Selected quad for the lemma: nature_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
nature_n law_n moral_a precept_n 2,880 5 9.5945 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 37 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

themselves with respect unto the mind is that they are foolishness In themselves they are the Wisdom of God 2. Cor. 2. 7. Effects of the Wisdom of God and those which have the impress of the Wisdom of God upon them and when the Dispensation of them was said to be foolishness the Apostle contends not about it but tells them how-ever it is the foolishness of God 1 Cor. 1. 15. which he doth to cast contempt on all the Wisdom of Men whereby the Gospel is despised And they are the hidden Wisdom of God such an effect of Divine Wisdom as no Creature could make any discovery of Ephes. 3. 9 10. Job 28. 20 21 22. And they are the Wisdom of God in a Mystery or full of deep mysterious Wisdom But to the Natural Man they are foolishness not only although they are the Wisdom of God but peculiarly because they are so and as they are so for the Carnal Mind is Enmity against God Now that is esteemed foolishness which is looked on either as weak and impertinent or as that which contains or expresseth Means and Ends disproportionate or as that which is undesirable in comparison of what may be set up in competition with it or is on any other consideration not eligible or to be complyed with on the terms whereon it is proposed And for one or other or all of these Reasons are Spiritual Things namely those here intended wherein the Wisdom of God in the Mystery of the Gospel doth consist foolishness unto a Natural Man which we shall demonstrate by some Instances Sect. 32 1. That they were so unto the Learned Philosophers of old both our Apostle doth testifie and the known Experience of those first Ages of of the Church makes evident 1 Cor. 1. 22 23 26 27 28. Had Spiritual Things been suited unto the Minds or Reasons of Natural Men it could not be but that those who had most improved their Minds and were raised unto the highest exercise of their Reasons must much more readily have received and embraced the Mysteries of the Gospel than those who were poor illiterate and came many degrees behind them in the Exercise and Improvement thereof So we see it is as to the Reception of any thing in Nature or Morality which being of any worth is proposed unto the Minds of Men they are embraced soonest by them that are wisest and know most But here things fell out quite otherwise they were the Wise the Knowing the Rational the Learned Men of the World that made the greatest and longest opposition unto Spiritual Things and that expresly and avowedly because they were foolishness unto them and that on all the accounts before-mentioned and their opposition unto them they managed with Pride Scorn and Contempt as they thought foolish things ought to be handled Sect. 33 The profound Ignorance and Confidence whence it is that some of late are not ashamed to Preach and Print That it was the Learned Rational Wise part of Mankind as they were esteemed or professed of themselves the Philosophers and such as under their Conduct pretended unto a Life according to the Dictates of Reason who first embraced the Gospel as being more disposed unto its Reception than others cannot be sufficiently admired or despised Had they once considered what is spoken unto this purpose in the New Testament or knew any thing of the Entrances Growth or Progress of Christian Religion in the World they would themselves be ashamed of this folly But every day in this Matter Prodeunt Orators novi stulti adolescentuli who talk confidently whilst they know neither what they say nor whereof they do affirm Sect. 34 2. The principal Mysteries of the Gospel or the Spiritual Things intended are by many looked on and rejected as foolish because false and untrue Though indeed they have no reason to think them false but because they suppose them foolish and they fix upon charging them with falsity to countenance themselves in judging them to be folly Whatever concerns the Incarnation of the Son of God the Satisfaction that he made for Sin and Sinners the Imputation of his Righteousness unto them that believe the effectual working of his Grace in the Conversion of the Souls of Men which with what belongs unto them comprize the greatest part of the Spiritual Things of the Gospel are not received by many because they are false as they judg And that which induceth them so to determine is because they look on them as foolish and unsuited unto the rational Principles of their Minds Sect. 35 3. Many plainly scoff at them and despise them as the most contemptible Notions that Mankind can exercise their Reasons about Such were of old Prophesied concerning 2 Pet. 3. 3 4. and things at this day are come to that pass The World swarms with Scoffers at Spiritual Things as those which are unfit for rational noble generous Spirits to come under a sense or power of because they are so foolish But these things were we foretold of that when they came to pass we should not be troubled or shaken in our Minds Yea the Atheism of some is made a means to confirm the Faith of others Sect. 36 It is not much otherwise with some who yet dare not engage into an open Opposition to the Gospel with them before mentioned For they profess the Faith of it and avow a Subjection to the Rules and Laws of it But the things declared in the Gospel may be reduced unto two Heads as was before observed 1. Such as consist in the confirmation direction and improvement of the moral Principles and Precepts of the Law of Nature 2. Such as flow immediately from the Sovereign Will and Wisdom of God being no way communicated unto us but by Supernatural Revelation only Such are all the Effects of the Wisdom and Grace of God as he was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself the Offices of Christ his Administration of them and Dispensation of the Spirit with the especial Evangelical Supernatural Graces and Duties which are required in us with respect thereunto The first sort of these things many will greatly praise and highly extol And they will declare how consonant they are to Reason and what Expressions suitable unto them may be found in the Ancient Philosophers But it is evident that herein also they fall under a double Inconvenience For 1. mostly they visibly transgress what they boast of as their Rule and that above others For where shall we meet with any at least with many of these sort of Men who in any measure comply with that Modesty Humility Meekness Patience Self-denial Abstinence Temperance Contempt of the World Love of Mankind Charity and Purity which the Gospel requires under this Head of Duties Pride Ambition Insatiable desires after Earthly Advantages and Promotions Scoffing Scorn and Contempt of others Vanity of Converse Envy Wrath Revenge Railing are none of the Moral Duties required in the Gospel And 2. no pretence of
Divinely inspired by him consisted in the Revelation of those Duties of Holiness which although they had a general Foundation in the Law and the Equity of them was therein established yet could they never have been known to be Duties in their especial Nature Incumbent on us and Necessary unto us but by his Teachings and Instructions Hence are they called Old and New Commandements in distinct sences such are Faith in God through himself Brotherly love Denyal of our selves in taking up the Cross doing Good for Evil with some others of the same Kind And how a great part of Evangelical Holiness consists in these things is known Besides he also teacheth us all those Ordinances of Worship wherein our Obedience unto him belongs unto our Holiness also whereby it is enlarged and promoted This I say is the Nature and End of the Prophetical Office of Christ wherein he Acts towards us from God and in his Name as to the Declaration of the Will of God in his Commands And it is our Holiness which is his only End and Design therein So it is summarily represented Tit. 2. 10 11 12. Sect. 10 There are three things considerable in the Doctrine of Obedience that Christ teacheth 1 That it reacheth the Heart it self with all its inmost and secret Actings and that in the first place The Practice of most goes no further but unto Outward Acts the Teachings of many goe no further or at best unto the Moderation of Affections But he in the first place requires the Renovation of our whole Souls in all their Faculties Motions and Actings into the Image of God 1 Joh. 3. 1. Ephes. 4. 23 24 25. 2 It is Extensive There is nothing in any kind pleasing to God conformable to his Mind or complyant with his Will but he requires it nothing crooked or perverse or displeasing to God but it is forbidden by him It is therefore a perfect Rule of Holiness and Obedience 3 Clearness Perspicuity and Evidence of Divine Truth and Authority in all Sect. 11 First Hereby I say the Doctrine of Christ for universal Obedience in all the Duties of it becomes to be absolute every way compleat and perfect And it is a notable Effect of the Atheistical Pride of Men that pretending to design Obedience at least in Moral Duties unto God they betake themselves unto other Rules and Directions as either more plain or full or efficacious than those of the Gospel which are the Teachings of Christ himself as the great Prophet and Apostle sent of God to instruct us in our Duty Some goe to the Light of Nature and the Use of Right Reason that is their own as their Guide and some adde the Additional Documents of the Philosophers They think a Saying of Epictetus or Seneca or Arrianus being wittily suited to their Fancies and Affections to have more Life and Power in it than any Precepts of the Gospel The Reason why these things are more pleasing unto them than the Commands and Instructions of Christ is because proceeding from the Spring of Natural Light they are suited to the Workings of natural Fancy and Understanding but those of Christ proceeding from the Fountain of Eternal spiritual Light are not comprehended in their Beauty and Excellency without a Principle of the same Light in us guiding our Vnderstandings and influencing our Affections Hence take any Precept general or particular about Moral Duties that is materially the same in the Writing of Philosophers and in the Doctrine of the Gospel not a few preferre it as delivered in the first way before the latter Such a Contempt have men risen unto of Jesus Christ the Wisdom of God and the great Prophet of the Church When he entred upon his Office the Voyce came from the Excellent Glory This is my Beloved Son hear him This succeeded into the Room of all those terrible Appearances and dreadfull Preparations which God made use of in the giving of the Law For he gave the Law by the Ministry of Angels who being meer Creatures he manifested the Dread of his own Presence among them to give Authority unto their Ministrations But when he came to Reveal his Will under the Gospel it being to be done by him in whom dwelt the Fulness of the Godhead Bodily and who was intrusted himself with all Divine Power he did no more but indigitate or declare which was the Person and give us a Command in General to hear him And this he did with respect unto what he had fixed before as a Fundamental Ordinance of Heaven namely that when he should raise up and send the great Prophet of the Church whosoever would not hear him should be cut off from the people A Complyance therefore with this Command in hearing the Voyce of Christ is the Foundation of all Holiness and Gospel Obedience And if men will be moved neither with the Wisdom nor Authority nor Goodness of God in giving us this Command and Direction for our Good nor with the Consideration of the Endowments and Faithfulness of Jesus Christ the Son of God in the Discharge of his Prophetical Office nor from the Remembrance that it is He and not Epictetus or Seneca or Plato to whom at the Last Day they must give their Account so as to take him alone for their Guide in all Obedience unto God and Duty among themselves they will find when it is too late that they have been mistaken in their Choyce Sect. 12 Let us suppose if you please at present for the sake of them who would have it so that all our Obedience consists in Morality or the Dutyes of it which is the Opinion of as one well calls them our Modern Heathens from whence or whom shall we learn it or to whom shall we goe for Teaching and Instruction about it Certainly where the Instruction or Systeme of Precepts is most plain full perfect and free from Mistakes where the manner of Teaching is most Powerfull and Efficacious and where the Authority of the Teacher is greatest and most unquestionable there we ought to apply our selves to Learn and be guided In all these Respects we may say of Christ as Job said of God Who teacheth Like him Job 36. 22. Then probably shall we be Taught of God when we are Taught by him The Commands and Precepts of Duties themselves which are given us by the Light of Nature however improved by the Wits and Reasons of contemplative men are many wayes Defective Sect. 13 For 1 The utmost Imaginations of Men never reached unto that wherein the Life and Soul of Holiness doth consist Namely the Renovation of our lapsed Natures into the Image and Likeness of God Without this whatever Precepts are given about the Moderation of Affections and Duties of Moral Holiness they are lifeless and will prove useless And hence it is that by all those Documents which were given by Philosophers of Old the Nature of no one individual Person was ever renewed what Change soever was wrought
Christ in the Wombe 137 1 Humane Nature of Christ guided and supported by the Spirit in his Ministry 141 7 Humble walking with God Motives unto it 404 Humility promoted by thoughts of Sovereign Grace 526 16 I. Idolatry in Opposition to the Oneness of the Divine Nature and Monarchy the first Apostasie 24 27 Cure of Idolatry by the Captivity 25 27 Jesus Anathema how uttered by the Instigation of the Devil 3 2 Jesus confessed to be the Lord by unclean Spirits and how 4 2 Ignorance taken for simple Nescience how it may be ascribed to the Humane Nature of Christ. 138 3 Ignorance of the true Nature of Holiness and its Effects 421 Illumination previous to Conversion the Nature of it 193 6 Illumination how distinguished from meer Natural Knowledge 194 7 Image of God wherein it consisted 76 14 Image of God defaced by Sin 366 Image of God in us wherein it consisted 376 5 Imitation of Christ highly Necessary 449 59 Imperfect Obedience not taken into the Room of perfect Obedience by the New Covenant 413 4 Importance of the Doctrine concerning the Holy Spirit 10 10 Importance of the Doctrine of Sanctification 324 6 Imposition of Names by a Prophetical Spirit 100 6 Impotency of the Mind to receive spiritual things 210 13 Impotency of the Mind by Nature 218 27 Impotency of the Mind of Man by Nature Two-fold 224 39 Impotency from Spiritual Death the Nature of it 243 14 Natural Impotency and Enmity how taken away 278 46 Inclinations unto holy Actings predominant in a Gracious Soul 430 27 Inclinations of Sin alwayes to be watched against 479 11 Inconformity unto Gods Holiness the Nature of it 374 Reasons of Inconformity unto God 508 17 Incumbrances from Sloath in spiritual Duties 435 36 Individed Operations of the Divine Nature 69 2 Indulgence of any Sin hinders the progress of Holiness in general 354 Indwelling Sin three wayes to be considered 476 6 Infusion of a Principle of Divine Life in Regeneration 411 2 Inhabitation of the Spirit the Foundation of the Mortification of Sin 483 18 Inherent Righteousness what it is and wherein it consists 182 19 Actual Inherent Righteousness required unto Holiness 463 1 Ability of Adam in the State of Innocency 280 50 Inspiration the Original of Prophecye 101 7 Inspiration what it is and wherein it consists 102 8 Adjuncts of Divine Inspiration 103 9 Institutions of the Law could not purge the Defilements of sin 379 Instruction of the Mind the first End of preaching the Word 258 11 Intellectual Faculties of the Mind strengthened by the Holy Spirit 119 26 Intellectual Faculties impaired by Sin 206 5 Intellectual and Moral Habits short of Holiness 336 14 Intellectual Habits the Nature of them 415 8 Intension of Mind in attendance to the Outward Means of Conversion how Necessary and in our own power 192 3 Intercession of Christ how a Cause of our Holiness 444 5 Intercession of Christ its Influence unto Holiness 556 5 Interest of Faith and Obedience in Principles of Truth 43 1 Internal Actings of the blessed Trinity where one Person is the Object of the Love of another natural and necessary to the Being of God 45 5 Internal Acts of the Holy Trinity how undivided 131 9 Irregularity of our Natures the Cause of Shame 383 Judgement of Spirits the Duty of all Believers 18 22 Justification not for Obedience to Gospel Precepts 536 537 7 8 c. K. Killing of Sin what it is and whence it is so called 478 9 Kindness required towards Believers in an especial Manner 516 30 Kingly Power of Christ and its Influence unto our Holiness 562 18 Knowledge of Divine things in their Operations and Effects 20 24 L. Law written in the Heart what it is 278 47 The Law to be considered as it expresseth first the Authority of God and then his Holiness 374 Law and Rule of the Acceptance of New Obedience what it is 413 4 Power of the Law with respect unto Duties 534 4 Reasons why mens Minds are little influenced by Humane Laws 540 15 The Law expounded and vindicated by Christ. 556 6 Legacy left by our Lord Jesus Christ unto his sorrowfull Disciples 9 10 Legal Purifications Types of real Sanctification 371 2 Legal Institutions for Purification their Vse and End 399 Arguments from Legal Commands no Motives to Holiness 534 3 Letter of the Scripture profiteth not the Jewes whilest they have not the Spirit 24 26 Spiritual Leprosie by Nature 393 10 Liberty and Ability in the renewed Will. 433 33 The Life of God from which we are alienated by Nature wherein it consists 215 21 Life natural what it is and wherein it consists 239 3 c. Life spiritual what it is 240 6 Life unto God of Adam in Innocency ibid. Spiritual Life of Adam in Innocency 241 7 Christ how he is our Life 247 23 Spiritual Life wherein it consists 419 13 Life unto God consists principally in Duties internal 464 3 The Light within examined 19 23 Things against the Light of Nature not really enjoyned the Prophets 109 15 Saving Light attainable by the Gospel onely 208 9 Saving Light how communicated to the Mind 283 54 Light and Ability in the renewed Mind 432 31 Some things clear in the Light of Nature 560 13 Literal sence of Doctrines of Truth may be understood 219 28 Three things required to render man meet to live to God 76 14 No Local Motion in the sending of the Spirit 84 8 Local Mutations in Vision or Divine Revelations the Nature of them 109 16 The Spirit of the Lord is Jehova 65 31 Love abused by Superstition vain 125 6 Love the first Grace acted by Christ in the offering of himself 144 Spiritual Love how implanted on the Soul 284 56 Love to Man the Spring of Christs holy Obedience 449 58 Love derives Vertue from the Death of Christ and how 495 37 Love effectual to make us like unto God 513 25 Especial Effects of Divine Love 514 25 26 27. Eternal Love a powerfull Motive unto Holiness 525 14 Love towards all Saints promoted by thoughts of Eternal Love 517 18 Electing Love a Motive unto Holiness 529 20 Lustrations and Purgations whence in use among the Heathen 376 4 Lusts of the Mind from Darkness 231 51 Particular Lusts not the entire Objects of Mortification 481 14 M. Macedonian Heresie concerning the Holy Spirit 46 7 Man a middle Creature between Angels above and sensitive Animals below 75 10 Man the perfection of the Inferiour Creaation 75 12 The New Man what it is 184 21. 367 Outward Manner and Wayes of Divine Revelations 106 11 Manner of the secret growth of Grace 347 8 The Manner and Way how the Blood of Christ doth cleanse us from Sin 387 5 Manner of the Operation of the Spirit in the Mortification of Sin 484 21 Manner of teaching by the greatest Moralist compared with that of Christ. 561 16 Not the Matter only but the Words of Divine Revelations given by Inspiration
reason of the Darkness that it is under the Power of it can neither discern the Excellency of the Spiritual and Heavenly Things which are proposed unto it nor have any Affections whereunto they are proper and suited so that the Soul should go forth after them Hereby this Prejudice becomes invincible in their Souls They neither do nor can nor will admit of those things which are utterly inconsistent with all things wherein they hope or look for Satisfaction And Men do but please themselves with Dreams and Fancies who talk of such a reasonableness and excellency in Gospel-Truths as that the Mind of a Natural Man will discern such a suitableness in them unto it self so as thereon to receive and embrace them Nor do any for the most part give a greater Evidence of the Prevalency of the Darkness and Enmity that is in Carnal Minds against the Spiritual Things of the Gospel as to their Life and Power than those who most pride and please themselves in such Discourses Sect. 55 2dly The Mind by this Darkness is filled with Prejudices against the Mystery of the Gospel in a peculiar manner The hidden Spiritual Wisdom of God in it as Natural Men cannot receive so they do despise it and all the parts of its Declaration they look upon as empty and unintelligible Notions And this is that Prejudice whereby this Darkness prevails in the Minds of Men otherwise knowing and learned it hath done so in all Ages and in none more effectually than in that which is present But there is a Sacred Mysterious Spiritual Wisdom in the Gospel and the Doctrine of it This is Fanatical Chimerical and Foolish to the wisest in the World whilst they are under the Power of this Darkness To demonstrate the Truth hereof is the Design of the Apostle Paul 1 Cor. 1 2. For he directly affirms that the Doctrine of the Gospel is the Wisdom of God in a Mystery that this Wisdom cannot be discerned nor understood by the Wise and Learned Men of the World who have not received the Spirit of Christ and therefore that the things of it are weakness and foolishness unto them And that which is foolish is to be despised yea Folly is the only object of Contempt And hence we see that some with the greatest Pride Scorn and Contempt imaginable do despise the Purity Simplicity and whole Mystery of the Gospel who yet profess they believe it But to clear the whole Nature of this Prejudice some few Things may be distinctly observed Sect. 56 1. There are two sorts of Things declared in the Gospel First Such as are absolutely its own that are proper and peculiar unto it Such as have no footsteps in the Law or in the Light of Nature but are of a pure Revelation peculiar to the Gospel Of this Nature are all Things concerning the Love and Will of God in Christ Jesus The Mystery of his Incarnation of his Offices and whole Mediation of the Dispensation on the Spirit and our Participation thereof and our Union with Christ thereby our Adoption Justification and Effectual Sanctification thence proceeding in brief every thing that belongs unto the Purchase and Application of Saving-Grace is of this sort These things are purely and properly Evangelical peculiar to the Gospel alone Hence the Apostle Paul unto whom the Dispensation of it was committed puts that eminency upon them that in comparison he resolved to insist on nothing else in his Preaching 1 Cor. 2. 2. And to that purpose doth he describe his Ministry Ephes. 3. 7 8 9 10 11. Sect. 57 2. There are such Things declared and enjoyned in the Gospel as have their Foundation in the Law and Light of Nature Such are all the Moral Duties which are taught therein And two things may be observed concerning them 1. That they are in some measure known unto Men aliunde from other Principles The inbred concreated Light of Nature doth though obscurely teach and confirm them So the Apostle speaking of Mankind in general saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1. 19. That which may be known of God is manifested in themselves The Essential Properties of God rendring our Moral Duty to him necessary are known by the Light of Nature And by the same Light are Men able to make a judgment of their Actions whether they be Good or Evil Rom. 2. 14 15. And this is all the Light which some boast of as they will one day find to their disappointment 2. There is on all Men an obligation unto Obedience answerable to their Light concerning these things The same Law and Light which discovereth these things doth also enjoyn their Observance Thus is it with all Men antecedently unto the Preaching of the Gospel unto them In this Estate of Gospel superadds two things unto the Minds of Men. 1. It directs us unto a right performance of these things from a right Principle by a right Rule and to a right End and Purpose so that they and we in them may obtain acceptance with God Hereby it gives them a new Nature and turns Moral Duties into Evangelical Obedience 2. By a communication of that Spirit which is annexed unto its Dispensation it supplies us with strength for their Performance in the manner it prescribes Sect. 58 Hence it follows that this is the Method of the Gospel First It proposeth and declareth things which are properly and peculiarly its own So the Apostle sets down the constant Entrance of his Preaching 1 Cor. 15. 3. It reveals its own Mysteries to lay them as the Foundation of Faith and Obedience It inlayes them in the Mind and thereby conforms the whole Soul unto them See Rom. 6. 17. Gal. 4. 19. Tit. 2. 11 12. 1 Cor. 3. 11. 2 Cor. 3. 18. This Foundation being laid without which it hath as it were nothing to do with the Souls of Men nor will proceed unto any other thing with them by whom this its first Work is refused it then grafts all Duties of Moral Obedience on this stock of Faith in Christ Jesus This is the Method of the Gospel which the Apostle Paul observeth in all his Epistles First He declares the Mysteries of Faith that are peculiar to the Gospel and then descends unto those Moral Duties which are regulated thereby But the Prejudice we mentioned inverts the Order of these things Those who are under the Power of it when on various accounts they give admittance unto the Gospel in general yet they fix their Minds firstly and principally on the things which have their Foundation in the Law and Light of Nature These they know and have some acquaintance with in themselves and therefore cry them up although not in their proper place nor to their proper end These they make the foundation according to the place which they held in the Law of Nature and Covenant of Works whereas the Gospel allows them to be only necessary Superstructions on the Foundation But resolving to give unto Moral Duties the
Method and ways of Expression which may be varied as they are found to be of Advantage unto them that are to be instructed yet for the substance of the Doctrine they taught the same which hath been preached amongst us since the Reformation which some have ignorantly traduced as novel And the whole of it is nobly and elegantly exemplifyed by Austin in his Confessions wherein he gives us the Experience of the Truth he had taught in his own Soul And I might follow their footsteps herein and perhaps should for some Reasons have chosen so to have done but that there have been so many differences raised about the Explication and Application of these Terms and Distinctions and the Declaration of the nature of the Acts and Effects of the Spirit of Grace intended in them as that to carry the Truth through the intricate perplexities which under these notions have been cast upon it would be a longer Work than I shall here ingage into and too much divert me from my principal intention I shall therefore in general refer the whole Work of the Spirit of God with respect unto the Regeneration of sinners unto two Heads First that which is preparatory for it and secondly that which is effective of it That which is preparatory for it is the Conviction of sin This is the Work of the Holy Spirit John 16. 8. 9. And this also may be distinctly referred unto three Heads 1 A Discovery of the True Nature of Sin by the ministry of the Law Rom. 7. 7. 2 An Application of that discovery made in the Mind or Understanding unto the Conscience of the sinner 3 The Excitation of Affections suitable unto that Discovery and Application Acts 2. 37. But these Things so far as they belong unto our present Design have been before insisted on Our principal Enquiry at present is after the Work it self or the nature and manner of the working of the Spirit of God in and on the Souls of Men in their Regeneration And this must be both negatively and positively declared Sect. 7 First The Work of the Spirit of God in the Regeneration of sinners or the quickning of them who are dead in trespasses and sins or in their first Saving Conversion to God doth not consist in a Moral Swasion only By Swasion we intend such a perswasion as may or may not be effectual so absolutely we call that only perswasion whereby a Man is actually perswaded Concerning this we must consider 1 What it is that is intended by that Expression and wherein its Efficacy doth consist and 2. prove that the whole Work of the Spirit of God in the Conversion of sinners doth not consist therein And I shall handle this matter under this Notion as that which is known unto those who are conversant in these things from the writings of the ancient and modern Divines For it is to no purpose to endeavour the reducing of the extravagant confused Discourses of some present Writers unto a certain and determinate stating of the things in difference among us That which they seem to aim at and conclude may be reduced unto these Heads 1. That God administers Grace unto all in the Declaration of the Doctrine of the Law and Gospel 2. That the Reception of this Doctrine the Belief and Practice of it is enforced by Promises and Threatnings 3. That the things revealed taught and commanded are not only good in themselves but so suited unto the Reason and Interest of Mankind as that the Mind cannot but be disposed and enclined to receive and obey them unless overpowered by Prejudices and a Course of Sin 4. That the Consideration of the Promises and Threatnings of the Gospel is sufficient to remove these prejudices and reform that Course 5. That upon a compliance with the Doctrine of the Gospel and Obedience thereunto Men are made partakers of the Spirit with other Priviledges of the New Testament and have a Right unto all the Promises of the present and future Life Now this being a perfect systeme of Pelagianism condemned in the ancient Church as absolutely exclusive of the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ will be fully removed out of our way in our present Discourse though the loose confused expressions of some be not considered in particular For if the Work of our Regeneration doth not consist in a Moral Swasion which as we shall see contains all that these Men will allow to Grace their whole Fabrick falls to the ground of its own accord Sect. 8 1. As to the nature of this Moral Swasion two things may be considered 1. The Means Instrument and Matter of it and this is the Word of God the Word of God or the Scripture in the Doctrinal Instructions Precepts Promises and Threatnings of it This is that and this is that alone whereby we are commanded pressed perswaded to turn our selves and live to God And herein we comprize the whole both the Law and the Gospel with all the Divine Truths contained in them as severally respecting the especial Ends whereunto they are designed For although they are distinctly and peculiarly suited to produce distinct Effects on the Minds of Men yet they all joyntly tend unto the general end of guiding Men how to live unto God and to obtain the enjoyment of him As for those Documents and Instructions which Men have concerning the Will of God and the Obedience which he requires of them from the Light of Nature with the Works of Creation and Providence I shall not here take them into Consideration For either they are solitary or without any super-addition of instructive Light by Revelation and then I utterly deny them to be a sufficient outward means of the Conversion of any one Soul or they may be considered as improved by the written Word as dispensed unto Men and so they are comprized under it and need not to be considered apart We will therefore suppose that those unto whom the Word is declared have antecedaneously thereunto all the help which the Light of Nature will afford Sect. 9 2. The principal way of the Application of this means to produce its Effect on the Souls of Men is the Ministry of the Church God hath appointed the Ministry for the Application of the Word unto the Minds and Consciences of Men for their Instruction and Conversion And concerning this we may observe two things 1. That the Word of God thus dispensed by the Ministry of the Church is the only ordinary outward means which the Holy Ghost maketh use of in the Regeneration of the Adult unto whom it is preached 2. That it is every way sufficient in its own kind that is as an outward means For the Revelation which is made of God and his Mind thereby is sufficient to teach Men all that is needful for them to believe and do that they may be converted unto God and yeeld him the Obedience that he requires Hence two things do ensue 1. That the use of those
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
Persons by whom these things are derided but conclude from it that those who are unacquainted with it in some Degree of sincerity are wholly uninterested in that Evangelical Holiness which we enquire after We need not therefore further labour in the Confirmation of that concerning which the Testimonyes of Scripture are so multiplyed and whereof we have such undoubted Experience Sect. 4 Secondly The Nature of this Defilement of Sin must be enquired into Ans. 1 By some it is reckoned unto Guilt For whereas the inseparable Effects of Guilt are Shame and Fear whereby it immediately evidenced it self in our first Parents and shame in particular is from this filth of sin it may be esteemed an Adjunct thereof Hence sin was said to be purged by Sacrifices when its Guilt was expiated And Christ is said to purge our sins by himself that is when he offered himself a Sacrifice for us Heb. 1. 3. And therefore it is granted that so far as the Filth of sin was taken away not by Actual Purification but by Legal Expiation it is sin with its Guilt that was intended But the Scripture as we have shewed intendeth more hereby even such an internal inherent Defilement as is taken away by real actual Sanctification and no otherwise 2 There are some especial sins which have a peculiar Pollution and Defilement attending them and which thereon are usually called uncleanness in a peculiar manner The ground hereof is in that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 6. 18. Flee Fornication Every sin that a man doth is without the Body but he that committeth Fornication sinneth against his own Body All sins of that Nature have a peculiar Defilement and filth accompanying them And Holiness is sometimes mentioned in an Opposition unto this especial Pollution 1 Thess. 4. 3. But yet this is not that which we enquire after although it be included in it as one especial kind of it That we now consider alwayes inseparably attends every sin as sin as an Adjunct or Effect of it It is the uncleanness of all sin and not the sin of uncleanness which we intend And for the discovery of its proper Nature we may observe 1 That the Pollution of Sin is that Property of it whereby it is directly opposed unto the Holiness of God and which God expresseth his Holiness to be contrary unto Hence he is said to be of purer eyes than to behold iniquity or to look on evil Hab. 1. 13. It is a thing vile and loathsome under the Eyes of his Holiness Psal. 5. 4 5 6. So speaking concerning it he useth that pathetical Dehortation O do not that abominable thing which my soul hateth Jerem. 44. 4. and with respect unto his own Holiness it is that he sets it forth by the names of all things which are vile filthy loathsome offensive every thing that is Abominable It is so to him as he is infinitely Pure and Holy in his own Nature And that Consideration which ingenerates shame and self-Abhorrency on the Account of the Defilement of sin is taken peculiarly from the Holiness of God Hence it is that Persons are so often said to blush to be ashamed to be filled with Confusion of Face to be vile to be Abased in their own sight under a Sense and Apprehension of this filth of sin 2 The Holiness of God is the Infinite Absolute Perfection and Rectitude of his Nature as the Eternal Original Cause and Pattern of Truth Uprightness and Rectitude in all And this Holiness doth God exert as in all he doth naturally and necessarily so particularly in his Law which is therefore Good Holy and Perfect because it represents the Holiness of God which is impressed on it God might not have made any Creature nor given a Law which are free Acts of his Will But on supposition he would do so it was absolutely necessary from his own Nature that this Law of his should be Holy And therefore whatever is contrary unto or different from the Law of God is so unto and from the Holiness of God himself Hence it followes 3 That this Defilement and Pollution of Sin is that Pravity Disorder and shamefull Crookedness that is in it with respect unto the Holiness of God as expressed in the Law Sin is either Original or Actual Original Sin is the Habitual Inconformity of our Natures unto the Holiness of God expressed in the Law of Creation Actual Sin is our Inconformity to God and his Holiness expressed in the particular Commands of the Law The Nature of all sin therefore consists in its Enmity its Inconformity to the Rule Now this Rule which is the Law may be considered two wayes which give a Two-sold respect or inseparable Consequent or Adjunct unto every sin 1 As it expresseth the Authority of God in its Precepts and and Sanction Hence Guilt inseparably follows every sin which is the Respect it induceth on the sinner unto the Law upon the Account of the Authority of the Law-giver The Act of sin passeth away but this Guilt abideth on the Person and must do so untill the Law be satisfied and the sinner thereon absolved This naturally produceth Fear which is the first Expression of a sence of Guilt So Adam expressed it upon his sin I heard thy Voyce and was afraid Gen. 3. 10. 2 The Law may be considered as it expresseth the Holiness of God and his Truth which it was necessary from the Nature of God that it should doe Hence there is in sin a peculiar Inconformity to the Holiness of God which is the Macula the spot stain and filth of it which are inseparable from it whilest God is Holy unless it be purged and done away as we shall shew And this is inseparably attended with shame which is the Expression of a sence of this filth of sin So Adam upon his sin had his Eyes open to see his Nakedness and was filled with shame This is the Order of these things God who is the Object of our Obedience and Sin is considered as the Supreme Law-giver On his Law he hath impressed his Authority and his Holiness Sin with respect unto his Authority is attended with Guilt and this in the Conscience of the sinner produceth Fear As it respects the Holiness of God it is attended with Filth or uncleanness and this produceth shame And the Ultimate Effects of it are on the first Account Poena Sensus on the other Poena Damni This therefore is the spot the stain the Pollution of sin which is purged in our Sanctification The perverse Disorder and shamefull Crookedness that is in sin with respect unto the Holiness of God And herein there is a real filthiness but spiritual which is compared with and opposed unto things materially and carnally so Not that which goeth into a man Meats of any sort defile him saith our Saviour but that which cometh out of the Heart that is spiritually with respect unto God his Law and Holiness And as men are taught the Guilt of sin
least the main parts if not the whole of Religion consists in Moral Vertue though it be altogether uncertain what they intend by the one or the other These are they who scarce think any thing intelligible when declared in the words of the Scripture which one hath openly traduced as a ridiculous Jargon They like not they seem to abhorre the speaking of Spiritual Things in the Words which the Holy Ghost teacheth the only Reason whereof is because they understand not the things themselves And whilest they are foolishness unto any it is no wonder the terms whereby they are declared seem also so to be But such as have received the Spirit of Christ and do know the Mind of Christ which profane Scoffers are sufficiently remote from do best receive the Truth and apprehend it when declared not in the Words which Mans Wisdom teacheth but which are taught by the Holy Ghost It is granted to be the Wisdom and Skill of men further to explain and declare the Truths that are taught in the Gospel by sound and wholsom words of their own which yet all of them as to their Propriety and Significancy are to be tryed and measured by the Scripture it self But we have a new Way of teaching spiritual Things sprung up among some who being ignorant of the whole Mystery of the Gospel and therefore despising it would debase all the glorious Truths of it and the Declaration made of them into dry barren sapless Philosophical Notions and Terms and those the most common obvious and vulgar that ever obtained among the Heathen of old Vertuous Living they tell us is the Way to Heaven but what this Vertue is or what is a Life of Vertue they have added as little in the Declaration of as any Persons that ever made such a Noyse about them Sect. 79 2 That ambiguous Term Morall hath by Usage obtained a double Signification with respect unto an Opposition unto other things which either are not so or are more than so For sometimes it is applyed unto the Worship of God and so is opposed unto Instituted That Religious Worship which is prescribed in the Decalogue or required by the Law of Creation is commonly called Moral and that in Opposition unto those Rites and Ordinances which are of a superadded Arbitrary Institution Again it is opposed unto things that are more than merely moral namely Spiritual Theological or Divine So the Graces of the Spirit as Faith Love Hope in all their Exercise whatever they may have of Morality in them or however they may be exercised in and about moral Things and Duties yet because of sundry Respects wherein they exceed the Sphear of Morality are called Graces and Duties Theological Spiritual Supernatural Evangelical Divine in Opposition unto all such Habits of the Mind and Duties which being required by the Law of Nature and as they are so required are merely moral In neither sence can it with any tolerable Congruity of speech be said that Moral Vertue is our Holiness especially the whole of it But because the Duties of Holiness have the most of them a Morality in them as Morall is opposed to Instituted some would have them have nothing also in them as Moral is opposed to Supernatural and Theological But that the Principle and Acts of Holiness are of another special Nature hath been sufficiently now declared Sect. 80 3 It is as was before intimated somewhat uncertain what the great Pleaders for Moral Vertue do intend by it Many seem to design no more but that Honesty and Integrity of Life which was found among some of the Heathens in their vertuous Lives and Actions And indeed it were heartily to be wished that we might see more of it amongst some that are called Christians For many things they did were Materially good and usefull unto Mankind But let it be supposed to be never so exact and the Course of it most diligently attended unto I defie it as to its being the Holiness required of us in the Gospel according unto the terms of the Covenant of Grace and that because it hath none of those Qualifications which we have proved Essentially to belong thereunto And I defie all the men in the World to prove that this Moral Vertue is the summe of our Obedience to God whilest the Gospel is owned for a Declaration of his Will and our Duty It is true all the Duties of this Moral Vertue are required of us but in the Exercise of every one of them there is more required of us than belongs unto their Morality as namely that they be done in Faith and Love to God through Jesus Christ and many things are required of us as necessary parts of our Obedience which belong not thereunto at all Sect. 81 4 Some give us such a Description of Morality as that it should be of the same extent with the Light and Law of Nature or the Dictates of it as rectified and declared unto us in the Scripture And this I confess requires of us the Obedience which is due towards God by the Law of our Creation and according to the Covenant of Works materially and formally But what is this unto Evangelical Holiness and Obedience Why it is alleadged that Religion before the Entrance of Sin and under the Gospel is one and the same and therefore there is no difference between the Duties of Obedience required in the one and the other And it is true that they are so far the same as that they have the same Author the same Object the same End and so also had the Religion under the Law which was therefore so far the same with them But that they are the same as to all the Acts of our Obedience and the Manner of their Performance is a vain Imagination Is there no Alteration made in Religion by the Interposition of the Person of Christ to be Incarnate and his Mediation No Augmentation of the Object of Faith No Change in the Abolishing of the Old Covenant and the Establishment of the New the Covenant between God and Man being that which gives the especial form and kind unto Religion the Measure and Denomination of it No Alteration in the Principles Aids Assistances and whole Nature of our Obedience unto God The whole Mystery of Godliness must be renounced if we intend to give way unto such Imaginations Be it so then that this Moral Vertue and the Practice of it do contain and express all that Obedience materially considered which was required by the Law of Nature in the Covenant of Works yet I deny it to be our Holiness or Evangelical Obedience and that as for many other Reasons so principally because it hath not that respect unto Jesus Christ which our Sanctification hath Sect. 82 5 If it be said that by this Moral Vertue they intend no Exclusion of Jesus Christ but include a respect unto him I desire only to ask whether they design by it such an Habit of Mind and such Acts
Condition Nothing is more certain than that the latter Resolution will be infallibly Destructive if pursued of all the Everlasting Concernments of our Souls Death and Eternal Condemnation are the unavoidable Issues of it No man giving himself up to the Conduct of that Conclusion shall ever come to the Enjoyment of God But in the other way it is possible at least that a man may be found to be the Object of Gods Electing Love and so be saved But why doe I say it is possible there is nothing more infallibly certain than that he who pursues Sincerely and Diligently the Wayes of Faith and Obedience which are as we have often said the Fruits of Election shall obtain in the End Everlasting Blessedness and ordinarily shall have in this World a Comfortable Evidence of their own personal Election This therefore on all Accounts and towards all sorts of Persons in an invincible Argument of the Necessity of Holiness and a mighty Motive thereunto For it is unavoidable that if there be such a thing as personal Election and that the Fruits of it are Sanctification Faith and Obedience it is utterly impossible that without Holiness any one should see God the Reason of which Consequence is apparent unto all CHAP. III. Holiness Necessary from the Commands of God Necessity of Holiness proved from the Commands of God in the Law and the Gospel Sect. 1 WEE have evinced the Necessity of Holiness from the Nature and the Decrees of God Our next Argument shall be taken from his Word or Commands as the Nature and Order of these things do require And in this Case it is needless to produce Instances of Gods Commands that we should be Holy it is the concurrent Voyce of the Law of Gospel Our Apostle summes up the whole Matter 1 Thess. 4. 1 2 3. We exhort you that as you have received of us how you ought to walk and please God so you would abound more and more for you know that Commandment we gave you by the Lord Jesus for this is the Will of God even your Sanctification or Holiness whereunto he addes one special Instance This is that which the Commandments of Christ require yea this is the summe of the whole Commanding Will of God The substance of the Law is Be ye Holy for I the Lord your God am Holy Levit. 11. 44. the same with what it is referred unto by our Saviour Matth. 22. 37 39. And whereas Holiness may be reduced unto two Heads 1 The Renovation of the Image of God in us 2 Vniversal Actual Obedience they are the summe of the Perceptive Part of the Gospel Ephes. 4. 22 23 24. Tit. 2. 11 12. Hereof therefore there needeth no further Confirmation by especial Testimonies Sect. 2 Our Enquiry must be What Force there is in this Argument or whence we doe conclude unto a Necessity of Holiness from the Command of God To this End the Nature and proper Adjuncts of these Commands are to be considered that is we are to get our Minds and Consciences affected with them so as to endeavour after Holiness on their Account or with respect unto them For whatever we may doe which seems to have the Matter of Holiness in it if we do it not with respect unto Gods Command it hath not the Nature of Holiness in it For our Holiness is our Conformity and Obedience to the Will of God and it is a Respect unto a Command which makes any thing to be Obedience or gives it the formal Nature thereof Wherefore as God rejects That from any place in his Fear Worship or Service which is resolved only into the Doctrines or Precepts of Men Isa. 29. 13. so for men to pretend unto I know not what Freedom Light and Readiness unto all Holiness from a Principle within without Respect unto the Commands of God without as given in his Word is to make themselves this own God and to despise Obedience unto him who is over all God blessed for ever Then are we the Servants of God Then are we the Disciples of Christ when we doe what is Commanded us and because it is Commanded us And what we are not influenced unto by the Authority of God in his Commands we are not principled for by the Spirit of God administred in the Promises Whatever Good any man doth in any Kind if the Reason why he doth it be not Gods Command it belongs neither to Holiness nor Obedience Our Enquiry therefore is after those things in the Commands of God which put such an indispensible Obligation upon us unto Holiness as that whatever we may be or we may have without it will be of no Use or Advantage unto us as unto Eternal Blessedness or the Enjoyment of him Sect. 3 But to make our Way more clear and safe one thing must yet be premised unto these Considerations And this is that Gods Commands for Holiness may be considered two wayes 1 As they belong unto and are Parts of the Covenant of Works 2 As they belong and are inseparably annexed unto the Covenant of Grace In both respects they are materially and formally the same that is the same Things are required in them and the same Person requires them and so their Obligation is Joynt and Equal Not only the Commands of the New Covenant do oblige us unto Holiness but those of the Old also as to the Matter and Substance of them But there is a great Difference in the Manner and Ends of these Commands as considered so distinctly For 1 The Commands of God as under the Old Covenant do so require universal Holiness of us in all Acts Duties and Degrees of them that upon the least Failure in Substance Circumstance or Degree they allow of nothing else we doe but Determine us Trangressors of the whole Law For with respect unto them whosoever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point is Guilty of all James 2. 10. Now I acknowledge that although there ariseth from hence an Obligation unto Holiness to them who are under that Covenant and such a Necessity of it as that without it they must certainly perish yet no Argument of the Nature with those which I insist upon can hence be taken to press us unto it For no Arguments are forceable unto this Purpose but such as include Encouragements in them unto what they urge But that this Consideration of the Command knoweth nothing of seeing a Complyance with it is in our Lapsed Condition absolutely impossible and for the Things that are so we can have no Endeavours And hence it is that no man influenced only by the Commands of the Law or first Covenant absolutely considered whatever in particular he might be forced or compelled unto did ever sincerely Ayme or Endeavour after universal Holiness Sect. 4 Men may be subdued by the Power of the Law and compelled to habituate themselves unto a strict Course of Duty and being advantaged therein by a sedate Natural Constitution desire
God Author of our Sanctification 322 3 God how he is the God of Peace 323 3 All good in the Scripture ascribed to the Holy Spirit 470 15 A good man who he is 515 516 29 No good in us but what is wrought by the Holy Spirit 11 13 The good Spirit and the Holy Spirit the same 38 12 Good Spirit of God over-ruling the Devil 112 18 Gospel how abused and despised 223 36 Apprehension of Gods Goodness in the Light of Nature not sufficient to reconcile men to him 229 47 No true Apprehension of the Divine Goodness but in Christ. 229 48 Nature of the Gospel with respect unto the Objects of mens Lusts and Desires 233 54 Things peculiarly belonging to the Gospel or its own Things 234 56 Things known in the Light of Nature further manifested in the Gospel 234 What the Gospel superaddes unto Moral Duties 235 57 Gospel sent for the Accomplishment of the Decree of Election 524 11 Nature of Gospel Precepts 535 6 Grace taken two wayes in the Scripture 164 7 Grace how really efficient in Conversion 264 23 Grace of the Gospel overthrown by asserting it to be a Moral Suasion only 265 23 Nature of Converting Grace explained 268 27 Grace victorious and irresistible 270 30 Grace internal not resisted 271 34 Grace produced by a Creating Act. 275 40 Grace and Nature opposed 322 3 All Grace depends on continual Influences from God 344 6 All Grace Originally in Christ. 362 Things wrought in a way of Grace prescribed in a way of Duty 379 Grace excited by Afflictions 392 Sin and Grace cannot bear rule in the same Person at the same time 429 25 Grace and Nature opposed 322 3 Grace how it frees the Soul from spiritual Incumbrances 436 36 Grace how communicated from Christ unto Believers 457 70 Administration of Grace not equal at all times 547 24 Graces acted and exercised in the Oblation of Christ. 144 Graces which are our Duties not absolutely in our own power 322 2 Graces of Holiness improved into Glory 328 10 All Graces excited unto Exercise by the Holy Ghost 341 5 Graces whose Exercise is Occasional onely how they are encreased 343 6 Graces eminently making us like unto God 513 23 Graces declaring our Conformity to God 515 28 Growth in Grace and Wisdom how ascribed unto Christ. 138 2 Growth in Holiness compared unto that of Trees and Plants 346 8 Growth of Holiness secret and indiscernible 347 8 Growth in Holiness an Object of Faith 351 10 Growth in Holiness enjoyned unto us and required of us 339 4 Growth in Holiness an Access towards Glory 511 21 H. Habit of Holiness antecedently necessary to every Act of Holiness 416 8 Habit of Grace preserved by the constant Influences of the Holy Spirit 417 10 Habit of Holiness not acquired but preserved in a way of Duty ibid. Habit of Holiness permanent in its Inclination 427 23 Habits encline unto Acts of their own kind for a certain End 423 15 Infused Habits of Grace proved 280 50 Intellectual Habits the Nature of them 415 8 Habitual Vncleanness equal in all 378 Habitual Pollution inconsistent with any Holiness ibid. Habitual Grace necessary unto all Acts of Obedience 548 26 Tongues and Hands of the Prophets guided by the Holy Ghost 105 10 Harmony between Grace and the Command 551 33 Head of the Church first respected in the New Creation 128 1 The Heart what it signifies and how it is depraved 212 17 Stony Heart how taken away 277 43 New Heart promised what it is 277 44 418 11 Heart the meaning of it in the Scripture 367 Historical Books of the Scripture written by Divine Inspiration 113 19 The Holy Spirit how both Lord and God 6 4 Holy Spirit the onely Author unto us of all spiritual Good 11 12 The Holy Spirit known by his Operations 21 24 Holy Spirit so called from his immaterial substance 34 9 The Holy Spirit so called first because he is essentially holy 35 36 9 10 Holy Spirit called holy from his Work 36 10 Holy Spirit in what sence called the Spirit of God 38 13 Holy Spirit how called the Spirit of the Son 39 14 The Holy Spirit an Eternal Infinite Intelligent Person 46 47 48 49 c. 7 8 9 10 c. The Holy Spirit hath a spiritual substance and subsistence of his own 54 18 Why the Holy Spirit never Appeared in the Person of a Man 55 18 The Holy Spirit the Author of the Ministry of the Church 61 26 The Holy Spirit the Object of mens Actings in Religion 62 28 The Holy Spirit not a Quality or Vertue of the Divine Nature 64 30 The Holy Spirit expresly called God 64 31 The Holy Spirit given of God and how 80 3 The Holy Spirit compared unto Fire and Water and why 88 13 The Holy Spirit One dividing as he pleaseth to others 94 21 The Holy Spirit the Promise and Legacy of Christ. 124 6 The Holy Spirit the Spirit of the Son as well as of the Father and what followeth thereon 130 8 Actings of the Holy Spirit not ascribed unto him Exclusively 130 9 The Holy Spirit supplyes the bodily Absence of Christ. 158 5 Holy Spirit worketh by Means ordinarily 187 25 The Holy Spirit the immediate Sanctifier of all Believers 337 15 The Holy Spirit promised with respect unto his Effects 357 2 Holy Spirit the principal efficient Cause of the Mortification of Sin 481 15 c. Holy Ghost how the Power of the most High 132 No Holiness but by the Gospel and the Grace of it 325 8 Holiness passeth over into Eternity and Glory and how 328 11 Holiness glorious in this Life 329 12 Holiness all that God requireth of Believers 330 13 Holiness commanded in a way of Duty promised in a way of Grace 336 14 Holiness in its true Nature 338 2 Holiness how it is encreased in Believers 340 4 Holiness may thrive where its growth is not discerned 350 10 Holiness pleaseth God wherever it is 361 5 No Holiness beyond the bounds of Relation to Christ. 363 6 Holiness of God wherein it consists 374 4 Where the Principle of Holiness is there will be the Fruits of it 421 All Holiness derived from Christ. 450 451 c. Evangelical Holiness an effect of the Covenant of Grace 459 75 Holiness of God how an Argument of the Necessity of Holiness in us 500 5 Holiness not absolutely of the same use under the New Covenant and the Old 503 9 Holiness necessary unto the future Enjoyment of God 504 13 Holiness the highest Excellency whereof our Nature is capable 509 18 Holiness the Design of God in Election 521 3 Vniversal Holiness how required in the Precepts of the Gospel 535 6 Necessity of Holiness 537 9 Moral Honesty not Holiness 363 6 The Host of Heaven what it is 70 6 Host of the Earth 71 6 Humane Nature of Christ derived no evil from the Fall of Adam Reasons thereof 136 1 Sanctification of the Humane Nature of
Prayers of Believers for the purification of Sin how influenced by the Spirit of God 384 3 Prayer for Light to discern the Nature of Sin necessary 395 Prayer how a Means of purging Sin 400 13 Prayer weakeneth Sin and how 492 32 Preaching of the Word by the Holy Spirit 119 27 Preaching of the Gospel provided for and disposed by the Holy Ghost 209 10 Precepts of the Law not clearly understood before the Coming of Christ. 557 6 Preeminence of our Nature wherein it consists 509 18 Prejudices against spiritual things from Darkness 232 53 Prejudices against the Mystery of the Gospel what they are and whence they arise 234 55 Work preparatory unto Conversion 192 3 Works of the Spirit preparatory for the New Creation 98 2 Preparatory Works for Conversion on men not preparatory Inclinations in them 251 30 Preparatory Work unto Conversion wherein it consists 256 6 Presence of Christ by his Spirit what it is and wherein it consists 159 Preservation of the Creation by Divine Providence 77 15 Preservation of Grace a glorious Work 348 9 None can preserve their own Grace 345 6 Pretences of Opposition unto the Spirit of God examined 21 25 Pretences of Moral Vertue unto Holiness disproved 462 False pretences unto Holiness 327 10 Prevalency of the Word whereon it depends 260 15 Pride the poyson of the Age. 527 16 Acts of Christs Priestly Office 555 3 Principle of spiritual Life antecedent unto Moral Reformation of Life 185 22 Principle of Obedience how wrought in us of God 276 42 Principle of spiritual Obedience how renewed in us 280 50 A Principle of Eternal Life in Holiness 329 12 Priciple of Holiness in it self 346 8 Principle of Sanctification or Habit of Grace wrought in Believers by the Holy Spirit the Nature of it 411 2 Principle of Holiness in what sence called an Habit. 416 9 Principle of Holiness described ibid. Principle of Holiness in Believers the same in kind in all Believers distinct in degrees 417 10 Where the Principle of Holiness is there will be the Fruits of it 421 Principle of Holiness enclineth the Heart unto Acts and Duties of Holiness universally 425 19 Principle Dispositions and Effects of Sin 476 6 All false Principles of Obedience will admit of Reserves for Sin 425 19 Priviledge of one man above another on the Account of Holiness 510 19 Spirit proceedeth from the Son 39 14 Procession of the Holy Spirit of what sort 88 89 14 15 Procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and Son 89 15 Two-fold Natural and Voluntary ibid. Dignity of Professors wherein it consists 511 20 Progress made by the Lord Christ in the Exercise of his Humane Faculties 137 2 Mortification Progressive 479 10 Promise of the Holy Ghost unto whom it is made 10 10 Promise of the Spirit of God unto the Church rendred useless by some 23 26 Promise of the Spirit under the Gospel unto all Believers 123 4 Promise of Christs presence with his Church how accomplished 158 5 Promise of God when respected in a due manner 337 14 Promises and Exhortations how effectual 245 18 Promises how to be mixed with Faith 400 Especial Promises annexed unto especial Duties 552 35 Promises a great Encouragement unto Holiness 553 36 Proper Ends of the Knowledge of Christ Love and Conformity 152 16 All properties of the Divine Nature ascribed unto the Holy Spirit 66 32 The properties of God most gloriously represented in Christ. 501 6 Prophets of Baal who they were and why so called 14 17 A Prophet what the Name signifies 101 8 Prophets how they enquired into their own Prophecies 100 5 Tongues and Hands of the Prophets guided by the Holy Ghost 105 10 Prophets established in the Church all Holy 111 18 Prophecy the first eminent Gift of the Holy Ghost under the Old Testament 99 5 Beginning and Ending of the Gift of Prophecy under the Old Testament 100 6 Prophecy in its Exercise Two-fold 101 8 General Nature of the Gift of Prophecy 102 9 Prophetical Office of Christ its Acts and Objects 556 6 Propositions of the Gospel to be believed of what Nature 524 12 Purgatory a great Engine for the Ruine of Souls 381 Faith how it purgeth the Soul 390 8 Purging of Sin commensurate unto the whole Work of Sanctification 378 To purifie our selves from all Sin our Duty 398 13 Purification the first of Sanctification 370 1 Means of Purification if duely used the Soul is kept from Defilement so as to be alwayes accepted with God 407 Purification the End of Christs Oblation 555 Legal Purifications Types of real Sanctification 371 2 Putting of Spirit on men and what is signified thereby 85 10 Q. Quakers mistakes and failures about Mortification 488 26 Quakers strangers unto true Mortification 489 26 Qualifications for the Receiving of Gospel Gifts unto Edification 359 Spiritual Quickening an Act of Almighty Power 279 49 The Queen of Heaven 71 6 R. Rage against the Spirit of God 24 26 Enthusiastical Raptures no Means of Conversion 186 25 Readiness unto Holy Obedience whence it proceedeth 435 36 Readiness in the Minds of Believers unto all Duties of Obedience 464 5 Real Work of Grace and Holiness in the Hearts of Believers 452 66 Reasons and Causes why the Mysteries of the Gospel are esteemed Folly 222 34 Reasons why the Growth of Holiness is hardly discerned 351 10 Corrupted Reason depraves the whole Mystery of the Gospel 325 8 Weakness of Humane Reason to instruct us unto Obedience 559 13 To Receive the Grace of God what it is 80 3 What is required to the Receiving spiritual things in a spiritual Manner 219 29 Receiving of the Spirit how Antecedent unto Faith 358 3 Rectitude of Mans Nature wherein it consisted 76 14 Reformation of Life is not Regeneration 181 17 Reformation of Life upon Convictions wherein it comes short of Holiness 201 19 Regeneration wrought under the Old Testament but not clearly as to its Nature 174 6 Regeneration not a Metaphorical Expression of Amendment of Life 175 Regeneration in the Nature of it clearly revealed in the Gospel 176 8 Regeneration as to the Kind of the Work the same in all that are Regenerate 177 10 Regeneration infallibly produceth Reformation of Life 182 19 Regeneration the only Means of Delivery from the state of Sin 254 3 Regeneration the Work of God not our own 285 57 Regenerate Persons alone have the Promise of the Spirit for their Sanctification 358 Rejection of Christ the the last fatal Fall of the Church of the Jewes 25 27 Relation of the Person of the Holy Spirit unto the Father and the Son 89 15 Relation the Ground of Communication 363 5 Reliance on the Blood of Christ for Cleansing an Act of Faith 389 No Relief by Christ for unholy Persons 564 21 Religious Worship is the due Application of our Souls unto God according to his own Manifestations of himself 44 3 Religious Obedience due to the Holy Spirit as unto the Father and Son
hereby animated and capable of all Vital Acts. Hence he could move eat see hear c. for the natural Effects of this Breath of Life are only intended in this Expression Thus the first Man Adam was made a Living Soul 1 Cor. 15. 45. This was the Creation of Man as unto the essentially constituting Principles of his Nature Sect. 11 With respect unto his Moral Condition and Principle of Obedience unto God it is expressed Gen. 1. 26 27. And God said Let us make Man in our own Image after our likeness and let them have dominion so God created Man in his own Image in the Image of God created he him He made him upright Eccles. 7. 29. perfect in his Condition every way compleat fit disposed and able to and for the Obedience required of him Without Weakness Distemper Disease contrariety of Principles Inclinations or Reasonings An universal Rectitude of Nature consisting in Light Power and Order in his Understanding Mind and Affections was the principal part of this Image of God wherein he was created And this appears as from the Nature of the thing it self so from the Description which the Apostle giveth us of the Renovation of that Image in us by the Grace of Christ Ephes. 4. 24. Col. 3. 10. And under both these Considerations we may weigh the especial Operations of the Spirit of God Sect. 12 First As to the Essential Principles of the Nature of Man it is not for nothing that God expresseth his Communication of a Spirit of Life by his breathing into him God breathed into his Nostrils the Breath of Life The Spirit of God and the Breath of God are the same onely the one Expression is proper the other metaphorical wherefore this breathing is the especial acting of the Spirit of God The Creation of the Humane Soul a Vital Immortal Principle and Being is the immeate Work of the Spirit of God Job 33. 4. The Spirit of God hath made me and the Breath of the Almighty hath given me Life Here indeed the Creation and Production of both the essential parts of Humane Nature Body and Soul are ascribed unto the same Author For the Spirit of God and the Breath of God are the same but several Effects being mentioned causeth a repetition of the same Cause under several names This Spirit of God first made Man or formed his Body of the Dust and then gave him that Breath of Life whereby he became a living Soul So then under this first Consideration the Creation of Man is assigned unto the Holy Spirit for Man was the Perfection of the Inferior Creation and in order unto the Glory of God by him were all other things Created Here therefore are his Operations distinctly declared to whom the perfecting and compleating of all Divine Works is peculiarly committed Sect. 14 Secondly We may consider the moral State and Condition of Man with the Furniture of his Mind and Soul in reference unto his Obedience to God and his enjoyment of him This was the principal part of that Image of God wherein he was created Three things were required to render Man idoneous or fit unto that Life to God for which he was made First An ability to discern the Mind and Will of God with respect unto all the Duty and Obedience that God required of him as also so far to know the Nature and Properties of God as to believe him the only proper Object of all Acts and Duties of Religious Obedience and an all-sufficient Satisfaction and Reward in this World and to Eternity Secondly A free uncontrolled unintangled disposition to every Duty of the Law of his Creation in order unto living unto God Thirdly An ability of Mind and Will with a readiness of complyance in his Affections for a due regular performance of all Duties and abstinence from all Sin These things belonged unto the integrity of his Nature with the uprightness of the State and Condition wherein he was made And all these things were the peculiar Effects of the immediate Operation of the Holy Ghost For although this Rectitude of his Nature be distinguishable and separable from the Faculties of the Soul of Man yet in his first Creation they were not actually distinguished from them nor superadded or infused into them when Created but were concreated with them that is his Soul was made meet and able to live to God as his Sovereign Lord Chiefest Good and Last End And so they were all from the Holy Ghost from whom the Soul was as hath been declared Yea suppose these Abilities to be superadded unto Man's Natural Faculties as Gifts supernatural which yet is not so they must be acknowledged in a peculiar manner to be from the Holy Spirit For in the Restauration of these Abilities unto our minds in our Renovation unto the Image of God in the Gospel it is plainly asserted that the Holy Ghost is the immediate Operator of them And he doth thereby restore his own Work and not take the Work of another out of his Hand For in the New Creation the Father in the way of Authority designs it and brings all things unto an head in Christ Ephes. 1. 10. which retrived his original peculiar Work and the Son gave unto all things a new consistency which belonged unto him from the beginning Col. 1. 16. So also the Holy Spirit renews in us the Image of God the original implantation whereof was his peculiar Work And thus Adam may be said to have had the Spirit of God in his Innocency He had him in these peculiar Effects of his Power and Goodness and he had him according to the Tenor of that Covenant whereby it was possible that he should utterly lose him as accordingly it came to pass He had him not by especial Inhabitation for the whole World was then the Temple of God In the Covenant of Grace founded in the Person and on the Mediation of Christ it is otherwise On whomsoever the Spirit of God is bestowed for the Renovation of the Image of God in him he abides with him for ever But in all Men from first to last all Goodness Righteousness and Truth are the Fruits of the Spirit Ephes. 5. 9. Sect. 15 The Works of God being thus finished and the whole frame of Nature set upon its Wheels it is not deserted by the Spirit of God For as the preservation continuance and acting of all things in the Universe according to their especial Nature and mutual Application of one unto another are all from the powerful and efficacious Influences of Divine Providence so there are particular Operations of the Holy Spirit ●●nd about all things whether meerly Natural and Animal or also Rational and Moral An Instance in each kind may suffice For the first as we have shewed the Propagation of the succeeding Generations of Creatures and the annual Renovation of the Face of the Earth are ascribed unto him Psal. 104. 30. For as we would own the due and just Powers
execution of his Office as the King and Head of the Church is included in these words But his first Sanctifying Work in the Womb is principally intended For those Expressions a Rod out of the Stem of Jesse and a Branch out of his Roots with respect whereunto the Spirit is said to be communicated unto him do plainly regard his Incarnation And the Soul of Christ from the first moment of its Infusion was a Subject capable of a Fulness of Grace as unto its habitual Residence and Inbeing though the actual exercise of it was suspended for a while until the Organs of the Body were fitted for it This therefore it received by this first Unction of the Spirit Hence from his Conception he was Holy as well as harmless and undefiled Heb. 7. 26. An Holy Thing Luke 1. 35. radically filled with a Perfection of Grace and Wisdom Inasmuch as the Father gave him not the Spirit by Measure John 3. 34. See to this purpose Our Commentary on Heb. 1. v. 1. p. 17. see John 1. 14 15 16. Sect. 2 Thirdly The Spirit carried on that Work whose Foundation it had thus laid And Two Things are to be here diligently observed 1. That the Lord Christ as Man did and was to exercise all Grace by the Rational Faculties and Powers of his Soul his Understanding Will and Affections For he acted Grace as a Man made of a Woman made under the Law His Divine Nature was not unto him in the place of a Soul nor did immediately operate the things which he performed as some of old vainly imagined But being a perfect Man his Rational Soul was in him the immediate principle of all his Moral Operations even as ours are in us Now in the Improvement and Exercise of these Faculties and Powers of his Soul he had and made a Progress after the manner of other Men. For he was made like unto us in all things yet without sin In their Encrease Enlargement and Exercise there was required a Progression in Grace also And this he had continually by the Holy Ghost Luke 2. 40. The Child grew and waxed strong in Spirit The first Clause refers to his Body which grew and increased after the manner of other Men as v. 52. He increased in Stature The other respects the confirmation of the Faculties of his Mind he waxed strong in Spirit So v. 47. he is said to increase in Wisdom as in Stature He was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 continually filling and filled with new Degrees of Wisdom as to its Exercise according as the Rational Faculties of his Mind were capable thereof an increase in these things accompanied his years v. 52. And what is here recorded by the Evangelist contains a Description of the Accomplishments of the Prophesie before mentioned Isa. 11. 1 2 3. And this Growth in Grace and Wisdom was the peculiar Work of the Holy Spirit For as the Faculties of his Mind were enlarged by Degrees and strengthened so the Holy Spirit filled them up with Grace for Actual Obedience Sect. 3 2. The Humane Nature of Christ was capable of having New Objects proposed to its Mind and Understanding whereof before it had a simple Nescience And this is an inseparable adjunct of Humane Nature as such as it is to be weary or hungry and no vice or blameable defect Some have made a great outcry about the ascribing of Ignorance by some Protestant Divines unto the Humane Soul of Christ Bellarm. de Anim. Christi Take Ignorance for that which is a moral Defect in any kind or an unacquaintedness with that which any one ought to know or is necessary unto him as to the Perfection of his Condition or his Duty and it is false that ever any of them ascribed it unto him Take it meerly for a nescience of some things and there is no more in it but a denial of Infinite Omniscience nothing inconsistent with the highest Holiness and Purity of Humane Nature So the Lord Christ sayes of himself that he knew not the Day and Hour of the End of all things and our Apostle of him that he learned Obedience by the things that he suffered Heb. 5. 8. In the representation then of things anew to the Humane Nature of Christ the Wisdom and Knowledg of it was objectively increased and in new Tryals and Temptations he experimentally learned the new Exercise of Grace And this was the constant Work of the Holy Spirit in the Humane Nature of Christ. He dwelt in him in fulness for he received him not by measure And continually upon all occasions he gave out of his unsearchable Treasures Grace for Exercise in all Duties and Instances of it From hence was he habitually Holy and from hence did he exercise Holiness entirely and universally in all things Sect. 4 Fourthly The Holy Spirit in a peculiar manner anointed him with all those extraordinary Powers and Gifts which were necessary for the Exercise and Discharging of his Office on the Earth Isa. 61. 1. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me because the Lord hath anointed me to Preach good Tydings unto the Meek he hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted to proclaim Liberty to the Captives and the opening of the Prison unto them that are bound It is the Prophetical Office of Christ and his discharge thereof in his Ministry on the Earth which is intended And he applies these words unto himself with respect unto his Preaching of the Gospel Luke 4. 18. For this was that Office which he principally attended unto here in the World as that whereby he instructed Men in the Nature and Use of his other Offices For his Kingly Power in his Humane Nature on the Earth he exercised but sparingly Thereunto indeed belonged his sending forth of Apostles and Evangelists to preach with Authority And towards the End of his Ministry he instituted Ordinances of Gospel-Worship and appointed the Order of his Church in the Foundation and Building of it up which were Acts of Kingly Power Nor did he perform any Act of his Sacerdotal Office but only at his Death when he gave himself for us an Offering and a Sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling Savour Ephes. 5. 2. wherein God smelt a Savour of Rest and was appeased towards us But the whole course of his Life and Ministry was the Discharge of his Prophetical Office unto the Jews Rom. 15. 8. Which he was to do according to the great Promise Deut. 18. 18 19. And on the Acceptance or Refusal of him herein depended the Life and Death of the Church of Israel v. 19. Acts 3. 23. Heb. 1. 1. John 8. 44. Hereunto was he fitted by this Unction of the Spirit And here also is a distinction between the Spirit that was upon him and his being anointed to Preach which contains the Communication of the Gifts of that Spirit unto him As it is said Chap. 11. 3. The Spirit rested on him as a Spirit of Wisdom to make
22. Jesus of Nazareth a Man approved of God by Miracles and Wonders and Signs which God did by him For they are all immediate Effects of Divine Power So when he cast out Devils with a word of command he affirms that he did it by the Finger of God Luke 11. 20. that is the Infinite Divine Power of God but the Power of God acted in an especial manner by the Holy Spirit as is expresly declared in the other Evangelist Matth. 12. 28. And therefore on the Ascription of his Mighty Works unto Beelzebub the Prince of Devils he lets the Jews know that therein they blasphemed the Holy Spirit whose Works indeed they were v. 31 32. Hence these mighty Works are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Powers because of the Power of the Spirit of God put forth for their working and effecting see Mark 6. 5. Chap. 9. 39. Luke 4. 36. 5. 17. 6. 19. 8. 46. 9. 1. And in the Exercise of this Power consisted the Testimony given unto him by the Spirit that he was the Son of God For this was necessary unto the Conviction of the Jews to when he was sent John 10. 37 38. Sect. 7 Sixthly By him was he guided directed comforted supported in the whole Course of his Ministry Temptations Obedience and Sufferings Some few Instances on this Head may suffice Presently after his Baptism when he was full of the Holy Ghost he was led by the Spirit into the Wilderness Luke 4. 1. The Holy Spirit guided him to begin his Contest and Conquest with the Devil Hereby he made an entrance into his Ministry and it teacheth us all what we must look for if we solemnly engage our selves to follow him in the Work of Preaching the Gospel The word used in Mark to this purpose hath occasioned some doubt what Spirit is intended in those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 1. 12. The Spirit driveth him into the Wilderness It is evident that the same Spirit and the same Act is intended in all the Evangelists here and Mat. 4. 1. Luke 4. 1. But now the Holy Spirit should be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to drive him is not so easie to be apprehended But the Word in Luke is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which denotes a guiding and rational Conduct And this cannot be ascribed unto any other Spirit with respect unto our Lord Jesus but onely the Spirit of God Matthew expresseth the same effect by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 4. 1. he was carried or carried up or taken away from the midst of the People And this was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that Spirit namely which descended on him and rested on him immediately before Chap. 3. 17. And the Continuation of the Discourse in Luke will not admit that any other Spirit be intended And Jesus being full of the Holy Spirit returned from Jordan and was led by the Spirit into the Wilderness namely by that Spirit which he was full of By 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore in Mark no more is intended but the sending of him forth by an high and strong impression of the Holy Spirit on his Mind Hence the same word is used with respect unto the sending of others by the powerful impression of the Spirit of God on their Hearts unto the Work of Preaching the Gospel Matth. 9. 38. Pray you therefore the Lord of the Harvest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So also Luk. 10. 2. that he would thrust forth Labourers into his Harvest namely by furnishing them with the Gifts of his Spirit and by the Power of his Grace constraining them to their Duty So did he enter upon his Preparation unto his Work under his Conduct And it were well if others would endeavour after a conformity unto them within the Rules of their Calling 2. By his assistance was he carried triumphantly through the course of his Temptations unto a perfect Conquest of his Adversary as to the present Conflict wherein he sought to divert him from his Work which afterwards he endeavoured by all wayes and means to oppose and hinder 3. The Temptation being finished he returned again out of the Wilderness to Preach the Gospel in the Power of the Spirit Luk. 4. 14. He returned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Power of the Spirit into Galilee that is powerfully enabled by the Holy Spirit unto the discharge of his Work And thence is his first Sermon at Nazareth he took those Words of the Prophet for his Text The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me because he hath anointed me to Preach the Gospel to the Poor Luke 4. 18. The issue was That they all bare him Witness and wondred at the gracious Words that proceeded out of his Mouth v. 22. And as he thus began his Ministry in the Power of the Spirit so having received him not by measure he continually on all occasions put forth his Wisdom Power Grace and Knowledg to the astonishment of all and the stopping of the Mouths of his Adversaries shutting them up in their Rage and Unbelief 4. By him was he directed strengthned and comforted in his whole Course in all his Temptations Troubles and Sufferings from first to last For we know that there was a confluence of all those upon him in his whole Way and Work a great part of that whereunto he humbled himself for our sakes consisting in these things In and under them he stood in need of mighty Supportment and strong Consolation This God promised unto him and this he expected Isa. 50. 7 8. 42. 4 6. 49. 5 6 7 8. Now all the voluntary Communications of the Divine Nature unto the Humane were as we have shewed by the Holy Spirit Sect. 8 Seventhly He offered himself up unto God through the Eternal Spirit Heb. 9. 14. I know many Learned Men do judge that by the Eternal Spirit in that place not the Third Person is intended but the Divine Nature of the Son himself And there is no doubt but that also may properly be called the Eternal Spirit There is also a Reason in the words themselves strongly inclining unto that sense and acceptation of them For the Apostle doth shew whence it was that the Sacrifices of the Lord Christ had an Efficacy beyond and above the Sacrifices of the Law and whence it would certainly produce that great Effect of purging our Consciences from dead Works And this was from the Dignity of his Person on the account of his Divine Nature It arose I say from the Dignity of his Person his Deity giving sustentation unto his Humane Nature in the Sacrifice of himself For by reason of the indissoluble Union of both his Natures his Person became the Principle of all his Mediatory Acts and from thence had they their Dignity and Efficacy Nor will I oppose this Exposition of the words But on the other side many Learned Persons both of the Ancient and Modern Divines do judg that it is the Person of the Holy Spirit
especial part of this his Offering up himself That this was wrought in him by the Holy or Eternal Spirit was before declared And it is frequently expressed as that which had an especial Influence into the Efficacy and Merit of his Sacrifice Psal. 2. 8. He humbled himself and became Obedient unto Death the Death of the Cross. And when he offered up Prayers and Supplications though he were a Son yet learned he obedience by the things that he suffered Heb. 5. 8. That is he experienced Obedience in Suffering It is true that the Lord Christ in the whole course of his Life yeelded Obedience unto God as he was made of a Woman made under the Law Gal. 4. 4. But now he came to the great Tryal of it with respect unto the especial command of the Father to lay down his Life and to make his Soul an Offering for sin Isa. 53. 10. This was the highest Act of Obedience unto God that ever was or ever shall be to all Eternity And therefore doth God so express his satisfaction therein and acceptance of it Isa. 53. 11 12. Phil. 2. 9 10. This was wrought in him this he was wrought unto by the Holy Spirit and therefore by him offered himself unto God 4. There belongs also hereunto that Faith and Trust in God which with fervent Prayers Cries Supplications he now acted on God and his Promises both with respect unto himself and to the Covenant which he was sealing with his Blood This our Apostle represents as an especial Work of his testified unto in the Old Testament Heb. 2. 13. I will put my trust in him And this 1. respected himself namely that he should be supported assisted and carried through the Work he had undertaken unto a blessed Issue Herein I confess he was horribly assaulted until he cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Psal. 22. 1. But yet after and through all his dreadful Tryal his Faith and Trust in God were Victorious This he expressed in the Depth and Extremity of his Tryals Psal. 22. 9 10 11. and made such an open Profession of it that his Enemies when they supposed him lost and defeated reproached him with it v. 8. Matth. 27. 43. To this purpose be declared himself at large Isa. 50. 7 8 9. So his Faith and Trust in God as to his own supportment and deliverance with the accomplishment of all the Promises that were made unto him upon his ingagement into the Work of Mediation were victorious 2. They respected the Covenant and all the Benefits that the Church of the Elect was to be made Partaker of thereby The Blood that he now shed was the Blood of the Covenant and it was shed for his Church namely that the Blessings of the Covenant might be communicated unto them Gal. 3. 13 14. With respect hereunto did he also exercise Faith in God as appears fully in his Prayer which he made when he entred on his Oblation John 17. Now concerning these Instances we may observe three Things to our present purpose 1. These and the like gracious Actings of the Soul of Christ were the Wayes and Means whereby in his Death and Bloodshedding which was violent and by force inflicted on him as to the outward Instruments and was penal as to the Sentence of the Law he voluntarily and freely offered up himself a Sacrifice unto God for to make Atonement And these were the things which from the dignity of his Person became Efficacious and Victorious Without these his Death and Bloodshedding had been no Oblation 2. These were the things which rendred his Offering of himself to be a Sacrifice of a sweet sm●lling Savour unto God Ephes. 5. 2. God was so absolutely delighted and pleased with these high and glorious Acts of Grace and Obedience in Jesus Christ that he smelt as it were a Savour of Rest towards Mankind or those for whom he offered himself so that he would be angry with them no more curse them no more As it is said of the Type of it in the Sacrifice of Noah Gen. 8. 20 21. God was more pleased with the Obedience of Christ than he was displeased with the Sin and Disobedience of Adam Rom. 5. 17 18 19. It was not then the outward suffering of a violent and bloody Death which was inflicted on him by the most horrible wickedness that ever Humane Nature brake forth into that God was atoned Acts 2. 23. Nor yet was it meerly his enduring the Penalty of the Law that was the means of our Deliverance But the voluntary giving up of himself to be a Sacrifice in these Holy Acts of Obedience was that upon which in an especial manner God was reconciled unto us All these things being wrought in the Humane Nature by the Holy Ghost who in the time of his Offering acted all his Graces unto the utmost He is said thereon to offer himself unto God through the Eternal Spirit by whom as our High Priest he was Consecrated Spirited and Acted thereunto Sect. 10 Eighthly There was a peculiar Work of the Holy Spirit towards the Lord Christ whilst he was in the State of the Dead For here our precedeing Rule must be remembred namely that notwithstanding the Union of the Humane Nature of Christ with the Divine in the Person of the Son yet the Communications of God unto it beyond Subsistence were voluntary Thus in his Death the Union of his Natures in his Person was not in the least impeached but yet for his Soul or Spirit he recommends that in an especial manner into the Hands of God his Father Psal. 31. 5. Luke 23. 46. Father into thy Hands I commend my Spirit for the Father had ingaged himself in an Eternal Covenant to take care of him to preserve and protect him even in Death and to shew him again the Way and Path of Life Psal. 16. 11. Notwithstanding then the Union of his Person his Soul in its separate State was in an especial manner under the care protection and power of the Father preserved in his Love until the Hour came wherein he shewed him again the Path of Life His Holy Body in the Grave continued under the especial care of the Spirit of God and hereby was accomplished that great Promise That his Soul should not be left in Hell nor the Holy One see Corruption Psal. 16. 10. Acts 2. 31. It is the Body of Christ which is here called the Holy One as it was made an holy Thing by the Conception of it in the Womb by the Power of the Holy Ghost And it is here spoken of in contradistinction unto his Soul and opposed by Peter unto the Body of David which when it died saw Corruption Acts 2. 29. This Pure and Holy Substance was preserved in its Integrity by the overshadowing Power of the Holy Spirit without any of those Accidents of change which attend the dead Bodies of others I deny not but there was use made of the Ministry of
Angels about the dead Body of Christ whilst it was in the Grave even those which were seen sitting afterwards in the place where he lay John 20. 12. by these was it preserved from all outward Force and Violation But this also was under the peculiar care of the Spirit of God who how he worketh by Angels hath been before declared Sect. 11 Ninthly There was a peculiar Work of the Holy Spirit in his Resurrection this being the compleating Act in laying the Foundation of the Church whereby Christ entred into his Rest the great Testimony given unto the finishing of the Work of Redemption with the satisfaction of God therein and his acceptation of the Person of the Redeemer It is on various accounts assigned distinctly to each Person in the Trinity And this not only as all the external Works of God are individed each Person being equally concerned in their Operation but also upon the account of their especial respect unto and interest in the Work of Redemption in the manner before declared Unto the Father it is ascribed on the account of his Authority and the declaration therein of Christ's perfect accomplishment of the Work committed unto him Acts 2. 24. Him hath God raised up having loosed the Pains of Death because it was not possible that he should be holden of it it is the Father who is spoken of And he is said as in other places to raise Christ from the Dead but this he doth with respect unto his loosing the Pains of Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which with a little alteration of one Vowel signifie the Sorrows of Death or the Cords of Death For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the Sorrow of Death and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the Cords of Death see Psal. 18. 4. Psal. 116. 3. And these Sorrows of Death here intended were the Cords of it that is the Power it had to bind the Lord Christ for a season under it For the Pains of Death that is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tormenting Pains ended in his death it self But the Consequents of them are here reckoned unto them or the continuance under the Power of Death according unto the Sentence of the Law These God loosed when the Law being fully satisfied the Sentence of it was taken off and the Lord Christ was acquitted from its whole Charge This was the Act of God the Father as the Supream Rector and Judg of all Hence he is said to raise him from the Dead as the Judg by his Order delivereth an acquitted Prisoner or one who hath answered the Law The same Work he also takes unto himself John 10. 17 18. I lay down my Life that I may take it again no Man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again For although Men by violence took away his Life when with wicked hands they crucified and slew him Acts 2. 23. Chap. 3. 15 Yet because they had neither Authority nor Ability so to do without his own consent he saith No Man could or did take away his Life that is against his Will by Power over him as the lives of other Men are taken away for this neither Angels nor Men could do So also although the Father is said to raise him from the Dead by taking off the Sentence of the Law which he had answered yet he himself also took his Life again by an Act of the Love Care and Power of his Divine Nature his living again being an Act of his Person although the Humane Nature only died But the peculiar efficiency in the reuniting of his most Holy Soul and Body was an Effect of the Power of the Holy Spirit 1 Pet. 3. 18. He was put to death in the Flesh but quickned in the Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was restored to Life by the Spirit and this was that Spirit whereby he preached unto them that were disobedient in the dayes of Noah v. 19 20. or that Spirit of Christ which was in the Prophets from the Foundation of the World 1 Pet. 1. 11 12. by which he preached in Noah unto that disobedient Generation 2 Pet. 2. 5. whereby the Spirit of God strove for a season with those Inhabitants of the Old World Gen. 6. 3. that is the Holy Spirit of God To the same purpose we are instructed by our Apostle Rom. 8. 11. But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the Dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the Dead shall also quicken your Mortal Bodies by his Spirit which dwelleth in you God shall quicken our Mortal Bodies also by the same Spirit whereby he raised Christ from the Dead For so the Relation of the one Work to the other requires the words to be understood And he asserts again the same expresly Ephes. 1. 17 18 19 20. he prayes that God would give his Holy Spirit unto them as a Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation v. 17. The Effects thereof in them and upon them are described v. 18. and this he desires that they may so be made Partakers of that by the Work of the Spirit of God in themselves renewing and quickning of them they might have an experience of that exceeding greatness of his Power which he put forth in the Lord Christ when he raised him from the Dead And the Evidence or Testimony given unto his being the Son of God by his Resurrection from the Dead is said to be according to the Spirit of Holiness or the Holy Spirit Rom. 1. 4. He was positively declared to be the Son of God by his Resurrection from the Dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is by the powerful working of the Holy Spirit This also is the intendment of that Expression 1 Tim. 3. 16. Justified in the Spirit God was manifest in the Flesh by his Incarnation and Passion therein and justified in the Spirit by a Declaration of his acquitment from the Sentence of Death and all the Evils which he underwent with the Reproaches wherewith he was contemptuously used by his Quickning and Resurrection from the Dead through the mighty and effectual working of the Spirit of God Sect. 12 Tenthly It was the Holy Spirit that glorified the Humane Nature and made it every way meet for its Eternal Residence at the Right Hand of God and a Pattern of the Glorification of the Bodies of them that believe on him He who first made his Nature Holy now made it Glorious And as we are made conformable unto him in our Souls here his Image being renewed in us by the Spirit so he is in his Body now glorified by the Effectual Operation of the same Spirit the Exemplar and Pattern of that Glory which in our Mortal Bodies we shall receive by the same Spirit For when he appears we shall be like him 1 John 3. 2. seeing he will change our vile Bodies that they
are not delivered from a state of sin And he who denies the necessary perishing of all that live and dye in the state of Corrupted Nature denies all the use of the Incarnation and Mediation of the Son of God For if we may be saved without the Renovation of our Natures there was no need nor use of the New Creation of all things by Jesus Christ which principally consists therein And if Men may be saved under all the Evils that came upon us by the fail then did Christ dye in vain Besides it is frequently expressed that Men in that state are Enemies to God alienated from him Children of Wrath under the Curse and if such may be saved so may Devils also In brief it is not consistent with the Nature of God his Holiness Righteousness or Truth with the Law or Gospel nor possible in the nature of the thing it self that such persons should enter into or be made possessors of Glory and Rest with God A Deliverance therefore out of and from this Condition is indispensibly necessary to make us meet for the inheritance of the Saints in Light Sect. 3 This Deliverance must be and is by Regeneration The Determinaof our Saviour is positive both in this and the necessity of it before asserted Joh. 3. 3. Except a Man be born again or from above he cannot see the Kingdom of God Whatever sense the Kingdom of God is taken in either for that of Grace here or of Glory hereafter it is all the same as unto our present purpose There is no Interest in it to be obtained no Participation of the Benefits of it unless a man be born again unless he be Regenerate And this Determination of our Saviour as it is absolute and decretory so it is applicable unto and equally comprizeth every Individual of mankind And the Work intended by their Regeneration or in being born again which is the Spiritual Conversion and Quickning of the Souls of Men is everywhere ascribed unto them that shall be saved And although Men may have through their ignorance and prejudices false Apprehensions about Regeneration and the Nature of it or wherein it doth consist yet so far as I know all Christians are agreed that it is the way and means of our Deliverance from the state of Sin or Corrupted Nature or rather our Deliverance it self For this both express Testimonies of Scripture and the Nature of the thing it self put beyond Contradiction Tit. 3. 3 4 5. And those by whom it is exposed unto scorn who esteem it a ridiculous thing for any one to enquire whether he be Regenerate or no will one day understand the necessity of it although it may be not before it is too late to obtain any Advantage thereby Sect. 4 The Holy Ghost is the immediate Author and Cause of this work of Regeneration And herein again as I suppose we have in general the Consent of all Nothing is more in words acknowledged than that all the Elect of God are sanctified by the Holy Ghost And this Regeneration is the Head Fountain or Beginning of our Sanctification virtually comprizing the whole in it self as will afterwards appear However that it is a part thereof is not to be denied Besides as I suppose it is equally confessed to be an Effect or Work of Grace the Actual Dispensation whereof is solely in the hand of the Holy Spirit This I say is in words acknowledged by all although I know not how some can reconcile this Profession unto other notions and sentiments which they declare concerning it For setting aside what Men do herein themselves and what others do towards them in the Ministry of the Word and I cannot see what remains as they express their loose Imaginations to be ascribed unto the Spirit of God But at present we shall make use of this general concession that Regeneration is the Work of the Holy Ghost or an Effect of his Grace Not that we have any need so to do but that we may avoid contesting about those things wherein Men may shrowd their false Opinions under general ambiguous Expressions which was the constant practice of Pelagius and those who followed him of Old But the Scripture is express in Testimonies to our purpose What our Saviour calls being born again John 3. 3. He calls being born of the Spirit ver 5. 6. because he is the sole principal efficient Cause of this new birth For it is the Spirit that quickneth Joh. 6. v. 63. Rom. 8. 11. And God saveth us according to his mercy by the washing of Regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3. 5. whereas therefore we are said to be born of God or to be begotten again of his own will John 1. 13. Jam. 1. 18. 1 John 3. 9. it is with respect unto the especial and peculiar Operation of the Holy Spirit Sect. 5 These things are thus far confessed even by the Pelagians themselves both those of old and those at present at least in general nor hath any as yet been so hardy as to deny Regeneration to be the Work of the holy Spirit in us unless we must except those deluded Souls who deny both him and his Work Our sole Enquiry therefore must be after the manner and nature of this work for the nature of it depends on the manner of the working of the Spirit of God herein This I acknowledg was variously contended about of old and the truth concerning it hath scarce escaped an open Opposition in any Age of the Church And at present this is the great Ball of Contention between the Jesuites and the Jansenists the latter keeping close to the Doctrine of the principal Ancient Writers of the Church the former under new Notions Expressions and Distinctions endeavouring the Reinforcement of Pelagianism whereunto some of the Elder School-Men led the way of whom our Bradwardine so long ago complained But never was it with so much Impotence and Ignorance traduced and reviled as it is by some among our selves For a sort of Men we have who by stories of wandring Jews Rhetorical Declamations pert Cavillings and proud Revilings of those who dissent from them think to scorn and banish Truth out of the World though they never yet durst attempt to deal openly and plainly with any one Argument that is pleaded in its defence and confirmation Sect. 6 The Ancient Writers of the Church who looked into these things with most diligence and laboured in them with most success as Austin Hilary Prosper and Fulgentius do represent the whole Work of the Spirit of God towards the Souls of Men under certain Heads or Distinctions of Grace And herein were they followed by many of the more sober School-Men and others of late without number Frequent mention we find in them of Grace as preparing preventing Working Co-working and Confirming Under these Heads do they handle the whole Work of our Regeneration or Conversion unto God And although there may be some Alteration in
Reason and common Sense that what-ever be our Duty and Power herein yet these Expressions must denote an Act of God and not ours the substance of what we contend for is granted as we shall be ready at any time to demonstrate It is true God doth command us to circumcise our Hearts and to make them New But he doth therein declare our Duty not our Power for himself promiseth to work in us what he requireth of us And that Power which we have and do exercise in the progress of this Work in Sanctification and Holiness proceeds from the infused Principle which we receive in our Regeneration for all which Ends we ought to pray for him according to the Example of Holy Men of old The Manner of Conversion explained in the Instance of Augustine CHAP. VI. The outward means and manner of Conversion to God or Regeneration with the Degrees of Spiritual Operations on the Minds of Men and their Effects exemplified in the Conversion of Augustine as the Account is given thereof by himself Sect. 1 AS among all the Doctrines of the Gospel there is none opposed with more violence and subtilty than that concerning our Regeneration by the immediate powerful effectual Operation of the Holy Spirit of Grace so there is not scarce any thing more despised or scorned by many in the World than that any should profess that there hath been such a Work of God upon themselves or on any Occasion declare ought of the way and manner whereby it was wrought The very mentioning hereof is grown a Derision among some that call themselves Christians and to plead an interest or concern in this Grace is to forfeit all a Mans Reputation with many who would be thought wise and boast themselves to be rational Neither is this a practice taken up of late in these declining times of the World but seems to have been started and followed from days of old possibly from the beginning yea the Enmity of Cain against Abel was but a branch of this proud and perverse Inclination The Instance of Ishmael in the Scripture is Representative of all such as under an outward profession of the true Religion did or do scoff at those who being as Isaac Children of the Promise do profess and evidence an interest in the internal Power of it which they are unacquainted withal And the same practice may be traced in succeeding Ages Hence Holy Austin entring upon the Confession of his greater sins designing thereby to magnify the Glory and Efficacy of the Grace of God in his Conversion provides against this scorn of Men which he knew he should meet withal Rideant saith he me arrogantes nondum salubriter prostrati elisi per te Deus meus ego tamen confiteor tibi dedecora mea in laude tua Confess lib. 4. cap. 1. let Arrogant Men deride or scorn me who were never savingly cast down nor broken in pieces by thee my God yet I will confess my own shame unto thy praise Let none be offended with these expressions of being savingly or wholesomely cast down and broken of God For in the Judgment of this great person they are not Fanatical We may not therefore think it strange if the same truth the same practice and profession of it do still meet with the same Entertainment Let them deride and scorn it who were never humbled savingly nor broken with a sense of sin nor relieved by Grace the Holy Work of Gods Spirit is to be owned and the truth to be avowed as it is in Jesus Sect. 2 Of the Original Depravation of our nature we have treated sofar as is needful unto our present purpose Yet some things must yet be added concerning the Effects of that Depravation which will conduce unto the right understanding of the way and manner whereby the Spirit of God proceedeth for the healing and removal of it which we have now under especial consideration And we may observe Sect. 3 1. That the Corrupt Principle of sin the native habitual Inclination that is in us unto evil worketh early in our natures and for the most part preventeth all the Actings of Grace in us Though some may be sanctified in or from the Womb yet in order of nature this native Corruption hath first place in them for a clean thing cannot be brought out of an unclean but that which i● born of the flesh is flesh Psal. 58. 3. The Wicked are estrang●d from the Womb they go astray as soon as they be born speaking lyes It is to no purpose to say that he speaks of wicked Men that is such who are habitually and profligately so For whatever any Man may afterwards run into by a course of sin all Men are Morally alike from the Womb and 't is an Aggravation of the Wickedness of Men that it begins so early and holds on an uninterrupted course Children are not able to speak from the Womb as soon as they are born Yet here are they said to speak lyes It is therefore the perverse Acting of Depraved nature in Infancy that is intended For every thing that is irregular that Answers not the Law of our Creation and Rule of our Obedience is a Lye And among the many Instances Collected by Austin of such irregular Actings of nature in its infant-state one is peculiarly remarkable Confess lib. 1. cap. 6. Paulatim sentiebam ubi essem voluntates meas volebam ostendere eis per quos implerentur non poteram itaque jactabam membra voces signa ●imilia voluntatibus meis pauca quae poteram qualia poteram cum mihi non ob●emperabatur vel non intelligendo vel ne obesset indignabar non subditis Majoribus liberis non servientibus me de illis slendo vindicabam This he again repeats cap. 7. An pro tempore illo bona erant flendo petere etiam quod noxie daretur indignari acriter non subjectis hominibus liberis majoribus hisque a quibus genitus est multisque preterea prudentioribus non ad nutum voluntatis obtemperantibus feriendo nocere mihi quantum potest quia non obeditur imperiis quibus perniciose obediretur Ita imbecillitas membrorum infantilium innocens est non animus infantium Those irregular and perverse Agitations of mind and of the Will or Appetite not yet under the Conduct of Reason which appear in Infants with the Indignation and little self-Revenges wherewith they are accompanyed in their disappointments when all about them do not subject themselves unto their Inclinations it may be to their hurt are from the Obliquity of our nature and effects of that depraved habit of sin wherewith it is wholly possessed And by the frequency of these lesser Actings are the mind and will prepared for those more violent and impetuous motions which by the improving of their natural Capacities and the incitation of new Objects presented unto their Corruptions they are exposed unto and filled withal God
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
Disquietment of Mind fear of Ruine and the like see Acts 2. 37. Acts 24. 25. But this I must not enlarge upon Sect. 21 This therefore is the second thing which we observe in God's gracious Actings towards the Recovery of the Souls of Men from their Apostacy and from under the Power of sin The principal efficient Cause of this Work is the Holy Ghost the preaching of the Word especially of the Law being the Instrument which he maketh use of therein The Knowledg of sin is by the Law both the Nature Guilt and Curse belonging to it Rom. 7. 7. There is ●herefore no Conviction of sin but what consists in an Emanation of Light and Knowledg from the Doct●ine of the Law with an Evidence of its Power and a sense of its Curse Other Means as Afflictions Dangers Sicknesses Fears Disappointments may be made use of to excite stir up and put an edge upon the Minds and Affections of Men yet it is by one means or other from the Law of God that such a discovery is made of sin unto them and such a sense of it wrought upon them as belongs unto this work of Conviction But it is the Spirit of God alone that is the principal efficient Cause of it or he works these effects on the Minds of Men. God takes it upon himself as his own work to reprove Men and set their sins in order before their eyes Psal. 50 21. And that this same Work is done immediately by the Spirit is expresly declared John 16. 8. He alone it is who makes all means effectual unto this End and Purpose Without his especial and immediate Actings on us to this End we may hear the Law preached all the Days of our Lives and not be once affected with it Sect. 22 And it may by the way be worth our Observation to consider how God designing the Calling or Conversion of the Souls of Men doth in this holy wise Providence over-rule all their outward Concernments so as that they shall be disposed into such Circumstances as conduce to to the end aymed at Either by their own Inclinations and Choice or by the Intervention of Accidents crossing their Inclinations and frustrateing their Designes he will lead them into such Societies Acquaintances Relations Places means as he hath ordained to be useful unto them for the great ends of their Conviction and Conversion So in particular Austin aboundeth in his Contemplation on the Holy Wise Providence of God in carrying of him from Carthage to Rome and from thence to Milan where he heard Ambrose preach every Lords-day which proved at length the Means of his through-Conversion to God And in that whole Course by his discourse upon it he discovers Excellently as on the one hand the variety of his own Projections and Designes his Aymes and Ends which oft-times were perverse and froward so on the other the constant guidance of divine Providence working powerfully through all Occurrences towards the blessed End designed for him And I no way doubt but that God exercised him unto those distinct Experiences of Sin and Grace in his own Heart and Wayes because he had designed him to be the great Champion of the Doctrine of his Grace against all its enemyes and that not only in his own Age wherein it met with a fierce Opposition but also in all succeeding ages by his Excellent Labours preserved for the use of the Church see Confess lib. 5. cap. 7. 8 9 c. Tu spes mea in terra viventium ad mutandum terrarum locum pro salute animae mea Carthagini stimulos quibus inde avellerer admovebas Romae illecebras quibus attraberer proponebas mihi per homines qui diligebant vitam mortuam hinc insana facientes inde vana pollicentes ad corrigendos gressus meos utebaris occulte illorum mea perversitate cap. 8. Thou who art my hope in the Land of the Living that I might remove from one Country to another for the Salvation of my Soul didst both apply goads unto me at Carthage whereby I might be driven from thence and proposedst Allurements unto me at Rome whereby I might be drawn thither and this thou didst by Men who loved the Dead Life in sin here doing things outragious there promising things desirable to vain Minds whilst thou to correct and reform my ways didst secretly make use of their frowardness and mine Sect. 23 3. It must be granted that many on whom this work hath been wrought producing great Resolutions of Amendment and much Reformation of Life do lose all the Power and Efficacy of it with all the impressions it had made on their Affections And some of these wax worse and more profligate in sinning than ever they were before For having broken down the Damm of their restraints they pour out their lusts like a Flood and are more senseless than ever of those Checks and Fears with which before they were bridled and awed 2 Pet. 2. 20 21. 22. So the person lately mentioned declares that after many Convictions which he had digested and neglected he was grown so obdurate and sensless that falling into a feaver wherein he thought he should die and go immediately unto Hell he had not that endeavour after Deliverance and Mercy as he had many years before on lesser dangers And this perverse Effect is variously brought about Sect. 24 1. It is with most an immediate product of the power of their own Lust. Especially is it so with them who together with their Convictions receive no Gifts of the Holy Ghost For as we observed their Lusts being only checked and controuled not subdued they get new strength by their Restraint and rebel with success against Conviction Such as these fall away from what they have attained suddenly Math. 13. 5. 21. One day they seem to lye in Hell by the Terror of their Convictions and the next to be hasting towards it by their sins and pollutions see Luke 11. 24 25 26. Hos. 4. 6. cap. 6. 4. 2. This Apostacy is promoted and hastned by others As 1. such as undertaking to be Spiritual Guides and Instructers of Men in their way towards Rest who being unskilful in the Word of Righteousness do heal their wounds slightly or turn them out of the way Seducers also it may be interpose their crafty deceits whereby they lye in wait to deceive and so turn Men off from those Good ways of God whereinto they would otherwise enter So it fell out with Austin who beginning somewhat to enquire after God fell into the society and heresy of the Manichees which frustrated all the Convictions which by any means he had received 2. Such as directly and that perhaps with importunity and violence will endeavour to draw Men back into the wayes of the World and the pursuit of their lusts Pro. 1. 11 12 13 14. So the same Person declares with what earnestness and restless importunities some of his Companions endeavoured to draw
of the sanctification of the Spirit For such fruits of secret Atheism doth the world abound withall But our principal Duty in this world is to know aright what it is to be Holy and so to be indeed Sect. 7 One thing we must premise to clear our ensuing Discourse from Ambiguity And this is that there is mention in the Scripture of a Twofold sanctification and consequently of a two-fold Holiness The first is common unto Persons and Things consisting in the peculiar Dedication Consecration or Separation of them unto the Service of God by his own Appointment whereby they become Holy Thus the Priests and Levites of Old the Arke the Altar the Tabernacle and the Temple were sanctified and made Holy And indeed in all Holiness whatever there is a peculiar Dedication and Separation unto God But in the sense mentioned this was solitary and alone no more belonged unto it but this sacred separation nor was there any other effect of this Sanctification But secondly There is another kind of Sanctification and Holiness wherein this Separation to God is not the first thing done or intended but a Consequent and Effect thereof This is real and internal by the Communicating of a principle of Holiness unto our Natures attended with its Exercise in Acts and Duties of Holy Obedience unto God This is that which in the first place we enquire after and how far Believers are therein and thereby peculiarly separated and dedicated unto God shall be afterwards declared And unto what we have to deliver concerning it we shall make way by the ensuing observations Sect. 8 This whole matter of Sanctification and Holiness is peculiarly joyned with and limited unto the Doctrine Truth and Grace of the Gospel for Holiness is nothing but the implanting writing and realizing of the Gospel in our souls Hence it is termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes. 4. 24. The Holiness of Truth which the Truth of the Gospel ingenerates and which consists in a conformity thereunto and the Gospel it self is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 1. 1. The Truth which is according unto Godliness which declares that Godliness and Holiness which God requireth The prayer also of our Saviour for our Sanctification is conformed therunto John 17. 17. Sanctifie them in or by thy Truth thy word is Truth And he sanctified himself for us to be a sacrifice that we might be sanctified in the Truth This alone is that Truth which makes us free John 8. 12. that is from sin and the Law unto Righteousness in Holiness It belongs neither to nature nor the Law so as to proceed from them or to be effected by them Nature is wholly corrupted and contrary unto it The Law indeed for certain Ends was given by Moses but all Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ. There neither is nor ever was in the world nor ever shall be the least dram of Holiness but what flowing from Jesus Christ is communicated by the Spirit according to the Truth and promise of the Gospel There may be something like it as to its outward Acts and effects at least some of them something that may wear its Livery in the world that is but the fruit of mens own Endeavours in Compliance with their convictions but Holiness it is not nor of the same kind or nature with it And this men are very apt to deceive themselves withal It is the design of corrupted Reason to debase all the glorious mysteries of the Gospel and all the concernments of them There is nothing in the whole Mystery of Godliness from the Highest crown of it which is the Person of Christ God manifested in the flesh unto the lowest and nearest effect of his Grace but it labours to deprave dishonour and debase The Lord Christ it would have in his whole person to be but a meer man in his Obedience and suffering to be but an Example in his doctrine to be confin'd unto the Capacity and Comprehension of Carnal Reason and the Holiness which he communicates by the Sanctification of his Spirit to be but that Moral vertue which is common among men as the fruit of their own Endeavours Herein some will acknowledge that men are guided and directed to a great Advantage by the Doctrine of the Gospel and thereunto excited by motions of the Holy Ghost himself put forth in the Dispensation of that Truth but any thing else in it more excellent more mysterious they will not allow But these low and carnal imaginations are exceedingly unworthy of the Grace of Christ the Glory of the Gospel the mystery of the Recovery of our Nature and healing of the wound it received by the entrance of sin with the whole design of God in our Restauration into a state of Communion with himself Moral vertue is indeed the best thing amongst men that is of them It far exceeds in worth use and satisfaction all that the Honours Powers Profits and Pleasures of the World can extend unto And it is admirable to consider what instructions are given concerning it what expressions are made of its excellency what Encomiums of its use and beauty by Learned contemplative men among the Heathen the wisest of whom did acknowledge that there was yet something in it which they could onely admire and not comprehend And very eminent instances of the practice of it were given in the lives and conversations of some of them And as the examples of their Righteousness Moderation Temperance Equanimity in all Conditions rise up at present unto the shame and reproach of many that are called Christians so they will be called over at the last day as an Aggravation of their Condemnation But to suppose that this Moral vertue whatever it be really in its own nature or however advanced in the imaginations of men is that Holiness of Truth which Believers receive by the Spirit of Christ is to debase it to overthrow it and to drive the souls of men from seeking an interest in it And hence it is that some pretending highly a friendship and respect unto it doe yet hate despise and reproach what is really so pleasing themselves with the empty name or withered Carcase of vertue every way inferiour as interpreted in their practice to the Righteousness of Heathens And this in the first place should stir up our diligence in our enquiries after its true and real nature that we decive not our selves with a false appearance of it and that unto our ruine Sect. 9 It is our Duty to enquire into the nature of Evangelical Holiness as it is a fruit or effect in us of the Spirit of Sanctification because it is abstruse and Mysterious and be it spoken with the good leave of some or whether they will or no undiscernable unto the eye of carnal Reason We may say of it in some sense as Job of Wisedom whence cometh Wisedom and where is the place of understanding seeing it is hid from the eyes of all living and kept close from the
indulged unto vitiates the whole Spiritual Health and weakens the Soul in all Duties of Obedience 2 There are some things required of us to this End that Holiness may thrive and be carryed on in us Such are the constant use of all Ordinances and Means appointed unto that End a due Observance of Commanded Duties in their Season with a Readiness for the Exercise of every especial Grace in its proper circumstances Now if we neglect these things if we walk at all peradventures with God attending neither to Means nor Dutyes nor the Exercise of Grace as we should we are not to wonder if we find our selves Decaying yea ready to dye Doth any man wonder to see a person formerly of a sound Constitution grown weak and sickly if he openly neglect all Means of health and contract all sorts of Diseases by his Intemperance Is it strange that a Nation should be sick and faint at heart that Grey-hairs should be sprinkled upon it that it should be poor and decaying whilest Consuming Lusts with a strange Neglect of all envigorating Means do prevail in it No more is it that a Professing people should decay in Holy Obedience whilest they abide in the Neglects expressed Having vindicated this Assertion I shall yet adde a little further Improvement of it And 1. If the Work of Holiness be such a Progressive thriving Work in its own nature if the Design of the Holy Ghost in the use of Means be to carry it on in us and encrease it more and more unto a perfect Measure then is our Diligence still to be continued to the same End and Purpose For hereon depends our growth and thriving It is required of us that we give all Diligence unto the Encrease of Grace 2 Pet. 1. and that we abound therein 2 Cor. 8. 7. abounding in all Diligence and not only so but that we shew the same Diligence unto the End Heb. 6. 11. Whetever Diligence you have used in the attaining or improving of Holiness abide in it unto the End or we cast our selves under Decayes and endanger our Souls If we slack or give over as to our Duty the Work of Sanctification will not be carryed on in a way of Grace And this is required of us this is expected from us that our whole Lives be spent in a Course of diligent Complyance with the Progressive Work of Grace in us There are three Grounds on which men doe or may neglect this Duty whereon the Life of their Obedience and all their Comforts do depend 1 A Presumption or Groundless Perswasion that they are already perfect This some pretend unto in a proud and foolish Conceit destructive of the whole Nature and Duty of Evangelical Holiness or Obedience For this on our parts consists in our willing Complyance with the Work of Grace gradually carryed on unto the measure appointed unto us If this be already attained there is an End of all Evangelical Obedience and men return again to the Law unto their Ruine See Phil. 3. 12 13 14. It is an excellent Description of the Nature of our Obedience which the Apostle gives us in that place All Absolute Perfection in this Life is rejected as unattainable The End proposed is Blessedness and Glory with the Eternal Enjoyment of God and the Way whereby we press towards it which comprizeth the whole of our Obedience is by continual uninterrupted following after pressing reaching out a constant Progress in and by our utmost Diligence 2 A foolish Supposition that being interested in a state of Grace we need not now be so solicitous about exact Holiness and Obedience in all things as we were formerly whilest our minds hung in suspense about our Condition But so much as any one hath this Apprehension or Perswasion prevailing in him or influencing of him so much hath he cause deeply to question whether he have yet any thing of Grace or Holiness or no. For this Perswasion is not of him who hath called us There is not a more effectual Engine in the hand of Sathan either to keep us off from Holiness or to stifle it when it is attained nor can any thoughts arise in the Hearts of men more opposite to the nature of Grace For which cause the Apostle rejects it with Detestation Rom. 6. 1 2. 3 Weariness and Despondencies arising from Oppositions Some find so much difficulty in and Opposition to the Work of Holiness and its Progress from the Power of Corruptions Temptations and the Occasions of Life in this World that they are ready to faint and give over this Diligence in Dutyes and Contending against Sin But the Scripture doth so abound with Encouragements unto this sort of Persons as we need not to insist thereon CHAP. III. Believers the only Object of Sanctification and Subject of Gospel Holiness 1 Believers the only Subject of the Work of Sanctification 2 How men come to believe if Believers alone receive the Spirit of Sanctification 3 The principal Ends for which the Spirit is promised with their Order in their Accomplishment 4 Rules to be observed in praying for the Spirit of God and his Operations therein 5 That Believers only are Sanctified or Holy proved and confirmed 6 Mistakes about Holiness both Notional and Practical discovered 7 The Proper Subject of Holiness in Believers Sect. 1 THat which we are next to enquire into is the personal Subject of this Work of Sanctification or who and of what sort those Persons are that are made Holy Now these are All and Only Believers All who unseignedly believe in God through Jesus Christ are sanctified and no other Unto them is Evangelical Holiness confined It is for them and them only that our Saviour prayes for this Mercy Grace or Priviledge Joh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy Truth And concerning them he affirms for their sakes I sanctifie my self that they also may be sanctified through the Truth v. 19. And whereas in the Verses foregoing he had immediate Respect unto his Apostles and present Disciples that we may know that neither his Prayer nor this Grace are confined or limited unto them he addes Neither pray I for these alone that is in this Manner and for these Ends but for them also which shall believe on me through their World v. 20. It was therefore the Prayer of our Lord Jesus Christ that all Believers should be sanctified and so also was it his Promise John 7. 38 39. He that believeth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall slow rivers of living water But this he spake of the Spirit which they that believe on him should receive And it is with respect principally unto this Work of Sanctification that he is compared unto flowing and living Water as hath been declared before It is for Believers the Church that was in God the Father and in Jesus Christ that is by Faith 1 Thess. 1. 1. that our Apostle prayes that the God of Peace would sanctifie them throughout chap. 5.
by their own Fear which is the inseparable Adjunct of it so are they taught the Filth of sin by their own Shame which unavoidably attends it To instruct us herein is one End of the Law and the Gospel For in the Renovation of the Law which was added to the Promise because of Transgressions Gal. 3. 19. and in the Institutions annexed unto it God designed to instruct us further in them both with the Wayes whereby we may be freed from them In the Doctrine of the Law with the Sanction and Curse of it and the Institution of Sacrifices to make Attonement for sin God declared the Nature of Guilt and its Remedy By the same Law and by the Institution of sundry Ordinances for Purification and cleansing as also by determining sundry Ceremonial Defilements he makes known the Nature of this Filth and its Remedy To what End were so many Meats and Drinks so many Diseases and Natural Distempers so many external fortuitous Accidents as touching the Dead and the like made Religiously unclean by the Law It was to no other but to teach us the Nature of the spiritual Defilement of sin And to the same End together with a Demonstration of the Relief and Remedy thereof were the Ordinances of Purification instituted which as they were Outward and Carnal purged those Uncleannesses as they also were Outward and Carnal made so by the Law But Internal and Spiritual things were taught and presigured hereby yea wrought and effected by vertue of their Typical Relation to Christ as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 9. 13 14. For it the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of an Heyfer sprinkling the unclean sanctifyeth to the purifying of the Flesh how much more shall the Blood of Christ purge our Consciences from dead Works to serve the Living God And hence the whole Work of Sanctification is expressed by opening a Fountain for sin and for uncleanness that is the purging of them away Zech. 13. 1. So is it in the Gospel where the Blood of Christ is said to purge our sins with respect to Guilt and to wash our Souls with respect to Filth Yea so inseparable is this Filth from sin and Shame from Filth that wherever abides a sence of sin there is a sence of this Filth with Shame The very Heathen who had only the workings of their own Minds and Consciences for their Guide were never able to quit themselves from a sence of this Pollution of sin And thence proceeded all those wayes of Lustration Purgation and Cleansing by Washings Sacrifices and Mysterious Ceremonious Observances which they had invented It remains therefore only that we enquire a little into the Reasons and Causes why this pravity of sin and discrepancy from the Holiness of God is such a Defilement of our Natures and so inseparably attended with shame For without the Consideration hereof we can never understand the true Nature of Sanctification and Holiness And it will also then yet further appear how openly they betray their prodigious Ignorance of these things who contend that all Grace consists in the Practice of Moral Vertues And we may to this Purpose observe Sect. 3 1 That the Spiritual Beauty and Comeliness of the Soul consists in its Conformity unto God Grace gives Beauty Hence it is said of the Lord Christ That he is fairer or more beautifull than the Children of Men and that because Grace was poured into his lips Psal. 45. 2. And when the Church is furnished or adorned with his Graces he affirms her to be Fair and Comely Cant. 1. 5. chap. 6. 4. chap. 7. 6. Christ by washing of it takes away its spots and wrinkles rendring it beautifull that is Holy and without blemish Ephes. 5. 27. And this Beauty Originally consisted in the Image of God in us which contained the whole Order Harmony and Symmetry of our Natures in all their Faculties and Actions with respect unto God and our utmost End That therefore which is contrary hereunto as is all and every sin hath a Deformity in it or brings Spots Stains and Wrinkles on the Soul There is in sin all that is contrary to spiritual Beauty and Comeliness to inward Order and Glory and this is the Filth and Pollution of it 2 Holiness and Conformity to God is the Honour of our Souls It is that alone which makes them truely Noble For all Honour consists in an Accession unto Him who is the only Spring and absolute Possessour of all that is so in whom alone is Originally and Perfectly all Being and Substance Now this we have alone by Holiness or that Image of God wherein we were created Whatever is contrary hereunto is base vile and unworthy This is sin which is therefore the only base thing in Nature Hence it is said of some great Sinners that they had debased themselves to Hell Isa. 57. 9. This belongs to the Pollution of Sin that it is base vile unworthy dishonouring the Soul filling it with shame in its self and contempt from God And there are no Persons who are not absolutely hardened but are in their own Minds and Consciences sensible of this Baseness of sin as they are also of the Deformity that is in it When mens Eyes are opened to see their Nakedness how vile and base they have made themselves by sin they will have a sence of this Pollution not easily to be expressed And from hence it is that sin hath the Propertyes and Effects of Vncleanness in the sight of God and in the Conscience of the sinner God abhorrs loaths it accounts it an abominable thing as that which is directly contrary to his Holiness which as impressed on the Law is the Rule of Purity Integrity spiritual Beauty and Honour And in the Conscience of the sinner it is attended with Shame as a thing deformed loathsome vile base and dishonourable See Jer. 2. 26. In all in whom it is I say unless they are blind and obdurate it fills them with shame I speak not of such as are little or not at all spiritually sensible of sin or any of its propertyes who fear not because of its Guilt nor are disquieted by its Power not acquainted with its Fomes or Disposition to evil and so not ashamed of its filth much less of such as are given over to all uncleanness with Delight and Greediness wallowing in the pollution of it like the Sow in the Mire who not only do the things which god abhorreth but also have pleasure in them that do them But those I intend who have the least real Conviction of the nature and tendency of sin who are all in one Degree or other ashamed of it as a filthy thing And a Casting off of outward shame that is so from its Object or Shame with respect unto the Conscience and Judgement of Humane Kind as those doe who proclaim their sins as Sodom and hide them not is the highest Aggravation of sinning and Contempt of God and the casting out of
they are else they are alwayes Chastisements and Correction respects Faults And it is our safest course in every Affliction to lodge the Adequate Cause of it in our own Deserts as the Woman did 1 King 17. 18. and as God directs Psal. 81. 30 31 32. Lament 3. 33 34. And this is one Difference between his Chastiments and those of the Fathers of our Flesh that he doth it not for his Pleasure Heb. 12. 9 10. Now a View of sin under Suffering makes men loath and abhorre themselves for it and to be ashamed of it And this is the first step towards our Purifying of our selves by any Wayes appointed for it Self-pleasing in Sin is the highest Degree of our Pollution and when we loath our selves for it we are put into the Way at least of seeking after a Remedy 2 Afflictions take off the Beauty and Allurements of all Created Good Things and their Comforts by which the Affections are solicited to commit Folly and Lewdness with them that is to embrace and cleave unto them inordinately whence many Defilements do enensue Gal. 6. 14. This God designs them for even to wither all the Flowrings of this World in the Minds of men by discovering their Emptiness Vanity and Insufficiency to give Relief This intercepts the disorderly entercourse which is apt to be between them and our Affections whereby our Minds are polluted For there is a Pollution attending the least inordinate Actings of our Mind and Affections towards Objects either in their own nature sinfull or such as may be rendred so by an Excess in us towards them whilest we are under the Command of Loving the Lord our God with all our Minds Souls and strength and that alwayes 3 Afflictions take off the Edge and put a Deadness on those Affections whereby the Corrupt Lusts of the Mind and Flesh which are the Spring and Cause of all our Defilements do act themselves They curb those Vigorous and Brisk Affections which were alwayes ready press'd for the service of Lust and which sometimes carry the Soul into the pursuit of sin like the Horse into the Battail with Madness and Fury They are no more such prepared Channels for the Fomes of Concupiscence to empty it self into the Conversation nor such Vehicles for the spirits of Corrupted Lusts and Inclinations God I say by Afflictions brings a kind of Death unto the World and the Pleasures of it upon the Desires and Affections of the Soul which render them unserviceable unto the Remainder of Defiling Lusts and Corruptions This in some indeed endures but for a season as when in Sickness Wants Fears Distresses Losses Sorrowes there is a great appearance of Mortification when yet the strength of sin and the Vigour of Carnal Affections do speedily revive upon the least outward Relief But with Believers it is not so but by all their Chastisements they are really more and more delivered from the Pollutions of Sin and made Partakers of Gods Holiness 2 Cor. 4. 16 17. 4 God doth by them excite stir up and draw forth all the Graces of the Spirit into a constant Diligent and Vigorous Exercise and therein the Work of cleansing the Soul from the Pollution of sin is carried on A time of Affliction is the Especial season for the peculiar Exercise of all Grace For the Soul can then no otherwise support or relieve it self For it is cut short or taken off from other Comforts and Reliefs every sweet thing being made bitter unto it It must therefore live not only by Faith and Love and Delight in God but in some sence upon them For if in their Exercise Supportment and Comfort be not obtained we can have none Therefore doth such a Soul find it necessary to be constantly abounding in the Exercise of Grace that it may in any measure be able to support it self under its Troubles or Sufferings Again there is no other Way whereby a Man may have a sanctified Use of Afflictions or a good Issue out of them but by the assiduous Exercise of Grace This God calls for this he designs and without it Afflictions have no other End but to make men Miserable and they will either have no Deliverance from them or such a one as shall tend to their farther Misery and Ruine And so have we taken a View of the First Part of our Sanctification and Holiness which I have the more largely insisted on because the Consideration of it is utterly neglected by them who frame us an Holiness to consist only in the Practice of Moral Vertue And I do not know but what hath been delivered may be looked on as Fanatical and Enthusiastical Yet is there no other Reason why it should be so but only because it is taken from the Scripture Neither doth that so much insist on any Consideration of Sin and Sanctification as this of the Pollution of the one and the Purifying of it by the other And to whom the Wisdom and Words of the Holy Ghost are displeasing we cannot in these things give any satisfaction And yet I could easily demonstrate that they were well known to the Ancient Writers of the Church and for the substance of them were discerned and discussed by the Schoolmen in their Manner But where men hate the Practice of Holiness it is to no Purpose to teach them the Nature of it Sect. 10 But we may not pass over these things without some Reflections upon our selves and some Consideration of our Concernment in them And First Hence we may take a View of our own State and Condition by Nature It is usefull for us all to be looking back into it and it is necessary for them who are under it to be fully acquainted with it Therein are we wholly defiled polluted and every way unclean There is a Spiritual Leprosie spread all over our Natures which renders us loathsom to God and puts us in a state of separation from him They who were Legally unclean were separated from the Congregation and therein all the Pledges of Gods Gracious Presence Numb 5. 2. It is so Virtually with all them who are spiritually defiled under that Pollution which is Natural and Universal they are abhorred of God and separated from him which was signified thereby And the Reason why so many Laws with so great severity and exactness were given about the Cleansing of a Leprous person and the Judgement to be made thereon was only to declare the Certainty of the Judgement of God that no unclean person should approach unto him Thus is it with all by Nature and whatever they do of themselves to be quit of it it doth but hide and not cleanse it Adam cured neither his Nakedness nor the shame of it by his Fig-leaves Some have no other Covering of their Natural Filth but outward Ornaments of the Flesh which encrease it and indeed rather proclaim it than hide it The Greatest Filth in the World is covered with the greatest Bravery See Isa. 3. 16. 17.
Ray of Supernatural Light The Light of a Natural Conscience will convince Men of and reprove them for actual sins as to their Guilt Rom. 2. 14 15. But the meer Light of Nature is dark and confused about its own Confusion Some of the Old Philosophers discerned in general that our Nature was disordered and complained thereof But as the Principal Reason of their Complaints was because it would not throughout serve the Ends of their Ambition so of the Causes and Nature of it with respect unto God and our Eternal Condition they knew nothing of it at all Nor is it discerned but by a Supernatural Light proceeding immediately from the Spirit of God If any therefore have an Heart or Wisdom to know their own Pollution by sin without which they know nothing of themselves unto any Purpose let them pray for that Directing Light of the Spirit of God without which they can never attain to any usefull Knowledge of it 2. Those who would indeed be purged from the Pollution of Sin must endeavour to be affected with it suitably to the Discovery which they have made of it And as the proper Effect of the Guilt of sin is Fear so the proper Effect of the Filth of sin is Shame No man who hath read the Scriptures can be ignorant how frequently God calls on men to be ashamed and confounded in themselves for the Pollutions and Uncleannesses of their sin So is it expressed in Answer unto what he requires O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift up my face to thee my God because of our Iniquities Ezra 9. 6. And by another Prophet We lye down in our shame and our Confusion covereth us for we have sinned against the Lord our God Jerem. 3. 25. And many other such Expressions are there of this Affection of the Mind with respect unto the Pollution of sin But we must observe that there is a Two-fold shame with respect unto it 1 That which is Legal or the product of a meer Legal Conviction of Sin Such was that in Adam immediately after his Fall And such is that which God so frequently calls open and profligate sinners unto A shame accompanyed with Dread and Terrour and from which the sinner hath no Relief unless in such sorry Evasions as our First Parents made use of And 2 There is a shame which is Evangelical arising from a mixed Apprehension of the Vileness of sin and the Riches of Gods Grace in the Pardon and Purifying of it For although this latter gives Relief against all terrifying discouraging Effects of shame yet it encreaseth those which tend to genuine self-Abasement and Abhorrency And this God still requires to abide in us as that which tends to the Advancement of his Grace in our Hearts This is fully Expressed by the Prophet Ezek. 16. 60 61 62 63. I will remember my Covenant with thee in the Dayes of thy Youth and I will establish unto thee an Everlasting Covenant then shalt thou remember thy Wayes and be ashamed and I will establish my Covenant with thee and thou shalt know that I am the Lord that thou mayest remember and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou hast done saith the Lord God There is a shame and Confusion or face for sin that is a Consequent yea an Effect of Gods renewing his Covenant and thereby giving in the full Pardon of sin as being pacified And the Apostle asks the Romans what Fruit they had in those things whereof they were now ashamed Chap. 6. 21. Now after the Pardon of them they were yet ashamed from the Consideration of their Filth and Vileness But it is shame in the First sence that I here intend as antecedent unto the First Purification of our Natures This may be thought to be in all men but it is plainly otherwise and men are not at all ashamed of their Sins which they manifest in Various Degrees For Sect. 12 1 Many are senceless and stupid no Instruction nothing that befalls them will fix any real shame upon them Of some particular Facts they may be ashamed but for any thing in their Natures they slight and despise it If they can but preserve themselves from the known Guilt of such sins as are punishable amongst Men as to all other things they are secure This is the Condition of the Generality of men living in sin in this World They have no inward shame for any thing between God and their Souls especially not for the Pravity and Defilement of their Natures no although they hear the Doctrine of it never so frequently What may outwardly befall them that is shamefull they are concerned in but for their Internal Pollutions between God and their Souls they know none 2 Some have a Boldness and Confidence in their Condition as that which is well and pure enough There is a Generation that is pure in their own Eyes yet are they not washed from their Filthiness Prov. 30. 12. Although they were never sprinkled with the pure Water of the Covenant or cleansed by the Holy Spirit although their Consciences were never purged from dead Works by the Blood of Christ nor their Hearts purified by Faith and so are no Way washed from their Filthiness yet do they please themselves in their Condition as pure in their own Eyes and have not the least sence of any Defilement Such a Generation were the Pharisees of Old who esteemed themselves as clean as their Hands and Cups that they were continually washing though within they were filled with all manner of Defilements Isa. 65. 4 5. And this Generation is such as indeed despise all that is spoken about the Pollution of Sin and its Purification and deride it as Enthusiastical or a fulsome Metaphor not to be understood 3 Others proceed farther and are so far from taking shame to themselves for what they are or what they doe as that they openly Boast of and Glory in the most shamefull sins that Humane Nature can contract the Guilt of They proclaim their Sins saith the Prophet like Sodom where all the People consented together in the Perpetration of Unnatural Lusts. They are not at all ashamed but Glory in the things which because they do not here will hereafter fill them with Confusion of Face Jerem. 6. 15. Chap. 8. 12. And where once Sin gets this Confidence wherein it compleats a Conquest over the Law the in-bred Light of Nature the Convictions of the Spirit and in a word God himself then is it ripe for Judgement And yet is there a higher Degree of shamelesness in sin For 4 Some content not themselves with Boasting in their own Sins but also they approve and delight in all those who give up themselves unto the like Out-rage in Sinning with themselves This the Apostle expresseth as the highest Degree of shameless sinning Rom. 1. 32. Who knowing the Judgement of God that they which Commit
and strengtheneth continually by effectual supplyes of Grace from Jesus Christ disposing enclining and enabling the whole Soul unto all Wayes Acts and Dutyes of Holiness whereby we live to God opposing resisting and finally conquering whatever is opposite and contrary thereunto This belongs Essentially unto Evangelical Holiness yea herein doth the Nature of it Formally and Radically consist This is that from whence Believers are denominated Holy and without which none are so or can be so called Sect. 36 Secondly The Properties of this Power are Readiness and Facility Wherever it is it renders the Soul ready unto all Dutyes of Holy Obedience and renders all Dutyes of holy Obedience easie unto the Soul 1. It gives Readiness by removing and taking away all those incumbrances which the Mind is apt to be clogged with and hindred by from Sin the World spiritual Sloth and Unbelief This is that which we are exhorted unto in a way of Duty Heb. 12. 1. Luke 12. 35. 1 Pet. 1. 13. chap. 4. 1. Ephes. 6. 14. Herein is the Spirit ready though the Flesh be weak Mark 14. 35. And those Incumbrances which give an unreadiness unto Obedience to God may be considered two wayes 1 As they are in their full power and efficacy in persons Unregenerate whence they are unto every good work reprobate Tit. 1. 13. Hence proceed all those prevalent Tergiversations against a Complyance with the Will of God and their own Convictions which bear sway in such persons Yet a little slumber a little sleep a little folding of the hands to sleep Prov. 6. 10. By these do men so often put off the Calls of God and perniciously procrastinate from time to time a full Complyance with their Convictions And whatever particular Dutyes such Persons do perform yet are their Hearts and Minds never prepared or ready for them but the incumbrances mentioned do influence them into spiritual Disorders in all that they doe 2 These Principles of Sloth and Vnreadiness do oft-times partially influence the Minds of Believers themselves unto great Indispositions unto spiritual Dutyes So the Spouse states her case Cantic 5. 2 3. By reason of her Circumstances in the World she had an unreadiness for that Converse and Communion with Christ which she was called unto And it is so not unfrequently with the Best of men in this World A spiritual unreadyness unto holy Dutyes arising from the Power of Sloth or the Occasions of Life is no small part of their sin and Trouble Both these are removed by this spiritual Power of the Principle of Life and Holiness in Believers The total prevailing Power of them such as is in persons unregenerate is broken by the first Infusion of it into the Soul wherein it gives an habitual fitness and Preparation of Heart unto all Dutyes of Obedience unto God And by various Degrees it freeth Believers from the Remainders of the Incumbrances which they have yet to conflict with and this it doth three wayes As 1 it weakeneth and taketh off the bent of the Soul from Earthly things so as they shall not possess the Mind as formerly Col. 3. 2. How it doth this was declared before and when this is done the Mind is greatly eased of its Burden and some way ready unto its Duty 2 It gives an insight into the Beauty the Excellency and Glory of Holiness and all Dutyes of Obedience This they see nothing of who being unsanctified are under the Power of their Natural Darkness They can see no Beauty in Holiness no form nor Comeliness why it should be desired and it is no wonder if they are unfree to the Dutyes of it which they are but as it were compelled unto But the spiritual Light wherewith this Principle of Grace is accompanyed discovers an Excellency in Holiness and the Dutyes of it and in the Communion with God which we have thereby so as greatly to encline the mind unto them and prepare it for them 3 It causeth the Affections to cleave and adhere unto them with Delight How doe I love thy Law saith David my delight is in thy Statutes they are sweeter unto me than the Honey-Comb Where these three things concurr that the Mind is freed from the powerfull Influences of carnal Lusts and Love of this World where the Beauty and Excellency of Holiness and the Dutyes of Obedience lye clear in the Eyes of the Soul and where the Affections cleave unto spiritual things as commanded then will be that Readiness in Obedience which we enquire after Sect. 37 2. It gives Facility or Easiness in the Performance of all Dutyes of Obedience Whatever men do from an Habit they doe with some kind of Easiness That is easie to them which they are accustomed unto though hard and difficult in its self And what is done from Nature is done with Facility And the Principle of Grace as we have shewed is a new Nature an infused Habit with respect unto the Life of God or all Dutyes of Holy Obedience I grant there will be Opposition unto them even in the Mind and Heart it self from sin and Sathan and Temptations of all sorts yea and they may sometimes arise so high as either to defeat our purposes and intentions unto Dutyes or to clogge us in them to take off our Chariot-wheels and to make us drive heavily But still it is in the Nature of the Principle of Holiness to make the whole Course of Obedience and all the Dutyes of it easie unto us and to give us a Facility in their Performance For 1 it introduceth a suitableness between our Minds and the Dutyes we are to perform By it is the Law written in our Hearts that is there is an Answerableness in them unto all that the Law of God requires In the state of Nature the great things of the Law of God are a strange thing unto us Hos. 8. 12. there is an enmity in our Minds against them Rom. 8. 7. There is no suitableness between our Minds and them But this is taken away by the Principle of Grace Thereby do the Mind and Duty answer one another as the Eye and a lightsome Body Hence the Commands of Christ are not grievous unto them in whom it is 1 Joh. 5. 3. They do not appear to contain any thing uncouth unreasonable burdensome or any way unsuited to that new Nature whereby the Soul is influenced and acted Hence all the Wayes of Wisdom are unto Believers as they are in themselves Pleasantness and all her paths are peace Prov. 3. 17. The great Notion of some in these dayes is about the suitableness of Christian Religion unto Reason And to make good their Assertion in the principal Mysteries of it because Reason will not come to them they bring them by violence unto their Reason But it is with respect unto this renewed Principle alone that there is a suitableness in any of the things of God unto our Minds and Affections 2 It keeps up the Heart or whole Person unto a frequency
Understanding That Grace which proceeds from especial Love will carry along an holy quickening sence of it and thereby be excited unto its due Exercise And we do what we can to famish and starve our Graces when we do not endeavour their Supplyes by Faith on that Spring of Divine Love from whence they proceed Sect. 48 3 Seeing we are chosen in Christ and predestinated to be like unto him those Graces of Holiness have the most evident and legible Characters of Electing Love upon them which are most Effectual in working us unto a Conformity to him That Grace is certainly from an Eternal Spring which makes us like unto Jesus Christ. Of this sort are Meekness Humility Patience Self-denyal Contempt of the World Readiness to pass by Wrongs to Forgive Enemies to Love and doe Good unto all which indeed are despised by the most and duely regarded but by few But I return Sect. 49 Secondly The especial procuring Cause of this Holiness is the Mediation of Christ. We are not in this Matter concerned in any thing let men call it what they please Vertue or Godliness or Holiness that hath not an especial Relation unto the Lord Christ and his Mediation Evangelical Holiness is purchased for us by him according to the Tenour of the Everlasting Covenant is promised unto us on his Account actually impetrated for us by his Intercession and communicated unto us by his Spirit And hereby we do not only cast off all the Moral Vertues of the Heathens from having the least concernment herein but all the Principles and Dutyes of Persons professing Christianity who are not really and actually implanted into Christ. For he it is who of God is made unto us Sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30. And this he is on several Accounts the Heads whereof may be called over Sect. 50 1 He is made unto us of God Sanctification with respect unto his sacerdotal Office because we are purified purged washed and cleansed from our Sins by his Blood in the Oblation of it and the Application of it unto our Souls as hath been at large declared Ephes. 5. 26 27. Tit. 2. 14. 1 Joh. 1. 7. Heb. 9. 14. All that we have Taught before concerning the Purification of our Minds and Consciences by the Blood of Christ is peculiar unto Gospel-Holiness and distinguisheth it Essentially from all Common Grace or Moral Vertues And they do but deceive themselves who rest in a Multitude of Duties it may be animated much with Zeal and set off with a Profession of the most rigid Mortification whose Hearts and Consciences are not thus purged by the Blood of Christ. Sect. 51 2 Because he prevails for the actual sanctification of our Natures in the Communication of Holiness unto us by his Intercession His Prayer Joh. 17. 17. is the blessed Spring of our Holiness Sanctifie them through thy Truth thy Word is Truth There is not any thing of this Grace wrought in us bestowed on us communicated unto us preserved in us but what is so in Answer unto and Complyance with the Intercession of Christ. From his Prayer for us is Holiness begun in us Sanctifie them saith he by thy Truth Thence is it kept alive and preserved in us I have saith he to Peter prayed for thee that thy Faith should not fail and through his Intercession are we saved to the uttermost Nothing belongs to this Holiness but what in the Actual Communication of it is a peculiar Fruit of Christs Intercession What is not so what men may be made partakers of upon any more general Account belongs not thereunto And if we really design Holiness or intend to be Holy it is our Duty constantly to improve the Intercession of Christ for the Encrease of it And this we may do by especial Applications to him for that Purpose So the Apostles prayed him to encrease their Faith Luke 17. 3. And we may do so for the Encrease of our Holiness But the Nature of this Application unto Christ for the Encrease of Holiness by vertue of his Intercession is duely to be considered We are not to pray unto him that he would intercede for us that we may be Sanctified For as he needs not our minding for the Discharge of his Office so he intercedes not Orally in Heaven at all and alwayes doth so Vertually by his Appearance in the Presence of God with the Vertue of his Oblation or Sacrifice But whereas the Lord Christ gives out no Supplyes of Grace unto us but what he receiveth from the Father for that End by vertue of his Intercession we apply our selves unto him under that Consideration namely as he who upon his Intercession with God for us hath all stores of Grace to give us supplyes from Sect. 52 3 He is so because the Rule and Measure of Holiness unto us the Instrument of working it in us is His Word and Doctrine which he taught the Church as the great Prophet of it The Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ. The in-bred dictates of the Light and Law of Nature in their greatest Purity are not the Rule or Measure of this Holiness much less are these Rules and Maxims which men deduce partly right and partly wrong from them of any such use Nor is the Written Law it self so It is the Rule of Original Holiness but not the adequate Rule of that Holiness whereunto we are restored by Christ. Neither are both these in Conjunction the Dictates of Nature and the Law written the Instrument of working Holiness in us But it is the Doctrine of the Gospel which is the Adequate Rule and immediate Instrument of it My meaning is That the Word the Gospel the Doctrine of Christ in the Preceptive part of it is so the Rule of all our Obedience and Holiness as that all which it requireth belongeth thereunto and nothing else but what it requireth doth so and the Formal Reason of our Holiness consists in Conformity thereunto under this Consideration that it is the Word and Doctrine of Christ. Nothing belongeth unto Holiness materially but what the Gospel requireth and nothing is so in us formally but what we doe because the Gospel requireth it And it is the Instrument of it because God maketh use of it alone as an external Means for the Communicating of it unto us or the Ingenerating of it in us Principles of Natural Light with the Guidances of an awakened Conscience do direct unto and exact the performance of many material Duties of Obedience The written Law requireth of us all Duties of Original Obedience and God doth use these things variously for the preparing of our Souls unto a right Receiving of the Gospel But there are some Graces some Duties belonging unto Evangelical Holiness which the Law knows nothing of Such are the Mortification of sin Godly Sorrow daily Cleansing of our Hearts and Minds not to mention the more sublime and spiritual Acts of Communion with God by Christ with all that
thence proceeding as have the Properties before described as to their Causes Rise Effects Use and Relation unto Christ and the Covenant as are expressely and plainly in the Scripture assigned unto Evangelical Holiness Is this Moral Vertue that which God hath predestinated or chosen us unto before the Foundation of the World Is it that which he worketh in us in the pursuit of Electing Love Is it that which gives us a new Heart with the Law of God written in it or is it a Principle of spiritual Life disposing enclining enabling us to live to God according to the Gospel produced in us by the effectual Operation of the Holy Ghost not educed out of the natural Powers of our own Souls by the mere Applications of external Means Is it that which is purchased and procured for us by Jesus Christ and the Encrease whereof in us he continueth to intercede for Is it the Image of God in us and doth our Conformity unto the Lord Christ consist therein If it be so if Moral Vertue answer all these Properties and Adjuncts of Holiness then the whole Contest in this matter is whether the Holy Spirit or these men be wisest and know best how to express the things of God Rationally and Significantly But if the Moral Vertue they speak of be inconcerned in these things if none of them belong unto it if it may and doth consist without it it will appear at length to be no more as to our Acceptance before God than what one of the greatest Morallists in the World complained that he found it when he was dying a mere empty Name But this fulsome Pelagian Figment of an Holiness or Evangelical Righteousness whose Principle should be Natural Reason and whose Rule is the Law of Nature as explained in the Scripture whose Use and End is Acceptation with God and Justification before him whereof those who plead for it the most of them seem to understand no more but outward Acts of Honesty nor do practise so much being absoluely opposite unto and destructive of the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ being the mere Doctrine of the Quakers by whom it is better and more intelligibly expressed than by some new Patrons of it amongst us will not in the Examination of it create any great Trouble unto such as look upon the Scripture to be a Revelation of the Mind of God in these things CHAP. VII Of the Acts and Duties of Holiness 1 Actual inherent Righteousness in Duties of Holiness and Obedience explained The Work of the Holy Spirit with respect thereunto 2 Distribution of the Positive Duties of Holiness 3 Internal Duties of Holiness 4 External Duties and their Difference 5 Effectual Operation of the Holy Spirit Necessary unto every Act of Holiness 6 Dependance on Providence with respect unto things Natural and on Grace with respect unto things Supernatural compared 8 Arguments to prove the Necessity of Actual Grace unto every Duty of Holiness 15 Contrary Designs and Expressions of the Scripture and some men about Duties of Holiness Sect. 1 THE Second Part of the Work of the Spirit of God in our Sanctification respects the Acts and Duties of Holy Obedience For what we have before treated of chiefly concerns the Principle of it as habitually resident in our Souls and that both as unto its first Infusion into us as also its Preservation and Increase in us But we are not indued with such a Principle or Power to Act it at our pleasure or as we see good but God moreover worketh in us to will and to doe of his own good pleasure And all these Acts and Duties of Holiness or Gospel Obedience are of two sorts or may be referred unto two Heads 1 Such as have the Will of God in Positive Commands for their Object which they respect in Duties internal and external wherein we do what God requireth 2 Such as respect Divine Prohibitions which consist in the Actings of Grace or Holiness in an Opposition unto or the Mortification of Sin And what is the Work of the Holy Spirit what is the Aid which he affords us in both these sorts of Duties must be declared Sect. 2 The Acts and Duties of the First sort respecting Positive Divine Commands fall under a double Distinction For 1. They are in their own Nature either Internal only Or 2. External also There may be internal Acts of Holiness that have no external Effects But no external Acts or Duties are any part of Holiness which are only so and no more for it is required thereunto that they be quickened and sanctified by internal Acting of Grace Two Persons may therefore at the same time perform the same Commanded Duties and in the same outward Manner yet may it be the Duty of Evangelical Holiness in the one and not in the other as it was with Cain and Abel with the other Apostles and Judas For if Faith and Love be not acted in either of them what they do is Duty but Equivocally properly it is not so Sect. 3 1. By the Duties of Holiness that are internal only I intend all Acts of Faith Love Trust Hope Fear Reverence Delight that have God for their immediate Object but go not forth nor exert themselves in any external Duties and in these doth our spiritual Life unto God principally consist For they are as the first Acts of Life which principally evidence the Strength or Decayes of it And from these we may take the best Measure of our spiritual Health and interest in Holiness For we may abound in outward Duties and yet our Hearts be very much alienated from the Life of God Yea sometimes men may endeavour to make up what is wanting with them by a multitude of outward Duties and so have a Name to live when they are dead wherein the true Nature of Hypocrisie and Superstition doth consist Isa. 1. 11 12 13 14 15. But when the internal Actings of Faith Fear Trust and Love abound and are constant in us they evidence a vigorous and healthy Condition of Soul Sect. 4 2. Duties that are external also are of two sorts or are distinguished with respect unto their Objects and End For 1 God himself is the Object and End of some of them as of Prayer and Prayses whether private or more solemn And of this nature are all those which are commonly called Duties of the first Table all such as belong unto the Sanctification of the Name of God in his Worship 2 Some respect Men of all sorts in their various Capacities and our various Relations unto them or have Men for their Object but God for their End And among these also I include those which principally regard our selves or our own Persons The whole of what we intend is summarily expressed by our Apostle Tit. 2. 12. Sect. 5 Concerning all these Acts and Duties whether internal only or external also whether their proper Object be God or selves or other Men so far as they are Acts of
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
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
of Applause Self-Righteousness or Superstition may make a great Appearance of Holiness But if the Principle of what they doe be onely the Commands of the Law they never tread one true step in the Paths of it Sect. 5 2 The End why these Commands require all the Duties of Holiness of us is that they may be our Righteousness before God or that we may be Justified thereby For Moses describeth the Righteousness which is of the Law that the Man which doth those things shall live by them Rom. 10. 5. that is it requires of us all Duties of Obedience unto this End that we may have Justification and Eternal Life by them But neither on this Account can any such Argument be taken as those we enquire into For the deeds of the Law no man can be justified If thou Lord shouldest mark Iniquities O Lord who shall stand Psal. 130. 3. So prayes David Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified Psal. 143. 2. Rom. 3. 20. Gal. 2. 16. And if none can attain the End of the Command as in this sense they cannot what Argument can we take from thence to prevail with them unto Obedience Whoever therefore presseth men unto Holiness meerly on the Commands of the Law and for the Ends of it doth but put them upon tormenting Disquietments and deceive their Souls However men are indispensibly obliged hereby and must Eternally perish for want of what the Law so requires who do not or will not by Faith comply with the only Remedy and Provision that God hath made in this Case And for this Reason are we necessitated to deny a Possibility of Salvation unto all to whom the Gospel is not preached as well as unto those by whom it is refused For they are left unto this Law whose Precepts they cannot answer and whose End they cannot attain Sect. 6 It is otherwise on both these Accounts with the Commands of God for Holiness under the New Covenant or in the Gospel For 1 Although God in them requireth universal Holiness of us yet he doth not do it in that strict and rigorous way as by the Law so as that if we fail in any thing either as to the Matter or Manner of its performance in the Substance of it or as to the Degrees of its Perfection that thereon both that and all we doe besides should be rejected But he doth it with a Contemperation of Grace and Mercy so as that if there be an universal sincerity in a Respect unto all his Commands he both pardoneth many sins and accepts of what we doe though it come short of Legal Perfection both on the Account of the Mediation of Christ. Yet this hindreth not but that the Law or Command of the Gospel doth still require universal Holiness of us and a Perfection therein which we are to do our utmost Endeavour to comply withall though we have a Relief provided in sincerity on the one hand and Mercy on the other For the Commands of the Gospel doe still declare what God approves and what he doth condemn which is no less than all Holiness on the one hand and all Sin on the other as exactly and extensively as under the Law For this the very Nature of God requireth and the Gospel is not the Ministry of Sin so as to give an Allowance or Indulgence unto the least although in it Pardon be provided for a multitude of sins by Jesus Christ. The Obligation on us unto Holiness is Equal as unto what it was under the Law though a Relief be provided where unavoidably we come short of it There is therefore nothing more certain than that there is no Relaxation given us as unto any Duty of Holiness by the Gospel nor any Indulgence unto the least sin But yet upon the Supposition of the Acceptance of Sincerity and a perfection of Parts instead of Degrees with the Mercy provided for our Failings and Sins there is an Argument to be taken from the Command of it unto an indispensible Necessity of Holiness including in it the highest Encouragement to endeavour after it For together with the Command there is also Grace administred enabling us unto that Obedience which God will accept Nothing therefore can avoid or evacuate the Power of this Command and Argument from it but a stubborn Contempt of God arising from the Love of Sin Sect. 7 2 The Commands of the Gospel do not require Holiness and the Duties of Righteousness of us to the same End as the Commands of the Law did namely that thereby we might be Justified in the sight of God For whereas God now accepts from us an Holiness short of that which the Law required if he did it still for the same End it would reflect Dishonour upon his own Righteousness and the Holiness of the Gospel For First if God can accept of a Righteousness unto Justification inferiour unto or short of what he required by the Law how great severity must it be thought in him to bind his Creatures unto such an exact Obedience and Righteousness at first as he could and might have dispensed withall If he doth accept of sincere Obedience now unto our Justification why did he not do so before but obliged Mankind unto absolute Perfection according to the Law for coming short wherein they all perished Or shall we say that God hath changed his Mind in this matter and that he doth not stand so much now on rigid and Perfect Obedience for our Justification as he did formerly Where then is the Glory of his Immutability of his Essential Holiness of the absolute Rectitude of his Nature and Will Sect. 8 Besides Secondly what shall become of the Honour and Holiness of the Gospel on this Supposition Must it not be looked on as a Doctrine less Holy than that of the Law For whereas the Law required absolute perfect sinless Holiness unto our Justification the Gospel admits of that to the same End on this Supposition which is every way imperfect and consistent with a multitude of Sins and Failings What can be spoken more to the Derogation of it Nay would not this indeed make Christ the Minister of Sin which our Apostle rejects with so much Detestation Gal. 2. 17. For to say that he hath merited that our imperfect Obedience attended with many and great sins for there is no man that liveth and sinneth not should be accepted unto our Justification instead of perfect and sinless Obedience required under the Law is plainly to make him the Minister of Sin or one that hath acquired some Liberty for sin beyond whatever the Law allowed And thus upon the whole matter both Christ and the Gospel in whom and whereby God unquestionably designed to declare the Holiness and Righteousness of his own Nature much more Gloriously than ever he had done any other way should be the great means to darken and obscure them For in and by them on this Supposition
God must be be thought and is declared to accept of a Righteousness unto our Justification unspeakably inferiour unto what he required before Sect. 9 It must be granted therefore that the End of Gospel Commands requiring the Obedience of Holiness in us is not that thereby or thereon we should be Justified God hath therein provided another Righteousness for that End which fully perfectly absolutely answers all that the Law requires and on some Considerations is far more Glorious than what the Law either did or could require And hereby hath he exalted more than ever the Honour of his own Holiness and Righteousness whereof the External Instrument is the Gospel which is also therefore most Holy Now this is no other but the Righteousness of Christ imputed unto us for he is the End of the Law for Righteousness unto them that do believe Rom. 10. 4. But God hath now appointed other Ends unto our Holiness and so unto his Command of it under the Gospel all of them consistent with the Nature of that Obedience which he will accept of us and such as we may attain through the Power of Grace and so all of them offering new Encouragements as well as Enforcements unto our Endeavours after it But because these Ends will be the Subject of most of our ensuing Arguments I shall not here insist upon them I shall only adde two things in General 1 That God hath no design for his own Glory in us or by us in this World or unto Eternity that there is no especial Communion that we can have with him by Jesus Christ nor any Capacity for us to enjoy him but Holiness is Necessary unto it as a Means unto its End 2 These present Ends of it under the Gospel are such as that God doth no less indispensibly require it of us now than he did when our Justification was proposed as the End of it They are such in brief as God upon the Account of them judgeth meet to command us to be Holy in all Manner of Holiness which what Obligation and Necessity it puts upon us so to be we are now to enquire Sect. 10 First The first thing considerable in the Command of God to this purpose is the Authority wherewith it is accompanyed It is indispensibly necessary that we should be Holy on the Account of the Authority of Gods Command Authority wherever it is just and exerted in a due and equal Manner carryeth along with it an Obligation unto Obedience Take this away and you fill the whole World with Disorder If the Authority of Parents Masters and Magistrates did not oblige Children Servants and Subjects unto Obedience the World could not abide one moment out of Hellish Confusion God himself maketh use of this Argument in general to convince men of the Necessity of Obedience A Son honoureth his Eather and a Servant his Master if I then be a Father where is mine Honour and if I be a Master where is my Fear saith the Lord of Hosts unto you Priests who despise my Name Mal. 1. 6. If in all particular Relations where there is any thing of Superiority which hath the least parcel of Authority accompanying of it Obedience is expected and exacted is it not due to me who have all Authority of all Soveraign Relations in me towards you And there are two things that enforce the Obligation from the Command on this Consideration Jus imperandi and Vis exequendi both comprized in that of the Apostle James ch 4. v. 12. There is one Law-giver who is able to save and to destroy 1. He who commands us to be Holy is our Sovereign Law-giver He that hath absolute Power to prescribe unto us what Lawes he pleaseth When Commands come from them who have Authority and yet are themselves also under Authority there may be some secret Abatement of the Power of the Command Men may think either to appeal from them or one way or other subduct themselves from under their Power But when the Power immediately commanding is Sovereign and absolute there is no room for Tergiversation The Command of God proceeds from the absolute Power of a Sovereign Legislator And where it is not complyed withall the whole Authority of God and therein God himself is despised So God in many places calleth sinning against his Commands the despising of him Numb 11. 20. 1 Sam. 2. 30. the despising of his Name Mal. 1. 6. the despising of his Commandement and that in his Saints themselves 2 Sam. 12. 10. Sect. 11 Being then under the Command of God to be holy not to Endeavour alwayes and in all things so to be is to despise God to reject his Sovereign Authority over us and to live in Defiance of him This state I suppose there are few who would be willing to be found in To be constant Despisers of God and Rebels against his Authority is a Charge that men are not ready to own and do suppose that those who are so indeed are in a very ill Condition But this and no better is the state of every one who is not holy who doth not follow after Holiness Yet so it is propose unto men the true Nature of Evangelical Holiness press them to the Duties wherein the Exercise of it doth consist convince them with Evidence as clear as the Light at Noon-day that such and such Sins such and such Courses wherein they live and walk are absolutely inconsistent with it and irreconcileable unto it yet for the most part it is but little they will heed you and less they will doe to answer your Exhortations Tell the same Persons that they are Rebels against God Despisers of him that they have utterly broken the Yoke and cast off his Authority and they will defie you and perhaps revile you But yet these things are inseperable God having given his Command unto men to be Holy declared his Sovereign Will and Pleasure therein if we are not so accordingly we are not one Jott better than the Persons described Here then in the first place we found the Necessity of Holiness on the Command of God The Authority wherewith it is accompanyed makes it Necessary Yea from hence if we endeavour not to thrive in it if we watch not diligently against every thing that is contrary unto it we are therein and so far Despisers of God and his Name as in the places before cited Sect. 12 This therefore evidenceth unto the Consciences of men that the Obligation unto Holiness is indispensible And it would do well if we alwayes carryed this formal Consideration of the Commandement in our Minds nothing would be more prevalent with us unto Watchfulness in Holiness as nothing doth more effectually render what we doe to be Obedience properly so called Forgetfulness hereof or not heeding it as we ought is the great Reason of our loose and careless Walking of our Defect in making a Progress in Grace and Holiness No man is safe a Moment whose Mind by any
Grace which will ascertain unto us our Eternal Election with our Effectual Vocation whereon we shall obtain an assured Joyfull Entrance into the Kingdom of Glory Sect. 24 3 This Administration of Grace and spiritual Strength is not equally Effectual at all Times There are Seasons wherein to Correct our Negligences in giving place to our Corruptions and Temptations or on other Grounds to discover unto us our own Frailty and Impotency with other Holy Ends of his own that God is pleased to withhold the powerfull Influences of his Grace and to leave us unto our selves In such Instances we shall assuredly come short of answering the Command for universal Holiness one way or other See Psal. 30. 6 7. But I speak of ordinary Cases and to prevent that slothfulness and Tergiversation unto this Duty of complying with all the Commands of God for Holiness which we are so obnoxious unto Sect. 25 4 We do not say That there is in the Covenant of Grace spiritual Strength administred so as that by Vertue thereof we should yield sinless and absolutely Perfect Obedience unto God or to render any one Duty so absolutely Perfect If any such there are or ever were who maintain such an Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ unto us as should render our own personal Obedience unnecessary they doe overthrow the Truth and Holiness of the Gospel And to say that we have such supplyes of Internal Strength as to render the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ unto our Justification Unnecessay is to overthrow the Grace of the Gospel and the New Covenant it self But this alone we say There is Grace administred by the Promises of the Gospel enabling us to Perform the Obedience of it in that Way and Manner as God will accept And herein there are various Degrees whereof we ought constantly to ayme at the most Compleat and so to be perfecting Holiness in the Fear of the Lord. And where we signally come short of the best Rules and Examples it is principally from our Neglect of those Supplyes of Grace which are tendred in the Promises Sect. 26 5 There is a Two-fold Gracious Power Necessary to render the Command for Holiness and Obedience thereunto easie and pleasant 1. That which is Habitually Resident in the Hearts and Souls of Believers whereby they are constantly enclined and disposed unto all Fruits of Holiness This the Scripture calls our Life a New Principle of Life without which we are dead in Trespasses and Sins Where this is not whatever Arguments you constrain and press men withall to be Holy you do as it were but offer violence unto them endeavouring to force them against the sixed Bent and Inclination of their Minds By them all you do but set up a Damme against a Stream of Waters which will not be Permanent nor turn the Course of the stream contrary to its natural Inclination Unto such the Cemmand for Holiness must needs be grievous and difficult But such a Disposition and Inclination or a Principle so inclining and disposing of us unto Duties of Holiness we have not in nor of our selves by Nature nor is it to be raised out of its Ruines For the carnal Mind which is in us all is Enmity against God which carrieth in it an Aversation unto every thing that is required of us in a way of Obedience as hath been proved at large And yet without this Habitual Principle we can never in a due Manner comply with any one Command of God that we should be Holy Want hereof is that which renders Obedience so grievous and Burdensome unto many They endure it for a Season and at length either violently or insensibly cast off its Yoke Light and Conviction have compelled them to take it on themselves and to attend unto the performance of those Duties which they dare not omit But having no Principle enabling or enclining them unto it all they doe though they do much and continue long therein is against the grain with them they find it difficult uneasie and wearisome Wherein they can be any Pretences countenance themselves in a Neglect of any part of it or Bribe their Consciences into a Complyance with what is contrary unto it they fail not to deliver themselves from their Burden And for the most part either insensibly by multiplyed Instances of the Neglect of Duties of Obedience or by some great Temptations before they leave the World they utterly leave all the Wayes of Holiness and Respect unto the Commands of God or if they continue any it is unto External Acts of Morality which pass with Approbation in the World the inward and spiritual part of Obedience they utterly Renounce The Reason hereof I say is because having no Principle within enabling them unto a Complyance with the Commands of God with Delight and Satisfaction they grow grievous and intolerable unto them So unto many on the same Ground the Worship of God is very burdensome unless it be borne for them by External Additions and Ornaments Sect. 27 2. There is an Actual Assistance of Effectual Grace required hereunto We are not put into that Condition by the Covenant as that we should be able to doe any thing of our selves without Actual Divine Assistance This were to set us free from our Dependance on God and to make us Gods unto our selves The Root still bears us and the Springs of our spiritual Life are in another And where both these are there the Command is Equal not onely in it self but unto us and Obedience unto it as easie as just Sect. 28 6 And both these sorts of Grace are Administred in the New Covenant suited unto the holy Obedience it requires 1. For the first it is that which God so frequently so expressely promiseth where he sayes that he will take away the Heart of Stone and give us an Heart of Flesh that he will write his Laws in our Hearts and put his Fear in our inward parts that we shall fear him and never depart from him that he will circumcise our Hearts to know and love him Which Promises and the Nature of the Grace contained in them I have before at large explained It is sufficient unto our present Purpose that in and by these Promises we are made partakers of the Divine Nature and are therein endowed with a constant Habitual Disposition and Inclination unto all Acts and Duties of Holiness For our Power followeth our Love and Inclinations as Impotency is a Consequent of their Deceit Sect. 29 And here we may stay a little to confirm our principal Assertion Upon the Supply of this Grace which gives both Strength for and a constant Inclination unto Holy Obedience the Command for it becomes equal and just meet and easie to be complyed withall For none can refuse a Complyance with it in any Instance but their so doing is contrary unto that Disposition and Inclination of the New Nature which God hath implanted in themselves So that in them to Sin
is a purging of Sin which consists in the Legal Expiation of it in making Attonement Heb. 1. 3. But the purging of a Sinner or of the Conscience is by Real Efficiency in Sanctification which is here declared to be one End of the Oblation of Christ. So where he is said to wash us from our Sins in his own Blood namely as shed and offered for us Rev. 1. 5. it is not only the Expiation of Guilt but the Purification of Filth that is intended Sect. 4 The Way and Manner how Holiness is Communicated unto us by vertue of the Death and Oblation of Christ I have shewed before at large and shall not therefore here again insist upon it I shall only observe that Holiness being one especial End for which Christ gave himself for us or Offered himself unto God for us without a Participation thereof it is impossible that we should have the least Evidence of an Interest in his Oblation as to any other End of it And as for those who are never made Holy Christ never dyed or Offered himself for them I cannot understand what Advantage it is unto Religion to affirm that the most of them for whom Christ dyed as a Priest or offered himself an Oblation to God shall have no Benefit thereby as to Grace or Glory and incomparably the most of them without any especial Fault of their own as never hearing of him Neither can I find in the Scripture a double Design of Christ in giving himself for Mankind towards some that they may be redeemed from all Iniquity and purified to be his peculiar Ones towards others that they may yet be left under the Guilt and Power of their Sins And it evacuates the force of the Motive unto the Necessity of Holiness from the Consideration of the Oblation of Christ where men are taught that Christ offered himself a Sacrifice for them who are never made Holy Wherefore I say no unholy person can have any certain Evidence that he hath an Interest in the Oblation of Christ seeing he gave himself to purifie them for whom he was Offered Sect. 5 The Intercession of Christ which is his second Sacerdotal Act hath also the same End and is Effectual to the same Purpose It is true he doth Intercede with God for the Pardon of Sin by vertue of his Oblation whence he is said to be our Advocate with God to comfort us in case of Surprizals by sin 1 John 1. 1 2. But this is not all he designeth therein He Intercedes also for Grace and supplyes of the Spirit that we may be made and kept Holy See John 17. 15 17. Sect. 6 Secondly As to the Prophetical Office of Christ the Church or Men alone are its immediate Object and of all the Acts and Duties of it He is therein Gods Legate and Ambassador his Apostle and Messenger unto us Whatever he doth as a Prophet he doth it with us and towards us in the Name of God And there are two Parts or Works of Christ in this Office relating onely to the Doctrine he taught 1 The Revelation of God in his Name and Love in the Mystery of his Grace and Goodness of Truth by his Promises that we may believe in him 2 The Revelation of God in his Will and Commands that we may obey him For the first wherein indeed his Prophetical Office was principally exercised see John 1. 18. Chap. 1. 2. John 17. 6. The Revelation of the Preceptive Will of God made by Jesus Christ may be considered two wayes 1. As he was peculiarly sent to the House of Israel the Minister of the Circumcision for the Truth of the Promises of God unto the Fathers Rom. 15. 8. 2 With respect unto the whole Church of all Ages 1 The first which took up much of his personal Ministry in the Flesh consisted in the Declarations Exposition and Vindication that he gave unto the Church of Divine Precepts for Obedience which had been given before God had from the Beginning and in especial Manner at the Promulgation of the Law on Sinai and the ensuing Expositions of it by the Prophets given Excellent Precepts for Holiness and Obedience But the People unto whom they were given being carnal they were not able to bear the spiritual Light and Sence of them which was therefore greatly Veyled under the Old Testament Not only the Promises but the Precepts also of the Law were then but obscurely apprehended Besides the Church being grown corrupted there were solemn Expositions of Gods Commands received amongst them whose sole Design was to accommodate them unto the Lusts and Sins of men or to exempt men if not totally yet in many Instances from an Obligation unto Obedience to them Our Blessed Saviour applyes himself in the Discharge of his Prophetical Office with respect unto the End of the Command which is our Holy Obedience unto both these in the Declaration of its Excellency and Efficacy Sect. 7 And first he declares the inward spiritual Nature of the Law with its respect unto the most secret Frames of our Hearts and Minds with the least Disorder or Irregularity of our Passions and Affections And then secondly he declares the true Sence of its Commands their Nature Signification and Extent vindicating them from all the corrupt and false Glosses which then passed current in the Church whereby there was an Abatement made of their Efficacy and an Indulgence granted unto the Lusts of Men. Thus they had by their Traditional Interpretation restrained the Sixth Commandment Thou shalt not Kill unto actual Murder and the Seventh Thou shalt not commit Adultery unto actual Vncleanness as some now would restrain the Second Commandment unto the Making of Images and Worshipping them excluding the primary Intent of the Precept restraining all Means and Manners of Worship unto Divine Institution How in his Doctrine he took off these Corruptions we may see Matth. 5. 21 22 27 28. Sect. 8 Thus he restored the Law to its pristine Crown as the Jews have a Tradition that it shall be done in the Dayes of the Messiah Herein did the Lord Christ place the Beginning of his Prophetical Office and Ministry Matth. 5. 6 7. He opened unveyled explained and vindicated the Preceptive part of the Will of God before Revealed to the End that by a Complyance therewith we should be Holy The full Revelation of the Mind and Will of God in the Perfection and Spirituality of the Command was reserved for Christ in the Discharge of his Office And he gave it unto us that we might have a perfect and compleat Rule of Holiness This therefore was the immediate End of this Work or Duty of the Office of Christ. And where we Answer it not we reject that great Prophet which God hath sent to which Excision is so severely threatned Sect. 9 2 The second part of this Office or the Discharge of it with respect unto the Church of all Ages which takes in the Ministry of the Apostles as
on their Conversation But that this is plainly and directly required in the Doctrine of Obedience taught by Jesus Christ as the great Prophet of the Church I have sufficiently proved in this whole Discourse 2 Very few of the Precepts of it are certain so as that we may take them for an undoubted and infallible Rule There are some general Commands I acknowledge so clear in the Light of Nature as that no question can be made but that what is required in them is our Duty to perform Such are they that God is to be loved that others are not to be injured that every ones Right is to be rendred unto him whereunto all Reasonable Creatures do assent at their first Proposal And where any are found to live in an open Neglect or seem to be Ignorant of them their Degeneracy into Beastiality is open and their Sentiments not at all to be regarded But goe a little further and you will find all the great Moralists at endless uncertain Disputes about the Nature of Vertue in general about the Offices and Duties of it about the Rule and Measures of their Practice In these Disputes did most of them consume their Lives without any great Endeavours to express their own Notions in their Conversations Sect. 14 And from the same Reason I suppose in part it is that our present Moralists seem to care for nothing but the Name Vertue it self is grown to be a strange and uncouth thing But what is commanded us by Jesus Christ there is no room for the least haesitation whether it be an infallible Rule for us to attend unto or no. Every Precept of his about the meanest Duty is equally certain and infallibly declarative of the Nature and Necessity of that Duty as those of the greatest and that have most Evidence from the Light of Nature If once it appears that Christ requires any thing of us by his Word that he hath taught us any thing as the Prophet of the Church there is no Doubt remains with us whether it be our Duty or no. 3 The whole Rule of Duties given by the most improved Light of Nature setting aside those that are purely Evangelical which some despise is obscure and partial There are sundry Moral Duties which I instanced in before which the Light of Nature as it remains in the lapsed depraved Condition of it never extended it self to the Discovery of And this Obscurity is evident from the Differences that are about its Precepts and Directions But now as the Revelation made by Christ and his Commands therein is Commensurate unto Universal Obedience and gives Bounds unto it so that there is no Duty of it but what he hath commanded and it is sufficient to discharge the most specious Pleas and Pretences of any thing to be a Duty towards God or Man by shewing that it is not required by him so his Commands and Directions are plain and evidently perspicuous I dare challenge the greatest and most Learned Moralists in the World to give an Instance of any one Duty of Morality confirmed by the Rules and Directions of the highest and most Contemplative Moralist that I will not shew and evince that it is more plainly and clearly required by the Lord Christ in the Gospel and pressed on us by far more effectual Motives than any they are acquainted withall It is therefore the highest Folly as well as Wickedness for Men to design plead or pretend the Learning Duties of Obedience from others rather than from Christ the Prophet of the Church Sect. 15 Secondly The Manner of Teaching as to Power and Efficacy is also considerable unto this End And concerning this also we may say Who teacheth like him There was that Eminency in his personal Ministry whilest he was on the Earth as filled all men with Admiration Hence it is said that he taught with Authority and not as the Scribes Matth. 7. 29. and another while they wondred at the Gracious words which he uttered Luke 4. 22. And the very Officers that were sent to apprehend him for Preaching came away astonished saying Never man spake like this Man John 7. 46. It is true it was not the Design of God that Multitudes of that hardned Generation should be Converted by his personal Ministry John 12. 38 39 40. as having another to fulfill in them by them and upon them yet it is evident from the Gospel that there was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Divine Power and Glory accompanying his Ministerial Instructions Yet this is not that which I intend but his continued and present Teaching of the Church by his Word and Spirit He gives that Power and Efficacy unto it as that by its Effects every day it demonstrates it self to be from God being accompanyed with the Evidence and Demonstration of a spiritual Power put forth in it This the Experiences Consciences and Lives of Multitudes bear witness unto continually They do and will to Eternity attest what Power his Word hath had to enlighten their Minds to subdue their Lusts to change and renew their Hearts to relieve and comfort them in their Temptations and Distresses with the like Effects of Grace and Power Sect. 16 What is in the Manner of Teaching by the greatest Moralist and what are the Effects of it Enticing Words Smoothness and Elegancy of Speech composed into Snares for the Affections and Delight unto the Fancy are the Grace Ornament and Life of the Way or Manner of their Teaching And hereof evanid Satisfaction temporary Resolutions for a kind of complyance with the things spoken with it may be some few perishing Endeavours after some Change of Life are the best Effects of all such Discourses And so easie and gentle is their Operation on the Minds of men that commonly they are delighted in by the most profligate and obstinate Sinners as is the Preaching of them who Act in the same spirit and from the same principles Thirdly Whereas the last thing Considerable in those whose Instructions we should choose to give up our selves unto is their Authority that must be left without further Plea to the Consciences of all men whether they have the highest Esteem of the Authority of Christ the Son of God or of those others whom they do admire and let them freely take their Choyce so they will ingenuously acknowledge what they doe Sect. 17 Whereas therefore the great End of the Prophetical Office of Christ in the Revelation he made of the Will of God in the Scriptures in his personal Ministry in the Dispensation of his Word and Spirit continued in the Church is our Holiness and Obedience unto God I could not but Remark upon the Atheisme Pride and Folly of those Modern Heathens who really or in pretence betake themselves to the Light of Nature and Philosophical Maxims for their Guidance and Direction rather than to him who is Designed of God to be the great Teacher of the Church I deny not but that in the Ancient Moralists there
Mistakes about Ability to comply with Gods Commands 544 20 Abuse of the best Duties Possible 398 13 Abuse of spiritual Gifts 1 1 Abuse of Eternal Love devilish 525 14 Acquaintance with the Pollution of Sin necessary 394 11 Every Gracious Act of the Will wrought by the Holy Spirit 470 10 Difference between the Act of the Spirit in forming the Humane Nature of Christ and the Act of the Son in assuming it 133 12 To be acted by the Spirit what it is 468 11 How the Holy Prophets were Acted by the Spirit 104 10 All Actings of the Person of the Son of God towards the Humane Nature voluntary 129 6 Actings of the Holy Spirit not ascribed unto him exclusively 130 9 Internal Actings of the blessed Trinity where one Person is the Object of the Love of another natural and necessary to the Being of God 45 5 External Actings of one Divine Person towards another of what sort 46 5 All Actions internal and external to be tryed by the Word 412 3 Internal Acts of the Holy Trinity how undivided 131 9 All Acts of Natural Life from God 465 6 No Vital Acts under the Power of Death Spiritual 246 21 Act of the Holy Ghost in forming the Body of Christ a Creating Act. 132 Two-fold Event of Mens falls into Actual Sins 291 292 7 8 Actual Sins how they spring from Original Sins 289 5 Actual supplyes of Grace necessary to the Mortification of Sin 486 23 Actual assistance of Grace necessary unto Obedience 548 27 Adam how he had the Spirit of God in the state of Innocency 76 14 Adam had many things revealed unto him 100 6 Adherence and Assimulation Effects of of Love 496 Adjuncts of Divine Inspiration 103 9 Admiration an effect of love 514 26 Administration of Grace not equal at all times 547 24 Advantage and Priviledge in the Participation of the Gifts of the Spirit 83 7 Advantage of the New Testament in our Access to God 155 2 Advantage of Duties vitiated in their Performance 249 28 Great Advantage of spiritual Experience 342 Affections wrought upon and excited by Convictions 200 18 Affections fixed by Grace on spiritual things 201 18 Affections when renewed work sensibly 353 Affections how depraved how sanctified 285 57 Affections the Means of Convictions 294 13 Afflictions how they purge away sin 391 9 Afflictions how sanctified and made usefull ibid. Various Aggravations of the Defilement of Sin 379 Aggravations of sin in them who have received a Principle of Grace 549 29 All personal Properties assigned unto the Holy Spirit in the Scripture 48 8 Alienation from the Life of God what it is 216 22 Alienation of the Minds of men from the Gospel on what Ground 233 54 Allusion unto Local Motion in sending of the Spirit whence taken 84 8 Angels Gods Host. 70 6 Ministry of Angels about the Body of Christ when dead 147 10 Anointing at the Inauguration of Governours what it signified 117 The Spirit of Antichrist what it is 41 17 An Anti-Spirit set up in Opposition to the Spirit of God 19 23 Apostasie of the Church in several Ages with respect unto the Persons of the Holy Trinity 24 27 Apostasie of Christian Churches in the Rejection of the Holy Spirit and his Work 25 27 Apostasie from beginnings of Conversion how brought on 300 24 Appellations or Titles of the Holy Spirit in the Scripture 34 9 Appearances of the Holy Spirit under visible Signs 52 15 Appearances of Persons in Divine Visions 108 14 All Apprehensions of Divine Operations to be tryed by the Rule of the Word 187 Apprehension of Eternal danger from the Law before Conversion 308 31 Application of the Blood of Christ for the Cleansing of Sin 371 1 Application to the Blood of Christ for the Cleansing of Sin and the Nature of it 387 388 389 s. 5. 400 405 Applications of the Death of Christ unto the subduing of Sin wherein it consists 494 495 36 Arguments in Prayer for the further Communications of the Spirit 359 4 Weak Arguments for Holiness prejudicial to it 498 2 Arguments to prove the Divine Personality of the Holy Ghost 47 48 c. 8 Articulate Voyces in Divine Revelations how formed 106 12 Internal Assistance of the Spirit of God necessary to every Act of Obedience 465 5 Assumption the only immediate Act of the Person of the Son towards the Humane Nature 129 4 Assurance accompanying Divine Revelations 104 10 Assurance of Success and final preservation an Encouragement to Duties of Holiness 529 21 Assurance of the End an Encouragement unto the use of the Means 530 23 Attonement or Satisfaction not required of Sinners 331 13 False Wayes of making Attonement the Ground of all Superstition ibid. Vain Attempts for the Mortification of Sin 478 8 Auricular Confession an Invention to accommodate the Inclinations of all Flesh 380 Authority in giving the Spirit respects his Gifts and Grace 81 4 Authority of God gives Efficacy to the Word 259 13 Authority of God to be alwayes considered in his Commands 537 10 Sense of the Authority of God to be carried into all our Occasions 542 17 B. Baalam how a Prophet and how a Sorcerer 110 17 Baptized into the Name of the Holy Spirit as into the Father and Son 51 14 Baptisme of Christ the time of his being anointed unto his Prophetical Office 139 140 5 Baptism is not Regeneration 179 15 All that are duely Baptized are not Regenerate 180 16 Baptism how it expresseth our Sanctification 371 2 Baptism washeth not away Sin virtute Operis operati 380 Beauty of the Soul in its Conformity unto God 376 5 Beginning and Ending of the Gift of Prophesie 100 6 Beginnings of Holiness small like seed 340 4 Beginning of Good from our selves a Pelagian Fiction 467 9 Believers alone receive the Spirit in what sense 82 5 Believers much unacquainted with the Nature of Holiness and their own interest therein 327 10 Believers the only Subject of Sanctification 356 6 Benefit and use of the Word Preached 341 5 Benignity and Charity the great Resemblances of God 515 28 Blasphemy of the Jewes against the Name of Jesus 3 3 Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost 64 29 Blindness of may about the Nature of Sin 479 11 The Blood of Christ how it cleanseth from sin 384 3 The Blood of Christ that purgeth sin is the Blood of his sacrifice 385 4 Blood in Sacrifice both Offered and Sprinkled 385 4 The Blood of Christs Sacrifice alwayes in the same condition as to Efficacy 386 Boasting and Despondency prevented by the same Means 345 6 Bodily strength given by the Spirit of God 118 24 Bodily Absence of Christ how supplyed by the Holy Spirit 161 6 Body of Christ formed of the substance of the Blessed Virgin Reasons thereof 132 The Body how depraved by Sin 366 The Body how sanctified 368 Bounty expressed in pouring forth the Spirit 87 13 The Spirit how called the Breath of Gods Mouth 39 13 How God Breathed into
whence voluntary and meritorious 146 9 Obligation unto Holiness no less under the Gospel than under the Law 535 6 All Obstacles removed by effectual Grace 270 30 Obstinacy and Stubbornness of the Heart by Nature 277 45 Obstructions of the Growth of Holiness 350 10 Occasions of spiritual decays in Grace 354 How Christ Offered himself to God through the Eternal Spirit 143 8 Office of Witness-bearing unto the Lord Christ discharged by the Holy Spirit 149 13 One singular Spirit of God declared in the Scripture 33 8 The Holy Spirit One dividing as he pleaseth to others 94 21 Operations of the Spirit called the Spirit by a Metonymy 33 8 Divine Operations of all sorts ascribed to the Holy Spirit 59 24 All Divine Operations ascribed unto God absolutely 68 1 Operations of the Holy Spirit on the Humane Nature of Christ of two sorts 128 2 Operations of the Holy Spirit on the Humane Nature of Christ notwithstanding its personal Vnion with the Son 129 3 Operations of the Holy Spirit in Conversion suited unto the Powers of our Souls 270 31 Two-fold Operation of Christ as Three in One 162 Opening of the Heavens what it signifies 52 15 Opinions in the Primitive Church falsly fathered on spiritual Revelations 15 19 Opposition to the Spirit of God and his Works with the Grounds of it 21 25 Pretences of Opposition unto the Spirit of God examined 21 25 Oppositions against the Church suppressed by the Spirit of God 78 16 No Opposition between Gods Commands and his Grace 167 Vniversal Opposition between Sin and Grace 477 7 Order of Divine Dispensations dependeth on the Order of the subsistence of the Divine Persons 39 14 Order of subsistence of the Holy Spirit in the Blessed Trinity 66 33 Order of Operation depending on the Order of Subsistence not the Order of Promination ibid. Outward Order in the Church of no use without the Presence and Work of the Spirit 158 4 Order in Subsistence gives Order in Operation 162 Order of the Mind in its first Creation 212 15 Order of the Gospel inverted by Prejudices 235 58 Order of Precedency in the Acts of Sanctification 410 1 Skill in the Original Text necessary to the Exposition of the Scripture 30 4 Original of all things in their several kinds 73 9 Original of the Spirits Acting in all his Works towards the Church 89 15 Where Original Sin is denyed Regeneration cannot be effected 186 24 Original Order of our Souls wherein it consisted 568 6 Outward Manner and wayes of Divine Revelations 106 11 P. Pains of Death how loosed towards Christ. 147 11 Vanity of Papal Inventions for the Purification of Sin 379 380 Partial departure of the Spirit from any 91 19 Partial Works deceitfull 369 Two Parts of the Life of God 423 16 Particular good End not sufficient to render a Duty Good or Holy 441 44 Peace with God preserved by Sanctification 323 3 How God sanctifieth us as the God of Peace ibid. Pelagius his Artifices 177 9 Doctrine of Pelagius 183 20 Pelagianism renewed 255 5 Pelagianisme reduced unto its Head 256 7 Difference between Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians 262 19 Pelagian Grace inconsistent with Prayer 265 24 Pelagius his Prayer 266 25 Pelagian Grace rejected 458 73 Pen-men of the Scripture whether all holy 111 18 Pen-men of the Scripture not left unto the use of their own Natural Abilities 114 20 Sinless Perfection not attainable in this Life 547 25 Persecution of Erring Persons vain and fruitless 19 20 23 Person of the Spirit and his Operations distinguished 33 8 Third Person in the Trinity whence called the Spirit 34 9 Person of the Father the Fountain of the Trinity 38 13 Some things not proper to a Person assigned to the Holy Ghost in what sence 48 9 The Person of the Holy Spirit not poured out but his Gifts and Graces 87 13 Every Divine Person Author of the same Work 68 1 The Person of Christ how the Fountain of all Grace 455 The whole Person of a Believer the subject of Sanctification 365 Divine Persons succeeded not to each other in their Operations 70 3 Manifestation of the distinction of Persons in the Divine Nature a great End in the Work of the New Creation 155 2 All Personal Properties assigned unto the Holy Spirit in the Scripture 48 8 Personal Vnion or the Subsistence of both the Natures of Christ in one Person the necessary Consequent of Assumption 129 5 Personality of the Holy Spirit from John 14. 15 16. 60 61 25 Perswasive Efficacy of the Word Preached 258 12 Perswasion conferres no Strength 262 21 Perswasions enable not men to convert themselves 266 25 Perswasions of Perfection ruinous to Holiness 355 Pharisaical Confidence 397 12 Wise Philosophers of Old the greatest Despisers of the Gospel 221 222 Physical Operations of Grace proved 269 29 Pleas for Balaam answered 111 112 19 Pleas of Pelagians 263 21 Vain Pleas for the Power of Free-will in Opposition to the Aids of the Spirit 471 15 Pleas for Holiness by unholy persons uncomely and dangerous 498 2 Pleas for Moral Vertue examined 506 15 Pollution or spiritual Defilement in Sin 372 3 Pollution of Sin that property of it whereby it is opposed to the Holiness of God 374 4 Habitual Pollution inconsistent with any Holiness 378 Pouring forth of the Spirit 86 11 Pouring forth of the Spirit alwayes respects the times of the Gospel 87 12 Power ascribed unto the Holy Spirit 58 22 Powers and Operations of Secondary Causes to be owned 77 15 Power of the Mind with respect unto spiritual things examined 216 23 Power in the Mind by Nature to discern spiritual things 221 30 Power of spiritual Darkness 227 43 Power of Darkness in the Devil 228 45 Powers and Duties of the Mind 236 60 Power unto Obedience in the State of Innocency 241 8 Power in Natural men beyond what they do or will use 245 20 Power in the Faculties of Nature as Corrupted 250 29 Power of the Word to prevail on the Souls of Men whereon it depends 258 13 Spiritual Power in the Habit of Holiness 432 31 Commands of the Covenant respect the Power administred in the Covenant 432 30 Spiritual Power wherein it consists 432 31 No Power in Believers unto Duties of Holy Obedience without assistance of the Spirit 465 c. Power administred by Christ enabling us to be Holy 502 8 No Power given by one Covenant to fulfill the Commands of the other 544 20 All power unto Obedience from Grace 546 22 Two-fold power necessary unto Obedience 547 26 Practice of Moral Vertue not Gospel Holiness 459 77 Pravity of Sin with respect unto the Holiness of God Two-fold 377 6 Praying for the Spirit prescribed as our Duty 123 124 5 Difference between the Prayers of Wicked men and of Believers 164 6 Prayers of the Church prove Effectual Grace 265 24 Prayers for Grace and Holiness of what Nature 348 349 9 Prayer for the Holy Spirit in what sence 357 2