Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n believe_v faith_n grace_n 8,077 5 5.8830 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A57373 Believers evidences for eternall life collected out of the first epistle of John which is catholique : explained and confirmed by very many subservient signes, or undernotes grounded upon Scriptures and illustrated by testimonies both of ancient fathers and modern writers whereby persons truly regenerate may divers wayes discover their present state of grace and title unto glory / by Francis Roberts. Roberts, Francis, 1609-1675. 1655 (1655) Wing R1579; ESTC R29322 150,624 294

There are 21 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

kill me c. This is the minimum quod sic viz. the lowest step of Assurance and is so of the nature of faith that faith cannot be without it in the weakest beleever Every true believer hath this assurance 2. A Certainty of Evidence or Experience When by the reflection of conscience and faith upon themselves and their owne acts or by the Testimony of the Spirit of God we evidently see we are in a gracious State experimentally discerning what God hath done for us and that upon such and such grounds effects of grace or other discoveries As being new creatures walking in the light walking after the spirit not after the flesh loving the brethren c. This some call Assurance of Internall vision Agustine counts this a clear evidence saying that our faith is conspicuous to our owne minde and that a man holds his faith by certaine knowledge and attestation of conscience And saith Ambrose He that hath the sense of faith in his heart knowes that Christ is in himselfe This Assurance is usually attended with much comfort and sweet joy upon the soule that hath it Yet every Christian reacheth it not as the former though all should contend earnestly for it It seems to pertaine rather to the well-being then to the meere being of faith and grace 3. An unstaggering certainty or a Full assurance when there 's such a full perswasion that overcomes all doubts feares staggerings of unbeliefe as in Abraham the father of the faithfull This is the maximum quod sic viz. The highest Pinacle of Assurance in this life next unto celestiall enjoyment and very few attaine unto it II. Of the Tryall of Assurance The Tryall of the truth of our assurance is of great importance and necessity For 1. Many Christians have some degree of assurance who think they have none at all Let such but be convinced of what they have they are comforted 2. Many have no true assurance at all who yet pretend thereto most of all Carnall men and hypocrites As Israel Solomons foole the selfe-justifying Pharisee and the Laedicean Angel Such should be convinced of what they want that they might be humbled and replenished All graces and so Assurance have their countefeits we had need try them lest we take shadows for substances Copper for gold Try Assurance by the 1 Qualification of the subject assured 2. Grounds or Causes of Assurance 3. Fruits or effects of Assurance I. The subject of Assurance must be duly qualified ere he can be capable of Assurance Persons are previously and preparatorily qualified for Assurance 1. By kindly humbling of the soule breaking of the heart and troubling of the conscience with feares about their naturall condition The spirit of bondage to fear goes before the spirit of adoption witnessing with our spirit our Son-ship More or lesse thus God deals with all that come by assurance Where 's thy true humbling 2. By furnishing the humbled broken heart with saving faith First we believe then are after sealed with the Spirit of promise Where 's thy true faith 3. By giving them the Spirit they must first have the Spirit of God ere by the Spirit they can know the things given them of God Hath God truly given thee his Spirit II. The Grounds or Causes of assurance must not be 1. Ignorance of our miserable state 2. Nor carnall confidence upon common things viz. worldly prosperity outward acts of religion or common inward gifts of the Spirit Illumination Taste of the good Word of God c. those and like are the false grounds of hypocrites But Grounds of true assurance are either 1. Divine Testimony by audible voice Thus Christ assured the Palsie-man and the penitent woman of pardon and the Convert thiefe of Paradise But this vocall Testimony was extraordinary To expect the like now or else to reject other grounds of assurance were to tempt God 2. The lively exercise of faith reflecting upon its own acts and ●…seeing it selfe believing Faiths acts are 1. Direct and these either 1. Receptive of Christ or 2. Operative from and by Christ received 2. Reflexive when faith returnes upon it selfe looks back upon its own acts thus receiving Christ thus working as Paul knew whom he had believed Doth thy faith thus act 3. The Testimony of our owne sanctified spirituall heart or conscience according to the Word of God of our good spirituall estate The spirit of man is as the candle of the Lord searching all the inward parts of the belly knows what 's in him This Testimony of our sanctified conscience is usually obsolved by Ratiocination or discourse in a Practicall experimentall Syllogisme thus The Proposition being taken out of the Word viz. Some eminent Scripture Signe or Character of grace as in 2 Cor. 5. 17. Acts 15. 9. 1 Iohn 1. 7. and 3. 14. He that loves the brethren is passed from death to life this is dictated by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. The Conservative Treasury of conscience treasu●…ing up such Principles The Assumption is drawn from our owne ●…nown state and experience in the things of Christ c. As But I love the brethren This is made by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. Con●…cience as conscious of a mans state and frame ●…f heart The Conclusion containing the hearts sen●…ence hereupon Therefore I am transla●…d from death to life is made by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iudgment or judiciary sentence of con●…ience upon the Premises Doth thy con●…ience thus assure thee by the Word 4. The Testimony of the Spirit of God which purposely given us to this end that we ●…ay know the things that are given us of ●…od Now the Spirit becomes the Author ●…d ground of our Assurance 1. As a Seal ●…aling us after we believe by his holy and heavenly impression 2. As an earnest of our eternall inheritance First-fruits of the true Canaan or Handsell of heaven 3. As a joynt witnesse with our spirits and consciences both clearing up our spirituall evidences to our minds and opening our minds to discerne them as a teaching unction enabling us to know all things Hast thou such a Testimony from the Spirit of God III. The fruits or effects of true assurance distinguishing it from counterfeit assurance Presumption are these and such like 1. True assurance whereever it be mightily incites to selfe-purifying to accurate sanctification in heart and life Now we are the Sons of God but we know that whe●… he shall appeare we shall be like him An●… every man that hath this hope in him purifie●… himselfe even as he is pure See this selfe-purifying hereafter more fully opened Presumption encourageth in sin and impurity 2. True assurance stirres up fervent d●… fires and longings in such hearts after th●… Gospel of Jesus Christ They that once ha●… truly tasted the
lost it and retained when they have go●… possession of it IV. Inducements unto Assurance I. Non-Assurance of Gods favour in Christ and of our true state of grace in him is a ma●… nifold misery and prejudice to the dear childre●… of God For 1. This is a bad Signe 1. Sometimes of the defectïvenesse an●… weaknesse of grace in such that they are bu●… babes not grown men in Christ because thei●… spirituall senses are not as yet exercised so fa●… as to discerne the things of God in them●… selves and that they want very much o●… the Anointing of the Spirit to reveale unt●… them the things of the Spirit Now Chri●… stians should strive to get out of their infa●… cy and imbecillity of grace not still remain●… ing children and babes in faith and know●… ledge but labouring to become men in Christ growing up unto perfection 2. Sometimes of the strength and prevai●… ing of corruption and temptation when D●… vid had relapsed he lost the joy of Gods salv●… tion Great fals aftonish and amaze bot●… corporall and spirituall senses And it muc●… concernes all Christians to wrastle again●… entangling temptations and recover the●… selves out of Relapses 3. Sometimes of spirituall desertions that the Lord hath in some measure forsaken the soule and withdrawn himselfe as in the case of David Heman Asaph and the Church her selfe Now spirituall desertions are such overwhelming afflictions to the soule that hath once truly tasted of the sweetnesse of Christs presence that the gracious heart is wholly restlesse till it be again re-embraced in the dearest armes of love and favour 2. This is one great cause of Christians dejectednesse and uncomfortablenesse that though they are in a state of grace yet they cannot discerne themselves to be in such a gracious State To be in the true State of grace is the happiest ground of comfort but till there be some apprehension and knowledge of that our State oft-times we have small sense of comfort As Hagar when her bottle of water was spent and her childe ready to die she sate down full of perplexity and yet there was a Well in the place the Well did not comfort her though close by her till the Lord opened her eyes to see it How pensive and sad were the two Disciples going towards Emmaus about Christs death though Christ risen from the dead was in their company and talked with them whilest their eyes were holden that they should not know him How did Mary Magdalene stand weeping by Christs Sepulchre supposing that his dead body was thence stollen away though Christ revived and risen stood close by her and why Christ was present but she did not know him So if we be close by the Well of grace if Christ be present with us yea in us if yet we know it not we are still in our discomforts our teares and sorrows are still flowing David was told by the Prophet The Lord hath put away thy sinne but because David had not the sense and apprehension hereof he wanted the joy of Gods salvation and groaned still under his broken bones a good while after II. God hath often charged his people to contend after the security and assurance of their Spirituall State Give diligence to make your calling and election sure Examine your selves whether you be in the faith c. Let us draw neere with a true heart in full assurance of faith We desire that every one of you do shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end III. It is Possible that such as are in a state of grace may if the fault be not their own come to know and be assured they are in such a state For 1. Many Scriptures intimate this 2. The Nature of saving Knowledge Faith and Hope tend to this 3. Many Gracious persons have sometimes attained to this though at other times not without their doubtings and infirmities As Iob David Hezekiah Thomas Peter Paul the Church her selfe Finally Assurance of our gracious state is richly worth all earnest endeavours after it They that once attaine to it as hereafter is manifested finde a Jewell of great price and no stranger shall intermeddle with their joy The Summary Contents of the severall Chapters in this Book CHAP. I. Evidences of Gods love to us 1. CHrists being sent to die for us that we might live by him 1 Joh. 3. 16. and 4. 9 10. page 5. 2. Adoption 1 Ioh. 3. 1. p. 7. 3. Our not loving the world c. inordinately 1 Ioh 3. 15 16 17. p. 8. 4. Our true love to God 1 Ioh. 4. 19. p. 10. CHAP. II. Evidences of our Regeneration Adoption Sonship 1. That the world knoweth us not 1 Ioh. 3. 1. p. 21. 2. True believing that Jesus is the Christ 1 John 5. 1. p. 23. 3. Not committing or practising of sinne 1 Iohn 3. 8 9. p. 29. 4. Overcoming erroneous hereticall spirits and their seducements 1 Iohn 4 1 4. p. 127. 5. Overcoming the world by faith 1 Iohn 5. 4 5. p. 142. 6. Doing or practising of righteousnesse 1 Iohn 2. 29. and 3. 10. p. 162. 7. True love of the Brethren 1 Iohn 3. 10. and 4. 7. and 3. 14. p. 168. 8. Hope and assured apprehension in some measure that we shall be conforme ●…o God and Christ in his glorious appearing 2 Iohn 3. 2. p. 173. 9. In hope of glory purifying our selves as he is pure 1 Iohn 3 2 3. p. 173. CHAP. III. Evidences that we are of the truth and of the number of Gods people 1. Having an Unction from the Holy One teaching us all ●…hings 1 Iohn 2. 19 20 27. p. 180. 2. The Testimony of our heart touching our true love of the ●…rethren 1 Iohn 3. 18 19 20 21. p. 183. 3. Perseverance with the faithfull in Christ and in the truth 〈◊〉 Ioh. 2. 19. CHAP. IV. V. Evidences of being in light not in darknesse in life not in death 1 Actuall interest in and enjoyment of Jesus Christ 1 Iohn 〈◊〉 11 12. p. 188. 2. Loving and not hating of our brother 1 Ioh. 2. 9 10 11. and 〈◊〉 14 15. p. 191. CHAP. V. Evidences of our true knowledge of God and of Iesus Christ. 1. Real and sincere keeping of Gods Commandements 1 Iohn 〈◊〉 3 4. p. 193. 2. Not sinning 1 Ioh. 3. 6. p. 197. 3. A right entertaining and hearkening to the true Apostolical ●…octrine 1 Ioh. 4. 5 6. p. 197. 4. Brotherly love 1 Ioh. 4. 7 8. p. 199. CHAP. VI. Evidences of our true love to God and to Iesus Christ. 1. When our love to God flows from Gods love to us 1 Iohn 〈◊〉 19. p. 200. 2. Casting out of base servile fear 1 Iohn 4. 18 19. p. 202. 3. Not loving the world c. excessively 1 Ioh. 2. 15. 16. p. ●…05 4. Keeping Gods Commandements and that
demonstrates Iames 2. 14 to the end Now faiths principal acts are these 1. Cleansing and purifying the heart from all inward filthinesse so as not to approve it or mingle with it Acts 15. 9. 2. Calming and pacifying the conscience as once Christ said to the windes and waves so faith in Christ saith to the troubled and perplexed soul Peace and be still and there is a great calme Rom. 5. 1 2 3. Phil. 4. 7. 3. Acting and working by love with a chearful respect and delightful enlargement to all Gods Commandements Gal. 5. 6. 1 Iohn 5. 3. 7. Finally Faith having attained to this spiritual strength and activity contends after a fuller perfection even after a full assurance Col. 2. 2. Heb. 10 22. Heb. 6. 11 18 19. which full-assurance is obtained by faith's reflecting upon its own acts and seeing it self believe I know whom I have believed 2 Ti●… 1. 12. and though every believer reacheth not this full assurance nor any one retaines it at all times yet the nature of faith contends and leads all unto it most genuinely whence Calvin was not afraid to say that full assurance can no more be plucked from faith then heat or light can be severed from the Sun Qu. 2. Whence may it be evinced that whosoever doth thereby thus beleeve is born of God Answ. From many grounds take a few for all 1. This believing thus described is a receiving of Christ and a believing on his Name but every one that receives Christ and believes on his Name is born not of bloods nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1. 12 13. What need to be said more punctually 2. This Faith thus described is one of the fruits of the spirit enumerated as contra-distinct from the works of the flesh Gal. 5. 22. Consequently they that have this Faith have the regenerating Spirit in them whence this and the other fruits flow and so are born of God 3. This Faith and beleeving here described is such as whereby the believer pleaseth God Heb. 11. 6. Consider well the former particulars Therefore they that so beleeve are regenerate in the spirit and not in the flesh for they that are in the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8. 8. 4. Finally they that believe in Christ as hath been described shall be saved Mark 16. 16. Joh. 3. 16. Therefore they must needs be borne of God for Except a man be ●…orn againe he cannot enter into the Kingdome ●…f God Joh. 3. 3 5. The not committing of sin is the proper●…y of such as are truely regenerate He that ●…mitteth sin is of the devil for the devil ●…nneth from the beginning for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the workes of the devil Whosoever is ●…orn of God doth not commit sin for his seed ●…maineth in him and he cannot sin because he 〈◊〉 borne of God 1 Joh. 3. 8 9. This note about ●…ing is for greater cleerenesse and more ●…phaticalnesse laid down Affirmatively ●…d Negatively by that detecting the children of the divil by this the children of God Contraries parallel'd serve to illustrate one ●…nother 1. Affirmatively ver 8. where consider ●…st The Position it selfe He that committeth 〈◊〉 is of the devil i. e. He is the child of the 〈◊〉 and the divel his father as Ioh. 8. 44. and ●…lkes according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the Aire ●…e spirit that now worketh in the children of ●…obedience Eph. 2. 2. For this phrase is 〈◊〉 the divel is here opposed to that is born 〈◊〉 God ver 1 9 2. The confirmation of it by double Argument viz. 1. From the devils ●…ostasie for the devil sinneth from the begin●… i. e. The devil sinned from the beginning of the world compare Ioh. 8. 44. wi●… Iude 6. He was the very first sinner in th●… world and the cause of all other sinners 〈◊〉 the world He drew his Apostate Ange●… with him hence probably that phrase the D●… vil and his Angels Mat. 25. 41. He deceive●… our first parents in the Serpent and 〈◊〉 brought sin upon all the world Gen. 3. An●… still he as a roaring Lyon walketh about see●… ing whom he may destroy 1 Pet. 5. 8. Nor●… it said he sinned but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sinne●… from the beginning i. e. indefinently an●… with one continued act as some we●… observe Sin is the devils continuall trad●… without cessation or intermission No●… the devil being such a sinner from the begi●… ning they that commit sin as meer natu●… men do must needs be the children of th●… devil This the first Argument 2. From Chris●… office or the end of his first coming into th●… world viz. To destroy the workes of the d●… vil Sinne is the proper work of the dev●… Christ destroyed both By the vertue a●… sufficiency of his merit for all his elect at onc●… Rom. 8. 3. And By the vigour and efficien●… of his Spirit Rom. 8. 2 13. for every one 〈◊〉 his elect respectively when effectually calle●… So that hence it must needs follow th●… those persons in whom the dominion a●… power of sin is not subdued by Christ b●… they still commit sin they so continuing 〈◊〉 still remain the children of the devil th●… present state is damnable 2. Negatively verse 9. where also note 1. The Position it selfe containing the Character of such as are borne of God Whosoever is borne of God doth not commit sin which also may thus be converted Whosoever commits not sin is borne of God 2. The Confirmation of the Position by a double Argument 1. A causâ conservante from the conserving cause in him that keeps him from sinning for his seed remaineth in him By seed here 1. Some understand the ●…raduction of the divine essence to the Saints whom therefore Beza deservedly brands as most ridiculous fanatick persons for this ●…bsurd dream 2. Some understand by seed the Spirit of God by whom we are regenerated and our corruptions and flesh subdued so that we walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit the streame of Interpreters runnes this way 3. Some finally by ●…eed understand the Word and Spirit together the Word effectually applyed and actuated by the operation of the Spirit and this seems fullest For the Scripture compa●… the word to seed because it is Gods instrumentall Ordinance for our Regeneration Being borne againe not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever 1 Pet. 1. 23. And this Word of God abiding in the heart written there is a most prevalent Antidote against Sinne. Thy Word have I bid in my heart that I might not sinne against thee Psa. 119. 11. So that the regenerate sinnes not because his seed remaineth in him i. e. Gods Wordcast into the heart by the operation of the Spirit making a man to spring
into a new creature As that learned Master Perkins hath observed Thus of the first Argument 2. Ab impossibili from the impossibility of his so sinning that is born of God and that from the state and nature of his regeneration and he cannot sinne because he is borne of God whereby he intimates that a sinful course and a state of grace are wholly incompatible and inconsistent with one another Here the Apostle riseth higher in his expression clearly pronouncing that the hearts of the godly are so efficaciously governed by his Spirit that with an inflexible affection they follow the conduct of the Spirit The Apostle doth not only teach that the regenerate are able not to sin 〈◊〉 but that the motion of the Spirit is so effectuall that it necessarily retaines them in the constan●… obedience of righteousnesse As Calv. observes not unsuitable to this of Iohn is the tenor of the Covenant of grace I will put my feare in their hearts and they shall not depart from me Jer. 32. 40. Thus much for the distribution and explication of this cotext wherein not sinning is made a note of regeneration Now because this is a grand evidence of being born of God that all such sin not nor can sin because this hath much difficulty in it as seeming to crosse not onely the experience of all regenerate persons who feel they sin frequently to the griefe of their soules but also divers Scriptures Psa. 19. 12 13. Rom. 7. 15 23 24. Iam. 3. 〈◊〉 1 Ioh. 1. 8 9 10. Therefore this is the prin●…ipall thing here to be opened and cleered convincingly to the Conscience viz. How or in what sense He that is borne of ●…od doth not commit sin nor can sin For more clear Resolution herein consi●…er this thing Negatively and Affirmatively Negatively when the Apostle saith He that born of God doth not commit sin nor can sin ●…ereby cannot be meant as some have hence ●…agined that the regenerate have no sin all inherent in them nor committed by ●…em but are perfectly holy even in this ●…e As of old the Maniche●…s and Cathari●…ought ●…ought they could not so much as sin in ●…ought The Pelagians and Familists i●…gined themselves so free from sinne that they needed not to pray forgive us our trespasses The Adamites deemed themselv●…s as pure as Adam and Eve before their fa●… And the Carpocratians dreamed that they were as free from sinne as Christ himsel●…e Yea even in these our dayes some have held That he that believeth that Christ hath ta●… away his sin is as clean without sin as Christ himselfe That It is as possible for Christ himselfe to sinne as for a child of God to sinne That If a man by the Spirit know himse●… to be in the state of grace though he be dr●… or commit murther God sees no sin in him That as well our workes as persons are perfectly holy and good That a Saint 〈◊〉 this life without any addition hereafter is perfectly just perfectly holy compleatly glorious 〈◊〉 this life and is not capable of any addition 〈◊〉 ter death in the least degree but onely of ma●… festation Against these fond and false imagination observe 1. That the holy Scripture expressely tes●… fies the contrary viz. That the most holy a●… regenerate persons in this life have in the●… Sin Originall and hence ●…oo often fall i●… sin act●…all Who can underistand his error Psal. 19. 12. Who can s●…y I have made 〈◊〉 beare clean I am pure from my sin Pro. 〈◊〉 9. There i●… no man 〈◊〉 sinneth not 1 K●… 8. 46. 2. Chron. 6. 36. In many things sin all Iames 〈◊〉 2. There is not a just man on earth that doth good and sinneth not Eccles●…y 20. If we say that we have no sin viz. originally we deceive our selves and the truth is not in us If we say we have not sinned viz. actually we make him a liar and his word is not in us 1 Iohn 1. 8 10. 2. The universall experience of the best of God Saints in all ages evidences that none of them all have been without sinne in this life Not Abraham Gen. 12. 13 19. 20. 2 5. Not Isaac Gen. 26. 7 9. Not Iacob Gen. 27. 19 20 24. Not Moses and Aaron Psal. 106. 33. Deut. 32. 50 51. Exod 32. 2 21. Not David Psal. 51. 1 to 10. 38. 3 4. Not Peter Matth. 26. 33 34 35 70 to the end Gal. 2. 11 12 13 Not Paul himselfe Rom. 7. 18 20 23 24 25. 3. The nature of grace and sanctification in this life is at perfectest but imperfect and growing on to perfection 1 Cor. 13. 9 10. Phil. 3. 12 13. consequently mortification is imperfect Some Canaanites are still in the land though the Kings are distroyed There is a remnant of flesh as well as a principle of spirit Gal. 5. 17. The Church is not actually purged but in purging from all defilements and at last there shall be no spot nor wrinkle nor any such thing Eph. 5. 26 27. Onely the man Christ Jesus in this world was without sin Heb. 4. 15. Isa. 53. 9. Heb. 7. 26. 2 Cor. 5. 21. 4. Compleat purity from sin and perfection of holinesse is a glory though to be desired on earth yet reserved for heaven Rom. 6. 7. Eph. 5. 27. Heb. 12. 23. Rev. 21. 27. 5. Unto all which might be added the plentifull suffrage of Ancient Writers take the sense of two or three for all Lactantius Firmianus saith None can be without sin so long as he is burdened with the clothing of flesh Hierom saith If the outward man do what it would not and acts what it hates it shewes that the Command is good and that he acts not what is evill but sinne dwelling in his flesh i. e. the vices of the body and desires of pleasune * Augustine saith Search every one though most righteous in this life though he be worthy of the title of a just man yet is he not without sin And a little after Whatsoever is sin is formerly blotted out of us in baptisme but because all iniquity is blotted out doth no infirmity remaine if none remaine we shouid live here without sinne but who dare say this but a proud man but one unworthy of the mercy of the pardoner but he that will deceive him selfe and in whom the truth is not And in his book of the City of God he saith The words of such a master and our Lord are vigilantly to be considered for he saith not If you forgive men their sins your Father will allso forgive you what sins soever but he saith your sins For he taught adaily prayer and spake to disciples justified What is therefore your sins but the sins without which even you are not who are justified and sanctified Blessed Cyprian also that valiant Confessor and glorious Martyr of Jesus Christ writing upon that Petition of the Lords prayer And forgiveius our
BELIEVERS Evidences FOR ETERNALL LIFE Collected Out of the First Epistle of JOHN which is Catholique Explained and confirmed By very many Subservient Signes or Under-Notes Grounded upon Scriptures and Illustrated by Testimonies both of Ancient Fathers and Modern Writers Whereby Persons truly Regenerate may divers wayes Discover their present State of Grace and Title unto glory By FRANCIS ROBERTS A. M. Pas●…or of the Church at Augustines LONDON The second Impression Brethren Give Diligence to make your Calling and Election sure 2 Pet. 1. 10. Examine your selves whether ye be in the Faith Prove your owne selves KNOW ye not your owne selves How that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be repro●…ates 2 Cor. 13. 5. London Printed by T. R. and E. M. for George Calvert and are to be sold at his shop at the Sign of the Half-Moon in Pauls Church-yard neer the little North-door 1655. To the RIGHT HONOURABLE HENRY Earle of KENT And to his Right Noble Consort Amabella Countess of Ken●… All Confluence of Blessings both for the life that now is and for that which is to come from the Father of Mercies and God of all Consolations Right Honourable OF all people in the world that 's the only happy people whose God is the LORD the Lord being that suprem good in whom alone are concentred all beatificall Perfections No people can enjoy the Lord as their God but by Covenant in Christ Iesus that only way unto the Father Covenant-Interest in Christ cannot actually be pleaded by any person but only such a●… are actually seized of a gracious Covenant-State th●… Grace of the Covenant i●… us being the surest Pledg●… of Gods entring into the Co●… venant of Grace with us S●… that to be in a Graciou●… State is true happinesse B●… to know our selves to be such a State is true happinesse double upon us Hereupon that I might lend some help to true believers for reading and discerning their own spirituall Evidences of their State of Grace I have been perswaded to publish this bundle of Beleevers Evidences for Eternall Life in the ensuing Treatise Whereunto I have been the more inclinable that my lines might be of use 1. To support the weak and comfort the feeble-minded who walk heavily and disconsolately in the paths of grace through want of Assurance That they hereby comming in some measure to know the things that are freely given to them of God may lift up the hands that hang downe and the feeble knees and run with enlarged hearts the way of Gods Commandements 2. To confute really the Enthusiasticall fancies the ignorant Anti-Scripturall opinions of some who cry up I know not what imaginary Raptures Revelations and other Dreames of their own as the only Characters of Election and Justification decrying as carnall all discoveries of beleevers spirituall estates by markes and Signes of Sanctification For this sweet Epistle of John the beloved Disciple is full of such markes as in this book is evident Christ hath taught us to judge of the tree by the fruits And Reason directs us to discover the Cause by the effect 3. To divert the distempered minds of men a little if it be possible from jejune empty perverse disputes vain janglings brain-sick notions and speculations the calamity of these crazy times to exercise themselves upon that wholesome necessary practicall businesse of making their calling and Election sure We have laid out farre too much for that which is not bread for that which satisfieth not 4. And finally to rouze up my selfe and all sorts of Christians in this Kingdom in these slippery days wherein both Lives Liberties Health Friends Wealth Pleasures Honours Crowns Scepters and all sublunaries are in such extremity of extraordinary uncertainties to lay hold and make sure of eternall life that in the midst of all terrestriall Concussions and Revolutions we may have a celestiall unshaken foundation of true spirituall Peace and Consolation Your Honours noble respects and undeserved favours heretofore manifested unto me have commanded me to Dedicate and Present unto you this small Testimoniall of my unfeigned gratitude And wherein can I be more truly serviceable to your Honours then in such sincere endeavours to promote your Assurance of eternall salvation Now the God of all Grace fill your hearts with all the fruits of his Spirit unto all riches of the full assurance of understandding and faith and hope in this life And at last crown you both with ineffable glory in the life to come in the full enjoyment of himselfe who is the Heaven of heaven and Glory of glory So prayeth Augustines London Octob. 9. 1648. Your Honours humble and faithfull servant in the Lord FRAN. ROBERTS The Evidences Methodized The chiefe Scope of his Book 〈◊〉 To Pro●…te Believers Assu●…nce of ●…eir true ●…te of Grace To his end herein are ●…folded I. The Saints Assurance itself in Generall viz. the 1. Nature of it Preface Pag 14 15 ●…6 2. Tryall of it Pref. p. 16. to 22. 3. Way of Attaining it Pref. p. 22. to 26. 4. Inducements to it Pref. p. 26. to 30. II. The Evidences or Signs in Particular Leading to Assurance of Eternal Life These discover I. Gods Gratuitous Love to us in Jesus Christ How he loved us first pag. 10 11 12. 200. where 1. IV Signes of Gods love to us pag. 5. ●…o 21. 2. VI Signes of Gods love Applyed to us pag. 201 202. II Our Gracious state towards God according to his love in Christ. viz in our I. Enjoyment of the Spirit of Christ himselfe The immediate Author of all Grace where 7 Signes of the Spirit given unto us pag. 216 217. II. Enjoyment of the gracious effects of the Spirit viz. I. Regeneration or New-birth at our Conversion Here 1 How the Soule is brought to Christ by 7 steps pag. 25. to 28. 〈◊〉 How the Father drawes the Soule to Christ in six particulars pag. 25 26. 3. 〈◊〉 Signes of Regeneration pag. 21. to 180. II. Sanctification our Persons by 1. Mortifying of the Old man 1. In generall Sinne where 1. How Regenerate persons Sinne not like the unregenerate in eight distinctive Characters pag. 38. to 60. 2 How Regenerate persons may possibly Sin against Grace in five degrees pag. 89 90. 3 How the Regenerate Sinne not the Sinne against the Holy Ghost pag. 60. to 127. 2 In Particular 1. Errours How farre the Regenerate overcomes them pag. 127 to 139. 2. Love of the World 15. Signes of inordinate love of the world pag. 9 10. 207 208. Many Signes of overcoming the worlds Smiles and Frownes pag. 142 to 162. 3. Slavish Feare 5 Signes that it is cast out pag. 203 204 205. 4. Bosome-Sinne pag. 52 53. 2. Vivifying of the New man Some holy habits wherof are 1 Know ledge p. 70. 71. here cōsider 1. VIII Signes of the Spirits Teaching us pag. 181 182 183. 2. IIII Signes
Lords graciousness pleasan●…ness goodnes c they as new-born babes lo●… for the sincere milk of the Word that they m●… grow thereby But Presumption or car●… confidence breeds rather disaffection th●… true affection to the Word Such either d●…sire it not at all or not the pure sincere Wor●… or not in reference to their growth 3. True assurance makes the soule incomparable to prize Communion with God and Iesus Christ when the Church had obtained Christs sweet embracements and perceived her selfe lodged in the bosome of her dearest Love and knew that her beloved was hers and she his how jealous is she lest any should disturbe him or drive him from her so earnest is she to be filled with his fellowship and upon his withdrawing in any measure from her how restlesse is she till his returne David was a man of much heavenly experience and assurance when his evidences were dimmed by his fall how pathetically doth he cry Make me to heare joy and gladnesse that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce Restore to me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit Presumption knowes not what Communion with Christs meanes 4. True assurance notably engages those that have it to serve and honour God in their places to the uttermost God assured Ioshua that he will never leave him nor forsake him and Ioshua resolves what ever others do that he and his house will serve the Lord. Sense of Christs love constrained Paul to all zeal in his ministery David said Thou art my God and I will praise thee thou art my God and I will exalt thee Presumption provokes and contemnes God what is the Almighty that we should serve him c. 5. True assurance singularly supports and comforts the heart in deepest tribulations As is remarkably evident in Iob and Paul Carnall confidence in such cases is a miserable Comforter 6. True assurance fils with joy in hope of glory after tribulation hath done its worst They that have no more then carnall confidence have indeed no hope of another world III. Of the way how to attaine and retaine Assurance Having thus seen the Character of true Assurance next consider we How to compasse and conserve it To this end faithfully follow these and such like directions viz. 1. Be much in selfe-examination frequen●… in selfe-Probation that you may finde where your evidence clearly lies Examine you●… selves prove your own selves know ye no●… that Iesus Christ is in you except ye be re●… probates If a mans Title of land be questioned how will he search and examine hi●… evidences and also take the best counse●… upon them A Merchant that would exactly know his own State he often examine●… and casts up his Bookes So should Christians be much in casting up and examinin●… their spirituall evidences that would obtai●… assurance of their good estate to God 2. Quench not grieve not the Spirit of God by any known corruption but still entertaine him with all holy acceptablenesse for the Spirit of God is therefore given us that we by him might be assured and know the things given us of God and he assures us most convincingly clearly satisfactorily 3. Cherish and improve all your graces for every grace hath an evidence in it but peculiarly your speciall Assuring graces viz. Knowledge Faith and Hope By knowledge we discerne our selves By faith we reallize and appropriate to our selves for present the things as yet not seen and by hope we patiently wait for full enjoyment All tend to assurance 4. Constantly exercise your selves herein to have a conscience void of offence towards God and man in all the parts of well-doing A good conscience and a gracious upright Conversation are singular grounds and helps to Assurance To him that ordereth his conversation aright will I shew the salvation of God And Christ saith He that hath my Cemmandements and keepeth them he it is that loveth me and he that loveth me shall be beloved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my selfe unto him 5. Remember former experiences of Assurance the dayes of old the years of Gods right hand these will support and perswade our hearts against doubtings Gods people have taken this course in their wants of assurance 6. Labour to getout of those conditions which are prejudicial and obstructive to assurance These are foure viz. 1. The Infancy of grace Infants in nature live move grow c. long before they actually know it So Babes in grace have not their spirituall senses exercised to discerne their condition Labour to be men in growth both in grace and knowledge 2. The spirituall slumber or sleep of security In naturall sleep our senses are so tied up that we discerne not our naturall or civill State In the spirituall slumber of security our assurance is suspended our evidences sleep with us as in the Church in her spirituall security Awake thy selfe out of security 3. The spiritual Swoon of Desertions In a Swoon when our spirits and sense faile us we discerne not our naturall life In spirituall Desertions when God withdrawes the light of his countenance and sweet presence we discerne not our spirituall life Labour to remove Desertions the Conflicts of temptations and other soule-distempers When the body is in deep distempers hath been astonished with dangerous falls c. it is not comfortably sensible of its corporall condition no more is the soule in deep Temptations Afflictions especially Relapses apprehensive of its good spiritual condition As in David upon his fal Therefore wrastle out of temptations and relapses 7. Diligently and skilfully improve those notable Assuring Ordinances the Word Lords Supper and Prayer To help on all the former directions in reference to assurance 1. The Word was therefore written that beleevers might know they have eternall life Let it therefore dwell in you richly in all wisdome 2. The Lords Supper particularly and individually seals up remission of sinnes Communion with Christ and interest in the New Testament Be at the Lords table frequently but still manage it worthily And 3. Prayer not onely spreads open a mans heart to himselfe but pierceth the heavens creeps into the bosome of God and often furnisheth the doubting spirit with Assurance in the very exercise of it Therefore labour to be mighty men in prayer Pray alwayes and faint not How oft do the servants of God begin their prayer doubting and perplexed but conclude assured and perswaded David begins O Lord rebuke me not in ihine anger neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure c. and he ends The Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping The Lord hath heard my supplication By these and such like meanes true Assurance may be obtained by the people of Go●… when they want it recovered when they hav●…
what part we have in the Sonnes redeeming love would we discover our share in the Sonnes redeeming love then let us accurately search what right and property we have in the Spirits sanctifying love when we spiritually live from the Father through the Sonne by the Spirit then God gives us a taste of his love experimentally Excellently Salvian that eminent Presbyter of the Massilian Church who flourished in the fifth Century discourseth of this love of God to us This is that which I said before that God loves us more then a Father his Sonne Verily the thing is evident that God loves us above the affection of sonnes who for our sakes hath not spared his Sonne And what adde I further and this a just Son and this an only begotten Sonne and this Son God And what can be said more and this for us that is for evill ones for most wicked ones for unrighteous ones Who can estimate this love of God towards us but that the justice of God is such that no unjust thing can be incident unto him For so far as humane reason may judge any man had done an unjust thing if for the worst servants he should haveput to death a good Sonne So that in this the piety of God is more inestimable and in this the vertue of God is more admirable that so the greatnesse of his justice cannot by man be understood inasmuch as to the apprehension of humane imbecillity the greatnesse of his justice seemes almost to have a shew of in justice So he Adoption That we should be reckoned among the children of God may be a second Signe of Gods love to us Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sonnes of God! 1 Joh. 3. 1. Well said the Apostle Behold what manner of love for here is not only love but love to admiration That we without strength Rom 5. 6. we lost creatures Luk. 15. last we sinners Rom. 5. 8. we in the bond of iniquity Act. 8. 13. we dead in trespasses and sins Eph. 2. 1. we enemies to God by wicked works Col. 1. 21. we children of wrath even as others Eph. 2. 3 c. That we should be thus advanced in heavenly places in Christ and accounted not only servants which is much Ioh. 12. 26. not only friends which is more Ioh. 15. 15. but also sonnes and consequently heires and co-heires with Christ which is most of all Rom. 8. 16 17. Gal. 4. 4 5 6. Let men behold let Angels behold let both adore and admire what manner of love is this love Shew thy sonneship this Son-ship demonstrates infallibly Gods love unto thee God takes none into this nearest relation but whom he first took into his dearest affection If thou art a Sonne of God then 1. Thou art born againe of the Spirit of God Iohn 1. 12 13. and 3. 3 5. 2. Thou hast received Jesus Christ by believing on his Name Ioh. 1. 12. 3. God hath instilled into thee a Son-like Spirit of prayer Rom. 8. 15 26 4. Thou art conforme to Christ the first-borne among many brethren Rom 8. 29 5. Thou art acted led and guided by the Spirit of God Rom. 8. 14. Our not loving the world not the things that are in the world inordinately may be a third Signe of Gods love to us Love not the world nor the things that are in the world for if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him For all that is in the world the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but is of the world and the world passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1. Ioh. 3. 15 16 17. The love of the Father is in him neither Actively nor Passively who immediately loves the world Not Actively he loves not the Father not passively he is not beloved of the Father for who can be beloved of the Father and not reciprocally love the Father again 1 Iohn 4. 19. and who can entertaine the true love of the Father in the heart but withall he must banish the excessive love of the world out of the heart For 1. The love of the Father and the love of the world are sorepugnant and inconsistent one with another Iam. 44. Matth. 6. 24. 2. The love of the Father and of the world do each of them so forcibly exhaust and draw out the whole heart that it is impossible that these two loves should at one and the same time in intense degrees dwell in one and the same heart As Cyprian well observed The love of God and the world cannot cohabit in one heart together as the same eye cannot at once look up to heaven and down to the earth together But who do inordinately love the world and things in the world Answ. 1. They who are wont inordinately to desire and seek it when they want it 1 Tim. 6. 9 10. Matth. 6. 31 32 33. 2 Pet. 2. 1 2 3. 2. Kings 5. 20 22. 1 Kings 21. 4. 9 10 16. 2. They who are wont inordinately and immoderately to set their hearts upon it and abuse it whilest they have it Ps. 62. 10. 1 Tim. 6. 17. Luk. 12. 16 to 22. Mat. 19. 21 22 23 24. Iam. 5. 1 to 7. 34. 1. They who are wont excessively to grieve and perplex themselves when they lose it as Achitophel who when he lost this worlds honours went discontentedly and hanged himselfe 2 Sam 17. 23. Our love to God which is a sweet effect a resulting ray a reflexive beame of Gods love to us may be a fourth Signe of Gods love to us We love him because he first loved us 1 Joh. 4. 19. When God begins to us in this sweet cup of love we cannot chuse but pledge him but should not he love us first and we also have some apprehension of that his love we should never love him at all For as Bernard saith Men render not love to God loving them till the spirit of faith reveales to them Gods eternall purpose about their future salvation As light breeds light fire fire so Gods love to us begets love to God in us But how or wherein hath God loved us first Answ. God the Father Son and holy-Ghost hath eternally loved us in electing us Col. 1. 12. 1 Pet. 1. 2. Eph. 1. 3 4 5 6 7. In a more peculiar sort God the Fathers love first shined forth towards us in giving Jesus Christ his own only Son that Sonne of his love Col. 1. 13. for us Tit. 3. 4 5 6. Iohn 3. 16. Hath God so loved us as not to spare his ●…wne Sonne as hath before been eviden●…ed how can this chuse but kindle in us re●…iprocall flames of love again to God and ●…ake us delight in his love They more I ●…rink saith Bernard of the love of God
trespasses c. saith How necessarily how providently and wholesomely are we admonished that we are sinners who are urged to beg s●… our sinnes that whilest a pardon is asked of God our minde may be remembred of it's guiltinesse Lest any should please himselfe as if he were innocent when there is none innocent and by extolling himselfe should be in more danger of perishing he is instructed and taught that himselfe sins daily whilest he is daily commanded to pray for his sins pardon Affirmatively They that are borne of God de not commit sin nor can sinne as they do and cannot chuse but de who remaine unregenerate and continue the children of Satan This position will comprehend the full sense of the Apostle who here plainly opposeth the regenerate to the unregenarate the children and issue of God to the children and issue of the devil and this peculiarly in the point of committing or not committing of sinne and take in all the severall interpretations which are opposite and pertinent to the clearing of this place Consider therefore though both the children of God and the children of the devill sin yet there is a vast disparity and manifold difference betwixt the sinning of the one and of the other whereby we may clearly according to Scripture distinguish betwixt the regenerate and the unregenerate as I. They that are regenerate commit not sin nor can sin against the Gospel-Remedy Jesus Christ is the Gospel-Remedy Act. 4. 12. The going on in a state of unbeliefe and impenitency not accepting of Christ by faith and repentance as a Saviour and Mediatour is sinning against this Gospel-Remedy Mark 1. 15. Act. 2. 38. with 16. 31. Iohn 1. 11 12. with 3. 18 36. and 16. 9. Now no truly regenerate person can thus sin against Christ putting him away from them by unbelief and impenitency because in that they are regenerate it is inevitably implyed that they actually have believed and repented already for repentance and faith are ingredients inseparable from regeneration Iohn 1. 12 13. But every regenerate man whilest such still sins against the Gospel-remedy J. Christ in not accepting him for salvation Iohn 1. 11 12 13. Iohn 3. 18 36. and 16. 9. Luk. 19. 14 27. And they cannot chuse but thus sin against Christ by infidelity because they are unregenerate Rom. 8. 8. II. Hence They that are born of God commit not sin nor can sin as persons under the absolute Power Reigne and Dominion of sin Sin may oft-times rebell in them ye●… sometimes tyrannize over them as Rom. 7. 23. Gal. 5. 17. But it doth not reigne in them Rom. 6. 6 11. 18. and 8. 2. The reigne of sin discovers it selfe chiefly in two respects as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 6. 12 13. viz. 1. When men willingly obey it in the lusts thereof when the first motions sustings and stirrings of sin in them are listned and assented to approved delighted in c. A King is willingly obeyed by his subjects a Tyrant is obeyed unwil●…ingly The regenerate they sin not willingly but rather against their wills Rom. 7. 15 19. 2. When men readily take up armes for sin and fight for sin to fulfill it viz. when they yeeld their members whether inward faculties of soule or outward parts of their bodies as armes or weapons of unrighteousnesse unto sin fighting against the motions of the Spirit commands of the Word c. When men thus readily fight sins battels they are sins servants under sins raigne and dominion As men under the raigne of a King readily take up armes for him but under the usurpation of a Tyrant they are readier to fight against him then for him Now the regenerate do not fight for sin nor yeeld their faculties and members to the service of it but warre snd strive against it Rom. 7. 23 24. Gal. 5. 17. Rom. 8. 13. But on the contrary unregenerare men both 1 readily obey sins commands obey it in the lusts thereof Rom. 6. 19. Eph. 2. 2 3. Tit. 3. 3. and 2. as readily take up armes for sin yeelding their members weapons of unrighteousnesse unto sin and cannot chuse but so do they cannnt cease from sin 2 Pet. 〈◊〉 14. They are captived-alive like wilde beasts in a trap by the hunter by Satan at his will 2 Tim. 2. 25 26. III. Hence They that are borne of God commit not sin nor can sin Voluntate plenâ sed semi-plenâ with a whole will but as it were with an halfe will an unwilling willingnesse not with a full consent but with a dissenting consent with much renitency and reluctancy not with a totall delight of heart but with an unpleasing delightfulnesse The evill that I would not do that I do Rom. 7. 19. When the will of a regenerate person hath so farre consented to sin as to act it yet even in acting it there remaines in the will an inclination and principle to act against it for there is in the wombe of the beleeving soule a Iacob and an Esau a good and bad part habits of grace infused and reliques of sin unmortified in every regenerate person and this in every faculty and affection of soule Some saving light in the minde and yet some carnall darknesse some holy dispositions in the will and yet some unholy inclinations c. So farre as the heart and will is regenerate so farre it hates sin and declines it so farre as it is unregenerate so farre it loves sin and in clines unto it hence the Apostle said that which I do I allow not for what I would that do I not but what I hate that I do Now then it is no more I that do it but sin that dwelleth in me Rom. 7. 15 17. No more I viz. not I so farre as regenerate as spirirituall A regenerate man as regenerate commits not sin nor can sin grace produceth not sin nor the Spirit flesh such as is the cause such is the effect grace acts g●…aciously Spirit spiritually as flesh acts carnally sinfully Hence from these two contrary parties within the regenerate ariseth a constant spirituall combate betwixt the flesh and Spirit The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit lusteth against the flesh and these two are contrary the one to the other Gal. 5. 17. Now where there 's this lusting and combating against corruption there can be no full and total consent of heart or complyance of will with corruption But unregenerate persons contrariwise commit sinne with full consent of will with totall inclination of heart for they have no principle of grace within to with-hold them from fin but onely principles of corruption to impell and push them upon sin the regenerate have sin in them the unregenerate have nothing else but sin in them yea they are in the flesh i. e. wholly plunged ingulfed swallowed up of the flesh Rom. 8. 5 8. yea they are nothing but flesh Ioh. 3. 6. Now they being meere flesh no spiritually good thing dwells in them Rom.
ask according to Gods will vers 14 15. This done he more particularly accmmodates this their priviledge declaring how prevalent their prayer shall be in particular for a lapsed brother to obtain life and pardon for him verse 16. This particular case of praying for a lapsed brother is further amplified three wayes viz. By a Distinction a Caution and a Cnofirmation of it By a Distinction betwixt sin and sin that a believer may know what sin he may pray for pardon of according to Gods will so as to speed Sin is here distinguished into sin unto dath and sin not unto death verse 16. 17. Sin unto death as Tertullian hath observed is irremissible or unpardonable Sin not unto death is remissible or pardonable for this sort of sin we are to pray Yet here the Apostles meaning is not to intimate that any sin is in its owne nature not mortall as Papists fondly distinguish of mortall and veniall sin for according to the merit and proper nature of every sin there can be no sin so small but in it selfe it is mortall and deserves death even death eternall Rom. 6. 23. For every sin is a transgression of the Law 1 John 3. 4. and the least transgression of the Law though but once admitted in its owne nature exposes to the curse Gal. 3. 10. But though all sins are mortall meritoriously yet some sins are not mortall eventually viz. God is pleased not to inflict the punishment of eternall death for every sin that deserves it and this the Apostles sence here as Calvin hath judiciously observed though there is one kinde of sin which is mortall not onely meritoriously in its owne nature but eventually God alwayes so plaguing it And what sin can this be but that sin against the Holy Ghost of which Matth. 12. 31 32. Heb. 6. 4 to 7. and ●…0 ●…6 to 31. seeme plainly to speaks 2. By a caution not to pray for the pardon of that sin unto death vers 10. For that were not to pray according to Gods Will inasmuch as God hath declared that of all sin he will not pardon that sin Matth. 12. 31 32. So that we ought not to pray for the pardon of the sin against the Holy Ghost abstractly considered not yet as considered concretely in this or that person whom we can clearly and infallibly discover to have fallen into it 3. By confirmation the Apostle gives a reason why we should pray for pardon of the sin of a lapsed Brother of any regenerate person in that he that is borne of God never commits this sin unto death this impardonable sin Why He that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe and that wicked one toucheth him not Vers. 18. It is not said He tempteth him not but he toucheth him not How doth not Satan that wicked one touch him Non tangit tactu qualitativo i. e. Not with a qualitative touch saith Cajetan in loc but Calvin much more judiciously He toucheth him not lethally mortally The regenerate is not quite exempted from Satans wounding-touch but by the shield of faith he guards himself from the mortall killing touch that he is not stabbed to the heart Whence is it that he is thus preserved He keepeth himselfe nay God keeps him as Christ prayed Iohn 17. 11. 1 Pet. 1. 5. Else wo wo to every Christian were he is own keeper He keeps himself from this sinne whilest God keeps him for he acts meerely in Gods strength and no further Thus the H. Ghost plainly testifies that they that are borne of God sin not this sin to death Make but sure to thy conscience that thou art borne of God and this may encourage thee against thy trembling apprehensions that thou hast sinned against the H. Ghost 2. Should it come to passe that the regenerate might sin against the H. Ghost then they might totally and finally fall away from God But that any regenerate person should totally and finally fall away is as impossible as that Gods Covenant promises and faithfulnesse should faile or that Gods Spirit grace and power preserving them should be overcome as was before cleared or that Gods immutable decree for their salvation should be shaken or overthrown 2 Tim. 2. 19. Rom. 8. 29 30. 3. They that are regenerate shall never come into condemnation There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit For the Law of the Spirit of life hath made them free from the law of sin and death Rom. 8. 1 2. Therefore they shall never fall into the sin against the H. Ghost for they that fall into that sin cannot possibly escape condemnation 2. Questionlesse those persons have not sinned the sin against the H. Ghost who are perplexed troubled and afraid that they have fallen into it That very jealousie fear solicitousness and trouble of conscience lest thou shouldest have already so sinn'd is an undoubted proof and evidence that thou never did'st commit that sin in all thy life for no person that indeed ever sinned against the Holy Gost either was or could be afraid perplexed or troubled in spirit about it such trouble being inconsistent with the nature of that sin which leaves no place for any religious feare suspicion jealousie or trouble of heart about it They that so sin sinning wilfully obstinately maliciously and blasphemously against the Spirit of grace without all colour shadow or possibility of remorse or repentance Matth. 12. 31 32. Heb. 6. 4 to 7. and 10. 26 to 31. These feares and tremblings of poor soules in this case are signes indeed that they are very weake and Satan very busie with them abusing their weaknesse but they are no signes of this sin committed by them but rather of the contrary 3. Those persons that are without the visible Church and without the Gospel-ordinances as Turks Pagans c. though some of the Ancients think even such may sin against the H. Ghost as also those persons within the visible Church who have yet received little or no illumination by meanes of the ordinances or spirituall taste and power of them they are not for present in immediate capacity of falling into this dreadfull sin against the Holy Ghost though the root of it being original coruption be in them wholly unmortified for as much as it is not immediately and actually incident but to such as are within the Church and those therein who wanting true grace have yet received some common grace of illumination and taste of spirituall things Hebrewes 6. Affirmatively false-hearted hypocriticall Professours of Christ and Christianity living in the bosome of the Church who were never throughly renewed Col. 3. 10. Tit. 3. 5. not partakers of the true life of God Eph. 4. 18. and power of godlinesse but onely attained the forme of godlinesse 2 Tim. 3. 5. a name that they live Rev. 3. 1. and some formall accomplistments of Hypocrites and temporary beleevers who to
humane apprehensions may go very farre these are the persons who of all other in the world are most in danger of falling into this unpardonable sin against the H. Ghost for such the Scripture describes them to be who are particularly declared to be liable to this sin Compare well these Scriptures together Matth. 12. 24 31 32. Marke 3. 28 29 30. Heb. 6. 4 to 7. Heb. 10. 26 to 31. Luke 12. 10 In all which places Hypocrites especially the formal Hypocrites who usually go furthest in their saint-like appearances seem to be evidently characterized and intended For Christ speaks plainly of the Pharisees which were in the Jewish Church but blasphemous Hypocrites And the Apostle Paul speaks of temporary professours which were in the Christian Church but Apostatical Hypocrites More particularly take the Holy Ghosts own Character of these persons which are in more neer capacity and hazard of sinning this great sin against the Holy Ghost as they are laid down in these Scriptures viz. 1. They are such as have attained to much knowledge of Christ of the Truth and of the way of righteousnesse These who were once enlightened Heb. 6. 4. i. e. enlightened with the knowledge of divine Truths and fundamental principles of Christian Religion immediately fore-recited Ver. 1 2. If we sinne wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the Truth Heb. 10 26. Which passages presuppose them that fall into this sinne of sins to be knowing men in mysteries of Christianity and notably illuminated for this sin is a sin against light great light There 's a threefold light or illumination of men 1. General and natural viz. the light of reason Thus the eternall Word the Sonne of God is the true light which enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world Joh. 1. 9. 2. Speciall and supernatural viz. That light of the Faith and Grace from the sanctifying Spirit which is part of the image of God in the regenerate Of which see Ioh. 17. 3. 1 Ioh. 2. 27. Col. 3. 10. 3. There 's a kind of middle illumination betwixt these more then meere natural but lesse then true supernatural illumination a common gift of the Spirit even to Hypocrites and temporary beleevers which have no true grace whereby men may be able even to Prophesy c. of this the Apostle speaks Though I have the gift of Prophecy and understand all mysteries and all knowledge and have not charity I am nothing 1 Cor. 13. 2. Iudas was thus enlightened and those Hypocrites Mat. 7. 22 23. Here we are to understand not the two first but this last illumination 2. They are such as by meanes of this knowledge have attained to much reformation in their lives and wayes They have escaped the pollution of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ 2 Pet. 2. 20. Here they were outwardly deformed in the sight of men not inwardly renewed in the sight of God sin was chained up and restrained not cast out and mortified as in Iudas who walked so unblameably as none of the Apostles could suspect him more then themselves to be the betrayer of Christ. This seemes to be that which our Saviour calls the uncleane spirits going out of a man Matth. 12 43. h. e. Seemingly though not really and in truth or in some degree but not throughly An allusion to the ejection of the Devill out of the Demoniack about which the Pharisees so blasphemed the Holy Ghost 3. They are such as have tasted of the heavenly gift Heb. 6. 4. By heavenly gift b Ambr. understands the remission of sins Oecumenius the remission of sinnes which is in Baptisme for this saith he is an heavenly gift Pareus Faith which is a gift bestowed from heaven upon them that are illuminated Calvin understands the things of Christ which are above nature and above the world And of all other Christ by way of peculiar emphasis is called the gift of God Joh. 4. 10. And may here principally be intended by the heavenly gift for he came down from heaven for us Ioh. 6. 38 50. Under which also Faith and remission of sins may be implyed and included Remission of sins and such like benefits being tasted in Christ and Faith being the Organ whereby we taste them And note it is not said have eaten or drunk but onely tasted i. e. have had some kind of relish or small sense by a temporary faith of the excellency of Christ and the things of Christ. 4. They are such as were made partakers of the Holy Ghost Heb. 6. 4. By Holy Ghost here Interpreters unanimously understand nor the speciall sanctifying graces of the Spirit But the common gifts of the Holy Ghost as comman illumination tongues temporary faith Faith of miracles c. Of which gifts the Apostle makes an enumeration 1 Cor. 12. 3 to 12. Iudas Simon Magu●… many hypocrites had such gifts in the Primitive times Matth. 7. 22 23. Act. 8. 13. In after-times and even in our dayes publick Church-Officers though hypocrites may have the gift of formal preaching expounding Scriptures and praying in publick Yea private professours may share in such gifts as to be able formally to pray to resolve doubts to comfort the feeble-mimded to strengthen and encourage the timerous to instruct the ignorant and by profitable discourse to edify many and all these by the common assistance of the Holy Ghost Otherwise how should the Apostates here described sinne against the Holy Ghost had they not in themselves some gifts and endowments of the Holy Ghost See Ambrose Occumonius Piscator Calvin Pareus thus interpreting 5. They are such as have tasted the good word of God Heb. 6. 5. i. e. The doctrine of the Gospel saith Ambros. the Doctrine of Christ saith Occumenius the Word of the Gospel stiled good i. e. pleasant saith Piscator the holy Scriptures saith Parcus all come much to one and Calvin thinks that the Gospel is here peculiarly intended that being the good the sweet Word testifying the sweetnesse of Gods love to poor sinnes when the Law biterly thunders out nothing but death and curses Now even hypocrites and cast awayes hearing the Gospel powerfully and sweetly preached the matchlesse love of God in Christ to sinners displayed the worth and excellency of Jesus Christ and his benefits unfolded oh how are they sometimes moved pleased and for present affected with some pangs and moods of joy Herod ●…rd Iohn Baptist gladly Mar 6. 20. The hearers resembled to the stony ground ●…ard the word and anon with joy received it Mat. 13. 20. Ezek. 33. 31 32 But all this is but an imperfect Taste 6. Finally they are such as have tasted also the powers of the world to come Heb. 6. 5. Most by world to come here understand the life to come in heaven and by the powers of the world to come the Resurrection of the Saints bodies their blessed separation from the Goates and sentence
of Salvation from Jesus Christ together with all that blisse joy glory vision of God and benefits of eternall life which they shall possesse in heaven All which may be well called powers of the world to come partly 1. because then they shall appear to be glorious effects of Gods power partly 2. because Christ the mighty God Isa. 9. 6. hath made it a powerful Kingdom which cannot be shaken partly 3. because now the very apprehensions and hopes of them work powerfully effects of comfort joy delight c. in the hearts of them that expect them Rom. 5. 1 2. These powers of the world to come formall professours may taste By Contemplation of them with some delight and by Application to themselves though falsly by a temporrary Faith Luk. 8. 13. which for present may leave some tincture and relish of sweetnesse upon their spirits Hence Balaam wished Let me dye the death of the righteous and my last end be like his Numb 23. 10. But some by world to come understand these last times of the New Testament in opposition to the world past under the Old Testam and in that sense in this very Epist. speaking of the times of the Gospel he phraseth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the world come For unto Angels hath he not subjected the world to come of which we speake Heb. 2. 5. By powers of the world to come in this sense they understand the Signes wonders and miracles with which God did powerfully beare witnesse to the Apostles and their Doctrine Heb. 2. 4. Mat. 16. 26. as Christ promised Mar. 16. 17 18. And those that had the gifts of working miracles in the primitive Church are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. powers 1 Con. 12. 28 29. Which is the selfe-same word here used in Heb. 6. 5. Now its evident that even hypocrites had a teste of such powers of miracles c. Matth. 7. 22 23. And doubtlesse Iudas wanted not this gift else the rest of the Apostles might have suspected him rather then themselves to betray Christ which they did not Now though this latter interpretation be plausible and the expressions here used may well bear this sense being elsewhere used to like purpose y●…t the former exposition seems rather to be preferred 1. partly pecause so the sense wil rise in this particular of tasting the powers of the world to come above all the other forementioned which according to the latter exposition rather fals 2. partly because so a ●…tology will be prevented in these particular qualifications enumerated which according to this latter interpretation cannot be avoided understanding powers of miracles which evidently come under the former particular of partakers of the Holy Ghost Thus much for the first thing to be opened viz. Who they are that have a more immediate habitude to and are more neerly in danger of the sin against the Holy Ghost SECT II Next consider we What the sinne against the Holy Ghost is and wherein it consists And here I may ingenuously confesse with Augustine writing upon the blasphemy of the Holy Ghost what it should be that happily in the whole sacred Serip●… th●… is scarce found a greater and an harder question then this is And were it not 〈◊〉 That Scripture hath revealed something concerning it And 2. That it is necessary to endeavour the satisfaction of the weak scrupling Consoiences of some trembling Christians about it that they have not fallen into it and by the Grace of God ●…ever shall 3. As also that it is a thing desirable that all truely Regenerate persons may more cleerely see the riches of Gods grace in his undoubted preserving all and every one of them for ever from comitting it that so they may walke the more thankfully humbly and watchfully before the Lord I say were it not for these considerations I should most willingly have bin silent herein But these efford both warrant and encouragement to speak so it be soberly and according to Scripture For more clearnesse herein consider 1. The Name 2. The Nature And 3. the Grievousnesse of this sin against the Holy Ghost I. The Name or Names given to this sin in holy Scripture Names properly given do much notify or make known the things intended by them The more remarkable ●…mes given to it are these viz. 1. Blasphemy against the holy Ghost or blasphemy against the Spirit But the blasphe●… against the H. Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men which is after expounded by speaking against the Holy Gost Mtth. 12. 31 32. See also Mark 3. 30 31 32. and Luk. 12. 10. Blasphemy is originally a Greek word derived as some think from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. a bad fame an uselesse fame c. or as others à 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. from ●…rting the fame good name or reputation of any God or man Thus it signifies in the generall notation of the word but used more strictly as here it denotes a more grievous and hainous reproaching slandering or reviling of the Holy Spirit and this purposely and maliciously against knowledge This the Apostle elsewhere calls despiting the Spirit of grace Heb. 10. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which properly notes a petulancy and frowardnesse of reproaching See H. Steph. Th●…sur G. Ling. Now this sin is peculiarly called Blasphemy of the Spirit or against the Holy Ghost rather then blasphemy against the Father or the Son Not in respect of the divine essence or personall subsistence of the Holy Ghost For he that sins against any one person of the blessed Tri●…ty sins against every person for they are all one in unity of essence 1. Iohn 5. 7. He that blasphemes the H. Ghost blasphemes also both the Father and Son inasmuch as all three are co-essentiall and therefore co-equall and co-eternall in majesty glory and all divine perfections as Ambrose hath well noted But in respect of the Ministery and office of the Holy Ghost 1. The Ministery of the Spirit is the Gospel and the glorious truth therein contained See 2 Cor. 3. 8. From which truth hypocrites fall away and against which truth they maliciously and blasphemously oppose and set themselves who sinne against the Holy Ghost as after will appear 2. Th●… Office of the Spirit is to convince Joh. 16 9. To illuminate and furnish with variety of gifts and spirituall endowments Act. 8. 13. Luk 8. 13. 1. Cor. 12. And to suggest many good motions and inclinations into mens hearts in use of Ordinances and otherwise as Math. 13. 20. Mark 6. 20. they had some motions of joy Act. 26. 28. Agrippa almost perswaded to be a Christian. Against which light gifts and motions of the Spirit they directly and wilfully sinne that sin against the Holy Ghost 2. An Apostasie or falling away If they shall fall away Heb. 6. 6. It is the highest and worst Apostasie of all other As after
Christ Matth. 26. last Iohn 21. 15 c. Paul delivered from his body of death by Jesus Christ his Lord Rom. 7. 24 25. 3. Besides sinning against knowledge and illumination divers other sinfull poysons are complicated and contained in the sin against the H. Ghost Heb. 6. 4 5 6. 10. 26 29. Matth. 12. 31. 4. Not every sinning against the Truth of Christ and the Gospel is the sin against the Holy Ghost For 1 Those that know most of the truth of Christ in this world know but in part See but as through a glasse darkly 1 Cor. 13. 9 12. and therefore they may possibly erre from the truth in some things 2. Divers have sinned against the truth yea sometimes against fundamentals and yet are not challenged to have sinned against the Holy Ghost but were accounted as of the visible Church as those in the Church of Corinth that denied the resurrection 1 Cor. 15. 12. And those in the Church of Porgamus that held the Doctrine of Balaam and the Doctrine of the Nicolaitanes Yet are not counted hopelesse but invited to repent of these damnable opinions Rev. 2. 14 15 16. The Churches of Galatia were fearfully tainted with that dangerous error of the necessity of the workes of the Law to Justification as well as of Faith which gave occasion to Paul of writing that excellent Epistle to the Galatians See Gal. 1. 6 c. 2. 16. c. 3. 1 c. Yea the very Apostles themselves had an erroneous opinion about Christs temporall Kingdome and that till after his resurrection Act. 1. 6. 3. Erroneous persons are called to repentance Rev. 2. 16. and Ministers are directed to instruct with meeknesse those that oppose themselves if God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth 2 Tim. 2. 24 25 26. 5. Not every sinning against the gracious motions strivings and operations of the Holy Ghost is this peculiar sin against the Holy Ghost here spoken of For 1. It 's possible that men may thus sin and sometimes with an high hand and yet not be charged by the Scripture with sinning against the Holy Ghost The Proto-martyr St●…phen thus challenges his hearers Ye stiffe-necked and uncircumeised in heart a●…e eares ye do alwayes resist the Holi Ghost as your fathers did so do ye Which of the Prophets have not your fathers persecuted c. Acts 7. 51 52. They are charged with alwayes resisting the Holy Ghost an heavy charge an hainous sin doubtlesse But yet are not charged with that sin against the Holy Ghost 2. All carnal men in the visible Church whilest carn●…l still resist the Holy Ghost in his Gospel Ministery often quenching his Conv●…ctions Motions and Holy Suggestions to their soules yet it would be an hard and false sentence to say all such sin the sin against the Holy Ghost here intended Possibly they may do it in ignorance and afterwards come to repentance Saul whilest a carnal Pharisee was a blasphemer 1 Tim. 1. 13. and compelled the Saints to blaspheme and being exceedingly mad agaiast them persecuted them to strange Cities Acts 26. 10 11. He so farre withstood the Spirits Ministery and Tenders of grace that he persecuted it to the death yet all this he did ignorantly repented of it and obtained mercy 1 Tim. 1. 13 16. Which could not have been if in this height of his wickednesse he had sinned this grand sin against ●…he Holy Ghost 3. Who knows not but even the dear children of God are in danger in some measure of sinning against the Spirit of God by grieving him and quenching him hence the Apostle so cautions them Quench not the Spirit 1 Thes. 5. 19. And Grieve not the holy Spirit of God wherby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption Eph. 4. 30. Yea actually some have quenched the Spirit in some measure As the Angel of Ephesus had left his first love c. Rev. 2. 4 5. As David who therefore prayes Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and stablish me with thy free Spirit Psal. 51. 12. 6. Not every sinning against Grace received is presently the sinne against the Holy Ghost For 1. The most heavenly and gracious soules are daily perplexed with inseparable and invincible infirmities as doubts feares distracting thoughts distempered passions c. 2. They may too often quench the Spirit 1 Thes. 5. 19. and grieve him Eph. 4. 29 30. by suppressing his good motions sacred stirrings and strivings in their hearts 3. They may gradually decay and decline in their graces and gracious affections to God and Jesus Christ though this be very sad and dangerous Rev. 2. 5. and yet not be utterly cast out of Christs affection The Angel of Ephesus had left his first love and first works though otherwise much commended and approved by Christ Rev. 2. 1 to 8. 4. They may grosly fall and even breake their bones by falling which is much to be lamented yet not quite fall away As Noah to drunkenness Gen. 9. 21. Lot to incest Gen. 19. 33 c. David to murder and uncleannesse 2 Sam 11. with Psal. 51. Augustine intimates some were of opinion that such falls were the sin against the Holy Ghost which opinion he justly rejects because in such cases the door of repentance is not quite shut 5. Yea it 's possible that those who are borne of God and are kept from sinning this sin unto death may yet relapse againe and againe Lapses are dangerous Relapses double dangerous To break a bone is hazzardous but to break it again in the same place is extreamly perillous yet even repeated and reiterated sins may finde pardon upon repentance Iacob twice told a lye for compassing of the blessing Gen. 27. 19 21. Lot twice made drunken committed incest with both his Daughters Gen. 19. Peter thrice denied his Master and every time worse then other Matth. 26. These are recorded to caution them that stand that they fall not and to comfort them that have relapsed that they despair not 7. Not every malicious opposing and persecuting of the Church and wayes of Christ though this be an high pitch of Wickednesse is the sin against the Holy Ghost For 1. We have two eminent instances in the New Testament to the contrary Saul consented to Stephens death Act. 8. 1. Breathed ●…ut threatnings and slaughter against the Disciples of the Lord Act. 9. 1 c. When they were put to death he gave his voice against them and punished them oft in every Synagogue and compelled them to blaspheme and being exceedingly mad against them persecuted them even unto strange Cities Act. 26. 10 11. and yet the Lord had mercy on him 1 Tim. 1. 13 16. Yea he had such mercy on him as to convert and save him when he was in his course of subverting and destroying his Church Act. 9. 1 2 3 c. and 26. 12 13. Behold here a wonder of mercy And yet here 's a greater wonder the persecutors and
murderers of Jesus Christ himselfe finde mercy and are converted Act. 2. 36 c. Let Heaven and Earth Men and Angels adore this mercy He pittied him that was cruel to his Saints yea he pardoned them that crucified himselfe who would despaire when Christ opens to such a doore of hope who would presume to sin and spurne against such bowels of commiserations 2. Such sins may be committed by them that have not been Evangelically illuminated Paul obtained mercy because he did it ignorantly 1 Tim. 1. 13. and had they known they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory 1 Cor. 2. 7 8 9. And properly the sin against the Holy Ghost is not committed till after the Gospel illumination Heb. 6. 3. Such Delinquents sometimes finde mercy that Christ may make them Presidents for mercy to all that after shall believe 1 Tim. 1. 16. None of all these are this sin against the Holy Ghost which we seek after yet are we not therefore to embolden our selves in them Though Treason bring the most shameful and cruel death yet felony is Capital and the easiest death is an heavy punishment and though none of these sins be that sin of sins which excludes all hope of salvation yet every one even the least of them are such sins as in their own nature deserve damnation Rom. 6. 23. Consider this thou trembling Christian thou thinkest thou hast sinned against the Holy Ghost nay stay the Lord hath thus farre kept thee from many of these recited evils and Questionlesse the sin against the Holy Ghost is farre beyond them all But what is it seeing thus far we see what it is not II. By way of Position or Affirmation Consider now what it is The sin against the Holy Ghost is not a single but a compounded wickednesse tempered and made up of many deadly poisons whereby it becomes extremely damnable There 's a Concurrence and Complication of many pernicious diseases in it which make it out of measure deadly There are some special Scriptures that peculiarly delineate the nature of this horrid sin unto us viz. These that follow For it is impossible for those which were once enlightened and have tasted of the heavenly gift and were made Partakers of the Holy Ghost ●…d have tasted the good Word of God and tho powers of the world to come If they shall fall away to renew them again unto repentance Seeing they crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame Heb. 6. 4 5 6. And afterwards in the same Epistle it is said Not forsaking the assembling of our selves together as the manner of some is For if we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the Truth there remain●…th no more sacrifice for sins but a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries He that despised Moses Law died without mercy under two or three witnesses Of how much sorer punishment suppose ye shall he be thought worthy who hath troden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the blood of the Covenant wherewith he was sanctified an unholy thing and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace Heb. 10. 25 26 27 28 29. The Apostle Iohn also saith If any man see his brother sin a sin which is not unto death he shall aske and he shall give him life for them that sinne not unto death There is a sinne unto death I do not say that he shall pray for it All unrighteousnesse is sin and there is a sin not unto death We know that whosoever is borne of God sinneth not but he that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe and that wicked one toucheth him not 1 Iohn 5. 16 17 18. Our blessed Saviour having healed one possessed of a devil blinde and dumb The Pharisees maliciously reviled him and said This fellow doth not cast out Devils but by Beelzebub the Prince of the Devils And Iesus knew their thoughts and said unto them Every Kingdom divided against it selfe is brought to desolation Wherefore I say unto you All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man it shall be fergiven him but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost it shall not be forgiven him neither in this world neither in the world to come Matth. 12. 22 24 25 31 32. Compare herewith Mark. 3. 22 28 29. who addes this as an expresse Reason Because they said He hath an unclean spirit ver 30. And Luk. 12. 10. The sin against which our Saviour thus severely speaks in these three Evangelists is without doubt that notorious sin against the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 most strictly and properly so called For 1. It is denominated blasphemy against the Holy Ghost And 2. Is by Christ declared to be that one only unpardonable sin That sin also against which the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrews and Iohn in the three fore-cited texts speak must needs be granted to be the same sin against the Holy Ghost in as much as it is in all the three places laid down as a dreadfull and unpardonable sin of which it's impossible to repent Heb. 6. 4. 5. 6. for which there remaines no more sacrifice Heb. 10. 25. 26. And for pardon whereof we must not pray 1 John 5. 16. So that all these texts speaking so fully and evidently of the sin against the Holy Ghost we may from them all considered together draw this Description of that horrid Sin against the Holy Ghost most properly and strictly so called viz. The sin against the Holy Ghost is an universall finall and wilfull falling away of Hypocriticall Professours From the Truth and common graces of the Holy Ghost once Received and Professed To the blasphemous despiting of the Spirit of Grace horrid contempt and malice against the Son of God and violent persecution of the way of Christianity This description of the sin against the Holy Ghost is so clearly grounded upon the former Scriptures that much need not be said for evincing thereof ' Only for unfolding the nature of this sin Consider in this description these ensuing particulars viz. 1. The general Nature of it A falling away 2. The more special Nature of it whereby it is differenced or distinguished from other sins viz. By 1. The peculiar Subject of it Hypocritical Professours 2. The properties of this falling away which are three It is 1. Universal 2. ●…ll 3. Wilfull 5. The Termini of Terms of this Apostasy or falling away which are 2. viz. 1. Terminus à Quo. The term frō w●… or the Good from which he falls viz. 1. Truth 2. Cōmon Graces of the Holy Ghost Once received professed 2. Terminus ad Qu●… The term to which or the evil to which he backslides which is 3 fold viz. to 1. Blasphemous despiting of the Spirit of
of Baptisms 4. and of laying on of Hands 5. and of the Resurrection of the dead 6 and of Eternall judgment ver 1 2. These are very comprehensive principles in which all other Evangelicall truths may be well comprised These seeme to be the heads of the Apostles Catechisme in the primitive Church Secondly Here are also reckoned up many common gifts and Graces of the Holy Ghost and that so comprehensively also that all the common graces of the Spirit may be easily included therein viz. 1. Enlightening 2. Tasting the heavenly gift 3. Partaking of the Holy Ghost 4. Tasting the good word of God 5. and the powers of the world to come ver 4 5. Thirdly here is intimated a possibility of falling away both from all these truths and all these common Graces of the Holy Ghost to that unpardonable Sinne ver 4 5 6. This falling-away is afterwards by this same Apostle called Sinning wilfully after the receiving of the knowlodge of the Truth Heb. 10. 26. Which may well imply both falling from truth and grace Thus that judicious Calvia understands the Apostle here not of some Particular but of an Universall defection the Faith of Christ and grace of Christ being wholly cast off And elsewhere he saith It is to be noted there is a double falling-away Particular and universall He that in any kind or severall wayes offends he fals from the state of a Christian man therefore all sins are so manyfals But the Apostle doth not here dispute of Theft or Perjury or Murther or Drunkennesse or Adultery but he notes an universall defection from the Gospel when a sinner offends not God in some one respect but withdrawes himself from his grace altogether And that this may be the better understood the Antithesis betwixt the graces reckoned up and this falling away is to be observed For he fals away that makes defectian from the Word of the Lord that extinguisheth the light of it that deprives himselfe of the taste of the heavenly gift that forsake the participation of the Spirit And this is to r●…sounce God totally Now we see whom he sec●…des from hope of pardon viz. Apostates who withdraw themselves from the Grace of God and the Gospel of Christ which they had formerly embraced which befals no man but he sins against the Holy Ghost So he Thus also those learned Interpreters Beza and D. Paraeus understand here An universall Apostasy let the Reader consult their words Thus also Master Deering in his excellent Lectures on the Hebrewes counts this an universall Apostasy of which here the Apostle speakes because his book is scarce I have here annexed his words in the Margin So that this falling away is not Partial but universall 2 A Finall Apostasy A departure from God Christ grace the Church without returne A ruine without repaire An Apostasy to the end of a mans life without recovery A backsliding for ever David fell but David rose againe Peter fell and that fearfully but it was but for a while for a few houres He went out and wept bitterly Mat. 26. 75. but this falling-away so as to sinne against the Holy Ghost is not only universall but also Finall For 1. It is impossible to renew them againe unto repentance Heb. 6. 4 5 6. And they that so fall as to fall beyond the possibility of rising againe by repentance must needs fall finally 2. There remaines no possibility of pardon to such He that shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost hath never forgivenesse but is in danger of eternall damnation Mark 3. 29. Luk. 12. 10. If we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinnes Heb. 10. 26. And where there 's no place for pardon that 's finall offence 3. Death eternall is the certain and inevitable reward and event of this sinne See 1 Iohn 5. 16. Mark 3. 29. Heb. 10. 27. Thus this falling away is not onely universal but Finall 3. A wilfull and malicious Apoctasy viz. Not Apostasy or falling away through meer ignorance inconsideratenesse or infirmity against the deliberate Resolution and habitual disposition of heart and will or through violent push of temptation which may be incident even to the best of Saints But an obstinate falling away out of a mans owne free spontaneous Election against knowledg and conscience out of a malicious wilfulnesse of spirit fixedly and peremptorily resolved to cast off the truth and wayes of God whatever God or man shall say or do to the contrary Such is their Apostasy that sin against th●… Holy Ghost as these words intimate For if we sinne wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins Heb. 10. 26. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated sinning wilfuly implies thus much in the judgement of learned men Here saith Pareus He understands not every sin but secession from the Church nor every secession out of infirmity feare or ignorance but that which is done wilfully and Philosophers tell us those things are done wilfully which are done neither through violence nor ignorance but by the spontaneous motion of the will He understands therefore a Defection not extorted by Tyrants through violence or admitted through feare or ignorance because he presently addes after we have received the knowledge of the Truth but wilfully i. e. maliciously committed by deliberate will and counsell So he To the like purpose also that learned Beza expoundeth this word This word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ultroneously is said of them who do any thing without any cause or shew of cause Therefore it agrees to them not who simply sin knowingly for then farewell David and Peter And by this reason who should not be an hundred thousand times mancipated to eternall death but to them who professedly and universally departed from Christ are delighted in impiety and make war against the knowne Truth as did Saul Julian the Apostate Arius and others of execrable memory Thus their falling away is wilfull i. e. Not onely committed with knowledge but also with free consent obstinacy yea and maliciousnesse of will And this interpretation is the more confirmed by the Apostles subsequent expressions of treading under foot the Sonne of God of counting the blood of the Covenant an unholy thing and of doing despight to the Spirit of Grace vers 29. in the forehead of which actions malice is engraven in Capitall Letters Thus this falling away is not onely universall and finall but also wilfull and malicious These three Properties of this grand Apostasy viz. 1. Universalnesse 2. Finalnesse and 3. Maliciousnesse must be taken conjunctim non divisim joyntly altogether not dis-joyntly or severally one from another if by them we would describe the Sin against the Holy Ghost and rightly understand the Scripture about it for its possible that men may fall totally and finally and yet not commit this sin against the Holy
Ghost unlesse also they fall maliciously Excellently that learned D. Paraeus expresseth himselfe to this point wherewith I shall close up this branch We must note that there are divers degrees of falling and as it were foure kinds 1 Partiall falls into some error or some sin as many Fathers Irenaeus Lactantius c. fell into the Heresie of the Chiliast's David fell into murder and adultery Of these the Apostle speaks not it is not impossible to repent of these 2. A totall Fall or renouncing of the whole Christian faith but through infirmity and therefore not finall As Peter by denying Christ seemes to fall totally but he repeneed with tears So Marcellinus fell through infirmity to idolatry and many other Christians under persecution but afterwards repented And when Novatus understood this saying of such viz. Heb. 6. 4 5 6. he erred and the event evidenced that it was ill wrested against them Nor was it impossible for Peter Marcellinus and others lapsed truly to repent As Cyprian Oratione de lapsis and histories do testifie 3. A totall and finall fall but not malicious i. e. not done of purposed malice but from other causes which Christ adumbrated in his Parable of the seed falling on rocky and thorny ground Matth. 13. Some are deterred by persecutions others are withdrawn from Religion by hopes of honours Pleasures and th●… cares of this life and that finally yet without blasphemy and persecution rather through a kind of security and sluggushnesse So divers departed from Christ and walked no more with him being offended at his Sermon about eating his flesh Ioh. 6. Properly the Apostle doth not speak of these because though these be not renewed by repentance yet is it not impossible for them to be renewed And sometimes God gives these grace to returne into the way 4. A totall finall and malicious faling away A defection from the truth certainly acknowledged not through feare or infirmity but of purposed malice and counsell joyned with the finall hatred blasphemy and Persecution thereof As we read Iulian the Apostate Lucian and Porphyry to have fallen and as many other Apostates to this day have fallen This falling is that which Christ cals the sin against the Holy Ghost Iohn The sinne to death for which we are not to pray because it is irremissible Thus he And thus much touching the three properties of this sinne against the Holy Ghost this dreadfull Apostasy which is 1. Universall 2. Finall and 3. Malicious III. The Termini i. e. The Termes of this Apostasy or falling away laid downe in this description are of two sorts viz. 1. The Terme from waich they fall and 2. The Terme to which they fall That denotes what good they forsake This what evill they embrace 1. The Terminus à Quo or Terme from which they fall denoting the good they cast off viz. The Truth and Common Graces once Received and Professed They fall both from the Profession and Approbation of the whole Truth and all Grace received Heb. 6. 1 to 7. compared with Heb. 10. 26. This hath been sufficiently cleared before especially in opening the first property of this Apostasy viz. Universality of it 2. The Terminus ad quem Or the Terme to which they fall containing the evill which they embrace and practise who sin against the Holy Ghost which is chiefly threefold ●…d all extreamly wicked and desperate 〈◊〉 Blasphemous despiting of the Spirit of Grace 〈◊〉 Horrid contempt and malice against the ●…nne of God And 3. Violent Persecution of the way of Christianity 1. Blasphemous despiting of the Spirit of Grace This is one extremity to which such Apostates fall Hence our blessed Saviour cals it A speaking against the Holy Ghost and The Blas●…hemy against the Holy Ghosh Matth. 12. 31 32. The Apostle calls it doing despight unto the Spirit of Grace Heb. 10. 29. Blaspheming and D●…spiting for substance come much to one see these termes formerly opened in the names given to this sin p. 63 64. so that I put them both together It is a Blasphe●…s despiting or a despiting blasphemy of the Spirit of Grace Oh how much malice and rankling venome is couched in this sinne To blaspheme man is sinfull what is it then to blaspheme the great God of Heaven and earth what to despite that holy Spirit by whom if ever we must be illuminated clearly santified graciously and comforted sweetly 2. Horrid contempt and malice against the Sonne of God The Spirit of Grace is the Spirit of Christ communicated from Christ the head to his whole mysticall body and all his true members See Rom. 8. 2 9. 2 Cor. 〈◊〉 17 18. Therefore this sweet Spirit of grace cannot be thus villainously blasphemed and reproachfully vilified but therein also Jesus Christ who sends forth this Spirit of grace must needs be blasphemed and most intolerably debased Now this grand contempt and indignity which they that sin against the Holy Ghost cast upon Jesus Christ is set forth in foure most pathetick expressions in Scripture viz. 1. They crucify to themselves the Sonne of God afresh Heb. 6. 6. What is it to crucify the Son of God afresh Answ. To commit such a sinne as did Iudas Pilate the Iewes the souldiers in betraying and murdering of Jesus Christ the Lord of glory and this by a painfull shamefull and cursed kinde of death To murder a son of man is so dreadfull a sin that it cries to God for vengeance Gen. 4. 10. what is it then to murther the Sonne of God what to crusify him which is a double murder yet this do all Apostates that sin against the Holy Ghost by denying the Son of God which was once crucified for our sins they will not be saved by his death they count it invalid insufficient accept it not but reject it c. and therefore for them Christ must be crucified a second time which is impossible for Christ dieth no more if ever they be saved there being no salvation or redemption but by him and his blood Act. 4. 12. Heb. 9. 22. But what is it to crucify the Sonne of God to themselves Answ. Crucifigunt in ipsis i. e. quantum in ipsis est That is as much as in them lies Though they do not actually crucifie Christ as once the Jewes and souldiers did yet they would were it possible even dethrone him and pluck him from his Fathers right hand and destroy him as once the Jewes did for an impostor a seducer a blasphemer and a seditious person their malice is such against him that were it possible they would do all this unto him According to that knowne maxime Every Apostate is an Hater and Persecutor of his owne Order 2. They put him to an open shame Heb. 6. 6. The Greek word here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies to diffame or to expose to ignominie or to make one a publick example or infamous example Thus it s said of Ioseph in reference to Mary he
would not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. make her a publick example Matth. 1. 19. Thus they that crucified Jesus Christ did put him to an open shame by scornes scoffes raunts jeares revilings c. whilest he hanged upon the crosse Thou that destroyest the Temple and buildest it in three dayes save thy selfe If thou be the Sonne of God come down from the crosse He saved others himselfe he cannot save if he be the King of Israel let him now come downe from the Crosse and we will believe him Matth. 27. 39 to 45. Much like to them do base Apostates by vile scornes reproaches and blasphemies put Christ to an open shame wickedly counting him not a Saviour but an impostor not freely paying a price for our sins but duly sustaining the deserved punishment of his owne sins c. horrid blasphemies Thus Iulian the Apostate in scorne called him Galilaean The Carpenter The Carpenters son c. shall not the just God that avengeth the injuries of his Saints avenge the blasphemies of his Son 3. They tread under foot the Son of God Heb. 10. 29. This is an higher degree of insolency and contempt of the Lord Christ then both the former The villanous Jewes and souldiers did crucifie Christ and put him to an open shame yet we read not that they trod under foot the Son of God The pride impudency and malice of these Apostates against Christ farre transcends theirs for they tread the Son of God under foot they trample upon him i. e. they account of him and deale with him most visely abjectly contemptibly despicably as the filth and off-scouring of the world not prizing him as a Saviour nor fearing him as a Judge not accepting and believing in him as a Mediatour For as Ambrose observes They are things of basest and vilest account which we tread under foot we tread not gold pearles or Jewels but mire and dirt under foot What shall dust and ashes sinfull wormes lift up themselves so desperately as to tread under foot the ever-blessed Son of God hear oh heavens yet this is the fruit of this cursed Apostasy 4. Finally They count the blood of the Covenant wherewith they were sanctified an unholy thing Heb. 10. 29. 1. The blood of Christ is called the blood of the Covenant because the N. Covenant or New Testament was ratified and confirmed by the blood and death of Christ the Testator Heb. 9. 15 16 17. Hence Sacramentally the cup in the Lords Supper is called the New Testament in his blood or his blood of the New Testament Mat. 26. 28. 1. Cor. 11. 25. because it signifies seales and exhibits to the believer Christs blood whereby the N. Testament was stablished 2. Apostates are said to be sanctified by this blood of the Covenant not really and indeed but formally and in appearance in respect of their visible profession whence in judgement of charity men took them to be sanctified 3. To count this blood of the Covenant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. common blood is to count it not pure sacred meritorious blood but prophane impure unholy Compare Acts. 10. 15. 4. Apostates thus vilifie Christs invaluable blood shed for our redemption accounting it but as the blood of a common man or as of a delinquent or as the blood of the theeves crucified whith him This blood of Christ they practically prophane whilest they return after a holy profession of Christ with the dog to the vomit and the sow to the wallowing in the mire as Ambrose interprets it not willing to cleanse themselves by repenting Thus they that sin against the Holy Ghost 1. Crucify the Son of God afresh 2. Put him to an open shame 3. Tread him under foot and 4. count his blood an unholy thing O what horrid contempt and malice is this against the Son of God! 3. Uiolent Persecution of the way of Christianity Such and so extreame is the madnesse and malice of these back-sliders both against the Spirit of Grace and the Son of God that they break off from profession to Persecution of Christianity and to a deadly hatred of the Church and members of Jesus Christ. And hence some think the Apostle stiles these Apostates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The adversaries Heb. 10 27. because they are the sworn enemies of Christ the Gospel●… and all Christians and if it were possible would destroy them As Iulian the Apostate who as the Centuriators observe out of Eutropius was from his childhood trained up in piety and when he came to the Empire he carryed himselfe with much clemency towards Christians He called home such as Constantius had banished for religion caused their goods to be restored to them commanded it to be proclaimed to his people that they should not hurt the Christians nay nor reproach them But afterwards as is noted out of Hierom he denyed Christ in France and turned a most bloody barbarous butcher to the poor Christians of which the Centuriators record divers dreadfull instances afterwards going to warre against the Persians he swore he would make warre against the Christians if he returned conquerour But there his army was first distressed through wan●… of corn and afterwards himselfe by a Persians subtilty being led into a desert was deadly wounded either by a blow from the Devill●… as some think or by a speare or by an arrow shot from heaven whereupon taking an handfull of his owne blood he flung it up into the aire ●…nd burst out into that wicked contemptuous expression against Christ Vicisti Galilaee 〈◊〉 Thou man of Galilee thou hast overcome 〈◊〉 and so miserably dyed And thus much for opening the Nature of ●…is sin against the Holy Ghost that we might see wherein it properly consists III. The Grievousnesse of this sin against the Holy Ghost comes next to be considered And Surely this is such a sin of sins such a Centaur of transcendent malice and wickednesse such an extract of deadly poyson that 〈◊〉 pen nor tongue nor thought of man can ●…ly reach it My present scope in this small Tractate will not permit me to expatiate and therefore let me succinctly propound only these few Aggravations of this horrid sinne 1. This is the highest sinne against the saving Remedy The lapsed state of man in the first Adam ●…s of all other in this world our deepest and most desperate malady Act. 8. 13. Eph. 2. 1 2 3. Jesus Christ and the Spirit of g●…ce are of all other the most effectuall and only sufficient remedy Jesus Christ by meritorious working out of compleat Redemption and salvation for us Heb. 〈◊〉 12 ●…3 14. and 10. 12 13 14. Heb. 7. ●…5 Act. 4. 12. The Spirit of grace by immediate and effectuall application of Christ and all his grade unto us Ioh. 16. 9 c. Gal. 4. 4 5 6. Rom. 8. 2 15 16 26 27. Without these all the world cannot afford us Redemption Adoption Iustification Sanctification true Consolation or eternall
salvation but by Christ and his Spirit we have all Now they that sin this sin they sin against the Remedy and that wilfully maliciously incurably As for Jesus Christ 1 They crucified him afresh 2. They put him to an open●… 〈◊〉 3. They tread him under foot and 4. Count ●…is blood of the Covenant●…an unholy thing Heb. 6. 6. and 10. 29. As for the Spirit of grace 1. They depart from his truth 2. They fall away from his grace 3. They despite him 4 They blaspheme him Heb. 6. 1 to 7. and 10. 29. Matth. 12. How should such sinners ever be redeemed called justified sanctified or saved that thus sin against the very Remedy unbelief and impenitency are sins against the Gospel-Remedy but not aggravated with that obstinacy and maliciousnesse as this sin is That Patient that is so farre from applying that he hates and abhorres the Remedy that should cure him flings the Physick to the ground curses and reviles the Physician yea and treads him under foot is he ever likely to be cured So in this case spiritually 2. Hence This sin never is never can possibly be repented of So the Apostle tells us For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened if they shall fall away to renew them againe unto repentance Heb. 6. 4 5 6. As if he should say It is impossible for such Apostates to repent Note he saith not It is improbable unlikely or difficult for them to repent but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is impossible to renew them to repentance To whom is it impossible 1. Impossible to themselves to renew themselves for if carnall men that never thus relapsed cannot renew themselves no more then a blackamore can change his skin and the leopard his spots it being impossible a bad tree should bring forth good fruit how much lesse can such Apostates renew themselves to repentance 2. Impossible to their Teachers to renew them to repenance with all their Exhortations Promises Threats Prayers or ministeriall Administrations They are but instruments planting watering only God gives the increase 1 Cor. 3. 6 7. Only God gives Repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25. Yea 3. Impossible in some sense unto God himselfe as some thinke not through any impotency in God but in respect of his infinite justice which cannot chuse but take vengeance of such heynous and malicious offenders And the Apostle gives two great Reasons of the impossibility of such back-sliders Repentance 1. From the atrocity and grievousnesse of the sin committed viz. a sin of extreame malice against Jesus Christ Seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame Which words have been formerly explained p. 112 c. 2. From the just judgement of God inflicted upon them set forth under the metaphor of good and bad ground For the earth which drinketh in the rain that cometh oft upon it and bringeth forth herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed receiveth blessing from God But that which beareth thornes and briars is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned Heb. 6. 6 7 8. i. e. As an husbandman that tils manures waters plants bestowes much cost and pains upon ground and after all it brings forth nothing but briars thorns nettles weeds c. he will never bestow more cost upon it its worthy to be cursed and burnt up so after God hath by his Gospel-ordinances bestowed much husbandry upon men and afforded them also many heavenly influences viz. common gifts graces of his Spirit they notwithstanding bring forth nothing but thornes and briars of this cursed Apostasie God will give them up to finall impenitency and hardnesse of heart to their own Destruction 3. Hence This sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable So Christ tells us The blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven neither in this world neither in the world to come Matth. 12. 32. that is as Mark expresseth it He that shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost hath never forgivenesse Mark 3. 29. This sin is Unpardonable not as if it were in its own nature beyond Gods pardoning mercy or beyond Christs purging merit both which are infinite but because it is alwayes accompanied with finall impenitency and therefore God will not bestow his pardon Christ will not apply his merit To like effect the Apostle saith If we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins Heb. 10. 26. This sins unpardonablenesse heightens this sins grievousnesse above all other sins in the world What other sin but hath been repented of and upon repentance pardoned This beyond all Manasses sins they were repented of and pardoned beyond all Sauls sins 1 Tim. 1. 13 16. Act. 26. 9 to 12. they were repented of and pardoned beyond their sins that murdered Christ through ignorance for they repented and were forgiven Act. 2 36 37 38 41. but this shall never be forgiven 4. Hence This sin is inevitably damnable If this sin be never repented of never pardoned it must needs alwayes be punished with damnation and eternall death and that inavoidably He that shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost hath never forgivenesse but is in danger of eternall damnation Mark 3. 29. If we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins But a certain fearefull looking for of judgement and fiery indignation which shall devour the Adversaries He that despised Moses Law dyed without mercy under two or three witnesses of how much sorer punishment suppose ye shall he be thought worthy who hath troden under foot the Son of God c Heb. 10. 26 27 28 29. Here 's 1. Judgment fiery indignation and that devouring yea much sorer punishment then death without mercy what can this be but eternall damnation 2. Here 's the certainty of it and that without hopes or place remaining for any more Sacrifice for sin what is this but inevitable damnation Hence such as sin against the Holy Ghost are resembled to ground nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned Heb. 6. 8. Thinke now sadly of the inevitablnesse of eternall damnation ever attending upon this sin and then consider how grievous it must needs be 5. Hence This sin is usually a most intolerable torture to the Conscience This plainly flows frō all the former For this being 1. The highest sin against the saving Remedy 2. Never repented of 3. Unpardonable 4. Inevitably damnable How can the concience reflecting upon all this chuse but be unspeakablytortured in this present world with horrour terrour despaire and self-Confusion Which the Apostle calls A certain fearfull looking for of judgement and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries Heb. 10. 27. Oh what a torment what a rack what an hell aforehand is this to the Conscience to think that Hell is inevitable and yet intolerable the furious horrour hereof made
Iudas restlesse till he had hanged himselfe Matth. 27. 1 to 7. Yea sometimes the anguish and sting of Conscience is so intolerable that they desperately wish themselves in hell that they might not be so overwhelmed with torturing fears but feele the worst but alas when they shall come into hell their worme of Conscience will never dye but fret and g●…aw the heart-strings of the soule for evermore 6. Finally this sin is so heynous that the pardon of it is not to be prayed for There is a sin unto death saith Iohn I do not say ye shall pray for it 1. Joh. 5. 16. And that sin which may not be prayed for is counted desperate and past remedy for Prayer is one remedy now the more remedilesse the more grievous Thus far of the second thing to be evidenced viz. What the sin against the Holy Ghost is and wherein it consists viz. of 1. The Names 2. Nature and 3. Grievousnesse of it SECT III. Now briefly to the third and last thing propounded for clearing this Case of Conscience viz. to shew What a vast difference there is betwixt the sinning of Regenerate persons and their sinning that sin against the Holy Ghost And this results by way of Corollary from all that hath been already spoken To hint some particulars may be sufficient as 1. They that sin against the Holy Ghost are such as are under the reign dominion of sin viz. Hypocrites that never had in them any power of godlinesse but only a forme remaining still in their carnall condition But Regenerate persons though sometimes they may fall grievously 〈◊〉 yet are delivered from the dominion and reign of sin as hath been shewed 2. They that sin against the Holy Ghost were never advanced beyond the degree of Hypocrites as hath been evidenced But Regenerate persons are sincere and upright Psal. 18. 22. 2 Cor. 1. 12. they partake of the truth of grace power of godlinesse life of GOD. 3. They that sin against the Holy Ghost universally fall away both from Profession and Approbation of Truth and grace as hath been proved But the Regenerate never fall away thus universally but only partially and in some particular respects only 4. They that sin against the Holy Ghost apostatize and fall away finally But though Regenerate persons sometimes fall Wofully yet never finally they alwayes rise again 5. They that sin against the Holy Ghost sin wilfully and maliciously But as hath been cleared Regenerate persons sin out of weaknesse and infirmity not of malice or wilfull obstinacie they hate the evill which they do Rom. 7. 15. 6. They that sin against the Holy Ghost sin desperately against the saving Remedy viz. both against the Ministery and Grace of the Holy Ghost and also against the blood and merit of the Son of God as was declared But they that are regenerate sin not thus against the saving Remedy 7. They that sin against the Holy Ghost are not in fear or trouble lest they have sinned that sin but are wickedly hardened Regenerate persons are oft perplexed and afraid lest they should have sinned it 8. They that sin against the Holy Ghost so sin that it is impossible to renew them again unto repentance But they that are regenerate repent of every sin which they fall into before they die in the generall or particular 9. They that sin against the Holy Ghost sin unpardonably But all the sins of regenerate persons are pardonable and actually pardoned to them 10. They that sin against the Holy Ghost are tortered with a certain fearfull looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devoure them Heb. 10. 27. But they that are Regenerate are justified Rom. 8. 29 30. and being justified by faith they have peace with God and joy in hope of the glory of God and not only so but even glory in tribulation Rom. 5. 1 2 3. 11. They that sin against the Holy Ghost must not be prayed for 1 Joh. 5. 16. But we ought to pray for all Regenerate persons not withstanding their sins frailties which they are subject to Iames 5. 16. 1 Ioh. 5. 16. 12. Finally they that sin against the Holy Ghost shall certainly and inevitably be condemned as was proved But Regenerate persons not withstanding their Actuall or Original sins shall certainly and infallibly be saved Rom. 8. 29 30. There being no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit Rom. 8. 1. These and divers such like differences are very remarkable betwixt the sinning of Regenerate persons and their sinning that sin against the Holy Ghost whereby truly Regenerate Persons may discern how far they are from sinning that great sin notwithstanding all their feares and perplexities about it For whose satisfaction I have the more largely insisted upon this weighty Case Thus far of that 3. Evidence or signe of Regeneration viz. The not committing of sin They that are borne of God do not commit sin nor can sin in that sense and in those respects as have been explained IV. Overcoming of Erroneous and Hereticall Spirits and their seducements may be a fourth Signe or Evidence of Regeneration Believe not every Spirit but try the Spirits whether they are of God because many false Prophets are gone out into the world Ye are of God little children and have overcome them because greater is he that is in you then he that is in the world 1 Joh. 4. 1. 4. In these 4 Verses the Apostles scope is to caution and encourage the faithfull against all the seducements of erroneous and heretcall spirits then abounding To this end 1. He warnes them of their danger Many false Prophets being gone out into the world v. 1. 2. He directs them how to prevent harm by them Negatively Believe not every spirit Positively Prove the spirits c. v. 1. 3. He gives them one eminent character of a true and false spirit viz. the confessing or not confessing of Iesus Christ v. 2 3. For as Calvin hath well noted Christ is the scope at which faith aims and also Christ is the rock against which all Heretiques dash either in respect of his Person Offices or Ordinances 4. He comforts and encourages them in their victory over these hereticall Seducers and false Prophets though they have many sharp conflicts with them yet they have conquered them got the day Ye have overcome them This their victory is amplyfied 1. By the evidence that it gives them of their owne Regenerate condition Ye are of God little children and have overcome them As if he had said This is a pregnant token or pledge to you that you are borne of God Joh. 1. 13. that you are in a godly gracious regenerate condition that you have overcome these heretiques these false Prophets ye have not been corrupted by nor carried away with their errors 2. By the true cause or ground of this their victory it was not from their own skil or
fetched to anoint the Priests And Daniel describes Christs coming to be the proper time for anointing the most Holy Dan. 9. 24. 3. The Receptacle of this unction from Christ in whom it should abide ye have an unction 4. The effect of this unction upon them Teaching them all things viz. All things necessary to salvation If now we have this unction from Christ teaching us all things we are of the people of God Signes that we have the Unction of the Spirit from Christ teaching us all things 1. When this unction the Spirit teacheth us with a Scripturr-knowlede not with Enthusiasmes or orher by-wayes Thus he taughr David Ps. 119. 99 104. Thus Timothy 2 Tim. 3. 14 15. Hence called the Spirit of Truth because he acts upon us by and according to Scripture-Truth Iohn 14. 17. 2. The Spirits teaching is cleare and certaine in necessaries to salvation Prov. 22. 20 21. Ioh. 6. 69. 1 Cor. 2. 15. 3. The Spirits teaching is of a Growing nature The more he instructs us the more we desire to be instructed of him Prov. 1. 5. 15. 14. 18. 15. David though he knew so much yet wonderously thirsted to know more Ps. 119. 27 73 125 144. 4. The Spirits teaching meekens and humbles a mans Spirit Iam. 3. 13. Psal. 25. 9. for it manifests still more and more ignorance and sinne Eph. 5. 13. Carnall knowledge swels puffes up 1 Cor. 8. 1. 5. The Spirits teaching floats not onely in the Head but kindly soaks into the Heart and forcibly works upon the Affections Josh. 23. 14. Psal. 34. 8. stirring up the heart to trust love joy c. in spirituals Ps. 9. 10. 1 Ioh. 4. 8. 1 Pet. 1. 8. 6. The Spirits teaching is Practical Brings not only to knowing but to doing It is very effective alters and changes a man wonderfully and diverts his course from sinne to sanctitie See Ephes. 4. 20 21 22 23 c. 2 Cor. 3. 18. Iob. 28. 28. Psal. 119. 104. Prov. 15. 21. Psal. 111. 10. Iam. 3. 17. Ier. 22. 16. 7. The Spirits teaching makes men come to Christ and believe in him Joh. 6. 44 45. Make it evident thou comest to Christ believest in him thou art taught most effectually Finally The true teaching of Gods Spirit wonderfully strengthens and preserves against temptations and snares Prov. 24. 5. See Prov. 2. 10 11. compared with vers 12. 15 16. Search and consider hath this Teaching Unction thus illuminated and instructed thee doubtlesse thou art of the number of Gods Church taught of God II. The Testimony of an upright Heart or Conscience touching our reall and true love of the Brethren My little children let us not love in word neither in tongue but indeed and in truth And hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him For if our heart condemne us God is greater then our heart and knoweth all things Beloved if our heart condemne us not then have we confidence towards God 1 John 3 18 19 20 21. Here are 1. An exhortation to reall and true Brotherly love ver 18. 2. A Demonstration hereby that we are of the Truth viz. Borne of God who is Truth or Having the truth of God in us ver 19 3. The Confirmation of this Evidence By the testimony of our conscience concerning it in the sight of God and shall assure our hearts before him verse 19. This is further streng●…hened by arguing from the double act of a well-guided conscience viz. 1 Accusing If conscience condemne us for not lo●…ing the brethren truly or for any other thing much more will God condemne us ver 20. 2. Excusing If Conscience cleare us we have confidence towards God viz. that we are of the Truth The Testimony of our heart and Conscience for us or against us is most Comforting or corroding How was Iudas tortured with an accusing conscience Matth. 27. 3 4 5. How was Paul in deepest tryalls supported with an excusing conscience 2 Cor. 1. 12. The Heathen could say A cleare conscience is as a wall of Brasse The Proverb saith A good conscience is a continuall feast With this Augustine comforted himselfe against Secundinus the Manichee who aspersed him saying Think thou of Augustine what thou pleasest so conscience only accuse me not in the sight of God Canst thou now in thy conscience oppeale to God about thy love of the brethren as sometimes Peter about his love of Christ Lord thou knowest all things thou art greater then my conscience thou knowest that indeed and in truth I love thy children Hereby thou mayest know that thy selfe art of the truth Signes of true brotherly love see in chap. 2. Sign VII p 168 to 173. III. Finally Perseverance with the faithfull in Christ and in the truth They went out from us but they were not of us for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us But they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us 1 John 2. 19. He speakes of Ebion Cerinthus and such like Anti-Christian Hereticks who apostatizing from Christ and his truth departed from the Church They were once in the Church but never truly of the Church for then they would have persevered Their Apostasy therefore evidenced their Hypocrisie Whereas contrariwise Perseverance is a sure Argument of our Sincerity and that we are indeed anointed with the Spirit of truth The anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you But as the same anointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lie And even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him 1 John 2. 27. In which words as the Apostle testifies that they shall persevere in Christ that are truly taught by the anointing which is truth and no lie So he declares that they were never of the true number of Gods people that through heresie and schisme depart from the Communion of the Church and the Faithfull As Iude intimates These be they who separate themselves sensuall having not the Spirit Jude vers 19. False rotten Professors will thus Apostatize but true sound members will persevere in the truth with the faithful for Reasons formerly alledged Dost thou now backslide and separate through heresie or schisme from communion with the true Church of Christ How canst thou think thy selfe to be of the true number of Gods people Notably Cyprian Whosoever separated from the Church is joyned to an adultorous Church is separated from the promises of the Church Nor shall he come to the rewards of Christ that leaves the Church of Christ. He is an Alien he is profane he is an enemy He cannot have God for his Father that hath not the Church for his Mother If any could escape that was without Noah's Arke then may be escape that is without the Church And afterwards he addes Let no man think that the
1563. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 proprè est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. vivum cari idque tanquam venando Pisc. schol in loc * Intelligit per insolentias manifest●… delicta seuapertas transgressiones quibus adjuncta est con tumacia quas vocat superbias arrogantlas eo quod temerario ausu ac fastu cum Dei hominū contēptusiant contumaciter Quasi diceret non possūt omniapeccata vi●…ari sed mi Deus custodi me ne deditâ operâ sciens volens grave quid enorme admi●…tam Andr. Rjvet Comment in Psal. 19. v. 14. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dave operam peccato purificare se opponuntur Itaque 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 differt hoc loco ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 simpliciter accepto sed de ●…s demum dicitur qui non imbecilitate virium Spiritus nec etiam quicunque scientes peccant sed qui etiam vel ab aliis vel à sua ipsorum conscientia reprehensi ipsi malo planè delectantur in quibus propterea dicitur illud peccatum peccans regnare idque ita esse non modo liquet ex antithesi sed etiam ex eo quod supra commemoravit 1. 8. 2. 1. ex tota denique Scriptura rei ex perientiâ perpetuâ Itaque non homines sed monstra hominum sunt Pela●…iani Cathari C●…lestiani Donatistae Anabaptistae Libertini qui ex hoc loco perfectionem illam somniant à qua absunt ipsi omnium hominum longissime Bez. Annot. in 1 Iohn 3. 4. * Aliud est in Johanne peccare peccatum facere hoc est concupiscentias pravas desideria peccatricis carnis perficere aliud vero peccatum habere hoc est concupiscentiae motus sentire Felix anima quae sentiens peccatum non consentit peccato Ger-●…oc Com. Tom. II. De peccatis actualibus cap. 20. * Consuetudo quasi secunda quasi affabricata natura dicitur August lib. 6. de Music. Quia peccando cessare nesciant B●…z Annot. In●…●…d peccandum Calv in loc Incessab les peccati Iac. Laurent in col r Multi volunt cadere cum David sed nolunt surgete cum David Aug. enarrat in Psal. 50. s Singula habet emphasin auxesin saepe im proba suut scelerata hominum opera tamencor non plane malum mica bonae mentis super est at hi●… etiam fontem operum cormalum nequam ac corrptum fuisse air Nec dicit cor malum sed tantum malum non nisi malum nulla ex parte quicquam in eo boni fuiss Nec solum dicit cor sed cogitationes cordis Et addit insuper ad auxesin sigmentum cogitalionis cordis metaphora ducta à figulo vas fingente id est quicquid imaginatur instituit suscipit molitur quod est velut fingere figuli animo suo omnem animi propensionem conatum ac institutum quicquid animo volvitur Haebraeorum quidam faciunt duplex figmentum bonum malum unde natum quod nostri dicunt cuique homini duos Angelos datos unum ad eum tuendum alterum qui eum oppugnet ei adversetur Sed alii rectus dicunt non esse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nisi in malum Tota enim hominis natura etiam sons u●…pote cor est corrupta nec boni quicquam ex se vel cogitate nedum fa●…ere potest Omni die sunt qui accipiant omni tempore jam inde ab infantia sed malo intelligere in dies cresc●…re corum malitiam etiam in corde eorum ut jam planè sint deplorati Merceri Fraelection in Genes 6. 5. t Scimus autē quod omnis qui exDeo natus sit non delinquit scilicet delictū quod ad mortem est Tertul. lib de Pudicitâ cap. 19. u Iohannes docebit Si quis scit fratrem suum delinquere delictum non ad mortem postulabit dabitur vita ei quia non ad mortem delinquit hoc erit remissiblle Est delictum ad mortem non pro illo dico ut quis postulet hoc erit irremissibile Ita ubi est postulationis illic etiam remissionis Ubi nec postulationis ibi aequè nec remissionis Secundùm hanc differentiam delictorum poenitentiae quoque conditio discriminatur Alia crit quae veniam consequi possit in delicto scilicet remissibili alia quae consequi nullo modo possit in delicto scilicet irremissibili Tertull. lib. de Pudicit cap. 2. pag. 601 602. Francker●… 1597. * Peccata negat mortifera esse quae etsi morte digna sint non tamen tam atrociter à Déo puniūtur Ideo peccata in se non aestimat sed judicium de illis ex paterna Dei indulgētia facit quae reat●… condonet ubi tamen culpaerati Den que morti non addicit quos Deus erigendo restituit in vitā quamvis per ●…os non steterit quò minus à vita alienati essent Iob. Calv. Comment in loc * Hinc autem inferre voluit orandum pro omnibus Dei filiis esse qui ad mortem non peccant Additur probatio Quòd quisquis ex Deo genitus est ●…ipsum fervat hoc est continet se in Dei timore nec se ita abripi pacitur ut extincto pietatis sensu Diabolo carni totum se permittat Nam cùm dicit non tangi eum à maligno ad lethale vulnus referendum est Neque enim à Satanae vulneribus intacti manent filii Dei sed ita fidei clypeo propulsant ejus ictus ut minimè ad cor ipsum penetrent Servat se ipsum Quod Dei proptium est ad nos transfert Nam ū quisquis nostrûm salutis suae sit custos miserum erat praesidium Servant ergò se à peccato fideles quatenus à Deo servantur Calv. Comm. in 1 Ioan. 5. 18. vide etiam Piscat in loc * We may conclude that Turks and Infidels that all Atheists Epicures they have not yet sinned against the H. Ghost not Phara●…h a vessel of Gods wrath not Sodom and Gomorrah with all their filthinesse not Rabshakeh or any such who would make themselves God they have not sinned against the Holy Ghost They are accursed Creatures and their sins are abominable they are bond-slaves of Satan and strangers from the God of Is●…ael but yet we may say truely it shall be easier for those of Sodom and Gomorrah for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgement then for these wicked blasphemers of the H. Spirit which not only fulfilled the full measure of these Pagans sin●… but have also contemned the graces which were given unto them and despised the Spirit of which the Pagans were never made partakers Mr Deering in his readings upon the Epistle to the Hebrews ch 6. 3 4 5 6. Lect. 27. * Sive ergò sit ille Paganus
Grace 2. Horr●… contempt and malice against the Son of God 3. Violent persecution of the way of Christianity These are the particulars in this Description let us briefly consider how clearly they are grounded on Scripture and then we shall see that in Scripture sense this is the true nature of the sinne against the Holy Ghost I. The generall nature of this sin against the Holy Ghost viz. A falling away or an Apostasy There 's a manifold falling away as 1. From truth to errour and heresie Gal. 1. 6 7. and 3. 1. 2 Thess. 2. 10 11. 1 Tim. 1. 19 20. 2. From purity of worship to superstition and idolatry as Israel often fell in the dayes of Aaron Exod. 32. of the Iudges of the Kings c. See Acts 7. 39 to 44. 3. From some holy degrees and heroick perfections of first love to carnal sluggishnesse remissenesse and negligence As the Angel of Ephesus Rev. 2. 4 c. the Church her selfe Cant. 5. 2 3 4. Or into some erroneous offences as sometimes the dear servants of God fell as David Peter c. 4. From temporary faith and professions to loosenesse and profanenesse worldlinesse c. As the bearers compared to the stony ground Matth. 13. 20 21 Luk. 8. 6 13. Yea all the ground save the good ground fell away 5. From all truth common-graces and all profession of them to a malicious obstinate and incurable opposition thereof And this is that notorious Apostasy and sin against the Holy Ghost Now there being many sorts of falling away This sin is ranked among Apostasies for the generall nature of it for herein it agrees with them That the sin againg the Holy Ghost is an Apostasy or falling away is plaine in Scriptures that speake particularly of this sin Such as commit this sin are said to sin wilfully after they have received the knowledge of the truth Heb. 10. 25. There 's a falling away intimated viz. After truth knowne and professed a wilfull sinning against that truth yea a forsaking of publick Assemblies verse 24. So dangerous it is to make separations from the Church of Christ and to fall off from Communion with true Church-Assemblies that it fearfully prepares and disposes to this great sin yea they that commit this sinne are expressely said to fall away for it is impossible for those who were once enlightened If they shall fall away c. Heb. 6. 4 5 6. So that the generall nature of this sin is Apostasy or falling away Apostates and Backsliders they are in the highest degree that sin this sin How dreadfull is the sin of Apostasy 1. Sharply threatned of God Prov. 14. 14. Heb. 10. 38 39. And 2. Severely plagued Matth 12. 43 44 45. compared with 2. Pet. 2. 20 21 22. II. The more speciall Nature of this Sin against the Holy Ghost whereby it 's distinguished from other sins is considerable in the 1 Subject 2 Properties and 3 Termes of this Apostasy 1. The peculiar Subject of Apostatizing or falling away is Hypocriticall professours viz. Hypocriticall false-hearted professours of Christianity in the bosome of the Church who have received some large measure of illumination and common gifts or graces of the Holy Ghost These are the men who not having a true foundation of grace are in greatest and neerest hazard of any other of falling into the Sin against the Holy Ghost by their Apostasy For 1. No other sort of persons are in this hazzard and danger as was evidenced afore Sect. 1. pag. 62 c. 2. Scripture plainly teacheth us that Hypocriticall professours especially those that have attained the highest formal perfections and temporary accomplishments from the Holy Ghost are the very persons that commit this sin Who were they that our Saviour so warnes of their blaspheming of the Holy Ghost But the Pharisees Ma●…th 12. 24 25 31 32. And the Scribes Mark 3. 22 28 29. And what were the Scribes and Pharisees but notorious Hepocrites Mat. 5. 20. 23. 13 14 15. 23 25 27 29. Who were those whom the Apostle intimates to be likely to sin this sin but such as were once enlightened and have tasted of the heavenly gift were made p●…rtakers of the H. Ghost and have tasted the good word of God and the powers of the world to come Heb. 6. 4 5 6. Who also forsaking the publique Church Assemblies sin wilfully after they have received the knowledge of the Truth and after they have been sanctifyed with the blood of the Covenant Heb. 10. 25. 26 29. How sanctified Not inwardly truly and savingly sanctified as Interpreters observe but only externally seemingly and in appearance consisting in externall profession of faith participation of the Sacraments wherby they were visibly severed from Pagans and Heathens reputed in the judgment of charity Christians Now all these qualifications raise a man no higher then to the pitch of formall Hypocrites or Hypocriticall professours And yet these are the very men who sin against the Holy Ghost Not that all such Hypocrites run into this sinne but that none but such Hypocrites thus sin Convenit soli●…sed non omni Prop. secundo modo This is the subject sinning or falling-away 2. The properties of this falling-away which render it the most dangerous and pernicious Apostasy in the world are these three It is 1. Universall 2. Finall and 3. Wilfull or Malicious 1. An universall Apostasy or falling-away This is a first property of this Sinne against the Holy Ghost This the height of a Apostasy that it is Universall Partiall particular fallings away from some truths onely to some errours from some degrees of profession of grace of obedience onely to some graduall defects or decayes therein c. may befall a Daid a Peter or the exellentest Saint unglorifyed and yet be pardonable but this unpardonable Sin is a Totall absolute universall falling-away Universall both in respect of the 1. Truth and 2 Graces of the Holy Ghost They that sinne against the Holy Ghost they fall away both from the 1. Profession and 2. Approbation of all 1. Truth and 2 Grace once received and professed Possibly there may remaine in them some principle of truth as That God is that Iesus Christ is that there shall be a judgment that there shall be another life after this c. Some reliques also of common grace may remaine in them un obliterated irritating and aggravating their malice and wickednesse so much the more as some beams of illumination and conviction which they would faine totally extinguish being full of vexation and madnesse at themselves that they know so much but it 's one thing to have these remaining in them another thing to professe them and approve them Now that this their falling-away is so universall is notably hinted to us Heb. 6. 1 to 7. For first here the principles of Christianity or the fundamentall Doctrines of Christ are summarily enumerated viz. 1. Repentance from dead workes 2. Faith towards God 3. The Doctrine