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A53720 Pneumatologia, or, A discourse concerning the Holy Spirit wherein an account is given of his name, nature, personality, dispensation, operations, and effects : his whole work in the old and new creation is explained, the doctrine concering it vindicated from oppositions and reproaches : the nature also and necessity of Gospel-holiness the difference between grace and morality, or a spiritual life unto God in evangelical obedience and a course of moral vertues, are stated and declared / by John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1676 (1676) Wing O793; ESTC R16093 721,250 620

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Preheminence in their Minds they consider afterwards the peculiar Doctrines of the Gospel with one or other of these Effects For 1. some in a manner wholly despise them reproaching those by whom they are singularly professed What is contained in them is of no importance in their Judgment compared with the more necessary Duties of Morality which they pretend to embrace and to acquit themselves of the trouble of a search into them reject them as unintelligible or unnecessary Or 2. they will by forced Interpretations enervating the Spirit and perverting the Mystery of them square and fit them to their own low and Carnal Apprehensions They would reduce the Gospel and all the Mysteries of it to their own Light as some to Reason as others to Philosophy as the rest And let them who comply not with their weak and carnal Notions of things expect all the contemptuous Reproaches which the proud pretenders unto Science and Wisdom of old cast upon the Apostles and first Preachers of the Gospel Hereby advancing Morality above the Mystery and Grace of the Gospel they at once reject the Gospel and destroy Morality also for taking it off from its proper Foundation it falls into the Dirt whereof the Conversation of the Men of this Perswasion is no small Evidence Sect. 59 From this Prejudice it is that the Spiritual Things of the Gospel are by many despised and contemned So God spake of Ephraim Hos. 8. 12. I have written to him the great things of the Law but they were counted as a strange thing The things intended were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great manifold various things of the Law That which the Law was then unto that People that is the Gospel now unto us The Torah was the intire Means of God's communicating his Mind and Will unto them as his whole Counsel is revealed unto us by the Gospel These things he wrote unto them or made them in themselves and their Revelation plain and perspicuous But when all was done they were esteemed by them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as is also the Gospel a thing forreign and alien unto the Minds of Men which they intend not to concern themselves in They will heed the things that are cognate unto the Principles of their Nature things morally Good or Evil but for the hidden Wisdom of God in the Mystery of the Gospel it is esteemed by them as a strange thing And innumerable other Prejudices of the same Nature doth this Darkness fill the Minds of Men withal whereby they are powerfully and as unto any Light or Strength of their own invincibly kept off from receiving of Spiritual Things in a spiritual manner Sect. 60 Again the Power and Efficacy of this Darkness in and upon the Souls of Unregenerate Men will be farther evidenced by the Consideration of its especial Subject or the Nature and Use of that Faculty which is affected with it This is the Mind or Understanding Light and Knowledg are intellectual Vertues or Perfections of the Mind and that in every kind what-ever whether in things Natural Moral or Spiritual The Darkness whereof we treat is the Privation of Spiritual Light or the want of it And therefore are they opposed unto one another You were Darkness but are Light in the Lord Ephes. 5. 8. It is therefore the Mind or Understanding which is affected with this Darkness which is vitiated and depraved by it Now the Mind may be considered two ways 1. As it is Theoretical or Contemplative discerning and judging of things proposed unto it So it is its office to find out consider discern and apprehend the truth of Things In the Case before us it is the duty of the Mind to apprehend understand and receive the Truths of the Gospel as they are proposed unto it in the manner of and unto the end of their proposal This as we have manifested by reason of its Depravation it neither doth nor is able to do John 1. 5. 2 Cor. 2. 14. 2. It may be considered as it is practical as to the Power it hath to direct the whole Soul and determine the Will unto actual Operation according to its Light I shall not enquire at present whether the Will as to the specification of its Acts do necessarily follow the determination of the Mind or practical Understanding I am at no more but that it is the directive Faculty of the Soul as unto all Moral and Spiritual Operations Hence it follows Sect. 61 1. That nothing in the Soul not the Will and Affections can will desire or cleave unto any good but what is presented unto them by the Mind and as it is presented That Good what-ever it be which the Mind cannot discover the Will cannot chuse nor the Affections cleave unto All their actings about and concerning them are not such as answer their Duty This our Saviour directs us to the consideration of Mat. 6. 22 23. The Light of the Body is the Eye if therefore thine Eye be single the whole Body shall be full of Light But if thine Eye be evil the whole Body shall be full of Darkness if therefore the Light that is in thee be Darkness how great is that Darkness As the Eye is naturally the Light of the Body or the means thereof so is the Mind unto the Soul And if Darkness be in the Eye not only the Eye but the whole Body is in Darkness because in the Eye alone is the Light of the whole so if the Mind be under Darkness the whole Soul is so also because it hath no Light but by the Mind And hence both is Illumination sometimes taken for the whole Work of Conversion unto God and the Spiritual Actings of the Mind by the Renovation of the Holy Ghost are constantly proposed as those which precede any gracious Actings in the Will Heart and Life as we shall shew afterwards 2. As the Soul can no way by any other of its Faculties receive embrace or adhere unto that Good in a saving manner which the Mind doth not savingly apprehend so where the Mind is practically deceived or any way captivated under the Power of Prejudices the Will and the Affections can no way free themselves from entertaining that evil which the Mind hath perversly assented unto Thus where the Mind is reprobate or void of a sound Judgment so as to call God Evil and Evil Good the Heart Affections and Conversation will be conformable thereunto Rom. 1. 28 29. And in the Scripture the deceit of the Mind is commonly laid down as the Principle of all Sin what-ever 1 Tim. 2. 14. Heb. 3. 12 13. 2 Cor. 11. 3. Sect. 62 And this is a brief Delineation of the state of the Mind of Man whilst unregenerate with respect unto Spiritual Things And from what hath been spoken we do conclude that the Mind in the state of Nature is so depraved vitiated and corrupted that it is not able upon the proposal of Spiritual Things unto it in the Dispensation
Col. 3. 10. as that they serve to the same End and Purpose Sect. 11 There being therefore this two-fold Spiritual Life or Ability of Living unto God that which we had in Adam and that which we have in Christ we must enquire with reference unto which of these it is that Unregenerate Men are said to be Spiritually dead or dead in Trespasses and Sins Now this in the first Place hath respect unto the Life we had in Adam For the Deprivation of that Life was in the Sanction of the Law Thou shalt die the Death This Spiritual Death is comprized therein and that in the Privation of that Spiritual Life or Life unto God which Unregenerate Men never had neither de facto nor de jure in any state or condition Wherefore with respect hereunto they are dead only negatively they have it not but with respect unto the Life we had in Adam they are dead privatively they have lost that Power of Living unto God which they had Sect. 12 From what hath been discoursed we may discover the Nature of this Spiritual Death under the Power whereof all Unregenerate Persons do abide For there are three things in it 1 A Privation of a Principle of Spiritual Life enabling us to live unto God 2 A Negation of all Spiritual Vital Acts that is of all Acts and Duties of holy Obedience acceptable unto God and tending to the Enjoyment of him 3 A total Defect and want of Power for any such Acts whatever All these are in that Death which is a Privation of Life such as this is First there is in it a Privation of a Principle of Spiritual Life namely of that which we had before the Entrance of sin or a Power of living unto God according to the Covenant of Works and a Negation of that which we have by Christ or a Power of Living unto God according to the Tenor of the Covenant of Grace Those therefore who are thus dead have no Principle or First Power of Living unto God or the Performance of any Duty to be accepted with him in order to the Enjoyment of him according to either Covenant It is with them as to all the Acts and Ends of Life Spiritual as it is with the Body as to the Acts and Ends of Life Natural when the Soul is departed from it Why else are they said to be dead Sect. 13 It is objected that there is a wide difference between Death Natural and Spiritual In Death Natural the soul it self is utterly removed and taken from the Body but in Death Spiritual it continues A man is still notwithstanding this Spiritual Death endowed with an Understanding Will and Affections And by these are Men enabled to perform their Duty unto God and yield the Obedience required of them Answ. 1 In Life Spiritual the Soul is unto the Principle of it as the Body is unto the Soul in Life Natural For in Life Natural the Soul is the quickning Principle and the Body is the Principle quickned When the Soul departs it leaves the Body with all its own Natural Properties but utterly deprived of them which it had by Vertue of its Union with the Soul So in Life Spiritual the Soul is not in and by its Essential Properties the quickning Principle of it but it is the Principle that is quickned And when the quickning Principle of Spiritual Life departs it leaves the Soul with all its Natural Properties entire as to their Essence though morally corrupted But of all the Power and Abilities which it had by Virtue of its Union with a quickning Principle of Spiritual Life it is deprived And to deny such a quickning Principle of Spiritual Life superadded unto us by the Grace of Christ distinct and separate from the Natural Faculties of the Soul is upon the matter to renounce the whole Gospel It is all one as to deny that Adam was created in the Image of God which he lost and that we are renewed unto the Image of God by Jesus Christ. Hence 2ly Whatever the Soul acts in Spiritual things by its Understanding Will and Affections as deprived of or not quickned by this Principle of Spiritual Life it doth it Naturally not Spiritually as shall be instantly made to appear There is therefore in the first Place a Disability or Impotency unto all Spiritual things to be performed in a Spiritual manner in all Persons not born again by the Spirit because they are Spiritually dead Whatever they can do or however Men may call what they do unless they are endowed with a quickning Principle of Grace they can perform no Act Spiritually vital no Act of Life whereby we live to God or that is absolutely accepted with him Hence it is said the Carnal Mind is enmity against God it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can it be Rom. 8. 7. so then they that are in the flesh cannot please God v. 8. Men may cavil whilst they please about this carnal Mind and contend that it is only the sensitive part of the Soul or the Affections as corrupted by Prejudices and depraved habits of Vice Two things are plain in the Text. First that this Carnal Mind is in all mankind whoever they be who are not partakers of the Spirit of God and his Quickning Power Secondly that where it is there is a Disability of doing any thing that should please God which is the Sum of what we contend for and which Men may with as little a disparagement of their Modesty deny as reject the Authority of the Apostle So our Saviour as to one Instance tells us that no Man can come unto him unless the Father draw him Joh. 6. 4. 4. And so is it figuratively expressed where all Men being by Nature compared unto evil Trees it is affirmed of them that they cannot bring forth Good fruit unless their Nature be changed Mat. 7. 18. Chap. 12. 33. And this Disability as to Good is also compared by the Prophet unto such Effects as lye under a Natural Impossibility of Accomplishment Jerem. 13. 24. We contend not about Expressions This is that which the Scripture abundantly instructeth us in There is no Power in Men by Nature whereby they are of themselves upon the mere proposal of their Duty in Spiritual Obedience and Exhortations from the Word of God unto the Performance of it accompanied with all the Motives which are meet and suited to prevail with them thereunto to perceive know will or do any thing in such a Way or Manner as that it should be accepted with God with respect unto our Spiritual Life unto him according to his Will and future Enjoyment of him without the Efficacious Infusion into them or Creation in them of a new gracious Principle or Habit enabling them thereunto and that this is accordingly wrought in all that believe by the Holy Ghost we shall afterwards declare But it will be Objected and hath against this Doctrine been ever so since the days
means unto Men in the state of Sin if they are not complyed withal is sufficient on the grounds before laid down to leave them by whom they are rejected inexcusable so Isa. 5. 3 4 5. Prov. 29. 1. 2 Chron. 36. 14 15. Joh. 2. That the effect of Regeneration or Conversion unto God is assigned unto the Preaching of the Word because of its efficacy thereunto in its own kind and way as the outward means thereof 1 Cor. 4. 15. James 1. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 23. Sect. 10 2ly We may consider what is the Nature and wherein the Efficacy of this Moral Work doth consist To which purpose we may observe Sect. 11 1. That in the use of this Means for the Conversion of Men there is preparatory unto that wherein this Moral Perswasion doth consist an Instruction of the Mind in the knowledg of the Will of God and its duty towards him The first regard unto Men in the Dispensation of the Word unto them is their Darkness and Ignorance whereby they are alienated from the Life of God This therefore is the first End of Divine Revelation namely to make known the Counsel and Will of God unto us see Matth. 4. 15 16. Luk. 4. 18 19. Acts 26. 17 18. Acts 20. 20 21 26 27. By the Preaching of the Law and the G●spel Men are instructed in the whole Counsel of God and what he requires of them And in their Apprehension hereof doth the Illumination of their Minds consist whereof we must treat distinctly afterwards Without a supposition of this Illumination there is no use of the Perswasive Power of the Word for it consists in affecting the Mind with its Concernment in the things that it knows or wherein it is instructed Wherefore we suppose in this Case that a Man is taught by the Word both the Necessity of Regeneration and what is required of himself thereunto Sect. 12 2. On this Supposition that a Man is instructed in the knowledg of the Will of God as revealed in the Law and the Gospel there is accompanying the Word of God in the Dispensation of it a powerful perswasive E●●●cacy unto a complyance with it and observance of it For Instance Suppose a Man to be convinced by the Word of God of the Nature of Sin of his own sinful Condition of his danger from thence with respect unto the Sin of Nature on which account he is a Child of Wrath and of his actual Sin which further renders him obnoxious unto the Curse of the Law and the Indignation of God of his Duty hereon to turn unto God and the way whereby he may so do there are in the Precepts Exhortations Expostulations Promises and Threatnings of the Word especially as dispensed in the Ministry of the Church Powerful Motives to affect and Arguments to prevail with the Mind and Will of such a Man to endeavour his own Regeneration or Conversion unto God rational and cogent above all that can be objected unto the contrary On some it is acknowledged that these things have no effect they are not moved by them they care not for them they do despise them and live and die in rebellion against the Light of them having their Eyes blinded by the God of this World But this is no Argument that they are not powerful in themselves although indeed it is that they are not so towards us of themselves but only as the Holy Spirit is pleased to act them towards us But in these Motives Reasons and Arguments whereby Men are in and from the Word and the Ministry of it urged and pressed unto Conversion to God doth this Moral Perswasion whereof we speak consist And the efficacy of it unto the end proposed ariseth from the things ensuing which are all resolved into God himself Sect. 13 1. From an evidence of the Truth of the things from whence these Motives and Arguments were taken The Foundation of all the Efficacy of the Dispensation of the Gospel lies in an evidence that the things proposed in it are not cunningly devised Fables 2 Pet. 1. 16. Where this is not admitted where it is not firmly assented unto there can be no perswasive Efficacy in it But where this is namely a prevalent Perswasion of the Truth of the Things proposed there the Mind is under a Disposition unto the things whereunto it is perswaded And hereon the whole Efficacy of the Word in and upon the Souls of Men is resolved into the Truth and Veracity of God For the things contained in the Scripture are not proposed unto us meerly as true but as Divine Truths as immediate Revelations from God which requires not only a rational but a sacred Religious respect unto them They are Things that the Mouth of the Lord hath spoken 2. There is a proposal unto the Wills and Affections of Men in the Things so assented unto on the one hand as Good Amiable and Excellent wherein the chiefest Good Happiness and utmost End of our Natures are comprized to be pursued and attained and on the other of things Evil and Terrible the utmost Evil that our Nature is obnoxious unto to be avoided For this is urged on them that to comply with the Will of God in the proposals of the Gospel to conform thereunto to do what he requires to turn from Sin unto him is good unto Men best for them assuredly attended with present Satisfaction and future Glory And therein is also proposed the most noble Object for our Affections even God himself as a Friend as reconciled unto us in Christ and that in a way suited unto his Holiness Righteousness Wisdom and Goodness which we have nothing to oppose unto nor to lay in the Ballance against The way also of the Reconciliation of Sinners unto God by Jesus Christ is set out as that which hath such an Impress of Divine Wisdom and Goodness upon it as that it can be refused by none but out of a direct enmity against God himself Unto the enforcing of these things on the Minds of Men the Scripture abounds with Reasons Motives and Arguments the rendring whereof effectual is the principal end of the Ministry On the other hand it is declared and evidenced that Sin is the great Debasement of our Natures the Ruine of our Souls the only Evil in the World in its Guilt and Punishment that a Continuance in a state of it with a Rejection of the Invitation of the Gospel unto Conversion to God is a thing foolish unworthy of a rational Creature and that which will be everlastingly pernitious Whereas therefore in the judgment of every rational Creature Spiritual Things are to be preferred before Natural Eternal Things before Temporal and that these things are thus disposed of in infinite Goodness Love and Wisdom they must needs be apt to affect the Wills and take the Affections of Men. And herein the Efficacy of the Word on the Minds and Consciences of Men is resolved into the Authority of God These Precepts these Promises
did not Originally thus create our nature a Condition worse and inferiour unto that of other Creatures in whose Young Ones there are none of these disorders but a regular complyance with their natural instinct prevailes in them And as the dying of multitudes of Infants notwithstanding the utmost care for their preservation whereas the young ones of other Creatures all generally live if they have whereby their nature may be sustained argues the imputation of sin unto them For Death entred by Sin and passed upon all inasmuch as all have sinned so those irregular Actings peculiar unto them prove sin inherent in them or the Corruption of their Nature from their Conceptions Sect. 4 Secondly with the Increase of our natural Faculties and the strengthning of the members of our bodies which by nature are become ready instruments of unrighteousness unto sin Rom. 5. 13. this perverse Principle acts it self with more evidence frequency and success in the production of Actual sin or inordinate actings of the Mind Will and Affections So the wiseman tells us that Childhood and Youth are Vanity Eccl. 11. 10. The Mind of Man in the state of Childhood and Youth puts it self forth in all kinds of vain Actings in foolish Imaginations perverse and froward Appetites falseness in words with sensible effects of corrupt Inclinations in every kind Austin's first book of Confessions is an excellent comment on that Text wherein the Vanity of Childhood and Youth are graphically described with pathetical self-reflecting complaints concerning the Guilt of sin which is contracted in them Some perhaps may think light of those ways of Folly and Vanity wherein Childhood doth or left alone would consume it self that there is no moral evil in those Childish Innocencies That Good Man was of an other Mind Istane est saith he innocentia puerilis non est Domine non est Oro te Deus meus nam haec ipsa sunt quae a paedagogis magistris a nucibus pitulis passeribus ad Prefectos Reges aurum praedia mancipia haec ipsa omnino quae succedentibus majoribus aetatibus transeunt lib. 1. cap 19. This is not Innocency it is not so The same Principle and Habit of Mind carried over unto riper Age and greater Occasions bring forth those greater Sins which the lives of Men are filled withal in this World And who is there who hath a serious Reverence of God with any due apprehension of his Holiness and a clear conviction of the Nature of Sin who is not able to call over such Actings in Childhood which most think meet to connive at wherein they may remember that perversity whereof they are now ashamed By this means is the Heart prepared for a further Obduration in Sin by the confirmation of native Obstinacy Sect. 5 Thirdly unto those more general irregularities Actual sins do succeed such I mean as are against the remaining light of Nature or committed in Rebellion unto the dictates and guidance of our Minds and Consciences the Influence of those Intelligencies of Moral Good and Evil which are inseparable from the faculties of our Souls For although in some they may be stifled and over-born yet can they never be utterly obliterated or extinguished but will accompany the nature of Man unto Eternity even in that condition wherein they shall be of no other use but to add to and increase its misery Amongst those we may call over one or two Instances Lying is such a sin which the Depravation of Nature in Youth is prone to exert it self by and that on sundry Reasons not now to be enquired into They go astray from the womb speaking lies The first Inducement of our Nature unto Sin was by a Lye and we fell in Adam by giving credit thereunto And there is in every Sin a particular Lye But speaking falsly contrary unto what they know to be true is that which Children are prone unto though some more than others according as other vicious Habits prevail in them whose Actings they foolishly think to that●h over and cover thereby This that holy Person whom we instance in acknowledgeth and bewaileth in himself Non videbam voraginem turpitudinis in quam projectus eram ab oculis tuis nam in illis quid jam me turpius fuit fallendo innumer abilibus mendaciis paedagogum magistros parentes amore ludendi studio spestandi nngatoria Lib. 1. Cap. 19. I saw not O God into what a gulf of filth I was cast out from before thee for what was more filthy than I whil'st out of love of Playes and desire of looking after vanities I deceived Teachers and Parents with innumerable Lyes And this the good man was afterwards ex●eedingly humbled for and from it learned much of the vileness of his own nature And we find by experience that a sense of this sin oft-times accompanies the first real Convictions that befal the Souls of men For when they seriously reflect upon themselves or do view themselves in the Glass of the Law they are not only sensible of the nature of this Sin but also how much they indulged themselves therein partly whil'st they remember how on the least occasions they were surprized into it which yet they neglected to watch against and partly understanding how sometimes they made it their business by premeditated falshoods so to cover other sins as to escape rebuke and correction The mention of these things will probably be entertained with contempt and scorn in this Age wherein the most prodigious wickednesses of men are made but a sport But God his Holiness and his Truth are still the same what-ever alternations there may be in the World And the holy Psalmist seems to have some reflection on this Vice of Youth when he prayes that God would take from him the way of Lying Of the same nature are those lesser Thesis in despoiling their Parents and Governours of such things which they are not allowed to take and make use of for themselves They rob their Father or Mother and say it is no transgression Prov. 28. 24. So saith the same Person furta etiam faciebam de cellario parentum de mensis vel gula impuitante vel ut haberem quod darem pueris ludum suum mihi quo pariter delectabantur tamen vendentibus He sometimes stole from his Parents either to gratify his own sensual Appetite or to give unto his Companions In such instances doth Original Pravity exert it self in Youth or Childhood and thereby both increase its own power and fortify the Mind and the Affections against the Light and Efficacy of Conviction Sect. 6 Fourthly As Men grow up in the state of nature sin gets ground in them and upon them subjectively and objectively Concupiscence gets strength with Age and grows in violence as persons arrive to Ability for its Exercise the Instruments of it in the faculties of the Soul Organs of the senses and members of the body growing every day more serviceable unto it and
more apt to receive Impressions from it or to comply with its motions Hence some charge the sins of Youth on the Heat of Blood and the Restlesness of the animal Spirits which prompt men unto irregularities and extravagancies But these are only vehicula concupiscentiae things which it makes use of to exert its poyson by For sin turns every thing in this state unto its own advantage and abuseth even the Commandment it self to work in us all manner of concupiscence Rom. 7. 8. Again the Objects of Lust by the occasions of Life are now multiplied Temptations increase with years and the businesses of the World but especially by that corruption of conversation which is among the most Hence sundry Persons are in this part of their youth one way or other overtaken with some gross actual sin or sins That all are not so is a meer Effect or preventing grace and not at all from themselves This the Apostle respects in his charge 2 Tim. 2. 22. Flee youthful Lusts such Lusts as work effectually and prevail mightily in those that are young if not subduced by the Grace of God And David in a sense and from experience hereof prayes that God would not remember the sins of his youth Psal. 25. 7. And a Reflection from them is sometimes the Torment of Age Job 20. 11. So he in whom we have chosen to exemplifie the Instances of such a Course He humbly confesseth unto God his falling into and being overtaken with great sins such as Fornication and uncleanness in his younger days in the mire whereof he was long detained To this purpose he discourseth at large lib. 2. cap. 1 2 3. And of the Reason of this his humble and publick Acknowledgments he gives this holy Account Neque enim tibi Deus meus sed apud tenarro haec generi meo generi human● quantulacunque ex particula incidere potest in istas meas literas Et ad quid hoc ut videlicet ego quisquis haec legit cogitemus de quam profundo clamandum sit ad te Cap. 3. I d●clare these things O my God not unto th●e but before hee or in thy presence unto my own Race unto Humane kind whatever portion thereof may fall on these Writings of Mine And unto what end Namely that I and every one who shall read these things may consider out of what great Depths we are to cry unto thee So he who lived not to see the Days wherein humble Confession of sin was made a matter of contempt and scorn Sect. 7 Now there is commonly a two-fold Event of Mens falling under the power of Temptat●ons and thereby into great Actual sins 1. God sometimes takes occasion from them to awaken their Consciences unto a deep sense not only of that Sin in particular whose guilt they have contracted but of their other sins also The great Physician of their Souls turns this poyson into a Medicine and makes that wound which they have given themselves to be the lancing of a festred sore For whereas their Oscitancy Prejudices and Custom of sinning have taken away the sense of lesser sins and securethem from Reflections from them the stroke on their Consciences from those greater provocations pierceth so deep as that they are forced to entertain thoughts of looking out after a Release or Remedy So did they of old at the Sermon of Peter when he charged them with the guilt of a consent to the Crucifying of Jesus Christ they were pricked to the Heart and cryed out Men and Brethren what shall we do Acts. 2. 36 37. Sect. 8 2. With others it proves a violent Entrance into a further pursuit of sin The bounds of Restraints with the Influence of natural light being broken up and rejected Mens lusts being let Loose do break through all remaining Obstacles and run out into the greatest compass of Excess and Riot observing no present evil to ensue on what they have done according to their first fears they are emboldned to greater wickedness Eccl. 8. 11. And by this means is their Conversion unto God rendred more difficult and Men thus wander away more and more from him unto the greatest Distance that is recoverable by Grace For Sect. 9 Fifthly a Course in and a Custom of sinning with many ensues hereon Such the Apostle treats concerning Ephes. 4. 18 19 Being past feeling have given themselves over unto Lasciviousness to work all uncleanness with greediness Custom of sinning takes away the sense of it The Course of the World takes away the shame of it and Love to it makes Men greedy in the pursuit of it see Confess lib. 2. Cap. 6. And this last effect of sin as incited provoked and assisted by Temptations hath great variety in the Effects and Degrees of it Hence are the various courses of unhumbled sinners in the world wherein the Outrage and Excess of some seems to Justify others in their more sedate irregularities and less conspicuous provocations Yea some who are not in any better state and condition as to their Interest in the Covenant of God than others will yet not only startle at but really abhor those Outrages of sin and wickedness which they fall unto Now this Difference ariseth not from hence that the nature of all men is not equally corrupt and depraved but that God is pleased to make his Restraining Grace effectual towards some to keep them within those bounds of sinning which they shall not pass over and to permit others so to fall under a Conjunction of their Lusts and Temptations as that they proceed unto all manner of Evil. Moreover there are peculiar Inclinations unto some sins if not inlaid in yet much enhaunced and made obnoxious unto incitations by the Temperature of the body And some are more exposed unto Temptations in the World from their outward Circumstances and Occasions of Life Hereby are some even precipitated to all manner of Evil. But still the old Man which is Corrupt according unto deceitful Lusts is the same naturally in all All difference as to Good from Evil I mean not as to the nature of the things themselves but as to Mens interest in them so as to adhere to the one and avoid the other is from the Will of God Thus he secretly prepares for some a better Temperature of nature docile and pliable unto such notices of things as may entertain their minds and satisfy them above sensual Delights And some he disposeth in their Education Callings Societies Aymes and Designs in the World into wayes inconsistent with open Lewdness which will much ballance their Inclinations besides his secret internal actings on their Hearts and Minds whereof af●erwards This is excellently expressed by Austin Confess lib. 2 Cap. 7. Diligam te Domine gratias agam confitear nomini tuo quontam tant a dimisisli mihi mala nefaria opera mea Gratiae tuae deputo misericordiae tuae quod peccata mea tanquam glaciem solvisti gratiae
with them at the great Day Would we prevent all these fatal evils would we engage in a reall thriving everlasting Holiness let our first business be to secure a Relation unto Jesus Christ without which nothing of it will ever be attained To close this discourse I shall only from it obviate a putid Calumny cast by the Papists Quakers and others of the same Confederacy against the Grace of God upon the Doctrine of the free Justification of a sinner through the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ. For with a shameless Impudence they clamour on all by whom it is asserted as those who maintain Salvation to be attained through a meer External Imputation of Righteousness whilest those so saved are unclean and unholy as the Quaker or negligent of the Dutyes of Righteousness and Obedience as the Papists and others slanderously report For the frontless impudence of this Calumny is sufficiently evident from hence that as we assert Sanctification and Holiness to be peculiar only unto Believing justified Persons that is that Faith and Holiness are inseparable habitually or actually or in both regards so in like manner that all such Persons are infallibly sanctified and made Holy Sect. 7 All Believers and only Believers being sanctified and made Holy What it is that is sanctified in them or what is the proper Seat and Subject of this Work is in the next place to be declared For it is not a meer External Denomination as things were called Holy under the Old Testament nor any transient Act nor any series or Course of Actions that we plead about but that which hath as a reall Being and Existence so a constant abiding or Residence in us Hence he that is Holy is alwayes so whether he be in the Actual Exercise of the Dutyes of Holiness or no though an Omission of any of them in their proper season is contrary unto and an impeachment of Holiness as to its Degrees Now this subject of Sanctification is the Entire Nature or whole Person of a Believer It is not any one Faculty of the Soul or Affection of the Mind or Part of the Body that is sanctified but the whole Soul and Body or the entire Nature of every Believing Person And hereby is the Work of Sanctification really distinguished from any other meer common Work which may represent it or pretend unto it For all such Works are partiall either they are in the Mind only by Light and Notions of Truth or on the Affections only in Zeal and Devotion or on the Mind and Conscience in the Convictions of Sin and Duty but further they proceed not But true Holiness consists in the Renovation of our whole Persons which must be demonstrated 1 That our entire Nature was Originally created in the Image of God I have proved before and it is by all acknowledged Our whole Souls in the Rectitude of all their Faculties and Powers in order unto the Life of God and his Enjoyment did bear this Image Nor was it confined unto the Soul only The Body also not as to its shape figure or natural use but as an Essential part of our Natures was interested in the Image of God by a Participation of Original Righteousness Hence the whole Person was a meet Principle for the Communication of this Image of God unto others by the means of Natural Propagation which is an act of the entire Person For a Person created and abiding in the Image of God begetting another in his own Image and Likeness had by vertue of the Covenant of Creation begotten him in the Image of God also that is had communicated unto him a Nature upright and pure 2 By the Entrance of sin this Image of God so far as it was our Righteousness and Holiness before him was utterly defaced and Lost. This also I have sufficiently evidenced before It did not depart from any one Power Part or Faculty of our Souls but from our whole Nature Accordingly the Scripture describes 1 the Depravation of our Natures distinctly in all the Powers of it In particular the Corruption that ensued on our Minds Wills and Affections upon the loss of the Image of God I have before declared and vindicated And 2 in reference unto the first Actings of all these Faculties in things Moral and Spiritual the Scripture addes that all the Thoughts and Imaginations of our Hearts are evil and that continually Gen. 6. 5. All the Original first Actings of the Powers of our Souls in or about things Rational and Morall are alwayes evil For an evil tree cannot bring forth good fruit That which is lame and distorted can act nothing that is straight and regular Hence 3 All the Outward Actions of Persons in this State and Condition are evil unfruitfull works of Darkness And not only so but the Scripture 4 in the Description of the Effects of this Depravation of our Nature calls in the Body and the members of it unto a partnership in all this Obliquity and Sin The members of the Body are Servants unto Vncleanness and Iniquity Rom. 6. 19. And the engagement of them in all the Course and Actings of Depraved Nature is particularly declared by our Apostle out of the Psalmist Rom. 3. 12 13 14 15. They are all gone out of the way they are together become unprofitable there is none that doth good no not one Their throat is an open sepulchre with their tongues they have used deceit the poyson of Asps is under their lips whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness their feet are swift to shed blood in all wayes of evil This being the State of our whole Nature in its Depravation our Sanctification wherein alone its Reparation in this Life doth consist must equally respect the whole Some suppose that it is our Affections only in their Deliverance from corrupt Lusts and Prejudices with their direction unto Heavenly Objects that are the Subject of this Work For the Mind or rational Intellectual Power of the Soul is in its self they say pure noble untainted and needs no other Ayd but to be delivered from the Prejudices and Obstructions of its Operations which are cast upon it by the Engagements and Inclinations of corrupt Affections and a vitious course of Conversation in the World received by uninterrupted Traditions from our Fathers from whence it is not able to extricate or deliver it self without the Aid of Grace But they have placed their Instance very unhappily For among all things that belong unto our Nature there is not any one which the Scripture so chargeth this Depravation of it upon as the Mind This in particular is said to be fleshly to be Enmity against God to be filled with Vanity Folly and Blindness as we have at large before evinced Nor is there any thing concerning which the Work of Sanctification and Renovation is so expressly affirmed as it is concerning the Mind It is declared by the Renovation of our Minds Rom. 12. 2. or being Renewed in
the spirit of our Minds Ephes. 4. 23. that we put on the New man that is renewed in knowledge Col. 3. 10. with other Expressions of the like nature It is therefore our Entire Nature that is the Subject of Evangelical Holiness For to manifest in particulars 1 Hence it is called the New Man Ephes. 4. 24. Put on the New Man which after God is created in Righteousness and Holiness As the Principle of Sin and corrupted Nature in us is called the Old Man for no other Reason but that it possesseth all the Active Powers of the whole Man so that he neither doth nor can do any thing but what is influenced thereby so this Principle of Holiness in us the Renovation of our Natures is called the New Man because it possesseth the whole Person with respect unto its proper Operations and Ends. And it extends it self as large as the Old Man or the Depravation of our Natures which takes in the whole Person Soul and Body with all their Faculties and Powers 2 The Heart in the Scripture is taken for the whole Soul and all the Faculties of it as they are one Common Principle of all Morall Operations as I have proved before Whatever therefore is wrought in and upon the Heart under this Consideration is wrought upon the whole Soul Now this is not only said to be affected with this Work of Sanctification or to have Holiness wrought in it but the principal Description that is given us of this Work consists in this that therein and thereby a New Heart is given unto us or created in us as it is expressed in the Promise of the Covenant This therefore can be nothing but the possessing of all the Powers and Faculties of our Souls with a New Principle of Holiness and Obedience unto God 3 There is especial mention made of the effecting of this Work on our Souls and Bodies with their Powers and Faculties distinctly This I have already proved in the Declaration of the Work of our Regeneration or Conversion to God which is only preserved cherished improved and carryed on to its proper End in our Sanctification The Nature also of that spiritual Light which is communicated unto our Minds of Life unto our Wills of Love unto our Affections hath been declared Therefore doth it follow thence unavoidably that the whole Person is the Subject of this Work and that Holiness hath its residence in the whole Soul entirely 4 We need goe no further for the proof hereof than unto that Prayer of the Apostle for the Thessalonians which we insisted on at the beginning of this Discourse 1 Thess. 5. 23. The God of Peace himself sanctifie you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 throughout that is in your whole Natures or Persons in all that you are and doe that you may not in this or that part but be every whit clean and Holy throughout And to make this the more evident that we may know what it is which he prayes may be sanctified and thereby preserved blameless to the coming of Christ he distributes our whole Natures into the two Essential parts of Soul and Body And in the former he considereth two things 1 the Spirit 2 the Soul peculiarly so called And this distinction frequently occurrs in the Scripture wherein that by the Spirit the Mind or Intellectual Faculty is understood and by the Soul the Affections is generally acknowledged and may evidently be proved These therefore the Apostle prayes may be sanctified and preserved Holy throughout and entirely and that by the Infusion of an Habit of Holiness into them with its Preservation and Improvement whereof more afterwards But this is not all Our Bodyes are an Essential part of our Natures and by their union with our Souls are we constituted individual Persons Now we are the Principles of all our Operations as we are Persons Every Moral Act we do is the Act of the whole Person The Body therefore is concerned in the Good and Evil of it It became a subject of the Depravation of our Nature by Concomitancy and Participation and is considered as one entire Principle with the Soul of communicating Original Defilement from Parents unto Children Besides it is now subject in that Corruption of its Constitution which it is fallen under as a punishment of sin unto many disorderly Motions that are Incentives and Provocations unto sin Hence sin is said to reign in our mortal Bodyes and our Members to be servants unto unrighteousness Rom. 6. 12. 19. Moreover by its Participation in the Defilement and Punishment of sin the Body is disposed and made obnoxious unto Corruption and Destruction For Death entred by Sin and no otherwise On all these Accounts therefore it is necessary on the other hand that the Body should be interested in this Work and Priviledge of Sanctification and Holiness And so it is 1 By Participation For it is our Persons that are sanctified and made Holy sanctifie them throughout and although our Souls are the first proper Subject of the infused Habit or Principle of Holiness yet our Bodyes as essential parts of our Natures are Partakers thereof 2 By a peculiar Influence of the Grace of God upon them also as far as they have any influence into Moral Operations For the Apostle tells us that our Bodyes are Members of Christ 1 Cor. 3. 15. and so consequently have influences of Grace from him as our Head 3 In the Work of Sanctification the Holy Ghost comes and dwells in us And hereon our Bodyes are the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in us 1 Cor. 3. 19. And the Temple of God is Holy although I confess this rather belongs unto the Holiness of peculiar Dedication unto God whereof we shall treat afterwards And hereby 1 are the Parts and Members of the Body made Instruments and Servants of Righteousness unto Holiness Rom. 6. 19. do become meet and fit for to be used in the Acts and Dutyes of Holiness as being made clean and sanctified unto God 2 Hereby are they disposed and prepared unto a blessed Resurrection at the Last Day which shall be wrought by the Spirit of Christ which dwelt in them and sanctified them in this Life Rom. 8. 10 11. Phil. 3. 20 21. 2 Cor. 4. 14 16 17. Our whole Persons therefore and in them our whole Natures are the Subject of this Work and true Holiness invests the whole of it Now whether this universal Investiture of our Nature in all the Faculties and Powers of it by a new Principle of Holiness and Obedience unto God whereby it is renewed unto his Image do belong unto that Morall Vertue which some so plead for as to substitute it in the Room of Gospel-Holiness they may do well to consider who are the Patrons of that Cause For if it doth not then doth not it self belong unto that Holiness which the Gospel teacheth requireth promiseth and communicates whatever else it be And moreover it is practically worthy consideration that men
hath neither the Root of it nor any Fruit that doth so much as resemble it But it is to be lamented that such Multitudes of Rational Creatures living under the Means of Light and Grace should so vainly and wofully delude their own Souls That which they aim at and intend is to have that in them whereby they may be accepted with God Now not to insist on what will absolutely frustrate all the Designs of such persons namely their want of Faith in Christ and an Interest in his Righteousness thereby which they are regardless of all that they project and design is as farre beneath that Holiness which God requireth of them and which they think hereby to obtain as the Earth is beneath the Heavens All that they do in this kind is utterly lost it will never be either a Righteousness unto them or an Holiness in them But this Deceit is frequently rebuked God only by his Grace can remove and take it away from the Minds of Men. Sect. 41 2 And we may Learn hence not to be imposed on by Gifts though never so usefull with a plausible Profession thereon These things go a great way in the World and many deceive both themselves and others by them Gifts are from the Holy Ghost in an especial manner and therefore greatly to be esteemed They are also frequently usefull in and unto the Church For the Manifestation of the Spirit is given unto men to profit withall And they put men on such Duties as have a great shew and Appearance of Holiness By the help of them alone may men pray and preach and maintain spiritual Communication among them with whom they do converse And as Circumstances may be ordered they put sundry persons on a frequent performance of these Duties and so keep them up to an Eminency in Profession But yet when all is done they are not Holiness nor are the Duties performed in the strength of them alone Duties of Evangelical Obedience accepted of God in them by whom they are performed and they may be where there is nothing of Holiness at all They are not indeed only consistent with Holiness but subservient unto it and exceeding promoters of it in Souls that are really Gracious But they may be alone without Grace and then are they apt to deceive the Mind with a pretence of being and doing what they are not nor doe Let them be called to an Account by the Nature and Properties of that Habit and Principle of Grace which is in all true Holiness as before explained and it will quickly appear how short they come thereof For as their Subject where they have their Residence is the mind only and not the Will or Affections any further but as they are influenced or restrained by Light so they do not renew nor change the Mind it self so as to transform it into the Image of God Neither do they give the Soul a general Inclination unto all Acts and Duties of Obedience but only a Readiness for that Duty which their Exercise doth peculiarly consist in Wherefore they answer no one Property of true Holiness and we have not seldom seen Discoveries made thereof Sect. 42 Least of all can Morality or a Course of Moral Dutyes when it is alone maintain any pretence hereunto We have had Attempts to prove that there is no specifical Difference between Common and Saving Grace but that they are both of the same Kind differing only in Degrees But some as though this ground were already gained and needed no more contending about do adde without any Consideration of these petty distinctions of Common and Saving Grace that Morality is Grace and Grace is Morality and nothing else To be a Gracious Holy man according to the Gospel and to be a Moral man is all one with them And as yet it is not declared whether there be any Difference between Evangelical Holiness and Philosophical Morality Wherefore I shall proceed to the Second Thing proposed And this is further to prove That this Habit or Gracious Principle of Holiness is specifically distinct from all other Habits of the Mind whatever whether Intellectual or Moral Connate or Acquired as also from all that Common Grace and the Effects of it whereof any Persons not really sanctified may be made partakers Sect. 43 The Truth of this Assertion is indeed sufficiently evident from the Description we have given of this spiritual Habit its Nature and Properties But whereas there are also other Respects giving further Confirmation of the same Truth I shall call over the most important of them after some few things have been premised As 1. An Habit of what sort soever it be qualifies the Subject wherein it is so that it may be denominated from it and make the Actions proceeding from it to be suited unto it or to be of the same Nature with it As Aristotle sayes Vertue is an Habit which maketh him that hath it Good or Vertuous and his Actions good Now all Moral Habits are seated in the Will Intellectual Habits are not immediately affective of Good or Evil but as the Will is influenced by them These Habits do encline dispose and enable the Will to act according to their Nature And in all the Acts of our Wills and so all external Works which proceed from them two things are considered First the Act it self or the Work done and Secondly the End for which it is done And both these things are respected by the Habit it self though not immediately yet by vertue of its Acts. It is moreover necessary and natural that every Act of the Will every Work of a Man be for a certain End Two things therefore are to be considered in all our Obedience 1 The Duty it self we doe and 2 The End for which we doe it If any Habit therefore doth not encline and dispose the Will unto the proper End of Duty as well as unto the Duty it self it is not of that Kind from whence true Gospel Obedience doth proceed For the End of every Act of Gospel Obedience which is the Glory of God in Jesus Christ is Essential unto it Let us then take all the Habits of Moral Vertue and we shall find that however they may incline and dispose the Will unto such Acts of Vertue as materially are Duties of Obedience yet they do it not with respect unto this End If it be said that such Moral Habits do so incline the Will unto Duties of Obedience with respect unto this End then is there no need of the Grace of Jesus Christ or the Gospel to enable men to Live unto God according to the Tenor of the Covenant of Grace which some seem to aim at Sect. 44 2. Whereas it is the End that gives all our Duties their special Nature this is two-fold 1 The next and 2 The ultimate or it is particular or universal And these may be different in the same Action As a man may give Almes to the poor his next Particular End
of this World makes men Earthly minded their Minds and Affections grow Earthy carnal and sensual But of all Kinds Divine Love is most effectual to this purpose as having the best the most noble proper and attractive Object It is our Adherence unto God with Delight for what he is in himself as manifested in Jesus Christ. By it we cleave unto God and so keep near him and thereby derive transforming Vertue from him Every Approach unto God by ardent Love and Delight is Transfiguring And it acts it self continually by 1 Contemplation 2 Admiration and 3 Delight in Obedience 1. Love acts it self by Contemplation It is in the Nature of it to be meditating and Contemplating on the Excellencies of God in Christ. Yea this is the Life of it and where this is not there is no Love An heart filled with the Love of God will Night and Day be exercising it self in and with Thoughts of Gods glorious Excellencies rejoycing in them This the Psalmist exhorts us unto Psal. 30. 4. Sing unto the Lord O ye Saints of his and give thanks at the remembrance of his Holiness And Love will do the same with respect unto all his other Properties See to this purpose Psal. 63. throughout And this will further our Likeness unto him our Minds by it will be changed into the Image of what we Contemplate and we shall endeavour that our Lives be conformed thereunto Sect. 26 2. It works by Admiration also That is the voyce of Love How great is his Goodness how great is his Beauty Zech. 9. 17. the Soul being as it were ravished with that View which it hath of the glorious Excellencies of God in Christ hath no way to express its Affections but by Admiration How great is his Goodness how great is his Beauty And this Beauty of God is that sweetness and holy symmetry of Glory if I may be allowed to speak so improperly in all the Perfections of God being all in a sweet Correspondency exalted in Christ which is the proper Object of our Love To see infinite Holiness Purity and Righteousness with infinite Love Goodness Grace and Mercy all equally Glorified in and towards the same Things and Persons one Glimpse whereof is not to be attained in the World out of Christ is that Beauty of God which attracts the Love of a Believing Soul and fills it with an holy Admiration of him And this also is a most effectual Furtherance of our Conformity unto him which without these steps we shall labour in vain after Sect. 27 3. Again Love gives Delight in Obedience and all the Duties of it The common Instance of Jacob is known of whom it is said that his seven Years Service seemed short and so easie to him for the Love he bare to Rachel He did that with Delight which he would not afterwards undergoe for the greatest Wages But we have a greater Instance Our Lord Jesus Christ sayes concerning all the Obedience that was required of him Thy Law O God is in my heart I delight to do thy Will And yet we know how terrible to Nature were the things he did and suffered in Obedience to that Law But his unspeakable Love to God and the Souls of men rendred it all his Delight Hence follows Intension and Frequency in all the Duties of it And where these two are Intension of mind and spirit with a Frequency of holy Duties both proceeding from Delight there Holiness will thrive and consequently we shall do so in our Conformity to God In brief Love and Likeness unto God are inseperable and proportionate unto one another And without this no Duties of Obedience are any part of his Image Sect. 28 Secondly There are Graces which are Declarative of this Assimulation or which evidence and manifest our Likeness unto God I shall instance only in two of them 1 And the first is such as I shall give many Names unto it is its Description as the Scripture doth also but the thing intended is one and the same This is Goodness Kindness Benignity Love with Readiness to do good to forgive to help and relieve and this towards all Men on all Occasions And this also is to be considered in Opposition unto an evil Habit of Mind exerting it self in many Vices which yet agree in the same general Nature such are Anger Wrath Envy Malice Revenge Frowardness Selfishness all which are directly opposite to the Grace of Holiness at present instanced in and pleaded for And this I fear is not so considered as it ought to be For if it were it would not be so common a thing as it may be it is for men to plead highly for the Imitation of God and almost in all they doe give us a full Representation of the Devil For as this universal Benignity and Love to all is the greatest Representation of the Nature of God on the Earth so is Fierceness Envy Wrath and Revenge of that of the Devil Would we then be like unto our Heavenly Father would we manifest that we are so unto his Glory would we represent him in and unto the World it must be by this frame of spirit and Actings constantly suited thereunto This our Blessed Saviour instructs us in and unto Matth. 5. 44 45. A Man I say thus Good his Nature being cured and rectified by Grace thence usefull and helpfull free from Guile Envy and Selfishness Pride and Elation of Mind is the best Representation we can have of God on the Earth since the Humane Nature of Christ was removed from us Sect. 29 This therefore we are to labour after if we intend to be like God or to manifest his Glory in our Persons and Lives unto the World And no small part of our Holiness consists herein Many Lusts Corruptions and distempered Passions are to be subdued by Grace if we design to be Eminent Strong Bents and Inclinations of Mind to comply with innumerable Provocations and Exasperations that will befall us must be corrected and discarded Many Duties be constantly attended unto and sundry Graces kept up to their Exercise The whole drove of Temptations all whose force consists in a pretence of care for Self must be scattered or resisted And hence it is that in the Scripture a Good man a Merciful man an usefull liberal man is frequently spoken of by way of Eminency and Distinction as one whom God hath an especial regard unto and concerning whom there are peculiar Promises When men live to themselves and are satisfied that they doe no hurt though they doe no good are secure selfish wrathfull angry peevish or have their kindness confined to their Relations or otherwise are little usefull but in what they are prest unto and therein come off with Difficulty in their own minds who esteem all lost that is done for the Relief of others and the greatest part of Wisdom to be cautious and disbelieve the necessities of men in a word that make Self and its concernments the End of
is not only contrary to the Law without them to the Light of their Minds and Warning of their Consciences but it is so also unto that which is their own Inclination and Disposition which hath sensibly in such Cases a Force and Violence put upon it by the Power of Corruptions and Temptations Wherefore although the Command for Holiness may and doth seem grievous and burdensome unto Unregenerate Persons as we have observed because it is against the habitual bent and Inclination of their whole Souls yet neither is it nor can it be so unto them who cannot neglect it or act any thing against it but that therein also they must Crucifie and offer Violence unto the Inclinations of the New Creature in them which are their own For in all things the Spirit lusteth against the Flesh Gal. 5. 17. and the Disposition of the New Creature is Habitually against Sin and for Holiness And this gives a mighty constraining Power unto the Command when it is Evident in our own Minds and Consciences that it requires nothing of us but what we do or may find an Inclination or Disposition in our own Hearts unto And by this Consideration we may take in the Power of it upon our Souls which is too frequently disregarded Let us but upon the proposal of it unto us consider what our Minds and Hearts say to it what Answer they return and we shall quickly discern how equal and just the Command is For I cannot perswade my self that any Believer can be so captivated at any time under the Power of Temptations Corruptions or Prejudices but that if he will but take Councel with his own Soul upon the Consideration of the Command for Obedience and Holiness and ask himself what he would have he will have a plain and sincere Answer That indeed I would doe and have the Good proposed this Holiness this Duty of Obedience Not only will Conscience answer that he must not do the Evil whereunto Temptation leadeth for if he doth Evil will ensue thereon but the new Nature and his Mind and Spirit will say This Good I would doe I delight in it it is Best for me most suited unto me And so it joyns all the Strength and Interest in hath in the Soul with the Command See to this Purpose the Arguing of our Apostle Rom. 7. 20 21 22. It is true there is a Natural Light in Conscience complying with the Command in its Proposal and urging Obedience thereunto which doth not make it easie to us but where it is alone increaseth its Burden and our Bondage For it doth only give in its Suffrage unto the Sanction of the Command and addes to the severity wherewith it is attended But that Complyance with the Command which is from a Principle of Grace is quite of another Nature and greatly facilitates Obedience And we may distinguish between that Complyance with the Command which is from the Natural Light of Conscience which genders unto Bondage and that which being from a Renewed Principle of Grace gives Liberty and Ease in Obedience For the first respects principally the Consequent of Obedience or Disobedience the Good or Evil that will ensue upon them Rom. 2. 14 15. Set aside this Consideration and it hath no more to say But the latter respects the Command it self which it embraceth delighteth in and judgeth good and holy with the Duties themselves required which are Natural and suited thereunto Sect. 30 2. Grace of the latter sort also Actual Grace for every holy Act and Duty is administred unto us according to the Promise of the Gospel So God told Paul that his Grace was sufficient for him And he worketh in us both to will and to doe of his own good Pleasure Phil. 2. 13. so as that we may doe all things through him that enables us the Nature of which Grace also hath been before discoursed of Now although this Actual working Grace be not in the Power of the Wilis of Men to make use of or refuse as they see Good but its Administration depends meerly on the Grace and Faithfulness of God yet this I must say that where it is sought in a due Manner by Faith and Prayer it is never so restrained from any Believer but that it shall be Effectual in him unto the whole of that Obedience which is required of him and as it will be accepted from him Sect. 31 If then this be the Condition of the Command of Holiness how Just and Equal must it needs be confessed to be and therefore how highly Reasonable is it that we should comply with it and how great is their Sin and Folly by whom it is neglected It is true we are absolutely obliged unto Obedience by the meer Authority of God who commands but he not only allows us to take in but directs us to seek after these other Considerations of it which may give it Force and Efficacy upon our Souls and Consciences And among these none is more Efficacious towards Gracious Ingenuous Souls than this of the Contemperation of the Duties commanded unto spiritual Aids of Strength promised unto us For what Cloke or Pretence of Dislike or Neglect is here left unto any Wherefore not onely the Authority of God in giving a Command but the Infinite Wisdom and Goodness of God in giving such a Command so Just Equal and Gentle fall upon us therein to Oblige us to Holy Obedience To Neglect or Despise this Command is to Neglect or Despise God in that Way which he hath chosen to manifest all the holy Properties of his Nature Sect. 32 Secondly The Command is Equal and so to be esteemed from the Matter of it or the Things that it doth require Things they are that are neither great nor grievous much less perverse useless or evil Micah 6. 6 7 8. There is nothing in the Holiness which the Command requires but what is Good to him in whom it is and Vsefull to all others concerned in him or what he doth What they are the Apostle mentions in his Exhortation unto them Phil. 4. 8. They are things true and honest and just and pure and lovely and of good report and what Evil is there in any of these things that we should decline the Command that requires them The more we abound in them the better it will be for our Relations our Families our Neighbours the whole Nation and the World but best of all for our selves Godliness is profitable unto all things 1 Tim. 4. 8. These things are good and profitable unto men Tit. 3. 8. Good to them that do them and good to those towards whom they are done But both these things namely the Vsefulness of Holiness unto our selves and others must be spoken unto distinctly afterwards and are therefore transmitted unto their proper place Sect. 33 As therefore it was before observed it is incumbent on us in the first place to Endeavour after Holiness and the Improvement of it with respect unto
man the Breath of Life 75 12 Burden of the Lord whence that Name was given to Prophesies 107 14 Burden and danger of Government 117 C. What it is to Call Jesus Lord 34 2 Calumny against the Doctrine of Justification refuted 365 6 Two-fold Capacity in the Mind with respect unto spiritual things 220 29 Carnal Mind in all Mankind by Nature 243 14 Causes of the Purification of Sin 382 1 Certainty of Outward Voyces from Internal Light 106 12 Secret Chambers where Christ is not what is intended●y them 152 15 Characters of Divine Truth on all Divine Inspirations 105 10 Cherishing and Acting the Principle of Holiness the great Means of Mortification of Sin 485 22 Childhood the Vanity thereof 289 4 To say Christ is the Lord what it includes and how we are enabled thereunto 5 3 Christ in no sense the Son of the Holy Spirit 133 11 Christ raised from the dead by the Holy Ghost 148 Christ how he is our Life 247 23 Christ not defiled with our defilements 406 16 Christ how he is made unto us Sanctification 445 c. Christ the exemplary Cause of our Holiness 447 54 Christ an Head of Influence unto the Church 451 64 Christ only to be heard if we would learn Obedience 559 11 Circumcision of the Heart wherein it consists 275 41. 418 11 Church of the Jewes first fell by Idolatry 25 27 Head of the Church first respected in the New Creation 128 1 Churches how at first founded and built by the Holy Ghost 6 6 Cleansing our selves from Sin our Duty 371 1 Cleansing from Sin how to be prayed for 372 3 Cleansing in Profession and Reality in Signification and Efficacy 380 No Cleansing of Sin meerly by our own Endeavours 398 13 Collation of the Spirit on Christ how a present and how a Continued Act 141 5 The commands of God how possible unto us 220 30 Commands of the Covenant respect the power administred in the Covenant 432 30 Commands of Duty when not grievous 446 53 Commands of Obedience belonging unto the Old Covenant and their Ends 534 3 Commands for Obedience how proportioned unto our Abilities 543 19 Commands for Holiness whence just and equal 550 31 Commands for Holiness multiplyed and why 551 34 Respect unto the Command the formal Reason of Obedience 533 2 How the Holy Spirit comes on men 89 90 16 Coming of Christ in the flesh the first and principal Promise of the Old Testament 8 9 Communication of spiritual things from Christ by the Spirit 161 6 Communication of the Vertue of the Blood of Christ unto our Souls by the Holy Spirit 390 6 Communication from God to his Creatures Two-fold 541 64 All Communications in a way of Grace through Christ 452 65 Communion with God by the Gospel the nature manner and way of it 163 6 Communion between God and Believers by real Operation of the Holy Ghost 164 6 Complaints of Sin in Prayer derided 491 30 Compleating Acts ascribed in all Divine Operations to the Holy Spirit 69 3 What comprehension Prophets had of Divine Revelations 103 10 Conception of Christ in the Womb Instantaneous 133 13 Conception of Christ how assigned to the Holy Spirit how to the Blessed Virgin 134 14 Conclusions to be made from the Doctrine of Election 531 25 Concupiscence gets strength by Age 290 6 Condition of all unregenerate Persons absolutely the same 178 12 Confluence of Trouble on the Lord Christ in the Course of his Ministry 142 Conformity unto God the Honour of the Soul 376 5 Conformity unto God wherein it consists 419 13 Conformity unto the Death of Christ wherein it consists 493 33 Conformity to God our onely Glory 503 10 Conscience how affected with Convictions 200 17 Consistency of Commands and Promises proved 336 14 Glorious Consequences of the Miraculous Conception of the Body of Christ 135 Consequences falsely charged on the Doctrine of the Gospel 507 16 Considerations of Grace and the true Spring of all spiritual Diligence 346 7 Considerations of the Nature and End of Sin subservient unto Mortification 496 39 Spiritual consolations unto whom they do belong 359 Consolation of Believers from the Eternal Continuance of Grace 329 11 Constancy in Holy Duties a necessary consequent of a Principle of Holiness 426 20 Constitution no excuse for sin 369 Contemplation an effect of Love 514 26 Contempt of the Gospel whence 224 37 Contempt of Regeneration in many 205 1 Contempt of the World from the Consideration of Electing Love 528 19 Contest in the World about the Lord Christ how managed on each side 149 13 Continuation of the Work of the Holy Ghost in the Church 123 4 Contrary Dispositions and Inclinations in Believers the Nature of them and whence they are 428 24 Difficulty of Conversion not onely from a Custom of sinning 253 1 Conversion to God not meerly an Act of our own Wills 262 20 Way and Means of Conversion according to the Old and New Pelagians 267 Work of the Spirit in Conversion how declared by some and derided by others 341 39 Conviction of Sin antecedaneous to Conversion 195 8 Convictions of Sin how they are lost 196 9 Wayes whereby Convictions are lost ex●●●● in Austin 296 15 16 The Nature of the Conviction of Sin 297 18 Convictions variously used and abused 364 Conviction of the Defilement of Sin necessary antecedently unto its Purification 387 5 Evidence of Duties proceeding onely from the Power of Convictions 426 20 Corruption of the Mind expressed by Darkness 209 11 Corruption of Nature working early in Infancy 288 3 Common Notions of Good and Evil remaining in Corrupted Nature and their use 293 11 Corrupted Reason depraves the whole Mystery of the Gospel 325 8 Creating of the Body of Christ out of the substance of the Virgin compared with the Creation of the first man out of the dust of the Earth 132 Creation assigned distinctly to each Person in the Trinity 69 1 Creation of Man the Parts and Degrees of it 74 75 10 New Creation how effected by the Holy Spirit 98 1 New Creation the work whereby God designed to glorifie himself principally in this World 126 8 New Creation how assigned unto the Father Son and Spirit distinctly 126 9 Old and New Creation compared 172 1 Creatures above and below why called Gods Host 71 6 New Creature what it is and wherein it consists 183 20 New Creature supported and acted by the Holy Spirit 466 7 Cure of Idolatry by the Captivity 25 27 Cyrus how Anoynted of God 77 15. 118 22 D. Danger of Mistakes about Regeneration 190 State of Darkness and Blindness by Nature 206 4 Spiritual Darkness the Nature of it 207 7 Darkness Objective and Subjective 208 8 Spiritual Darkness working by Enmity and its Effects 230 49 Dead Works what they are and whence so called 246 22 Men said to be Dead in Sin with respect to the Life we had in Adam 242 11 Work of the Spirit towards the Humane Nature
his Gifts unto his Disciples by breathing on them John 20. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And because in our first Creation it is said of Adam that God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 breathed into his Nostrils the Breath of Life Gen. 2. 7. He hath the same Appellation with respect unto God Psal. 18. 15. Thus is he called the Spirit And because as we observed before the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is variously used Didymus de Spiritu Sancto lib. 3. supposeth that the prefixing of the Article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth distinguish the signification and confine it to the Holy Ghost in the New Testament Oft-times no doubt it doth so but not alwayes as is manifest from Joh. 8. 3. where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is joyned with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and yet only signifies the Wind. But the Subject treated of and what is affirmed of him will sufficiently determine the signification of the Word where he is called absolutely THE SPIRIT Sect. 9 Again He is called by way of Eminency the Holy Spirit or the Holy Ghost This is the most usual Appellation of him in the New Testament And it is derived from the Old Psal. 51. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit of thy Holiness or thy Holy Spirit Isa. 63. 10 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit of his Holiness or his Holy Spirit Hence are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Holy Spirit and the Spirit of Holiness in common use among the Jews In the New Testament He is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That Holy Spirit And we must enquire the special Reasons of this Adjunct Some suppose it is only from his peculiar Work of sanctifying us or making us Holy For this Effect of Sanctification is his peculiar Work and that of what sort soever it be whether it consist in a separation from things Profane and Common unto Holy Uses and Services or whether it be the real Infusion and Operation of Holiness in Men it is from him in an especial manner And this also manifesteth him to be God for it is God alone who sanctifyeth his People Levit. 20. 8. I am Jehovah who sanctifieth you And God in that Work ascribes unto himself the Title of Holy in an especial manner and as such would have us to consider him Levit. 21. 8. I the Lord which sanctifieth you am Holy And this may be one Reason of the frequent use of this Property with reference unto the Spirit Sect. 10 But this is not the whole Reason of this Name and Apellation For where he is first so mentioned he is called the Spirit of Gods Holiness Psal. 51. 11. Isa 63. 10 11. And in the New Testament absolutely the Spirit of Holiness Rom. 1. 4. And this respects his Nature in the first Place and not merely his Operations As God then absolutely is called Holy the Holy One and the Holy One of Israel being therein described by that Glorious Property of his Nature whereby he is Glorious in Holiness Exod. 15. 11 And whereby he is distinguished from all false Gods who is like unto thee O Jehovah among the Gods who is like unto thee Glorious in Holiness So is the Spirit called Holy to denote the Holiness of his Nature And on this Account is the Opposition made between him and the Unholy or unclean Spirit Mark 3. 29 30. He that shall blaspheme against the Holy Spirit hath never forgivness Because they said he hath an unclean Spirit And herein first his Personality is asserted for the Unclean Spirit is a Person And if the Spirit of God were only a Quality or Accident as some fancy and dream there could no comparative opposition be made between him and this unclean Spirit that is the Devil So also are they opposed with respect unto their Natures His Nature is Holy whereas that of the unclean Spirit is Evil and perverse This is the Foundation of his being called Holy even the eternal Glorious Holiness of his Nature And on this account he is so stiled also with respect unto all his Operations For it is not only with regard unto the particular Work of Regeneration and Sanctification or making of us Holy but unto all his Works and Operations that he is so termed For he being the immediate Operator of all Divine Works that outwardly are of God and they being in themselves all Holy be they of what kind soever He is called the Holy Spirit Yea he is so called to attest and witness that all his Works all the Works of God are Holy although they may be great and terrible and such as to Corrupt Reason may have an other Appearance in all which we are to acquiesce in this that the Holy One in the midst of us will do no iniquity Zeph. 3. 5. The Spirit of God then is thus frequently and almost constantly called Holy to attest that all the Works of God whereof he is the immediate Operator are Holy For it is the Work of the Spirit to harden and blind obstinate sinners as well as to Sanctifie the Elect. And his acting in the One is no less Holy than in the other although Holiness be not the Effect of it in the Objects So when he came to declare his dreadful Work of the final hardning and Rejection of the Jews one of the most tremendous Effects of Divine Providence a Work which for the strangeness of it Men would in no wise believe though it were declared unto them Acts 13. 41. he was signally proclamed Holy by the Seraphims that attended his Throne Isa. 6. 3 10 11 12. Joh. 12. 40. Acts 28. 26. Sect. 11 There are indeed some Actions on Men and in the World that are wrought by God's permission and in his righteous Judgment by Evil Spirits whose Persons and actings are placed in Opposition to the Spirit of God So Sam. 16. 14 15. The Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul and an Evil Spirit from the Lord troubled him And Saul's servants said unto him behold now an Evil Spirit from God troubleth thee So also v. 23. The Evil Spirit from God was upon Saul So chap. 18. 10. Chap. 19. 9. This Spirit is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an evil Spirit of God Chap. 16. 15. and absolutely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Spirit of God v. 33. where we have supplied Evil in the Translation But these Expressions are to be regulated and explained by v. 14. where he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Evil Spirit from the Lord that is appointed and commissioned by him for the punishing and terrifying of Saul For as the Spirit of the Lord departed from him by with-drawing his Assistance and Influential operations whereby he had wrought in him those Gifts and Abilities of mind which fitted him unto the discharge of his Kingly Office upon the first impressions whereof he was turned into another man from what he was in his Private Condition 1 Sam. 10. 6
frame or inclination the fleshly Will of it stirs up vain Thoughts and Imaginations it minds the things of the flesh Rom. 8. 5. These thoughts fix on and represent unto the Mind Objects suited unto the satisfaction of its Vanity and Lust. With these the Mind committeth folly and lewdness and the fleshly habit thereof is thereby heightned and confirmed and this multiplies Imaginations of its own kind whereby Men inflame themselves Isa. 57. 5. waxing worse and worse And the particular bent of these Imaginations doth answer the Predominancy of any especial Lust in the heart or mind Sect. 52 It will be Objected That although these things are so in many especially in Persons that are become profligate in sin yet proceeding from their Wills and corrupt sensual Affections they argue not an Impotency in the Mind to discern and receive Spiritual Things but notwithstanding these Enormities of some the Faculty of the Mind is still endued with a Power of discerning judging and believing Spiritual Things in a due manner Answ. 1. We do not discourse concerning the weakness and disability of the Mind in and about these things which is as it were a natural Impotency like blindness in the Eyes which hath been both explained and confirmed before But it is a Moral Disability and that as unto all the Powers of Nature invincible as unto the right receiving of Spiritual Things which ensues on that corrupt Depravation of the Mind in the state of Nature that the Scripture calls darkness or blindness which we intend 2. Our present Testimonies have sufficiently confirmed that all the Instances mentioned do proceed from the Depravation of the Mind And whereas this is common unto and equal in all unregenerate Men if it produce not in all Effects to the same degree of Enormity it is from some Beams of Light and secret Convictions from the Holy Spirit as we shall afterwards declare 3. Our only aim is to prove the indispensible necessity of a saving Work of Illumination on the Mind to enable it to receive Spiritual Things spiritually which appears sufficiently from the Efficacy of this Darkness whence a Man hath no ability to disintangle or save himself For also Sect. 53 Thirdly It fills the Mind with Prejudices against Spiritual Things as proposed unto them in the Gospel And from these Prejudices it hath neither Light nor Power to extricate it self No small part of its Depravation consists in its readiness to embrace them and pertinacious adherence unto them Some few of these Prejudices may be instanced 1. The Mind from the Darkness that is in it apprehends that Spiritual Things the Things of the Gospel as they are proposed have an utter inconsistency with true Contentment and Satisfaction These are the Things which all Men by various wayes do seek after This is the Scent and Chase which they so eagerly pursue in different Tracts and Paths innumerable Something they would attain or arrive unto which should satisfie their Minds and fill their Desires And this commonly before they have had any great Consideration of the Proposals of the Gospel they suppose themselves in the way at least unto by those little Tastes of Satisfaction unto their Lusts which they have obtained in the wayes of the World And these hopeful Beginnings they will not forgo Isa. 57. 10. Thou art wearied in the greatness of thy way yet saidst thou not There is no hope Thou hast found the Life of thine Hand therefore thou wast not grieved They are ready oft-times to faint in the pursuit of their Lusts because of the Disappointments which they find in them or the Evils that attend them For which way soever they turn themselves in their Course they cannot but see or shrewdly suspect that the end of them is or will be Vanity and Vexation of Spirit But yet they give not over the pursuit wherein they are engaged they say not There is no hope And the Reason hereof is because they find the Life of their Hand Something or other comes in daily either from the Work that they do or the Company they keep or the Expectation they have which preserves their Hope alive and makes them unwilling to forgo their present Condition They find it to be none of the best but do not think there can be a better And therefore their only design is to improve or to thrive in it If they might obtain more Mirth more Wealth more Strength and Health more Assurance of their Lives more Power more Honour more suitable Objects unto their sensual Desires then they suppose it would be better than it is but as for any thing which differeth from these in the whole kind they can entertain no respect for it In this State and Condition Spiritual Things the spiritual mysterious things of the Gospel are proposed unto them At first view they judg that these Things will not assist them in the pursuit or improvement of their Carnal Satisfactions And so far they are in the Right they judg not amiss The things of the Gospel will give neither Countenance nor Help to the Lusts of Men. Nay it is no hard matter for them to come to a discovery that the Gospel being admitted in the Power of it will crucifie and mortifie those corrupt Affections which hitherto they have been given up to the pursuit of For this it plainly declares Col. 3. 1 2 3 4 5. Tit. 2. 11 12. Sect. 54 There are but two things wherein Men seeking after Contentment and Satisfaction are concerned First The Objects of their Lusts or Desires and then those Lusts and Desires themselves The former may be considered in their own Nature so they are indifferent or as they are capable of being abused to corrupt and sinful ends In the first way as the Gospel condemns them not so it adds nothing to them unto those by whom it is received It gives not Men more Riches Wealth or Honour than they had before in the World It promises no such thing unto them that do receive it but rather the contrary The latter consideration of them it condemns and takes away And for the desires of Men themselves the avowed Work of the Gospel is to mortifie them And hereby the naturally corrupt Relation which is between these Desires and their Objects is broken and dissolved The Gospel leaves Men unless upon extraordinary occasions their Names their Reputations their Wealth their Honours if lawfully obtained and possessed But the League that is between the Mind and these things in all Natural Men must be broken They must no more be looked on as the Chiefest Good or in the place thereof nor as the Matter of Satisfaction but must give place to spiritual unseen eternal Things This secretly alienates the Carnal Mind and a Prejudice is raised against it as that which would deprive the Soul of all its present Satisfaction and offers nothing in the room of them that is suitable to any of its Desires or Affections For by
as great an Encouragement unto Unholiness and a continuance in Sin for those who believe it and at the same time love the Pleasures of sin which are the Generality of their Church as ever was or can be found out or made use of For to come with a plain down-right Disswasure from Holiness and Encouragement unto Sin is a Design that would absolutely defeat it self nor is capable of making Impressions on them who retain the Notion of a Difference between Good and Evil. But this Side-wind that at once pretends to relieve men from the Filth of sin and keeps them from the only Wayes and Means whereby it may be cleansed insensibly leads them into a quiet pursuit of their Lusts under an Expectation of Relief when all is past and done Wherefore setting aside such vain Imaginations we may enquire into the true Causes and Wayes of our Purification from the Uncleanness of sin described wherein the First part of our Sanctification and the Foundation of our Holiness doth consist CHAP. V. The Filth of Sin purged by the Spirit and Blood of Christ. 1 Purification of the Filth of sin the first part of Sanctification how it is effected 2 The Work of the Spirit therein 3 Efficacy of the Blood of Christ to that Purpose 4 The Blood of his Sacrifice intended 5 How that Blood cleanseth Sin Application unto it and Application of it by the Spirit 6 Wherein that Application consists 7 8 9. Faith the Instrumental Cause of our Purification with the use of Afflictions to the same purpose Necessity of a Due Consideration of the Pollution of Sin 10 Considerations of the Pollution and Purification of Sin practically improved 11 Various Directions for a due Application unto the Blood of Christ for Cleansing 12 Sundry Degrees of Shamelesness in Sinning 13 Directions for the Cleansing of Sin continued 14 Thankefulness for the Cleansing of Sin 15 With other Vses of the same Consideration 16 Union with Christ how consistent with the Remainders of Sin 17 From all that Differences between Evangelical Holiness and the Old Nature asserted Sect. 1 THE purging of the Souls of them that Believe from the Defilements of Sin is in the Scripture assigned unto several Causes of different Kinds For the Holy Spirit the Blood of Christ Faith and Afflictions are all said to cleanse us from our sins but in several Wayes and with distinct Kinds of Efficacy The Holy Spirit is said to doe it as the principal Efficient Cause The Blood of Christ as the Meritorious procuring Cause Faith and Affliction as the Instrumental Causes the one Direct and Internal the other External and Occasional Sect. 2 1 That we are purged and purified from sin by the Spirit of God communicated unto us hath been before in General confirmed by many Testimonies of the Holy Scriptures And we may gather also from what hath been spoken wherein this Work of his doth consist For whereas the Spring and Fountain of all the Pollution of Sin lyes in the Depravation of the Faculties of our Natures which ensued on the Loss of the Image of God he renews them again by his Grace Tit. 3. 5. Our want of due answering unto the Holiness of God as represented in the Law and exemplified in our Hearts Originally is a principal Part and universal Cause of our whole Pollution and Defilement by sin For when our Eyes are opened to discern it this is that which in the first place filleth us with shame and self-Abhorrency and that which makes us so unacceptable yea so loathsome to God Who is there who considereth aright the Vanity Darkness and Ignorance of his Mind the Perversness and Stubbornness of his Will with the Disorder Irregularity and Distemper of his Affections with respect unto things Spiritual and Heavenly who is not ashamed of who doth not abhorr himself This is that which hath given our Nature its Leprosie and defiled it throughout And I shall crave leave to say that he who hath no Experience of Spiritual shame and self-Abhorrency upon the Account of this Inconformity of his Nature and the Faculties of his Soul unto the Holiness of God is a great stranger unto this whole Work of Sanctification Who is there that can recount the Unsteadiness of his Mind in Holy Meditation his Low and unbecoming Conceptions of Gods Excellencies his Proneness to foolish Imaginations and Vanities that Profit not his Aversation to Spirituality in Duty and fixedness in Communion with God his Proneness to things Sensual and Evil all arising from the spiritual Irregularity of of our Natural Facultyes but if ever he had any due Apprehensions of Divine Purity and Holiness that is not sensible of his own Vileness and Baseness and is not oft-times deeply affected with shame thereon Now this whole Evil Frame is cured by the effectual working of the Holy Ghost in the rectfying and Renovation of our Natures He giveth a New Understanding a New Heart New Affections renewing the whole Soul into the Image of God Ephes. 4. 23 24. Col. 3. 10. The way whereby he doth this hath been before so fully declared in our opening of the Doctrine of Regeneration that it need not be here repeated Indeed our Original Cleansing is therein where mention is made of the Washing of Regeneration Tit. 3. 5. Therein is the Image of God restored unto our Souls But we consider the same Work now as it is the Cause of our Holyness Look then how far our Minds our Hearts our Affections are renewed by the Holy Ghost so far are we cleansed from our spiritual habitual Pollution Would we be cleansed from our Sins that which is so frequently promised that we shall be and so frequently prescribed as our Duty to be and without which we neither have nor can have any thing of true Holiness in us we must labour after and endeavour to grow in this Renovation of our Natures by the Holy Ghost The more we have of saving Light in our Minds of Heavenly Love in our Wills and Affections of a constant Readiness unto Obedience in our Hearts the more Pure are we the more cleansed from the Pollution of sin The Old Principle of Corrupted Nature is unclean and defiling shamefull and loathsome The New Creature the Principle of Grace implanted in the whole Soul by the Holy Ghost is Pure and purifying Clean and Holy 2 ly The Holy Ghost doth Purifie and Cleanse us by strengthening our Souls by his Grace unto all Holy Duties and against all Actual sins It is by Actual Sins that our Natural and Habitual Pollution is encreased Hereby some make themselves base and vile as Hell But this also is prevented by the Gracious Actings of the Spirit Having given us a Principle of Purity and Holyness he so acts it in Dutyes of Obedience and in Opposition unto Sin as that he preserves the Soul free from Defilements or Pure and Holy according to the Tenor of the New Covenant that is in such Measure and to such a
not yet agreed about The Socinians contend that the Doctrine of the Satisfaction of Christ doth overthrow the Necessity of an Holy Life The Papists say the same concerning the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ unto our Justification The same Charge is laid by others against the Doctrine of the gratuitous Election of God the almighty Efficacy of his Grace in the Conversion of Sinners and of his Faithfulness in the Preservation of true Believers in their state of Grace unto the End On the other hand the Scripture doth so place the Foundations of all true and real Holiness in these things that without the Faith of them and an Influence on our Minds from them it will not allow of any thing to be so called Sect. 2 To examine the pretences of others concerning the suitableness of their Doctrines unto the Promotion of Holiness is not my present Business It is well that it hath alwayes maintained a Conviction of its Necessity and carryed it through all different Perswasions in Christianity In this one thing alone almost do all Christian agree and yet notwithstanding the want of it is if not the onely yet the principal thing whereby the most who are so called are ruined So ordinary a thing is it for men to agree for the Necessity of Holiness and live in the Neglect of it when they have so done Conviction comes in at an easie rate as it were whether men will or no but Practice will stand them in pains cost and trouble Wherefore unto the due handling of this matter some few things must be premised As First It is disadvantageous unto the Interest of the Gospel to have men plead for Holiness with weak incogent Arguments and such as are not taken out of the Stores of its Truth and so really affect not the Consciences of men And it is pernicious to all the Concerns of Holiness it self to have that defended and pleaded for under its Name and Title which indeed is not so but an Vsurper of its Crown and Dignity which we shall afterwards enquire into Secondly It is uncomely and unworthy to hear men contending for Holiness as the whole of our Religion and in the mean time on all Occasions express in themselves an Habit and Frame of Mind utterly inconsistent with what the Scripture so calls and so esteems There is certainly no readier way on sundry Accounts to unteach men all the Principles of Religion all Respect unto God and common Honesty And if some men did this only as being at variance with themselves without Reflections on others it might the more easily be borne But to see or hear men proclaiming themselves in their whole Course to be Proud Revengefull Worldly Sensual Neglecters of Holy Dutyes Scoffers at Religion and the Power of it pleading for an Holy Life against the Doctrine and Practice of those who walked unblameably before the Lord in all his Wayes yea upon whose Breasts and Foreheads was written Holiness unto the Lord such as were most of the first Reformed Divines whom they reflect upon is a thing which all sober men do justly nauseate and which God abhorres But the further Consideration here of I shal at present omit and pursue what I have proposed Thirdly In my Discourse concerning the Necessity of Holiness with the Grounds and Reasons of it and Arguments for it I shall confine my self unto these two Things 1 That the Reasons Arguments and Motives which I shall insist on being such as are taken out of the Gospel or the Scripture are not only consistent and compliant with the great Doctrines of the Grace of God in our free Election Conversion Justification and Salvation by Jesus Christ but such as naturally flow from them discover what is their true Nature and Tendency in this matter 2 That I shall at present suppose all along what that Holiness is which I do intend Now this is not that outward Shew and pretence of it which some plead for not an Attendance unto or the Observation of some or all Moral Vertues only not a Readiness for some Acts of Piety and Charity from a superstitious proud Conceit of their being Meritorious of Grace or Glory But I intend that Holiness which I have before described which may be reduced to these three heads 1 An internal Change or Renovation of our Souls our Minds Wills and Affections by Grace 2 An universal Compliance with the Will of God in all Duties of Obedience and Abstinence from Sin out of a Principle of Faith and Love 3 A Designation of all the Actions of Life unto the Glory of God by Jesus Christ according to the Gospel This is Holiness so to be and so to doe is to be Holy And I shall divide my Arguments into Two sorts 1. Such as prove the Necessity of Holiness as to the Essence of it Holiness in our Hearts and Natures 2. Such as prove the Necessity of Holiness as to the Degrees of it Holiness in our Lives and Conversations Sect. 3 First then The Nature of God as revealed unto us with our Dependance on him the Obligation that is upon us to Live unto him with the Nature of our Blessedness in the Enjoyment of him do require indispensibly that we should be Holy The Holiness of Gods Nature is every where in the Scripture made the Fundamental Principle and Reason of the Necessity of Holiness in us Himself makes it the ground of his Command for it Levit. 11. 44. For I am the Lord your God ye shall therefore sanctifie your selves and ye shall be Holy for I am Holy So also Chap. 19. 2. Chap. 20. 7. And to shew the everlasting Equity and Force of this Reason it is transferred over to the Gospel 1 Pet. 1. 15 16. As he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of Conversation because it is written Be ye holy for I am holy God lets them know that his Nature is such as that unless they are sanctified and Holy there can be no such Entercourse between him and them as ought to be between a God and his People So he declares the Sence of this Enforcement of that Precept to be Levit. 11. 45. I brought you out of the Land of Aegypt to be your God ye shall therefore be Holy for I am Holy Without this the Relation designed cannot be maintained that I should be your God and you should be my People To this Purpose belongs that Description given us of his Nature Psal. 5. 4 5 6. For thou art not a God that hath pleasure in Wickedness neither shall Evil dwell with thee The Foolish shall not stand in thy sight thou hatest all Workers of Iniquity Thou shalt destroy them that speak Lying the Lord will abhorre the Bloody and Deceitfull man Answerable unto that of the Prophet Thou art of purer Eyes than to behold Evil and canst not look on Iniquity Hab. 1. 13. He is such a God that is such is his Nature so pure
in the Apprehension of them with whom they have to doe which was Actually the Case of David all his Dayes and of Hannah 1 Sam. 1. 6 7. I would be far from giving Countenance unto th● sinfull Distempers of any but yet I doubt not but that the Infirmities of many are represented by Envy and Hatred of Profession unto an undeserved Disadvantage 3 Where-ever there is the seed of Grace and Holiness there an Entrance is made on the Cure of all these sinfull Distempers yea not only of the corrupt Lusts of the Flesh that are absolutely evil and Vitious in their whole Nature but even of those natural Infirmities and Distempers of peevishness moroseness inclination to Anger and Passion Vnsteadiness in Resolution which Lusts is apt to possess and use unto evil and disorderly Ends. And I am pressing the Necessity of Holiness that is of the Encrease and Growth of it that this Work may be carried on to perfection and that so through the Power of the Grace of the Gospel that great Promise may be accomplished which is recorded Isa. 11. 6 7 8 9. And as when a wandring jugling Impostor who pretended to judge of mens Lives and Manners by their Physiognomy beholding Socrates pronounced him from his Countenance a Person of a flagitious sensual Life the People derided his Folly who knew his sober vertuous Conversation but Socrates excused him affirming that such he had been had he not bridled his Nature by Philosophy how much more truely may it be said of Multitudes that they had been eminent in nothing but untoward Distempers of Mind had not their Souls been rectified and cured by the Power of Grace and Holiness Sect. 14 I find there is no End of Arguments that offer their service to the Purpose in hand I shall therefore wave many and those of great importance attended with an unavoidable Cogency and shut up this Discourse with one which must not be omitted In our Holiness consists the principal part of that Revenue of Glory and Honour which the Lord Christ requireth and expecteth from his Disciples in this World That he doth require this indispensibly of us is I suppose out of Question amongst us although the most who are called Christians live as if they had no other Design but to cast all Obloquies Reproach and Shame on him and his Doctrine But if we are indeed his Disciples he hath bought us with a Price and we are not our own but his and that to glorifie him in Soul and Body becuase they are his 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. He dyed for us that we should not live unto our selves but unto him that so dyed for us and by vertue of whose Death we live Rom. 14. 7 8 9. He gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all Iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar People zealous of good Works Tit. 2. 14. But we need not to insist hereon To deny that we ought to glorifie and honour Christ in the World is to renounce him and the Gospel The sole Enquiry is How we may do so and what he requireth of us to that purpose Sect. 15 Now the summe of all that the Lord Christ expects from us in this World may be reduced unto two Heads 1 That we should live holily to him 2 That we should suffer patiently for him And in these things alone is he glorified by us The first he expecteth at all times and in all things the latter on particular Occasions as we are called by him thereunto Where these things are where this Revenue of Glory is payd in and returned unto him he repents not of his Purchase nor of the unvaluable Price he hath payd for us yea sayes The Lines are fallen to me in pleasant places I have a goodly Heritage which are the words of Christ concerning the Church which is his Lot and the Portion of his Inheritance Psal. 16. 6. Now amongst many others we shall consider but one way whereby we glorifie the Lord Christ by our Holy Obedience and whence also it will appear how much we dishonour and reproach him when we come short thereof Sect. 16 The Lord Christ coming into the World as the Mediator between God and Man wrought and accomplished a mighty Work amongst us And what he did may be referred to three Heads 1 The Life which he lead 2 The Doctrine which he taught and 3 The Death which he underwent Concerning all these there ever was a great Contest in the World and it is yet continued And on the part of the World it is managed under a double Appearance For some openly have traduced his Life as unholy his Doctrine as foolish and his Death as justly deserved which was the sence of the Pagan World and the Apostate Judaical Church of Old as it is of many at this Day Others allow them to pass with some Approbation pretending to own what is taught in the Gospel concerning them but in fact and practice deny any such Power and Efficacy in them as is pretended and without which they are of no Vertue which is the way of Carnal Gospellers and all Idolatrous Superstitious Worshippers among Christians And of late there is risen up amongst us a Generation who esteem all that is spoken concerning him to be a meer Fable In opposition hereunto the Lord Christ calls all his true Disciples to bear Witness and Testimony unto the Holiness of his Life the Wisdom and Purity of his Doctrine the Efficacy of his Death to Expiate Sin to make Attonement and Peace with God with the Power of his whole Mediation to Renew the Image of God in us to restore us into his Favour and to bring us unto the Enjoyment of him This he calls all his Disciples to avow unto and express in the World and by their so doing is he glorified and no otherwise in a peculiar manner A Testimony is to be given unto and against the World that his Life was most Holy his Doctrine most heavenly and pure his Death most precious and Efficacious and consequently that he was sent of God unto his great Work and was accepted of him therein Now all this is no otherwise done but by Obedience unto him in Holiness as it is visible and fruitfull For Sect. 17 1 We are Obliged to profess that the Life of Christ is our Example This in the first place are we called unto and every Christian doth virtually make that profession No man takes that holy Name upon him but the first thing he signifies thereby is that he makes the Life of Christ his Pattern which it is his Duty to express in his own And he who takes up Christianity on any other Terms doth wofully deceive his own Soul How is it then that we may yield a Revenue of Glory herein How may we bear Testimony unto the Holiness of his Life against the Blasphemies of the World and the Vnbelief of the most who have no Regard thereunto Can this be any
consists 493 34 Real internal Efficiency ascribed unto Grace 269 29 Eminent Effusions of the Holy Spirit accompanyed with effectual Delusions of Sathan at the same time 18 22 Plentiful Effusion of the Spirit the great Promise of the Old Testament 122 2 The Elect the subject of the Promise of the Spirit as to Regeneration 357 3 Election the Spring of all true Holiness 442 45 Eternal Election a Cause of and Motive unto Holiness 520 c. No Evidence of Election without Holiness 521 5 Election absolutely considered no part of Gods Revealed Will. 523 10 No man Obliged to believe his Election before Conversion 524 13 Who are bound to believe that they are Elected 525 13 Divine Emanation of the Holy Spirit from the Father and Son 35 9 End of Prophesie in the Church 99 5 End of Miraculous Operations 115 21 End of God in the Work of the Old and New Creature 155 2 End of Afflictions and Tryals 343 6 End of Dutyes Two-fold 441 44 End of Legal Commands 535 5 Ends of Holiness for which it is required 414 4 Principal Ends for which the Holy Spirit is promised 357 3 Enforcements unto Obedience from the Authority of God in his Commands 538 10 11 No Enjoyment of God without Purification from Sin 378 Enmity of the Carnal Mind against God and his Wayes 231 49 50 Natural Impotency and Enmity how taken away 278 46 Enquiry into the Reasons and Difficulties in Holy Duties 438 8 Enthusiastical Raptures no Means of Conversion 186 25 No Enthusiastical Impressions in Conversion 270 32 No Entrance with God without Holiness 504 11 Equity of the Law how it respects the Ability of them that are Obliged by it 249 27 Espousals of the Blessed Virgin with Joseph the Necessity thereof 134 14 Essence and Form of Holiness wherein it consists 415 7 8 Eternal Love a powerfull Motive unto Holiness 525 14 Evangelical Holiness distinguished from all Pretences thereunto 439 40 No Evangelical Truth inconsistent with Holinesse or repugnant thereunto 507 16 Evidences of Regeneration various 177 11 No Evidence of an Interest in the Oblation of Christ unless we are Holy 556 4 Infallible Evidences of Divine Inspiration 104 10 Evil Spirits and their Operations 37 11 Evil Frame of Nature how Cured 383 Evil Spirit how it wrought in Saul 112 18 All Excellencies ascribed unto the Holy Spirit in the Scripture 98 3 How Christ is our Example 447 448 449 Exhortations respect Duty not Ability 244 17 Experience of the work of the Spirit of God in the Souls of Men. 27 31 Experiences of the Truth and Reality of things believed supplyed by the Holy Spirit 341 5 Experience of the Defilement of Sin 372 3 External Duties of two sorts 464 4 Extraordinary Works of the Holy Spirit the several kinds of them 99 4 Extraordinary Acts of Christ during the Course of his private Life 140 F. Face of the Earth by what means Annually renewed 74 9 Facility in Dutyes of Obedience from a Principle of Holiness 436 37 Faith and Obedience with respect unto the Gift of the Holy Ghost how to be regulated 90 16 Faith Actually wrought by Grace 272 36 Faith and Love the Spring of Holiness how they are encreased 340 5 Faith encreased by the due Proposal of its proper Objects 341 5 What Faith is required that a man may please God 362 Faith alone interests us in the purifying Vertue of the Blood of Christ. 388 Faith worketh by Prayer unto the Cleansing of Sin 390 6 How it purgeth the Soul 390 8 Faith whether it be a Fixing of the Imagination 400 The Power of Faith in Conforming the Soul unto God 513 24 Faith of Election tends not to Carelesness 530 22 Faith without Holiness vain 553 38 Faithfulness of God in his Promises to be pleaded in Prayer 360 How the Holy Spirit doth Fall on men 90 17 Reasons of Mens Falling from a Course of Duties 548 26 False pretences unto the Name and Work of the Holy Spirit 13 15 False Prophets how they were Acted ib. 16 False Prophets of two sorts some meerly Acted by the Devil some pretenders only 14 17 False pretences to Divine Revelation Sathans Design therein 15 18 False Prophets why called Spirits 16 21 False Notions of Jews and Mahumetans about the Spirit of God 33 8 The Father how he is said to raise Christ from the Dead 148 All Grace Originally from the Father 163 Dread and Fear attending Convictions of Sin 304 30 Fear inseperable from Guilt 375 Fear of Sin a Fruit of Faith 404 Fear of Man how to be removed 539 13 Fiery Tongues what they signified 54 17 Figurative Expressions multiplyed in the Scripture 48 9 Figurative Expressions setting out the Vileness of Sin 402 The Nature of the Guilt and Filth of Sin how made known 375 The Finger of God what it is 72 7 Filiation a personal Adjunct 133 11 Fire on the Altar what it signified 53 16 Fire and Water the Means of all Typical Cleansing 371 1 Folly of men in seeking after Instruction in Moral Duties from others rather than from Christ. 558 11 The Things of God Foolishness unto the Mind of the Natural man how and in what sence 221 31 No Force put upon the Faculties of our Souls by the Operations of the Spirit 187 Forming of the Host of Heaven and Earth the Work of the Holy Spirit 71 7 Forming of the Body of Christ in the Womb the Work of the Holy Spirit 131 10 Foundation of all Church-Order in the Confession of the Lordship of Christ. 4 2 Foundation of the Ministry of the Church in the Promise of the Spirit 156 3 Foundation of Moral Differences among Mankind 364 Freedome and Bounty in the Gift of the Spirit 82 4 Free-will wherein it ends consists 433 33 Freedom of Corrupted Nature and of Grace 434 33 Frequency in Duties produceth Facility 437 Fruits of Sin Internal and External 476 6 Fruits of Election its onely Manifestation 524 13 Evil Frame of Nature how Cured 383 Fulness of Christ what it is and how Communicated 457 71 Fundamental Principles to be attended unto in the tryal of Spirits 17 12 G. Gift of Prophesie honourable in the Church of Old and why 13 16 Gift of Prophesie falsely pretended unto and abused 13 16 The Gift of Prophesie whether ever given to Wicked men 110 17 Gift of Prophesie not a sanctifying Grace 111 18 Gifts of Civil Government from the Holy Ghost 116 22 Gifts for the Discharge of the Office of Mediator Collated on the Humane Nature of Christ by the Holy Ghost 139 4 Gifts how to be prayed for 360 The Holy Spirit Given of God and how 80 3 Giving and Receiving related ibid. Giving of the Spirit includes Authority Freedom and Bounty 81 4 The Spirit how Given by the Father in the way of Authority 81 4 To Glorifie God as God what it is 44 2 Glorified Body of Christ the Example of ours 149 12 Glorying in Sin its Abomination 397 12
114 20 Matter of Holiness wherein it consists 411 3 Means assigned in the Wisdom of God for the Recovery of fallen Man 8 9 Due Means to be sued in coming to the knowledge of Christ. 151 14 False Means rejected ibid. Means of Regeneration various 177 10 Vse of Means towards Persons unregenerate 244 16 Measures of the Gift of the Holy Spirit 95 21 The Spirit not given by Measure to Christ. 140 Mediation of Christ the only procuring Cause of Holiness 444 49 Christ a Mediator in what sence 451 62 Mediation of Christ confined unto his Offices 554 2 Merit in●●nsistent with Grace 332 13 Merit destractive unto Holiness 505 14 Metaphors not to be faigned in the Scripture 57 21 Metaphor in the Expression of sending the Spirit 84 8 Meteors when created 72 8 Method of the Work of the Spirit in Regeneration 189 26 Method of the Gospel in declaring the Matters contained in it 235 58 Method of Divine Revelations to be believed 523 9 The Mind Depraved in things Natural and Moral 209 12 The Mind as the leading Faculty of the Soul how Corrupted 211 15 The Mind affected with Darkness 236 60 Carnal Mind in all Man-kind by Nature 243 14 Mind as the Conducting faculty of the Soul how Depraved 181 51 Mind to be renewed 367 Wofull Disorder of the Mind in a Natural Condition 567 2 Impotency of the Mind to receive spiritual Things 210 13 To be spiritually Minded what it is 424 18 Ministration of the Spirit renders the Gospel effectual 11 11 Ministration of the Spirit or how he is ministred 85 9 Ministers how called by the Holy Ghost 62 26 Ministers Duty to inquire into and declare the Nature of Regeneration 188 26 Ministry of the Gospel how the Ministry of the Spirit 122 3 Ministry of Angels about the Body of Christ when dead 147 10 Ministry of the Word its use in Conversion 257 9 Foundation of the Ministry of the Church in the Promise of the Spirit 156 3 Miracles Effects of the Power of the Holy Ghost 114 21 No Mere Man the real Subject of a Power of working Miracles 115 21 Miraculous Operations in Christ by the Power of the Holy Ghost 141 6 Misery of Defiled Sinners 394 10 Misery of Man in this World not renewed by Grace 566 1 Moral Condition of Man by Creation 75 11 Moral Vertues and Endowments in Civil things wrought by the Holy Spirit 118 23 Moral Impotency of the Mind wherein it consists 225 41 Moral Vertue its worth and Excellency 325 326 8 Moral Vertue is not the Holiness of Truth 326 8 Moral Habits the Nature of them 416 8 Moral what is intended thereby 460 79 Name and Nature of Moral Vertue examined 459 78 Moral Operation and Efficacy of Dutyes for the Mortifying of sin 490 29 Moral Vertue what intended thereby 506 15 Morality improved by Grace no way hindred 181 17 Morality or a Course of Moral Duties not Gospel Holiness 440 441 c. To mortifie sin what it signifies 474 3 Mortification of Sin the Nature of it explained 473 1 Mortification an alwayes present Duty 475 5 Mortification progressive 479 10 Moses the first who committed Divine Revelations to writing 113 19 No local Motion in the sending of the Spirit 84 8 Motives unto Religious Worship taken from what God is unto us 44 2 Motives unto the Purification of Sin 391 8 Example of Christ our great Motive unto Holiness 449 58 Principal Motive unto the Mortification of Sin what it is 489 19 Moving on the Face of the Waters 72 8 Mistake of sundry ancient Translations 30 3 Mystery of Holiness 326 9 Mystery of the Cleansing of Sin by the Blood of Christ. 399 Mystical Body prepared for Christ by the Holy Ghost 321 1 N. The Name Spirit with the several Significations of it in the Scripture considered 28 2 The Name Spirit how peculiar to the third Person in the Trinity 34 9 The Name of God denoting his Being and Authority proper to each Person in the Trinity 50 12 The Nature of God the Foundation of all Religion 43 2 Nature of Prophesie of Old 100 5 Humane Nature of Christ derived no Evil from the Fall of Adam Reasons thereof 136 1 Sanctification of the Humane Nature of Christ in the Womb. 137 1 Divine Nature in Christ acted not as his Soul 137 2 The Divine Nature what it is 184 21 Nature of the Common Work of the Spirit explained what 198 13 Our whole Nature the subject of Sanctification 323 3 Nature of Holiness not to be comprehended by Natural Reason 326 9 Nature of Merit wherein it consists 332 13 Nature lapsed and depraved not able to repair it self 335 14 Nature of Decayes in Holiness 353 Nature created in the Image of God 365 The Nature of the Guilt and Filth of Sin how made known 375 True Nature of spiritual Liberty 434 34 Nature of God the onely infinite Fountain of Holiness 451 63 Holy Nature of God the Original Reason of the Necessity of Holiness in us 499 3 The Nature of that Holiness which God requireth of us revealed in Christ. 502 7 Some things clear in the Light of Nature 560 13 The Natural Man who he is 217 24 Natural Impotency of the Mind wherein it consists 225 40 Necessity of Changes in the Work of Grace 353 3 Necessity of Holiness acknowledged by all 498 1 Necessity of Holiness notwithstanding Gods readiness to pardon sin 518 33 Necessity of Holiness arising from Gods Command 533 2. 553 37 Neglect of known Duty ruinous to the Life of Holiness 250 10 New Act of especial Grace required unto every particular Duty 430 28 New Creation how effected by the Holy Spirit 95 1 Work of the Holy Spirit in the New Creation greatly to be considered 121 1 New Creation the Work whereby God designed to glorifie himself principally in this World 126 8 New Creation how assigned unto the Father Son and Spirit dictinctly 126 9 New Creature what it is and wherein it consists 183 20 New Man what it is 367 New Nature wherein it consisteth 411 2 Nine sorts of spiritual Gifts 6 7 7 Nocturnal Visions and Dreams the same 107 13 Nothing to be done in Obedience without Aids from Christ. 466 8 Nourishing of the Creation the Work of the Holy Spirit 73 9 O. Obedience of Christ gave Efficacy to his Oblation 144 Obedience without Merit Foolishness to Carnal Reason 334 13 Obedience with respect unto Rewards and Punishments not servile 541 15 Object of Christs Priestly Acts God himself 555 3 Objects of the Life of Innocency and the Life of Grace in Christ different 242 10 Objects of Creating Acts not in potentia before their Existence 273 37 Objections against the Progressive Nature of Holiness answered 349 350 c. 10 Objections against the Necessity of Holiness from the Decree of Election removed 522 523 c. How the Lord Christ sanctified himself to be an Oblation or Sacrifice 143 9 Oblation of Christ