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A09277 VindiciƦ gratiƦ. = A plea for grace More especially the grace of faith. Or, certain lectures as touching the nature and properties of grace and faith: wherein, amongst other matters of great use, the maine sinews of Arminius doctrine are cut asunder. Delivered by that late learned and godly man William Pemble, in Magdalen Hall in Oxford. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1627 (1627) STC 19591; ESTC S114374 222,244 312

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the worke of Gods Spirit when hee intends to bestow this first grace of Sanctification upon a sinner This of Habituall Conversion in the internall renovation of all the faculties which cannot be resisted or hindered in the next place we are to consider of Conversion as it is our act consisting in the operations and exercises of all gracious habites infused as when we actually beleeue repent and doe other good workes This Active Conversion is nothing but the practice of Sanctification when being made holy and good wee doe good and holy workes as a man after he is raised from death or restored to health performes the actions of a living of a healthy man For that similitude of S. Austins is certaine Non ideo currit rota ut sit rotunda c. as a wheele runs not that it may be round but because it is round so the will beleeves not that it may be regenerate but because it is regenerate And therefore that is an errour of the coursest bran when our adversaries make the act of Beleeving to go before our Sanctification whereas nothing is more certain than this that all holy actions whether of Faith or any other grace come from that common root of holinesse infused into our soules Now then touching these actions proceeding from grace inherent the question is how farre they are in mans power to refuse the doing of them and the question may bee laid generally touching all good workes inward or outward thus Whether or no that man who is truely sanctified may refuse to doe any good and holy worke at all for if any one be in his power to refuse it all may be in his power by the same reason But yet because Faith is a principall grace and all the dispute is touching the act thereof we may restraine the question unto it though whatever can bee spoken of mans power about the action of Faith is appliable to all other gracious actions whatsoever The question therefore is thus Whether after that a man is once sanctified and regenerate it be in the freedom of his will to choose whether he will actually beleeve and assent to the Promise or not For the explication of this point How farre every good action is in a godly mans power to doe or leave it undone you are to note that there is a double beginning or Cause of every gracious action in a man regenerate 1. The spirit of God by his exciting and Cooperating grace 2. Man himselfe renued and sanctified in all his faculties The former is termed Principium à quo the latter Principium quod man worketh but hee must be moved thereto and assisted by the Spirit of grace both together concurre to the producing of every holy action I say both together for although man in his first conversion was meerely passive Gods spirit working all without mans helpe yet Man in performance of any holy act is not meerely Active able to doe all of himselfe without Gods helpe No he is partly Passive partly Active Passive as hee stands in need of Gods grace to stirre up guide and strengthen the endevour of each faculty in the doing of good Active in as much as being thus helped by Grace himselfe willingly moves himselfe to every godly worke Now by reason of this concurrence of man with God these operations of grace are properly called Mans worke not Gods worke in man So that when a regenerate man beleeves this act though it be caused by Gods Spirit yet it is done and exercised by Man voluntarily moving himselfe in that action and therefore wee say it is Man that beleveth not Gods spirit that beleeveth as if the act of beleeving were wrought in mans Will by the Spirit of God in the same sort as Iugglers worke strange motions in their Puppets which seeme to doe wondrous feats but t is an unseene hand that 's the cause of all Such grosse conceits should not have beene devised by ingenuous mindes and put upon so plaine and cleere doctrine as that is touching the concurrence of Gods grace with our strength in all Holy actions whatsoever The point is easie to him that will understand Every good desire and good worke is partly from man because he wills it hee workes it but principally from Gods Spirit because hee makes Man to will and to worke it Without which cooperating grace man by Habituall inherent grace could doe no good worke at all according to that of Christ Ioh. 15. 5. Without mee yee can doe nothing and of the Apostle Phil. 1. 6. He that hath begun the good worke will also performe it and againe Phil. 2. 13. It is God that worketh in you both the will and the deed even of his good pleasure and againe 1 Cor. 15. 10. I have laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the grace of God which is in me These things thus explaned we are yet further to note that in a man Regenerate there are two contrary qualities inherent in every Faculty 1. Grace in a rectified holy inclination to goodnesse infused into it 2. Corruption in a vitious Quality disposing it to evill These two Qualities abide in the regenerate and oppose one another till sinne be finally overcome abolished by death Vpon these undeniable grounds let us proceed to declare what is a regenerate mans resistance that hee makes against the working of Grace in hindering the performance of any good worke which you shall perceive by these two conclusions 1. A man regenerate so farre forth as hee is Spirituall never resists the worke of Grace but is constantly most willing and forward to the performance of all holy actions None can be so ignorant in the mystery of Sanctification as to deny this therfore they tell ●…ge wonders in Divinity who teach that mans 〈…〉 put in aequilibrio hanging like a beame upon 〈…〉 to bow either way and indifferently disposed to 〈◊〉 good or evill A very dreame it is contrary to all S●…●●d ●●perience whereby we are taught that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●●ing regenerate and made spirituall as it is so 〈◊〉 so farre from standing upon termes of indifferencie deliberating whether it shall yeeld or whether it shall denie obedience whether it shall beleeve or not beleeve c. as on the contrary it doth most constantly and eatnestly desire in all things to obey alwayes A man whose eye God hath truly inlightened and touched his heart by the finger of his sanctifying Spirit doth not stand in a mammering shall I shall I shall I beleeve shall I obey were I best doe this good worke or shall I let it alone No all his desire is now for godlinesse the weight and strength of his resolutions and affections leane wholy to obedience his will chooseth the good with full purpose to cleave to that only turning it selfe from evill with much hatred and detestation This constant determination of the spirituall will unto obedience and that only is a thing most manifest in
is manifest that when a regenerate man failes in his obedience it comes not to passe because his will is free and so willing to doe that which is evill but because his will is not so free from the power of his corruption as it desires to bee but is partly in bondage under the command thereof To conclude this point There is in every regenerate man a possibility or power of Resistencie alwaies remaining so long as any corruption abides in him which will perpetually make some opposition more or lesse in the performance of every good worke But for the prevailing act of Resistency whereby such good workes might bee quite hindered we affirme that by the power of assisting grace effectually ayding the regenerate Faculties that act is taken away The flesh may strive but the spirit doth overcome Infidelity may cast many doubts but Faith at last prevailes Sinne and the World may pleade much worth and lovelinesse but yet in fine the love of God overtops all earthly base delights and fills the soule with the only desire of enjoying that alone most blessed and infinite goodnesse Thus Amaleck may fight but Israell will get the victory a victory indeed certaine in regard of the event but with some uncertainty in the Combat wherein Israell is sometime put unto the worst For you are to note that albeit in the generall as touching those maine and principall Acts of beleeving repenting persevering in obedience c. grace doth work so effectually with mans regenerate will that corruption cannot hinder it in the exercise of those Acts neverthelesse in many particular actions after his first conversion in the continued practice of Sanctification hee may obey the enticings of his corrupt concupiscence against the motions of the Spirit of grace For many times in sundry particulars of Christian practice God is pleased to denie that effectuall assistance which at other times he affords and then he leaves us unto our owne strength for experiment to trie what is in us for humiliation in discovery of our weaknesse unto us for exercise of Christian watchfulnesse in making diligent use of all gracious helpes and the like good purposes In which case a man that is thus left unto himselfe presently lends an eare to the deceivable suggestions of Sinne and Sathan whereby wanting a rescue to bring him off cleere in this assault hee is vanquished and though with much unwillingnesse led away a prisoner unto those his spirituall Adversaries During the time of which bondage though grace shew it selfe so farre as to cause many an heavie sigh an hearty prayer and longing wish after its former freedome yet can he not make a faire escape from his corruption till Gods spirit returne and bring li●… with 〈◊〉 breaking the gates of Brasse and cutting in sunder the barres of Iron that is enlarging the heart that it may againe freely runne the way of Gods Commandements And thus we confesse that a regenerate man may resist the grace of God hee may Quench the Spirit hee may Grieve the the Spirit hee may Depart away from God through an evill and deceitfull heart he may Rebell against the words of God and contemne the counsell of the most high opposing all motions of grace in these raging fits of his corruption which still furiously struggles for life after it is mortally wounded in our regeneration But these desertions are not perpetuall corruption may for a time let the exercise of some particular graces but in all and alwayes it shall never hinder God who hath given unto a regenerate man a power to beleeve by the changing of his will through the infusion of a constant inclination to all spirituall good will also cause the Act of beleeving infallibly to ensue by the assistance of Cooperating grace so powerfully strengthening the regenerate will and so effectually restraining the rebellious motions of corruption that the will shall not choose but doe that which above all things in the world it most desires to doe namely beleeve and obey the Gospell Now to shut up all touching this point of Mans liberty in resisting the grace of God the summe of all is this Before true Conversion all unregenerate persons doe resist the gracious meanes and preparations to their Conversion the Reprobate finally the Elect for a time till Grace become victorious in their perfect Sanctification In this their first Conversion or Regeneration the Elect are no way Active either to worke it or to hinder it After their Conversion in the doing of all good workes immanent or transient they resist not so farre as they are Spirituall they cannot but resist so farre as they are Carnall And though in time of temptation and Spirituall desertion the flesh doe not onely resist but also prevaile to the hinderance of many particular gracious actions yet for those maine and principall Acts of Faith Repentance Love of God Hatred of Evill c. the Spirit is infallibly victorious both to doe them after the first Conversion and also finally to persevere in doing of them Which comes to passe thus 1. By Habituall grace infused the Sanctified will is constantly determined to embrace all Spirituall good 2. By assisting grace the will is stirred up provoked allured and inclined to obedience through the proposall of the promises and the heavenly suggestions of the holy Spirit 3. By the same assisting grace all contrary motions of concupiscence are subdued and kept under So that nothing can hinder obedience to follow because by grace the will is made willing to obey and by grace all impediments in obeying are taken away now when all lets are removed what can let a willing minde to doe that which it desires Hence you may perceive the vanity and odiousnesse of those imputations of Manicheisme and Stoicisme which our adversaries the Iesuites and Arminians throw upon this Orthodoxe Doctrine crying out upon us as if we destroyed nature offered violence to the will tooke away all liberty from the will and turned it in the meere necessity of those naturall instincts and inclinations that are in brute beasts yea as if wee made the will like a dull and senslesse blocke that cannot move it selfe a jot in any action of grace These are unworthie calumnies raised out of malice or ignorance in the great worke of Sanctification for refutation we neede but denie what they barely affirm● and tell them againe that by our doctrine grace doth not destroy but perfect nature It takes not away but restores unto the will the true liberty thereof which consists not in the instability of a Weather-cocke to move any way in an indifferency to will and do any thing but in a fixed determination to will and doe nothing but what is good Which determination is not from any violent compulsion of an externall Agent as if the will were moved by grace unwillingly nor yet by imposing upon the will any naturall necessity from some internall principle as if the will did
actuall Concurrence yet we truly and properly ascribe such effects to their Visible apparant immediate causes But in this point concerning the replantation of Holinesse in a Sinfull man we affirme against Pelagians Semi-pelagians Papists Arminians or other sectaries however branded that as the Agent or Efficient of mans Sanctification is simply supernaturall viz. the Holy Hhost so is his manner of working altogether Divine beyond the power and without the helpe of any thing in man An assertion that layes nature flat on her backe and yet gives vnto her as much as Sinne hath left her and that 's just Nothing in matter of Grace And the truth hereof will easily appeare to any that will without pride and prejudice consult the Scriptures or common experience Me thinkes when we reade in the booke of God these and such like sayings that every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart is only evill continually that of the children of men there is none that understands and seeks after God that they are become altogether filthy none that doth good no not one that the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit nor can he know them being spiritually discerned that wee are blinde till God Open our eyes that wee are deafe till God bore our Eares that wee are Darknesse vtterly destitute of Spirituall light that the Wissdome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the flesh is enmity or hatred against God is not nor can be subiect to him that the flesh lusteth against the Spirit rebelling against the worke thereof even in the regenerate much more before regeneratiō that of our selves we are not sufficient to thinke a good thought as of our selves but that our sufficiency is of God that it is God which worketh in us both the will and the deed of his good pleasure that in our conversion wee are New begotten New borne New creatures created in Christ Iesus to good workes in fine to put all out of doubt That wee are Dead in trespasses and Sinnes and that our Sanctification is the first resurrection from death effected in us by the same Almighty power which God declared in raising Christ from the grave When I say wee consider of these and the like places were wee not too much in love with our selves and held some scorne to con God all the thankes for our salvation our hearts and tongues would presently bee filled with a sincere acknowledgement Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name wee give the glory for thy loving mercy and for thy truths sake Besides I wish wee would descend unto an unpartiall examination of our owne hearts to make discovery by the light of the Spirit of that body of Death wee be are about with us what strong rebellion there is of the Law in our members against the law of our mindes what secret and powerfull attractives the affections of Sinne have to pull us unto disobedience what violent and bitter opposition they make against Grace checking their disorderly motions how seldome any blessed resolution tending to sanctity rises up in our thoughts how vnwildy we are in the managing of any gracious motion from the Holy Ghost with what slacknesse and cumber wee prosecute such holy inspirations to action and full accomplishment in a word how passing slow our course towards heaven is when wee have all helpes of nature and Grace to carry us forward I am fully perswaded that whatsoever any man may conceive in abstract speculation there is no converted person if he make application to his owne particular but will confesse freely if he deale truly with his owne heart that not only if God had not done More for him than he could for himselfe but if God had not done All for him he had utterly perished in his sinnes And he will acknowledge that it is impossible there should be in and of himselfe such Preparations and forward dispositions to worke his owne Conversion who being Converted is hindered by none so much in the finishing of his salvation as by his owne perpetuall indisposition to goodnesse This our disabilitie whereof wee are convinced in our owne sense and by testimony of the Scripture will inforce us if our pride bee not as great as our povertie to confesse whence wee have our riches without stammering shifting and mineing of the matter as the fashion of too many is who by many prety scholasticall devices distinguish God out of all or the greatest part or at least some part of his Glory due unto him for our Conversion and thrust in the Abilities of their owne Free-will as co-workers with Gods Spirit joynt-purchasers of this inheritance of Grace But let God have glory and every man shame and let all whom grace hath taught to judge of their Corruption say with the Church Es. 26. 12. Thou O Lord hast wrought all our workes in us I will not prevent my selfe by larger explication of this point at this time but wrapp up all touching this first conclusion in a needfull distinction or two and so passe on Mans Concurrence in the worke of his sanctifications is double 1 Passive which is the Capacity or Aptnesse that is in mans nature for the Receiuing of Grace for being a Reasonable creature hee is naturally prepared and disposed with such a substance and faculties as are meet subjects to receive the Habit and instruments to performe the actions of Grace This Concurrence of man to his regeneration is most necessary nor doth God sanctifie senslesse or irrationall creatures nor is man in his conversion in such sort passive as is a stone blocke or brute beast as our adversaries absurdly cavill 2 Active which is some Strength or Power that man hath in the Vse of his faculties especially of his will for the Production of Grace This strength of man in doing good is to be distinguished in regard 1 Of the Beginning and first Act of our Conversion when Holinesse is at the first reimplanted in the Soule 2 Of the Progresse of our Conversion in the practise of Sanctification In this second respect none denies Mans actuall concurrence with the Spirit of God for being sanctified and inwardly inabled in his faculties by Spirituall life put into them he can Move himselfe in and towards the performance of all living actions of grace even as Lazarus of Nature Whereas yet you are to remember that even in these actions wee cannot worke alone we are but Fellow-workers with the Spirit of God and this not in an Equality but Subordination to him we indeed move our hands to write but like raw schollers wee shall draw mishapen charecters unlesse our heavenly Master guide our hands Neverthelesse these actions take their denominations from the next Agent and though performed by speciall assistance of the Spirit yet are rightly said to be mans actions so that when a regenerate person Beleeves Praies gives almes rejoyceth in God c. we doe not say that the Holy Ghost in us
opposite which at most are but subordinate and differ only as the cause and effect For is it not the fancy of some crackt braine to affirme that there is a Grace every way sufficient and powerfull enough in it selfe to worke the conversion of a Sinner and yet when this grace is given to such a sinner with a purpose and intent to convert him by it it shall be found to be utterly unsufficient to Effect it T is strange whence or how men should conceit a sufficiency in the power of such grace when they finde insufficiency in the performance of the worke 2. By the word Grace we understand some Supernaturall gift freely given unto man from God himselfe 3. By the word Christians wee meane all those that live in externall communion with the militant Church enjoying the ministery of the Word and being of yeares to make use of it for this Question toucheth not Infants 4. Lastly by Conversion as heretofore hath beene shewed we are to understand two things either 1. The Roote and Cause of that act namely the Sanctification of all the Faculties by the Infusion of Habituall Holinesse 2. The Fruite or Act of Conversion properly so called when a man regenerate and renued in all parts doth actually imploy them in loving and obeying God The first is Gods worke upon us the next our worke performed toward him when by the strength of inward Grace given we after convert our selves in Thought and Worke towards God This latter is not here to bee understood in this Question but the former namely that Conversion of a man which God workes in him by infusion of the grace of Regeneration into all parts This infusion of Grace into the Soule by an immediate act of Gods Spirit the Arminians can by no meanes endure to heare of in this businesse of our Conversion and therefore they burden this assertion with odious but untrue imputations of Anabaptisticall Enthusiasmes and of a Lazy expectation of all Grace to be poured into us sleeping without any endeavour of our owne to get it Which slanders are only devised for the countenance of that impious opinion of their owne namely That mans Conversion to God begins in some act which man himselfe performes and not in a worke first wrought in us by God Now that act of man is his assent and actuall Faith given to the promise A lewd imagination sufficiently confuted and cryed downe in the venerable assembly of the last Synod as most derogatory to the whole worke of Grace in our Vocation most repugnant to reason and Scriptures which tell us That the tree must bee good before the fruit can bee so it being impossible that an action so Holy and good as is the yeelding of Assent and Beliefe to the promises of the Gospell should be done by a man unlesse he be first regenerate and sanctified in all his faculties The termes thus explaned the state of the Question is more fully thus Whether God doe bestow upon all such as Heare the Word preached any such Supernaturall gift as is sufficiently powerfull to worke in them true Sanctification though it doe not alwayes effectually produce it Our Adversaries affirme it but we truly maintaine the Negative part opposing against their assertion these two Conclusions 1. That there is no supernaturall gift given unto the unregenerate which is Sufficient to worke his Sanctification but that only which is Effectuall to worke it This hath appeared manifestly enough in the explication of the termes of this Question and will bee more and more evident to us if we consider that maine mistake of our Adversaries in this businesse of our Conversion which is that they imagine our Conversion to begin in some act of ours namely our Assenting and Beleeving not in some act of God sanctifying the Soule before it can Assent and Beleeve Now because this act is good and therefore must be done by Gods helpe for to salve this they have found a daintie new devise of Spirituall strength infused into the Soule by the Holy Ghost which strength when it is inherent in the soule a man may use it if hee will to the producing of the act of Faith If he doe use it then by that act he is converted if not yet that was sufficient to bring forth the Act if it had beene thereto applied As in a like Case when Christ said to the sicke man Arise take up thy bed and walke Hee gave him bodily strength sufficient to doe what he bad him but yet the man might have let his bed lie and stood still if hee list So when God commands us to beleeve he gives us strength sufficient so to doe it albeit we may if we will neglect to make use of it This foule error hath bred all that confusion and darknesse wherein this controversie is wrapped up and it containes two grosse absurdities in it 1. That they suppose a supernaturall abilitie of beleeving infused into the soule by the Holy Ghost which yet shall be no sanctifying grace of the Spirit an opinion altogether new and against reason For aske them is not the inward disability of our soules to beleeve and convert a part of our corruption It cannot bee denied Well is not then the infusion of an Ability to Beleeve and Convert the doing away of that corruption It is And then shall not that gift which abolishes our sinfull infirmities bee justly called a Sanctifying grace It is most evident and none but such as are possest with the Spirit of wilfull contradiction to all manifest truth will affirme That the Rectifying of our weake and corrupt faculties by a supernaturall ability put into them and disposing them to the most excellent worke of Faith can be any thing else than the grace of Regeneration An Act so Holy must come from an Habit as Holy 2. That they suppose the Act in Divine graces goes before the Habit an assertion in Divinitie not tolerable which tells us that the Tree must be good before the fruit can be good And that Question which Christ put to the Pharisees Mat. 12. 34. How can yee that are evill speake good things is more than any Arminian cau tell how to answer This pincheth them and puts them to this choyce either that an unregenerate man who certainely is utterly Evill may by the helpe of such a gift as hath not sanctified nor made him Good not only speake but doe that which is eminently Good namely Beleeve and Convert or that the Act of Faith performed by such a one is not good and sound and so no beginning of true Conversion or that they doe confesse the Habit of Faith as of other graces to be first implanted in our soules in the universall renovation of all the Faculties thereof whence the operation of faith doth afterwards issue And this is the truth which under those obscure and unexplicated termes of Supernaturall strength to Beleeve they grant in effect for the strength is either Nothing
Scriptures and experience of all the Saints in their prayers purposes desires to obey their joy when they could doe it their griefe when they could not Let thy kingdome come thy will be done is the prayer of every faithfull soule not standing upon quarrelsome termes of yeelding or refusing but wholly submitting it selfe and suing for obedience Oh faith David that my waies were directed that I might keepe thy testimonies Vnite my heart unto thee that I may feare thy name Incline mine heart unto thy testimonies with a thousand such prayers of that holy man shewing the firme resolution of a sanctified soule only ayming at obedience Lord increase our faith prayed the weake Disciples Lord I beleeve helpe mine unbeliefe that new convert in both we see an earnest desire not an indifferent deliberation That prayer of the whole Church is excellent Psal. 68. 28. Lord confirme that which thou hast wrought in us and more fully Cant. 1. 2. Draw mee we will runne after thee Here 's no resistency no hanging backe or standing aloofe off in a doubtfull devising what to doe but as soone as these Virgins in the first verse have smelt the favour of the pretious oyntments of Christs grace poured out into their soules they love him him onely him entirely they 'le goe they 'le run after him and whereas corruption clogges them in their course they still shew their readinesse to come by their willingnesse to be drawne And such is the temper of every regenerate man His obedience is his Hearts joy and desire and there is nothing that grieves him more than when he is carried away by his carnall will and unsanctified part against his spirituall and gracious resolutions as may appeare for all by that bitter complaint of the Apostle Rom. 7. the latter end of the Chapter Wherefore the regenerate Will stands not Newter betweene sinne and grace but takes part with grace against sin in a constant resolvednesse to hold with God and Goodnesse against all things that are contrarie to them according to that of Christ The Spirit indeede it willing but the Flesh is weak and that of the Apostle They that live after the Spirit savour the things of the Spirit Now this is that most blessed worke of the Spirit of grace in the regeneration of mans will namely the taking away of that resistency which our adversaries so stiffely and odiously stand for against us and the truth They say that grace leaves the will in indifferency so that it hath power to resist we maintaine the contrary that the proper worke of grace in sanctifying our will is to determine and incline the motions of it onely to obedience and to take away all power of resisting or disobeying Which appeares thus To disobey and not to beleeve is an act of the greatest sinfulnesse that can be To be able to commit this act comes not from power and strength but from weakenesse and infirmity Perfect strength and liberty is to have no power nor will to commit any sinne at all as it is in God and the blessed Spirits and Christs humanity to bee able to doe that which is evill is from weakenesse from corruption Now in the sanctified will this corruption is in part done away by grace so that so farre as the will is made Spirituall it neither doth nor can resist and be disobedient it doth not because it cannot it cannot because it will not it will not because by this new infused grace and holinesse it is made alwaies willing to obey But this point is cleered by the late worthy Bishop of Salisbury The second conclusion is this 2. That a man regenerate so far forth as bee is carnall doth alwaies resist the worke of grace being unwilling and backward to performe any holy action This is manifest by that of the Apostle Rom. 8. 5. They that are after the flesh savour the things of the flesh and againe Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the spirit In experience nothing is more certaine even the best men in their best workes and best temper doe sensibly feele many twinges of a froward heart crossing and interrupting their cheerefull performance of holy dueties From which rebellion of the Law in our members against the Law in our mindes the most sanctified man in the world is not free but as long as he lives he hath cause to complaine with the holy Apostle When I would doe good I am thus yoaked that Evill is present with mee In this opposition of two contrary principles of all our good and evill actions we have to observe these two things 1. The necessity of the concurrence of Gods cooperating grace in all holy actions to bee done after our first Conversion For if God should give unto us a power only to doe well by the infusion of Habituall grace and then should leave us unto our selves for the exercise of the Act it is apparant that we should never bring this power into Act by our own strength For wheras we are sanctified but in part and there remaines in every faculty a corrupt inclination to evill as well as an holy disposition to good did not the Spirit of God constantly powerfully assist us in well doing Corruption would prevaile against Grace lead us captive unto the Law of sin that is in our members Not that Corruption is stronger than Grace but because we without the aide of Gods Spirit should be more ready to follow the sinfull motions of our corrupted nature than the sanctified inclinations of grace And if Adams will being only mutable but not as yet tainted with any inward corruption neverthelesse wanting the effectuall assistance and support of Gods grace was so easily seduced by temptation much more our Wills that are holy but in part would quickly bee enticed and drawne away by the deceiveablenesse of inward concupiscence and by the subtilty of Sathans temptations if the Spirit of God did not worke mightily in us repressing the motions of sinne and ayding us against all outward provocations to disobedience 2. The true cause and roote of that irregularitie which is found in the obedience of a regenerate man Which is not that indifferencie or freedome our Adversaries contend for whereby t is in the power of a man regenerate at all times to choose whether he will doe good or evill but it is that opposition which the Flesh maketh against the Spirit by reason whereof a regenerate man when by Grace he constantly desires to obey is by Corruption hindered in the performance This is plaine by that of the Apostle Rom. 7. 19. 20. I doe not the good things which I would but the evill which I would not that doe I Now if I doe that I would not it is no more I that doe it but the sinne that dwelleth in me And againe Gal. 5. 17. The flesh and spirit are contrary one to the other so that yee cannot doe the same things that yee would Whence it
hath the generall custome and consent of the times and Church wherein wee live whereby men are they know not how nor upon what firme grounds drawne to beleeve those things which they see others hold and maintaine fortruth Lastly 3. Some extraordinary worke or event confirming the truth of Religion So did Miracles in the time of Christ and his Apostles perswade many to beleeve who were notwithstanding farre from being true beleevers as Ioh. 2. 23. Many beleeved in his name when they saw the miracles which hee did but t was not good crediting of them that beleeved only upon miracles therefore Christ would not commit himselfe to them ver 24. And thus the Magitian when he saw the signes and great wonders which were done by the Apostles he beleeved and wondred when yet his heart was not right in the sight of God Act. 8. 13. 21. By these and the like meanes is this imperfect and generall kinde of Faith wrought in men destitute of all inward grace and holinesse Such motives as these cause this assent but there is no Internum principium no roote in themselves as our Saviour speakes Mat. 13. 21. whence this beliefe springeth no thorough sanctification of the soule conforming all the powers thereof unto the puritie and holinesse of divine things and inclining the affections to a constant embracing thereof These men like Religion well and commend it as men doe costly Iewells set forth to sale but when it comes to the point that this Good Pearle of great price is to be bought then if God will let them have it at their owne rates there 's a match made they 'le beleeve and be religious if God withall will spare them the use of some sinnes and pleasures they love well but if it must be purchased at Gods price with the sale of all that they have they are no merchants for such a hard bargaine with the yongue man they shrinke away sorrowfull that heaven cannot be had at a cheaper rate Thus when it comes to the proofe in particular application and practice this kinde of faith vanisheth away and comes to just nothing Thus you have the explication of this first degree of Faith withall you see that this faith falls greatly short of that perfection which is required unto that saith which is saving and justifying Neverthelesse our Adversaries of the Romish Church maintaine that this assent is that justifying Faith whereof the Scriptures speake Their opinion touching this point is sufficiently declared by Becanus who followes the rest of that rabble Hee Theol. Schol. Tom. 3. cap. 8. q. 1. disputing of the act of justifying Faith rejects the Lutherans opinion who place Faith in the will and make it to be Fiduciam de misericordia Dei propter Christum and saith that the doctrine of the Catholikes is this that faith belongs to the understanding and is nothing else but Credere sive assentiri eis quae à Deo revelata sunt Thence hee setteth downe this Conclusion § 6. Actus fidei consistit in assensu quo quis assentitur alicui propositioni à Deo revelatae propter authoritatem revelantis In this definition there are two parts 1. the Object of this assent Propositions revealed by God 2. The essentiall difference of this act taken à formaliratione credendi and that is to beleeve propter authoritatem revelantis By this saith Becanus Cap. 8. q. 2. § 2. assensus fidei constituitur in sua specie essentiall that is the assent of Faith is made supernaturall and justifying when wee beleeve things because God hath revealed them for saith he if articles of faith be beleeved upon other motives as upon mans authority c. then this assent of faith is naturall as in Heritickes and Divells So then according to Popish doctrine that faith which justifies us is nothing but a bare assent of the minde to such things as God reveales because of Gods authority that revealed them Than which explication of the nature of justifying faith nothing can be poorer and more below the majestie of so high a grace as faith is I will trouble you but with two reasons proving that this kinde of assent is not that faith whereby wee are justified 1. The act of justifying faith must needs be supernaturall such as cannot bee done without the aide of speciall grace of Gods spirit But unto this assent there is required no such speciall grace therefore it is not an act of justifying faith The Major is evident and granted by the Schooleman Cap. 8. 4. 4. that something there is in faith above nature requiring a supernaturall cause whereto the Scriptures plainely inforce him Eph. 2. 8. By grace yee are saved thorough Faith and that not of ourselves it is the gift of God Phil. 1. 29. Vnto you it is given for Christ that not only yee should beleeve in him but also suffer for his sake So Ioh. 6. 45. Wherefore § 3. he teacheth that this act of assent must be supernaturall partly in regard of the Object id est divine revelations and partly in regard of the principium or cause by which it is produced id est non per solas naturae vires sed per auxilium gratiae Wee agree then in the Proposition For the assumption That there needes not any speciall grace of the Spirit to worke this bare assent unto the truth of divine revelations this wee prove out of the same Schoolemens doctrine who teach that the Vnderstanding assents not unlesse the Will command it because say they the act of beleeving is absolutely in our treewill Cap 8. q. 5. Well be it so But now say wee the Will may without the helpe of grace command the assent of the Vnderstanding which wee prove thus Whatsoever the Vnderstanding by the only light of Nature judges to be honest that the Will can desire by the only strength of nature But by the only light of Nature the Vnderstanding judges that it is an honest thing to beleeve Gods authority revealing any thing to us therefore the Will by the only strength of Nature may desire this act of beleeving and so consequently there 's no need of Grace to move the Will to command the Vnderstanding T is Becanus owne argument against himselfe cap. 8. q. 5. § 9. Whereto he would faine giue an answer if hee could tell how Something he sayes to that Minor proposition whereof he thus distinguisheth The Vnderstanding by the only light of Nature judges it a thing honest to beleeve Gods authority when hee reveales any thing Via ac modo naturali not when he reveales any thing Via ac modo supernaturali Beleeve it a rare distinction and full of mystery Divine Revelations are of two sorts supernaturall and naturall Againe when God reveales his will to us by naturall meanes then the very light of Nature teacheth us that 't is honest to beleeve his authority But if hee reveale things to us by supernaturall meanes the light of nature