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A09277 VindiciƦ gratiƦ. = A plea for grace More especially the grace of faith. Or, certain lectures as touching the nature and properties of grace and faith: wherein, amongst other matters of great use, the maine sinews of Arminius doctrine are cut asunder. Delivered by that late learned and godly man William Pemble, in Magdalen Hall in Oxford. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1627 (1627) STC 19591; ESTC S114374 222,244 312

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the Morall Law 110 Faith Legall and Euangelicall the same in substance and differ only in the vse and obiect 111 The excellencie of Faith 158 What Faith or beleefe is in generall 159 How it agrees with and differs from knowledge opinion 160. c. Three grounds of the certaintie of assent in Faith 164. 206 The first 206 The second 220 The third 222 Faith a degree beyond beleefe being an assent with confidence and reliance 170 Faith taken in a speciall sence as it is Christian Faith described 171 Diuers acceptions of it ibid. 172 The obiect of Faith described 172. c. The subiect euerie reasonable creature 197. 198 Faith is in the whole heart euen in the will as well as in the vnderstanding 199. 230 Faith which Papists call iustifying is the faith of diuels and reprobates 237 Faith foolishly distinguished by Papists into formed and vnformed 237 Faith without works differs in nature from Faith with workes 238 Particular assent in Faith and the root and cause of it 241 The obiect of it two-fold 244 Faith of the Elect wherein it differs from Faith of Hypocrites 247 Faith vnfained 253. 254 Faith of Hypocrites doth not assent to all Diuine truth at all times 147. 148. c. Faith implicit of Papists confuted 194 Faith in the particular promise of grace defined 257 The iustifying act therof propounded proued 258 How it is wrought 259 The comfort of it 260 Faith of the Elect by what degrees of assent and essentiall differences it is distinguished from other Faith 226 Temporarie Faith 227 The causes of it 228. 229 G GOD as Creator how far he may be knowne to naturall men 65 Goodnesse of the naturall man not generall 80 It resp●cts others more then himselfe 79 Grace what the habit of it is 7 It is infused all at once 10. 11 The actions of it appeare sooner or later stronger or weaker in some 9 It is so firmely wrought in the Elect that it shall neuer be blotted out 34 Grace preuenting assisting inciting helping 13 By what meanes Grace may be quenched 37 Grace sufficient for conuersion not giuen to the Gentiles while they are out of the Church 55. 56. 57 Nor to all Christians in the visible Church 88. 89. c. Grace of conuersion friuolously distinguished into sufficient and effectuall 89 Grace sufficient to conuersion is alwayes effectuall and effectuall Grace onely is sufficient 91 Grace giuen to those who are within the Church set forth in the diuers kinds thereof 94 Grace doth not rectifie inferiour faculties first 127 Grace sufficient to beleeue and turne to God is no other but the Grace of regeneration 92. 93 It is not giuen to all 93 Grace preparatiue to conuersion how it may be resisted 140. 141. c. H HOly Spirit giuen two wayes 26 I IGnorance of the very time of our conuersion no iust cause of doubting fear that we are not conuerted and why 44 Illumination both naturall and spirituall described 94 95 When it is not sufficient for sanctification of the heart 101. c. Common Illumination not giuen to all hearers of the Word 100 Image of God wherein Adam was made 4 Implicit faith of Papists confuted 194. c. Infants dying without Baptisme may be saued 45 Infants are charitably supposed to be regenerate in Baptisme 45 Why they may not receiue the Lords Supper 49. 50 Infusion of grace hath no concurrence of mans naturall abilities but onely requires in him a passiue capacity to receiue 32 K KNowledge of Christian Religion must be alwayes increasing and fruitfull Preface 14 Knowledge meere naturall of the Morall Law brings little practise 70 Knowledge more certaine then beleefe in things of the same kind 166 Perfect Knowledge takes away all beleefe 167 Knowledge by sight so far as sight goes takes away faith 191 Knowledge distinct and explicit of Diuine things necessarie to the being of faith 192 L LAw morall how far it may be knowne to a naturall man 66. 68 Learned men vnsanctified fit to make hereticks pr. 19. 20 Loue of God reacheth to the Elect before they be regenerate 17 Considered in it selfe it differs from the manifestation of it to vs 18 Gods Loue to our persons and actions 19 Light of nature well vsed by the Heathen doth not bind God in Iustice to giue them supernaturall light 84 MEanes of common faith 229 Meditation of what things will stir vs vp to praise Gods rich grace and mercy in our conuersion 38 Ministers dutie in preaching the Word 113 Miraculous faith ground on immediat reuelations 173 Motions naturall and spirituall which are wrought by the Word described 95. 96 NAturall man cannot by the most industrious vse of all helpes naturall attaine to the least knowledge of God as he is mans Redeemer in Christ 64 His knowledge of God confined within two limits 65 How far his knowledge of God as Creator reacheth 65 He neuer goeth so far in practise as he might and as he knowes he ought to doe 71 He neither knowes the cause nor can iudge aright of the nature of sin 74. 75 His vertue and goodnesse how far it goes and is approued of God 76 He cannot possibly desire grace and mercy and why 84 Necessitie doth well stand together with libertie in the will regenerate 156 OBedience of regenerate men how it is made irregular 152 Obscuritie in the obiect of faith as it is held by the Papists confuted 187. 188. c. Obseruation of Gods mercies iudgments on our selus or other a speciall meanes to increase faith 223. P PAssions and affections naturall not subiect to reason 124 Plainnesse of speech and matter to be vsed in preaching of Gods Word Pref. 22. 23 Priesthood of Christ and how Christ and Aaron agree and differ Pref. 23 Promises the obiect of faith 170 QValities in the reasonable soule differ three wayes according to the threefold state of man 4. 5 REgeneration improperly ascribed to the Word 97 Regenerat man hath in him two contrarie qualies grace and corruption as he is spirituall he neuer resists the worke of grace 148 Resistance of grace in Regenerat men whence it flowes 151 How the preuailing act of it is taken away 152 VVhy it preuailes many times 153 Religion breeds ciuility knowledg of all arts 68. 69 Righteousnesse of the naturall man not acceptable to God 81 Rather negatiue then positiue 79 More outward then inward 76. 77 SAnctification how it goes before iustification 21 It is infused into Infants 43 VVrought in a maner meerely supernaturall 29 Sanctification how it hath mans free-will concurring to it two waies 31 Man not a moral agent in it 33. 34 Schollars how made complete Pref. 20. 21. c. Scriptures freed from Popish imputations of obscurity 177. 178. c. How they are certainly knowne to be Gods VVord 208. 209 By themselues 213 and by the Spirit 214. 215 Sin what a snare it hath layd to intrap wicked men 139 Spirit how far
and effect to the Word preached which wee maintaine and plead for This point will fall in more fitly to be discussed afterwards in the handling of a few Questions touching the manner of the Working of grace in mans conversion Whereinto though I am somewhat unwilling to enter because that Positive rather than Polemicall Divinity befits this place yet considering the danger whereinto mindes not rightly informed in these points may unhappily fall and that herein it is easie to slip from the truth to Arminianisme and thence to Popery there 's but a threed betweene them I have thought it would not bee unprofitable briefly and plainly to touch upon such materiall controversies as are moved in this matter that even the younger sort might have something to oppose against cauilling gainsayers of the truth and crafty seducers of the uninstructed You are therefore to understand that in point touching Mans conversion there is scarce any circumstance that wee have formerly spoken of but it is quarrelled at and corrupted with false opinions Not the nature and substance of our conversion which say they is not by the infusion of Habituall sanctity into the Soule but through Grace acquired by much paines and industrious actions of our own excited assisted by some helpe of the Spirit Not the moving Cause which is affirmed by them to bee not Gods speciall and actuall Love to his Elect but his common and equall love to all mankinde alike Not the Efficient cause which wee affirme to be the worke of Gods Spirit they say is the Freedome of our wills Not the manner of it without and above the strength of our naturall abilities as wee hold but so farre is the compasse of our owne power that we may helpe or hinder it at our pleasure Not the instrument of it the Word by the worke of the Spirit but as they would have it the Word working by it selfe without any inward vertue of the Spirit besides Lastly not the Subject the Elect only as we maintaine but all in Common upon whom sufficient grace to Conversion is bestowed if we will beleeve them All these Erroneous opinions are founded upon other rotten and unsound principles which are chiefly these 1. That God hath not precisely determined of any mans salvation or damnation in particular but hath left it to be decided by the libertie of their owne wills 2. That God doth not beare any speciall favour to one more than another but that his love is equall to all in generall and his desire of the salvation of all mankinde alike 3. That Christ hath dyed for all men alike procuring so much by his death that God is Placabilis toward all and all men indifferently are Salvabiles if they list to make use of the benefit purchased for them 4. That God requires Faith in Christ of all men whatsoever even of such Infidells as to whom Christ was never preached 5. That God cannot in justice demand of Man the performance of those things which since his fall hee hath no strength to performe and that if God require any such service he is bound in equitie to give unto man new strength for to performe it I doe but only name these articles of the Arminian Faith though even that 's enough to shew their weaknesse and untruth to any that can judge of sound doctrine but I say I mention them only that you may the better perceive what is that maine issue whereinto they are finally resolved and that in plaine termes is this That all men whether Christians or Infidells within or without the Church may bee converted and saved if they will You will say this is broadly spoken but I doe them no wrong reade their bookes compare their tenents and you shall see that this is the upshot of all their discourses God hath excluded none hee loves all alike Christ hath dyed for all Faith is required of all sufficient ability to beleeve and repent is given to all who then or what should hinder the Conversion or Salvation of any one but himselfe his owne meere free-will Surely an opinion that should not bee gainsaid by any but readily embraced by all if it had as much truth in it as it carries shew of Pity and Commiseration to mankinde Wee would be loth to be judged cruell but t is folly not pitie to take upon us to bee more mercifull than God hath declared himselfe to be and t is impiety to tell a lie for God by magnifying the glorious largenesse of his mercy beyond the bounds which himselfe hath prescribed unto it Wherefore against this wide and vast Conclusion of Arminianisme that God hath given sufficient grace to all the world to convert and beleeve if they will I oppose this directly contradictory God hath not given sufficient grace to all and in those to whom hee hath given such grace it depends not on their Free-will whether they will be converted or no. These two propositions destroy one another and one is confuted by that which confirmes the other I will proceed in the handling of them in this order Men that are capable of Vocation are of two sorts 1. Out of the Visible Church and of these the Question will bee Whether God have given to all Pagans and Heathens grace sufficient for their conuersion 2. Within the precincts of the Visible Church and of these the question will be double 1. Whether God doe give unto all Christians grace sufficient to worke their conversion 2. Whether those upon whom such sufficient grace is bestowed may if they list hinder their conversion by the power of their free-will Within the compasse of these three Questions will bee included all that is materiall touching this businesse I will use as much brevity in each as the matter will give leave of the first at this time viz. Whether the Gentiles out of the Church have grace given unto them sufficient for their conversion Wee maintaine the Negative part the Arminians affirme that all Pagans and Infidells have so much grace given unto them that by it they may be converted beleeve and worship God rightly in some sort even without the knowledge of the Gospell A monstrous assertion every way repugnant to Reason and Scriptures For 1. Let it be demanded what this sufficient Grace is that is given to the Gentiles Is it that knowledge of God and goodnesse whereto the Gentiles might come by the light of nature or it is some other supernaturall Revelation If the former there is a double error in it 1. That they call that Grace which is but Nature for if Vniversall Grace given to Heathens be but that knowledge of God and his worship which is attainable by the right use of the light of Nature through the contemplation of the creatures and remainders of the Morall Law in mans heart what is this grace but Nature what this opinion but Pelagianisme 2. In that they suppose this light of Nature well used is a sufficient
direction for the right and acceptable worship of God in some sort which is nothing but a fancie overvaluing natures abilities against all reason and common experience and by consequence taking away the necessitie of Scriptures and divine Revelations to teach the right way of worshipping God in Christ. If they say t is some Supernaturall Revelation it must be knowne wherof when and by what meanes it is bestowed on the Heathen Is it of the Law or of the Gospell is it made knowne unto them by some inward suggestion vision or dreame or by outward instruction from a Preacher or Prophet invisibly convayed unto them by miracle or extraordinarily raised up among them againe when is this supernaturall knowledge bestowed on Pagans have they it as soone as they come into the world if so t is Naturall or is it given afterwards at yeares of discretion if so then t is not in Infants and so not in all the Heathen and at what yeares is it bestowed and what if they die before that age All which quaeres are inexplicable and draw into most vexing and torturing absurdities a sufficient proofe that there is no such thing as Sufficient grace to conversion given to Indians Americans Tartarians and other Pagans when they that defend it cannot tell what it should bee For seeing t is neither any Naturall or Supernaturall knowledge I thinke none will be so senselesse to say that it is some Naturall or Supernatupower or ability For if it be Naturall t is not Grace if Supernaturall t would be knowne to what purpose a Supernaturall ability should be given to ignorant Infidells to doe they know not what 2. Let 's come to experience and judge wee by what meanes it may possibly appeare unto us that the Virginians and other Americans or the Inhabitants of Southerne unknowne parts of the world have at this day or ever have had before or since Christ sufficient grace for their Conversion and Salvation What instance and example can bee given in so many ages of any one among these or other Gentiles that hath been converted by this Sufficient grace Strange that what is ordinarily bestowed on all should never take effect in any If it doe take effect extraordinarily in some how know they that If ordinarily in many then farewell the prerogative of the Iew above the Gentile of the Christian Church above Pagans if God ordinarily have his Church his Converts his right Worshippers even amidst the darknesse of Gentilisme without the knowledge of Christ and all divine revelation of Gods will in his Word These opinions are as Moulin speakes like sicke mens dreames or rather madde mens ravings 3. Let us inquire of the Scriptures and see whether they speake as favourably of the Gentiles as these pitifull Remonstrants doe In them we shall finde another manner of censure both touching their forlorne estate in Ignorance and Infidelity as also the impossibility of their recovery into Grace except by greater helpe than the Arminians afford them Of the Ephesians Paul testifieth that before they were converted by the Preaching of the Gospell They were at that time without Christ aliens from the common-wealth of Israel strangers from the covenant of Promise having no hope and being without God in the world Ephes. 2. 12. And Matthew out of the Prophet Esay witnesseth of all the Gentiles that before the light of the Gospell was risen to them they sate in darknesse and in the region of the shadow of Death Mat. 4. 15 16. This was the condition of the Nations in their pure Naturalls so fully expressed by those places as nothing can bee more significantly declared Now for the meanes they had to come out of it and bee converted the Scriptures deny them all unto them God favoured them not nor had any regard to bestow grace on them for In times past he suffered all the Gentiles to walke in their own waies saith Paul Acts 14. 16. The Word and Ordinances of his worship they had not for He sheweth his Word unto Iacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel Hee hath not dealt so with every nation neither have they knowne his judgements as the Prophet speakes Psal. 147. 19 20. A Preacher they have not and How should they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard and how should they heare without a Preacher Rom. 10. 14. Naturall ability to know the mysteries of the Kingdome of God they have not for The Naturall man perceives not the things of the Spirit 1. Cor. 3. Nor is there any such power given them from God for Vnto you it is given to know the secrets of the Kingdome of Heaven but unto them it is not given Mat. 13. 11. and Without mee yee can doe nothing Ioh. 15. 5. What shall wee thinke then the poore Americans can either know or do in point of godlinesse by the pretended power of Sufficient grace when the Pharisees and other Iewes yea the Apostles themselves could do nothing without a speciall gift and assistance from Christ whereof they will not say those Pagans are made partakers Wherefore there is good cause wee should reject this monstrous opinion of Sufficient grace for Conversion bestowed upon Savages and Infidells as being contrary to Scripture common sense and reason Nor can it be thought but that the authors of it are ashamed of the absurdity thereof although the Sequell of their other tenents one errour drawing on another have inforced upon them a necessity of defending this also And that it may not goe abroad without the Patronage of some colour of reason they proceed in the justification of it upon two grounds 1. That the light of Nature if it be well used is of it selfe sufficient to convert a Heathen from his idolatrous and evill wayes and bring him to a right knowledge and worship of God in some sort 2. That if the Gentiles use the light and helpe of Nature well and with their best endeavour God is ready nay hee is bound in justice to bestow on them one further grace viz. the knowledge of themystery of Redemption These two are the rotten pillars of Vniversall grace given unto the Gentiles which how shaken and riven they are you may soone perceive if wee pill off that plaister of doubtfull words wavering and darke sentences wherewith they are daubed over for the matter is so shamefull that they dare scarce speake out their minde plainely But their opinion in plaine termes is this God say they hath given sufficient strength to all the Gentiles to use their Naturall gifts well Be it so But what is this Well Vsing of Naturall gifts It is that say they whereby they may in some sort according to their measure forsake their idolatrous and wicked practises and attain to the right knowledge and worship of God and reformation of Life But may all this be done without the helpe of Supernaturall revelation Yes for say they if a man goe so farre as with utmost endeavour hee
may by naturall helpes then God is ready and bound in equity to give him Greater grace Well what is this further or Greater grace T is the Supernaturall light of the Gospell and knowledge of Gods will in Christ. So then here 's the conclusion Before all knowledge of God in Christ a Heathen man may so bestirre himselfe in the use of Naturall helpes that he may convert truely unto God knowing and serving him rightly in part and upon his so doing God will give a new supply of grace to perfect what is begun I cannot well say whether these things deserve a serious refutation which had they beene defended in former ages would sure have beene rejected with scorne and laughter but seeing in these times wherein men grow wanton and use neither Grace nor Nature as they ought to doe seeing I say the Bond-woman is advanced equall to the Free-woman the servant set up in honour to the disgrace and contumelie of the Mistresse it shall not bee I hope amisse to take a little pains in examining the Dignities Abilities of Nature that shee being compelled to keepe her old ranke Grace in all things may have the sole preeminency And after wee will in a word or two examine the force of that Obligation wherein the Arminians say God stands bound to Nature to give her a larger portion of Grace upon triall had of her good behaviour To come therefore to the first viz. The Sufficiency of meer nature in the Heathen to worke in them true Conversion in part for the confirmation hereof three speciall passages of Scriptures are alledged First that of Rom. 1. 19 20 21. That which may be knowne of God is manifest in them for God hath shewen it unto them For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are cleerely seene being understood by the things which are made even his eternall Power and God-head so that they are without excuse Because when they knew God they glorified him not as God neither were thankefull c. The second is that in Rom. 2. 14. For when the Gentiles having not the Law doe by Nature the things contained in the Law these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves Which shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnesse and their thoughts the meane while accusing or else excusing one another The third is that place Act. 14. 16 17. Who in time past suffered all Nations to walke in their owne waies Neverthelesse he left not himselfe without witnesse in that he did good and gave us raine from heaven and fruitfull seasons filling our hearts with foode and gladnesse From hence this argument may be framed The booke of Nature and Providence cleerely shewing what God is in himselfe in his Nature and Attributes his eternall Power and Godhead and what hee is to us in his Goodnesse and Gracious bounty together with the booke of Conscience dictating unto vs what duty it is wee owe to God or Man in doing of good or forbearing of evill these two bookes are a sufficient direction for man to glorifie God and become thankefull But all the Gentiles had the direction of these bookes of Nature Providence and Conscience as appeares by the places alledged Therefore the Gentiles had a sufficient direction for the worshipping of God and for to make them thankefully obedient Which helpe because they followed not when they might but detained the truth in unrighteousnesse they are therefore justly left without excuse in their idolatries and ungodlinesse of liuing The answer to this argument depends upon the deniall of the major proposition and the right explication of its contradictory which is this The knowledge of God and goodnesse whereto a meere Heathen devoid of all Supernaturall helpes may possibly attaine by contemplation of the works of Creation and Providence and by the light of his Naturall conscience is not sufficient to convert him to the right worship and obedience of God That this may appeare be pleased to afford me your patience whilst once for all we take a generall survey of the State of a meere naturall man living out of the Church utterly destitute of all Supernaturall helpes and whilst of such a one we doe inquire how far he may goe in Religion in the knowledge and practice of Piety In which search we are for our more distinct proceeding to examine 1. The Knowledge of the Heathen how farre they might proceede by the helpe of a meerely naturall understanding in the knowledge of Divine things 2. The Effect which this knowledge may worke in them in regard of practise and obedience to what they know Touching the former there may bee a twofold consideration of it 1. How farre the Heathen have gone 2. How farre they might have gone in the knowledge of God and Godlinesse if they had carefully used all Natures helpes For this question is defined in too narrow a compasse if we go no farther than the Hypothesis taking an Historicall view of the Heathens knowledge by those records of it that are remaining upon their writings Wee must ascend higher to the Thesis to see what they might have done more than they have or at least whether they have done that they could It is not to bee doubted there were and are among the Heathen many who besides the common and ordinary gifts of Nature had extraordinary abilities and endowments by a speciall though not sanctifying grace of God whereby they were fitted in a singular manner for the finding out of the most secret hidden principles and conclusions in all learned arts and for the wisest application of them to all manner of practise A point easily demonstrable if we consider the singular excellency of some few in all times above the common pitch of mans ordinary condition though not above that whereto meere Nature is advanceable Which whether it depended partly on some peculiar temper of the body and spirits not usuall partly on the speciall gift of God or both it alters not the matter this being certaine that these rare priviledges exempted not the possessors of them from being Naturall men and no more Now whether such as were thus in the best manner qualified did imploy themselves in the search of the best that is Divine things it may justly be doubted if wee ghesse at former times either by the monuments of them or by the temper of this present age Wee may now see and if such did not scorne to be pitied wee would lament the unhappinesse of our finest rarest and most Heroicall wits who doe generally spend themselves in matters of meaner and inferiour excellency and most commonly in curious and fruitlesse imploiments scarcely ever aspiring to any atchievement worthy of a man and men of their parts and if they doe t is any thing rather than divine and sacred inquisitions the humble and painefull study wherof is most opposite to their negligence presumption For former times it
will also evidently appeare to him that shall but a little survey the writings of Philosophers both those that are extant in whole or in part and such whose titles onely wee have remaining recorded by those that have written their lives For among so many hundred volumes written by the Ancients how few or none almost shall we finde touching the matter of Religion Those great scriblers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrysippus was called who left no part of Logicke Oratory Mathematickes Morality Policy and Nature it selfe unattempted but with a curious and inquisitive eye pried into the smallest matters yet in those higher speculations concerning the Nature of Divine things were either miserably blinde or wilfully negligent Aristotle a man of the deepest reach that Antiquity ever bred among so many bookes that he wrote and are in part yet extant hath not left us any one discourse by which it might appeare that hee bestowed any paines in searching after the knowledge of God except a little here and there in some poore pitifull disputes Theophrastus his schollar who exceeded the master in numbersome writings composed sixe bookes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 three which we wish had remained to posterity albeit by the very titles we may suspect what stuffe they were not unlike to Hes●ods Theogonia and such other fooleries and that both his bookes and others written of the same subject by Crito Simon Xenocrates Strato Cleanthes Epicurus and many more as may be seene in Laertius were they now extant would give us but small satisfaction in this point unlesse it were to discover the grosse stupidity and dulnesse of those otherwise refined and sublimated wits Tullie who had read them and sets downe the summe of their opinions gives us cause to beleeve that the wisest of them all and himselfe too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were here starke fooles and forsaking the right way of searching out the Deity in the footsteps of Nature by a due proceeding from the lower to the higher they gave heede to old fond fables or vanished away in their idle imaginations and new opinions Nor could it be otherwise if we respect either the corruption of Nature which how quick and forward soever it bee in other matters is dull enough in sacred imploiments as the experience of many dispositions proves who are excellent in many sorts of Learning yet dunces in Divinity or if wee regard the policy of Satan who blinding the eies of so learned and wise men made use of their wits and pens in darkning the cleerer light of divine knowledge by senselesse fables and foolish fancies which passed unto the ignorant vulgar with approbation under the authority of their deepe learning Wherefore seeing neyther the most wise and learned in former times have alwaies applied their industry in this part of knowledge nor yet the labours of such as have beene busied therein are preserved to our times nor those few monuments that are left doe give sufficient proofe that men have done their best in going so farre as they might we must without consideration of particulars first dispute in generall how deepe the eye of Naturall reason can pierce into divine mysteries and then see in briefe how far men whose inventions are come to our knowledge have proceeded therein Concerning the first you are to call to minde that Religion containes in it two chiefe branches 1. All Divine truths to bee knowne and beleeved in way of Spirituall contemplation and assent and the Summary of these are the Articles of our Creed which in general declare unto us what is to be beleeved touching God as Creator in the first Article Redeemer in the rest 2. All Divine and Morall duties to be done and practised by us the briefe wherof is in the Decalogue describing unto us the rules of 1. Pietie in Gods worship 2. Of Charity in righteousnesse towards man Within these bounds wee must seeke for the utmost extent of the meere naturall mans knowledge which wee will doe beginning with the knowledge of God the Redeemer touching which I lay downe this position as infallible and undeniable that The meere naturall man cannot by the most industrious use of all Natures helpes attaine unto any the least knowledge of God as hee is mans Redeemer in Christ. This is most apparant by the Scriptures wholly ascribing the knowledge of this mystery to the Sonne of God revealing it from the bosome of the Father and to the Spirit of God but utterly denying so much as a thought of it to any of the greatest or wisest of this world yea unto the blessed Angells themselves And t is no lesse agreeable to good reason which forbids to imagine that a man fallen corrupted by sin should ever attaine to the understanding of those things which Adam in his perfection never had knowledge of Now the knowledge of God as Redeemer with all the dependances thereupon as Adam had no need of it so was hee before his fall utterly ignorant of it and had so remained forever if God had not vouchsafed to reveale it to him Which revelation though made to Adam when wee were in his loynes yet was not as I may speake Generall and deriveable to all his posterity as the first connaturall and inprinted knowledge was but particular for the benefit of Adam and so many of his seed as were elect And though no doubt but Adam did instruct his children and they theirs for some descents in this mysterie yet wickednesse increasing in men as fast as men multiplied in the earth and by reason of the darksome obscurity of this mysterie in those first times of the world it came to passe that this knowledge quickly decreased being almost decayed even among the sonnes of God the Few of Gods Church whom therefore God was faine by new revelations continually to instruct but for the Sonnes of men the rest of the wicked world it was utterly extinct and no sparke of it left alive They soone forgot what they cared not to beleeve Wherefore wee must confine the meere naturall mans knowledge within these two limits 1. The knowledge of God as Creator 2. The knowledge of the morall Law and beyond these it is not possible for him to goe The knowledge of which though very much eclipsed in Adam himselfe but more and more darkned in his posterity as they further degenerated from his originall purity yet is it not so farre obscured except in such whose brutish and savage education have made them equall to the beasts that perish but that by carefull education and vigilant industry in the use of all helpes it may be somewhat repaired though this some what is but a very little part almost nothing of its first clearenesse Wherefore in the second place touching the knowledge God as Creator I suppose a meere naturall man may know these things touching God in his nature and attributes 1. That there is a God 2. That
he is a living Substance 3. That hee is one 4. That hee is Eternall 5. That hee is Immutable 6. That he is Omnipresent at once in all places 7. That his Substance is Incorporeall and Invisible 8. That hee is most Simple without all mixture and composition 9. That he is most Perfect most Happy most Good and Omnisufficient in and of himselfe 10. That he is Omnipotent and most free Omniscient and most wise 11. That hee is most just and mercifull in rewarding and punishing Besides these invisible things of the Godhead a meere naturall man may know these two 1. That this God is the Creator of the world giving all things their being of nothing 2. That this God by his Providence doth Preserve and Rule all things Thus farre at least a naturall man may proceed in the knowledge of God as Adam kn●w him and the Gentiles might grope after even in their naturall darknesse But this is not all in the third place touching the knowledge of the morall Law as it containes all such duties as were to be knowne and put in practice in regard of God and our neighbour by the very lawes of Creation we may safely affirme these things fallwithin the reach of the naturall understanding and conscience 1. That this God is to bee worshipped and adored of all creatures men especially 2. That hee is not to bee worshipped in bodily shapes and figures 3. That there are outward religious services to be done in his honour as Invocation with its solemne Times Gestures and Ceremonies and also Oathes 4. That God is to bee inwardly reverenced as well as outwardly adored namely with the pure affections of Love Feare Trust and Confidence 5. That in all the duties of the second Table Iustice and Civill honesty in a state betweene man and man as also sanctity and sobrietie in each man is a thing commanded by God and pleasing to him And thus farre if not further a naturall man might goe proceeding still upon sure undeniable grounds and experiments in nature and reason and from thence deducting necessary conclusions So that I doubt not but a learned Philosopher having his judgement rectified by the helpe of Logicke not forstalled and infatuated by some superstitious and senslesse conceits as was that of the ancient Philosophers might have attained thus farre if hee had diligently and mainely intended the search of these things But as their search so their finding was by halfes Christian Philosophers have taken more paines in this point and it alters not the case that they were Christian and so had other light besides that of their owne seeing in this matter they used it not but have taken pleasure in this naturall search both to see Religion confirmed by reason as also to behold how short the Ancients came of those conclusions which posterity hath with much ease collected even out of their owne principles To make a summary collection of all those reasons which are produced by sundry authors who have purposely or by occasion dealt in these points were a matter of no great difficulty Such as have written of Metaphysickes as also some Divines afford us no small number of Arguments But out of them or where they faile out of Reason it selfe to make a certaine and unerring discourse for confirmation of all the forenamed points so as a wrangling cavelling and gainsaying naturall wit might be convinced and set downe were a labour worth the paines of some active and searching wit but requiring time and industry In the issue of which discourse these two conclusions would appeare evidently true 1. That our naturall man may goe much further in the disquisition of Gods attributes and those things that concerne his worship than in the understanding of the Nature of the Divine Essence wherein following reason hee would be as some Christians are strangely befogg'd especially in the mysterie of the Trinity 2. That nothing concerning God himselfe immediatly in the first Table of the Law would bee so discernable to the Naturall man as those other points of morality contained in the second a more particular and exact knowledge whereof hee would with ease attaine unto The ground of this whole discourse besides that in Nature we have in the Scriptures in the like practice of the Apostle with the Gentiles as with the Lystrians Act. 14 17. the Athenians in that long and excellent Sermon wholly almost of this subject Act. 17. 24 25 c. and the Romans Chap. 1. vers 18 19 20 21. An exact consideration and resolution of which places would singularly declare the point in question But goe wee on from what may be knowne to enquire in briefe what hath beene found out by naturall men in former times Which being a matter of fact depending upon Records and Histories of ancient times cannot possibly be perfectly handled seeing time hath defaced the memory and monuments of our Ancestors Many learned men have made collections of those sayings and opinions which the Ancients have left unto us concerning the matter of Religion the like whereof were not hard to be performed with much addition by such as have time to reade and would use diligence to collect the passages of severall authors For the present I desire you only to observe in generall these two cautions which particular search will approve for good 1. That the wisest of the Gentiles have taken more paines and with farre better successe in points of Morality touching the second than Divinity in the first Table as appeares by those Treatises of Oeconomickes Ethickes and Politicks where the orders of houshold Government the course of a vertuous conversation the lawes of State and Policie are disputed largely and in most points consonantly to the Scripture and the fundamentall grounds of equity and justice So that in many of these vertues commended unto us in Scripture wee may with much profit have recourse unto their writings for the explication of their nature and qualitie 2. That we cannot bee certaine when these Ancients were only guided by the meere light of nature and when by some supernaturall illumination not that God did afford divine Revelations concerning heavenly mysteries unto the Heathen excepting haply the Sybills but that what God had revealed from heaven to his Church was from them brought by some meanes or other to the knowledge of these Philosophers A point not much to be doubted if wee consider that all knowledge whatsoever in any kinde hath principally flourished in those parts of the world that have beene nighest unto the borders of the Church Such is the nature of Religion that it breedes Civilitie and Knowledge of all Arts in the Countries wherein it is professed and also spreads some part of its light and vertue into the Countries next adjoyning Witnesse hereof are the Countries of Chaldea Syria AEgypt Arabia Greece and Asia with the neerer coasts thereof wherein the Church had its originall and first breeding or nigh whereunto it had its abode and
doe it As God commandeth and seeing the Circumstances of every good worke are a pure Conscience and Faith unfained the Cause and the Glory of God the End which give such beauty and so sweet a relish to all actions as that without them they are deformed and unsavoury in the eye and taste of the Almighty it is manifest that all the morall actions of the Heathen fell short of their Compleate perfection forasmuch as their Persons were unholy their Consciences defiled their Purposes perverse and crooked and their best Intentions finally resolving themselves into temporall worldly and selfe-considerations But if wee looke unto the substance of the worke it selfe wee shall finde little difference betweene many actions of the Heathen and of Christians there being as exact proportion and correspondence to the rules of Iustice observed by the one as by the other yea many times more by the Heathen than the other It were a consideration worth ones labour to parallell the lawes customes and famous actions of the people of God with those which we finde like unto them recorded in humane history we should see that many particulars would carry a faire resemblance betweene themselves and have the same stampe of vertue imprinted on both This morall goodnesse in Heathen men was no doubt pleasing and acceptable to God so farre forth that he liked the worke and approved of it with that common allowance which he affords to all things that beare any stampe of his owne goodnesse but not so that he liked the person and accepted of it into any speciall favour of grace For it were most absurd to imagine that the Iustice Temperance Valour Chastity of an Aristides Cato Scipio Lucretia c. shall stand condemned before God with the same censure of dislike as the rapine luxury cowardise lust c. of a Sardanapalus Caligula Messalina or such other miscreants Nay he approved of their vertue and civility as the effects of his owne grace in common bestowed on the Gentiles for a common good and in testimony of this his approbation hee prospered those persons and common-wealths among whom sobriety of life strictnesse of discipline severity of good lawes was best maintained And Heathenism it selfe could discerne the ruine of Common-wealths to spring originally from the neglect of Piety and Vertue To conclude then and summe up all touching this point Gods Nature and Attributes his Godhead and eternall Power and Providence are indeede cleerely to bee seene in the Creatures if the Heathen had eyes to see them as Adam had at first But though they be still as visible as they were yet man is blinde and cannot behold them It is very little the Naturallman hath seene not much that hee can see What hee knowes might teach him that God is to be worshipped otherwise than he doth but cannot shew him how to worship him as he ought Whatever he doth or can do in the worship of God nothing is done aright for matter or manner His Inward worship is unholy because his heart is so His Outward worship is superstitious and idolatrous because hee is utterly ignorant of Gods appointments both are false and displeasing being presented to God without a Mediatour of whom the Heathen have no knowledge Againe the Nature of their sinne and misery is above the reach of the Heathens knowledge and therefore Grace and Mercy are beyond the possibility of their desire both which yet are the first step to true Conversion Finally for their vertues they are corrupted in the roote perverted in their buddes defective in their whole practice So that unlesse we will thinke that a civill Conversation without all Sanctity of heart to be true Conversion a kinde of bare Naturall reverence of the Creator in some cold affections of Love Feare c. or an externall superstitious invented worship without all warrant from God To be Gods true right worship in part which are the things the Heathen can attaine unto it appeares to be a vaine assertion to affirme That God hath afforded sufficiency of ability to the Gentiles by the good use of Nature to convert truely to the right worship and obedience of God This of the first the second ground is That if the Heathen use the light of Nature well God is ready yea bound in justice to bestow on them Supernaturall light of grace In the examination of this we neede not be long it being supported by the former together with it it falls to the dust A meere imagination it is withour all warrant from Scripture though for it they bring that place Matth. 25. 29. For unto every man that hath it shall be given and hee shall have abundance i. e. say the Arminians Hee that hath the light of Nature and useth it well to him shall be given the Supernaturall light of grace An Arminian glosse that corrupts the Text which is to be understood of painfulness in the Ministers of the Gospell in the emploiment of such gifts as God hath endewed them withall for the benefite of the Church Which gifts and abilities being well used increase through Gods blessing but if neglected decay utterly through his secret curse as experience shewes in painfull or idle Ministers If the argument be framed only by analogy from this Text and the generall equity of it That whosoever uses any thing well shall have more given unto him besides that this is a very large interpretation which will admit of many exceptions it is to bee noted that in their deduction they mistake the proportion observed in the Text and Parable which speaketh of an increase in the Same not in a Divers kinde Hee that hath meane gifts for the Ministry and useth them well he shall have greater gifts in the same kinde But thence to collect Hee that useth Nature well shall have Grace given him is as if wee should say He that useth his health well shall have riches or honours given him things of another nature It had been true if they had said Hee that useth Naturall light well i. e. studiously in the search of all good knowledge in him that light shall be increased as it was in Philosophers but this made not to their purpose and therefore they take a wide step from Nature to Grace In Scripture therefore there is no ground for this conceit besides there are these three errors in it 1. Against Experience which shewes that grace hath not beene bestowed where they have had the best Natuturall dispositions as is plaine by rejection of the Tyrians and Sidonians and Vocation of the Capernaites though they were naturally better fitted to entertaine the Gospell than these as also by the long rejection of all the civill and learned men of the Nations of the world who though they used their Naturall reason farre better than other barbarous people yet were left destitute so many ages of all Supernaturall helpes as well as they 2. It is founded upon two false Suppositions 1. One That the
well using of Naturall light is such an excellent preparation for the receiving of the Gospell Which is not so for although God shewed that favour towards learning and civility of manners that in the propagation of the Gospell through the world hee respected those Nations that excelled therein before others as appeares by the plantation of the Church among the Gentiles yet come we to particulars and t is evident the Gospell found most resistance and neglect at their hands who seemed to have used their Naturall abilities best as the learned Philosophers the wise temperate just politicke men of the world who were so farre from being the fitter to receive the Gospell that they cut of pride and fleshly wisedome were its greatest enemies Num ut quisque saith Moulin virtutis civilis laudem affectat ingenium habet multâ eruditione subactum ita eimaximè sordet simplicitas Evangelij crucis Christi scandalo magis offenditur 2. Another That a man may use his Naturall abilities well i. e. to the right worshipping and obedience of God without the grace of regeneration without faith without all knowledge of the Gospell and the will of God revealed unto man which being a grosse supposition of an utter impossibility and such a one as by consequence overturnes all Christian Religion as hath beene shewed it is manifest that this obligation wherewith the Arminians have tied God to give Supernaturall grace to the Gentiles upon their good usage of Naturall helps is void of no validity God will easily be discharged of it without forfeiture of his Iustice where the condition on mans part is so impossible to be performed And hitherto of this first question touching sufficiency of grace given to them that are out of the Church I will make an end of all with a word or two of admonition for our practice We beloved are as the Apostle speaks 〈◊〉 sinners of the Gentiles but Iewes of that circumcision which ●o not made with hands Let us then now bethink our selves what grace we have received and others want Compare we advisedly our condition at this present with that of Turkes or other Pagans and let us magnifie his mercy that hath by Grace made so great a difference betweene us and them who by Nature were all alike Wee were strangers and forreiners as they now are but we are now fellow Cittizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God which they are not A glorious priviledge and if we have grace to judge aright of it deserving to have the first place in our esteeme above all prerogatives in the world T was but a poore contentment to a dying Philosopher when he thankt his Gods for being a Crecian not a Barbarian an Athenian among Grecians a philosophen among Athenians We my Brethren have to joy in greater dignities who are Christians not Insidells true Beleevers among a world of Heretickes and Schollars among the company of true Beleevers Let mee then tell you what you know already but few of us thinke of it as we should where greater grace and favour is hestowed there more Thankes are deserved more Service is required a stricter account will be taken of both And be now intrcated by the mercies of our Lord Iesus Christ to hearken to the Apostolicall exhortation Walke worthy of that Vocation wherewith wee are called Be we ashamed that the Morality of a Pagan should outstrip our Religion that the Conversation of a Papist should disgrace the Beliefe of a Protestant that the Piety and Modesty of the Vnlearned should condemne the Vncivility and Lewdnesse of a Schollar Be not ignorant of the dignity of your Calling but if in any thing here stand upon your credit and reputation Why should not the name of Christian of Protestant of Schollar be held forth as a shield of defence against all provocations to base and unworthy courses as well as meaner titles of Gentility Honours and Offices are readily alledged against viler imploiments not besitting persons of that quality If there be any so respectlesse of his owne and regardlesse of Gods honour as by ungodly and base practices to cause those holy and pretious names wherewith we are called to be ill spoken of and Gods Name therein to be blasphemed to such a one I say only this and I wish him to heed it that God will shame that Servant that disgraces his Master and will in his time vindicate his owne glory by pouring contempt and everlasting shame upon the head of such a Caitiffe wretch Wherefore let us pray that the Lord would make us truly jealous of his and our owne honour by demeaning our selves answerably to our Holy Calling in all things to please him and glorifie his name Amen Having thus shewed the state of a meere Heathen living out of the Church and the Vnsufficiency of all meanes whatsoever that are given him in that state to worke his Conversion and Salvation wee are in the second place to descend unto the discussing of our next Question touching the Condition of those that live within the pale of the visible Church enjoying the benefit of the Word and other ordinances of Salvation Whether or no Sufficient grace be given to all and singular Christians for their Conversion unto God This Question is something perplexed and intricate by reason of divers particular queres whereinto it resolves it selfe I will by Gods helpe proceed therein as distinctly and plainely as I can First beginning with a briefe explication of the Termes of the Question where it must be in short explained 1. What is meant by Sufficient 2. What by Grace 3. What by Christians 4. What by Conversion 1. For the terme Sufficient we are to knowe that Sufficiency as it is taken in Relation to the producing of some effect is nothing but such a degree of Power or Strength in any thing as that if it be applied unto the Execution it is able to performe that whereto it was intended As we use to say of any man Hee is a man sufficient for such an imployment because if hee be set about it he can by the good parts he hath actually discharge it Where you are to observe that it is a meere abuse of this word Sufficient to oppose it to Effectuall and so to distinguish betweene the Power and the Act as if any thing could be called Sufficient in Potentia which when it is purposely applied to the Act is utterly insufficient to produce it T is an error in Speech to say This Medicine considered in it selfe is sufficient to cure such a man for t is a vaine consideration to consider the Medicine in it selfe when wee should consider it in relation to the disease And if such a medicine being administred suffice not to cure the disease it is certaine that it was an unsufficient medicine Wherefore that distinction of the grace of Conversion into Sufficientem and Essicacem is at least a frivolous imagination distinguishing those things as
at all or Nothing else but that Habituall Faith which wee maintaine to be given us as a principall part of our regeneration These mistakings of the Nature of our Conversion hath utterly confounded our Adversaries in their opinions and writings about this point They speake of Sufficiency of Grace to produce the acts and operations of Faith and other vertues when the Question is meant of the Sufficiencie of Grace in producing the Habit of all Inherent Holinesse Now as in the former example of the sicke man it is one thing to enquire whether the Health and strength Christ gave him was sufficient to cause him to walk another thing to demand what vertue of Christ was sufficient to give him that health and strength so in this case t is one thing to aske whether the grace of Spirituall health or Sanctification be sufficient for the producing of the actions of a Sanctified man another thing to aske what grace is sufficient to worke in the soule the grace of Sanctification it selfe Wherefore in this matter we affirme that as Health when it is in a man is sufficient to every Naturall action though alwaies it be not effectuall because wee make not use of our strength at all times but to worke Health in a sicke man no vertue is sufficient but that onely which being applied proves effectuall to restore it So where Sanctification is it is alwaies sufficient to every gracious action if it be duely exercised thereabouts but may sometime bee ineffectuall through our default in not applying it aright but now to worke Sanctification in the heart that hath it not there is no other gift whatsoever sufficient but the onely vertue and power of the Holy Ghost the immortall seede of our Regeneration and wheresoever this onely and all-sufficient vertue worketh in the heart of any man there it is alwayes infallibly effectuall To dreame of any other inherent quality in the soule given to man as sufficient to Sanctifie the soule and yet after t is given ineffectuall to performe it is a fancy never thought of till of late times wherein mens hearts are strangely embittered in fierce opposition against the glory of Gods free Grace This of the first Conclusion the second followeth and it is this That sufficient grace for Sanctification is not given unto all This is a necessary consectary of the former for seeing Sufficient and Effectuall are all one in this case seeing t is apparant that this grace is not Effectuall in some who are never Sanctified it follows necessarily that such Sufficient grace is not given unto all This were enough to have beene said against this opinion of Sufficiency of Grace given to all within the Church But yet ex abundanti for our better satisfaction I desire your patience and attention in the further examination of this second Conclusion The truth of it will be cleered by considering what the grace is which is given to those that are within the Church Now this grace is twofold 1. The Externall Declaration of Gods will made unto all men in common by the Preaching of the Word the ordinary consequent whereof is Knowledge or Illumination And this is termed our Externall Vocation by the Word 2. The Inward gracious worke and vertue of the Holy Ghost immediately exercised upon the Vnderstanding Will Affections and whole Man The constant effect whereof is Regeneration And this is called our Internall Vocation by the Spirit In the explication of the Nature Distinction and Sufficiency of these two unto the worke of Sanctification consists the further cleering of this troublesome controversie The Orthodoxe sentence which hath beene held touching this matter agreeably to the Scriptures is this There are two things which are ordinarily wrought in men living under the Ministery of the Word 1. Illumination of the Vnderstanding 2. A touch or motion of the Will and Affections These two because they are the fountaine of all Outward actions we onely consider in this businesse letting passe such effects as are visible in mens conversations Now both these are each of them of two different sorts Illumination is either 1. Common and Naturall when a man in hearing or reading conceives the litterall sense and meaning of the Scriptures in most points of Christian Religion so that he is able to discourse dispute and write of them I call this knowledge Common because t is bestowed on reprobates as well as others I call it also Naturall because although the object thereof bee Supernaturall and Divine nor could be knowne but by revelation yet being revealed the manner of apprehending it in such a one is meerely Naturall and Carnall and that light which the Spirit affords to such a one is but some more eminent degree of that common assistance which hee gives to all that seeke after knowledge in any learning for a publicke benefite For the case is plaine enough a learned Schollar unregenerate knowes and studies Divinity in the same manner as he doth any other Art and as in them so in this hee may attaine excellent knowledge by a speciall but no sanctifying gift of the Spirit perfecting his Naturall reason but not making it Spirituall 2. Proper and Spirituall when a man by a singular gift of the Spirit of grace is inabled to judge of Heavenly things in a Spirituall manner according to their truth and goodnesse represented to the understanding in their native beauty and excellency I call this Proper because it belongs onely to the Elect and Spirituall because the Sanctified understanding judgeth of them Spiritually Thus for knowledge next touching the Motions which are wrought in the Will they are likewise double 1. Naturall when upon the understanding of threatnings or promises the Will is touched with some kinde of affections towards those things as they which are naturally hurtfull or beneficiall to it as to love hope desire feare or hate such or such a good or evill thing spoken of in the Word I terme these affections Naturall being proportionable to that first sort of knowledge that bred them For when an unregenerate man shall heare it plainly and amply declared what happinesse belongs to the Saints what comfort is in Gods favour what glory in heaven what horrour in Hell and a bad conscience hee will be easily stirred up with many desires of enjoying the one and escaping the other But this he doth in no other manner than as every man by instinct of Nature will wish and seeke for that good which he knoweth to be proportionable to his nature and also shunne the Contrarie 2. Spirituall when upon the thorough apprehension of all Spirituall Good and Evill known beleeved by Faith the Will is strongly inclined with all Constant and Vehement affections of Love and Hatred earnestly to embrace the one and detest the other above all things else whatsoever How great difference there is betweene these Illuminations and Motions in the regenerate and unregenerate I shall by Gods grace shortly have
Prophets in the famous Vniversity of Oxford yet I assure my selfe that whosoever reads this booke with good attention and understanding shall finde the Authors meditations therein so throughly digested and the nature properties and proper acts of Grace and Faith so distinctly layde downe and accurately distinguished that he shall reape to himselfe much profite and comfort thereby and shall with me admire the grace of God abounding toward the Author in all wisedome and in all knowledge lively sense and utterance of heavenly and supernaturall mysteries far above all which can be expected from or is ordinarily found in one of his age and yeares If as we know trees by their fruit so we may passe our sentence upon the composer of this Treatise by his work we cannot conceive or speake lesse of him but that as hee was from his childehood trayned up in the Schooles of learning and had profited above his equals in the studies of the best arts humane divine so undoubtedly he hath from his tender yeares beene throughly disciplined in the Schole of Christ and hath by much and daily experience of afflictions and manifold temptati●ns in himselfe and of the inward sensible operations of Gods spirit and grace in his owne soule attained to this high measure of heavenly knowledge and understanding whereof he hath here given us a lively experiment It is not the most strong out stretched arme of humane reason nor the most swift and farre flying arrow of the sharpest naturall wit nor the farre extended lines of long continued studies which can reach so high to these heavenly and supernaturall mysteries It is onely the holy Spirit of grace comming upon all these taking possession of mans soule dwelling in him and making him a new creature which brings this kind and measure of profound wisedome and this distinct knowledge of divine things yea by the fiery tryall of inward temptations onely doth that blessed Spirit drive the thirsly soules of Gods militant Saints to digge and dive so deep into the fountaines of the sacred Scriptures and to draw such living waters from the very bottome of those Wells of salvation In a word as the Apostle saith of yongue Abel that by Faith having offered up a more excellent sacrifice than his elder brother Cain he by it obtained witnesse that he was righteous God testifying of his gifts by it he being dead yet speaketh Heb. 11. 4. so I will not doubt nor bee affraid to say of the godly and learned Author of this Booke who having offered up to God in a publike place these exercises as the first fruits of his heavenly learning did not long after leave this world in the flower of his age and ascended up into that supercelestiall glory towards which he had ever bent all his studies and desires and which alwaies hee had sought after in the whole course of his life that by faith hee though yongue in yeares hath offered up a more excellent sacrifice than many of his elder brethren by which hee being dead yet speaketh and shall speake to future ages And as hereby he shall obtaine witnesse of all Gods surviving Saints that hee himselfe was a righteous and faithfull servant of Christ excelling in grace and vertue in the dayes of his pilgrimage here on earth So God also will testifie of this his gift that it is holy and acceptable in the eyes of his Majestie by making it powerfull and effectuall to the begetting and increasing of saving grace faith and knowledge in all such as reade and peruse it with true Christian docilitie diligence and humble devotion To the blessing of which gracious God I leave this worke and to his grace commend you all desiring in my daily prayers to be and continue Your brother companion and fellow souldier in seeking the glory of Gods grace defending the truth of the Gospell and fighting against the spreading errours and springing heresies of this age George Walker The Table of the chiefe matters contained in this Treatise ABilities of man are not to be measured by his own partiall iudgement page 145 Actions of grace and holinesse how far they are in a godly mans owne power 147 Admonition three-fold about searching the Scriptures 217. c. Affections two-fold sensuall rationall described 125 Affections not quickned nor stirred vp to loue of goodnesse before conuersion 125 Not rightly moued towards Spirituall things but when thoy are affected spiritually 130 Articles of the Arminian faith 53 Arminians how they erre about vniuersall grace 54 Their errors about the worke of Gods Word and mans calling 99 Their obiections and reasons answered 106. 107. c. Their errors about the subiection of mans naturall affections to his reason discouered 125. c. They giue large allowance of grace to men vnregenerate 127 Their absurdities therein 128 Their grosse errors about mans will discouered 132 c. Their errors in holding that conuersion doth begin and consist in the act onely of beleeuing 134 135. c. The dangerous issue and conclusion of their errors 136 Assent differs in degree according to the diuersity of the obiects assented vnto 169 Assistance effectuall why denied by God at some times to the regenerate 153 B BAptizing of Infants lawfull 47 Beleefe how it differs from faith and trust 170 C CAlumnies of Arminians and Iesuites 155 Calling outward and inward described 94 How the Arminians conceiue of Calling 99 Catechizing needfull and vsefull in the Church of Christ Preface page 6 Certaintie of assent in Faith springs from three grounds The first 206 The second 220 The third 222 Communion with Christ two-fold 15 Conuersion of a sinner to God 6. 7 The causes of it 16. 24 The subiect 37 The manner how it is wrought 27 It goes before Faith 4 It signifies First Gods infusing of habituall grace Second The regenerate mans actuall imploying of grace infused 89. 144 Conuersion mistaken by Arminians which is a cause of confusion in their writings 92 Conuersion how to be truly discerned 115 Preparatiue meanes vnto it 137. 138 How weake they are and in a man vnregenerate how they are said to be sinfull 139 That they may be resisted and how 140. c. Cooperation of Gods Spirit necessarie in all holy actions of men regenerate 151 Corruption of nature what it is 5 D DEsire of spirituall things after a naturall manner is a corrupt desire 130 E ELect men onely are the proper subiect of true conuersion vnto God 41 Euidence of the Scriptures declared proued 175. 176 Conclusions touching it The first 176 The second 182 The third ibid. 183 F FAlling from grace and finall resistance described 142 Faith in Christ a part of sanctification 10 The habit and act of it and when it is wrought ibid. It is not properly the root of all grace 12 There is some Spirituall life before it 13 and some participation with Christ 15. 23 It helps forward and increaseth grace and all gracious actions 14 Faith is commanded in
Beleeves or Praies or gives almes or rejoyceth in the hope of happinesse as some would fasten upon us such a senselesse assertion it is man that doth all these but man assisted by Grace But now concerning the former respect for the first Infusion of the Habite of grace into the soule wee utterly deny all Active concurrence of mans naturall abilities to the acquiring and generating of grace in his heart and grant him onely a Passive capacity to receive it bestowed on him And we maintaine that in this Case neyther the Holy Ghost workes like a Naturall nor man like a Morall agent The worke of the Holy Ghost is not like that of Naturall agents in the production of Materiall Formes brought out of the Power of the Matter that is if I understand Naturalists in that Phrase resulting out of the Inherent qualities of the Subject diversly compounded and ●ipened by the externall agent or as those agents worke in the generation of Second qualities arising out of the different mixture of the First in both which the qualities of the Subject concurre with the outward agent in producing the effect This worke is of a higher nature like the infusion of the Reasonable Soule into the Conception to whose creation the body conferres nothing at all and to its introduction nothing but a passive capacitie It is a change of our nature a creation of new qualities not a perfection of the old an habituall qualitie meerely infused by Diuine vertue not issuing out of any inward force of humane abilities howsoeuer strained up to the highest pitch of their naturall perfection And therefore againe man in this work of sanctification is not any morall agent as when by many commendable actions he gets to himselfe the habit of morall vertue No Civilitie is a hopefull preparation but no working cause of sanctitie Take that and all other the most likely dispositions you will let there be sweetnesse of naturall temper ingenuitie of education learning good companie abstinence hatred of grosser vices respect of lawes restraint of discipline an industrious forwardnesse to all laudable courses a naturall desire of the unknowne happinesse of the Saints a part in the externall communion of the Church in briefe the whole packe of morall vertues Christianis'd that I may so speake by the generall knowledge of religion yet all these with their joint force cannot kindle in us one sparke of Celestiall fire nor quicken our dead soules with the least true motion of spirituall life Of a man qualified with those preparations we may say as Christ of the yongue man in the Gospel He is not farre from the kingdome of God but that hee is in common estimation and according to the usuall course of Gods working more fit than another man is for the receiving of Grace and for the performance of all gracious workes without question hee is more aptly disposed than others are because by those preparations the violence of corruption is somewhat broken in him which in others remaining intire till their conversion makes the stronger resistance afterward in all their religious practises Wherefore it is not to be denied but that in such a man so prepared there is a passive capacitie more large and fit for the entertainment of Grace than in others but for any active qualification to produce it it is found neyther in the one nor other And you are to observe that in respect of God t is all one prepared or not prepared he can of stones raise up children to Abraham t is easie for him to doe so and t is not unusuall if you marke it that the fairest best tempered and best governed natures are manietimes left utterly destitute of all true sense of Pietie when men of sowre and crabbed dispositions or of more disorderly conversations are made partakers of sanctifying grace To end this matter Originall righteousnesse to Adam was naturall being the naturall qualitie wherwith he was created and corruption was accidentall being an unnaturall vitiousnesse acquired by his fall with us t is quite contrary Corruption is naturall following our generation and birth and Grace accidentall recoverable neyther in whole nor in part by vertue of the poore remainders of Gods Image in us but by supernaturall restitution made by the holy Ghost So I come to my second conclusion touching the manner how grace is planted in us which is this That in our Conversion the Habite of grace is so firmely wrought in us as it shall neuer be abolished againe Grace in the regenerate is not any slight tincture or staine but a through and durable dye The Image of God is so deeply imprinted in our soules as it shall never be defaced againe Where the Spirit of God comes hee makes sure worke what hee hath built none shall pull downe where he hath taken possession none can thrust him out of doores where he hath opened none can shut where hee bestowes his gifts and graces hee repents not of his liberalitie where he hath begun the good worke of grace there he will also finish it A matter as plaine as comfortable if we will but distinguish of the workes of Gods Spirit about our Sanctification as they are differenced in their times they are two 1. The first is the Creating of the Qualitie of renewed Holinesse in the Soule whereby wee are converted This work is called Preventing grace by which the Spirit without our helpe workes in us Habituall grace 2. The second is the Ayde and Assistance of the Spirit in all actions slowing from the Habite of grace by effectuall concurrence of his vertue together with the strength of our regenerate faculties This worke is called Gratia Subsequens Cooperans or Assistens and the issue of it are all those sanctified actions which wee performe by its helpe And this second worke of the Spirit must needs be granted for albeit he could worke without us in making us good trees yet wee must worke together with him in bearing good fruit and t is verie absurd to denie the assistance of Gods speciall grace in euery spirituall action when we cannot but grant an immediate concourse of his ordinarie power in all actions naturall even to the moving of one of our fingers But further this subsequent vertue of the Holy Ghost about all good workes which wee doe is twofold 1. One that stirres us up to good actions by inspiring into our soules after a secret and unperceiveable manner holy thoughts heavenly motions desires purposes and resolutions tending to godlinesse and this worke is called Gratia excitans 2. Another that guides and helps forward the strength of each facultie when it applyes it selfe to the reall performance of any action and this is properly called Gratia adjuvans or Cooperans These things thus differenced let us see wherein the Constancie of Grace consists and wherin it seemes changeable First for the Habit of Grace in the regenerate we affirme that it is Constant abiding for ever in them in
settled plantation for many ages In which time learning Arts and all Civilitie seemed to have beene confined to those middle parts of the world the rest further remote being left in grosse ignorance and barbarisme And the same course is held to this day wherein Learning and Civility hath abandoned the Easterne countries which have forsaken true Religion and hath not yet approached to the Westerne Americans who have not heard the sound of the Gospell Now then in the course of times it could not bee but sundry accidents would fall out for the dispearcing of sacred knowledge as trading and commerce of Merchants both strangers into Iudaea and Iewes into forraine parts Entertaining of Slaves and Captives who if barbarous learned of their Iewish if Iewes taught their barbarous Masters many mysteries of Religion received and beleeved among the people of God The perigrination and sojourning of many Iewes abroad in forraine parts as no countrey soever but hath some of its people in all countreys which Iewes as they learned the superstitions of the Heathen so they brought in amongst them some pieces and relickes of true Religion Lastly the Curiosity of the Philosophers of those times shaming the negligence of the learned now who would with any cost purchase bookes of any Art in any Language which they thought contained some secret knowledge and rare mysterie as also spared no labour in travelling into forraine parts wherein they heard were any men or meanes whereby their knowledge might be increased Wherefore it is more than probable that those Ancients Zoroastres Hermes Orpheus Plato and others drew their knowledge which in part they had of many high mysteries out of a deeper and cleerer fountaine than the muddy shallow springs of their owne naturall reason though in the passage this water was much soyled by them with the mudde of many idle fables and silly conceits A reason whereof we may conceive to be either the darknesse of their apprehension not cleerely discerning what was perhaps plainely enough delivered or the corruption of those Idolatrous times which permitted not the least innovation in opinion or practice touching the matter of Religion as appeares in the case of Socrates which constrayned the learned in those dayes to conceale much of what they knew or to declare it darkly in many mistie and foggy fables whose interpretation aftertimes forgot and so beleeved a lie for a true tale Hitherto of the knowledge of a meere naturall man let us next descend to the Effects thereof in regard of Practice which admitting of a double consideration as theformer What may be what hath beene done shall yet here be handled joyntly together By the former discourse it appeares how imperfect the knowledge of the wisest naturall man is whence it followes that his practice will come as farre short of his knowledge as his knowledge doth of perfection For so t is even with the best Christians who practise farre lesse than they know much more with the naturall man whose knowledge is too darke and uncertaine to cause any powerfull and vigorous impression upon his will and sensuall affections which will be too too violent and untamed to give way to the commands of his understanding Yea should we suppose in a naturall man the cleerest apprehension of all duties in the morall Law yet could it not much better his practice so easily would the Naturall Conscience bee choaked and borne downe by the power of Corruption unlesse it bee supported by Faith which only puts life into our knowledge and strength unto our practice And in this case there is no difference betweene a Naturall Heathen and an Vnregenerate Christian who in knowledge may and doth exceed the other and yet come short of him in practice For seeing they both alike want Faith and Sanctification it is possible that goodnesse of naturall temper civility of education strictnesse of government due hope of reward and praise or feare of the contrary with the like motives may carry a Heathen as farre in vertuous courses as bare illumination can a Christian. The same corruption in both perhaps greater in the Christian than Heathen as sinne abounds more where unsanctified knowledge abounds I say the like corruption in both would imprison this knowledge in unrighteousnesse that it breake not forth into Religious practice Whence wee finde that Christians much more Philosophers have not beene the same men in the Chaire and in their Conversations but that their opinions and discourses have beene full of Sanctity and Temperance when their lives have beene defiled with all Impiety and Sensuality Wherefore for the generall let us set downe this Conclusion as most true that The meere naturall man never goes so farre in the application of his knowledge unto practice as hee might doe and as hee knowes he should doe And therefore the Gentiles are condemned for detaining the truth in injustice for sinning against their consciences accusing them for knowing God and yet not glorifying him as God So that t is cleere although the Naturall man cannot doe or know so much as he ought yet hee knowes more than hee is ever willing to practise and for that cause his knowledge is sufficient to condemne him of his unrighteousnesse towards man and false worship of God himselfe though it bee not sufficient to direct him in the true meanes and manner of Gods right worship or the practice of a holy life And thus in Gods wonderfull judgement he is left as without sufficient direction for well doing so without all lawfull excuse for his ill doing But come we to particulars the Naturall mans practice respects either God in his Inward worship Outward Man 1. In things concerning God and his worship the Naturall man utterly perverts himselfe in his practice there being in this case the greatest deformity and disagreement that may be betweene his knowledge in the speculation and his application thereof to practice Consider him in the Inward worship of the heart how hee stands affected toward the Deity in those inward affections of Love Feare Credence and Confidence which are required as part of our Spirituall worship of God It would be strange to see the disposition of a meere Naturall mans heart in this part of Gods worship how feeble cold and forced these affections would bee how full of hypocrisie and falshood being secretly fastned to the creature when they pretend to bee directed to the Creator just like unregenerate Christians that will make shew of Love Feare Faith and Trust in God when t is apparant they intend nothing lesse in their affections Consider him in the Outward worship of God and the Naturall man is farre more defective as appeares by the manifest experience of all ages who corrupted their waies in nothing so much as the service of God mistaking the object and seeking for that Deity which they apprehended in a generall Notion not onely in the Similitude but in Nature of the Creatures and those many times of the weakest and
beleeving that depends wholly on his free will which after the forenamed illumination of the minde and motions in the affections remaines Free to choose or not to choose to consent or not consent unto the promise of Grace Which wondrous doctrine they unfold unto us in this manner The will of man say they never had hath nor can have any other qualitie inherent in it but only that which is alwayes Essentiall unto it namely Liberty Indifferenti● indeterminati● ad actus oppositos Wherefore as in Adam it had no spirituall gifts of Holinesse inherent in it so it lost none in the fall nor hath it now any inherent corruption as the other faculties have nor is it in our regeneration re-indued with any sanctified qualities whatsoever Only a pure naked Liberty there is in it to choose or refuse any good or evill whatsoever Spirituall Morall or Naturall after it is once knowne This Freedome though it bee so Naturall to the will of Man that Salvâ essentià it cannot be taken away yet in the exercise thereof the Will depends on the Vnderstanding and Affections So long as the understanding is darke and the affections distempered the Will though it have in it selfe a naturall abilitie to choose that which is good yet it cannot exercise it by reason of those impediments Even as the eye hath in it selfe a naturall power to see even in the darke but yet cannot make use of it till the object be inlightened So in the Vnregenerate the Will hath a naturall freedome in it selfe towards all Spirituall good or evill but it wants the free exercise of this power so long as the Vnderstanding is without Knowledge and the affections are disordered But as soone as the Vnderstanding is inlightened and the affections reneued then the Will is restored to the use of her Naturall libertie So that whereas Life and Death Good and Evill is now set before her shee may by her owne free power without any further help from God choose the good if she list or the evill if she please And this is that whereon they affirme consists Vivisicatio Voluntatis the quickening of the Will which is not the giving of some new power unto it which it had not before but only the restoring of it to the free use of that Power which it alwayes had but could not exercise Here 's then the summe of their opinion in briefe When a man unconverted heares the word of the kingdome hee understands it and is affected with it irresistably and necessarily By so doing hee hath a power to beleeve given him that is His will hath recovered the use of that naturall freedome which it alwaies had so that now hee stands indifferent hee may if hee will assent to the promise of grace he may if he will dissent from it this Act is absolutely in his owne power to doe or not to do it and by this Act done he is converted and not till then This is that leaven of Arminianisme wherewith of late the whole lumpe of sound doctrine hath beene sowred this is that fretting leprosie which will scarce ever bee healed but in the ruine of those our neighbour Churches wherein the disease first bred Let us alwaies pray that God wil keep this our Church us her Children safe from the danger of this infection That we may the better avoide it let us rippe up this swelling ulcer and wring out the rottennesse and corruption that is gathered together in it taking a particular view of the severall errors which are like a bed of snakes folded one in another in this dunghill They are these 1. That there is no other illumination of the understanding in divine things but the ordinary apprehension of the sense and meaning of the Word wrought in us by the cleere evidence of the things delivered and the ordinary helpe of the Spirit perfecting and assisting naturall reason and judgement For herein they all agree that although the Gospell could not possibly have been found out by naturall reason yet being once revealed it may be fully understood by naturall reason In so much that he who is industrious and hath a good judgement may know all that is needefull to be knowne without any Supernaturall light infused into his understanding by the Holy Ghost It seemes these men in their study of Divinity never sought after nor ever did finde any other helpe besides their owne naturall abilities and therefore they thinke other men have no more helpe than themselves had Wee may probably judge so by those Hereticall opinions the immediate off-spring of their naturall reason wherewith they have now so troubled the quiet of the Christian Church Had they beene taught of God and the eyes of their understanding opened to follow the directions of Gods Spirit more than their owne Naturall wisdome they might have learned to have judged otherwise of themselves and all their opinions too But how partiall soever their judgements are wee know the judgement of God to be just and infallible who knowes us better than wee doe our selves and He tells us That wee are blinde that wee are darknesse till wee be made light in the Lord that when the Light shineth in darknesse the darknesse comprehendeth it not that the Naturall man cannot perceive the things of the Spirit for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned Besides this censure of God upon our naturall ignorance in divine things wee have the practice of the Saints acknowledging their naturall disability and praying for the illumination of the Spirit which the Arminians scorne Hence those frequent supplications of the Prophet David Open mine eyes that I may see the wonders of the Law O give mee understanding that I may live Teach mee O Lord the way of thy statutes Make mee to understand the way of thy precepts with many such like prayers wherein it were much perversnesse to affirme that David prayed only for that knowledge of the meaning of the Law whereto by study and use of his Naturall parts he might possibly attaine And what shall we say to that prayer of the Apostle Paul which he makes for the Ephesians That God would give them the Spirit of Wisdome and Revelation in the knowledge of Christ the eyes of their understanding being inlightened that they might know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints Surely an Arminian will hardly say Amen to this Prayer For to what end is it had not Paul preached the Gospell to the Ephesians plainly enough had not they heard and beleeved it were they not men of reason and judgement that could understand what Paul meant when he preached or wrote unto them what need then to pray yet for the spirit of Wisdome and Revelation and inlightening their eyes when things were so revealed as they could not choose but know and see
them Yes there was and is still great need we should make this Prayer now the Gospell is revealed to the Church yet to pray for the Spirit of Revelation to reveale it to our hearts and to inlighten the eyes of our minde not only to understand the literall sense of the Word by the helpe of that Common light of the Spirit which shineth ordinarily in the Church but to comprehend with all Saints the height depth and largenesse of Gods love the riches of his glorious inheritance the pretiousnesse of the promises of Grace the power and saving vertue of the Gospell the rare excellencie and amiablenesse of all divine truth Which none can doe without the speciall worke of the Holy Ghost changing the Vnderstanding from Naturall to Spirituall by an immediat infusion of such a qualitie as inables it to discerne aright of Spirituall things I conclude this point with one reason more If to the understanding of spirituall things there bee no other illumination required but only the cleere evidence of the object plainely represented to the understanding without any further worke of the Spirit upon the Vnderstanding it selfe infusing into it a speciall strength to apprehend the things that are proposed to it then it would be knowne whether these men thinke that our intellective Facultie hath got any hurt and defect by Adams fall yea or no. It is manifest that they thinke that mans fall hath not brought any defect and weaknesse upon the power of mans understanding no not in Spiritualib●…s For marke it when Divine things are in a plaine and lively manner declared to the understanding is there any defect in the facultie that must be first amended by the Spirit before it can have the perfect knowledge of those things No say they so therebe the common assistance of the Spirit preserving unto us the right use of reason and judgement we may without any supernaturall worke of the Spirit understand spirituall things when they are plainly expounded unto us Why then here 's all the difference betweene Adam and Vs His Vnderstanding was perfect and happy because he had both the Power to conceive of things hee was yet ignorant of when they should be cleerely revealed to him and also the Actuall knowledge of wonderfull varietie in all things Our understanding is imperfect and unhappy because by our fall wee want the Actuall knowledge of almost all things especially Spirituall but yet we still retaine the same power that we had in Adam to understand any spirituall thing when it is once cleerely discovered unto us So that according to Arminius schoole the understanding of man since the Fall is like unto our Eyes in the darke the eye is well and without blemish needing no cure of any defect in it selfe yet it sees nought because the Object is not inlightened so soone as light shines on that causing a cleere discovery of it the eye without further adoe can easily perceive it But this is yet the very pride and gall of an Hereticall spirit secretly accusing the whole mystery of Gods revealed wisdome whether in the booke of nature or of Scripture as if it were wrapped up in Obscurity and Darknesse Wee forsooth have eyes and we need not that God should restore unto us the Faculty of Seeing only wee are in darknesse because things that are to be knowne are in darkenesse if God will take away obscuritie from them and make them evident to be knowne there 's no such infirmity in us but wee may know them if wee be attentive Let us from our hearts detest this odious popish imputation of obscurity laid upon Nature and Scripture as if the cause of all our ignorance were not now in the weaknesse of our Vnderstanding but in the darknesse of Gods revealing himselfe to us And let us detest that opinion which leads us upon this absurdity and learne we to confesse our blindenesse to pray that God will give us eyes and restore our understanding to its first perfection else though the light shine round about us making all things wherein God is to be knowne most appparant and visible yet wee may still lie in darkenesse and perish in our ignorance This is their first error touching the Vnderstanding of which I shall have occasion to speake more in handling the parts of Faith I now proceed to the second touching the affections which is this 2. That even in Divine things the motions of the Affections necessarily follow upon the illumination of the Vnderstanding So that when the understanding is rightly informed and thoroughly convinced the affections are presently excited in all motions conformable to the things knowne It is very strange that men of so deepe learning should yet professe so much ignorance in the estate of Mans corrupt nature as to dreame of a Correspondency and dutifull subjection of our Passions unto our Reason so that when this is rightly taught they will be truly affected even in Spirituall things Nothing more could be said of Adam in his innocency and to affirme this touching Man corrupted is to give the lie to Reason Authority and all Experience which speake the contrary The truth is this as wee are falne out with God so are we at oddes with our selves and our affections are not more often mis-led by our erroneous understanding than our understanding and right judgement is haled aside by our vitious affections What man in the world that knowes himselfe but will confesse that even in naturalibus and moralibus much more in spiritualibus he may often say with Medea Video meliora proboque Deteriora sequor Wherefore we reject this Opinion that there is no vitious inclination properly inherent in the affections besides that which is brought upon them per t●n●bras mentis through the error of the understanding wee detest this assertion as a fond and false imagination and we confesse with the Apostle that even when we know allow of consent unto the goodnesse of the Law and delight in it in part yet then wee cannot alwayes doe what we would but through the Law of Sinne in our corrupt wills and affections are led captive to disobedience Their third error is this 3. That the affections may be excitati stirred up and quickened with true love of goodnesse and hatred of evill before such time as a man be converted The Arminians are wonderfull obscure in explicating unto us their new invented opinion concerning the Excitation of the Affections which they make the second worke of Grace preceding mans true Conversion They tell us not in plaine termes what affections they meane nor yet what kinde of Excitation and Vivification it is they would have Wherefore we are more particularly to enquire of both For Affections or Passions in man they are of two sorts 1. Sensuall belonging to the Sensitive Appetite and directed by the phantasie these are common to brute beasts with us and arise from one like temper and constitution in both The object of these
Faith or Beliefe in generall as this word is taken in the largest extent in relation to all civill or naturall things 2. In the next place explaining the meaning of this word Faith as it is used in speciall about Divine and Supernaturall things declared to us in Scriptures The opening of the nature of Beliefe in generall will give much light for the understanding of the speciall consideration thereof therefore I begin with that first Not to trouble you with reckoning up all the improper acceptions of this word Fides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to tell you that sometime it is taken for Fidelity or Trustinesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as when a thing is done or spoken bonafide faithfully or trustily and in that exclamation Vestram fidem c. sometimes for Arguments or Proofes from Reason or Authority brought to breed beliefe in another which acception is usuall in Rhetoritians Arist. 1. Rhet. c. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Quintil. l. 5. cap. 10. Haec omnia argumenta generaliter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appellant c. Faith or Beliefe in the proper acception of the word is an Assent to such matters a● are knowne only by Revelation from another This definition agrees to beliefe as it is taken in the largest sense the Genus i● Assent the difference is taken from the object whereto Assent is yeelded and that is such things as wee understand onely by anothers revelation Both parts will be plainly understood if we distinguish between three sorts of knowledge Cognitionis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that are incident unto man 1. The first is Scientia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowledge properly so called which is bred in us by the evident certainety of things presented unto our reason or sense When wee understand such principles and conclusions in all arts and sciences as are demonstrable by evident and infallible reason or when we know such particulars as come under our senses when they are rightly disposed 2. The second is Opinio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Opinion an imperfect knowledge of things not cleerely presented unto reason or sense when we apprehend things in part and obscurely so that wee cannot absolutely say t is this or t is that 3. The third is Fides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beliefe which is a knowledge grounded on testimony and authority of others when wee assent to those things whereof by our owne sense and reason we have no certainety nor evidence only we beleeve them because such and such have told us they are so These three divers apprehensions of things wee expresse in formes of speech agreeable the first when we say I know this to be so the second thus I thinke it is so the last in this I beleeve it is so A great difference there is betweene these three apprehensions of the understanding as every one may easily discerne but more cleerly thus it stands 1. Knowledge whether it be of things past present or to come hath evermore certainety in the subject and evidence in the object accompanying it For the things that are knowne must bee alwaies apparant to the senses or to the understanding To the senses by the proportionablenesse of the qualities in the Object and due application of them to the Organ To the understanding by the bright light of reason shining in the things themselves Wherefore the Object of knowledge is evermore evident and being thus evident and apparant the apprehension thereof in the Subject by the sense and understanding must needs bee cleere and most distinct whence ariseth such an assent unto the truth of the thing as is most firme and certaine excluding all doubting whatsoeuer as for instance that the Fire is hot the Water moist the Sunne light that Quicquid dicitur vel negatur de Vniversali dicitur vel negatur de Particulari Quae conveniunt in uno tertio inter se conveniunt with the like these things are evident making such a lively impression upon the senses and so cleerly discovering their reasonablenesse to the understanding that we strongly assent unto their truth without all doubting 2. Opinion is contrary unto knowledge and alwayes hath uncertainetie in the Subject and inevidence in the Object attending on it For some things there are of their owne nature uncertaine and contingent whereof our best knowledge is but a doubtfull conjecture as that a red evening and a gray morning should bring a faire day Againe those things that are in themselves certaine enough and necessary yet unto us they will be but onely probable and conjecturall if either our senses through weakenesse and distemper perceive them not throughly or our understanding doe not cleerely apprehend the nature and reason of them Whence it followes that for want of cleere evidence in the things themselves our assent unto their truth will be alwayes wavering doubtfull without any fixed determination to embrace any side resolvedly but so holding it selfe to that part which for the present seemes most probable as that it is ready to shift it selfe unto the other side when better reason shall bee discovered 3. Beliefe partly agrees partly differs both from the one and the other for it partakes but of one property namely certainety in the Subject though very variable but never of evidence in the Object Both shall appeare unto you in order For the Object of beliefe it may bee certaine and necessary in it selfe but quâ tale it is never evident to the beleever For evident as I said before those things onely are which by their owne proper qualitie and light worke a cleere apprehension of themselves in the senses or understanding or both Now such things are not beleeved but knowne as for instance what wee see heare touch taste or smell by these senses orderly disposed we doe not say we beleeve it but we know it as that the Fire is hot the Water cold He that relates unto mee an accident that himselfe hath seene He knowes it but I that heare him doe beleeve it Againe things that wee understand by manifest and infallible reason those also we know we doe not beleeve as for example If an Astronomer foretell an Eclipse to fall out an hundred years hence hee doth not beleeve but he knowes this effect will ensue by the infallible motion of the Heavens but an unlearned man that findes this in an Ephemerides hee onely beleeves it But now that which is the Object of Beliefe so farre as it is the Object thereof doth not fall under the cleere apprehension either of sense or understanding by its owne naturall light For things beleeved are of three sorts Past Present or to Come Of things Past before we were and of things to Come t is not possible for us to get any knowledge from the things themselves by our sense or reason unlesse it be Astronomicall demonstrations as was touched before or such Physicall effects as depend upon necessary connexion of their causes Touching things
it unlesse himselfe had been acquainted with the like Revelations But this is certaine God-where he comes makes himselfe knowne and such were the lively characters of heavenly majesty brightnesse and cleernesse imprinted on those Revelations that mortall mindes were infallibly ascertained of their Divinity Yea Balaam himselfe though he could have wished with all his heart not to have knowne or beleeved those revelations that so unkindly crost his hope of preferment yet when once the Spirit of God comes upon him he utters his parable with this preface Balaam the son of Beor hath said and the man whose eies are open hath said Hee hath said which heard the words of God which saw the vision of the Almighty falling into a trance but having his eies open He that was at other times driven by the divell into furious motions of mind procured by spells inchantments is now as forcibly moved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or borne away by the power of the holy Ghost who in this revelation makes so cleere a discovery and strong impression of divine truth in the minde of Balaam that the Wizard cannot but speake what he knowes and beleeves though it quite undoe his owne desire of Greatnesse and Balacks hope of Victory Whence also this rule followes generally true That where the revelation is infallibly knowne to be of God there will be a firme assent to the truth of the things revealed Now we are further to note that upon such immediate revelations and suggestions of the Spirit is grounded that Faith which is usually stiled the Faith of working miracles A gift proper to the primitive times of the Church bestowed then on many for the better establishment of the Gospell among unbeleeving Gentiles or Iewes Though the words of the Promise runne largely Marc. 16 17. yet it seemes not likely that every private true beleever had this priviledge but rather that it was bestowed on such as were Preachers and Publishers of the Gospell for confirmation of their doctrine And amongst them t was given not onely to the truely faithfull beleever but to others also as appears by Iudas to whom this power was given as well as to the rest of the twelve Matt. 10 1. and in many other reprobate Matt. 7. 22. Lord Lord have wee not by thy name prophesied c The proper ground of this faith and assurance of working some miraculous effect was the speciall and particular suggestion of the spirit Other motives there were further off as the generall perswasion of Gods omnipotency the beliefe of that promise which Christ made to his Disciples Matt. 17. 20. Verily I say unto you if yee have Faith as a graine of mustard-seed yee shall say unto this mountaine remove hence to yonder place and it shall remove and nothing shall be impossible to you but more specially that larger promise hee made at his Ascension Mark 16. 17. 18. And these signes shall follow them that beleeve in my name they shall cast out divells they shall speake with new tongues They shall take up Serpents and if they drinke any deadly thing it shall not hurt them they shall lay their hands on the sicke and they shall recover But these grounds were not sufficient to give assurance of performing this or that miraculous act without a speciall and particular suggestion of the Holy Ghost informing them inwardly both touching the time when and matter wherin they should worke a Miracle For as all beleevers had not that power so such as had it could not doe wonders when and in what kinde they pleased but were to expect a speciall warrant and direction from the Spirit like unto Peter who though a faithfull beleever yet durst not venture upon a miraculous attempt of walking dry-shod upon the water without a speciall word from Christ bidding of him come unto him in that manner Matt. 14. 28. 29. In these times wherein this speciall direction ceaseth and also miracles have no use unlesse for conversion of a Countrey where the Gospell hath never beene preached this gift also is ceased Thus much of the first sort of Revelations to bee beleeved the other followes 2. Some Mediate delivered from God by others unto us Such were the answers Sermons which the Prophets and Apostles made by word of mouth unto the people such is now unto us the whole written word of God which is now the only ordinary object of our Faith Now touching the Scriptures wee are to enquire how farre things revealed in them may be knowne how farre they must bee beleeved You have heard before the difference betweene Knowledge and Beliefe that is an assent to things evident this to things not-evident therefore seeing those things that are written are generally the object of our faith wee must diligently examine what evidence there is to bee found in these things or whether any at all that so wee may know what to judge of that assertion of our adversaries the Papists who make obscuritie one essentiall property of Faith In the opening of this question Whether things revealed in Scriptures be evident to Mans understanding let these distinctions be observed in the first place 1. The Scriptures containe in them matters of three sorts viz. 1. Precepts and Declarations of the doctrines of Religion whether in the higher mysteries thereof as of the Trinitie Incarnation of Christ c or in other inferiour points of Sanctification Piety and morall Practice And unto this head may be referred all such discourses of naturall things as are found in the Scripture as of the windes thunder c. 2. Histories of matters of Fact past and gone as of the Creation Fall of Man the Floud c. 3. Predictions of things to come hereafter whether they be meerely Propheticall or withall doe containe some speciall Promise or Threatning concerning those to whom the prediction is made 2. There is a twofold Evidence 1. One of the Narration when it is made in Words and Sentences so plaine perspicuous that the Vnderstanding conceives cleerely what the Speaker or Writen meanes 2. Another of the thing it selfe that is related when either our senses doe plainely perceive it if it be a thing sensible or our understandings doe manifestly behold the truth and reason of it if it bee only intelligible This distinction is most manifest in all discourses and specially in Mathematickes where the meaning of a Proposition or Probleme may be cleerely understood what is to bee knowne or done before one jot of the Demonstration be understood how and wherefore it must be so 3. Wee must distinguish of Mans understanding in a twofold estate 1. Of Naturall corruption as it attaines no further light of knowledge than that which may be gotten by the ordinary gift of God in the course of a learned education and painefull studie of Humanity and Divinity for such ends as men propose unto themselves 2. Of Grace and Regeneration when the Vnderstanding is inlightened and
not properly an assent of Christian faith I prove thus To assent or dissent is an action of the Vnderstanding or of the Will if of the Vnderstanding the object of it is Truth or Falsehood if of the Will the object of it is goodnesse or evill For the assent of the Will the case is manifest that it doth never assent unto and allow of the goodnesse of the obiect or dissent from and disallow the evill of it untill there be knowledge and apprehension of both For this approbation or reprobation of any thing by the Will cannot bee without Election nor Election without foregoing deliberation and judgement of the understanding upon the thing that is chosen or refused Againe for the Vnderstanding how can it assent unto the Truth or dissent from the Falsehood of such things whereof it hath no apprehension at all For so here should be an Act without an Object at least an irrationall act of the rationall part of man For if the Vnderstanding assent or dissent without understanding of whereto or from what is not a non-ens the object of such an act and is not such an act more like the naturall propensions of senslesse creatures whereby they are carried to unknowne ends than the judiciall determination of a reasonable man Though the things beleeved exceed reason yet the revelations of them are not above our knowledge and our assent unto them must be so farre forth rationall that if wee cannot give a reason of the thing beleeved yet wee must give a reason of our beliefe A reason of our beliefe is then rendred when we understand that testimony and authority wherein the thing to be beleeved is revealed unto us This only makes our assent reasonable For as in Scientificall knowledge and opinion the understanding never assents till the nature of the thing it selfe be knowne either fully or in part so in beliefe the understanding assents not till the meaning of the relation or testimony be understood what that thing is distinctly whereto it must assent In the two former wee give the reason of our assent from the thing it selfe knowne in the last wee give the reason of our assent from the authority of the revealer In every one our assent presupposeth knowledge in the former of the thing it selfe in the later of the Revelation Wherefore that implicite faith of the ordinary Papist who following the doctrine of his Teachers contents himselfe that he gives his assent in grosse unto all what ever is in the Bible Churches traditions that it is true whilst yet he understands scarce any Article of his religion distinctly this their implicite assent is meerely bruitish and unreasonable Contrary to the expresse precept of the Apostle Paul Rom. 12. 1. commanding us to offer unto God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a reasonable service and Peter 1 Pet. 3. 15. bidding us be ready to give an answer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not a bare answer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but with a defence to every one that demandeth of us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Reason of our Faith Now it would be knowne of the Romish Laiety what reason they can give for their faith what Apologie they are able to make for it when as they are utterly ignorant of Scriptures the only reason and defense of our Faith And is not their service and worship of God the very unreasonable motion of an unintelligent beast that 's ordered by his driver but understands not why and for what reason and ground Where particulars are not knowne there may be a generall kinde of beliefe But this generall beliefe is not an actuall assent to the truth of any particular thing revealed till that particular bee knowne and understood Actuall assent to particular truths is then only when they are knowne and according to the increase of distinct knowledge so this assent increaseth Before there is this distinct knowledge there can be no more but Praeparatio animi a resolution of the minde to yeeld assent to any particular if it bee once knowne Which though it be good when wee can doe no otherwise by reason of unavoydable ignorance yet to teach that this is sufficient to true faith is to teach men to be carelesse of all religion T is good where there is knowledge in part and when for the rest ignorance is seene bewayled and avoyded by all earnest desire and possible endevour to get knowledge in all points but t is monstrous flothfulnesse to bee content with this that in generall we beleeve all though we assent to nothing in particular This were indeed a short cut to heaven if no more were required to Christian faith but to force upon ones selfe such a resolution as this Here is the Bible I am resolved to beleeve all that it saith but for particulars I le looke no further let the Church and those that are learned looke to that How farre such a blinde resolution is from Christian faith and pietie besides experience which testifies that all those who have true faith in some things doe alwayes much lament their ignorance and eagerly desire the increase of distinct knowledge the Scriptures also doe abundantly witnesse unto us Wherein no exhortation more common then this unto the encrease of Knowledge yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. as the Apostle prayes for the Collosians Col. 2. 2. And for the Corinthians hee wisheth the like 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 8. 7. How many prayers of the Saints doe wee finde they have made for knowledge every where mentioned How often is Faith and Knowledge coupled together Ioh. 10. 38. 1 Ioh. 4. 16. c. yea many times confounded and taken one for the other 2 Cor. 4. 14. Esa. 53 ●1 Ioh. 17. 3. c Againe this knowledge is easie to be had by the ayde of the holy Spirit inwardly inlightening and teaching the faithfull when they use such meanes as hee hath appointed See for that purpose Ier. 31. 33 34. 1. Cor. 2. 10. 12. 2. Cor. 4. 6. Ioh. 14. 21. where Christ promiseth to shew himselfe visibly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to those that love him Were knowledge a thing impossible or very difficult or unprofitable some pretence there were to pleade for ignorance but when t is so often commanded us when it may be so easily had when t is so usefull in the having so dangerous to want it it s now impudence to patronize ignorance as a friend to Religion which is a professed enemy to mans reason Wherefore it is a shamelesse assertion of Bellarmine De Iustif. l. c. 5. That Faith may better be defined by ignorance than by knowledge A pestilent conceit which once rooted in men breeds in them an horrible contempt distaste and neglect of Scriptures and all Religion as matters not possible nor necessary for them to comprehend But this is a gull put upon poore people by the Clergy thereby to excuse their owne idlenesse in not teaching them or to gaine the