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A33338 Medulla theologiæ, or, The marrow of divinity contained in sundry questions and cases of conscience, both speculative and practical : the greatest part of them collected out of the works of our most judicious, experienced and orthodox English divines, the rest are supplied by the authour / by Sa. Clarke ... Clarke, Samuel, 1599-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C4547; ESTC R1963 530,206 506

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Spirit of grace Zach. 12.10 11. and godly sorrow works repentance c. 2 Cor. 7.10 The blood of Christ which was shed for the killing of sin makes them sensible of their sin with the aggravations of it being now not only against the Law of God but against the blood and love of the Son of God The contrary doctrine is very false and pernicious Quest. VVhether is the Law given as a Rule to believers under the Gospel Answ. Yea as may be proved by these Arguments First if sin be the transgression of the Law as the Apostle affirmes it to be 1 John 3.4 then a believer is bound to attend the Law as his rule that so he may not transgresse it as David did Psal. 119.11 For whosoever makes conscience of sin cannot but make conscience of observing the rule and they which lay aside the rule cannot make conscience of sin which is downright Atheism and Profanenesse P●rquius a great Libertine in Calvins time makes this only to be sin viz. to see know or feel sin and that the great sin of man is to think that he doth sin and that the old man is put off by not seeing sin But these are liars 1 John 1.8 10. Secondly a true believer though he cannot keep the Law perfectly as his rule yet he loves it dearly and blames himself when he cannot keep it and cries out with the Apostle Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy and good though I am carnal He loves his Copy though he can but scribble after it Thirdly had believers been free from this directive power of the Law Paul would never have perswaded them to love upon this ground Because its the fulfilling of the Law Gal. 5.13 14. Ob. But the Law written in the heart and the spirit is the rule of life therefore not the written Law Answ. First the Law written in the heart is called a Law not in respect of perfect direction which is essential to the rule but in respect of ●ighty and effectual operation 〈◊〉 being a power in it as of a strong Law effectually and sweetly compelling ●o ●he obedience of the Law Secondly for the spirit he is indeed the principle of our obedience whereby we conform unto the rule but not the rule it self Only this is true 1. That the Spirit enclines the heart to the obedience of the rule 2. It illuminates the minde many times to see it by secret shinings of preventing as well as brings things to remembrance which we knew before 3. It acts them also sometimes as when we know not what to pray it prompts us Rom. 8.26 when we know not what to speak before our adversaties it gives it in to us M●t. 10.19 when we know not whither or how to go it s a voice behinde us and leads us to the fountain of living waters Isa. 30.21 Rev. 7.17 But all these quickening acts proves it not to be a rule by which we ought to walk but only by meanes of which we come to walk and are enclined directed and enabled to walk according to the rule Fourthly the Spirit of God which endited the Scriptures and this Law is in the Scriptures and in the Law as well as in the Believers heart and therefore to forsake or reject the Scriptures or this written rule is to forsake and reject the spirit speaking in it as our rule nay it is to forsake that Spirit which is the Supream Judge according to which all private spirits nay all the actings dictates movin●s and speakings of Gods Spirit in us are to be tried examined and judged as Isa. 8.20 John 5.39 For which the men of Bereah were commended Act● 17.11 Ob. The diff●r●nce between the Old and New Testament is this That of Moses was a Ministery from without but that of Christ from within and therefore the letter of the Scriptures is not a Law to a Christian but the Law written in their hearts c Answ. If this be the difference between the dispensation of the Old and New Testament Ministry then we may all burne our Bibles as uselesse and then its a marvel why the Apostles preached or why they wrote the Gospel for after-times that men mi●ht believe c. as it is John 20.31 1 John 5.13 For either their writing and preaching was not an external Ministry which is contrary to sense or it was not Christs Ministry which is blasphemous whereas Christ in the Spirit leads us to Christ in the letter the Spirit within to the Word without by which we shall be judged at the last day John 12.48 and therefore certainly we are to be regulated by it now Ob. But the faithful receive an Unction of the Spirit which teacheth them all things Answ. This teaching is either immediate or mediate If immediate why doth St. John tell them that he writ to them that they might hereby know that they had eternal life 1 John 5 13. But if mediate to wit by the Word externally preached or writ then that external word is still to be our rule which the anointing of the Spirit helps us to know when therefore he saith 1 John 2.27 that being taught of the Spirit they need not that any man should teach them he speaks not of the immediate teaching of the Spirit but explains his meaning in the words following Ye need not that any man should teach you i. e. otherwise or after another manner of way then the Spirit taught them but as the anointing teacheth you all things and is truth For if Ministers are to preach in demonstration of the Spirit then they that hear them and are taught by them need no man to teach them otherwise then as the same spirit in the same demonstration teacheth them all things As therefore the Spirit leads us to the Word so the Word leads us to the Spirit but never to a spirit without or beyond the Word whereby the outward administration in the Word or letter should cease when the inward administration of Christ in the Spirit comes Ob. We are not to be led or guided by any outward commands in our obedience unto God because God is to work all our works for us and we are not to live but Christ is to live in us Answ. It s vain to think that we are not to look at any Promises because Christ is to accomplish all Promises for us If the question therefore be by what we are to live the Apostles answer is full Gal. 2 19 20. We are to live by the faith of the Son of God But if the question be According to what rule are we to live the answer is given by David Psal. 119.4 5. Thou hast commanded us to keep thy Precepts diligently c. So v. 17.77 If any demand what is the rule of faith by which we live Answ. The Gospel Phil. 3.16 But if you demand what is the rule of life it self Answ. The Moral Law and of this is the controversie Ob. But we are neither subject
and was not this done for our imitation So David and Christ delighted to do Gods Will because it was so written of them Psal. 40.7 8. Paul exhorts children to obedience because it 's the first Commandment with promise Eph. 6.2 Paul preached what was in the Old Testament Acts 22.20 what is it but Popery to make the spirit within to be the supream Judge and superior to the Spirit of God in the written Word without The grace of God appearing in the Gospel will have us to walk worthy of God in all well-pleasing according to the Law Tit. 2.12 13. and to mourn bitterly that we are so unlike the will and image of God revealed in the Law Rom. 7.23 24. Object Paul speaks of a Law written and engraven in stone and therefore of the Moral Law which yet he saith is abolished by Christ in the Gospel 2 Cor. 3.6 7 11 13. Answ. The meaning of this place as also Gal. 3.25 is that the Apostle speaking of the moral Law by a Synecdoche comprehends the ceremonial Law also both which the false Teachers urged as necessary to salvation and justification at least together with Christ against whom the Apostle here disputes The moral Law therefore is abolished First as thus accompanied with a yoke of ceremonies Secondly as it was formerly dispensed the greater light of the Gospel obscuring that lesser light of the Law as ver 10. Thirdly he may speak of the moral Law as a Covenant of life which the false Teachers urged in which respect he calls it a Ministry of death and a letter which killeth and thus it s abolished by Christ that with open face we may behold the glory of the Lord as the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that doth believe Object The Gospel under which Believers are requires no doing for doing is proper to the Law which promises life and requires conditions But the Gospel promiseth to work the conditions but requires none and therefore a beleever now is fully free from the Law Answ. The Gospel and the Law are taken two wayes 1. Largely the Law is taken for the whole doctrine contained in the Old Testament and the Gospel for the whole doctrine of Christ and the Apostles in the New Testament 2. Strictly the Law pro lege operum for the Law of Works the Gospel pro lege fidei for the Law of faith The Law of Works is strictly taken for that Law which promises Gods favour and life upon condition of doing or of personal obedience the Law of faith is strictly taken for that doctrine which reveals remission of sins and reconciliation with God by Christs righteousnesse only apprehended by faith Now the Gospel in this latter sense excludes all works and requires no doing in point of justification but only believing but take it largely for the whole doctrine of Gods love and free grace and so the Gospel requires doing For as it 's an act of Gods free grace to justifie us without calling for our works so it 's an act of the same free grace to require works of a justified person to serve him in righteousnesse and holinesse all the days of our lives Tit. 2.14 and to think that the Gospel requires no conditions is a dreame against multitudes of Scriptures which contains conditional yet evangelical promises There are indeed no conditions required of us in the Gospel but what the Lord himself hath or shall work in us but it doth not therefore follow that no conditions are required of us for requiring the condition is the means to work it and the means and end should not be separated As Christs righteousnesse must go before as the matter or moving cause of our justification so faith must go before this righteousness as an instrument or applying cause of it by which we are justified 'T is true God justifies the ungodly But not immediatly without faith but mediately by faith Rom. 4.5 when the Apostle affirms that we are justified by faith without works he doth hereby plainly give that to faith which he denies to Works so then as he denies works to be the antecedent condition of our justification so he affirms the contrary of faith which goes before our justification Believe and live Object There is no sin now but unbelief which is a sin against the Gosp●l onely therefore there being no sin against any Law Christ having abolished it by his death the Law cannot be our rule Answ. Are drunkenness whoredome theft c. then no sinns to be repented of or watched against but only unbelief will not the Lord judge men not only for unbelief but for all the works done in the body as Rom. 2.16 2 Cor. 5.10 Is not the wrath of God revealed from heaven against all unrighteousnesse c Rom. 1.18 If there were no sin but unbelief how can all flesh Jews and Gentiles become guilty before God that so they may believe the Gospel as Rom. 3 21 c. if they be all guiltless till unbelief comes in No sin indeed shall condemn a man if he believe but it will not hence follow that there is no sin but unbelief sin is before unbelief comes a sick sinner before an healing Saviour sin kills the soul as it were naturally unbelief morally No sin shall condemn us if we believe but it doth not hence follow that there is no sin before or after faith because there is no condemning sin unlesse we fal by unbelief Object But now to preach the Law savours of an Old Testament spirit which was wont to wound then to heale to humble and then to raise But now we are to be Ministers of the New Testament and no Law is to be heard of Answ. Indeed to preache the Law as the means of our justification and as the matter of our righteousnesse without Christ or together with Christ as they did 2 Cor. 3.6 is a Ministry of the letter not of the Spirit But to preach Christ plainly as the end of the Law to preach the Law as the means to prepare for and advance Christ in our hearts is no Old Testament Ministry neither doth it put a vaile upon mens hearts that they cannot see the end of the Law as 2 Cor. 3.14 but it takes away the vail of all conceit of mans own strength and righteousnesse by seeing his curse that so he may flie to Christ and embrace him for righteousnesse Object Indeed the children of the Old Testament were under the Law as their School-master to lead them to Christ Gal. 3.24 25. But now saith the Apostle we are no longer under this School-master Answ. Be it so that the sons of God are now no longer under the terrour of this School-master is it not therefore a Ministers work to preach the Law unto the slaves of sin Object No but we must say Thou poor drunkard c. here is a God that hath loved thee and a Christ to die for thee here is salvation by him only
and edifying our neighbours by our good example Fifthly We must carefully preserve our bodies and souls which are his Temple in purity from all pollution of sin For as a good aire and sweet habitation doth much refresh and strengthen our natural and vitall spirits and preserves our bodies in health So no less doth it chear up the Spirit of God within us if we provide him a cleanly lodging free from sinfull impurity sweetned with the incense of our prayers and adorned with the flowers and fruits of our good works and holy obedience Sixthly If we would strengthen the Spirit and increase in us the gifts and graces thereof we must keep them in continual exercise and cause these habits to shew themselves in their functions and operations For as breathing and moving are necessary for preserving the life of our bodies So fruitfull working and holy walking in all Christian duties is for preserving and cherishing the life of the Spirit Gal. 5.25 If we live in the Spirit let us walk in the Spirit Let the fire of the Spirit have fit vent to send out its flames in holy and righteous actions it will live and blaze but if we stop its vent it will presently die Let Faith exercise it self in apprehending the promises in waiting for performances fighting against doubting and in bea●ing the fruits of good works it will from a grain of mustard-seed grow to be a great tree from smoaking flax to a burning flame and from a feeble assent to a full perswasion Let love be exercised in doing and suffering for Gods sake in performing all holy services and Christian duties to God and our neighbours it will grow from a spark to a great fire Let the shoulders of patience be inured to bear the Cross of Christ and suffer afflictions to put up wrongs and overcome evill with good though they be weak at first they will become hardy and strong Exercise encreaseth graces but ease and sloth weakens them we should therefore resolve with David Psal. 119.32 33 34. Seventhly The last and principall means to cherish the Spirit is earnest and effectuall prayer to God that he will strengthen our weakness and quicken our dulness and support our faintness by a constant renewing of his spirit in us and sending a continuall supply of his saving graces to reenforce and refresh our decayed bands that by these Auxiliaries they may be enabled to stand in the day of battell and to get the victory over all our spirituall Enemies It s God that teaches our hands to war and our fingers to fight Psal. 144.1 and that gives us at the last a full and final victory and then adds the Crown of victory even everlasting glory Mr. Downhams Christian warfare Quest. But the flesh and Spirit being but qualities how can they be said to fight together Answ. Because the flesh and Spirit are mixed together in the whole regenerate man and in all the powers of his soul as light and darkness are mixed in the air in the dawning of the day and as heat and cold are mixed together in lukewarm water we cannot say that one part of the water is hot and another cold but heat and cold are mixed in every part so the man regenerate is not in one part flesh and another spirit but the whole mind is partly flesh and partly spirit and so are the will and affections c. Now upon this mixture it is that the powers of the soul are carried and disposed divers ways and hereupon follows the combate Quest. How doth the lust of the flesh shew it self Answ. First it defiles and suppresses the good motions of the Spirit Hence Paul saith Rom. 7.21 23. when I would doe good evill is present and the Law of the flesh rebels against the Law of the mind Hereupon the flesh is fitly compared to the disease called Ephialtes or the mare in which men in their slumber think they feel a thing as heavy as lead to lie upon their breasts which they can no way remove Secondly It brings forth and fills the mind with wicked cogitations and rebellious inclinations Hence concupiscence is said to tempt to entice and to draw away the mind of man Jam. 1.14 Quest. What are the contary actions of the spirit Answ. First To curb and restrain the flesh Hence St. John saith the regenerate man cannot sin 1 Joh. 3.9 Secondly To beget good motions inclinations and thoughts agreeable to the will of God as in David Psal. 16.7 My reins instruct me in the night season and Isa. 30.21 thine ears shall hear a voice behind thee c. and thus by the concurrence of these contrary actions in the same man is the combate made Quest. Why is there such a contrariety between the flesh and spirit Answ. Because the Spirit is the gift of righteousness and the flesh stands in a double opposition to it 1. In the want of righteousness 2. In a proness to all unrighteousness Object But naturall men also have a combat in them For they can say video meliora proboque deteriora sequor I see and approve of what is good but doe that which is naught Answ. This combat is between the naturall conscience and rebellious affections and its incident to all men that have in them any conscience or light of reason Quest. Have all believers this combat in them Answ. No For 1. Only such as be of years have it for Infants though they have the seed of grace in them yet do they want the act or exercise of it and therefore they feel not this combat because it stands in action Secondly This combate is in the godly in the time of this life only For in death the flesh is abolished and consequently this combate ceaseth Quest. What are the effects of this combate in the godly Answ. It hinders them that they cannot do the things that they would Gal. 5.17 and that three wayes 1. It makes them that they cannot live in the practice of any one sin 1 Joh. 3.9 2. If at any time they fall it staies and keeps them that they sin not with full consent of will but they can say the evil which I hate that doe I Rom. 7.19 3. Though in the ordinary course of their lives they do that which is good yet by reason of this conflict they fail in the doing of it Rom. 7.18 Hence it follows that all the works of regenerate men are mixed with sin and in the rigor of justice deserve damnation Object Sin is the transgression of the Law but good works are no transgression of the Law and therefore they are no sins Answ. I answer to the Minor The transgression of the Law is two-fold One which is directly against the Law both for matter and manner 2. When that is done which the Law requires but not in that manner it should be done and thus good works become sinfull Object Good works are from the Spirit of God but nothing proceeding from the
the School of Instruction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His rods when sanctified are powerful Sermons to teach us 1. To know God and this is life eternal to know him John 17.3 It s said of Manasseh 2 Chron. 33.13 Then he knew that the Lord was God Affliction teacheth us not only to know God in his power anger hatred of sinne but also in his goodness and mercy For God doth so sweeten the bitter Cup of affliction that a child of God doth often taste more of Gods love in one moneths affliction then in many years of prosperity 2 Cor. 1.4 5. and 7.4 Affliction also teaches us to know God experimentally and affectionatively so to know him as to love and feare him and to flie to him as to our Rock and hiding place in the day of distresse Cant. 3.1 2 3 4. By night i. e. in the time of divine desertion c. 2. Not only to know God but to trust in him also 2 Cor. 1.9 3. To know our selves also when the Prodigal was in adversity he came to himself Luke 15.17 they teach us to know that we are but men Psal. 9.2 yea but frail men Ezek. 21.17 and that God can crush us as easily as we do moths which will make us to stand in awe of God and to study to serve and please him Secondly Gods aim in affliction is to keep us from sin So 2 Cor. 12.7 or when we have sinned to bring us to repentance for it and from it For 1. They open the eyes to see sin as Gen. 42.21 Oculos quos culpa claudit poena aperit 2. They open the eares to discipline as Deut. 5.27 For Jer. 2.24 3. They open the mouth to confesse sin Judg. 10.15 4. They command us to depart from iniquity Iob 36.8 9 10. They are Gods Furnaces to purge our drosse Gods Files to pare off our spiritual rust Gods Fanns to winnow out our chaffe Dan 11.35 and 12.10 Thirdly Gods end is also to make us holy and righteous Isa. 26.9 Hebr. 12.10 Fourthly to make the world bitter to them and Christ sweet For Prov. 10.4 Fifthly to prove their graces Rev. 2.10 Deut. 8.2 1. The truth and sincerity of them Hence he loaded Job with afflictions and the strength of our graces for it requires a strong faith to endure great afflictions 2. To emprove our graces For as the Palme-tree the more it s pressed the hi● her it grows so do the graces of Gods people Sixthly it is to put an edge upon their prayers and all their other holy services 1. Upon Prayer what a fervent prayer did Manasses make when he was in fetters in the dungeon 2 Chron. 33.13 18 19. When Saint Paul was struck off his horse and smitten with blindnesse then he prayed to the purpose Acts 9.11 So Isa. 26.16 2. Upon Preaching Prosperity glutteth the spiritual appetite Adversity whets it 3. Upon the Sacrament How sweet is the Sacrament to a true Saint after a long and great sicknesse 4. It makes God and his Word precious If God set our corne-fields on fire as Absalom did Ioabs then we come running to him and how sweet is a Scripture-Promise to a childe of God in his distresse Hos. 5. ult Quest. What considerations may chear up our hearts in the time of affliction Answ. First that God never afflicts his people but out of pure necessity 1 Pet. 1.6 as a tender father never corrects his children but when he is forced to it Lam. 3.33 Isa. 27.9 It s sin that puts thunderbolts into Gods hand God never scourgeth us but it is with a whip made of our own sinnes Prov. 5.22 Rom. 2.5 Hence Isa. 28.21 It s his strange work Secondly he doth it out of his true and real love Heb. 12.6 7 8. Obj. Do not divine afflictions proceed from anger was not God angry with Moses for speaking unadvisedly Psal. 106.33 and with David for Adultery Answ. This anger was a fatherly anger rooted in love It was not Ira quae reprobat but Ira quae purgat It was not Ira hostilis exterminativa but Ira paterna medicinalis As it s sometimes a great punishment for God not to punish Isa. 1.5 Hosea 4.14 So it s a great mercy sometimes for God to withdraw his mercy Thirdly afflictions are a part of divine Predestination that God that hath elected us to salvation hath also elected us to afflictions 1 Thes. 1.3 4 6. Rom. 8.29 Fourthly they are part of that gracious Covenant which God hath made with his people Psal. 89.31 c. In which Text three things are observable 1. A supposition of sin If his children forsake my Law c. For it is alwayes the cause sine qua non the cause without which God would never chastise us and mostlie it s the cause for which he chastiseth 2. A gracious Promise Then will I visit their transgressions with the Rod and their iniquiry with stripes 3. A merciful qualification Nevertheless my loving kindnesse will I not take from him nor suffer my faithfulnesse to faile c. So Psal. 119.75 Fifthly Consider that afflictions are part of the Saints blessednesse Iob 5.17 Behold happy is the man whom God correcteth c. Afflictions when sanctified are instructions and so are evidences that we are in a blessed condition Psal. 94.12 Job when upon the dunghil wonders why God should so set his heart upon him as to visit him every morning and try him every moment Job 7.17 18. Lazarus full of sores and in his rags was happier then Dives in his robes P●ilpot in his Colehouse then Bonner in his Palace Sixthly consider the gracious ends and designes that God hath in afflicting his children mentioned before Seventhly the sweet and precious Promises that he hath made to them to comfort and support them in the day of their affliction ●i●●hly that all afflictions shall at last work for their good Rom. 8.28 God beats his children as we do our cloathes in the Sunne only to beat our dust and mo●hes God puts them into the Furnace not to hurt but to untie the bonds of their sins as D●u ● 25 God will either deliver them out of afflictions or send them to heaven by them Quest. What else may comfort us in the times of affliction Answ. First consider that by afflictions we are conformed to the Image of Ch●ist Rom. 8.29 Secondly that Christ himself suffers with us nay suffers in us Act● 9.4 Christ bein● the head of that mystical body whereof we are members Thirdly he will 〈◊〉 then us with his grace that we shall be able to say with the Apostle Phil. 4.13 I can do all things yea and suffer all things too through Christ tha● s●●●●g●neth me Fourthly Christ will sweeten all those waters of Marah to us that we shall finde them most delicious in the clo●e Cam. 1.13 A bundle of 〈◊〉 is my beloved to me he shall lie all night between ●y br●●sts though a bundle
that hath adorned me with so many gifts afforded me such means to keep me from sin that I should abuse my talents and his mercies so as to fight against him with his own weapons As he hath laden me with his mercies I have pressed him with my sinnes c. Secondly the second circumstance is the injury it self as if we be injured in our soul body name goods c. and as the thing wherein we are wronged is the greater so is our anger which we conceive against it This we should consider in the wrong we do against God We injure him in his glory which is most deare to him impeach his sovereignty deny him homage and all this to satisfie our fleshly lusts and to enlarge the Kingdome of Satan Thirdly the person injured as if he be a person of great authority esteem and vertue If one that was then endeavouring the offenders good c. In these particulars we have great reason to be angry with our selves for sinning against God For hereby we have done intollerable injury to the Lord of glory To whom we are indebted for inestimable favours who hath been always ready to do us good c. Fourthly the mannner of injuring as if we be esteemed as friends and yet secretly injured as enemies If the injurie was premeditated long aforehand If in place where we ought to be loved and honoured we be wronged and disgraced If the injury be publick before many If often reiterated c. In which respects we have the more cause to be angry with our selves for sinne For in words we professe our selves Christs servants but in deeds we deny him We lightly regard his presence sin against knowledge and conscience c. If ever we had just cause of indignation it 's against our selves for sinning against God Quest. Why is anger rightly to be ordered Answ. First because of all passion it 's deepliest rooted and extends its branches farthest For no age condition or nation are free from it other passions onely trouble some particular persons Lust enflames one ambition another covetousnesse another c. But whole states are enflamed by anger and fury Secondly Inordinate anger is most infamous an argument of shameful levity infirmity madnesse An angry person hates truth embraceth errour opposeth them that admonish him entertains perverse counsel forgets his own credit is an enemy to his own safety against himself is untameable against his neighbours is intollerable under a weak pretence of revenge anger makes men violate all bonds of friendship tread under feet all Laws both Divine and Humane Other passions will hearken to Reason but this to none Thirdly as of all infirmities there are none worse or more dangerous then those which disfigure the face of a man so of all Passions none are more pernicious then anger for the eyes of such a man sparkle his face is enflamed with blood which flows from the heart his hair stares with horrour his mouth foames his tongue falters his feet and hands are in perpetual motion he vomiteth out nothing but threats speaks of nothing but blood and revenge c. Fourthly It 's a deceitful passion An angry man sees not the thing as it is and yet swells and boils inwardly Fifthly it 's the character of a fool Prov. 12.16 and 14.17 29. Eccles. 7.9 Sixthly it makes a man unmindful of his own condition If poor yet hee 'l waste his goods Being a private man he would rule being weak he becomes a lion where delay is requisite he makes haste where haste is necessary he doubts Seventhly an angry person can neither please God nor man He regards no commandments doth nothing in order but all rashly and without discretion Quest. What are the several kindes of disordered anger that must be shunned Answ. It 's disordered when it 's not moved by faith ariseth not from love keeps not within its bounds and is not directed to a right end The kinds of it are many First devilish which rageth against vertue and godlinesse is incensed by innocent and vertuous actions as in Caine Genes 4.5 In Saul 2 Sam. 20.30 In Asa 2 Chron. 16.10 In the Jews Luke 4.28 In Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.13 Secondly rash and unadvised the branches whereof are 1. Unjust anger that proceeds from our own suspicion and imagination only as in Eliab 1 Sam. 17.28 2. When we are provoked without cause or upon every smal occasion contrary to the law of love 1 Corinth 13.7 Prov. 10.12 and it 's a mans glory to passe by a Transgression Proverbs 19.11 And so sudden anger which is admitted without deliberation condemned Eccles. 7.9 It s a foolish thing Prov. 14.17.29 such abound with transgressions Proverbs 29.22 Thirdly immoderate and immodest anger which may be discerned by these signes 1. When men utter words dishonourable to God by blaspheming swearing cursing c. or opprobrious to their neighbours as when their anger breaketh out into bitter and reviling speeches as Shemei did against David 2 Sam. 16.5 the Jewes against Steven Acts 7.54 Forbidden Ephes. 4.32 3. When we have no regard of order and comelinesse either in respect of our selves or those with whom we are angry In respect of our selves when though private men we take revenge which belongs to God Rom. 12.19 In respect of the party with whom we are angry as when a sonne being angry with his father though upon just cause useth him unreverently and so of servants towards their Masters c. and all inferiours towards their superiours 4. When it makes us forget any duty of love which we owe to them as to pray for them and endeavour their reformation So in the Disciples Luke 9.54 5. When it stirs us up to violent and unseasonable reproofs Psalme 106.32 33. 6. When it s not mixed with sorrow proportionable to the displeasure that we conceived He that is rightly angry though he be displeased with the offence yet he pities the offender Fourthly when anger is partial its disordered and that is 1. When its hot against some sins and can brook others as bad either because they suite with our disposition or that we have little wrong by them 2. when we are zealous against sin in our enemies but ●avourable to it in our selves or friends 3. When we are as angry for small as for great offences whereas our anger should be proportioned to the offence Fifthly when it 's directed against the person of the offendor not against his offence and aimes at his hurt and destruction but seeks not the glory of God the good of the Church or Common-wealth the private benefit of our selves or neighbours or the reformation of the offendor Such was Cains towards Abel Sauls towards David Nebuchadnezzars towards the three children but Christs rule is otherwise Mat. 5.44 Sixthly when being long retained it turns to hatred Quest. What Motives may disswade us from sinful anger Answ. First consider the sinful causes of it which are 1. Unbelief in Gods Word David
to the Law nor to sin Because all things both good and evil come from Gods VVill and all things that are done are wrought by him and all that he doth is good and therefore all sinful actions are good because he works them Answ. The commanding Will of God called Voluntas mandati is to be our Rule and not the working Will of God called Voluntas decreti For we cannot sin by fulfilling the one but we may sin in fulfilling the other Gods secret and working Will was fulfilled when Josephs brethren sold him into Egypt and when the Babylonians afflicted Israel seventy years and when the Jewes caused Christ to be crucified yet in all these they sinned and provoked God against them Acts 4.28 Gods Will is his own rule to work by not ours and therefore Samuel convinced Saul when he spared Agag that his disobedience against Gods command was rebellion and as the sin of witchcraft though therein he fulfilled the decree of God 1 Sam. 15.23 Fourthly a fourth Argument to prove that the Law is our tule is this If the love of Christ is to lead us then the commands of Christ wherein he discovers one chief part of his love are to guide us and to be a rule of life to us He that believes that a Christian under the rule of the Law is under bondage may justly be feard that himself is still under the bondage of sin and Satan and never knew what the true love of Christ is For it 's a great part of the love of Christ to command us to do any thing for him A poor humbled Prodigal will account it great love to be made an hired servant Object The Law indeed requires doing but not the Gospell and therefore Believers that are under the Gospel are under no Law of doing Answ. As the Gospel requires ●o doing that thereby we may be just so it requires doing also when by Christ Jesus we are made just For it commands us to be holy as God is holy 1 Pet. 1.15 and perfect as our heavenly Father is perfect Mat. 5.48 The Law and Gospel require the same perfection of holinesse onely here is the difference the Law requires it that thereby we may be made just and therefore accepts of nothing but perfection but the Gospel requires it because we are already perfectly just in Christ Hence though it commands as much as the Law yet it accepts of lesse even the least measure of sincerity though mixed with the greatest measure of imperfection Object A Believer hath repented in Christ and mortified sin in Christ so that mortification and vivification is nothing but a b●lieving that Christ hath mortified sin for us and been quickned for us and sanctification that is inherent in Christ and not in us is the evidence of our justification Answ. First this principle confounds a Christians justification and sanctification as it casts the seed of denying all inherent graces in a believer and lays the basis refusing to do any duty or conform to any Law in our own persons and it will follow that as the perfection of Christs righteousnesse to our justification should make us abhor any righteousnesse of our own to our justification so if we be perfectly sanctified in Christ then perfection of Christs righteousnesse to our sanctification should make a beleever not only renounce the Law but abhorre all personal righteousnesse through the spirit to our sanctification and then a Believer must abhor to seek any love or feare of God in his heart which directly is an inlet to all manner of prophannesse Secondly Christ indeed is our sanctification as well as our righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1.30 but not materially and formally but virtually meritoriously and with meet explications exemplarily Our righteousnesse to our justification is inherent in him but our sanctification is inherent in our selves though derived from him Hence we are never commanded to justifie our selves unless it be instrumentally and Sacramentally but we are commanded by faith to wash ourselves Isa. 1.18 Act. 22.16 we are exhorted to repent to believe to mortifie our earthly members to walk in newnesse of life c. because these things are wrought in us by Christ to our sanctification but not wrought in Christ for us as our righteousnesse to our justification Object They that are in Christ are said to be compleat in him Col. 2.10 and that they receive all grace from his fulnesse John 1.16 therefore they have no grace in themselves but its first in him and consequently their sanctification is perfected in him Ans. Though the perfection and fulnesse of grace is first in Christ yet beleevers have not all in him after one and the same manner nor for the same end For our righteousnesse to our justification is so in him as never to be inherent in us neither here nor in heaven but our righteousnesse to our sanctification is so far in him as it is to be derived to us and hence it 's formally in us but virtually and meritoriously in him Object A Christian must do what is commanded but not by vertue of the command for the spirit will binde their hearts to the Law but they are not bound by any authority of the Law to the directions thereof For the Spirit say they is free and they are under the government of the Spirit which is not to be controlled by any Law Answ. If their meaning be that a beleever is not bound by the commanding power of any Law to conforme thereunto only the spirit will conforme their hearts to it so that perhaps they shall do the thing which the Law requires but not because the Law commands it then it will follow that in case a beleever fall into any sin as whoredome drunkenness murder c. these wicked acts though they be sins in themselves yet they are not so to him because he is now free from the Law and not bound to obedience by vertue of any command and where there is no Law there is no transgression Object The Law is our rule as it was given by Christ and not as it was given by Moses Answ. The Law may be considered either materially as it contains the matter of the Covenant of Works and thus a believer is not to be regulated by it or it may be considered finally or rather relatively as it stood in relation to the people of the God of Abraham who were already under Abrahams covenant which was a Covenant of Grace Gen. 17.7 And so the Law as it was given by Moses was given by Christ in Moses Hence it is that the Law of love commanded by Moses is called the Lawe of Christ Gal. 6.2 therefore we must not set Christ and Moses together by the eares Object The written Law is not to be a Christians rule but so far as it s written in the heart Answ. This is a cursed assertion For did not Christ himself resist tentations to sin by cleaving to the written word Mat 4.4 10.
because thou art a sinner fear not thou art free from dam●ation Christ died for thee Answ. Is a poor drunkard a villaine that never believed in a state of condemnation Rom. 8.1 Paul saith there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ but where are they freed that are out of Christ who are by nature the children of wrath whil'st dead in sin Eph. 2.1 c. much lesse are such to believe because they are such Are not such Ministers therefore that preach this doctrine like the false Prophets Isa. 48. ult and 57. ult that cry peace peace when God saith there is no peace to the wicked and saith not Christ John 3. ult He that believes not the wrath of God abides on him It was upon him before and when he believes not it abides still on him Must the Ministers of the New Testament preach lies and tell drunkards and villains before they reject the Gospel by unbelief that the Lord loves them and there is no condemnation to them Object To judge of Justification by sanctification is a doubtful evidence a carnal and inferior evidence Answ. If to be under the power and dominion of sin be a certain evidence of condemnation so that he that says he knows Christ and yet walks in darkness is a liar 1 John 1.6 and 2.4 then sanctification whereby we are freed from the power of sin is a clear and full evidence of our actual justification 1 ●oh 2.3 Hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments So Act. 3. ult Christ is sent to blesse his people by turning the● from their iniquities then they that are turned from them by him may know certainly that they are blessed So 1 Tim. 4.8 Godlinesse hath the promise of this life and that which is to come therefore sanctification is a clear evidence of Gods love to us sanctification is always an evidence in it self of a justified estate though it be not always evident unto us Now to prove that it s no carnal and inferior but the first evidence and a principal one take th●se propositions First the free offer of grace is the first evidence to a poor lost sinner that he may be beloved Secondly the receiving of this offer by faith relatively considered in respect of Christs spotlesse righteousnesse is the first evidence that sheweth why he is beloved and what hath moved God actually to love him Thirdly the work of sanctification which is the fruit of our receiving this offer is the first evidence shewing that he is beloved See Shepheards morality of the Sabbath Object That which revealeth any evidence of assurance that I am Christ and he is mine is the Spirit speaking personally and particularly to my heart with such a voice Son be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven thee and this is that broad seale of the Spirit making an immediate impression on my heart without any begged testimony from works of sanctification which is the revealing evidence of my interest in Christ and the receiving evidence is faith believing this Testimony of the spirit only because the spirit saith so not because I have evidences or particular works of sanctification such as are universal obedience sincerity of heart and love of the brethren Answ. The Papist is the black devil taking away all certainty of assurance the Antinomian is the white devil a spirit of hell clothed with all heaven and the notions of Free-grace they say Free-grace in us is a dream sanctification inherent is a fiction Christ is all there is no grace existent in the creature Grace is all in Christ and nothing but imputed righteousnesse But if works of sanctification can give no assurance then First the joy and rejoycing which we have in the Testimony of a good conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have our conversation in the world 2 Cor. 1.12 must be but a dream David Job Moses Samuel the Prophets and Apostles their joying in a good conscience must arise from doubtful and conjectural evidences yea then none can say in any assurance I beleeve in Christ In the inward man I delight in the Law of God I am crucified to the world My conversation is in Heaven c. for all these are inherent qualifications in a childe of God but they are doubtful and uncertain How then hath God promised to love the righteous to give the prize to him that runneth c. Secondly the testimony of the Spirit bearing witnesse to our spirit that we are the children of God Rom. 8.16 is in this sense an immediate act of the Spirit because the reflex acts of the soul are performed without any other medium or meanes but that whereby the direct acts are performed I know that I know and I know that I believe my sense by the same immediate operation of the Spirit by that which I know God without any other light teacheth me to know that I know God As by light I see colours and my common sense needs not another li●ht to make me know that I see colours so when I believe in Christ that habitual instinct of the grace of God actuated and stirred up by the Spirit of God makes me know that I know God and that I believe and so that I am in Christ to my own certain feeling and apprehension but this doth not hinder but the assurance of my interest in Christ is made evident to me by other inferiour evidences as 1 John 2.3 Hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments By keeping Gods Commandments we do not simply know that we know him by certainty of faith but we know that we know God these two wayes 1. We know the instinct of the new man being stirred up to action by the winde which bloweth when and where it lusteth our knowing of God to be sound saving and true we do not so much know our knowing of God by this supernatual sense as we know the supernatural qualification and sincerity of our knowing of God so that we rather know the qualification of the act that the work is done according to God then the act according to its substance though we do also know it in this relation So 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren i. e. our love to the brethren doth evidence to us both that we are translated to the Kingdome of grace and also we know that that translation is real true sincere and effectual by love and all the fruits of the Spirit 2. By these works of sanctification we have evidence that we have interest in Christ not as by formal light suggesting to us that the immediate impression of this great and broad Seal of God and his personal and particular testimony is true for Gods Spirit needeth not another witnesse to adde authority to what he saith but because this Conclusion thou John
seek and procure them by evil 1 Pet. 2.15 A good conscience must not go out of Gods way to meet with sufferings nor out of sufferings way to meet with sinne It s not Poena but Causa the cause not the punishment which makes a Martyr 2. If thou sufferest for ill-doing yet be sure that it be wrongfully 1 Pet. 2.19 and if thou beest charged with any evil that it be falsly Mat. 5.11 that thy conscience may say we are as deceivers yet true as unknown yet well konwn to God 2 Cor. 6.9 10. Thirdly if thou desirest chiefly and especially to suffer in the cause and for the name of Christ this with him is to suffer as a Christian. In the matters of the Kingdom Daniel was careful to carry himself unreprovably but in the matters of God he cared not what he suffered Dan. 6.14 5. Life as it is too little worth to be laid out for Christ so it s too precious to be laid out in any other cause It s an honour if we can call our sufferings the sufferings of Christ Col. 2.24 and our scarrs the marks of the Lord Jesus Gal. 6.17 and can subscribe our selves the prisoners of Christ Eph. 3.1 Fourthly if thou lovest to see the ground thou goest upon that thy cause be clear the grounds manifest that thou beest not thrust forward by a turbulent spirit or a mis-informed conscience but for conscience towards God or according to God that thou mayest say with the Apostle I suffer according to the will of God 1 Pet. 4.19 Fifthly if thou beest careful not only that the matter be good but that the manner be good lest otherwise we disgrace our sufferings 1 Pet. 2.19 c. If thou suffer wrongfullly yet thou must suffer patiently This is to suffer as Christ suffered 1 Pet. 2.21 22 23. Sixthly if thou committest thy self in thy sufferings to God in well-doing 1 Pet. 4.19 suffering times must not be sinning times He is no good Martyr that is not a good Saint A good cause a good conscience a good life a good death a good matter to suffer for a good manner to suffer in make an honourable Martyr Tenthly a conscience of charity This the Apostle speaks of as the end and perfection of the Law and Gospel too 1 Tim. 1.5 where there is the truth of charity there is the truth of conscience also the more of charity the more of conscience Now this charity is twofold 1. External or civil which respects 1. The poor to whom is to be shewed the charity of beneficence 2. To the neighbour and friend a love of benevolence And 3. To the enemy a love of forgivenesse 1. To the poor a love of beneficence and well-doing this kind of charity is the worlds grand benefactor the poors great Almoner the widows Treasurer the Orphans Guardian and the oppressed mans Patron This lends eyes to the blinde feet to the lame deals out bread to the hungry cloaths the naked and brings upon the Donor the blessing of him that was ready to perish This Zacheus shewed Luke 19.8 and Job Chap. 30.12 c. and Obadiah 1 King 18.13 and Nehemiah Chap. 5.15 Hence Psal. 112.5 Prov. 31.20 26. So Cornelius Acts 10.2 4. Isa. 32.8 2. To our neighbours must be shewed the charity of benevolence we must love them as our selves Matth. 22.39 Rom. 13.8 For Prov. 18.24 He that hath a friend must shew himself friendly It s a pleasant thing to see friends and neighbours living in this mutuall love and benevolence Psal. 133.1 c. 3. To our enemies a love of forgiveness This is the hardest and therefore the highest pitch of love a lesson only to be learned in the School of Christ. The Pharisees taught otherwise which Christ laboured to reform Matth. 5.46 Luke 6.32.33 This makes us like our Father in Heaven who is kind to the thankfull and unkind Luke 6.35 and like his Son on Earth who prayed for his enemies This we are exhorted to Col. 3.12 13. 2. Spirituall or Ecclesiasticall which is to be shewed in the love we bear to the Church and truth of Christ and to the souls of our brethren This Charity is to be preferred before all the former the former may be amongst Heathens and civilized Christians but this is the peculiar badg of the people of God A love of Symphonie in judgment and opinion of Sympathy in heart and affection and of Symmetrie or Harmony in an offensive conversation This is often and earnestly pressed Phil. 2.1 c. 1 Pet. 3.8 It s the end of the Law the adorning of the Gospel the lively Image of God and of Christ the first fruit of the Spirit the daughter of Faith the Mother of hope the sister of peace the kinswoman of truth the life and joy of Angels the bane of Divels It s the death of Dissentions the grave of Schismes wherein all Church rupture and offences are buried 1 Joh. 4.8 16. Joh. 13.34 Gal. 5.22.6 Yea it s the very bond of perfection Col. 3.14 and that which covers all sins 1 Pet. 4.8 Quest. What is the excellency and benefit of a good Conscience Answ. First The excellency of it appears in the honourable titles given to it above all other graces and the reall preheminence it hath if compared with all other things as 1. It hath this proper denomination given it ordinarily of a good Conscience Act. 23.19 1 Tim. 1.15 1 Pet. 3.16 21. whereas other graces though excellent in their place and kind are seldom so called Where do we read of good Faith good Love Holiness c. whereas Conscience is good of it self and makes the good Faith the good Love the good repentance c. which all cease to be good when severed from the good conscience Again compare it with all other good things and it hath the better of them what good is there in a chest full of goods when the Conscience is empty of goodness Quid prodest plena bonis Area si inanis sit Conscientia said St. Austin What if he hath good wares in his shop a good stock in his ground good cloaths to his back c. if he hath not a good Conscience in his heart This man is like Naaman a rich and honorable man but a Leper What are all great parts and abilities without a good Conscience but as sweet flowers upon a stinking carcass It s above all Faith alone therefore they oft go together in Scripture 1 Tim. 1.5 19. and 3.9 If this be put away Faith is shipwract Nothing profits alone without this not Baptisme 1 Pet. 3.21 not Charity 1 Tim. 1.5 not coming to the Lords Supper Heb. 10.22 not any serving of God 2 Tim. 1.3 not obedience to Magistrates Rom. 13.5 not all our sufferings 1 Pet. 2.19 20. Let all duties be performed and Conscience nor regarded and the man is but an Hypocrite Let all gifts remain and profession stay and the man is but an Apostate Hence Bernard Vtilius est