been already in a great part done ad cap. 3. and besides the grounds now laid afford answer sufficient Proceed we therefore to the next explication God justifies the ungodly that is makes him righteous by imputing righteousness and if the question be What righteousness The Righteousness of Christ whether of his life or death it is not so pertinent here to enquire For we are now onely to dispute whether imputation be the means whereby we are made just in the sight of God and this also will fitliest be handled in the next verse thither therefore I refer it Onely it shall not be amiss to see upon what reason our Divines thus interpret the word of justifying by making righteous That acception of the word in Scripture being so rare that scarce in any other place it is found Their reason is this because the word when it is taken to acquit can in no wise fit this place because the Lord professeth so often He will not justifie the wicked in this sense so as to acquit him or hold him righteous whiles he continues wicked It should seem therefore that when Paul saith he justifieth the ungodly his meaning is He makes him righteous that he may acquit him But what if that sentence of Moses be understood with the exception of the Gospel Except he repent and believe the Gospel Surely though the Lord profess He will not clear the the wicked Exod. 34.7 that are impenitently such yet we know he testifieth in the same place that he will forgive transgression iniquity and sinne to the penitent and believing The last thus God justifieth the ungodly Cajetan by remitting his sins or in that that he forgiveth him his sinnes But Is this true doth God forgive the sins of the ungodly Answ Though not to an ungodly man continuing in his ungod liness yet to an ungodly man that ceaseth to be ungodly Isa 1.18 c. as they all do that believe in Christ for faith purifieth the heart not onely from the guilt but also from the power and practice of ungodliness Act. 15.9 Obiect But so doing God iustifies not the ungodly but the righteous Answ Distingue tempora concordabunt Scripturae No man saith that in the instant of iustification a man is in that sense ungodly but yet inasmuch as before faith he was ungodly it s no absurd speech to say That in remitting the sins of a believer he forgives the sins of the ungodly or thus He iustifieth him that is ungodly by Nature though when he iustifieth him he be altered by Grace Matthew the Apostle is called Matthew the Publican Matth. 10.3 not for that he was so then but because he had been a Publican Why not then the believer ungodly especially when as there are reliques of ungodliness sticking even after justisication Vse Now brethren how sweet is the comfort of this meditation that God who in his wrath is a * Hebr. 12.29 consuming fire
sufficeth And it teacheth us in our study and search of Scripture not to let pass the smallest circumstance sith under it lye hid Doctrine so substantiall For wisdome we should search saith Solomon as men do for silver Prov. 2.4 turning up every clod and almost grain of dust wherein the least portion of pure metall may seem to lye hid In sacris liter is nihil est quod non ingentem thesaurum contineat modò scrutatorem habeat Ruizius reg 118. è Chrysostomo singuli sermones syllabae apices puncta in divinis Scripturis plena sunt sensibus Hieron ad Ephes. 3. Howbeit that we mistake not we must not forget that even the Scripture hath its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore it is not safe always to reason from order of narration except by other circumstances it be evident that the narration be to the order of times A Second collection of some Interpreters hence is this That the grace of justification is not tyed to Sacraments because it may be had without them And that was it as they think the Lord would teach us by the time of Abrahams circumcision and justification that look as the Lord furnishing the earth with hearbs and fruits before he made starrs by their heat or influence to give them vigour or raine to yeild them moysture would teach us that they are but Arbitrary Jnstruments which he useth ad Placitum So the the Lord giving Abraham Testimony of righteousnes before his circumcision would thereby teach us that his grace may be had without the Sacraments The question hath been already treated ad cap 2. Let us yet resume it that at least Our Judgement may be more manifest Necessity of Baptisme whereof the question chiefly is may be two ways conceived First Calvin justifi lib. 4. cap. 19. Serm. 26. Whether the receiving thereof be a necessary duty pressing the conscience by the law of God Whereto we answer with joynt consent it is necessary and so necessary that the wilfull contempt yea neglect of it where it may be had lays guilt of sin upon the conscience of the negligent or contempuous refuser Secondly It may be thus apprehended whether it be necessary as a mean of salvation In this also we consent that it is necessary as a mean of salvation Because 1. The observation thereof is a work of obedience and so part of that vita Regni 2. Because in the right use it serves to confirm faith and to nourish all graces that do accompany salvation What is then the question betwixt us and Papists It stands chiefly about the decree or manner of necessity namely whether it be absolutely necessary Vt perijsse protinùs existimetur cui ejus obtinendi ademta fucrit facultas Bellarm de Bapt. lib. 1. cap. 4. As Calvin explains it This measure of necessity of Baptisme we deny Papists affirm The question is saith Bellarmine whether Baptisme be necessary as a mean of salvation so that if any be not Baptised he perisheth etiamsi forte obignorantiam excusetur a praevaricatione praecepti that they affirm and if any demand what time it came to this height of necessity They answer Baptismus Christicaepit esse necessarius necessitate medii praecepti a die pentecostes As touching what we are to hold in this question I had rather utter in Bernards terms then in my own considering what adversaries we are are to deal with He therefore thus delivers his judgment Bernard Epist 77. That whosoever in men of years if any man since the publishing of that remedy for sin refuseth to be Baptized he adds to the generall contagion of nature the crime of pride and so carries with him a double cause of just damnation if he so dye yet if before death he repent and have a will and desire to be Baptized and cannot being prevented by death so be it he want not fides recta spes pia charitas sincera propitius sit mihi deus quia huic Ambrose de obitu valentiniani imperator ob solam quauam si defuerit nequaquam desperare possum omnino salutem nec vacuam credere fidem nec confundere spem nec excidere charitatem tantum si aquam non contempus sed sola prohibeat impossibilitas His reasons are First from authorities of Ambrose and Augustin Ambrose doubts not of the salvation of Valentinian for his faith only though he dyed unbaptized because he had a purpose S. Augustin de Bapt. lib. 4. cap. 22. and desire to be baptized Hear himself speak I hear saith Ambrose you are grieved because he received not the Sacrament of Baptisme Hear his reply Dicite mihi quid aliud nobis est nisi voluntas nisi petitio Atqui etiam dudum hoc voti habuit ut cúm in Italiam venisset initiaretur proximè baptizari se a me velle significabit c. Non habeat ergó gratiam quam desideravit Non habet quam poposeit Certe quia poposcit accepit mox quem eram regeneraturus amisi sed illi gratiam quam speraverat non amisit To Ambrose Saint Bernard adds S. Augustine determining that not only suffering for Christ but faith also and conversion of the heart doth supply the stead of Baptisme when not contempt of religion but point of necessity excludes the Sacrament of Baptisme 2. His next reason is collected out of Mark. 16.16 Our Saviour in likelihood when he said he that believes and his baptized shall be saved even for this so cautelously did not repeate he that is not baptized but onely he that believes not shall be damned intimating no doubt solam interdum sufficere fidem ad salutem sine ipsa sufficere nihil 3. His third Reason that which gives Martyrdom its value and causeth it to supply the stead of Baptisme shall it be thought so weak that what it gives to another thing it cannot alone by it self obtain we cannot think it Now faith gives Martyrdome this power that without any doubt it is reputed Baptisme For what is Martyrdome without it nisi poena It therefore alone may out of case of contempt suffice to salvation 4. Suppose the Lord see as great Faith in the heart of a man dying in Peace as in his that suffers martyrdome Surely God needs not outward evidences for discerning of faith and there may be in a man dying in peace a readiness to suffer death for the maintenance of faith suppose now this man to desire Baptisme but prevented by death to die without it damnabit fidelem suum Deus damnabit inquam hominem prose etiam paratum mori God forbid his peremptory conclusion is this Pro certo cùm non aliunde martyrium nisi ex Fidei merito illam obtinuerit praerogativam ut fingulariter vice Baptismi secure suscipiatur Non video cur non ipsa aeque sine Martyrio apud eum tantundem possit cùm sine Martyrii probamento proculdubio innotescit 5.
In sins The will is in esteem the Fact Matth. 5.28 Why not also in good duties nisi forte putetur in malo quam in bono efficacior inveniri voluntas apud Deum qui Charitas est promptior esse ad ulciscendum quam ad remunerandum misericors miserator Dominus Add to this the consent of Bellarmine That martyrdom Bellarm. de Bapt. l. 1. c. 6. and true conversion of the heart in case of necessity supplies the stead of Baptism And follows is not thence that the Baptism of Water is not of so absolute necessity to salvation that he that dies without it perisheth everlastingly A man would now think the odds is not great betwixt us and Papists touching this point of necessity of Baptism They teaching as we that out of case of contempt faith and conversion avail to salvation without the Sacrament But will you hear a Merciles distinction It is true they say of grown men inasmuch as they have faith and conversion to supply the stead of Baptism but yet for infants it is their peremptory conclusion though they be born of believing parents are not capable of personall contempt yet perish they in their originall sinne for want of Baptism if they die unbaptised For they have nothing to supply the stead of baptism Answ 1. Let them shew us where the Lord hath made the condition of infants in this respect worse then that of grown men 2. Let them prove that in grown men faith and conversion therefore exempts them from condemnation because they supply the stead of Baptism 3. What hinders to say that the faith of the parents is available to salvation of infants without baptism as well as with it In case they be baptized they confess with Bernard that through grace it is granted them to have benefit by others faith as they were damnified by anothers fault yea faith Bernard there is no doubt but that the stain contracted by others may and ought to be purged also by the faith of others doth the faith of a grown man supply the stead of baptism out of case of contempt and shall not the faith of infants do as much for them No For it is said Except a man be born again of water and the holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdom of God But I demand is this understood of Baptism generally belonging to all men or must it be limitted to infants onely If of all then methinks of grown men also If of infants onely 1. What meant Christ to propound it to Nicodemus was it his purpose to teach him that inasmuch as he was not baptised in his infancie he could not not enter into the kingdome of God then sure I shall not wonder if Nicodemus conceited a necessity for an old man desiring to come to Heaven to return back into his mothers womb and be born again 2. Will they say it must have this gloss by limitation If a man want baptism by contempt and not otherwise Why then should it stand in force against infants in their own persons not capable of contemning and whose parents hasten to it with desire but are prevented by necessity alas poor infants that you free from contempt in your selves and your parents must to Hell for bare want of baptism and elders in the same want have access to Heaven so they be free from contempt Can we imagine bare want to be more prejudiall to infants then to grown men Now what if it shall appear to us that the place cannot in that strict manner be understood of baptism but of regeneration The point I wil labour to clear against Papists only comparing it thus expounded with other of their grounds For ground this I wil lay That the sentence of our Saviour had truth at that time when he had conference with Nicodemus yea long before ever since the fall of Adam 1. For that our Savior blames Nicodemus for his ignorance in this point the necessity of that which he calls the new birth v. 10. Art thou a master of Israel and knowst not these things Now sure if it must be understood of baptism the ignorance of that ordinance could have been no such blemish to Nicodemus the ordinance being so new and of him till that day unheard of 2. Besides this the purpose of our Saviour more then seems to be this to exhort Nicodemus to present labouring for that whose necessitie Christ teacheth to be so absolute Now shall we say that at this time baptism was of so absolute necessitie hear Bernard He was informed of one that taught how that ever since this sentence was pronounced by our Saviour none could in any wise be saved without actuall receiving the visible Sacrament or martyrdome in stead thereof Now sure saith Bernard Bernard Epist 77. De Temporis praefixione durum nimis austerúmque videtur ut videlicet verbum absconditum palam jam noceat ante judex feriat quàm minetur His arguments in short are these 1. It is improbable it should so be because many should by this means be damned that never had knowledge of any such precept For this of baptism is not as some other things are that are known by nature factitium enim quodammodo est non naturale mandatum but that is impossible Rom. 10. John 15. Ergò 2. Circumcision as yet stood in force and had its virtue as Baptism 3. And from the dayes of John Baptist the kingdome of heaven suffered violence 4. Fit injuria antiquo illi Dei aeque mandato si novo adhuc furtive superveniente non tamen subveniente illud ita subito evanuisse putetur ut prodesse deinceps non valeret 5. And Bellarmine confesseth that Baptism became not thus necessary as a mean untill ●he day of Pentecost The inference is this that which Christ teacheth Nicodemus to be thus necessary was necessary at that time when he had conference with Nicodemus Baptism was not then so necessary Therefore that that Christ speaks of is not Baptism And do we think Christ taught Nicodemus that after the time of Pentecost Baptism should become thus necessary The sense then must be this Nicodemus look that thou procure Baptism betwixt this and the next Pentecost after my death if then thou want it there is no hope for thee to enter into the kingdom of Heaven From those circumstances of the text besides others elsewhere pointed at it is clear I think that the place is not to be understood of Baptism of water but of that which they call the Baptism of the Spirit that is of Regeneration And see whether the reason annexed prove not as much Regeneration necessary for whatever we have by the first birth is fleshly and corrupt Now shall we say that corruption is removed onely by Baptism or at least not without it Faith purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 and sometimes saith Augustine S. August de Bapt. contr Donat. l. 4. c. 24. before Baptism the
Matter or Substantiall element signifies the person of Christ or something therein The actions of the Minister the actions of God the Father and his Spirit communicating Christ and his benefits unto us The Sacramentall actions of the people their receiving Christ and his benefits The Authour of them comes next to be treated of as part of the difference whereby they are distinguished from other signes of mans imposition The Authour of them is God onely 1. Because He onely can determine signes to such actuall signification 2. And can alone by them assure us of the grace they signifie Last is the Use or End of Sacraments which is intimated in the next words seals of the righteousness of faith Let us explain the words and then examine the doubts The office of a seal stands in four things 1. Concealment 2. Distinction 3. Impression 4. Confirmation According to which severall uses of seals the explanation is here diversly conceived Some think the Apostles metaphor hath respect to the first office Concealment and they thus expound it Circumcision sealed up righteousness that is concealed Sasbout ex origine and closed it up for a Time namely Till by Christs coming in the flesh it should be revealed That dotage needs no confutation Another sort take it well nigh Stapleton in Antidoto Cajetan ad loc as Anabaptists and they will have it so called onely because it is a mark of the righteousness of faith by which men might know that they had obtained the righteousness of faith but that office of Sacraments if there be any such is sufficiently expressed in the former Title when it is called a signe Whether in the third respect they are called Seals because they leave a stamp and impression of the righteousness of faith that absurdity I wonder some of them fell not up 〈…〉 considering that they teach they confer grace by the work done but the place it self sufficiently confutes it because Abraham had this righteousness before either he received or God ordained the sign of circumcision It remains then that in the last respect they are called seals because they are ordained for greater confirmation and assurance given to us of righteousness promised in the Covenant of grace So Theophylact as Sasbout conceives him a seal whereby God sealed up righteousness to Abraham and testified it to be most true and certain as we are wont to set seal to that which we would testifie to be sure and firm Now if any demand what they seal up or confirm unto us the answer is It is the righteousness of faith that is remission of sins and that esteem of righteousness which the Lord allows to all truly believing If this be not all they assure us of yet it is the principall other ends being all subordinate to this other uses less principall and dependent thereon Now see we what it is that adversaries except against our description of Sacraments hence collected Forsooth they tell us that we reason absurdly from one species to the whole kinde affirmatively thereto hath been already answered They limit this use of circumcision to Abraham only and though to him it was a seal in this sence yet not therefore to others But I demand Bellarm. de Sacram. lib. 1. cap. 17. Gen. 17.7 10. was the Covenant made with Abraham only or with his seed also or was circumcision a sign of the Covenant to Abraham only or else to his seed also If the Covenant belonged to all if circumcision was to all a sign of their being in the Covenant why not to all also a seal of righteousness Forsooth say our adversaries one end of Abrahams circumcision was peculiar to Abraham as that he should be the father of all believers therefore this also of being a seal of the righteousness of faith Answ And I wonder why we may not conclude by the like reason that to Abraham only it was a sign of the Covenant because this end they mention had place in Abraham only But let us more neerly view the Reasons It was Abrahams priviledg only to be the father of all believers both circumcised and uncircumcised Ergo His priviledg onely to have circumcision a seal of righteousness How prove they their consequence Forsooth Paul joyns both together and therefore they are of like priviledg Answ Why may we not say ut supra that the necessity of the sign of circumcision was also Abrahams priviledg because it also is joyned to the rest But for more full satisfaction view we the scope of the text which is this To shew that justification belongs to believers of both people The proof is from a sign Abraham had righteousness in uncircumcision Ergo Righteousness belongs to the uncircumcised For this was that the Lord mystically intended to signifie in justifying Abraham before circumcision and in commending circumcision to him justified But to what end mentions he that end of circumcision sealing up the righteousness of faith Answ To answer that which he saw might be objected on this manner If Abraham were justified before circumcision what profit received he by that Sacrament Answ It sealed unto him the righteousness of faith And shall we say now it was Abrahams priviledg to be confirmed in perswasion of righteousness belike then his posterity either needed no such confirmation and so Abrahams priviledg shall be to be the only weakling in faith that needs means of confirmation or else his seed shall lack that help that Abraham had for establishment though the Covenant were equally made with them It is too tedious to follow them in all their diversions here therefore an end of his enquiry touching the generall nature and use of Sacraments What is it now that our adversaries want in our description that serves to express the generall nature of Sacraments that pulcherima definitio of a Sacrament extant in the catechisme of Trent Councill and ours besides the homonymie of the word righteousness they can assign no difference but in a term onely Sacramentum say they est res sensibus subiecta Bellarm. de Sacram. lib. 1. cap. 11. quae ex dei institutione sanctitatis justitiae tum significandae tum efficiendae vim habet Sacramentum say we est res sensibus subjecta quae ex dei institutione justitiae tum significandae tum obsignandae vim habet sealing of righteousness they like not though the Apostle hath pointed us thereto It should be effecting or working of righteousness and then all were well See we therefore a little whether this be of the nature of Sacraments and amongst the uses to which they are assigned to effect or work righteousness Where we have to things to consider First What grace they are appointed to work they answer justifying grace which after them stands in the habit of faith hope charity Secondly How they work it Not as principall efficients for that is peculiar to God but as instruments as the Master of sentences expresseth it Lumbard
Baptismus est The same Augustine Cùm essent omnia communia Sacramenta non communis erat omnibus gratia quae Sacramentorum virtus est speaking of the very elements Inst The same let them be but in signification not in vertue or efficacy Answ They drank of the Rock which was Christ some of them I mean as Augustine expounds in Psalm 77. And if therein they had Communion with Christ how are they not the same in efficacy Will they say the effect was one the efficiency or manner of producing different It is easie to say any thing their proof we want and require Not to be long Scholast ad 4. senten Concerning the Sacrament of Circumcision their own Divines confess many of them that it had the same effect with Baptisme and in the same manner namely the work wrought Why may we not then conclude that their Sacraments were one with ours in Use Ends and Efficacy Forsooth their Sacraments had no absolute promise of grace ours have But before I answer their objections the Reader must be entreated to observe that they change the state of the question For the question is not betwixt them and us Whether their Sacraments conferred justification as ours For we maintain that neither confer justification though both equally confirm it in manner above-shewn But the question is whether theirs had the same efficacy that ours have to the uses and ends whereto they were designed And so we affirm that the same promises for spirituall things were made to both people in both Testaments and confirmed in both Sacraments The same promise that is made to us was made to Abraham yea first to Abraham and first to the seed of his loins walking in the steps of his faith Gen 17. How else reasons the Apostle from the example of Abraham the promise was given Abraham through faith Ergò It s ours through faith and not by the Law c. and again How makes he Abraham the father of believers in both people except that the Covenant was stablished in him as the father for his children of both people But have our Sacraments absolute promise of grace justifying to be conferred by them then what lets infants even of hereticks in baptisme of hereticks to receive justification And if justification may be had in the Conventicles of hereticks why not also salvation We will henceforth be of comfort in the Church of England and we will hope for our infants yet that they may go to heaven 2. Where have we such an absolute promise made to our Sacraments Mar. 16.16 this I read He that believes and is baptized shall be saved Acts 2.39 He that repents and is baptized shall receive remission of sins Never He that is baptized shall have justification or salvation simply because he is baptized To omit all other their objections bewraying too foul ignorance in the matter of the Covenant of grace their last onely I will take notice of It lies thus Our Sacraments are said to save to regenerate to justifie and no such thing is read of theirs in the Scriptures Ergò They are not equal in efficacy Answ Many of the places alledged are to be understood of the Baptisme of the Spirit as that 1. Pet. 3.21 Tit. 3.5 Joh. 3.5 And what is that to the Sacrament 2 If in other places remission of sins be in shew of words ascribed to the Sacrament it must be understood significativè at most but concomitanter Vse Let us now leave a while these toilesome controversies and see what use of this conclusion redounds to us And it shall be the same that Paul once made to the people of Corinth 1 Cor. 10. upon this ground That none of us presume upon Sacraments as if they sealed up impunity to willfull transgressions there is no greater vertue in ours then was in Iewish Sacraments And their Murmurings Idolatry Fornication Tempting of God was severely punished even in those that partook Sacraments the same with ours in signification use and efficacy And why should any of us adventure the displeasure of God upon vain confidence of the work done of Sacraments Consider we that they are not only obsignations of favour but obligations to duty and so bined to dutifull carriage that they seal up pardon of no more sins then are repented and forsaken It is in this respect with Gods pardon as with like indulgence of Princes to Malefactours they binde for ever to good behaviour And I could wish our people thus perswaded of them But thus it fares with most through their ignorance as it is said of the Hart when he is wounded he runs to the herbe dittany known by naturall instinct to be soveraign So our people when they have wounded their souls even to death with the vilest abominations they post to Sacraments for medicine adding to their other sins this of profaning Gods sacred ordinances By the law of God given to the Iewes it was ordained that none that had contracted any legall pollution should on pain of death adventure on their Passeover till such time as his cleansing according to the law was accomplished The statute for the letter bindes not us but the signification thus far serves to instruct us that none of us renewing his sins should adventure on Sacraments without renewing repentance The last thing here observable is this That Sacraments are ordained not to confer justification but to confirm us in perswasion of it As to Abraham circumcision gave not righteousness but as a seal confirmed it unto him for what shall we say as Papists This Sacrament was so to Abraham only as his priviledg not so ours to us Thereto hath already been answered and the case is as plain for Baptisme in Cornelius as this for circumcision in Abraham Kemnit Exam. part 2. de sacram efficac Vsu or shall we say these instances were extraordinary and therefore afford no generall rule First How appears it of either that there was any thing extraordinary Secondly Whence should we fetch the rule to judg of the ordinary use of Sacraments save from their persons that first received them Let it stand therefore for a conclusion that the use of Sacraments is not to confer faith or justification but to confirm it For which cause we shall finde that ordinary faith is required as a pre-disposition necessary in all that are admitted to the Sacraments yea Act. 8. faith of the Messiah and confidence in him for justification between which faith and justification the connexion is inseparable Ob. If any shall say that they cannot have use in infants Answ To omit other answers though in infants while they are infants they have not actually that use yet to 〈◊〉 end they are ministred to infants that when in time to come they shall believe to righteousness their faith may receive confirmation by baptisme in infancy received August de Bapt. contra Donat. lib. 4. cap. 24. To this purpose saith Augustine In Abraham praecessit
ignorance to denie the truth of the History understood according to the letter and to fansie all things after the course of Allegories From my experience and knowledge something I can speak An id to once falling on a Fryer Allegorizing after their fashion The History of David and Goliah grew stiff in the opinion that there never was such a monster as Goliah He would have added nor such a Saint as David His reason For Goliah signifieth the Devil David Christ the stone wherewith he was slain the Word of God and what I wonder the scrip and sling But such mischiefs draw wrested Allegories frequently with them But affords not Scripture often such Allegories Answ No question Yes but it is good for us to be sure we have Gods spirit directing us in their accommodation before we propound them as things intended by the inspirer of Scripture least we belie the Holy Ghost in fathering on him a sense that he never intended Hieron praesat decem vision Esaiae Saint Hierome speaking of Origen the Father of Allegories though himself be faulty enough in that kind Yet casts on him this aspersion Origines saith he liberis Allegoriae spatiis evagatur ingenium suum facit Ecclesiae sacramenta Would God not many of our Ministers also And other ancients though bold enough this way Yet set limits to us in this kind Basil in Hieron Hieron in Zech. 4. Gal. 4. 1. Ever preferring the sense literall 2. Prohibiting Allegories to be attempted in praeceptis quae ad vitam pertinent in his quae perspicua manifesta sunt Later Divines have straighter bonds as 1. That it be done Parcè 2. For illustration rather then proof except where Gods spirit points at the Allegorie 3. Let this be added that as similitudes such things may be used so be it we be not too peremptory in fathering that sense upon the Spirit of God For example it is said of Moses He brought the Israelites to the skirts of Canaan but Joshua gave them possession of it perhaps in that was this mystery That the Law prepares to Gods kingdome but it is the Gospel that brings thereinto howbeit it were too much audaciousness in any to say any such thing was taught thereby though by way of similitude it may be so applyed Of this observation thus farre 2. Whereas Abraham is said to be the Father of all that believe in uncircumcision Note we That the Covenant of Grace made with Abraham reached by Gods intention from the beginning even to the Gentiles believing And this appears Gen. 17. inasmuch as to strangers and those bought with money Circumcision must be administred And long after when the greatest enclosure of Grace to Jews seemed to be if strangers sojourning amongst them would consent to be circumcised they might eat the Passover there was one Law for the home-born and for the stranger sojourning amongst them Exod. 12.48 49. And if any ask Why Paul saith of them They were strangers from the common-wealth of Israel Aliens from the Covenants of Promise Ephes 2.12 Answ In respect of the dispensation of the Covenant the body of the Gentiles were Aliens because God had not yet so generally manifested his Grace to them by calling Ephes 3. Yet in respect of Right it belonged to as many of them as walked in the steps of Abrahams faith or otherwise thus The Covenant from the beginning was intended to Gentiles Howsoever the Visible admission of them into the Covenant was not till the dayes of the new Testament so that who can blame the Lord of hard dealing towards Gentiles even before Christs coming that even in Israel gave place unto as many of them as would submit to the conditions of the Covenant will any say the Lord should have called them as he did the Jews Answ Who hath given him first and it shall be recompensed him Rom. 11.35 And his church was conspicuous and eminent in the eyes of the whole world that who so had hearts might thereto joyn themselves and share in the priviledges thereof And father of circumcision That is of Jews circumcised To them c. that is to as many as unto circumcision added imitation of Abrahams faith So then circumcision alone while it stood in force as a Sacrament made no man a child of Abraham they must as well imitate his faith as admit circumcision that would be indeed and truth of that seed of Abraham to whom the Covenant belonged Children of Abraham were of three sorts some such by propagation onely so Israelites yea Ishmaelites are all his children some by imitation onely as Gentiles that descended not out of his loyns some both by propagation and imitation as believing Jews Now here let it be observed that faith is the predominant and that that hath chief virtue in making children of Abraham such I mean as to whom the Covenant belonged insomuch that faith severed from circumcision made children of Abraham circumcision severed from faith not so The Jews saith Theophylact wanting faith Theophyl ad loc vaunting of circumcision are as they that make shew of a sealed bag emptie of money such Jews saith he marsupium gestiunt circumcisionis signo munitum c. And why may we not so say of Baptisme the Sacrament of the New Testament Hath it more virtue to bring us into the Covenant then had Circumcision He that believes and is baptized shall be saved Mar. 16.16 he that believes not shall be damned yea though he be baptized Why then do Papists obtrude upon us the work done of our Sacraments as if it had such virtue to make us sharers in the Covenant of grace they will never be able to prove unto us a disparity in this kind betwixt old and new Sacraments Indeed saith Peter Baptisme saves but it is not the element but the interrogation of a good conscience 1. Pet. 3.21 And let me here once again advise our people to adde to that they call their Christendome faith unfeigned as they desire to become Christians indeed and to share with Christ in his benefits conveyed unto us in the Covenant of grace They erre dangerously to their souls peril that think the naked Sacrament makes them Gods confederates To us indeed the baptized are such till they discover hypocrisie to God none else but hearty believers Now in describing the circumcised sons of Abraham that are such not by propagation onely or participation of the Sacrament but by imitation the phrase of the Apostle is to be observed They are said to walk in the steps of his faith A Metaphor expressing the exactest kind of imitation Not much unlike is that that Job hath expressing his precise and accurate obedienee Job 23.11 My foot hath held his steps So accurate would the Lord have us in imitating the virtuous examples of his Saints But of this point of imitation with the cautions and limits thereof more hereafter on another occasion Here it shall suffice to observe that
life suprá I●st judicium ut qui contemnunt Dei misericordem justitiam suam volunt constituere eidem suae justitiae relinquantur opprimendi magis quàm justificandi For us Let us learn to expect the inheritance by the means whereby God hath intended to give it What is that if not the Law the Apostle answers The Righteousness of Faith And what is that righteousness say Papists Cui fides est initium that is in short Bellarm. de Justif l. 1. c. 17. obedience which we in our own persons perform to the law after we have received to believe the word of God so great force is there in general faith to make works imperfect in themselves and therefore condemned by the law to be the mean of our inheritance and salvation But I wonder what made Paul now a believer having it in so exellent a measure yet to say he was not thereby justified 1 Cor. 4.4 Large discussing of the point I mean not on this occasion to enter into But this I am sure of the law to salvation requires perfection of obedience curses to hell even the least imperfections Gal. 3.10 and doth any man believing receive ability to perform it to the full I am sure it s Augustines and Hieromes resolution that howsoever perhaps such measure of grace may be obtained yet there never yet lived the man on earth nor should do to the end of the world so righteous that he did good and sinned not Eccles 7.20 Say others The righteousness of faith That is the righteousness which stands in faith so making faith the substance as it were of that righteousness whereby we are justified and saved against it are these reasons 1. That then our righteosness whereby we are just in Gods sight shall be a thing that is imperfect for hath any man at all times perfection of faith 2. Accordingly conscience shall never have solid peace neither in act nor in the cause 3. Righteousness of Justification shall be variable in the degrees according as faith is more or less in the same or divers subjects so that some shall be more some less justified in the sight of God and the same man according as his faith ebbs or flows shall be whiles perfectly whiles partially whiles not at all justified in the sight of God For the act of faith wherein according to this opinion our righteousness stands may by the consent of all be lost for a time The old way still is the good way by righteousness of faith that is by righteousness which faith apprehends in Christ see Rom. 5.17 By righteousness of Christ then apprehended by faith obtain we the promised inheritance Gal. 3.22 The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe and vers 9. They which be of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham By faith they are made partakers of the Blessing Vse Exhortation in this point is more needfull then proof the whole Scripture almost running this way Be we exhorted therefore leaving all confidence in the Law for righteousness or salvation to cleave fast to the righteousness of faith It is a fearfull doom passed on the Jews by the Apostle Rom. 10.3 that going about to stablish their own righteousness they were not subject to the righteousness of God And was it for nothing think we that the Apostle counts all dung and dross for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ and desires to be found in him not having his own righteousness by the Law but that which is by the righteousness of faith Phil. 3.8.9 Surely if any had cause to trust therein the Apostle much more that from the time of his calling had lived in all good conscience before God and men Acts 23.1 and yet knowing that thereby he was not justified or saved he utterly disclaims confidence therein and rests onely in that which is by faith of Christ Whose example let us follow as we desire to have comfort in the day of judgement Bern. in tantic Ser. 30. S. Bernard elegantly comparing grace and the Law together in their effects saith Quàm dissimili vultu ad omnem conscientiam se offerunt suavitas hujus illius austeritas quis sanè ex aequo respiciat condemnantem consolantem reposcentem ignoscentem plectentem implectentem And surely they know little the terrour of the Judge and have had as little experience of the Laws arraignment in the conscience that trust to their own polluted righteousness and not to that absolute obedience of Christ the Mediatour Proceed we now in the Text. VERS 14 15. For if they which are of the Law be heirs faith is made void and the promise made of none effect Because the Law worketh wrath For where no Law is there is no transgression THe words tend to confirmation of the Apostles former argument for justification by faith the summe whereof was this That the promise of inheritance was not to be accomplished by the Law c. the proof of it is here laid down taken from a double inconvenience issuing from that manner of attaining the inheritance If they which are of the Law be heirs then is faith made void and the promise of none effect But neither is faith void nor the promise of none effect Ergò They which are of the Law be not heirs or which is equivalent the promise of inheritance is not obtained by the Law They which are of the Law That is saith Theodoret Qui ex Lege vitam instituerunt saith Cajetan Qui subditi sunt Legi Mosi Sasbout Qui Legis observatores sunt Many the like Expositions might be cited Thus I think rather They which are of the Law that is which by the works of the Law seek the inheritance as Gal. 3.9 10. The Apostle sorts them that seek righteousness and salvation into two kinds Some are of faith they are such as by faith seek the inheritance Theophylact. ad Gal. 3. Some again are of the works of the Law they are such as by the Law seek salvation or as Theophylact They are of faith Quirelictà Lege ad fidem se conferunt They of the Law which leaving faith betake themselves to the Law If these be heirs namely ex Lege as Ambrose interprets if they get the inheritance by the Law Then is faith void Whose faith Gods or Mans Gods saith Cajetan that is his fidelity in keeping promise impertinently rather Mans prescribed of God to be the means of inheritance Their faith is void or vain What is that whether frustrate in respect of fruit or unnecessary and needless in the prescript Calvin Instit lib. 3. c. 11. S. 11.13 3. or else as M. Calvin so shaken that it turns to distrust and degenerates towards desperation this latter is a truth as he explains it there being left no place for perswasion of justification if it depend upon condition of fulfilling the Law
inasmuch as no man can ever be assured that he hath fatisfied the Law nor indeed can by works fulfill it But the other Expositions seem more pertinent let us view them Faith is vain That is say some frustrate and fruitless though how they explain not perhaps they thus conceive it If they onely which fulfill the Law be heirs then faith is fruitless and can never attain the inheritance promised inasmuch as no man is able to fulfill the Law But I take it the Apostle hath eye rather to the prescription of faith on Gods part then to the fruit on ours So that the sense is this If they which seek the inheritance by the Law do by the Law obtain it needlesly and vainly was faith prescribed to be the means of inheritance To discern the consequence of this argument view we whereupon the necessity of substituting faith instead of works grew The Lord had made a covenant of life with man upon condition of fulfilling the Law so that if he kept the Law and continued in obedience thereof he should live see Rom. 10.5 Lev. 18.5 Man falling through disobedience lost the benefit of that Covenant and withall propagated to posterity a nature so not onely impotent to fulfill the Law but vitiously inclined to the breach thereof that there was no hope of salvation by the Law Howbeit the Lord out of his love to mankind and loath that the whole posterity should perish in his rich mercy was pleased to enter a new covenant of life and salvation establishing another means for our happiness which was faith of the Messiah by which through grace performed we might from Christ receive a better and more firm title to the inheritance This was one reason why faith was prescribed as is intimated Rom. 8. and Gal. 3. Now how needless had this been if by the Law we might inherit salvation To what end go we by faith out of our selves to seek righteousness and salvation in Christ if by the Law performed by our selves we might have obtained it The Consequence therefore we see to be firm Let us now consider what out of this argument may be collected viz. Observ The Doctrine of salvation by works frustrates faith and chargeth on God the crime of folly in ordeining it to be the onely mean of inheritance Much to this purpose speaks the Apostle Gal. 3 c. If righteousness be by the Law then Christ died in vain it had been needless for the Lord to send his Son to die for our sins thereby to procure unto us justification if by the Law we might have obtained the blessing and Rom. 8.3 he makes this his reason why the Lord sent his Son in the similitude of sinfull flesh because it was impossible for the Law weakned by the flesh to give us righteousness Whereto what say our adversaries Forsooth their old distinctions they obtrude for answer Works are of two sorts some done by strength of naturall free-will some by grace and faith works of naturall free-will indeed frustrate faith and grace and Christs death not so works done by grace in faith yea the Apostles consequence Gal. 3. is very firm if by them we will exclude works done through grace For it followes not that if we be justified by works following faith that then Christ dyed in vain Bellarm. de justif lib. 1. cap. 19. nay if Christ had not dyed we could not have been justified by faith or works issuing therefrom It being Gods grace in Christ that hath made our works so virtuous Answ Where first we desire to know for our learning where in all the Scripture we may finde that Christs death or our faith gives to our works justifying or saving virtue That our services are acceptable to God by Iesus Christ that our works done in faith are pleasing to him though in great weakness performed we finde that they are of value to countervail our sins or to purchase Heaven we finde not nay the contrary we finde in sundry Scriptures taught us 2. Yea the purgation of our sins we know Christ made by himself Heb. 1.3 and the way into the holy of holies to be opened by his flesh never by our righteousness Heb. 10.19 20. 3. Let the Reader observe how cleanly a gull they would put upon us in this distinction of works done by grace and those done by power of naturall free will For in these works of grace free-will is according to their principles the predominant 4. Doth the Law of God in any place allow us justification by works imperfect though done in grace search and see whether it damne not to hell the least blemises cleaving to our works and require not only that the principall manner and end be regular but that in every respect they be pure and free from blemish All which considered return us our conclusion firm and undoubtfull notwithstanding these cavills of popish Iustitiaries In our passage let us take notice of the intolerable pride of our merit-mongers chusing rather to robbe God of the glory of his wisdome then in humility to acknowledg the imperfection of their own obedience How much better were it with holy Iob 4● 6 to abhor our selves in dust and ashes then thus to nullifie the wisdome of God in frustrating his prescripts hath God appointed faith the sole mean of inheritance and shall we by works seek to inherit the blessing I say not much but sure Gal. 4.30 if Ishmael may not be heir with the Son of promise no more shall Workres with believers The second inconvenience follows to be scanned The promise by this means becomes ineffectuall How if any demand Answ Because the inheritance promised shall never by this means be obtained For hangs it on condition of fulfilling the law And must those that desire to inherit by legall obedience obtain salvation Who then can be saved Seeing no man is able by any measure of grace in this life given to fill up the measure of legall righteousness This saving the judgment of more Learned I take to be the ground of the consequence the rather for the reasons objoyned Hence the inference is fluent That who so teacheth us to seek salvation by works frustrates Gods promise and deprives us of salvation Not but that good works are necessary but as duties not as merits for thankfulness not for righteousness as the way to the kingdome not as causes of salvation the son of the bondwoman shall not be heir with the son of the freewoman Gal. 4.30 That is by Pauls intention not legall workers with Evangelicall believers Gal. 3.9 As many as are of the works of the law are under the curse so far is it that they should have any title to the blessing Such mischiefs bring pharisaicall Iustitiaries upon their sectaries Hear the Reasons They bind us by this means to a condition and means of Salvation impossible not onely to Nature but to Grace according to that portion God is pleased in this life to
life How many incredulous yea opposites to faith hath he by his word brought to the obedience of the faith His hand is not shortned it is ever true of him He can quicken the dead and still by his word give being to things that erst had no subsistence This may serve to direct us in use of these marvellous effects of Gods power for stablishing of faith And of the first member of this Chapter thus far The second followeth from the 18th verse to the 23. VERS 18. Who against hope believed in hope that he might become the father of many nations according to that which was spoken so shall thy seed be IN this verse and the four that follow the Apostle digresseth a little from his principall conclusion to a commendation of Abrahams faith The scope whereof seems this To prescribe us a form of Believing and to direct us a course for the establishing of our faith required of us to justification both which we may learn from the example of Abraham the father and pattern of Believers The specialties commendable in Abrahams faith expressed in this verse are two 1. His courage 2. His prudence in Believing His courage in that against hope he believed in hope Sense Against hope in hope How reconcile we Against hope which naturall course could afford In hope by meditation of Gods power and truth conceived He had promise to be father not of children onely but of whole nations the course of nature contradicted it His body dead and unfit for generation with Sarah besides her wonted barrenness it ceased to be after the manner of women so that in respect of means naturall causes there were many of despairing none of hope yet believed he the promise in the largest extent knowing that Gods power transcends nature Observ From whose example we learn in the midst of despair still to hope where we have Gods promise for our warrant Besides Abrahams example we have like practice in Job a mirrour not of patience onely but of faith Who would rest on him for life whom he feels wounding even to Death Yet Though he kill me saith Job I will trust in him Job 13.15 To their practice let us add the consideration of defects in this kind severely punished in Moses Num. 11.13 20 21 22. The incredulous Prince 2 King 7.1 2 17. Zachary Luke 1.18 20 22. In a word In Believing there are four degrees one more excellent then another 1. That which is exercised in sufficiency of means 2. Where the means are weak and improportionate to the promise 3. In the want of means 4. Where are means strongly opposing the accomplishment of the promise this the highest degree of faith so commendable in Abraham Vse Brethren we all profess our selves the sonnes and daughters of Abraham Gal. 3.29 His children we are if we walk in the steps of his faith Iohn 8.39 and labour therein to resemble Let us be exhorted not onely in believing but in the very measure of faith to hold correspondence above hope yea against hope to believe in hope above sense yea against sense to believe what the Lord hath promised There fall out times with Gods children when if we shall make sense or naturall causes the measure of faith a thousand to one but we are swallowed up of despair The Lord sometimes writes bitter things against us and makes us possess the sinnes of our youth seems to surcharge Conscience with imputation of those sinnes the pardon whereof he commands us to believe What shall a poor soul do in this case to keep it self to the task of faith Surely what thou feelest God to impute believe he will pardon to thy repentance for so runs the promise There are times when we may feel decayes of grace and declinings in obedience yet sith it is his promise to give perseverence without interruption believe thou shalt stand even while thou thinkest thou art falling c. Helps to stablish faith in this kind are these 1. To rest on the naked promise of God 2. Consideration of the transcendency of Gods power able to work without above yea against nature Ephes 3.20 to do as * Paul speaks exceeding abundantly above all that we can ask or think 3. Observation of the Lords dealing with others or our selves accomplishing his promises beyond all expectation The second commendable specialty in Abrahams faith here mentioned is his prudence in believing according to that which was spoken Observ Whence learn we That the rule and measure of a wise mans faith is the word of God so that all the Lord speaks must be believed onely what he speaks must be believed And in this generall we and Papists accord The rule and object of Christian faith is Veritas prima and the adaequatum objectum of faith is the Word of God But that word say they is of two sorts Scriptum Traditum Written and Traditionary Both these together make us a perfect rule of faith Scripture without Tradition is regula but partialis Bellarm. de verb. Dei non scripto lib. 4. cap. 12. That which is taught for Gods truth in our Church is this That the Scripture contains doctrine and direction all-sufficient for faith and practice necessary to salvation so that there is no more to be believed or done upon pain of damnation then what is contained in the written word of God For explanation the contents of Scripture we conceive to be not only what is here immediately and in express terms taught but all whatsoever may thence be diduced by just and necessary consequence out of generalls causes equalls c. Our arguments are these 2 Tim. 3.14.15 The Scriptures saith Paul to Timothy are able to make thee wise to salvation to make the man of God perfect throughly furnished unto every good work Afford they us wisdome sufficient to salvation Bellarm. lib. 4. cap. 11. ubi supra therefore they contain doctrine sufficient for faith and practice And that there may be no place for that idle evasion of our adversaries limitting the sufficiency of written doctrine to what is necessary for Laiques Both Timothy was a Bishop and him they they were able to make wise to salvation and generally saith the Apostle they completely furnish the man of God that is the Minister to every good work of his calling Our Second argument is this The written rule of practice we are sure is perfect both for that the Lord gives so strait charge to add nothing thereto Deut. 4.2 Prov. 30.6 Rev. 22.18 and because there cannot the duty be named which the Law of God prescribeth not nor the sin thought of which it forbids not May we think to evade this testimony with that Nicety of Bellarmine add not by depraving the sense nay as appears by the Lords own often reproof of doctrins of men in matter of his worship Isai 29.13 and his heavy judgments on those that altered but circumstances of his prescripts Levit. 10. additions as well
perseverâsse quod acceperat ut nasceretur Isaac Observ The difficulties thus rid let us now see what we may observe for our further profit Where first offers it self that distinction of faith according to the divers degrees and measures thereof in believers There is weak faith and strong faith there are men of no faith as infidels men of weak faith as novices men strong in faith as was Abraham Matt. 14.31 O thou of little faith saith Christ to Peter Matth. 15.28 O woman great is thy faith saith our Saviour to the Canaanitish woman Christ found not so great faith in Israel as in the Centurion some in Israel not so great as in an alien The greatness or smalness of faith is three wayes considered 1. In respect of the things to be believed so it is more or less according as things believed are more or lesse in number 2. According as things believed are more or less distinctly conceived the more implicite faith is the less it is the more explicite the greater 3. According as the assent to things believed is more or less firm more or less free from doubting and in this last sense we must conceive the Apostle Abraham strong in faith because he doubts not of the promise Questions here offering themselves are these First whether weak faith have in it justifying virtue or Whether a man weakly believing have title to justification according to the Covenant Answ Weak faith if true gives title to justification our Saviour speaking of faith miraculous saith The least degree of it even the grain of mustard seed Luke 17.6 is available to miracles even of greatest nature it holds proportionally of faith justifying to the uses whereto it serves the least measure is of force to justification 2. Add hereunto that it is not the greatness of faith that justifieth Faith as it is a virtue or gift in us hath not justifying virtue but as it apprehends the righteousness of Christ whereby we are justified which apprehension may be as true in him that believes weakly as in him whose faith is more firm 3. It is not to be forgotten that as the defects of other gifts and parts of obedience are covered with Christs perfection so that they hinder not justification so is also the imperfection of faith Secondly it may be demanded How we may discern our faith to be true while it is weak Answ It is true if 1. It strive against doubting and infidelitie 2. If it be carefull to get strength by means that God hath sanctified Luc. 17.5 Mar. 9.24 3. If that weak perswasion we have of Gods love and pardon of our sins breed care to purifie our hearts and to please God Act. 15.9 The next point in the text is the signes of strength in Abrahams faith two in number First this That he considered not the opposition in course of nature made against the promise 2. That he doubted not of the promise nor debated the matter how it could have accomplishment For the first Whether we consider it as a signe or as a means of Abrahams firmness in believing is not much materiall It is no small signe of stable faith to passe by notice of things that oppose Gods promise and a great means to stablish faith the withdrawing of our minds from beholding the things that may hinder the accomplishment of Gods promise This once is clear that the first step to incredulity is the loosing of our thoughts to rove towards things opposing Gods promise and demitting our minds to behold the impediments of second causes Thus fell Zachary incredulously to question the promise of God whiles he considered his own and his wife 's old age disabled as he thought for procreation Luc. 1.18 Thus Sarah in like sort Gen. 18.12 thus Moses Num. 11.21 Thus Gods children at this day Their sins great therefore not capable of pardon Corruptions strong and settled by evil custome therefore not possible to be mortified Grace small temptations many and violent therefore perseverance impossible Vse It is our wisdome and will be our comfort in this particular to hold semblance with Abraham where we have Gods promise seem it never so incredible rest in it and that thou mayest so do beware how thou give way to flesh and bloud drawing down thy thoughts to the course of nature To many yea most of the promises made to us in Christ gainsaying we shall find in nature reasons of believing onely in the power truth and goodness of God and in the merit and obedience of Christ the ratifier of the promises 2. Cor. 1.20 The second signe of Abrahams strength in faith is That he doubted not of the promise where also the generall cause of doubting is expressed that is unbelief Touching the sense see the former explanation The points we have here observable 1. A difference betwixt faithlesness and doubtfulness such as is betwixt the Cause and the Effect Not every one that doubts is faithless though doubting argue some measure of unbelief A man merely faithless denies all assent to truth propounded in doubtfulness is some assent though not without fear that the contrary may be true I observe it the rather respecting the weakness of some amongst Gods Children that perplexed with doubtings pass censure of meer faithlesness upon themselves Saith our Saviour to Peter doubting * Mat. 14.31 oh thou of little faith wherefore didst thou doubt Doubtings argues weakness of faith not a nullity of believing A Second point observable is the fountain of doubtfulness and that is unbelief doubting is a fruit of unbelief so far as we are doubtfull so far are we faithless from faith proceeds nothing but certainty wavering therefore issues from want of faith If any demand whether such as doubt may be presumed to have faith Answ Doubtfulness though it agree not to the nature of faith yet may meet with faith in the same subject Why not as well as other corruption with grace Flesh with spirit knowledg with ignorance rebellion with obedience hard-heartedness with remorsefulness c. So hath God tempted all gifts of the spirit in us that their contraries are abated not abolished Whence issue in Gods Children acts not of grace only but of corruption also yea in the same act of Gods Saints a spice of corruption as well as a rellish of grace see Rom. 7.23 Gal. 5.17 And as the argument is ill there is some rebellion therefore no inclination to obedience some corruption therefore no grace so as ill followes it there is some doubtfulnes therefore no faith But though this be true yet doubtfulness hath no other fountain then unbelief And it serves first to shew the vain contentment and self-pleasing many through misprision conceive from their doubtings even hence concluding the sincerity of faith from the sense of doubtings Their errour I would gladly reform and it springs from hence We say truly it is presumption not faith that 's never encountred with doubtings and they have no faith