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A91437 The late Assembly of Divines Confession of faith examined. As it was presented by them unto the Parliament. Wherein many of their excesses and defects, of their confusions and disorders, of their errors and contradictions are presented, both to themselves and others. Parker, William, fl. 1651-1658. 1651 (1651) Wing P486; Thomason E1229_1; ESTC R203140 216,319 371

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wayes assailed and weakned but gets the victory l Luk 22.33 Ephes 6.16 1 John 5.4 5. growing up in many to the attainment of a full assurance through Christ m Heb 6.11 12. Heb 10.12 Col 2 ● who is both the Author and Finisher of our Faith n Heb. 12.2 CHAP. XIV Of Saving Faith Examined AS Your selves elsewhere condemn an implicite faith of which notwithstanding you are not altogether guiltless in letting your authors so often impose upon you as they do so we hope you will leave our faith free to dissent from you where truth is not on your side in this and other chapters Here some men perhaps would quarrel with you for not setting forth the kinds of faith but since it was your scope and purpose to speak here of saving faith onely which is a living faith or hope 1 Pet. 1.3 We will not much blame you for making no mention of that dead faith spoken of by St. James chapter 2.20 The like we say of omitting the mention of a false and feigned faith seeing that whereby me must be saved is called faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1 5. The ordinary distribution of faith into those of historical temporary miraculous and saving might here by you with the lesse detriment be passed over in silence because as historical faith is an ingredient into true faith so the temporary differs nothing or very little from it but in point of perseverance and though outward miracles with the primitive power of godlinesse for the greatest part seem long fince to have grown rare yet the true saving faith in Jesus Christ hath alwayes according to its strength and growth been a worker of inward and spiritual miracles and that upon sure grounded promises John 14.12 Verily verily I say unto you he that beleeveth in me the works that I do shall he do also and greater works then these shall he do because I go unto the Father And those words of our Saviour Marke 16.17 18. being spiritually understood do set forth the signes of a true faith to the end of the world And these signes shall follow them that beleeve In my name shall they cast out Devils they shall speak with new tongues they shall take up Serpents and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them they shall lay their hands upon the sick and they shall recover But the things we most wonder at are these First That you should now come to speak of faith not onely after effectual calling which in your sense implies faith but after justification which you confess to be attained by faith yea and after sanctification also which though you take it to be a distinct thing from justification must for the greatest part follow faith also as an effect of it Acts 26.18 Among them that are justified by faith that is in me And Secondly That you should make no distinction betwixt the three degrees if not kindes of saving faith to wit Faith in God the father Belief in God the Son and Confidence in the Holy Ghost The which as they are in part descriminated from each other at least wise by their distinct objects in the Apostles Creed so are they clearly dissevered from each other in the holy Scripture It is in a general comprehension that the Apostle takes the faith of the elect when he describes it to be an acknowledgment of the truth that is according to godliness in hope of eternal life which God that cannot lie promised before the world began 1 Tit. 1.2 But it is faith in God the Father or faith in confuso as we said before that is set forth Heb. 11.6 For he that cometh to God must beleeve that God is and that he is a rewarder of them that seek him as it is faith in God the Son which St. Paul points at Gal. 2.15 16. saying We who are Jewes by nature and not finners of the Gentiles knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the faith of Jesus Christ even we have beleeved in Jesus Christ that we might be justified by the faith of Jesus It is also that faith in the holy Ghost of which the Apostle speaks thus Gal. 5.3 For we through the spirit wait for the hope of righteousness by faith that is the Lord our righteousness or the beavenly Jerusalem Jer. 33.16 These three are distinct from each other and men may have the first without the second and the first and second without the third For first we finde that Cornelius beleeved in God prayed unto him gave alms and did many things with acceptance before God ere ever he was commanded to send for Peter that he might by him hear of the faith in Jesus Christ Acts 10. chapter Thus our Saviour speaks to his Disciples and Apostles John 14.1 Let not your hearts be troubled ye beleeve in God beleeve also in me intimating that though they had a clear and strong faith in God the Father yet their knowledge of him in his right saving office and their respective faith was but darke and weak as yet for they neither distinctly understood that he must dye for them and that they must dye with him if they should be saved nor expected salvation from sins and Satan by his blood and spirit and much less had they any hope or due knowledge of the promised Spirit the everlasting comforter who should abide with them for ever till Christ there especially after his resurrection revealed the same unto them and brought them to a true belief and stedfast hope of the same yea where are they now to be found who thus beleeve in the holy Ghost or in Jesus Christ himself for a right justification and spiritual salvation from the hands of all their enemies by his alone power and grace Thus is that fulfilled Luke 18.7 8. And shall not God avenge his own Elect which cry day and night to wit for help against their spiritual enemies I tell you that he will avenge them speedily nevertheless when the Son of man cometh shall he finde faith upon the earth This faith was a rare bird like a black Swan at Christs last comming in the Spirit That there may be some pious souls which not onely want the third degree or kinde of faith but have not so much as heard that there is an holy Ghost the Scriptures witness clearly Acts 19.2 The like may be said concerning the Lord Jesus and faith in him among the Heathen to whom the Father hath not revealed him as yet But now to come to your particular Sections In the first of them you say That faith whereby the Elect beleeve to the saving of their souls is the work of the spirit of Christ which thing in a proper and accurate kinke of speaking is not true for it is the work of the Father to reveale and manifest the Son unto us as it is the work of the Father and Son to beget faith in
Testament Deut. 6.25 And it shall be our righteousness if we observe to do viz. through the help of Christ all these commandements before the Lord our God as he hath commanded us Ezek. 18.22 All his transgressions that he hath committed shall not be mentioned unto him in his righteousness that he hath done he shall live Rom. 8.4 That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Rom. 10.4 For Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth 2 Cor. 9.10 As it is written he hath dispersed abroad he hath given to the poor his righteousness remaineth for ever Now he that ministreth seed to the sower both minister bread for your food and multiplie your seed sown and increase the fruits of your righteousness See Heb. 10.36 James 1.22.23 24. Rom 2.13 For not the hearers of the Law are just before God but the doers of the same and they onely shall be justified And Augustine himself doth acknowledge That forasmuch as this obedience is performed with our consents and endeavors though principally begun and ended through the grace and power of God yet it is through the mercy and goodness of God imputed unto us as if it were entirely ours Ninthly you say That men are justified by having Christs obedience and satisfaction imputed unto them but we have shewed before that the outward person and active obedience of Christ stands upon his own score he as a creature being a debtor to keep the Law and is not imputed unto us as his passive obedience is through which we are discharged of those sins which we have repented of and left Tenthly you say That persons to be justified rest upon Christ and his righteousness by faith which is true of his internal righteousness as we have shewed but not in your sense for so Saint Paul having spoken of the righteousness of faith Phil. 3.8 9. doth explain himself at the 10. vers saying That I may know him and the power of his resurrection c. So the same Apostle Rom. 4.11 saith That Abraham received circumcision which in it self signifies and sets forth sanctification as a seal of the righteousness of faith Lastly whereas you say That they have not this faith of themselves it is the gift of God we grant it to be true of Gods illumination revealing unto us the things which we knew not but not of our credence which we yeeld unto the same as we said before In your second Section besides one of your former errors resumed of faiths resting upon an imagined righteousness his outward obedience aforesaid you affi●m two untruths more The first is That faith is the alone instrument of Justification whereas the Publican who went away justified rather then the self justifying Pharisee obtained that mercy partly by his penitence and partly by prayer saying Lord be merciful unto me a sinner Luk. 18.14 Furthermore the word of God is a blessed instrument of our cleansing and justification from sin Joh. 15.3 Now are ye clean through the word that I have spoken unto you Joh 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy truth thy word is truth see Eph. 5.25 26. Finally we have shewed before that our obedience both active and passive is a way wherein and so a mean and instrument whereby we attain justifying and sanctifying grace from Christ Secondly you say but untruely That faith is accompained with all other graces For though it is the high way to obtain whatsoever grace we want yet at the first it is seconded but with two other ordinarily to wit hope and love Hence the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 13.13 Now abideth these three Faith Hope and Love but the greatest of these is Love And if it were attended at the first with all other graces why doth the Apostle thus charge us 2 Pet. 1.5 6 7. And besides this giving all diligence add to your faith vertue and to vertue knowledge and to knowledge temperance and to temperance patience and to patience godliness and to godliness brotherly kindness and to brotherly kindness love Lastly though you say truly That the faith which justifieth is no dead faith we may justly fear that such a faith as seeks no living justification is scarce a lively faith In your third Section first you harp upon that old string That Christ hath discharged our debt and satisfied Gods justice by his death which how far it is true or false we have already declared yet is our justification of freegrace and so contrived that both Gods exact justice which can have no fellowship with iniquity and his rich grace also might be glorified in the justification that is the renewing and reparation of sinners In your fourth Section we acknowledge Gods decree to justifie all sinners if they oppose him not in the work but not to justifie all the elect For such chosen ones as die in innocency need it not We assent also unto it that Christ did in the fulness of time in his assumed humanity die for the sins of all offenders as in his God●ead he dyeth in them from the time of their fall but neither way doth he suffer death for all the Elect. T is granted likewise that he is risen again both inwardly and outwardly for the justification of sinners but not in your sense But that which you add in the close of the same Section That they are not justified until the Holy Spirit doth in due time actually apply Christ unto them is false Not that we dream as some do that men are justified either from eternity or from the time of Christs resurrection but that Christ in the work of our justification applyeth the spirit unto us and not the Spirit him as you here dream In your fifth Section by not distinguishing of justification in sieri in facto you bring forth both confusion and error For first you say That God doth continue to forgive the sins of those that are justified which is true of them that are now under the work so far as they continue in faith and obedience or after fals renew their repentance but as for those who are fully justified they have a general acquitance and discharge of all their sins sealed up unto them in and through the death of Christ Heb. 10.14 15 16. For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that a●e sanctified whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witness to us For after that he had said before this is the Covenant that I will make with them after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my Lawes into their hearts and in their minds will I write them and their sins and iniquities will I remember no more Now where remission of these is there is no more offering for sin Secondly whereas you say That the justified persons can never fall away from the state of justification it is false of persons that are there in fieri and true of
cogit triplices ad praelia sectas Hásque omnes temerat caede livore dolis Effugient pauci Lotus ut de triplice sectâ Uvas qui Sodomae non comedêre suae E Babylone fugam propera properante ruinâ Ne te corripiant dira flagella Dei. Mitte fidem citus hanc nobis tot monstra creantem Quot nescit monstri Nilus ipse ferax Ad pulsus cytharae vestrae saltabimus omnes An fidibus vestris admodulanda fides Sis Gomarhaee puer pueris coeleste paratur Regnum stultescas si sapuisse velis Cum Christo moriare prius vivatur ut illi Quàm nos de Christo tale quid edoceas Scire tuum nihil est vetitae nocet arboris esus Obsequium ad vitam jam patefecit iter Vera fides coelis ignem deducit Amoris Igneus hic currus tollit ad astra virum Quicquid lex mandat quicquid sacra foedera spondent Et Legem Vates unus adimplet Amor. Arbor quid vitalis Amor. Paradisus Amores Fons Edenis Amor. Vita perennis Amor. Quid Deus ipsus Amor fine Marte cupidinis expers Cui Veneres virtus fas pietásque faces THE Lamentation over the Synod of DORT OR The verses of an out-landish but a learned and peaceable man since deceased unto and upon that Synod sitting in the fatal yeer presently after the great blazing Star that messenger of Gods wrath and the foreteller of the worlds ensuing calamities appeared Anno Dom. 1618. now turned into English WHen in the Netherlands the learned crew Of James Arminius first 'gan to brew Or broach their sober Tenets to the Dutch Prejudice-drunk uncapable of such The Gomarist the fatal Comets brother A Synod called at Dort which was no mother And being set upon the judgement throne Convents th' Arminians yet leave out one But Dordrect might have learnt of Amsterdame No man that lives well for his faith to blame Yet in that Synod rests a knot untide Who shall Umpire be 'twixt side and side Sayest thou the Scripture That each side doth wrest They make their own sence not the Text the Test A rule is one thing in a lightful place A Judge another in a doubtful case Shal then the Church be judge which of the twain The Roman Synagogue or Lutheran Neither say you the former are my foes The later with Arminius doth close Will yee the Dominick shall moderate No they in some thing suit the knaves I hate Then chuse the Anabaptists at a pinch No I fear drowning if they me should drench Wilt thou be judge thy self That likes me well What foe judge foe So heaven may yield to hell Then let Arminius have leave to cite The Gomarists and boldly them indite If Gomarists shall any Vorsty yield Let that learned combatant be barr'd the field And let new Spanish inquisitions With interrogatories vex those sons Be sure with heresie thy charge be strong With schisme them burden be it right or wrong Damn them to hell as reprobates alive The Authors of their damning Art deprive What shall for truth for falshood pass decree The Law is in thine hand be bold and free Thine Articles of faith bring into light Though they be errors darker then the night Awake the civil sword the soldier call To helpe the cause of Christ material Now Gomarist doth all this seem accurst Why didst thou then this way pursue at first Cymerian darkness droppeth from thy quil The ship of truth doth touch the Armenian hil Who to these haltings twain shall be umpire Unless some new Elias bring down fire Dost thou reply that prophets now are gone Then in the list of prophets thou art none Prophesie faith and knowledge cease But when When peece-works have an end with perfect men A prophet wants not honor save at home I le prophecy of some but be no Mome One by Loves spiri't doth evangelize Of love and peace against wickedness and vice Another in his eight books doth impart Th' Heavenly treasures hidden in mans heart A third to Ninivitish penitence Like a new Jonas doth us all incense A Belgick prophetess I here could spring Sions laments who dolefully doth sing Pretor's Elias and Schnaubar Divine Europes post writer make up a new trine What need I pantel Trapim Faire recite Or Behman who did like a prophet write Arnd and thy lesser prophets I forget Oh what a harvest here of prophets met Was not the Comet late a prophet true Of errors schismes and wars which all must rue Armin's when he had write Elias found With him the fire of love which to the ground Consumes the altar with the sacrifice Oh that thou Gomarist mighst find the prize Who had he lived would an Elisha prove But death untimely did the man remove When he that did these Articles discry Of the disease articular doth ly What faith is this which soyles the Deity With little-less then tacit blasphemy Decrees Laconick which were writ in blood Saturne his sons devouring far from good Yet far more cruel things to God the Fount And Ocean of goodness thou dost count Who mak'st him damne from all eternity Most men then guiltless with unmov'd decree Which Soveraign justice to him such ascribes As him from favor frees not though from bribes Whilst men of equal merits it will have Some to destroy at pleasure some to save Which to the herds of Epicure sets ope a gate By Stoical necessity and fate If all things hurryed be by fatal stream Drink Dutch man cover of no vertue dream Which for the fathers fault condemn's the seed This God abjures and this his lawes forbid Go burn thy guiltless infants Gomarist That thou with th' name of justice may'st be blest Which the most simple Deity doth fill Here with a double but contrary will Who by his secret will would few men save By his revealed none would damned have Doth not this faith make him an hypocrite And worse then Satan see the foul despight For by the Laws of contraries the Devil Hath a will secret good but th' open evil Which of Divine Elections makes no choice Though one a calling is from sin and vice Another crowneth after tryal late A third from ages all conditionate Which saith that Esau yet unborn was hated Ere he or good or ill had perpetrated But why should God himself so oft perplex Creating things so hated self to vex God of two seeds did to Rebecca say The younger people shall the elder sway It is the house of Edom desperate Whom Malachy doth shew this God to hate Which general for sorts Christs ransome makes But individuals must claim no stakes Is not Christs Godhead then a boundless spirit Infinite in mercy as well as merit Which makes God now create all men impure Can he produce uncleanness most past cure Which maketh God use force and violence When his converting work he doth commence Hence slothful souls till they drop into hel Expect a time when God
corrupted that without it we could not have been saved or brought to communiō w th God again by that his other conceptiō alone in the womb of the Virgin Mary as neither could infants be saved without his other presence spoken of before Thus is Christ both the resurrection and the life Joh. 11.25 viz. a life preservation to the innocent a resurrection to the dead who beleev on him obey him In your 3 Section you are first much mistaken and afterwards no less defective Mistaken in these things 1. That you say That the Lord Jesus in his human nature was sanctified above measure For though it is said of him Joh. 3.34 that he receiveth not the spirit by measure yet that is spoken of the God-head which alone is infinite As for his humanity it being a creature must needs be finite though spiritually enriched above any other creature 2. Whereas you say or imply That in his humanity likewise all treasures of wisdom are hidden it is a mistake likewise For that place Col. 2.3 to which you refer us speaks of the Diety likewise The same we say concerning Colos 1.19 where it is written that it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell by you appropriated but amiss to his human nature 2. Though it must be granted also to be true which the Aposte speakes Heb. 7 26. that he is holy hormless undefiled and separate from sinners and made higher then the Heavens yet the last words transfer this honor to the Deity especially and not to the humanity alone as you would restrain them And thus he is throughly furnished to do the great office of a Mediator which Office as you truely say Christ did not take upon himself of his own head but was there unto called of his Father who hath put all power judgement into his hand Thus of your mistakes deficient you are in setting forth what and wherein the Mediatorship of Christ doth mainly consist especially in his works of spiritual Mediation Intercession and Redemption In your 4. Section you have in part set forth Christs twofold state in the humanity the one of humiliation the other of exaltation but if you will confider what you have here omitted you will have more cause to be humbled then exalted For 1. You make no mention at all of that great work of his wherein Gods justice and severity against sin is so conspicuous and the love of Christ towards mankind is so illustrious to wit Christs descending into Hel his suffering there for us the torments due to the sins of the whole world Which grand article of the Faith though retain'd in the most ancient Creeds confessed in the most Orthodox Councels is by you suppressed to the eternal blemish of this your confession But Consider we pray you was not Jonah three daies afflicted or tormented by the sense of Gods wrath upon him in the belly of Leviathan as a type of our Saviours future sufferings See Jonah 2.2 Out of the belly of Hell have I cried unto thee compared with Mat. 12.40 For as Jonah was 3 daies and 3 nights in the Whales belly so shall the Son of man be 3 daies and 3 nights in the heart of the earth Doth not the Apostle also expresly say Ephes 4 9. Now that be ascended what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth Where take notice of two things First Of the comparative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the lower which is according to an usual Hellenism in the New Testament put for the superlative the lowest as utter darkness is put for the utmost darkness And Secondly That the heart of the earth afore-named Matth. 12. and the lower parts of the earth here mentioned cannot possibly be understood of Christs Sepulther which was upon the superficies of the earth Thirdly Doth not Christ comfort himself with this that though he knew he should go into hell yet he fore-saw that God would not leave his soul there alwayes Psal 16.10 for thou wit not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffe● thine holy one to see corruption Doth not St. Peter seconded with the other Apostles and all filled with the holy Ghost in the day of Pentecost expresly affirm Acts 2.24 the God raised up Christ from the dead loosing the paines of death c Now Christs body while it remained in the grave was not in any pain therefore it was his soul that at the hour of his resurrection was loosed from those paines and torments But here two things seem to puzle you First That saying of Christs upon the Cross not long before his expirement John 19.30 crying it is finished Secondly That he sayeth to the penitent theef this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise Luke 23.43 To which we answer severally as followeth To the first We object a like place John 17.4 where our Saviour saith unto his Father some space before his death I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do that is I have almost finished it And how much more then might Christ so say when he had suffered so much more in the garden before his Judges and upon the cross If you reply That in the former place he speaks of his ministery we will rejoyn that he speaks here of the sacrifice and offering up of his corporal life both to fulfil the types of the Old Testament and to set us an example of dying with him To the second we answer with Gillebert in Bernard That as man consists of three distinct parts body soul spirit 1 Thes 5.23 seconded with Hebr. 4.12 So did Christs humanity also consist of the same parts Psal 16 9 10. Therefore my heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth my flesh also shall rest in hope for thou wilt not leave my soul in Hell nor suffer thine holy one to see corruption Where the heart is the soul and the flesh the body so the glory was his spirit which Jacob also calls his honour Gen 49.6 O my soul come not thou into their secret unto their assembly mine honour be not thou united Which two are dissevered again by a gradation Isa 26.9 With my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early The which distinction of parts being most clear we say then that the spirit of Christ at his death immediately ascended to God according to those words Luke 23.43 aforesaid This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise his body also was laid in the grave yet saw no corruption but his soul went to hell there to suffer for us the condign punishment of our sins in the proper place of punishment Oh justice upon the surety to be trembled at for ever O love in Christ never to be forgotten Secondly You are deficient in setting forth the inward and spiritual crucifying death and burial of Christ within us ever since our fall
ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God Was not new righteousness put into these men And were they not thereby washed sanctified and justified these three words expressing one and the same thing see also Tit. 3.4 5 6. But after the kindness and love of God our Saviour unto man appeared not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour that so being justified by his Grace we should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life Where you see again that the Apostle makes regeneration in Christ and justification to be the self same thing as we intimated in the foregoing Chapter Yea in the whole dispute about justification by Christ the Apostle Paul useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to justifie either for that part of justification which we commonly call mortification or that other part which we usually term vivification or for both as Rom. 6.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For he that is dead to wit with Christ is justified freed or purged from sin In this notion doth the Apostle use the word Act. 13.39 And by him all that believe are justified or cleansed from all things from which they could not be justified by the Law of Moses Rev. 22.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is He that is unjust will be so let him be unjust still and be which is filthy let him be filthy still and he that is or will be righteous let him be justified or righteous still and that is holy let him be sanctified still Where justification and sanctification are the same thing so Isa 45.24 25. Surely shall one say In the Lord have I righteousness and strength even to him shall men come and all that are incensed against him shall be ashamed In the Lord shall all the seed of Israel be justified and shall glory Where righteousness and strength being joyned together the words must be understood of an internal righteousness through which our sins and corruptions are purged out And therein lies our justification as the next verse imports Yea if mortification be not comprehended under the word justification it is wholly left out in that golden chain so much spoken of and so little understood Rom. 8.30 Moreover whom be did predestinate them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified In this sense Cyprian useth the word frequently and among prophane authors Catullus thus Justificam nobis mentem avertere deorum And so must the word of necessity be meant by the Apostle Rom. 5.8 as appeareth there by the opposition of our state as sinners to our justified estate But God commendeth his love towards us that while we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us much more being now iustified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath thruogh him And so must the same word be taken Rom. 3.24 25. Gal 2.17 We grant indeed that the word is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and variously used as for defending our selves or others as just Luke 16.15 Ye are they which justifie your selves before men c. for absolving or declaring one just Rom. 8 33 34. It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth for predicating or magnifying some person or thing Mat. 11.19 But wisdom is justified of her children But all these are founded upon that moral sense of being just or made just or of being free from unrighteousness which is the Apostles sense in all his discourse of justification by Christ Thirdly you say positively That God justifieth by pardoning of sins but though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used sometimes for the puting away of sins and that by regeneration Luk. 1.77 Eph. 1.7 and elswhere as well as for the pardon of sins Yet justification in Saint Pauls sense lieth not in remission of sins Fourthly you say positively also That God justifies men by accounting and accepting their persons as righteous and you mean he doth so while they are otherwise both in heart and life But God accounts of every man as he is and though he is so gracious as to pardon the guilt of sins forsaken and repented of and ready also in Christ both to cleanse us and renew us because he would not have us dye in our iniquities yet as he speaks to Moses he will by no means clear the guilty or such as continue in evil Exod. 34.7 He is a God of purer eyes then to behold iniquity Hab. 1.13 Doth not he search the heart and try the reines that he may give to every man according to his wayes and according to the fruit of his doings Jer. 17.20 See what he saith Micah 6.10 11. Are there yet the treasures of wickedness in the house of the wicked and the scant measure that is abominable shall I count them pure with the wicked balances and the bag of deceitful weights God indeed is said to justifie the ungodly Rom. 4.5 Yet not by accounting him righteous when he is wicked but by cleansing and renewing him and so making him of ungodly a godly and righteous person Fifthly you say God justifies them not for any thing that is wrought in them which is false for it is by something wrought in us that we are justified and sanctified and by something wrought in us also that we are justified that is declared just before God and men in Jesus Christ Sixthly you say That such are justified for Christs sake alone which is true of Christ and his work within us but not of Christ and his obedience without us as you mean it But why do you in these two last passages oppose that which is wrought in us to Christ as if the father and his Christ with the Holy Ghost were not the makers of every good work in the unregenerated Seventhly you say That God in this work imputeth not faith or the act of believing unto us for righteousness contrary to express Scriptures Is it not written Gen. 15.6 Rom. 4.3 Gal 3.6 that Abraham believed God and it was imputed unto him for righteousness that is the Lord accepted his believing whereby he gave him that honor of his truth omnipotency and faithfulness as an acceptable duty at his hand and rewarded it with the promised righteousness as St. James speaks chap. 2.23 Yea doth not the Apostle speak thus expresly Rom. 4.23 24. Now it was not written for his sake alone that it was imputed to him but to us also to whom it shall be imputed if we believe in him who raised up our Lord Jesus from the dead Eighthly you say That God doth not impute any other Evangelical obedience to men for their righteousness wherein you run full butt against the whole stream of the Scriptures of the Old and New
a good conscience have made shipwrack of their faith as we said before 1 Tim. 1.18 19. How Christ may be said to be the Author and Finisher of our faith we shewed before CHAP. XV. Of Repentance unto Life REPENTANCE unto life is an Evangelical grace a Ezek 12.10 Acts 11.18 the doctrine whereof is to be preached by every minister of the Gospel as well as that of Faith in Christ b Luke 24.47 Mar 1.15 Acts 20.21 II. By it a sinner out of the sight and sence not onely of the danger but also of the filthyness and odiousnesse of his sins as contrary to the holy nature and righteous law of God and upon the apprehension of his mercy in Christ to such as are penitent so grieves for and hates his sins as to turn from them all unto God c Ezek 18.30.31 Eze 36.31 Isa 30.22 Psal 51.4 Jer 31.18 19. Joel 2.12 13. Amos 5.15 Psal 119.118 2 Cor 7 11 purposing and indeavouring to walke with him in all the wayes of his commandments d Psal 119.6 50 106. Luke 1.6 2 King 23.25 III. Although Repentance be not to be rested in as any satisfaction for sin or any cause of the pardon thereof e Ezek 36.31 32 Ezek 16.61 62.63 which is the act of Gods free grace in Christ f Hos 11.24 Rom 3.21 Eph 1.7 yet it is of such necessity to all sinners that none may expect pardon without it g Luk 13 5. Acts 17.30 31. IV. As there is no sin so small but it deserves damnation h Ro 6.23 Rom 5.12 Mat 12.36 so there is no sin so great that it can bring damnation upon those who truely repent i Isa 55 7. Rom 8.1 I● 1.16 18. V. Men ought not to content themselves with a general repentance but it is every mans duty to repent of his particular sins particularly k ●sal 19.13 Luke 19 8. 1 Tim 1.13 15. VI. As every man is bound to make private confession of his sins to God praying for the pardon thereof l Psal 51.4 5 7.9 14 Psa 32.5 6 upon which and the forsaking of them he shall finde mercy m Pro 28.13 1 John 1.9 So he that scandalizeth his Brother or the Church of Christ ought to be willing by a private or a publick confession and sorrow for his sin to declare his repentance to those that are offended n Ja● 5.16 Luk 17.3.4 Josh 7.19 who are thereupon to be reconciled unto him and in love to receive him o 2 Cor 2.8 ● Psal 51 throughout CHAP. XV. Of repentance unto life examined IN this Chapter though you deliver many things not to be repented of yet you first strangely and needlessly multiply ●eads and common places For wherein doth your repentance differ from your conversion or effectual calling Chap. 10. and from sanctification joyned with it Chap. 13. or from adopting grace as it is conditional or from effectual calling jointly with justification in Saint Pauls sense In effect all this is one entire work of grace though calling and sanctification or justication are the parts of it But as you are herein redundant so you are many wayes deficient For first you do not distinguish repentance there being a repentance wrought by the Law and accompanied with the spirit of bondage or fear of wrath Rom. 8.15 and another wrought by the Gospel which again is twofold The one a temporary humiliation and reformation the concomitant and effect of a temporary faith and the other a persevering and through repentance never to be repented of Secondly you set not forth the degrees of repentance in the least measure or degree whereas first there is repentance or conversion wrought by God the Father which follows upon our respective faith in him of which these and many other Scriptures speak Mar. 11.5 Repent ye and believe the Gospel Act. 20 21. Testifying both to Jews and also to the Gentiles repentance towards God and faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ Heb. 6 1. Therefore leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ let us go on unto perfection not laying again the foundation of Repentance from dead works and of faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ which work is all one with our conversion and lieth mainly in our turning to God Ezek. 14.6 Thus saith the Lord repent and turn you from your Idols Ezek. 18.30 Repent and turn you selves Joel 2.14 Who knoweth if be will return and repent Acts 3.19 Repent you there ore and be converted that your sins may be blotted out c. This first degree of repentance is that sanctification which we obtain and receive from God the Father in the change of our minde will and affections Jude To them that are sanctified by God the Father Besides which there is a further progress in repentance of inward and outward reformation wrought by Jesus Christ when after the conversion aforesaid we are brought to believe on him for the purging away of their sins and corruptions by his blood and spirit which in its latitude containes the totall and final work of mortification of which those texts speak expresly Luk. 24 4● 47. He said unto them thus it is written and thus it behoove● Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day and that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all Nations beginning at Jerusalem Mat. 9.13 I am not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance unto Israel and forgiveness of sins This is that work of Christ of which the Apostles and Saints speak Act 11.18 Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life Thus of your defects in general In your first Section you call this repentance unto life whereof you speak an Evangelical grace as if you thought it to be a single vertue as hope patience meekness or the like But repentance in the latitude is an universal change of the inward man as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies to the putting away of all iniquity in heart and life towards which there are necessarily so many vertues required as there are vices to be put away for each sinne is removed by his contrary Secondly Though in your second Section you concurr with us in making repentance such an universal change of the whole man as that he not only grieves for hates and turnes from all his sins unto God but also both purposeth and indeavors to walk with him in all the wayes of his commandements yet here you faile or mistake in three things First In describing such a repentance only as the least Saint attaines by the work of the Father and leaving out that repentance unto life which lies in mortification See Rom. 8.13 where it is said If yee live after the flesh ye shall dye but if through
me saith the Lord Zach. 14.16 c. And it shall come to pass that every one that is left of all the Nations that came against Jerusalem shall even go up from yeer to yeer to worship the King the Lord of Hosts c. In your fourth Section you yet seem to digress further from the truth in saying That the judiciall law did expire with the state of the Jewes for doubtless whensoever their Commonwealth shall be restored that Law shall be revived yea how far it may now oblige all Christian states to follow it is worth your inquiring You say That the general equity of it may still continue In which words you recommend the whole upon the matter for what is there to be found in it but equity it self can ever the Christian Nations hope to finde out better political Laws then those which first came from Heaven Yea what by the Testimony of almost all men were more to be wished for in a Christian state then that their Laws might be few in number just in themselves and eafie to be known as those would be if they were gathered into a body and that such as have controversies might have a speedy dispatch as in Moses his dayes In your fifth Section you do justly maintain the continued authority and obligation of the moral Law over all persons under the Gospel Where you truly affirm That Christ doth not any way dissolve but muchst engthen this obligation which thing he doth by his Doctrine Mat. 5.16 17 18 19. by his example John 15.10 and especially by the end of his coming which is to fulfill it in us Rom. 8.3 4. and not for us otherwise then we have shewed before as you in your next Section partly imply In your sixth Section though you do not shew what it is to be under the Law yet there you truly set forth many most precious uses of that law even for the regenerate Nevertheless you forget a singular peice of service it did them in their first converson by God their fathers cooperation when it first made known their sin and misery unto them and was their Schoolemaster unto Christ Galatians 3.22 23 24. At which time while we were under the work of the Law breeding fear of wrath for we alwayes remain under the rule of it till it be dead we were troubled with the spirit of bondage which made us justly fear the wrath and vengeance to come Rom. 8.15 And this was the first great bower and encliner of our wils to leave our wicked wayes and keep Gods Commandements yet an impulsive out of self love and self preservation for the present till faith in Gods gracious promises did kindly melt and charge our hearts to bewaile and leave sin as also to work righteousness out of love and good will to him that was so gracious towa●ds us And in this sense we may grant you that which you speak of in your seventh and last Section of the Spirits subduing our wils for it is by the work of the Law that our pride is first brought down and our strong inclination to sin with ou● utter aversness to righteousness becomes broken in us but our wils are sweetly attracted and framed to choose the good and nil theevil by the apprehension of mercy and grace from God whom in our own sense by the sentence of our own consciences we deserved nothing but pe●dition Lo this is that wise powerful and gracious work of God in the conversion of a sinner which you call Gods irresistable working and yet is nothing less then a compulsion though it wants not strong impulsions at the first to work upon our stiffe yet not inflexible wils That these forementioned uses of the Law are not contrary to the grace of the Gospel but either make way for the same or sweetly comply therewith as you speak in this last Section is undoubtedly true And therefore the believer under the Covenant of grace remains still in some sence under works But yet if the Spirit of Christ both can and usually doth subdue our wils and inable us freely and chearfully to do the will of God revealed in the law as you here speak what letteth but that our corruptions may be abolished our sanctification perfected and our obedience to the law made compleat especially if we seek that grace contrary to your former doctrines Yea if Christ by his Spirit can and will so fulfill the Law in us which of the Saints made perfect in the world to come you will not deny what great need can there be at that time may some say of Christs outward obedience to be our righteousness But of that sufficiently before For a conclusion then of this Chapter as you here tacitly oppose the Antinomians and other such adversaries to the law so we pray you remember that it is upon your own grounds here and elsewhere that they desert the Law for they thus argue If Christ hath fulfilled the Law for us in his active and personal obedience to make us compleatly righteous before God what need is there of our obedience to the same Yea some of them are so bold as to say They see not how God in Justice can require obedience to his Law the second time at our hands which he hath both exacted and obtained already from his Son in our behalf yea why should any still perish for their disobedience against the Law who yet believed on Christ as some do Mat. 7.21 22 23. Thus they argue for themselves out of your own principles so dangerous a thing it is to lay a sandy foundation in the bottom of the structure But is not the keeping of Christs words and sayings and therein the fulfilling of the Commandements through his grace and help that immoveable rock which he hath commended to every wise builder for a sure foundatition Mat. 7.24 25. CHAP. XX. Of Christian liberty and liberty of Conscience THE Liberty which Christ hath purchased for believers under the Gospel consists in their freedom from the guilt of sin the condemning wrath of God the curse of the moral Law a Tit 2.4 1 Thess 1.10 Ga 3.13 and in their being delivered from this present evil world bondage to Satan and dominion of sin b Gal 1.4 Col 1.19 Act 26.18 Ro 6.14 from the evil of afflictions the sting of death the victory of the grave and everlasting damnation c Ro 8.28 Psa 119.71 1 Cor. 15.54 55 56 57. Ro 8.1 as also in their access to God d Ro 5.1 2. and their yeilding obedience unto him not out of slavish fear but a child like love and willing mind e Rom 8.14 15. 1 Joh 4.18 All which were common to all believer under the Law f Gal 3.9 14 but under the new Testament the liberty of Christians is further enlarged in their freedom from the yoke of the Ceremonial Law to which the Jewish Church was subjected g Gal 4.1 2 3 6 7 Gal
betwixt the second and the third because the Apostle speakes of the Doctrine of Baptismes Hebrews 6.2 as also for that some were said to be Baptized for the dead 1 Corinthians 15.29 the former of which places implies that the acts of Baptism might be a plurality though all at one time successively performed The other That some were Baptized to become dead with Christ which we take to be the genuine meaning of that Text and that the Baptizer there paused if he went any further at that time The other is Whether those that were ignorant of what was done to them in their Infancy by death of Parents or Sureties may not lawfully be Baptized again at the time of their Repentance and Conversion to God and that for their further edification or comfort though otherwise we neither see what necessity there can be of Persons once Baptized and knowing they were so to be rebaptized or what warrant the Anabaptists have from God or men to reiterate this Sacrament or administer it at all CHAP. XXIX Of the Lords Supper OVR Lord Jesus in the night wherein he was betrayed instituted the Sacrament of his body and blood called the Lords Supper to be observed in his Church unto the end of the world for the perpetual remembrance of the Sacrifice of himself in his death the sealing all benefits thereof unto true Beleever their spiritual nourishment and growth in him their further ingagement in and to all duties which they owe unto him and to be a bond and pledge of their communion with him and with each others as members of his mystical body a 1 Cor 11.23 24 25 26. 1 Cor 10.16 17 21. 1 Cor 12.13 II. In this Sacrament Christ is not offered up to his Father nor any real Sacrifice made at all for remission of sins of the quick and dead b Heb 9.22 25 26.28 but only a commemoration of that once offering up himself by himself upon the Cross once for all and a spiritual oblation of all possible praise unto God for the same c 1 Cor 11.24 2● 26 Matth 26.26 27. So that the Popish Sacrifice of the Mass as they call it is most abominably injurious to Christs one onely Sacrifice the alone Propitiation for the sins of the Elect d Heb 7.23 24 27. Heb 10.11 12 14 18. III. The Lord Jesus hath in this Ordinance appointed his Ministers to declare his word of institution to the people to pray and bless the Elements of bread and wine and thereby to set them apart from a common to an holy use and to take and break the bread to take the cup and they communicating also themselves to give both to the Communicants e Mat 26.26 27 28. Mark 14.22 33.24 Luke 22.19 20. with 1 Cor 11.23 24 25 26. but to none who are not present in the Congregation f Act 20.27 1 Cor 11.20 IV. Private Masses or receiving this Sacrament by a Priest or any other alone g 1 Cor 10 6. as likewise the denial of the Cup to the people h Mark 14.23 1 Cor 11.25 26 27 28 29. worshiping the Elements the lifting them up or carrying them about for adoration and the reserving them for any pretended religious use are all contrary to the nature of this Sacrament and to the institution of Christ i Mat 15. ● V. The outward Elements in this Sacrament duly set apart to the uses ordained by Christ have such relation to him crucified as that truely yet Sacramentally onely they are sometimes called by the name of the things they represent to wit the body and blood of Christ k Mat 26.26 27 28. albeit in substance and nature they still remain truly and onely bread and wine as they were before l 1 Cor 11 2● 27 28. Mat 26.29 VI. That Doctrin which maintains a change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of Christs body and blood commonly called transubstantiation by consecration of a Priest or by any other way is repugnant not to the Scripture alone but even to common sense and reason overthroweth the nature of the Sacrament and hath been and is the cause of manifold superstitions yea of gross Idolatries m Acts 3.21 with ● Cor 11.25.26 Luke 24.26 39. VII Worthy receivers outwardly pertaking of the visible Elements in that Sacrament n 1 Cor 11.28 do then also inwardly by faith really and indeed yet not carnally and corporally but spiritually feed upon Christ crucified and all the benefits of his death the body and blood of Christ being then not corporally or carnally in with or under the bread and wine yet as really but spiritually present to the faith of beleevers in that ordinance as the Elements themselves are to the outward senses o 1 Cor 10.16 VIII Although ignorant and wicked men receive outward Elements in this Sacrament yet they receive not the thing signified thereby but by their unworthy coming thereunto are guilty of the body and blood of the Lord to their own damnation wherfore all ignorant and ungodly persons as they are unfit to injoy communion with him so are they unworthy of the Lords table and cannot without great sin against Christ while they remain such pertake of the holy mysteries p Cor 11.27 28 29. 2 Cor 6.14 15 16. or be admitted thereunto q 1 Cor 5.6 7 13. 2 Thes 3.6 14 15. Matth 7.6 CHAP. XXIX Of the Lords Supper examined BRETHREN to give you your due you have here truly set forth the Author of this Sacrament the time of its institution with some of the ends for which it was ordained in the first Section and some part of the Ministers duty in the right administration of it in the third Section you have learnedly detected and confuted many of the gross abuses of the Papists in or about this Sacrament in your second fourth fifth and sixth Sections endeavoured to comfort the receiver of it in the seventh and set Railes about the Communion Table in the eighth Section to keep back ignorant profane and unworthy Communicants but if we here convince your selves with your Authors and guides of gross ignorance and error in the main Mystery of this Sacrament we hope you will the sooner yeeld that it was possible for you to erre in other things even in the most of these we have mainly challenged you for yea peradventure you will be hereupon induced to beleeve these things That there is a departure from the faith come into the Church 1 Tim. 4.1.2 2 Thes 2.24 That the man of sin errour and delusion is crept in 2 Thes 2.3 4 That much saving truth hath been lost for many hundred years That your Authors were not sent of God to preach the true Gospel which they never understood rightly in its chief mysteries concerning Christ That it was needful that the Gospel should be preached a new to the whole world before the end of the