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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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distinction in and of that People Rom. 9. 4 5. for they are not all Israel that are of Israel the whole lump body of them being the People of God in respect of separation from the rest of the world dedication to his Worship externall profession yet a Remnant only a hidden Remnant being his People upon the account of Eternall designation and actuall Acceptation into Love and Favour in Jesus Christ there must needs be also a twofold Dispensation of God and his will in reference to that People The First Common Generall towards the whole body of them in outward Ordinances and Providentiall Exercises of Goodnesse or Justice In this there was Great variety as to the Latter part comprehending only externall Effects or products of the Power of God in which regard he can pull downe what he hath set up and set up what he hath pulled downe without the least shadow of turning These various Dispensations working Uniformely towards the accomplishment of his Unchangeable Purpose And this is all that Mr Goodwins Exceptions reach too Even a change in the outward dispensation of Providence which none ever denied being that which may nay is done for the bringing about and accomplishment in a way sutable to the advancement of his Glory of his unchangeable Purpose What proportion there is to be argued from betweene the generall effects of various Dispensations and that peculiar Love and Grace of the Covenant thereof wherein God assures his Saints of their Stability upon the account of his own Unchangeablenes I know not Because he may remove his Candlestick from a fruitlesse Faithlesse People and give them up to desolation may he therfore take his holy Spirit from them that Believe For whilst that continues the root of the matter is in them So that Secondly there is a peculiar Dispensation of Grace exerted towards those peculiar ones whom he owneth and receiveth as above mentioned wherein there are such ingagements of the Purpose Decrees and Will of God as that the streame of them cannot be forced back without as Great an Alteration change in God as the thoughts of the heart of the meanest worme in the world are lyable unto And on this the Lord asserts the stedfastnesse of his Love to them in the midst of the changes of outward Dispensations towards the body of that People wherein also their Externall concernments were wrapt up 1 Sam. 12. 22. But this will afterwards be more fully cleared The Substance of this Exception amounts only to thus much there are changes wrought in the workes which outwardly are of God as to generall and common administrations therefore also are his Eternall purposes of Spirituall Grace lyable to the like Alterations Whereas Mr Godwin sayes that this will not import any alteration in God at least any such alteration as is incompetent to him I know not of any shadow of alteration that may be ascribed to him without the greatest and most substantiall derogation from his Glory that you can ingage into And this farther clears §. 18. what is farther excepted to the end of the Sect. 40. in these words Therefore neither the Vnchangeablenesse nor Changeablenesse of God are to be estimated or measured either by any variety or uniformity of dispensation towards one and the same Object and consequently for him to express himselfe as this day towards a Person Man or Woman as if he intended to save them or that he really intended to save them and should on the morrow as the alteration in the interim may be or how ever may be supposed in these Persons expresse himselfe to the contrary as that he verily intends to destroy them would not argue or imply the least Alteration in him It is true Ans. such Dispensations of God as are morally declarative of what God approves of what he rejects not ingagements of any particular intēdment designe or purpose of his Will or such as are meerely outward Acts of his Power may in great variety be subservient to the accomplishment of his Purpose may undergoe the first in respect of the Object the latter of the Works themselves many alterations without prejudice to the Immutability of God The first in themselves are everlastingly unchangeable God alwaies approves the Obedience of his Creatures according to that Light and knowledge which he is pleased to communicate unto them and alway condemnes disallowes their Rebellions yet the same Persons may doe sometimes what he approves and sometimes what he condemnes without the least shadow of change in God Whilest they thus change his Purposes concerning them and what he will doe to them and for them are unchangeable as is his Law concerning Good and Evill For the latter take an instance in the case of Pharaoh God purposeth the destruction of Pharaoh and suites his Dispensations in great variety and with many changes for the bringing about and accomplishing of that his unchangeable Purpose he Plagues him and Frees him he Frees him and Plagues him againe all these things doe not in the least proove any alteration in God being all various effects of his Power suited to the accomplishment of an unchangeable Purpose So in respect of Persons whom he intends to bring through Christ infallibly to himselfe how various are his Dispensations both Temporall and Spirituall He Afflicts them and Relieves them sends them Light and Darkenesse Strength and Weakenesse Forsakes and Appears to them againe without the least alteration in his thoughts and purposes towards them all these things by his infinite Wisdome working together for their good But now if by Dispensation you understand and comprehend also the thoughts and Purposes of God towards any for the bringing of them to such and such an end if these be altered and the Lord doth change them continually I know no reason why a poore Worme of the Earth may not lay an equall claime absit Blasphemia to Immutability and Unchangeablenesse with him who Asserts it as his Essentiall Property and Prerogative whereby he distinguisheth himselfe from all Creatures whatsoever There is also an Ambiguity in that expression §. 19. that God expresseth himselfe this day towards a Man or Woman that he really intends to save them and on the morrow expresseth himselfe to the contrary If our Author intends only Gods Morall approbation of Duties and Performances as was said before with the Conditionall approbation of Persons with respect to them there being therein no Declaration of any Intention or Purpose of God properly so called the instance is not in the least looking toward the businesse we have in hand But if withall he intend the Purposes and Intentions of the will of God as those termes really intend and verily intend doe import I know not what to call or account Alteration and Change if this be not surely if a man like our selves doe really intend one thing one day and verily intend the cleane contrary the next day we may make
that Believers receive the spirit of Adoption to cry Abba Father which being a worke within them cannot be wrought and effected by Adoption it selfe which is an extrinsicall Relation Neither can Adoption and the Spirit of Adoption be conceived to be the same He also farther affirmes it 1 Cor 2. 12. we have received the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given us of God We have so received him as that he abides with us to teach us to acquaint our hearts with Gods dealing with us bearing witnesse with our spirits to the condition wherein we are in reference to our Favour from God and Acceptation with him and the same he most distinctly asserts Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into our hearts crying Abba Father The distinct Oeconomy of the Father Sonne and Spirit in the work of Adoption is clearly discovered He is sent sent of God that is the Father That name is Personally to be appropriated when it is distinguished as here from Sonne and Spirit That is the Fathers work that work of his Love he sends him He hath sent him as the spirit of his Sonne procured by him for us promised by him to us proceeding from him as to his personall subsistence and sent by him as to his office of Adoption and Consolation Then whether the Father hath sent the spirit of his Sonne where he is to abide and make his residence is expressed it is into our Hearts saith the Apostle there he dwells and abides And lastly what there he doth is also manifested he setts them on worke in whom he is gives them priviledges for it Ability to it Incouragement in it causing them to cry Abba Father Once and againe to Timothy doth the same Apostle assert the same truth 1 Epist. 3. 14. the good thing committed unto thee keep by the Holy Spirit which dwelleth in us The Lord knowing how much of our Life and Consolation depends on this Truth redoubles his Testimony of it that wee might receive it even wee who are dull and slow of heart to believe the things that are written 3. Whereas some may say §. 3. it cannot be denyed but that the Spirit dwels in Believers but yet this is not personally but only by his Grace though I might reply that this indeed and upon the matter is not to distinguish but to deny what is positively affirmed To say the Spirit dwells in us but not the Person of the Spirit is not to distinguish de modo but to deny the thing it selfe To say the Graces indeed of the Spirit are in us not dwell in us for an Accident is not properly said to dwell in its subject but the Spirit it selfe doth not dwell in us is expressly to cast downe what the word sets up If such distinctions ought to be of force to evade so many positive and plaine Texts of Scripture as have been produced it may well be questioned whether any Truth be capable of proofe from Scripture or no. Yet I say farther to obviate such Objections and to prevent all quarrellings for the future the Scripture it selfe as to this businesse of the Spirits indwelling plainely distinguisheth between the Spirit it selfe and his Graces He is I say distinguished from them and that in respect to his indwelling Rom. 5. 5. The Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost that is given to us The Holy Ghost is given to us to dwell in us as hath been abundantly declared and shall yet farther be demonstrated Here He is mentioned together with the Love of God and his shedding thereof abroad in our Hearts that is with his Graces is as clearely distinguished and differenced from them as Cause and effect Take the Love of God in either sence that is controverted about this place for our Love to God or a sence of his Love to us and it is an eminent Grace of the Holy Spirit If then by the Holy Ghost given unto us yee understand only the Grace of the Holy Ghost He being said to be given because that is given then this must be the sence of the place The Grace of the Holy Ghost is shed abroad in our Hearts by the Grace of the Holy Ghost that is given to us Farther if by the Holy Ghost be meant only his Grace I require what Grace it is hereby the expression intended Is it the same with that expressed the Love of God This were to confound the efficient cause with its effect Is it any other Grace that doth produce the great worke mentioned Let us know what that Grace is that hath this power energie in its hand of shedding abroad the Love of God in our Hearts So Rom. 8. 11. He shall quicken your mortall bodyes by the Spirit that dwelleth in you This quickning of our mortall bodies is generally confessed to be and the scope of the place inforceth that sence our Spirituall quickning in our mortall bodyes mention being made of our bodyes in Analogie to the body of Christ by his death we have life and quickning Donbtlesse then it is a Grace of the Spirit that is intended Yea the habitual principle of all Graces And this is wrought in us by the Spirit that dwelleth in us There is not any Grace of the Spirit whereby he may dwell in men antecedent to his Quickning of them Spirituall Graces have not their residence in dead soules So that this must be the Spirit himselfe dwelling in us that is here intended and that personally or the sence of the words must be The Grace of quickning our mortall bodyes is wrought in us by the Grace of Quickning our mortall bodyes that dwels in us which is plainely to confound the Cause and Effect Besides it is the same Spirit that raised up Jesus from the dead that is intended which doubtlesse was not any inherent Grace but the Spirit of God himselfe working by the exceding greatnesse of his Power Thus much is hence cleared Antecedent in order of nature to our Quickning there is a Spirit given to us to dwell in us Every efficient Cause hath at least the precedency of its effect No Grace of the Spirit is bestowed on us before our Quickning which is the preparation and fitting of the subject for the receiving of them the planting of the Roote that containes them vertually and brings them forth actually in their order Gal. 5. 22. All Graces whatsoever come under the name of the fruit of the Spirit that is which the Spirit in us brings forth as the Roote doth the fruit which in its sodoing is distinct therefrom Many oher instances might be given but these may suffice 4. There is a Personallity ascribed to the Holy Ghost in his dwelling in us and that in such a way §. 4. as cannot be ascribed to any Created Grace which is but a Quality in a subject and this the Scripture doth three wayes 1. In
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
bidde to feare him who can cast both body and soule into Hell-fire Now though the Logicke of this Argument doth scarce appeare to me or the strength of the inference from the text there being a great difference between fearing him who can cast both body and soule into Hell-fire and fearing of Hell-fire between fearing God for his Severity and Power in Opposition to the weakenesse and limitednesse of Persecutors even whilst we feare not their feares but sanctify the Lord of hosts in our hearts making him our dread and our feare and such a feare of punishment as is inconsistent with the Promises of God that we shall be preserved in Obedience so be free from it Yet I shall consider the following Discourse that is built thereon Supposing all that Mr Goodwin observes from this Text and that the reason of the feare here injoyned is taken from the power of God to cast into Hell yet the whole of the Argument thence amounts but thus farre because such who are threatned to be persecuted by men who can only kill their bodyes ought rather to feare God who can extend his power of punishing to the destruction of body and soule of those that offend him therefore there is such a feare ingenerated in the Saints by the Threatnings of the Word as is inconsistent with the truth of Gods stedfastnesse in his Covenant with them to keepe them up to Obedience unto the end Sect. §. 59. the 14. he farther pleades from Heb. 11. 7. 2 Kings 22. 19 20. That the eminentest and Holyest men that live may do many things from a principle of feare or of being afraid of the Judgments of God that they should come upon them and upon that account have beene put upon wayes that were acceptable to God Ans. We know that the Feare of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdome and that the Feare of the Lord and his Goodnesse is a great Mercy of the Covenant of Grace This is not the thing here pleaded for it is a thing quite of another nature even that ascribed to the strange nations that were transplanted into Samaria by the King of Syria upon the captivity and removeall of the ten tribes and frightened by Lyons that destroyed some of them who did yet continue to worship their owne Idolls under the dread of God which was upon them which is called the Feare of the Lord. To compleat this feare 't is required that a man have such an Apprehension of the comeing of Hell and Wrath upon him as that he be not relieved against it by any interposall of Promise or ought else from God that he should be preserved in the way and path whereby he shall assuredly finde deliverance from that which he feares How farre this kind of Feare the feare of Hell not as declarative of the terrour of the Lord but as probable to betide and befall the persons so fearing it and that solely considered as an evill to himselfe may be a principle of any act of acceptable Gospell Obedience is not cleared by Mr Goodwin nor easily will be so For 1. That it is not the intendment of any divine Threatnings to beget such a Feare in reference to them that believe hath beene declared 2. It is no fruit or product of the Spirit of Life and Love which as hath beene showne is the principle of all our Obedience and walking with God 3. It holds out a frame of Spirit directly contrary to what we are called ond admitted unto under the Gospell For God hath not given us the Spirit of feare but of ●●wer of Love and of a sound minde 2. Tim. 1. 7. and Rom. 8. 15. We have not received the Spirit of bondage unto feare but the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father The Spirit of this Feare and Dreade and the bondage that attends it is at open variance with the Spirit of Liberty Boldnesse Power Adoption and a sound minde wherewith Belivers are indued And 4. It is that which the Lord Christ intended to remove and take away from his by his death Heb. 2. 15. He dyed that he might deliver them who for feare of death were in bondage all their dayes This feare then I say which is neither Promise of the Covenant nor fruit of the Spirit nor product of saving Faith will scarce upon strict inquiry be found to be any great furtherer of the Saints Obedience what use the Lord is pleased to make of this dread and terrour in the hearts of any of his for the hedging up their wayes from folly and staving them off from any Actuall evill when through the strength of Temptation they do begin to cast off the Law of Life and Love whereby they are governed is not in the least prejudiced by any thing asserted in the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance Toward some who though they are perswaded of the Perseverance of the Saints Indefinitely yet have no perswasion or at least no prevailing chearing Assurance that themselves are Saints which Mr Goodwin thinkes to be the condition of far the greatest part of Believers it hath its full power extent its whole efficacy depending on the Apprehensions of the minde wherein it is Towards the residue who upon abiding grounds and sure foundations have obtained a comfortable Spirituall perswasion of their owne Interest in the Promises of God That the consideration of Hell and Judgement as the due debt of sinne and necessary vindication of the Glory of God hath also its Effects and influence as farre as God is pleased to exercise them therewith acquainting them continually with his Terrour and filling them with an abhorrency of those wayes which in and of themselves tend to so dismall an end and issue hath beendeclared Secondly §. 60. the places of Scripture mentioned by Mr Goodwin doubtlesse will not reach his intendmend Of Noah it is said that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Being warned of God of that floud that was for to come upon the World of ungodly men and the Salvation of himselfe and his Family by the Arke being filled with the Reverence of God and assured of his owne preservation he industriously sets himselfe about the use of the meanes whereby it was to be accomplished That because a man assured of an end from God himselfe in and by the use of meanes did with a Reverentiall Feare of God not of any evill threatned which he was to be preserved from set himselfe to a conscientious use of meanes whereby the promised end of God's owne institution is to be brought about Therefore the Feare of Hell such a Feare as hath been decribed is one principle of the Obedience of the Saints in their walking with God and such as they ought to cherish as being a meanes appointed of God for that end and purpose is an Argument of no great value here with us Neither surely will the Conclusion intended be more evidently educed from
17. 3. and unto this bestowing on them everlasting Life his raising of them at the last Day as was mentioned is a necessary consequent namely that they may be brought to the full and compleat fruition of that life which here in some measure they are made partakers of Even in the words of v 39. that passage I should loose nothing extends it selfe to the whole Compasse of our Saviours Duty in reference to his Fathers Will for the safe-garding of Believers and is it only death and the state of dissolution of Body and Soule that it is the Will of God that he should deliver them from and the power of that that it should not have dominion over them in the morning The Apostle tells us that he came to doe the will of God whereby we are sanctified Heb 10. 9 10. it was the Will of God that he should sanctify us and he tells his Father that he had kept all his own in the World Joh 17. which doubtlesse was not his raising them from the dead If he be the Mediator of the Covenant of Grace if the Promises of God be yea and amen in him if he be our Head Husband and Elder Brother our Advocate and Intercessour our Sheapheard and Saviour his keeping us from being lost extends it selfe no lesse effectually to our preservation from utter ruine in this life then to our raising at the last day yea and that exceptive particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 includes this preservation as well as leads us to the addition of the other Favour and Priviledge of being raised to Glory at the last day In a word this whole discourse is added to make good that Gracious Promise of our Saviour v 35. He that cometh to mee shall never hunger and he that Believes on me shall never thirst which how it can be done by a naked ingagement for the Resurrection of them that come to him and abide with him if many doe most of all them that come to him may depart from him and fall into everlasting ruine needs Mr Goodwins farther labour and paines to unfold What is lastly added concerning Christ's doeing the utmost of his Fathers Pleasure for their Custody but the fault is their own who fall away is the same inconsistent ridiculous Assertion with that erewhile considered with this addition that whereas it is his Fathers Pleasure that they be saved Christ doth his pleasure to the utmost and yet saved they are not And so much if not too much for the vindication of this Testimony witnessing to the Truth that we have in hand Mat 24. 24. comes in the next place to be Considered §. 49. an unquestionable Evidence to the Truth and that voluntarily of its own accord speaking so plaine to the matter in hand that it were a sinne against cleare light to refuse to attend unto it so farre is it from being compelled to beare the Crosse of this service as Mr Goodwin phrases the matter Cap 10. Sect 9. Pag 181 182 183. They shall seduce if it were possible the very Elect hence saith he it is inferred that the deceiving or seducing of them that Believe is a thing impossible which is the drawing of darknesse out of light Strange to me it seemes so farre from a forced inference or a strained drawing of a Conclusion that it is but the conversion of the termes of the same Identicall supposition He that saies they shall deceive the very Elect if it were possible so mighty shall be their prevalency in seducing seemes to mee and would I doubt not doe so to others did not their prejudices and ingagements force them to stoppe their eares shut their eyes to say that it is Impossible the Elect should be seduced But let the Place as it deserves be more distinctly considered It is among them §. 50. which I referre to the head of the Purposes of God and a Purpose of God there is though not expressed yet included in the words The Impossibility of the seduction of some persons from the Faith is here Asserted Whence doth this Impossibility arise Not from any thing in themselves not from their own carefull Consideration of all the Concernments of their Condition the only preservative in such a season if some who pretend themselves skilfull and experienced yea almost the only Physitians of Soules may be believed They can never stand upon such sands against that opposition they shall be sure to meet withall Our Saviour therefore intimates whence the Impossibility expressed doth flow in a description of the Persons of whom it is affirmed in reference to the Purpose of God concerning them They are the Elect Those whom God hath chosen before the foundation of the World Eph. 1. 4. Rom. 9. 12. 11. 7. that they should be holy and unblameable before him in love His Purpose according to Election must stand firme and therefore the Election it selfe shall obtaine This then is that which is here affirmed God having chosen some or Elected them to Life according to the purpose which he purposed in himselfe and faith being bestowed on them Ephes. 1. 9. Phil. 1. 29. they believing on the account of their being ordained to eternall life Act. 13. 48. it is impossible they should be seduced so as to be thrown downe from that state and Condition of Acceptance with God for the substance of it wherein they stand Some few Observations will further cleare the minde of the Holy Ghost §. 51. and obviate the exceptions that are put in against our receiving the words in their plaine proper obvious signification Observe then 1. Upon the intimation of the Great Power and Prevalency of Seducers our Saviour adds this as a matter of greate Consolation to True and Sound Believers that notwithstanding all this all their attempts however advantaged by force or subtility yet they shall be preserved This the whole Context inforceth us to receive and our Adversaries to confesse that at least a great difficulty of their seduction is intimated And it arises with no lesse Evidence that this difficulty is distinguishing in respect of the Persons exposed to seduction that some are Elect who should be seduced if it were possible others not that may and shall be prevailed against 2. The Bottome of the Consolation in the freedome of the Persons here spoken of from falling under the prevailing Power of Seducers consists in this that they are the Elect of God such as in a personall Consideration are Chosen of God from all Eternity to be kept and preserved by his Power to Salvation notwithstanding any Interveniences or Oppositions which he will suffer to lye in their way But saith Mr Goodwin These men at least before their Calling are as lyable to be deceived or seduced as other men this is their owne Confession and Paul saies that they were somtimes deceived Titus 3. 3. Ans. An Exception doubtlesse unworthy him that makes it who had he not resolved to say
sinne the body of it or the ruling of Originall sinne the old man and the full fruit of actuall sinne in the body of it is by the death of Christ crucified and destroyed and in that whole Chapter from our participation in the death of Christ he argues to such an abolition of the Law and Rule of sinne to such a breaking of the power and strength of it that it is impossible that it should any more rule in us or have dominion over us Of the way whereby virtue flowes out from the death of Christ for the killing of sinne I am not now to speake And this is the first way whereby the death of Christ hath an influence into the safegarding of Believers in their continuance of the Love and Favour of God He so takes away the guilt of sinne that it shall never be able utterly to turne the Love of God from them and so takes away the rule of Sathan and power of sinne destroying the one and killing the other that they shall never be able to turne them wholly from God Farther §. 19. to secure their continuance with God he procureth the Holy Spirit for them as was shewed before But because much weight lyes upon this part of our foundation I shall a little farther cleare it up That the Spirit of Grace and Adoption with all those Spirituall Mercyes and operations wherewith he is attended and accompanied is a Promise of the new Covenant doubtlesse is by its own evidence put out of question There is scarce any Promise thereof wherein he is not either clearly expressed or evidently included Yea and often times the whole Covenant is stated in that one Promise of the Spirit the actuall collation and bestowing of all the Mercy thereof being his proper worke and peculiar dispensation for the carrying on the great designe of the Salvation of sinners So Isa. 59. 20. As for me saith God this is my Covenant with them my Spirit that is upon thee and my word which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart from thee This is my Covenant saith God or what in my Covenant I do faithfully ingage to bestow upon you But of this Text and its vindication more afterwardes Many other places not only pregnant of proofe to the same purpose but expressly in termes affirming it might be insisted on Now that this Spirit §. 20. promised in the Covenant of Grace as to the bestowing of him on the elect of God or those for whom Christ dyed is of his purchasing and procurement in his Death is apparent 1. Because he is the Mediator of the Covenant by whose hands and for whose sake all the Mercyes of it are made out to them who are admitted into the bond thereof Gen. 17. 1. Though men are not compleatly stated in the Covenant before their owne Believing Ierem. 31. 32. 32. 38 39 40 which brings in what of their part is stipulated yet the Covenant and Grace of it layes hold of them before even to bestow Faith on them Ezek. 11. 19. 36. 25 26. or they would never Believe for Faith is not of our selves it is the Guift of God God certainely bestowes no such Guifts but from a Covenant Spirituall Graces are not administred soly in a providentiall dispensation Heb. 8. 9 10 11. Faith for the receiving the pardon of sinne is no guift nor product of the Covenant of workes Now as in generall the Mercies of the Covenant are procured by the Mediator of it so this whereof we speake in an especiall manner Heb. 9. 15. For this cause he is the mediator of the New Testament that by meanes of death they which are called might receive the Promise of Eternall Inheritance By his death they for whom he dyed and who thereupon are called Deut 27 29. being delivered from their sinnes which were against the Covenant of workes Gal. 3 12. receive the Promise Rom. 3. 21. or pledge of an Eternall Inheritance What this great Promise here intended is and wherein it doth consist the Holy Ghost declares Acts 2. 23. The Promise which Jesus Christ received of the Father upon his exaltation was that of the Holy Ghost having purchased and procured the bestowing of him by his Death upon his Exaltation the dispensation thereof is committed to him as being part of the Compacte and Covenant which was between his Father and himselfe The grand bottome of his satisfaction merit This is the great Originall radicall Promise of that Eternall Inheritance By the Promised Spirit are wee begotten a new into a hope thereof Rom. 8. 11. made meet for it Col. 1. 12. and sealed up unto it Ephes. 4. 30. Yea do but looke upon the Spirit as promised and yee may conclude him purchased for all the Promises of God are yea and a men in Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. They all have their Confirmation Establishment and Accomplishment in by and for Jesus Christ. And if it be granted that any designed appointed Mercy whatever that in Christ the Lord blesseth us withall be procured for us by him in the way of merit being given freely to us through him but reckoned to him of debt it will easily be manifested that the same is the condition of every Mercy whatever promised unto us and given us upon his Mediatory interposition 2. It appears from that peculiar promise § 21. that Christ makes of sending his Holy Spirit unto his owne He tels them indeed once and againe that the Father will send him Ioh. 14. 16 26. As he comes from that originall and Fountaine Love from which also himselfe was sent But withall he assures us that he himselfe will send him Ioh. 15. 26. When the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the Spirit of truth It is true that he is promised here only as a Comforter for the performance of that part of his Office But look upon what account he is sent for any one Act Ioh. 16. 7. or Worke of Grace on that he is sent for all I will send him then saith Christ and that as a fruit of his death as the procurement of his Mediation for that alone he promiseth to bestow on his And in particular he tells us that he receives the spirit from the Father for us upon his Intercession wherein as hath been elsewhere demonstrated he askes no more nor lesse Salus Electorum sanguis Iesu. then what by his death is obtained Iohn 14. 16 17. I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever even the spirit of Truth whom the World cannot receive he tells us v. 13. that whatsoever we aske he will doe it But withall in these verses how he will doe it even by interceding with the Father for it as a fruit of his Bloodshedding and the Promise made to him upon his undertaking to Glorify his Fathers
that it was possible in respect of the event that he should be damned Why because he laboured that he might not be so That is no man can use the meanes of avoiding any thing but he must be uncertaine whether in the use of those meanes it may be avoided or no This looketh like begging the thing in question Paul labouring and indeavouring in the wayes expressed evidently manifesteth such a labour and indeavour in such a way to be the appointed meanes of avoiding the Condition of being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That there is an infallible connexion betwixt the use of such meanes the deliverance from that state is proved But that Paul had not assurance of the sufficiency of the Grace of God with him for his certaine use of those meanes certaine infallible deliverance from that end nothing in the least in intimated in the Text or brought in from any place else by Mr Goodwin to give colour thereunto But of this Scripture at large afterwards Supposing himselfe to have fairly quit himselfe of the former plea §. 20. in the behalfe of our Doctrine as by himselfe proposed he addeth another Pretension in the behalfe of the same plea formerly produced which he attempteth also to take out of the way having in some measure prepared it in his proposall of it for an ea●y removall Thus then he proceedeth To pretend that the weaknesse of the flesh in the best of Saints considered and their aptnesse to goe astray they must needs lye under many trouble some and tormenting feares of perishing unlesse they have some promise or assurance from God to support them notwithstanding any declinings or goings astray incident unto them yet they shall not loose his favour or perist is to pret and nothing but what hath been throughly answered already especially in Cap. 9. Ans. Before I can admit this plea to be put in in our behalfe I shall crave leave a little to rectify and point it more sharply against the Doctrine it aimeth to oppose I say then 1. It is not the weaknesse of the flesh or the feeblenesse and disability of our naturall man to act in or goe through with great duties and trialls but the strength and wilfulnesse of the flesh i.e. of the corrupted man even in the best of saints continually provoking and seducing them with sometimes an insuperable efficacy leading them captive and working in them continually with a thousand baits and wiles as hath been in part discovered labouring to turne them aside from God That fills the Saints of God with tormenting perplexing feares of perishing and must needs doe so if they have no promise of God for their preservation Besides all this strength and wilfulnesse of the flesh they are exposed to the Assaults of other most dreadfull Adversaries wrestling with Principalities and Powers in heavenly places and contending with the World as it lieth under the curse all their daies To referre all the oppositions that Believers meet withall in the course of their obedience and which may fill them with fears that they shall one day perish if not supported by an Almighty hand and kept by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation unto the weaknesse of the flesh which in the place where the expression is used plainly pointeth at the disability of the naturall man to abide in and goe through with great duties and trialls is a most vaine and empty contemplation Those who have to doe with God in the matter of Gospell obedience and know what it is indeed to serve him under temptations can tell you another manner or story and among them M. Goodwin could doe so to the purpose when his thoughts were not prejudiced by any byasing opinions that must be leaned unto 2. We do not say that the Saints of God in the condition mentioned stand in need of any Promise of God that notwithstanding any declinings or goings astray incident unto them they shall not loose his favour or perish but that they shall have such a presence of his spirit and sufficiency of his grace with them all their daies that they shall never notwithstanding all the oppositions and difficulties they meet withall utterly faile in their Faith nor be prevailed against to depart wickedly and utterly from God And now I see not but that supposing that it is necessary that the Saints be delivered from troublesome perplexing feares of perishing and that God hath made provision for that end and purpose which that he hath seemes to be granted by our Author I say I cannot see but that this Plea striketh at the very heart of the Apostasy of S t s though not very fitly brought in in this place in reference to the Argument that occasioned it but our Author knowing his faculty to lye more in evading what is objected against him than in urging Arguments for his own opinion doth every where upon the first proposall of any Argument divert to other considerations and to the answering of Objections though perhaps not at all to the Plea in hand nor any way occasioned by it But what saith he now in defence of his dearly beloved thus attempted to vindicate it from this sore imputation of robbing and despoiling the Saints of God of their Peace and Assurance purchased for them at no lesse rate then the blood of the Lord Jesus He telleth you then three things 1. That the weakenesse of the flesh or aptnesse of miscarrying through this is no reasonable ground of feare §. 31. to any true Believer of his perishing considering that no manlooseth or forfeiteth the Grace and Favour of God through sinnes of weakenesse or infirmity It is only the strength of sinne and corruption in men that exposeth to the danger of loosing the Love of God Ans. The latter part of these words plainely discovers the vanity of the former as produced for any such end and Purpose as that in hand For though I willingly grant that that which is termed the weakenesse of the flesh is enough to make any man what ever feare that he shall not hold outin the course of his Obedience to the end if he have no Promise of supportment and preservation by an Almighty power notwithstanding it is affirmed that it draweth men only to sinnes of weaknesse or infirmity which I thought had not been called so from the weaknesse of the flesh but of Grace in Believers yet it is the strength the power the Law the subtillty of the flesh or indwelling sinne that is the matter of our plea in this case Not that which Paul gloried in even his infirmity but that which made him cry out Oh! wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Rom. 7. 8. 1. from the distresse by reason whereof he found no deliverance but only in the Assured Love of God in Jesus Christ. So that notwithstanding this Reply shaped to fortifie the minds of men against their failings upon the account
from you so that you also having my Law written in your hearts shall never utterly and wickedly depart from me And for such sinnes and follies as you shall be overtaken withall I will graciously heale your backslidings and receive you freely This is the Language of the Doctrine we maintaine which is not we full well know obnoxious to any Exceptions or Consequences what ever but such as bold and prejudiced men for the countenance of their vaine conceits and opinions will venture at any time to impose and fasten on the most pretious Truths of the Gospell That God should say to Believers as is imposed on him fall into what sinnes they will or abominations they can yet he will have them believe that by an irresistible hand he will necessitate them to Persevere that is in and under their Apostacy which is evidently implyed in their falling into sinnes and abominations in the manner insisted on is a ridiculous fiction to the imagination whereof the least colour is not supplied by the Doctrine intended to be ●raduced thereby Secondly §. 4. for the ensuing Exhortations Promises and Threatnings as farre as they are really Evangelicall whose use and tendency is argued to be inconsistent with the Doctrine before proposed I have formerly manifested What is their proper use and efficacy in respect of Believers and their consistency with the truth we maintaine apprehended as it is indeed and not visarded with ugly and dreadfull appearances will I presume scarcely be called in question by any who having received a Kingdome that cannot he shaken doe know what it is to serve God acceptably with reverence and Godly feare It is true they are made unto and have their use in reference unto them that Believe and shall Persevere therein but they are not given unto them as men assured of their Perseverance but as men called to the use of meanes for the establishing of their soules in the wayes of obedience They are not in the method of the Gospell irrationally happed on such intimations of unchangeable Love or proposed under such wild Conditionalls and Suppositions as here by our Author but annexed to the Appointment of those wayes of Grace and Peace which God calls his Saints unto being suited to worke upon the new nature wherewith they are indued as spreading it selfe over all the facultyes of their Rationall Soules wherein are Principles fit to be excited to Operation by Exhortations and Promises Thirdly §. 5. all that is indeed Argumentative in this Discourse is built on this Foundation that a Spirituall Assurance of attaining the end by the use of meanes is discouraging and disswasive to the use of those meanes A Proposition so uncouth in it selfe so contradictory to the experience of all the Saints of God so derogatory to the Glory and Honour of Jesus Christ himselfe who in all his Obedience had doubtles an Assurance of the end of it all as any thing that can well fall into the imaginations of the Hearts of men Might not the Devill have thus replyed upon our Saviour when he tempted him to turne Stones into Bread cast himselfe from a pinacle of the Temple received Answer that man lives not by Bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God but alas thou Jesus the Sonne of the Living God that art perswaded thou art so and that God will preserve thee whether thou usest any meanes or no that thou shalt never be starved for want of Bread nor hurt thy selfe by any fall whatever thou clost the Angells having charge that no evill shall come nigh thee nor thy foot be hurt against a stone thou maist now cast thy selfe headlong from the Temple to manifest thy Assurance of the Love and Faithfullnesse of God with his Promises to thee If our Saviour thought it sufficient to stop the mouth of the Devill to manifest from Scripture that notwithstanding the Assurance from God that any one hath of the end yet he is to use the meanes tending thereunto a neglect whereof is a sinfull tempting of God we shall not need to goe farther for an Answer to the same kind of Objections in the mouth of any Adversary whatever His 19 th Section containeth his fourth Argument §. 6. in these words If there be no possibility of the Saints falling away finally then is their Persevering uncapable of reward from God But their finall Perseverance is not uncapable of reward from God Ergo The minor Proposition I presume containes nothing but what is the sence of those who deny the conclusion or how ever it containes nothing but what is the expresse sence of the Lord Christ where he saith that he that endureth to the end the same shall be saved Therefore I suppose we shall bee excused from farther proofe of this without any prejudice to the cause in hand Ans. I grant Eternall Life may be called the Reward of Perseverance in the sence that the Scripture useth that word applyed to the matter in hand It is afterward neither procured by properly and Morally as the deserving cause nor proportioned unto the obedience of them by whom it is attained a Reward it is that withall is the free gift of God and an Inheritance purchased by Jesus Christ a Reward of Bounty and not of Iustice in respect of them upon whom it is bestowed but only of faithfulnesse in reference to the promise of it A Reward by being a gratious incouragement as the end of our obedience not as the procurement or desert of it so we grant it a Reward of Perseverance though those words of our Saviour he that endureth to the end the same shall be saved expressed a consequence of things only and not a connexion of causality of the one upon the other of the foundation of this discourse concerning a possibility of declining immediate consideration shall be had He proceeds then The consequence of the Major Proposition §. 7. stands firme upon this foundation No act of the Creature whereunto it is necessitated or which it cannot possibly decline or but doe is by any Law of God or rule of Iustice rewardable therefore if the Saints be necessitated by God to Persevere finally so that he leaves unto them no possibility of declining finally their finall Perseverance is not according to any Law of God or man nor indeed to any principles of Reason or Equity capable of reward no whit more than actions meerely naturall are Nay of the two there seems be more reason why acts meerely naturall as for example Eating Drinking Breathing Sleeping should be rewarded in as much as these flow in a way of necessity yet from an inward principle and connaturall to the Agent than such actions whereunto the agent is constrain'd necessitated determined by a principle of power from without and which is not intrinsecall to it And this is the strength of the Argument which will quickly appeare to be very weakenesse For First the efficacy of