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A47599 The marrow of true justification, or, Justification without works containing the substance of two sermons lately preached on Rom. 4:5 ... : wherein the nature of justification is opened, as it hath been formerly asserted by all sound Protestants, and the present prevailing errors against the said doctrine detected / by Benjamin Keach ... Keach, Benjamin, 1640-1704. 1692 (1692) Wing K76; ESTC R18579 45,425 50

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it not to merit thereby nay though he be wicked and an ungodly person and so worketh not or hath no Moral Righteousness at all yet if he believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is counted or imputed for righteousness Not as a simple Act or as it is a quality or habit or in us as the Papists teach ipsa fides saith Bellarmine censetur esse Justitia Faith it self is counted to be a Justice and it self is imputed unto Righteousness No nor in respect of the effects or fruits of it for so it is part of our Sanctification But as it is a hand to take hold of or receive or apply Christ and his Righteousness Manus accipientis saith Dr. Downham the hand of the Receiver is the Grace of justifying Faith 'T is not Faith but the Object and Righteousness Faith apprehends or takes hold of that justifies the ungodly 1. The Apostle doth not intend by these Words That if a Man hath the Works here meant he cannot be justified unless he throws them away and become openly wicked and prophane and so sin that Grace may abound No as the Apostle says God forbid Rom. 6. 1. But his meaning is that the absence or want of good Works or moral Righteousness cannot hinder a Man's Justification if he believes in Jesus Christ though he be never so wicked and ungodly That justifieth the ungodly Every Man is ungodly before he is acquitted and justified having till that very instant a great Mountain of guilt and filth lying upon him Justifie 't is Verbum fore●se a judicial Word used in Courts of Judgment or a Law-Term which usually is opposed to Condemnation And it signifies to absolve to acquit from guilt and accepting a Man as righteous or to pronounce him just and righteous or give sentence for him Deut. 25. 1. Prov. 17. 15. not the making a person inherently righteous but to count or impute Righteousness to one that is in himself a Sinner or as my Text ungodly Obj. But may be you will say what ungodly ones doth God justifie if it be an impenitent ungodly one how can you reconcile this Text with that of Solomon He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they are both abomination to the Lord Prov. 17. 15. 1. Answ I answer 't is not meant of justifying of any ungodly Act of a wicked Person for God can as soon cease to be as so to justifie the ungodly 2. Nor Secondly he means not justifying the person in his committing of any sinful deed for that is as opposite to God's holy Nature and all one with the former 3. Nor in the Negative are they such ungodly ones that are righteous in their own Eyes like as many of the Jews and Pharisees were and Paul also before his Conversion Phil. 3. 4 5 6 7. when a Persecutor For although such who are Righteous in their own sight are the worst of Sinners in the sight of God yet they are such whom God while they retain that conceit of themselves will never justifie Christ did not come to call the righteous but sinners to Repentance There is saith Solomon a Generation pure in their own eyes yet are they not cleansed from their filthiness Prov. 30. 11. Our Saviour compares this sort of Men to painted Sepulchres who appear beautiful without but are within full of dead Men's bones and of all uncleanness Matth. 23. 27. What pollution is more loathsome than the filth of a rotten and stinking Sepulchre The proud Pha●isee crys out God I thank thee I am not as other Men are Extortioners Vnjust Adulterers or even as this Publican I fast twice 〈◊〉 the week I give Tithes of all that I possess Luke 18. 13. These Men boast of ●heir good Works Prayers and Alms-deeds but never saw their horrid ●ride hardness of their Hearts Unbelief and cursed Hypocrisie They make ●lean the outside of the cup and platter but are abominable inwardly in his eye ●ho beholds their hearts These Men are wicked and ungodly notwithstan●ing they look upon themselves to be Righteous and yet are not therefore ●he ungodly whom God will justifie 'T is said the Publican who cried Lord ●e merciful to me a Sinner went away rather justified than the proud Pharisee 4. And in the fourth place neither are they such wicked and ungodly ●nes who though openly prosane and wretched Creatures such that love and ●ive in Sin yet glory presumptuously of Christ's Death and say through ●im they hope to be saved They believe in Christ and therefore do not ●oubt of their Salvation Faith is one thing and Presumption is another I ●m afraid Brethren that this conceit and delusion of the Devil sends daily many thousands to Hell because God hath abounded in his Grace they abound 〈◊〉 Sin and Wickedness and presumptuously trust to lying Words These un●odly ones are not the persons which God doth justifie but rather positively ●ondemns in his Word and will condemn for ever unless they believe truly ●elieve in Jesus Christ 5. Therefore in the Fifth place they are such ungodly ones in the Affirma●●ve who do see themselves to be ungodly and vile they are such whom God brings to see their Sickness to feel themselves wounded who find them●elves lost and undone nay though some of them may like Paul be blameless 〈◊〉 respect of the outward Acts of Sin yet by the coming of the Commandment ●ith powerful Convictions sin revives and they die Rom. 7. They see the pol●tion of their Hearts and the pravity of their Nature and behold themselves ●e worst of Men. Though some others may be indeed guilty of gross Acts of Sin or notorious Transgressors even just until that very instant that they hear the Gospel preached and have done no Acts of Righteousness yet if they believe on Jesus Christ or throw themselves by an Act of saving Faith on the Blood and Merits of Christ they are immediately justified for let Men have moral Righteousness or no moral Righteousness they are all ungodly in God's sight till they believe and at that very instant they do believe they are accounted righteous through the Imputation of Christ's perfect Righteousness For as a Man 's own Righteousness cannot further his Justification or conduce or add thereto so his Sin and Ungodliness cannot hinder or obstruct his Justification if he truly believe on him who justifies the Ungodly My Brethren do not mistake a Man seeing himself wounded doth not heal him though it may and does put him upon seeking out for healing so a Man seeing himself a Sinner doth not render him Righteous Nothing renders a Man righteous to Justification in God's sight but the Imputation of the perfect Personal Righteousness of Christ received only by the Faith of the Operation of God When I was a Lad I was greatly taken with a Book called The flowing of Christ's Blood freely to Sinners as Sinners O my Brethren that 's the Case that 's the Doctrine
THE MARROW OF TRUE JUSTIFICATION OR JUSTIFICATION without WORKS Containing the Substance of Two Sermons lately preached on Rom. 4. 5. And by the Importunity of some gracious Christians now published with some Additions WHEREIN The Nature of Justification is opened as it hath been formerly asserted by all sound Protestants and the present prevailing Errors against the said Doctrine detected By BENJAMIN KEACH Pastor of a Church of Christ Meeting at Horsly-Down Southwark I will raise unto David a righteous Branch and this is the Name whereby he shall be called Jehovah our Righteousness Jer. 23. 5 6. Justificatio est Doctrina stantis cadentis Ecclesiae saith Luther LONDON Printed for Dorman Newman at the King's Arms in the Poultrey 1692. THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY To all who desire to be found in the Righteousness of Christ and count their own but as Dung in comparison thereof particularly to the Congregation Meeting at Horsly-Down the Hearers of these Sermons Grace Mercy and Peace be multiplied Brethren AS I was put upon preaching on this great Subject so I am satisfied it was at a very seasonable Hour this Doctrine being greatly struck at by too many Persons though of different Sentiments in many Points of Religion And as it was well accepted by you who heard these Sermons and the others that followed when preach'd and having been prevail'd with to publish these to the World so I hope some may receive Advantage hereby Though for the meanness of the Author and weakness of the Work they may not meet with that Entertainment from some as the Subject deserves yet for your sakes whose Souls are committed to my Charge and for whom I must give Account to the great Shepherd of the Sheep at the last Day I readily consented to this Publication as also that all may see that we are in this and in all other great Fundamentals of Religion established in the same Faith with our Brethren and all Sound aud Orthodox Christians in the World And cannot but look upon our selves greatly concerned to see how Men by Craft and Subtilty endeavour through Satan's Temptations though I hope some do it not wittingly strive to subvert the Gospel of Christ and corrupt the Minds of weak Christians An Error in a Fundamental Point is dangerous and destructive but should we mistake some Men we have to do with we should be glad The Lord help you to stand fast in the Truth as it is in Jesus in which through Grace you are well established Our Days are perillous Satan seems to be let loose upon us and is in great Rage his Time being but short Brethren 't is a hard Case that any of those who maintain the Old Doctrine of Justification should be branded with the black Name of Antinomians As for my part if Dr. Crisp be not mis-represented by his Opposers I am not of his Opinion in several respects but I had rather erre on their side who strive to exalt wholly the Free Grace of God than on theirs who seek to darken it and magnifie the Power of the Creature though we fear the Design is to wound the Truth and us through that good Man's sides who I doubt not is gone to Heaven O when shall we see that Truth Peace and Vnion longed for My Brethren the Doctrine we preach does not open a Door to the least Licentiousness as ' iis unjustly said to do by some who are either wilfully or ignorantly blind No God forbid Nothing can promote Holiness and Gospel-Sanctification like unto it only it teaches us to act from high sublime and right Evangelical Principles It shews the only way to attain to Gospel-Purity flows from our Vnion with Christ and that no Man can arrive to any degree of true Holiness or expect to meet with any Success therein without a Principle of Spiritual Life or saving Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ The Nature of Men must first be changed and that Enmity that is in their Hearts against God be removed before they can be holy The Tree must first be made good or the Fruits will be evil The Image of God must be formed in our Souls which puts the Creature into an actual bent and propensity of his Heart to the Practice of Holiness If a Man hates not Sin be not out of Love with Sin How should he be in love with God and Holiness Now because we say Sanctification is not necessary as antecedent to Justification but is the Fruit or Product of Vnion with Christ though we deny not but the Habits of Holiness are infused at that same Instant that Faith is wrought in the Soul Must we be look'd upon as Promoters of a Licentious Doctrine Must we make our own Performances or Obedience a Condition of Justification or be laid under Infamy and Reproach 'T is by Faith only that we come to have actual Enjoyment and Possession of Christ himself and of Remission of Sin and not only so but of eternal Life and so of Holiness also and no other ways The good Lord help you to a right Vnderstanding of these things and make you all a holy People to the Praise of his Glory and Honour of your Sacred Profession The Holy Apostle having asserted Justification by the Righteousness of God which is by Faith in Jesus Christ desired to know him and the Power of his Resurrection c. which he did not to be justified thereby but as a Fruit flowing therefrom or as a further Evidence thereof The first he had attained but there was a higher degree of Sanctification in hts Eye which he pressed after as then not having attained Whose Example let us follow I shall say no more You own a Rule of Gospel-Holiness Let me exhort you to labour after sincere Obedience And pray forget me not in your Prayers that God would graciously help me through all my Troubles and Temptations and preserve me and you to his Heavenly Kingdom who am your Servant for Jesus's sake and so shall abide till Death Benjamin Keach THE MARROW OF JUSTIFICATION OR The Doctrine of Justification opened in divers Sermons at Horsly-down Rom. IV. 5. But to him that worketh not but believeth on him that justifieth the Vngodly his Faith is counted for righteousness THIS Text is given me as I told you the last Lord's Day by an unknown Hand and though it may seem to interfere with my design and intention in speaking to another Scripture on a different subject yet I readily imbrace this Motion and Answer the Desire of those Christian Friends who so earnestly request and intreat me to speak to the Doctrine of Justification and that for these Reasons following 1. Because the Doctrine of Justification is one of the greatest and most weighty subjects I can insist upon it being by all Christians acknowledged to be a Fundamental of Religion and Salvation Hence this Article is justly stiled by worthy Writers Articulus stantis vel cadentis Religionis The very ●illar of the Christian Religion
which the Apostle preaches you must come to Christ believe on Christ as Sinners as Ungodly ones and not as Righteous not as Saints and Holy persons The whole need not a Physician but they that are sick The Thief on the Cross as a Sinner cry'd out Lord remember me c. and the Jaylor as a Sinner cry'd out Sirs what must I do to be saved So much as to the Explanation of the Terms of the Text in which you have three parts 1. A Negative Proposition But to him that worketh not 2. An Affirmative Proposition But believeth on him that justifies the ungodly 3. The Conclusion from hence His faith is counted or imputed for Righteousness The Observations I shall take notice of from the Words shall be but two 1 Doct. That all Works done by the Creature are quite excluded in point of Justification of a Sinner in the sight of God 2. Doct. That Justification is wholly of the free Grace of God through the Imputation of the perfect Righteousness of Jesus Christ by Faith I purpose to begin with the first of these Points of Doctrine and then come to speak to the second 1. But before I proceed I shall shew you divers false and erroneous Principles which Men have sucked in in and about the great Doctrine of Justification 2. I shall then prove the Point viz. That all Works done by the Creature are quite excluded in point of Justification of a Sinner in God's sight 1. I shall begin with the Papists who hold that Men are Justified by inherent Righteousness by Good Works and not by Faith only affirming Good Works to be meritorious or that Men thereby deserve Eternal Life nay ●hat a Man may perfectly fulfil the Law of God though he cannot live without Sin But to mend the matter Bellarmine's Argument is That Venial Sins of which he denies not that all are guilty yet they do not hinder a Man from ●eeping the Law perfectly The foolishness of which distinction is easily ●iscerned for if they be Sins which he calls Venial then they are the Transgression of the Law and he that transgresses the Law doth not keep it perfectly but contrariwise breaks it and so is accursed cast and condemned by 〈◊〉 But they affirm that a Man may not only by his Good Works merit for himself but also may do more than is commanded or may do Works of ●upererogation or do more than his Duty 2. The second sort I shall mention are the Socinians who deny the Deity of the Son of God and from hence deny also the Satisfaction of Christ because the latter depends upon the former It was from the dignity and excellency of Christ's Person he being God as well as Man that his Sacrifice ●ad such infinite value and worth in it that by one single payment as I may 〈◊〉 say he made such a full compensation to the Law and Justice of God But ●●ey erring in those two grand Points of Christian Religion run into the ●hird and deny the imputation of Christ's Personal righteousness to us in ●ustification And indeed it seems to me that this sort of Men assert that Justification of the Sinner is nothing more than God's pardoning him freely by ●is Mercy and that only as a simple act of his own Mercy and Grace without ●espect had to the Satisfaction made for our Sins by Jesus Christ by which act of God's pardoning Grace they affirm the guilt of Sin that binds the Sinner ●ver to punishment is taken off and so he is acquitted and delivered from Eternal Wrath but could this be admitted which they affirm why should God ●end his beloved Son into the World to be a Sacrifice for Sin For could not God without that Glorious Fruit of his infinite Goodness have pardoned and acquitted us and never have suffered his Son to have underwent such pain and ●orrow for us which indeed he did 3. Another sort there be which are those called Arminians of which ●here are many of late Times I find one of them does affirm That though the Works of the Law are excluded from justifying the Sinner in the sight of God yet Gospel Works are not So that they ●nclude Love to God Acts of Mercy and other Gospel Duties and Obedience in ●oint of Justification as well as Faith or joyn Good Works done under the Gospel and Faith together and this plainly appears by what Mr. William Allen hath wrote in his Book called A Glass of Justification See p. 18. These are his Words viz. It is no where neither in Words nor Sence said but he that ●oveth not but believeth on him that Justifieth 〈◊〉 Vngodly his Faith is counted to him for righteousness Sure this Man forgot that Love to God was one great thing the Law commanded Were not the Israelites or the People of the Jews under the Law to do all they did in Love to God Thou shalt Love the Lord thy God with all thy Heart and with all thy Soul and with all thy strength c. He proceeds to blame our Protestant Writers in asserting Justification by Faith alone without Works Brethren although we do not oppose Faith to Love as if Faith that is of the right Kind can be without Love to God yet we say 't is Faith and not Works not love nor Deeds of Mercy nor any other Gospel Duties or Obedience that is counted to us for righteousness And why to Faith only Because that Grace only carries us out of our selves to another for righteousness i. e. to Jesus Christ 4. The same sort affirm Faith doth Justifie the Sinner as far as I can gather as it is the act of the Creature God accepting of that internal act of the Soul according to his good pleasure to Justification not having respect so to the Object of Faith as that the matter thereof is Christ perfect righteousness and the form or formal Cause of it the Imputation thereof to such who believe in Jesus but that it hath pleased God to appoint or ordain Faith in respect of it self to that end and purpose namely to Justifie the Sinner Of this sort are the Dutch Arminians in pursuance of their main Doctrine of Free Will they exalt Man's Works and therefore affirm that he is Justified not by Christ's righteousness but by his own Faith God having required of him instead of full Obedience to the Law of Works that now he should believe on his Son and that for so doing he should be Justified and saved as he should have been before for perfect Obedience So that with this sort as one observes Faith is that righteousness for which we are Justified before God Moreover they tell us that Faith is a belief of the Truth of the Gospel so as to live according to it thus it includeth and not excludeth Works and that Faith and Works or Obedience to the Gospel is our righteousness for which we are Justified and saved At the same time you must remember that they do not
saved the Matter of Justification is one and the same the Balsam that cures our Malady is all one in Infants and in Adult Persons 't is Christ's Death Christ's Blood the Merits of Jesus Christ or 't is his active and passive Obedience which is our only Righteousness to discharge us from Sin and Condemnation Though the Mode or Manner of the Application thereof may be different to the Adult 't is by Faith only to Infants in a more secret and hidden Manner not known to us Nay Abraham David and Paul were not justified by inherent Righteousness but by Faith without Works of Obedience and as Abraham was justified so are all his spiritual and true Seed to them and every one of them is Faith imputed to Justification or Righteousness even by Faith alone without Works as Paul proveth Rom. 4. 3 4 5. 11 Arg. Is Because Christ is tendered or offered to Sinners as Sinners not as righteous Persons but as ungodly ones without any previous Qualifications required of them to fit themselves to receive Christ they are all as poor lost undone weary and heavy laden Sinners required to believe in Christ or venture their Souls upon him though they have no Money no Righteousness if they have they must cast it away in point of Dependance Trust or Justification These are they Christ came to call these are they he invites to come to him these are they he came to seek and to save who see nothing of Good in themselves but contrariwise are sensible of their filthy Hearts and abominable Lives And yet though it be thus if they come to Christ believe truly in Christ they shall at that very Instant be justified which Faith or Divine Grace will soon make them holy and sanctifie them for holy Habits are at that very instant infused into them though Sanctification is a gradual Work This being so it follows all Works done by the Creature are excluded in point of Justification of a Sinner before God What said Paul to the ungodly Jailor when he cry'd out Sirs what must I do to be saved Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved and thy house Act. 16. 31. The Apostle did not put him upon doing to be saved but upon believing But O how contrary is this to the Doctrine some Men preach now a-days they tell Sinners what they must do what good Fruits they must bring forth and this before the Tree is good or they have closed with Christ or have real Union with him nay bid the People take heed they do not too soon believe on Christ or venture on Christ Sirs you cannot too soon believe in Christ I mean truly believe I don't say you should get a presumptuous Faith but true Faith But is it not strange a Minister should be heard lately to say A Man must get a new Heart before he can be justified I thought a Man could not have a new Heart before he had true Faith Is not a new Heart one of the absolute Promises of the New Covenant Ezek. 36. 26. Can any thing short of Almighty Power make the Heart new or form the Image of God in the Soul or can a Man that hath a new Heart be under Condemnation for are not all in that Condition who are not actually justified Or can a dead Man quicken himself or dead Works please God Or the Fruit be good before the Tree is good Are not all that are new Creatures in Christ Jesus and have Union with him 2 Cor. 5. 17. 12 Arg. With which I shall conclude the Proof of the Doctrine though I might mention many more to prove all Works done by the Creature or Obedience of his are in this Case excluded c. It is because if a Man should so walk as to know nothing of himself i.e. be so righteous or so sincere in his Obedience as not to have his Conscience to accuse or reproach him yet he cannot thereby be justified See what Paul saith Though I know nothing of my self yet am I not thereby justified 1 Cor. 4. 4. Though he had kept a Conscience void of Offence towards God and towards Men yet in the Point of Justification he renounces all his own Obedience and Righteousness that was inherent in him Durst holy Job depend upon his Sincerity or venture in that to stand at God's Tribunal Though he could plead Uprightness against the false Charge of his three friends and with much Confidence persevere therein justifying his Sincerity with his Faith and Hope in God against their Accusatio●s he shewed his Faith ●y his Works and stands on his Justification of himself against Hypocrisie But at length he is called into the immediate Presence of God to plead his own Cause not now as it was stated between himself and his Friends before Whe●her he were sincere or not The Question was now reduced to this i. e. on that grounds he might or could be justified in the sight of God and God to ●●epa●e him in this Case and to shew him what to plead at his Bar graciously ●anifested himself unto him And quickly now he comes to see all his former ●leas as Dr. Owen notes of Faith Hope and sincere Obedience would not avail ●●m but he is made to fly under the deepest Self-abasement and Abhorrency 〈◊〉 Sovereign Grace and Mercy For then Job answered the Lord and said I ●m vi●e what shall I answer thee I will lay mine hand upon my mouth Once 〈◊〉 I spoken but I will not answer yea twice but I will proceed no further Job 〈◊〉 3 4 5. I have heard of thee by the hearing of the Ear but now mine Eye ●eth thee Wherefore I abbor my self and repent in Dust and Ashes Dr. Owen How Job abhor thy self that art so holy so sincere such an upright ●an What is all the Beauty of thy inherent Holiness and sincere Obedience ●ecome nothing to thee Is it as Dung now Darest thou not appear before ●od in it not stand at his Bar thereby to be justified No no he saw that here was Sin cleaving to his best Duties and that he was vile in God's sight Sure th●● agrees 〈◊〉 with Mr. Daniel William's New Doctrine It was not Go●●el-holiness which Paul counted Dung says he No doubt Job's Righteousness was ●he Fruits of Faith as well as Paul's and purified his Heart too who says 〈◊〉 knew that his Redeemer lived Job 14 But yet for all this Holiness Up●ightness and sincere Obedience he abhors himself and repents he ever had 〈…〉 Conceit of the Worth of his own Righteousness Let a Man place himself in the Condition wherein Job was to stand before the Bar of God's Justice and let him attend to the Charge he hath against him and let him consider what will be his best Plea at God's Tribunal that he may be justified I do not believe saith the reverend Doctor that any Man living hath more encouraging grounds to plead for an Interest in his own Faith and