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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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is a weighty observation yet withall it is evident that he opposeth the abiding of the Spirit with them as a Comforter to his owne bodily presence with them for that end His was for a season the other to endure for ever And I desire to know how our Saviour Christ comes or enters into the soules or hearts of men but by his Spirit and how these things come here to be distinguished But 2. He saies By the abiding of the Comforter with them for ever he doth not meane his perpetuall abode in their hearts or the hearts of any particular man but his constant abiding in the world in and with the Gospell and the Children thereof in respect of which he saith of himselfe elswhere I am with you alwaies even to the end of the world as if he should have said This the purpose of my Father in sending me into the world requiers that I should make no long stay in it I am now upon my returne but when I come to my Father I will intercede for you and he will send you another Comforter upon better termes for staying and continuing with you then those on which I came for he shall be sent not to be taken out of the world by death but to make his residence with and among you my friends and faithfull ones for ever Now from such an abiding of the Holy Ghost with them as this cannot be inferd his perpetuall abiding with any one person or Believer determinately much lesse with every one Ans. 1. §. 29. It was evident before that this Promise was made to the Disciples of Christ as Believers to quicken and strengthen their failing drooping Faith in and under that great Tryall of loosing the presence of their Master which they were to undergoe and being made unto them as Believers though upon a particular occasion is made to all Believers for à quatenus ad omne valet argumentum 2. It is no lesse evident that according to the interpretatiō here without the least attempt of proofe importunately suggested the Promise is no way suited to give the least Incouragement or Consolation unto the Disciples in reference to the Condition upon the account whereof it is now so solemnly given thē It is alone as if our Saviour should have said you are sadly troubled indeed yea your hearts are filled with trouble fear because I have told you that I must leave you be not so dejected I have kept you whilst I have been with you in the world now I goe away and will send the Holy Spirit into the world that whatsoever becomes of you or any of you whether yee have any Consolation or no he shall abide in the world perhaps with some or other that is if any doe believe which it may be some will it may be not untill the end and consummation of it 3. Is this Promise of sending the Holy Spirit given to the Apostles or is it not If you say not assigne who it is given or made unto Christ spake it to them and doubtlesse they thought he intended them and it was wholly suited to their Condition If it were made unto them is it not in the letter of the Promise affirmed that the Spirit shall abide with them for ever to whom it was given If there be any subject of this Promise in receiving the Spirit he must of necessity keepe his residence and abode with it for ever The whole designe of this Section is to put the persons to whom this Promise is made into the darke that we may not see them yea to deny that it is made to any persons at all as the recipient subject of the Grace thereof He tells yee that he abides in the world how I pray Doubtlesse not as the uncleane Spirit that goes up and downe in dry places seeking rest and finding none Christ promiseth his Spirit to his Church not to the world to dwell in the hearts of his not to wander up and downe Nay he abides with the Apostles and their Spirituall posterity that is Believers in our Saviours interpretation John 17. 20. Are they then and their posterity that is Believers the persons to whom this Promise is made and who are concerned in it with whom as he is promised he is to abide This you can scarcely finde out an Answer to in the whole Discourse He tells you indeed the Holy Ghost was not to dye with such other rare notions but for any persons particularly intended in this Promise we are still in the Darke 4. He tells us That from such an abiding of the Holy Ghost with them as this cannot be inferred his perpetuall abiding with any one person determinately But 1. What kind of abiding it is that he intends is not easily apprehended 2. If on the account of this Promise he is given to any person on the same account he is to abide with the same person for ever 3. That which he seemes to intend is the presence of the Spirit in the Administration of the Word to make it effectuall unto them to whom it is delivered when the Promise is to give him as a Comforter to them on whom he is bestowed But he adds Sect. 14. 4. And lastly This particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not alwayes import the certainty of the thing spoken of by way of event no not when the speech is of God himselfe but oft times the intention only of the Agent so that the words that he may abide with you for ever doe not imply an absolute necessity of his abiding with them for ever but only that it should be the intent of him that should send him and that he would send him in such a way that if they were true to their own interest they might retain him and have his abode with them for ever Turne the words any way with any tolerable congruity either to the scope of the place manner of Scripture expression principles of Reason and the Doctrine of Perseverance will be found to have nothing in them Ans. 1. This is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that when all Medicines will not heale must serve to skinne the wound given our Adversaries cause by the Sword of the Word The Promise is made unto Believers indeed but on such and such conditions as on the account whereof it may never be accomplisht towards them 2. This no way sutes Mr Goodwins interpretation of the place formerly mentioned and insisted on If it be as was said only a Promise of sending his Spirit into the World for the end by him insinuated doubtlesse the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must denote the Event of the thing and not only an Intention that might faile of Accomplishment For let all or any individualls behave themselves how they will it is certaine as to the Accomplishment and event that the Spirit of God shall be continued in the World in the sence pleaded for But it is not what is congruous to his
higher then outward dispensations when the words expressly mention the Spirit already received Evident it is that the whole Grace Love Kindnesse and Mercy of this eminent Promise and consequently the whole Covenant of Grace is enervated by this corrupting Glosse Doe men think indeed that all the mercy of the Covenant of Grace consists in such tenders and offers as here are intimated that it all lyes in outward endearements and such dealings with men as may seeme to be suited to win upon them and that as to the reall exhibition of it it is wholly suspended upon the unstable uncertaine fraile wills of men The Scripture seemes to hold out something farther of more efficacy Ezek. 11. 19. The designe of these exceptions Jere 31. 32. 32. 40. is indeed to exclude all the effectuall Grace of God promised in Jesus Christ upon the account that the things which he promiseth to work in us thereby are the duties which he requireth of us In summe these are the exceptions which are given into this Testimony of God concerning the abiding of the spirit with them on whom he is bestowed and for whom he is procured to whom he is sent by Jesus Christ. And this is the Interpretation of the words As for mee for my part or as much as in me lieth this is my Covenant I will deale bountifully and gratiously with them the whole Nation of the Jewes my spirit that is in thee that they ought to take care that they entertaine and retaine the Holy Spirit and not walk so extremely unworthily that he should depart frō them the residue of the words wherein the maine Emphasis of them doth lye is left untouched The import then of this Promise is the same with that of the Promises insisted on before with especiall reference to the Holy Spirit procured for us and given unto us by Christ. The stability and establishing Grace of the Covenant is here called the Covenant as sundry other particular mercies of it are also Of the Covenant of Grace in Christ the blessed Spirit to dwell in us and rest upon us is the maine and principall Promise This for our consolation is renewed againe and againe in the Old and New Testoment As a Spirit of sanctification he is given to men to make them believe and as a spirit of Adoplion upon their Believing In either sence God even the Father who takes us into Covenant in Jesus Christ affirmes here that he shall never depart from us which is our first Testimony in the case in hand With whom the Spirit abides and whilest he abides with them they cannot utterly forsake God nor be forsaken of him for they who have the spirit of God are the Children of God sonnes and Heyres But God hath promised that his Spirit shall abide with Believers for ever as hath been clearly evinced from the Text under consideration with a removall of all exceptions put in thereto The second witnesse we have of the constant abode and residence of this spirit bestowed on them §. 26. which Believe for ever is that of the Sonne who assures his Disciples of it Joh. 14. 16. I will saith he pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever As our Saviour gives a Rule of Interpretation expressely of his Prayers for Believers that he did in them intend not only the men of that present Generation but all that should believe to the end of the World Ioh. 17. 20. I pray not for these alone but for them also who shall believe on me through their word so is it a Rule equally infallible for the interpretation of the gracious Promises which he made to his Disciples that are not peculiarly appropriated to their season and worke in which yet as to the generall Love Faithfulnesse and Kindnesse manifested and revealed in them the concernements of the Saints in all succeeding ages does lye they are proper to all Believers as such For whom he did equally intercede to them he makes Promises alike They belong no lesse to us on whom in an especiall manner the ends of the World are fallen then to those who first followed him in the Regeneration Let us then attend to the Testimony in this place and as he shall be pleased to increase our Faith mix it therewithall that the Spirit he procureth for us and sends to us shall abide with us for ever and whilest the Spirit of the Lord is with us we are his Doubtlesse it is no easy taske to raise up any pretended plea against the evidence given in by this Witnesse the Amen the great and faithfull witnesse in Heaven He tells us that he will send the Spirit to abide with us for ever and therein speaks to the whole of the case in hand and Question under debate All we say is that the Spirit of God shall abide with Believers for ever Christ saies so too and in the issue what ever becomes of us he will appeare to be one against whom there is no rising up Against this Testimony it is objected by Mr Goodwin §. 27. Cap. 11. Sect. 14. Pag. 234. This Promise saith he concerning the abiding of this other Comforter for ever must be conceived to be made either to the Apostles personally considered or else to the whole body of the Church of which they were principall members If the first of these be admitted then it will not follow that because the Apostles had the perpetuall residence of the spirit with them and in them therefore every particular Believer hath the like no more then it will follow that because the Apostles were infallible in their judgments through the teachings of the spirit in them therefore every Believer is infallible upon the same account also If the latter be admitted neither will it follow that every Believer or every member of the Church must needs have the residence of the spirit with them for ever There are principall priviledges appropriated to Corporations which every particular member of them cannot claime the Church may have the residence of the spirit of God with her for ever and yet every present member thereof loose his interest and part in him yea the abiding of the spirit in the Apostles themselves was not absolutely promised Ioh. 15. 10. 1. The designe of this discourse is to prove Ans. that this Promise is not made to Believers in generall or those who through the word are brought to believe in Christ in all Generations to the end of the World and consequently that they have no Promise of the Spirits abiding with them for that is the thing opposed and this is part of the Doctrine that tends to their Consolation and improvement in Holinesse What thankes they will give to the Authors of such an eminent discovery when it shall be determined that they have deserved well of them and the Truths of God I know not especially when it shall be considered that not
such sinnes and unworthinesse as are inconsistent with the state of Acceptation with God which is the very thing he hath to prove 2. In supposing that if Believers are sealed up infallibly to Redemption the Exhortations to the avoidance of sinnes in themselves and to all that continue in them destructive to Salvation are in vaine which is a figment in a case somewhat alike as to the reason of it rejected by men that knew nothing of the nature of Gods Promises nor his commands nor the Accommodation of them both to the fulfilling in Believers all the good pleasure of his Goodnesse 2. The Assurance the Apostle gives of freedome from the wrath of God is inseparably associated with that Assurance that he gives that we shall not be left in or given up to such waies as wherein that wrath according to the tenure of the Covenant of Grace is not to be avoided From this latter Testimony this Argument also doth flow Those who are sealed of God to the day of Redemption shall certainly be preserved thereunto their preservation being the end and aime of God in his sealing of them Mr Goodwins Answer to this Proposition is that they shall be so preserved in case they fall not into abominable sinnes and practises and so Apostatize from the Faith that is in case they be preserved they shall be preserved but wherein their preservation should consist if not in their effectuall deliverance from such waies and courses is not declared That all Believers are so sealed and to that end as above is the plaine Testimony of the Scripture and therefore our Conclusion is undeniably evinced Thus have we through the Lords assistance freed the triple Testimony of Father Sonne and Spirit given to the Truth under Consideration from all Objections and exceptions put in thereunto so that we hope the mouth of iniquity may be stopt and that the cause of the Truth in hand is secured for ever It is a fearfull thing to contend with God Let God be true and all men lyars CAP. VIII 1. Entrance into the Digression concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit The manner of the ahode of the Spirit with them on whom he is bestowed Grounds of the Demonstratious of the Truth 2. The Indwelling of the Spirit proved from the Promises of it 3. Expresse affirmations of the same Truth Psal. 51. 11. Rom. 8. 9. opened v. 11 15. 1 Cor. 2. 12. Gal. 4. 6. opened 1 Tim. 3. 14. 4. The Spirit in his Indwelling distinguished from all his Graces Evasions removed Rom. 5. 5. Explained The Holy Ghost himselfe not the Grace of the Holy Ghost there intended Rom 8. 11. opened Gal 5. 22. 5. A Personality ascribed to the Spirit in his Indwellings 1 In personall Appellations 1 Ioh. 4. 5. Ioh. 14. 19 17. 2. Personall Operations Rom. 8. 11 15. explained 3. Personall circumstances The Spirit dwells in the Saints as in a Temple 1 Cor. 3. 16. Ch. 6. 9. 6. The Indwelling of the Spirit farther Demonstrated from the signall Effects ascribed in the Scripture to his so doing as 1 Union with Christ. 7. Union with Christ wherein it consisteth 8. Union with Christ by the Indwelling of the same Spirit in him and us 9. This proved from 1. Scripturall Declarations of it 2 Pet. 1. 4. How we are made partakers of the Divine Nature 10. Union expressed by caring the flesh and drinking the blood of Christ. Ioh. 6. 56. opened 11. The Prayer of our Saviour for the Union of his Disciples I●h 17. 21. The Union of the Persons in the Trinity with themselves 12. 2 Scripturall illustrations for the manifestation of Union 13. The Union of Head and Members what it is and wherein it doth consist 14. Of the Union between Husband and Wife aud our Union with Christ represented thereby 15. Of a Tree and its branches 16. Life and quickning given by the Indwelling Spirit in Quickning Life and sutable operations 17. 2. Direction guidance given by the Indwelling Spirit Guidance or direction twosold 18. The severall waies whereby the Spirit gives guidance and Direction unto them in whom he dwells The first way by giving a new understanding or a new spirituall light upon the understanding 19. What light men may attaine without the particular guidance of the Spirit 20. Saving Embracements of particular Truths from the Spirit 1 Ioh 2. 20 21. 21. The way whereby the Spirit leads Believers into Truth 22. Consequences of the want of this guidance of the Spirit 23. The 3d thing received from the Indwelling Spirit Supportment 24. The way whereby the Spirit gives supportment 25. 1. By bringing to mind the things spoken by Christ for their Consolation Ioh. 14. 16 26. 26. 2. By renewing his Graces in them as to strength The benefits issuing and flowing from thence 27. Bestraint given by the Indwelling Spirit and how 28. The continuance of the Spirit with Believers for the Renewall of Grace proved Ioh. 4. 14. 29. That Promise of our Saviour at large opened 30. The Water there promised is the Spirit The state of them on whom he is bestowed Spirituall thirst twofold Ioh. 65. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 2. 31. The Reasons why men cannot thirst againe who have once dranke of the Spirit explained 32. Mr G's Exceptions considered and removed 33. The same work farther carried on as also 3● 35 36. The Indwelling of the Spirit in Believers farther demonstrated by the Inferences made from thence 37. The first Our Persons Temples of the Holy Ghost To be disposed of in all waies of Holinesse 38. Wildome to try Spirits 39. The wayes means and helps whereby the Saints discerne between the voyce of Christ and the voyce of Sathan HAving shewed §. 1. that the Holy Spirit is purchased for us by the Oblation of Christ and bestowed on us through his Intercession to abide with us for Ever a Truth confirmed by the unquestionable Testimonies of the Father Sonne and Spirit I shall in the next place I hope to the advantage and satisfaction of the Christian Reader a little turne aside to consider how and in what manner he abideth with them on whom he is bestowed together with some Eminent Acts and Effects of his Grace which he putteth forth and exerteth in them with whom he abideth all tending to their preservation in the Love and Favour of God A Doctrine it is of no small use and importance in our walking with God as we shall find in our pursuit of it And therefore though not appearing so directly Argumentative and immediately subservient to the promotion of the Dispute in hand yet tending to the establishment guidance and consolation of them who doe receive it and to the cherishing increasing and strengthning of the Faith thereof I cannot but conceive it much conducing to the carrying on of the maine Intendment of this whole undertaking I say then upon the purchase made of all Good things for the Elect by Christ the Holy and Blessed Spirit of God is given to
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
personall Appellations 2. In personall Operations 3. Personall Circumstances 1. First there are ascribed to the indwelling Spirit in his indwelling Personal Appellations He that is in you is greater then he that is in the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that is in you is a personall Denomination which cannot be used of any Grace or gratious habit whatsoever so John 14 16 17. He shall abide with you he dwelleth with you shall be in you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 16. 13. But when the Spirit of Truth is come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His Person is as signally designed and expressed as in any place of Scripture to what intent or purpose soever mentioned Neither is it possible to apprehend that the Scripture would so often so expressly affirme the same thing in plaine proper words if they were not to be taken in the sence which they hold out The maine Emphasis of the Expression lyes upon the Termes that are of a personall designation and to evade the force of them by the fore mentioned distinction which they seeme signally to obviate and prevent is to say what we please so we may oppose what pleases us not 2. Personall Operations such acts and actings as are proper to a person only are ascribed to the Spirit in his indwelling That place mentioned before Rom. 8. 11. is cleare hereunto But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he who raised Christ from the dead shall quicken your mortall bodyes by his Spirit which dwélteh in you or by his indwelling Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To quicken our mortall bodyes is a Personall acting such as cannot be wrought but by an Almighty Agent And this is ascribed to the Spirit as inhabiting whch is in order of nature antecedent to his quickning of us as was manifested And the same is asserted v. 15. The Spirit beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the Sonnes of God That Spirit that dwells in us beares witnesse in us a distinct Witnesse by himselfe distinguished from the Testimony of our owne spirit here mentioned is either an Act of our naturall Spirits or Gracious fruit of the Spirit of God in our hearts If the first what makes it in the things of God Is any Testimony of our naturall spirits of any value to assure us that we are the Children of God If the latter then is there here an immediate operation of the Spirit dwelling in our hearts in witnesse-bearing distinct from all the fruits of Grace whatever And on this account it is that whereas 1 Epistle of John 5. 7 8. the Father Sonne and Spirit are said to beare witnesse in Heaven the Spirit is moreover peculiarly said to beare witnesse in the Earth together with the Blood and Water 3. There are such Circumstances ascribed to him in his indwelling as are proper only to that which is a Person I will instance only in one his dwelling in the Saints as in a Temple 1 Cor. 3. 16. Yee are the Temple of God and his Spirit dwelleth in you that is as in a Temple so plainely chap. 6. 19. Your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which you have of God giving us both the distinction of the Person of the Spirit from the other Persons he is given us of God and his residence with us being so given he is in us as also the manner of his in-being as in a Temple Nothing can make a place a Temple but the Relation it hath unto a Deity Graces that are but Qualifications of and Qualities in a Subject cannot be said to dwell in a Temple This the Spirit doth and therefore as a voluntary Agent in an habitation not as a necessary or naturall principle in a subject and though every act of his be Omnipotent intensively being the act of an Omnipotent Agent yet he worketh not in the acts extensively to the utmost of his Omnipotency he exerteth and puts forth his Power and brings forth his Grace in the hearts of them with whom he dwells as he pleaseth to one he comunicates more Grace to another lesse yea he gives more strength to one and the same person at one time and in one condition 1 Cor. 12. then another dividing to every one as he will and if this peculiar manner of his personall presence with his Saints distinct from his Ubiquity or Omnipresence may not be believed because not well by reason conceived we shall lay a Foundation for the questioning principles of Faith which as yet we are not fallen out withall And this is our first manifestation of the Truth concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit in the Saints from the Scripture The second will be from the signall Issues and benefits which are asserted to arise from this indwelling of the Spirit in them of which I shall give sundry instances 1. The first signall Issue and Effect which is ascribed to this Indwelling of the Spirit §. 6. is Union not a Personall Union with himselfe which is impossible He doth not assume our natures and so prevent our Personality which would make us one Person with him but dwells in our Persons keeping his owne and leaving us our Personality infinitely distinct But it is a spirituall Union the great Union mentioned so often in the Gospell that is the sole fountain of our Blessednesse our Union with the Lord Christ which we have thereby Many thoughts of heart there have been about this Union §. 7. what it is wherein it doth consist the causes manner and Effects of it The Scripture expresses it to be very Eminent neere durable setting it out for the most part by similitudes and Metaphoricall Illustrations to lead poore weak Creatures into some usefull needfull acquaintance with that Mystery whose depths in this life they shall never fathome That many in the dayes wherein we live have miscarried in their conceptions of it is evident some to make out their Imaginary Union have destroyed the person of Christ and fancying a way of uniting man to God by him have left him to be neither God nor Man Others have destroyed the Person of Believers affirming that in their Union with Christ they loose their own Personality that is cease to be Men or at least these or these Individuall men I intend not now to handle it at large but only and that I hope without offence to give in my thoughts concerning it as farre as it receiveth light from and relateth unto what hath been before delivered concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit and that without the least contending about other wayes of Expression I say then §. 3. this is that which gives us Union with Christ and that wherein it consists even that the one and selfe-same Spirit dwells in him and us The first saving Elapse from God upon the Hearts of the Elect is the Holy Spirit Their quickning is every where ascribed to the Spirit that is
his Sheepe that they know his voice heare him and follow him but a stranger they will not follow John 10. 25. Christ speakes by his Spirit in his guidance and direction is the voice of the Lord Jesus He that hath an eare to heare let him heare what the Spirit saith to the Churches Rev. 2. 29. What Christ saith as to the Fountain of Revelation he being the great Prophet of the Church that the Spirit saith as to the Efficacy of the Revelation unto the Hearts of the Saints And as the Vnction teacheth them so do they abide in Christ 1 John 2. 27. The seducements of the Spirit of the world either immediatly by himselfe or mediately by others are the voice of strangers between these and the voice of the Spirit of Christ that dwells in them the Saints have a Spirit of discerning This the Apostle affirmes 1 Cor. 2. 15. He that is Spirituall judgeth all things He discerneth between things and judgeth aright of them He judgeth all things that is all things of that nature whereof he speakes that is the things which are freely given us of God v. 12. for the discerning knowledge whereof the Spirit is given them For the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God v. 11. They know also the suggestions of the Spirit of the world judge them 2 Cor. 2. 11. We are not ignorant of his devices There is a twofold knowledge of the depths and devices of Sathan one with Approbation to the imbracing and practice of them the other with Condemnation to their hatred and rejection The first ye have mentioned Rev. 2. 24. As many as have not knowne the depths of Sathan as they speake Their Doctrinall depths so they call them Of them our Saviour there speakes New Doctrines were broached by Sathan unintelligible notions some pretended to attaine an acquaintance with them and boasted it seemes in them as very great and high Attainements They called them depths such as poore ordinary Believers that contented themselves with their low formes could not reach unto Saith Christ they are depths as they speake indeed in themselves nothing at all things of no solidity weight nor Wisdome but as managed by Sathan they are depths indeed such as whereby he destroyes their soules And as some approve his Doctrinall depths so some close with his Practicall depths and imbrace them Men that study his wayes and paths becoming desperately wicked maliciously fcoffing at Religion and despising the profession of it But there is a knowledge also of the depths and devices of Sathan leading to judging condemning rejecting and watching against them The suggestions of Sathan in their infinite variety their Rise Progresse Efficacy and Advantages their various aimes and tendencyes unto sinne against Grace I do not now consider But this I say those who are lead by the Spirit of God who have directions from him and guidance they discerne between the voice of the Spirit which dwells in them and the voice of the Spirit which dwells in the world Now because this is not alwaies to be done §. 39. from the manner of their speaking the Serpent counterfeiting the voyce of the Dove and coming on not only with earnestnesse and continuance of impulse but with many faire and specious pretences making good his impressions labouring to win the understanding over to that wherewith he inticeth the Affections and Passions of men they use the helpe of such Considerations as these insuing to give them direction in attending to the voice of that Guide which leades them into the paths of Truth and to stoppe their eares to the songs of Sathan which would transforme them into Monsters of disobedience Thus they know 1. That all the motions of the holy Spirit whereby they are and ought to be lead are regular that he moves them to nothing but what is according to the mind of Christ delivered in the Word which he hath appointed for their Rule to walke by to no duty but what is acceptable to him and what he hath revealed so to be 1 John 4. 1. So that as Believers are to try the spirits of others by that standard whether they are of God or no so because of the subtilty of Sathan transforming himselfe into an Angell of Light yea into a spirit of duty what ever immediate motions and impressions fall upon their Spirits they try them by the Rule 'T is no dishonour to the Holy Spirit yea it is a great Honour to have his motions within us tryed by the Word that he hath given for a Rule without us Yea when any preached by immediate inspiration he commends those Acts 17. 10. who examined what they delivered by that which he had given out before He doth not now move in us to give a new Rule but a new Light and Power as was said before The motions of the Spirit of the World are for the most part unto things wherein though the persons with whom he deales may be in the darke or blind and darkened by him yet themselves are against the Rule or besides it in the whole or in part in respect of some such circumstances as vitiate the whole performance 2. They know that the Commands and motions of the Spirit which dwells in them 1 John 5. 1. are not grievous The commands of Christ for the matter of them Mal. 11. 30. are not grievous his burthen is light his yoake easy and the manner whereby we are carried out to the performance of them is not Grievous where the Spirit of the Lord is there is Liberty 2. Cor. 3. 17. It carries out the soule to duty in a free sweet calme ingenuous manner The motions of the Spirit of the World even unto good things and duties for so for farther ends of his it often falls out that they are are troublesome vexatious perplexing grievous and tumultuating Sathan falls like lightning upon the Soule and comes upon the powers of it as a Tempest Hence acting in any thing upon his closing with and provoking our convictions is called a being under the Spirit of bondage Rom 8. 15. which is opposed to the Spirit of God the Spirit of Adoption of Liberty boldnesse power and a sound mind 3. They know that all motions of the Spirit whereby they are lead are orderly as is Gods Covenant with us ordered in all things so the Spirit of God carries us out unto every duty in its own order and season when as we see some poore soules to be in such bondage as to be hurried up and downe in the matter of duties at the pleasure of Satan They must runne from one to another and commonly neglect that which they should doe When they are at Prayer then they should be at the worke of their calling and when they are at their Calling they are tempted for not laying all aside and running to Prayer Believers know that this is not from the Spirit of God which makes every
Conscience doth however it tumultuate rebuke chide perswade trouble cry and the like whatever conviction of the guilt of sinne may shew into the judgement yet sinne hath the consent of the whole soule Every thing that hath a reall influence into operation consents thereto originally and radically how ever any principle may be dared by Conscience To take off any thing from full consent there must be something of a spirituall Repugnancy in the mind and will which when Lust is thus enthroned there is not Secondly That sinne reigneth in such persons Many have been the inquiries of Learned men about reigning of sinne As What sinnes may be said to reigne §. 8. and what not Whether sinnes of ignorance may raigne as well as sinnes against knowledge What little sinnes may be said to reigne as well as great Whether frequent relapses into any sinne prove that sinne to be reigning Whether sinne may reigne in a Regenerate person Or whether a Saint may fall into reigning sinne whereabout Divines of great note and name have differed all upon a false bottome and supposall The Scripture gives no ground for any such inquiries or disputes or Cases of Conscience as some men have raised hereupon And indeed I would this were the only instance of mens creating Cases of Conscience and answering them when indeed and in truth there are no such things so insnaring the Consciences of Men and intangling more by their Cases than they deliver by their Resolutions The truth is there is no mention of any reigning sinne or the Reigning of any sinne in the whole Book of God taking sinne for this or that particular sinne But of the Reigne of this Indwelling originall Lust or fountaine of all finne there is frequent mention Whilest that holds its power and universality in the soule and is not restrained nor straitned by the Indwelling spirit of grace with a new vitall principle of no lesse extent and of more power than it be the Actuall sinnes few or more knowne or unknowne little or great all is one sinne reignes and such a person is under the power and dominion of sinne so that in plain termes to have finne reigne is to be unconverted and to have sinne not to reigne is to be converted to have received a new principle of Life from above This is evident from the 5. and 6. Chapter of the Epist. to the Romans the seate of this Doctrine of reigning sinne The opposition insisted on by the Apostle is between the Reigne of Sinne and Grace and in pursuit thereof he manifests how true Believers are tanslated from the one to the other To have sinne reigne is to be in a state of sinne to have Grace reigne is to be in a state of Grace So Chapter 5. 21. % As sinne reigned unto death so Grace reignes through Righteousnesse unto eternall Life by Jesus Christ our Lord The sinne he speakes of is that whereof he treates in all that Chapter the sinne of Nature the Lust wherof we speake this by nature reigneth unto Death but when Grace comes by Jesus Christ the soule is delivered from the power thereof so in the whole 6. Chap. It is our change of state and Condition that the Apostle insists on in our delivery from the reigne of sinne and he tells us this is that that destroyes it our being under Grace v 14. Sinne shall not have dominion over you because you are not under the Law but under Grace Plainely then there are two Lords and Rulers and these are Originall or Indwelling sinne and Grace or the Spirit of it The first Lord the Apostle discovers with his entrance upon his Rule and Dominion Chap. 5. and this all men by nature are under The second he describes Chap. 6. which sets out the Rule reigne of Grace in Believers by Jesus Christ. And then Thirdly the place that both these Lords have in this life in a Believer Cap. 7. This then is the only reigning sin in whomsoever it is in its power compas as it is in all unregenerate men in them in them only doth sin reigne every sin they commit is with full consent as was manifested before in exact willing Obedience to the soveraigne Lord that reignes in them Fourthly §. 9. observe that the Grace new Creature Principle or Spirituall Life that is Given to bestowed on and wrought in all and only Believers be it in the lowest and most remisse degree that can be imagined is yet no lesse universally spread over the whole soule than the contrary habit and principle of Lust and sinne whereof we have spoken In the Understanding it is Light in the Lord in the Will Life in the Affections Love Delight c. those being reconciled who were alienated by wicked workes Where ever there is any thing the least of grace there something of it is in every thing of the soule that is a capable seat for good or evill habits or dispositions He that is in Christ is a new creature 2 Cor 5. 17. not renewed in one or other particular he is a new Creature Fiftly that where ever true Grace is in what degree soever §. 10. there it bears Rule though sinne be in the same subject with it As sinne reignes before grace comes so Grace reignes when it doth once come And the reason is because sinne having the first Rule and Dominion in the heart abiding there there is neither Roome nor place for Grace but what is made by conquest Now who ever enters into a possession by right of Conquest what resistance soever be made if he prevaile to a Conquest he reignes In every regenerate man though Grace be never so weake and Corruption never so strong yet properly the Soveraignty belongs to Grace Having entered upon the soule and all the powers of it by Conquest so long as it abides there it doth reigne So that to say a Regenerate man may fall into reigning sinne as it is commonly exprest though as we have manifested no sinne reignes but the sinne of Nature as no good Act reigneth but the spirit and habit of Grace and yet continue Regenerate is all one as to say he may have and not have true Grace at the same time Now from these considerations §. 11. some farther inferences may be made First That in every regenerate person there are in a spirituall sence two Principles of all his actings Two Wills There is the Will of the Flesh and there is the Will of the Spirit a Regenerate man is spiritually and in Scripture expression two men a new man and an old an inward man and a body of Death and hath two Wills having two Natures not as Naturall faculties but as Morall principles of operation and this keepes all his actions as Morall from being perfect absolute or compleate in any kind He doth good with his whole heart upon the account of sincerity but he doth not good with his whole heart upon the account
being the object of any ordinary thoughts or expressions Nothing not great not considerable not some way eminent is by any spoken of him either consencing with him or dissenting from him To interpose my Judgment in the crowd on the one side or the other I know neither warrant or suffcient cause We all stand or fall to our own masters And the fire will try all our workes This only I shall crave Liberty to say that whether from his own genius and acrimony of Spirit or from the provocations of others with whom he hath had to do many of his Polemical Treatises have been sprinkled with Satyrical Sarcasmes and contemptuous rebukes of the persons with whom he hath had to do So that were I not relieved in my thoughts by the consideration of those Exacerbations and exasperations of spirit which upon other accounts besides bare difference of opinion in religious things have fallen out in the dayes and seasons which have passed over us all of them labouring to exert something of themselves in every undertaking of the persons brought under their power I should have been ●●terly discouraged from any contests of this nature Much indeed of his irregularity in this kind I cannot but ascribe to that prompt facility he hath in putting abroad every passion of his mind and all his conceptions not only decently clothed with language of a full and choice significancy but also trim'd and adorn'd with all manner of signal improvements that may render it keen or pleasant according to his intendment or desire What the Latine Lyrick said of the Grecian Poet may be applyed to him Monte decurrens vel●t amnis imbres Quem super notas aluêre rìpas Fervet immensusque ruit profundo Pindarus ore And he is thereby plainly possessed of not a few advantages It is true that when the proof of his opinion by Argument and the orderly pursuit of it is incumbent on him a course of all other wherein ● soonest faileth the medium he useth and insisteth on receiveth not the least contribution of real strength from any dress of words and Expressions wherewith it is adorned and accompanied yet it cannot be denyed but that his Allegorical amplifications illustrations and exaggerations of the things he would insinuate take great impressions upon the minds of them who are in any measure intangled with the seeming probabilities which are painted over his Arguments by their sophistry and pretence of Tru●h The Apostle giving that Caution to the Collossians that they should take heed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manifesteth the prevalencie of false reasonings when in Conjunction with Rhetorical perswasions The great store also of words and expressions which for all occasions he hath lying by him are of no little use to him when being pressed with any Arguments or testimonies of Scripture and being not able to evade he is forc't to raise a cloud of them wherewith after he hath a while darkned the wisdome and Councel of that wherewith he hath to do he insensibly slipps out of the cord wherewith he appeared to have been detained and triumphes as in a perfect Conquest when only an unarticulate sound hath been given by his trumpet but the charge of his Adversaries not once received or repelled But not any where doth he more industriously hoist up and spread the sailes of his luxurient Eloquence then when he aimes to render the opinion of his adversaries to be monstrum ●orendum informe ingens cui lumen ademptum a dark dismal uncomfortable fruitless death-procuring doctrine such as it is marveilous that ever any poor soul should embrace or choose for a Companion or guide in it's pilgrimage towards heaven Rolling through this feild his expressions swell over all bounds and limits metaphors similitudes parables all help on the current though the streames of it being shallow and wide a little opposition easily turnes it for the most part aside a noise it makes indeed with a goodly shew and appearance Herculeâ non mole minor Agylleus Sed non ille rigor patriumque in corpore robur Luxuriant artus effusaque sanguins laxo Membra natant This as I said prompts I feare the learned person of whom we speak to deale so harshly with some of them with whom he hath to do And it is still feared that parata tollit cornua Qualis Lycambae spretus infido Gener Aut acer hostis Bupalo It might indeed be the more excusable if evident provocation were alwaies ready at hand to be charged with the blame of this procedure if he said only An si quis a●ro dente me petiverit Multus ut slebo puer But for a man to warme himselfe by casting about his own pen until it be so filled with indignation and scorne as to blur every page and almost every line is a course that will never promote the praise nor adorne the Truth of God For what remaines concerning him do illi ingenium do eloquentiam industriam fidem veritatem utinam colnisset The Course Condition of my procedure with him whether it be such as becometh Christian modesty and sobriety with an allowance of those ingredients of zeal in contending for the trut hwhich in such cases the Holy Ghost gives a command for is referred to the Judgment of all who are concerned and account themselves so in the things of God As to any bitterness of expression personal reflections by application of Satyrical invectives I know nothing by my selfe and yet I dare not account that I am hereby justified The calme and indifferent Reader not sensible of those commotions which the discovery of Sophistical evasions pressing of inconsequent consequences bold Assertions c will sometimes raise in the most candid and ingenuous mind may and especially if he be an observer of failings in that kind espie once and againe some signes and appearances of such exasperations as ought to have been allayed with a spirit of meekness before the thoughts that stirred them up had been turned out of doores in the expressions observed Although I am not conscious of the delivery of my selfe in any termes intimating a Captivitie under the power of such a snare for a moment yet what shall to the Christian Reader occurre of such a seeming tendency I humbly refer it to his judgment being content to suffer loss in any hay or stubble what ever that I may have layd upon the foundation of truth which I am sure is firmly fixed by God himselfe in the business in hand For what further concernes my manner of dealing in this Argument I have only a few things to mention Reverend Brethren and you will be discharged of the trouble of this prefatory address unto you The matter in hand I hope you will find attended and pursued without either Iocular or historical diversions which are judged meet by some to retaine the spirits and intice the minds of the Readers which are apt to faint and grow weary if alwaies bent to the
wholesome words answering the mould of Gospel doctrin whereinto you have been cast may shine as Lights in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation knowing that it is but yet a little while and he that shall come will come will not tarry yea come Lord Jesus come c. So prayes Your unworthy fellow Labourer and Brother in our deare Lord Jesus JOHN OWEN A Preface to the Reader READER IF thy enquiry be only after the substance of the Truth in the ensuing Treatise contended for I desire thee not to stay at all upon this preliminary discourse but to proceed thither where it is expresly handled from the Scriptures without the intermixture of any humane Testimonies or other less necessary Circumstances wherein perhaps many of them may not be concerned whose interest yet lies in the truth it selfe and it is precious to their Soules That which now I intend and ayme at is to give an account to the learned Reader of some things nearly relating to the doctrine whose protection in the strength of him who gives to his suitable helps for the works and Employments he calls them to I have undertaken and what entertainment it hath formerly found and received in the Church and among the Saints of God For the Accomplishment of this intendment A breife mention of the Doctrine it selfe will make way Whom in this controversy we intend by the name of Saints and Beleivers the Treatise following will abundantly manifest The word Perseverantia is of most knowne use in Ecclesiastical writers Austin hath a book with the inscription of it in it's forehead The word in the New Testament signifying the same thing is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of them that followed Paul it is said that he perswaded them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 13. 43. That is to Persevere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is of the same import 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Math. 10 23. He that persevereth to the end The Vulgar Latin renders that word almost constantly by persevero 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a word also of the same signification and which the Scripture useth to express the same thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes by a Metathesis expressed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thence is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 valdé and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spoken of him who is of a valiant resolved mind By faith Moses left Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He. 11. 27. As eying the invisible he endured his tryal with a constant valiant mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from thence is most frequently to persevere Act. 1. 14. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 2. 42. They persevered in the Doctrine of the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 once used in the New Testament is rendred by our Translatours perseverance Eph. 6. 18. In what variety of Expression the thing is revealed in the Scripture is in the Treatise it selfe abundantly declared The Latin word is Classical Persevero is Constanter sum severus In that sense as Seneca saies Res severa est verum gaudium It 's extreme in excess is Pertinacy if these are not rather distinguished from their objects then in themselves Varro lib 4. de ling Lat Tells us that Pertinacia is a continuance or going on in that wherein one ought not to continue or proceed Perseverantia is that whereby any one continues in that wherein he ought so to doe Hence is that definition of it commonly given by the School-men from Austin Lib 87. qu 31 who took it from Cicero one they little acquainted themselves withall lib. 2 de Invent it is say they In ratione bene fundatâ stabilis per petua permansio And this at present may pass for a general description of it that is used in an Ethical and Evangelical sense Perseverance was accounted a commendable thing among Philosophers Morally Perseverance is that part of Fortitude whereby the mind is established in the performance of any good and necessary work not withstanding the assaults and opposition it meets withal with that tediousness and wearisomness which the protraction of time in the pursuit of any affairs is attended withal Aristotle informes us that it is excercised about things troublesome lib. 7. Eth Nicom giving a difference between Continence with it's opposite vice and forbearance or perseverance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that abides in his undertaken work so it be good and honest notwithstanding that trouble and perplexity he may meet withal is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hence he tells us that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as well as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not pleasant to many lib. 10. cap. 9. And that because so to live implies difficulty and opposition And He also as Varro in the place above mentioned distinguishes it from pertinacy And of men infected with that deprav'd habit of mind he says there are three sorts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all These are in his Judgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nic●● lib. 7. cap. 9. Which perverse disposition of spirit he there clearly manifests to be sufficiently differenced from a stable resolved frame of mind what ever it may resemble it in Now though there is no question but that of two persons continuing in the same work or opinion one may doe it out of pertinacy the other out of perseverance yet amongst men who judge of the minds of others by their fruits and of the Acts of their minds by their objects these two dispositions or Habits are universally distinguished as before by Varro Hence the Termes of pertinacy and obstinacy being thrust into the definition of herisy by them who renouncing any infallible living Judge and determiner in matters of faith to make way for the inflicting of punishment on the entertainers and maintainers thereof they take no thought of proving it such but only because it is found in persons embracing such errours The same Affection of mind with the same fruites and demonstrations of it in persons embracing the Truth would by the same men be termed perseverance But this is not that whereof I Treat Evangellical perseverance is from the Scripture at large explained in the Book it selfe As it relates to our Acceptation with God and the immutability of Justification which is the the cheife and most eminent part of the Doctrine contended for as it hath no conformity in anything with the moral perseverance before described so indeed it is not comprehended in that strict notion and signification of the word it selfe which denotes the continuation of some Act or Acts in us and not the uninterruptibleness of any Act of God This then is the cause of perseverance rather than perseverance it selfe yet such a cause as being established the effect will certainly and uncontrolably ensue They who goe about to assert a perseverance of Saints cut off from the absolute unchangableness of the decree purpose and Love of God attended with a possibility of a contrary Event and that not
congratulante Ecclesiâ totâ and addes satis pro imperio nihil hìc de acceptatione totius Ecclesiae sine quà Episcopos Diaconos ab Apostolis Apostolicis viris constitutos non esse ex hoc loco concludit Blondellus quasi qui ex Dei jussu Approbatione constituebantur populi etiam acceptatione indigere putandiessent Dissert 4. Cap. 7. 8. 10. And who dares take that confidence upon him as to affirme any more what so great a Doctor hath denyed Though the scope of the place the nature of the thing and first most common sence of the word here used being willingly to Consent as it is also used in the Scripture for the most part Act 8. 1. 1 Cor 7. 12 to a thing to be done or to the doing of it yet here it must be taken to applaud or congratulate or what else our Doctour pleases because he will have it so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also must be Viri Apostolici men with Apostolical or extraordinary power when they are only the choice men of the Church where such a constitution of Officers is had that are intended because it is our Doctours purpose to have the words so rendred Ex jussu Dei Approbatione as though any particular command or opprobation of God were intimated for the constitution of the Bishops and Deacons mentioned beyond the institution of the Lord Jesus Christ that Elders should be ordained in every Church because this would seeme to be exclusive wholly of the consent of the people as any way needful or required to their constitution which yet as it is practically false no such thing being mentioned by Clemens who recoutneth the way and meanes whereby Officers were continued in the Church even after the decease of the Apostles and those first ordained by them to that holy employment so also is it argumentatively weake and Unconcluding God appointed designed Saul to be King approving of his so being and yet he would have the people come together to chuse him So also was it in the case of David Though the Apostles in the name the authority of God appointed the Deacons of the Church at Hierusalem yet they would have the whole Church look out among themselves the men to be appointed And that the ordaining of the Elders was with the peoples Election Act. 14. 23. It will ere long be manifested that neither our Doctour nor any of his Associates have as yet disproved This poore thing the people being the peculiar people of Christ the heritage of God and Holy Temple unto him c. Will one day be found to be an other manner of thing then many of our great Doctours have snpposed But he informes us Cap. 4. Sect 3. From that Testimony which we cited before that the Apostles in the Appointment of Bishops and Deacons for so the words expresly are are said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i e Saith he Revelationibus edoctos esse quibus demum haec dignitas communicanda esset that is that they appointed those whom God revealed to them in extraordinary manner to be so ordained and this is the meaning of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and why so The holy Ghost orders concerning the appointment of Deacons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim 3. 10. That those who are to be taken into office and power in the Church had need first to be tryed and approved is granted And this worke the Apostles give to the multitude of the Church Act 6. Where yet after the peoples Election and the Apostles Approbation and the trial of both one that was chosen is supposed to have proved none of the best And yet of him and them are the Apostles said by Clemens that they did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But how shall it be made to appeare that Spiritum probantes trying or proving by the Spirit or spiritually proving them to try whether they were able Ministers of the new Testament not of the Letter but of the Spirit proving them by that spirit which was promised unto them to lead them into all truth must needs signifie they were taught whom they should appoint by immediate Revelation To prove by the Spirit or Spiritually the persons that are to be made Ministers or Bishops is to have their names revealed to us Stephen is said to speak 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 6. 10. And Paul purposed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act 19. 21. And we are said to serve God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 5.5 and to make supplication 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 6. 18. With many more expressions of the like nature Does all this relate to immediate Revelation and are all things done therby which we are said to doe in the Spirit Before we were instructed in this mystery and were informed that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did signify to be taught by revelation We had thought that the expression of doing any thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 had manifested the Assistance guidance and direction which for the doing of it we receive by the holy and b●essed spirit of God promised unto us and bestowed on in through the Lord Jesus Christ. Yea but he addes that it is also spoken of the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praecognitionem i e Revelationem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they appointed them Bishops and Deacons by the helpes and presence of the spirit with them the Apostles examined tryed those who were to be appointed Bishops so obtaining and recieving a perfect foreknowledge or knowledge of them before their Admission into office This also expresses Revelation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon tryal it was revealed unto them and so must any thing else be allowed to be that our Doctour will have to be so now he is asserting to that purpose But had the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who appointing Bishops and Deacens after the Apostles time had they also this special Revelation Or may they not be said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If not how will you look upon them under the notion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who neglected so great a duty if they did let us know when this way of constituting Church officers by immediate Revelation ceased and what was afterwards took up in the Roome thereof and who they were that first proceeded on another account and on what Authority they did it There are a generation of men in the world will thank the Doctour for this insinuation and will tye knots upon it that will trouble him to loose Before we returne let us look but a little further and we shall have a little more light given us into what was the conditon and power of the people in the Church in the daies of Clemens speaking of them who occasioned the division and schisme in the Church of Corinth or them about whose exaltation into office or dejection from it that sad difference fell out he gives them this advice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It seemes the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
assurance they have that those who are borne of God cannot shall not sinne unto deaths 1 Joh. 3. 9. seeing their own interest in that estate and condition may be clouded at least for a season and their consolation thereupon depending interrupted might occasion thoughts in them of very sad consideration but whilest besides all the beams raies that ever issued from a falling starre all the leaves and blossomes with abortive fruit that ever grew on an unrooted tree all the goodly turrets and ornaments of the fairest house that ever was built on the sand 1 Joh. 5. 7 8. there are moreover three that beare witness in Heaven the Father Sonne and Spirit and three that beare witness on Earth the Water Bloud and Spirit 1 Joh. 2. 20 21 whilst there is a teaching anoynting and assuring earnest a firme sealing to the day of redemption a knowledge that we are passed from death to life 2 Cor. 1. 21 22. the temptation arising from the Apostasie of Hypocrites is neither so potent nor unconquerable 2 Cor. 5. 5. but that by the grace of him through whom we can doe all things Ephes. 1. 14. it may be very well dealt withall Ephes. 4. 30. This I say Rom. 8. 16. supposing the ordinary presence and operation of the spirit of grace in the hearts of believers with such shines of Gods countenance upon them as they usually enjoy Let these be interrupted or turned aside and there is not the least blast or breath that proceeds from the mouth of the weakest enemy Psal 30. 6 7. they have to deale withall but is sufficient to cast them downe from the excellency of their joy and consolation The evidence of this truth is such § 8. that M. Goodwin is forced to say * Verè fidelit uti pro tempore praesenti de fidei conscientiae suae integritate certus esse potest ita de salute sui de salutiferâ Dei erga ipsum benevolentiâ pro illo tempore certus esse potest debet Farre be it from me to deny but that a man may very possibly attaine unto a very strong and potent assurance and that upon grounds every way sufficiently warrantable and good that his faith is sound and saving Cap 9. Sect 9. but unto this concession he puts in a double exception First That there is not one true believer of an hundred yea of many thousands who hath any such assurance of his Faith as is built upon solid and pregnant foundations I must by his leave enter my dissent hereunto and as we have the liberty of our respectiue apprehensions so neither the one nor the other prove any thing in the cause Setting aside causes of desertion great temptations and tryalls I hope through the riches of the grace and tenderness of the love of their father Act. Synod p. 182. decl sent Thes. 7. the condition is otherwise then is apprehended by M. Goodwin with the generality of the Family of God The reasons given by him of his thoughts to the contrary doe not sway me from my hopes or byas my former apprehensions in the least His reasons are First Because though the testimony of a mans heart and conscience touching his uprightness towards God or the soundness of any thing that is saving in him be comfortable and chearing yet seldome are these properties built upon such foundations which are sufficient to warrant them at least upon such whose sufficiency in that kind is duely apprehended For the testimony of the conscience of a man touching any thing which is spiritually and excellently good is of no such value unlesse it be first excellently inlightned with the knowledge nature proprieties and condition of that on which it testifieth and Secondly be in the actuall contemplation consideration or remembrance of what he knoweth in this kind Now very few believers in the World come up to this height and degree First Ans. 1. There is in this reason couched a supposition which if true would be farre more effectuall to shake the confidence and Resolution of beleevers then the most serious consideration of the Apostasies of all professors that ever fell from the glory of their profession from the beginning of the World and that is that there is no other pregnant foundation of Assurance but the testimony of a mans own heart and conscience touching his uprightness towards God and therefore before any can attaine that assurance upon abiding foundations they must be excellently inlightened in the nature properties and condition of that which their consciences testifie unto as true faith and uprightnesse of heart and be cleare in the disputes and Questions about them being in the actuall contemplation of them when they give their Testimony I no way doubt but many thousands of believers 1 Cor. 1. 26. whose apprehensions of the nature properties and conditions of things Jam. 2. 5. as they are in themselves are low weake and confused yet hauing received the Spirit of Adoption bearing witness with their spirits Rom. 8. 16. that they are the Children of God 1 Joh. 5. 10. and having the Testimony in themselves have been taken up into as high a degree of comforting and cheering assurance and that upon the most infallible foundation Imaginable 1 Joh. 5. 6. for the spirit witnesseth because the spirit is truth as ever the most seraphically illuminated person in the World attained unto Yea in the very graces themselves of Faith and uprightnesse of heart there is such a seale and stamp impressing the image of God upon the soule as without any reflex act or actuall contemplation of those graces themselves have an influence into the establishment of the soules of men in whom they are unto a quiet comfortable assured repose of themselves upon the love and faithfulnesse of God neither is the spirituall confidence of the Saints shaken Math. 7. 25. much lesse cast to the ground by their conflicting with feares Math. 16. 18. scruples and doubtfull apprehensions seeing in all these conflicts they have the pledge of the faithfulness of God Psal. 77. 10. that they shall be more then conquerours 1 Cor. 1. 9. Though they are exercised by them 1 Thes. 5. 23 24. they are not dejected with them 1 Cor. 10. 13. nor deprived of that comforting assurance and joy which they have in believing Rom. 8. 37. But yet suppose that this be the condition practically of many Saints of God that they never attaine to the state of the primitive Christians 1 Pet. 1. 8. to whose joy and consolation in believing the Holy Ghost so plentifully witnesseth nor doe live up to that full rate of plenty which their Father hath provided for them in his Family and sworne that he is abundantly willing they should enjoy and make use of Heb. 6. 17 18. what will hence follow as to the businesse in hand I professe
he knoweth it to be but positively to judge and conclude of it accordingly If then it be possible for men by any such fruits workes or expressions to know true Believers the persons we speake of may be known to have been such Though the words of our Saviour principally lye on the other side of the way giving a Rule for a condemnatory Judgment of men Ans. whose evill Fruits declare the Root to be no better wherein we cannot well be deceived the workes of the flesh being manifest and he that worketh wickednesse openly and brings forth the effects of sinne visibly Gal. 2. 19. in a course as a Tree doth its fruit may safely be cōcluded Rom. 6. 16. whatsoever pretence in words he makes to be a false corrupt Hypocrite yet by the way of Analogie and proportion it is a Rule also whereby our Saviour will have us make a Judgement of those Professors and Teachers with whom we have to do as to our Reception and Approbation of them He bids his Disciples tast try the Fruit that such persons beare and acording to that not any specious pretences they make or innocent Appearances which for a season they shew themselves in let their Estimation of them be Yea but sayes Mr Goodwin we doe not only stand bound by the Law of Charity but by the Law of a Righteous and strict Judgment it selfe to judge such persons Believers This distinction between the Law of Charity and the Law of a Righteous Judgment I understand not Though Charity be the principle exerted eminently in such dijudications of men yet doubtlesse it proceeds by the rules of Righteous Judgment When we speake of the Judgment of Charity we intend not a loose conjecture much lesse a Judgment contradistinct from that which is Righteous but a Righteous and strict Judgment according to the exactest rules whatsoever that we have to Judge by free from evill surmises and such like vices of the minde as are opposed to the grace of Love By saying it is of Charity we are not absolved frō the most exact procedure according to the Rules of judging given unto us but only bound up from indulging to any Fnvy Malice or such like works of the flesh which are opposite to Charity in the subject wherein it is Charity in this assertion denotes only a gracious qualification in the subject and not any condescension from the Rule and therefore I something wonder that Mr Goodwin should make a Judgment of Charity as afterwards a meere conjecture and allow beyond it a Righteous and strict Judgement which amounts to knowledg It is true our Saviour tells us §. 21. that by their fruits we shall know them But what knowledge is it that he intendeth is it a certain knowledge by demonstration of it or an infallible assurance by revelation I am confident M. Goodwin will not say it is either of these but only such a perswasion as is the result of our thoughts concerning them upon the profession they make the works they doe upon which we may according to the minde of Christ who bare with them whom he knew to be no Believers having taken on them the profession of the faith know how to demeane our selves towards them so farre we may know them by their fruits and judge of them other knowledge our Saviour intendeth not nor I believe does M. Goodwin pretend unto Now notwithstanding all this even on this account and by this rule it is very possible yea very easy and practically proved true in all places and at all times that we may judge yea so farre know men to be or not to be seducers by their fruits as to be able to order aright our demeanour towards them according to the will of Christ and yet be mistaken though not in the performance of our duty in walking regularly according to the lines drawne out for our paths in the persons concerning whom our judgement is the knowledge of them being neither by demonstration nor from revelation such as cui non potest subesse falsum we may be deceived The Saints then or believers §. 22. of whom alone our discourse is may be briefely delineated by these few considerable concernements of their Saintship 1. That whereas by nature they are children of wrath as well as others and dead in trespasses and sinnes Rom. 8. 28 29. that faith and holinesse which they are in due time invested withall whereby they are made Believers and Saints and distinguished from all others whatever is an effect and fruit of and flowes from God's eternall purpose concerning their salvation or election Act. 13. 4. Eph. 1. 4. 1 Pet. 1. 2 3 4 5. their faith being as to the manner of its bestowing peculiarly of the operation of God and as to its distinction from every other gift that upon any account what ever is so called T it 1 1. in respect of its fountaine termed The faith of Gods elect 2. For the manner of their obtaining of this pretious faith it is by Gods giving to them that holy Spirit of his 2 Pet. 1. 1. Rom. 8. 11. whereby he raised Jesus from the dead to raise them from their death in sinne Eph. 1. 19 20. 2. 1 5 5 8 10. to quicken them unto newnesse of life endowing them with a new life with a Spirituall gracious supernaturall habit spreading it selfe upon their whole soules making them new creatures throughout in respect of parts investing them with an abiding principle Mat. 7. 17. 12. 33. being a naturall genuine fountaine of all those Spirituall acts Galat. 2. 20. 1 Ioh. 5. 12. 2 Cor. 5. 17. 1 Thes. 5. 25. Gal. 5122 23. 1 Ioh. 3. 9. Eph. 2. 10. 1 Pet. 1. 22. Philip. 12. v. 13. workes and duties which he is pleased to worke in them and by them of his own good pleasure 3. That the holy and blessed Spirit which effectually and powerfully workes this change in them Ioh. 4 16 26. 15. 26. 16. 7 8 9. Rom. 8. 10 11. is bestowed upon them as a fruit of the purchase and intercession of Jesus Christ to dwell in them and abide in them for ever upon the account of which inhabitation of the Spirit of Christ in them they have union with him 1 Cor. 6. 19. Rom. 5. 5. 1 Ioh. 4. 4 13. i. e. one and the same spirit dwelling in him the Head and them the Members 2 Tim. 1. 14. 1 Cor. 6. 17. 12. 12 13. Ephes. 4. 4. 4. By all which as to their actuall state and condition they are really changed from a 1 Ioh. 3. 14. Eph. 2. 2. Col. 2. 13. Rom. 6. 11 13. 8. 2 8 9. death to life from b Act. 26. 18. Eph. 5. 8. 1 Thes. 5. 4. Col. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 9. darknesse to light from c Ezek. 36. 25. Zach. 13. 1. Isa. 4. 3 4. Eph. 5. 6. 1 Cor. 6. 11. Tit. 3.
for the preservation of this excellency and glory of his People This Sunne though it may be for a while eclipsed yet shall never set nor give place to an evening that shall make long the shade thereof whom God once freely accepts in Christ he will never turne away his Love from them nor cast them Vtterly out of his Favour The other is within us and that is our Sanctification our Portion from God by the Spirit of Holinesse and the fruits thereof in our Faith Love and Obedience unto him And on this part of our Glory there is this Defence that this Spirit shall never Vtterly be dislodged from that Soule wherein he makes his residence nor resigne his habitation to the Spirit of the World that his fruit shall never so decay as that the Fruits of Sodome and the Grapes of Gomorra should grow in their roome nor they wherein they are Everlastingly Utterly and wickedly grow barren in departing from the Living God these two make up that Perseverance whereof we speake Whom God accepts in Christ he will continue to doe so for ever whom he quickens to walke with him they shall doe it to the end And these three things Acceptance with God Holinesse from God and a Defence upon them both unto the end all Free and in Christ are that threefold cord of the Covenant of Grace which cannot be broken In the handling then of the Doctrine proposed unto consideration § 50. I shall the Lord assisting shew First that the Love and Favour of God as to the free Acceptation of Believers with him in Christ is constant abiding and shall never be turned away handling at largethe Principles both of its being and manifestation Secondly that the Spirit and grace of Sanctification which they freely receive from him shall never utterly be extinguished in them but so remaine as that they shall abide with him for ever the Sophisticall separation of which two parts of our Doctrine is the greatest advantage our Adversaries have against the whole And demonstrate Thirdly the Reall and Causall influences which this Truth hath into the Obedience and Consolation of the Saints considered both absolutely and compared with the Doctrine which is set up in competition with it In the pursuit of which particulars I shall indeavour to Inforce and presse those places of Scripture wherein they are abundantly delivered and vindicate them from all the Exceptions put in to our inferences from them by M. Goodwin in his Redemption Redeemed as also Answer all the Arguments which he hath with much labour and industry collected and improved in opposition to the Truth in hand Take then only these few Previous observations and I shall insist fully upon the proofe and Demonstration of the first Position concerning the Vnchangeablenesse of the Love of God towards his to whom he gives Iesus Christ for Beauty and Glory and freely accepts them in him First §. 51. as to their Inherent Holinesse the Question is not concerning Acts either as to their vigour Revel 2. 5. 3. 2. which may be abated or as to their frequency which may be interrupted Isa. 57. 17. but only as to the Spirit Habit of it which shall never depart Hos. 14. 4. We doe not say they cannot sinne fall into many sinnes great sinnes which the Scripture plainely affirmes of all the Saints Isa. 59. 21. that went before and who of them living doth not this day labour under the Truth of it Ioh. 14. 16. But through the Presence of God with them 1 Ioh. 3. 9. upon such Grounds and Principles as shall afterwards be insisted on 1 Ioh. 1. 8. they cannot shall not sinne away the Spirit and Habit of Grace Iam. 3. 2. which without a miracle cannot be done away by any one Act 1 King 8. 38. and God will not worke Miracles for the destruction of his Children so as to fall into that state Isa. 64. 5 6. wherein they were before they were Regenerate and of the Children of God become Children of the Devill tasting of the second Death Rev. 20. 6. after they have been made Partakers of the first Resurrection Secondly the Question is not about the decay of any Grace but the losse of all not about sicknesse and weakenesses but about death it selfe which alone we say they shall be preserved from Neither doe we say that Believers are endowed with any such rich and plentifull Stock of Grace Psal. 23. 6. as that they may spend upon it without new supplyes all their dayes Isa. 35. 1 2. c. but grant that they stand in continuall need of the renued communication of that Grace Ioh. 15. 3 4 5 6. 7. which hath its abode and residence in their Soules Rom. 11. 18. and of that actuall Assistance whereby any thing that is truly and Spiritually good Ioh. 1. 16. is wrought in them Thirdly whereas there is a twofold Impossibility Col. 2. 19. First that which is absolutely and simply so in its own nature Luk. 17. 5. And Secondly that which is so only upon some suposition Phil. 2. 13. we say the totall falling away of the Saints is imppossible only in this latter sence The unchangeable Decree and Purpose of God his faithfull Promises and Oathes the Mediation of the Lord Jesus being in the Assertion supposed And Fourthly whereas we affirme they shall assuredly continue unto the end the Certainty and Assurance intimated is not mentis but entis Isa. 49. 14 15 16. not subjective but objective not alwayes in the person persevering but alwayes relating to the thing it selfe Isa. 5. 17. Fiftly that the three things formerly mentioned Cantt 5. 2 6. Acceptance with God Psal. 73. 26. Holinesse from God and the Defence upon them both unto the end are that threefold corde of the Covenant which cannot be broken This will appeare by compareing those two eminent places together which afterwards must more fully be insisted on Jerem. 31. 34 35. Cap. 32. 38 39 40. In generall God undertakes to be their God and that they shall be his People Cap. 31. 31. Cap. 32. 38. And this he manifests in three things First that he will Accept them freely give them to finde great Favour before him in the forgivenesse of their sinnes for which alone he hath any quarrell with them I will saith he forgive their iniquities and remember their sinnes no more cap 31. 34. As 't is againe repeated Heb. 8. 12. Secondly that they shall have sanctification and Holinesse from him I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their Hearts cap. 31. 33. I will put my feare in their Hearts v 40. with Ezek. 66. 67. calls the putting his Spirit in them who is the Author of that Grace and Holinesse which he doth bestow Thirdly that in both these there shall be a continuance for ever cap 32. 40. I will not turne away from
and Decree of God concerning the punishment of wicked and ungodly men is expressed by the Holy Ghost absolutely and certainly without the least mention of any condition of relaxation or reversion yet from other passages of Scripture it is fully evident that this Decree of his is conditionall in such a sence which imports a non-execution of the punishment therein declared upon the repentance of the Persons against whom the Decree is In like manner though the purpose and Decree of God for the justification of those who are called and so for the Glorifying of those that shall be Justified be in the Scripture in hand delivered in an absolute and unconditioned forme of words yet is it no way necessary to supose the most familiar frequent and accustomed expression in Scripture in such cases exempting us from any such necessity that therefore these Decrees must needs bring forth against all possible interveniences whatever so that for example he that is called by the Word and Spirit must needs be Justified whether he truly Believe or no and he that is Justified must needs be Glorified whether he Persevere or no. Ans. 1. That the Threatnings of God are morall Acts not declarative as to Particular Persons of Gods Eternall Purposes but subservient to other ends together with the Law it selfe whereof they are a Portion as the avoyding of that for which men are threatned is knowne They are Appendixes of the Law and in their Relation thereunto declare the Connexion that is betweene Sinne and Pnnishment such Sinnes and such Punishments 2. That the Eternall Purposes of God concerning the workes of his Grace are to be measured by rule and Analogy of his Temporall Threatnings is an Assertion striking at the very Root of the Covenant of Grace and efficacy of the Mediation of the Lord Jesus yea at the very being of Divine Perfections of the nature of God himselfe This there is indeed in all Threatnings declared of the absolute Purpose and Unchangeable Decree of God that all impenitent sinners shall be punished according to what in his Wisdome and Righteousnesse he hath apportioned out unto such deservings and threatneth accordingly In this regard there is no Condition that doth or can in the least import a non-execution of the Punishment Decreed Neither do any of the Texts cited in the Margent of our Author proove any such thing They all indeed positively affirme Faithlesse Impenitent Vnbelievers shall be Destroyed which no supposall whatsoever that takes not away the Subject of the Question and so alters the whole thing in Debate can in the least infringe Such assertions I say are parts of the Law of God revealing his will in Generall to Punish impenitent Unbelievers concerning which his Purpose is absolute Unalterable and Stedfast The conclusion then which Mr Goodwin makes is apparently racked from the words by stretching them upon the unproportioned bed of other Phrases and Expressions wholly Hetcrogeneous to the designe in this place intended Added here are supposed Conditions in generall not once explayned to keepe them from being exposed to that shame that is due unto them when their intrusion without all order or warrant from Heaven shall be manifested only wrapped up in the Clouds of possible Interveniences when the Acts of Gods Grace whereby his Purposes and Decrees are accomplished doe consist in the effectuall removeall of the Interveniences pretended that so the end aimed at in the Uuchangeable Counsell of God may suitably to the determination of his Soveragin Omnipotent Infinite Wise Will be accomplished Neither doth it in the least appeare that any such Calling by the Word and Spirit as may leave the Persons so called in their unbeliefe they being so called in the pursuit of this Purpose of God to give them Faith and make them conformable to Christ may be allowed place or Roome in the Haven of this Text The like may be said of Justification wherein men doe not Persevere Yea these two supposalls are only not an open beging of the thing in Contest but a flat defying of the Apostle as to the validity of his Demonstration That all things shall worke together c. Notwithstanding then any thing that hath been objected to the contrary the Foundation of God mentioned in this place of Scripture stands ●irme and his Eternall Purpose of safegarding the Saints in the Love of Christ untill he bring them to the injoyment of himselfe in Glory stands cleare from the least shaddow of Change or suspension upon any certaine Conditionalls which are confidently but not so much as speciously obtruded upon it The next thing undertaken by Mr Goodwin §. 29. is to vindicate the forementioned Glosses from such oppositions as arise against them from the Context and words themselves with the designe of the Holy Ghost therein These things doth He find his Exposition obnoxious unto The exposition which He pretends to give no strength unto but what is forraigne on all Considerations whatsoever of words and things to the place it selfe This it seemes is to prophesy according to the Analogie of Faith Rom. 12 6. First then Sect. 44. To the Objection that those who are Called are also Justified and shall be Glorified according to the Tenor of the series of the Acts of the Grace of God here layd down he Answereth That where either the one or the other of these Assertions be so or no it must be Judged of by other Scriptures Certain it is by what hath bin argued concerning the frequent usage of the Scripture in point of Expression that it cannot be concluded or determined by the Scripture in hand The Sum of this Answer amounts to thus much Although the sence opposed be cleare in the Letter and Expression of this place of Scripture in the Grammaticall sence and use of the words though it flowes from the whole Context and Answers alone the designe and scope of the place which gives not the least Countenance to the interposing of any such Conditionalls as are framed to force it to speake contrary to what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it holds forth yet the mind of God in the words is not from these things to be concluded on but other significations and sences not of any word here used not from the laying downe of the same Doctrine in other places with the Analogie of the Faith thereof not from the proposing of any designe suitable to this here expressed but places of Scripture agreeing with this neither in Name nor Thing Expression nor Designe Word nor Matter must be found out in the sence and meaning of this place and be from them concluded and our interpretation of this place accordingly regulated Nobis non licet c. neither hath M. Goodwin then produced any place of Scripture nor can he parallel to this so much as in expressiō though treating of any other subject or matter that will endure to have any fuch sence tyed to it as that which he violently imposeth on this place
continue in so doing to the end But saith he 2. This Promise was appropriated and fitted to the state of the Jewes in a sad captivity but the Promise of Perseverance was if our Adversaries might be Believed a standing Promise among them not appropriated to their condition Ans. 1. Non venit ex pharetris ista sagitta tuis It is Socinus's in reference to Ezechiel 36. In Prael Theol cap. 12. Sect 6. And so is the whole Interpretation of the place afterwards insisted on derived to Mr Goodwin through the hands of the Remonstrants at the Hague Conference 2. If this exception against the Testimony given in these words for the confirmation of the Thesis in hand may be allowed what will become of Mr Goodwins Argument from Ezechiel 18. for the Apostasy of the Saints It is most certaine the words from thence by him and others insisted on with the whole discourse of whose contexture they are a part are appropriated to a peculiar state of the Jewes and are brought forth as a meete vindication of the Righteousnesse of God in his dealing with them in that condition This then may be laid up in store to refresh Mr Goodwin with something of his own providing when we are gone so farre onward in our journey But 3. It is most evident to all the World that Mr Goodwin is not such a stranger in the Scriptures as not to have observed long since that Spirituall Promises are frequently given to the People of God to support their Soules under Temporall distresses and that not alwaies new Promises for the matter of them for indeed the substance of all Promises is comprized in the first promise of Christ but either such as enlarge and cleare up Grace formerly given or promised or such as have need of a solemne Renewall for the establishing of the Faith of the Saints assaulted in some particular manner in reference to them which was the state of the Saints among the Jewes at this time How often was the same promise renewed to Abraham And upon what severall occasions And yet that Promise for the matter of it was the same that had bin given from the beginning of the World That Gods solemne Renewall of the Covenant at any time is called his making of or entring into Covenant needs no labour to prove But saith he 3. This Promise is the same with that of Ezek. 11. 17 18 19 20. which Promise notwithstanding §. 12. it is said v. 21. But as for them whose heart walketh after the heart of their detestable things and their abominations I will recompense their wayes upon their heads so that notwithstanding this seeming Promise as is pretended of Perseverance in Grace they may walke after their abominable things for this threatning intends the same Persons or Nations as Calvin himselfe confesseth the Israelites 1 Grant that this is the same Promise with the other Ans. how will it appeare that this is not a Promise of such an enterposure of the Spirit and Grace of God as shall infallibly produce the effect of Perseverance Why Because some are threatned for following the Heart of their abominable things Yea but how shall it appear that they are the same Persons with them to whom the Promise is made The Context is plainely against it saith he I will give them a Heart to walke in my Statutes and Ordinances to doe them but for them that walke after their owne Hearts them I will destroy in as cleare a distinction of the Object of the Promise and threatning as is possible Saith Mr Goodwin this Threatning concernes the same Persons or Nation the same Nation but not the same Persons in that Nation but Calvin saith that it concerneth the Israelites But Paul hath told us that they are not all Israel who are of Israel not all Children of the Promise who are Children of the flesh And 2. If it doe any way concerne the Persons to whom that Promise is given it is an expression suited to the dispensation of God whereby he carrieth Believers on in the enjoyment of the good things he gives them in and by his Promises without the least prediction of any event being only declarative of what the Lord abhorreth and the connexion that is between the Antecedent and the Consequent of the axiome wherein it is contained and is farre from the nature of those Promises which hold out the Purpose or Intention of God with the engaging of a reall efficacy for their accomplishment He adds 4. If this be a Promise of absolute Perseverance no time nor season can be imagined wherein it was fulfilled Ans. At all times and seasons to them to whom it was made according to their concernement in it But saith he 1. It hath been proved that it was made to the community of the Jewish Nation toward whom it was not fulfilled Ans. 1. It hath been said indeed againe and againe but scarce once attempted to be proved nor the Reasoning of the Apostle against some pretended proofes and Answers to them at all removed 2. It was fulfilled to the Body of that Naiion as farre as it concerned the Body of that Nation in their Typicall returne from their captivity But then 2. If this be the sence it was fulfilled in the captivity as well as afterward for you say the Saints alwaies Persevere Ans. 1. The Typicall part of it was not then accomplished 2. It is granted that as to the Spirituall part of the Covenant of Grace it was at all times fulfilled to them which is now evidently promised to establish them in the Assurance thereof Wherefore it is 5. Argued Sect. 53. That these words I will give them one Heart that they shall not depart from me may be as well rendred that they may not depart from me and so it is said in the verse foregoing that they may feare me for ever Ans. 1. Suppose the words may be thus rendred what inconvenience will ensue Either way they evidently beyond exception designe out the End aimed at by God and when God intends an End or Event so as to exert a reall efficiency for the compassing of it to say that it shall not be infallibly brought about is an Assertion that many have not as yet had the boldnesse to venture on But saith he 2. The words so read doe not necessarily import the actuall event or taking place of the effect intended of God in the Promise and his performance thereof but only his intention it selfe in both these and the sufficiency of the means allowed for the producing such an effect but it is of the same nature with that that our Saviour saith Iohn 5. 34. these things I say unto you that yee might be saved And that of God to Adam Gen 3. 10 11. All which things were in like manner insisted on by the Remonstrants at the Hague Colloquie Ans. It is not amisse that our contests about the sence of this place of Scripture are at length
God hath humbled and pardoned such as he hath converted and justified whom hehath allured into the Wildernesse there spoken comfortably to them 2. Verse 15 §. 28. the Lord promiseth to this called and justified People plenty of Spirituall Gospell Mercies which he shaddoweth out with typicall Expressions of Temporall enjoyments and that with Allusion to their deliverance of old from Aegypt in three particulars 1. In generall He will give them Vineyards from thence that is from the Wildernesse as he did to them in Canaan when he brought them out of the Wildernesse This God often mindeth them of that he gave them Vineyards which they planted not Deut. 6. 11. And here setteth out the plenty of Gospell Grace which they never laboured for which he had provided for them under that notion He giveth them of the Wine of the Gospell his holy Spirit 2. In particular He compares his dealings with them to his dealings in the valley of Achor a most pleasant and fruitfull valley that was neere Jericho being the first the Israelites entred into when they came out of the Wildernesse which is mentioned as a fruitfull place Isa. 65. 10. And therefore this is said to be to them a doore of hope or an entrance into that which they hoped for it being the first fat fruitfull and fertile place that the Israelites came into in the Land of Canaan and so an entrance into the good land which they hoped for answering their Expectation to the uttermost In the Promise of the abundance of Spirituall Mercies Grace which God hath prepared for his here calleth into their minds the consideration of the refreshment which the Israelites after so long an abode in the wast and howling Wildernesse had and took in the fruitfull plenteous valley of Achor Such is the spirituall provision that God hath made for the entertainment of poore soules whom he hath allured into the Wildernesse and there spoken comfortably to them being called and pardoned he leadeth them to sweet and pleasant pastures treasures of Grace and Mercies which he hath laid up for them in Jesus Christ. He giveth them of the first fruits of Heaven which is a doore of hope unto the full possession Rom. 8. 23. 3. To the Songs and Rejoycings which the Church had when they sung one to another upon the destruction of the Aegyptians at their delivery out of the bondage of Aegypt As then they sung for joy Exod. 15 upon the sence of that great and wonderfull deliverance which God had wrought for them so shall their hearts be affected with Gospell Mercies pardoning healing purging and comforting Grace which in Jesus Christ he will give in unto them These then are the three things which are promised to them that come out of the Wildernesse 1. Gospell refreshment in powring out of the Spirit upon them 2. The first fruits of Heaven a doore of Hope 3. Spirituall joy in the destruction and conquest of sinne This then is the summe §. 29. of this second part of that description which wee have of those persons to whom the Promise under consideration is given They are such as being Called and Pardoned are admitted to that portion in the wonderfull marvelous provision of Gospell Mercies and Grace which in Jesus Christ he hath provided for them with that joy and Consolation which thereon doth ensue In the following verses you have a fuller description of these Persons upon a twofold account 1. By their delivery from Idolarty and falfe-worship v 16 17. which is particularly and peculiarly insisted on because that eminently was the sinne for which those mentioned in the beginning of the Chapter were utterly rejected God will preserve these as from the sinne of Idolatry so from any other that should procure their utter Rejection and desolation as that of Idolatry had formerly done in respect of the only carnall Jewes 2. By their protection against their enemies v 18. and these are the Persons to whom this Promise is made converted justified sanctified and purified Persons 2 ly We may take a little view of the Nature of the Promise it selfe §. 30. I will saith the Lord betroth thee unto me for ever There is in this Promise a twofold opposition to that Rejection that God had before denounced unto the carnall and rebellious Jewes 1. In the Nature of the thing it selfe unto the divorce that God gave them v. 2. Shee is not my Wife neither am I her Husband but to these saith God I will betroth them unto my selfe they shall become a Wife to mee and I will be a Husband unto them and this also manifesteth that they are not the same persons to whom that threatning was given that are principally intended in this Promise For if God did only take them againe whom he had once put away there would have been no need of any betrothing of them anew New Sponsalia are not required for such an Action 2. In the continuance of the Rejection of the first and the establishment of the Reception of the latter at least in respect of his abiding with these and those with those for a season but unto these he saith I will Betroth them unto me FOR EVER Gods betrothing of Believers is his actuall taking them into a Marriage covenant with himselfe to deale with them in the tendernesse faithfulnesse and protection of a Husband So is he often pleased to call himselfe in reference to his Church I shall not goe forth to the consideration of this Relation that God is pleased to take the soules of Saints into with himselfe The eminent and precious usefulnesse and consolation that floweth from it is ready to draw me out thereunto but I must attend that which I principally aime at namely to evince that God hath undertaken the Hee and Believers will and shall abide in this Relation to the end that he will for ever be a Husband to them and that in opposition to his dealing with the carnall Church of the Jewes to whom he was betrothed as to Ordinances but rejected them and said he was not their Husband as to peculiar grace To whom God continueth to be a Husband to them he continueth the loving-kindnesse goodwill and protection of a Husband the most intense usefull fruitfull that can be imagined This then will he doe to Believers and that for Ever Now because sundry Objections may be levied against the Accomplishment of this Engagement of God upon the account of our instability and backsliding the Lord addeth the manner of his entring into this engagement with us obviating and preventing or removing all such Objections whatever which is the third thing proposed to consideration namely the Engagement of the Properties of God for the accomplishment of this Promise Five Properties doth the Lord here mention §. 31. to assure us of his constancy in this undertaking of his Grace and the stedfastnesse of the Covenant he hath taken his People into and they are Righteousnesse
of God according to Election or the Purpose of his Will in Jesus Christ Rom. 9. 11. which though it comprize his Will of not punishing them in their own persons Joh. 3. 36. that are within the verge of this his Purpose Eph. 2. 3. yet it is not properly an Act of forgivenesse of sinns Rom. 5. 6 8. nor are they pardoned by it Gal. 3. 23. nor is the Law actually innovated 2 Cor. 5 21. or its obligation on them unto punishment dissolved Rom. 3. 23 24 25. nor themselves justified in any sence thereby 2. That interposition of the Lord Christ 2 Cor. 1. 30. whereof we have been treating being a medium indispensably necessary as to satisfaction Math. 17. 5. and freely designed by the will and Wisdome of God for such a procurement of the good things designed in his Eternall Counsell as might advance the Glory of his Grace and make knowne his Righteousnesse also And this being fixed on by God as the only thing by him required that all the Mercies all the Grace of his eternall Purpose might be dispensed in the order by him designed unto them Rom. 5. 9 10. upon the performance of it God resteth as well pleased and they for whom he hath mediated by his Blood 2 Cor. 5. 18 19 21. or for whom he is considered so to have done 1 Pet. 2. 24. are reconciled unto God as to that part of Reconciliation which respects the Love of God as to the dispencing the fruits of it unto them even whilest they are enemies upon the accounts before mentioned 3. Things being thus stated between God 2 Cor. 5. 20. and them Rom 8. 11. for whom Christ dyed on the account of his death God actually absolves them from under that sentence and Curse of the Law by sending the Spirit of his Sonne into their hearts to quicken them and to implant Faith in them Aud in what Act of God to place his actuall absolution of sinners ungodly persons whom Christ dyed for but in this actuall collation of the Spirit and habit of Grace on them I am not as yet satisfyed neither doth this in any measure confound our Justification and Sanctification For nothing hinders but that the same Act as it is of free Grace in opposition to workes or any thing in us may justify us or exert the fruit of his Love which was before purchased by Christ in our Gracious Acceptation notwithstanding all that was against us and also by principling us with Grace for Obedience Sanctify us throughout 4. This being done they with whom God thus Graciously deales receive the Attonement and being Justifyed by Faith have peace with God But this is not the matter or subject of our present Contest This then is the first influence which the Bloodshedding in the death Oblation of Christ hath into the Saints continuance of the Love and Favour of God It taketh away the guilt of sinne that it shall not be such a provocation to the eyes of his Glory his Law being fulfilled and Justice satisfyed as to cause him utterly to turne away his Love from them 2 Cor. 5. 21. And they becoming the Righteousnesse of God in him to all intents and purposes what should separate them from the Love of God Eph. 2. 14 15 He hath made peace in the Blood of the Crosse of his Sonne Rom. 8. 32 33. and will not ingage in enmity against his Elect any more to Eternity But in his owne way and own time as he hath the Soveraignty of all in his hands he will bring them infallibly to the enjoyment of himselfe And thus much by this discourse about the effects of the Death of Christ have we clearely obtained what Christ aymes to accomplish by his Death and what was the designe and intention of the Father that he should accomplish that cannot faile of its issue and appointed event by any interposure whatever That the effectuall removall of every thing that might intercept hinder or turne aside the Love and Favour of God from them for whom he dyed is the designed effect of the death of Christ hath been demonstrated This then in the order wherein it hath seemed good to the infinite Wisdome of God to proceed in dispencing his Grace unto sinners shall certainely be fulfilled and all Believers saved to the utmost I come §. 15. in the second place to demonstrate that as our Saviour secures the stability of the Love of the Saints to God and their abiding with him by taking away and removing what ever might hinder them therein or prevaile upon them utterly and wickedly to depart from him That which meritoriously might cause God to turne from us he utterly destroies and abolishes and that which efficiently might cause us to turne from God that also he destroyes and and removes Now all that is of this kind that workes effectually and powerfully for the alienating of the hearts of Believers from God or keeping men in a state of alienation from him may be referred unto two principles Gen. 3. 17. 1. Sathan himselfe 2. His Workes The world as under the Curse is an instrument in his hand who is called the God thereof to allure 2 Cor. 4. 4. vex and mischiefe us withall neither hath it the least power or efficacy in it selfe Math. 4. 9. but only as 't is managed in the hand of Sathan to turne men from God And yet the Lord Christ hath not let that goe free neither without its deaths wound John 16. 32. but bids his followers be of good comfort for he had overcome the World Gal. 1. 4. that is 1 John 5. 4 5. for them and in their stead so that it should never be used nor heightned in its enmity to a conquest over them I meane a totall and finall Conquest such as might frustrate any intention of God in his undertaking for them It is not our losse of a little bloud but our losse of Life that makes the enemy a Conqueror But now for Satan 1. First he overcomes §. 16. destroyes and breakes him in pieces with his power Heb 2. 14. by death he destroyed him that had the power of death that is the Divell The first thing that was promised of him was That he should breake the head of the Serpent Gen. 3. 15. He doth it also in and for the seed of the Woman all the Elect of God opposed to the seed of the Serpent or Generation of Vipers In pursuit hereof he spoyles Principalities and Powers and makes a shew of them openly triumphing over them in his Crosse Col. 2. 15. In the bloud of his Crosse he conquered and brake the power of the Divell binding that strong man Armed and spoyling his goods making a shew of him and them as great Conquerors were wont to doe with their Captives and their spoyles Now there are two waies whereby the bloud of
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
name in the great worke of Redemption And therefore he informes us Ioh. 17. 4. 6. that when the Comforter whom he procureth for us shall come he shall Glorify him and shall receive of his and shew it unto us Ioh. 16. 14. farther manifest his Glory in his bringing nothing with him but what is his or of his procurement so also instructing us clearly and plentifully to aske in his name that is for his sake which to doe plainly and openly is the great priviledge of the New Testament for so he tells his Disciples Ioh. 16. 24. hitherto have you asked nothing in my name who yet were Believers and had made many addresses unto God in and through him but darkely as they did under the Old Testament when they begged mercy for his sake Dan. 9. 17. But to plead with the Father clearly upon the account of the Mediation and Purchase of Christ That I say is the priviledge of the New Testament Now in this way he would have us aske the Holy Spirit at the hand of God Luke 11. 9 13. Aske him that is as to a clearer fuller Administration of him unto us for he is antecedently bestowed as to the working of Faith and Regeneration even unto this Application for without him we cannot once aske in the name of Christ for none can call Jesus Lord or doe any thing in his nane §. 22. but by the spirit of God This I say then He in whom we are blessed with all spirituall blessings Eph. 1. 4. hath procured the Holy Spirit for us and through his Intercession he is bestowed on us Now where the Spirit of God is 2 Cor. 3. 17. there is liberty from sinne peace and acceptance with God But it may be objected although this Spirit be thus bestowed on Believers yet may they not cast him off Rom. 8. 14. so that his abode with them may be but for a season and their Glory not be safegarded in the Issue but their condemnation increased by their receiving of him This being the only thing wherein this proofe of Believers abiding with God seemes lyable to exception I shall give a triple Testimony of the certainty of the continuance of the Holy Spirit with them on whom he is bestowed that in the mouth of two or three witnesses this Truth may be established and they are no meane ones neither but the three that beare witnesse in Heaven the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost The first you have Isa. §. 23. 59. 21. But as for me this is my Covenant with them saith the Lord my Spirit which is upon thee and my words which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy Seed nor out of the mouth of thy Seeds Seed saith the Lord hence forth and for ever That which the Lord declares here to the Church he calls his Covenāt Now whereas in a Covenant there are two things 1. What is stipulated on the part of him that makes the Covenant 2. What of them is required with whom it is made which in themselves are distinct though in the Covenant of Grace God hath promised that he will worke in us what he requires of us that here mentioned is clearely an Evidence of somewhat of the first kinde of that Goodnesse that God in the Covenant doth promise to bestow Though perhaps words of the future tense may sometimes have an Imperative Construction where the import of the residue of the words inforces such a sence yet because it may be so in some place therefore it is so in this place and that therefore these words are not a Promise that the Spirit shall not depart but an injunction to take care that it do not depart as Mr Goodwin will have it is a weake inference And the close of the words will by no meanes be wrested to speake significantly to any such purpose Saith the Lord henceforth even for ever which plainely make the words Promissory an ingagement of God himselfe to them to whom they are spoken So that the interpretation of these words this is my Covenant with them by Mr Goodwin Cap. 11. Sect 4. Pag. 227. That Covenant of perpetuall Grace and Mercy which I made with them requireth this of them in order to the performance of it on my part that they quench not my Spirit which I have put into them doth plainly invert the intendment of God in them and substitute what is tacitely required as our duty into the roome of what is expressly promised as his Grace Observe then Secondly that as no Promise of God given to Believers is either apt of it selfe to ingenerate or by them to be received under such an absurd notion of being made good what soever their deportment be it being the nature of all the Promises of God to frame and mould them to whom they are given into all Holinesse and purity 2 Cor. 7. 1. and this in especiall is a Promise of the principall Author and cause all Holinesse to be continued to them and is impossible to beapprehended under any such foolish supposall so also that this Promise is absolute not Conditionall can neither be colourably gainesaid nor the contrary probably confirmed so that the strength of Mr Goodwins two next Exceptions 1. That this cannot be a Promise of Perseverance unto true Believers whatsoever their deportment shall be And 2. That it must be Conditionall which cannot as he saith be reasonably gainesaid The first of them not looking towards our perswasion in this thing And the latter being not in the least put upon the proofe is but very weakenesse For what Condition I pray of this Promise can be imagined God promises his Spirit of Holinesse that sanctifyeth us and worketh all holinesse in us and therewith the holy Word of the Gospell which is also Sanctifying John 17. 7. that they shall abide with us for ever It is the continuance of the presence of God with us for our Holinesse that is here promised On what condition shall this be supposed to depend Is it in case we continue Holy Who seeth not the vanity of interserting any condition I will be with you by my Spirit and Word for ever to keep you Holy provided you continue Holy 3. Thirdly It is a hard taske to seeke to squeeze a condition out of those gracious words in the beginning of the verse As for mee which Iunius renders de me autem words wherein God graciously reveals himselfe as the sole Author of this great blessing promised it being a worke of his owne which he accomplisheth upon the account of his free Grace And therefore God signally placed that expression in the entrance of the Promise that we may know whom to look unto for the fulfilling thereof And it is yet a farther corruption to say that as for me is as much as for my part I will deale bountifully with them provided that they doe so
own thoughts but what may oppose ours that is the plaine and obvious sence of the words that he is concerned to make use of It being not the sence of the place but an escaping our Argument from it that lies in his designe he cares not how many contrary and inconsistent Interpretations he gives of it haec non successit aliâ aggrediemur viâ The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denotes as is confessed the intention of Christ in sending the Spirit that is that he intends to send him to Believers so as that he should abide with them for ever Now besides the impossibility in generall that the intention of God or of the Lord Christ as God and man should be frustrate whence in particular should it come to passe he should faile in this his intention I will send ye the holy spirit to abide with you for ever that is I intend to send you the Holy Spirit that he may abide with you for ever what now should hinder this Why it is given them upon condition that they be true to their own interest and take care to retaine him what is that I pray Why that they continue in Faith Obedience Repentance and close walking with God but to what end is it that he is promised unto them Is it not to teach them to worke in them Faith Obedience Repentance and close walking with God to Sanctifie them throughout and preserve them blamelesse to the end making them meet for the inheritance with the Saints in Light In case they Obey Believe c. the Holy Ghost is promised unto them to abide with them to cause them to Obey Believe Repent c. 4. The Intention of Christ for the sending of the Spirit and his abiding for ever with them to whom he is sent is but one and the same And if any frustration of his intention do fall out it may most probably interpose as to his sending of the Spirit not as to the Spirits continuance with them to whom he is sent which is asserted absolutely upon the account of his sending him He sends him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his abode is the end of his sending which if he be sent shall be obtained Upon the whole doubtlesse it will be found that the Doctrine of Perseverance findes so much for its establishment in this place of Scripture and Promise of our Saviour that by no Art or cunning it will be prevailed withall to let goe its interest therein And though many attempts be made to turne and wrest this Testimony of our Saviour severall wayes and those contrary too and inconsistent with one another yet it abides to looke straight forwards to the proofe and confirmation of the Truth that lyes not only in the wombe and sence of it but in the very mouth and literall expression of it also I suppose it is evident to all that Mr Goodwin knowes not what to say to it nor what sence to fixe upon At first it is made to the Apostles not all Believers then when this will not serve the turne there being a Concession in that Interpretation destructive to his whole cause then it is made as a Priviledge to the Church not to any individuall Persons but yet for feare that this priviledge must be vested in some individualls it is denyed that it is made to any but only is a Promise of the Spirits abode in the world with the Word but perhaps some thoughts coming upon him that this will no way suit the scope of the place nor be suited to the intēdmēt of Christ it is lastly added that let it be made to whom it will it is conditionall though there be not the least intimation of any condition in the Text or Context and that by him assigned be coincident with the thing it selfe promised But hereof so farre And so our second Testimony the Testimony of the Sonne abides still by the Truth for the confirmation whereof it is produced and in the mouth of these two witnesses the abiding of the Spirit with Believers to the end is established Adde here unto thirdly the Testimony of the third that beares witnesse in Heaven §. 29. and who also comes neere and beares witnesse to this Truth in the hearts of Believers even of the Spirit it selfe and so I shall leave it sealed under the Testimony of the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost As the other two gave in their Testimony in a word of Promise so the Spirit doth in a reall worke of Performance wherein as he beares a distinct Testimony of his owne the Saints having a peculiar Communion and fellowship with him therein so he is as the common seale of Father and Sonne set unto that Truth which by their Testimony they have confirmed There are indeed sundry things whereby he confirmes and establisheth the Saints in the Assurance of his abode with them for ever I shall at present mention that one eminent worke of his which being given unto them he doth accomplish to this very end and purpose and that is his Sealing of them to the day of Redemption A worke it is often in the Scripture mentioned and still upon the account of assuring the Salvation of Believers 2 Cor. 1. 22. by whom also ye are sealed Having mentioned the Certainty Unchangeablenesse and efficacy of all the Promises of God in Christ and the end to be accomplished and brought about by them namely the Glory of God in Believers v. 20. all the Promises of God are yea and Amen in him to the Glory of God by us the Apostle acquaints the Saints with one Foundation of the security of their interest in those Promises whereby the end mentioned the Glory of God by them should be accomplished This he ascribes to the efficacy of the Spirit bestowed on them in sundry workes of his Grace which he reckoneth v. 21 22. Among them this is one that he seales them As to the nature of this sealing and what that Act of the Spirit of Grace is that is so called I shall not now insist upon it The end and use of Sealing is more aimed at in this expression then the nature of it what it imports then wherein it consists Being a terme forensicall and translated from the use and practice of men in their Civill Transactions the use and end of it may easily from the originall rise thereof be demonstrated Sealing amongst men hath a two fold use First to give secrecy and security in things that are under present consideration to the things sealed And this is the First use of Sealing by a seale set upon the thing sealed Of this kind of sealing chiefely have we that long Discourse of Salmasius in the vindication of his Jus Atticum against the Animadversions of Heraldus And 2 ly to give an assurance or faith for what is by them that seale to be done In the first sence are things sealed up in Baggs and in Treasuries that they may be kept safe none daring to
them to dwell in them personally for the Accomplishment of all the ends and purposes of his Oeconomie towards them to make them meet for and to bring them unto the inheritance of the Saints in Light Personally I say in our Persons not by Assumption of our Natures giving us mysticall union with Christ not Personall Union with himselfe that is not one Personality with him which is impious and blasphemous to imagine by a Gracious inhabitation distinct from his Essentiall filling all things and his energeticall operation of all things as he will as shall afterwards be declared Now this being a Doctrine of pure Revelation our Demonstrations of it must be meerely Scriptuall and such as will instantly appeare we have provided in great plenty In the carrying on then of this undertaking I shall do these two things 1. Produce some of those many Texts of Scripture which are pregnant of this Truth 2. Shew what great things do issue from thence and are affirmed in reference thereunto being inferences of a supposall thereof all conducing to the preservation of Believers in the Love and Favour of God unto the end For the first I shall referre them to 4. heads unto 1. Promises that he should so dwell in us 2. Positive Affirmations that he doth so 3. Those Texts that hold out his being distinguished from all his Graces and Guifts in his so doing 4. Those that ascribe a Personality to him in his indwelling in us Of each sort one or two places may suffice 1. The indwelling of the Spirit is the great and solemne Promise of the Covenant of Grace The manner of it we shall afterwards evince Ezek. 36. 27. I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my wayes In the verse foregoing he tels them He will give them a new heart and a new Spirit which because it may be interpreted of a renewed frame of Spirit though it rather seemes to be the renewing Spirit that is intended as also Cap. 11. 19. he expressly points out and differences the Spirit he will give them from all workes of Grace whatsoever in that Appellation of him my Spirit my Holy Spirit Him will I put with in you I will give him or place him in interiori vestro in your inmost part in your heart or in visceribus vestris in your bowels as the Soule is frequently signifyed by expressions of sensuall things within you In his giving us a new heart new Spirit by putting in us his Spirit certainly more is intended then a meere working of Gracious qualities in our Hearts by his Spirit which he may do yet be no more in us then in the greatest Blasphemers in the world And this in the carrying of it on to its accōplishment God calls his Covenant Isa. 59. 21. This is my Covenant with them saith the Lord my Spirit that is upon thee shall not depart from thee upon thee in thee that dwels in thee as was promised And this Promise is evidently renewed by the Lord Christ to his Disciples clearely also interpreting what that Spirit is which is mentioned in the Promise of the Covenant Luk. 11. 13. Your Heavenly Father will give the Holy Spirit to them that aske him of him that is that pray to him for the Holy Spirit Our Saviour instructs his Disciples to aske the Holy Spirit of God upon the account of his being so promised as Acts 2. 23. All our supplications are to be regulated by the Promise And surely he who as shall afterwards appeare did so plentifully Rom. 8. 27. and richly Promise the bestowing of this Spirit on all those that believe on him did not instruct them to aske for any inferion Mèrcy and Grace under that name That Spirit which the Lord Christ instructs us to aske of the Father is the Spirit which he hath promised to bestow so on us as that he shall dwell in us That the Spirit which Christ instructs us to aske for and which himselfe promiseth to send unto us is the Holy Ghost himselfe the Holy Spirit of Promise by whom wee are Sealed to the day of Redemption I suppose will require no labour to prove what is needfull to this end shall be afterward insisted on 2. Positive affirmations that he doth so dwell in § 2. and remaine with the Saints are the second ground of the Truth we assert I shall name one or two Testimonies of that kind Psal. 51. 11. saith David take not thy Holy Spirit from me It is the Spirit and his presence as unto Sanctification not in respect of Prophesy or any other gift whatever that he is treating of with God All the Graces of the Spirit being almost dead and buried in him he cries aloud that He whose they are and who alone is able to revive and quicken them may not be taken from him With him in him he was or he could not be taken from him And though the Gifts or Graces of the Spirit only may be intended where mention is made of giving or bestowing of him sometimes yet when the Saints begge of God that he would continue his Spirit with them though they have grieved him and provoked him that no more is intended but some Gift or Grace is not so cleare I know men possessed with prejudice against this Truth will think easily to evade these Testimonies by the Distinction of the Person and Graces of the Spirit Wherefore for the manner how he is with them with whom he is the Apostle informes us Rom 8. 9. yee are in the spirit that is spirituall men opposed to being in the flesh that is carnall unregenerate unreconciled and enemies to God if so be the spirit of Christ dwell in you and if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Not only the thing it selfe is asserted but the weight of our Regeneration and Acceptation with God through Jesus Christ is laid upon it If the Spirit dwell in us we are spirituall and belong to Christ otherwise not wee are none of his This the Apostle farther confirmes v. 11. if the spirit of him that raised up Jesus dwell in you I know not how the Person of the Holy Ghost can be more clearely decyphered then here he is The spirit of him that raised Jesus from the dead Why that is mentioned shall afterwards be considered And this Spirit as he bears Testimony of himselfe dwells in Believers which is all we say and without farther curious enquiry desire to rest therein Doubtlesse it were better for men to captivate their understandings to the obedience of Faith then to invent Distinctions and Evasions to escape the power of so many plaine Texts of Scripture and those litterally and properly not Figuratively and Metaphorically expressing the Truth contained in then which though it may be done sometimes yet is not in a constant uniforme tenure of expression any where the manner of the Holy Ghost The Apostle also affirmes farther v. 15.
given unto them There is not a quickning a life-giving Power in a quality a created thing In the state of Nature besides gracious dispensations and habits in the Soule inclining it to that which is good and making it a sutable subject for spirituall Operations John 5. Eph. 2. 1 2. we want also a vitall Principle which should actuate the disposed subject unto answerable Operations this a quality cannot give He that carries on the worke of quickning doth also begin it Rom 8. 11. All Graces whatever Gal. 5. 22. as was said are the fruits of the Spirit and therefore in order of Nature are wrought in men consequentially to his being bestowed on them Now in the first bestowing of the Spirit we have Union with Christ the carrying on whereof consists in the farther manifestation and operations of the Indwelling Spirit which is called Communion To make this evident that our Union with Christ consists in this the same Spirit dwelling in him and us and that this is our Union let us take a view of it First from Scripturall Declarations of it and then Secondly from Scripture Illustrations of it both briefely being not my direct businesse in hand 1. First Peter tells us §. 9. that it is a participation of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. We are by the Promises made partakers of the Divine Nature that is it is promised to be given unto us which when we receive we are made partakers of by the Promises That this participation of the Divine Nature let it be interpreted how it will is the same upon the matter with our Union with Christ is not questioned that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be only a gracious habit quality or disposition of Soule in us I cannot easily receive that is somewhere called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 5. 17. the New Crea ure but no where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Divine Nature The pretended high and spirituall but indeed grosse and carnall conceits of some from hence destructive to the Nature of God and Man I shall not turne aside to consider What that is of the Divine Nature or wherein it doth consist that we are made partakers of by the Promises I shewed before That the Person of the Holy and Blessed Spirit is promised to us whence he is called the Holy Spirit of Promise Eph. 1. 13. hath been I say by sundry evidences manifested Upon the Accomplishment of that Promise he coming to dwell in us we are said in him by the Promises to be made partakers of the Divine Nature We are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have our Communion with it Our participation then of the Divine Nature being our Union with Christ consists in dwelling of the same Spirit in him and in us we receiving him by the Promise for that end 2. Christ tells us § 10. that this Union arises from the eating of his flesh and drinking of his bloud Ioh 6. 56. Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud dwelleth in me and I in him The mutuall Indwelling of Christ and his Saints is their Union this saith Christ is from their Eating my flesh and Drinking my bloud But how may this be done Many were offended when this saying was spoken neere and close trialls of sincerity drive hypocrites into Apostasy from his Christ takes away this scruple v 63. it is saith he the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing It is by the Indwelling of the quickning Spirit whereby we have a reall participation of Christ whereby he dwelleth in us and we in him So 3. He prayes for his Disciples Ioh. 17. 21. that they may be one §. 11. as the Father in him and he in the Father that they may be one in the Father and Sonne and v. 22. let them be one even as we are one And that yee may not think that it is only union with and among themselves that he presses for though indeed that which gives them Union with Christ gives them Union one with another also and that which constitutes them of the Body unites them to the Head there is one Body because there is one Spirit Eph. 4. 4. which even Lombard himselfe had some notion of in his Assertion that Charity which is in us is the person of the Holy Ghost from that place of the Apostle God is Love I say he farther manifests that it is Union with himselfe which he intends v. 23. I in them saith he and thou in mee This Union then with him our Saviour declares by or at least illustrates by resemblance unto his union with the Father Whether this be understood of the Union of the Divine Persons of Father and Sonne in the Blessed Trinity the Union I meane that they have with themselves in their distinct Personality and not their Unity of Essence or the Union which was between Father and Sonne as Incarnate it comes all to one as to the Declaration of that Union we have with him The Spirit is Vinculum Trinitatis the Bond of the Trinity as is commonly and not ineptly spoken proceeding from both the other Persons being the Love and Power of them both he gives that Union to the Trinity of Persons whose substratum and Ground is the inestimable unity of Essence wherein they are one Or if you take it for the Union of the Father with the Sonne Incarnate it is evident and beyond inquiry or dispute that as the Personall Union of the Divine Word and the Humane Nature was by the Assumption of that Nature into one Personall Substance with it selfe so the Person of the Father hath no other union with the Humane Nature of Christ immediatly and not by the Union of his own Nature thereunto in the Person of his Sonne but what consists in that Indwelling of his Spirit in all fulnesse in the Man Christ Jesus Now saith our Saviour this Union I desire they may have with mee by the dwelling of the same Spirit in me and them whereby I am in them and they in me as I am one with thee O Father 2. The Scripture sets forth this Union by many Illustrations §. 12. given unto it from the things of the neerest Union that are subject to our apprehension giving the very termes of the things so united unto Christ and his in their Union I shall name some few of them 1. That of Head and Members making up one Body §. 13. is often insisted on Christ is the Head of his Saints and they being many are Members of that one Body and of one another as the Apostle at large 1 Cor 12. 12. even as the Body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is Christ The body is one and the Saints are one Body yea one Christ that is mysticall They then are the Body what part is Christ He is the Head 1 Cor. 11. 3. the Head of every man
Object or Truth revealed in the word This is common to all that are made partakers of the good Word of God that is to whom 't is Preached and delivered as it is to many whom it doth not profit being not mixt with Faith Heb 4. 2. 3. The way and meanes of Communicating the truth so revealed to their minds or understandings which is the Litterall Grammaticall Logicall delivery of the things contained in the Scriptures as held out to their Minds and Apprehensions in their meditation on them and this meanes of convayance of the sence of the Scripture is plaine obvious and cleare in all necessary Truths A Concurrence of these three will afford and yeild them that have it upon their diligence and enquiry a Disciplinary knowledge of the Litterall sence of Scripture as they have of other things By this meanes the Light shines 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sends out some beames of light into their darke minds but the darknesse comprehends it not John 1. 5. receives not the Light in a spirituall manner there is notwithstanding all this still wanting the work of the Spirit before mentioned creating and implanting in and upon their understandings and minds that Light and power of discerning spirituall things which before we insisted on This the Scripture sometimes calls the opening of the understanding Luk 24. 45. sometimes the giving an understanding it selfe 2 Tim 2. 7. 1 John 5. 20 sometimes light in the Lord Ephes. 5. 8. Notwithstanding all the Advantages formerly spoken of without this men are still naturall men and darknesse not comprehending not receiving the things of God that is not spiritually for so the Apostle adds because they Spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. 14. Receiving Spirituall things by meere naturall mediums they become foolishnesse unto them This is the first thing that the Spirit dwelling in us doth towards Guidance and Direction he gives a new Light and Understanding whereby in generall we are inabled to discerne comprehend and receive Spirituall things 2. In particular he Guides and leades men to the embracing particular Truthes and to the walking in and up §. 20. unto them Christ promised to give him to us for this end namely to lead us into all Truth John 16. 13. He will guide us into all Truth There is more required to the receiving entertaining embracing a particular Truth rejecting of what is cōtrary unto it then an habituall Illumination This also is the work of the Spirit that dwells in us he works this also in our minds hearts therefore the Apostle secures his little Children that they shall be lead into Truth preserved frō seduction on this account 1 John 2. 20. You have au Vnction from the holy one or ye have received the Spirit from the Lord Jesus and you shall know all things why so because it is his worke to Guide and Lead you into all the things whereof I am a speaking And more fully v 27. You have received an Vnction from him that abideth in you and you have no need that any teach you but as the Vnction teacheth you of all things and is true and is no lye and as he hath taught you abide in him It is received as promised it doth abide as the Spirit is said to do and it teacheth which is the proper worke of the Spirit in an eminent manner Now this Guidance of Believers by the Spirit §. 21. as to the particular Truthes and actings consists in his putting forth of a twofold Act of Light and Power First Of Light and that also is twofold 1. Of Beauty as to the things to be received or done he represents them to the soule as Excellent Comely Desirable and Glorious leading us on in the receiving of truth from Glory to Glory 2 Cor. 2. 18. He puts upon every Truth a new Glory making and rendring it desirable to the soule without which it cannot be closed withall as not discovering either suitablenesse or proportion unto the minds and hearts of men And 2. By some actuall elevation of the minde and understanding to goe forth unto and receive into it selfe the Truth as represented to it by both of them sending forth Light and Truth Psal. 43. 3. blowing of the Cloudes and raising up the day Starre that rises in our hearts Secondly 2 Pet. 2. 19. Of Power Isa. 35. 6. The breaking forth of Streames makes not only the blind to see but the lame to leape Strength comes as well as Light by the powring out of the Spirit on us Strength for the receiving and practice of all his Gracious discoveries to us He leades us not only in Generall implanting a saving Light in the minde whereby it is disposed and enabled to discerne Spirituall things in a Spirituall manner but also as to Particular Truths rendring them Glorious and Desirable opening the mind and Understanding by new beames of Light he leades the soule irresistably into the receiving of the truths revealed which is the second thing we have by him I shall only observe for a close of this §. 22. one or two Consequences of the weight of this twofold Operation of the indwelling of Christ. 1. From the want of the first or his creating a new light in the minds of men it is that so many Labour in the fire for an acquaintance with the things of God It is I say a consequence of it as darknesse is of absence of the Sunne Many we see after sundry years spent in considerable labours and diligence reading of many bookes with a contribution of assistance from other usefull Arts and Sciences Rom. 1. 21 22 in the issue of all their indeavours do wax vaine in their imaginations having their foolish hearts darkned professing themselves wise they become fooles being so farre from any Sappe and savour that they have not the leaves of ability in things Divine Others indeed make some progresse in a disciplinary knowledge of Doctrines of the Scriptures and can accurately reason and distinguish about them according to the formes wherein they have been exercised and that to a great height of conviction in their owne spirits and permanency in the profession they have taken up But yet all this while they abide without any effectuall power of the Truth Rom. 6. 17. conforming and framing their spirits unto the likenesse and mould thereof They doe but see men walking like trees some shines of the light breake in upon them which rather amaze then guides them they comprehend it not They see Spirituall things in a Naturall Light and presently forget what manner of things they were and in the species wherein they are retained 1 Cor. 2. 12 13 14. they are foolishnesse 2. From the want of the latter it is that we our selves are so slow in receiving some partes of Truth and do find it so difficult to convince others of some other parts of it which to us are written with the beames of the Sunne Unlesse the
performances And how comes that about saith the Psalmist it is by Gods satisfying my mouth with good things he satisfyed his mouth with good things or answered his prayers What these good things are which the Saints pray for and wherewith their mouthes are satisfied our Saviour tells us your Father saith he knoweth how to give good things to them that aske them of him which expressing in another place he saith your Father will give the Holy Spirit to them that aske him of him He is given us and he renewes our strength as the Eagles making our soules which were ready to languish prompt ready cheerefull strong in the wayes of God To this purpose is that Prayer of the Spouse Cant. 4. 6. Awake O North wind and come thou South and blow upon my Garden that the savour of my spices may flow out let my beloved come into his Garden that he may eate of the fruit of his precious things Shee is sensible of the withering of her Spices the decayes of her Graces and her disability thereupon to give any suitable entertainment unto Jesus Christ Hence is her earnestnesse for new breathings and operations of the Spirit of Grace to renew and revive and set on worke againe her Graces in her which without it could not be done All Graces are the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 25 26. The fruit of the Spirit is Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Kindnesse Goodnesse Faith Gentlenesse Temperance if the Root doe not communicate fresh juyce and sappe continually the fruit will quickly wither were there not a continuall communication of new life and freshnesse unto our Graces from the Indwelling Spirit we should soone be poore withered Branches this our Saviour tells us Ioh. 15. 4 5. abide in mee and I in you as the branches cannot bring forth fruit of themselves unlesse they remaine in the Vine no more can yee unlesse ye abide in mee I am the Vine yee are the Branches he who abideth in mee and I in him he bringeth forth much fruit for separate from mee ye can doe nothing Our Abiding in Christ and his in us is as was declared by the Indwelling of the same Spirit in him and us Hence saith Christ have you all your fruit-bearing vertue and unlesse that be continued to us we shall wither and consume to nothing David in his spiritually declined condition intangled under the power and guilt of sinne cries out for the continuance of the Spirit and the restoring him as to those ends and purpose● in reference whereunto he was departed from him Ps 51. 21 22. This the Apostle praies earnestly that the Ephesians may receive Ch. 3. 16 17. I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ that he will give unto you according to the riches of his Glory that ye may be strengthened with might by his spirit in the inward man that Christ may dwell in your hearts by Faith that yee being rooted and grounded in Love c. The inward Man is the same with the new Creature the new principle of Grace in the Heart This is apt to be sick to faint and decay the Apostle prayes that it might be strengthened how is this to be done how is it to be renewed increased enlivened It is saith he by the mighty power of the Spirit and then gives you particular instances in the Graces which flourish and spring up effectually upon that strengthening they receive by the might and power of the Spirit as of Faith Love Knowledge and Assurance the increasing and establishing of all which is ascribed there unto him He who bestowes these Graces on us and workes them in us doth also carry them on unto perfection Were it not for our inflowings from that spring our Cisternes would quickly be dry therefore our Saviour tells us that he the Spirit is unto Believers as Rivers of living water flowing out of their bowels Ioh 7. 38 39. A never failing fountaine that continually puts forth living waters of Grace in us This may a little farther be considered and insisted on being directly to our main purpose in hand It is true indeed it doth more properly belong unto that which I have assigned for the Second Part of this Treatise concerning the Ground or Principle of the Saints abiding with God for ever but falling in conveniently in this order I shall farther presse it from Ioh. 4. 14. whosoever saith our Saviour shall drink of the water which I shall give unto him shall not thirst for ever but the water which I shall give unto him shall be in him a fountain of water springing up unto eternall life The occasion of these words is known §. 29. they are part of our Saviours Colloquie with the poore Samaritan Harlot having told her that he could give her another manner of water and infinitely better then that which she drew out of Jacobs well for which the poore Creature did almost contemne him and askt him whence he had that water whereof he spake how he came by it or what he made of himselfe Did he think himselfe a better man then Iacob who dranke of that well which shee was drawing water out of to convince her of the Truth and reality of his Promise he compares the water that he would and could give with that which she drew out of the Well especially as to one eminent effect wherein the water of his Promise did infinitely surmount that which she so magnifyed for v. 13. he tells her for that water in the well though it allayed thirst for a season yet within a little while she would thirst againe and must come thither to draw but saith he whosoever drinketh of the Water I shall give him thirsts no more and this he proveth from the Condition of the Water he giveth it is a well of Water not a drought not a Pitcherfull as that thou carryest away but it is a Fountaine a Well yea perhaps in it selfe it is so a Fountaine or Well but he that drinkes of it he hath but one draught of that water Nay saith Christ it shall become a Well in him not a Well whereunto he may goe but a Well that he shall carry about in him He that hath a continuall spring of living water in him shall doubtlesse have no occasion of fainting for thirst any more This our Saviour amplifies and clears up unto her from the nature and energy of this Well of water it springeth up unto everlasting life in these last words instructing the poore sinfull Creature in the use of the Parable that he had used with her Having taken an occasion to speake to her of heavenly things from the nature of the employment that she was engaged in at present Two or three things may be observed from the words to give Light unto their tendency to the Confirmation of the Truth we have under consideration First §. 30. the Water here Promised by our Saviour is the Holy and Blessed Spirit this
tending to the end and purpose we have in hand As 1. First §. 37. because the Spirit dwells in us we are therefore to consider and dispose of our persons as Temples of the Holy Ghost that is of this Indwelling Spirit the Scripture manifesting hereby that the Doctrine of the Indwelling of the Spirit is not only a Truth but a very usefull Truth being made the Fountaine of and the inforcement unto so great a duty He dwells in us and we are to look well to his habitation our Saviour tells us that when the evill Spirit finds his dwelling swept and garnished Mat. 12.44 he instantly takes possession and brings company with him he will not be absent from it when 't is fitted for his turne In reference to the Saints and their holy Indweller this the Apostle urgeth 1 Cor. 6. 19. Your Bodies are the Temples of the Holy Ghost which dwells in you whence he concludes whose ye are not your owne and therefore ought to glorify God in your Bodies From hence is the strength of his Argument for the avoiding of all uncleannesse v. 16. 17. Know ye not that he who is joyned to an Harlot is one body he who is joyned to the Lord is one spirit flye Fornication know ye not that your Body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost On this account also doth he presse to universall holinesse 1 Cor 3. 16. 17. Know ye not that ye are the Temples of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you if any man desile the Temple of God him shall God destroy for the Temple of God is holy which Temple ye are In v. 12. 13. 14. the Apostle discovers the fruitlesnesse of Building hay and stubble light and unsound Doctrines or practises upon the foundation of Faith in Jesus Christ once laid and tells us that all such things shall burne and suffer losse and put the contrivers and workers of them to no small difficulty in escaping like men when the Garments they are cloathed withall are on fire about them On the account of this sad event of foolish and carelesse walking he presses v. 16 as was said earnestly to universall Holinesse laying downe as the great motive thereunto that which we have insisted on viz. the Indwelling of the Holy Spirit in us know ye not that ye are the Temple of God The Temple wherein God of old did dwell was built with hewen stone Cedar Wood and overlaid with pure Gold and will ye now who are the spirituall Temple of God build up your Soules with hay and stubble Which he furthers by that dreadfull commination taken from the zeale of God for the purity of his Temple so that on each hand he doth presse to the universall close keeping of our Hearts in all Holinesse and purity because of the Indwelling of the Holy Spirit And indeed where ever we are said to be Temples of God or an Habitation for him as it still relates to this cause of the Expression which we now insist upon so there is ever some intimation of Holinesse to be pursued on that account Eph 2. 21. 22. In whom the whole building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord in whom ye also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit being made an habitation of the Lord by the Spirits Indwelling in us we grow up or thrive in grace into an Holy Temple to the Lord to be a more compleate and well furnished Habitation for him This then is that which I say The Truth of what hath formerly been spoken concerning the manner of the Spirits abode with us being procured for us by Jesus Christ is farther cleared by this inference that the Scripture makes thereof The Saints are exhorted with all diligence to keepe themselves a fit Habitation for him that they may not be uncleane and defiled lodgings for the Spirit of purity and Holinesse This is and this is to be their daily Labour and indeavour that vaine thoughts unruly passions corrupt lusts may not take up any Roome in their bosome that they put not such unwelcome and unsavory inmates upon the Spirit of Grace that sinne may not dwell where God dwells On this ground they may plead with their owne Souls and say Hath the Lord chosen my poore heart for his Habitation Hath he said I delight in it and there will I dwell for ever Hath he forsaken that goodly and stately Materiall Temple whereunto he gave his speciall presence of old to take up his abode in a farre more eminent way in a poore sinfull soule Doth that Holy Spirit which dwells in Jesus Christ who was Holy Blamelesse Vndefiled separate from sinners who did no sinne neithere was guile found in his mouth dwell also in me that am in and of my selfe wholly corrupted and defiled And shall I be so foolish so unthankfull as willingly to defile the Habitation which he hath chosen Shall I suffer vaine Thoughts foolish Lust distempered Affections worldly aimes to put in themselves upon him there He is a Spirit of Grace can he beare a Gracelesse Corruption to be cherished in his Dwelling He is a Spirit of Holynesse and shall I harbour in his Lodging a frame of worldlynesse He is a Spirit of Joy Consolation shall I fill my bosome with foolish feares and devouring Cares Would not this be a griefe unto him Would it not provoke the eyes of his Glory Can he beare it that when he is with me before his face in his presence I should spend my time in giving entertainement to his enemyes He is the high and the Holy one who dwells in Eternity and he hath chosen to inhabit with me also Surely I should be more bruitish then any man should I be carelesse of his Habitation And should not this fill my soule with an Holy scorne and indignation against sinne Shall I debase my soule unto any vile Lust. which hath this exceeding honour to be an Habitation for the Spirit of God Hence upon a view of any defilement of Lust or passion nothing troubles the Saints more nor fills them with more selfe-abhorrence and confusion of face then this that they have rendred their hearts an unsuitable habitation for the Spirit of God This makes David upon his sinne cry so earnestly that the Spirit might not depart from him Psal. 51. being conscious to himselfe that he had exceedingly defiled his dwelling place And were this Consideration alwayes fresh upon the Spirits of the Saints were it more constant in their thoughts it would keepe them more upon their Guard that nothing might breake in to disquiet their gracious Indweller 2. Secondly §. 38. because be the Spirit we have guidance and direction there is Wisdome given unto us and we are called to a holy discerning between the Directions of the Spirit of Grace and the delusions of the Spirit of the World and the seduction of our owne Hearts Christ gives this character of
thing beautifull in its season 4. They know that all the workings of the Spirit of God as they are good so also they tend unto a good end Doth that stirre them up to close walking with God It is that God may be glorified his Graces exercised in them their soules strengthened in obedience and their progresse in Sanctification furthered Doth it assure them of the love of God It is that they may be more humble thankefull watchfull When all the compliances and combinations of Sathan and mens corrupt hearts even when they compell to good duties are for false evill and corrupt ends Duty is prest to pacify Conscience Peace is given to make men secure Gifts are stirred up to tempt to Pride and indeed it may easily be observed that the Divell never doth any work but he will quickly come for his Wages By the help I say of these and such like Considerations the Saints of God in whom this Spirit doth dwell are inabled to discerne and know the voyce of their Leader and Guide from the neerest resemblance of it that the Spirit which is in the World doth or at any time can make shew of And this Indwelling of the Spirit yeelds a considerable contribution of strength toward the confirmation of the maine Theses undertaken to be proved Our Adversaries dispute about the removall of acquired habits but how infused habits may be cast out or expelled they have not any tolerable measure been able to declare If moreover it shall be evinced as it hath been by plentifull Testimonies of Scripture that the Holy Ghost himselfe dwelles in Believers what way can be fixed on for his Expulsion That he cannot be removed but by his own will the will of him that sends him I suppose will easily be granted Whilest he abides with them they are accepted with God and in Covenant with him That God whilest his Children are in such a state and condition doth take away his Spirit from them and give them up to the power of the Divell is incumbent on our Adversaries to prove But to returne at length from this digression Thus farre have wee proceeded in manifesting upholding and vindicating that influence which the Oblation of Christ hath into the preservation of the Saints in the Love and Favour of God unto the end His Intercession being Eminently effectuall also to the same end and purpose comes in the next place to be considered CAP. IX 1. The Intercession of Christ. 2. The nature of it It s ayme not only that Believers continuing so may be saved but that they may be preserved in Believing 3. This farther proved from the Typicall Intercession of the Judaicall High Priest 4. The Tenor of Christs Intercession as manifested loh 17. v. 11. opened and v. 12. 13. 14. 15. 5. The result of the Argument from thence The Saints Perseverance fully confirmed 6. Rom. 8. 33 34. at large explained 7. 8. M. G's Interpretation of the place in all the parts of it confuted Vaine supposalls groundlessely interserted into the Apostles discourse What Christ Intercedes for for Believers farther manifested The summe of what is assigned to the Intercession of Christ by M. G. How farre it is all from yeelding the least consolation to the Saints manifested 9. The Reasons of the foregoing Interpretation proposed and answered 10. The end assigned of the Intercession of Christ Answered God works persevere actually a supply of mercies that may not be effectuall not to be ascribed thereunto 11. Farther objections Answered Christ not the minister of sinne by this Doctrine 12. Supposalls and Instances upon the former Interpretation disproved and rejected 13. A briefe account of our Doctrine concerning the Intercession of Christ for Believers and of the true end of the Act of his Mediation 14. The close of the Argument and of the first Part of this Treatise OF the Intercession of Christ §. 1. both as to the nature of its typicall Representation by the high Priests entring into the Holy of Holyes every yeare with blood Heb. 9. 7. and its effectuall influence into the perfect compleate Salvation of Believers so much hath been spoken by others and the whole of the Doctrine delivered with so much clearnesse spirituallnesse and strength that I shall not need to adde any thing thereunto That Christ intercedes for the preservation of Believers in the Love and Favour of his Father to the end is that which I intend to manifest and which may as I suppose be very easily undeniably evinced Some few Considerations will make way for the demonstration of the Truth which is under Consideration or Confirmation of the Perseverance of Saints from the Intercession of Christ. First the Intercession of Christ being his Appearance for us in the presence of God Heb. 9. 24. He is gon into Heaven §. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make a legall Appearance for our defence before the Judgment seat of God by being there is our Advocate I John 2 1. he is said to save us to the utmost Heb 7. 25. There is certainely some thing or other that he puts in for in the behalfe of them in whose Cause he appeares and sues that so he may save them to the utmost Now this must be either that being and continuing Believers they may be Saved or that they may believe and continue Believers unto Salvation That the first is not the sole import and aime of the Intercession of Christ may be manifested from this double Consideration 1. From the nature of the thing it selfe There is nothing but the establishment of the very Law of the Gospell He that believeth shall be Saved wrapt up in this interpretation of the Intercession of Christ. But this neither hath Christ any need to intercede for it being ratified confirmed and declared from the beginning neither is there or can there any Opposition be made against it to shake weaken or disturbe it in the least it depending solely on the Truth and Unchangeablenesse of God not being vested by any Condition whatsoever in any other subject nor would this be availing to his Militant Church whose preservation he aimes at and intends in his Intercession For the whole of his desires may be granted him to the uttermost and yet his whole Church at any time militant perish for ever Though not one soule should continue believing to the end though the gates of Hell should prevail against every one that names the name of Christ in the world yet that Truth He that believeth shall be Saved taken in the sence of our Adversaries for a Promise to Perseverance in believing and not a promise to actuall true Believers might stand firme for ever To say then that this is the whole Intercession of Christ for his Church is to say that in his whole Intercession he Interceded not at all for his Church Ioh. 11. 44. He is heard in his Intercession and he may be heard to the uttermost in this and yet his
of mankind not at all to any of those whereby they are distingunished as such This they professed to have a powerfull Efficacy to prevaile with them for that exactnesse in walking with God which by his Grace they attained unto And why they should not be believed herein as farre a sany men whatever bearing the like Testimony to any Doctrine whatever I know not Besides the intendment of this instance of the Persons and their Piety who formerly Believed and spake forth this Doctrine was to manifest by an eminent experiment that there was not in it nor is any tendency to a contrary frame unto Piety Holines which it is injuriously charged withall if by the consideration thereof we do not obtaine that it hath a proper and direct serviceablenesse to the promotion of Godlinesse yet at least we have a convincing demonstration that it is no way obstructive to it Nextly §. 15. Sect. 26. Mr Goodwin entreth upon his defensative to the charge against his Doctrine whose Foundation is laid in the unworthinesse of its Authors in this Nation before it fell upon his hand These he confesseth to be the worst of our late Bishops with such as Romanized ●yrannized among them with their Clergie creatures favorites Persons many of thē of superstition loosenes much profanenes Of the Apologie shaped for the clearing of the Doctrine he maintaineth from aparticipation with them in their unworthinesse there are three parts In the 1. whereof he denieth that this Doctrine did any way induce them to the loosenesse that was found upon them In the other two giveth as many Reasons of their receiving of it and cleaving to it As for the first part I shall willingly assent to him that the Holinesse or unholinesse of Professors is not to be charged on the Religion they professe I meane appearing Holinesse in the profession of it unlesse there be an evidence of a connexion betwixt their principles practises which in this case to us our apprehension of them who charge this Doctrine with the miscarriages of those men there is At least we may insist on this that there is a suitablenesse in the whole Systeme of the Doctrine whereof the Apostacy of the Saints is an eminent parcell to that frame of Spirit which is in men of loose and superstitious wayes enemies of the Grace of God and power of Godlinesse Neither can there any other reason be tollerably assigned or alledged for the embracement of that Doctrine by those Persons formerly mentioned but only their ignorance of envy to the great Misteryes of the Gospell the Covenant of Grace with union communion and close walking with God A designe was upon them written with the beames of the Sunne to cry up a barren outside light and loose profession with a vaine superstitious selfe-invented Worship of God instead of the Power of a Gospell-conversation and Ordinances of Christ according to his appointment Seeking after a Righeousnesse as it were by the workes of the Law and being ignorant of the Righteousnesse of Christ they found the whole Doctrine whose defence M. G. hath lately undertaken suited to their principles and aimes and therefore with greedinesse drunke it downe like water untill they were swelled with the Dropsy of Pride and selfe conceit beyond what they could beare whatever be now pretended it was little disputed then and in those dayes which Mr Goodwin pointeth unto but that loosenesse of Life inclination to Popery enmity to the power of Godlinesse were at the bottome of the entertainement of the Arminian Principles by that generation of men But Mr G. proceedeth to alleviate this charge §. 16. informes us thus That if the soundnes rottennes of Opinions should be esteemed by the goodnes or badnes of the Lives of any parcell or number of Persons professing the same as well the Opinion of Atheisme which denyeth the being of any God as the opinion of Polytheisme which affirmeth a plurality of Gods must be esteemed better and more sound than that which maintaineth the being of one God and of one only for certaine it is that there have been many Heathens Professours some of the one some of the other of those Opinions who have quitted themselves upon fairer tearmes of honour and approbation in their lives than many Christians professing of the last opinion have done I am not willing to wring this Nose too farre least bloud should follow The lives of many Atheists and Pagans are preferred before the lives of many professing Christianity By Professors of Christianity Mr Goodwin intendeth those who are so indeed and seasoned with the Power of the Principles of that Religion or such only as making an outward profession of it are indeed acted with Principles quite of another nature which notwithstanding all their Profession rendreth them in the truth of the thing it selfe enemies of the crosse of Christ their God being their belly their glory being in their shame and their end being destruction Philip. 3. 18 19. If the former be intended as the Assertion is most false the Gospell only effectually teaching men to deny all ungodlinesse and to live soberly righteously and Godly in this present world so it tendeth directly to the highest derogation from the honour of our Lord Jesus Christ and of his glorious Gospell He that would be throughly acquainted with the notorious untruth of this insinuation let him a little consult Tertullian Arnobius Lactantius Austin others handling the Lives Conversations of the best of the Polytheists and Heathens before in their dayes if he be not contented to take a shorter course and rest in the Authority of the Apostle or rather of the Holy Ghost describing them and their conversations to the Life as they lay under the just hardening Judgements of God Rom. 1. 18. to the end If the latter sort of men called Christians be intended the comparison instituted between them and Atheists is to no purpose they themselves being disclaimed and disowned by Christ his Gospell and reckoned among them with whom they are compared So that upon the matter this is but the comparing one sort of Atheists with an other and giving in a Judgement that of all those are worst whose practises are so and yet pacifie their owne Consciences and deceive the world with a pretence flowrish of a glorious profession I shall not now enter upon any long enquiry what influence the ungodly and profane lives of any ought to have upon the Judgements of men in discovering and discerning of the Doctrines that they bring especially if such as consent in any Doctrine do also concurre in a dissolutenesse of conversation That it will be of no small consideration the experience of all Ages hath evinced The Athenians refused a virtuous Law because the Person was vicious who proposed it and it is generally esteemed that there is a correspondency betwixt the principles practices of those men who earnestly
made good will be of no use to M. Goodwin as to his present purpose The whole strength of this Argumentation is built on this supposall That the effectuall Grace of God in its working the will deed in Believers or the Spirits doing of it by Grace with Gods fore determination of events doth take away the Liberty of the will inducing into it a necessary manner of Operation determining it to one antecedently in order of time to its own determination of it selfe which is false nowise inferred frō the Doctrine under Consideration Yea as Gods Providentiall concurrence with men and determination of their wills to all their Actions as Actions is the Principle of all their naturall Liberty so his Gracious Concurrence with thē or operations in thē as unto Spirituall Effects working in thē to will is the Principle of all their true Spirituall Liberty when the Son makes us free then are we free indeed the Reward then is proposed to an understanding enlightned a will quickned made free by grace to stirre thē up to actions suitable to them who are in expectation of so bountifull a close of their Obedience which actions are yet wrought in them by the Spirit of God whose fruits they are and this to very good purpose in the hearts of all that know what it is to walke with God and to serve him in the midst of Temptations unlesse they are under the power of some such particular errour as turnes away their eyes from believing the Truth Secondly §. 11. The opposition here pretended between a Physicall necessitating and a Morall inducement for the producing of the same effect is in plain tearms intended between the Efficacy of Gods internall grace and the use of Externall exhortations and motives If God give an Internall Principle or Spirituall Habit fitting for inclining to spirituall actions and duties if he followes the work so begunne in us who yet of our selves can doe nothing nor are sufficient to think a good thought with continuall supplies of his Spirit and Grace working daily in us according to the exceeding greatnesse of his power the things that are well pleasing in his sight then though he worke upon us as Creatures endued with Reason Understandings Wills and Affections receiving glory from us according to the Nature he hath endued us withall all Exhortations and Incouragements to Obedience required at our hands are vaine and foolish Now because we think this to be the very Wisdome of God and the opposition made unto it to be a meere invention of Satan to magnify corrupted nature and decry all the Efficacy of the Grace of the new Covenant we must have something besides and beyond the naked Assertion of our Author to cause us once to believe it Thirdly The great Execution that is made by Morall inducements solely without any internally efficacious grace in the way of Gospell Obedience is often supposed but not once attempted to be put upon the proofe or Demonstration It shall then suffice to deny that any perswasions outward motives or inducements whatever are able of themselves to raise ingage and carry out the will unto Action so that any good spirituall Action should be brought forth on that account without the effectuall influence and Physicall operation of internall grace And M. Goodwin is left to prove it together with such other Assertions derogatory to the free Grace of God Dogmatically imposed upon his Reader in this Chapter whereof some have been already remarked and others may in due time The residue of this Section the 13 th spent to prove that Eternall Life is given as a Reward to Perseverance having already manifested the full consistency of the Proposition in a Gospell acceptation of the word Reward with whatever we teach of the Perseverance of the Saints I suppose my selfe inconcerned in And therefore passing by the triumphant conclusion of this Argument asserting an Absolute power in men to exhibite or decline from Obedience I shall goe on to that which in my apprehension is of more importance and will give occasion to a Disconrse I hope not unusefull or unprofitable to the Reader I shall therefore assigne it a peculiar place and Chapter to it selfe CAP. XV. 1. M G's fift Argument for the Apostasy of true Believers 2. The weight of this Argument taken from the sins of Believers The difference between the sins of Believers and unregenerate persons proposed to consideration 3. lames 1. 14. 15. The rise and progresse of Lust and Sinne. 4. The fountain of all sinne in all persons is Lust. Rom. 7. 7. 5. Observations clearing the difference between Begenerate and unregenerate persons in their sinning as to the common fountaine of all sinne The first 6. The second of the universality of Lust in the soule by nature 7. The Third in two inferences the first unregenerate men sinne with their whole consent 8. The Second inference concerning the raigne of sinne and raigning sinne 9. The Fourth concerning the universall possession of the Soule by renewing Grace 10. The fift that true Grace bears rule where ever it be 11. Inferences from the former considerations The first that in every regenerate person there are diverse principles of all Morall operations Rom 7. 19. 20. opened 12. The second that sinne cannot raigne in a Regenerate person 13. The third that Regenerate persons sinne not with their whole consent 14. Answer to the Argument at the entrance proposed Believers never sinne with their whole consent and willes 15. M. G's attempt to remove the Answer 16. His exceptions considered and removed Plurality of Wills in the same person in the Scripture sence of the opposition between flesh and spirit that no Regenerate person sinnes with his full consent proved 17. Of the Spirit and his Lustings in us 18. The Actings of the spirit in us free not suspended on any conditions in us 19. The same farther manifested 20. M. G's discourse of the first and second motions of the spirit considered 21. The same considerations farther carried on 22. Peter Martyrs Testimony considered 23. Rom. 7. 19. 20. considered 24. Difference between the opposition made to sin in persons Begenerate and that in persons unregenerate farther argued 25. Of the sence of Rom. 7. and in what sence Believers doe the works of the flesh 26. The close of these considerations 27. The Answer to the Argument at the entrance of the Chapter opened The Argument new formed the Major Proposition limited and granted and the Minor denied 28. The proofe of the Major considered Gal. 5. 21. Ephes. 5. 5. 6. 1 Cor 6. 9. 10. 29. Believers how concerned in comminations 30. Threatning proper to unbelievers for their sinnes 31. Farther objections proposed and removed 32. Of the progresse of Saints intempting to sinne 33. The effect of Lust in tem ptations 34. Difference between Regenerate and unregenerate persons as to the tempting of Lust 1. in respect of universality 2. of Power 35. Objections Answered 36. Whether
That there is a plurality yea a contrariety of wills in the Scripture sence of the expression of the will of a man was before from the Scripture declared not a plurality of wills in a Physicall sence as the will is a naturall faculty of the soule but in a Morall and Analogicall sence as 't is taken for a habit or principle of good or evill The will is a naturall faculty one nature hath one will in every Regenerate man there are two natures the new or divine and the old or corrupted In the same sence there are in him two wills as was declared But saith he It is an impossibility of the first evidence that there should be a plurality of Acts in the same subject at the same time and these contrary one to another But 1. If you intend acts in a Morall Consideration unlesse you adde about the same Object which you do not this Assertion is so farre from any evidence of truth that it is ridiculously false May not the same person love God and hate the Divell at the same time But 2. How passe you so suddenly from a plurality of wills to a plurality of acts by the will we intend in the sence wherein we speak of it an habit not any act i.e. The will as habitually invested with a new principle not as actually willing from thence by vertue thereof Arminius from whom our Author borrowes this Discourse fell not into this Sophystry he tels you There cannot be contrary wills or volitions about the same Act But is it with M.G. or Arminius an impossibility that there should be a mixt action partly voluntary partly involuntary actions whose principles are from without by perswasion may be so a mans throwing his goods in the Sea to save his owne life Now the principles whereof we speak Flesh Grace are internall contrary shall not the actions that proceed from a faculty wherein such contrary principles have their residence be partly voluntary partly involuntary 3. But he tells you That though there might be lusting of the Spirit against the flesh before the act of sinne yet when it comes to the acting of it then it ceaseth so the act is wrought with the whole will First though this were so yet this doth not prove but that the Action is mixt and not absolutely and wholly voluntary Mixt Actions are so esteemed from the antecedent deliberation and dissent though the will be at length prevailed upon thereunto and I have shewed before that in the very action there is a vertuall dissent because of the opposite principle that is in the will But Secondly How doth it appeare that the Spirit doth not lust against the flesh though not to a prevalency even in the exertion of the acts of sinne In every good act that a man doth because evil is present with him though the prevalency be of the part of the Spirit and the principle of Grace yet the flesh also with its lustings doth alwayes in part corrupt it Thence are all the spots staines and imperfections of the holy things and dutyes of the Saints and if the flesh in its lusting will immix it selfe with our good Actions to their defilement and impairing why may not the Spirit in the ill not immix its selfe and its lustings threwith but beare off from the full influence of the will into them which otherwise it would have But saith he If the spirit doth not cease lusting before the flesh bring forth the act of sinne then is the Spirit conquered by the flesh contrary to that of the Apostle 1 John 4. 4. % Stronger is he that is in you than he that is in the world But First If from hence the flesh must be though conceived to be stronger than the Spirit because it prevailes in any act unto sin notwithstanding the contending of the Spirit how much more must it be judged to prevaile over it and to conquer it if it cause it utterly to cease and not to strive at all He that restraines an other that he shall not oppose him at all hath a greater power than he who conquers him in his resistance But why doth Mr Goodwin feare least the flesh should be asserted to be stronger in us than the Spirit Is not his whole designe to prove that it is or may be so so much stronger and more prevalent than it that whereas it is confessed on all hands that the Spirit doth never wholly conquer the flesh that it shall not remaine in the Saints in this life yet that the flesh doth wholly prevaile over the Spirit and conquer it to an utter expulsion of it out of the hearts of them in whom it is Secondly In the prevalency of the flesh it is not the Spirit himselfe that is conquered but only some motions actings of him in the heart Now though some particular actings and motions of his may not come out eventually unto successe yet if he generally beares Rule in the heart he is not to be said even as in us and acting in us not to be stronger than the flesh He is as in us on this account said to be stronger than he that is in the world because notwithstanding all the opposition that is against us he preserveth us in our state and condition of Acceptation with God and walking with him with an upright heart in good workes and dutyes for the most part though sometimes the flesh prevailes unto sinne from which yet he recovers us by Repentance Thirdly To speake a little to Mr Goodwin's sence By the Spirits insufficiency it is manifest from the Text urged and from what followes in the same place that he intends not a Spirituall vitall principle in the will having its residence there with its contrary principle the flesh perhaps he will grant no such thing but the Spirit of God himselfe How now doth this Spirit lust Not formally doubtlesse but by causing us so to do and how doth it do that in Mr Goodwin's judgement Meerely by perswading of us so to do so that to have the flesh prevaile against the Spirit is nothing in his sence but to have sinne prevaile and the motives of the flesh above the motives used by the Spirit which may be done and yet the Spirit continue unquestionably stronger than the flesh Fourthly The summe is If the Spirit and the flesh Lust and Grace may be lookt on as habituall qualityes and principles in the wills of the same persons so that though a man hath but one will yet by reason of these contrary qualityes He is to be esteemed as two diverse principles of operation it is evident that having contrary inclinations continually the will hath in its actings a Relation to both these principles so that no sinne is commited by such an one with his whole will and full consent That contrary qualityes in a Remisse degree may be in the same subject is knowne Lippis Tonsoribus These adverse
condition They are no lesse obnoxious to that death from whence our Regeneration is a delivery by the bestowing of a new Spirituall life than a sinner of an hundred yeares old A returning to this condition it seemes is Regeneration Quantum est in rebus inane Thirdly The qualifications of Infants not Regenerated are meerely negative and that in respect of the acts of sinne not the habituall seed and root of them for in them dwells no good that in respect of these qualifications of Innocency that are in them by nature Antecedent to any Regeneration all which are resolved into a Naturall impotency of perpetrating sinne they are accepted in Grace and favour with God had been another new notion had not Pelagius and Socinus before you fallen upon it without Faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And his wrath abides on them that Believe not Iohn 3. 36. That Infants have or may have Faith and not be regenerated will scarcely be granted by them who believe the Spirit of Christ to cause Regeneration where he is bestowed Tit. 3. 5. And all Faith to be the Fruit of that Spirit Gal 5. 26 27. Farther for the qualifications of Infants by Nature how are they brought cleane from that which is uncleane Are they not conceived in sinne and brought forth in iniquity Or was that Davids hard case alone If they are borne of the flesh and are flesh if they are uncleane how come they to be in that estate upon the account of their Qualifications accepted in the Love and favour of him who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity If this be the Doctrine of Regeneration that M. G. preaches I desire the Lord to blesse them that belong unto him in a deliverance from attending thereunto Of the Effects of the death of Christ in respect of all children I shall not now treat That they should be saved by Christ not washed in his Bloud not sanctifyed by his Spirit which to be is to be Regenerate is another new notion of the new Gospell The Countenance which Mr Goodwin would begge to his Doctrine from that of our Saviour to his Disciples Except ye be turned and become as little Children ye cannot enter into the Kingdome of God reproving their ambition and worldly thoughts from which they were to be weaned that they might befit for that Gospell state imployment whereunto he called them wherein they were to serve him does no more advantage him nor the cause he hath undertaken than that other caution of our Saviour to the same persons to be wise asserpents innocent as Doves would do him that should undertake to prove that Christians ought to become pigeons or snakes Thus much then we have learned of the mind of M. G. by this digression 1. That no children are Regenerate 2. That they are all accepted with God through Christ upon the account of the good Qualifications that are in them 3. That Regeneration is a mans returing to the state wherein he is borne And having taken out this Lesson which we shall never learne by heart whilst we live we may now proceed I shall only adde to the maine of the businesse in hand §. 49. that so long as a man is a child of God he cannot he need not to repeat his Regeneration But that one who hath been the child of God should cease to be the child of God is somewhat strange How can that be done amongst men that he should cease to be such a mans sonne who was his sonne Those things that stand in Relation upon any thing that is past and therefore irrevocable cannot have their beings continued and their Relation dissolved it is impossible but that cause and effect must be related one to another such is the relation between Father and Sonne The foundation of it is an act past and irrevocable and therefore the Relation it selfe is indissoluble Is it not so with God and his Children when they once stand in that Relation it cannot be dissolved But of these things hitherto To proceed with that place of Scripture which I laid as the foundation of this discourse §. 50. The generall way of Lusts dealing with the soule the bringing forth of sinne whereof there are two acts expressed v. 14. the one of drawing away the other inticing is to be insisted on Upon the first the person tempted is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drawn off or drawne away and upon the second he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inticed or intangled The First stirring of sinne is to draw away the soule from what it ought to be fixed upon by its rising up irregularly to some delightfull object For a man to be drawne away by his lust is to have his Lust drawne out to some object suited to it wherein it delighteth Now this drawing away denoteth two things 1. The turning of the soule from the actuall rectitude of its frame towards God Though the soule cannot alwayes be in actuall Exercise of Grace towards God yet it ought alwayes to be in an immediate readinesse to any Spirituall duty upon the account whereof when occasion is administred it doth as naturally goe forth to God as a vessell full of water floweth forth when vent is given unto it Hence we are commanded to pray alwayes Our Saviour giveth a Parable to instruct his Disciples that they ought to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 18. 1. And we are commanded to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without ceasing or intermission 1 ●hess 5. 17. Which the same Apostle in an other place calleth praying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in every place namely as occasion is administred It is not the perpetuall exercise of this duty as the Iewes some of them have ridiculously interpreted the first Psalme of reading the Law day and night which would shut out and cut off all other dutyes not only of mens Callings and Employments as to this Life but all other dutyes of the wayes worship of God whatever But it is only the readinesse and promptitude of the heart in its constant frame to that necessary duty that is required Now he who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by lust is drawne off from this frame that is he is interrupted in it by his lust diverting unto some sinfull object And as to this particular there is a great difference betwixt the sinning of Believers and those who arise not beyond that height which the power of Conviction beareth them oftentimes up unto For 1. The maine of a true Believers watching in his whole life § 51. and in the course of his walking with God is directed against this off-drawing from that habituall frame of his heart by lust and sinne His great businesse is as the Apostle telleth us to take the whole armour of God to him that sinne if it be possible may make no approach to his soule Eph. 6. 13. It is to keepe up their spirits to a hate of
every evill way and to delight in God continually and because they cannot attaine in this life unto perfection they cry out of the power of sin leading them captives to the Law thereof They would have their wills dead to sinne wholly dead and have trouble that they are not so as to the generall frame of of their spirits how oft so ever they be drawne off For other persons they have truly no such frame at all whatever they may be cut into the likenesse of by the sharpnesse of Scripturall convictions that come upon them and therefore they watch not as to the keeping of it The deeper you dive into them the more neere you come to their hearts the worse they are their very inward parts is wickednesse I speak now of the ordinary frame of the one and other This drawing of by sinne in Believers is by the power of sinne in opposition to their Will Their wills lye against it to the utmost thev would not as was shewed be so drawne off But as for the others as hath been shewen however their minds may be inlightned and their consciences awakned and their Affections corrected and restrained their wills are wholly dead in sinne Secondly when a man is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or drawne away there are stricken out between the lust and the pleasing object some glances of the heart with thoughts of sinne When lust hath gon thus farre if a violent temptation fall in the person to whom it doth so befall may be carryed or rather hurried out and surprized into no small advance towards the perpetration of sinne without the least delight in the sinne or consent of the will unto it if he be a godly man So was it in the case of David in the cutting of the lap of the garment of Saul Lust stirred in him drew him off from his frame of dependance on God and by the advantage of Sauls presence stirred up thoughts of selfe-security and advantage in him which carryed him almost to the very act of sinne before he recovered himselfe Then I say is a man drawn away not only in respect to the Terme from whence but also of that whereunto when the thoughts of the object presented as suitable to lust are cast in though immediately rejected This I intend by this acting of sinne Which although it be our sinne as having its rise and spring in us and is continually to be lamented yet when it is not accompaned with any delight of the Heart or consent of the Will but the thought of it is like a piece of fiery iron cast into water which maketh a sudden commotion or noise but yet is suddenly quenched it is that which regenerate men are may be subject to which also keepeth them humble all their dayes There is more in this drawing away than a single thought or apprehension of evill amounts to which may be without the least sinne To know evill is not evill but yet is short of the soules consent unto it The second way wherein lust proceedeth in tempting is by inticing the soule § 53. he who is so dealt withallby it is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be inticed There is something more in this than in being only drawn away The word here used is twice mentioned in the 2 Epistle of Peter 2 chapter Once it is rendred to beguile 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 14. And in the other alluring v. 18. It commeth as is commonly known from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a bait which is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deceit because the end of a bait is to deceive to catch by deceiving Thence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to intice to allure to intangle as men do fishes and birds with baits That which by this expression the Holy Ghost intendeth is the prevalency of Lust in drawing the soule unto that which is by the Casuists termed Delectatio morosa a secret delight in the evill abiding some space upon it So that it would do that which it is tempted and inticed unto were it not forbidden as the fish liketh the bait well enough but is affraid of the Hooke The soule for a season is captivd to like the sinne and so is under the power of it but is affraid of the guilt It sticketh only at this how shall it do this great thing and sinne against the Lord. Now though the mind never frame any intention of fulfilling the evill wherewith the soule is thus intangled or of committing that sinne whereunto it is allured and inticed yet the affections having been cast into the mould of sin for a season conformed unto it by delight which is the conformity of the affections to the thing delighted in This is an high degree of sin and that because it is directly contrary to that death unto sin and the crucifying of the flesh and the lusts thereof which we are continually called unto It is in a sence a making provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof provision is made though the flesh be not suffered to feed thereon but only delight it selfe with beholding of it I shall not deny but this also may befall a true Believer §. 54. it being chiefely implyed in Rom. 7. But yet with wide difference from the condition of other persons in their being under the power of the deceits and beguilements of sin For first this neither doth nor can grow to be the habituall frame of their hearts because as the Apostle telleth us they are dead to sinne and cannot live any longer therein Rom. 6. 2. And their old man is crucified with Christ that the body of sinne might be destroyed v. 6. Now though a man should abst●ine from all actuall sinnes or open committing of sinne all his dayes yet if he have any habituall delight in sinne and defileth his soule with delightfull contemplations of sinne he liveth to sinne and not to God which a Believer cannot do for he is not under the Law but under Grace To abide in this state is to weare the garment spotted with the flesh But now take another Person however heightned and wrought up by convictions unlesse it be when Conscience is stirred up and some affrightment is put upon him he can as his leisure affords give his heart the swing in inordinate affections or what else pleaseth suiteth his state condition temper and the like 2. A Believer is exceedingly troubled upon the account of his being at any time led captive to the power of sinne in this kind and the review of the frame of his spirit wherein his affections were by delight conformed to any sinne is a matter of sore trouble and deep humiliation to him I am of Austins mind De Nup-Concupis Cap. 8 that it is this perpetrating of sinne and not the actuall committing of it which the Apostle complaineth of Rom. 7. Two things perswade me hereunto First That it is the
import any such thing as is aimed at from the Text nor the word abide but to the whole proposition the seed of God abideth in him as produced to confirme the former assertion of the not sinning of the Persons spoken of there is nothing spoken at all I shall therefore briefely confirme the Argument in hand by the strength here communicated unto it by the Holy Ghost and then consider what is answered to any part of it or objected to the interpretation insisted on That he that sinneth not neither can sinne in the sence explained shall never fall away totally or finally from God is granted That Believers sinne not nor can sinne so or in the manner mentioned besides the Testimony of the Holy Ghost worthy of all acceptation in the cleare assertion of it we have the Reason thereof manifested in the discovery of the causes of its truth The first Reason is Because the seed of God abideth in them A tacite grant seemeth to be made that fruit sometimes may not visibly appeare upon them as the case is with a Tree in winter when it casts its leaves but its seed remaineth Grace may abide in the habit in and under a winter of Temptation though it doth not exert its selfe in bearing any such actuall fruit as may be ordinarily visible The Word of God is sometimes called seed incorruptible seed causatively as being an instrument in the hand of God whereby he planteth the seed of Life and holinesse in the heart That it is not the outward word but that which is produced and effected by it through the efficacy of the Spirit of God that is by seed intended is evident from the use and nature of it And it is abiding in the Person in whom it is Whatever it is it is called seed not in respect of that from whence it cometh as is the cause and Reason of that appellation of other seed but in respect of that which it produceth which ariseth and insueth upon it and it is called the seed of God because God useth it for the Regeneration of his Being from God being the principle of the Regeneration of them in whom it is abiding in them even when it hath brought forth fruit and continuing so to doe it can be no other but the New Creature New Nature inward Man new principle of Life or habit of Grace that is bestowed upon all Believers whence they are Regenerate quickned or borne againe of which we have spoken before This seed saith the Holy Ghost abideth §. 67. or remaineth in him Whatever falling or withering He may seeme to have or hath this seed the seed of God remaineth in him The principle of his new life abideth some exceptions are made as we shall see afterwards to the signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remaineth and instances given where it signifyeth for to be and denoteth the essence of a thing not its duration That to abide or remaine is the proper signification of the word I suppose will not be questioned That it may in some place be used in another sence is not dispuited All that lyeth under consideration here is whether the word in this place be used properly according to its genuine and first signification or no It supposeth indeed to be also but properly signifieth only to abide or remaine Now if nothing can be advanced from the Text ot context from the matter treated on or the paralell significancy of some expression that is in conjunction with it that should inforce us to carry it from its proper use and signification the instancing of other places if any such be wherein it is restrained to denote being and not duration is altogether impertinent to the businesse in hand When an Argument is urged from any place of Scripture to pick out any word in the Text and to manifest that it hath been used improperly in some other place and therefore must be so in that is a procedure so farre from an ingenious Answer that it will scarce passe for a tolerable shift or evasion To remaine then or to abide is the proper signification of this word nothing is in the least offered to manifest that it must necessarily in this place be diverted from its proper use According to the import of the word the seed of God remaineth in Believers now that remaining of the seed is the cause of their not sinning that sinne or in that manner as the Apostle here denyeth them to be liable to sinne For that is the Reason he giveth why they cannot sinne even because the seed of God remaineth in them Mr Goodwin granteth that this seed remaineth in Believers alwayes unlesse they sinne by a totall defection from God Of not sinning the sinne of totall de●ection from God the remaining or abiding of this seed is the cause Whilst that abideth they cannot sinne that sin for it is an unquestionable cause uncontrouleable of their not so doing This seed therefore must be utterly lost and taken away before any such sinne can be committed Now if the seed cannot be lost without the commission of the sinne which cannot be committed till it be lost neither can the seed be lost nor the sin becommited The same thing cannot be before and after its selfe He that cannot go sucha journey unlesse he have such a horse cannot have such a horse unlesse he go such a journey is like to stay at home In what sence the words cannot sin are to be taken was before declared That there are sins innumerable whereinto men may fall notwithstanding this seed is confessed Under them all this seed abideth so it would not do under that which we cannot sin because it abideth but because it abideth that sin cannot be committed The latter part of the Reason of the Apostles assertion §. 68. is for he is borne of God which is indeed a driving on the former to its head and fountaine What it is to be borne of God we need not dispute It was sufficiently discovered in the mention that was made before of the seed of God God by his Holy Spirit bestowing on us a new Spirituall Life which by nature we have not and in respect of whose want we are said to be dead is frequently said to beget us James 1. 14. And we are said to be borne of God He is the Soveraigne disposer dispenser and supreme fountaine of that Life which is so bestowed on us which we are begotten againe unto and are borne with and by And Jesus Christ the Mediatour is also said to have this Life in himselfe Joh 5. because he hath received the spirit of the father to give to his for their quickning who taketh of his and thereby begeteth them a new And this Life which Believers thus receive and whereby indeed radically they become Believers is every where in Scripture noted as Permanent and abiding In respect of the originall of it it is said to be from above
not the least service for God but labouring to stirre up strife in his Family to set his poore children and their heavenly Father at variance filling them with hard thoughts of him As one that takes little or no care for them And discouraging them in that obedience which he requireth at their hands continually belying their Father to them and that in reference to the most desireable Excellencies of his Faithfulnesse Truth Mercy and Grace never speaking one good or comfortable word to them all their daies nor once urging them to doe their duty But with-holding a rodde yea Scorpions over their backs And casting the eternall flames of Hell into their faces this is that sanguine indeed truly spiritually bloudy Complexion of this new Nurse which is offered to be received in the roome of that sad Melancholy piece of the Perseverance of the Saints Thus then he proceeds The Consolation of true Believers depends upon their obedience their obedience is farthered by this Doctrine and therefore their Consolation also Ans. What are the springs of true spirituall heavenly Consolation the consolation which God is willing Believers should receive whence it flowes the meanes of its continuance and increase how remote it is from a sole dependency on our own Obedience hath been in part before declared But yet if the next Assertion can be made good viz. That the Doctrine of the Saints Apostasy hath a tendency instituted of God to the promotion of their Obedience and Holinesse I shall not contend about the other concerning the issuing of their consolation from thence All that really is offered in the behalfe of Apostasy as to its serviceablenesse in this kind is that it is suited to ingenerate in Believers a feare of Hell which will put them upon all wayes of mortifying the flesh and the fruits of it which otherwise would bring them thereunto And is this indeed the great mistery of the Gospell Is this Christs way of dealing with his Saints Or is it not a falling from Grace to returne againe unto the Law Those of whom alone we speak who are concerned in this busines are all of them taken into the Glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God are every one of them partakers of that Spirit with whom is liberty are all indued with a living principle of Grace Faith and Love and are constrained by the Love of Christ to live to him are all under Grace and not under the Law have their sinnes in some measure begun to be mortifyed and the flesh with the lusts thereof the old man with all his wayes and wiles crucifyed by the Death and Crosse of Christ brought with their power and efficacy by the Spirit into their hearts are all delivered from that bondage wherein they were for feare of Death and Hell all their dayes by having Christ made Redemption unto them I say that these persons should be most effectually stirred up to Obedience by the dread and terrour of that Iron rod of vengeance and Hell and that they should be so by Gods appointment is such a new such another Gospell as if preached by an Angell from Heaven we should not receive That indeed no motive can be taken from hence or from any thing in the Doctrine by Mr Goodwin contended for suited to the principle of Gospell Obedience in the Saints that no sin or lust whatsoever was ever mortifyed by it that it is a clog hinderance burthen to all Saints as far as they have to do with it in the wayes of God hath bin before demonstrated And therefore leaving it withall the Consolation that it affords unto those who of God are given up thereunto we proceed to the Consideration of another Argument his eighth in this case which is thus proposed Sect. 37. That Doctrine which evacuates and turnes into weakenesse and folly §. 5. all the gracious councells of the Holy Ghost which consist partly in the diligent information which he gives unto the Saints from place to place concerning the hostile cruell and bloudy mind and intention of Sathan against them partly in detecting and making knowne all his subtile stratagems his plots methods and dangerous Machinations against them partly also in furnishing them wiih speciall weapons of all sorts whereby they may be able to grapple with him and to tryumph over him partly againe in those frequent admonitions and Exhortations to quit themselves like men in resisting him which are found in the Scripture And lastly in professing his feare least Sathan should circumvent and deceive them that Doctrine I say which reflects disparagement and vanity upon all these most serious and gracious applycations of the Holy Ghost must needs be a Doctrine of vanity and errour And consequently that which opposeth it by a like necessity a truth But such is the common Doctrine of absolute and infallible Perseverance Ergo. Ans. Not to ingage into any needlesse contest about wayes of Arguing §. 6. when the designe and strength of the Argument is evident I shall only remarke two things upon this First the Holy Ghost professing his feare least Sathan should beguile Believers is a mistake It was Paul that was so afraid not the Holy Ghost though he wrote that feare by the appointment and inspiration of the Holy Ghost The Apostle was jealous least the Saints should by the craft of Sathan be seduced into errours and miscarriages which yet argues not their finall defection this indeed he records of himselfe but of the feares of the Holy Ghost arising from his uncertainty of those issue of the things and want of power to prevent the coming on of the things feared I suppose there is no mention And Secondly that the consequent of the supposition in the inference made upon it is not so cleare to me as to Mr Goodwin viz. Suppose any Doctrine to be false whatsoever Doctrine is set up in opposition to it is true I have knowne and so hath Mr Goodwin also when the truth hath layen between opposite Doctrines assaulted by both entertained by neither with these Observations I passe the Major of this Sillogisme the Minor he thus confirmes If the Saints be in no possibility of being finally overcome by Satan or of Miscarrying in the great and most important businesse of their Salvation by his snares and subtilties §. 7. all that operousnesse and diligence of the Holy Ghost in those late mentioned Addressements of his unto them in order to their finall conquest over Satan will be found of very light consequence of little concernement to them yea if the said Addressements of the Holy Ghost be compared with the State and Condition of the Saints as the said Doctrine of Perseverance representeth and affirmeth it to be the utter uselesnesse and impertinency of them will much more evidently appeare Ans. What possibility or not possibility the Saints are in of finall Apostasy from God what assurance themselves have may have or have not concerning their Perseverance with what is the
is so great and so much variety therein that it can scarce be cast into one course and current and if the generall scope aime and tendency of the Scripture may passe for the course of it there is not any one thing that lyes so evident and cleare therein as the decrying of all that Ability and strength and power to doe good in men which M. Goodwin so much pleads for and Asserts to be in them with an Exaltation of that rich and free Grace in the efficacy and the power of it which he so much opposeth The experiment all knowledge he hath of his own heart §. 8. the workings and reasonings thereof a thing common to him with others and what advantages he hath thereby I shall not consider Only this I shall dare to say that I would not for all the World have no experience in my heart of the truth of many things which M. Goodwin in this Treatise opposeth or that my weake experience of the Grace of God should not rise above that frame of heart and spirit which the teachings of it seem to discover I doubt a person under the Covenant of workes heightned with convictions and a low or common worke of the Spirit induced thereby to some Regular walking before God may reach the utmost of what in this Treatise is required to render a man a Saint truly gracious regenerate and a Believer And in this also I doubt not lyes the deceit of what is thirdly insisted on viz. His observation of the wayes and spirits of men their firstings and lastings in Religion A sort of men there are in the world who escape the outward pollution of it and are cleane in their owne eyes though they are never wash't from their iniquityes who having been under strong convictions by the power of the Law and broken thereby from the course of their sinne attending to the Word of the Gospell with a temporary Faith do go forth unto a profession of Religion and walking with God so far as to have all the lineaments of true Believers as Mr Goodwin somewhere speakes drawne in their faces hearing the Word gladly as did Herod receiving it with joy as did the stony ground attending to it with delight as they did in Ezech. 33. 31. Repenting of former sinnes as did Ahab and Judas untill they are reckoned among true Believers as was Judas those John 2. 23. who yet were never united unto Jesus Christ of whose wayes and walking Mr Goodwin seemes to have made observation and found many of them to end in visible Apostacy But that this observation of them should cause him to judg them when Apostatized to have been true Believers or that he is thereby advantaged to determine concerning the truth of severall Opinions pretending to his acceptance I cannot grant nor doth he go about to prove For what he mentions in the last place of the light of reason and understanding §. 9. which he hath I do not only grant him to have it in common as he saith with other men for the kind of it but also as to the degrees of it to be much advanced therein above the generality of men yet I must needs tell him in the close that all these helps and advantages seeming to be drawne forth and advanced in opposition to that one great assistance which we enjoy by promise from Christ of his Spirit leading us into all truth and teaching us from God by his owne anointing are to me hay and stubble yea losse and dung of no value nor esteeme Had we not other wayes meanes helps and advantages to come to the knowledge of the Truth than these here unfolded and spread by Mr Goodwin actum esset we should never perceive the things that are of God The Fox was acquainted with many wiles and devices the Cat knew unum magnum wherein she found safety Attendance to the Word according to the direction of the usuall knowne Rules and helpes agreed on for the interpretation of it with humble dependance on God waiting for the guidance of his Spirit according to the Promise of his deare Sonne asking him of him continually that he may dwell with us anoint and lead us into all truth with an utter abrenunciation of all our skill abilityes wisdome and any resting on them knowing that it is God alone that gives us understanding is the course that hitherto hath been used in our enquiry after the mind of God in the Doctrine under consideration and which the Lord assisting shall be heeded and kept close unto in that discussion of the Texts of Scripture wrested by Mr Goodwin as by others before him to give countenance to his opposition to the Truth hitherto uttered confirmed and vindicated from his contradictions thereunto The place of Scripture first insisted on §. 10. and on the account whereof he triumphs with the greatest confidence of successe is that of Ezech. 18. 24 25. Unwhich words he subjoynes a Triumphant Exulting Exclamation What more saith he can the understanding judgement soule and conscience of a man reasonably desire for the establishment in any truth whatsoever than is delivered by God himselfe in this passage to evince the possibility of a righteous mans declining from his righteousnesse and that unto death The councell given of old to the King may not be unseasonable to Mr Goodwin in that dominion which he exerciseth in his owne thoughts in this worke of his let not him that putteth on this armour boast like him that puteth it off You have but newly entered the lists and that with all pressed Souldiers unwilling so much as once to appeare in that service they are forced to If you will but suspend your triumph untill we have made a little tryall of your forces and your skill in managing of them to the battle perhaps you may be a little taken off from this confidence of successe notwithstanding the facing of this Scripture upon the Truth being cut off and taken away from that coherence and connexion and station wherein it is placed of God which is not at the least enquired into it will be found in that issue to beare it no ill will at all As will also be manifested by the light of the ensuing consideration 1. The matter under enquiry into a disquisition of whose state we have hitherto been engaged in the condition of the Saints of God and his dealing with them in and under the Covenant of Grace in Generall For our guidance and direction herein a Text of Scripture evincing the Righteousnesse of Gods dealings with a number of persons in a peculiar case which was under debate is produced and by the tenour of this and according to the tenour of the reasonings therein must all the Promises of God in the Covenant of Grace mape and ratifyed by the Bloud of Christ be regulated and interpreted We have been told by as Learned a man as Mr Goodwin that Promises made to the people of
formerly considered but yet leaving them to the liberty of their judgment who are so minded that the reason given by them and here againe repeated by Mr Goodwin doth not in the least enforce any to let go this Answer to the objection proposed that shall be pleased to insist upon it hath been manifested To this Mr Goodwin farther addes that weighty Observation that the word If is not in the Originall and thence takes occasion to fall foule upon the Translators as having corrupted the passages out of favour to the Doctrine contended for I wish they had never worse mistaken nor shewed more partiality in any other place For first will Mr Goodwin deny that a proposition cannot be Hypotheticall nor an expression conditionall unlesse the word if be expressed were it worth the labour instances might abundantly be given him in that language whereof we speake to the contrary He that shall say to him as he is journying going the right hand way you will meet with theeves may be doubtles said to speake conditionally no lesse than he that should expresly tell him If you go the way on the right hand you shall meet with theeves Secondly what cleare sence significancy can be given the words without the supplement of the conditionall conjunction or some other terme equipollent thereunto Mr Goodwin hath not declared For it is impossible for those who were once enlightned c. And they falling away as the words verbum de verbo lye in the text is scarce in english a congruous or significant expression Yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Syntaxe and coherence wherein it lyes is most properly and directly rendered if they fall away As is also the force of the expression Chap. 10. 26. Yea thirdly the connexion of the Translation mentioned by Mr Goodwin doth not in the least relieve him as to the delivery of the words from a sence Hypotheticall When they fall away though his when be no more in the text than the Translators if doth either include a supposition that they shall and must fall away certainely and so requiers the event of the thing whereof it is spoken or it is expressive only of the condition wheron the event is suspended if it be taken in the first sence all Believers must fall away if in the latter none may notwithstanding any thing in this Text so learnedly restored to its true significancy the words only pointing at the connexion that is between Apostacy and punishment Notwithstanding then any thing here offered to the contrarary those who affirme that nothing can certainely be concluded from these places for the Apostacy of any be they who they will that are intended in them because they are conditionall Assertions manifesting only the connexion between the sin and punishment expressed need not be ashamed of nor recoyle from their Affirmation in the least For mine owne part §. 27. I confesse I do not in any measure think it needfull to insist upon the conditionalls of these assertions of the Holy Ghost as to the removall of any or all the oppositions that from them of old or of late have been raised and framed against the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance there being in neither of the Texts insisted on either name or thing enquired after nor any one of all the severalls enquired into and constantly in the Scriptures used in the description of the Saints and Believers of whom we speake This I shall breifely in the first place demonstrate and then proceed with the eonsideration of what is offered by Mr Goodwin in opposition thereunto Some few observations will lead us through the first part of this worke designed I say then 1. There is an inferiour common worke of the Holy Ghost in the dispensation of the word upon many to whom it is preached causing in them a great alteration and change as to Light Knowledge Abilityes Guists Affections Life and Conversation when the persons so wrought upon are not quickned regenerate nor made new creatures nor united to Jesus Christ. I suppose there will not be need for me to insist on the proofe of this Proposition the truth of it being notoriously knowne confessed as I suppose amongst all that professe the name of Christ. 2. That in persons thus wrought upon there is or may be such an assent upon light and conviction to the truths proposed and Preached to them as is true in its kind not counterfeit giving and affording them in whom it is wrought profession of the Faith and that sometimes with constancy to the death or the giving of their bodies to be burned with perswasions whence they are called Believers of a future enjoyment of a glorious and blessed condition filling them with ravished affections and rejoycings in hope which they professe suitable to the expectation they have of such a state and condition This also might be easily evinced by innumerable instances and examples from the Scripture if need required 3. That the persons in and upon whom this work is wrought cannot be said to be hypocrites in the most proper sence of that word that is such as counterfeit and pretend themselves to be that which they know they are not nor to have faith only in shew and not in substance as though they made a shew and pretence only of an assent to the things they professed their high gifts knowledge faith change of affections and conversation being in their own kind true as the Faith of Devills is and yet notwithstanding all this they are in bondage and at best seeke for a righteousnesse as it were by the workes of the Law and in the issue Christ proves to them of none effect 4. That among these persons many are oftentimes endued with excellent gifts lovely parts qualifications and abilities rendring them exceeding usefull acceptable and serviceable to the Church of God becoming vessells in his house to hold and convey to others the precious liquour of the Gospell though their nature in themselves be not changed they remaining wood and stone still 5. That much of the worke wrought in and upon this sort of persons by the Spirit and word lies in its own nature in a direct tendency to their relinquishment of their sinnes and selfe-righteousnesse to a closing with God in Christ having a mighty prevalency upon them to cause them to amend their wayes and to labour after life and salvation from which to Apostatize and fall off upon the account of the tendency mentioned of these beginnings is dangerous and for the most part pernitious 6. That persons under the convictions and workes of the Spirit formerly mentioned partakers of the guifts light and knowledge spoken of with those other endowments attending them are capacitated for the sinne against the Holy Ghost or the impardonable Apostasy from God These things being commonly knowne and as farre as I know universally granted I affirme that the persons mentioned and intended in these places are such as have been
now described and not the Believers or Saints concerning whom alone our contest is Mr Goodwin replyes Sect. 19. Pag. 183. To the latter exception which pretends to find only Hypocrites and not true Believers staged in both passages we likewise answer that it glosseth no whit better than the former if not much worse considering that the persons presented in the said passages are described by such characters and signall excellencies which the Scriptures are wont to appropriate unto Saints and true Believers and that when they intend to shew them iu the best and greatest of their glory what we say herein will I suppose be made above all gainesaying by instancing particulars Ans That this is most remote from truth and that there is not here any one discriminating Character of true Believers so farre are the expressions from setting them out in any signall eminency will appeare from these ensuing considerations 1. There is no mention of Faith or Believing either in expresse termes or in termes of an equivalent significancy in either of the places mentioned Therefore true Believers are not the persons intended to be described in these places Did the Holy Ghost intend to describe Believers it is very strange that he should not call them so nor make mention of any one of those principles in them from whence and whereby they are such Wherefore I say 2. There is not any thing ascribed here to the persons spoken of which belongs peculiarly to true Believers as such or that constitutes them to be such and which yet are things plainely and positively asserted and described in innumerable other places of Scripture that the Persons described are called according to the purpose of God quickened borne againe or regenerated Justifyed united to Christ Sanctifyed by the Spirit adopted made sonnes of God and the like which are the usuall expressions of Believers pointing out their discriminating forme as such is not in the least intimated in the Text Context or any concernement of it That they are elected of God Redeemed of Christ Sanctifyed by the Spirit that they are made Holy is not at all affirmed 3. The persons intended are v. 8. ch 6. compared to the ground upon which the raine falls aud beareth thornes and briers True Believers whilst they are so are not such as do bring forth nothing but thornes and briers Faith it selfe being an Herbe meet for him by whom they are dressed 4. Things that accompany Salvation are better things than any in the persons mentioned were to be found This the Apostle asserts v. 9. we are perswaded better things of you and things that accompany Salvation Now neither of these either better things or things that accompany Salvation were upon them whose Apostacy the Apostle supposeth The exceptive particle at the entrance with the Apologeticall designe of the whole verse ascribes such things to the Saints to whom the Apostle speakes as they were not partakers of concerning whom he had immediately before discoursed The Faith of Gods Elect whereby we are Justifyed is doubtlesse of the things that accompany Salvation 5. The persons intended by the Apostle were such as had need to be taught againe the first principles of the Oracles of God Chap. 5. v. 12. that were unskillfull in a word of Righteousnesse v. 15. that had not their sences exercised to discerne good and evill v. 14. and are plainely distinguished from them to whom the Promise made to Abraham doth properly belong Chap. 6. 9 10 11 12 13 14 c. 6. True Believers are opposed in the Discourse of the Apostle Chap. 6. unto these persons lying under a possibility of Apostacy so farre as they are cast under it by the conditionall Discourse of it upon sundry accounts As 1. Of their workes and labour of Love shew'd to the name of God v. 10 of their preservation from the Righteousnes or Faithfulnes of God in his Promises v. 11. Of the mutability of the counsels of God and his Oath for the preservation of them v 13 17 18. Of their sure and steedfast anchor of hope v. 19. c. Upon all which Considerations it is abundantly evident that they are not Believers the Children of God Justifyed Sanctifyed Adopted Saints of whom the Apostle treates in the passages insisted on Sect. §. 29. 28. M. Goodwin urges sundry reasons to prove that they are not Hypocrites or outside professors only but true Believers that are described If by Hypocrites and outside Professors he intends those who are grossely so pretending to be what they are not and what they know themselves not to be we contend not about it if by those expressions he compriseth also those whom we characterized in the entrance of this Discourse who unto their profession of the Faith have also added those guifts and endowments with the like which we mentioned notwithstanding all their Advancement in light conviction joy usefulnesse conversation do yet come short of union with Christ I shall joyne issue with him in the consideration of his reasons offered to be pregnant of proofe for the confirmation of his Assertion He tells you Sect. 28. Pag. 288. 1. There is no Clause Phrase or Word in either of the places any waies characteristicall or Descriptive of Hypocrisy or Hypocrites there are none of those colours to be seen which are wont to be used in drawing or limning the Portraitures or shapes of those Beasts as distinguished from creatures of a better kind All the lineaments of the Persons presented in these tables before the mention of their falling away become the best and fairest faces of the Saints as hath been proved and are not to be found in any other Yea the greatest and most intelligent Believer under heaven hath no reason but to desire part and fellowship with the Hypocrites here described in all those characters and properties which are attributed unto them before their falling away or sinning wilfully Ans. 1. The designe of the Apostle is not to discover or give any characters of Hypocrites to manifest them to be such but to declare the excellencies that are or may be found in them from the enjoyment of all which they may decline and sinne against the mercy and grace of them to the aggravation of their condemnation Neither had any lines used to particularise those beasts in their shape wherein they differ from Believers been at all usefull to the Apostles purpose his ayme being only to draw those wherein they are like them and conformeable to them Neither 2. Is it questioned whether these things here mentioned may be found in true Believers and become them very well rendering their faces beautifull but whether there be not something else then what is here mentioned that should give them being as such and life without which these things are little better than painting Nor 3. Is it at all to the purpose that Believers may desire a participation in these characters with the persons described but whether they who have no other
shall be startled in their sinnes troubled in their consciences forced to seeke out for a remedy and shall come so farre as to have some though but a light tast of the excellency of the Gospell and the remedy provided for sinners in Jesus Christ and then through the strength of their lusts and corruptions shall cast it off reject it and spit out of their mouth as it were all that of it whereby they found the least savour in it no creature under Heaven can be guilty of more abominable undervaluing of the Lord Christ and the Love of God in him than such persons What degree of Love Joy Repentance Peace Faith persons many times arrive unto when with Herod they have heard the Word gladly and done many things willingly c. hath been by others abundantly demonstrated This sufficeth our present purpose that they do make such a progresse in the wayes of God and finde so much excellency in the treasure of Grace and mercy which he hath provided in Jesus Christ and tenders in the Gospell that he cannot but look upon their Apostacy renunciation of him whereby they proclaime to all the world as much as in them lyes that there is not that reall goodnesse worth and excellency to be found in him as some pretend as the highest scorne and contempt of him and his Love in Christ and revenges it accordingly 2. To the second which consists of instances collected by the Remonstrants to manifest the use of the word tasting to be other than what we here confine it to I say 1. That the word as it is applyed to Spiritualls being borrowed and metaphoricall not in its Analogie to be extended beyond making triall for our coming to some knowledge of a thing in its nature the use of it in one place cannot prescribe to the sence of it in another no more than any other metaphoricall expression whatever but it must in the severall places of its residence be interpreted according to the most peculiar restriction that the matter treated of doth require If then M G. can prove that any thing in this place under consideration enforces such a sence all his other instances are needlesse if he cannot they are uselesse It might easily be manifested and hath been done by others already that in all the places mentioned by Mr Goodwin the word is not expressly significant of any thorough solid eating participation of that which is said to be tasted as is pretended But to manifest this is not our concernment there being no reason in the world to enforce any such sence as is contended for in the place under present consideration 2. To the third wherein he argues with his predecessors from our opinion concerning Faith a briefe reply will suffice That a faint weake perception and relish of heavenly things is sufficient to make a man a Believer is so farre from being our opinion that we utterly disclaime them from being Believers to whom this is ascribed if nothing else be added in their description from whence they may be so esteemed It is true Faith is sometimes little and weake in the exercise of it yea a man may be so overtaken with Temptations or so clouded under desertions as that it may not deport it selfe with any such considerable vigour as to be consolatory to him in whom it is or demonstrative of him unto others to be what he is but we say that the weakest lowest meanest measure and degree of this Faith is yet grounded and fixed in the heart where though it be not allwayes alike lively and active yet it is allwayes alive and gives life How farre Believers may fall into the guilt of enormous courses has been already manifested The intendment of the expression is to disadvantage the perswasion he opposeth We do not grant that believers may fall into any enormityes but only what God himselfe affirmes they may yet not utterly be cast out of his Love favour in Jesus Christ. Farther the weakest Faith of which we affirme that it may be true and saving though it may have no great perception nor deepe tast of Heavenly things for the present yet hath it allwayes that of adherence to God in Christ which is exceedingly exalted above any such preception of Heavenly things whatever that may be had or obtained without it so that from the consideration of what hath been spoken we may safely conclude that M.G. hath not been able to advance on steppe in his intendment to prove that the persons here described are true Believers I know no sufficient ground or reason to induce me to any large consideration of the other two or three expressions that remaine §. 34. that are insisted on by M.G. seeing it is evident from their associats which have been already examined that there is none of them can speak one word to the businesse in hand I shall therefore discharge them from any farther attendance in the service they have been forced unto The next priviledge insisted on which to these persons is ascribed is that they are made partakers of the Holy Ghost In mens participation of the Holy Ghost either the guifts or Graces of the Holy Ghost are intended The Graces of the Holy Ghost are either more common and inchoative or speciall and compleating of the worke of conversion that it is the peculiar regenerating Grace of God that is intended in this expression of being made partakers of the Holy Ghost and not the guifts of the Spirit or those common graces of illumination unto which persons not truly converted but only wrought upon by an effectuall conviction in the preaching of the word may attaine M G is no way able to prove And there is also this consideration rising up with strength and power against that interpretation viz. that those that are so made partakers of the Spirit as to be regenerated quickned sealed comforted thereby which are some of the peculiar acts of his Grace in and towards the soules of those that Believe can never loose him nor be deprived of him as was manifested before at large being sealed and confirmed not only in the present enjoyment of the Love and favour of God but also unto the full fruition of the Glory which is provided for them and therefore cannot fall away as these are supposed to do What there is in Mr Goodwins Discourse on this passage Sect. 23 24. to weaken in the least what is usually answered or farther to enforce his exposition of the place I am not able to apprehend and shall therefore proceed with what remaineth All that followes in the place of the Apostle under contest §. 35. is regulated by the word Tast they have tasted of the good word of God and the powers of the World to come what the sence and importance of that word is hath been already declared neither can it be proved that the persons here described doe so tast of the good word of God as to
any attaine they shall never faile in or fall from but whether they may or shall attaine it or no here is nothing spoken But here is no notice taken of the maine opposition insisted on by our Saviour between the supplies of the Spirit for life Eternall which faile not nor suffers them to thirst to whom they are given and the supplies of naturall life by Elementary water notwithstanding which they who are made partakers thereof doe in a short season come to a totall want of it againe Instead of Answers to our Argument from this place we meet with nothing but perpetuall diversions from the whole scope and intendment of it and at last are told that the Promise signifies only that men should not want Grace when they come to Heaven 2. To prove that there is no Promise of any abiding spirituall Life here those words they shall never thirst are produced That we shall have our life continued to the full injoyment of it unto eternity because such are the supplies of the Spirit bestowed on us that we shall never thirst is the Argument of our Saviour That there is no such life promised or here to be attained because in it we shall not thirst is Mr Goodwins 3. It is not the intendment of our Saviour to prove that we shall not thirst because we shall have such a life but the quite contrary that we shall have such a life and shall assuredly be preserved because the supplies of the Spirit which he gives will certainly take away the thirst which is so opposite to it as to be destructive of it 4. It is true the Saints notwithstanding this Promise are still liable to Thirst that Thirst intimated Mat. 5.6 after Righteousnesse but not at all to that Thirst which they have a Promise here to be freed from a Thirst of an universall want of that water wherewith they are refreshed and that their freedome from this Thirst is their portion in this life we have the Testimony of Christ himselfe he that believes on mee shall thirst no more Ioh. 6. 35. And the reason of their not Thirsting is the receiving and drinking in that water which Christ gives them which as himselfe saies is his Spirit which they receive who believe on him Ioh. 7. 38 39. neither is that Thirst of theirs which doth remaine troublesome as is insinuated it being a grace of the Spirit and so quieting and composing Though they are troubled for the want of that in its fulnesse which they Thirst after yet their Thirst is no way troublesome That then which is farther added by Mr Goodwin is exceeding sophisticall Saith he §. 34. by the way this spirituall thirst which is incident unto the life which is derived from Christ and the waters given by him unto men as 't is enjoyed and possessed by them in this present World is according to the purport of our Saviour's own arguing an Argument that for the present and whilest it is obnoxious to such a thirst it is dissolveable and may faile for in the latter part of the said passage he plainly implies that the eternallnesse of that life which springs from the drinking of this water is the reason or cause why it is exempt from thirst Let the whole passage be read and minded and this will clearly appeare If then the eternality of a life be the cause or reason why t is free from the inconveniency of thirst Evident it is that such a life which is not free from thirst is not during this weaknesse or imperfection of it eternall or Priviledged against dissolution Ans. 1. That we cannot thirst under the enjoyment of the Life promised proves this life not here to be enjoyed is proved because the eternallnesse of this life is the cause of its exemption from Thirst But that the plaine contrary is the intendment of the Holy Ghost I presume is evident to all men The reason of our preservation to Eternall Life and being carried on thereunto is apparently assigned to those supplies of the Spirit whereby our Thirst is taken away The taking away of our Thirst is the certain meanes of our Eternall Life not a consequent of the Eternity of it All the proofe of what is here asserted is Let the whole passage be read and minded in which appeale I dare acquiesce before the judgement seat of any Believer in the World whose concernment this is It is here then supposed that the Eternity of the Life promised is the cause of their not thirsting in whom it is which is besides the Text and that they may thirst againe in the sence spoken of who drink of that water of the Spirit which Christ gives which is contrary unto it and of these two supposalls is this part of this discourse composed The ensuing Discourse rendring a reason upon the account whereof Life may be called eternall though it be interrupted and cut off we shall have farther time God assisting to consider and to declare its utter inconsistency with the intendment of the Holy Ghost in the expressions now before us He addes then in the last place Sect. 12. §. 35. That the intendment of Christ is not that the water he gives shall alway end in the issue of Eternall Life but that it lies in a tendency thereunto Ans. Which upon the matter is all one as if he had said Christ saith indeed that the water which he gives shall spring up unto Everlasting Life and wholly remove that Thirst which is comprehensive of all interveniences that might hinder it as God said to Adam In the day thou eatest of that fruit thou shalt dye but he knew full well that it might otherwise come to passe which whether it doth not amount to a calling of his Truth and credit in his Word and Promises into question deserves as I suppose Mr Goodwins serious consideration To conclude then our Saviour hath assured us that the Living Water wich he gives us shall take away such Thirst all such totall want of Grace and Spirit be it to be brought about not by this or that meanes but by what meanes soever as should cause us to come short of eternall life with himselfe which we shall look upon as a Promise of the Saints Perseverance in Faith notwithstanding all the Exceptions which as yet to the contrary hath been produced Having thus long insisted on this influence of the Mediation of Christ §. 36. into the continuance of the Love and Favour of God unto Believers by procuring the Spirit for them sending him to them to dwell in them and abide with them for ever the most effectuall principle of their continuance with God give me leave farther to confirme the Truth of what hath been spoken by remarking some inferences which the Scripture holds out unto us upon a supposition of those Assertions which we have laid downe concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit and the Assistance which we receive from him on that account all