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

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given unto them There is not a quickning a life-giving Power in a quality a created thing In the state of Nature besides gracious dispensations and habits in the Soule inclining it to that which is good and making it a sutable subject for spirituall Operations John 5. Eph. 2. 1 2. we want also a vitall Principle which should actuate the disposed subject unto answerable Operations this a quality cannot give He that carries on the worke of quickning doth also begin it Rom 8. 11. All Graces whatever Gal. 5. 22. as was said are the fruits of the Spirit and therefore in order of Nature are wrought in men consequentially to his being bestowed on them Now in the first bestowing of the Spirit we have Union with Christ the carrying on whereof consists in the farther manifestation and operations of the Indwelling Spirit which is called Communion To make this evident that our Union with Christ consists in this the same Spirit dwelling in him and us and that this is our Union let us take a view of it First from Scripturall Declarations of it and then Secondly from Scripture Illustrations of it both briefely being not my direct businesse in hand 1. First Peter tells us §. 9. that it is a participation of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. We are by the Promises made partakers of the Divine Nature that is it is promised to be given unto us which when we receive we are made partakers of by the Promises That this participation of the Divine Nature let it be interpreted how it will is the same upon the matter with our Union with Christ is not questioned that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be only a gracious habit quality or disposition of Soule in us I cannot easily receive that is somewhere called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 5. 17. the New Crea ure but no where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Divine Nature The pretended high and spirituall but indeed grosse and carnall conceits of some from hence destructive to the Nature of God and Man I shall not turne aside to consider What that is of the Divine Nature or wherein it doth consist that we are made partakers of by the Promises I shewed before That the Person of the Holy and Blessed Spirit is promised to us whence he is called the Holy Spirit of Promise Eph. 1. 13. hath been I say by sundry evidences manifested Upon the Accomplishment of that Promise he coming to dwell in us we are said in him by the Promises to be made partakers of the Divine Nature We are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have our Communion with it Our participation then of the Divine Nature being our Union with Christ consists in dwelling of the same Spirit in him and in us we receiving him by the Promise for that end 2. Christ tells us § 10. that this Union arises from the eating of his flesh and drinking of his bloud Ioh 6. 56. Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud dwelleth in me and I in him The mutuall Indwelling of Christ and his Saints is their Union this saith Christ is from their Eating my flesh and Drinking my bloud But how may this be done Many were offended when this saying was spoken neere and close trialls of sincerity drive hypocrites into Apostasy from his Christ takes away this scruple v 63. it is saith he the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing It is by the Indwelling of the quickning Spirit whereby we have a reall participation of Christ whereby he dwelleth in us and we in him So 3. He prayes for his Disciples Ioh. 17. 21. that they may be one §. 11. as the Father in him and he in the Father that they may be one in the Father and Sonne and v. 22. let them be one even as we are one And that yee may not think that it is only union with and among themselves that he presses for though indeed that which gives them Union with Christ gives them Union one with another also and that which constitutes them of the Body unites them to the Head there is one Body because there is one Spirit Eph. 4. 4. which even Lombard himselfe had some notion of in his Assertion that Charity which is in us is the person of the Holy Ghost from that place of the Apostle God is Love I say he farther manifests that it is Union with himselfe which he intends v. 23. I in them saith he and thou in mee This Union then with him our Saviour declares by or at least illustrates by resemblance unto his union with the Father Whether this be understood of the Union of the Divine Persons of Father and Sonne in the Blessed Trinity the Union I meane that they have with themselves in their distinct Personality and not their Unity of Essence or the Union which was between Father and Sonne as Incarnate it comes all to one as to the Declaration of that Union we have with him The Spirit is Vinculum Trinitatis the Bond of the Trinity as is commonly and not ineptly spoken proceeding from both the other Persons being the Love and Power of them both he gives that Union to the Trinity of Persons whose substratum and Ground is the inestimable unity of Essence wherein they are one Or if you take it for the Union of the Father with the Sonne Incarnate it is evident and beyond inquiry or dispute that as the Personall Union of the Divine Word and the Humane Nature was by the Assumption of that Nature into one Personall Substance with it selfe so the Person of the Father hath no other union with the Humane Nature of Christ immediatly and not by the Union of his own Nature thereunto in the Person of his Sonne but what consists in that Indwelling of his Spirit in all fulnesse in the Man Christ Jesus Now saith our Saviour this Union I desire they may have with mee by the dwelling of the same Spirit in me and them whereby I am in them and they in me as I am one with thee O Father 2. The Scripture sets forth this Union by many Illustrations §. 12. given unto it from the things of the neerest Union that are subject to our apprehension giving the very termes of the things so united unto Christ and his in their Union I shall name some few of them 1. That of Head and Members making up one Body §. 13. is often insisted on Christ is the Head of his Saints and they being many are Members of that one Body and of one another as the Apostle at large 1 Cor 12. 12. even as the Body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is Christ The body is one and the Saints are one Body yea one Christ that is mysticall They then are the Body what part is Christ He is the Head 1 Cor. 11. 3. the Head of every man
of sensuality impenitency and obduration you have in other places sufficiently explained your selfe to intend their falling under the power of Sinne. And is this asserted by us to be the tenor of Gods Promises to Believers Or is it not or do you not know that it is not so did ever any say that God preserveth men in believing under obduration impenitency that is under unbeliefe for no man can be obdurately impenitent but unbelievers doe not you know that we maintaine that the Grace faithfully engaged to be bestowed on them is given them to this end to preserve them from the power of sinne from obduration and impenitency and shall certainely be effectuall for that purpose Prima est haec ultio quòd se Judice nemo nocens absolvitur CAP. VI. 1. The former Argument confirmed by an induction of particular instances Ioh 1. 5. opened The concernment of all Believers in that Promise proved by the Apostle Heb 13. 5. The generall interest of all Believers in all the Promises of God cleared Objections answered How Old Testament Promises may be improved 2. The Promise insisted on relates principally to Spiritualls The strength of it to the end intended 3. 1 Sam. 12. 22. To whom the Promise there is given 4. The twofold use of this Promise Threats to wicked men of use to the Saints Promises to the Saints of use to wicked men Isa. 4. 2 3 4. Psal. 89. 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37. opened A condition of back-sliding supposed in Believers yet they not rejected Gods abididing with his Saints upon the account of his 1. Faithfulnesse 2. Loving-kindnesse 3. Covenant 4. Promise 5. Oath 5. The intendment of the words insisted on from 1 Sam 12. 22. Isa. 27. 2 3 4. Zeph. 3 17. illustrated The intendment of those words I will not forsake thee The reason of the Promise and means promised therein no cause in them to whom the Promise is made Ezek. 36. 31. Isa. 43. 22 23 24 25. opened also Isa. 57. 17. 6. The cause in God himselfe only The Name of God what it imports his Allsufficiency ingaged therein and his Goodnesse 7. The Rise and fountaine of all Gods Goodnesse to his peopl● in his own good pleasure The summe of our Argument frō this place of Scripture 8. Psl. 23. 4 5. opened the Psalmists use of assurance of Perseverante 9. Inferences from the last use 2 Tim 4. 18. opened all Believers in the same condition as to Perseverance with David and Paul 10. The Second inference from the place insisted on Assurance a motive to obedience and is the end that God intends to promote thereby 11. Psal 125. 12. explained Psal 37. 28. Deut 33. 3. 12. Inferences from that place of the Psalmist perpetuall preservation in the condition of Saints promised to Believers 13. Mr G. Objections and Exceptions to our Exposition and Argument from this place removed 14. Promises made originally to persons not Qualifications not the same Reason of Promises to the Church and of threatnings to sinners 15. Other objections removed 16. Isa. 54. 7 8 9. 17. The mind of the Lord in the Promises mentioned in that place opened 19. The exposition given on that place and Arguments from thence vindicated 20. Direction for the right improvement of Promises 20. Hos. 2. 19 20. opened 21. Of the generall designe of that Chapter the first part of the totall Rejection of the Church and Politicall state of the Jewes 23. The second of Promises to the remnant according to the election of Grace Of this foure particulars 1. Of Conversion v. 14 15. 2. Of obedience and forsaking all false worship 3. Of Peace and quietnesse v. 18. 4. Discovering the fountaine of all the mercies 24. Some objections removed to whom this Promise is made 25. The Promise farther opened the persons to whom it is made 26. v. 14. of that Chapter opened The wildernesse condition whereunto men are allured by the Gospell what it imports 1. Separation 2. Intanglement 27. Gods dealing with a soule in its wildernesse condition 28. Promises given to persons in that condition 29. The summe of the foregoing Promises The persons to whom they are made farther described 30. The nature of the maine Promise it selfe considered Of the maine Covenant between God and his Saints 31. The Properties of God engaged for the Accomplishment of this Promise 32 33 24. Mr G. Exposition of this place considered and confuted 35. Ioh. 10. 27 28 29. opened 30. Vindicated HAving cleared the Truth of the one §. 1. and Meaning of the other Proposition mentioned in the Argument last proposed I proceed to confirme the Latter by an induction of particular Promises The first that I shall fixe upon is that of Ioshuah 1. 5. I will be with thee I will not faile thee nor forsake thee This Promise it is true in this originall Copy of it is a grant to one single person entring upon a peculiar employment but the Holy Ghost hath eminently taught the Saints of God to plead and improve it in all Generations for their own Advantage and that not only upon the account of the generall rule 2 Cor. 1. 10. of the establishment of all Promises in Jesus Christ to the glory of God by us but also by the application which himselfe makes of it unto them and all their occasions wherein they stand in need of the Faithfulnesse of God therein Heb 13. 5. Let your conversation be without Covetousnesse and be content with such things as you have for he hath said I will never leave thee nor forsake thee The Apostle layeth downe an Exhortation in the beginning of the verse against the inordinate desire of the things of this World that are laboured after upon the account of this present life To give power and efficacy to his Exhortation he manifesteth all such desires to be altogether needlesse upon consideration of his Allsufficiency who hath promised never to forsake them which he manifests by an instance in this Promise given to Ioshuah giving us withall a Rule for the Application of all the Promises of the Old Testament which were made to the Church and People of God Some labour much to rob Believers of the consolation intended them in the Evangelicall Promises of the Old Testament though made in generall to the Church upon this account that they were made to the Jewes and being to them peculiar their concernment now lyeth not in them If this plea might be admitted I know not any one Promise that would more evidently fall under the power of it then this we have now in consideration It was made to a peculiar person and that upon a peculiar occasion made to a Generall or Captaine of Armies with respect to the great Warres he had to undertake upon the speciall command of God May not a poore hungry Believer say what is this to mee I am not a Generall of an Army have no Warres to make upon Gods command the vertue doubtlesse
them to dwell in them personally for the Accomplishment of all the ends and purposes of his Oeconomie towards them to make them meet for and to bring them unto the inheritance of the Saints in Light Personally I say in our Persons not by Assumption of our Natures giving us mysticall union with Christ not Personall Union with himselfe that is not one Personality with him which is impious and blasphemous to imagine by a Gracious inhabitation distinct from his Essentiall filling all things and his energeticall operation of all things as he will as shall afterwards be declared Now this being a Doctrine of pure Revelation our Demonstrations of it must be meerely Scriptuall and such as will instantly appeare we have provided in great plenty In the carrying on then of this undertaking I shall do these two things 1. Produce some of those many Texts of Scripture which are pregnant of this Truth 2. Shew what great things do issue from thence and are affirmed in reference thereunto being inferences of a supposall thereof all conducing to the preservation of Believers in the Love and Favour of God unto the end For the first I shall referre them to 4. heads unto 1. Promises that he should so dwell in us 2. Positive Affirmations that he doth so 3. Those Texts that hold out his being distinguished from all his Graces and Guifts in his so doing 4. Those that ascribe a Personality to him in his indwelling in us Of each sort one or two places may suffice 1. The indwelling of the Spirit is the great and solemne Promise of the Covenant of Grace The manner of it we shall afterwards evince Ezek. 36. 27. I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my wayes In the verse foregoing he tels them He will give them a new heart and a new Spirit which because it may be interpreted of a renewed frame of Spirit though it rather seemes to be the renewing Spirit that is intended as also Cap. 11. 19. he expressly points out and differences the Spirit he will give them from all workes of Grace whatsoever in that Appellation of him my Spirit my Holy Spirit Him will I put with in you I will give him or place him in interiori vestro in your inmost part in your heart or in visceribus vestris in your bowels as the Soule is frequently signifyed by expressions of sensuall things within you In his giving us a new heart new Spirit by putting in us his Spirit certainly more is intended then a meere working of Gracious qualities in our Hearts by his Spirit which he may do yet be no more in us then in the greatest Blasphemers in the world And this in the carrying of it on to its accōplishment God calls his Covenant Isa. 59. 21. This is my Covenant with them saith the Lord my Spirit that is upon thee shall not depart from thee upon thee in thee that dwels in thee as was promised And this Promise is evidently renewed by the Lord Christ to his Disciples clearely also interpreting what that Spirit is which is mentioned in the Promise of the Covenant Luk. 11. 13. Your Heavenly Father will give the Holy Spirit to them that aske him of him that is that pray to him for the Holy Spirit Our Saviour instructs his Disciples to aske the Holy Spirit of God upon the account of his being so promised as Acts 2. 23. All our supplications are to be regulated by the Promise And surely he who as shall afterwards appeare did so plentifully Rom. 8. 27. and richly Promise the bestowing of this Spirit on all those that believe on him did not instruct them to aske for any inferion Mèrcy and Grace under that name That Spirit which the Lord Christ instructs us to aske of the Father is the Spirit which he hath promised to bestow so on us as that he shall dwell in us That the Spirit which Christ instructs us to aske for and which himselfe promiseth to send unto us is the Holy Ghost himselfe the Holy Spirit of Promise by whom wee are Sealed to the day of Redemption I suppose will require no labour to prove what is needfull to this end shall be afterward insisted on 2. Positive affirmations that he doth so dwell in § 2. and remaine with the Saints are the second ground of the Truth we assert I shall name one or two Testimonies of that kind Psal. 51. 11. saith David take not thy Holy Spirit from me It is the Spirit and his presence as unto Sanctification not in respect of Prophesy or any other gift whatever that he is treating of with God All the Graces of the Spirit being almost dead and buried in him he cries aloud that He whose they are and who alone is able to revive and quicken them may not be taken from him With him in him he was or he could not be taken from him And though the Gifts or Graces of the Spirit only may be intended where mention is made of giving or bestowing of him sometimes yet when the Saints begge of God that he would continue his Spirit with them though they have grieved him and provoked him that no more is intended but some Gift or Grace is not so cleare I know men possessed with prejudice against this Truth will think easily to evade these Testimonies by the Distinction of the Person and Graces of the Spirit Wherefore for the manner how he is with them with whom he is the Apostle informes us Rom 8. 9. yee are in the spirit that is spirituall men opposed to being in the flesh that is carnall unregenerate unreconciled and enemies to God if so be the spirit of Christ dwell in you and if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Not only the thing it selfe is asserted but the weight of our Regeneration and Acceptation with God through Jesus Christ is laid upon it If the Spirit dwell in us we are spirituall and belong to Christ otherwise not wee are none of his This the Apostle farther confirmes v. 11. if the spirit of him that raised up Jesus dwell in you I know not how the Person of the Holy Ghost can be more clearely decyphered then here he is The spirit of him that raised Jesus from the dead Why that is mentioned shall afterwards be considered And this Spirit as he bears Testimony of himselfe dwells in Believers which is all we say and without farther curious enquiry desire to rest therein Doubtlesse it were better for men to captivate their understandings to the obedience of Faith then to invent Distinctions and Evasions to escape the power of so many plaine Texts of Scripture and those litterally and properly not Figuratively and Metaphorically expressing the Truth contained in then which though it may be done sometimes yet is not in a constant uniforme tenure of expression any where the manner of the Holy Ghost The Apostle also affirmes farther v. 15.
that is every Believer is Christ He is the Head of the Church and the Saviour of the Body Ephes. 5. 23. he is the Head of the Body the Church Col 1. 19. This relation of Head and Members I say between Christ and his holds out the Union that is between them which consists in their being so As the Head and the Members make one Body so Christ and his Members make one mysticall Christ Whence then is it that the Head and Members have this their Union whereby they become one Body Wherein doth it consist Is it that from the Head the Members do receive their influences of life sence and guidance as the Saints do from Christ Eph. 4. 15 16. They grow up unto him in all things who is the Head from whom the whole body fitly framed together and compact by the which every joynt supplieth according to the effectuall working in the measure of every part groweth up to an holy increase So also Col 2. 19. holding the Head from whom the whole body by bands and joynts knit together increaseth with the increase of God But evidently this is their Communion whereunto Union is supposed Our Union with Christ cannot consist in the Communcation of any thing to us as Members from him the Head but it must be in that which constitutes him us in the Relation of Head and Members He is our Head antecedently in order of nature to any communication of Grace from him as a Head and yet not antecedently to our Union with him Herein then consists the Union of Head and Members that though they are many and have many Offices Places and dependencies there is but one living quickning soule in Head and Members If a man could be imagined so big and tall as that his feet should stand upon the Earth and his head reach the starry Heavens yet having but one soule he is still but one man As then one living soule makes the naturall Head Members to be one one body so one quickning Spirit dwelling in Christ and his members gives them their Union makes them one Christ one body This is cleare from the 1 Cor. 12. 12. As the first man Adam was made a living Soul so the last man Adam is made a quickning Spirit Secondly §. 14. Of Husband and Wife The Union that is between them sets out the Union betwixt Christ and his Saints There is not any one more frequent Illustration of it in the Scripture the Holy Ghost pursuing the allusion in all the most considerable Concernements of it and holding it out as the most solemne Representation of the Union that is between Christ and his Church Ephes. 5. 31 32. For this cause shall a man forsake his Father and Mother and cleave to his Wife and they two shall be one flesh This is a great mystery but I speake concerning Christ and the Church The transition is eminent from the Conjugall Relation that is between man and wife unto Christ and his Church What the Apostle had spoken of the one he would have understood of the other Wherein consists then the Union between man and wife which is chosen by God himselfe to represent the Union between Christ and his Church The Holy Ghost informes us Gen. 2. 24. They shall be no more twaine but one flesh This is their union they shall be no more twaine but in all mutuall care respect tendernesse and love one flesh The Rise of this you have v. 23. Because of the bone flesh of Adam was Eve his helper made Hence are they said to be one flesh Wherein then in answer to this is the Union between Christ and his Church The same Apostle tells us 1 Cor. 6. 16 17. He saith he that is joyned to an harlot is one flesh and he that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit as they are one flesh so these are one spirit and as they are one flesh because the one was made out of the other so these are one Spirit because the Spirit which is in Christ by dwelling in them makes them his Members which is their Union 3. Of a Tree §. 15. an Olive a Vine and its Boughs and Branches I am the Vine saith Christ yee are the Branches John 15. 5. Abide in me and I in you As Tree Branches they have an abiding Union one with another Wherein this consists the Apostle sets out under the example of an Olive and his Boughs Rom. 11. 16 17. It is in this that the Branches and Boughs being ingrafted into the Tree they partake of the very same juyce and fatnesse with the Root and Tree being nou●●shed thereby There is the same fructifying fatning virtue in the one as the other only with this difference in the Root and Tree it is originally in the Boughs by way of Communication And this also is chosen to set out the Union of Christ and his Both he and they are partakers of the same fruit-bearing Spirit He that dwells in them dwells in him also only it is in him as to them originally in them by Communication from him Take a Cyon a graft a plant fix it to the Tree with all the art you can and bind it on as close as possible yet t is not united to the Tree untill the Sappe that is in the Tree be communicated to it which communication states the Union Let a man be bound to Christ by all the bonds of profession imaginable yet unlesse the Sappe that is in him the Holy and Blessed Spirit be also communicated to him thereis no Union between them And this is the first thing that doth issue and depend upon the indwelling of the Spirit in Believers even Union with Christ which is a Demonstration of it a posteriori 2. The Spirit as indwelling gives us Life and Quickning God Quickens our mortall bodyes or us in them by his Spirit that dwells in us Rom. 8. 11. by which Spirit Christ also was raised from the dead and therefore the Apostle mentioning in another place the beginning and carrying on of Faith in us he saith it is wrought according to the exceeding greatnesse of the power of God which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Ephes. 1. 8. Now in this Quickning there are two things 1. The Actus primus or the Life it selfe bestowed 2. The Operations of that Life in them on whom it is bestowed For the first I shall not positively determine what it is nor wherein it doth consist This is cleare that by nature we are dead in trespasses and sinnes That in our Quickning we have a new Spirituall life communicated to us and that from Christ in whom it is treasured up for that purpose But what this Life is it doth not fully appeare whilst we are here below All actuall Graces confessedly flow from it and are distinct from it as the Operations of it I say in this sence they flow from it confessedly as suitable
made good will be of no use to M. Goodwin as to his present purpose The whole strength of this Argumentation is built on this supposall That the effectuall Grace of God in its working the will deed in Believers or the Spirits doing of it by Grace with Gods fore determination of events doth take away the Liberty of the will inducing into it a necessary manner of Operation determining it to one antecedently in order of time to its own determination of it selfe which is false nowise inferred frō the Doctrine under Consideration Yea as Gods Providentiall concurrence with men and determination of their wills to all their Actions as Actions is the Principle of all their naturall Liberty so his Gracious Concurrence with thē or operations in thē as unto Spirituall Effects working in thē to will is the Principle of all their true Spirituall Liberty when the Son makes us free then are we free indeed the Reward then is proposed to an understanding enlightned a will quickned made free by grace to stirre thē up to actions suitable to them who are in expectation of so bountifull a close of their Obedience which actions are yet wrought in them by the Spirit of God whose fruits they are and this to very good purpose in the hearts of all that know what it is to walke with God and to serve him in the midst of Temptations unlesse they are under the power of some such particular errour as turnes away their eyes from believing the Truth Secondly §. 11. The opposition here pretended between a Physicall necessitating and a Morall inducement for the producing of the same effect is in plain tearms intended between the Efficacy of Gods internall grace and the use of Externall exhortations and motives If God give an Internall Principle or Spirituall Habit fitting for inclining to spirituall actions and duties if he followes the work so begunne in us who yet of our selves can doe nothing nor are sufficient to think a good thought with continuall supplies of his Spirit and Grace working daily in us according to the exceeding greatnesse of his power the things that are well pleasing in his sight then though he worke upon us as Creatures endued with Reason Understandings Wills and Affections receiving glory from us according to the Nature he hath endued us withall all Exhortations and Incouragements to Obedience required at our hands are vaine and foolish Now because we think this to be the very Wisdome of God and the opposition made unto it to be a meere invention of Satan to magnify corrupted nature and decry all the Efficacy of the Grace of the new Covenant we must have something besides and beyond the naked Assertion of our Author to cause us once to believe it Thirdly The great Execution that is made by Morall inducements solely without any internally efficacious grace in the way of Gospell Obedience is often supposed but not once attempted to be put upon the proofe or Demonstration It shall then suffice to deny that any perswasions outward motives or inducements whatever are able of themselves to raise ingage and carry out the will unto Action so that any good spirituall Action should be brought forth on that account without the effectuall influence and Physicall operation of internall grace And M. Goodwin is left to prove it together with such other Assertions derogatory to the free Grace of God Dogmatically imposed upon his Reader in this Chapter whereof some have been already remarked and others may in due time The residue of this Section the 13 th spent to prove that Eternall Life is given as a Reward to Perseverance having already manifested the full consistency of the Proposition in a Gospell acceptation of the word Reward with whatever we teach of the Perseverance of the Saints I suppose my selfe inconcerned in And therefore passing by the triumphant conclusion of this Argument asserting an Absolute power in men to exhibite or decline from Obedience I shall goe on to that which in my apprehension is of more importance and will give occasion to a Disconrse I hope not unusefull or unprofitable to the Reader I shall therefore assigne it a peculiar place and Chapter to it selfe CAP. XV. 1. M G's fift Argument for the Apostasy of true Believers 2. The weight of this Argument taken from the sins of Believers The difference between the sins of Believers and unregenerate persons proposed to consideration 3. lames 1. 14. 15. The rise and progresse of Lust and Sinne. 4. The fountain of all sinne in all persons is Lust. Rom. 7. 7. 5. Observations clearing the difference between Begenerate and unregenerate persons in their sinning as to the common fountaine of all sinne The first 6. The second of the universality of Lust in the soule by nature 7. The Third in two inferences the first unregenerate men sinne with their whole consent 8. The Second inference concerning the raigne of sinne and raigning sinne 9. The Fourth concerning the universall possession of the Soule by renewing Grace 10. The fift that true Grace bears rule where ever it be 11. Inferences from the former considerations The first that in every regenerate person there are diverse principles of all Morall operations Rom 7. 19. 20. opened 12. The second that sinne cannot raigne in a Regenerate person 13. The third that Regenerate persons sinne not with their whole consent 14. Answer to the Argument at the entrance proposed Believers never sinne with their whole consent and willes 15. M. G's attempt to remove the Answer 16. His exceptions considered and removed Plurality of Wills in the same person in the Scripture sence of the opposition between flesh and spirit that no Regenerate person sinnes with his full consent proved 17. Of the Spirit and his Lustings in us 18. The Actings of the spirit in us free not suspended on any conditions in us 19. The same farther manifested 20. M. G's discourse of the first and second motions of the spirit considered 21. The same considerations farther carried on 22. Peter Martyrs Testimony considered 23. Rom. 7. 19. 20. considered 24. Difference between the opposition made to sin in persons Begenerate and that in persons unregenerate farther argued 25. Of the sence of Rom. 7. and in what sence Believers doe the works of the flesh 26. The close of these considerations 27. The Answer to the Argument at the entrance of the Chapter opened The Argument new formed the Major Proposition limited and granted and the Minor denied 28. The proofe of the Major considered Gal. 5. 21. Ephes. 5. 5. 6. 1 Cor 6. 9. 10. 29. Believers how concerned in comminations 30. Threatning proper to unbelievers for their sinnes 31. Farther objections proposed and removed 32. Of the progresse of Saints intempting to sinne 33. The effect of Lust in tem ptations 34. Difference between Regenerate and unregenerate persons as to the tempting of Lust 1. in respect of universality 2. of Power 35. Objections Answered 36. Whether
being the object of any ordinary thoughts or expressions Nothing not great not considerable not some way eminent is by any spoken of him either consencing with him or dissenting from him To interpose my Judgment in the crowd on the one side or the other I know neither warrant or suffcient cause We all stand or fall to our own masters And the fire will try all our workes This only I shall crave Liberty to say that whether from his own genius and acrimony of Spirit or from the provocations of others with whom he hath had to do many of his Polemical Treatises have been sprinkled with Satyrical Sarcasmes and contemptuous rebukes of the persons with whom he hath had to do So that were I not relieved in my thoughts by the consideration of those Exacerbations and exasperations of spirit which upon other accounts besides bare difference of opinion in religious things have fallen out in the dayes and seasons which have passed over us all of them labouring to exert something of themselves in every undertaking of the persons brought under their power I should have been ●●terly discouraged from any contests of this nature Much indeed of his irregularity in this kind I cannot but ascribe to that prompt facility he hath in putting abroad every passion of his mind and all his conceptions not only decently clothed with language of a full and choice significancy but also trim'd and adorn'd with all manner of signal improvements that may render it keen or pleasant according to his intendment or desire What the Latine Lyrick said of the Grecian Poet may be applyed to him Monte decurrens vel●t amnis imbres Quem super notas aluêre rìpas Fervet immensusque ruit profundo Pindarus ore And he is thereby plainly possessed of not a few advantages It is true that when the proof of his opinion by Argument and the orderly pursuit of it is incumbent on him a course of all other wherein ● soonest faileth the medium he useth and insisteth on receiveth not the least contribution of real strength from any dress of words and Expressions wherewith it is adorned and accompanied yet it cannot be denyed but that his Allegorical amplifications illustrations and exaggerations of the things he would insinuate take great impressions upon the minds of them who are in any measure intangled with the seeming probabilities which are painted over his Arguments by their sophistry and pretence of Tru●h The Apostle giving that Caution to the Collossians that they should take heed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manifesteth the prevalencie of false reasonings when in Conjunction with Rhetorical perswasions The great store also of words and expressions which for all occasions he hath lying by him are of no little use to him when being pressed with any Arguments or testimonies of Scripture and being not able to evade he is forc't to raise a cloud of them wherewith after he hath a while darkned the wisdome and Councel of that wherewith he hath to do he insensibly slipps out of the cord wherewith he appeared to have been detained and triumphes as in a perfect Conquest when only an unarticulate sound hath been given by his trumpet but the charge of his Adversaries not once received or repelled But not any where doth he more industriously hoist up and spread the sailes of his luxurient Eloquence then when he aimes to render the opinion of his adversaries to be monstrum ●orendum informe ingens cui lumen ademptum a dark dismal uncomfortable fruitless death-procuring doctrine such as it is marveilous that ever any poor soul should embrace or choose for a Companion or guide in it's pilgrimage towards heaven Rolling through this feild his expressions swell over all bounds and limits metaphors similitudes parables all help on the current though the streames of it being shallow and wide a little opposition easily turnes it for the most part aside a noise it makes indeed with a goodly shew and appearance Herculeâ non mole minor Agylleus Sed non ille rigor patriumque in corpore robur Luxuriant artus effusaque sanguins laxo Membra natant This as I said prompts I feare the learned person of whom we speak to deale so harshly with some of them with whom he hath to do And it is still feared that parata tollit cornua Qualis Lycambae spretus infido Gener Aut acer hostis Bupalo It might indeed be the more excusable if evident provocation were alwaies ready at hand to be charged with the blame of this procedure if he said only An si quis a●ro dente me petiverit Multus ut slebo puer But for a man to warme himselfe by casting about his own pen until it be so filled with indignation and scorne as to blur every page and almost every line is a course that will never promote the praise nor adorne the Truth of God For what remaines concerning him do illi ingenium do eloquentiam industriam fidem veritatem utinam colnisset The Course Condition of my procedure with him whether it be such as becometh Christian modesty and sobriety with an allowance of those ingredients of zeal in contending for the trut hwhich in such cases the Holy Ghost gives a command for is referred to the Judgment of all who are concerned and account themselves so in the things of God As to any bitterness of expression personal reflections by application of Satyrical invectives I know nothing by my selfe and yet I dare not account that I am hereby justified The calme and indifferent Reader not sensible of those commotions which the discovery of Sophistical evasions pressing of inconsequent consequences bold Assertions c will sometimes raise in the most candid and ingenuous mind may and especially if he be an observer of failings in that kind espie once and againe some signes and appearances of such exasperations as ought to have been allayed with a spirit of meekness before the thoughts that stirred them up had been turned out of doores in the expressions observed Although I am not conscious of the delivery of my selfe in any termes intimating a Captivitie under the power of such a snare for a moment yet what shall to the Christian Reader occurre of such a seeming tendency I humbly refer it to his judgment being content to suffer loss in any hay or stubble what ever that I may have layd upon the foundation of truth which I am sure is firmly fixed by God himselfe in the business in hand For what further concernes my manner of dealing in this Argument I have only a few things to mention Reverend Brethren and you will be discharged of the trouble of this prefatory address unto you The matter in hand I hope you will find attended and pursued without either Iocular or historical diversions which are judged meet by some to retaine the spirits and intice the minds of the Readers which are apt to faint and grow weary if alwaies bent to the
the multitude or the people were not such poore inconsiderable things as they are reported to be when he advises them to stop and stay the sedition by yeelding obedience to the things by them appointed and commanded If it were in it selfe evill disorderly and not according to the mind of Christ that the people should order and appoint things in the Church it had been simply evill for Clemens to have advised any to yeeld obedience unto things by them so appointed Where is now Ignatius his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Even those who are contending about Rule and Goverment in the Church are advised to stand to the determination of the people and to cry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is also insisted on by Blondellus who thence argues potestatem plebis Circa Sacra Disser 5. Cap. 8. Sect. 4. Ad verba haec saith our Doctor prodigii instar est quod notandum duxit Dav Blondellus potestatem Plebis Circa Sacra de quâ tandem integram dissertationem elucubravit artificiis quibuscunque asserturus Hic inquit nos monet Clemens fideles etiam de Episcopatu aut Presbyterio contendentes non ab Episcopi singulari 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nutu sed à multitudinis praeceptis pependisse But let not our Doctour be angry nor cry out so fast of Prodigies a little time will manifest that many things may not be prodigious which yet are contrary to sundry of his conceptions and Apprehensions I cannot but acknowledge him to be provoked but with all must say that I have found very commonly that reasons ushered in by such loud Clamours have in examination proved to have stood in need of some such noyses as might fright men from the consideration of them What is in the next Sections set up to sheild the Children of Episcopacy from being afrighted with this prodigy may perhaps be of more efficacy thereunto then the exclamations before mentioned He therefore proceedes Sect 5. Certè saith he si serio rem ageret Da● Blondellus de Presbyteris suis non de Episcopis nostris actum planè triumphatum erit nec enim ab universo aliquo Presbyterorum Collegie quod ille tam afflictim ardet sed a multitudinis solius Arbitrio tum contendentes de Episcopo tum fideles omnes Corinthios pependisse aequè concludendum erit If any man in the world hath manifested more desperate Affection towards Presbyterie then this Doctour hath done toward Episcopacy for my part solus habeto But though neither Clemens nor Blondellus speak any one word about the ordering of things multitudinis solius arbitrio yet here is that said by them both as is sufficiently destructive not only to the Episcopacy the Doctour contends for as a thing wholly inconsistent with the power and liberty here granted the people but of any such Presbyterie also as shall undertake the ordering and disposing of things in the Church of God without the consent and Concurrent suffrage of the People Such a Presbytery it seemes Blondellus does not defend But yet neither the Doctours Out-cry as at a Prodigy nor this retortion upon Presbytery is any answer to the testimony of Clemens nor indeed is there the least possible reflection upon an orderly Gospel Presbytery in any Church and Over it by what Clemens here professeth to be the power of the People all the appearance of any such things is from the terme Solius foysted into the discourse of Blondellus by the Doctour in his taking of it up to retortat Clemens in the very next words secures us from any thought that all things depended à multitudinis solius arbitrio His very next words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Doctours and Masters having stuft their imaginations with the shape and lineament of that Hierarchichal fabrick which the Craft Pollicy Subtilty Avarice Pride Ambition of many ages successively had formed and framed according to the Paterne they saw in the Mount of the World and the goverments therin upon the first hearing of a Church a flock of Christ walking in orderly subjection to their own Elders concurring with them and consenting to them in their Rule and Goverment instantly as men amazed cry out a Prodigy It is not imaginable into what ridiculous contemptible miscarriages pride prejudice and selfulness do often-times betray men otherwise of good abilities in their waies and very commendable Industry But Section the sixth the Doctour comes closer and gives his Reason why this Testimony of Clement is not of any efficacy to the purpose in hand saith He At quis sodes à fidelibus de Episcopatu ut vis contra ipsos ab Apostolis constitutos Episcopos contendentibus quis à populo contra principem suum tumultus ciente quis verbis ad retundendum seditionem ad plebem factis argumenta ad Authoritatem populo adjudicandum principi derogandum duci posse existimavit Though many words follow in the next Section yet this is all of Answer that is given to this signal Testimony of Clement's I know the Doctour for the most part meets not only with favorable Readers but also partial Admirers or else certainly his Exclamation would scarce pass for an invincible Argument nor such Rhetorical diversions as this be esteemed solid Answers There is not by Blondellus any Argument taken from the faithful's tumultuating against the Bishops that if appointed by the Apostles which is thrust in taken for the persons of those Bishops is against the express Testimony of Clemens in this Epistle nor from the peoples seditiously rebelling against their Prince nor from any word spoken to the People to represse their sedition neither was any thing of this nature urged in the least by Blondellus nor is there any colour given to such a collection from any thing in the words cited from the Epistle or the context of them It is the advise of the Church of Rome to the persons whether already in office or aspiring thereunto about whom the contention and division was in the Church of Corinth that is insisted on It is not the words nor plea of them who were in disorder there is not any reprehension given to the body of the Church the multitude or people who are supposed to tumultuate to quiet them but a direction given as was said by the Church of Rome to the persons that occasioned the difference how to behave themselves so that a timely issue might be put to the division of the Church To this end are they advised to observe the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the orders precepts decrees or appointments of the multitude as from Acts the fifteenth the body of the Church is called It is not that they should yeild to their tumultuating but to yeild obedience to their orderly precepts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are by him approved had it not been lawful for them with the Presbyters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Affaires of the Church Clemens writing
they runne themselves through Was this inded the case with David Solomon Peter and others who totally Apostatized from the Faith But if it be so if they are thus secure whence is it that it doth arise what are the Fountaines Springs and causes of this generall Security Is it from the weakenesse of the Opposition and slightnesse of all Meanes of diversion from walking with God to the End that they meet withall Or is it from the nature of that Faith which they have and Grace wherewith they are indued Or is it that God hath gracionsly undertaken to safegard them and to preserve them in their abiding with him that they shall not fall away Or is it that Christ intercedeth for them that their Faith faile not but be preserved and their Soules with it by the Power of God unto the End Or from what other Principle doth this Security of theirs arise From what Fountain do the streams of their Consolation Flow Where lye the Heads of this Nilus That it is not upon the first account I suppose cannot enter into the Imagination of any person who ever had the least experience of walking with God or doth so much as assent to the letter of the Scripture How are our Enemies there discribed as to their Number Nature Power Policy Subtility Malice Restlessenes and Advantages With what inimaginable and unexpressible variety of Meanes Temptations Baites Allurements Inticements Terrors Threats doe they fight against us Such so many are the enemies that oppose the Saints of God in their abiding with him so Great Effectual the Means weapons wherewith they fight against thē so unwearied and watchfull are they for the improovement of all Advantages Opportunityes for their ruine that upon the supposall of the Rejection of those Principles and those meanes of of their Preservation which we shall finde Mr Goodwin to attempt they will be found to be so farre from a state of no danger and litle probability of Falling or only under a remote Possibility of so doing that it will appeare utterly imposible for them to hold out and abide unto the end Had the choisest Saint of God with all the Grace that he hath received but one of the many Enemies and that the weakest of all them which oppose every Saint of God even the feeblest to deale withall separated from the Strength of those Principles and Supportments which M r Goodwin seeketh to cast downe let him lye under continuall exhortations to watchfulnesse close walking with God he may as easily move Mountaines with his finger or climbe to Heaven by a Ladder as stand before the strength of that one enemy Adam in Paradise had no Lust within to intice him no World under the Curse to seduce him yet at the first assault of Sathan who then had no part in him he fell quite out of Covenant with God Psal. 30. 6 7. I shall give one instance in one of the many enemies §. 35. that fight against the welfare of our soules and ex hoc uno we may guesse at the residue of its companions This is indwelling sinne whose power and policy strength and prevalency neerenesse and trechery the Scripture exceedingly setts out and the Saints daily feele I shall only poynt at some particulars First concerning its Neerenesse to us it is indeed in us and that not as a thing different from us but it cleaveth to all the faculties of our soules it is an Enemy borne with us Psal. 51. 5. bred up●with us carried about in our bosomes by nature Math. 5. 29 30. our familiar friend our guide and councellor deare to us as our right eye usefull as our right hand our wisdome strength c. The Apostle 7. Rom. 17 20. calleth it the sinne that dwelleth in us Iam. 3. 15. 6. it hath in us in the faculties of our soules its abode and station It doth not passe by and away but there it dwelles so as that it never goes from home is never out of the way when we have any thing to doe whence v 21. he calls it the evill that is present with him When we goe about any thing that is good or have opportunity for or temptation unto any thing that is evill it is never absent but is ready to pluck us back or to put us on according as it serves its ends it is such an Inmate that we can never be quit of its company and so intimate unto us that it puts forth it selfe in every acting of the ming will or any other faculty of the soule Though men would faine shake it off yet when they would doe good this evill will be present with them Then 2. Secondly Its Vniversality and compasse Act. 26. 18. 2 Cor. 6. 14. Ephes. 5. 8. Isa. 29. 18. 35. 5. 42. 7. It is not straightned in a corner of the soule 't is spread over the whole all the faculties affections and passions of it That which is a Ioh. 5. 6. Math. 6. 23. ch 11. 79. Luk. 11. 34 35 36. borne of the flesh is flesh t is all flesh and nothing but flesh it is Darknesse in the Vnderstanding keeping us at best that we know but in part and are still dull and slow of heart to believe naturally we are all Darknesse Rom. 2. 19. nothing but Darknesse and though the Lord shine into our mind to give us in some measure the knowledge of his Glory in the face of Jesus Christ Col. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 9. yet we are still very darke it is a hard work to bring in a little Light Luk. 4. 8. Eph. 4. 18. Revel 3. 17. upon the soule especially this is seen in particular practicall things though in Generall Math. 23. 16. we have very cleare light and eviction yet when we come to particular Acts of obedience Math. 4. 16. How often doth our light grow dimme and failes us causing us to judge amisse of that which is before us Ioh. 1. 5. 2 Cor. 4. 6. by the rising of that naturall darknesse which is in us It is perversenesse stubbornnesse obstinacy in the Will Luk. 4. 18. Ioh. 8. 34. that carries it with violence to disobedience and sinne It is sensuality upon the Affections Rom. 6. 16. bending them to the things of the World alienating them from God Rom. 7. 18. 8. 7 8. It is slipperinesse in the memory making us like leaking vessells lerem 6. 16. that the things that we heare of the Gospell doe suddainly slip out when as other things abide firme in the Cells and Chambers thereof Gen 6. 5. It is senselesnesse and errour in the Conscience lerem 13. 23. Heb. 2. 1. staving it off from the performance of that duty which in the Name and Authority of God it is to accomplish and in all these is dayly enticing and seducing the heart to Folly conceiving bringing forth sinne Iam. 1. 14 15. 3. Thirdly
with an arguing from inferences not only Questionable but Vnquestionably false yet if his second Demonstration will evince the matter under Debate he may be content to suffer losse in the Hay and Stubble of the first so that the Gold of the following Argument doe abide Now thus he proceedeth in these words And lastly this demonstrates the same thing yet farther If God should Justifie all without exception whom he Calleth and that against all barrs of wickednesse and unbeliefe possible to be layd in his way by those who are Called Then might ungodly and unbelieving Persons inherit the kingdome of God the Reason of the connexion is evident it being a knowne Truth that the Persons Justified are in a condition or present capacity of inheriting the kingdome of God Ans But Carbones pro Thesauro if it be possible this being of the same nature with that which went before is more weake and infirme as Illogicall and Sophisticall as it the whole strength of it lyes in a supposall that those who are so Called as here is intimated in the text called according to the Purpose of God called to answer the designe of God to make them like to Jesus Christ so called as to be hereupon Justified may yet lay such barrs of Wickednesse and Unbeliefe in their owne way when they are so Called as not to be Justified when that Calling of theirs consists in the effectuall removeall of all those barrs of Wickednesse and Vnbeleife which might hinder their free and Gracious Acceptation with God That is that they may be called Effectually and not Effectually A supposall hereof is the strength of that Consideration which yeilded Mr Goodwin this Demonstration His eminent way of Arguing here in will also be farther manifest if you shall consider that the very thing which he pretends to proove is that which he here useth for the medium to proove it not varied in the least Si Pergama dextra c. But Mr Goodwin fore-saw as it was easy for him to doe what would be excepted to this last Argument to wit that the Calling here mentioned effectually removes those barrs of Wickednesse and Vnbeliefe a supposall whereof is all the strength and vigour it hath And in that supposall there is a plaine assuming of the thing in Question and a bare contradiction to that which from the place we proove and confirme Wherefore he answereth sundry things 1. First that Judas Demas Simon Magus were all called and yet layd bars of Wickednesse and Vnbeliefe whereby their Justification was obstructed and to the reply that they were not so Called as those mentioned in the Text not Called according to Gods Purpose with that Calling which flowes from their Predestination to be conformed unto Christ with that Calling which is held out as an effectuall meane to accomplish the End of God in causing all things to worke together for their good and therefore that the strength of this Answer lyes in the interposition of his owne Hypothesis once more his renewed requests for a grant of the thing in question he proceeds to take away this Exception by sundry crosse Assertions and Interrogations Sect. 45. 1. It hath not been prooved saith he by any man nor I believe never will be S r we live not by your Faith that the Calling here spoken of imports any such Act or Worke of God whereby the called are irresistibly necessitated savingly to believe If it import no such thing as this what hinders but that the persons mentioned might have been Called by that very kind of Calling here spoken of It is known what Mr Goodwin ayms at in that Expression iresistibly necessitated savingly to believe we will not contend about words neither of the two first termes mentioned Ans. are either willingly used of us or can be properly used by any in reference to the worke of Conversion or Calling What we own in them relates as to the first terme irresistibly to the Grace of God Calling or Converting and in the latter necessitatingly to the Event of the Call it selfe If by irresistibly you intend the manner of operation of that effectuall Grace of God not which conquers in a reaction which properly may be termed so but which really and therfore certainely for unumquodque quod est dum est necessariò est produces its effect not by forcing the Will but being as intimate to it as it selfe making it willing c. we owne it And if by necessitating they understand only the event of things that is it is of necessity as to to the Event that they shall savingly Believe who are Effectually Called without the least straitning or necessitating their Wills in their Conversion which are still acted sutably to their native Liberty we close with that terme also and affirme that the Calling here mentioned imports such an Act of Gods Grace as whereby they who are Called are effectually and infallibly brought savingly to believe and so consequentially that the persons whose Wickednesse and Unbeliefe abides upon them were never Called with this Calling here contended about They who are not Predestinated a parte antè nor Glorified a parte pòst are not Partakers of this Calling I must adde that as yet I have not met with any proofe of Mr Goodwin's Interpretation nor any Exception against ours that is not resolved into the same principle of Craving the thing in question producing the thing to be prooved as its owne Demonstration And asserting the things prooved against him not to be so because they are not so From the designe and scope of the place the intendment of the Holy Ghost in it the meaning of the words the Relation and Respect wherein the Acts of God mentioned stand one to an other the disappointment of Gods Purpose Decree in case of any interruption of them or non-producing of the effects which lead the subjects of whom they are spoken from one to an other we prove the infallible efficacy of every Act of Gods Grace here mentioned as to their tendency unto the end aymed at these he that is called to believe may infallibly doe so But sayes Mr Goodwin this is otherwise Well let that passe He adds secondly Suppose it be granted that the Calling here spoken of is that kinde of Calling which is alwayes accompanied with a saving Answer of Faith yet neither doth this prove but that even such called ones may obstruct and prevent by Wickednesse and Vnbeliefe their finall Justification and consequently their Glorification If so then that Chaine of Divine Acts or Decrees here framed by the Apostle is not indissolveable in any such sence which imports an Infallibility and universall exertion or execution of the latter whensoever the former hath taken place In this Answer Mr Goodwin denies our conclusion to wit that the Chaine of Divine Acts of Grace in this place is indissolveable which that it is we make out and prove from the words of the Text the Context and scope of
as can well be expressed wherefore these being exceptions expressely against the scope of the whole It is objected 3. That it cannot be proved that this promise properly or directly intendeth the collation of Spirituall or heavenly good things unto them so as of Temporall yea the situation of it betwixt Temporall Promises immediately both behind and before it perswadeth the contrary Read the Context from v. 8. to the end of the Chapter Ans. The other forts being demolished this last is very faintly defended That it cannot be proved that it doth so properly or directly but if it doth intend spiritualls properly and directly though not so properly or directly the case is cleare And that it doth properly intend Spiritualls and but secondarily and indirectly Temporalls as to sundry limitations is most evident For 1. The very Conjugall Expression of the Love of God here used manifesteth it beyond all contradiction to be a Promise of the Covenant I will Betroth thee unto mee I will take thee unto mee in a Wedlock covenant What! in Temporall mercies Is that the tenor of the Covenant of God God forbid 2. The Foundations of these Mercies and the principles from whence they flow are Loving-kindnesses and Mercy and Fathfulnesse in God which are fixed upon them and engaged unto them whom he thus taketh into Covenant and surely they are Spirituall Mercies 3. The Mercies mentioned are such as never had a literall accomplishment to the Iewes in Temporalls nor can have and when things promised exceed all accomplishment as to the outward and temporall part it is the spirituall that is principally and mainely intended And such are these v. 18. I will breake the bow and the sword and the battell out of the earth and make you to lye downe in safety How I pray was this fulfilled towards them whilest they lived under the power of the Persian Graecian and Roman Empires to their utter desolation and v. 23. he telleth them that he will sowe them unto himselfe in the Earth and have mercy on them which as I said before Paul himselfe interpreteth and applieth to the speciall Mercies of Faith and Justification in the bloud of Christ So that both the verses going before and those that follow after to the consideration whereof we are sent containe directly and properly spirituall Mercies though expressed in words and termes of things of a temporall importance Thus notwithstanding any Exception to the contrary the Context is cleare as it was at first proposed Let us then in the next place consider the intendment of God in this Promise with that influence of Demonstration which it hath upon the Truth we are in the consideration of and then free the words from that corrupting Glosse which is endeavoured to be put upon them In the first I shall consider §. 25. 1. The Persons to whom this Promise is made 2. The Nature of the Promise it selfe 3. The great undertaking and engagement of the Properties of God for the accomplishment of his Promise 1. The Persons here intimated are such as are under the power and enjoyment of the Grace and kindnesse mentioned in v. 14 16 17 18. Now because a right understanding of the Grace of those Promises addeth much to the Apprehension of the Kindnesse of these particulars insisted on the opening of those words may be thought necessary 1. V. 14. they are those whom God allureth into the Wildernesse §. 26. and speaketh comfortably unto them He allureth and perswadeth them there is an allusion in the words to the great originall Promise of the conversion of the Gentiles and the way whereby it shall be done Gen 9. 27. God perswades Iaphet to dwell in the tents of Shem. Their alluring is by the powerfull and sweet perswasion of the Gospell which here is so termed to begin the Allegory of Betrothing and Marriage which is afterwards pursued It is God's beginning to Wooe the Soule by his Embassadors God perswadeth them into the Wildernesse perswadeth them but yet with mighty power as he carried them of old out of Aegypt for thereunto he evidently alludeth as in the next verse is more fully expressed Now the Wildernesse condition whereunto they are allured or perswaded by the Gospell comprizeth two things 1. Separation 2. Intanglement 1. Separation as the Israelites in the Wildernesse were separated from the residue of the World and the pleasures thereof the people dwelling alone being not reckoned with the Nations having nothing to doe with them So God separateth them to the love of the Gospell from their carnall contentments and all the satisfactions which before they received in their Lusts untill they say to them Get you hence what have we to doe with you any more They are separated from the practice of them and made willing to bid them everlastingly farewell They see their Aegyptian Lusts ●ye slaine or dead or at least dying by the crosse of Christ and desire to see them no more 2. Intanglement as the Israelites were in the Wildernesse they knew not what to doe nor which way to take one step but only as God went before them as he took them by the hand and taught them to goe God bringeth them into a lost condition they know not what to doe nor which way to take nor what course to pitch upon and yet in this Wildernesse state God doth commonly stirre up such gracious dispositions of soule in them as himselfe is exceedingly delighted withall hence he doth peculiarly call this time a Time of Love which he remembreth with much delight All the time of the Saints walking with him he taketh not greater delight in a soule when it cometh to its highest peace and fullest assurance then when it is seeking after him in its Wildernesse Intanglement So he expresseth it Ierem 2. 2. Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth the Love of thine Espousals when thou wentest after mee in the Wildernesse in a land that was not sowen And what he here affirmeth holds proportion therewithall The Time of their being in the Wildernesse was the Time of their Espousals and so it is here the Time of the Lords Betrothing the Soule to himselfe the Wooing words whereby he doth it being intimated in the next verse For 1. He speaketh comfortably to them §. 27. speaketh to their hearts good words that may satisfy their spirits and give them Rest and deliverance out of that condition What it is that God speaketh when he speaketh comfortably to the very hearts of poore soules he telleth you Isai 40. 1. Comfort you comfort you my People saith your God speake you comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned It is the pardon of iniquity that enwrappeth all the Consolation that a poore Wildernesse soule separated and intangled is capable of or doth desire And this is the first description of the Persons to whom this Promise is given They are such as
God hath humbled and pardoned such as he hath converted and justified whom hehath allured into the Wildernesse there spoken comfortably to them 2. Verse 15 §. 28. the Lord promiseth to this called and justified People plenty of Spirituall Gospell Mercies which he shaddoweth out with typicall Expressions of Temporall enjoyments and that with Allusion to their deliverance of old from Aegypt in three particulars 1. In generall He will give them Vineyards from thence that is from the Wildernesse as he did to them in Canaan when he brought them out of the Wildernesse This God often mindeth them of that he gave them Vineyards which they planted not Deut. 6. 11. And here setteth out the plenty of Gospell Grace which they never laboured for which he had provided for them under that notion He giveth them of the Wine of the Gospell his holy Spirit 2. In particular He compares his dealings with them to his dealings in the valley of Achor a most pleasant and fruitfull valley that was neere Jericho being the first the Israelites entred into when they came out of the Wildernesse which is mentioned as a fruitfull place Isa. 65. 10. And therefore this is said to be to them a doore of hope or an entrance into that which they hoped for it being the first fat fruitfull and fertile place that the Israelites came into in the Land of Canaan and so an entrance into the good land which they hoped for answering their Expectation to the uttermost In the Promise of the abundance of Spirituall Mercies Grace which God hath prepared for his here calleth into their minds the consideration of the refreshment which the Israelites after so long an abode in the wast and howling Wildernesse had and took in the fruitfull plenteous valley of Achor Such is the spirituall provision that God hath made for the entertainment of poore soules whom he hath allured into the Wildernesse and there spoken comfortably to them being called and pardoned he leadeth them to sweet and pleasant pastures treasures of Grace and Mercies which he hath laid up for them in Jesus Christ. He giveth them of the first fruits of Heaven which is a doore of hope unto the full possession Rom. 8. 23. 3. To the Songs and Rejoycings which the Church had when they sung one to another upon the destruction of the Aegyptians at their delivery out of the bondage of Aegypt As then they sung for joy Exod. 15 upon the sence of that great and wonderfull deliverance which God had wrought for them so shall their hearts be affected with Gospell Mercies pardoning healing purging and comforting Grace which in Jesus Christ he will give in unto them These then are the three things which are promised to them that come out of the Wildernesse 1. Gospell refreshment in powring out of the Spirit upon them 2. The first fruits of Heaven a doore of Hope 3. Spirituall joy in the destruction and conquest of sinne This then is the summe §. 29. of this second part of that description which wee have of those persons to whom the Promise under consideration is given They are such as being Called and Pardoned are admitted to that portion in the wonderfull marvelous provision of Gospell Mercies and Grace which in Jesus Christ he hath provided for them with that joy and Consolation which thereon doth ensue In the following verses you have a fuller description of these Persons upon a twofold account 1. By their delivery from Idolarty and falfe-worship v 16 17. which is particularly and peculiarly insisted on because that eminently was the sinne for which those mentioned in the beginning of the Chapter were utterly rejected God will preserve these as from the sinne of Idolatry so from any other that should procure their utter Rejection and desolation as that of Idolatry had formerly done in respect of the only carnall Jewes 2. By their protection against their enemies v 18. and these are the Persons to whom this Promise is made converted justified sanctified and purified Persons 2 ly We may take a little view of the Nature of the Promise it selfe §. 30. I will saith the Lord betroth thee unto me for ever There is in this Promise a twofold opposition to that Rejection that God had before denounced unto the carnall and rebellious Jewes 1. In the Nature of the thing it selfe unto the divorce that God gave them v. 2. Shee is not my Wife neither am I her Husband but to these saith God I will betroth them unto my selfe they shall become a Wife to mee and I will be a Husband unto them and this also manifesteth that they are not the same persons to whom that threatning was given that are principally intended in this Promise For if God did only take them againe whom he had once put away there would have been no need of any betrothing of them anew New Sponsalia are not required for such an Action 2. In the continuance of the Rejection of the first and the establishment of the Reception of the latter at least in respect of his abiding with these and those with those for a season but unto these he saith I will Betroth them unto me FOR EVER Gods betrothing of Believers is his actuall taking them into a Marriage covenant with himselfe to deale with them in the tendernesse faithfulnesse and protection of a Husband So is he often pleased to call himselfe in reference to his Church I shall not goe forth to the consideration of this Relation that God is pleased to take the soules of Saints into with himselfe The eminent and precious usefulnesse and consolation that floweth from it is ready to draw me out thereunto but I must attend that which I principally aime at namely to evince that God hath undertaken the Hee and Believers will and shall abide in this Relation to the end that he will for ever be a Husband to them and that in opposition to his dealing with the carnall Church of the Jewes to whom he was betrothed as to Ordinances but rejected them and said he was not their Husband as to peculiar grace To whom God continueth to be a Husband to them he continueth the loving-kindnesse goodwill and protection of a Husband the most intense usefull fruitfull that can be imagined This then will he doe to Believers and that for Ever Now because sundry Objections may be levied against the Accomplishment of this Engagement of God upon the account of our instability and backsliding the Lord addeth the manner of his entring into this engagement with us obviating and preventing or removing all such Objections whatever which is the third thing proposed to consideration namely the Engagement of the Properties of God for the accomplishment of this Promise Five Properties doth the Lord here mention §. 31. to assure us of his constancy in this undertaking of his Grace and the stedfastnesse of the Covenant he hath taken his People into and they are Righteousnesse
only this but all other Promises uttered by Christ to his Apostles as we had thought not for their own behoofe alone but also for the use of the Church in all ages are tyed up in their tendency and use to the men of that Generation and to the employment to which they to whom he spoke were designed But let us see whether these things are so or no. I say 2. There is not any necessary cause of that disjunctive proposition The Promise of the perpetuall residence of the Spirit is made either to the Apostles personally or to the whole body of the Church By the Rule formerly given for the Interpretation of these Promises of Christ it appears that what in this kind was made to the one was also given to the other and how Mr Goodwin will inforce any necessary conclusion from this distinction framed by himselfe for his own purpose I know not The Promise was made both to these and those the Apostles and all other Believers because to the Apostles as Believers 3. The making of the Promise to the Apostles personally doth not argue that it was made to them as Apostles but only that it was made to their Persons or to them though under another qualification viz. of Believing 'T is given to them personally as Believers and so to all Believers whatever This also sets at liberty and plainly cashiers the comparison instituted between the Apostles Infallibility as Apostles and their sanctifying grace as Believers by the Spirit of Grace given for that end The Apostles Infallibility we confesse was from the Spirit for they as other Holy men of old wrote as they were moved by the Spirit of God 2 Pet. 1. 21. but that this was a distinct guift bestowed on them as Apostles and not the teaching of the Spirit of Grace which is given to all Believers 1 Ioh. 2. 22. we need not contend to prove Besides to what end doth he contend that it was made to the Apostles in the sence urged and by us insisted on seeing he denies it in the close of this Section and chooseth rather to venture upon an opposition unto that common received perswasion that the Apostles of Christ the sonne of perdition only excepted had an absolute promise of Perseverance then to acknowledge that which would prove so prejudiciall and ruinous to his cause as he knowes the confession of such a Promise made to them would inevitably be He contends not I say about the sence of the Promise but would faine divert it from other Believers at the entrance of the Section by limiting it to the Apostles but considering afterward better of the matter and remembring that the concession of an absolute Promise of Perseverance to any one Saint whatever would evidently root up and cast to the ground the goodliest engine that he hath set up against the Truth he opposeth he suits it in the close of the Section to an evasion holding better Correspondency with its associates in this undertaking 4. I wonder what Chimericall Church he hath found out to which Promises are made and Priviledges granted otherwise then upon the account of the Persons whereof'tis constituted suppose I pray that Promises of the Residence of the Spirit for ever with it be made to the Church which is made up of so many members and that all these members every one should loose their interest in it what subject of that Promise would remaine What Vniversall is this that hath a reall existence of it selfe and by it selfe in abstraction from its particulars in which alone it hath its being Or what whole is that which is preserved in the destruction and dissolution of all its essentially constituent parts The Promises then that are made to the Church are of two sorts 1. Of such Grace and Mercies as whether inherent or relative have their residence in and respect unto particular persons as such of this sort are all the Promises of the Grace of Sanctification as also of Justification c. which are all things of mens personall spirituall interest The Promises made to the Church of this nature are made unto it meerely as consisting of so many and those Elected Redeemed persons whose right and interest as those individuall persons they are 2. Of all such good things as are the exurgency of the collected state of the Saints in reference to their spirituall invisible Communion or visible gathering into a Church constituted according to the mind of Christ and his Appointment in the Gospell and these also are all of them founded in the former and depend wholly upon them and are resolved into them All Promises then whatever made to the Church the Body of Christ doe not respect it primarily as a Corporation which is the second notion of it but as consisting of those particular Believers much lesse as a Chimericall universall having a subsistence in and by it selfe abstracted from its particulars This evasion then not withstanding this Promise of our Saviour doth still continue to presse its Testimony concerning the perpetuall residence of this Holy Spirit with Believers The scope of the place inforces that exception of these words §. 28. which we insist upon Our Blessed Saviour observing the trouble and disconsolation of his followers upon the apprehension of his departure from them stirres them up to a better hope and confidence by many Gracious Promises and ingagements of what would and should be the Issue of his being taken away v. 1. He bids them to free their hearts from trouble and in the next words tells them that the way whereby it was to be done was by acting Faith on the Promises of his Father and those which in his Fathers name he had made and was to make unto them Of these he mentions many in the following verses whereof the Fountaine Head and Spring is that of giving them the Comforter not to abide with them for a season as he had done with his bodily presence but to continue with them as a Comforter and consequently to the discharging of his whole dispensation towards Believers for ever He speakes to them as Believers as disconsolate dejected Believrs quickning their Faith by Exhortations and gives them this Promise as a solid Foundation of peace and composednesse of Sprit which he exhorted them unto And if our Saviour intendeth any thing but what the words import viz. that he will give his Holy Spirit as a Comforter to abide with them for ever the Promise hath not the least sutablenesse to relieve them in their distresse nor to accomplish the end for which it was given them But against this it is excepted Cap. 11. Sect. 13. Pag. 233 1. Evident it is that our Saviour doth not in this place oppose the abiding or remaining of the Holy Ghost to his owne departure from the hearts or soules of men into which he is framed or come but to his departure out of the world by death which was now at hand Ans. 1. This
such sinnes and unworthinesse as are inconsistent with the state of Acceptation with God which is the very thing he hath to prove 2. In supposing that if Believers are sealed up infallibly to Redemption the Exhortations to the avoidance of sinnes in themselves and to all that continue in them destructive to Salvation are in vaine which is a figment in a case somewhat alike as to the reason of it rejected by men that knew nothing of the nature of Gods Promises nor his commands nor the Accommodation of them both to the fulfilling in Believers all the good pleasure of his Goodnesse 2. The Assurance the Apostle gives of freedome from the wrath of God is inseparably associated with that Assurance that he gives that we shall not be left in or given up to such waies as wherein that wrath according to the tenure of the Covenant of Grace is not to be avoided From this latter Testimony this Argument also doth flow Those who are sealed of God to the day of Redemption shall certainly be preserved thereunto their preservation being the end and aime of God in his sealing of them Mr Goodwins Answer to this Proposition is that they shall be so preserved in case they fall not into abominable sinnes and practises and so Apostatize from the Faith that is in case they be preserved they shall be preserved but wherein their preservation should consist if not in their effectuall deliverance from such waies and courses is not declared That all Believers are so sealed and to that end as above is the plaine Testimony of the Scripture and therefore our Conclusion is undeniably evinced Thus have we through the Lords assistance freed the triple Testimony of Father Sonne and Spirit given to the Truth under Consideration from all Objections and exceptions put in thereunto so that we hope the mouth of iniquity may be stopt and that the cause of the Truth in hand is secured for ever It is a fearfull thing to contend with God Let God be true and all men lyars CAP. VIII 1. Entrance into the Digression concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit The manner of the ahode of the Spirit with them on whom he is bestowed Grounds of the Demonstratious of the Truth 2. The Indwelling of the Spirit proved from the Promises of it 3. Expresse affirmations of the same Truth Psal. 51. 11. Rom. 8. 9. opened v. 11 15. 1 Cor. 2. 12. Gal. 4. 6. opened 1 Tim. 3. 14. 4. The Spirit in his Indwelling distinguished from all his Graces Evasions removed Rom. 5. 5. Explained The Holy Ghost himselfe not the Grace of the Holy Ghost there intended Rom 8. 11. opened Gal 5. 22. 5. A Personality ascribed to the Spirit in his Indwellings 1 In personall Appellations 1 Ioh. 4. 5. Ioh. 14. 19 17. 2. Personall Operations Rom. 8. 11 15. explained 3. Personall circumstances The Spirit dwells in the Saints as in a Temple 1 Cor. 3. 16. Ch. 6. 9. 6. The Indwelling of the Spirit farther Demonstrated from the signall Effects ascribed in the Scripture to his so doing as 1 Union with Christ. 7. Union with Christ wherein it consisteth 8. Union with Christ by the Indwelling of the same Spirit in him and us 9. This proved from 1. Scripturall Declarations of it 2 Pet. 1. 4. How we are made partakers of the Divine Nature 10. Union expressed by caring the flesh and drinking the blood of Christ. Ioh. 6. 56. opened 11. The Prayer of our Saviour for the Union of his Disciples I●h 17. 21. The Union of the Persons in the Trinity with themselves 12. 2 Scripturall illustrations for the manifestation of Union 13. The Union of Head and Members what it is and wherein it doth consist 14. Of the Union between Husband and Wife aud our Union with Christ represented thereby 15. Of a Tree and its branches 16. Life and quickning given by the Indwelling Spirit in Quickning Life and sutable operations 17. 2. Direction guidance given by the Indwelling Spirit Guidance or direction twosold 18. The severall waies whereby the Spirit gives guidance and Direction unto them in whom he dwells The first way by giving a new understanding or a new spirituall light upon the understanding 19. What light men may attaine without the particular guidance of the Spirit 20. Saving Embracements of particular Truths from the Spirit 1 Ioh 2. 20 21. 21. The way whereby the Spirit leads Believers into Truth 22. Consequences of the want of this guidance of the Spirit 23. The 3d thing received from the Indwelling Spirit Supportment 24. The way whereby the Spirit gives supportment 25. 1. By bringing to mind the things spoken by Christ for their Consolation Ioh. 14. 16 26. 26. 2. By renewing his Graces in them as to strength The benefits issuing and flowing from thence 27. Bestraint given by the Indwelling Spirit and how 28. The continuance of the Spirit with Believers for the Renewall of Grace proved Ioh. 4. 14. 29. That Promise of our Saviour at large opened 30. The Water there promised is the Spirit The state of them on whom he is bestowed Spirituall thirst twofold Ioh. 65. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 2. 31. The Reasons why men cannot thirst againe who have once dranke of the Spirit explained 32. Mr G's Exceptions considered and removed 33. The same work farther carried on as also 3● 35 36. The Indwelling of the Spirit in Believers farther demonstrated by the Inferences made from thence 37. The first Our Persons Temples of the Holy Ghost To be disposed of in all waies of Holinesse 38. Wildome to try Spirits 39. The wayes means and helps whereby the Saints discerne between the voyce of Christ and the voyce of Sathan HAving shewed §. 1. that the Holy Spirit is purchased for us by the Oblation of Christ and bestowed on us through his Intercession to abide with us for Ever a Truth confirmed by the unquestionable Testimonies of the Father Sonne and Spirit I shall in the next place I hope to the advantage and satisfaction of the Christian Reader a little turne aside to consider how and in what manner he abideth with them on whom he is bestowed together with some Eminent Acts and Effects of his Grace which he putteth forth and exerteth in them with whom he abideth all tending to their preservation in the Love and Favour of God A Doctrine it is of no small use and importance in our walking with God as we shall find in our pursuit of it And therefore though not appearing so directly Argumentative and immediately subservient to the promotion of the Dispute in hand yet tending to the establishment guidance and consolation of them who doe receive it and to the cherishing increasing and strengthning of the Faith thereof I cannot but conceive it much conducing to the carrying on of the maine Intendment of this whole undertaking I say then upon the purchase made of all Good things for the Elect by Christ the Holy and Blessed Spirit of God is given to
personall Appellations 2. In personall Operations 3. Personall Circumstances 1. First there are ascribed to the indwelling Spirit in his indwelling Personal Appellations He that is in you is greater then he that is in the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that is in you is a personall Denomination which cannot be used of any Grace or gratious habit whatsoever so John 14 16 17. He shall abide with you he dwelleth with you shall be in you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 16. 13. But when the Spirit of Truth is come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His Person is as signally designed and expressed as in any place of Scripture to what intent or purpose soever mentioned Neither is it possible to apprehend that the Scripture would so often so expressly affirme the same thing in plaine proper words if they were not to be taken in the sence which they hold out The maine Emphasis of the Expression lyes upon the Termes that are of a personall designation and to evade the force of them by the fore mentioned distinction which they seeme signally to obviate and prevent is to say what we please so we may oppose what pleases us not 2. Personall Operations such acts and actings as are proper to a person only are ascribed to the Spirit in his indwelling That place mentioned before Rom. 8. 11. is cleare hereunto But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he who raised Christ from the dead shall quicken your mortall bodyes by his Spirit which dwélteh in you or by his indwelling Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To quicken our mortall bodyes is a Personall acting such as cannot be wrought but by an Almighty Agent And this is ascribed to the Spirit as inhabiting whch is in order of nature antecedent to his quickning of us as was manifested And the same is asserted v. 15. The Spirit beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the Sonnes of God That Spirit that dwells in us beares witnesse in us a distinct Witnesse by himselfe distinguished from the Testimony of our owne spirit here mentioned is either an Act of our naturall Spirits or Gracious fruit of the Spirit of God in our hearts If the first what makes it in the things of God Is any Testimony of our naturall spirits of any value to assure us that we are the Children of God If the latter then is there here an immediate operation of the Spirit dwelling in our hearts in witnesse-bearing distinct from all the fruits of Grace whatever And on this account it is that whereas 1 Epistle of John 5. 7 8. the Father Sonne and Spirit are said to beare witnesse in Heaven the Spirit is moreover peculiarly said to beare witnesse in the Earth together with the Blood and Water 3. There are such Circumstances ascribed to him in his indwelling as are proper only to that which is a Person I will instance only in one his dwelling in the Saints as in a Temple 1 Cor. 3. 16. Yee are the Temple of God and his Spirit dwelleth in you that is as in a Temple so plainely chap. 6. 19. Your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which you have of God giving us both the distinction of the Person of the Spirit from the other Persons he is given us of God and his residence with us being so given he is in us as also the manner of his in-being as in a Temple Nothing can make a place a Temple but the Relation it hath unto a Deity Graces that are but Qualifications of and Qualities in a Subject cannot be said to dwell in a Temple This the Spirit doth and therefore as a voluntary Agent in an habitation not as a necessary or naturall principle in a subject and though every act of his be Omnipotent intensively being the act of an Omnipotent Agent yet he worketh not in the acts extensively to the utmost of his Omnipotency he exerteth and puts forth his Power and brings forth his Grace in the hearts of them with whom he dwells as he pleaseth to one he comunicates more Grace to another lesse yea he gives more strength to one and the same person at one time and in one condition 1 Cor. 12. then another dividing to every one as he will and if this peculiar manner of his personall presence with his Saints distinct from his Ubiquity or Omnipresence may not be believed because not well by reason conceived we shall lay a Foundation for the questioning principles of Faith which as yet we are not fallen out withall And this is our first manifestation of the Truth concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit in the Saints from the Scripture The second will be from the signall Issues and benefits which are asserted to arise from this indwelling of the Spirit in them of which I shall give sundry instances 1. The first signall Issue and Effect which is ascribed to this Indwelling of the Spirit §. 6. is Union not a Personall Union with himselfe which is impossible He doth not assume our natures and so prevent our Personality which would make us one Person with him but dwells in our Persons keeping his owne and leaving us our Personality infinitely distinct But it is a spirituall Union the great Union mentioned so often in the Gospell that is the sole fountain of our Blessednesse our Union with the Lord Christ which we have thereby Many thoughts of heart there have been about this Union §. 7. what it is wherein it doth consist the causes manner and Effects of it The Scripture expresses it to be very Eminent neere durable setting it out for the most part by similitudes and Metaphoricall Illustrations to lead poore weak Creatures into some usefull needfull acquaintance with that Mystery whose depths in this life they shall never fathome That many in the dayes wherein we live have miscarried in their conceptions of it is evident some to make out their Imaginary Union have destroyed the person of Christ and fancying a way of uniting man to God by him have left him to be neither God nor Man Others have destroyed the Person of Believers affirming that in their Union with Christ they loose their own Personality that is cease to be Men or at least these or these Individuall men I intend not now to handle it at large but only and that I hope without offence to give in my thoughts concerning it as farre as it receiveth light from and relateth unto what hath been before delivered concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit and that without the least contending about other wayes of Expression I say then §. 3. this is that which gives us Union with Christ and that wherein it consists even that the one and selfe-same Spirit dwells in him and us The first saving Elapse from God upon the Hearts of the Elect is the Holy Spirit Their quickning is every where ascribed to the Spirit that is
250. unto this Argument §. 12. is either a meere repetition of what was spoken before or a pressing of Consequences upon such supposalls as he is pleased to make concerning the Doctrine that he doth oppose As we cannot hinder any man from making what supposals they please and suiting inferences to them manifesting their skill in casting downe what themselves set up so we are not in the least concerned in such Theatricall contests What it is §. 13. that we teach of the Intercession of Christ for Believers hath been sufficiently explayned The end and aime of it is that they may be kept that they may not be lost that the evill one may not touch them that they may be Saved to the utmost and kept by the Power of God unto Salvation All that the Lord Jesus hath for his Church either by bis Oblation or his Intercession procured or doth procure being made out unto them by the Holy and Blessed Spirit which he sent them from his Father as the first fruits of his undertaking for them by and in the use of such meanes and wayes as he hath appointed for them to walke in in reference to the end proposed He Intercedes that through supplyes of that Spirit their Faith faile not that no temptation prevaile against them that they may have suitable helpes in time of need and so be preserved according to the tenor of that Sanctification which he is pleased to give them in this life which is imperfect not from all sinnes for it is the will of God to keepe them and walke with them in a Covenant of pardoning Mercy not absolutely from this or that great sinne as is evident in the case of David and Peter whereof under such sinnes the one lost not the Spirit nor the other his Faith but from such sinnes or such a course or way in and under sinne as would disappoint him and make his desires frustrate as to the end first proposed of bringing them to Glory so that as the intendment of his Oblation is meritoriously and by way of procurement to take away all our sinnes whatsoever and yet in the application of it unto us as to the taking of them away by purifying us to be an Holy People unto himselfe it is not perfected and compleated at once nor the worke thereof consummated but by degrees so in his Intercession which respecteth the same persons and things with his Oblation he puts in for our deliverance from all sinnes the power of them but so and in a such manner as the nature of our present condition whilst we are in viâ and the condition of the Covenant whereunto God hath graciously taken us doth require Through the Goodnesse of God §. 13. we have now brought this first Part to an end They who are in any measure acquainted in what straights under what pressing imployments and urgent Avocations and in what space of time this Offering was provided for the Sanctuary of God will accept it in him whose it is and from whom it was received CAP. X. 1. The Improvement of the Doctrine of Perseverance in reference to the Obedience and Consolation of the Saints why its tendency to the promoting of their Obedience is first handled before their Consolation 2. Five previous Observations concerning Gospell Truths in generall 1. That all are to be received with equall reverence 2. That the end of them all is to worke the soule into a conformity to God prov'd by severall Scriptures 2 Tim. 3. 16. Tit. 1. 1. c. 3. Some Truths have a more immediate tendency hereunto them others have 2 Cor. 5. 14. 4. Most weight is to be laid by Believers upon such 5. Men are not themselves to determine what Truths have most in them of this Tendency c. 3. Gospell Obedience what it is and why so called 5. It s nature 1 In the matter of it which is All and Only the will of God 5. 2 In the Forme of it which is considered 1. In the Principle setting it on worke Faith 2. In the manner of doing it eying both Precepts and Promises 3. The end aimed at in it the Glory of God as a Rewarder Heb. 11. 6. Rom. 4. 4. 6. The Principle in us whence it proceeds which is the New man the Spirit proved Eph. 3. 16 17. c. 7. What kind of Motives conduce most to the carrying on of this Obedience namely such as most cherish this New man which they doe most that discover most of the Love of God and his good will in Christ such as these are alone usefull to Mortification and the subduing of the contrary Principle of Flesh which hinders our Obedience proved Titus 2. 12. Rom. 6. 8. What Persons the improvement of this Doctrine concernes only true Believers who won't abuse it 9. How this Doctrine of Perseverance conduces so eminently to the carrying on of Gospell Obedience in the hearts of these true Believers 1. By removing discouragements 10 1. Perplexing Fears which impaire their Faith 11. 2. Hard thoughts of God which weaken their Love without which two Faith and Love no Gospell Obedience performed 12. Unspeakable obligations to live to God hence put upon the Soules of the Saints 13. Objection concerning the Abuse of this Truth to presumption and carelessnesse discussed examined at large and removed 14. The mortification of the Flesh wherein it consists how it is performed The influence of the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance thereinto Dread and terror of Hell not the meanes of mortification at large proved by shewing quite another meanes of mortifying the Flesh viz The spirit of Christ Rom. 8. 13. applying the Crosse and Death of Christ. Rom. 6. 5 6. 15. 3. This Doctrine is usefull to promote Gospell Obedience in that it tends directly to increase and strengthen Faith and Love both towards God and towards our Lord Jesus Christ. 16. How it strengthens their Love to God viz. By discovering his Love to them in three eminent properties of it Freedome Constancy Fruitfulnesse 17. How it strengthens their Love to Jesus Christ viz. By discovering his Love to them in two eminent Acts of it his Oblation and his Intercession 18. 4. This Doctrine conduces c. by giving Gospell Obedience its proper place and due order 19. 5. By closing in with the ends of Gospell Ordinances particularly the Ministry one eminent end whereof is to perfect the Saints Eph. 4. 12 13. Which is done by discovering to them the whole will of God both Precepts on the one hand and Promises Exhortations Threatnings on the other 20. That of the Promises more particularly and more largely insisted on THat which remaines to compleat our intendment §. 1. as to that Part of the worke which now drawes towards a close is the importment of that Doctrine so long insisted on having in some measure vindicated and cleared up the Truth of it as to the effectuall influence it hath into the Obedience and Consolation of
we are disenabled from persuing the Comparison instituted The one part being not to be considered or at least not being considerable The time when first Head was made against the Truth we professe and Criminations like those managed by Mr Goodwin hatched and contrived to Assault it withall was when it had been eminently delivered to the Saints of this Nation and all the Churches of Christ by Reinolds Whitakers Greenham and others like to them their fellow labourers in the Lords Vineyard The poore weake Wormes of this present Generation who imbrace the same Doctrine with these men of name are thought to be free some of them at least from being destroyed by the poysonous and pernicious embracing of it by their owne weakenesse and disability to discerne the naturall genuine Consequences and Tendency in the progresse of that which in the Roote and Foundation they imbrace Their ignorance of their owne Doctrine in its compas Extent is the Mother of that Devotion which in them is nourished thereby So our great Masters tell us against whose Kingly Authority in these things there is no rising up For the Persons formerly named the like reliefe cannot be supposed He that shall provide an Apology for them Affirming that they understood not the state nature consequences and tendences of the Doctrines they received defended preached contended for will scarce be able by any following defensative to vindicate his owne credit for so doing In the lives then and the Ministry of those men and such as those if any where are the fruits of this Doctrine to be seene If it corrupted not their lives nor weakned their Ministry if it turned not them aside from the pathes of Gospell Obedience nor weakened their hands in the Dispensation of the Word in the Promises Threatnings and Exhortations thereof to the Conversion of soules and building up of those who by their Ministry were called in their most holy Faith it cannot but be a strong presumption that there is no such venomous infectious quality in this Doctrine as of late some Chimicall Divines pretend themselves to be able to extract out of it Now what I pray were these men What were their Lives What was their Ministry All those who now oppose Mr Goodwin's Doctrine do it either out of Ignorance or to Comply with Greatnesse and men in Authority thereby to make up themselves in their Ambitious and worldly aymes and to prevaile themselves upon the opinion of men for what cause else in the world can be imagined why they should so ingage what though they really believed the whole fabricke of his Doctrine wherein he hath departed from the Faith he once as they say professed to be a lye A lye of dangerous and pernitious Consequence to the soules of men a lye derogatory to the Glory of God the efficacy of Grace the merit of the Death of Christ and the honour of the Gospell and full of disconsolation to poore soule● being in and under Temptation What though they suppose it secretly to undermine the maine fundamentals of the Covenant of Grace and covertly to substitute another Covenant in the Roome thereof what though they have observed that the Doctrine they have received was Imbraced Preached prized by all those great and blessed soules which in the last Generation God magnified with the conversion of so many thousands in this Nation given into their Ministry whilst they spent their dayes under continuall Aflictions persecutions what though they have the generall known consent of all the Reformed Churches beyond the Seas with them in their zeale for the Doctrine under consideration What though under these the like apprehensions they profes in the presence of God his holy Angels and men that the eternall Interest of the precious soules of men is more valuable to them ten thousand times than their owne lives and that that is the sole Reason of their opposition to M. 〈◊〉 in his attempts against the Doctrine they have so received and imbraced yet it is meet for us to Judge and for all to whom evill surmises are not esteemed to be among the workes of the flesh that all their opposition is nothing but a cōplyance with and pursuit of those worldly low and wretched aimes that they are filled withall But as to those Persons before mentioned what shall we say Their Piety Literature Zeale Diligence Industry Labour with successe in the worke of the Ministry and that under manifold discouragements are so renowned in the world that how or wherewith they shall be shifted of from being considerable in their Testimony I cannot imagine If ever Persons in these latter Ages had written upon their breasts Holynesse to the Lord If ever any bare about a conformity to the Death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ they may put in for an eminent esteeme and name among them will doubtlesse be found at last to be of the thirty if they attaine not to the first Ranke of the Worthyes of Christ in these ends of the world How is it that they were not retarded in the course of their Gospell Obedience by their entertainement of this wretched Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance But what though they kept themselves Personally from the pollution of it yet possibly their Ministry was defiled and rendered uselesse by it And who I pray is it that in this Generation can so support himselfe with successe in the Ministry as to rise up with this accusation against them Many thousands who were their Crowne their Glory and Rejoycing in Christ are fallen a sleepe and some Continue to this day Of the Reasons given by Mr Goodwin why all the Zealous Fruitfull Faithfull Preachers of former dayes imbraced this Doctrine we shall instantly undertake the Consideration In the meane time this seems strange that God should magnify and make famous the Ministry of so many throughout the world and give in that visible blessing to their Labours therein which hath filled this Island with such an increase of Children to Sion as that she hath not lengthned the cords of her Tabernacle to such an extent and compasse in any proportionable spot of earth under Heaven if any one eminent part of their Doctrine and that whereon they lay'd great weight in their Ministry which they pressed with as much fervency and contention of Spirit as any head of the like importance should indeed be so apparently destructive of Holinesse and of such a direct and irresistible efficiency to render uselesse that great Ordinance of the Ministry committed to them as this is clamoured to be What will be the successe of them in their Ministry who shall undertake to deny and oppose it I hope the People of God in this Nation will not have many Instances to Judge by The best conjecture we can for the present make of what will be hereafter must be taken from what hath already come to passe and the best guesse of what events will be are to be raised from
of perfection and when he doth evill there is still a non-submitting an unconsenting principle this the Apostle complains of and declares Rom. 7. 19. 20. The good that I would I doe not but the evill which I would not that doe I now if I doe that I would not it is no more I that doe it but sinne that dwelles in mee I find then a Law that when I would doe good evill is present with mee For I delight in the Law of God after the inward man There is an I and an I at opposition a will and not willing a doing and not doing a delighting and not delighting all in the same person so that there is this difference at the entrance between what sinne soever of Regenerate persons and others though the principle of sinning be the same for the kind and nature of it in them and others all sinne every mans sinnes be who he will be believer or unbeliever being tempted by his own Lust yet that Lust possesseth the whole soule and takes in the vertuall consent of the whole man notwithstanding the controwle and checks of conscience the light of the judgement in him that is unregenerate but in every Regenerate person there is an unconsenting principle which is as truly the man himselfe that doth not concurre in sinne that doth expressely dissent from it as the other is from whence it flowes Secondly §. 12. That sinne neither can doth nor ever shall reigne in Regenerate Persons The reason of this I acquainted you with before and the Apostle thinks this a sufficient proofe of this assertion because they are under grace Rom. 7. 14. Whilest the principle of Grace abides in them which reignes where ever it be or the free acceptance of God in the Gospell is towards them it is impossible upon the account of any actuall sinne whatever whereinto they may fall that sinne should reigne in them nothing gives Sinne a Reigne and dominion but a totall defect of all true grace whatever not only as to the exerting it selfe but as to any habituall relicts of it It may be overwhelmed sometimes with Temptations and corruptions but it is Grace still as the least sparke of fire is fire though it should be covered with never so great an heape of ashes and it reignes then Thirdly That Regenerate persons sinne not with their whole and full consent §. 13. Consent may be taken two wayes First Morally for approbation of the thing done so the Apostle saies that in the inward man he did consent to the Law that it was good Rom. 7. 16. that is he did approve it as such like it delight in it as good and thus a Regenerate man never consents to sinne no nor unregenerate persons neither unlesse they are such as being past feeling are given up to work lasciviousnesse with greedinesse a Regenerate person is so farre from thus consenting to sinne that before it in it after it he utterly condemnes disallowes hates it as in himselfe and by himselfe committed Secondly Consent may be taken in a Physicall sence for the concurrence of the commanding and acting principles of the soule unto its operations and in this sence an unregenerate man sinnes with his full consent and his whole will a Regenerate man doth not cannot doe so For though there is not in that consent to sinne which his will inclined by the remaining disposition of sinne in it doth give an actuall sensible Reaction of the other principle yet there is an expresse not consenting and by the power that it hath in the soule for habits have power in and over the Subjects wherein the are it preserves it from being wholly ingaged into sinne and this is the great intendment of the Apostle Rom. 7. 19 20. 21. 22. From what hath been spoken will easily appeare what Answer may be given to the former Argument to wit That notwithstanding any sinnes that either the Scripture or the experience of men do evince that the Saints may fall into yet that they never sinne or perpetrate sinne with their full and whole consent whereby they should be lookt upon in and under their sinnes in the same state and condition with unregenerate persons in whom sinne reigneth committing the same sinne and how insufficient any thing produced by Mr Goodwin in defence of the argument layd downe at the entrance of this Chapter is to remove the Answer given unto it from Believers not sining with their whole consent may easily be demonstrated This he thus proposeth Some to mainetaine this position That all the sinnes of true Believers are sinnes of infirmity lay hold on this shield such men they say never sinne with their whole wills or with full consent therefore they never sinne but through infirmity that they never sinne with full consent they conceive they prove sufficiently from that of the Apostle for the good that I would I do not but the evil that I would not that I do Now if I do that I would not it is no more I that do it but sinne that dwelleth in me I Answer first that the Saints cannot sinne but with their whole wills or full consents is undeniably proved by this consideration viz. Because otherwise there should be not only a plurality or diversity but also a contrariety of wills in the same persō at one the same instant of time viz. when the supposed act of evill is produced now it is an impossibility of the first evidence that there should be a plurality of acts these contrary one to the other in the same subject or agent at one or the same iustant of time it is true between the first movings of the flesh in a man towards the committing of the sinne and the compleating of the sinne by an Actuall and Externall patration of it there may be successively in him not only a plurality but even a contrariety of Volitions or Motions of the will according to what the Scripture speaketh concerning the flesh lusting against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh But when the flesh having prevailed in the combate bringeth forth her desire into act the Spirit ceaseth from his act of Lusting otherwise it would follow that the flesh is greater aud stronger in her lusting than the Spirit of God in his and that when the flesh lusteth after the perpetration of such or such a sinne the Spirit as to the hindering of it lusteth but in vaine which is contrary to that of the Apostle greater is he that is in you speaking as t is cleare of the Spirit of God unto true Believers than he that is in the world meaning Sathan and all his Auxiliaries Sinne Flesh Corruption Ans. What we intend by the Saints not sinning with their whole wills hath been declared §. 16. that there is not a consistency in the explanation we have given Mr Goodwin asserts because it would inferre a plurality yea a contrariety of wills in the same person at the same time
whereof he labours to deliver it is the great Absurdity of the Repetition of Regeneration whereof there is no mention at all in the Scripture and which yet must be Asserted by him unlesse he will affirme all that fall away at any time irrecoverably to perish which howsoever he waves at present were with much more probability according to his owne principles to be maintained than what he insisteth on But this repetition of Regeneration saith he is not unworthy God and for men a blessed and happy accommodation whether it be unworthy God or no the Scripture and the nature of the thing will declare The Accomodation that it seemes to afford unto men being a plaine incouragement to sinne at the highest rate imaginable will perhaps not be found so Happy and Blessed unto them With great noise and clamour hath a charge been managed against the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance upon the account of its giving supportment to the thoughts of men in and under the wayes of sinne whether Truth and Righteousnesse have been regarded in that charge hath been considered Doubtlesse it were a matter of no difficulty clearely to evince that this Doctrine of the Repetition of Regeneration is of the very same tendency and import which is falsly and injuriously charged upon that of the Perseverance of the Saints The worst that a man thinks he can do by any act of sin is but to sin himselfe quite out of the favour of God into a state of death and desert of wrath He can no farther injure his soule than to cast it into the condition of men by nature Tell this man now whom you suppose to be under the temptation to sinne at least that he hath in him that great foole the flesh which longs for Blessed Accommodations to its selfe whilest it makes provision to fulfill its lusts that if he should so do this is an ordinary thing for men to do and yet to be renewed againe and to have a Second Regeneration do you not incourage him to venture boldly to satisfy his sinfull desires having such a reliefe against the worst that his thoughts and feares can suggest to him But whatever it be in respect of God or men yet that so it may be Mr Goodwin proves from Heb. 6. 6. Where 't is said that 't is impossible to renew some to repentance wherefore some may be renewed and in Jude 12. Men are said to be twice dead therefore they may live twice Spiritually The first proofe seemes somewhat uncouth The persons spoken of in that place are in M. G. judgement Believers there is no place of Scripture wherein he more tryumphs in his endeavoured confirmation of his Thesis The Holy Ghost says expresly of thē that 't is impossible to renew thē therefore says M.G. 't is possible what is of emphasis in the Argument mentioned ariseth frō two things 1. That they are true Believers of which afterwards 2. That they fall totally away This then is the importance of M. Goodwins plea from this place If true believers fall totally away it is impossible they should be renewed to Repentance therefore if true Believers fall totally away it is possible they should be renewed to and by Repentance that there is a falling away and a renewing againe by Repentance of the same persons we grant That falling away is partiall only which is incident unto true Believers who when God heales their backslidings are renewed by Repentance To be renewed also by Repentance is taken either for the renovation of our Natures and our change as unto state and condition and so it is the same with Regeneration and not to be repeated or for a Recovery by Repentance in respect of personall failings so it is the daily worke of our lives Jude saies some are twice dead that is utterly so an hyperbolicall expression to aggravate their condition Those to whom the Gospell is a favour of Death unto Death may well be said to be twice dead unto the Death that they are involved in and are obnoxious to by nature they adde a second death or rather seale up their soules under the power and misery of the other by contempt of the means of Life and recovery therefore Regeneration may be reiterated Quod erat Demonstrandum Much of the Section that remains is taken up in declaring in many words without the least attempt of proofe that 't is agreeable to the honour of God to renew men totally fallen away that is when those who have been quickned by him washt in the bloud of his Sonne made partakers of the Divine nature imbrac'd in the armes of his Love shall despise all this dis-faith themselves reject the Lord and his Love trample on the bloud of the Convenant kill their soules by depriving them of spirituall life proclaime to all the world their dislike of him and his Covenant of Grace yet though he hath not any where revealed that he will permit any one so to doe or that he will accept of them againe upon their so doing yet M. Goodwin affirming that for him so to doe is agreeable to his Holinesse and Righteousnesse 't is fit that those who conceive themselves bound to believe what ever he saies should think so too for my part I am at liberty I should not farther pursue this discourse nor insist on this digression but that M. Goodwin hath taken advantage by the mention of Regeneration to deliver some rare notions of the nature of it which deserve a little our farther taking notice of for which end doubtlesse he published them To make way then for his intendment he informes us Sect 29. That Regeneration it selfe according to the Grammaticall and proper signification of the word imports a reiteration or repetition of some generation or other it cannot import a Repetition of the naturall all Generation of men the sence of Nicodemus in this poynt was Orthodox who judged such a thing impossible therefore it must import a repetition of a spirituall generation unlesse we shall say which I think is the road opinion that it signifies only the spirituall generation with a kind of reflection upon and unto the birth Naturall Ans. First That the Grammaticall sence of the word imports a Reiteration of some generation is only said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath other signification in composition besides the intimating of a reiteration of the same thing either in specie or individually the same againe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would seeme rather to inforce such an Interpretation than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which yet it doth not It is spoken of that which hath no birth properly at all as Philo de Mundo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it selfe is only through 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through a wooddy Countrey 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Resurrection doth not import againe after another rising before but a restauration from a lost state so is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used Math 19. 28. to
themselves to search into and to weigh the Scriptures wherein the case in question is clearely determined nor skill enough to understand and receive them when so dexterously opened to their hand by M. G. What they are the Lord knoweth will judge determine and in the appointed time declare and it may be the day that shall manifest all things will vindicate them from those reproaches in the meane time such expressions as these ly in the middle between all parties at variance exposed to the use of any that is pleased to take them up the place insisted on in the sequell of this Preface is the Parable of our Saviour Mat. 18. 32 33. the whole extent of the Parable is from v. 20. to the end of the Chapter Hence M. G. thus inferreth Sect 11. Evident it is from our Saviours rendition or application of the Parable so likewise shall my heavenly Father doe also unto you if c. speaking unto his Disciples v. 1. and to Peter more particularly v. 21. that Persons truly regenerate and justified before God for such were they to whom in speciall manner he addresseth the Parable and the application of it and indeed the whole carriage of the Parable sheweth that it was calculated and formed only for such may through high misdemeanours in sinning as for example by unmercifulnesse cruelty oppression c. turne themselves out of the justifying Grace and Favour of God quench the spirit of Regeneration and come to have their portions with Hypocrites and Vnbelievers Ans. This is not the only occasion whereupon we have to deale with this Parable The Socinians wrest it also with violence to disprove the satisfaction of Christ from the mention that is made in it of the free forgivenesse of sins and the Lords injoyning others to doe what he did they doubtlesse being to forgive without satisfaction given or made as to any crimes committed against them M. Goodwin with much lesse probability of drawing nigh to the intendment of our Saviour in this place makes use of it or rather abuses it to countenance his Doctrine of the Apostasy of the Saints To both I say Parables have their bounds and limits their lines and proportions scope and peculiar intendment beyond which they prove nothing at all to wring the nose of a Parable or similitude to force it to an universall compliance will bring forth bloud There is nothing so sottish or foolish or contradictious in and to it selfe as may not be countenanced from teaching Parables to be instructive and proving in every parcell or expression that attends them The intendment of the Parable here used that wherein from the proportion and answerablenesse of the comparats it argueth is neither that God forgives without satisfaction to his justice being the judge of all the World nor that Believers may fall away by sinnes of unmercifulnesse and oppression and so perish everlastingly but that men upon the account of mercy and forgivenesse received from God in Christ ought to extend mercy and kindnesse to their Brethren God threatning and revenging unmercifulnesse and oppression in and on whomsoever it is found whether it be Ignorance in us or what it be the Lord knowes and will judge but we are not able to stretch the lines of this Parable one step towards what M. Goodwin would lengthen them unto that no persons whatever must or ought to expect the grace and pardoning mercy of God to them who have no bowells of compassion towards their brethren is clearly taught in making the rest of the circumstances of the Parable argumentative we cannot joyne with our Adversary he himselfe in his so doing working meerly for his own ends 2. Finding his Exposition of this Parable §. 20. liable and obnoxious to an exception in that it renders God changeable in his dealings with men and a knot to be cast on his Doctrine which he is not able to untie he ventures boldly to cut it in pieces by affirming that indeed God loves no man at all with any love but the approbation of the qualifications that are in him and that he cannot be said to change in reference of that which is not in him at all This he sets out and illustrates variously with the dealings of men and the Laws that are made amongst them rewarding what is good and punishing what is evill c. words fully fitted in his apprehension to the clearing of God from any shadow of alteration in that course of proceeding which to him he ascribes and tells you the roote of the mistake concerning the Love of God towards any mans person lyes in that Capitall errour of personall Election or a purpose of God to give Grace and Glory to any one in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That M. Goodwin doth at all understand the love of God if his apprehension of it be uniforme to what he expresseth here in disputation I must question An eternall unchangeable love of God to some in Christ is not now my taske to demonstrate it may through the patience and goodnesse of God find a place in my weake endeavours for the Lord ere long When it will be a matter of delight to consider the Scriptures and Testimonies of Antiquity that M.G. will produce for the eversion of such a personall election for the present I shall only take notice of the face of his judgement in the thing which Sec. 13. he here delivers All the Love which God bears to men or to any person of man is either in respect of their nature and as they are men in respect of which he beares a generall or common love to them or in respect of their qualification as they are good men in one degree or other in respect whereof he bears a more speciall love to them What that common love is in M. Goodwins doctrine which God bears to all men as men we know full well He also himselfe is not unacquainted how often it hath been demonstrated to be a vaine and foolish figment in the sence by him and his associates obtruded on us derogatory to all the glorious Properties of the nature of God and inconsistent with any thing that of himselfe he hath revealed The Demonstration and farther eviction whereof waits its season which I hope draweth on The speciall love which he bears persons in respect of their qualifications is only his Approbation of those qualifications where ever they are and in whomsoever That these qualifications are Faith Love Repentance Gospell obedience c. Is not called into question I would faine know of M. Goodwin on what account and consideration some men and not all are translated from the condition of being objects of Gods common love to become objects of his peculiar love or from whence spring these qualifications which are the procurement of it whether they are from any love of God to them in whom they are If not on what account do men come to have Faith Love Obedience c. If they are
formerly considered but yet leaving them to the liberty of their judgment who are so minded that the reason given by them and here againe repeated by Mr Goodwin doth not in the least enforce any to let go this Answer to the objection proposed that shall be pleased to insist upon it hath been manifested To this Mr Goodwin farther addes that weighty Observation that the word If is not in the Originall and thence takes occasion to fall foule upon the Translators as having corrupted the passages out of favour to the Doctrine contended for I wish they had never worse mistaken nor shewed more partiality in any other place For first will Mr Goodwin deny that a proposition cannot be Hypotheticall nor an expression conditionall unlesse the word if be expressed were it worth the labour instances might abundantly be given him in that language whereof we speake to the contrary He that shall say to him as he is journying going the right hand way you will meet with theeves may be doubtles said to speake conditionally no lesse than he that should expresly tell him If you go the way on the right hand you shall meet with theeves Secondly what cleare sence significancy can be given the words without the supplement of the conditionall conjunction or some other terme equipollent thereunto Mr Goodwin hath not declared For it is impossible for those who were once enlightned c. And they falling away as the words verbum de verbo lye in the text is scarce in english a congruous or significant expression Yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Syntaxe and coherence wherein it lyes is most properly and directly rendered if they fall away As is also the force of the expression Chap. 10. 26. Yea thirdly the connexion of the Translation mentioned by Mr Goodwin doth not in the least relieve him as to the delivery of the words from a sence Hypotheticall When they fall away though his when be no more in the text than the Translators if doth either include a supposition that they shall and must fall away certainely and so requiers the event of the thing whereof it is spoken or it is expressive only of the condition wheron the event is suspended if it be taken in the first sence all Believers must fall away if in the latter none may notwithstanding any thing in this Text so learnedly restored to its true significancy the words only pointing at the connexion that is between Apostacy and punishment Notwithstanding then any thing here offered to the contrarary those who affirme that nothing can certainely be concluded from these places for the Apostacy of any be they who they will that are intended in them because they are conditionall Assertions manifesting only the connexion between the sin and punishment expressed need not be ashamed of nor recoyle from their Affirmation in the least For mine owne part §. 27. I confesse I do not in any measure think it needfull to insist upon the conditionalls of these assertions of the Holy Ghost as to the removall of any or all the oppositions that from them of old or of late have been raised and framed against the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance there being in neither of the Texts insisted on either name or thing enquired after nor any one of all the severalls enquired into and constantly in the Scriptures used in the description of the Saints and Believers of whom we speake This I shall breifely in the first place demonstrate and then proceed with the eonsideration of what is offered by Mr Goodwin in opposition thereunto Some few observations will lead us through the first part of this worke designed I say then 1. There is an inferiour common worke of the Holy Ghost in the dispensation of the word upon many to whom it is preached causing in them a great alteration and change as to Light Knowledge Abilityes Guists Affections Life and Conversation when the persons so wrought upon are not quickned regenerate nor made new creatures nor united to Jesus Christ. I suppose there will not be need for me to insist on the proofe of this Proposition the truth of it being notoriously knowne confessed as I suppose amongst all that professe the name of Christ. 2. That in persons thus wrought upon there is or may be such an assent upon light and conviction to the truths proposed and Preached to them as is true in its kind not counterfeit giving and affording them in whom it is wrought profession of the Faith and that sometimes with constancy to the death or the giving of their bodies to be burned with perswasions whence they are called Believers of a future enjoyment of a glorious and blessed condition filling them with ravished affections and rejoycings in hope which they professe suitable to the expectation they have of such a state and condition This also might be easily evinced by innumerable instances and examples from the Scripture if need required 3. That the persons in and upon whom this work is wrought cannot be said to be hypocrites in the most proper sence of that word that is such as counterfeit and pretend themselves to be that which they know they are not nor to have faith only in shew and not in substance as though they made a shew and pretence only of an assent to the things they professed their high gifts knowledge faith change of affections and conversation being in their own kind true as the Faith of Devills is and yet notwithstanding all this they are in bondage and at best seeke for a righteousnesse as it were by the workes of the Law and in the issue Christ proves to them of none effect 4. That among these persons many are oftentimes endued with excellent gifts lovely parts qualifications and abilities rendring them exceeding usefull acceptable and serviceable to the Church of God becoming vessells in his house to hold and convey to others the precious liquour of the Gospell though their nature in themselves be not changed they remaining wood and stone still 5. That much of the worke wrought in and upon this sort of persons by the Spirit and word lies in its own nature in a direct tendency to their relinquishment of their sinnes and selfe-righteousnesse to a closing with God in Christ having a mighty prevalency upon them to cause them to amend their wayes and to labour after life and salvation from which to Apostatize and fall off upon the account of the tendency mentioned of these beginnings is dangerous and for the most part pernitious 6. That persons under the convictions and workes of the Spirit formerly mentioned partakers of the guifts light and knowledge spoken of with those other endowments attending them are capacitated for the sinne against the Holy Ghost or the impardonable Apostasy from God These things being commonly knowne and as farre as I know universally granted I affirme that the persons mentioned and intended in these places are such as have been