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A53688 The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some degressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject / by John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1654 (1654) Wing O740; ESTC R21647 722,229 498

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Blood c Joh. 1. ● Ephes. 5. 8. Col. 1. 13. Luk. 4. 18. Darknesse d Rom. 8. l 6 7 8. Rom. 5. 10. Col. 1. 21. Gal. 3. 13. Joh. 3. 35. Bindnesse Enmity curse and Wrath Disobedience Rebellion Impotency and Vniversall Alienation from God is beyond all contradiction by Testimonies plentifully given out here a little and there a little line upon line manifest in the Scripture Shall we now say that this Grace of God is bestowed on men upon the account of these Qualifications and continued without revocation on condition that they abide in the same State with the same Qualifications Let then men continue in sinne that grace may abound Is the case any other as to Iustification doth not God justify the ungodly Ro. 4. 5. are we not in filthy Robes when he comes to cloath us with Robes of Righteousnesse Zech 3. 3. are we not reconciled to God when alienated by wicked workes Col 1. 13. these are the Qualifications on which it seemes God grafts his Gifts and Graces and whose abode in the Persons in whom they are is the condition whereon the irrevocablenesse of those Gifts and Graces does depend Who would have thought they had been of such reckoning and esteeme with the Lord And this considering what is learnedly discoursed elsewhere may suffice as to the other Assertion 1 Cor. 4. 7. that God gives his Gifts and Graces to Qualifications not to Persons Those Qualifications are either Gifts of God or not if not who made those men in whom they are differ from others if they are on what Qualifications were those Qualifications bestowed That God freely bestows on Persons of his own good pleasure not Grafting on Qualifications his Gifts and Graces we have Testimonies abundantly sufficient to out-ballance M. Goodwins Assertions Rom 9. 18. He hath Mercy on whom he will have Mercy he bestowes his Mercy and the fruits of it not on this or that Qualification but on whom or what Person he will and to them it is given saith our Saviour to know the Mysteries of the Kingdome of God but to others it is not given I see no stock that his gift is grafted on but only the Persons of Gods good will whom he graciously designes to a Participation of it Truth is §. 9. I know not any thing more directly contradictory to the whole Discovery of the worke of Gods Grace in the Gospell then that which is couched in these Assertions of M. Goodwin neither is it any thing lesse or more then that which of old was phrased The Giving of Grace according to merit ascribing the primitive discriminating of persons as to Spirituall Grace unto selfe indeavours casting to the ground the free distinguishing good pleasure of God and that Graciousnesse of every Gift of his I speake as to the first issue of his love in quickning renewing pardoning Grace which eminently consists in this that he is found of them that seeke him not and hath Mercy on whom he will because so it seemed good to him Not to digresse farther in the discovery of the unsatisfactorinesse of this pretence from the pursuit of the Argument in hand Because Gods gifts are not repented of therefore doe men continue not in the condition wherein they find them but wherein they place them And all Qualifications in men whatever that are in the least acceptable to God are so farre from being stocks whereon God grafts his Gifts and Graces that they are Plants themselves which he plants in whomsoever he pleaseth Yea the Tree is made good before it beare any good fruit and the Branch implanted into the True Olive before it receive the sap or juyce of any one good Qualification The summe of Mr Goodwins Answer amounts to this let men be stedfast in a good condition and Gods Gifts shall stedfastly abide with them if they change they also shal be revoked which is directly opposite to the plain intendment of the place viz. That the stedfastnesse of men depends upon the irrevocablenesse of Gods Grace and not è contra there is not in his sense the least intimation in these words of the permanency of any Gift or Grace of God with any one on whom it is bestowed for a Day an Houre or a Moment but notwithstanding this Testimony of the Holy Ghost they may be given one houre and taken away the next they may flourish in a man in the morning and in the evening be cut downe dried up and withered this is not to Answer the Arguings of men but positively to deny what God affirms To conclude God gives not his gifts to men I mean those mentioned because they please him Jerem. 31. 32. but because it pleaseth him so to doe he does not take them away because they displease him but gives them so to abide with them that they shall never displease him to the height of such a provocation Neither are the Gifts of God otherwise to be repented of then by taking them from the Persons on whom they are bestowed But this heape being removed we may proceede Farthermore then §. 10. in sundry places doth the Lord propose this for the Consolation of his and to assure them that there shall never be an everlasting separation between him and them which shall be further cleared by particular instances Things or Truthes proposed for Consolation are of all others most clearely exalted above exception without which they were no way sutable considering the promptnesse of our unbelieving hearts to rise up against the worke of Gods Grace and Mercy to compasse the end for which they are proposed Isaiah §. 11. 40. 27 28 29 30 31. Why sayest thou O Jacob and speakest O Israell my way is hid from the Lord and my Judgment is passed over from my God hast thou not knowen hast thou not heard that the everlasting God the Lord the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary there is no searching of his Vnderstanding He giveth power to the faint to them that have no might he increaseth strength Even the youths shall faint and be weary and the young men shall utterly faile but they that wait upon the Lord shall renue their strength they shall mount up with wings as as Eagles they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not faint v. 27. Jacob and Israel make a double complaint both parts of it manifesting some feare or dread of Separation from God for though in Generall it could not be so yet in particular Believers under Temptation may question their owne condition with their right unto and interest in all the things whereby their state and Glory is safegarded My way say they is hid from the Lord The Lord takes no more notice sets his heart no more upon my way my walking but lets me goe and passe on as a stranger to him And farther My judgement is passed over from my God Mine enemies prevaile perhaps Lusts and
and Favour to them whilest they wallow in all manner of Abominations and desperate Rebellions against him An Hypothesis crudely imposed on our Doctrine and repeated over and over as a matter of the greatest detestation and abomination that can fall within the thoughts of men And such supposalls and conclusions are made thereupon as border at least upon the cursed cost of Blasphemy but cui fini I pray To what end is all this noyse as though any had ever Asserted that God promised to continue his Love and gracious Acceptation alwaies to his Saints and yet took no care nor had promised that they should be continued Saints but would suffer them to turne very Devills It is as easy for men to confute Hypotheses created in their own imaginations as to cast downe men of straw of their own framing and setting up We say indeed that God hath faithfully promised that he will never leave nor forsake Believers but withall that he hath no lesse faithfully engaged himselfe that they shall never wickedly depart from him but that they shall continue Saints and Believers Yea if I may so say Promising alwaies to accept them freely it is incumbent on his Holy Majesty upon the account of his Truth Faithfulnesse and Righteousnesse to preserve them such as without the least dishonour to his Grace and Holinesse yea to the greatest advantage of his Glory he may alwaies accept them delight in them and rejoyce over them and so he tells us he doth Ierem. 31.7 Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting Love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawne thee he drawes us with his kindnesse to follow him obey him live unto him abide with him because he Loves us with an Everlasting Love 2. That these promises of God doe not properly and as to their originall rise depend on any conditions in Believers or by them to be fulfilled but are the Fountains and Springs of all conditions whatever that are required to be in them or expected from them though the Grace and Obedience of Believers are often mentioned in them as the means whereby they are carried on according to the appointment of God unto the enjoyment or continued in it of what is promised This one Consideration that there is in very many of these Promises an expresse non obstante or a not-withstanding the want of any such condition as might seeme to be at the bottome and to be the occasion of any such Promise or Engagement of the Grace of God is sufficient to give light and evidence to this Assertion If the Lord sayeth expresly that he will doe so with men though it be not so with them his doing of that thing cannot depend on any such thing in them as he saith notwithstanding the want of it he will doe it Take one instance Isai. 54. v. 9 10. In a little wrath have I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord they Redeemer for this is as the waters of Noah unto mee whereas I have sworne that the waters of Noah shall no more cover the Earth so have I sworne that I will not be worth with thee nor rebuke thee for the mountaines shall depart aud the hills be removed but my kindnesse shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee He will have mercy on them with everlasting kindnesse v. 8. Yea but how if they walke not worthy of it Why yet this kindnesse shall not faile saith the Lord for it is as the waters of Noah God sweareth that the waters of Noah should no more cover the Earth and you see the stability of what he hath spoken The World is now reserved for Fire but drowned it shall be no more my kindnesse to thee saies God is such it shall nor more depart from thee then those waters shall returne againe upon the Earth Neither is this all wherein he compareth his kindnesse to the waters of Noah but in this also in that in the Promise of drowning the World no more there was an expresse non obstante for the sinnes of men Gen. 8 21. The Lord said in his heart I will not againe curse the ground any more for mans sake for the imagination of mans heart is evill from his youth Though men grow full of wickednesse and violence as before the Flood they were yet saith the Lord the World shall be drowned no more And in this doth the Promise of kindnesse hold proportion with that of the waters of Noah there is an expresse reliefe in it against the sinnes and failings of them to whom it is made viz. such as he will permit them to fall into whilest he certainly preserves them from all such as are inconsistent with his Love and Favour according to the tenor of the Covenant of Grace and therefore it depends not on any thing in them being made with a proviso for any such defect as in them may be imagined 3. To affirme that these Promises of God's abiding with us to the end do depend on any condition that may be uncertaine in its event by us to be fulfilled as to their Accomplishment doth wholly enervate and make them void in respect of the maine end for which they were given us of God That one chiefe end of them is to give the Saints consolation in every condition in all the straights tryalls and temptations which they are to undergoe or may be called to is evident When Ioshua was entring upon the great work of subduing the Canaanites and setting the Tabernacle and people of God in their appointed Inheritance wherein he was to passe through innumerable difficulties tryalls and pressures God gives him that word of Promise I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Iosua 1.5 so are many of them made to the Saints in their weaknesse darknesse and desertions as will appeare by the consideration of the particular instances following Isa. 4. 3 4. Now what one drop of consolation can a poore drooping tempted soule squeeze out of such Promises that depend wholly and solely upon any thing within themselves he will be with mee and be my God it is true but alwaies provided that I continue to be his That also is a sweet and gratious Promise but that I shall doe so he hath not promised It seems I have a cursed Liberty left me of departing wickedly from him so that upon the matter notwithstanding these Promises of his I am left to my selfe If I will abide with him well and good he will abide with me and so it shall be well with mee That he should so abide with me as to cause me to abide with him it seemes there is no such thing Soule look to thy selfe all they hopes and help is in thy selfe but alas for the present I have no sence of this Love of God and I know not that I haue any true
invented To shut up this Discourse and to proceed §. 42. If these are the solid Foundations of Peace and Consolation which the Saints have concerning their Perseverance if these be the means sufficient abundantly sufficient afforded them for their Preservation that are laid in the ballance as to the giving of an Evangelicall Genuine Assurance with the Decrees and Purposes the Covenant Promises and Oath of God the Blood and Intercession of Christ the Annoynting and Sealing of the spirit of Grace I suppose we need not care how soone we enter the Lists with any as to the comparing of the Doctrines under contest in reference to their Influence into the Obedience and Consolation of the Saints which with it's Issue in the close of this discourse shall God willing be put to the triall Now that I may lay a more cleere Foundation for what doth insue §. 43. I shall briefely deduce not only the Doctrine it selfe but also the Method wherein I shall handle it from a portion of Scripture in which the whole is summarily comprized and branched forth into suitable Heads for the Confirmation and vindication thereof And this also is required to the mayne of my designe being not so directly to Convince stout Gaine-sayers in vanquishing their Objections as to Strengthen Weak Believers in helping them against Temptations therefore shall at the entrance hold out that whereinto their Faith must be ultimately resolved the Authority of God in his Word being that Arke alone whereon it can rest the sole of its foot Now this is the Fourth chap. of Isaiah of which take this short account It is a Chapter made up of Gracious Promises given to the Church in a Calamitous season the Season it selfe is described verses 25 and 26. of the third Chapter and the first of this all holding out a distressed estate a low condition it is indeed Gods Method to make out gracious Promises to his People when their condition seems most deplored to sweeten their soules with a sence of his Love in the multitude of the perplexing thoughts which in distracted times are ready to tumultuate in them The Foundation of all the following promises lies in the second verse §. 44. even the giving out of the Branch of the Lord and the Fruit of the earth for Beauty and Glory to the remnant of Israel Who it is who is the Branch of the Lord the Scripture tells us in sundry places Isaiah 11. 1. Ier. 23. 5. 33. 15. Zach. 3. 8. The Lord Jesus Christ the Promise of whom is the Churches only Supportment in every tryall or distresse it hath to undergoe He is this Branch and Fruit and he is placed in the Head here as the great Fountain Mercy from whence all others doe flow In those that follow the Persons to whom those promises are made and the Matter or Substance of them are observable the Persons have various Appellations and descriptions in this Chapter They are called First the Escaping of Israell v. 2. They that are left in Sion v. 3. Jerusalem it selfe v. 4 The Dwelling places and Assemblies of Mount Sion v. 5. That the same individuall Persons are intended in all these severall Appellations is not questionable It is but in reference to the severall Acts of Gods dwelling with them and outgoing of his Love and Goodwill both eternall and temporall towards them that they come under this variety of Names and Descriptions First in respect of his Eternall Designation of them to Life and Salvation they are said to be written among the living or unto life in Jerusalem Revel 3. 12. 13. 8. their names are in the Lambs book of life from the foundation of the World Luke 10. 20. and they are recorded in the purpose of God from all eternity Secondly in respect of their Deliverance and actuall Redemption from the bondage of death Satan which for ever prevaile upon the greatest number of the Sonnes of Men shadowed out by their deliverance from the Babilonish Captivity Revel 5. 9. pointed at in this place they are said to be a Remnant Eph. 5. 25. 26. an Escaping such as are Left and Remaine in Jerusalem From the perishing Lump of Man-kind Zech. 3. 2. God doth by Christ snatch a Remnant whom he will preserve like a Brand out of the fire John 17. 9. Thirdly in respect of their injoyment of Gods Ordinances and Word Rom. 8. 38. and his Presence with them therein they are called Psal. 48. 11 12 13 14. 16. 1 2 3. c. the Daughter of Sion and the Dwelling places thereof There did God make known his Mind and Will Jerem. 50. 5. and Walked with his People in those Beauties of Holinesse Zecl 8. 2. These are they to whom these promises are made the Elect John 12. 17. Redeemed and Called of God or those who being Elected and Redeemed Psal. 110. 3. shall in their severall Generations be Called according to his Purpose who worketh all things Isa 49. 14. according to the Councell of his own will For the Matter of these promises §. 45. they may be reduced to these three Heads First of Justification vers 2. Secondly of Sanctification v. 3 4. Thirdly of Perseverance vers 5 6. First of Justification Christ is Made to them or Given unto them for Beauty and Glory which how it 's done the Holy Ghost tells us Isaiah 61 10. I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord my soule shall be joyfull in my God for he hath cloathed me with the Garment of salvation he hath covered me with the Robes of Righteousnesse saith the Church he puts upon poore deformed Creatures the Glorious Robe of his own Righteousnesse to make us Comely in his Presence and the Presence of his Father Zac. 13. 3 4. Through Him 1 Cor 1 20. 54. 17. his being given unto us made unto us of God Righteousnesse Isa. 45. 24 25. becoming the Lord our Righteousnesse doe we find free acceptation as Beautifull and Glorious in the eyes of God Jer. 23. 6. But this is not all He doth not only Adorne us without Rom. 5. 1. 8. 1. but also Wash us within the Apostle acquaints us that Col. 2. 10. that was his designe Ephes. 5. 25 26. and therefore you have Secondly the promise of Sanctification added verses 3 4. v. 3. you have the thing it selfe they shall be called holy Made so called so by him who calleth things that are not as though they were and by that Call gives them to be that which he calls them 2 Cor. 4. 6. he said let there be light and there was light And then the manner how it becomes to be so v. 4. first setting out the Efficient cause Ezek. 11. 19. the spirit of Judgment and Burning Joh. 3. 5. that is of Holinesse and Light Secondly the way of his producing this great effect Rom. 8. 2. washing away
bold to think and say he is Changeable what Apology will be found on such a supposall for the Immutability of God doth not fall within the compasse of my narrow apprehension neither is that Parentheticall Expression of a change imagined in the Persons concerning whom Gods intentions are any Plea for his Changeablenesse upon this supposall For he either foresaw that change in them or he did not if he did not where is his Prescience Yea where is his Deity If he did to what end did he really and verily intend and purpose to doe so and so for a man when at the same instant he knew the man would so behave himselfe as he should never accomplish any such intention towards him We should be wary how we ascribe such Lubricous thoughts to Wormes of the Earth like our selves But if a man sinne against the Lord who shall plead for him If one should really and verily intend or purpose to give a man bread to eat to morrow who he knows infallibly will be put to death to night such a one will not perhaps be counted Changeable but he will sCarce scape being esteemed a Changeling Yet it seems it must be granted that God verily intends and really to doe so and so for men if they be in such and such a condition which he verily and really knowes they will not be in But suppose all this might be granted what is it at all to the Argument in hand concerning the Lords ingaging his Immutability to his Saints to secure them from perishing upon the account thereof Either prove that God doth change which he saith he doth not or that the Saints may perish though he change not which he affirmes they cannot or you speake not to the businesse in hand The 41. §. 20. Section containes a discourse too long to be transcribed unlesse it were more to the purpose in hand then it is I shall therefore briefely give the Reader a tast of some Paralogismes that runne from one end of it to the other and then in particular rowle away every stone that seemes to be of any weight for the detaining captive the Truth in whose vindication we are ingaged First from the beginning to the ending of the whole Discourse the thing in question is immodestly begged and many inferences made upon a supposall that Believers may become Impenitent Apostates which being the sole thing under debate ought not it selfe to be taken as granted and so made a proofe of it selfe It is by us Asserted that those who are once freely accepted of God in Christ shall not be so forsaken as to become impenitent Apostates and that upon the account of the Immutability of God which he hath ingaged to give Assurance thereof To evince the falsity of this it is much pressed that if they become impenitent Apostates God without the least shadow of mutability may cast them off and condemne them which is a kind of reasoning that will scarce conclude to the Understanding of an intelligent Reader yet this sandy Foundation is thought sufficient to beare up many Rhetoricall expressions concerning the Changeablenesse of God in respect of sundry of his Attributes if he should not destroy such Impenitent Apostates as 't is splendidly supposed Believers may be ô Famâ ingens ingentior armis Vir Trojane This way of Disputing will scarce succeed you in this great undertaking The second Scene of this discourse §. 21. is a grosse confounding of Gods Legall or Morall Approbation of duties and Conditionall of Persons in reference to them which is not Love properly so called but a meere Declaration of Gods approving the thing which he Commands and Requires with the will of Gods Purpose and Intention and actuall Acceptation of the Persons of Believers in Jesus Christ suited thereunto Hence are all the comparisons used between God and a Judge in his Love and the expresse deniall that Gods Love is fixt on any Materially that is on the Persons of any for that is theintendment of it but only Formally in reference to their Qualifications Hence also is that Instance againe and insisted on in this and the former Section of the Love of God to the fallen Angells whilest they stood in their obedience Their Obedience no doubt if any they actually yeilded fell under the Approbation of God but that it was the purpose and intention of God to continue and preserve them in that Obedience cannot be asserted without ascribing to him more palpable mutability then can fall upon a wise and knowing man Thirdly the Discourse of this Section hath a contribution of strength such as it is from a squaring of the Love of God unto the sweet nature and Loving disposition of men which is perhaps no lesse grosse Anthropomorphisme then they were guilty of who assigned him a Body and Countenance like to ours And upon these three stilts whereof the first is called Petitio Principii the second Ignoratio Elenchi and the third Fallacia non causae pro caus● is this Discourse advanced I shall not need to transcribe §. 22. and follow the Progresse of this Argumentation the Observation of the Fallacies before mentioned will helpe the meanest capacity to unravell the Sophistry of the whole The close only of it may seeme to deserve more particular consideration so then it prooceedeth The Vnchangeablenesse assumed by God himselfe unto himselfe in the worke in hand I am the Lord I change not is I conceive that which is found in him in respect of his Decrees the reason is because it is assigned by him as the reason why they were not utterly destroyed I am the Lord I change not therefore yee Sonnes of Jacob are not consumed In the beginning of the Chapter he did declare unto them his purpose and Decree of sending his only begotten Sonne whom he there calls the Messenger of the Covenant unto them He predicteth v. 3 4. The happy fruit or consequence of that his sending in reference to their Nation and Posterity To the Vnchangeablenesse of this his Decree he assignes the Patience which he had for a long time exercised towards them under their great and continued provocations whereby he implyes that if he could have been turned out of the way of his Decree concerning the sending of his Sonne unto them in their Posterity they would have done it by the greatnesse of their sinnes but in so much as this his Decree or himselfe in this his Decree was Vnchangeable and it must have been changed in case they had been all destroyed For the Decree was for the sending to their Nation and Posterity hence saith he it comes to passe that though your sins otherwise abundantly have deserved it yet I have spared you from a totall ruine therefore in these two last Scripture Arguments there is every whit as much or rather more against then for the common Doctrine of Perseverance That the Vnchangeablenesse of God Ans. which is mentioned in this Text
Distinctions Yet the certaine accomplishment of them as they are ascribed unto God is here asserted by the Holy Ghost Were the confirmation of the matter of our present Discourse §. 9. my designe in hand I could farther confirme it by inlarging these ensuing Reasons 1. First from the Immutability of God the least questioning whereof falls foule on all the Perfections of the Divine Nature which requireth a correspondent affection of all the Internall and Eternall Acts of his Mind and Will 2. Secondly from his Soveraignty in making and executing all his Purposes which will not admit of any such mixture of Consults or Cooperations of others as should render his thoughts lyable to Alteration Rom. 11. 34 35 36. The Lord in his Purposes is considered as the great Former of all things who having his clay in the hand of his Almighty power ordaines every parcell to what kind of vessell and to what use he pleaseth hence the Apostle concludes the consideration of them and the distinguishing Grace flowing from them with that admiration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oh the depth c. 3. Thirdly from their Eternity which exempts them from all shadow of change and lifts them up above all those sphears that either from within and their owne nature or from without by the impression of others are exposed to turning that which is Eternall is also Immutable Acts 15. 18. 1 Cor. 2. 11. 4. Fourthly from the Absolutenesse and Independency of his Will whereof they are the Acts and Emanations Rom. 9. 15 16 17 18 19 20. whatever hath any influence upon that as to Move it Cause it Change it must be Before it Above it Better then it as every cause is then its effect as such This Will of his as was said is the fountain of all beings to which free and independent Act all Creatures owe their being and subsistence their operations and manner thereof their whole difference from those Worlds of beings which his Power can produce but yet shall lye bound up to Eternity in their nothingnesse and possibility upon the account of his good Pleasure Into this doth our Saviour resolve the disposall of himselfe Math. 26. 42. and of all others Math 11. 25 26 27. certainly men in their wrangling Disputes and Contests about it have scarce seriously considered with whom they have to doe shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made nice thus 5. Fiftly §. 10. from the Ingagement of his Omnipotency for the accomplishment of all his Purposes and Designes as is emphatically expressed Isa 14. 24 25 26 27. Surely the Lord of Hosts hath Sworne saying surely as I have thought so shall it come to passe and as I have purposed it shall stand that I will breake the Assyrian in my land This is the purpose of God that is purposed upon the whole Earth and this is the hand that is stretched out upon all the Nations for the Lord of Hosts hath purposed and who shall disanull it And his hand is stretched out and who shall turne it back The Lord doth not only Assert the certain Accomplishment of all his Purposes but also to prevent and obviate the Vnbeliefe of them who were concerned in their fulfilling he manifests upon what account it is that they shall certainly be brought to passe and that is by the stretching out of his hand or exalting of his mighty Power for the doeing of it so that if there be a fayling therein it must be through the shortnesse of that Hand of his so stretched out in that it could not reach the end aymed at A Worme will put forth its Strength for the fullfilling of that whereunto is is inclined and the Sonnes of men will draw out all their Power for the compassing of their designes if there be Wisdome in the laying of them and foresight of Emergencyes they alter not nor turne aside to the right hand or to the left in the pursuit of them And shall the Infinitely Wise Holy and Righteous thoughts and Designes of God not have his Power engaged for their accomplishment His Infinite Wisdome and Understanding are at the foundation of them they are the Counsells of his Will Ephes. 7. 11. who hath known his minde in them saith the Apostle and who hath been his Counsellour though no creature can see the paths wherein he walks nor apprehend the reason of the waies he is delighted in yet this he lets us know for the satisfying of our hearts and teaching of our inquiries that his owne Infinite Wisdome is in them all I cannot but feare sometimes that men have darkned counsell without knowledge in curious contests about the Decrees Purposes of God as though they were to be measured by our rule line and as though by searching we could find out the Almighty to Perfection But he is Wise in heart he that contendeth with him let him Instruct him Adde that this Wisdome in his Counsell is attended with infallible Prescience of all that will fall in by the way or in the course of the accomplishment of his Purposes and you will quickly see that there can be no possible intervenience upon the account whereof the Lord should not ingage his Almighty Power for their accomplishment He is of one minde and who can turne him he will worke and who shall let him 6. Sixtly by demonstrating the Vnreasonablnesse Folly and Impossibility of suspending the Acts and Purposes of the Will of God upon any actings of the Creatures whatsoever seeing it cannot be done without subjecting Eternity to time the first Cause to the second the Creator to the Creature the Lord to the Servant disturbing the whole order of Beings and Operations in the world 7. Seventhly by the removeall of all Possible or Imaginary Causes of Alteration and change which will all be resolved into impotency in one kind or other Every Alteration being confessedly an imperfection it cannot follow but from want and weaknesse Upon the Issue of which Discourse if it might be perused these Corollaries would insue 1. First Conditionall Promises and Threatnings are not declarative of Gods Purposes concerning Persons but of his Morall Approbation or Rejection of Things 2. Secondly There is a wide difference betweene the Change of what is Conditionally pronounced as to the things themselves and the change of what is Determinately willed the certainty of whose event is proportioned to the Immutable Acts of the Will of God it selfe 3. Thirdly That no Purpose of God is Conditionall though the things themselves concerning which his Purposes are are often times conditionalls one of another 4. Fourthly That conditionall Purposes concerning Perseverance are either Impossible implying contradictions or Ludicrous even to an unfitnes for a Stage But of these and such like as they occasionally fall in in the insuing Discourse This foundation being laid §. 11. I come to what was Secondly proposed namely to manifest by an Induction of particular Instances the ingagement
for the deterring men from their impious and destructive courses I say God forbid To put it then to an issue God here promiseth that they who here trust in him shall never be remooved What I pray is the Conditiō on which this Promise doth depend It is say they who oppose us in this if they continue trusting in him that is if they be not removed for to trust in him is not to be removed if then they be not removed they shall not be removed and is this the minde of the Holy Ghost Notwithstanding all the Rhetoricke in the world this Promise will stand for the consolation of them that believe as the Mountaines about Jerusalem that shall never be removed In some it is said to be a Promise of abiding in Happinesse §. 15. not in Faith but it plainely appeares to be a Promise of abiding in trusting the Lord which comprehends both our Faith and Happinesse Ob. It is not promised that they who once trust in the Lord shall abide happy though they cease to trust in him Ans. It is a Promise that they shall not cease to trust in him Ob. It is not that they shall be necessitated to abide trusting in him Ans. No but it is that they shall be so far assisted and effectually wrought upon as certainely to do it Ob. It is no more then the Apostle sayes to the Corinthians 2 Cor. 2. 3. which frame towards them he would not continue should they be changed and turned into Idolaters and Blasphemers Ans. First the Promises of God and the affections of men are but ill compared 2. Paul loved the Corinthians whilst they were such as he mentioned God promiseth his Grace to Believers that they may continue such as he loves Ob. All the Promises are made to Qualifications not to Persons Ans. Prove that and 1. Take the case in hand and 2. Cast downe the Church to the ground it having no one Promise on that account made unto it as consisting of Abrahams Seed and so this witnesse also is freed from all exceptions put in against it and appeares with confidence to give in its Testimony to the Vnchangeablenesse of God unto Believers I shall in the next place adjoine another portion of Scripture of the same import with those foregoing §. 16. wherein the truth in hād is no lesse clearly somewhat more pathetically convincingly expressed thē in that last mentioned It is Isa. 54. 7 8 9 10. For a small moment have I forsaken thee but with great Mercies will I gather thee In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have Mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer For this is as the waters of Noah unto me for as I have sworne that the Waters of Noah shall no more cover the Earth so have I sworne that I will not be wrath with thee nor rebuke thee for the Mountaines shall depart and the hils be removed but my Loving-kindnesse shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my Peace be removed saith the Lord that hath Mercy on thee The place I have mentioned before but only as to one speciall inference from one passage in the words I shall now use the whole for the confirmation of the generall Truth we plead for the words are full plaine suited to the businesse in hand No expressions of our finding out can so fully reach the Truth we assert much lesse so pathetically worke upon the Affections of Believers or so effectually prevaile on their understandings to receive the Truth contained in them as these words of God himselfe given us for those ends are suited to doe Goe to men whose minds in any measure are free from prejudice not forestalled with a contrary perswasion and furnished with evasions for the defence of their opinions and aske whether God doth not in these words directly and positively promise to those to whom he speaketh that he will alwaies continue his kindnesse to them to the end and that for the daies of eternity his Love shall be fixed on them and I no way doubt but they will readily answer It is so indeed it cannot be denied But seeing we have to deale as with our own unbelieving hearts so with men who have turned every stone to prejudge this Testimony of God the words must a little more narrowly be considered and the mind of the Holy Ghost inquired into V. 5. mention is made of the desertion of the Church § 17. by the eclipsing of the beames of Gods countenance and the inflicting of some great affliction for a season in opposition unto which momentary desertions in that and in the beginning of the 8. v. he giveth in Consolation from the Assurance of the great Mercies and Everlasting Kindnesse wherein he abideth to doe them good with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee I will pardon pitty and heale thee with that mercy which floweth from Love which never had beginning that never shall have ending that cannot be cut off Everlasting Kindnesse Beare with patience your present desertion your present trialls whatever they are that befall you they are but for a season but for a moment and these also consistent with that Mercy Kindnesse which is everlasting and turneth not away If this Mercy and Kindnesse dependeth on any thing in us and is resolved lastly thereunto which may alter and change every moment as our walking with God in its selfe considered not relating to the Unchangeablenesse of his Purpose the efficacy of his promised Grace is apt to doe what opposition can there be betwixt that desertion wherewith they are exercised and the kindnesse wherewith they are embraced as to their continuance As that is said to be for a little while for a moment so this also may be of no longer abode It may possibly be as Jonah's Gourd that grew up in the morning and before night was withered what then shall become of the foundation of that consolation wherewith God here refresheth the soules of his people consisting in the continuance of his kindnesse in an Antithesis to the moment arinesse of their desertion Least that any should call this into Question §. 18. as our unbelieving hearts are very apt and skilfull in putting in pleas against the truth of the Promises of God and their accomplishment towards us v. 9. the Lord farther confirmeth the Assurance formerly given and removeth those objections to which through the Sophistry of Satan and the Sottishnesse of our own hearts it may seem to be lyable This is saith he as the waters of Noah Gods dealing with thē in that mercy which floweth from his everlasting kindnesse is like his dealing with the World in the matter of the waters of Noah or the floud wherewith it was drowned and destroyed when he with his were saved in the Arke He calleth upon his Children to consider his dealings with the World in respect
as can well be expressed wherefore these being exceptions expressely against the scope of the whole It is objected 3. That it cannot be proved that this promise properly or directly intendeth the collation of Spirituall or heavenly good things unto them so as of Temporall yea the situation of it betwixt Temporall Promises immediately both behind and before it perswadeth the contrary Read the Context from v. 8. to the end of the Chapter Ans. The other forts being demolished this last is very faintly defended That it cannot be proved that it doth so properly or directly but if it doth intend spiritualls properly and directly though not so properly or directly the case is cleare And that it doth properly intend Spiritualls and but secondarily and indirectly Temporalls as to sundry limitations is most evident For 1. The very Conjugall Expression of the Love of God here used manifesteth it beyond all contradiction to be a Promise of the Covenant I will Betroth thee unto mee I will take thee unto mee in a Wedlock covenant What! in Temporall mercies Is that the tenor of the Covenant of God God forbid 2. The Foundations of these Mercies and the principles from whence they flow are Loving-kindnesses and Mercy and Fathfulnesse in God which are fixed upon them and engaged unto them whom he thus taketh into Covenant and surely they are Spirituall Mercies 3. The Mercies mentioned are such as never had a literall accomplishment to the Iewes in Temporalls nor can have and when things promised exceed all accomplishment as to the outward and temporall part it is the spirituall that is principally and mainely intended And such are these v. 18. I will breake the bow and the sword and the battell out of the earth and make you to lye downe in safety How I pray was this fulfilled towards them whilest they lived under the power of the Persian Graecian and Roman Empires to their utter desolation and v. 23. he telleth them that he will sowe them unto himselfe in the Earth and have mercy on them which as I said before Paul himselfe interpreteth and applieth to the speciall Mercies of Faith and Justification in the bloud of Christ So that both the verses going before and those that follow after to the consideration whereof we are sent containe directly and properly spirituall Mercies though expressed in words and termes of things of a temporall importance Thus notwithstanding any Exception to the contrary the Context is cleare as it was at first proposed Let us then in the next place consider the intendment of God in this Promise with that influence of Demonstration which it hath upon the Truth we are in the consideration of and then free the words from that corrupting Glosse which is endeavoured to be put upon them In the first I shall consider §. 25. 1. The Persons to whom this Promise is made 2. The Nature of the Promise it selfe 3. The great undertaking and engagement of the Properties of God for the accomplishment of his Promise 1. The Persons here intimated are such as are under the power and enjoyment of the Grace and kindnesse mentioned in v. 14 16 17 18. Now because a right understanding of the Grace of those Promises addeth much to the Apprehension of the Kindnesse of these particulars insisted on the opening of those words may be thought necessary 1. V. 14. they are those whom God allureth into the Wildernesse §. 26. and speaketh comfortably unto them He allureth and perswadeth them there is an allusion in the words to the great originall Promise of the conversion of the Gentiles and the way whereby it shall be done Gen 9. 27. God perswades Iaphet to dwell in the tents of Shem. Their alluring is by the powerfull and sweet perswasion of the Gospell which here is so termed to begin the Allegory of Betrothing and Marriage which is afterwards pursued It is God's beginning to Wooe the Soule by his Embassadors God perswadeth them into the Wildernesse perswadeth them but yet with mighty power as he carried them of old out of Aegypt for thereunto he evidently alludeth as in the next verse is more fully expressed Now the Wildernesse condition whereunto they are allured or perswaded by the Gospell comprizeth two things 1. Separation 2. Intanglement 1. Separation as the Israelites in the Wildernesse were separated from the residue of the World and the pleasures thereof the people dwelling alone being not reckoned with the Nations having nothing to doe with them So God separateth them to the love of the Gospell from their carnall contentments and all the satisfactions which before they received in their Lusts untill they say to them Get you hence what have we to doe with you any more They are separated from the practice of them and made willing to bid them everlastingly farewell They see their Aegyptian Lusts ●ye slaine or dead or at least dying by the crosse of Christ and desire to see them no more 2. Intanglement as the Israelites were in the Wildernesse they knew not what to doe nor which way to take one step but only as God went before them as he took them by the hand and taught them to goe God bringeth them into a lost condition they know not what to doe nor which way to take nor what course to pitch upon and yet in this Wildernesse state God doth commonly stirre up such gracious dispositions of soule in them as himselfe is exceedingly delighted withall hence he doth peculiarly call this time a Time of Love which he remembreth with much delight All the time of the Saints walking with him he taketh not greater delight in a soule when it cometh to its highest peace and fullest assurance then when it is seeking after him in its Wildernesse Intanglement So he expresseth it Ierem 2. 2. Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth the Love of thine Espousals when thou wentest after mee in the Wildernesse in a land that was not sowen And what he here affirmeth holds proportion therewithall The Time of their being in the Wildernesse was the Time of their Espousals and so it is here the Time of the Lords Betrothing the Soule to himselfe the Wooing words whereby he doth it being intimated in the next verse For 1. He speaketh comfortably to them §. 27. speaketh to their hearts good words that may satisfy their spirits and give them Rest and deliverance out of that condition What it is that God speaketh when he speaketh comfortably to the very hearts of poore soules he telleth you Isai 40. 1. Comfort you comfort you my People saith your God speake you comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned It is the pardon of iniquity that enwrappeth all the Consolation that a poore Wildernesse soule separated and intangled is capable of or doth desire And this is the first description of the Persons to whom this Promise is given They are such as