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B10040 The perfection of justification maintained against the Pharise the purity of sanctification against the stainers of it: the unquestionablenesse of a future glorification aganst the Sadduce: in severall sermons. Together with an apologeticall answer to the ministers of the new province of London in vindication of the author against their aspersions. / by John Simpson, an unworthy publisher of gospel-truths in London. Simpson, John, 17th cent. 1648 (1648) Wing S3817A; ESTC R184177 253,105 558

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sight of himselfe his sonne and grace the mouth of conscience is stopped and wee see all our sins swallowed up in his love Shew us the Father and it sufficeth us saith Philip. Joh. 14.8 When God sheweth us himselfe our spirits are at rest When Grace is discovered and Gods light doth shine upon the soule Sin death damnation cannot terrifie the soule But they are filled with a spirit of joy in beleeving their free justification who before through feare of death were subject to bondage Heb. 2.15 Grace appeareth greater and stronger to bring salvation then sinne powerfull to bring damnation Our sins the sins of all the man of the world being the acts of creatures are finite but grace that justifieth us is the grace of an infinite God and is boundlesse and infinite Men are unassured of their salvation unlesse this Grace be presented to the eye of their spirits And men and Devills cannot prevaile against us to enforce us to question our justification and salvation when wee looke upon it That peace which the world cannot take from us nor give unto us that joy which neither the Law nor the workes of the Law can convery unto us nor bereave us off that salvation which damned Feinds can never rob us of is communicated to us by the beholding of Gods grace in the face of the Lord Jesus The soule when it hath a sight of this grace it stands with boldnesse at the Throne of Grace and though it feele hellish sin in it selfe yet it is able to dispute with all the Divels in Hell and to maintaine the freenesse fulnesse and compleatnesse of its own justification from all sin by the grace of God in Jesus Christ If the Divell shall then suggest this to a man that he is a sinner The beleeving soule will make this answer It is true I am a sinner but I am not terrified to desparation because I am ungodly but I rejoyce in this that God justifieth the ungodly by his grace Rom. 4.5 If the Divell shall reply But thou art a great sinner and there is a great damnation The believing soule will returne I am not tormented by the great damnation prepared for great sinners but comforted by the great salvation Heb. 2.3 which is for the greatest and cheifest of sinners by Gods grace in Jesus Christ 1 Tim. 1.15 If the Divell shall still assault a man to perswade him that he is a damned soule having mispent his time and strength in the service of sin having no good workes to commend him unto God that he may finde favour from him The beleeving soule will be easily able in the strength of God when it is upon the mountaine of his Grace to silence the Accuser by lying downe in the lap of that God who maketh him the object of his Grace who worketh not for justification Rom. 4. but beleiveth in God who justifieth sinners in his Grace without workes And because wee are justified and comforted in the Court of our owne Consciences by grace The spirit which is given forth in the Ministry of the Gospel is called a spirit of grace It being the worke of the Spirit to reveale the grace of the Father for the comfort of his children according to that of the Apostle 2 Thess 2.16 17. Our Lord Iesus Christ himselfe and God even our Father which hath loved us and given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace comfort your hearts Heere the Apostle sheweth us that the Saints have consolation and that this consolation is everlasting and that this everlasting consolation is only by grace Goe to all the true Saints in the world and aske them how they received the Comforter whether by the observation of moral precepts or by the doctrine of grace they will informe you that they received him by the Gospel of grace and not by the law of works Some Saints are able to acquaint you with their own experience can tell you how they laboured for holiness to bring them to happinesse to love God that they might assure themselves that they were in the love of God and that they found darknesse instead of expected light death instead of life horrour bondage instead of joy and liberty untill they were enabled to come unto God as sinners without workes disclaming their owne righteousnesse deserts and endeavours and laying the head-stone of their peace and happinesse in the free favour of God crying Grace Grace Zech 4 7. Exalting the free grace of God in their justification and overthrowing overturning their own works and legal righteousnesse It is grace and grace alone which bringeth salvation Tit 2.11 and therefore not our workes Grace and workes are inconsistent in this point of justification they can no more stand together then the Arke of God and Dagon Let grace stand up in its glory workes will quickly be overthrown and set up works and yee destroy the doctrine of grace By eternall grace wee were elected and made vessells of mercy from eternitie by grace we were saved before God in heaven in the presence of the Lord Iesus by grace wee were saved in the person of Christ before faith By the revelation of grace unto us through faith wee are saved in foro conscientiae in the Court of our owne consciences By grace salvation is inchoated here and compleated and perfected hereafter Rom. 6. ult The gift of God is cternall life through Jesu Christ our Lord. The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a gift flowing from Grace or free favour In these severall acceptations of the word grace we are saved by grace I might now lay downe many reasons for the proofe of this poynt but those which I gave to proove that wee are not justified by workes will bee sufficient for the confirmation of this And when I shall handle the doctrine of beleiving some reasons will fall in which will more fully illustrate this truth I shall therefore for the present onely present unto you a reason or two and hasten to the use 1 Reason First it being supposed that man is a sinner it is impossible that man should bee saved by any thing but by the knowledge of Grace The Law in this particular would not deale with us considering what good hath bin done by us but what evill And therefore when the Apostle had proved Bom. 3.23 that devout Jews as well as prophane Gentiles had sinned and come short of the glory of God he takes it for granted as a thing undeniable and unquestionable that wee are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Iesus Christ And if we could bring our selves into a state of perfection after we have once sinned wee could not be justified by that perfection in us which is required by the Law but should be condemned for our sinnes and imperfections in breaking of the Law If a man have done good service for the Common-wealth and yet be found guilty
believing from a dunghill to a Throne from everlasting wrath to never-ending glory and immortality I might speak more fully of this concerning which no man can speak sufficiently But my intention was not to speak of this but rather of that which is principally intended in the words to shew you the sinlesse condition of the man which is borne of God And therefore give me leave to leave this point that I may briefly open the words which follow in the Text that so I may draw the marrow and substance of them into a short conclusion the illustration confirmation and amplification of which by the grace of God shall be the subject of my ensuing discourse I doe finde that the godly-learned doe not agree in their expositions of these words I shall therefore acquaint you with their severall expositions and shall enlarge my thoughts in the amplifying of that which I doe apprehend in truth to be the meaning of the Apostle in these words First Some say that he cannot commit sin That is Non potest operam dare peceate He cannot make sin his work trade or employment and this is a truth The rode of prophanesse and wilfull sinning hath never been the way in the which the Saints have walked Their path is the path of purity and uprightnesse But this doth not seeme to be the meaning of the Spirit in this place For the Apostle doth not only say that he cannot commit sin but hee cannot sin Secondly Others say that he cannot commit sin as a servant of sin As though our Saviours words were a sufficient exposition of these Joh. 8.34 Whosoever committeth sinne is a servant of sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He doth not doe sin as his worke as a servant doth work by the appointment and commandement of his Master I question not the truth of this Sinne shall not have dominion where Christ is Lord and Master in the soule He taketh our soules in unto himselfe by conquest and will not suffer those who commanded us before his conquest to rule over us now he hath subdued them As a conquering King will not suffer conquered Rebels to command his Subjects But the Apostle doth not seeme to drive only at this because as it hath been observed he saith afterwards that he cannot sin Thirdly Some say that he cannot sinne because he cannot commit the unpardonable sin And these goe as far as the end of the Epistle for an exposition Chap. 5.17.18 All iniquity is sinne and there is a sinne not unto death Wee know that whosoever is borne of God sinneth not But hee that is borne of God keepeth himselfe and the wicked one toucheth him not Thus they affirme that he finneth not because hee sinneth not unto death This which they say is likewise an undenyable truth in it selfe but not all that the Apostle intendeth in these words Which will evidently appear if we look seriously upon the precedent words Where the Apostle doth set downe the Antithesis and opposition between the man borne of God and the naturall man And doth make this the characteristical difference between the man borne of God and the man of the Devill vers 6 7 8. That the one doth sinne and the other doth not sinne Every one that abideth in him sinneth not he that sinneth hath not known him or seene him And as no man will say that the difference in this place between the carnall and spirituall man is this That the one doth not commit the unpardonable sinne and the other doth For then this absurdity will necessarily follow that every carnall man doth commit the unpardonable sin For the Apostle saith that every carnal man is of the Devill and sinneth that is against the holy Ghost if we take their exposition So no man may affirme that this is the meaning of these words which are laid downe in way of opposition to the precedent that he that committeth not sin doth not commit the unpardonable sin for then this absurdity will follow that every man who committeth not the unpardonable sin is born of God And this is evident by the subsequent words where he saith vers 10. That in this the children of God and the children of the Devill are manifested To wit that the one doth not commit sin and the other doth commit sin Take the words according to their exposition and this is the sence of them In this the Saints and carnall men are distinguished that the Saints doe not commit the unpardonable sin and that all carnall men doe commit the unpardonable sin Of the absurdity of which tenet contrariety to Scripture and daily experience I leave the spirituall man a judge 4. Others say that he sinneth not That is in his justified state and condition he sinneth not Because he is free from sin and the condemnation of the Law And this is a truth likewise full of comfort and sweetnesse That the believer or man borne of God doth not sin in reference to justification Their meaning is that there is no sin from which a believer is not justified But the Apostle doth not speake only of this for he speaketh of his working of righteousnesse by love in this place and through the whole Epistle as well as of believing And of such workes which Saints are to doe by which they may be justified before men as these men doe grant themselves and therefore this is not to be taken so strictly in reference to our justification through faith only As these words do declare it sufficiently Every one that worketh not righteousnesse is not of God and hee that loveth not his brother vers 10. Doth he pray for such whom he thought were no where to be found or for all true Saints whom he did know did love the Lord Jesus in corruption Reply If they be considered as they ought to be done so they are not evill but as they be done by us So the holy Ghost is not affraid to call them menstruous rags even our very righteousnesse not our old man only Isa 64.6 from the better part And therefore the Scripture doth call us Saints or holy men Ephes 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because we are spiritually regenerated or made new creatures though much of the flesh doth remaine in the best of us And this I doe apprehend to be the meaning of God in this place So Cajetan upon the words Hee doth saith he understand it formally that is in as much as he is borne of God for our new creation from God doth not suffer us to sin Intelligit formaliter hoc est quatenus ex Deo natus Nativitas enim ex Deo non dat peccare So likewise that faithfull Martyr Tyndall speaketh in the opening of these words God and the Devill are two contrary Fathers two contrary fountaines two contrary causes the one of all goodnesse the other of all evill And they that doe evill are borne of the Devill and are first evill by that birth before they
love saith the Apostle He will remember the good works of men borne of God at the great day of judgement The good workes of some are manifest before-hand and they that are otherwise cannot be hid 1 Tim. 5.15 They cannot for ever be hid because God will make mention of them at that day But hee hath engaged himselfe by oath to remember our sins and sinfull actions Hebr. 8. And therefore the works of the spirituall man are not sin or sinfull Arg. 8. There is no law against the workes of a spirituall man or the fruits of the spirit of grace and therefore they are not sin because where there is no law there is no transgression But there is no law against these This is plain by that passage of the Apostle Gal. 5.22 The fruit of the spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse temperance against such there is no law Object They are here considered as they are precisely the fruits of the spirit and as they ought to be done by us and so they are no sins but consider them as acted by us even with the spirits assistance and so they are defective and sinfull Answ The Apostle doth not speake of the fruits of the spirit as Tully of his Oratour Plato of his Common-wealth Moor of his Utopia as of things no where to be found But be speaks of the spirit as in us and the fruits of it as in us And doth plainly tell us that if we are led by the spirit we are not under the law and that there is no law against the fruits of the spirit But I shall have occasion hereafter to speake more fully of some places where the Apostles and servants of God doe speak plainly of these works as done in us that so I may break the neck of this distinction which is made as a Catholicon or salve for every sore Arg. 9. God doth give a testimony concerning his Saints that they are righteous and holy which is spoken in reference to their spirituall nature and actings and therefore they are righteous and holy The judgment of God is according to truth hee being the God of truth Doth not God give this testimony of Job Job 1.1 That he was a perfect man and upright one that feared God and eschewed evill And though man may oppose this yet it feemeth by Gods speech to Sathan that the Devill could not contradict it Job 2.3 And the Lord said unto Sathan hast thou considered my servant Job that there is none like him in the earth a perfect man upright one that feareth God and escheweth evill Did any thing which was sin or sinful procure this honourable title to David that he was a man after Gods owne heart 1 Sam. 13.14 Doth not the Scripture of truth inform us concerning Zacharias and Elizabeth his wife that they were both righteous before God walking in all the Commandements of God blamelesse Luke 1.6 They did not onely walk in the great Commandement of God concerning faith for Justification but in all the Ordinances and Commandements of God Is not Lot called a just and righteous man who was vexed with the filthy conversation of the wicked 2 Pet. 2.7 And was his sinfull soule vexed with their evill deeds or his righteous soul speak in the language of Gods Word and ye must acknowledge that it was his righteous soule vers 8. God is not like unto some indulgent parents who by their fond indulgency doe account that to be a vertue which is the fault of their children and them to be vertuous who are vile God calleth nothing righteousnesse which is sin or sinfull Nor those to be perfect and upright which are not so indeed and therefore seeing God doth call his children righteous holy and perfect wee may not be affraid to call them so unlesse wee will be affraid to follow his judgment Object They were righteous before God by Justification and before men by holy walking Ans We deny not their justification before God by faith but with all we affirme that they were righteous before him by their holy walkings As these places doe sufficiently prove with others which we shall hereafter speak of Let us not delude ous soules to think that righteousnesse sanctification is to the eye of men only The purest sanctification of a Saint is not so visible to men as unto God Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this to visite the fatherlesse and Widowes in their affliction and to keepe himselfe unspotted from the world which will be further manifested by our next argument Arg. 10. Almighty God is a God of pure eyes who cannot behold any iniquity any sinfull thing or sin with an eye of approbation But this God who cannot approve what is sin and sinfull this God approveth and professeth that he is well pleased with the performances of his Saints therefore the performance of the Saints cannot be sin or sinfull The Apostle in Philip. 4.18 Professeth that the worke of the Philippians in sending to relieve his wants was an odour of a sweet smell a sacrifice acceptable well pleasing to God God hath pure eyes and pure nostrils and therefore if it had been sin or sinfull it could not have pleased his eye nor have beene an odour of a sweete smell unto his nostrills Object They are so but not in their owne nature Answ If they be not so in their own nature they are filthy and odious in their own nature and yet accepted by grace If one thing which is filthy and odious in its owne nature be accepted why should not other things which are filthy and odious in their owne nature be accepted for good workes If this can be made good Whoredome and Adultery will prove good works which hath been asserted by some who have said that the filthinesse of whoredome being done away the action is well-pleasing to Almighty God as well as any good work Arg. 11. One end and intention of God in electing of us was that he might make us holy that he might make us good trees to bring forth good fruit Though God doth not elect us because wee doe believe or because wee doe love yet hee hath elected us that wee may believe and that we may love So that wee frustrate one end that God hath in electing us if we doe not grant that God gives us a new nature and new hearts According to that of the Apostle 2 Thes 2 13. We are chosen unto salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth And in Eph 1.4 He hath chosen us in him that we should be holy and without blame before him in love Object We doe apprehend our election imperfectly which is the cause of the sinfulness of our works Answ By reason of that which is in the flesh we cannot so perfectly see our election as wee shall doe hereafter Yet in the spirit for the present we doe so fully apprehend it
formam et finem Arg. 4. Sanctification in the feare of God is alwayes perfecting whilest we live here in this life 2 Cor. 7.1 and therefore it is not perfected untill the life to come Answ Sanctification is said to be perfecting here in reference to that which is in the flesh which is to be put off that sanctificaiion may come in the place of it not in reference unto that which is already wrought as though that sanctification were not already perfect if we take perfection as it is opposed to that which is sinfull 2. It is said that our Saviour encreased in wisdome Luk. 2.52 will you say that his wisedome was sinfull at first because he did encrease and grow in it You may as well say so as conclude that our sanctification is sinne or sinfull because it doth grow or increase to a greater perfection Arg. 5. If our workes be in themselves perfect then might Paul have desired to have been found in them before God Answ I deny the consequence For these good workes are not wrought in us that they may be the cause or matter of our Justification and therefore Paul will not appeare before God in them for Justification But Paul and every true Saint being justified by faith without them doth dare to bring them in the presence of God as secondary evidences of Gods love to him According to that of John 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the Brethren hee that loveth not his brother abideth in death ver 19. And hereby wet know that we are of the truth and shall perswade our hearts before him Which you maintaining them to be sin and sinful doe not doe Arg. 6. If the new man doth not sinne then he is not the man who is pronounced to bee a blessed man Psal 32. Rom. 4. Answ This is a plaine fallacy You take the new man here physically whom wee take according to Scripture Spiritually and Theologically Justification to speak properly is neither of the new man nor old man but of the person in whom there is an old man and a new man And this man is justified from the sinnes of the old man by the work of the spirit in the new man which doth carry him to the grace of God in Jesus Christ Arg. 7. Pauls best workes were accounted by him but as drosse dung therfore they were not perfect Phil. 3. Answ 1. This may be very well understood of his workes done under the Law As the preceding words do seeme to hold it forth where he speaketh of his Jewish priviledges and Pharisaicall righteousnesse And secondly the words following will seem to carry it this way because hee saith that hee accounteth all things dung for the excellent knoweldg of Christ by which is evident that he speaketh of all things as they stand in opposition to the knowledge of Christ 3. This argument maketh nothing for you because you account this knowledge sinfull But let us take it as you do and an answer is presently at hand to wit that the Apostle doth not speake these words absolutely but comparatively They are all dung in comparison of Christ and in reference to their uselesnesse to justification Dung will as soone justifie a man from sin as that love which floweth from faith Arg. 8. This that the new man sinneth not doth in a very high measure if not altogether overthrow all the offices of Christ 1. His Kingly office as having none to rule not the old man for hee savoureth not thet hings of God he is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be not the new man for he needs not the government of Christ hee is already perfect and cannot sin 2. His Priestly office which is to make propitiation for the sins of those which shall be saved now the new man who only shal be saved never did nor could not commit any sinne 3. His Propheticall office For whom should he teach the new man needs not his teaching seeing he with all his works is already perfect and can be no otherwise The olde man is not capable of his teaching Answ I have already detected the fallaciousnesse of this argument in answering to the 6th Argument Yet give mee leave to prove in few words that this doctrine doth magnifie Christ in the glory of his spirituall offices First in his Kingly office the glory of a king doth lye in subduing his enemies And in this the glory of Christ considered as a King doth appeare that hee doth vanquish the enemies of us his Subjects by ruling in our hearts with his Scepter of righteousnesse According to that of the Psalmist that hee shall rule in the midst of his enemies By this wee see his regall power over the old man Again the glory of a King is wrapt up in the willing obedience of his Subjects and this is made good in the new man His people being made willing in the day of his power For what is here objected that the new man needs not the government of Christ It is as if one should say that a man doth make void and overthrow royall government because he maintaineth that the Kings Subjects are willingly obedient unto him But you say that they are perfect and therefore his government is needlesse The spirits of just men are made perfect Heb. 12. And will you therefore conclude that the government of Christ over them is needlesse But to passe this by 2. It will appeare that the Priestly office of Christ is not overthrown but established rather by this doctrine for first we hold that no man liveth as a new man who doth live under the guilt of sin and therefore by the eye of the new man wee are daily to looke upon Christ as a Priest in whom is no finne who by one offering hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10.14 Again the Priest was to offer up the sacrifices of the people for them and by this doctrine we establish Christ in his Priestly office which we could not do if we should say that there were nothing in us but what is sinne and sinfull in us The people were to bring something which was good to be offered up by the Priest to God The blinde lame and sicke were not to be offered unto God Mal. 1.8 Neither is that which we doe that is sin or sinfull offered up by Jesus Christ to the Father but that which is good And thus wee establish Christ in his Priestly office by affirming that there is something good in the new man which is the matter of acceptance 3. Wee doe not overthrow his Propheticall office by this truth For he doth daily teach us in the new man Whereas you say that he needs not his teaching wee say that the new man hath his dependance upon Christ for wisedome knowledg and understanding And as a burning Lampe doth daily stand in need of oyle to be powred into
fearing our rejoycing our praying If so then are we in this working either perfect or imperfect Agents If perfect agents then is there no ignorance in our understandings no depravation in our wills no perversenesse in our affections The contrary whereof all the truly faithfull find by experience and the Scripture abundantly testifieth But if we be imperfect agents then cannot perfection come out of imperfection no effect can be better than its cause Ans 1 The efficiency of the first cause doth not take away the efficiency of the second cause In God we live move yet it is not God that moveth he though he moveth all things cannot be moved himself immobilis movens omnia Aug. So it is not God that repenteth but we repent The ignorance of which truth hath been the cause of the wicked mistery of Familisme which my soule abhorreth And therefore we shall agree in the truth which is implicitely laid down in the first part of your Dilemma 2ly Whereas you say that all the faithfull grant that man is an imperfect agent I answer that if we take perfect here in this point as it is opposed to that which is sinfull so many Saints doe grant and all should and will as more light is beamed into their soules grant it that the sanctified and spiritual man considered as farre forth as he is a spirituall man doth work as a perfect Agent not as an unholy but an holy man And therefore according to your rule his action must be spirituall and holy And this may give an answer to that argument which is brought from Job Who can bring a cleane thing out of an uncleane Job 14.4 3ly Whereas you say that no effect can be better than its cause c. This is not universally true A man imperfect by the want of his armes or legs may beget a childe which is perfect and hath its limbs But this not being much to the purpose I shall not contend about it Arg. 12. If the new man never sin Christ came not to save the new man for he came only to save sinners Answ The new man taken in this spirituall and theologicoll sence is not the object of salvation but an elect person guilty and sinfull in himselfe And the new creation is a blessed consequent of our redemption by Christ but I have sufficiently answered this before Arg. 13. That which is not in its owne nature agreeable to the holy law of God is not perfect and without sin for sin is the transgression or disagreement with the law of God 1 John 3.4 But the best of a regenerate mans actions are not agreeable to the law of God being not done with all the heart with all the soule with all the understanding and with all the strength Mat. 22.37 Deut. 6.5 Ans 1. By this argument you would bring the spirituall man to judge himselfe by the law or old covenant but hee is better taught by the Spirit And as hee doth not put his person under the old covenant so doth he not judge his actions by the old covenant but by the new covenant of grace According to that of the Apostle Gal. 5.18 If ye are led by the Spirit ye are not under the law And thus looking upon what is wrought by the Spirit under the new covenant he seeth it in its own nature agreeable to the law as it is delivered unto him in the hand of the Lord Jesus Not that Christ doth require lesse holinesse than is required in the old covenant but because he giveth us more grace enabling us to keepe his Commandements by the keeping of which we known in the light of the Spirit that we truly know him And the Commandements of Christ are kept by the Saints Evangelically two manner of wayes 1. By believing for justification 2. By holy walking for sanctification not that we can keep them by holy walking but as we walk in the light of our justification And thus he is as well able to keep the commandement of love as the commandement of faith Suppose a King should pardon a Traytor and should give him an assurance of pardon for all future Treason which he might run into and had power to enable him in some things and sometimes to be obedient unto him as a loyall Subject would you not say that this Subject were a loyall Subject all his trayterous acts forgiven and his loyall obedience to the command of his Soveraigne being accepted Thus it is between God and us He forgiveth all the treasons of the flesh and accepteth of the obedience of the spirit God doth account that all the commands of the Law are fulfilled by us when that which is not done is pardoned Omnia tunc facta deputantur cum id quod non fit ignoscitur which is true in a sense in reference to sanctification as well as to justification And a spirituall man thus looking upon himselfe in the glasse of the covenant of grace doth know that he is a keeper of the Commandements of God and can say with the Psalmist Ps 119.10 With my whole heart I have sought thee O let me not wander from thy Commandements All his defects and imperfections with the committing of evil and omitting good in the flesh are done away and that which is good is accounted so by the law of God as it is presented unto him in this Covenant So speake ye and so doe as they that shall be judged by the law of liberty saith James Jam. 2.12 As God doth judge our persons by the law of liberty or the law of the new Covenant so he doth judg our actions and thus they are perfect And the law of the new Covenant is not only faith for justification but love for sanctification And thus this place is expounded by the learned Paraeus Arg. 14. Paul did not think himself to have fully apprehended or to be already perfect but strove forward Phil. 3.12 13. which cannot be said of the olde man but only of the new man for the old man doth not strive forward for the prize of the high calling Answ Though Paul had not attained to that perfection which he looked for at the resurrection Yet hee had attained to a perfection of parts which is opposed to sinfulnesse Which doth appear by what followeth in the 15. vers of the same Chap. where he doth acknowledg the Saints in this sence to be perfect with which verse I shall put a period to my answers to your objections As many as be perfect be thus minded if in any thing ye be otherwise minded God shall reveale even this unto you Vse 2. The lessons which God hath taught me from these meditations have beene very powerfull by his grace for the convincing mee of sin in a Gospel-way and for the humbling of my soule under his mighty hand by seeing the huge masse of corruption which is in the flesh that little quantity of pure gold which is in the Spirit It
folly and curiosity of my nature I have beene tempted to reach forth my hand unto it I have rune over the bogges of Familisme but have not beene swallowed up in them Yet that I may not be mistaken in this relation notwithstanding all this By the grace of God I am what I am And though the world hath looked upon mee as an Heretique I have seene my selfe so fast in the armes of God that I am confident that neither men Devills Errours sinnes nor temptations shall ever be able to pull mee thence I have beene dead by the law to the law and am alive by the Gospell I have ceased from works and yet am created to good workes I am not under the Law and yet in my minde I serve the Law of GOD. I can doe nothing and yet can doe all things in CHRIST which strengthneth me And though I can doe all things I am an unprofitable servant I care not much what men can say of mee seeing GOD doth daily assure mee in the Spirit of Christ that I am his Sonne It doth not too much afflict mee if any men refuse to have fellowship with mee as a SAINT seeing I have fellowship with the Father and his Sonne JESVS and thy selfe and have liberty in my Conscience to have fellowship with all SAINTS My greatest sorrow and most delightfull griefe at this present is this That I am not more holy being so strongly assured by truth that I am happy I hope that thou wilt further this worke of purity in mee by thy spirituall prayers presented to the Throne of our FATHERS grace for mee where I doe desire that thou wouldst know mee one with thy selfe being one SPIRIT with JESVS though I cannot but subscribe my selfe The greatest of SINNERS and lesse then then the least of all SAINTS John Simpson TO The two and fifty Parish-Ministers within the new Province of London who have subscribed unto that Pamphlet which is wickedly and unjustly called by them A Testimonie to the truth of Jesus Christ and to our solemn League and Covenant SIRS WHen I reade your un-scripture-like termes which you make use of in presenting your new modalled Government to the world as the government of Jesus Christ I wonder with what faces in these times of light ye should dare to hold it forth as the unquestionable government of CHRIST by divine right and should so uncharitably censure all men as Schismaticks or superstitious persons who doe expresse their dislike of it or refuse to be conformable unto the same Not to runne farre for an instance of one of these termes It seemeth that the strange and hidden vertue of your Presbyterian-government hath suddenly turned our famous Citie into a Province and made you Ministers of this Presbyterian Province Did ever CHRIST or his Apostles turne free Cites or Countreyes into Provinces by bringing in any Ecclesiasticall government upon those who were converted to the faith What is any Province to speake properly but a Region or Countrey subdued by force of Armes and kept under jurisdiction by a Lieutenant sent thither with Commission to governe as the Schoole-boyes know very well who know the meaning of that phrase in Caesare Commentaries in provinciam redigere To turne such a free Countrey into a Province to the Romans I know that it is the designe of some to turne our Shires and Countreyes into Provinces and to wrest power from the Civill Magistrate by which they may set up their Lieutenants to enslave the Magistrates and all the people of the Kingdome to their Preabyterian Command and Dominion But I cannot yet remember when London was turned into a Province unlesse some of you did secretly and cunningly contrive the plot with some of the Armie that the Armie should march throughout the Citie for the bringing of LONDON into the condition of a Presbyterian Province Friends finde words in Scripture for your government by Parochiall and Classicall Presbyteriall Provinciall and National Assemblies or else the people of England will not believe that your government is by divine right untill you shall make Captaines over them and inforce them to returne againe into Aegypt Where this shall he all the liberty of the King Princes Nobles Parliament and people of England to believe that every thing is schisme or Heresie which doth oppose that as er●rour which the children of the Adulterer and Whore I mean the sonnes and posterity of the Pope and Popish Bishops shall enjoyne thonto receive as the truths of the Lord Jesus But I touch now upon an unpleasing string I shall therefore leave it with a sad Aposiopesis and shall entreate you seriously to consider some things which I shall acquaint you with in relation to my selfe and your dealing with mee willingly acquitting those among you and as farre as I may who having subscribed to those Articles against mee and yet never read or heard of my name in the Booke Among whom Master Downham doth acknowledge himselfe to be one who doth professe that if hee had seene mee there among the impeached Delinquents and Heretiques that he would rather for what he hath heard and known of me have pleaded my excuse then have subscribed to my censure And shall leave it to your selves to enquire among your selves concerning the miscarriage in this particular In the first place I doe suppose that some of you upon mature deliberation may apprehend that you have beene too rash in censuring mee upon Master Gatakers testimonie if it shall appeare unto you that I was freed by Master Marshall whom I name in thankefulnesse unto him for his love unto mee and to let men know that I have found more of the Spirit of Christ sincerity and love in him then in any who have beene favourers of the Presbyterian government To shew my willingnesse and readinesse to free my selfe from misapprehensions which men had entertained concerning those things which I held I did voluntarily goe unto him and discoursed with him concerning my judgement in the things with which I had beene charged who did receive such f●ll satisfaction from mee that upon my request bee was willing to write unto Master White the Chaire-man that though I did differ from him in my phrases and expressions concerning the Law Justification and free grace yet that I held nothing but what was maintained by many godly and faithfull men concerning those points And this was done many months before Master Gataker did fling his fire-brands at me to charge me with those things in which in his judgement I had cleared my selfe And lest any should make nothing of this uncharitably supposing that I might hold one thing in my heart and write another thing to him I am willing if he please that he shall Print what I delivered unto him and make it publique If this be considered by men of tender consciences if that character of a good man be not odious unto you some of you who knew of this may read your maliciousnesse
away from grace and thus some have been too bold with me in this particular And when I have proved the law to be uselesse unto us in many particulars they have concluded that I did totally deny the use of the Law which hath been the ground of this groundlesse aspersion unto which I think it needlesse to give any larger answer Concerning the 3. other branches in this Article to wit that it is no rule for a Christian to walk by nor to examine his life by and that Christians are freee from the mandatory power of it I can either affirm or deny them all I doe acknowledge that in a sence we may be said to be under the rule and power of the Law and in a sence it is true that we are not under the rule and power of it which if it be well weighed by the ballance of right reason whether these who have charged me with this not stateing the question as I did when I delivered my judgment and suppressing my meaning in their Article may be justified in this action I leave it to any man truly rationall and unprejudiced concerning me yea to themselves when God shall awaken their consciences to judge Wherefore that the truth of God and my meaning may be more evident I shall present to the view of the Reader the distinctions which I made use of in the handling of this controversie The first distinction is this that the Law may be considered as delivered in Sinai Sion Gal. 4.24 As the covenant of Sinai or as a part of the covenant of Sion Isa 2.3 For out of Zion shall goe forth the Law and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem 2ly As 1. delivered by the hand of Moses 2. by the hand of Christ And though this distinction hath beene branded by some of the learned Teachers of our times in their Pulpits and Presses with the infamous mark of Antinomianisme yet I doe not doubt but that I shall easily prove it to be a Scripture distinction This is the meaning of that speech of John Joh. 1.17 The law was given by Moses but grace truth came by Jesus Christ By Moses that is by the hand of Moses As it is plain by Lev. 26.46 These are the laws which the Lord made between him and the Children of Israel in mount Sinai by the hand of Moses So grace and truth is given by the hand of Jesus Christ Christ is stiled the Mediator of the better Covenant Heb. 8.6 And as he is the Mediator of this better Covenant he doth give the law to the Saints by his hand in this Covenant This distinction is frequently used by Zanchius 4. Tom. operum delege Translata est lex a Mose ad Christum e manu Mosis in manum Christi veri mediatoris sicut et sacerdotium ab Aarone ad Christum verum aeternumque Pontificem translatum est Translato autem sacerdotio necesse est inquit Apostolus ut et legis translatio fiat The law saith hee is translated from Moses to Christ out of the hand of Moses into the hand of Christ the true Mediator as the Priest-hood is translated from Aaron to Christ the true and eternall high Priest For the Priest-hood being changed it is needfull saith the Apostle that there be a change of the Law And in the same booke he hath afterward these words Dicimus legem quatenus fuit in manu Mosis abrogatam jam esse per Christum fidelibus sed quatenus jam est in manu Christi confirmatam esse constabilitam We say that the Law as it was in the hand of Moses is now abrogated to believers by Christ but as it is in the hand of Christ it is confirmed and established Brethren give mee an answer in the spirit of love and meekenesse to this question why should you censure me to be an Antinomian for makeing use of this distinction seeing ye account Zanchius to be a sound and orthodox writer who maintaineth the same thing Having premised these distinctions I shall answer plainly to these severall branches and not be affraid to owne what I have delivered because I am still confident that it is the truth of Christ 1. The law as delivered by Moses is not the rule by which a believing Christian doth walk but as it is delivered unto him in the covenant of grace by the hand of the Lord Jesus I shall prove this by this argument A covenant of works is not the rule by which a believing Christian doth walk The law as delivered in Sinai by the hand of Moses is a Covenant of works Therefore the law as delivered in Sinai by the hand of Moses is not a rule by which a believing Christian doth walk I doe suppose that you will not deny the major proposition You will not say that a covenant of workes is the rule of a Christian for then a Christian should worke that hee might live whereas a true Christian doth work because he doth live and hath life without works If ye shall deny the minor or second proposition I shall prove it by these reasons which are drawn from Scripture Reas 1. The Apostle doth frequently oppose the righteousnesse of the law and the law to the righteousnesse of grace the covenant of grace which hee could not doe if the law were a covenant of grace 1. Hee opposeth the righteousnesse of the Law and Gospel Rom. 10.5.6 Moses describeth the righteousness which is of the Law that the man which doth those things shall live by them But the Gospel-righteousnesse is the righteousnesse of faith vers 6. Observe the Apostles words well he doth not say that the Law requireth doing and working for justification according to the false glosses and interpretations of the Pharisees as some Writers of late with the Papists of old have asserted But Moses describeth the righteousnesse of the law so 2 ly He opposeth the law and the Covenant of grace Rom. 6.14 Sin shall not have dominion over you because ye are not under the law but under grace What sence can you make of these words if ye shall assert the law to be a covenant of grace for then this will be the meaning of the words Sinne shall not have dominion over you because ye are not under the law or covenant of grace but under grace Reas 2. The Apostle doth affirme that no flesh shall be justified by the law because by the law is the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3.20 But if the law were a covenant of grace a man might be justified by it And therefore I conclude that it is not a covenant of grace Reas 3. The Apostle affirmeth that if righteousnessE come by the law then Christ is dead in vaine And shall wee say that that is the covenant of grace by which righteousnesse cannot come unto us Reas 4. The Apostle plainly saith that the law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them Gal. 3.12
the whole law Cum sophista intelligit legem abrogari eamque ceremonialem tu potius intellige Paulum quemlibet Christianum universae legi abrogari Simplicitur mortuus sum legi hoc est nihil plane commercij est mihi cum lege Luth. I am dead to the law that is I have nothing to doe with the law Est autem mori legi lege non tencri sed liberum esse a lege et nescire eam To be dead unto the law is not to be held by the law but to be free from the law and not to know it Reas 4. If we preach consolation and doe exhort people to expect comfort from God we may bid them put away the law and their confidence of expecting comfort by it The law worketh wrath Rom. 7. and therefore it doth not worke joy The spirit of joy is not received by the workes of the law but by the hearing of faith We receive the promise of the spirit through faith Gal. 3.14 Res 5. Though the law requireth holiness yet it doth not make us holy A man that will be truely fanctified must not live under the Law but under the Gospel This is the argument of the Apostle Rom. 6.14 Sinne shall not have dominion over you because ye are not under the law but under grace Must not the law in some sense be put away that we may not be under it Let my arguments be well weighed and I am contented to be censured In the meane while I shall comfort my selfe in this that I am not the first of Saints who have been reproached and persecuted as an enemy to the law The false witnesses which were set up against the Proto-martyr Stephen did bring in this against him that he spake blasphemous words against the law Acts 6.13 And it is probable that some such thing was charged upon Paul by the Jewes as we may gather by his defence for himselfe before Festus where he professeth that hee had not offended against the law of the Jewes Acts 25.8 His proposing and clearing objections so frequently in his Epistles when he speaketh of the Law and Gospel lest hee should be traduced as an enemie to the law doth sufficiently prove what was in the hearts and tongues of men who were opposers of that doctrine of free grace which he preached I shall shut up my reply to this Artitle with the words of this chosen Vessell spoken by him in the like case Acts 24.14 This I confesse that after the way which they call heresie so worship I the God of my Fathers believing all things which are written in the law and the Prophets Sect. 3. The next Article which the Subscribers doe bring against me as matter of errour which they have received from the penne of the same witnesse is that horrid speech of mine as they were pleased to call it The law cuts off a mans legs and then bids him walke Reply When these Articles were brought against me it being demanded of me whether I would owne them as my tenents and opinions I doe well remember that I gave them this answer after I had read them over That I had made use of some phrases and expressions which were in that paper and that some things which were therein being understood in a right sense sano sensu might passe for the blessed truths of the Lord Jesus But as they lay in the paper which was given unto me so I did not own them as my tenents and opinions because those things which were in my Sermons and discourses which held forth light for the understanding of them were not conjoyned with them in that paper And that answer may more especially reach these particular words I am not ashamed to acknowledge that in a Sermon I did make use of these expressions speaking of the impossibility of our fulfilling the law for justification the irritating power of the law by which sinne is stirred up in us we by accident being made worse by it and while the law commandeth men who are under it to yeild personall and perfect obedience unto it though it giveth us no power to doe what it commandeth us And I doe not doubt but in the strength of grace I shall free the expressions from that horridnesse which the Subscribers following Mr. Gataker have put upon it or else I shall willingly acknowledg that it was a rash inconsiderate yea horrid expression which fell from me But before I come to defend the innocency of the expression I cannot but stand still a little and pause upon it wondering that so many men who by their profession are tyed and engaged to the study of the Scriptures should be so little acquainted with the language of the Scriptures that they should not be able to remember one Scripture expression among so many which are like unto it to free it from that horridnesse which they would put upon it Friends consider what you doe If ye censure my expressions as horrid which the holy Spirit will justifie by the like expressions of his owne in Scripture take heed that ye doe not censure the Spirit as well as me and strike at the truth through my sides It is the speech of Plutark The thick clouds do often darken the Sun and the cloud of passions the light of reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And thus I am apt to think it is with you Your passions certainly are high or else how could you be so low in your reasons so unadvisedly to condemn that as an horrid speech which by warrant from Scripture I shall prove to be harmlesse But in the first place let us enquire where this horridnesse doth lie I am ready to believe that ye are not such enemies to the law to assert the latter part of the speech hath any thing horrid in it Yee will not say that it is horrid to say that the law bids men to walke The horrid treason then of the speech must lye in the former part of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have found I have found out the horridnesse of it It is horrid to affirme that the law doth cut off a mans legges Let us bring it to the bar of truth to be tryed and if it cannot bring speeches in Scripture like unto it where the Apostle is speaking of the same points which I handled when I delivered it let it be stil branded with the hot iron of the Subscribers and passe for an horrid errour 1. Let us compare this speech with that of Paul 2 Cor. 3.6 The letter ki●●eth Which Expositors with one consent uno ore doe expound to be meant of the law and which the words following of the Apostle do so plainely prove that it is bootlesse and in vaine for any man to deny it wee shall take it therefore for granted That the law killeth and this is Pauls or rather Gods assertion who gave this law Now let the indifferent Reader judge whether it be more horrid to say
that the law killeth a man or cutteth off his legs Friends I am perswaded that some of you have experimentally found as I have done that the law killeth And when ye were slaine and killed by the law were you freed presently from the mandatory power of it I am perswaded that some of you can professe in truth with mee that ye were not The law then did command you to doe and walke What horridnesse is there more in this if I may make the comparison to affirme that the law cutteth off a mans legs and then biddeth him to walke then in this To affirme that the law killeth a man doth yet bid him to doe it and walke Object But some may say that Paul saith that the letter killeth because it giveth not strength to fulfill it Litera occidit nempe quia non consert vires ad praestandum Answ I spake it in this sense too and is it not lawfull for me to imitate Pauls expressions Unlesse the ignorant world must be made to believe that my speeches and exclamations are horrid and blasphemous I might multiply arguments from this Chapter if I should runne over all the expressions of the Apostle especially these where he calleth the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A ministration of death a ministration of condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a thing to be abolished or abolished and done away And whatsoever is spoken by any of the godly for the making good of these expressions I might make use of the same for the justifying of mine seeing I spake them in the same manner as Paul did But that it may appeare that I speake not this for the reproaching of you but the vindicating of wronged abused truth and knowing that a word is sufficient to a wise man when a thousand stripes will not enter into a foole I shall not insult over your weakenesse but rather cover it as farre as I may without injury to the truth Let mee only leave this word to your consideration which in this place is very seasonable to wit That it is the mind of God that we should be as favourable in interpreting the expressions of spirituall men in their writings and speakings now as in interpreting the expressions of those spirituall men who are now with the Lord knowing that they both speak by the same spirit which spirit doth retain his liberty to speake in us as it did in them 2. Compare this speech with that of the Apostle Rom. 7.5 The motions of sinne which were by the law which will sound as harsh as to affirme that the law doth cut off the legs of sinners But if some say this is only occasionally and accidentally men running the more into sinne by how much the more they are forbidden to commit sinne According to that of the Poet. Tendimus in vetitum wee have a tendency in us to that which is forbidden I answer that the same exposition will sufficiently qualifie my speech to take away from it the least appearance of evill The law doth cut off a mans legs occasionally and accidentally A man by reason of the corruption which is in him findeth by experience that he is of lesse strength to run in the wayes of God the more he doth endeavour to get strength by the law of workes Musculus compareth it in this respect to a chaste Matron in a Brothel-house which by her good advice doth prove an occasion to some impudent whores to be more bold and shamelesse in their impiety Had the spirit of love without which wee are nothing taught you something concerning this speech you would have been favourable in interpreting it and not rigidly censorious in condemning it Oh that you who seeme to he zealous for the law would consider that this commandement to wit that we should love our neighhour as our selves is one of the great Commandements upon which all the Law and Prophets doe hang Mat. 22.40 And then how would you dare to be so rigid and uncharitable in your censuring of your Brethren If indeed you have received the law from Moses may I not say as my Saviour did to the Jewes John 7.19 Did not Moses give you the law and yet none of you keepeth it And then remember what the Apostle saith Rom. 2.13 That not the hearers or preachers of the law are just before God but the doers of the law shall be justified Brethren I am not such an enemie to the law but I can with freedome of spirit make use of that pertinent portion of Scripture unto you Jam. 2.8 9. If yee fulfill the royall law according to the Scripture Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe yee doe well But if ye have respect to persons in your censuring judging them And the same thing in effect delivered by one man shall be accounted sound by you and shall be a horrid error if delivered by another man ye commit since and are convinced of the law as transgressors 3 dly Looke seriously upon those words of Paul Rom. 5.20 The law was given that the offence might abound And then tell me whether there be not the same figure in my expression which is in Pauls And why may I not make use of a figurative expression as well as Paul expounding my meaning more plainly afterwards as he doth which I also did in my discourse Calvin saith that by these words Paul doth simply signifie the encreasing of the knowledge and pervicacy Designatur hic simpliciter incrementum notitiae et pervicaciae And another saith that it it said that it aboundeth by the law because it aboundeth in our knowledge of it ut abundare agnoscetur And will not this which is usually spoken upon this place by Expositors make our speech passeable too And as Paul saith that the Commandement which was to life he found to be unto death Rom. 7.10 So may not I say that the law which was for holy walking I found to cut off my legs because being under it I was no more able to walke in the way of it than a man is able to walke without legs I leave it to the spirituall man who judgeth all things 1 Cor. 2.15 to judge of this thing betweene us And that you may not any farther to the dishonour of God and your profession the prejudicing of the worke of the Lord in my Ministery vent forth slanders and reproachas against me I do professe that I am not conscious to my selfe of denying the use of the law in any way in which it is held forth in the new Testament But know that the law is good if a man use it lawfully Knowing this that the law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawlesse disobedient for the ungodly and for sinners for the unholy and prophane for murtherers of fathers and for man-slayers for whoremongers for perjured persons and lyars and if there be any other thing that is contrary to sound
doctrine 1 Tim. 1.9 10. And am likewise perswaded that he who loveth Christ will keepe his Commandements John 14.15 and Phil. 4.8 will follow things honest pure lovely and of a good report in the Spirit desiring holinesse as well as happinesse by Christ and as much longing to be in Heaven because it is a place of holinesse as because it is a place of glory and happinesse And am also confident that if we speake with the tongues of Angels and have all faith so that we could remove mountaines by the name of Christ and have not that faith which worketh by love it will not advantage us at all for our Justification Salvation before that God who doth justifie us without love To whose grace alone let salvation be ascribed for ever Amen Section 4. MAster Gatakers fourth Article unto which he is brought in as a witnesse by the Subscribers in the 17 th page of their booke is this That God doth not chastise any of his children for sinne nor is it for the sins of Gods people that the Land is punished Some few weekes for want of experimentall knowledge I was a little clouded in my spirit concerning the doctrine of affliction And though God did shine into my soule at that time to give me a wonderfull light concerning the doctrine of free grace yet I had not such a cleer and truely spirituall knowledge of this point as God did afterwards in the houre of tryall temptation and affliction give unto me But though there was some hay and stubble in mee in this particular and some mis-apprehensions concerning a place or two of Scripture which I have publiquely to my shame Gods glory acknowledged though my mistake was never charged upon me by my accusers yet in my darkest and most cloudy discourses I held forth enough to charitable and loving hearers to free me from this charge and more fully to informe them of the difference between legall punishments and fatherly chastisements I then did preach that afflictions were Gods fornace in which he did take away that drosse out of our lives and conversations which he had taken away before by his grace through faith in our Justification And afterward while I yet continued my preaching at Algate before I was ejected from thence by the potency and prevalency of my oppposers in the Citie that I may speake favourably of them To satisfie those whom I did conceive did mis-apprehend me I did speak from those words of our Saviour Rev. 3. As many as I love I rebuke and chasten be zealous therefore and amend In the handling of which words for the better clearing of my meaning I took liberty to handle two propositions seemingly contradictory First That God doth not chastise his people for sin or from sin 2 dly That God doth chastise his people for sinue and from sin And this was the reason of my action Not long before this I had preached that God doth not punish his justified people for sinne From whence some concluded that I denied fatherly chastisements to be for sin Wherefore that it might appear unto them that they had not drawn good consequences from my premises I proved that these two Propositions seemingly contradictory might stand well together as two blessed truths of the Lord Jesus which thing I can prove by many witnesses and by some who did take the same Sermons verbatim in short-hand And I shall observe the same method in clearing of this thing which is here charged upon me for my reproach And that my meaning may more plainely appear this Article having two branches in it I shal speak of them severally The first branch is That God doth not chastise any of his children for sin The word which I did usually make use of was punish and not chastise But if the word be taken in a large sence as sometimes it is in Scripture in which it signifieth as much as a legall punishment properly so called according to Isaiah's acception of it Isa 53. The chastisement of our peace is upon him I am willing to let it passe and in this sence hold it for a truth That God doth not punish or chastise his people for sin which I shall further briefly prove for the satisfaction of the Reader by these arguments Arg. 1. The chastisements or legall punishments due unto us for our sins cannot be laid upon us which are laid upon Jesus Christ for us But these chastisements or legall punishments due unto us for our sins are laid upon Jesus Christ and therefore they cannot be laid upon us The first proposition is evident because Justice doth not twice require satisfaction for the same fault as the learned Davenant doth well prove it against the Papists in his determinations Upon this position that the sinne being forgiven the punishment is also forgiven Remissâ culpâ remittitur paena where he affirmeth that if God should punish sin after it is pardodoned he should not exercise an act of Justice but severity or his absolute power Is non justitiae sed saevitiae aut saltem absolutae potentiae actum exerceret The second proposition is plainly proved by Isa 53.4.5 Arg. 2. God hath sworn that he will not be wroth with us or rebuke us Isa 54.9 And therefore hee doth not punish us with a legall punishment For a legall punishment or chastisement is an effect of his wrath Arg. 3. When God doth remember sin no more he doth not punish sin with a legall punishment properly so called But God doth not remember our sins any more Jer 31. Heb. 8. And therefore he doth not punish us with any legall punishment properly so called Arg. 4. God doth not punish us for those sins from which we are cleansed and purged by grace But we are purged and cleansed from our sinnes by grace 1 John 1.7 Heb. 1.3 Apoc. 1.5 And therefore we are not punished for our sinnes Arg. 5. Believers when they are without fault blame and reproofe in the sight of God cannot be punished with any legall punishment But Believers are without fault blame and reproofe in the sight of God Col. 1.22 And therefore they cannot be punished with any legall punishment Arg. 6. Beleivers cannot be punished by God in his justice as under the law when nothing can be charged upon them But nothing can be charged upon them Rom. 8.33 Therefore they cannot be punished by the justice of God as under the law Arg. 7. When God is fully appeased and satisfied for the sins of believers by the sacrifice of the death of Christ he cannot then punish them with any legall chastisement properly so called But God is fully appeased and satisfied for the sins of believers by the sacrifice of the death of Christ Rom. 3.25 And therefore they cannot be punished with any legal punishment properly so called Arg. 8. They for whom Christ is made a curse and hath freed from the curse of the law are not lyable to any punishment as a
Devill If it were in our power God should not reigne and be King in the world but the Devill This is in the heart of wicked flesh it brings forth nothing else it loves it self and the devill but hates loaths and abhorres God and had rather that the Devill should sit on the throne then God the Father and the Lambe at his right hand So that a man being unable to obey the Law of God God cannot justifie him by his Law but must pronounce him a rebell for sin is rebellion and spirituall high treason against God In Ezek. 2. when God sent the Prophet to teach the people he tells him what people he should meet with he saith they were such as would not heare him such as would sleight him and would not indure to heare sound and good doctrine and calleth them rebells And he said unto me Son of man I send thee to the children of Israel to a rebellious Nation that have rebelled against me even to this very day You see sinne is called rebellion in the Word of God But some will say certainly I was never such a rebell as you make me I apprehend not that I ever hated God in such a manner Answ If thou dost not see how thou abhorrest God and how in the flesh thou lovest the Devill more then God thou hast not to this day a sight of the just and pure will of God For it is not enough that thou abstaine from grosse sins and prophanenesse that makes a man scandalous to the eye of the world but thou must abstaine from every sin from every vaine thought or else the Law will passe the sentence of condemnation on thee as a rebell If it were possible that a man could so live on earth that he should never dishonour God in any action that he should never dishonour God by any word of his mouth but all his words should be to the glory of that God that made him and to the glory of that wisdome of the Father by which he made all things yet if this man should have but a sinfull ungodly rising in his heart against God the Law would take no notice of all the good deeds of this man all the good words that he hath spoken to the glory of God but the Law would condemne him for that sinfull thought in his spirit Therefore you shall finde that not onely sinfull words and actions are called trayterous words and rebellious actions in Scripture but evill thoughts concerning God are treason against God the Law of God reacheth the heart spirit of a man so that if there be a sinfull thought the spirituall and holy Law of God condemnes a man as a rebell for that thought Jer. 5.23 This people hath a revolting and rebellious heart The Law doth not condemne a man onely for rebellion in words and actions but for rebellion in the heart It is not enough for us outwardly to conform to what the Law requires but we must have obedient hearts if there be any rebellion in the heart we are condemned as though wee had sinned against God in words and actions The Law doth not only condemn a man for adultery by which he defiles his neighbours wife A man may be an adulterer and yet an Eunuch if a man have but an adulterous glance with his eye at the sight of a woman if he have but a sinfull thought arising in his heart the glorious Law of God thunders in the face of that man and lightens in the countenance of that man and will utterly destroy him for his sin The Law is like the Priest and Levite Luk. 10. that past by the man which was robbed and wounded by theeves It is Christ alone who powreth in the oyle of his Gospel into the wounds of sinners for to heale and refresh them The Law rightly and spiritually understood is a Ministery of death Languorem ostendi non aufert Aug. It is the Gospel which is the Ministery of life and salvation And if we thus look upon the Law of God rightly understand it it is cleare and evident that there was never any man that loved God Sin is a hatred of God so many sins as thou committest so much hatred of God thou discoverest Our love is shewed by keeping the Commandements of God so by breaking the commandements of God we discover and manifest that hatred that is in us against the most holy God So that if you consider this that you never loved God yet you cannot comfort your selves in your love to God but must abase your selves for your neglecting of the doctrine of justification When God shall give you light to see himself and his Son you will find that that which you call love to God in your blind ignorance is hatred of God and rebellion against him Secondly Consider that there is no man that ever loved his neighbour as he ought The Law of nature and the written Law of God require that every man should doe to others as he would that they should do to him But there was never any man that did so If it were possible for a man to live so as that he should never wrong his neighbour or his brother by any unjust action or by any word spoken against his brother But where is the man that can stand forth and truly affirme it yet he may be charged by the Law if he hath had any evil thoughts against him in his heart For the Law is spirituall the Law reacheth the heart and the Law will condemne this man as a man that hates his brother for the Law takes notice of this in this particular As you shall find Zech. 7.10 Oppresse not the widdow nor the fatherlesse nor the poore and let none of you imagine evill in your hearts against his brother The Law forbids imagining evill against our brother in our hearts So that if once in all the dayes of thy life thou hast had but one uncharitable thought of any man when thou hadst no ground at all for it thou hast imagined evill in thy heart against thy brother and art a transgressor of the Law for thou walkest contrary to thy rule and light I appeale to thee wouldest thou have a man think evill of thee when he hath no just cause Thou wilt say I would have no man thinke evill of me or harbour an uncharitable thought in his breast against me so then if thou have an uncharitable rising in thy spirit against any man or woman in the world thou comest short of the righteousnesse holinesse and perfection of the Law and so there is no salvation for thee by the Law If a man consider what the Law is he shall find no comfort in the world by looking upon himselfe and his best performances in the glasse of the Law but he shall find that all have sinned are haters of God fighters against God haters of his children and enemies to their neighbours That as Christ said to
the world but that hee was a Saviour to them Thus Paul preached to the keeper of the prison Act. 16.31 Beleeve on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved and thy house As when they preached the doctrine of repentance or changednesse of the mind their meaning was that every man ought to be changed so when they urge beleeving for salvation their meaning is that wee should beleeve for our owne salvation in particular The generall truth of faith and repentance is to beleeve by a power enabling us in particular for our selves to beleeve and repent Lastly We are saved through faith Because by faith we heare the inward word of salvation The word which soundeth to the outward eare without this inward word bringeth no salvation As the Philosopher told him who reprehended him for publishing and divulging a booke of philosophy that he had published it and he had not published it his meaning was this that it was so darke and mysticall that though it were published yet it was not published to the ignorant and unlearned so the Gospel in the letter is published to men and not published they heare and doe not heare they see and doe not see But by faith wee so heare that our soules live by hearing Isa 55.3 The dead saith our Saviour shall heare the voyce of the Sonne of God and they that heare shall live Fidei oculi sunt spiritus per quem spiritualia videntur Cypr The Spirit is an eye to a beleeving man by which he seeth and enjoyeth spirituall things wee receive not the Spirit by hearing the Law or doing the workes of the Law but by the hearing of faith Gal. 3.2 Eternall life and Salvation is by hearing the inward word of life salvation and grace God bids the Prophet Ezech 38.5 to prophesie over the drie bones that they might live The Lord Jesus is the great invisible Prophet who prophesieth over drie bones and dead-hearted sinners and by hearing inwardly the inward word of this Prophet they live in hearing and believing And therefore it is said that wee are saved by faith Having by these particulars acquainted you with my Judgement concerning our salvation through faith I shall now by the same assistance of Gods grace draw some usefull conclusions from the premises and so put a period to my discourse for the present First this doth discover unto us the usefulnesse and excellency of the unfained faith of the elect As Noah was preserved from the destruction which came upon the old world by going for his safety into the Arke so by the foot of faith wee walke into our Arke Christ Jesus for the Salvation of our soules The world of sin is a dismall wildernesse full of fierie Serpents by faith we eye Jesus Christ as our brasen Serpent and set footing in the heavenly Canaan of gods grace while the sinfull Sodome of the world is destroyed with the raine of fire and brimstone by faith like Righteous Lot wee escape out of it when with Peter wee are readie to sinke and perish in the Sea of sinne by Faith we touch the saving arme of the Lord Jesus and are preserved when wee drinke the deadly poyson of sinne by faith we take in Jesus Christ as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or antidote and the deadly poyson doth not hurt us but we are miraculously preserved Faith beholdeth Christ crucified before us Gal. 3.2 and evidently set forth who hath nailed the Law of workes our sinne and death to his owne crosse and wee who deserved damnation are saved through grace Christ is the man who is an hiding place from the wind and a covert from the tempest Isa 32.2 sin is a noxious and a destroying wind as wind in the cavernes of the earth is a cause of an Earth-quake so sinne is the cause of destroying Earthquakes in the earthly hearts of men but Christ is our hiding place in which through beleeving wee are safe The Devills infernall windes and blastes destroy many a soule with which he filleth it with hellish errours and impieties to its destruction Acts 5.3 Christ filleth his people by breathing upon them in the Spirit of grace for their salvation but Christ is a shelter from the infernall blastes of Satan And while carnall and unbeleeving men are as a ship under sayle and the Devill unto them is as a powerfull winde violently blowing them to destruction Acts 26.18 Christ by enabling his people to beleeve doth blow them with the pleasant gales of his sweet spirit to the havens of peace and safetie Though there are infectious and destroying windes upon earth yet there are none in Heaven so though the men of the earth are infected with the winds of sinne and Satan to their ruine yet they who live in the Heaven of Gods grace by faith Jesus Christ is a defence unto them When darknesse and tempests are in the Spirits of men from the Law which they have broken Christ who rebuked the tempests of the Sea Mat. 8.2 doth rebuke tempestates mentis Hier the tempests of our troubled minds and consciences and by beleeving there is a great calme in the soule Sinne in the soule is like Jonah in the ship which bringeth a tempest with it but Christ through faith doth cast this Tempest-raiser into the sea of his Fathers grace and the soule is quieted and filled with joy and peace in beleeving The Philosopher saith that Logick to a rationall and learned man is the instrument of instruments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without which he shall make little proficiencie in other Arts and Sciences So faith is the Organ or instrument to the spirituall man by which hee is made partaker of the wisdome and spirit of the Lord in which he is to doe all things and without which he can doe nothing Secondly this discovers the reason why the Devill and his agents doe so much oppose the Doctrine of faith and the preaching of it He is an enemie to mans salvation and therefore he is an enemy to the Doctrine of faith through which wee are saved The Devill doth what hee pleaseth to those who are without faith as being unable to resist him Unbeleeving men are like the Israelites without a shield or Speare to defend themselves Jude 5.7 And the Devill doth lead them captive at his will 2 Tim. 2.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as wild beasts are mastered and ruled by those who have taken them in a snare or net so the word fignifieth but when wee beleeve to Salvation we are furnished with power to oppose him who seeketh our damnation when we beleeve we are armed against his encounters and fitted against his opposition Faith is the soules defensive Shield by wich all his fierie darts are quenched Eph. 6.16 and therefore it is that he doth alwayes raise opposition persecution and reproaches against the Doctrine and professors of Faith Thirdly seeing salvation is by faith examine thy selfe concerning thy salvation by trying thy faith Men that are not
salvation of him who commeth to Jesus Christ as David in the cave Adullam 1 Sam. 22.2 Entertained all such who were in distresse and every one that was in debt and every one that was discontented and became a Captaine over them So Jesus Christ of whom David was a type doth entertaine all distressed consciences indebted sinners discontented malefactors and becommeth the Captaine of their Salvation Heb. 2. He knoweth how unwilling impurity is to come to him who is purity what enemies we are to our owne salvation what fooles we are to run to those who cannot help us like Ephraim who when he saw his sicknesse went to the Assyrian who could not heale him Hos 5.13 and therefore hee publisheth proclamations of his Fathers grace to poor helplesse sinners And bringeth sinne-wounded miscreants out of the wildernesse of sin and misery to the heavenly Canaan of peace and holinesse through faith in his Name He seeth that we are ready to catch hold of the Law and our own works like unto men who are ready to sinke in the water who will get hold of rushes or strawes or any thing upon the surface of the water which cannot save them and therefore he reacheth forth his strong arme of salvation for to help us and bids us to hold fast by him and assureth us of life and salvation Hee keepeth open House and inviteth all sorts of sinners so lay hold of the grace of his Father in him He beseecheth us to be reconciled to his Father 1 Corinthians 5.20 He assureth sinners that whosoever will may drinke of the waters of life freely Rev. 22.17 He compareth himselfe to a running River out of which every poore Traveller may drinke freely no man demanding or requiring any thing for what he takes He doth set Captives sree not for price or reward Isa 45.13 not for their works Though wee have sold our selves for nought yet he assureth us that we shall be redeemed without money or price Isa 52.3 He having paid a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the price or money for our redemption and assuring us now in his word of trueth that there is salvation for us without our merits by faith in him Therefore let those who want joy and comfort come to the promises and take Christ in a promise such who have been mislead and not set in the right way to salvation and justification let them be convinced that this is the right way be assured of salvation by grace Christ dying not for the righteous but for the ungodly be perswaded that Jesus is not a Physician for the whole but for the sick Mat. 9.12 Sin is the souls sickness thou art a sinner art sick and maist come to Christ not as one that is well but as one that is sick Christ is a Chyrurgion that is able to cure the greatest wounds therefore he hath set up his bills and bids all to come and hee will reject none Wee may with the woman in the Gospell spend all that wee have upon other Physicians and be nothing profited There is health for us onely by comming to Jesus Christ Therefore if other Physitians have been Physicians of no value while they have bid you seeke Justification and assurance in the sight of your own works and not in the sight of Gods grace heare this day what the Lord Christ saith to your soules he professeth that he calleth not the righteous but sinners to repentance Hear him Heare I say and thy soule shall live Isa 55.3 I remember that some Physitians have been highly commended that have beene able to cure their Patients speedily and safely and without any great torment Now the Lord Jesus Christ is a most admirable Physitian in these three respects 1. He can speedily cure and heal us whatsoever our wounds are if there were but one wound and sore from the crown of the head to the sole of the soote if we were made up of nothing but sin the Lord Jesus Christ is able to cure us speedily hee is excellent in this respect Touch him and the bloody issue of thy soule is immediately cured He can say to thee as once he said to Zacheus This day salvation is come to thy soule If he lay the plaister of his Fathers grace upon thy sinfull soule thou shalt be immediately cured Secondly Christ cures safely there is no danger in taking that which Christ prescribes If Christ tell you that his Father justifies ungodly ones and that he is the Saviour of sinners you may believe him and put your life in his hand hee will not cozen and cheate as some Mountebanks that give that which kils when they confidently promise health If Christ promise to heale he will give that physick which shall effectually help us He wil not give that unto us which shall hurt us If hee had thought the doctrine of grace would have hurt men he would never have commanded the Doctrine of grace to have beene preached If hee had thought that the Doctrine of grace would onely have opened a doore to Libertinisme and licentiousnesse he would not have given his Apostles commission to preach the Gospell to every creature Though men in their carnall apprehensions thinke there is danger in the medicines of Christ Those who have had experience of him can assure you that hee is a matchles Physitian there is no danger in that which he gives there is no way to salvation but by believing without working Use this physicke of his apply this plaister to thy soul thou needest not to fear whom he cures hee cures with abundance of safety I dare assure thee that he will heale thee In the third place Physitians are commended that cure without tormenting their Patients much and such a physitian as Jesus Christ He comforts our hearts with Gospell Cordialls while he cures us There is sweet comfort in the healing of the Lord Jesus Christ he so heales thy wounds and diseases that thou shalt have delight and comfort while he heales thy soule and gives a plaister to thy putrified rotten spirit The Lord Jesus Christ doth not prescribe a tormenting remedie that is worse then the disease but when Christ heales he comforts he so cures that hee ravisheth the soule with joy unspeakable and full of glory Wherefore come to Christ you who have spent all and suffered much and have lain under a spirit of bondage 20. or 30. yeares here is healing looke to the Physitian the Lord Jesus Christ he will cure you speedily and safely and with delight to you In brief it is an easie and compendious way to heaven when God gives you believing hearts and yet the hardest thing in the world to believe without him but when God enables us the work is easie When Christ resolveth to be the Physician health quickly will be given in Some affirme that generation is in instanti in a moment It is unquestionable concerning spirituall regeneration by faith in Christ Therefore looke up to the Father and
consideration that if there were any thing in the reason or understanding of man which might further him in this work of faith then it would follow that those men who are the most acute men the most learned men the wisest and most rationall men would prove the best Christians and the most faithful men but we finde it quite contrary There are none commonly more ignorant of Christ then they who are most learned The worlds wise-man is Gods foole It were an easie matter to prove this by running over the severall ages of the world It was the complaint of a good man long since The unlearned saith hee doe arise and take ●eaven by force while we learned men are cast 〈◊〉 hell surgunt indocti rapiunt coelum ●um nos docti detrudimur ad gehennam but I snail confine my selfe to Scripture This is proved 1 Cor. 1.26 27. You see your calling brethren how that not many wise men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise and the weake things of the world to confound the things which are mighty The wise men and great men of the world have not generally embraced Christ but rather the worlds fools have been made wise by the knowledge of him The learned Pharisees did reproach Christ and his Doctrine with this Ioh. 7.48 Have any of the Rulers or Pharisees beleeved on him but this people who knoweth not the Law are cursed They looked upon his followers as a cursed company of ignorant people unacquainted with the Law which they taught for Justification and supposed that the Rulers and Pharisees had so much wit wisedome and learning that they would give no credite to his Doctrine Therefore seeing those who are most learned wise and acute by rationall parts gifts and abilities are commonly most averse and opposite to the knowledge of the Gospell it follows that it is not by any thing that is in the reason or understanding of man by which one man is made more capable of faith then any other man but God giveth the gift of faith freely to whom hee pleaseth The fourth may be drawne from the consideration of persons before their conversion as they are descyphered to us and characterized forth in the word of truth The Scripture calls them dead men they are rather Carkasses then men they have the shapes of living men but they are but dead men No more then a Carkasse is a man no more is an unconverted man a man in the scriptures sence As a dead man is able to do nothing to regain life so we who are dead in sins and trespasses are able to doe nothing towards our own conversion This phrase we have in the precedent words Eph. 2.1 You hath he quickned that were dead in sins and trespasses And the same Apostle saith Coll. 2.13 That when we were dead in sins and the uncircumcision of our flesh that then God quickned us with his Son having forgiven us all our trespasses A dead man heares nothing sees nothing there is no motion in him at all so it is with a man that is dead in sins he heares not the things of grace hee heares but he heares not hee sees not the things of grace he sees and he sees not hee is not able to move one foote by faith toward heaven and happinesse Unbelieving men are dead if wee view them in reference to the principle of life or the faculties of a living man or the operations of life Christ is the principle of life Colos 3.3 When Christ who is your life shall appeare then yee also shall appeare with him in glory They are without Christ and therefore without a principle of life 2ly In reference to faculties which are in living men they are dead Faculties are known and distinguished by their acts operations Potentiae distinguuntur et cognoscuntur per actus And therefore wee may speak of these two joyntly and together As in a living man there are faculties and operations of life So there are faculties and operations of life in a man who is spiritually alive Hee is nourished 1 Pet. 2.2 groweth Psal 22.6 heareth seeth smelleth Cant. 1.3 tasieth the sweetnesse of Christ and the like but it is not so with one dead in sin and unbeliefe hee hath no spirituall faculties and operations of life he lyeth rotting in the grave of sin without these If wee play upon Instruments of Musicke or shoot off guns in his eares he heareth it not If God thunders from sin in the Law or commeth from Zion with the musicke of the Gospell he heareth it not Refusing to live to God by faith in Christ he is dead Qui titi recusat vivere mortuus est August Men without Christ take them in their best estate and thus it is with them with his morall embellishments and ornaments he is but like a dead body stuck with flowers or an embalmed carkasse The whole world of unbelievers is but a Golgotha or Charnel-house of drye bones The man that wandreth out of the way of understanding shall remaine in the Congregation of the dead Pro. 2.6 Though thou art a professor of Christ yet without Christ thou art dead 1 Tim. 5.6 The Widow that professeth Christ living in pleasure is dead while she liveth As Seneca passing by the house of an Epicure said Hic situs est He that liveth here is dead and buryed here So we may say of all prophane men ignorant men civilized men without Christ formalized professors they are there dead where they live And being dead who will so far lay aside his reason to affirme that they are able to quicken themselves to a spirituall life Againe as the Scripture sets them out to us as dead men so the Scripture presents them to us as men that are in a sleep Wee have this expression Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light The knowledge that a man hath of Jesus Christ before his conversion it is rather as the dreame and fancy of a sleeping man then the true knowledge of a waking man A man may dream he is a King thinkes that he hath all the riches in the world but when he awakes he hath nothing because he did but dreame that hee was rich So it is with men that have a knowledge of Christ but not wrought in their hearts by the operation of the spirit they may be in a dreame and have false perswasions that Christ is theirs that heaven is theirs with all the glorious things of eternity but they are but beggars and poor slaves all the while They are likewise compared to mad men who may think that they are Monarchs and in a Palace when they are miserable creatures chained in a Bedlam So carnal men may have false perswasions concerning their happinesse but true faith is only wrought by the spirit of truth And as
love him because he first loved us He that loveth not God hath not apprehended Gods love to him As farre as thou believest in a spirituall way the love of God shall constrain thee to love God Tantum diligimus quantum scimus love is answerable to the measure of our faith or knowledge Hee that hath Pauls faith shall have his love We say that love is the load stone of love magnes amoris amor So Gods love doth draw forth our hearts in love to God God in Christ when he is presented unto us for our justhification doth appeare to us as such a lovely object that we cannot but love him The greek proverb is that loving is wrought by seeing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so when by faith we see the love of God in Jesus wee cannot but love God And therefore John saith 1 John 4.8 That he that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love Wherefore that faith by which thou art perswaded of the love of God to thy soul which carries thee not back again in love to God I dare speak it in the presence of God that that perswasion is not wrought by the spirit of grace but is the worke of thine owne carnall and naturall heart If any man saith the Apostle love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha 1 Cor. 16.22 Let him not be accounted as one inalbo fidelium in the list of the faithfull Let him be excommunicated look not upon him as a true Christian Peter though hee had denyed Christ not long before yet he was confident that he loved that Christ whom he had denyed when Christ asked him Simon sonne of Jonas lovest thou me he saith unto him yea Lord thou knowest that I love thee John 24.15 When Christ the second and third time proposed the same question unto him he remained still confident of his love And appeals to Christ the searcher of all hearts as to one who knew the truth of his love v. 17. Hee said unto him Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee I shall but adde one thing more because I shall God willing have an opportunity to enlarge my self in this point when I shall prove unto you affirmatively that true faith is the gift of God Lastly where the grace of the Father in the blood of his Son is apprehended for the covering of sin there is a forsaking of sin When God doth discover this that he will heale back-sliding love freely and turne away his anger Ephraim shall say what have I to doe any more with Idols Hos 14.8 When God pardoneth sin by his grace he will subdue sin by his grace Mic. 7.18 19. That man who hath true faith wrought in his heart he shall seele the power of grace apprehended for his justification ingaging his spirit to deny ungodlinesse according to that of the Apostle Tit. 2 11 12. The grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodlinesse and wordly lusts we should live soberly righteously and godly in this present world First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 soberly in reference to our selves 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 justly in our relation towards men 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 piously or religiously in reference to God Grace will not suffer us to live gracelesly because we are justified by grace but will throughly acquaint us with our duty towards God towards men and towards our selves If the grace that thou professest teach thee not to deny ungodliness but thou livest in a gracelesse way dishonouring Christ discrediting the Gospell by thy wicked scandalous and evill life thou dost not in deed and in truth apprehend the Gospell If God discovers himself to Abraham as Alsufficient he will command him to walke before him and be upright Gen. 17. Sin shall not have dominion over us if we are not under the law but under grace Rom. 6. Christ will present himselfe unto us as the pattern for sanctification if hee reveale himselfe as the object of our justification Every man who hath a sure and lively hope of salvation by Jesus Christ purifieth himselfe as he is pure 1 John 3.3 He that truly expects happinesse hereafter studies purity here True Saints do desire not only to know but to doe the will of God Psal 143.10 Teach mee to doe thy will O Lord saith the man after Gods own heart thy spirit is good lead me into the land of uprightnesse The spirit of the Gospell will not lead us into the land of prophanenesse but into the land of uprightnesse Gods goodnesse to us will make us in love with holinesse They shall feare and tremble for all the goodnesse and for all the prosperity that I procure unto them saith the Lord Jer. 33.9 The golden chaine of mercy let down from heaven to draw us up unto God doth binde us and oblige us to the service and obedience of God If thou art an old professor of the Gospel and doctrine of grace and livest gracelesly unacquainted with the sanctifying spirit yet hast a strong perswasion that God is thy Father and Christ thy Saviour thy perswasion is not worth one farthing it will doe thee no good Where there is no desire of purity there is no work of true faith for when thou hast a true and a lively faith and thou seest God gracious loving and merciful believe it thy spirit will be carried forth in desires to be made like unto Christ in holinesse Wee all saith the Apostle with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into the same image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3.18 If thou by the lively operation of the spirit hast seene the glory grace beauty and holinesse in Christ for thy Justification thy spirit will be so enamourd with the beauty of holiness perfection in Christ thou wilt desire to see the image and picture of holinesse perfection which is in Christ to be drawne forth upon thy own heart and spirit There may bee some that may thinke that this is strange Doctrine which I have delivered to wit that a man may have strong perswasions concerning his interest in God and Christ and boast much of it and yet be but a hypocrite and reprobate all the while I shall therfore adde one place of Scripture to those which I have delivered for the proofe of this and so for the present I shall conclude Yes shall find it in Micah 3.11 The heads judge for reward and the Priests teach for hire and the Prophets divine for money yet for all this will they leane upon the Lord and say is not the Lord among us none evill can come upon us See here a base vicious and covetous people that sell Justice and the Word of God and yet are confident that they belong to God they would not preach without money in their hand like many of our Priests no penny no pater-noster no money in hand no
est opus vestrum sed hoc est opus Dei He said not this is your worke but the worke of God Our Saviour speaking to his Disciples Mar. 4.11 To you saith he it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God but unto them that are without all those things are done in parables The Gospell of the Lord Jesus is a mystery and parable unto many untill the Lord doth give us the precious gift of faith by which we understand these mysteries of God so that he that truly understands the mysterie of the Kingdome doth look upon his spirituall knowledge as a gift What is compleat and perfect faith but the gift of God by which we believe that all our spirituall good things and faith it selfe is freely given unto us by God Quae est plena et perfect a fides Quae credit ex Deo et omnia bona nostra et ipsam fidem Aug. Fifthly This may convince those of their errour who being convinced of sinne do refuse to turne into the true way of salvation by believing supposing in the pride and ignorance of their hearts that this is too short and neare a way to Justification and happinesse These will first doe good workes get strength against all their corruptions be made holy sanctified men and then they thinke that they may safely make bold to lay hold of some promise of grace for justification and salvation It was thus with me when God did at first begin to awaken my conscience with the dreadfull fight of my sins and course of prophanenesse in which I had lived and some months I went in this way never in the spirit considering that the object of Gods justifying grace was an ungodly man and a sinner and not knowing that spirituall regeneration is not by the workes of the Law but the doctrine of the Gospel though I could then in a carnall way as many blind Protestants now can have spoken and preached more gloriously with rhetoricall words and flourishing expressions of justification by faith without workes then now I can or will But as God who from all eternity had singled me out unto salvation by Jesus Christ was pleased to convince mee of my ignorance and to bring mee to rest upon his grace in his sonne as a poore wretched sinner enabling me to believe that my sins were blotted out for his owne Names sake though my sins did testifie against me So these who are in the same condition in which I then was if they are in the number of those whom God hath given unto his sonne Jesus Christ shall be convinced that by faith through Christ wee have accesse to the Throne of grace with boldnesse and that faith is not given in consideration of any preceding acts of holinesse or sanctification but as the free gift of our heavenly Father That they who have thus erred in spirit Isa 29.24 may come unto understanding and such who have murmured against the truth of Gods grace may learn doctrine Give me leave briefly to lay downe some convincing considerations which may bring to your remembrance those things which we have more fully handled 1 Consi The word and promises which we doe enjoy are fre gifts of Gods favour What reason can we give why we should enjoy the outward meanes of grace rather then Americans but his owne free grace Psalm 147.19 He sheweth his word unto Jacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel It is the Lord that bringeth the externall meanes and word of grace as a gift more worth then the whole world unto a people According to that sweet promi●e of God Ezek. 29 21. I will give thee the opening of the mouth in the midst of them The great and precious promises by the believing of which we are made partakers of the divine nature are freely given unto us 2 Pet. 1.4 2 Consi The power of God doth make the difference between men who doe enjoy the outward means 2 Pe. 1.3 His divine power hath given us all things that pertaine unto life and godlinsse through the knowledge of him who hath called us to glory and vertue If God did put forth that omnipotent power in all which he doth in some who heare the Gospell all as well as some should believe 1 Cor. 3.7 Neither he that planteth is any thing neither he that watereth but God that giveth the encaease Upon which words one giveth us this observation As all things which are planted and watered do not spring up th●●● and prosper but those whom God doth blesse So all men who are planted in the Church of Ghrist and watered by the preaching or the Word doe not truly believe but those upon whom God bestoweth faith Nec omnium est 〈◊〉 qu● 〈◊〉 verbum sed quibus deus part●● m●nsuram ●idei sicut nec omnia germinant quae plantamu ●t rigantur But I have touched upon this before 3 Consi Gods good grace doth prevent mans good workes in his justification God in his grace must give us a new creation heavenly being in his word made flesh 1 Joh. before good workes can be wrought by us Sicut creatore opus habemus ut essemus sic salvatore ut revivisceremus Aug. As it was necessary that wee should have a Creator to give us beings as creatures so it is necessary that wee should have a Saviour to make us new creatures through faith 4 Consi Gods grace doth not only prevent our works but faith it self Faith is an effect of Gods grace and therefore God is gravious before we beleeve It is a blessing of the new Covenant and therefore in this respect it may be truly said that we are under the new Covenant before we do believe By which we may plainly see that faith is a free gift Mercy is shewed unto the faithfull and it is shewed unto us to make us faithfull Fideli datur quidem miserecordia sed data est etiam ut esset fidelis Aug. One saith that mercy was shewed unto Paul not only because he was faithfull but that he might be faithfufull The Apostle to prove the freenesse of grace in bestowing faith as a gift upon us hath these three expressions within the limits of three verses Rom. 5.15 16 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 calling faith a gift and a gift of grace and a gift of grace for righteousnesse 5. Consi There is no way to happinesse for thee but by grace and no closing in any sure or comfortable way with grace but through faith We are all condemned by the Law and there is no escaping for us but by that pardon which the King of Heaven in the prerogative of his grace doth give unto us and no way for us to be able to read our pardon unlesse God teach us And therefore God hath promised Isa 14.3 To give us rest from our sorrow feare and hard bondage with grace Psal 84.11 knowledge Ezek. 29.21 Faith Rom. 11.26 Strength and peace Psalm
of God Mat. 19.28 Our Saviour saith that such who have followed him in the regeneration shall sit upon Thrones The Saints are translated out of the Kingdome of the world into the kingdome of grace by spirituall regeneration and therefore they shall be translated from the Kingdome of grace into the Kingdome of glory By these considerations it is evident that true Saints are borne of God Vse Let us not try our Saint-ship by our large professions of Christ and subjection to such things which we apprehend to be his Ordinances for externall worship but by our new creation It concerneth every man to be thorowly assured of his heavenly birth who would make his claime good for heaven and glory and be assured that he shall escape the damnation of Hell As our Saviour said of Judas Mat. 26.24 That it had been good for him he had not been borne So it had been good for us that we had never been borne if wee shall live and dye professors of the knowledge of God in Christ and not dye possessors of God in Christ by the new creation Consider therefore 1. That every change or alteration which may be wrought in a man doth not make him a Sonne of God by spirituall regeneration Morall principles may make a great change in a man And Pharisaicall principles may make a man seeme to be very religious to himselfe and others But the Pharisees proselite is farre enough from a true Convert And except our righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees we cannot enter into the Kingdome of God We may walke farre in the way of the Law and performance of duties to make our selves new creatures and the Sonnes of God by our own righteousnesse and legall reformation and may at last stumble at Christ and never come to know what it is to be borne of God 2. A man may take a long walke in the path of the Gospell and may after a sort escape the pollutions of the world by Gospel-principles and may taste of the powers of the world to come in the conclusion may sit down short of a new creation here and glory hereafter 2 Pet. 2.20 Hebr. 6. Never truly knowing what it is to have the Spirit in him and himselfe in the Spirit God in him and himselfe in God Christ in him and himselfe in Christ Quer. But by what meanes is a man born of God may some one say seeing it concerneth us to know that we are born of God and it is so easie to be mistaken It is not by the law by that thou maist have a knowledge of sin Rom. 7. but canst never receive a new life The law bringeth forth servants not sons Ishmaelites not true Israelites Gal. 4. Secondly Those who are borne of God are children of the Gospell not by the workes of the law but by the hearing of faith wee are made new creatures In this Ministery God by his Spirit through faith in his Sonne maketh new creatures Nothing in nature can beethe cause of it selfe so nothing in the new creation can be the cause of it selfe There must be a Father before there can be a Sonne God therefore through faith in his Sonne is the cause of this new creation In this Ministery God doth not speak only by letters and syllables but by his eternall Word and Spirit Our soules are purified in the obedience of the truth of the Gospel unto unfeigned love of the Brethren 1 Pet. 1.22 23. And are borne againe not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever In this Ministry of life and salvation we have an eye to see the olde man crucified in the suffering of Christ Rom. 6.6 That henceforth we should not serve sin In this Ministery wee see Christ as that new man which maketh all things new 2 Corin. 5. The olde Adam stood as a publique person to bring shame sinne and sorrow upon his posterity so Christ the second Adam publique person and new man by whom we are renewed doth bring holy boldnesse righteousnesse and joy Adam communicated his sinfull nature to us so Christ doth communicate his divine nature unto us with those fruits and effects of the spirit which are contrary to the nature of the old man Uniting us unto himselfe and becomming a principle of life to us and in us And as one saith of generation that it doth not consist in the production of a new form but in the union of the form to the matter Generatie non consistit in productione sed unitione formae cummateria So spiritual regeneration is not by the production of a new forme but by the union of the forme to the matter By uniting Christ who is as the forme to man who is the matter of the new creature And as wee say that the generation of one thing is the corruption or destruction of another thing so in spirituall regeneration the old man is destroyed Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts O how is the man placed in the uppermost roome of honour and highest seat of happinesse who is spiritually acquainted with this truth Hee overcommeth the world by believing that Jesus is the Sonne of God 1 John 5.1 He admireth the inexpressible love of God by which hee is become the Sonne of God 1 John 3.1 He is borne to possesse the unsearcheable riches of Gods grace He is born to inherit large possessions a golrious inheritance being joynt heir with Christ Ro. 8.17 Hee is higher by his birth then the Sons of Kings and Emperours Christ he are of one therfore he is not ashamed to cal him Brother Heb. 2.11 And now hee begins to resolve to live like himselfe to live answerable to his condition of glory and honour unto which God of his grace hath brought him He wil live as one who hath hopes full of immortality He wil put on Christ in his conversation as he hath put him on in his free justification A King will not stoope to the earth to take up farthings as a beggar will nor meddle with such mean businesses and employments in which men of meane condition doe exercise themselves So hee will not stoop in spirit to the love of the things of the world which are but as a farthing to the things of glory and eternity Hee will not follow worldly businesse as though hee had no other employment His conversation is in Heaven Phil. 3. He is one of the Chosen generation and royall Priesthood holy Nation and peculiar People and therefore is resolved to shew forth the praises of him who hath called him out of darknesse into his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 from impurity to holinesse from a disgracefull and reproachfull condition to honour and favour from vassalage to a kingdome from feare of death to assurance of eternall life from hell to heaven from horror of conscience to joy in
thy sight But suppose wee should grant you this it doth still stand true that our service is in holinesse and righteousnesse And can any man be so blinde to thinke that a man shall serve in righteousnesse under Gods protection that hee should not see the righteousnesse which i● wrought under his protection and if it be righteousnesse which he seeth then it is righteousnesse before him or in his sight Arg. 15. To deny the purity of the man born of God is to deny one end for which Christ dyed for Christ dyed to bring us to be partakers of a pure Divine nature in which pure nature we are to live move and act holily The place by which I shall confirme this is in Heb. 9.14 The blood of Christ who through the eternall spirit offered himselfe without spot God shall purge our consciences from dead workes to serve the living God We are therefore washed from sin in our Justification that we may serve God by Sanctification And what spirituall man will call that the service of God which is sin or sinfull For to doe that which is sin or sinfull is to doe the Devils service or else I am to learne that which we need not be taught to wit what it is to doe the Devils service Arg. 16. The resurrection of Christ doth teach spirituall men to act purely in their new nature to the glory of their Father Rom. 6.4 As Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father so we should walke in newnesse of life To walk in newnesse of life is it to walk in the oldnesse of that which is sin or sinfull let any Spirituall man judge Arg. 17. We may draw another argument from the Kingly office of Christ He as a King hath a command over his Subjects but he hath not the command over us when we doe that which is sin or sinfull and therefore wee doe something good as his Subjects in obedience to his commands bona bene Good things must be done well And therefore Christ doth not onely enable us to doe that which is righteous but hee doth enable us to doe it righteously Why is Christ King but that we should live under his commands Why are we his subjects why are we his servants but because wee are under his commands and under his laws You know the Jewes said they would not have Christ to be their King but the voyce of every Christian is to cry up Christ to proclaime him King and to owne him only as their Ruler And Christ being King rules and reigns in the hearts of his people by lawes and commandements and precious statutes worthy of such a King Now Christ gives us not a law as Moses gave a law that was grievous to those that heard it but Christ gives a law of love a law● of sweetnesse by which hee rules in the midst of his enemies in our hearts what is in the flesh in us is an enemie to Jesus Christ but Christ Jesus sitting upon his Throne as King in our renewed regenerated and enlightned spirit rules in the midst of our sins his enemies which oppose him Christ is not such a King as other Kings other Kings make lawes and adde penalties to their laws for those that break them but they have no power to enable their Subjects to keep them But here is the priviledge and prerogative of our King when Christ makes lawes he doth not only give us lawes and bid us keepe them but he hath power in himselfe by which he enableth us to do that which he commands us to doe If Christ should command us to love should not enable us to doe that which he commands he should be such a Law-giver as Moses that gave a Law but gave no power to doe it But Christ is not such a Law-giver as Moses As he is not a rigid Law-giver to bid Saints doe it upon penalty of damnation or to worke for life and salvation so neither is he like Moses who could give them no power but there is a power and strength goes with Christs commands to enable us to doe what Christ the King commands Therefore if any of you give Christ the glory of his grace by believing that he hath abolished all your sins by his death be not dismayed at the sight of your corruptions Fight the good fight of faith Greater is he that is in you than he that is in the world Christ that commands you to obey his Father will enable you to obey his Father Christ reignes in the hearts of his people not only by making known to them the covenant of his owne grace but by supplying them with strength to doe his will Lord give what thou commandest said one and command what thou wilt Christ commands us what to doe and gives us power to doe that which he commands Such a King is Christ that frees his people not onely from the condemnation of sin but from the power and dominion of sin in their spirits lives and conversations Blessed be God saith the Apostle that ye were the servants of sin Are they so still now they are under grace No but being made free from sin ye are the servants of righteousnesse sinne shall not have dominion over you why ye have a new King ye are under grace ye are under King Jesus If a Tyrant should tyrannize over Subjects and depose their lawfull King if this King afterwards should overthrow this Tyrant and deliver his Subjects from tyranny and bondage by overcomming the Tyrant would hee suffer this Tyrant to tyrannize over them or his people to be under the lawes of the Tyrant We were under Satan the Tyrant under his lawes and commands under the law of sinne and concupiscence but Christ comes and overcomes the Tyrant that ruled tyrannically in our hearts and will hee suffer that Tyrant still to rule us by those commands which he gave us when wee were in bondage to him No we shall not be under the bondage of the flesh if we understand the liberty of grace and of the Spirit The Apostle saith that we doe not live nor eate nor drinke nor doe any shing to our selves because Christ dyed and rose and revived that he might be Lord of quicke and dead Rom. 14.8 9. Christ dyed and rose that he might be Lord and King and reigne and set up his Scepter of holinesse in the hearts of his people This was prophesied in Psal 110.3 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power When Christ as King comes with power his people shall be willing Christ bids them believe and they believe he bids them love and they doe love they run through fire and water they lay downe their honours and riches at his feet and love not their lives unto the death Object The enabling of Christ in working is not of the same extent with his command Answ In the spirituall and regenerate part the power of Christ is as large as
his command The fayling is not from the new but the olde man The whole man or person is under the command so that a man yea every man doth sin because he doth not doe in his person as he is a man what is commanded Charge the fault where it is to be charged upon the flesh which is the cause of a mans sin and then look upon grace which hath abolished sin and you shall finde the new man conformable to the will of God and the man good and holy in part to wit in his regenerated part It is further objected that Christ biddeth us to cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit which no man doth It is granted and therefore we deny not but that every man sinneth if we take him physically But as farre as we are in the Spirit Wee are cleansed from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit so that the new man doth fulfill it and Christ doth reign in him though the flesh prove a Traytor and rebellious against his commands Arg. 18. Another argument may be brought from the consideration of the Image of Christ If this were true that all the works of the Saints were in their formalitie sinne this would follow that the Image of Jesus Christ were an Image of unholinesse and sin I ground my argument upon that place of the Apostle 2 Cor. 3.18 Wee all with open face beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. Here the Apostle shewes that the Saints are changed into the Image of Christ Now if there were nothing but sin and unholinesse sinfulnesse in those who are looked upon as spirituall as some conceive it wil follow that the Image of Christ into which they are changed must be an image of unholinesse If my love be unholinesse I am changed to that image of love which is in Christ and so it would follow that the Image of Christ doth consist in unholinesse Object If there be perfect sanctification in the new man then wee may bee justified by it Answ I deny that it doth not follow We shall have perfect sanctification at the resurrection and yet you will not say that we shall be acquitted from our sinnes by it which wee have committed upon earth but by the grace of God in the blood of Christ 2. We are justified before sancification and therefore it will not follow that we are justified by it Because that is done before the other is wrought in us 3. That a man may be justified by his sanctification It is necessary that a man should be so wholy sanctified that there should be no sin in the man Our good works will not make satisfaction for our bad works A Traytor for an act of treason might be condemned by his Prince though he hath done him much good service If a man would seeke justification by the law who is sanctified in part the law would condemn him for his sin in his unregenerated part taking no notice of any sufficiency in his sanctification to free him from condemnation for his sinne in the unregenerated part Arg. 19. This opinion that the good works of the justified man are sin or sinfull do make divers places of Scripture irreconcileable Men shall never be well able to reconcile many places of Scripture who swallow this as a trueth that whatsoever workes are now done in the Saints are nothing but sinne or sinfull For instance in one place we are bound to disclaime our works and to account all our righteousnesses as filthy ragges to believe in him that justifieth the ungodly And in another place we are said to be redeemed from all iniquity that we might be zealous of good workes Tit. 2. And we are the work manship of God created in Christ Jesus to good workes Eph. 2. By what I have delivered they are easily reconcileable To wit by distinguishing as the Scripture doth concerning good works thus That all the works of man under the Law are but splendid and shining sins and that the spirituall workes of a spirituall man are good and not sin or sinfull in their nature Not that the Scripture makes these good workes that flow from the spirituall man the cause or the matter of our justification but the fruits of the Spirit and the consequents of our justification● It is a speech of Luthers worthy to be writte● in letters of gold that the whole world with all the riches of it are of no worth in comparison of good works flowing from faith and wrought by the Spirit of God in the hearts of his people Which how it can be made good I know not if that be true which he and some other Protestant Writers affirme that Omn● bonum secundum judicium dei est mortale peccatum every good worke of a regenerate man according to the judgment of God is a mortall sin That which is morally evill is not so good as any thing which is not morally evill That being the greatest evill which is morally evill I have known some professors of the Gospel who have fallen to Familisme and Atheisticall opinions and being asked why they did leave the Gospel they have answered that they could never reconcile the Scriptures concerning works to other places while they were professors of the Gospel Their meaning is while they were professors upon these principles by which they were taught to look upon the works of the spirit in them as sin and sinfull That which is frequently asserted by some Mr. Eatoon Honycomb and others that they are good to men-ward will not make up the breach The Apostle Peter speaking of a meeke quiet spirit which is the ornament of the hidden man of the heart saith that it is of great price in the sight of God 1 Pet. 3.4 The Apostle speaking of his sincerity in preaching the Gospel is not affraid to bring it into the sight of God 2 Cor. 2.17 And John saith 1 Joh. 3.22 That whatsoever we aske we receive of him because wee keepe his Commandements and doe those things which are pleasing in his sight And that he doth not meane believing only is plain by the next verse where he saith That this is his Commandement that wee believe on the name of his Sonne Jesus Christ and love one another And to stop the mouth of the objection which is usually brought against this truth to wit that he speaketh of doing as in Gods precept or command and not as done by us He saith that we receive what we aske because wee doe what is pleasing in his sight I must professe to the glory of God that this distinction hath given me a great light in the understanding of the Scripture And by this I am informed that I am justified without holiness or sanctification and yet that without holiness no man shall see the Lord Heb. 12.14 Arg. 20. This opinion that the good worke
confirmation of the truth Give mee leave to give an answer to their arguments as I have already presented unto you answers to their objections Arg. 1. Paul was a regenerated man yet he confesseth that he was not able to performe that which is good Rom. 7.18 Therefore no regenerate man is able to performe that which is good Answ Paul doth give a sufficient answer to this objection in the preceding words of the same verse where he saith in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing by which it is evident that he speaketh of himselfe in reference to his flesh And this is a truth which with all the faithfull I willingly subscribe unto But when he plainely speaketh of a man in the spirit freed from the clouds of temptations and power of the flesh in the last verse of the same Chapter he saith With the minde I my self serve the law of God but with the flesh the law of sin It is good to serve the law of God but Paul in the Spirit had attained unto this and therefore Paul was enabled to performe that which is good According to that of the Apostle Phil. 2.13 It is God who worketh in us to will and to doe of his owne good pleasure Arg. 2. There is none that doth good no not one Rom. 3.9 10 11. which is meant aswell of the regenerate as unregenerate as is evident by vers 23 24. because it is meant of all who are justified freely by his grace as appears further by the instances of Abraham and David which were regenerated Ch. 4.2.6 Therefore no workes of the regenerate are without sinne Answ It is plain that the Apostle speaketh here of a man under the law and of an unregenerate man by the things which are spoken of him Hee saith that none seeketh after God can you affirme this of a regenerated man when the same Prophet who in the 14. Psame doth give us a character of a wicked man out of which this is taken in the 24. Psalme doth give us this character of a man truly godly that hee is one of the generation of those who seeke God 2. The Apostle saith that there is none that understandeth But blessed be God the sonne of God is come and hath given us an understanding that we may know him 1 John 5.20 3. They are all gone out of the way But we can blesse God who through Jesus Christ hath brought us into the way of salvation 4. There is none that doth good no not one and there is none that is righteous But hearken unto the speech of John 1 John 3.7 Let no man deceive you hee that doth righteousness is righteous even as he is righteous I might runne over all the other particulars there laid downe but I shall content my selfe with what is spoken in the 17.18 it s said that the way of peace have they not known and there is no feare of God before their eyes Is a regenerate man an enemie to the way of peace and doe not they feare God to whom God hath sworne Jer. 32.40 That he will put his feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from him Again secondly you would prove it by this argument because hee speaketh of all those who are justified But let me tell you that we must distinguish of a man before and after his Justification Every man is such a man before Justification and in this respect he speaketh of all men but after justification there is a charge wrought in a man as I have formerly proved at large unto which I refer the Reader But thirdly you instance in David and Abraham who were regenerated men Answ Wee are not to forget that the Scriprure dosh acquaint us that there is a two-fold righteousnesse of a regenerate man The righteousnesse of Justification and the righteousnesse of sanctification Of the first of these the Prophet speaking saith that a man is blessed to whom sin is not imputed of the latter where hee saith of the same verse And in whose spirit there is no guile which the learned Zanchius doth apprehend to be spoken in reference to that sanctification which is in the unregenerated part understand the distinction rightly and you cannot want an answer to this Objection Arg. 3. Wee believe not so stedfastly nor love so perfectly as we ought therefore is our faith love imperfect and sinfull Ans 1. If we should grant the antecedent we may deny the consequence It is true that if a man doth not believe so stedfastly and love so perfectly as he ought that then the man doth sin consider him physically And this wee have alwayes granted but it doth not follow that his faith and love is sin but that which is in the flesh is sin which is the cause that he doth not believe so stedfastly and love so perfectly as he ought Amesius doth give a sufficient answer to this in answering an argument which Bellarmine doth bring against the Protestants to wit that sins doe not please God in Christ It is true saith he that sin doth not please God but the stain of sin being done away the good which remaineth is pleasing unto God Sane quidem certe sedpeccati maculâ in Christo deletâ bonum substratum placet Tom. 4. l. 6. c. 8. 2ly We say that a regenerate man looked upon in the new Covenant doth believe stedfastly and love perfectly His unbeliefe and hatred of God which is in the flesh being covered with the rich mantle of Gods grace and mercy as far as he doth believe truly he doth believe stedfastly and as far as he doth love he doth love perfectly Let not this offend any man that I say he doth love perfectly It is granted by most Protestant writers that a regenerate man hath a perfection of parts though not of degrees A childe may have an humane nature and the parts of a man as well as a man of forty yeares old A sparke of fire hath the true nature of fire a drop of water hath the nature of water in it as wel as all the water in the Sea So a sparke or drop of love hath the divine nature of love in it as well as that which burnes in the breasts of a Seraphim and therefore is not sin or sinfull And for this reason it is said that Abraham was not weak in faith though it is unquestionable that hee had his weaknesse in the flesh as well as other men and that hee staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief but was strong in faith giving glory to God Rom. 4. And this is the meaning likewise of Amesius in the place formerly cited where hee saith That the good works of the faithfull are not only good by the object of them but in reference to all the causes of them the efficient materiall formall and finall cause Opera fidelium non tantum sunt bona ex objecto sed etiam quoad omnes causas efficientem materiam
against such bitter enemies of Christ should not a zealous Christian say as David said to Michal when she scoffed him for his devotion to his God 2 Sam. 6.22 I will be yet more vile then thus Therefore let me desire you that you will abhorre these tenents and opinions of theirs which doe overthrow the whole Doctrine of the Lord Jesus Christ If this that they hold be a truth which we denie there is no truth in this booke that we hold if this be a truth that they professe there is no truth in Jesus Christ that professeth himselfe the way the truth and the life And as the Apostle preacheth 1 Cor. 15. The Apostles shall be found false witnesses of God for they preached that Christ though he suffered on the Crosse his body was raised and in it he ascended into Heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father and mediates and intercedes as an Advocate for us If Christ be not risen then we are false witnesses of God 1 Cor. 15.15 because we have testified that he raised up Christ whom he raised not up if the dead rise not and if they shall be found false witnesses and Imposters who then are the men that we must looke on as Divine men as knowing understanding men We must looke on these as a Generation of liers that have deceived us and made us believe that Christ is risen and that we shall rise by his power and there is no such matter who are to be eyed as men of truth we must looke on Lucian that in his Dialogues and other bookes jeeres those that expect happinesse after this life or feare misery and calls our blessed Jesus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Sophister that was hanged upon a Crosse We must looke on him as an Orthodox man as a Divine writer Pliny that writes of the soules immortality and denies that resurrection of the body we must looke on him as Canonicall Julian the Apostate must be admired for his wisdome To throw away our Bibles or burne them as those in the 19. Acts 19. did burne their Bookes of curious Arts will be a point of wisdome and discretion It will be no impiety to deny the truths that Peter Paul and other servants of the Lord Jesus Christ have preached and sealed with their bloods O Brethren take heed of this hellish hellish Doctrine take heede of these seducers Beware of these Wolves that come in sheeps clothing See how this tenent plants its Ordnance to batter downe all goodnesse all the hope of Christians and strength of Christianity 3. Vse The beliefe of this truth may bring in streames of joy to our soules and spirits in the middest of the greatest troubles and miseries that can come upon us Therefore the Apostle when he had laid down this point 1 Thess 4.1 see what use he makes of it in the 18. ver for their consolation bidding them to comfort one another with those words In your weaknesses and sicknesse consider that these bodies that are fraile mortall and must after a while moulder into dust shall at the resurrection be made like unto the glorious body of Christ Phil. 3. last Is death approching doth the King of feares Job 18.14 knock at the doores of your cottages of clay Let the feare of death be killed by the meditation of this that the Lord Jesus by his death and resurrection hath abolished our death and brought life and immortality to light through his glorious Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 Christ cujus victoria nostra est whose victory is ours hath overcome sinne the grave Death Hell and he arising as a publick person his glorious resurrection may be a pledge unto us of our future resurrection in glory Our bodies are called in Scripture the Temples of God Let me tell you that God will not pull downe his Temples unlesse he intended to build them up againe He will set up these Temples in glory which he puls downe and layes in the dust with dishonour I remember what a divine Poet saith speaking of the resurrection Pellite corde metum mea membra credite vosmet Cum Christo reditura deo Atra sepulcra respuite Prudentius My limbes drive away from you the feare of death ye shall with Christ returne to God sleight the blacknesse and horrour of the grave which doth sweetly accord with the divine rapture of Paul 1 Cor. 15.55 56 57. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory The sting of death is sinne and the strength of sinne is the Law But thanks be to God which giveth us victory through Jesus Christ our Lord. The full perswasion of this is that which hath filled the spirits of Christians with joy and fortitude in their sufferings The heavenly company of Martyrs that sacrificed their lives for Christ doe deserve rather to be registred in the Catalogue of fooles then to be dignified or innobled as Saints with the Crowne of Martyrdome had they suffered and questioned the truth of the resurrection This hath made their sufferings comfortable to them and glorious to us as our patterne and example for imitation This hath made them so willing to hazard their lives for the truth of Christ It is this that hath made them so prodigall of their blood that I remember it is reported of one of the heathen persecutors that he said he thought the Christians delighted in torments they seemed to sleight all punishments and tortures that the witty malice of their adversaries could invent or their cruelty inflict This carried them forth in that height of spirit that they rejoyced in the middest of tortures It was this that cheered the heart of a Martyr that was troubled a little before his suffering the Comforter coming and assuring him of happinesse at the resurrection Gregorius Nazianzenus in his third Oration tells us of Theclas and some other Martyrs that were observed by the spectators 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be very merry in the extremity of torments Marcus of Arethusa when the bloody persecutors had exercised his Faith and patience with several sorts of tortures and did afterwards draw him through draughts and other noysome places he accounted it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rather his pomp and glory then his misery and calamity Women have discovered masculine and heroicall spirits when they were called to suffer for the Lord. Nostri pueri mulierculae tortores suos taciti vincunt exprimere illis gemitum nec ignis potest Lactantius saith that the Christian children and women did by their silence over come their tormentors and the flames of firt could not make them weepe Austin tells of a poore weak maid that went to suffer for Christ tanquam ad epulas invitata a● though she had been invited to a banquet We read of some when they came to lay downe their lives they were sorrie that they had no more lives to lose for the Lord Jesus Tertullian saith that the Christians were so ready to suffer
the third of the Eph. 6. doth teach us that Jewes and Gentiles are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Parts of the same body One that desired to moderate between the Calvinists and Lutherans wishing them not to be so bitter the one against the other made use of this Argument telling them that Luther and Calvin were reconciled in love together in heaven Let not strife hatred malice and bitternesse prevaile among you Christians for yee shall sweetly agree together as one body in one Spirit at the resurrection Vse 2. There being such a glorious union between us and Christ it should engage the spirits of Saints to be much in the contemplation of it As the bloud and spirits doe runne through the body so this Doctrine of union doth runne through the whole body of Christian Religion Our Justification in the person of Christ our own Justification in our owne persons by Christ cannot bee clearely understood if we be totally ignorant of union with Christ As the Philosopher saith that all morall vertues are linck'd together in justice so all the points of Christianity are concatenated and joyned together in this doctrine of union As the Starre did lead the wise men to Christ shining over the place where Christ was so this Doctrine of our union with Christ shining among other truths of Christ in the Scripture doth hold forth unto us a light to direct us through the grace of God into a perfect and comfortable knowledge of all other truths As it doth in an especiall manner beame forth light unto us to confirme us in the Doctrine of the resurrection For you see that the bodies of the Saints are to bee raised because they are united to Christ and one with him Therefore this may strengthen the Faith of every one of us concerning the certainty of the resurrection● What saith the Apostle No man yet ever hated his owne flesh but nourished it and cherished it Eph. 5.29 The Lord Jesus Christ cannot hate his owne flesh nor forget his owne body the bodies of the Saints but in love will raise them even while they lie in the dust they are his body Our propriety in a thing doth draw out our affection to the thing Our bodies belong to the Lord and are in his heart and affections even while they moulder in the dust therefore let this truth pierce your understandings and sinke deepe into your memories and be fully perswaded that your bodies shall be raised because they are not so much your bodies as the body of the Lord Jesus The Scripture as you have heard speakes so gloriously of that union which all the Saints have with Jesus Christ in that one Spirit which is in Christ and in every Saint that it seemes to hold forth Christ as incompleat till he have gathered all his members into one body And certainly Christ will not appeare incompleat in his body at the resurrection which he should doe should hee not by his power command the bodies of the Saints to come out of the earth Therefore he will not suffer any part of himselfe to lie in the dust he will not appeare at the generall resurrection without a limb not without a hand not without a finger not without the least member Thou that art the meanest Christian that apprehendest thy selfe to be but as the toe of Christ mayst be strongly perswaded of thy resurrection for I tell thee when Christ shall appeare at the great resurrection he will not be without a toe not without the lowest and most inferiour member of his body He will appeare in his fulnesse and all the Saints gathered together and made one with him in body and spirit are his fulnesse and compleatnesse The King when he rides in triumph or to his great Counsell he rides in his Royall Robes and in all his glory When Christ shall appeare the second time he will ride in Triumph as a Conquerour of all Enemies and will ride to his great Counsell or Parliament of Saints who are to judge the Delinquents of the world And the Saints are his glory 2 Cor. 8.23 and therefore they must be raised that hee may be in his full glory If thou looke upon thy selfe and thy body and consider how thou hast dishonoured God in thy body it may bee thou mayst be startled in thy spirit and have such sad thoughts as these Will Christ ever raise this body as his that I have abused to sinne ● shall this body be glorified which I have dishonoured by base and filthy lusts but when thou hast any such thoughts as these in which the Devill appeares to thee as an Angel of light to make thee question the truth of the glorious resurrection of thy body then looke beyond thy selfe beyond the sinnes that thou hast committed against God in thy body and spirit And think thus with thy selfe This body though I have abused it by lust and intemperance though I have dishonoured God by the sinnes which I have committed and acted as it were upon a stage in this body and flesh of mine yet now the property is altered I am not now to looke on it as my body I am to look on it as the body of the Lord Jesus it is that body that he hath washed from all sinne in his owne bloud it is that body that he died for that he might cleanse it from filthinesse and uncleannesse it is his body he hath right to it and a propriety in it it is his and none of mine Christ will not lose that which belongs to himselfe and therefore it shall be raised in glory We see how unwilling men are to part with that which is their possession and inheritance We know how Naboth answered Ahab who would have had his Vineyard 1 King 21.3 Should I give the inheritance of my Fathers unto thee we are the inheritance the possession of the Lord Jesus and he will not lose any part of his inheritance This Argument is of sufficient strength to silence carnall reason if it were throughly weighed by us in the ballance of the Sanctuary For if a man look on himselfe as out of himselfe and the being which he hath in the first Adam and behold himselfe as one with the Lord Jesus in a spirituall onenesse seeing himselfe as such a part of Christ as a hand or a foote may be said to be a part of the bodie and knowing Christ hath undertaken to provide for his body and to owne it for his owne this will establish him in an unshaken confidence that the Lord Jesus Christ intends to raise his body and to assure and ascertaine us that he will raise us he himselfe is risen in his own person If the head be above the water the whole body may be drawne out of the water without drowning Christ our head is above water above the billowes that overwhelmed him is above sinne that was charged on him is above the curses of the Law that came upon him when he was made
a sacrifice for sinne above the temptations of Satan above the weaknesse of the flesh Death could not hold him as her prisoner and this may ascertaine us that wee his members shall be drawne up out of the water wee shall be above all things that we may call sinne in our selves above the reach of Satans fiery darts we shall be above Death that will be fulfilled which is spoken in the 1 Cor. 15. Death is swallowed up in victory Christ hath already fully conquered Death in his owne person and will conquer it in the person of all those that are his members enabling them to believe in him Christ doth infuse spirit and fortitude into all his souldiers by enabling them to looke on him their Generall Respice ad Ducem Look unto your Captaine was the old Roman word of Command to the common souldiers to stirre them up to imitate the valour and fortitude of their Commanders And Christian souldiers are made truly valiant by looking upon the fortitude and conquests of him who is the Captaine of their salvation Heb. 2.10 And knowing their union with him they see their head Captaine risen whose they are which maketh them Conquerours of death as his valiant souldiers by a strong perswasion from him and in him of a future resurrection In the next place you see that the bodies of Saints shal be raised for heaven as his body Therefore this may teach us to glorifie God in our bodies and spirits while wee are here below If the Lord Jesus Christ will raise our bodies as his owne bodie it is consonant to reason that we should use our bodies as the bodies of Christ This consideration if God goe along with it will be marvellous powerfull to teach us to be holy not only in our spirits but in our bodies considering that they are the bodies of the Lord Jesus Christ will raise thy body at the last day as his owne it is his body and not thine his spirit informes it he is owner and possessor of it thou art not thine owne thou art bought with a price 1 Cor. 6.20 Thererefore glorifie God in thy body and in thy Spirit which are Gods Seeing Christ will raise thy body as his body when it is dead therefore behave thy selfe towards thy body as the body of Christ while thou art alive This is that that the Apostle presseth from this consideration 1 Cor. 6.15 Shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of a harlot a Christian would not misdemeane himselfe toward his body if he did consider what his body is it is the house and Palace of the Lord Jesus the Temple of God It was accounted a great fault for any man to misbehave himselfe in the Temple of Solomon which was a place then by Gods appointment more holy then other places Our bodies are spirituall Temples therefore defile not the Temple of the Lord. Bring not in the abomination of desolation into the holy place bring not the filth of sinne into it suffer not lust to lie in thy body suffer not pride in thy flesh sinne not against thy owne body in any kind take heed of riot and drunkennesse take heed of those sins that are sinnes against the body because by them thou sinnest against the Temple and house of God thou sinnest against that that is not thine owne but is the Lord Jesus Christs Our bodies should not be like the Egyptian Temples that were stately Edifices and buildings but in them there was nothing but some noysome and filthy beasts Thy body is a stately Edifice O set not up thy beastly lusts as Idols to be worshipped there Galen that great Physitian when he came to anatomize mans body he stood in admiration of the workmanship wondring at the skilfull hand and finger of him that was the maker of it Thou must not only looke on thy body as it is a naturall Edifice but as it is a building for the Lord Jesus as a Temple that Christ hath made choyse of a Temple for the Holy Spirit to dwell in Therefore suffer not Crocodiles and noysome beasts to sit there stoup not to lusts fall not downe on thy knees before thy corruptions sacrifice not to uncleannesse Suffer not any sinne to reigne in thy mortall body Rom. 6. thy body is the body of the Lord it is under the power of Christ therefore ●et Christ onely reigne in it Sinne shall not have dominion over you because you are not under the Law but under grace Rom. 6.19 As yee have yeelded your members servants unto uncle annesse and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yeeld your members servants to righteousnesse unto holinesse If men did but consider the glory of their persons the glory that God hath put upon their spirits in making them one spirit with his owne and the glory that God hath put upon their bodies in making them his houses Temples and places of glory 〈◊〉 dwell in through the goodnesse of God i● would restraine them from sinne That th● high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity should come and dwell in these humble and low cottages of ours That the God o● glory should come and dwell in houses o● clay in houses of mud in houses that presently must be pulled downe and lye in the dust O how should the serious and spirituall meditation of this put bounds and limits yea a period to our corruptions As Luther doth report of one that being tempted to any sinne by the Devill would answer that she was Christian Thy body is Christs by conquest he hath dispossessed the Devill of the strong hold which he had in thy body and therefore suffer not the Devill to rule there as he did when he was Lord of thee If the Devill come and tempt thee to commit any sinne which is a sinne that thou mayst act with thy body answer him thus Satan away my eares cannot be open to thy temptations I cannot listen to thee to commit this sinne my body is not mine owne but the body of the Lord Jesus Christ And when thou findest thy selfe in thy body at any time unwilling for the service of Christ consider with thy selfe my body is not mine owne it belongs to the Lord Christ he will have a care of it at the resurrection he will not lose my earth or ashes he will preserve my dust and keep it as a precious Diamond in the casket of his owne love Therefore be willing to serve Christ in thy body he ownes the bodies of Saints here and will owne them hereafter he hath a speciall care of the bones of his Saints and though the limbes of their bodies be carried from one end of the world to the other and scattered in severall places and climates yet by his power he will bring one limb to another therefore glorifie Christ in your bodies who hath promised to quicken your mortall bodies by his spirit which he hath given unto you Rom. 8.11 In the
firmament is a great glory to our eyes so there shall be a Celestiall Star-like glory upon the bodies of the Saints they shall not be grosse lumpish and heavie bodies as they are now but spirituall bodies as swift as a Seraphim The bodie is now a clog and weight to the soule it is ergastulum animae as the Platonists say it keepeth the spirit under and presseth it down with the weight of it but then the bodie shall be a spirituall body so that in this body the Saints shall ascend into the aire as in a Charriot of triumph and glory to meet the Lord Jesus As Elias was carried up to Heaven so shall the Saints in these bodies of theirs rife in glorie to meet the Lord Jesus Christ in the ayre Now they are subject to diseases then they shall be freed from all diseases now they are subject to death then death shall be swallowed up and every Saint in his owne person shall appeare as a Conquerour of death and of the grave every Saint shall have this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this song of triumph in his mouth O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory The sting of death is sinne and the strength of sinne is the Law but thanks he unto God who hath given us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ Our bodies then shall be incorruptible wholly like the body of Christ therefore the Apostle saith that the bodie it must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3. last conformable in likenesse to the glorious bodie of the Lord Jesus Christ himselfe you see what perfection there shall be in the bodies of the Saints though they be vile now they shall be honourable and glorious then though they be now as pieces of earth they shall be then more bright then the Starres of Heaven or the Sunne in the firmament This glorie God will put upon the bodies of the Saints and being thus made happy in their bodies and spirits when they shall see themselvs in this happy condition filled in their bodies and spirits with the glory of God it cannot but cause great joy If a man lye sick a long while and have a weake distempered crazie bodie when he is restored he rejoyceth that he hath health and strength and is freed from the weaknesse that was upon him shall not there be great joy then when the Saints shall rise when they that had weake crazie and vile mortall bodies here shall see themselves in bodies of glory in bodies as glorious as the body of the Lord Jesus Againe there will be great cause of joy to these Saints when they shall be thus united in their bodies and soules and shall meet the Lord Jesus Christ because they shall have great dignitie put upon their persons they shall bee raised as no meane persons As wicked ungodly and unbelieving men shall be raised as slaves and vassals and be brought forth in chaines and fetters before the dreadfull tribunall of the Lord Jesus Christ so the Saints shall all come forth a● Kings every one of them shall be dignified with the glorie and Majestie of a King This is that that is spoken of in the Revelation where it is said that Christ hath made 〈◊〉 Kings and Priests and wee shall reigne upon earth We shall reigne in our bodies As a● Ambassadour said of the Senate of Rome that he apprehended that there were as many Kings as Senators in the Senate-house Quo● Senatores tot Reges So there shall be as many Kings as Saints at the resurrection and every one shall have Kingly glory and Majesty every one together with the Lord Jesus reigning as a King upon the earth Rev. 5.10 Therefore if men rejoyce in the enjoyment of earthly Kingdomes and Crowne● which are lined with cares that a King professed that if men knew the troubles which attended upon a Crowne no man would stoop to take it up what joy will there be when wee shall reigne as spirituall and heavenly Kings with the Lord Jesus Againe there will be great joy because all things that may occasion any sorrow or sadnesse shall be quite removed away all teares must then be wiped from the eyes of all the Saints Rev. 7.17 there must be no more sighing no more griefe no more sorrow All earthly infirmities and weaknesses which are accompanied with griefe and paine shall be removed for our bodies shall be Celestiall bodies 1 Cor. 15.40 raised up in incorruption 1 Cor. 15.42 And there shall be no more blindnesse or blacknesse upon our spirits Here so long as wee carrie sinne about us though we know it is pardoned though we know it shall be remembred no more Heb. 8.12 though we know in point of Justification that it may be sought for and cannot be found Jer. 50.20 yet so long as wee feele it opposing the Spirit of glory and holinesse in us by the filthy nature of it so long it will occasion sorrow griefe and some trouble to the soule but at the generall resurrection as sinne is now compleatly taken away in our Justification to those that believe in the Lord Jesus such being those blessed ones spoken of in the 32. Psal whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sinnes are covered So then sinne shall be wholly taken away to our owne sense feeling and apprehension by the Spirit of Sanctification There shall be no corner then in the soule spirit or body for any lust or uncleannesse and consequently no place for sorrow Sinne is like the evill spirit that possessed Saul that made him melancholy and sad and afflicted him in his spirit But when the Lord Jesus Christ shall appeare then all sinne shall be done away to our sense and feeling as it is done away now in our Justification Then we shall be as perfectly sanctified throughout both in bodie and spirit as wee are now perfectly justified Now the life that wee live in the flesh is by Faith in the Sonne of God by seeing how compleatly we are justified from sinnes lusts corruptions those enemies to the Lord Jesus Christ that wee carrie in our bosomes but then wee shall be as perfect in respect of the life of sanctification as wee are now perfect and compleat in respect of our Justification So that the cause of sorrow and trouble shall quite be taken away There shall be no place then left for Evangelicall sorrow the sorrow that now is wrought in the Saints is Evangelicall not Legall but the joy and glory which doth remaine for the Saints hereafter shall be so great that there shall be no place then left for Evangelicall griefe for any sinne that we have committed And as sin shall not then bring any sorrow upon us so neither shall the Devill who is the troubler of the Israel of God be able to afflict us Here he is permitted to afflict us as he did Job for the tryall of our Faith and patience and though for the present when we looke on Christ