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A20752 The Christian warfare wherein is first generally shewed the malice, power and politike stratagems of the spirituall ennemies of our saluation, Sathan and his assistants the world and the flesh, with the meanes also whereby the Christian may vvithstand and defeate them : and afterwards more speciallie their particvlar temptatiions, against the seuerall causes and meanes of our saluation, whereby on the one side they allure vs to security and presumption, and on the other side, draw vs to doubting and desperation, are expressed and answered : written especially for their sakes who are exercised in the spirituall conflict of temptations, and are afflicted in conscience in the sight and sense of their sinnes / by I. Dovvname ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1604 (1604) STC 7133; ESTC S1536 575,484 731

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respect than Gods spirit who wholy and onely knoweth all his secret counsailes In respect of truth hee is most true yea truth it selfe and in regarde hereof hee is called the spirit of truth which leadeth vs into all truth Ioh. 16.13 Ioh. 16.13 And therefore as in respect of his knowledge he cannot bee deceiued so in respect of his truth he cannot deceiue In respect of faithfulnesse he is most faithfull and iust in all his waies Psal 145.17 1. Cor. 1.9 especially in his word Psal 145.17 for his testimonie is sure as it is Psal 19.7 and therefore he cannot lie 1. Cor. 1.9 Psal 19.7 neither will he conceale the truth for any respect of persons and consequently whatsoeuer this al-knowing true and faithfull witnesse testifieth we are vndoubtedly to beleeue as being most sure and certaine If an Angell sent from heauen should assure vs from God that wee are elected euen the Papists themselues could not deny but that we might be assured thereof by such a reuelation without any manner of doubting but the testimonie of Gods spirit witnessing to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God is so much more certaine and without exception than the testimonie of Angels as the spirit of God better knoweth the counsels of God than Angels as it excelleth them in truth and faith as the testimonie which is imprinted in the heart is more firme then that which is spoken in the eare which may easily be forgotten And therefore if by their doctrine we might be assured of our election by the extraordinarie reuelation of an Angell then much more certainely may wee be assured hereof by the ordinarie testimonie of Gods spirit which he witnesseth in the hearts and consciences of the faithfull § Sect. 2 The proposition being manifest That Gods spirit testifieth that we are the sonnes of God let vs proue the assumption which containeth two branches first that the spirit of God testifieth to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God and secondly doth fully assure vs of this testimonie that it is most vndoubted true both which are manifest by Gods word First that Gods spirit giueth this testimonie in the hearts of the faithfull Rom. 8.15.16 it is euident Rom. 8.15.16 For ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage to feare againe but ye haue receiued the spirit of adoption whereby we crie abba father the same spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God Gal. 4.6 So Gal. 4.6 Because ye are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts which crieth abba father Which places doe so euidently proue this point that there needes no more reasons or allegations for first he excludeth the spirit of bondage which like the Papists faith causeth vs to feare and doubte of our election and saluation and then hee telleth vs that wee haue receiued the spirit of adoption which beareth witnesse vnto our spirit that wee are the children of God § Sect. 3 Secondly because we are exceeding weake and the graces in vs shadowed with imperfections and our faith mixt with doubting because we are saued as yet but by hope as it is Rom. 8.24 And we walke by faith and not by sight as it is 2. Cor. 5.7 and this our faith is continually shaken with manifold temptations therefore least we should doubt of Gods loue and our election adoption and saluation the Lord hath giuen vs his spirit to seale and further to confirme this assurance in our hearts and that it might be an earnest and a sure pledge vnto vs whereby he might secure vs concerning the couenant which he hath made with vs. The truth hereof appeareth in many places of the Scripture 2. Cor. 1.22 2. Cor. 1.22 Who hath sealed vs and hath giuen the earnest of the spirit in our hearts So Ephes 1.13 In whom also ye haue trusted Eph. 1.13 after that ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospel of our saluation wherein also after that ye beleeued ye were sealed with the holy spirit of promise 14. Which is the earnest of our inheritance vntill the redemption of the possession purchased vnto the praise of his glorie And Ephes 4.30 Eph. 4.30 The Apostle exhorteth vs not to grieue the holy spirit of God by whom we are sealed vnto the day of our redemption And 2. Cor. 5.5 2. Cor. 5.5 he saith that God hath giuen vnto vs the earnest of his spirit Which wordes doe minister vnto euery faithfull man no small consolation if they bee rightly waied for first wee vse to seale those things which we would haue most certaine and out of all controuersie as when a man hath made a promise or couenant with another for his better securitie he doth commit it to writing and least yet there should any scruple or doubt rest in his minde he doth confirme it by adding his seale to put the matter out of all question so the Lord hath added to the written couenant of his word whereby he hath assured vs of our election adoption and saluation the outward seale of the sacraments and the inward seale of his spirit whereby he hath ratified it not in it selfe but in our hearts that so all cause of doubting being taken away we might certainely be assured of his promises that they belong vnto vs not after a generall manner as the Papists teach but particularly euen as this assurance is particularly sealed by Gods spirit in the heart of euery true beleeuer Rom. 4.11 Rom. 4.11 The end therefore why we are sealed to saluation by Gods spirit is not that we should doubt thereof but that it might be out of all question fully ratified and confirmed vnto vs for this is signified by this metaphor here vsed of sealing as may appeare not onely by the ordinarie custome amongst vs but also by the vse thereof in former times So when Ahashuerosh would haue letters written in the Kings name which no man might reuoke he commaundeth that they should be sealed with the Kings ring Hest 8.8 Ioh. 6.27 Hest 8.8 And Ioh. 6.27 it is said that God the father had sealed our Sauiour Christ that is confirmed him in his office of mediation by giuing euident testimonies and manifest signes that the people might not doubt of his calling and anoynting Matth. 3. 17. and 17.5 and Ioh. 1.32 So whereas the holy Ghost in the faithfull is called the earnest of our inheritance this ministreth vnto euery true beleeuer no small consolation nor doubtfull assurance of their saluation for we know that an earnest is giuen amongst men to ratifie and binde a bargaine so as they cannot goe from their agreement after earnest is giuen and receiued The word arrhabo which is here translated earnest hath also other significations which minister vnto Gods faithfull the same assurance and the like true comfort Gen. 38.17.18 Genes 38.17.18 this word is vsed to signifie a pledge or pawne
than the which there can bee no better assurance of performing promise and 2. King 14.14 2. King 14.14 it signifieth a hostage giuen in warres which is giuen for assurance to confirme couenants agreed vpon Whereas therefore Gods spirit in the faithfull is called arrhabo which signifieth an earnest pawne and hostage we are hereby assured that the Lord will performe his couenant betweene vs and him that he will not misse a day in the performing of his promise that howsoeuer we were enemies yet now being reconciled by the death of his sonne he hath giuen vs an hostage to assure vs of eternall peace euen his holy spirit And therefore let not Sathan nor all his assistants cause vs to doubt of Gods couenant wherein he hath assured vs of our election adoption and saluation seeing he hath sealed this couenant with his spirit and hath giuen vnto vs this earnest and pawne to assure vs that he will performe his promise and bargaine § Sect. 4 But here the tempter obiecteth That we may discerne Gods spirit by the effects thereof that we cannot know and discerne whether we haue the spirit of God vnlesse it should bring forth in vs some extraordinarie effects and though it should be granted that we were indued therewith yet we cannot discerne the testimonie thereof from our owne thoughts vnlesse it be by some speciall reuelation To the first I answere that though many lulled asleepe with carnall securitie doe vainely dreame that they haue Gods spirit and so are deluded with their owne phantasies yet this hindereth not but that he who hath the spirit of God indeede may certainely be assured that it dwelleth in him for it sealeth in vs the assurance of Gods couenant 2. Cor. 1.22 and who can receiue this seale and not feele the impression it is an earnest and who receiuing an earnest cannot know whether he hath receiued it for otherwise how can it assure vs of our bargaine if of it selfe we haue no assurance it is a pawne of Gods loue and our saluation and who hauing a pawne in his custodie cannot know that he possesseth it it is a heauenly light which doth illuminate our vnderstandings Eph. 1.17.18 which were blinde and ignorant in the knowledge of Gods truth and who cannot discerne betweene blindnesse and sight light and darknesse it is a water which purgeth vs from our corruption Esa 44.3 Ezech. 16.9 and who that is thus washed and clensed can doubt that this water hath touched him Matth. 3.11 Act. 2.3 it is a sire which inflameth our cold frosen hearts with a zeale of Gods glorie and loue of our brethren and how can fire which is caried in our brests be hidden from vs 1. Ioh. 2.20.27 it is a precious oyle which mollifieth our hard stonie hearts and maketh them flexible and pliable able to Gods will which before were so stiffe and obdurate that they would rather haue broken then bowed to obedience it suppleth also our stiffe ioynts and maketh them actiue and nimble in the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse and who finding those strange alterations in himselfe may not be assured that he is annoynted with this oyle it is the Lords champion fighting in vs against the flesh Gal. 5.17 and subduing the lusts thereof and who feeling this intestine warre in his owne bowels can doubt that the combatants haue their residence in him in a word it is onely this spirit which restrained vs from the euill which naturally we loue and prouoketh vs to imbrace that good which through naturall corruption we loth and abhorre if therefore sinne growe vnpleasant vnto vs and vertue and true godlinesse delightfull we may be assured that this is the worke of Gods spirit dwelling in vs. Would we then be assured that we are indued with the spirit of God why then let vs consider if our eyes blinded with ignorance are inlightned in any good measure with the knowledge of Gods truth if our soules polluted with the filth of sinne are purged in some sort from our corruptions if our cold hearts are inflamed with the zeale of Gods glorie and the loue of our brethren if our hearts more hard than adamant and more inflexible than steele are softened and made obsequious to Gods will and if the other members of our body which were benummed and as it were taken with a dead paulsie be made nimble and actiue in the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse if we feele a fight and combate betweene the flesh and the spirit the one striuing to leade vs captiue vnto sinne the other resisting and drawing vs out of this captiuitie if the sins which heretofore we haue loued be now lothsome vnto vs and the vertues which we haue abhorred be delightfull and pleasant and then we may assure our selues that it is the light of Gods spirit which hath shined vpon vs it is this heauenly water which hath washed vs it is this diuine fire which hath inflamed vs it is this precious oyle that hath mollified and foftned vs it is this champion of the Lord of hosts which maketh warre against our trayterous flesh and subdueth the lusts thereof in a word it can be nothing but Gods spirit which makes vs hate that sinne which naturally we so dearely loue and to loue vertue and godlinesse which by nature is lothsome and bitter vnto vs. § Sect. 5 And thus it is manifest that wee may be assured that we haue Gods spirit by the ordinarie fruites thereof in euery faithfull man Now let vs consider how we may know the testimonie of Gods spirit witnessing in our hearts that we are elected adopted and shall be saued How we may discerne the testimonie of Gods spirit from our owne presumption 2. Cor. 3.6 1. Cor. 3.5 from our owne phantasies caused through carnall securitie and vaine presumption And to this end we are to know that the preaching of the Gospell is the ministerie of the spirit whereby wee are sealed and confirmed in the assurance of our saluation as appeareth 2. Cor. 3.6 And hence it is that the preachers of the Gospell are called the ministers by whom the people beleeue 1. Cor. 3.5 And the words of the Gospell are called by our Sauiour Christ spirit and life because it is the ministery of the spirit which quickneth vs as it is Ioh. 6.63 And Gal. 3.2 Ioh. 6.63 Gal. 3.2 the Apostle saith that we haue receiued the spirit by the hearing of faith that is the doctrine of faith preached in the ministery of the Gospell If therefore the testimonie of saluation in the mindes of the faithfull be conceiued by the preaching of the Gospell applied vnto them by faith then is it most certainly the testimonie of Gods spirit for the inward testimonie of Gods spirit is not different from the outward testimonie of the word but if this perswasion be not grounded vpon Gods word as theirs is not who perswade themselues that they are elected adopted
Ioh. 20.29 Thomas because thou hast seene me thou beleeuest blessed are they which haue not seene and haue beleeued An example hereof wee haue in the Cananitish woman who though shee had no experience of Gods truth in his promises yea though shee had many repulses yet beleeued and afterwards to her comfort had ioyfull experience of them Mat. 15.27 Mat. 15.27 An these are the degrees of faith which whosoeuer findeth in himselfe hee may be assured that hee hath a true liuely and iustifying faith notwithstanding all the tentations of Sathan If therefore hauing heard the gospell wee haue attained vnto some measure of knowledge of the chiefe principles thereof if we haue giuen our assent vnto this truth in which our vnderstandings are informed if hereby we haue attained vnto this assurance that our sinnes are pardonable and haue conceiued some hope in consideration of Gods infinite mercie and Christs merites that wee shall be forgiuen and pardoned if we haue an hungring desire after grace and mercie and highly esteeme the merites and righteousnesse of Iesus Christ so that wee wish nothing more then to bee made partakers of them if by this desire wee haue beene moued to flee vnto the throne of grace and there humblie acknowledging our sinnes haue earnestly desired pardon and forgiuenesse Lastly if at any time wee haue discerned in in our selues a perswasion of Gods loue and of the pardon and remission of our sinnes and that we haue or doe rest vppon the alone merites and obedience of Christ Iesus for our iustification and saluation then may wee be assured that we are indued with a true iustifying faith § Sect. 7 The second argument to proue that wee haue a true and a liuely faith is the testimonie of Gods spirite The second argument to proue that we haue faith is the testimonie of Gods spirie Rom. 8.15.26 for as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8.15 Wee haue the spirite of adoption whereby we crie abba father 16. and the same spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the children of God and ver 26. Likewise the spirite also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what to pray as we ought but the spirite it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed c. Whosoeuer therefore haue this testimonie in their harts and consciences that they are the children of God whosoeuer at any time feele or haue felt the spirit of God powerful in thē in powring out their soules in hartie prayer with sighes and grones which cānot be expressed they may be assured that they haue receiued the spirite of adoption and consequently are indued with true faith Gal. 5.22 for the spirite and the fruites thereof amongst which faith is one of the chiefe are neuer seuered Moreouer the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 2.12 that wee haue not receiued the spirit of the world 1. Cor. 2.12 but the spirit which is of God that wee might knowe the things that are giuen to vs of God That is not onely his spirituall graces in this life in which number faith is one of the greatest but those excellent ioyes in Gods kingdome in the life to come of which also wee haue some knowledge and tast by the illumination of the same spirite Lastly the Apostle affirmeth 2. Cor. 1.22 that God hath sealed vs 2. Cor. 1.22 and hath giuen the earnest of the spirit in our hartes and Ephe. 1.13 Hee telleth the Ephesians that after they had heard the gospel and beleeueà Ephe. 1.13 they were sealed with the holy spirit of promise which was the earnest of their inheritance vntil the redemption of the possession purchased vnto the praise of the glorie of God Wheresoeuer therefore is this testimonie of the spirite which as an earnest or seale assureth them that they are the children of God there also is faith for as the Apostle witnesseth after that wee beleeue we are thus sealed § Sect. 8 The third argument to proue that wee haue faith is the conflict and fight which euerie christian feeleth in himselfe betweene the spirit and the flesh The 3. argument is the fight between the flesh and the spirit the world and the diuell and the combat which is betweene faith and doubting for so long as wee are destitute of the spirit and a liuely faith we are wholy ouerswayed with the fleshe and Sathan like a mightie tyrant houldeth vs captiue peaceably and without any resistance but when wee haue receiued the spirite of God and haue faith wrought in our harts then beginneth a fierce battaile which neuer endeth till by death our spirituall enemies get a final ouerthrowe Though therefore this fight be most sharpe and exceeding troublesome to the poore christian yet hee may thereby gather vnto himselfe sound comfort and certaine assurance that hee is indued with the spirit of God and a liuely faith for when hee discerneth that hee is assaulted with Sathan and his owne corrupt fleshe he may be assured that Sathan and his owne corrupt fleshe he may be assured that Sathan is diseased of his quiet possession by a superior power which can be no other but the power of Gods spirit secondly by his assaulting it manifestly appeareth that hee findeth some resistance so as hee cannot peaceably reenter thirdly that howsoeuer our faith seeme vnto vs neuer so weak yet it is so strēgthened cōtinually by vertue of Gods spirit that sathā al the power of hel cānot preuaile against it for otherwise how could such weakenesse withstād such might Lastly being assured that it is the spirit of God which assisteth and enableth vs to withstand Sathan we may also be assured that in the end we shall obtaine victorie vnlesse we would fondly imagine that the diuell is stronger then God and the violence of his tentations more forcible to destroy vs then the spirit of God to protect and defend vs for now they haue ioyned battle and either the one or the other must get the vpper hand eyther the spirit of God must thrust out sathan or Sathan the spirit of God and therefore how can we doubt of conquest seeing wee are assured that God cannot take the foyle for his power is omnipotent and with a word of his mouth he is able to destroy Sathan and all his adhaerents and of his will wee neede not to make any question for it will not stand with his glory to receaue a repulse by giuing Sathan place after that he hath taken vpon him our protection § Sect. 9 How we may know that this combate is fought betweene the flesh and the spirite Yea will the tempter say but how wilt thou know that this battle is fought in thee how canst thou be assured that it is the spirite of God which fighteth in thee against thy spirituall enemies and not rather thine owne tumultuous passions and perturbations and diuers tentations suggested by the same diuell To which it is easie to make answere for neither doth
and raising vp of a most faithfull seruant of God and my most deare friend who hath bound me with many benefits to the performance of all christian duties But afterwards finding it to grow to such a volume that it was too great to passe in a written coppie and hoping that that which was profitable for one might bee beneficiall vnto many at length I resolued to make my labours publike by committing them to the presse The principall things that I propounded to my selfe in this treatise are these first and especially I indeauour to comfort those who are afflicted in conscience in the sight and sence of their sinnes by offering vnto them certaine assurance that their sinnes are remitted and that themselues are elected to eternall life in the state of grace reconciled vnto God in Christ and receiued in his loue and fauour Secondly I labour to leade the christian in an euen course vnto the hauen of eternall happinesse that he may not runne aside neither on the right hand and so falling vpon the rockes of presumption make shipwracke of his soule nor yet on the left hand and so plunge himselfe into the gulfe of desperation Wherein I haue purposely and aduisedly auoyded their practise who scatter their consolations they know not where to bee applyed they care not by whom whereof it commeth to passe that those that are most secure and presumptuous arrogate them to whom they doe not appertaine and those that are afflicted and humbled dare not appropriate them to themselues because they are deliuered indefinitly to all without all caution or any condition whereby they might bee restrai●ed rather to them than any other in whom sinne yet liueth and raigneth Wherein they resemble negligent physitions who hauing made a good medicine for a sicke man doe not giue it vnto him but cast it carelesly into some corner whether the sicke patient in respect of his faintnesse and weakenesse is likely neuer to come which being found and greedily drunken vp by those who haue no neede of it in stead of doing them good doth turne to their baine and vtter destruction Lastly I haue desired to giue solid and substantiall consolations which are firmely grounded vpon Gods vndoubted truth and such infallible reasons as cannot bee gainsaid and haue withall deliuered the conditions vpon which they are to be receiued and the vndoubted signes and markes of those to whom of right they appertaine to the end that those who finde these things in themselues may not doubt to apply them to their wounded consciences whereby they may bee soundly cured and throughly comforted and that those who finde no such condition obserued by them nor any such signe or marke in them may be debarred from participating of these consolations which would nourish in them securitie and presumption and contrariwise examining themselues according to these rules and finding no correspondencie betweene themselues and them may hereby be awakened out of their lethargie of securitie and attaining vnto a sight and sense of their miserable estate may neuer be at rest till by vsing all good meanes for this purpose they may finde these markes and signes of their election vocation iustification and sanctification in them that so they may boldly and fitly apply vnto themselues these comforts and consolations as rightly and truly appertaining vnto them All which my labours I thought good to dedicate vnto your worships partly because I desired to giue this testimonie of my true thankefulnesse for those manifold benefits which from some of you I haue receiued and of mine vnfained loue which I beare to you all for your vertues and approued godlinesse and partly because I thought none fitter to whom I might commend this discourse of the Christian Warfare than your selues who are olde experienced souldiars in fighting these spirituall battailes and therefore haue iudiciall feeling and sensible apprehension of those things which I haue written and commended to your patronage Now the Lord our God who is the fountaine of all goodnesse and the sole giuer of all true consolation increase in you more and more the gifts and graces of his sanctifying spirit and so fill your hearts with all sound spirituall comfort and the ioy in the holy Ghost that you may through the course of your whole liues chearefully goe forward in the profession and sincere practise of his religion and true godlinesse and after this life may receiue that crowne of righteounsnesse which is prepared and laid vp for you in his kingdome of eternall glorie Amen Your Worships in the Lord most assured IOHN DOVVNAME THE CONTENTS OF THIS BOOKE THE CHIEFE POINTS HANDLED in the first Booke CHAP. I. THat all Gods seruants are assaulted with the spirituall enemies of their saluation pag. 1 That the strong faith whereof worldlings boast is nothing els but securitie and vaine presumption pag. 3.4 That Gods seruants may rather be comforted than dismaied by the assaults of their spirituall enemies pag. 6 CHAP. II. Why God suffreth his seruants to be exercised in the spirituall conflict of temptations namely for his owne glorie and their euerlasting good pag. 7 CHAP. III. Arguments to encourage the weake Christian to enter into this spirituall conflict pag. 10 CHAP. IIII. Of the malice of our spirituall enemie Sathan ioyned with violence and falshood and how we may withstand it pag. 16 CHAP. V. Of his strength courage and audaciousnesse and how wee may withstand them pag. 23 CHAP. VI. Of Sathans aides and first of the world pag. 31 How the world tempteth by prosperitie and how wee may resist these temptations pag. 32 How it tempteth by aduersitie and of the meanes whereby wee may resist these temptations 34 CHAP. VII Of the flesh what it is and how we may subdue it 39 CHAP. VIII Of Sathans policie and how we may defeate it 40 CHAP. IX Of the spirituall armour described Eph. 6.44 CHAP. X. Of the particular parts of the Christian armour and first of the girdle of veritie 48 CHAP. XI Of the breastplate of righteousnesse 51 CHAP. XII Of the preparation of the Gospell of peace 54 CHAP. XIII Of the shield of faith and what is meant by quenching Sathans darts 55 CHAP. XIIII Of the helmet of saluation 57 CHAP. XV. Of the sword of the spirit and how we must vse it in the conflict of temptations 59 CHAP. XVI Of prayer and the necessitie thereof in the spirituall conflict 64 Of the properties required in prayer 65 Of watchfulnes in prayer 67 Of perseuerance in prayer Where is also shewed why the Lord delaieth to grant the petitions of his children 69 CHAP. XVII Of Sathans stratagems First how he fitteth his temptations according to our affections and naturall inclinations and how we may defeate this policie 72 CHAP. XVIII How Sathan fitteth his temptations according to our state and condition And how we may withstand these temptations 78 How Sathan tempteth professors of religion whose profession is only in shew 82 How he tempteth the sincere
tied with the heauie bolts and chaines of sinne hee is retchlesse and secure but if our Sauiour by his Ambassadours in the preaching of the word loose and vnburthen vs of these chaines and bolts and by the light of his spirit so illuminate the eyes of our vnderstanding that we see the way out of Sathans dungeon of ignorance and so escape out of his captiuitie then he rageth against and pursueth vs as Pharaoh did the Israelites that either he may bring vs backe againe into his bondage or els destroy vs if we make resistance Lastly they feele not any fight betweene the flesh and the spirit because the flesh wholie ruleth them and like a flood which hath a cleere current carrieth them wholie into a sea of sinne without any stop or resistance and therfore no marueile they feele not this fight when the spirit which is one of the combatants hath no force nor residence in them § Sect. 4 Secondly That the true Christian may receiue comfort by feeling the spirituall conflict Gods children who continually feele the assaults of their spirituall enemies and see the breaches which are made in their soules with the continuall batterie of their temptations may receiue no small consolation hereby when as they consider that all who professe themselues Gods seruants and resolue to serue the Lord in holines and righteousnes are thus tempted and tried Reuel 12.17 For the Dragon is wroth with the woman that is Gods Church and her seede which keepe the commandements of God and haue the testimonie of Iesus Christ as is Reuel 12.17 and like a roring lion seeketh their destruction because they haue renounced him and fight vnder the standard of the Lord of hoasts whom hee maligneth and hence it is that whilest we liue without sense of sinne we eate and drinke and take our ease without disturbance but after we make any conscience of our waies and endeuour to serue the Lord then Sathan casteth against vs the firie darts of his temptations and we feele many conflicts betweene the flesh and the spirit with which the worldly man is neuer troubled So that when we are thus tempted and assaulted by Sathan the world and our corrupt flesh it is a strong argument to perswade vs that wee are intertained for Gods souldiers and haue receiued the presse money of his spirit for Sathans kingdome is not diuided neither doth he fight against those who are his friends and seruants but against those who wage warre against him and fight vnder the Lords standerd True it is that when his seruants haue committed such abominable and grieuous sinnes as haue made deepe wounds in their seared consciences whereby they are awakened out of their sleepie lethargie of securitie then Sathan filleth them with horrour and despaire that hee may keepe them from true repentance when he can hide from them their sinnes no longer and the Lord in his iust iudgement and for the example of others doth suffer Sathan to begin in them the torments of hell in this life but if hee can by any meanes hide their sinnes and keepe them quietly in his kingdome he will neuer vexe them And hence it is that whereas one perisheth through despaire many thousands perish through presumption and securitie Let all those therefore who feele the burthen of their sinnes and are vexed with the continuall assaults of their spirituall enemies comfort themselues for hereby they haue assurance that they are members of the Church militant into which none but souldiers are intertained and that now they begin to be Gods friends and seruants when as Sathan opposeth himselfe against them CHAP. II. Why God suffereth his seruants to be exercised in the spirituall conflict of tentations BVt here it may be demaunded why the Lord will suffer his seruants to be thus tempted and assaulted whereas the wicked are free from such conflicts I answere first for his owne glorie for whereas our enemies are strong and mighty and we weake and feeble hereby is the Lords omnipotent power manifested to all the world by whose assistance such impotent wretches conquer and subdue such furious and puissant enemies Secondly God suffereth his children to be tempted that so those spirituall graces which he hath bestowed vpon them may the more cleerely shine to his glorie For who can know whether they be Gods golden vessels before they be brought to the touchstone of temptation Who could know the faith patience and valour of Gods souldiers if they alwaies lay quietly in garrison and neuer came to the skirmish Who could feele the odoriferous smell of these aromaticall spices if they were not punned and brused in the morter of afflictions For example who would haue discerned Abrahams faith Dauids pietie Iobs patience Pauls courage and constancie if they had been neuer tempted which now to the glorie of God shine to all the world And as the Lord suffereth Sathan and his impes to trie his children for his owne glorie so also for their spirituall and euerlasting good for first hereby he chastizeth them for their sinnes past and recalleth them to their remembrance that so they may truly repent of them And this cause Iob speaketh of Iob. 13.26 Iob. 13.26 Thou writest saith he bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities of my youth Secondly hereby hee manifesteth vnto vs our secret and hidden sinnes which the blind eyes of our iudgement would not discerne if their sight were not quickned with this sharp water of temptation For so long as wee liue in peace our secure consciences neuer summon vs to the barre of Gods iudgement but when wee are roused vp by temptation wee enter into a more straight examination of our selues and search what secret sinnes lie lurking in the hidden corners of our hearts that so wee may repent of them and make our peace with God without whose assistance wee can haue no hope to stand in any temptation Thirdly the Lord hereby preuenteth our sinnes to come for when we haue experience that the most sharp weapons which Sathan vseth to inflict deepe wounds in our consciences are our sinnes this will make vs most carefull to abstaine from them least thereby we strengthen him for our owne ouerthrow And as these temptations of Sathan are in this regard so many bridles to restraine vs from sinne so also they are so many prickes to let out the winde of vaine glorie wherewith like bladders we be puffed vp as wee may see in the example of Paul who lest he should be exalted out of measure through the abundance of reuelations receiued a pricke in the flesh the messenger of Sathan to buffet him 2. Cor. 12.7 Fourthly 2. Cor 12.7 the Lord suffereth Sathan to assault vs that wee may hereby come to the fight of our owne weaknesse and infirmities when wee haue receiued many foiles and learne to relie vpon his helpe and assistance in all our dangers for so proud we are by nature that before
arme our selues against aduersitie howsoeuer by the grace and blessing of God aduersitie the worlds churlish sonne oftentimes worketh these good effects yet in it selfe it is a temptation and that a strong one to draw vs from God by causing vs to murmure and repine yea as Sathan said of Iob to curse God to his face to enuie all who seeme vnto vs more happie then our selues to despaire of Gods mercie and to vse vnlawfull meanes that thereby we may better our estate And therefore it behoueth vs to arme our selues against the violence of this enemie also least building our houses vpon the sands of securitie they be ouerturned when the winds of afflictions and floods of aduersitie and persecution blow and beate against vs. And to this end we are to remember first that these fatherly corrections are euident testimonies to assure vs that we are not bastards but Gods deare children whom he gently chastiseth that wee may not be destroyed with the world Heb. 12.6 7 8. that now Christ hath chosen vs out of the world seeing the world hateth vs Ioh. 15.19 that now wee are the friends of God when the world Sathans eldest sonne becommeth our enemie for so long as we are of the world the world loueth vs for it loueth her owne Secondly let vs continually remember the recompence of reward then shal we with Moses volūtarily chuse rather to suffer aduersitie with the people of God Heb. 11.25.26 than to enioy the pleasures of sin for a season esteeming the rebuke of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt as it is Heb. 11.25 26. Thē shall we endure to be tried and purified in the fornace of afflictions if we know that after we are found to be pure gold the Lord will lay vs vp in his treasurie of euerlasting happines Lastly let vs remember that eternall blessednesse is promised to those that mourne with a godly sorrow and eternal woe denounced against those who pamper themselues with worldly delights Matth. 5.4.10 Matth. 5.4 Blessed are they that mourne for they shall be comforted So vers 10. Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Luk. 6.21.25 Luk. 6.21 Blessed are ye which hunger now for ye shall be satisfied blessed are ye that weepe now for ye shall laugh And vers 25. Woe be vnto you that are full for ye shall hunger woe vnto you that now laugh for ye shall waile and weepe And least the tediousnesse of our troubles should discourage vs or the waight of them presse vs downe the Apostle telleth vs that they are but light and momentanie causing notwithstanding vnto vs a farre most excellent and eternall waight of glorie 2. Cor. 4.17 2. Cor. 4.17 Why therefore should this little spot of foule way cause vs to stand still or goe out of our course which leadeth to euerlasting happines CHAP. VII Of the flesh and the strength thereof § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning the world The second enemie which assisteth Sathan against vs is the flesh which is that inborne traytor which wee nourishing in our selues doth opē a gate in our soules into which Sathan and the world may easily send whole troupes of temptations to enter and surprize vs. By the flesh we are not to vnderstand the bodie alone and the flesh thereof VVhat the flesh is but that corruption of nature which hath defiled both bodie and soule being spread and mixed with euery part of both euen as the light is mingled with darknes in the twilight or dawning of the day whereby wee are made prone to all sinne and readie to entertaine all temptations which promise the satisfying of any of the lusts thereof This secret traytor conspiring with Sathan and the world to worke our destruction doth entertaine and further all their temptations it fighteth and lusteth against the spirit it rebelleth against the law of our mindes and leadeth vs captiue to the law of sinne it hindreth vs from doing the good we would and maketh vs commit the euill which wee hate as it is notably set downe Rom. 7. So Gal. 5.17 Rom. 7. Galat. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrarie the one to the other so that ye cannot doe the same things that ye would This enemie the holy Ghost in the Scriptures deciphereth by diuers names for it is called the old man the old Adam the earthly carnall and naturall man the sinne which is inherent and dwelleth in vs the adioyning euill the law of the members the lusts of the flesh which fight against the soule by all which is signified our corruption of nature which is deriued from our first parents whereby wee are made backward vnto all good and prone vnto all euill vnapt to entertaine any good motions of Gods spirit but most readie to receiue and imbrace all the suggestions and temptations of the world and the diuell as the waxe the print of the seale or the tindar fire And this the Apostle Iames sheweth chap. 1.14 Euery man is tempted when he is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is enticed Iam. 1.14.15 15. Then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth foorth sinne and sinne when it is finished bringeth foorth death So that as Sathan is the father so the flesh is the mother of sinne which receiuing Sathans temptations as it were into a fruitfull wombe doth conceiue nourish and bring forth sinne which no sooner is borne but like a deadly stinging serpent it bringeth death to bodie and soule vnlesse the poyson thereof be ouercome and taken away by the precious bloud of Christ § Sect. 2 And thus you see what the flesh is The treacherie of the flesh and how it conspireth with Sathan in seeking our destruction whereby appeareth the treacherie and dangerousnes of this our enemie The treacherie thereof is hereby manifest in that being in outward shew a deare friend and more neere than an alter idem another selfe it notwithstanding aideth Sathan to our owne ouorthrow So as wee may complaine with Dauid Psal 41.9 My familiar friend whom I trusted Psal 41 9. which did eate my bread hath lift vp the heele against me For this Iudas which daily followeth vs and eateth drinketh and sleepeth with vs doth betray vs into the hands of those enemies who seeke our life and that when it seemeth louingly and kindly to kisse vs. And as it is most treacherous so also most dangerous and hard to be ouercome for as much as it is in our self and the greatest part of our selfe and therefore we cannot forsake it vnlesse we forsake our selues Mark 8.34 That the flesh is a most dangerous enemie we cannot fight against it vnlesse we raise intestine and ciuill warres in our owne bowels we cannot vanquish it vnlesse wee subdue our selues and if we seeke to runne away from it wee might as easily flee
spirituall enemies but they notwithstanding conspiring with Sathan to worke the ouerthrow of Gods Church depriue them of the vse of the sword of the spirit the word of God and so betray them into the power of Sathan being able to make no resistance when their chiefe weapon is taken from them CHAP. XVI Of Prayer § Sect. 1 THe last and chiefe meanes wherby we may both defend our selues and offend our enemie Eph. 6.18 That prayer is the meanes of obtaining Gods assistance and the rest of the spirituall armour is feruent and effectual prayer which the Apostle exhorteth vs to vse Eph. 6.18 And pray alwaies with c. The necessitie and profit of which exercise is exceeding great in this spirituall combat because thereby we doe obtaine all our strength to fight and victorie also ouer our enemies For first wee cannot endure the least assault of Sathan by our owne strength vnlesse wee be armed with the power of Gods might as before I haue shewed And the Lords assistance whereby onely we can ouercome is obtained by earnest and effectuall prayer according to that Psal 50.15 Call vpon me in the day of trouble Psal 50.15 so will I deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me And our Sauiour prescribeth vs this meanes to free our selues from temptation or at least from being ouercome by them by crauing the Lords assistance saying Leade vs not into temptation Matth. 6.13 but deliuer vs from euill Matth. 6.13 So hee exhorteth his disciples vnto prayer least they should enter into temptation Luk. 22.40 Luk. 22.40 46. Secondly we cannot obtaine the spirituall armour before described by any meanes of our owne but those graces of Gods spirit are his gifts from whom euery good and perfect gift descendeth Iam. 1.17 Iam. 1.17 and therefore are to be begged at his hands by earnest and effectuall prayer we hauing his gracious promise Matth. 7.7 that if we aske we shall receiue Math. 7.7 And our Sauiour hath assured vs that whatsoeuer wee aske the father in his name Ioh. 16.23 he will giue it vs Ioh. 16.23 And to this his promise he addeth his commandement in the verse following saying Vers 24. Luk. 11.13 Aske and you shall receiue Yea if we doe but truly desire the holy Ghost the Father will giue him vnto vs Luk. 11.13 And hee commeth not alone but bringeth with him our spirituall armour euen all his graces fit for to arme vs in the spirituall combat against all the assaults of Sathan and his assistants § Sect. 2 But whereas these graces are in this life but weake and imperfect in vs The rest of the spirituall armour is not sufficient without prayer our truth being mixt with will-worship and hypocrisie the puritie of our conscience being stained with our corruption our knowledge of the Gospell but in part and shadowed with the vaile of ignorance our faith mixt with doubting and weakened with incredulitie our hope shaken from our anker-hold when the promises of God are delaied and whereas we also are vnskilfull to vse this spiritual armour for our best aduantage therefore it behooueth vs after wee haue armed our selues at all points not to trust altogether in our armour but to haue our recourse vnto our grand Captaine Christ Iesus acknowledging our owne weakenesse and desiring his aide and assistance that being armed with his power we may obtaine a glorious victorie ouer our spirituall enemies And as Moses ioyned with Iosuahs sword his owne effectual prayer which was of farre greater efficacie for when he held vp his hands in prayer Israel preuailed but when he fainted Amaleck had the vpper hand so wee being to fight against the spirituall Amalekites are not wholie to trust in our spirituall weapons but we are to implore continually the Lords assistance by heartie prayer assuring our selues that if we lift vp our hands and hearts vnto God we shal in the end obtaine a full victorie but if we faint the spirituall Amaleck will preuaile against vs. Whilest our mindes lie groueling on the earth it is an easie matter for these spirituall wickednesses to ouercome vs seeing they fight against vs from high places but if wee lift vp our hearts in prayer vnto God our mindes and soules shall be as it were transported into heauen which is a tower of strength into which our spirituall enemies cannot approch Whensoeuer therefore wee are assaulted by Sathan let vs lift vp our soules into heauen by effectuall prayer and so we shall be out of his reach § Sect. 3 Now that our prayers may bee effectuall there are diuers conditions and properties required in them by the Apostle in this place First that wee pray continually Luk. 18.1 1. Thess 5.17 The properties required in prayer which also our Sauiour Christ enioyneth vs Luk. 18.1 And Paul also 1. Thess 5.17 not that wee must neglect all other exercises and doe nothing but pray for there is a time to heare the word to do the workes of mercie and of our callings but his meaning is that we be alwaies readie to pray vpon all good occasions especially in the time of temptation this dutie is required according to that Psal 50.15 Psal 50.15 And therefore the Apostle saith not that wee must pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in euery particular time and season but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in euery fit time when iust occasion and opportunitie is offered Seeing therefore in the time of temptation we doe especially need the Lords helpe therfore that aboue al other is the opportune and conuenient time wherein we are to implore the Lords assistance Where by the way the stinted prayers of the popish rabble which they restraine to set houres is confuted for the Apostle willeth vs alwaies to be in readines when any fit occasion is offered The second thing required is that wee pray with all manner of prayers and supplication The former word here vsed is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth the earnest desiring of any good thing the other is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the deprecation of some euill so that whether wee want any thing that is good or would be deliuered from any thing which is euill wee must haue recourse vnto God by prayer that we may obtaine the one and auoide the other but more especially when we feele the want or weaknes of any part of the spirituall armour the graces of Gods spirit wee are to begge them at Gods hand that so wee may be enabled to stand in the encounter and when wee apprehend the extreame malice ioyned with the great power and cunning policie of our spirituall enemies wee are earnestly to pray that the Lord will not leade vs into temptation or if he doe yet that he will not suffer vs to fall therein and to be ouerthrowne And these our prayers must not onely be publike in the Church but also priuate in our chambers neither must wee be alwaies begging these
the idolatrous heathen to burne in sacrifice their deare children So also he tempteth some to despaire of Gods mercie and so torment themselues with horror and feare yea sometimes to lay violent hands vpon themselues murthering and taking away their owne life which by nature is so deere and precious vnto them All which being contrarie to our naturall inclinations and the desires of the flesh manifestly appeare to be the suggestions of Sathan And these are the chiefe differences betweene the temptations of Sathan and the flesh otherwise they are commonly so like one to the other that they can hardly be discerned and therefore let vs not be so carefull curiously to distinguish them as to auoyde or resist them knowing that Sathan is the captaine generall and the flesh and the lusts thereof Sathans chiefe aides and assistants which continually fight against the spirit and labour to plunge both bodie and soule into euerlasting destruction CHAP. XXII Of the generall meanes whereby we may be inabled to withstand our spirituall enemies § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning the manner of Sathans fight The circumstances to be considered in this spirituall conflict now we are to speake of the conflict it selfe wherein as I haue shewed the parties assaulting and oppugning are the diuell and his assistants the world and the flesh the partie defending and resisting is the christian souldier The cause of the fight is not for lands and dominions nor for riches and mines of gold for these would Sathan be content to giue if he had them in his possession if we would renounce Gods seruice and fall downe and worship him but for the euerlasting saluation of our soules which Sathan laboreth by all meanes possible to hinder and to plunge vs into endlesse destruction The weapons which the assailants vse in this fight are not the sword speare or any other carnall furniture but spirituall temptations whereby they seek to intice draw and prouoke man to sin that consequētly he may receiue the wages therof euerlasting death The weapons which the Christiā souldier vseth to defend himself and repell his enemies is the spiritual armour before spokē of namely the girdle of veritie the breast-plate of righteousnes the knowledge profession of the Gospel of peace the shield of faith the helmet of saluation the sword of the spirit and feruent and effectuall prayer § Sect. 2 Now in this conflict of temptations Of two common affections to be considered of in this spirituall conflict there are first two common affections or generall properties to be considered of the Christian souldiers manfull resistance or els his fainting and receiuing the foile for either he couragiously standeth vpon his defence armed with the graces of Gods spirit and putteth Sathan to flight by withstanding his temptations or els being surprized at vnawares whilest he is disarmed of these spirituall weapons and Christian armour hee is soiled by his spirituall enemies yeelding vnto their temptations and falling into sinne Of the first meanes to withstand our spirituall enemies to wit Gods commandement That we may withstand our spirituall enemie valiantly in all his temptations and obtaine a finall victorie there are certaine general means to be vsed which may serue as strong forts and bulworkes vnto which we may retire our selues as often as we faint and be readie to receiue any disaduantage in the fight First we are continually to haue in memorie the commandement of our chiefe captaine Christ Iesus whereby he inciteth vs to a continuall fight without fainting or yeelding So Eph. Eph. 6.10.11 6.10.11 Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might Put on the whole armour of God that ye may be able to stand against all the assaults of the diuell 1. Pet. 5.8 And 1. Pet. 5.8 Your aduersarie the diuell as a roring lion walketh about seeking whom he may deuoure Whom resist stedfast in the faith The second meanes hope of victorie Secondly let vs be incouraged to withstand our spirituall enemies with assured hope of victorie for we fight the Lords battailes vnder the standerd of Iesus Christ whose power is omnipotent and therefore able to defend vs to ouerthrow our enemies with a word of his mouth who also is our head and we his members and therefore we may assure our selues that he hath no lesse will than power to succour vs. As also let vs alwaies haue in minde the crowne of victorie promised to all that ouercome euen a crowne of glorie and euerlasting happines in Gods kingdom Apoc. 2.7 3.5.12.21 And this will make vs resolue neuer to faint in the battell Apoc. 2.7 and 3.5.12.21 nor cowardly yeeld vnto Sathans temptations though he should intice vs to sinne by offring vs the whole world because we would not thereby hazard the losse of this eternall waight of glorie The third meanes to be alwaies in readines Thirdly we are alwaies to stand in readines armed with the christian armour the graces of Gods spirit and to vse al good means that we may be more and more strengthened confirmed in them but yet when we are at the strongest we are not to presume vpon our own strength but to relie our selues wholy vpon the Lords assistance and when wee are tempted and assaulted we must continually implore his help that being armed with the power of his might wee may withstand the temptation and obtaine victorie The fourth meanes to take occasion of Sathans temptation vnto sinne of doing the cōtrary vertue Fourthly when we are assaulted by our spirituall enemies and tempted vnto any sinne we must not only abstaine from committing thereof but also take occasion thereby of doing the contrary vertue For example whē we are tempted to vnlawful pleasures we must not only abstaine from thē but also we are somewhat to abridge our selues of those that be lawfull and the more feriously and painfully to follow the works of our lawfull callings when we are tempted to couetousnes we must the more carnestly exercise the works of mercie and christian liberalitie when we are tēpted to ambition we must not only refraine frō vainglorie but we must labour after true humilitie and mortification refusing not only vnlawfull honours but those also which are lawfull so oft as we haue iust cause to feare that Sathan wil taking occasion of our corruption hereby cause vs to forget God when we are tempted to neglect the hearing of Gods word on the Lords Sabbaoth wee are the more diligently to heare it not only then being bound hereunto by Gods commandement as being one of the chief means of sanctifying this day consecrated to Gods seruice but also on the weeke daies if the Lord giue vs fit opportunitie when as we might lawfully be exercised in the duties of our callings In a word when we are tempted to any vice wee are to take occasion thereby of doing the contrarie vertue in the meane time carefully auoiding the policie of
callings then are our mindes fit groundes to receiue the seedes of Sathans temptations and to nourish them till they bring forth the fruites of sinne and if Sathan finde vs like emptie houses cleane swept and voyde of all holy meditations and godly exercises he will easily enter and if himselfe be not strong enough he will take vnto him seuen other spirits worse than himselfe Matth. 12.45 that so he may be more strong to keepe possession If therefore we would not be ouercome by Sathans temptations let vs beware of idlenes for when the minde is emptie of that which is good it is most fit to receiue that which is euill But if Sathans temptations be at any time entertained into our mindes let vs most carefully take heede that we doe not suffer them as it were to take vp their lodging That we must not reuolue in our mindes Sathans temptations but rather meditate on the contrarie preseruatiues by reuoluing them in our thoughts not to meditate too earnestly on them but rather on the preseruatiues which may strengthen vs against their violence neither are we so seriously to thinke on Sathans obiections as that in the meane time we forget how to answere them For example when he setteth before our eyes the haynousnesse of our sinnes we are not to bend all our thoughts to meditate and call to minde all our sinnes both new and old both which we haue fallen into through infirmitie and which we haue willingly committed for so the huge cloude of our sinnes being neere our eyes will hide from our sight the shyning beames of Gods mercie and Christs merit though they are without comparison greater but as soone as we cast one eye vpon our sinnes for our humiliation let vs cast the other presently vpon Christ Iesus who hath payed the price of our redemption and suffered all the punishment which we by our sinnes had deserued For if when this fierie serpent Sathan hath stung vs with the sting of sinne we spend our time in looking vpon the wound and neuer thinke vpon the remedie euen the true brasen serpent Iesus Christ hanging on the crosse the poyson of sinne will so inflame our consciences that the wound will proue mortall which at the first might easily haue been cured if we would haue applied thereunto the precious balme of our Sauiours blood So when Sathan setteth before our eyes our owne wickednes and infirmities to the end we may despaire of victorie as being neuer able to withstand such strong temptations we are not to spend our time in thinking hereupon but presently to call to minde the almightie power of God who hath promised vs his assistance in this spirituall fight So when he obiecteth vnto vs the iustice and wrath of God in punishning of sinne and the curse of the law and torments of hell prepared for the damned we are not ouer seriously to reuolue these things in our mindes but presently to call to minde Gods infinit mercie and Christs merits whereby Gods iustice is fully satisfied his wrath appeased the curse of the law cancelled and we made of fire brands of hell heires of heauen And thus if as soone as Sathan inflicteth the wound we apply the cure it will neuer be mortall vnto vs but if we let the poyson of his temptations runne in our mindes and neuer thinke of any remedie though at the first it seemed but a small scratch it will so inflame our consciences with scorching heate that they will afterwards very hardly admit of any cure When therefore Sathan doth cast into our mindes his temptations let vs repell them and indeuour to quench them whilest they be but small sparkes for our corrupt mindes are like vnto tinder and Sathans temptations like the fire and therefore if in stead of putting them out we blow vpon them though they be but as a small sparke at the first within a while they will increase to an vnquenchable flame which will torment our consciences with scorching heate neither is there any thing but the blood of Christ and the water of the spirit which will extinguish this wilde-fire when once it hath taken deepe hold on vs. CHAP. XXIII How the christian being foyled by Sathans temptations may be raised againe § Sect. 1 ANd these are the meanes whereby the christian souldier may be strengthened and encouraged to stand in the combate of temptations But sometimes it commeth to passe that by reason they neglect these meanes or else doe not so carefully vse them as they should they are foyled by Sathan ouercome by his temptations and led captiue vnto sinne How therefore must the christian thus ouertaken behaue himselfe surely he is not desperatly to cast away all hope of victorie and cowardly to yeelde himselfe to be the slaue of Sathan lying contentedly in the chaines of sinne without any desire or indeauour of comming out of his captiuitie but being fallen he is to labour and striue that he may rise againe and being taken prisoner by sinne and Sathan he is not willingly to remaine in their bonds but earnestly to desire his freedome and libertie Now the meanes whereby being fallen he may rise againe is by vnfained repentance when as he is hartily sorie for his sinne because thereby hee hath displeased his louing and gracious father and stedfastly purposeth for the time to come to leaue and forsake those sinnes into which by the malice of Sathan and his owne infirmitie he is fallen and by a liuely faith when as he doth apply vnto himselfe all the mercifull promises made vnto all repentant sinners For though faith in nature goe before repentance yet the act and frute of faith whereby we are assured of Gods mercie in the free forgiuenes of our sinnes alwaies commeth after A difference betweene the child of God and the wicked Where by the way we may note a difference betweene the state of Gods children and the wicked both fall into sinne very often both also commit heynous and grieuous sinnes yea sometimes the child of God falleth into more fearefull and horrible sinnes than a meere worldling but herein the chiefe difference betweene them consisteth that the child of God after his fall is vexed and grieued and laboreth to rise againe by leauing and forsaking the sinne which is odious vnto him but the wicked man after his fall neuer soroweth nor grieueth but rather resolueth to liue still in his sinne and to commit it againe and againe with greedines and delight when he hath any occasion offered § Sect. 2 But here the weake christian whose soule is oppressed with the heauie waight of sinne will say vnto me The complaint of the weake christian alas this is small comfort vnto me which you speake neither can I hereby haue any assurance that I am the childe of God for after I am fallen into sinne such is the hardnes of my heart that I cannot bewaile nor be sorie for it and whereas euery small worldly
nature of an earnest to which the measure of grace here receiued is compared But wherein doth this measure of grace and chiefe perfection of a Christian consist in this life Surely not in their workes for they are all imperfect and so full of corruptions that they are odious in Gods sight being considered in themselues and examined by the rule of his exact iustice neither in their inherent righteousnes and begun sanctification for when they are at the holiest they are polluted with the reliques of originall corruption which bring foorth the fruites of actuall transgressions and make vs vnable to doe the good we would in that manner and measure which we should and therefore those which are most righteous are not in this respect acceptable to God but herein the perfection of a christian consisteth when as seeing his imperfections wants and sinnes he is grieued and truly humbled with the sight and sense of his owne miserie and wretchednesse and disclaiming and reiecting his owne righteousnes and good workes doth flee vnto our Sauiour Christ hungring after his righteousnes and by a liuely faith applying vnto his wounded soule his merit and obedience doth looke for saluation in him alone and lastly when as in obedience to his commandement and in true thankfulnes for his infinite mercies he hath an earnest desire to glorifie his name by a godly and Christian life striuing and endeuouring continually to forsake his sinnes to mortifie his corruption and to attaine vnto more and more perfection in righteousnes and holines For Maxima pars Christianismi est toto pectore velle fieri Christianum It is the greatest part of Christianitie to desire with the whole heart to become a Christian § Sect. 5 If therefore we doe keepe the couenant of the Lord nay if we but thinke vpon his commandements to the end we may doe them the louing kindnes of the Lord shall endure for euer vpon vs as it is Psal 103.17.18 if we can from our harts say with good Nehemiah Nehem. 1.11 Nehem. 1.12 O Lord I beseech thee let thine eare now hearken to the prayer of thy seruant and to the prayer of thy seruants who desire to feare thy name the Lord will heare vs indeed and graunt our requests If with the Prophet Dauid we haue but a respect to Gods commandements with a care to fulfill them we shal not be confounded Psal 119.6 as it is Psal 119.6 If wee but desire to obey Gods commandement the Lord will accomplish our desire and quicken vs in his righteousnes 40. though we be dull yea dead vnto all goodnesse as it is vers 40. Rom. 7. If with the Apostle Paul wee doe the euill which we would not and consent to the law that it is good delighting therein in the inner man then though we are with him led captiue vnto sinne yet it is not wee that offend but sinne that dwelleth in vs that is our old man our corrupt and vnregenerate part That neither the name nor actions of the flesh can properly be ascribed to the spirituall man which cannot fitly be called by our name because it is mortified alreadie in some measure and shall be fully abolished by the spirit of God neither doth it liue the same spirituall life with vs seeing it is not quickened by the same spirit and therefore as those who haue diuers soules which giue vnto them life and motion are themselues diuers and also called by diuers names so the new and old man liuing as it were by diuers soules the one being quickned with Gods spirit the other by Sathan whereof it commeth to passe that the more the one liueth the other dieth the more strong the spirit is the weaker is the flesh and the actions of both are quite contrarie therefore they may fitly be called by diuers names neither can the actions of the flesh bee ascribed to the spirit properly seeing they are contrarie the one to the other For as if a science of a crab tree and another of a pepin tree being grafted into the same stocke doe both bring foorth their seuerall fruites the one crabs the other pepins it may fitly be said this tree bringeth foorth either pepins or crabs because they grow in the same stocke but yet it cannot bee truly said that the crab tree science bringeth foorth pepins or the pepin science crabs so because the flesh and the spirit are ioyned together in the same bodie and soule we may in this respect say that this man sinneth or doth that which is good but yet whē we speak of the regenerate or carnall man properly and seuerally as we cannot truly say that the flesh doth any good so neither can we truly affirme that the spirit and regenerate man doth commit that which is euill but as the Apostle speaketh sin which dwelleth with him And though the flesh be the farre greater part yet doth it not denominate giue the name to the christian his actions because it is partly mortified partly in mortifying and partly to be mortified that is deputed and destinated to death and destruction and also because it is the worse and more vnworthie part without compare and consequently not to giue the name for as wine mixt with water is called still wine though the water exceede the wine in quantitie because it is the more excellent substance so the flesh being mixt with the spirit though it be in greater quantitie it doth not giue the name to vs and our actions but the spirit as being our most excellent and worthie part and of it wee are called spirituall regenerate and new men though the least part be spirituall regenerate and renewed If therefore we are regenerate and haue in vs the spirit of God and the graces thereof in the least measure wee may boldly say with Paul that it is no more we that do offend God but sinne that dwelleth in vs neither shall we receiue punishment but the flesh that is our vnregenerate and corrupt part which shall be mortified and fully abolished by the spirit of God as for the spirituall and regenerate part it shall daily bee more and more strengthened and confirmed in the spirituall life and the more punishments afflictions and torments the flesh hath inflicted on it the more shall the spirituall man grow vp in grace and goodnes till our corruption being by little and little mortified and in the end fully abolished by death we shall be perfect men in Christ liuing a spirituall and euerlasting life in all glorie and happines in his kingdome When therefore the Lord suffreth Sathan to afflict vs in our goods bodies and in our soules and consciences as hee did Iob it is not because hee hath forsaken vs and giuen ouer his whole interest hee hath in vs to this wicked spirit but as the Apostle speaketh in another matter he deliuereth vs vnto Sathan to be afflicted for the destruction of the flesh 1. Cor. 5.5 that the
graces of Gods spirit to the praise of his glory who hath bestowed them and to the comfort of our owne soules who haue receiued them And as they are chastisements they serue for sharpe eye-salues to cleere our dimme sight so as we may see our sinnes and truely repent of them They serue for sowre sauces to bring vs out of loue with our sweete sinnes and for fire and files whereby wee are purged and scoured from the drosse and rust of our corruptions They are sharpe pruning kniues to lop and trimme vs that we may bring forth plentifull fruits in godlinesse They are spurres to pricke vs forward in the Christian race and hedges to keepe vs from wandering out of the way They are sharp salues to draw out our secret corruptions and bitter potions to cure our desperate diseases They are that wormewood wherby the Lord weaneth vs frō the loue of the world whose pleasing delights we would euer sucke without wearinesse if our mouthes were not distasted with some afflictions They are roddes wherewith being scourged wee are made more circumspect in our wayes and more carefull to performe obedience vnto all the commandements of our heauenly Father In a word they are the straight path which leadeth to euerlasting happinesse and a bridle to restraine vs from running headlong in the broade way which leadeth to endlesse wo and miserie And therfore seeing our momentany afflictions do serue for the manifesting of Gods glorie for the increasing of spirituall graces and the furthering of our eternall saluation let not Sathan perswade vs that wee are out of Gods loue and fauour because of our afflictions but rather let vs repute them as they are indeede signes of his gracious prouidence and fatherly care which he hath ouer vs. § Sect. 3 But here the tempter will obiect that this I speake is true of the outward afflictions of the bodie Sathans temptations grounded vpon our spirituall afflictions for thereby the flesh is mortified and subdued and the spirituall graces of Gods spirit exercised and increased in vs but thy afflictions will he say are farre different for thy soule is filled with horrour and feare thy conscience is mortally stung with sinne and the waight thereof ouerwhelmeth thee thou seest thy selfe subiect to the curse of the law and art alreadie tormented with the paines of hell thy God who looketh vpon his children with an amiable countenance frowneth vpon thee like a seuere Iudge and thou tastest of nothing but of his heauie wrath and displeasure in a word thou hast not one sparke of true consolation wrought in thee by Gods spirit with which those that are Gods children are fully replenished and wherby they are incouraged patiently to abide all afflictions but thy inward vexations are the torments of an euill conscience and the flashings of hell fire wherewith hereafter thou shalt eternally be burned To this temptation we must answere that it cannot be denied but that the afflictions of the minde are farre more grieuous than the afflictions of the bodie That our spirituall afflictions are no signes of Gods hatred and that the torments of conscience caused by the waight of sinne and the apprehension of Gods fearefull wrath are as it were Gods three-stringed whip in respect of the gentle rod of outward afflictions for a sorrowfull mind drieth vp the bones Pro. 17.12 Pro. 18.14 as it is Pro. 17.12 and the spirit of a man may sustaine his other infirmities but a wounded spirit who can beare as the wise man speaketh Prou. 18.14 Neuerthelesse though these corrections are more sharp and grieuous than the outward afflictions of the bodie yet it cannot be denied but that these also are the chastisements which our heauenly Father inflicteth vpon his children somtimes for his owne glorie and sometime for their triall or chastisement when more light correction will not reclaime them For first those places of scripture before quoted are spoken generally of all afflictions whatsoeuer and therefore are not to be restrained to the outward afflictions of the bodie seeing they extend themselues also to the afflictions of the minde neither doth our heauenly Father correct all alike but some he rebuketh onely by his word and goeth no further when as this reclaimeth them but if this will not preuaile hee goeth a step further and chastizeth them with gentle correction as with outward crosses and afflictions but if this will not reforme them he taketh his whippe into his hand wherewith hee grieuously scourgeth them to the end they may more sensibly taste of his displeasure and amend that which is amisse and this he doth by making them feele the waight of sinne Reu. 3.19 Heb. 12.6 and appehend his wrath and heauie displeasure which by their sinnes they haue iustly incurred and yet notwithstanding all this he still remaineth their gracious Father who seeketh not their destruction but their reformation Neither need this dealing of our heauenly Father seeme strange vnto vs seeing earthly parents take the same courses with their children whom they tenderly loue for when they offen them they first seeke their amendment by words and fatherly admonitions and when this will doe no good they proceed to blowes and in a gentle manner do correct them and if this preuaile not with them then they vse more sharpe and seuere chastizement but if all this be to no purpose then will they disguise their fatherly affection vnder the vizard of wrath and heauie displeasure they banish out of their countenance all signes of loue and assume terrible looks and bitter frownes yea they will sometimes thrust them out of doores and reiect them a while leauing them to shift for themselues and to endure all miserie And whence proceedeth all this surely not from hatred but from loue and tender care which they haue ouer them for their good And this maketh them vse the bridle of correction to restraine them from running into all licentiousnesse this causeth them to pretend wrath in the countenance that they be not by their lewdnesse forced to entertaine it into their hearts this mooueth them to reiect them for a time that they may reclaime and retaine them for euer Neither doth our heauenly Father who is infinite in loue deale otherwise with his disobedient children hee vseth but his word if his word will suffice hee goeth no further then gentle chastizement if that be inough but if hee sharply scourge vs yea if hee looke vpon vs with a frowning countenance and shew nothing in outward appearance but his wrath and heauie displeasure if he seeme to reiect vs for a time and to giue vs ouer to be tormented by Sathan yet vndoubtedly all this proceedeth from his loue and that fatherly care hee hath ouer vs for our euerlasting good and saluation hee seeketh not our destruction but amendment he frowneth on vs for a time that hee may looke graciously on vs for euer he seemeth to reiect vs for a while that like the prodigall
aske But we are taught to pray for the remission of our sins and therefore we are certainly to beleeue that our sinnes are remitted and consequently that we are iustified called elected and shall be saued for whom he did predestinate them also he called Rom. 8.30 and whom he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them also he glorified as it is Rom. 8.30 § Sect. 9 Sixtly The sixt argument taken from the confession of our saith whatsoeuer we professe in the Articles of our faith that we should beleeue and of that we may and ought particularly to be assured but euery man professeth that he beleeueth the remission of sinnes and life euerlasting that is that the Lord doth not onely forgiue sinne and granteth vnto some the fruition of euerlasting life for this the diuels beleeue as well as we but also that he doth particularly forgiue me my sinnes and that he will make me an heire of eternall happinesse for this is the nature of faith to assure vs certainlie and particularlie of that which wee beleeue as wee haue shewed and therefore we ought particularly to be assured of the remission of our sinnes and that wee shall attaine vnto euerlasting life and consequently that wee are elected seeing none enioy it but Gods chosen But it may be obiected that if euery one be bound to beleeue as an article of his faith that his sinnes are forgiuen and that hee is an heire of euerlasting life then some are bound to beleeue that which is false for those who liue and die in their sinnes without repentance shall neuer obtaine either the one or the other I answere that wee are not bound to beleeue being destitute of a true and a liuely faith for this were rather fondly to presume than surely to bee perswaded of the promises of the Gospell but wee are first bound to haue a true liuely and iustifying faith and so to beleeue and applie vnto our selues the promises of the Gospell but those that liue in their sinnes without repentance they are altogether destitute of true faith which wheresoeuer it is purifieth the heart and worketh by loue moouing the beleeuer to endeuour and striue to mortifie his corruptions and to rise from the death of sinne to newnesse of life and therefore well may they securely presume but it is impossible that they should truly beleeue because they are vtterly destitute of a liuely faith and where the cause is not the effect cannot follow and consequently for their infidelitie they are subiect to eternall plagues and punishments because they doe not that which they are bound to perfourme Neither must we thinke that euery kind of faith or rather euery fond perswasion of faith is enioyned vs but such a faith as is grounded vpon Gods word but the word of God doth teach vs that whosoeuer liue in the flesh cannot please God and if we liue after the flesh we shall dye Rom. 8.8.13 Rom. 8.8.13 1. Cor. 6.9 That the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God 1. Cor. 6.9 That the workers of iniquitie shall be reiected of Christ Matth. 7.23 And that no vncleane thing Mat. 7.23 Reuel 21.27 nor whatsoeuer worketh abomination and lies shall enter into the kingdome of heauen Reuel 21.27 And therefore those who liue in the flesh those who are workers of iniquitie vnrighteous and vncleane in which ranke are all those who liue in their sins without repentance fulfilling the lusts of the flesh and falling continually into sinne with pleasure and delight are not bound simply and absolutely to beleeue so long as they resolue to continue in this state for so should they be bound to beleeue that which is false and repugnant to Gods word but they are bound to haue a true faith which being wrought in their hearts will moue them to forsake their sinnes by vnfained repentance to hunger after righteousnes to endeuour to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life and so to beleeue in Christ as their Sauiour and Redeemer which fruites if our faith bring not foorth we cannot be assured that we haue true faith or do truly beleeue For though in nature faith be before repentance yet in our sense and feeling it alwaies followeth it neither doth faith euer soundly and truly perswade vs of Gods loue till we haue sorrowed for our sinnes and at least in purpose of heart haue forsaken them So that whosoeuer liueth still in his sins with pleasure and delight and yet beleeueth that he is elected to saluation and that he is in Gods fauour and shall continuing in this state be made an heire of eternall life he is not indued with true faith but with fond presumption and carnall securitie which maketh him to beleeue that which is false and repugnant to Gods word Though then all men euen carnall worldlings and reprobates are bound to beleeue and because they doe not are subiect to condemnation as committing a great and fearefull sinne as appeareth Ioh. 3.18 and 16.8.9 where our Sauiour saith that the holy Ghost should reproue the world of sinne Ioh. 3.18 and 16.8.9 because they beleeue not in him yet they are not bound to beleeue continuing in their worldlinesse and resoluing to goe on in their sinnes for such a faith were but fond presumption but they are bound so to beleeue as that their faith may be grounded vpon Gods word which it can neuer possibly be if it be seuered from true repentance and for want of this faith they are condemned CHAP. VIII The last argument grounded vpon the testimonie of Gods spirit § Sect. 1 LAstly whatsoeuer the spirit of God doth testifie in the heart and conscience of a man and doth fully assure him thereof that he is to beleeue and of that he ought vndoubtedly to be assured but the spirit of God doth testifie to the faithfull and doth fully assure them that they are the sonnes of God by adoption and grace and consequently that they are elected for none are the sonnes of God but those who are predestinate to be adopted through Iesus Christ as it is Ephes 1.5 Eph. 1.5 and therefore the faithfull are to beleeue and ought vndoubtedly to be assured that they are the sonnes of God elected to euerlasting life The prosition is manifest for what more certaine truth can be imagined than that which the spirit of God witnesseth vnto our spirits and confirmeth vnto vs seeing all the properties required in a true witnesse doe concurre in him in the highest degree namely knowledge truth and faithfulnesse for knowledge he is infinit and knoweth all things euen the eternall councell and decree of God concerning our election as appeareth 1. Cor. 2.10 1. Cor. 2.10.12 The spirit searcheth all things euen the deepe things of God and this spirit doe we receiue that we may know the things that are giuen to vs of God As it is vers 12. What fitter witnesse therefore can be imagined in this
and shall be saued notwithstanding that they liue in their sinnes without repentance making no conscience of their waies nor indeauoring to serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse of life then is it not the testimonie of Gods spirit but a presumptuous phantasie and a secure and carnall imagination for the testimonie of Gods spirit in the conscience is the same with the testimonie of the word and therefore it doth not beare witnesse nor giue any assurance that they are saued which Gods word pronounceth to bee in the state of damnation When therefore this testimonie is giuen in a faithfull man and agreeable to Gods word it is the testimonie of the spirit which sealeth vs in the full assurance of that wee beleeue according to that Ephesians 1.13 where the Apostle saith Eph. 1.13 that after the faithfull had receiued the word of truth euen the Gospell of their saluation and beleeued therein they were sealed with the holy spirit of promise But those who make no conscience of hearing the Gospell preached and when they heare it doe not beleeue it nor apply it to themselues by a true and liuely faith nor bring foorth any fruites thereof in a holie and Christian life they haue neither faith nor Gods spirit and therefore if they haue any perswasion of their election and saluation it is not the testimonie of Gods spirit but their owne phantasie and a vaine opinion arising from carnall securitie and presumption § Sect. 6 Secondly Another means to discerne the testimonie of the spirit the testimony of Gods spirit may hereby bee knowne first in that it throughly perswadeth the faithfull of their election and saluation secondly by the manner of perswading them thirdly by the effects of this testimonie and perswasion For the first the spirit of God doth not only giue this bare testimonie that wee are elected adopted and shall be saued but also doth fully perswade vs hereof as being a thing most certaine and without question So 1. Cor. 2.12 the Apostle saith that wee haue receiued the spirit of God 1. Cor. 2.12 that wee might know the things that are giuen to vs of God And Eph. 1. 17 18. Gods spirit is called the spirit of wisedom and reuelation Eph. 1.17.18 which doth inlighten the eyes of our vnderstanding that we might know what the hope is of his calling and what the riches of his glorious inheritance is in the Saints and what is the exceeding greatnesse of his power particularly towards vs that beleeue according to the working of his mightie power So the Apostle Iohn saith 1. Ioh. 3.24 hereby we know that Christ abideth in vs euen by the spirit which he hath giuen vs 1. Ioh. 3.24 So that wee may be assured that we haue Gods spirit therby be throughly perswaded that Christ dwelleth in vs and consequently that wee are elected and shall be saued And chap. 4.13 Hereby know wee that we dwell in him and he in vs and 4.13 because he hath giuen vs of his spirit And the Apostle Paul by the spirit of God was so stedfastly assured of Gods loue that he professeth that he was firmely perswaded that nothing could separate him from it Rom. 8.38 39. Rom. 8.38 39. So that the spirit of God throughly perswadeth the faithfull that they are elected and shall be saued whereas the wicked who are destitute of Gods spirit may wel haue a fond opinion and a foolish conceit that they are highly in Gods loue and elected to saluation through carnall securitie and vaine presumption but they are neuer throughly perswaded hereof for when any affliction of bodie or minde is inflicted on them their vaine perswasion vanisheth away and nothing remaineth but doubting which in the end bringeth them to vtter desperation But here the tempter will take occasion to discourage the weake Christian and to perswade him that he hath not Gods spirit seeing he doth not feele in himselfe this firme perswasion of Gods loue and his election and saluation The perswasion of the spirit not alwaies discerned in our sense and feeling To which we are to answere that Gods spirit doth throughly perswade although not at all times neither in our present sense and feeling for immediatly after our conuersion when wee are newly regenerate and like new borne babes in Christ the motions of the spirit are but weake in vs and we are not skilfull in vnderstanding this heauenly language of the spirit wherewith we haue been altogether vnacquainted but the spirit waxing stronger in vs and we growing to a ripe age in Christ doth crie in our hearts Abba father and testifieth to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God which we then being better acquainted with this heauenly speech do well vnderstand and are throughly perswaded thereby And secondly when the poore Christian who hath receiued a great measure of the spirit is exercised in the spirituall conflict the hideous noise of Sathans temptations which like Cannon-shot sound in his eares and the tumultuous outcries of his owne passions doe so disturbe and wholie possesse him that he can not heare the voyce of the spirit perswading him that hee is the child of God till the skirmish bee past and the noise of temptations ceased and then againe as in former times hee heareth to his comfort the spirit of God perswading him of Gods loue and hereby hee is againe assured thereof So that wee are not to iudge of the hauing of Gods spirit in the time of our Christian infancie and spirituall nonage nor yet according to our present sense in the time of temptation but when wee are come to perfect age and when the conflict of temptations is ceased Secondly the testimonie of Gods spirit perswading vs of his loue and our election is knowne by the manner whereby it perswadeth vs namely it perswadeth vs hereof with arguments grounded vpon Gods word and drawne not from any worthinesse in our selues but from Gods free grace and vnderserued mercie and from the righteousnesse and merits of Christ whereas Sathan and our owne flesh neuer vse such reasons but either mooue vs to a bare and vaine opinion which hath no ground at all but selfe-loue which maketh men easily beleeue that which they desire or els with some arguments drawne from some outward common benefits bestowed indifferently vpon the good and bad or lastly from a pharisaicall conceit and false opinion of our owne worthinesse and deserts § Sect. 7 Lastly The 3. meanes to discerne the spirit namely by the fruites thereof the testimonie of Gods spirit is knowne and discerned by the effects thereof for after that it hath effectually perswaded vs that we are elected and the deare children of God we are mooued thereby to trust wholie in God and to loue him as our gratious father from which loue proceedeth a zeale of his glorie and a true hatred of sinne because thereby our heauenlie father is dishonored displeased with vs and a
Ephes 4.14 therefore without holinesse there is no assurance that we are elected seeing he hath sworne that all those whom he hath redeemed and saued out of the hands of their spiritual enemies hell death and the diuell Luk. 1.74 75. shall worship him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of their life what hope of redemption and saluation can they conceiue who liue in impietie and vnrighteousnesse seeing by Gods oath they are excluded from both whilest they continue in this state CHAP. X. Of the signes and infallible notes of our election § Sect. 1 ANd thus haue I set down the meanes whereby we may be assured of our election The first signe an earnest desire after the meanes of our saluation now let vs consider of some speciall signes which are infallible notes of those that are elected The first signe is an earnest desire after the meanes of our saluation and a conscionable endeuour in vsing them after we enioy them For the end and the meanes are neuer separated in Gods decree and therefore those that carefully vse the meanes may be assured that they shall attaine vnto the end For example the hearing of Gods word is the chiefe meanes of our conuersion being made effectuall by the inward operation of Gods spirit and as thereby we are begotten vnto God so also it is that bread of life wherewith our soules are nourished and strengthened in all spirituall graces So that whomsoeuer God hath elected those he hath decreed to call ordinarily by these meanes and by the same also to furnish with his graces being called Whosoeuer therefore labour to purchase this precious pearle whosoeuer hunger after this heauenly Manna and are content to enioy it not only when it is good cheap but also when it is very chargeable whosoeuer enioying it do attentiuely and diligently heare it and receiue it with delight they vse the meanes of their saluation and therefore may bee assured that they are elected for the meanes the end go together And that this is a note of Gods child it appeareth Ioh. 10.3 4. where our Sauiour saith that his sheep heare his voyce Ioh. 10.3.4 And Matth. 13.45 he compareth the true member of the kingdome of grace to a Merchant Matth. 13.45 who rather then he would want the precious pearle of Gods word selleth all he hath to buy it Those therefore who make this precious account of Gods word and carefully diligently and attentiuely heare it when they enioy it may to their comfort assure themselues that they haue an vndoubted signe of their election And on the other side those who had rather bee without it than enioy it those who wil bestow no cost to obtaine it nor forgoe any pleasure or commoditie that they may heare it nor when they do heare it are affected with any delight but are glutted with loathing satietic hearing no part of the sermon with any pleasure but the conclusion onely they can haue no assurance of their election because they neglect the means of their saluation which are ioyned with the end in Gods eternall decree The like also may bee said of other meanes as the receiuing of the Sacraments meditating in Gods word the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse and the rest § Sect. 2 The second signe of those that are elected The second signe the spirit of supplication is the spirit of supplication when as they can powre foorth their soules in feruent and effectuall prayer vnto the Lord confessing their sinnes and imploring his grace and mercie for this is a notable fruit of Gods spirit working in vs which we cannot by any naturall meanes attaine vnto for of our selues wee know not what to pray as we ought Rom. 8.26 but the spirit helpeth our infirmities and maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed as it is Rom. 8.26 Prayer therefore is a most inseparable fruite and vndoubted signe of Gods spirit and Gods spirit certainly assureth vs of our election and adoption for it beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the sonnes of God Vers 16. as it is vers 16. So Rom. 10.13 it is said Rom. 10.13 that whosoeuer call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued But this prayer must proceede from faith for as it followeth How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued and must be perfourmed in spirit and truth and not with deceitfull lips for it is to no purpose to draw neere vnto God with our mouthes Esa 29.13 if our hearts be farre from him Esa 29.13 § Sect. 3 The third signe of those who are elected and adopted to be the children of God The third signe is when we are weaned from the loue of the world and minde heauenly things is when as their hearts are somwhat weaned from the world and seated in heauen minding the things that are aboue and when their tongues being set a worke by the heart doe gladly entertaine godly and religious conferences for there as the treasure is there will the heart be also and with whatsoeuer the heart is affected the tongue is delighted Now that these holie meditations and religious discourses are signes of the child of God hereby it plainly appeareth in that they cannot possibly proceede from our corrupt nature to which they are irksome and tedious but from the spirit of God dwelling in vs and guiding and directing vs in our thoughts and words and whosoeuer are thus led with the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God as it is Rom. 8.14 Rom. 8.14 He that is right heire to a roiall kingdome and not yet possessed thereof is neuer wearie of thinking on it nor glutted with such discourses as tend to the extolling the riches and glorie which there attend him or shew the meanes whereby he may be assured to come into speedie and peaceable possession of his right and so those who are elected by God and adopted to bee the heires of his euerlasting kingdome of glorie are neuer satisfied in meditating and speaking of the riches and ioyes of this heauenly inheritance or of the meanes whereby they may bee assured vndoubtedly to obtaine it whereas those who haue no such interest nor hopes thinke and talke of these things with loathsome wearinesse as being matters not concerning them and therefore when such thoughts come into their mindes they vanish as suddenly as a flash of lightning and when they are present at any spirituall discourses the time seemeth long and they sit vpon thornes vntill they bee ended and they remaine dumbe as though they were tongue-tyed vnlesse they take occasion to interrupt such holie conferences and to diuert them to some worldly affaires § Sect. 4 The fourth signe of the childe of God who is elected to saluation The fourth signe is the sight of sinne and sorrow for it is when he seeth his sinnes and imperfections and truly repenteth of them that is bewaileth those
this inward fight within our selues we may be assured that Christ is come to dwell in our hearts by his holy spirit and consequently that we are the children of God and heires of euerlasting life for as many as receiue him to them he giues power to be the sonnes of God Ioh. 1.12 euen to them that beleeue in his name as it is Iohn 1.12 § Sect. 7 The seuenth signe of the childe of God is new obedience The seuenth signe is new obedience 1. Ioh. 2.5 when as he applies his heart to the keeping of Gods commanmaundements desiring and indeauouring to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life for if any man keepeth Gods word in him is the loue of God perfect in deede and hereby we know that we are in him as it is 1. Iohn 2.5 And whosoeuer abideth in him sinneth not whosoeuer sinneth hath not seene him neither hath knowne him chap. 3. v. 6.10 as it is chap. 3. ver 6. So vers 10. In this are the children of God knowne and the children of the diuell whosoeuer doth not righteousnesse is not of God c. So that our new obedience is a signe of the child of God and the neglect thereof a marke of the child of darknesse But wee are not to vnderstand this of that exact obedience which is required in the Law for thereby none liuing can haue any assurance of their election and saluation but rather of reprobation and damnation but it is to be vnderstood of an euangelicall obedience which consisteth in an holie desire and earnest endeuour of keeping all Gods commandements with which the children of God are so wholy possessed that after their true conuersion it is impossible that they should fall into any knowne sinne with full consent of will and with their whole hearts And this is the obedience which the Gospell requireth and of which the Apostle speaketh and thus wee neuer sinne but keepe all Gods commandements namely in respect of our desire and earnest endeuour This is that righteousnesse which is accepted as though it were perfect before God who spareth vs as a man spares his sonne whom hee tenderly loueth Mal. 3.17 as hee professeth Mal. 3.17 and therefore measureth our obedience not according to our actions but according to our offections and accepteth of the will for the deed as before I haue shewed § Sect. 8 But yet that we may not deceiue our selues with a counterfeite shew The properties of true obedience first that it must be totall and entire wee are to know that this euangelicall obedience hath these properties first it must be totall and that both in respect of the subiect and of the obiect that is wee must not share our selues betweene God and the world giuing one the tongue the other the heart one our outward actions and the other our inward affections but we must perfourme our obedience with our whole hearts yea with the whole man bodie soule and spirit for though wee be regenerated and sanctified but in part yet is there no part of the whole man vnregenerate and vnsanctified howsoeuer the flesh and the corruption of nature be spread likewise and mixed therewith throughout the whole bodie soule And therfore though all our obedience sauour of the flesh and is mingled with manifold imperfections yet it doth proceede from the whole man bodie and soule because regeneration from which it proceedeth is not of any part alone but of the whole man So also it must be totall in respect of the obiect for it is not sufficient that with Herod we obserue many things if we nourish willingly any one sinne taking therein pleasure and delight but wee must desire and endeuour to forsake all our sinnes and to performe obedience vnto all Gods commandements for if we nourish one sinne in our hearts it will open a doore to let in more when wee are tempted vnto them as wee may see in the example of Herod and Iudas the one harbouring incest the other couetousnesse if we neglect willingly obedience to one precept of Gods law it wil so harden our harts and seare our consciences that soone after we shall neglect all If therefore we would haue our obedience acceptable vnto God we must with the Prophet Dauid Psal 119.6 haue respect vnto all Gods commandements Psal 119.6 Iam. 2.10 The second propertie that it must be perpetuall and constant for he that faileth in one is guiltie of all as it is Iam. 2.10 Secondly this obedience must be perpetuall continuing in a constant course from the time of our conuersion to the end of our liues for we are not to iudge of our selues or others by one or two or many actions whether they be good or euil but by the whole tenour and course of our liues so that he who in this respect is holie and righteous hee is so accepted before God notwithstanding his many falles and great infirmities he that in the course of his life is wicked and prophane is so esteemed of God although hee seeme to himselfe and others religious by fits and perfourmeth many excellent duties and good workes It is therefore not sufficient that we begin in the spirit Galat. 3.3 if we end in the flesh Gal. 3.3 It is not sufficient to professe and practise godlinesse in our youth if wee breake off in our age it is not enough that we enter into the Christian race and runne well in the beginning if wee stand still in the midst or before we come to the goale Matth. 24.13 Luk. 9.62 for he only that endureth to the end shall be saued as it is Matth. 24.13 As for him that laieth his hand on the plough and looketh backe hee is not fit for Gods kingdome as our Sauiour affirmeth Luk. 9.62 The third propertie that it must be grounded on Gods word and referred to his glorie Lastly our obedience must be grounded vpon Gods word and therefore perfourmed because the Lord hath enioyned such duties vnto vs it must proceed from faith which first purifieth the heart and then worketh by loue it must not bee done for any worldly respect but of a conscionable care of perfourming our duties and in a feruent zeale of Gods glorie which is magnified when as our lights shine before men which zeale will make vs goe forward in our course of godlinesse through euill report 2. Cor. 6.8 and good report honour and dishonour And if our obedience spring from these fountaines and be referred to this end that God thereby may bee glorified then will we make no lesse conscience of secret than of open sinnes then will wee be no lesse readie to serue God in the duties of pietie and righteousnesse when there is no witnesse of our actions than if all the world should looke vpon vs then will we be as fearefull to offend God in the breach of any of his commandements in our secret chambers in the darke night as in the
to send his ambassadours not only to offer peace but also to beseech vs that wee would be reconciled vnto him as the Apostle speaketh 2. Cor. 5.20 2. Cor. 5.20 and vpon this reconciliation hee assureth vs of the riches of his kingdome who therefore receiuing and beleeuing this ambassage will not loue the Ambassadours that bring these blessed tidings vnto them Who can bee assured of such inestimable benefits and yet shew no token of thankfulnes towards them who are the meanes whereby they are deriued vnto them The great contempt of Gods ministerie a signe that few prosit by their ministerie Where by the way we may note how few the number is in these daies who receiue the Lords ambassage to their spiritual comfort how few they are to whome it is effectuall for the begetting in them the graces of Gods spirit how few hereby come to the true assurance of the remission of their sinnes and euerlasting happinesse seeing the number is so exceeding small who loue and respect the Lords ambassadors in regarde of their ambassage Nay rather the most euen for their ministerie sake doe contemne those whom otherwise in respect of their learning wisedome and other excellent gifts of bodie and minde they would respect and highly esteeme if they were not of the ministerie So that their honorable calling which aboue al things should commend them doth aboue all things make them base contemptible and no maruell seeing the most are flesh and not spirit the children of Mammon and not the children of God and therefore sauoring onely the things of the flesh not perceauing the things of the spirit of God 1. Cor. 2.14 they seeme foolishnesse vnto them and the preachers of them fooles and men of shallow conceites But let such know that God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise 1. Cor. 1.27.28 and weake things to confound mightie things vile things of the world and things that are despised hath God chosen and things that are not to bring to nought things that are that no flesh should reioyce in his presence as it is 1. Cor. 1.27.28 Let them know that this their contempt or at least small regarde of Gods ambassadors is a most manifest signe that they neuer receiued good by their ambassage for had they receiued from them spirituall things they would neuer grudge to bestowe vpon them their worldly things which in the true christians estimation are not to be compared with them and much lesse would they against their owne conscience defraud them of their owne right which by the lawes of God and man is due vnto them whereby it commeth to passe that whereas all men being industrious and frugall may liue plentifully euen of their meanest trades onely the Lord ambassadors though neuer so painefull in their callings liue in want and miserie § Sect. 11 The last signe of Gods childe elected to saluation which I will speake of The tenth signe an earnest desire of Christs comming to iudgement Reuel 22.20 Matth. 6.10 is their earnest desire that our Sauiour Christ should come to iudgement whence proceedeth that patheticall prayer Come Lord Iesus come quicklie Reuel 22.20 and that prayer which our Sauiour hath taught all the faithfull to pray daily let thy kingdome come Matth. 6.10 Now that this is a note of those that are elected to saluation it appeareth plainely 2. Tim 4.8 Where the Apostle saith that a crowne of righteousnesse is laide vp for all those that loue his appearing 2. Tim. 4.8 Rom. 8.23 And Rom. 8.23 he telleth vs that those who haue the first fruites of the spirit doe euen sigh in themselues waiting for the adoption euen the redemption of their body when as their corruption shall put on incorruption and the mortall body immortalitie as he speaketh 1. Cor. 15.53 1. Cor. 15.53 So our Sauiour Christ hath tolde vs that his faithfull children should at his comming looke vp and lift vp their heads Luk. 21.28 because their redemption draweth neere Luk. 21.28 and on the otherside that the kingdome of the earth shall mourne and that the prophane worldlings and reprobates shall say to the mountaines and rockes Matth. 24.30 Reuel 6.16 fall on vs and hide vs from the presence of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the lambe Reuel 6.16 So that by these places it is manifest that if we loue the appearing of the Lord Iesus and desire his comming to iudgement we are the children of God indued with his spirit which assureth vs of our saluation For naturally we abhorre to thinke of this fearefull day and tremble with feare when mention is made of the appearing of our iudge because by our sinnes we haue deserued euerlasting damnation but when the spirit of God by the ministerie of the word hath begot faith in vs whereby we apply vnto our selues Christ Iesus and all his merits by whom we are reconciled vnto God and made friends who before were enemies and sonnes of God and heyres of euerlasting happinesse who before were the children of wrath and firebrands of hell then doe we earnestly desire the companie of our heauenly father when we are assured that our iudge shall be our Sauiour then can wee goe boldly to his iudgement seate without feare of condemnation when we are assured that we are the beloued spouse of Christ then we long for nothing more then for the comming of our bridegroome when we are certainely perswaded that by Gods spirit we are ingrafted into the bodie of Christ and are become liuely members of his body then doe we hartily wish with the Apostle to be dissolued that we may be with Christ our head in his kingdome of glorie where together with him wee shall receiue and be fully satisfied with such incomparable ioyes 1. Cor. 2.9 as neither eye hath seene nor eare heard nor the heart of man conceiued CHAP. XI The obiections alleadged against the assurance of our election answered § Sect. 1 ANd thus much concerning the signes whereby we may be assured of our election Answers vnto testimonies alledged now I will answere such obiections as are brought against this doctrine by the enemies of Gods truth And these are of two sortes first testimonies of Gods word and secondly reasons The testimonies of scriptures are diuers 1. Cor. 10.12 Pro. 28.14 Rom. 11.20 first they obiect such places as these 1. Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinketh he standeth take heede least he fall Pro. 28.14 Blessed is the man that feareth alwaies Rom. 11.20 Be not high minded but feare Phil. 2.12 Make an end of your saluation with feare and trembling Phil. 2.12 1 Pet. 1.17 1. Pet. 1.17 Passe the time of your dwelling here in feare to all which and many other such like places we may answere generally that the holy Ghost would not hereby take away our certaintie of faith but carnall securitie he would not depriue
they handle is the argument which they handle and the end whereunto they tend For the subiect whereof they intreate are the great workes of the euerliuing God how hee exerciseth his mercie towards his children in sustaining defending and sauing them from all their enemies and his iustice towards the wicked in turning their counsailes to foolishnes in ouerthrowing their designes and purposes curbing in their rage and violence and in punishing and destroying them Now if you consider and peruse all other writings in the world besides you shall finde no such matter contained in them for some labour in polishing humane Arts some set out large histories of the actions counsailes successe policies enterprises and perturbations of men like themselues so that at the first sight wee may know that they are indited by the spirit of man seeing they are wholie spent in humane affaires neuer intermedling with any spirituall matter appertaining vnto God Moreouer the scriptures attribute the gouerning and wise disposing of all things to Gods al-ruling prouidence that he may haue the whole praise of his owne workes as when they speake of some famous victorie they doe ascribe it neither to the wisedome of the Captaine nor to the valour of the common souldier but vnto the Lord of hoasts alone neither doe they make poems in the praise of Moses Iosua Dauid Ezechias or any other of the Kings and Leaders but in the praise of the Lord who by his owne strong arme hath giuen his children victorie ouer their enemies Now whence can this proceed but from the spirit of God inditing them who contrarie to the nature of man which desireth rather all praise himselfe doth moue him to refuse all glorie attributed to himselfe that all the praise may bee ascribed vnto God So when they speake of any benefit receiued by the Church they doe not attribute it to worldly friends their good fortune or their owne industrie and labour but to the blessing of God proceeding of his meere mercie goodnesse towards them And contrariwise when they set downe the destruction of the wicked they doe not ascribe it to any want of their owne care and prouidence nor to the malice or power of their enemies nor to blind chance or other outward accident but to the hand of God exercising his iudgements vpon them and punishing them for their sinnes Now if you peruse all other writings you shall finde that they aime at nothing lesse than Gods glorie for some write to shew their eloquence others to extoll their wits and deepe learning others to aduance the praise of mortall men aboue the clowdes some for one end and some for another all aiming at their owne praise pleasure or profit neuer so much as once respecting Gods glorie in their least thought and hence it is that setting downe any victorie they ascribe it to the weaknesse or want of wit prouidence or courage of the aduerse part or to the fortitude of the Captains the resolutenesse of the souldiers the aduantages of the place Sunne winde and such like circumstances in the meane time excluding the God of battailes as though he had no stroke in this busines So likewise when they speake of any other affaires or accidents which fall out in the gouernment of the world they ascribe all to outward circumstances inferiour meanes and subordinate causes as though God had giuen ouer the gouernment of the earth and had committed the ruling of the sterne to blind fortune Now whence can this exceeding difference proceede that they should altogether aime at the glorie of God and these wholie at the praise pleasure profit of man that they should alwaies ascribe the gouernment and disposing of all things to the wise prouidence of God and these to outward accidents naturall causes and inferiour meanes Surely because they were indited by the spirit of God and therefore themselues are diuine sauouring wholie of the author of them and these by the spirit of man and therfore al contained in them is meerly humane carnall natural § Sect. 2 The ninth reason taken from the stile of the Scriptures The ninth reason may be taken from the stile and manner of penning the Scriptures in which they much differ from all other writings whatsoeuer for whereas men in their writings affect the praise of flowing eloquence and loftinesse of phrase the holie Ghost in penning the Scriptures hath vsed great simplicitie and wonderfull plainnesse applying himselfe to the capacitie of the most vnlearned in which low and humble maner of speech he doth notwithstanding set foorth the deepe wisedome of God and the profound mysteries of religion the bottome whereof the most wise and learned in the world can not search into and vnder the vaile of simple and plain speech there shineth such diuine wisedom and glorious maiestie that all the humane writings in the world though neuer so adorned with the flowers of eloquence and sharpe conceits of wit and learning cannot so deeply pearce the heart of man nor so forcibly worke vpon his affections nor so powerfully incline his will either to the imbracing of that which is good or auoiding of that which is euill as the word of God and whence can this proceed but from the vertue power and wisedome of the spirit of God who is the author of them Moreouer wee may obserue in the stile of the Scriptures a maiesticall authoritie aboue all other witings which onely beseemeth the glorious King and soueraigne commander of heauen and earth for they speake in the same manner and inioyne the like obedience to prince and people rich and poore learned and vnlearned without any difference or respect of person not vsing any arguments reasons or perswasions but absolutely commanding that dutie which is to be done and forbidding that sinne which should be left vndone and that vnder the promise of euerlasting life and blessednesse and the paine not of the gallowes racke or wheele but of eternall death and damnation and whom beseemeth it to promise euerlasting life or to threaten euelrasting death but him only who is himselfe eternall and euerlasting and who hath this absolute authoritie of commanding all without any difference but he who is Lord Creator and gouernour of the prince as well as the people Lastly this word of God doth not only extend it selfe to the outward actions and conuersation requiring onely the externall obedience which is in fact and outward behauiour which is the vttermost that humane lawes respect because the lawgiuers can see no further but the law of God requireth especially the obedience of the heart and forbiddeth not only consent to any euill but euen concupiscence and lust now who can make lawes for the heart and conscience or though he should be so fond to make them who could either reward the obedient or punish the disobedient but God alone who searcheth the heart and reines The stile therefore of the scriptures being peculiar vnto themselues shewing maiestie in lowlinesse
been said I might adde the testimony of heathen writers who in their seueral times haue in their writings made mention of the most principal things which are contained in the story of the Bible but as we neede not the helpe of a candle to see the sunne which more sufficiently sheweth it selfe by his own light so this glorious light of Gods truth is in it selfe so cleere and manifest that it needeth not the testimony of Infidels to confirme it vnlesse it be to those who farre exceede them in infidelitie And that noble learned and religious Gentleman Philip Mornay in his bookes of the Trunesse of Christian Religion hath eased me of this labour from whose neuer wasting candle I haue borrowed the chiefest part of my light in the handling of this question CHAP. XXI That the testimony of Gods spirit doth onely perswade vs that the Scriptures are the word of God ANd these are the arguments whereby all gainesaiers may be conuinced who deny the Scriptures to be the word of God and his infallible trueth but though they are sufficient for the conuiction of all opposers and for stopping the mouthes of all Atheists Epicures and meere naturals yet notwithstanding not any of these nor al these are in themselues sufficient to beget faith in the heart of any or to perswade him with full assurance to beleeue that the Scriptures are the word of God vnlesse there be adioyned vnto thē the testimony of Gods spirit which doth not only conuince but also throughly perswade vs of this truth and this alone in it selfe is al-sufficient though we neuer heard any other of the former reasons for the working of faith in vs and a full perswasion of this truth § Sect. 1 That all other arguments are insufficient without the testimony of Gods spirit That all other arguments are without this vnsufficient hereby it is more then manifest in that not many wise nor many learned in the world doe beleeue the Scriptures which is the cause why they doe not submit themselues to the obedience thereof whereas if faith might be wrought in men by force of arguments or naturall reason Matth. 11.25 they who best conceiue them would most easily be perswaded by them but contrariwise we see that these things are hid from the wise and prudent and are reuealed vnto babes not by meanes of naturall reason but by the testimony of Gods spirit For naturally we are all blind in spirituall things neither can the naturall man discerne the things of the spirit of God neither can he know them 1. Cor. 2.14 because they are spiritually discerned as it is 1. Cor. 2.14 and therefore though the Scriptures be the glorious light of Gods truth shining as bright as the sunne in the firmament to those whose eyes are inlightened with Gods spirit yet to those who continue in their naturall blindnesse and were neuer annoynted with the precious eye-salue of Gods spirit this glorious light appeareth not no more than the sunshine to those who want their sight and hence it is that they grope at noone dayes And as the poore woman of whom Seneca speaketh being suddainely in the night stricken with blindnesse desired the next day to vndraw the curtaines and open the windoes that shee might see whereas the cause of her not seeing was not want of light but want of eyes So these men who are stricken with naturall blindnesse complaine that they cannot see the glorious light of Gods truth shining in his word and therefore desire to haue it cleered by taking away the clouds of obiections which seeme to shadow it and by adding vnto it the light of humane reason but the truth is the fault is not in this glorious light which alwaies shineth but in their blindnesse who cannot discerne it and yet such is the pride selfe loue and vaine opinion which euery one hath of his owne gifts that they will sooner imagine that the sunne wanteth light than they eyes to looke vpon it § Sect. 2 True it is that by the former reasons they may be conuinced Other arguments conuince but not perswade so that they haue nothing to obiect and perhaps they may bee brought to haue a good opinion of the Scriptures to a doubtfull conceite that they are the word of God in deede they may with the two Disciples which trauailed to Emaus when they heare the Scriptures interpreted haue their harts burne and throb within thē imagining that which they heare to be more than the word of mortall man and as the blind man in the Gospell when his eyes were a little illuminated by our Sauiour discerned men not as men but as moouing trees so they may in some confused manner know and acknowledge the Scriptures to be the word of God but before Christ hath fully opened their eyes and by the precious eye-salue of his spirit hath dispelled their naturall blindnesse they wil neuer certainely be perswaded nor assuredly beleeue that the Scriptures are not the word of man but the infallible truth of God For it is not in mans power to beget faith in any neither is it grounded vpon any natural reasons or perswasions but it is the supernaturall gift of Gods spirit who illuminates our vnderstanding and inclines our will so that we see and stedfastly beleeue that trueth which it deliuereth as appeareth Ephes 2.8 2. Thes 1.11 Ephes 2.8 2. Thes 1.11 And when we haue this testimony of Gods spirit in our hearts it will certainely perswade vs of this truth Gods spirit fully perswadeth vs of this truth 1. Cor. 2.15 though we had no other reason as appeareth by testimonies of Scripture and by our owne experience For the first it is said 1. Cor. 2.15 That the spirituall man that is he who is indued with Gods spirit iudgeth all things and yet himselfe is iudged of no man So 1. Iohn 2.27 But the annoynting which ye receiued of him 1. Ioh. 2.27 dwelleth in you and ye neede not that any man teach you but as the annointing teacheth you all things and verse 20. Vers 20. But ye haue an oyntment him that is holy and ye haue knowne all things Where by hee vnderstandeth the spirit of God 1. Cor. 2.10.12 which searcheth all things euen the deepe things of God which spirit is giuen vnto vs that we might know the things which are giuen vnto vs of God as it is 1. Cor. 2.10.12 So our Sauiour promiseth to send a comforter vnto vs Ioh. 16 7.13 as it is Iohn 16.7.13 And in deede who is more fit then the spirit of God to confirme vs in the assurance of that truth which he himselfe hath indited and inspired or who can better iudge of the things of God then the spirit of God who can better informe vs in this truth then hee who is the spirit of truth And therefore if we haue the testimony of Gods spirit in vs we shall neede no other witnesse nor any
and all sanctifying and sauing graces And hence it is that the minister himself findeth not the word which he deliuereth effectual for the begetting of faith or any grace in him which notwithstanding is powerfull in many of the hearers for these purposes because the Lord vouchsafeth not the assistance and inward cooperation of his holy spirit with the outward ministerie of the word vnto him which notwithstanding he mercifully granteth vnto others Seeing then the ministerie of the word is Gods owne ordinance which he maketh effectuall to whom hee will by the inward operation of his holy spirit by whomsoeuer it is deliuered and seeing those ministers which are most holy and vertuous cannot at their pleasure infuse grace into their hearers for Paul may plant and Apollos may water but God giueth the increase 1. Cor. 3.5 so that neither the one nor the other are any thing in themselues without Gods blessing seeing also those who are loose and vicious if they truly preach the truth it selfe cannot by their badnesse hinder Gods ordinance but that comming from their mouthes it will be effectuall for the conuersion of men vnto God and the eternal saluation of those that beleeue for though vnto himselfe it be but a dead letter yet the spirit of God may giue life vnto it in those who receiue it and though he preacheth for glorie or gaine or for enuie and strife yet we must with the Apostle reioyce that Christ is preached any manner of way Phil. 1.15.18 and reape the fruite thereof to our eternal comfort Lastly seeing the wisedome of God thinketh it good to send ambassadours of both sorts sanctified and vnsanctified and oftentimes maketh the word in the mouth fo a faithfull and godly minister the sauour of death vnto death and the same word in the mouth of one who is voide of grace and sanctification the sauour of life vnto life to the end that we should not depend vpon man but wholy rest and relie our selues vpon Gods owne ordinance giuing and ascribing vnto him the whole glory and praise of our conuersion and saluation let not Sathan perswade vs to thinke the worse of the pure word of God because of his corruption who deliuereth it for what were this but to refuse a comfortable ambassage from a gracious prince because we dislike the qualities of the ambassadours what were this but to scorne to receiue a kind letter from a louing father because the carrier doth displease vs what is this but to refuse a rich treasure because it is brought vnto vs in an earthen vessell which is fraile and brittle what is it but like proud beggers to refuse the bountifull almes of a mercifull prince because it is deliuered vnto vs by an Amner which is couetous and hard harted Yea what is it but to crosse our Sauiour Christs expresse commandement who commanded all to heare euen the Scribes and Pharisies who sate in Moses chaire Matth. 23. and to do after their words though not after their workes In a word what is it els than to pin Gods ordinance vpon mans sleeue and to make the preaching of the Gospell Rom. 1.16 which is the power of God to saluation vnto euery one who beleeueth to depend vpon the weake strength of fraile flesh either to bee made effectuall by his worthinesse or to bee made vaine and vnprofitable by his vnworthinesse CHAP. XXIIII Sathans temptations taken from sundrie opinions sects and religions answered ANd thus Sathan may be answered §. Sect. 1. Sathans temptations perswading vs to professe no religion when he taketh occasion of discrediting the Gospell and hindring the course thereof by obiecting the wickednesse and worldly prophanenesse or the infirmities and fraile weaknesse of the Ministers thereof But if he cannot thus preuaile he leaueth their liues and commeth to their doctrine Doest thou not see will he say that there are innumerable sects and contrary factions amongst those who professe Christianitie some Papists some Protestants some Arians some Anabaptists some Pelagians some Libertines some Familists some Donatists many other who all cite and alledge Scriptures for the defending of their contrarie opinions confidently affirme that they only haue the truth amongst them how therfore canst thou know which is truth and which is falsehood who interpret the scriptures aright and who wrest and misconster them or if thou wert disposed to be religious what religion wilt thou professe in this great confusion to what Church wilt thou adioyne thy selfe seeing one is contrarie to another and thou knowest not which is in the truth If thou beest wise therefore keepe thy selfe quiet and let all alone harken not to any of them or if thou dost beleeue them not ouer hastily be of that religion which will best stand with thine aduantage or if thou wilt needes serue God follow thine owne conscience haue a good intention in that thou doest and it is enough but professe not one religion more than another till thou seest those who are learned agree amongst themselues for vntill then thou canst haue no assurance that thou professest the truth For the answering of which temptation we are to know that the scriptures haue foretould vnto vs that there should be sects diuisions 1. Cor. 11.19 1. Tim. 4.1 2. Pet. 2.1 heresies false teachers euen vnto the end of the world as appeareth 1. Cor. 11.19 1. Tim. 4.1 2. Pet. 2.1 And the experience of al times both vnder the law vnder the Gospel may sufficiently teach vs that wheresoeuer the truth of God is published and preached there it is opposed by innumerable sectaries and heretikes which by the malice and subtiltie of Sathan are stirred vp to impugne and discredit the true religion and therefore if Sathan can still keepe vs blindfoulded in ignorance and restraine vs from the confession and profession of our faith till there be a generall vnitie and agreement in the true religion without all opposition or gainesaying then he hath attained his desire for so shall we neuer ioyne our selues in the communion of the saints nor bee true members of the Church professing practizing the religion of Iesus Christ seeing the diuell will not cease to stir vp his wicked instruments false Prophets secraties and heretikes to the end they may oppugne and contradict the truth when it is sincerely preached and make it frutelesse in the hearts of vnbeleeuers seeing also our Sauiour hath taught vs that his Church is but a little flocke which is assaulted and grieuously vexed not onely with Lyons Tigers and open enemies but also with Foxes and Wolues in sheepes clothing and secret enemies who vnder the shew and profession of religion seeke to vndermine and bring it to ruine And the Apostle also hath forewarned vs that there must be heresies among vs 1. Cor. 11.19 that they who are approoued might be knowne 1. Cor. 11.19 Though therefore there be many sects and heresies many false religions and but one truth
this must not make vs to neglect all till there be an vniuersall agreement for as well may be reconcile light and darkenes the children of God with the children of the diuell grace naturall corruption truth and error as the true religion with those which are false or the professors of the one with the professors of the other Those who haue important businesses abroad doe not stay at home and refuse to trauaile because some goe out of the way but therefore they are more carefull to informe themselues of euery turning in their iourney because they would not erre with others those that haue a desire to liue doe not refuse all meate because some surfet die by eating that which is vnwholsome but rather hereby they are made more warie in making good choyse of such diet as is fit for the preseruation of their health those also who are sicke doe not neglect all phisicke because there are many cousening Imposters and vnlearned Emperickes who kil in sted of curing but this maketh thē with more circumspection to find out a skilful and learned phisition Let vs therefore follow the like practise in these spirituall things and seeing there is but one direct way which leadeth vnto heauen and many bywaies which leade to destruction let not this keepe vs from trauayling this heauenly iourney but rather moue vs with more diligence to inquire the right and perfect way seeing also there are many which offer vs poyson in sted of the wholesome foode and phisicke of our soules let vs learne with more care to make choyse and to put a difference betweene the one and the other But there it will be demaunded how those who are simple and ignorant can iudge which is the true religion §. Sect. 2. How the vnlearned may discerne the true religion from that which is false and which is the false who teacheth the truth and who falsehood to which I answere that euery one must labour to informe himselfe of the truth by studying and meditating in Gods word this must be his light to guide him his counsaylor to informe him his touchstone whereby he may discerne the stubble and straw of mens inuentions from the pure gold of Gods true religion Neither are we to receiue all doctrines hand ouer head but as the Apostle exhorteth vs we must trie the spirits whether they be of God or no and with the men of Berea we must search the scriptures I. Ioh. 4.1 Act. 17. to see if those things be so as they are deliuered and accordingly either receiue them if they are consonant with Gods word or reiect them if they be dissonant thereunto Yea will some say this were a direct course if those onely who haue the truth on their side had scripture to alledge but seeing euery heretike is as readie to quote scripture for the vpholding and defending of his heresie as the professors of Gods truth for the maintenance thereof all the question is whose interpretation is to be receiued as good and whose to be reiected as false and erroneous To this I answere that though there be some places in the scripture hard and somewhat doubtful and therefore the more easie to be wrested vnto a wrong sense yet are there others cleare end euident for the confuting of all sects heresies and errors whatsoeuer and therefore we must expound those places which are darke and ambiguous by those which are perspicuous and manifest For exmaple if we would know whether Poperie be the true religion or no we must examine the doctrines thereof by Gods word not making choyse of those places which seeme any way hard and doubtfull but of those which are cleere and manifest and so we shall finde that their doctrines are as contrarie to Gods truth as light to darkenes For whereas they teach that we are able to fulfill the law and to merit heauen the scriptures affirme the cleane contrarie I am 3.2 and 2.10 namely that in many things we sinne all I am 3.2 and whosoeuer shall keepe the whole law yet faileth in one point is guiltie of all I am 2.10 that there is no man who sinneth not 1. King 8.46 1. King 8.46 that in Gods sight none that liueth can be iustified Psal 143.2 Luk. 17 10. Psalm 143.2 that when we haue done all those things that are commaunded vs we are vnprofitable seruants and haue done but our dutie and therefore merit nothing Luk. 17.10 So whereas they teach that wee must pray to Saints and Angels because they make intercession for vs the Apostle flatly excludeth all other from this office but Christ alone 1. Tim. 2.5 1. Tim. 2.5 there is one mediator betweene God and man Where as they teach that marriage is vnlawfull for some men at all times and some meates vnlawfull for all men at some times the holy Ghost telleth vs plainely that this is erroneous and a doctrine of diuels 1. Tim. 4.1.3.4 and that euery creature of God is good and nothing ought to be refused if it be receiued with thankesgiuing 1. Tim. 4.1.3.4 And that marriage is honorable for all men and the bed vndefiled Heb. 13.4 Heb. 13.4 that to auoyde fornication euery man must haue his wife and euery woman her owne husband 1. Cor. 7.2 and that better it is to marrie then to burne v. 9. 1. Cor. 7.2 Whereas they teach that our Sauiour Christ is carnally and corporally present in the sacrament the scriptures teach vs the contrarie namely that he is ascended into heauen and therefore not vpon the earth Matth. 28.6 Matth. 28.6 That when he was taken into heauen he was taken from vs Act. 1.11 Act. 1.11 That the heauens must containe him vntill the time that all things be restored Acts 3.21 Act. 3.21 Whereas they teach that we must make and worship images both are expresly forbidden in the second commaundement and in many other places of scripture Whereas they teach that the scriptures should be kept from the common people in an vnknowne language the Apostle plainely affirmeth that he had rather in the Church speake fiue words with his vnderstanding that he might also instruct other 1. Cor. 14.19 than ten thousand words in a strange tongue and flatly inioyneth that the Prophets should keepe silence in the Church rather than speake strange lauguages where there is no interpreter 1. Cor. 14.19.27.28 Whereas they hold that the cup in the administration of the Lords supper is to be withheld from the common people and giuen onely to the Priests the quite contrarie is to be obserued in the institution whereas our Sauiour saith Drinke ye all of it because it is his blood of the new testament that is shed for many for the remission of sinnes plainely thereby inferring that this signe and sacrament of his blood belongeth to as many as were redeemed by it Matth 26.28 Matth. 26.28 And whereas they say that here the disciples were onely
and that to them alone this speech was directed the Apostle plainely taketh away this cauill for setting downe the words of institution for the vse of the whole Church of Corinth hee willeth euery one indefinitly to examine himselfe and so to eate of this breade and drinke of this cuppe 1. Cor. 11.28 1. Corinth 11.28 And thus if wee studie and meditate in Gods word wee shall find most cleere manifest places for the confirmation of the truth and confutation of all sects errors and heresies But what if this meanes be taken away from vs of reading studying the scriptures either because they are onely to bee had in an vnknowne language as in the time of popery or because we cannot reade and haue no body to teach vs What if both reading and studying them we finde many doubts and difficulties and diuers places which seeme to fauour diuers and opposite opinions and religions how the must we quit our selues out of this laberinth of ambiguitie and doubtfulnesse seeing it is preiudiciall to appeale to the iudgement of either faction I answere that in these dayes the meanes of knowledge are not so scant but that they may inioy them that labour for them for either they may obtaine the vse of the Scriptures in their owne language where they dwel or else in some other place by remouing their habitation though they cānot reade yet it is no hard matter to learne to those who will vse paines and diligence or at least to get the helpe of others to supplie their want and defect in this behalfe But let it bee granted that we were abandoned of all these meanes or that vsing them there were some doubt remaining of which we cannot be resolued are we therefore destitute of helpe and forsaken of all meanes whereby wee might attaine vnto the knowledge of the truth No surely For if when allother meanes faile vs we haue our recourse vnto God by earnest effectual prayer instantly crauing his holy spirit to guide and direct vs we haue a mercifull promise that he will heare our request and graunt vnto vs his holy spirit as it is Luke 11.13 Luke 11.13 and that thereby he will illuminate the blinde eyes of our vnderstanding inlighten our minds with the knowledge of the truth and take away from vs all preiudice of opinion and forestalled iudgement so as we shal discerne truth from falsehood and Gods true religion from errors and lies sects and heresies Iohn 16.13 For this spirit of truth will leade vs into al truth as it is Ioh. 16.13 He searcheth al things 1. Cor. 2.10.12 euen the deepe things of God and to this end we receiue him that we may knowe the things which are giuen vnto vs of God as it is 1. Cor. 2.10.12 He is that precious eye-salue wherewith being annointed we see Reuel 3.18 who before were blinde Reuel 3.18 And if once wee haue receiued this annoynting we neede not that any man should teach vs 1. Ioh. 2.27 for this annoynting teacheth vs all things as it is 1. Ioh. 2.27 Though therefore we were abandoned of all other meanes yet let not Sathan perswade vs to neglect all religion because we cannot discerne the true religion from that which is false for if we earnestly and sincerely labour after the knowledge of the truth and with good Cornelius continually implore the assstance and direction of Gods spirit wee shall bee sure to obtaine our desire for the Lord hath promised it and hee will vndoubtedly be as good as his word CHAP. XXV Sathans temptations taken from our vnworthinesse and vnfitnesse to heare answered § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning the temptations of Sathan That our sins and vnworthinesse should not hinder vs from hearing Gods word which he draweth from the Ministers to discredit the Gospel and to diswade men from the hearing thereof but if he cannot thus preuaile he will leaue the Ministers and come to the parties themselues suggesting into their minds that they are vnworthy in respect of the innumerable number of their sinnes to be hearers of the Gospell which is so pure and excellent and that their corruptions are so great their vnderstandings so blind their memories so slippery their wils so peruerse their heart and affections so wicked and prophane that it is to be feared in regard of this their vnfitnes to heare that the word of God which in it selfe is the sauour of life vnto life will become vnto them the sauour of death to their more deepe condemnation For the answering of which temptation wee are to know first that our sinnes and vnworthinesse should be so farre from hindring vs frō the hearing of Gods words that they should rather serue as forcible arguments to moue vs more attentiuely and diligently to heare it because it is the meanes ordayned of God to pull vs out of our sins to purge vs from our corruptions to worke in vs true sanctification and to make vs of the sonnes of wrath the children of God Moreouer though we want faith and all other sanctifying graces yet we are to heare the word of God for therefore the Lord hath ordained the ministery of the word not onely to increase grace where it is begun but also to beget and begin it where it is wanting so that we must not only heare because we are fit but also that we may be made fit who before were vnfit Neither are we to imagine that faith and other graces goe before hearing but follow after as fruits and effects thereof Rom. 10.14.17 as the Apostle plainely sheweth Rom. 10.14 But how shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued And how shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard And how shall they heare without a Preacher And verse 17. Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word of God If then there be no faith without hearing nor no grace without faith it must needs follow that before we heare we are destitute of faith all sauing grace and that by hearing they are wrought in vs God preuenting vs with his grace and calling vs vnto himselfe not only when we had no deserts to merit his mercy but also not so much as any grace to desire it And hence it is that the Apostle saith 2. Tim. 1.9 That God hath called vs with an holy calling not according to our works 2. Tim. 1.9 but according to his own purpose and grace which was giuen vnto vs through Christ Iesus before the world was The truth hereof may appeare in all the examples of Gods saints who before their calling were so far from deseruing any grace at Gods hand that rather they deserued confusion vtter destruction For example what worthines was in Abraham before his conuersion who liued in grosse idolatry what worthines in Rahab the harlot in Manasses a cruell tirant a wicked sorcerer an horrible idolater what worthines in Marie Magdalene possessed by
not how to pray as we ought the spirit it selfe helpeth our infirmities and maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed But God who scarcheth the hearts knoweth what is the meaning of the spirit for he maketh request for the Saints according to the will of God As the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8.26.27 who therefore can doubt of obtaining his suite euen the remission of his sinnes and reconciliation with God seeing his suite is framed and indited by Gods spirit and consequently is most wise iust and as the Apostle saith according to the will of God yea it is sollicited and followed with great earnestnesse by the same spirit and therefore our suite being wise iust and framed by the spirit according to the will of God and by the same spirite in most earnest manner sollicited and furthered there is no question but wee shall obtaine it CHAP. XXXVI Other reasons to perswade the weake Christian of the remission of his sinnes § Sect. 1 ANd these are the reasons which may be drawn from euery of the persons of the Trinitie 1. That wee are to beleeue the remission of our sinnes because it is an article of our Creede to assure vs of the remission of our sinnes to which we may ad diuers others First the beleeuing of the remission of our sinnes in an article of our Creede which we doe daily confesse and professe which is not left vnto our choise to beleeue or not to beleeue but as we confesse it with the mouth so we are boūd to beleeue it with the heart if we would be reckoned in the number of Christians Why then should we doubt of that which we are bound to performe and if wee doe not wee grieuously sinne through infidelitie which is more daungerous damnable then all our other sins whatsoeuer And therefore though there were no other reason to mooue vs though our hainous and manifold sinnes should make it seeme vnto vs neuer so incredible yet let vs set aside all impediments and breake through the violence of all obiections and beleeue in obedience to Gods commaundements and because it is our dutie the performance whereof is very acceptable vnto God and the neglect whereof is a sinne most daungerous and damnable Which that we may perfourme let vs carefully obserue the condition of the couenant of grace that is let vs rest and rely vpon Christ Iesus alone for our saluation by a liuely faith and turne vnto God by vnfained repentance and then there is no place left to doubting of that which in dutie we are bound to beleeue § Sect. 2 Secondly the afflicted soule labouring vnder sinne may receiue no small assurance by the testimonie of Gods faithfull ministers 2. The testimonie of Gods faithfull ministers Matth. 16. for the keyes of the kingdome of heauen are committed vnto them and they haue power giuen them of God here on earth to bind and loose not as though they could by their owne authoritie and in their owne name giue pardon of sinnes to whom they list as the papists teach and practise for this is proper and peculiar vnto God alone as euen the Pharises well knew whereof it was that seeing our Sauiour Christ take vpon him to forgiue sinnes whom they imagined to bee a meere man they affirmed that he blasphemed For who say they can forgiue sinne but God onely but they haue authoritie giuen them of God vpon due examination and tryall of their faith by the fruites thereof vnfained repentance certainely to declare and pronounce vnto them that their sinnes are forgiuen Whosoeuer therefore haue this testimonie of Gods faithful ministers who are well acquainted with their estates giuen vnto thē they may assure themselues that it is vndoubtedly true and most certaine for who is it that dare oppose himselfe and contradict the testimonie of Gods spirite in the mouth of so many his faithfull ambassadours who dare bee so presumptuous as to take vppon him the discerning of his state better then the ministers of God who being appointed of God to this function are indued with a great measure of his spirit whereby they are inabled to discerne and iudge of mens estates better then they themselues for he that is spiritual discerneth all things and is made acquainted with the mind of Christ as the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor 2.15.16 And therefore if diuers of Gods faithfull ministers with one consent pronounce vnto any paenitent sinner the remission of their sinnes and assure them after the examination of their estate that they are in the loue and fauour of God it should be vnto them ten thousand times more forcible an argument to perswade thē to confirme their faith in the assurāce of Gods loue then the cōtrarie testimonie of Sathan or their timorous vnbeleeuing flesh to moue them to doubting thereof if our bodies be sicke we committ our selues to the skill and care of the phisition and good reason because wee knowe he is better able to discerne of our estate then we our selues and beleeuing his iudgment to bee good wee suffer him to applie such remedies as hee thinketh most fitt why then should wee not committ the discerning of our estate to the phisition of the soule no lesse careful and in this respect much more skilful for the others rules in some patients may faile him but the grounds whereupon the spirituall physition buildeth are most infallible being the vndoubted truth of God Why should we not rather beleeue their often approoued iudgment then our owne timorous phantasies or Sathans testimonie who is our malitious enemie § Sect. 3 Thirdly the afflicted soule may gather assurance of the remission of sinnes from the contrarie testimonie of the diuel The 3. Reason drawne from the contrarie testimonie of Sathan For when ther is any suggestion cast into our mindes which is repugnant to the word of God and the testimonie of Gods spirit in the heartes of the faithfull we may assure our selues that it is the speech of Sathan or of our corrupt fleshe the messenger of Sathan both which come to one end but those motiues and suggestions that God will not receiue vs to mercie that our sinnes are vnpardonable that wee are reprobates and castawayes that now it is too late to turne vnto God proceed not from Gods spirit for they are quite contrarie to that which the scriptures teach vs namely that the mercies of God are infinite and hee alwaies readie to receiue vs to grace when we turne vnto him that if we wil earnestly repent and in the mediation of Christ sue for mercie hee will make our scarlet sinnes as white as snow that it is neuer to late to turne vnto God for if wee repent hee hath promised to remit our sins and to receiue vs into his fauour Neither are wee to imagine that the testimonie of Gods spirit in our consciences is contrarie to the testimonie of the same spirit in the holy scriptures and therefore seeing these suggestions
commaundementes To which wee must answere that the worde of Christ is his gospell wherein hee promiseth euerlasting life to all that beleeue in him and bring forth the fruites of their faith in vnfained repentance as it appeareth Ioh. 5.38 where hee thus speaketh to the vnbeleeuing Iewes And his word saith he haue yee not abiding in you for whom he hath sent him yee beleeue not whereby it is manifest if Christs reasoning bee of sound consequence that those haue his word abiding in them who beleeue in him whom God hath sent euen our Lorde and Sauiour Iesus Christ So that we keepe the word of our Sauiour when wee beleeue in him resting and relying vpon him alone for our saluation and truely repent vs of our sins sorrowing and grieuing that by them we haue offended and displeased our louing God and mercifull father hating our sinnes because they are sinnes purposing and labouring to forsake them and indeuouring according to the measure of strength and grace receiued to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life And therefore if wee can find in our selues this faith and this repentance wee may vndoubtedly be assured notwithstanding our manifould falls and greate corruptions that we haue kept the word of Christ and therefore are giuen vnto him of the father and consequently that we are effectually called and shal be eternally glorified For it is the will of the father that whosoeuer beleeueth in his son Iesus Christ shoulde haue euerlasting life as our Sauiour testifieth Ioh. 6.40 As for our corruptions they shall bee washed away with the bloud of Christ and our imperfections shall bee couered with the rich robe of his perfect righteousnesse so that in him wee shall appeare perfect before Gods iudgment seate and there bee accepted as iust and righteous § Sect. 9 The third part of our effectuall calling is our vnion and communion with Christ Of the third part of our effectuall calling whereby he becommeth our head and wee his members of which whosoeuer can bee assured they need not to make any queston of their effectual calling but all those who are indued with faith are vnited vnto Christ for it is a propertie thereof to apply vnto our selues Christ and all his benefitts it is the hand of the soule whereby wee lay hould vpon Christ it is the mouth of the soule wherby we spiritually feed vpō him he that eateth his flesh and drinketh his bloud dwelleth in Christ and Christ in him as himselfe speaketh Ioh. 6.56 So also whosoeuer are indued with Gods spirit and haue submitted themselues to bee led and gouerned thereby they are ingrafted in the bodie of Christ for the spirit is the bloud of this vnion and therefore if wee can discerne the spirit of God in vs by any of the fruits thereof Gal. 5.22 wee may bee assured that wee are the members of Christ and consequently effectually called Lastly wee may be assured that wee are ingrafted in the bodie of Christ by our worke of saluation either appertaining to Gods seruice or christian righteousnesse towards our neighbour for it is impossible that wee shoulde bring foorth any ripe grapes of godlinesse if wee were notingrafted in the true vine Iesus Christ as himselfe affirmeth Ioh. 15.4 Abide in mee and I in you as the branch cannot beare fruite of it selfe except it abide in the vine no more can yee except yee abide in mee 5. I am the vine ye are the branches hee that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruites for without mee yee can doe nothing And therefore if wee make conscience of our wayes and exercise our selues in some measure in those good workes which the Lorde hath commaunded in obedience to his will and to this end that his name may be glorified wee may assure our selues that wee are ingrafted into the true vine Christ Iesus for of our selues we are altogether vnfruitfull and could doe nothing § Sect. 10 But here Sathan will obiect that this argument maketh against our selues That we may be vnited vnto Christ though we alwaies bring forth small fruits and sometime no fruites for we thereby make it manifest that we are not ingrafted into Christ because our fruites of holinesse and righteousnesse are commonly exceeding small and sometimes none at al wheras the liuely branches of this vine are exceeding fruitfull and abundant in good workes To which we are to answere that all the branches of the vine do not bring forth fruits in like aboundance but some more and some lesse and yet notwithstanding this doth not proue that these are not true branches as well as the other although they receiue lesse sappe and liuely iuyce from the roote and stocke and so also it is in this mysticall vine if the branches be not altogeather barren and fruitlesse though their fruites be not in so greate aboundance yet if it bee right and of the same nature with the other they may assure themselues that they also are liuely branches of the true vine Iesus Christ neither is the quātity nūber of our fruits so much in this regard to be respected for if according to the quātitie of sap goodiuice which we receiue frō our root we bring forth fruit that is if according to that measure of grace giftes of Gods holy spirit which our sauiour Christ hath bestowed vpon vs we spend our liues in Gods seruice which himselfe hath commaunded to the end that we may glorifie his holy name we may assure our selues that we are true branches of this vine which our Sauiour will purge and prune that wee may bringe forth more fruites as he hath promised Ioh. 15.2 moreouer whereas Sathan obiecteth that wee are not branches of this vine because at some times wee can shew no fruits wee are to answere that as the earthly vine hath not alwayes grapes no not so much as leaues vpon it and yet notwithstanding it liueth receiuing nourishment from the roote and bringeth forth fruit in due time and season so that the braunches of this misticall vine are some time without the fruites of good workes yea haue not so much to bee seene vpon them as the faire greene leaues of an outward profession as it is most vsuall when as they are throughly nypped with the could winter of tentations and haue all their beautie blasted and blowne away with the boysterous blasts of sathans fierce incounters and yet at the same time they receiue the sapp iuyce and vertue of Gods spirit from their roote Iesus Christ by which they seeming dead doe liue and receiue nourishment vntill at Gods good pleasure the comfortable beames of his loue and fauour do shine vpon them with which their frozen hartes being throughly warmed doe againe bring forth not onely the leaues of profession but also the ripe fruits of godlinesse and righteousnesse and therefore though presently in such cases wee haue no fruites to shewe yet let not Sathan perswade vs that
ouerruled vs and after also beareth some sway in vs euē when we are regenerate til with al our other corruptions we lay this aside also by death And this appeareth in the exāple of the Prophet Dauid who desireth the Lord to create in him a cleane hart to renew a right spirit within him Psal 51.10 Psal 51.10 in which words he implieth that his hardnesse of heart was so great and the corruption thereof so abominable that it was euen past mending and therefore he doth not pray the Lord to purge and reforme his old hart Ezech. 11.19 but to create a new one and to take quite away his stonie hart to bestow vpon him a hart of flesh as though his hart were like a building exceeding ruinous which could no longer be repaired vnlesse it were razed downe euen to the foundation and all new built vp againe So whereas he praieth the Lord to renew his spirit in him he giueth vs to vnderstand that he hath lost the feeling of the spirit of adoption crying in his hart Abba father and that there was in him such an intermission surcease of the actions fruits therof that it seemed vtterly quenched and departed from him So els where he praieth vnto the Lord to quickē him according to his louing kindnesse Psal 119.88 that he might keepe the testimonies of his mouth Whereby hee intimateth his drowsinesse and deadnesse in Gods seruice The Prophet Esay likewise in the behalfe of himselfe and the people complaineth thus Esay 63.17 Esay 63.17 O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy waies and hardned our hart from thy feare By all which it appeareth that euen the deare children of God do oftentimes see and feele to their great griefe their hardnesse of hart which is ioyned with exceeding dulnesse and drowsinesse in Gods seruice Yea in truth this kind of hardnesse of hart is incident vnto them alone For whilest men are worldly and carnall though their harts are most hard and obdurate yet they doe not discerne it neither are they any whit displeased with their estate but fondly flatter themselues imagining that they are in exceeding good case and very deuout in Gods seruice which indeed as they perfourme it is meerely formall customable rather then conscionable in shew and externall but not in spirit and truth but when the Lord by the ministery of his word made effectuall by the inward operation of his holy spirit doth pull of the thicke skinne of carnall securitie from of their hearts and causeth the seales of ignorance to fall from their eyes then and not before doe they plainely discerne and sensibly feele that huge masse of inbred corruption their dulnesse and drowsinesse in Gods seruice their hardnesse of hart and impaenitencie and now they are much vexed and grieued with them which in former times neuer troubled them And therefore let not such be dismaied nor debarre their soules of that cōsolation which of right belongeth to them for flesh and bloud hath not reuealed this their corruption hardnesse of hart dulnesse and deadnesse in Gods seruice but the good spirit of God which hath begunne already to worke in them shewing them their corruptions and moouing them to an vnfained dislike of them and therefore they may assure themselues that he who hath begunne this good worke in them will also bring it in his good time to perfection Onely as the Psalmist exhorteth Let them tarrie the Lords leasure Phil. 1.6 waite vpon and trust in him and he shall comfort their hearts § Sect. 2 Now this sensible or discerned hardnesse of hart is also of two sortes 2. Sortes of sensible hardnesse of hart The first ioyned with the vse of the means wherby it may be softned the first is of them who carefully vse all good meanes and indeauour with all diligence to better their estate which they see to bee most miserable and to mollifie their hard hartes and to attaine vnto harty and vnfained repentance Which who so doth hee may assure himselfe that hee is the child of God and in his loue and fauour for earnestly to desire repentance and carefully to vse the meanes whereby we may attaine thereunto to be displeased with our hardnesse of heart and to labour that it may bee mollified to bee sorry that wee can bee no more sorry and to bee displeased with our selues because wee can no more bee displeased with our sinnes is very acceptable in the sight of God though wee see but a little progresse in godlinesse and but a small increase of repentance which wee desire in great measure for the Lorde esteemeth the will for the deed and the affection for the action and wee may assure our selues that if on our part wee be not wanting in the vse of the meanes the Lord will not bee wanting on his part to supply our wantes and to satisfie all our Godly desires Of this hardnesse of heart which verie often befalleth the dearest of Gods children wee haue many examples Examples of this hardnesse of heart Psal 77.2 The prophet Dauid thus complaineth Psal 77.2 In the day of my trouble I sought the Lorde my sore ranne and ceased not in the night my soule refused comfort 3. I did thinke vppon God and as troubled I prayed and my spirit was full of anguish 4. thou keepest mine eyes waking I was astonied and could not speake So the church complaineth thus Cant. 3.1 Cant 3.1 and 5.6 In my bed I sought him by night whom my soule loued I sought him but I found him not and chap. 5. ver 6. I opened to my welbeloued but my welbeloued was gone and past mine heart was gone when hee did speake I sought him but I could not find him I called him but hee answered me not Whereby it is manifest that euen the deare saints of God are often times destitute of all comfort and voyde of all feeling of Gods fauour and of the powerfull working of the graces of Gods spirit which they haue receiued though they vse the meanes appointed of God for the stirring vp and increasing of grace in them which commeth to passe by reason of their hardnesse of heart and drowsie dulnesse of spirit in these spirituall excercises And hence it is that many of Gods children doe grieously afflict their soules because they see these their corruptions and imperfections and hereby often times are mooued to thinke that they are destitute of faith and of all sauing graces of Gods sanctifying spirite because though they vse the meanes ordayned of God for the begetting and increasing of grace in them yet they cannot perceiue any fruite that commeth thereby nor feele in their soules any true comfort or ioy in these spirituall excercises For example some complaine that though they continually heare the word yet they feele no increase of any grace no more knowledge no more faith no more zeale of Gods glory no more mortification of their old corruptions
the flesh fight against sathan nor sathan against the flesh nor either of thē against thēselues for so their kingdome being deuided could not possibly stand Mat. 12.25 as our sauiour Christ himselfe hath taught vs Mat. 12.25.26 And therefore it must needs be sōe other force which causeth this oppositiō which can proceede from nothing else but the spirit of God But this will more manifestly appeare if we consider the contrarie affections and actions which plainely shew themselues in this battle for we find our faith assaulted with doubting and infidelitie these also againe beaten backe after they haue gotten some ground and subdued with the strēgth of faith we discerne also our affiance in God shrewdly shaken with diffidence and distrust and afterwards this distrust vanquisheth againe by affiance so as after we haue vttered through the violence oftentation some diffident and impatient speeches yet at the length we growe to Iobs resolution Though hee kill mee yet will I trust in him Iob. 13.15 Wee may also discerne our zeale sometime so hot in Gods seruice that it expelleth coldnesse and the fruit thereof dulnesse and drowsinesse of spirite and sometimes by them it is cooled and in outward appearance quenched and the like may bee saide of all the other fruits of the flesh and the spirit Besides which fight and stirring betweene them and their fruits the christian may obserue in himselfe a misliking of the corruptions of the flesh great greefe and vexation of mind because hee is still subiect vnto them and an earnest desire to be freed from them ioyned with an holy indeauoure in the vse of the meanes which are ordayned of God for this purpose and howsoeuer through the violence of Sathans tentations and his owne corruptions ye be sometimes led captiue into sinne yet afterwardes hee is greeued for it hee hateth and abhorreth it and earnestly desireth and indeauoureth for the time to come to leaue and forsake it and to serue the Lorde in newnesse of life Now whence doth all this opposition and contrarietie proceede shall wee say from the flesh why it is against all reason Iam. 3.11 for as the Apostle Iames disputeth Iam. 3.11 Doth a fountaine send out at one place sweete water and bitter can the figg tree bring forth oliues or a vine figgs or rather as our sauiour Christ reasoneth Mat. 7.16 Doe men gather grapes of thorns or figgs of thistles Mat. 7.16 so may I demaund can the flesh in the which as the Apostle affirmeth dwelleth no good thing Rom. 7.18 bring foorth the fruites of the spirite which are quite contrarie to the nature thereof namely sorrowe for sinne hatred of it selfe and the corruptions thereof and carnest desire of sanctification and holines of life it is impossible And therfore we may conclude that they are the fruits of Gods spirit in vs and consequently that wee are the sons of God who are indued with a true and liuely faith for as many as are led by the spirite of God Rom. 8. they are the sonnes of God which priuiledge belongeth onely to the faithfull as appeareth Ioh. 1.12 Ioh. 1.12 As many as receaued him to them hee gaue power to be the sons of God euen to them that beleeue in his name So that whosoeuer haue the spirit haue faith also for the spirit and faith which is a fruit thereof cannot be seuered § Sect. 10 The fourth argument whereby we may bee assured that we haue faith The 4. argument taken from our sanctification is our mortification and dying vnto sinne and rising againe to newnesse of life for the bloud of Iesus Christ which is applied vnto vs by faith as it doth washe away the guilt and punishment of our sinnes so doth it also cleanse vs in some measure from the corruptions themselues and as his death and obediēce hath meritted the pardon of our sins so also Gods spirit by vertue whereof we are more and more freed from the bondage and seruitude of sinne and Sathan and as by his resurrection hee hath made way for our second resurrection whereby wee rise to euerlasting happinesse so also for our first resurrection whereby wee rise from sinne to newnesse of life If therefore wee can find in our selues that our sins and corruptions are by little and little mortified that wee striue and indeauour after holinesse and righteousnesse of life if our vnderstandings bee somewhat inlightened in the knowledge of Gods truth and our stubberne wills inclyned to holy obedience if we discerne that our affections are in some measure changed and renewed then may wee be assured that wee are indued with a true and liuely faith which hath applied vnto vs Christ Iesus and his bloudshed death merites by vertue whereof this worke of regeneration is begunne in vs. § Sect. 11 Lastly The last argument taken from the seuerall fruits of sanctification we may be assured that we haue faith by the seuerall fruits of sanctification and regeneration which proceed from it for example when wee can sorrow and greeue for our sinnes past not for any worldly losse or feare of punishment but because thereby we haue offended God when as we hate our present sinnes and corruptions especially those which stick fastest vnto vs and are most pleasing to our corrupt nature when as we indeauour and striue to forsake and mortifie all sinne though our carnall affection be much indeared to it by reason of some great pleasure or profite which it bringeth with it auoiding with no lesse care those sinnes which bring worldly benefitt then those which are accompanied with shame and punishment when as we loue God euen when he afflicteth vs and in obedience to his commaundement perfourme such holy duties and imbrace such vertues not onely which are commendable in the world but also those which are accompanied with shame and reproach when as we loue our brethren yea euen our enemies and shew this our loue by giuing vnto those who want and forgiuing those who offend vs and when more especially we extend this loue and the fruits thereof to those who are of the houshould of faith and amongst these principally to Gods ministers who are instruments appointed of God for our conuersion and saluation when as wee can submit our selues vnto Gods will and rest contented in all estates with his good pleasure when as we loath this life and the vanities of the world and desire our dissolution that we may be with Christ and be freed from our sinnes when as we are patient in afflictions and in the middest of them haue some hope of tasting Gods mercy and goodnesse grounding our hope vpon Gods promisses and our owne former experience when as we delight in the hearing and meditating in Gods word and continue constant in the profession and practise of his truth not onely when our obedience is good cheape but also when it is deare and very costly and as well when it is
yet all true faith and sufsicient for saluation That so long as wee continue in this life our knowledge is but imperfect and vayled with much darknesse and ignorance for we know but in parte as euen the apostle speaketh in his owne person 1. Cor. 13.12 1. Cor. 13.12 And therefore our assent and perswasion must needs be imperfect and but in part and often assaulted with much doubting that howsoeuer faith and doubting are opposed in their owne nature yet notwithstanding they may be together in the same subiect in respect of diuers partes For wee are partly flesh and partly spirit and these two with their seuerall fruits do continually fight and striue one against the other and sometimes the flesh sometimes the spirit with their seuerall fruits get the vpper hand in the meane time both retaining their owne nature and properties howsoeuer they doe not so euidently appeare nor so powerfully worke their seuerall actions when the aduerse part preuaileth and hath put them to the foile for example faith which is a fruite of the spirit is continually assaulted by doubting which is a fruite of the flesh and proceedeth from the roote of infidelitie and sometime faith preuaileth and sometime it receiueth the foyle but yet at the same time howsoeuer wee cannot sensibly discerne it nor the actions thereof yet it retaines it owne nature and properties neyther is it depriued of his firmenesse constancie and certainty howsoeuer they be for a time couered hid out of our sight like the fire vnder the ashes or the Sunne vnder a cloud as before I haue said Though therefore we finde in vs much inconstancie and doubting yet let not Sathan perswade vs that these are of the nature and properties of our faith and that therefore our faith is not true but temporarie false and counterfaite for this inconstancie and doubting proceedeth not from faith and from the spirituall and regenerate part but from the flesh and the part vnregenerate and therefore howsoeuer it is assaulted and sometimes foyled by them yet in it owne nature it is true certaine and constant § Sect. 2 Secondly Sathans tentation groūded on the strong faith of some of Gods children answered he will suggest that the Saints mentioned in the Scriptures had most certaine strong faith in exceeding great measure that they brought forth cōtinually most notable fruits thereof were not subiect to such infirmities and doubting as wee feele in our selues To which we are to answere that this tentation is full of vntruth and hath no sound part in it for first we are to assure our selues that they fell into manifold doubtings and were subiect vnto innumerable infirmities and corruptions which are not specified in the booke of God neither was it fitte or expedient that it should be a register of all humane infirmities and of their manifold falls but onely that some should bee recorded for our warning that wee might more warily watch ouer our selues least wee should fall into the like sinnes and for our comfort also when wee are fallen in that our case is common with Gods dearest children in which respect the Scriptures is not wanting Looke vpon Abraham the father of the faithfull whose faith was so strong that he aboue hope beleeued vnder hope and you shall see that his faith notwithstanding was sometimes shaken with diffidence and doubting as when distrusting Gods gratious promisses made vnto him and not resting vpon his almighty power he was content to take vnto him Hagar his maide and commit sinne with her that so by his owne deuise he might make good Gods promisse and obtaine the blessed seed as though God could not perfourme that which he had spoken vnlesse he helped him by such vnlawfull meanes So where was the strength and constancie of Moyses faith when hee dishonoured God before the people in not beleeuing his word by shewing his impatiencie Numb 20.10.11 where was the strength and constancie of Dauids faith num 20.10 11. when he complaineth that he was forsaken that God had fayled in his promisses that he had forgotten to be mercifull and had shut vp his tender mercies in displeasure Psal 22.1 and 77.8.9 Or of Iobs faith when he cursed the day of his birth and accounted God his enemy Psal 22.1 and 77.8.9 who had set him vp as a marke against which he shot poisoned arrowes or of Ieremy when he likewise wished that he had neuer bene borne and bewraieth great impatiency Iere. 20. Ier. 20. Or of Ionas when he rebelled against Gods commaundement and fled from his presence or when after his miraculous deliuerie he murmured and vttered impatient speeches euen against God himself for the losse of a poore gourd which kept him from the heate of the sunne and when the Lord mercifully and mildly reproued him saying doest thou well to be angry for the gourd he stubbornely answered I doe well to bee angry vnto the death Ion. 4.9 Ion. 4.9 Or of the Apostles themselues when they fled away and forsooke their Lord and maister Iesus Christ for feare of worldly punishment and when after his death they would not beleeue the women reporting that hee was risen againe vntill their owne eyes had seene them Lastly though it be euident that diuers of the Saints mentioned in the Scriptures had a farre greater measure of faith and brought foorth much more plentiful fruits then we can discerne in our selues yet this is no good reason to prooue that our weaker smaller faith is no faith or vneffectuall for our saluation for this is an absurd consequence the Moone giueth much lesse light then the Sunne therefore it giueth no light at all one hand is farre greater then another therefore the lesser is not a true hand this man excelleth another in the vse of reason and therefore the other is vnreasonable because the diuers degrees in the quantitie of things doe not take away the truth of their being and existence so long as they be of the same nature and qualitie Besides as the holy ghost hath set downe examples of most strong faith in some of Gods seruants so hath he made mention of some who haue had but weake and little faith to the end that we should so labour to attaine vnto the highest degree as that in the meane time we be not vtterly discouraged with the lowest for example as he hath remembred the faith of Abraham who beleeued aboue hope vnder hope so hee hath not forgotten his weake faith who cried I beleeue Lord help thou mine vnbeliefe as he hath mentioned the faith of Iob who grew to this resolution Though hee kill me yet will I trust in him so he hath expressed also the faith of Nicodemus in knowledge weake and simple and in practise and profession cowardly and fearefull as hee hath set downe the strong faith of Paul who grew to this fulnesse of perswasion that nothing should be able to separate him from the loue of
God in Iesus Christ so he hath not left out the little weak saith of Thomas who would not beleeue further then hee sawe and felt Yea the Lord in his word hath reuealed vnto vs the diuers degrees of faith in the same men in respect of diuers times That the scriptures set forth vnto vs the diuers degrees of faith in the same beleeuer at one time like a graine of mustard seede at another time like a great tree at one time like a little smoke and soone after bursting out into a great flame now like a weake reed wauering and declyning with the smallest blast of any tryall and within a while like an immoueable rocke which beateth backe huge billowes and euen a whole sea of violent tentations in a word it setteth out to our vew as it were portrayed in a fresh and liue picture the diuers ages of a christian as he is in his conception and preparation to grace and as he is in his new birth and first conuersion as he is a babe and as he groweth from his infancie to greater age and strength till hee come to ripe yeares and to be a strong man in Christ Besides it sheweth vnto vs his diuers relapses through sinne the sicknesse of the soule and how oftentimes the spiritual growth is hindred and the strength of Gods graces abated and much weakned by the cotidian ague of our corruptions and Sathans tentations and also after these fitts bee driuen away by vertue of Gods spirit how we receiue a greater increase of grace and measure of strength whereby we grow more in christianitie and godlinesse in a yeere then we did in two before All which is set downe to this end that we should not make our infancie our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and full growth but labour to increase in grace till we become of babes strong men in Christ as also that finding our selues as weake as little infants wee bee not vtterly discouraged for if we sucke the brests of our spirituall mother the true church and receiue from her the milke and stronger meate of the word and sacraments wee shall assuredly growe vp from grace to grace and strength to strength till of babes wee become strong men in Iesus Christ and that though wee haue many great sickness of the soule and relapses into sinne whereby our spirituall growth for a time is hindred and our strength in Gods graces much abated yet if we often feed vpon the comfortable foode of Gods worde and vse this spirituall physick prescribed by God himselfe we shall not only againe recouer our former strength and health but also find a great increase of Gods graces in vs. § Sect. 3 Lastly Sathan will suggest that though our faith be true That Sathan cannot preuaile against the weakest faith yet it is so exceeding small and weake that with the violence of his tētations and huge masse of our own corruptions it will easily be ouerthrown and turned into infidelitie To which we are to answere that though hereby our faith may be shrewdly shaken yet it can neuer be ouerturned though it may be couered with the ashes of our corruptions yet it can neuer be vtterly quenched though through our gretuous foyles and falls in the cōbate of tentations it may be as it were brought into a traunce so as we cannot sensibly discerne any action motion or life of faith yet the habite and grace it selfe after it is once giuen of God is neuer taken away neither is it possible that it should be quite destroied by all the power of hell And this may appeare by diuers reasons first because faith is not of our selues but the free gift of God as it is Ephe. 2.8 Eph. 2.8 And whatsoeuer sanctifyng and sauing grace the Lord giueth that he neuer taketh vtterly away for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 11.29 Rom. 11.29 Secondly whosoeuer truely beleeueth he is truely knit and vnited vnto the body of Christ and is made partaker of his holy spirit which as it begetteth and beginneth all the sanctifying and sauing graces in vs so also it nourisheth strengtheneth and confirmeth them so as they can neuer vtterly faile for whatsoeuer good worke he beginneth that will hee also perfect and accomplish Phil. 1.26 Phil. 1.6 Thirdly whosoeuer truely beleeueth he is truely iustified and whosoeuer is iustified is elected called and shal be glorified for these inseparably goe together Rom. 8.30 Rom. 8.30 and consequently he that hath true faith whereby he is iustified cannot fall away seeing his iustification is as certaine as the eternall decree of Gods election § Sect. 4 Lastly That God both can and will vphould the weakest beleeuer God both can and will strengthen and confirme all those who are weake in faith till they attaine vnto the end of their faith euen the saluation of their soules and therefore it is impossible that they which once truely beleeue should fall away and be cōdemned Concerning Gods power no man can make any question seeing it is omnipotent and almighty and for his will he hath fully reuealed it both by his word and workes namely that he will not take away that grace which he hath once giuen but rather increase it till it bee perfected and accomplished Esa 66.13 Gods loue compared to the loue of a tēder mother For the first the Lord saith that hee will comfort his Church and people as the woman comforteth her child Esa 66.13 now wee know that the mother doth not abandon her child nor depriue him of that comfort which she can giue him because he is sicke and weake but rather the sicker and weaker he is the more is her care and diligence in releiuing him in his distresse when hee is not able to disgest strong meate she prouideth for him cōfortable foode of light disgestion when he is so weake that he cannot goe she carieth him in her armes or otherwise supporteth him when he is so sicke that he faleth downe to the ground in a swoune shee rayseth him vp neuer resteth till shee hath recouered life in him is this loue in a naturall mother then surely much more shall we finde in our heauenly father Esa 49.15 for though a mother may forget the fruit of her womb yet wil the Lord neuer forget vs as he hath promised Esa 49.15 And therefore the greater our weakenesse is in grace and the more greiuous our sicknesse is through sinne and the noisome humors of our corruptions the more carefully will hee watch ouer vs with the eye of his prouidence and support vs with his almighty power in our greatest weakenesse the more tenderly will he pitie vs and in louing compassion will prouide for vs such comfortable food as wil be fit to nourish vs and repaire our decaied strength when we cannot goe he will with his almighty hand vphould vs and when we fall into a dead traunce
1. Cor. 1.30 By his obedience many are made righteous Rom. 5.19 And that which was impossible to the law Rom. 5.19 in as much as it was weake because of the flesh God sending his sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh Rom. 8.3.4 and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in vs as it is Rom. 8.3.4 In a word in him alone wee haue all our righteousnesse in him we shine gloriously in the sight of God and he is that bright shining Sunne of righteousnes from whom we borrow all our light without whose raies of holinesse we should remaine in the darknesse of our sinnes and corruptions Lastly the Apostle setteth downe the forme of our iustification namely the imputation of our sinnes vnto Christ and the imputation of his righteousnes vnto vs. 2. Cor. 5.21 He which knew no sinne was made sinne for vs 2. Cor. 5.21 that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him As therefore Christ was made a sinner for vs so wee are made righteous before God in him but Christ Iesus was not made a sinner for vs by infusion of our sinnes and corruptions into his nature for hee was alwaies most holie pure vndefiled and without sinne 1 Pet. 1.18.19 and 2.21 as the Apostle witnesseth of him but by imputation onely as being our suretie who had taken vpon him to discharge all our debt and therefore in like manner wee are made righteous not by infusion of righteousnesse but by imputation onely § Sect. 3 Now whereas they obiect That iustification by imputation is not imaginarie but reall and in truth that to be iustified by imputation is but an imaginarie mockerie as if a poore man should be reputed rich to this we are to answere that it is but a friuolous cauill for we doe not teach that God esteemeth and reputeth vs righteous being wholy defiled with sinne and quite destitute of all righteousnes but that hee maketh vs perfectly righteous by washing away our sins with the precious bloud of Christ and by applying and appropriating vnto vs his perfect righteousnes and obedience by vertue of his spirit principally a liuely faith instrumentally wherby we are vnited vnto Christ and become members of his body and consequently haue right and full interest vnto all that which this our head hath done for vs and so being made partakers of his righteousnes and merits God reputeth vs as we are in truth perfectly iust and righteous If a man being poore and farre in debt should be accounted and reputed exceeding rich and nothing indebted it were indeede but a meere imagination But if another of great sufficiencie shuld take vpon him to be his suretie and not onely discharge all his debts but should bestow vpon him great summes of money and much treasure this man whatsoeuer hee was before time in himselfe may now be esteemed rich and out of debt So if we as wee are farre indebted to the iustice of God and exceeding beggerly yea starke naked of all righteousnesse should be reputed as we are thus in our selues righteous and nothing indebted it were but a meere mockerie but seeing our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ hath taken vpon him to be our suretie who is himselfe all-sufficient and seeing hee hath perfectly and fully answered all our debts wherein we were ingaged to Gods iustice and not onely so but also hath communicated and bestowed vpon vs the infinite rich treasures of his righteousnes and obedience giuing vnto vs full interest and possession hereof outwardly by his hand-writing of the Gospell and his Sacraments as seales annexed thereunto and inwardly by the vertue and cooperation of of his spirit applying them vnto vs and lastly seeing we also haue receiued the full assurance of all this heauenly and spirituall rich treasure by the hand of faith wee are in truth quite out of debt and exceeding rich with his righteousnes which is now become ours and therfore are so reputed and esteemed in the sight of God CHAP. LI. Sathans temptations mouing the weake Christian to doubt of his iustification answered § Sect. 1 ANd so much for answering Sathans temptations That our iustificatiō is plainly reuealed vnto vs in the word of God whereby he laboureth to perswade vs to rest vpon a false and imperfect righteousnesse for our iustification now wee are briefly to speake of those which hee suggesteth into the mindes of weake Christians to the end that hee may make them doubt of their iustification that so hee might if it were possible make frustrate this worke of God or at least robbe their soules of all comfort and peace of conscience which alwaies accompanieth the assurance of our iustification for being iustified by faith wee haue peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5.1 as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5.1 First therefore he suggesteth that our iustification is an action of God and therefore vnknowne to vs so that we cannot possibly attaine vnto any certaine knowledge that we are iustified of God vnlesse he assure vs hereof by some speciall and extraordinarie reuelation For the answering whereof we are to vnderstand that this act of God in iustifying a sinner is as cleerely reuealed ordinarily in the Scriptures as any other thing concerning our saluation and that euery true beleeuer may as certainly conclude by vndoubted arguments grounded on Gods infallible truth that he is iustified before God as by naturall reason he can proue that he liueth and breatheth For first our effectuall vocation and iustification are inseparably linked together by the Apostle Rom. 8.30 Rom. 8.30 So that whosoeuer can proue that he is effectually called he may also most certainly inferre that he is iustified But euery true beleeuer may come to the certaine knowledge that he is effectually called as before I haue shewed at large and that not by any speciall reuelation but by the will of God reuealed in his word by the inward testimonie of Gods spirit and the vndoubted signes of effectuall calling which he obserueth in himselfe and therefore without any particular reuelation we may attaine vnto the assurance also that we are iustified that is that our sinnes are pardoned for the merits and full satisfaction of Iesus Christ and we cloathed with his righteousnes Secondly whosoeuer can come to the assurance that he hath a true and liuely faith he may also be assured that he is iustified for it is the nature and an inseparable propertie of true faith to apply vnto the beleeuer Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse whereby hee is iustified before God and hence it is that the Scriptures plainely affirme that we are iustified by faith and not by any thing else which is in vs as before I haue sufficiently shewed But we may come to the certaine assurance that we haue a true faith by the vndoubted signes and inseparable fruites thereof which wee may discerne in our selues as hath been
vnto vs. with Sathans temptations drawne from the reliques of our sinnes the strength of our corruptions and the imperfections and small measure of our sanctification let vs further consider first that these reliques of sinne shall not bee imputed vnto vs nor come in iudgement before God to our condemnation because by faith we are vnited vnto Christ and so made partakers of the vertue and merits of his death and passion whereby he hath satisfied Gods iustice for our sinnes so that they cannot now condemne vs nor draw vpon vs any punishment and likewise wee are made partakers of his perfect righteousnesse and obedience to the law which as a rich robe doth couer and hide our patched ragges of imperfection So then though we see the reliques of sinne and our manifold imperfections let vs not be discouraged hereby from labouring in the worke of sanctification but rather striue and endeuour to mortifie our sinnes and aspire to more and more perfection And if besides our purpose wee be led captiue of sin let vs remember that we haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the iust 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 and that he is the reconciliation for our sinnes so that though they make vs condemne our selues in our own consciences yet they shall neuer condemne vs before God And this the Apostle Paul sheweth vnto vs for hauing in the seuenth chapter of his epistle to the Romanes declared that the faithfull haue remaining in them the flesh and reliques of their old corruptions which powerfully hinder them from doing the good they would and moue them to commit the euill which they would not least any hereby should be discouraged in the sight and sense of his corruptions hee presently addeth in the beginning of the eighth chapter that notwithstanding the flesh and the corruptions therof which before he had spoken of remained in vs yet there was no condemnation to those who were in Christ Iesus and hee yeeldeth this reason because the law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Iesus had freed them from the law of sinne and of death that is because the power and vertue of the spirit of God which is the author of life by vniting vs as members vnto the bodie of Christ in whom we liue and by sprinkling our consciences with his precious bloud had deliuered them from the force and power of sinne and death so that now it could not condemne them nor oblige and binde them to guilt and punishment as in former times Seeing therefore the sting of sinne is taken away that it cannot condemne vs let vs not so feare it as that it should moue vs desperately to cast away our weapons not daring to encounter it for though this our enemie may assault vs yet it cannot ouercome vs though it may wound vs yet it cannot kill vs though it may giue vs a foyle yet in the end wee are sure of victorie if we manfully resist and labour to subdue it § Sect. 6 Secondly let vs consider that the Lord doth not require of vs vnder the Gospel such exact and perfect righteousnes That the Lord in the Gospell requireth not perfect obedience to the law as was required vnder the Law which is altogether impossible to our corrupt nature and was neuer to be found in any man our Sauiour Christ excepted but onely that wee striue and labour to attaine vnto it he doth not require of vs that we should at once free our selues from the flesh and the corruptions thereof but that we endeuour to mortifie it according to the measure of grace and strength which wee haue receiued from him he doth not require of vs that wee be without sinne but that sinne doe not rule in our mortall bodies that wee should like slaues obey it willingly in the lusts thereof and that also wee hating and abhorring it doe continually make warre against it and subdue it by little and little seeing we cannot at once wholy vanquish it He doth not now require of vs that we should performe perfect obedience to the law which Christ hath performed for vs but that we doe our best endeuour and though we cannot attaine to our desire Rom. 7.12.22 yet at least that wee be delighted in the law of God concerning the inner man and consent vnto it that it is good holy and iust In a word this is the Christian mans righteousnes which God requireth that he hate sinne and loue godlines that hee desire and endeuour to mortifie the flesh and corruptions thereof and labour to leade a new life in holy obedience and if contrarie to his desire and purpose he doe the euill which hee hateth or leaue vndone the good which hee loueth that he sorrow and grieue for his sinnes and imperfections and making confession hereof before the throne of grace doe implore mercie and forgiuenesse in Christ Iesus And if wee offer vnto God this righteousnesse it will be acceptable vnto him notwithstanding our manifold imperfections for hee measureth our deede by our will and esteemeth more of our affections than of our actions August Nec intuetur Deus quantum quilibet valeat sed quantum velit quicquid vis non potes Deus factum computat He respecteth not what we can doe but what we would do and that which we could performe and cannot he esteemeth it as though it were performed So that hee reputeth him righteous who earnestly desireth and laboureth to be righteous and him perfect who acknowledging and bewailing his imperfections striueth to attaine to more perfection Wherein he fitly may be compared vnto a tender louing father who esteemeth of the least endeuours of his beloued sonne more than of the best actions of a seruant because hee regardeth not so much the excellencie of the action as the person and cheerefull will of the agent § Sect. 7 Now the reasons why the Lord being perfectly iust will notwithstanding accept of our imperfect righteousnesse VVhy the Lord accepteth of our imperfect righteousnesse is first because we being made members of Christs bodie our persons are acceptable vnto him and therefore our workes also not in their own worthines or for their own merit but in and for Christ are accepted the corruptions and staines of them being washed away in his bloud and the imperfections of them being couered with Christs perfect righteousnesse And thus being adorned in the garment of our elder brother Christ Iesus we obtaine the blessing of our heauenly father Secondly our righteousnesse and holinesse doth proceede from the spirit of God dwelling in vs and from hence our workes being imperfect in themselues doe receiue their dignitie excellencie and estimation in Gods sight as being the fruites of his own spirit howsoeuer mingled with our corruptions § Sect. 8 Thirdly let vs remember that our sinnes and corruptions which we hate and labour to mortifie will neuer mooue the Lord to reiect and cast vs out of his loue and fauour That
regenerate they doe not will nor yeeld vnto sinne and though they consent vnto sinne yet this consent is not absolute and intire but with some dislike grudging and resistance of the spirituall part the which dislike and resistance though sometimes it cannot easily be discerned in the very act of sinne whereas the weake motions of the spirit are violently ouerborne through the violent strength of their naturall corruptions and so ouershadowed by the cloudie mists which their vnruly passions cast before their vnderstāding that they cannot at all perceiue any dislike or resistance against the temptation yet after the sinne is committed and the good motions of the spirit are againe reuiued out of their deadly swound then doe they hate and detest that sinne which before seemed pleasant vnto them and earnestly desire with the Apostle to be freed from it Lastly the Apostle in that place doth not speake of euery particular sinne committed with full consent of will for so also the elect offend before their conuersion but of a generall and malitious apostasie from the knowne truth and a scornefull reiecting of the sacrifice of Christ once offered for sinne so that the sense is thus much that if wee wilfully and malitiously sinne by renouncing the sacrifice of Christ offered for sinne we cannot hope to be saued by any other sacrifice but are to expect iudgement and condemnation seeing such treade vnder foote the sonne of God and count the blood of the testament an vnholy thing and euen despite the spirit of grace as he explaneth himselfe in the verses following § Sect. 5 And so much concerning the first question That the christian may fall into presumptuous sinnes and that so falling he may be receiued to mercie the second is whether the christian man may fall into presumptuous sins and if hee doe whether they be pardonable or no. For the first though it must needes bee confessed that it is a fearefull case to neglect Gods iustice and iudgements because of his long suffering or to take occasion vpon the abundance of Gods mercies and readinesse to forgiue to prouoke him continually by our sinnes yet it cannot be denied but that a true christian through the strength of his inbred corruptions may fall into these presumptuous sinnes neither is there any priuiledge in the holy Scriptures to exempt them from any sinne whatsoeuer but that either before or after their conuersion they may fall into it sauing onely that vnpardonable sinne which is committed against the holy Ghost Moreouer Dauid prayeth the Lord to keepe him from presumptuous sinnes Psalm 19.13 and that he would not suffer them to raigne ouer him Psalm 19.13 where first he sheweth that of himselfe he was apt to fall into such sinnes if the Lord did not preserue him from them and secondly he implieth that the Lord might for good causes knowne vnto himselfe suffer him to commit these sinnes of presumption and therefore he further prayeth that if hee should fall into such sinnes it would please the Lord to raise him by true repentance and not suffer them to rule and raigne in him So that it appeareth that a true christian may fall into these sinnes now that hauing fallen he may rise againe by true repentance and receiue pardon and forgiuenesse it is likewise manifest For if once the Lord receiue vs into the couenant of grace and acknowledge vs for his children then nothing in the world no not the most grieuous sinnes which we can fall into can separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord Rom. 8.38 39. as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8.38 29. Secondly our Sauiour telleth vs that euery sinne and blasphemy shall be forgiuen vnto men vpon true repentance Mat. 12.31.32 sauing onely the blasphemie against the spirit which is alwaies ioyned with finall impenitencie Matth. 12.31 32. Thirdly the promises of the the Gospell are generall and indefinit excluding no fortes of sinnes whatsoeuer so they performe the condition of faith and repentance And therefore also presumptuous sinners repenting and beleeuing are assured of mercie and forgiuenesse Lastly if Dauid might fall into these sinnes then Dauid also might repent and receiue pardon seeing he was truely iustified sanctified and a chosen vessell of the Lord elected to euerlasting life § Sect. 6 And so much concerning the temptations which are taken from those sinnes which are once committed That it is a fearefull thing to fall often into the same sin willingly now we are to speake of them which he suggesteth vnto the weake conscience after the committing of one and the same sinne diuers times vpon which occasion he is readie to perswade the weake christian that he neuer truely repented otherwise he would neuer againe fall into the same sinne and the howsoeuer the child of God may fall into diuers sinnes through want of care and experience yet it is not incident to any of this number to fall againe and againe into the same wickednesse after they haue had warning and sufficient knowledge of the euils thereof For the answering whereof we are to know that in truth it is a grieuous and fearefull case to be thus ouertaken and to be so besotted with the pleasures of sinne that neither instruction nor our owne experience can make vs to see the euils of sinne and worke in vs a care to auoyde and shunne it The burnt childe as the prouerbe is dreadeth the fire he that hath been deceiued and thereby much indamaged is afterwards more warie he that hath cast himselfe into any grieuous disease through some vnholesome meates is euer after more carefull of his diet he that hath once been assaulted by his enemie at vnawares and hath receiued griesly woundes will after he is cured goe better armed and furnished that he may not againe be ouertaken of the like daunger And therefore seeing experience of all other euils doth teach vs to auoyde them what a lamentable thing is this that no warning will make vs take heede of sinne which is the greatest euill and cause of all the rest that hauing drunke this deadly poyson and been grieuously sicke thereof in our consciences wee should being recouered be inticed with the pleasant taste thereof to swallow it downe againe and that hauing receiued grieuous wounds we should after take no better heede and goe no better armed and prepared to make resistance but for want of care and watchfulnesse expose our selues againe to the like daunger of our spirituall enemies But yet we are to know that this sometimes That the child of God may fall often into the same sinne and yet be receiued to mercie through our great frailtie and corruption may be the estate of a true christian and faithfull seruant of God to fall againe and againe into the same sinne neither doth any thing priuiledge them from committing that sinne againe which they haue once committed For first the same inbred corruption still dwelleth in them
be made voyde and frustrate I answere that so likewise the couenant made with the Israelites was firme on Gods part but made frustrate by their sinnes but the Lord hath made a new couenant with vs not of workes but of grace vpon the condition of faith and repentance which being obserued on our part our sinnes and vnworthinesse cannot make it frustrate and of none effect as before I haue shewed more at large § Sect. 4 Secondly we are assured of our perseuerance Of the particular promises of our perseuerance Psal 1.3 Ezech. 47.12 by Gods particular promises made to his faithfull ones Psal 1.3 it is said of the righteous man that he shall be like a tree planted by the riuers of waters that will bring forth her fruites in due season whose leafe shall not faid c. As therefore the tree planted by the riuer side doth not wither because continually it sucketh moysture whereby it is quickned and refreshed so the righteous man perseuereth in his righteousnesse because he is continually reuiued and quickned with that spirituall moysture which he sucketh from Christ who is the liuely roote whereof he is a branch Psal 15.5 Psal 15.5 Psal 37.24 He that doth these things shall neuer be moued Psal 37.24 Though the righteous man fall he shall not be cast off for the Lord putteth vnder his hand Psal 112.6 Surely he shall neuer be moued Psal 112.6 but the righteous shall be had in euerlasting remembrance And vers 9. Vers 9. Psal 125.1 His righteousnesse remaineth for euer Psal 125.1 They that trust in the Lord shall be as mount Syon which cannot be remoued Ioh 4.14 but remaineth for euer Ioh. 4.14 Whosoeuer drinketh of the water that I shall giue him shall neuer be more a thirst but the water which I shall giue him shall be in him a well of water springing vp to euerlasting life Where by this water we are to vnderstand the holy Ghost Ioh. 7.38 39. as appeareth Ioh. 7.38 He that beleeueth in me as saith the scripture out of his belly shall flow riuers of the water of life 39. This saith the Euangelist spake he of the spirit which they that beleeued in him should receiue So that to drinke of this water is through faith in Christ to be made partakers of the holy Ghost whom whosoeuer receiueth shall retaine him vnto the end As therefore he that hath a liuing fountaine continually springing in him cannot be a thirst so they who haue this fountaine of life perpetually springing in them they shall neuer thirst any more but it shall continually refresh and quicken them till they haue attained vnto euerlasting life Ioh. 6.35.37 ●● 54 I am the bread of life he that commeth to me shall not hunger and he that beleeueth in me shall neuer thirst And vers 37. All that the father giueth me shall come vnto me and him that commeth to me I cast not away And vers 51. I am the liuing bread which came downe from heauen if any man eate of this bread he shall liue for euer And vers 54. Whosoeuer eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will raise him vp at the last day c. Now whosoeuer beleeue in Christ they eate his flesh and drinke his blood for faith is the mouth of the soule whereby we feede on this heauenly foode and therefore all the faithfull shall haue euerlasting life nay as he saith they haue it alreadie and shall not come into condemnation but haue passed from death to life Ioh. 5.24 and 10.28 as it is Ioh. 5.24 and Ioh. 10.28 I will giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hand 29. My father which gaue them me is greater than all and none is able to take them out of my fathers hand In which words he both sheweth his will in his promise and his power to performe it and therefore whosoeuer are the sheepe of Christ they cannot be taken from him neither for a time nor eternally for so it should follow if Christs reason be of any force that they who tooke them from him should be stronger than Christ and his father which were a horrible blasphemie for any to imagine § Sect. 5 But here it is obiected that these promises are made to all the faithfull so long as they continue faithfull An obiection tending to frustrate the former promises answered and to the sheepe of Christ so long as they are his sheepe who abide in his word and follow him But when they cease to beleeue and to be his sheepe they doe not appertaine vnto him for they onely remaine the Disciples of Christ who abide in his word and haue his word abiding in them Ioh. 8 31. Ioh. 8.31 and 15.7 and 15.7 To which I answere that this is an idle trifling in a circular disputation and a vaine begging of the question in controuersie For the question is whether the faithfull may be assured of their perseuerance in faith whether a member of Christ may be assured to continue a member of Christ whether a sheepe of Christ may assure himselfe that he is to remaine for euer a sheepe of Christ we hold the affirmatiue part and proue it by diuers testimonies they deny that these promises are absolute but on this condition that we are assured none can plucke vs from Christ so long as we continue and retaine the nature of the members and sheepe of Christ But I would faine know what it is to be plucked from Christ but to cease to bee a member or sheepe of Christ and to loose their nature and what it is to be a sheepe of Christ but to heare his word and to follow him When as then our Sauiour Christ promiseth that none shall plucke his sheepe from him he promiseth that none shall be able to make them cease to be his sheepe nor depriue them of their nature which is the essentiall forme which maketh them to be sheepe rather than other who neither heare his word nor follow him Whereas therefore they affirme that these promises doe assure vs to perseuere so long as we continue and retaine the nature of the sheepe and members of Christ what is it but idly to repeate the same thing namely that Gods promises doe assure vs to perseuere so long as wee doe perseuere that we shall not be plucked from Christ so long as we remaine with Christ that we shall continue the members and sheepe of Christ so long as we continue to be his sheepe and members that we shall not loose our faith so long as we continue faithfull And what is it to say that the sheepe of Christ shall so long continue to be his sheepe as they retaine their nature but to graunt also that they may loose their nature consequently cease to be Christs sheepe and so be plucked from him which is quite contrarie to his
promise CHAP. XIIII Of eight other reasons which proue the certaintie of our perseuerance § Sect. 1 THe sixt reason to assure vs of our perseuerance may be taken from the intercessiō of Christ for vs to God the father The sixt reason taken from Christs intercession For whatsoeuer Christ himself maketh request for in the behalfe of his faithfull that without doubt the father graunteth vnto him Ioh 11.42 for God heareth him alwaies Ioh. 11.42 But he continually maketh request for them that their faith faile not Luk. 22.32 Ioh. 17.9.11.15.21 as appeareth Luk. 22.32 He prayeth for them Ioh. 17.9 that the father would keepe them in his name whom he had giuen vnto him That they may be one as he and the father are one vers 11 That he would preserue them from euill vers 15 and what greater euill than to fall from grace and God also That they all may be one as the father is in Christ and Christ in him vers 21. That they be with Christ where he is and may behold his glorie Vers 24. vers 24. He maketh also intercession for all those whom he hath redeemed that they may be saued notwithstanding their sinnes into which they fall through the strength of their corruptions 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 as appeareth 1. Ioh. 2.1.2 And therefore all these things are graunted vnto him by the father for the faithfull So that now they may say with the Apostle Rom. 8.33 It is God that iustifieth 34. Who shall condemne Rom. 8.33 34 35. It is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God and maketh request for vs. 35. Who shall separate vs from the loue of God c. And though our corruptions be many and our weakenesse great yet we neede not doubt of our perseuerance to euerlasting life For we haue an high priest who is able perfectly to saue them that come vnto God by him seeing he euer liueth to make intercession for them as it is Heb. 7.25 Heb. 7.25 § Sect. 2 The seuenth reason may be taken from that vnion which is betweene Christ and the faithfull The seuenth reason taken from our vnion with Christ whereby he becommeth their head and they his members For there is no head that will willingly permit any of it members to bee rent and torne from it because then it should haue a maimed and vnperfect body But Christ Iesus is the head of all the faithfull and they the members of his body Eph. 5.30 Ephesians 5.30 And therefore hee will not suffer any of them to bee pulled from him and so perishing make a maime in his body seeing hee is also omnipotent and able to saue all those who depend vpon him Moreouer seeing our Sauiour Christ who is our head hath past all daungers and now liueth and raineth with God his father wee are also assured that we shall liue and raigne with him For he hath obtained this eternall glorie not for himselfe alone but also for all the members of his body as appeareth Ioh. 17.21.24 and therefore now there is no doubt of perishing Ioh. 17.21.24 seeing our life is hid with Christ in God as it is Col. 3.3 and consequently no lesse safe than his who now raigneth and triumpheth ouer his enemies Col. 3.3 Whereof it is that they are said in respect of the certaintie of their assurance to haue alreadie euerlasting life and to haue passed from death to life Ioh. 5.24 1. Ioh. 3.14 Ioh. 5.24 1. Ioh. 3.14 § Sect. 3 The eight reason may be taken from the spirit of God dwelling in vs for so long as it hath his abiding with vs The eight reason taken from the spirit of God dwelling in vs. we must needs perseuer in grace neither is it possible we should fall away seeing it is the fountaine and roote from which all graces flow and spring and seeing it continually fighteth against and subdueth the flesh and the lusts thereof But after we haue receiued the spirit of God it continually dwelleth and abideth with vs for this is that spirituall water of which whosoeuer drinketh shall neuer be more a thirst Ioh. 4.14 and 7.39 but it shall be a well of water springing vp into euerlasting life as it may appeare by comparing Ioh. 4.14 with chapt 7.39 So Ioh. 14.16 Ioh. 14.16 I will pray the father and he shall giue you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for euer 17. Euen the spirit of truth 1. Ioh. 2.27 whom the world cannot receiue because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but ye know him for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you 1. Ioh. 3.9 And 1. Ioh. 3.9 Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not that is with full consent of will for his seede remaineth in him neither can he sinne because he is borne of God where the spirit is called the seede of God because by vertue thereof wee are begotten vnto God If therefore by vertue of this spirit wee are so preserued that wee cannot sinne with full consent of will nor haue it raigning in vs as it did before our regeneration then certainly wee shall bee preserued thereby from falling away and notwithstanding our sinnes wee shall perseuere in grace to euerlasting life § Sect. 4 The ninth argument may be taken from the effects of the spirit dwelling in vs The ninth reason taken from the effects of the spirit 1. Ioh. 2.20.27 Rom. 8.14.17 for first it teacheth and guideth vs in the way of Gods truth as appeareth 1. Ioh. 2.20.27 And as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.14 and those that are sonnes are also heires euen the heires of God and coheires with Christ vers 17. Neither is it possible that those who are guided with the spirit should sinne with full consent of will much lesse fall away For whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not namely after this manner neither can euer their spirituall enemies finally preuaile against them for he that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe and the wicked one toucheth him not 1. Ioh. 5.18 as it is 1. Ioh. 5.18 Secondly the spirit of God witnesseth to our spirits that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 16.17 and consequently heires of his kingdome as it is Rom. 16.17 and his testimonie is true and infallible It also is the earnest of our inheritance and a pledge to assure vs that God will make good his promises vnto vs Eph. 1.14 2. Cor. 1.22 and thereby also wee are sealed vnto the day of redemption Eph. 1.14 2. Cor. 1.22 Eph. 4.30 Ephes 4.30 And therefore seeing the Lord hath confirmed our assurance by the testimonie of his spirit by this earnest pledge and seale we neede not to feare our falling away or to doubt of our perseuerance But of this I haue alreadie written at large in treating
of the certaintie of our election § Sect. 5 The tenth reason may be taken from Gods continuall aid in all trials and temptations The tenth reason taken from Gods continual aide for if hee be alwaies readie to strengthen and support vs wee can neuer finally bee ouerthrowne but though wee fall yet we shall not fall away but shall be raised vp againe in despite of all our enemies For God is faithfull and will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our power but will giue a good issue with the temptation 1. Cor. 10.13 that we may be able to beare it as it is 1. Cor. 10.13 2. Pet. 2.9 And he knoweth to deliuer the godly out of temptation as the Apostle speaketh 2. Pet. 2.9 And therefore be our weaknesse neuer so great yet let vs not feare our finall falling away but knowing whom we haue beleeued let vs perswade our selues of our perseuerance knowing that hee is able to keepe that which we haue committed vnto him 2. Tim. 1.12 as it is 2. Tim. 1.12 § Sect. 6 And these are the reasons drawne frō Gods nature in himself and his actions towards vs The eleuenth reason taken from the nature of faith wherby we may vndoubtedly be assured of our perseuerance The second sort of arguments may bee taken from our selues and first from the nature of true faith wherewith wee are endued which is not temporarie but constant and permanent For he that hath a true and liuely faith is like the house builded vpon the rock which neither the raine nor floods nor windes could ouerthrow Matth. 7.24 25 Matth. 7.24.25 and 16.18 neither shall the gates of hell ouercome him chap. 16. vers 18 he is like the good ground in which the seede falling is not stollen away nor choked vp nor withereth for want of root but he receiueth the seed and keepeth it and bringeth foorth fruite with patience Luk. 8.15 as it is Luk. 8.15 And contrariwise it is a most vndoubted marke of an hypocrite who neuer was indued with a true faith when as his faith is temporarie and hee falleth away according to that 1. Ioh. 2.19 They went out from vs but they were not of vs 1. Ioh. 2.19 for if they had been of vs they would haue continued with vs. But this commeth to passe that it might appeare that they are not all of vs. § Sect. 7 The second reason may bee taken from the example of those who haue grieuously fallen and yet haue continued in the state of grace The twelfth reason taken from examples Psal 51.10.11 and haue been raised and restored againe by vnfained repentance and thus did Dauid fall and that most grieuously and yet was not depriued of Gods spirit as appeareth Psal 51.10.11 Thus did Peter fall by denying his master Noah by drunkennesse Lot by incest and yet they were not depriued of those graces which they had receiued howsoeuer for the time they were much eclipsed and weakened neither were they reiected by God but vpon their true repentance were receiued into his former loue and fauour § Sect. 8 The last reason may be taken from the weaknesse and inabilitie of the causes which should hinder our perseuerance and make vs fall away The last reason taken from the inabilitie of the causes which should hinder our perseuerance Rom. 1.35 For there is nothing in the world so powerfull but it is altogether too weake to worke this defection For first afflictions cannot depriue vs of grace nor hinder our perseuerance as it is Rom. 8.35 for though they are the firie trial yet they do not burne vs but refine vs from our drosse neither doe they hinder our saluation but rather cause vnto vs a farre most excellent and et ernall waight of glorie as it is 2. Cor. 4.17 2. Cor. 4.17 nor yet our flesh for though it be neuer so strong yet the spirit of God dwelling in vs will in the end mortifie and subdue it Not the world for our Captaine Christ hath ouercome it not onely for himselfe but also for his members Ioh. 16.33 yea and hee enableth vs also by his holy spirit to ouercome it Iohn 16.33 1. Ioh. 5.4 For all that is borne of God ouercommeth the world and this is the victorie that ouercommeth the world euen our faith as it is 1. Ioh. 5.4 Not the diuell for if wee resist him Iam. 4.7 1. Ioh. 5.18 he will flee from vs Iam. 4.7 And he that is borne of God keepeth himselfe and the wicked one toucheth him not 1. Ioh. 5.18 Not our sinnes for they are punished and fully satisfied for in Christ and if we sin we haue an aduocate with the father 1. Ioh. 2.1 2. c. 1. Ioh. 2.1 2. And for the corruption of sin though it dwell in vs yet it shall not raigne in vs Rom. 6.12 Though we fall into it Rom. 6.12 1. Ioh. 3.9 yet not with full consent of will 1. Ioh. 3.9 for the regenerate man sinneth not but his corrupt flesh dwelling in him Rom. 7. as it is Rom. 7. Not any temptation for the Lord is faithfull and will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our power 1. Cor. 10.13 but will giue a good issue vnto it 1. Cor. 10.13 Not any thing in the world Rom. 8.38.39 Rom. 8.38.39 for all things whatsoeuer shall be so disposed by the wise prouidence of God that though they bee neuer so hurtfull in their owne nature and apt to draw vs from God yet they shall worke together for the best vnto them which loue God as it is Rom. 8.28 And thus haue I prooued the certaintie of our perseuerance both by plaine testimonies of Scripture and also infallible reasons I had purposed as in the other points going before to haue answered such obiections as are commonly suggested by Sathan and stifly vrged by his instruments the Popish rabble against this truth and accordingly had almost finished that which I intended but diuers reasons moued me to desist from my purpose as first and especially his earnest desire who is at the chiefe charge of printing these my labours who fearing that the greatnesse and dearenesse of the booke might be a hindrance to the sale thereof intreated me to forbeare the publishing of this controuersie which being somewhat long would haue increased the volume and consequently the price To whose request I more willingly condescended partly because the controuersie before handled of the certaintie of faith and assurance of our saluation is of the like nature so that the proouing of the one is the confirming of the other and the answering of those obiections which are made against the certaintie of our assurance is a sufficient refutation of those which are obiected against our perseuerance many of the testimonies of Scriptures and other reasons which are alledged against both being the very same And partly because I vnderstand that my godly learned and most deare brother