Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n harden_v let_v pharaoh_n 4,715 5 11.0616 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A44687 The reconcileableness of God's prescience of the sins of men with the wisdom and sincerity of his counsels, exhortations, and whatsoever other means he uses to prevent them / in a letter to the Honorable Robert Boyle Esq. Howe, John, 1630-1705. 1677 (1677) Wing H3036; ESTC R18027 41,939 174

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

conversant The affirmation is express and positive I am God and there is none like me declaring the end from the beginning and from antient times the things that are not yet done Nor is the affirmation naked and unfortify'd For in the same sacred records we have the same thing both affirmed and proved Inasmuch as we find in a great part thereof are contained things foretold by most express Prophecy unto which the Events recorded in other parts and many of them in other unqestioned Writings besides have so punctually corresponded as to leave no place for doubt or cavil Instances are so plain and well known that they need not be mentioned And surely what was so expressly foretold could not but have been foreknown It seems then an attempt also eqally hopeles and unrelieving as it were adventurous and bold to offer at the protection of his Wisdom and Sinceritie by assaulting his Prescience or certain foreknowledg of whatsoever shall come to pass And that their defence is not to be attempted this way will further most evidently appear from hence That it is not impossible to assign particular instances of some or other most confessedly wicked actions against which God had directed those ordinary means of counselling and dehorting men and which yet it is most certain he did foreknow they would do As tho it was so punctually determined even to a day and was tho not so punctually foretold unto Abraham how long from that time his seed should be strangers in a Land that was not theirs Yet how freqent are the counsels and warnings sent to Pharaoh to dismiss them sooner Yea how often are Moses and Aaron directed to claim their liberty and exhort Pharaoh to let them go and at the same time told he should not hearken to them Nor indeed is it most seldome said that the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart lest he should Tho it may be a doubt whether those passages be truly translated For the gentler meaning of the Hebrew idiom being well known it would seem more agreeable to the Text to have expressed only the intended sense than to have strained a word to the very utmost of its literal import and manifestly beyond what was intended After the like manner is the Prophet Ezekiel sent to the revolted Israelites And directed to speak to them with Gods own words The summe and purport whereof was to warn and dehort them from their wicked waies lest they should die when as yet it is plainly told him But the house of Israel will not hearken to thee for they will not hearken to me Unto which same purpose it is more pertinent than necessary to be added That our Saviours own plain assertions that he was the Son of God the many Miracles by which he confirmed it and his freqent exhortations to the Jews to believe in him thereupon had a manifest tendency to make him be known and believed to be so and conseqently to prevent that most horrid act of his crucifixion for it is said and the matter speaks it self that if they had known they would not have crucify'd the Lord of Glory Notwithstanding that it was a thing which Gods hand and counsel had determined before to be done That is foreseeing wicked hands would be prompt and ready for this tragic enterprise his Sovereign Power and Wise Counsel concurred with his foreknowledg so only and not with less latitude to define or determine the bounds and limits of that malignity than to let it proceed unto this Execution And to deliver him up not by any formal resignation or surrender as we well know but permitting him thereunto Tho the same phrase of delivering him hath elsewhere another notion of assigning or appointing him to be a propitiation for the sins of men by dying which was done by mutual agreement between both the parties him that was to propitiate and him who was to be propitiated In which respect our Saviour is also said to have given himself for the same purpose Which purpose it was determined not to hinder prepared hands to execute in this way Now if it did appear but in one single instance only that the Blessed God did foreknow and dehort from the same act It will be plainly consequent that his warnings and dehortations from wicked actions in the general can with no pretence be alledged as a proof against his universal Prescience For if the argument he dehorted from the doing such an action therefore he did not foreknow it would be able to conclude any thing it must be of sufficient force to conclude universally which it cannot do if but a single instance can be given wherein it is apparent he did both dehort and foreknow It can only pretend to raise the doubt which we have in hand to discuss how fitly and with what wisdom and sinceritie he can be understood to interpose his counsels and monitions in such a case §. VI. Wherefore nothing remains but to consider how these may be reconciled and made appear to be no way inconsistent with one another Nor are we to apprehend herein so great a difficulty as it were to reconcile his irresistible predeterminative concurrence to all actions of the creature even those that are in themselves most malignantly wicked with the wisdom and righteousness of his Laws against them and severest Punishments of them according to those Laws Which sentiments must I conceive to any impartial understanding leave it no way sufficiently explicable how the influence and concurrence the holy God hath to the worst of actions is to be distinguisht from that which he affords to the best Wherein such inherently evil actions are less to be imputed to him who forbids them than to the malicious tempter who prompts to them or the actor that does them or wherein not a great deal more And leave it undeniable that the matter of all his Lawes in reference to all such actions that ever have been done in the world was a simple and most strictly natural impossibilitie Nothing being more apparently so than either not to do an action whereto the agent is determined by an infinite Power or to separate the malignity thereof from an intrinsecally evil action And that this natural impossibility of not sinning was the ineluctable fate of his at first innocent Creatures Who also as the case is to be conceived of with the Angels that kept not their first station must be understood irreversibly condemned to the suffering of eternal punishment for the not doing of what it was upon these terms so absolutely impossible to them to avoid §. VII This too hard Province the present design pretends not to intermeddle in As being neither apprehended manageable for those briefly mentioned considerations and many more that are wont to be insisted on in this argument Nor indeed at all necessary For tho many considerations have been with great subtilty alledg'd and urged to this purpose by former and some