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A15527 Saints by calling: or Called to be saints A godly treatise of our holy calling to Christ, by the gospell. With the seuerall gifts proper vnto the called: and their counterfeits in the hypocrites which are not partakers of this effectuall calling. Written by Thomas Wilson, minister of Gods word, at S. Georges Church in Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1620 (1620) STC 25796; ESTC S103067 273,228 442

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whether they were little or great against God or men after this there followes a reuelation of all the fearefull punishments and curses temporall and eternall for the plaguing of body and soule now and for euer by the threatning and denunciation whereof and haply by a sensible experience of some part of it the holy Spirit breedeth terrour feare and astonishment vpon the view and apprehension of so many erroneous sinnes and such lamentable dolefull estate as is due thereunto Hereof called the Spirit of feare and bondage Rom. 8. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Whereupon the saide spirit bringeth to a speciall griefe vpon the sence of Gods heauy wrath for some especial sinne called Pricking of the heart Acts 2. 37. whereby it bereaueth men of their chiefe desires putteth them out of conceit with the best things in themselues turning their mirth to mourning their chiefe delight to bitter griefe taking downe their hearts courage and stomack because they see they haue to doe with a righteous most rigorous Iudge who will remit nothing of his iustice but taketh reuenge vpon all sinne and iniquities and finding no strength or meanes in themselues to escape his wrath they despaire of euer obtaining his fauour by any their owne worth or goodnesse These are the workes of the Spirit in the ministry of the Law and in Ioh. 16. 8. They are called the rebuking of the world of sinne Here the office of the Law ceasseth and can bring no neerer to Christ but onely to bewray vnto vs our great neede and want of his sufferings righteousnesse and thereof the Law is termed our Schoole-master to Christ Galat 3. 24. Thus then the Spirit hauing brought the sinnefull soule by the preaching of the Law in the view and dread of her iniquity and misery to beholde what great and extreame neede shee hath of Christ and of euery droppe of his blood of his Spirit and of euery grace thereof doth after this by the Word of the Gospell begin to open her a doore to the grace and fauour of God shewing God vnto her as a Redeemer and Sauiour of sinners freely offering mercy for forgiuenesse and saluation in the promises of the Word enlightening the minde to know the truth and certainty of them mouing the iudgement to yeeld and subscribe vnto them being known to be from God and then further making poore sinners to perceiue and beleeue that all sinnes how many and horrible soeuer for all the multitude and hugenesse of them are pardonable and such as may be forgiuen them as being far and very farre lesser then the infinite mercies of God and most vnualuable merites of Christs passion and death the infinite price and worth whereof being wrought by the same Gospell to see and consider the distrustfull hearts be therewithall stirred vp by the holie Ghost to make particular confession of sinnes and to seeke mercy and pardon of them from God by Iesus Christ with trust of finding it as also to hunger and thirst after that perfect righteousnesse of Christ there set before them and finally by the operation of that Spirit applying to them the promises concerning Christ and righteousnesse by him they are sure'y perswaded that they belong to themselues wherupon flying from the terrour of iustice threatned in the Law they dare approach to the Throne of grace saying Abba Father in respect whereof the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of adoption of faith and of a sound minde Rom. 8. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Aquila I doe acknowledge my selfe now well content with this your Anatomy and opening of the works of the Spirit in calling illuminating and opening the heart that it may beleeue Christ to saluation whereby I see how farre many are from faith which suppose themselues neere to it and also perceiue how manifoldly and greatly the Elect which doe beleeue are beholden to God for his wondrous working in them And lastly more and more discerne the continuall and sincere preaching of the Law and Gospell to be of great vse in the Church that Gods Elect thereby may bee translated from infidelity to faith Now if you thinke good we will hold our selues content to haue proceeded thus farre at this present and at our next meeting we will conferre further if God will concerning this great worke of Faith to the creating whereof we haue seene so many and sundry workes of the Spirit to be behouefull and requisite Apollos I am well pleased so to doe for my businesse calleth me away and it may be also your Family or calling may craue your presence and meete it is that these lesser duties giue place to the greater At our next meeting together I will try your knowledge about the nature and office of faith and other things which belong to that worthy and noble gift the Mother-gift and Queene of all graces which bee inspired into mans hear The third part of the Dialogue concerning a true and liuely Faith in Iesus Christ. Apollos WEll saide Neighbour Aquila I see you will not faile me in that you keep your appointed time so duly for you are here euen iust at the time we agreed vpon Aquila Sir I loue to stand to my word in euery thing which is in my power to performe I will be aduised what I promise but hauing once giuen my faith I will not breake it willingly Fidelity in keeping promise with men is one of those Christian graces which are proper to Gods children as there will be occasion hereafter to declare but in the meane time the thing that wee are now to deale in it is not concerning ciuill faith betweene man and man but about Christian faith in the promises which God hath made to man Which because it is a large theame and wil take vp much time I haue purposely set apart some and ouercome othersome businesse that wee might intend the through-sifting of this point Apollos And my leysure doth serue mee very well Therefore because you thought it no ease vnto you to propound Questions ye shall now vndergoe the burthen of an answer which you liked so well of Let me see how you proue that Faith is a fruite of our calling and a gift proper to the Elect seeing it is reported of many that they haue beleeued which yet were not Elect as of Simon Magus Actes 8. 13. Also some in Iohn 2. 23 24. Yea of the very Diuels that they doe beleeue Iames 2. 19. In which place verse 26. the same Apostle telleth vs of a dead faith which one may haue and yet be no true Christian. Aquila For your former Question whether it be a fruite of our effectuall Calling If there were no euident testimony to proue it yet the thing is plaine enough for all know which know any thing that in our Calling wee are made to beleeue this being the very terminus or end wherein the worke of our Calling resteth to bring vs
to all to whom they can doe good without wearinesse respect of persons or hope of recompence so their meeknesse enableth them to passe by abuses offered them by men without purpose of rendring euill for euill also to beare with a quiet minde all crosses sent of God referring themselues in them to his pleasure according as their meeke Sauiour hath giuen them example Father as thou wilt Mat. 26. And moreouer it causeth them to submit themselues for their iudgements and affections vnto the truth of God euen when it is contrary to their reason and doth thwart their will and desires then they meekely yeeld themselues to be gouerned by it in their opinions and actions laying aside all superfluitie of maliciousnesse they doe with meekenesse receiue the good Word of God which is able to saue their soules Iames 1. In these graces the 〈◊〉 may come somewhat neere vnto Gods children putting forth themselues to speake and doe many good things and prouoking others to be good and helpefull notwithstanding both the examples of goodnesse which themselues giue and the perswasions which they vse in the setting others on worke for to doe good yet the truth is that they haue not one drop of sound goodnesse in them which is euidenced and cleared by this argument that they are exceeding enuious and greeue much if they perceiue any others to be equally liked and loued as themselues for their goodnesse and care of well-doing As amongst the Iewes diuers of them did sundry good things yet they enuied Christ because he did more Mathew 26. Also Saul King of Israel before an euill spirit possessed him 1 Sam. performed much good vnto the people yet he fretted and repined at Dauid who did better things and thereby gained greater praise By this it appeareth that hypocrites exercise themselues in doing good not out of any habite of goodnesse and from a loue of wel-doing but vpon hope of receiuing the like good or else to please themselues and get them the name of good men which is the cause missing of their hoped ends that after a time they waxe weary of doing good and giue ouer that course their hearts being vnsound and howsoeuer they beare a likenesse and appearance of meekenesse yet herein they bewray that they haue not true meekenesse because they refuse to bring their hearts their thoughts and lusts vnder the yoake of the Word being also vnder Gods hand murmurers and vnwilling to passe by abuses put vpon them by men For if so be that they are hardly prouoked vnto anger yet in their anger stirred vpon iust causes they exceede their bounds both for time and measure yea and for manner too holding out their displeasure longer beeing also more deeply moued then they ought and alwaies bending their anger more against the persō of their neighbours then against their sinnes Whereas if they were truly meekened both they would suffer the Word of God to rule ouer their corrupt reason and euill desires and also in their anger stirred vp against their Neighbour they would so pursue his sinnes as it should bee with commiseration and greefe for his person after the example of that same most meeke Lambe of God who in such sort conceyued indignation against the weaknesse of his Disciples and wickednes of the Iewes as yet his heart mourned and his eyes shed teares for the hardnesse of heart in the one and for the infidelitie and maliciousnesse of the other Apollos Two wayes do all vnsound Christians declare themselues voyde of meekenesse both towardes God and man Toward God for that howsoeuer their wit and iudgement makes way and stoopes vnto the word of God to thinke and beleeue as it teacheth yet diuers of them do fancie and foster strange conceites contrary to the Word but they neuer labour to bring their will and affections in thorow subiection to Gods truth nourishing still some rebellious lust wherewith they take part against the knowne will of the most blessed God as did Herod and Iudas Toward their Brethren insomuch as if they study not how to requite vnkindnesses like to those which are neuer quiet till they haue mete home the like measure dooing one shrewd turne for another yet when they do such things as men soundly meeke would do either putting down some affections which make insurrection against God or putting vp some abuses done to them by men this commeth not of obedience vnto God with desire to please and honour him neyther is it ioyned with griefe and repentance for their slippes in this kinde whereas godly persons finding how hard a thing it is to frame their thoughts and affections to bee plyable to Gods will and to temper their anger towards men as they striue to haue their fiercenesse to God and man 〈◊〉 and to attaine to a good measure of Christian 〈◊〉 so they are much humbled in their soules for coming short fayling in these duties Now after meeknesse there followes two other worthy gifts to be considered of the one is Mercy taking pitty on otherfolks miseries the other is the taking in good part ther doubtfull sayings and doings so farre as with truth and reason they may Aquila Sir in naming these two vertues yee haue but preuented me These indeede are so proper to a regenerate childe of God as the naturall man can lay no claime vnto them It is true that vnregenerate men are not altogether without mercy for Barbarians pittied Paul Acts 18 3. and the Samaritane the wounded lew Luke 10. and Pharaohs daughter did with compassion behold that exposed infant Moyses Exod. 2 6. but this is a meere naturall affection and comes not from the Spirit and it is exercised not of obedience to God or for his sake and glory but vpon carnall respect such as flesh and blood suggests extending it selfe vnto outward miseries onely not to soule calamities Whereof naturall men haue no sense and when their mercie is abused it is ready to turn into cruelty and fiercenes at the least it will not breake through vnkindnesses to witnesse it selfe towards such as deserue euill of them But the mercy of Gods children whether they doe respect their fellow-feeling in that they can take the harmes and losses of others as their owne remembring them that are in bonds as if they were bound thēselues and them that are in prison as if they were afflicted like members of a body who suffer together and reioyce together or the effects and workes of this affection in ministering to the needy things they lacke as cloth to the naked meate to the hungry harbor to the harborlesse and all kinde of comforts I say in all this they are led by the Spirit which mooueth them thus to pity and succour others euen for the Lords sake because it is his will and it tends to his glory for their bretherens sake to refresh their bowels and by such examples of mercy to win them to the Word Moreouer they are most affected and
may by his wise silence or good answeres keepe himselfe from dangers and by his rash and inconsiderate either speaking or keeping silence may fall into many a great hazard euen of estate and life Besides this as vnto our life so vnto our comfortable being good speech doth much preuaile for Ioy shall come to a man by the answer of his lippes saith 〈◊〉 Therefore hereunto the godly doe giue great heede as they are bound that they doe not make sad their owne hearts by hasty and sinfull speech this is a thing whereof the wicked haue neither care nor conscience Indeed they are hereof carefull to make their hearts merry with iesting and witty conceits which so they want impiety and filthinesse are not simply to be condemned but to gaine to their hearts the ioy of a godly and discreete answer this is a peculiar care of good men who knowing that naturall liuelinesse or 〈◊〉 is the best part of life as griefe of heart is the beginning of death 2 Cor. 7. worldly sorrow leading thereunto therefore as by all other meanes as of dyet company physicke recreation being religiously vsed they doe cherish and quicken their spirits so they especially looke vnto this that to their naturall they may ioyne spirituall liuelinesse by the fruites of their holy speeches and actions vpon this consideration that God loues cheareful worshippers and that the more hearty and liuely that the body and mind be the better able shall they proue to doe vnto God and men their appointed seruice For the chearefulnesse of the heart maketh the countenance gladsome and addeth strength to the bones whereas the marrow of the bones euen the chiefe and best strength of a man is consumed by pensiue sadnesse and heauinesse of heart To be short the righteous because they know it to be a duty to comfort their hearts and that God and their brethren are better serued the more comfortable that the minde is therefore that which the children of this world doe that is to say make themselues mery vpon corrupt regards because they would liue and enioy the pleasures and benefits of life which is a care common to men with bruite beasts the same godly persons doe vpon conscience of the commandement and also because they would the more plentifully glorifie God and doe good to many Now to your motion for temperance or sobriety this fruite of the spirit together with 〈◊〉 doe belong to the keeping of our vessels pure and in honour being of such vse and force as without them our mindes and bodies which are the Temples of the holy Ghost cannot be preserued in holinesse to be fit mansions or habitations for Gods Spirit Many 〈◊〉 men are chaste as touching any act or deede when yet their desires are either exceeding vnruly or being restrained onely for worldly respects to auoide trouble in the flesh or for their reputation Whereas they which are regenerate whether they liue a single life or a married they haue a power giuen vnto them by the Spirit to keepe not onely their bodies but their very thoughts pure concerning the desire of sexe so farre as the measure of their grace will enable them they carefully shun after the example of continent Ioseph all temptations and occasions of vncleannesse in this respect that they would not doe wickednesse against God but if at any time any of them doe fall with Dauid breaking the Lawes of chastity they doe earnestly and vnfainedly repent with Dauid being ready to make their sinnes knowne publikely if neede require euer after more heedfully looking to their wayes Vnto their chastity they doe ioyne temperance which is a vertue moderating their desires about the pleasures of this life euen as chastity ruleth the heart about the desire of sexe so sobriety and temperance gouernes their affections about other pleasures of this life giuing them power not onely to abstaine from following and 〈◊〉 filthy and vnlawfull pleasures such as are forbid as whoredome drunkennesse gluttony c. but to withstand all inticements and prouocations thereunto and that not for feare of shame or punishment onely from God or man but of conscience towards God Moreouer in such pleasures as be lawfull and allowed as in the pleasures of eating drinking apparell recreation sleepe marriage buildings and other such honest pleasures by the vse whereof our life and kind is not onely maintained but preserued in a comfortable estate the gift of temperance is bestowed vpon the Children of God in all ages degrees and sexes as a met-yard to measure and as a bridle to hold backe their affections in vsing these warrantable delights that they doe not onely not exceede their bounds but be held in and restrained from going so far in the vse of them as otherwise their estate and ability and the custome of the times and place where they liue will suffer and giue them leaue for this is certaine that our desires after these pleasures are vnsatiable as a bottomelesse 〈◊〉 and withall Sathan layeth baites and snares to catch all the children of Adam in their pleasures euen as he caught their first parents and experience telleth vs that some very godly persons haue beene surprized and were taken in his snares to the wounding of their owne conscience and to the offence and dishonour of God Therefore as temperance is very needful to preserue vs from running into excesse and to cause vs to liue soberly and stayedly so the children of God haue a maruellous great care to cherish and practise this grace endeauouring thereby to curbe and hold in their sensuall desires and in abundance of their blessings to keepe a mediocrity in such sort vsing their liberty in outward blessings of this life as it may be a helpe and furtherance and not a hinderance to godlinesse and eternall life And this they inforce themselues to doe the rather because they know it is the will of God that they should liue temperately 1 Pet. 4. 7. and that temperance is a fruite of the Spirit Galat. 5. 23. an ornament of the Gospell Tu. 2. 10. and hath great promises made to it Lu. 21. 39. and finally brings great benefit both to minde and body If naturall men doe some temperate actions it is not out of an habite of temperance nor vpon these considerations but out of humane reason and for carnall respects Apollos Now that you haue spoken of such graces as tend to the preseruation of life and such as are behouefull for the tempering and ruling of the pleasures of life good order doth require that you come vnto such vertues as regenerate persons are bound to exercise about their Neighbours commodity and credite to shew how they stand affected towards the substance and name of their Neighbour otherwise then all other men doe Aquila Right so Thus therefore it is all godly persons make conscience of doing the least iniury to other men in their goods and wealth either by fraud or violence either directly or indirectly
vnto the Elect and this is an effectuall and inward calling of which S. Peter speaketh when hee saith Make your calling and election sure 2 Peter 1 10. Apollos How differeth this effectuall calling from the common calling Aquila First that draweth vs to Christ to become members of him This brings men onely to a profession of Christ to become outward worshippers of him Secondly that enlightneth vnto faith this vnto knowledge onely Thirdly that worketh a through change of the heart from euill to good as in S. Peter S. Paul those mentioned Acts 2 37 this changeth but lightly and slightly to external ciuil obedience or to a restraint onely of inward corruption as in Iudas Simon Magus and 〈◊〉 so as an effectuall calling carrieth with it first vnion with Christ secondly iustification thirdly sanctification Called and 〈◊〉 Rom. 8 30. Called sanctified Iude 1. Saints by Calling 1 Cor. 1 2. all which the common calling lacketh Apol. How is this 〈◊〉 calling described in the word of God Aquila Thus It is a 〈◊〉 of the elect out of the kingdome of darknesse that is of ignorance sin into the kingdome of Christ Col. 1 13. that is of faith and holinesse Orthus It is a seuering of the elect from the world of 〈◊〉 to become members of Christ by Faith Iohn 15 19. You are not of the world but I haue chosen you out of the world Thus the case standeth The elect and reprobate being in Adam all reuolted and departed from God put vnder the power of satan they lye together as an heape of chaffe and wheat in a great floore or as great and little fish in a net vntill by an effectuall calling as it were by a fanne there be a separation made as the wheate is seuered from the chaffe at winnowing And this first separation is begun in this world by the fanne of the Gospell Math. 3 12 Which hath his fanne in his hand c. and is finished perfectly at that great and last separation in the day mentioned Math. 25 32. Where the Goats shall for euer be seuered from the sheepe Apol. Now that you haue shewed what an effectual calling is tell vs by what meanes Christ worketh it Aquila Christ Iesus doth worke it inwardly by his Spirit of wisedome and reuelation which hee giueth to all the elect not excepting infants which dye in their infancy who cannot be saued except they be called brought vnto Christ Actes 4 12. and other band and linke whereby to be knit vnto Christ there is none besides the Spirit as it is written By one Spirit wee are all baptized into one body 1 Cor. 12 13. But for such elect as are of discretion and yeares the Spirit in them worketh by the outward preaching of the word calling them preparatiuely by the preaching of the Law therein shewing them their sinnes and iust condemnation to the terrifying of them and astonishing of their conscience but effectually calling them by the preaching of the Gospell wherein by the secret and great force of the Spirite they are so made to see the mercies of God for the forgiuenesse of their sinnes vnto their saluation by Christ as they are perswaded to rest in them and thus become they that which before they were not that is to say true Christians the members of Christ his mysticall body the sons and daughters of God And this is their effectuall calling which is nothing els but a making vs to be that which we were not as the Apostle sayth Rom. 4 17. God calleth those things which are not as though they were Whereby it appeareth to be a very easie thing for the mighty God to call and draw vs to his Son euen as easie as for vs to speake a word and to call one to vs. Some are called sooner and some later as GOD in his eternall counsell hath ordained the time of euerie ones calling which is shadowed somewhat vnto vs in the parable of the Husbandman calling to work in his vineyard some at the third houre of the day others at the sixt and others at the ninth yea and some at the eleuenth Math. 20 1 2 3. Further we do find in Scripture examples of such as haue bene called in euery part of mans life We may gather that Timothy and Iosias were called in their childhoode For of the one it is testified of him that he knew the Scriptures of a child was nourished vp in the words of faith and sound Doctrine of the other that in his yong yeares he sought God Of Iohn the Baptist it is expressely saide Luke 1. that he was filled with the holy Ghost in his mothers womb Of Paul as also of Zacheus it may appeare by the story that they were conuerted about their middle age in the strength of their life For Paul liued long after his calling and Zacheus at his conuersion was so lustie of body as he could climbe vp into a high tree to behold Christ passing by and hastily come downe at Christs commandement Luke 19. which is a signe that hee was not gone farre in yeares Lastly wee reade of one whom Iesus called at the last houre of the day to wit the theefe conuerted at his death but only one such we reade of least any presume yet one least any which are long vncalled should despaire Apollos After this which ye haue saide of the time of Calling let vs heare somewhat of the persons who are to be called Who be capeable and fit who be vnfit and vncapeable therof for the most part and as men may iudge of it Aqu. Such as liue out of the precincts of the church they are vncapeable of this calling to Christ whereof we speake For God hath denied vnto them the means He hath not giuen them his statutes and his lawes hee sendeth not vnto them his messengers with his Word but leaues them for iust causes knowne to himselfe in their ignorance Yet a calling they haue by the voyce and sound of the creatures which is sufficient thus far as to take from them all excuse as S. Paul affirmeth of them Rom. 1 20 21. but not so farre as to be powerfull to their conuersion and saluation For seeing the world by wisedome knew not God in the wisedome of God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue them that beleeue 〈◊〉 Cor. 1. If there be any among Pagans which are secretly inspired with the knowledge of the Messias to saluation it is more then wee can take knowledge of Now as touching them which are within the visible Church there are some persons which become vncapeable of Gods calling as the proud which are puffed vp and swolne with conceit and opinion of their owne excellency and righteousnesse Christ came not to call the righteous to repentance Luke 5 32. And againe God resisteth the proud Iames 4 6. to teach that
light to them that sit in darknesse And againe The people which sate in darknesse saw great light Mat. 4. 16. In respect of this worke of the Spirit Christ is said to be the light of the Gentiles Luke 2. 32. And the Ministers who are but Instruments of this worke are called Lights of this Word and Lights of the blinde Mat. 5. 14. Rom. 2. 19. This worke of illumination or enlightning it is that whereby the Spirit first purgeth the mind vnderstanding from darkenesse and vanity which was in it through ignorance of God also the iudgement from that peruerse corruption of it in things belonging to God whereby it could not put a difference betweene good and euill and secondly putteth into the vnderstanding and iudgement a new light of knowledge and discretion whereby the soule knoweth and discerneth aright the truth of saluation by Christ euen particularly in the seuerall doctrines This enlightning is twofold The first is generall and slight whereby the minde is enlightened vnto an idle and vnfruitfull knowledge of God The latter is a speciall and through-enlightening vnto a diligent and profitable vnderstanding of Christ. These two kindes of knowledge whereof the one a wicked man may haue the other is giuen to none but to the Elect though they both be the gifts of the Spirit and also be of the same things yet they differ very much For first the knowledge which a godly man receiueth in his illumination it is certaine and distinct so as hee is able to applie the threatnings of Gods iudgements to the humbling of himselfe and the promises of God to raise and comfort himselfe the wicked by their knowledge cannot doe so hauing but a naked and bare speculation without any particular application of the same for humbling or comfort Againe the knowledge of the godly is sufficient to direct them generally and in euery particular duty whether it be for auoyding euil or for doing any good but the insight and knowledge of the wicked is vnsufficient and vnable to direct them in their singular and particular actions either for omission of euill or practise of good The former knowledge is full of good workes and directs them in whom it is to doe good things constantly but the latter is barren and fadeth before the end or leaues them in the end In respect of these differences the knowledge of the Elect for the cleerenesse sufficiency and certainty of it is likened to the light of the Sunne and the knowledge of the reprobates for the confusednesse vnsufficiency vnstablenesse is compared to the Lightening which doth not giue any certaine light it doth not continue any certaine time and when it is gone men see worse then before So doth it fall out with the wicked for their knowledge doth soone vanish and while it lasteth it is very vncertaine and there is in them afterwards greater and more dangerous darknesse then before for because they winke with their eyes and make their hearts fat striuing willingly not to see that they cannot but see wilfully blinding and hardening themselues therefore as a punishment of this sinne they are giuen ouer to haue dull and heauy eyes and eares so as they shall see and not perceiue heare and not vnderstand Acts 28. 27. Whereas the knowledge of the godly encreaseth in brightnesse like the Sunne which shineth more more cleerely vnto the perfect day Prou. 4. 18. So as the godly are very greatly bound to praise God for such their light of knowledge and to endeauour to walke in that light answering such a grace by thankfulnes in tongue and obedience of liues and workes as becommeth children of such light translated out of such darknesse Aquila Now that ye haue spoken of illumination or opening the eyes will it please you to say somewhat of the other worke of the Spirit which ye call the opening of the heart what may this signific or how may it differ from the former worke of enlightening Apollos By the heart according to Scripture phrase is signified not the fleshy part of the body which is thought to be the fountaine of life and seate of the affections but the faculties of the soule especially the vnderstanding and will For the heart is as it were the chaire of estate for the soule where the soule sheweth her selfe in presence therefore it is so often put for the soule and the chiefe powers thereof as God opened Lydiaes heart that is her soule Now this opening sheweth and teacheth vs that the soule is as a Chest fast lockt and barred into which while it is so there can no treasure be put So it is with the soule before our effectual calling it is close shut vp and lockt vp through ignorance and vnbeliefe sinne so as no sauing grace can drop into it but it is kept from all sight and feeling of Gods peculiar mercies Therefore this opening of the heart besides the illumination already spoken of whereby the Spirit piercing into the minde endued it with that heauenly light before touched that it may cleerely and certainely vnderstand the whole truth of the Word but chiefly the promise of the Gospel it hath also the mouing and bowing of the will with affection to receiue and embrace this promise the Spirit enduing the soule with a sweete feeling of the most mercifull goodnesse of God therein And of these two workes of the Spirit in opening of the eyes and the heart ariseth that third worke called Faith which is a gift powred into the soule knitting it vnto Christ with whom being vnderstood and knowen as hee is reuealed in his Word and embraced with affection both of the mind will it now resteth satisfied as one that hath found a rich treasure or great spoyle Aquila But I am not yet satisfied with this that you haue said about these workes of the Spirit Therefore I pray you yet more plainely and particularly lay forth the actions of the Spirit tending to the engendring of faith in the heart of an elect sinner Herein I will doe mine endeauour to giue you satisfaction the Spirit of God as in our first conference you rightly told vs worketh both by the Law and the Gospel In the preaching of the law it worketh first a knowledge of God as he is God the Creator and preseruer of all things reuealing his most great maiesty power iustice and wisedome making vs to see him a mighty terrible Iudge extremely hating and infinitely recompencing all iniquity Then it goeth on by the Law to shew vs our sinnes against this God The knowledge of sinne is by the Law Rom 3. 20. especially reuealing vnto vs that the very first motions of our minde and will against God or our Neighbour are damnable sinnes and breaches of Gods Law Rom. 7. 7. Our sinnes being thus vttered vnto vs in the very particulars as well actuall as originall as well of omission as of commission in our thoughts words and workes
resolued of the truth of the doctrine which he knew as he was willing to suffer euen death rather then to renounce it All the Martires of Christ in yeelding their liues for Christ did witnesse to the world that they had firmely assented vnto and were throughly resolued of the vndoubted truth which they knew and professed The third part of faith is application when the beleeuing party is perswaded not onely of the truth of the doctrine touching Christ to yeeld firme assent thereunto but that the same truth belongeth vnto himselfe As this is the greatest so it is the hardest duty of faith impugned mightily by the Papists who cannot abide to heare of it and also it is performed with much difficulty of the best Protestants in the time of temptation when they are sore assayled by their sinnes and Satan But letting other things passe here I will onely proue it to be the duty of faith to appropriate the doctrine of Christ touching eternall saluation by him to a mans selfe particularly and to shew that faith makes a man beleeue his owne saluation and not onely that there is saluation purchased for sinnes by Christ as the Scripture teacheth First the Commandement is to beleeue the Gospell Marke 1. 15. To beleeue in the name of Christ 1 〈◊〉 4. 23. Shall we say that the meaning of this Commandement is no more but to beleeue the doctrine which teacheth Iesus to be the Sonne of God and a perfect Sauiour of the World to be of God and a most true doctrine What will let then but that 〈◊〉 may be a true beleeuer and be saued for either he beleeued this or hee beleeued nothing yea he preached this Mat. 10. 7. And doth not Christ say of some of the Pharises that they knew him also whence he was Ioh. 7. 28. 15. 22 that they had no cloke for their finne because by hearing him they did see and know his doctrine and workes to be of God And in sooth how could hee in Mat. 12. 31 32. charge them with that 〈◊〉 of the Spirit vnlesse they had beene enlightened by the worke of the Spirit so farre as to vnderstand that which he taught and wrote to be diuine and not from men or by humane power And who can doubt which will not hoodwinke his eyes not to see that which is so manifest that many in the Church come so farre as to see and to assent vnto the whole doctrine of Christ euen to the professing declaring it to others distinctly learnedly of whom yet there may be great doubt made that all such are not true beleeuers endued with this liuely faith effectuall to saluation Wherefore the Commandement pressing vs to beleeue the Gospell hath meaning to presse vs to beleeue it with particularitie that the doctrine of saluation by Christ belongs to our selues as the Elect may passe further then a naturall man can doe Secondly it may appeare to be so because beleeuing and eating are put one for the other Iohn 6. 47. compared with verse 50 51. Now euery one knoweth this action of eating to be an appropriating to a mans owne selfe a portion of meat which is prouided for all so is beleeuing an application to a mans selfe of such promises as are commonly propounded to the whole Assembly Tell me will itsuffice a man for the nourishing and preseruing of his bodily strength when hee commeth to a Table well furnished with meate to perswade himselfe that the meate is very wholsome good for nourishment and well dressed or may hee not goe away hungry and feeble if hee doe not take the meate and by eating make it his owne So when a sinner commeth to a Sermon where hee heareth the doctrine of the Gospell so mildly and distinctly taught and proued will it suffice him to saluation to credit it certainly to be a diuine truth onely able to saue poore sinners and to haue beene truly and wisely handled May he not for all this goe home in as bad case as he came as far from saluation except by beleefe he receiue that meate of heauenly truth into his owne heart particularly to be refreshed by a sure perswasion of the same that it appertaines to himselfe Moreouer doth not the Apostle say that Christ is put on by faith Gal. 3. 26 27. and that he dwels in our hearts by faith Ephe. 3. 17. And doth not this imply application to be louing to faith What is putting on but an application of a garment to the body for warmth and comelinesse What is dwelling in our hearts but the presence of Christ there by his Spirit to doe all the parts of a Sauiour to him in whom he dwelleth And this is done by faith And tell me how we are bound to beleeue that the thing wee aske by prayer according to the will of God shall be giuen vs and the forgiuenesse of our owne sins also our owne saluation to be by the will of God asked in prayer and yet wee not bound to beleeue the remission of our owne sinnes and our owne saluation Moreouer when Paul said Christ loued me and died for me and saith also that hee liued by faith in the Sonne of God Gal. 3. 20. And Mary called Christ her Sauiour 〈◊〉 1. 46. And Thomas confessed saying My Lord and my God Ioh. 20. 28. And 〈◊〉 God is my 〈◊〉 and my saluation Psal. 18. 1. Did not their faith apply that Sauiour God particularly to themselues who is the common Sauiour of all beleeuers And if this were not done by their faith how then And how doth the Church in framing prayers say Our Father but in making confession of faith say I beleeue If this bee not the iudgement of the Church that euery one must haue particular faith to beleeue the doctrine for himselfe and out of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prayers for others with himselfe Also when Sat an tempteth any about particularity of saluation to doubt that himselfe cannot be saued Christ died not for him will it not be too weake a buckler to beate backe this assault to say I doe surely beleeue the whole truth of doctrine concerning redemption by Iesus Christ that hee alone came from God and is the onely Sonne of God and that there is saluation by no other Nay will not the tempter replie I my selfe beleeue so much and yet tremble And Iulian beleeued and protested so much and yet an Apostata Wherefore as when a rich gift is bestowed amongst many poore people euery one must take to himselfe a portion of it for it will not releeue their pouerty if they onely beleeue it to bee a good gift and doe not take it to themselues so the gift of Christ which is offered to poore sinners in the doctrine of the Word to enrich them withall must of euery one by his faith as by an hand bee applied to himselfe or else they will remaine poore and beggerly still Vnto this action of application
comfort thereof for the time And sure this is a greater degree of the twain it is not a thing of such strength nor a matter so great in ioyfull feelings to beleeue Gods loue one hauing as it were a pawne of it in their hand as when one hath God frowning vpon him and lieth in some greeuous distresse outward or inward or both then to beleeue fully and strongly that God is still a Father and will saue and deliuer him argueth a mighty faith When Abraham sawe the day of Christ with reioycing at that sight and Mary so beleeued in Christ her Sauiour as her soule reioyced in him Luke 1. 46 when Paul and other beleeuers through their strong faith reioyced vnder the hope of glory Rom. 5. 2 This was nothing such a 〈◊〉 and height of faith to loose your third linke as for Iob when hee was in greeuous affliction God hiding his face from him Iob. 13. 24. and taking him for an enemy shooting his bitter arrowes against him which pierced his reines making him to possesse the sinnes of his youth to the terrour of his soule then and in that case to say I am sure my Redeemer liueth and I shall see him with the same eyes Iob 19. 25. and If he should kill me yet will I trust in him Iob 13. 15. Or for Dauid when his soule was cast-downe and vnquiet within him and all the waues of God came ouer him yet then to say Hee is my present helpe and my God Psal. 42. 5 11. I will yet giue him thanks Or for the man in the Gospell who cried with teares saying Helpe my vnbeleese yet could then say Lord I beleeue Marke 9. 24. And this it is which you did aduertise me of as thinking I had forgotten it that there may be a true faith yea and a great measure of it too for a time where there is no comfortable experience and feeling For as the Sunne may for a time cast forth his beames to the giuing of light when there is no heat nor warmth so the Sunne of righteousnesse Christ Iesus may kindle a light of some knowledge in the promise of mercy before there come to the soule the heat and warmth of ioy and comfort And where both light and heate haue beene giuen hee may seuer them at his pleasure which he is pleased sometimes to do denying to his members a ioyfull sence of mercies for some space for very good causes and respects First vpon some sinne committed he with-draweth his louing countenance taking from them inward ioy of heart that by the absence of it they may be humbled for their sinne as a father for the better humbling of his childe after some fault will denie him wonted fauour and looke vpon it with a displeasant eye and by this meanes also Gods children are brought the better to consider the greatnesse of their offence not onely for humbling but for whetting their prayers to moue them to more earnestnesse in 〈◊〉 of pardon and the restoring of their ioy vnto them as is to be seene in Dauids example Psalme 51. Also herein God taketh great triall of their faith and loue and hath occasion on the other side to expresse and giue his children experience of his mighty grace in sustaining and releeuing them his power is knowne in weakenesse and lastly it serueth for the awing of others to keepe them in feare of offending lest they also loose the ioy of their heart in Gods countenance as a Father will shew anger to one childe to informe and terrifie the rest vnto which wee may adde another consideration that ioy is often clouded or ecclipsed that when it breakes out againe and the minde is cheered and refreshed afresh then the comforts of the Spirit may be more esteemed more thankfully receiued and carefully retained Things lightly come by are lightly set by but euery thing is more accounted of the more hardly we get it therfore as we see a faire day more welcome after a soule or a calme or rest more embraced after a storme or trouble so is ioy of spirit more valued when it commeth after deepe heauinesse and much anguish of spirit for these respects Gods children must haue patience and striue to endure the lack of comfort considering it will returne with such aduantage yea and bee thankfull for such a schooling that it hath pleased God to send them such a bitter remembrance for so good ends for though it be the most greeuous thing in the World to haue our spirit wounded which should sustaine and beare vs out in all infirmities and afflictions Sand and Iron not being so heauy as anguish of heart yet surely in all Gods Children it hath a comfortable issue for which as God is to be waited on till it come so also he is to be praised for ministring such strength of faith as to be able to beleeue in him when nothing is seene and felt but terror and griefe and matter of despaire And where as yee asked how and by what steppes Gods people doe climbe vp vnto this height of beleefe in this I will satisfie you that there are sundry duties and meanes which thorough Gods blessing bring faith in time to such a great measure As first of all the duty of feruent prayer which being an exercise of faith as the body is encreased by exercise being moderate so is faith encreased by this exercise of prayer which springing of faith as a daughter like a good childe helpeth the mother Againe feruent prayer is like to a key or a bucket which doth vnlocke and draw out the treasures of Gods mercies Hence it is that such as haue beene most frequent in prayer haue proued fullest of knowledge faith loue and other graces Let Dauids example teach this none oftener in prayer none more rich in faith Paul full of faith because plentifull in prayer The second duty to adde vnto the strength of faith it is the often religious receiuing of the Lords Supper which for so much as by the vertue of Gods ordinance it signifieth and sealeth to euery beleeuer in particular the good will of God in Christ for forgiuenesse of sinnes and withall containeth a sacramentall promise of Christ and all his benefits to be distributed to due Communicants euen to euery faithfull receiuer Mat. 26. 26 27 28. Hence it is that it serueth greatly to the encrease of faith especially when therewithall is ioyned the diligent and obedient hearing of the Gospell preached which as it is the seede to beget faith so it is as foode and solid meate to confirme it by the ordinance of God And this effect it hath the rather if it be coupled with meditations of the Euangelicall promise the very nourishment of true faith which made godly Dauid to be much in meditations as Psalm 119. doth witnesse so earnestly to commend it to other Psal. 1. 2. Besides all this the long experience of Gods mercies and bounty in outward benefits and in inward
Christ can cleanse and make vs white as snow in Salmon How can any one great sinne hinder God from sauing any beleeuer when all his sinnes could not keepe him from reconciling him being an enemy to him Yea such as haue slaine the Lords Prophets and offered their Children and haue long both themselues liued in and by their authority maintained Idoll seruice as Manasses and Salomon yet haue found fauour vpon their beleeuing Yea he that by his sinne plunged the whole World with him into sinne and death yet was accepted and pardoned because he beleeued the promise And for lying in sinne you haue not abode in them longer then Dauid or Salomon or if ye haue yet as no sinnes so no space of time doth limit God God may forgiue what hee will and when he will to whom hee will The theese that had lyen in his sinnes euen till his last breath in a manner yet finding grace to beleeue found also the grace of pardon and was taken vp into Paradise there to be with Christ for euer That infinite mercy that can ouercome the multitude and vglinesse of our sinnes can also preuaile against our continuance in sinnes Aquila I haue so gone against the light of my knowledge in the course of my life as I am often in doubt lest I haue sinned that vnpardonable sinne yea I haue had feareful thoughts against that gracious diuine maiesty whereby I haue beene moued to feare lest hee had giuen me ouervtterly Apollos In all soule temptations lightly this of sinning against the holy Ghost is one as an ague goeth with all bodily diseases which commeth through ignorance of this sinne or the strong subtilty of Satan bewitching our mindes with feare of this sinne which is not any one nor many actions against knowledge but it is a sinne committed in speech being contumelious and reprochfull against Christ his person offices benefits doctrine and workes or against all of these yet not euery such speech is this sinne vnlesse it proceede of despight and malice of heart against the truth of Christ once knowne by the enlightening of the Spirit Also this sin is accompanied with an vniuersall and totall Apostacy from truth and generall pollution in maners quite contrary to the worke of the sanctifying Spirit wrought in them whereupon it is called the blasphemy of the Spirit Hee that dreads this sinne neuer did it Secondly he that truly greeues for any sinne neuer did this sinne Thirdly he that can pray for forgiuenesse of sinne if it be but with vnfained desire to be in Gods fauour he is free from this sinne Fourthly he that can speake honorably of Christ and can abide nay like the honourable mention of him and his truth by others neuer did this sinne Fifthly hee that hath any good affection to the Ministers or other members of Christ hath no part in this finne Lastly not he that feares lest hee be giuen ouer but knowes certainly that he is indeed giuen ouer to it is within the compasse of this sinne he that feares lest hee be in it is not in it for whosoeuer is in it knowes he is so this is most certain for he is damned of his owne conscience Aquila But when I am brought to see that all my sinnes are such as may be forgiuen me then I am troubled with this that I haue no faith My heart is dull and dead full of vnbeleefe and so all that can be saide is nothing to my comfort I feele no more then a stone or blocke except it be great feare sometimes and trembling of heart with excessiue dolour and heauinesse wherewith I am euen ouerwhelmed Apollos Faith is not feeling but apprehension feeling followes as a fruit of faith which is in assent not in sence What feeling had Christ when he cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and my soule is heauy to death Mat. 26. and 27. 46. In your heauinesse and sorrow you are conformed to your head and other his members to Hezekiah mourning as a Doue and chattering as a Crane Esay 38. 14 To Dauid complaining of the disquietnesse of his heart Psal. 42. and confessing that his teares was the water that washed his Couch Psal. 6. 6. To Iob whose greefe was like heauy sand and pressed downe his heart to the graue Then as wheate may be hid in chaffe so faith is often buried vnder the heape of our corruptions and discomforts Say not therefore ye haue no faith because your heart is dull and dead They of whom Christ saide that their hearts were slow to beleeue heauy and dull and foolish hearts yet did beleeue Luke 24. 25. And howsoeuer you thinke all to be full of vnbeleefe it commeth in you from hence because 〈◊〉 beleeue not now so strongly and comfortably as you were wont to doe and feele those motions of incredulity and distrust which you were not wont to feele And howsoeuer it goeth with you now as with a man in a great sicknesse that hath lost his tast and cannot iudge of meates yet you shall hereafter when health is restored say you were deceiued Finallie if it were some other besides your selfe that saide they had no faith I might be sooner brought to beleeue them And would giue them this counsell that though as yet they beleeue not yet not to despaire or cast off hope for they may beleeue hereafter so they carefully vse the meanes with waiting vpon God who calleth at all houres It is darknes in the night but at due time the Sunne ariseth so after darknesse of vnbeleefe couering the firmament of the heart there wil arise the Sun shine of liuely faith to all Gods Elect in the meane time to feele vnbeleefe with a mislike of it and with a desire of faith in Christ it is a good beginning as we haue heard hereof in the degrees of faith Aquila Sir you haue now well satisfied me in these obiections and in this whole discourse about faith I trust hereafter to heare you speake of the fruits of faith and namely to lay forth distinctly and cleerely our vnion with Christ by meanes of our faith and our communion with his righteousnesse and Spirit for iustification and sanctification which being matters of great importance and our allowance of time being already more then spent wee are to expect some new occasion for the further dealing in these things Apollos Ye say well in the meane time I thanke you for your good company and wish you much good by this conference The sixth Dialogue Of Vnion with Christ. The first maine fruite of Faith Apollos YEa Neighbour Aquila are you here already You got the start of me this time I perceiue your quality I may be your Physicion for I know your pulse If once you begin a matter ye loue to see the end of it you had neede to take in hand good things and with good aduisement seeing you are so constant in prosecuting enterprises
And as the woman hath giuen her selfe into the power of the man shee and whatsoeuer is hers be now become her husbands so it is here likewise euery beleeuing soule giues her selfe and all hers againe vnto Christ. The second similitude is of a naturall body wherein the head and the members are well knit and compact together by ioynts sinewes which as ligaments and bands doe so linke the members amongst themselues and to their head as they though they be distant one from another yet being all quickned by one soule they all make but one body So it is betweene Christ and the faithfull his members though they be many and by place diuided amongst themselues and all from Christ their head yet the Spirit of their head by influence from him descending into the members and quickening them with the life of grace they are by that Spirit as a band so fastened to their head through faith and amongst themselues through loue as that their head and they are mystically yet truly but one body as it is saide 1 Cor. 12. 12. As the body is one and hath many members and all the members of the body which is one though they be many yet are but one body euen so is Christ. Where note that to declare the neerenesse and euennesse as I may so speake betweene the beleeuers and Christ hee and they are all termed by one name euen Christ comprehending in this word the head with the members Hitherto also belongeth Eph. 4. 15. In all things grow vp in him which is the head by whom all the body being coupled c. The naturall body then and the head is not more one then Christ and the faithfull Which is further opened by the similitude of the Vine and branches and of grafting and planting grafts into new stockes Iohn 15 verse 1 2. c. Rom. 6. 6. As also of an house and the foundation whereon it stands Ephe 2. verse 21 22. Christ Iesus is the head corner stone in whom all the building c. For Christ is as the Vine we are as the branches he the noble stocke or roote of Iesse we the grafts he the corner stone we the building laide on him planted and grafted into him to be one with him and to grow vp in him The necessity of this vnion with Christ it is very great so as without it wee are for euer accursed For by Adam wee all fell from God lost his grace and fauour his Spirit his communion being through sinne become the very limmes of Satan held vnder his power as vassals and so seruants of sinne heires of hell and damnation thus deuoyded of all true life and bewrapt in the bands of sinne and death and so remaine till by vnion with Christ we recouer our communion with God his grace and Spirit his righteousnesse and life Hence it is so peremptorily auouched that Christ is the bread which came downe from Heauen of which whosoeuer eateth not hath no life in him And againe his flesh which he gaue for the life of the World is saide to be meate indeede his bloud drinke indeede and except a man eate his flesh and drinke his bloud hee cannot liue for euer Iohn 6. 51. In which Chapter these three things are taught about this matter First that we must haue vnion with Christ euen such as is betweene the nourishment and our substance And secondly that this vnion is wrought by beleeuing in him by seeing him by comming to him by hungering and thirsting after him And thirdly that vpon and by this vnion with Christ wee doe partake in the life of Christ which being originally in the Deity as it is written The flesh profiteth not it is the Spirit that quickeneth and againe God is life and that life is in God yet it is conueyed into the manhood of Christ personally vnited to the Godhead and from his flesh as from a Conduite receiuing grace of life from the fountaine of the Diuinity it is by the pipe of faith deriued into all his members To be short not more needfull that a naturall member as hand or foote be ioyned to the head that it may liue haue sense and motion or a branch to the Vine conioyned that it may take iuyce to fructifie then it is needfull for the Elect to bee coupled to Iesus Christ for spirituall life and euerlasting happinesse And now as concerning our last point moued touching the fruits and commodities of this vnion it is euident by this that hath beene spoken that all our good now and for euer dependeth vpon it it being the base and foundation of all the benefits whatsoeuer we haue from Christ whereof we can haue no part vnlesse we haue first a fellowship with himselfe by enioying of whom wee doe together enioy all his graces here and all his glory hereafter as his members are capable but not equally with the head euen as the branch once knit to the Vine partakes in all the life thereof And as the woman being ioyned in mariage to a rich and mighty King together with her coniunction to his person hath his maiesty glory and wealth 〈◊〉 farre as shee is capable of it and may be for her fullest contentment imparted to her Euen so it is heere in this spirituall coniunction that seeing Christ from his gifts blessings cannot be diuided but whosoeuer hath the one doth most certainly communicate in the other therefore the elect being vnited to Christ their head as there flowes from the naturall head to the lowest members power of life sense and motion so from Iesus Christ there is communicated to his spouse and his body the Church and to euery member all his riches and vnsearchable treasures both power of grace and possession of glory Heere of it being saide that Christ is made of God to vs Wisedome sanctification righteousnesse and redemption 1 Cor. 1 30. and that God hauing giuen vs Christ with him will giue vs all things Rom. 8 32. and in Iohn 6 54. All such as eate his flesh and drinke his blood that is haue vnion with himself first with his manhood and then by meanes thereof with his Godhead haue euerlasting life that is haue all his benefits euen to their eternall blisse and glory in heauen Apollos Friend Aquila it is very right so as you speak As a man cannot haue a farme as owner of it but hee hath all fruites commodities immunities royalties yea the treasure also if any happen to be hidde in the field is his so whosoeuer is owner of Christ by beleeuing in him and Christ againe possessing him as his owne the same party cannot but haue all the goodes and glory of Christ euen whatsoeuer is Christs is his his conception his birth his life his doctrine his sufferings his death his buriall his resurrection to glory his ascension his kingdome his Priesthoode his Spirit all the merits fruits profits
transgressions bond-men to Sathan enthralled to sinne and hell and most miserably poore destitute of all righteousnesse indebted to God the Soueraigne Monarch and iust Iudge of the World both to be for euer kept from eternall life in heauen for fault of perfect holinesse and besides to be plunged ouer head eares into the damnation of hell through breach of the Law yet through the wonderfull benignity and grace of God freely giuing them his Sonne with his righteousnesse actiue and passiue for the wiping out of all guilt of sinne and desert of punishment and the adorning decking them with perfect holinesse and innocency by the imputation of faith freely made they are now of bond-men and beggerly wretches of heires of hell and exiles from heauen become most free rich and glorious euen heires yea fellow heires with Christ of that excellent inheritance which is immortall in Heauen Here is indeede a most happy and ioyfull change which is happened them by the iustification of faith so as no maruell though the holy Apostle make so light account 〈◊〉 all other things whatsoeuer in comparison of this Neither is it to bee wondered though Sathan in all ages haue laide such battery against this mount bulwarke of Christianity No one point of all Christian doctrine which he hath so dangerously so often so many wayes assayled as this sometime carrying men from Christ to seeke forgiuenesse and some part of righteousnesse at least out of him in some other thing and sometime annihilating faith and voyding it as though there were no power in it at all so much as to helpe toward our iustification by apprehending our righteousnesse for he knowes this Article to be the key of all Religion the very heart and soule of Christianity the most comfortable and sure stay the very rocke and foundation of all hope so as ouerthrow this and ouerthrow all preaching and all beleeuing were in vaine if this one fundamentall truth could be peruerted and depraued either by defacing the gift of Christs righteousnesse by adding something to it of our owne or by cutting off the hand and arme that should receiue and embrace it It behoueth therfore al Gods children namely Gods Ministers so much the more to study striue to maintaine this truth and keepe it vnuiolable also such as haue this grace imparted to them to be iustified by beleeuing to make much of it enforcing and prouoking themselues to all hearty and ioyfull thankfulnesse for it in word and deede to all earnest care to grow and encrease in this grace continually I mean in the sense and feeling of it and in the more full apprehension of it euen in respect of such wonderfull effects as arise thence But neighbour Aquila because the day drawes toward an end and night approching calles vs home therefore we will here ceasse deferring the prosecution of your third motion touching the neerest effects and fruites which spring from the true sense of this benefit till another time when we may haue more leysure to call them to minde and to consider of them Aquila Well pleased I am to haue it so for the opening of these effects which follow vpon our iustification by faith being a thing of that great consequence would not be dealt in rawly and slenderly or passed ouer in few words So fare ye well for this time The seauenth Dialogue The nine effects of Iustification by Faith Apollos NOw Neighbour Aquila may I know of you whence doe you come for ye were not wont to come that way as ye now doe Aquila I came not long sithence from home with a friend of mine that came to visit me drew me out to goe with him to set him on his way which I did willingly for his good company sake but I haue made the best hast I could that I might keep touch with you and it falleth out well that I doe so happily and fitly meete you for I was somewhat afraide lest you should haue tarried too long for me Now Sir that wee are so well come together will it please you to lay forth those nine neerest fruits which spring from the feeling of iustification by faith what effects vse to follow hereupon in the soules and consciences of iustified persons Apollos The blessed Apostle Saint Paul shall giue you your answer vnto this question for hauing most diuinely in the 2. 3. and 4. Chapters to the Romans laid forth the doctrine of Iustification and very substantially proued it to be not by our workes which we doe not onely for that we are all sinners but because they answer not the iustice of the Law no not in the regenerate which haue most grace and doe most good but by faith apprehending the sufferings and death of Christ full absolution from sinne and his actiue obedience to the Law for our perfect iustice with God At the fifth Chapter he commeth to those proper and immediate effects of this grace of Iustification which you now enquire after and there as I conceiue them he rehearseth distinctly these nine 1. and 2. peace with God 3. Accesse vnto his grace 4. Standing in that grace 5. Hope of glory 6. Reioycing vnder that hope 7. Ioy in tribulation 8. A sense of Gods loue in Christ. 9. A glorying in God These are the most secret hidden workes of the Spirit as so many markes to the Christian soule whereby to finde and try out the truth and certainty of her own iustification Also being as it were rich Iewels or most precious ornaments affixed vnto that most glorious robe of righteousnesse wherewith shee is cloathed so sumptuously to the great contentment of Christ her husband and her owne vnspeakable comfort Aquila Of these foresaide effects I do desire now to heare you speake some-what in that order as they are named And first touching peace with God what do ye vnderstand thereby make it plaine to me what manner of gift that is Apollos These fruites of iustifying faith being many nine in number I had not neede to be long in thē we hauing so much other worke yet behinde And yet being both weighty matters and remoued from common vnderstanding I cannot well tell how to speake briefly lest I speak not plainly enough but this easeth me of some care that these things are spoken vnto one that hath them and feeleth them by good experience and therefore can sooner comprehend the nature and truth of these worthy gifts Now touching the first of them it is peace with God whereby two things are meant First reconciliation or truce with God in which sence the word is vsed in those Scriptures where Christ is termed our peace the Prince of peace our peace-maker and peace is made by his blood that is attonement or reconcilement with God whiles our sinnes which bredde an enmity betweene God vs and made a separation of vs from him and of him from vs his infinite iustice
mercies and goodnesse and in Christs death and passion they doe but abuse the mercies of God and the merits of Christ which are offered and preached vnto men to keepe them from sinning and to call them to amendment of life as it is written There is mercy with God that he may be feared Psal. 142. 4. And that the kindnesse of God leadeth to repentance Rom. 2. 4. For which purpose reade also Rom. 12. 1. Tit. 2. 12 1 Iohn 2. 1. Now the hope of the godly it is so far off that thereby they doe waxe bold to offend because they hope in Gods grace for pardon as contrariwise they are much moued to all good care of pleasing God in a new course of life to the end And as it is farre from them to grow secure in the carriage of their life vpon the hope they haue of Gods fauour and his glory so they doe not take heart to sinne as the wicked doe vpon opinion to repent at last for they know and consider that men may die suddenly And that as late repentance is suspitious not to be true so it is iust with God to forsake them in their death who haue forsaken his commandements in their life as also the longer it is ere one repent the harder it is sinne by custome hauing gotten strength as the further that one goeth out of his way the longer it is ere he can returne Howbeit it is certain that Gods faithful Children are subiect vnto sinnes of presumption else would not the holy Prophet haue prayed against them Psalm 19. 119. Yea and sundry times what for the better humbling of them what for the example of others to teach all men to feare themselues and to liue in awe continually of God and for the more full manifestation of this mercy toward the godly in pardoning euen their presumptuous sinnes for these and such like respects they are left of God to themselues to presume and be too confident not in Gods goodnesse and truth for that is the office of their hope but vpon their owne strength and outward prosperity forgetting the Lords goodnesse towards them and their owne great frailty as may be seene in example of Dauid Psalme 30. 6. In my prosperity I saide I shall neuer be moued And of Peter Mathew 26. I will neuer denie thee I will die rather whose presumption cost them much sorrow and many a salt teare therefore let all men be warned by their harmes But friend Aquila ye haue almost made me goe out of our way and kept me but too long in these fruits of iustifying faith of which there be yet two vnhandled which I will very quickly goe through that we may come to that other worthy benefit of our sanctification Sister or Daughter rather vnto iustification Aquila We haue indeede insisted in these matters through my fault but say then the next point is the shedding abroade of Gods loue in our hearts and our glorying in God through Christ the two last of the nine effects of iustification what doe ye vnderstand by them Apollos The loue of God that is not the actiue loue wherewith we loue him but the passiue loue where with we are beloued of him which giueth both strength to our hope and matter of our ioy is then saide to be shed abroade in our hearts when the sence and feeling of it is shed powred into the hearts of the faithfull whom God loueth in his purpose and decree from before the World was made and actually loued them at the time of their calling to faith in his Sonne the manifestation whereof vnto them when it is so expressed to them in the fruits of it as their hearts be affected with a ioyous feeling of it this is the shedding of it abroade which is the eighth fruite of Iustification It may be somewhat declared by this comparison of the boxe of precious ointment mentioned Mathew 26. which while the woman that had it kept shut gaue no sauour but hauing powred it out and shed it on Christs head it did yeeld a sweete and pleasant sent and smell to all which were in the house Euen so the loue of God is shut and pent vp in Gods purpose as it were till it be felt of the Elect but after they haue faith to beleeue the promise of saluation by Christ vnto their fellowship with Christ himselfe and all his benefits then his loue as an oyntment powred out doth plentifully refresh their hearts with the comfortable sence and feeling of it as the Apostle Rom. 8. 38 39. and the faithfull to whom Peter wrote 1 Peter 1. had good experience Wherein the wonderfull goodnesse of God doth vtter it selfe toward his chosen in this that hee doth not onely loue them in purpose but by speciall and singular fruites as pawnes and pledges and namely by giuing his onely begotten Sonne to suffer such a reprochfull and bitter death for them being sinners and his enemies doth assure them so of his loue as they know and beleeue they are beloued and are exceedingly cheered in their hearts with a certaine perswasion of his loue which verily is a great matter and serues them to great good purposes For as it is nothing to a blinde man to know there is a Sunne a glorious and bright creature when himselfe cannot enioy the sight of it or to a very poore man to know where much treasure is while himselfe cannot come at it to haue any part of it so it is nothing to heare and know that there is much loue hid in God except our selues feele it and become partakers of it but when the sence of this infinite loue of God is by a speciall worke of the Spirit giuen vnto the faithfull loe then there ariseth ioy and gladnesse in the soule euen vnspeakable and glorious ioy 1 Peter 1. 8. Also a great encrease of their hope in a more full assurance of enioying the blessing hoped for in as much as that God who hath so loued and so testified his loue cannot change and deceiue vs. And there is moreouer by the sence of Gods loue toward vs another loue in vs kindled toward him and toward all whom hee would haue vs loue as shall hereafter more largely be shewed But now I hasten to the ninth and last fruite which I called with the Apostle Aglorying concerning God Romans 5. 11. Which commeth herehence that beleeuers finding Gods loue so farre forth declared to them for his Sonnes sake as not onely to acquit them of all guilt and condemnation of sinne by his sufferings and death whereby of enemies they were reconciled to God But furthermore to allow them his perfect obedience and holinesse to be their owne by imputation euen to the interessing of them into the glorious inheritance of Heauen they doe thereupon greatly glorie and in a holy manner boast-and insult in their spirits ouer all the Enemies of their saluation that God is become so exceeding
one thing or being one with Christ and as iustification and imputation of righteousnesse remission of sinnes be often vsed to signifie one thing the absolution of a sinner before the tribunall of God so there be certaine words as regeneration renewing or renouation and sanctification which import one selfe-same action and worke of the Spirit euen that whereby the corruption of sinne as touching the dominion and the power which it doth exercise before our calling is destroyed till it selfe at length bee wholy abolished and in stead thereof a new quality of holinesse put into the faculties of the soule that it may begin to loue and doe such things as are pleasing vnto God till it come at last to perfection by certaine degrees This worke or action of the Spirit it is called renouation or renewing because of that new grace and quality powred into the mind and will the former corruption which is called the olde man being killed As in the first worke of creation hee that was nothing before was made a man so in this worke of renouation or new creation hee that was naught before is made good as if a new man were borne Hence also it is called Regeneration or new birth indcede not properly nor fitly for our regeneration is the same with our incorporation or vnion with Christ wherby we become his members euen one body with him For as by generation we haue our being in this World and take the essence or nature of our Parents to become their Children so by regeneration wee haue our being of Christianity to become the members of Christ sonnes of God being before children of wrath and members of Sathans kingdome sonnes of Adam Thus doth our Sauiour himselfe teach vs to vnderstand it for hauing saide Iohn 1. 12. That such as beleeue in Christ are the sonnes of God he presently addeth Which are borne not of bloud c. but of God To declare this vnto vs that our new birth or regeneration is the making of vs the sonnes of God by faith and not the furnishing vs with such qualities and properties as belong to such as bee already sons Howbeit for as much as most Diuines and best learned men doe confound regeneration and sanctification I doe therefore follow that commonly receiued iudgement and by regeneration vnderstand that framing of the heart to Gods Image in righteousnesse and true holinesse which because it is an immediate consequent of our new birth wherein wee are begotten to be sonnes and daughters of God and as it were the putting of another and new nature into vs euen that diuine as Peter calleth it therefore is vsually called by the name of new birth Now for the last word of sanctification whereas that word is somtimes generally vsed in Scripture to signifie all that euen whatsoeuer it is that we haue from or is done in vs by Christ and is as much as our 〈◊〉 from the rest of this sinfull World to remaine and be vnto Christ as a thing consecrate to him yet in this argument where we distinguish it from vnion with Christ and iustification it is that speciall worke of the Spirit renewing vs in the spirit of our mind vnto a new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and holinesse of truth as Saint Paul speaketh Ephesians 4. 23 24. Or more briefly it is that worke of God whereby our corruption by little and little is abolished and holinesse perfected by degrees For in this worke though Christ minister a power to the beleeuer by his Spirit against sinne to master it and to doe the will of God yet it is not absolute at the first so as by it all sinne should be vtterly done away not at all to be in the soule and a strength giuen perfectly to worke good for then the Law might be fulfilled of vs in this life and then wee should iustifie our selues and 〈◊〉 died in vaine and we neede not his mediation to make our workes accepted But whereas in sinne beside the guilt and condemnation wherein we are wrapt and from which our Iustification hath freed vs and in stead thereof hath put vpon vs righteousnesse vnto life there is also in it a tyranny dominion and power which by the iust iudgement of God it exerciseth euen ouer the very Elect who are the seruants of sinne and doe willingly offer the faculties of their soules and parts or members of their body as weapons and instruments to fight and warre 〈◊〉 corruption that the will and lusts the desires and motions of sinne may be done as it is to be seene Rom. 6. 13. 17 c. Now in this worke of our Sanctification there is strength force giuen to the beleeuing soule against this tyranny of sinne to beate it downe and subdue it to keepe it as vnderling that howsoeuer it dwell and remaines there egging to euill and still soliciting and prouoking against God yet it wants now much of his former vigour and might so as it cannot reigne and rage with full swinge as it was wont to carry vs headlong after all vngodlinesse vnrighteousnesse this we get by our Sanctification Apollos Now let me entreate you to open the seuerall parts of it with the causes and hereafter wee may consider of the measure Aquila This is it which I was minded to doe in the next place after I had shewed what the whole worke of Sanctification is then to lay it out into his parts and by the members laide out particularly the better to discouer the whole body of this worke Diuines vse to make two parts and that according to Scripture The first is 〈◊〉 or crucifying of the old man which hath two degrees First the death of sinne Secondly the buriall of sinne which is the progresse of the death of sinne In respect hereof the faithfull are saide to be crucified with Christ and their body of sinne to be crucified with him Rom. 6. 6. And also to be dead to sinne to be baptized into his death to be dead with him to be buried with him Rom. 6. 2 3 8. The second part of our Sanctification is our walking in new nesse of life or quickening the new man or liuing to God Rom. 6. 4. In which respect wee are said to be raysed vp together with Christ and to liue with him Phil. 3. 1. Rom. 6. 8. Here then we haue with the parts of Sanctification the true cause thereof deliuered to vs which I will for better vnderstanding thus declare and set forth according as I conceiue of it The first part of Sanctification is the death of sinne or dying to sinne which is when that the strength of our sinnefull corrupt Nature is taken downe and by degrees weakened as the body of Christ languished by degrees vpon the Crosse so as sinne cannot bring forth such euill fruites in thoughts words and deedes as it did while wee were vnder the power of it This is
in which they liued obeying the Prince that ruleth in the Ayre walking in sinnes according to the course of the World so it was not without a very mercifull and gracious respect vnto their owne good as well as with zealous respect of his owne glory not to giue it them in full measure during this life First in that sinne is suffered still to remaine and to tempt them it stirreth vp watchfulnesse to haue such an enemy within the house yea in the bed-chamber euen in the inward heart and spirit of a man it will not suffer him to sleepe in security But as in Townes which are only assaulted outwardly men stand continually vpon the guard so it behoueth much more Gods Children to doe hauing their City already surprized sinne being within their soule This is it also which will cause them with awefull watch to ioyne faithfull ardent prayer for helpe and strength from God against it Whence it is that our Sauiour hauing put his Disciples in minde of their sinfull weakenesse The flesh saith he is weake that is sinne and corruption maketh you weake either to resist euill or to doe good therefore hee commandeth them and in them all other Christians to giue themselues to watchfulnesse and prayer lest they fall into temptation For Sathan finding vs feeble and ready to stumble and fail at euery straw through sinne will be apt enough to take the aduantage of our infirmity and by his subtill temptations to draw vs to wickednesse so as there will be danger of being conquered by him except with a watchfull eye Christians looke to themselues and get them for succour vnto God that by his might they may bee made able for to stand Therefore as the Canaanites which were left in the Land vndestroyed did both awe the Israelites awake their slothfulnesse and prouoke them in danger to 〈◊〉 vnto God by prayer so the corruptions sticking in the Children of God doe through feare of being foyled by them driue them vnto God and shake off spirituall slothfulnesse Besides hence they can with pitty and compassion think and speake of other mens sinnes being alwayes ready with a fellow-feeling heart to reproue knowing and considering themselues how they are compassed with like infirmities Galat. 6. 1. They are also prouoked to exercise their charity not this way onely but in prayers for their brethren by their owne experience of sinfull lusts what they doe in them they can guesse how it fareth with other Yea they are by this meanes not without some griefe to heare of the grosse and horrible wickednesse of Gods enemies remembring that the same inclinations to euils and seedes of sinne are in themselues which so breake out to the shame and ruine of others Moreouer by this they are often brought to sue for pardon vpon their slippes and fraileties and to beg the encrease of Gods graces and comforts and so haue manifold proofe of Gods truth and goodnesse in standing to his promises whereby he hath bound himselfe to fulfill the desires of his people and can encourage others and doe quicken them in their faith to trust in that God whom they find so very willing to releeue and refresh them according to his word For when their sinnes temptations force them to God and his mercy aud truth doe manifest themselues being found when hee is sought opening to such as knock giuing to such as ask forgiuing such as humbly confesse themselues and as they haue their mouthes opened to speake forth the Lords praise and to glorifie him in his righteousnesse and saluation to declare them abroade so to excite all their fellow Saints to magnifie this God to seeke and to relie vpon him with strong confidence See the practise of this in that holy Prophet Dauid who hauing recourse to God against his sinnes and drawing downe grace and comforts by his prayers he is full as of hearty thankfulnesse for himselfe so of holy exhortations towards others to moue them vnto godlinesse Yet further whereas the great fauour which is vouchsafed the Elect in their calling and the rare graces put into them from Gods Spirit might heaue and puffe them vp euen Paul being subiect to pride and arrogancy in regard of singular blessings vouchsafed him 2 Corinthians 12 the sight and sence of the remainders of olde Adam serueth as to keepe from rash iudging of others so from taking pride in our owne good things there being more reason to bee abased for filthinesse for that is our owne then for the holiest gifts for they are not our owne and withall they are blemished and spotted through that poyson and contagion of sinne that mingleth it selfe with our best prayers best words best actions best graces to make our selues and them euen odious to God should hee but with a rigorous eye behold the best things in vs and done by vs. For his pure eye cannot behold any euill and best men haue some euill ioyned with their good yea there is more euill in that they doe then good That were it not for Gods mercifull acceptance passing by and winking at the euill pardoning wants and staines and imputing his Sonnes righteousnesse to the Saints their holiest endeauours might worthily sinke them into destruction The due consideration whereof doth preserue them from that most hatefull vice of pride and presumption which are the break-neckes of so many thousands And also in these and sundry other respects as to stirre vp in the godly a desire and loue to the fellowship of the Saints to the vse of the Lords Supper and all other good meanes of their saluation to the patient bearing with and gently censuring the imperfections of their brethen and infinite such other benefits as redound to themselues by this way of their imperfect sanctification God doth maruellously worke out his owne glory Sinnes assaults and Sathans temptations combining themselues with their confederate the Worlds allurements by pleasures and profits and glorie sometime and sometime feares threats and persecutions all conspiring together against the poore soule of the Childe of God as Ammon Moab Edomites did band against the Lords people doth but minister occasion vnto God the more to euidence his almightinesse and sufficiency of grace in that he 〈◊〉 against all these maintaine one weake heart not onely enabling to the encounter strengthening to endure it but also giuing power to ouercome and triumph ouer them that they may reioyce and glory in this strong God of their saluation whose power is so manifested in their weakenesse As the more and fiercer enemies did arise vp against Ioshuah in the Land of Canaan and against Moses in the Wildernesse the more it turned to the honour of God and their glory also to vanquish them and put them to flight so it is here the name of God is the more aduanced in his wonderfull assistance and protection which hee affordeth vnto his Saints against the gates of hell
Finally which is an admirable thing euen by the grosse sinnes of his Children it pleaseth God to doe them much good both to greeue them for that is past to humble them and shame them for the present to worke more feare and warinesse for the time to come Besides it turnes greatly to Satans great confusion their fales prouing medicines and remedies and preuentions of future sinnes and this as it much redoundeth to Gods honour so it cannot choose but vex Sathan at the heart that such sinnes as he hath drawne the godly into with great diligence and long deuice hoping therby to choke them and quite to spoile them should bee made meanes through Gods wonderfull goodnesse and wisedome euen to whet and sharpen them the more against Sathan the procurer of their wounds and woe by stirring vp themselues and strengthening others vnto all good duties He had been better to fit still then to haue tempted Dauid and Peter to such sinnes as he did as I could further proue saue that in our conference of Repentance this very thing wil be happily reuiued and come againe to be spoken of but it is now meete that wee seeke out the markes whereby Sanctification is knowne to be truly wrought and to speake of the duties of sanctified persons Apollos I doe well allow of your purpose onely by the way let me put you in remembrance that by the remainder of sinne in the new borne Christians and by those daily bitter fruits which spring from thence there is more occasion giuen to the godly to exercise their faith touching the forgiuenesse promised and their hope touching the blessednesse to come and all other their graces which if they were perfect and all sinne done away at their regeneration then what great vse of faith or hope when there should bee no vnbeleefe or doubting within them or what vse of any other vertue when it lacked the opposition resistance of the contrary vice to set it on worke Here is our warfare and there must be a continuall strife inwardly in our selues betweene grace and sinne as well as out wardly against the wicked In Heauen our warfare shall be ended and not before and further by how much the godly oftner sinne here so much the mercies of God in pardoning and Christs righteousnesse in couering such and so innumerable transgressions are manifested to bee the more glorious and excellent There being no lesse grace if not more expressed in forgiuing sinnes done after the Spirit of God and faith receiued then such as were done before Sithence the more Gods Children are beholden to God and the more meanes they haue against sinne and the more they are enlightened to vnderstand their duty the more grecuous is their fault which yet being all remitted freely vpon their repentance it declareth the abundance of the grace of God toward them Aquila It was well thought vpon by you for I had forgotten these things but now to follow my purpose Amidst so much darknesse of minde as yet remaineth after regeneration in Gods Children and so many and great imperfections Sathan also with his iuglings laboring to trouble their iudgements it seemeth then a hard thing to discerne that true sanctification of the Elect from that generall grace whereby a naturall man may liue for outward comfort and carriage as if hee were truly sanctified There bee sixe or seauen tokens by which the difference is to bee found and euery sanctified person shall by them know of himselfe that hee is gone beyond a ciuill life First a sanctified man hath care to order his life his whole way and euery step of it by the knowledge of the Word of which he enquireth what hee may doe and what not still taking counsell from thence doing all his things as necre as hee can by that diuine direction and with application of Christ beleeuing that his weaknesses are in him hidden and the vncleannesse of his worke wiped and purged by his death whereas the ciuill man dependeth vpon the allowance and reputation of men which if hee obtaine it contents him he lookes no further but to haue a good estimation in the World And whereas the sanctified man aymeth at this most how to please God euen with the deniall and displeasure of his owne corrupt heart the ciuill man doth not take thought nor trouble his head about the pleasing of God in the good he doth nor in leauing euils for the offence of God but seeketh and studieth to please himselfe and such whose fauour hee desireth to liue in ordering his course to his owne and their liking Thirdly whereas a ciuill man is very carefull in duties that concerne affaires and dealings with men that hee may get a good report that way and doth religious duties coldly and of custome the sanctified man though he will not be negligent in workes that belong to his calling yet he is cheefely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duties which concerne God and his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that both publikely and priuately Adde heereunto fourthly that ciuil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no great conscience of smaller sinnes as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 talke lesse oaths gaming c and not at all 〈◊〉 against naturall corruption to get it killed nor in 〈◊〉 bled for it It is otherwise with a sanctified man he laboureth most against the roote of sinne to get it mortified to haue the fountaine drained hee 〈◊〉 him and conceiues much 〈◊〉 euen for the 〈◊〉 of sinne Psal. 51 4 5. Hee hath a great care to meete with sin in the bud to resist it in the 〈◊〉 and euill desires and auoyding conscionably euen such offences as the most men iudge but 〈◊〉 For hee 〈◊〉 the danger of death the displeasure of God in euery sin euen the least Dauid will greeue for touching the lap of Sauls garment the Lords annointed The heart of a godly man wil smite him euē for a vile vnhonest thoght for euery little ouer sight if it be but in a circumstance of an action Yet 〈◊〉 ciuil men neuer take any 〈◊〉 to auoid the sins of the time or of their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 turall peculiar sinnes the sanctified man of all other most setteth himselfe against these And to shut vp because the differences are infinite the euill man is 〈◊〉 about the 〈◊〉 of grace to get more strength against 〈◊〉 more power to obey God he doth not marke in himselfe the decrease of grace or increase of sinne that being humbled therefore he may vse the means appointed without 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and faintnesse not by fits and girds It 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the sanctified person who 〈◊〉 how corruption workes and how grace decayes betakes himselfe vnto the vse of al good means 〈◊〉 all good care and conscience for the helping him 〈◊〉 a greater measure of the Spirit that he may grow vp in grace and knowledge For he considereth 〈◊〉 himselfe amongst sundry other things what duty he 〈◊〉 to God and to his owne soule and that this 〈◊〉 is laid vpon him by
good Christian and that it is spirituall and inuisible fought by inuisible combaters and weapons At length you deliuered the necessity of this battle by the true causes of it whereof the first is the wil and good pleasure of God who as he ordained his owne Sonne so all his members to this spirituall warre and conflict thorow which they are to passe vnto the Crowne and the Kingdome which is prepared for them as in earth no man is crowned except first hee striue lawfully none diuide the spoile which first haue not abid the brunt of the battle and obtained the victory The second cause is the extreme malice of Sathan against Christ the head and for his sake against all the Elect his members whom he will neuer ceasse to tempt and that with most wonderfull subtilty as a Serpent long experimented and with outragious cruelty as a red fierce and fell Dragon or roaring Lyon if it were possible to draw backe againe the regenerate vnto his kingdome and hauing ouercome them to destroy them 1 Pet. 5. The third is the repugnancy and contrariety which is betweene the Spirit and the flesh in the new borne Christians in whom they continually striue together as the twinnes did in Rebeccaes wombe the Spirit striuing against the flesh and the flesh lusting against the Spirit without truce or reconcilement hell and Heauen light and darkenesse God and Sathan being no more contrary in quality then the Spirit and the flesh Here I call to minde that it was taught that in Scripture phrase Spirit grace new man law of the mind in this argument were Synonyma and of one signification also flesh old man corruption law of the members were equiualent termes importing one thing so as euery regenerate man hauing these in him consisted of a double man and had two men warring in him perpetually during his whole pilgrimage the old man which is that remainder of sinne that vicious quality deprauing and poysoning our Nature inclining to the breach of Gods Law which is vsually called the flesh That which is borne of flesh is flesh Iohn 3. 6. And abstaine from the lusts of the flesh 1 Peter 2. 12. And corruption as Ephe. 4. 22. The old man is corrupt for it causeth spirituall vnsoundnesse wasting all where it reigneth lastly Law of the members because in faculties and powers of soule and body it hath force of a king or law to command and enioyne absolutely in wicked men but in the regenerate with resistance And the other man is the new man which is that quality of holinesse created in mind and will renewed by the Spirit of God hence called The Spirit and Grace because it is freely giuen and worketh things gracious and pleasing to God and lastly The Law of the minde because there it gouernes as a Law or Commander Now the opposition and strife betweene these two men in the regenerate it is this in generall that grace or the Spirit or the new man doth raise and beget godly desires and affections tending to Heauen and hindereth the wicked motions of corruption and the old man and this againe engendereth vicious euill desires and thoughts crossing and hindering the good counsels and purposes of the Spirit and new man In which conflict sometime sinne preuaileth against grace carrying vs away and leading vs captiue as it were fast bound in fetters and chaines Rom. 7. 23. and sometime grace mastereth the lusts of sinne and remaineth Conquerour And this alwayes falleth out by reason of this combate that a godly person as he cannot doe what euill Sathan sinne and himselfe according to his will corrupt would doe because grace dwelling in him doth put an obstacle and barre vnto sinfull desires that they doe not breake out as blisters or botches in ones body so he is not able to attaine to performe either all that good which he would or in so good a manner as he would with such loue to God and his Neighbour as his soule wisheth and the Law requireth because remaining corruption doth oppose it selfe vnto the worke and motions of the Spirit Which is the thing whereof Paul had experience in his owne person and hath reported in Rom. 7. 14 15. both to the instruction of all and great comfort of the weake that by reason of dwelling sinne egging and tempting him to euill pulling and drawing him from God hee both did the euils which he would not and left vndone the good which hee would doe or did it vntowardly and weakely He could no sooner haue a good thought and motion tending to God ward but euill was present and at hand very ready to quench and smother This was the condition which hee was subiect vnto euen like the condition of a sicke man newly recouered or but recouering who faine would walke a mile or two for his health but when he begins to go his legges double vnder him for feeblenesse and he can scarse walke two turnes about his chamber Or as it fareth with an escaped prisoner which desireth to flye and his heart could serue him to go twenty miles or forty a day yet his bolts and fetters so comber him as he can scarse rid one mile a day So the Apostle felt and so much other regenerated persons feele themselues encombred with their sinnefull Nature as they are enforced euen when they do best to do their duties with care wants and imperfections Apollos In this spirituall combate there is a materiall thing to bee enquired into whether corruption do so farre at any time preuaile ouer grace as wholly to extinguish it for a time or the faithfull do but onely fall into a spirituall sleepe deepely forgetting themselues yet still retaining the life of Grace The case of Dauid falling so heinously sinning so deliberately lying so long being falne causeth diuers more then to suspect that the godly in their conflict with sin may take such a foyle as to haue grace wholly beaten out of their hearts for a season though not finally For it thoughts that he yeelded vnto sinne with his whole will which cannot be where any sparkle of Grace remaines Aquila Sir this is a Question which it were more meete for you to make answer to then my selfe howbeit seeing you will haue it so I will speake my minde in it When I reade in Scripture that God is vnchangeable his couenant euerlasting his calling and giftes without repentance his regenerating grace to bee an immortall seede to remaine in the elect to be such as none can take from them and that the life of grace can no more returne to the death then Christ can returne to dye againe and that Christ doth make intercession for beleeuers and that the Comforter which is giuen them shall abide in them for euer Vpon these and such like grounds I am resolued that howsoeuer sauing grace in the Elect may be wounded yet not killed battered and beaten yet not raced sore shaken yet not plucked vp by the rootes
For God who put it into their heart still preseruing it and being stronger then all that be against it how can it vtterly faile This is it therfore which I iudge that when regenerate persons being ouercome by the strength of any temptation or in-bred corruption yeeld vnto any sinne their whole will doth neuer sinne so much onely doth sin as is vnregenerate the regenerate part doth neuer sin neither can it sinne for it is impossible that grace shold sinne which is as contrary vnto sinne as light is vnto darkenesse The Spirit and grace doth euer like and loue that which is good and hate that which is euill So the Apostle confesseth that when hee did the euill he would not and did not the good he would it was dwelling sinne that did it that is to say his soule vnrenewed was that which sinned it was not he that is his soule so farre as it was vnrenewed that did sinne For his minde renewed serued the law of God it was his flesh that serued the law of sinne his inward man did euen then delight in the law of God when the lawe of his members rebelled against it And this is the condition of all other the children of God amongst whom when any of them be ouercome in this conflict their will and minde renewed doeth still make resistance to sinne yet so feeble so faintly and weakely somtimes that sinne gets the vpper hand and grace is put to the worst Now touching Dauid and such as do sinne in such a sort as he sinned this is it which I do iudge of them that it fareth with them as with a man going downe a steepe hill whose foote once slipping hee cannot recouer himselfe but tumbles downe till hee meete with some stay Or as it doth with one in a swoone or in a Lethargie whose life is in them and yet to seeming they are dead Or as a withered tree in winter season which hath neither leafe blossome or beauty and yet there is life in the roote Or as with a soldier whose braine-pan being cracked with a blow he lieth astonished and as one vanquished yet comming to himselfe againe renewes the battle and conquers his enemie Or finally as one taken prisoner against his will for lacke of power to withstand the assault being willing and ready to make an escape whensoeuer an opportunity is offered As appeareth in the example of that Kingly Prophet who was so held captiue in the hands of sinne as when God did reach out a hand vnto him to draw him out by the admonition of his Prophet outwardly and the motion of his Spirit inwardly hee quickly apprehended it and embracing the occasion gaue satan and sinne the slip and as wee say shewed them a paire of faire heeles Apollos I am altogether of your iudgement in these points and surely as this is a very true doctrine so it is comfortable to consider that God doeth so maintaine grace in the hearts of his owne children as howsoeuer for due and iust causes the gates of helmay very farre preuaile yet neuer so farre as to displant that which God hath planted nor to destroy that image which God hath set vp But it remaines now that ye speake something more particularly of this combate and what weapons are to be vsed therein after what sort we are to make vse of them Aquila Sir it were a matter of great labour a very long worke particularly to rehearse how our knowledge is assaulted by ignorance our faith by infidelity our loue by enuy and hatred our holines by prophane lusts our chastity and temperancy by incontinency riot also to declare the dangerous stratagems wiles and enticements that are vsed by satan and the world to vndermine and ouerthrow the poore christian soul. and this haply is sufficiently performed by som others Touching the Weapons which wee are to vse in this warfare and how by prayer wee are to get the power to vse them well the Apostle instructeth vs fully in the 6. chapter to the Ephesians And for the right application of the maine weapon to wit the Worde of God we haue Christs practise in the 4. chap. of Matth. Therefore if it please you leauing this argument wee will passe forward to the doctrine of Repentance This onely I thinke meete to say ere we part from this matter that there is a very great oddes between a regenerate person and one vnregenerate as touching this fight against sinne they both fight but neyther vvith like minde nor with like successe In vnregenerate persons the light of naturall reason and of knowledge infused into the conscience doe checke sinne as well as discouer it leading the combater to a mislike and some kind of resistance whereof the issue and successe is the holding backe of the rage of sinne without weakning or killing it at the roote in so much as when this resistance such as it is 〈◊〉 then sinne like a Gyant or a Tyrant mightily assaulteth and insulteth ouer the poore soule trampling it downe and fiercely oppressing it Whereas regenerate persons doe more then mislike sinne and make some slender opposition to the keeping in of the fury of euill lusts for they doe truly detest and hate sinne as that which is contrary to the will image and glory of their Father and the cause of curse to their blessed Redeemer so as there is in them a conflict not alone betweene reason and affection and betweene conscience and sinne but between grace and sinne betweene the heart renewed by grace and remaining sinne which with a loathing is refused of them when it ariseth and tempteth the regenerate setting and bending themselues directly against euery lust of reason and will as against a most mortall enemy which it desireth and seeketh vtterly to destroy for that end being in continuall watch frequent in seruent prayer alwayes fearing infirmity and Gods dreadfull Maiesty the euent and successe of which strife is a daily wasting of sinne and mortifying it at the roote that it may at the length be quite abolished Of Repentance the other consequent of Sanctification Apollos NOW friend Aquila that we haue done with the spiritual combat betwixt the old man the new arising from the imperfect measure of Sanctification which when it is full that combate shall ceasse in the next place we are to deale with Repentance which in regard of these foyles and wounds which the Christian Souldier taketh in his spirituall fight is very necessary for they are to be healed and made vp again by repentance euen by our turning vnto God through faith in his Sonne As it cannot be but in the combate the new man is sometime put to the worst so vpon repentance all is made whole Aquila Suffer mee here a little to stay you in your speech what may the differance be betweene Sanctification and Repentance seeing Repentance is a ceassing from euill and doing of good a turning from sin to God and Sanctification is no other but
a dying to sinne and liuing to righteousnesse Apollos I will tell you what I conceiue of it that Repentance is a fruite of Sanctification a consequent of it which doth immediately follow it and is ioyned to it as a companion the difference I will expresse it to you by a similitude as you may vnderstand it better In the worke of Sanctification the holy Spirit doth as it were shape a new garment for the soule which as it hath a robe without to wit the perfect iustice of Christ to put on by faith so it hath other garments of lesse worth which be inherent and sticke within it selfe and this is the quality of holinesse created in the soule which we are willed to put on as Col. 3. Put on the new man Againe As the Elect of God put on compassion meekenesse c. And in 〈◊〉 6. 13. Keepe your garments pure and without spot Now as in a new garment there happens rents and breaches so our holinesse by strength of corruption striuing against it and Sathans temptation doth take some rents and breaches daily which are to be made vp and restored by repentance Sanctification is as the building of an House our soules and bodies thereby are made the Temples and habitation of God Ephe. 2. verse last 1 Cor. 6. Houses being wind and weather-beaten will take decayes and neede reparations Now repentance is the repairing of those wrackes and harmes which our selues take by the assaults of sinne and Sathan Take yet another comparison In Sanctification wee haue giuen to vs the skill and power to warre against sinne Sathan and the World and weapons put into our hands wherewith to defend our selues and to offend them Now our weapons wil waxe dul and need sharpening our selues take blowes and 〈◊〉 and neede curing this doth repentance which 〈◊〉 the weapons and makes whole our selues after hurts receiued I haue now shewed you what my iudgement is of the thing you propounded Aquila Yea I vnderstand it and will examine it and then rest in it if I find no iust matter of exception meane time I yet see not but that ye are right But tell me Sir what Repeutance doe you meane For Repentance euen in Scripture phrase is attributed sometime to reprobates and wicked men as where it is said that Iudas repented him Math. 27. 1. 2. And there was a certaine repentance euen in Cain Esau Achab Symon Magus and others as the Story of Scriptures euidenceth Beside the Elect which yet are in their sinnes and want all true sauing grace the holy Ghost vseth to exhort them to repentance as Acts 3. 19. To those that killed Iesus Peter saith Repent and returne And Acts 17. 30. to the supersticious Athenians Paul saith God admonisheth all men euery where to repent See also Acts 14. 15. by which it may appeare that there is a repentance in some which are neuer sanctified and others haue a repentance before their sanctification Apollos This was well moued for it is true that Repentance hath sundry acceptions in the Word of God which is the cause that Diuines write diuersly of this point and somewhat confusedly sometime for not duly distinguishing those workes of God which he diuersly worketh in men as hee pleaseth To shew you what I comprehend of this matter this word Repentance is in Scripture either taken in euil part or in good part when it is taken in the euill part then it signifieth a greefe of minde conceiued onely for punishment of sinne when yet the sinne it selfe is not a whit loathed and hated but still well liked of Thus is Iudas saide to repent who because of the present horrour which his sinne bred in his conscience and through the feare of future iudgement wished that vndone which hee had done and so repented but his heart nothing changed to abhorre his couetousnesse When it is taken in good part then it is either Legall or Euangelicall Legall Repentance I call that when by the ministery of the Law the Spirit is effectuall to worke a sight of sinnes both secret and grosse and of the curse and punishment due thereunto together with a certaine greefe and feare in regard of that sinfull and wofull estate which the sinner seeth by the Law himselfe to lie in This in the Elect is a preparatiue to the grace of conuersion and alwayes goeth afore which though in it selfe it be not true sauing grace yet it is the beginning the entrance and way to it in all the chosen and this is meant in part in all those exhortations made to vnconuerted elect persons Repentance Euangelicall is either generall or speciall generall repentance which is a turning from all sinne at once is that whereby a sinner being by precepts and threats of the Law stricken with terror and humbled vpon sight and some sense of his owne damnable state through sinne is by grace conuerted and changed in his minde and will so as of an euill man hee become a good now truly hating all his sinnes as offences of a good God reconciled in his Son and not only for punishment sake and louing righteousnesse vnfeinedly This is called passiue Repentance or conuersion and is in truth the same with Sanctification wherof ye may reade in these Texts Acts 11. 18. Acts 20. 21. Luke 24. 47. Speciall Repentance Euangelicall it is that whereby a sinner that beleeueth forgiuenesse of his sinnes and is sanctified or conuerted and already made good doth repent particularly of such sinnes which by occasion in the course of his life he falleth into this is of Diuines called particular Repentance Actiue and renewed Repentance and they doe distinguish it from the former And thus it is taken in all places of Scriptures where the Saints are saide to repent or exhorted to repent as 2 Cor. 7. 9. Reuel 2. 5. and 3. 19. Mathew 18. 3. And thus in this sence doe I speake of it at this time taking it for the repairing or renewing of those daily decayes and slips which doe arise in the practise of godlinesse For as in a garment namely a beggers garment there is alwayes something to be amended and in an house though well swept and cleansed yet there will still be something to be purged out and in an healthy body there fal out infirmiries to be cured so in the life and conuersation of euery good Christian there will be still something to be repented of and amended Our frailety and Sathans malice being considered there would indeede that care and watchfulnesse be vsed that as neere as euer may be those pure garments of our righteousnesse holinesse be kept cleane and vndefiled and our Temples of body and soule to be preserued holy yet as a materiall garment be it neuer so well lookt vnto gathereth spots and the house which is kept most neatly and curiously will haue dust and sulledgy so in the best Christians somewhat will be alwayes amisle and therefore the whole life of a Christian
though he cannot absolutely keep the Law to fulfil it in the strictnesse thereof by doing all that good that is commanded there and that vnto the end and in all perfection of loue nay there be sundry good duties and workes which our regenerate man through ignorance cannot so much as attaine to the knowledge of so large and broade be the Commandements and so narrow and dull is our capacity yet as he is sanctified throughout hauing all his powers of spirit soule and body well and aptly disposed by grace to doe good so he endeauoureth to know better euery day what his worke is which is prescribed him to doe and also to performe it in euery part so farre as it is knowne with such perfection as he can doing his worke in truth and vprightnesse though with wants and weaknesse so as he balkes no duties He will not play the Pope to giue himselfe dispensation for any good worke which he is bound to doe doe it neuer so much goe against his stomacke and contrary his corrupt iudgement and affection his profit or delight yet his heart standeth with the Law Rom. 7. 16. and with that hee will take part euen against his owne lusts repenting him earnestly of his failings in duty whether it come of ignorance or infirmity being still more desirous to come neerer and neerer to God in true righteousnesse Hence it is that the godly are saide in Scripture to walke in all the wayes of God as 〈◊〉 2 Kings 22. 2. to haue kept the Statutes and Testimonies of God as Dauid Psal. 119. to haue walked in all the Commandements of God without reproofe as Zachariah and Elizabeth Luke 1. 5 6 7. to haue pleased God in all things as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 9. to haue walked perfectly as Ezekiah because howsoeuer they could not for measure and manner doe all in an absolute fulnesse so as there should be no fault yet for desire care and endeauour they stroue to doe all which they could know and their heart was vpright in one duty as well as in another and so performed a perfection of parts as the Schoolemen speake It being quite otherwise with the vnregenerate man who as he still will cherish some sinne so he doth omit some duty good work knowne to be his duty and as necessary as any which he doth either because it thwarteth his carnall liking and fancy or pincheth him in his gaine or some other thing which is deare to him Herod will doe many things at Iohns preaching and Iehu is zealous in many things for the Lord Simon Magus will conforme himselfe to the word in sundry duties but their practise hated it is a maimed practise There were some good workes which they would not be brought to doe as there were some sinfull affections which they could not be made to put off for their heart was not right before God Acts 8 21. they were not seasoned with his true feare therefore their repentance was counterfeit in action rather then in affection in shew not in verity Aquila Sir this was well remembred It is indeede a maine matter and it is also a certaine truth that the childe of God being in the worke of his Sanctification nenewed though not perfectly yet throughout in euery faculty of his soule bearing now the Image of God his Father not in part but in whole carrying his resemblance in righteousnesse and holinesse and his heart framed vnto sincerity therefore he is renewed not to an halfe obedience but to all obedience that is in all duties which pertaine to him so as his will and purpose of heart is so farre as measure of grace will allow and enable him with readinesse to doe whatsoeuer the Lord shall say vnto him either for leauing euill vndone or for doing that which is good That which was Dauids resolution and care to haue respect to all the Commandements of God Psal. 119. 6 it is though not in such degree of grace the care and affection of euery repentant person to keepe couenant with no sinne but to disclaime and depart from all to omit willingly no good worke but to honour God by an vniuersall subiection to the Law so farre as concernes them in euery good worke submitting themselues to the mercy of God in Christ for forgiuenesse of that wherein they slip caking afterward better heede to their wayes But now Sir may it please you this being recouered which wee had in a manner lost that we proceed in our purpose and tell me is it of necessity that true Repentance be accompanied with good workes of all sorts Apollos After the doctrine of Repentance ye doe in very good time moue me for the doctrine of good workes which follow Repentance as the shadow doth the body and flow from it as a Riuer from the Fountaine or as fruite springeth from the tree Repentance lying hid in the heart as the iuyce or sappe in the roote of the tree vttereth it selfe by good workes as by meet and conuenient fruites This is it which we may marke in the Scripture how the holy Ghost hath matched repentance and good works together shewing that they should repent and doe workes worthy of Repentance Acts 26. 20. Againe Repent and doe the first workes Reuel 2. 5. Also Bring therefore fruits worthy of Repentance Mathew 3. 8. Where it is to be noted that a good worke is called a fruite not onely to shew how God accepteth them euen as a pleasant fruite is accepted of him that dresseth a Vineyard or an Orchard but in respect as they come from Repentance as a fruite from a Tree And whereas he calleth it a fruite worthy of Repentance he meaneth such workes as be meet for such persons to doe as haue repented Consider also that it cannot be that a man inwardly should loue that which is righteous and hate iniquity in his soule but hee must needs outwardly expresse it as occasion and meanes be offered so as that Repentance may be worthily suspected to be false where good workes doe not follow there is no true change in the heart where there is none seene in the life If we search the Scriptures we cannot find any who haue repented in truth but they haue beene afterwards carefull to doe good workes To omit other examples whereof Scripture affoords vs store take one or two in stead of all Zacheus repented and his repentance was fruitfull witnessing it selfe by good workes both by retribution of goods euilly gotten and by distributing of well gotten goods also by a cheerefull entertainment of Christ. The conuerted theefe as little space as he had after his conuersion yet how many wayes did his repentance declare it selfe namely by the reproofe and admonition of his fellow by admirable patience by godly prayer by iustifying and defending Christ his innocency when he was condemned of all the Iewes and doing it before them euen to their faces also by confessing
our good workes which they shall see may be moued more readily to hearken to that truth that worketh so mightily in vs. Therefore Peter counselleth faithfull wiues by their good workes to winne their vnbeleeuing husbands 1 Peter 3. 1. Also 1 Cor. 7. 16. For how knowest thou O woman whether thou shalt saue thy vnbeleeuing Husband But if any be vnconuerted and belong not to God these by our good workes shal haue their mouthes stopped that they cannot speake euill of vs or of our Religion For so is the will of God that with well doing we may stop the ignorance of foolish men 1 Peter 2. 15. Towards such as be already conuerted and become faithfull our good workes haue their proper vse either to confirme and strengthen them if they be weake in the faith as Christ saith to Peter Confirme thy brethren Luke 22. 32. Or else to comfort and reioyce such as be strong as Iohn reioyceth because the elect Lady and her children walked in the truth 2 Iohn 2. And Paul is greatly comforted by the faith and godlinesse of the Philippians Philip 3. 5. Insomuch as that which is spoken of the Vine and the fruite thereof Iudg. 9. 13. agreeth better to good workes the fruites of our faith that by them God and men are cheered Which should exceedingly worke preuaile with all good men to doe them and to doe them yet more cheerefully and plentifully not onely because as we vse to say of things we buy there is the more to put into the Inuentory so the more good workes we haue the more there is to further our reckoning but that our name may shine as the Sun in brightnesse our faith and saluation be sealed our God glorified our Religion beautified our Neighbour edified in his soule by godly admonition refreshed in his body and bowels by the fruits of our mercy and loue finally Sathan and our aduersaries confounded And for the better furthering of our selues in the practise of them let vs further remember these few things that our life is short oportunity will be taken away from vs therefore while we haue time let vs doe all the good we can considering that we haue lost much time already and heretofore haue done many things to the displeasure and discredite of so gracious a God Moreouer we haue receiued many fauours from God namely remission of all our sinnes and adoption by Christ sanctification by his Spirit with infinite other benefits for soule or body Let these mercies encrease constraine our loue to well doing and set vs on fire with zeale of good workes seeing Christ purgeth vs from our iniquitie to the end that we should be a peculiar people feruently giuen to doe good Titus 2. 14 15. And as we like to see other things fruitfull our Kine and Sheepe our Orchards our Fields so let it be our care and loue to see our selues fruitfull as it were our shame and reproach to be barren that wee may be like vnto Iesus Christ our head of whom it is written in the Gospell That he went about dooing good c. and that hee did all things well that we treading now in the steps of his faith and loue obedience and patience wee may at length reigne with him in glory For such as follow him now in the pathes of godlinesse shall hereafter sit with him at his Table in his Fathers Kingdome whither Christ Iesus safely and speedily bring vs for his name sake Amen The ninth part of the Dialogue Of particular good Workes first concerning God Of the Loue of God Apollos NOw Neighbour Aquila your constancy in following this conference makes me thinke you are like him of whom it is written That where hee beginnes a good worke he will finish it You haue taken in hand a good worke and you are desirous to accomplish it and to tell you truth so am I too and now that we draw toward an end let vs keepe close to it till we arriue where we would be there is nothing so hard but constant labour will ouercome it at last Aquila Constancy in any thing aduisedly taken vp is a very commendable thing but Sir according to your counsell let vs fall to our worke● Wee haue spoken of good workes generally wee are now to handle some especiall good workes which are more excellent and necessary and whereupon all the rest doe depend what choyce shall we make what good workes shall we single out from the rest therein to spend our time Apollos My aduice is this Whereas good works be all duties whereby either God or our neighbour be serued and benefited and the duties which we owe to God are cheefe as cause and ground of the rest first we will cull out such principall good workes as concerne God immediately namely the loue of God 2. his feare 3. of trust in him 4. thankesgiuing 5. prayer 6. reuerence towards his name 7. sanctifying his Sabbach and lastly of patience in suffering and then wee will descend to such fruites of faith and repentance as do belong to our neighbour For the first and great commandement is to loue God with all the heart and next to loue my neighbor as my selfe Aquila I do well approne of this order not onely because I know no better but because I iudge it to bee the best and fittest Let me then heare you tel me what it is to loue God wherefore wee stand bound to loue him and what it is that begets in vs the loue of God And then if ye wil declare the measure and manner of this loue how much it ought to bee and how it may be discerned to be in vs withall of the effects which this loue will be get in his children Apollos Loue is such an affection of the heart as desireth to be knit and neerely ioyned to the thing or party loued This is the nature of loue so to carry the heart with desire vnto that which is loued as nothing will content till it be enioyed and had The trueth of this may appeare in that loue which is inordinate and also in all well gouerned loue The theefe the adulcerer the gamester the couetous are by their loue such as they beare to their booty their whores their game and gaine so possessed as they are then quyet and not before when they haue and bee ioyned in one to that which they loue as their parting from the thing loued and losing it is their greefe yea sometime their death so their being with it and hauing it is their contentment and ioy and life Stories and experience afford vs sufficient proofe heereof We see the Gamester neuer well but when hee is at dice or cardes or other game The Fornicator is neuer at rest vnlesse he bee with his harlot The Couetous man is best pleased when he lookes vpon or fingereth money Now in well-gouerned loue it is right so whether it bee naturall or humane or
and haue the nature of blessings in them Thirdly when good and euill men are vnder afflictions there is no smal difference in their patience some 〈◊〉 men haue not so much as shew of patience being full of discontentment and rage when they are vnder Gods hand others which are more calme and still yet haue no patience but perforce because they cannot choose or be loath to be thought faint-hearted Whereas good men are as well pleased with afflictions as with benefits euer accounting that best which God sends to them whatsoeuer it be bearing his crosses not of necessity but for duty sake to God After these things thus discoursed it will be sitting that we passe from this generall Treatise of afflictions and to descend vnto particulars to speake of afflictions as they are either the chastisements of our sinnes or the trials of our faith and loue thus I thinke we may distinguish the afflictions of the godly The Scripture so plainely telleth vs that God chastiseth whom he loueth nurtering and correcting euery childe whom hee receiues Heb. 12. 6 and also doth tempt and take triall of them Thus he is saide to haue tempted Abraham Gen. 22. 1. And afflictions are called temptations Iames 1. 23. For as Sathan tempteth to seduce destroy so God tempteth to proue and make triall of his people to make it knowne what is in them Deut. 10. 1. It may fall out that some afflictions shall be both chastisements and trials yet wee are to consider and speake of them distinctly and 〈◊〉 things diuided in nature some being tried by affliction wherein it cannot be truly said that they are chastened as Iob and diuers Martyrs To conclude afflictions which be properly punishments to the wicked are to the righteous for correction or for their triall Apollos I thanke you Aquila for this kindnesse in cutting and laying out my worke for me I am content to be held your apprentise and to giue you the credit and place of the master workman But to fall in hand with the worke it is true indeed which you say that afflictions which in themselues and toward the wicked are a part of the curse due to sinne yet in respect of the righteous they change their condition the afflictions and death of our Lord Iesus Christ hauing sanctified all the afflictions of his members which beleeue in him that they should put on another nature and be no more to them an execration but to serue as you well say either for correction or probation or both For in one worke sometime God hath a double end both to chasten for some sinne done and to take triall of the graces in his children For our orderly proceeding I will first entreat of Chastisements and the patience which Gods Children shew therein Afterwards of their trials and namely of their great triall of trials which is by death and martyrdome whereunto some of Gods Children are put and all are to expect it The Church of God it is a Schoole the faithfull are as Disciples and Schollars in Schollars there is much forgetfulnesse and slothfulnesse and much other vntowardnesse which will neede to be remedied by the correcting hand of Christ the onely master of his Church his Ministers being to him but as Vshers The Church is as a Family the faithfull are as Gods seruants children amongst these there is alwayes some vnrulinesse and disobedience therefore God their Lord and Father cannot be without roddes for chastisements This the Scripture abundantly witnesseth that as the godly on the one side giue plentifull matter by their often and plentifull sinning yea sometimes by greeuous sinning against God why they should bee beaten euen with scourges so on the other side many and manifold are the corrections of God He hath roddes and scourges of all kindes gentler and sharper inward and soule chastisements outward and bodily corrections God can smite in goods name estate credite wife children friends liberty in euery thing that is with them or neere them or deere to them God knowes how to chasten them by taking away or lessening their comfort also by putting vpon them things greeuous to their nature wherein Gods Children through patience doe shew all good contentment at the Lords dealing with them though it be sometimes very rough and seuere Yet they know and consider that it is well deserued they haue made themselues very worthy to be wel beaten by their breach of Gods Law and it is but good reason if they be so bold as to transgresse and deserue chastisement that God should take leaue to vse his authority Therefore as they suffered with patience the Fathers of their bodies when they corrected them now much more they doe submit themselues to him that is the Father of Spirits especially when they marke his manner of proceeding in his chastisements and the chiefe ends that he aymeth at in them seeking therein their profit not his owne praise or pleasure as bodily Parents often doe For touching his proceeding albeit man suffer eth not but for his owne sinne Lament 3. 〈◊〉 is corrected but for his faults yet God doth not draw out his roddes for euery offence then there were none able to abide it for we offend so often and so much that it would quickly consume vs if wee should feele his hand for euery trespasse But as earthly Fathers winke at sundry and many things amisse in their children so it pleaseth God to vse conniuence and fauour towards our daily infirmities and smaller faults which accompany the frailty of our nature Therefore it is saide of him that he is slow to anger patient and full of compassion and goodnesse Psal. 103. Indeed when the godly doe forget themselues and fall into some foule and grosse sinne especially whereby they giue offence by their example prouoking others to sinne or when in lesser faults they grow too stubborne and waxe secure or when they lift vp their hearts and become proud and high minded 〈◊〉 commonly he taketh the rodde in hand being loth to fall to strike till we fall to dulnesse sluggishnesse arrogancy and contempt as there is no other remedy but that hee must scourge vs or lose vs. Againe when God hath suffered his Children long for he had rather they should iudge themselues then hee should iudge them desiring their conuersion by his bounty and kindnesse rather then their amendment by correction so sweete and louing is his Nature so loth to strike yet he striketh not till he haue giuen good warning either by admonitions of his Prophets and seruants or motions of his owne Spirit and often checkes of our owne conscience calling vpon vs to reforme our life As it is written in Amos 3. 7. Surely the Lord will doe nothing but he will reueale it to his Prophets After these warnings by his Ministers if there follow no repentance then there being no other remedy 2 Chro. 36. 16 17 he proceeds to
3. Now by the tryall of afflictions all these come to a sight and discerning themselues As it is written I haue tempted thee to know what was in thy heart Deuteronomy 10. 12 that is it was meete to make thee know what is in thy selfe whereof it will follow that such as tooke themselues to be full of grace as they in Reuel 3. 17. We are rich and full and need nothing finding themselues poore and empty either will be driuen to Christ or left without excuse Such as find they haue great strength of faith which thought they had but a small faith and they also that presumed of more then by experience they see in themselues the one shall be prouoked to more thankfulnesse and ioy the other to more humblenesse and feare and both to a greater patience considering the good that comes to them by such tryals For it is a great mercy of God in the tryall of his children to enable them to know themselues better and to behold more clearely both what they already haue and what they want that they may so ioy for the one as by the other they may be stirred to an holy feare and earnest prayer for encrease It is the greatest wisdome to know our selues and our tryals doe teach vs this wisedome for which cause they are with all patience to be endured especially sithence to them which are tryed and doe endure there is promised A Crowne of glory in the life to come Iames 1. 12. And euen in this life the godly in tryals and afflictions hauing stucke to God and followed his truth without shrinking and so conceiuing better then before their troubles that their faith is strong and their loue to God it is not for his benefits but for himselfe they are by this experience much encouraged to praise God and to proceede more chearefully in the rest of their course and more and more to despise the wicked suggestion of Sathan calling their faith and loue in question both being proued to be sound inasmuch as euen in great tryals they still trusted in God and their heart was still towards him to loue and obey him as Dauid saith Princes arose and spoke against mee yet did I not forget thy Law Psal. 119. Againe The proud haue me in derision yet did I not decline from thy Word Of Tryall by conflict of Conscience with sinne Aquila OF all the tryals of Gods Children which doe you hold to be greatest and fullest of difficulty to endure and glory to ouercome Apollos Amongst the tryals of Gods children some are but easie as to keep some earthly good things from them which others haue and they desire or to denie successe to their labours or to grant but small successe or to deferre the hearing of their prayers for a time and some lesse reproaches and hinderances in their name estate other trials be yet harder as the spoyling of their goods losse of liberty by imprisonment or banishment strange and long sicknesses in all which they haue for grounds of their patience the will of God who allotteth these things to them his promise of turning all things to the best for them the example of the Saints which haue beene put to endure the 〈◊〉 and also haue been both sustained in them and well brought through them but of all the trials their patience is most proued and approued by their enduring the conflict of conscience for sinne and the suffering of mattyrdome for the Golpell This double tryall for their sharpenesse and fiercenesse may well be called the fiery Tryall when either the conscience within is frighted and astonished with feare of hell fire for the offence of God by sinne or the body without is put to abide the flames of a temporary materiall fire for the name of Iesus and sure the former inuisible tryall is almost vnsupportable It is wondrous vncomfortable when the poore conscience hath sinne to surcharge and sting it Sathan to accuse the Law to threaten God also appearing as a bitter enemie shewing himselfe in great wrath as a seuere Iudge to condemne the mercifull promises and all things else that should breed comfort with-drawne from the eye of faith or faith so dimmed and daunted that it cannot looke vp to Christ. This is indeed a heauy tryall while a mans spirit is firme and strong it beares out all afflictions but when the spirit it selfe is wounded who can beare that Christ saith That if the salt that seasoneth other things haue lost his saltnosse wherewith saith he shall it be seasoned and if the eye which is the light of the body be darke how great is that darknesse So may I say of the spirit and heart of a godly man which comforteth him in all his troubles if that be dismayed and wounded how great is that discomfort Againe in other afflictions and tryals of Gods people this is the stay of their minds and the chief prop of their patience that though diuels and men be against them yet God is with them they see his helpe and aide ready to support and deliuer but here in this soule-tryal God himselfe shewes himselfe as an enemy offended for breach of his Law as armed with wrath and ready to take vengeance Thus it was with Iob in his tryall who thought God to be his enemy complayning that he had written bitter things against him and that hee had set him as a butte to leuell at and to shoote his arrowes against Thus it fared with holy Dauid and infinite others the Saints who could perceiue in God for the time and fit of their temptation no other but fury indignation and hot displeasure Psal. 6. 72. Psal. 22. 1 2. The Children of God neuer vtter their impatiency more then in this case so farre as they haue proceeded euen to challenge and charge God breaking forth in their infirmities into contumelies censuring him very hardly as if he were too rigorous and extreme yet for all this that their patience is so sore shaken it is still vpheld and made to endure vntill it ouercome at the last Remember the patience of Iob and what end it had Iames 5 11. The grounds of their patience in this their deepe tryall be these first the consideration of Gods soueraignty and absolute power ouer all men whom he may sist at his pleasuee and glorifie himselfe in vs by what way he will Secondly his exceeding great mercies and truth which will not suffer him to tempt aboue our strength nor to with-hold an happy issue Lastly the examples of others especially of the Sonne of God who tasted and drunke of the same Cup feeling in his soule the sharpe wrath and wrestling with the strict iustice of his displeased Father so as in his present sence he had nothing but discomfort Who being thus tryed euen with the sence of his Fathers hottest ite hauing his countenance seuerely set against him to the working of griefe distresse and perplexity in his holy conscience knoweth how
godlinesse compriseth all our duty towards God whereof as wee find sundry branches so hath Righteousnesse many members as Gal. 5. Paul there rehearseth loue ioy peace long suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse and temperance and Colos 3. 12. besides these there are reckoned vp mercy kindnesse humblenesse of mind forbearing and forgiuing one another Also in 2 Peter 1. 5. we find there vertue patience brotherly kindnesse in Iames 3. 13. meekenesse of wisdome in Titus 2. grauity and chastity in Ephe. 4. speaking truth in Heb. 13. 5. contenteanesse in Acts 20. 19. modesty Vnto all which wee must adde all respectiue graces and workes which are to be done of vs in respect of some degree which is put vpon vs as we be Parents or Children Masters or Seruants Husbands or Wiues Subiects or Gouernours c. Now the Scripture nameth all these graces in one place the fruits of the Spirit Galat 5. 22. In another exhorteth the Elect of God to put them on Col. 3 in a third telleth vs that who so hath them he shall neuer fall 2 Pet 1. 7 8. By all which it is manifest that they be such graces as are proper to the regenerate and which none but Gods chosen children can haue The appearance and shadow of them is to be found in others who as Apes doe Men would imitate the godly in these vertues and yet haue them not because they haue not faith the roote of them Aquila I see there is more worke behind then I was aware of yet it doth no whit discourage me let vs prosecute our purpose time and diligence with a little patience will ouercome great matters And tell me now I pray you would not these graces be handled in that order as ye haue named them otherwise how thinke ye good we should proceed ye haue found vs stuffe for a new conference ye must also deuise the frame to Apollos Let me alone with that though I be no good builder yet I will endeauour to haue this matter put in good for me I thinke it meete to speake first of the generall then of the specials and amongst these first of them that in common belong vnto all men and afterwards of such duties as are to be performed in respect of a degre put vpon vs. Aquila Let vs then take our beginning at Righteousnesse touching which declare vnto me what it may import as it doth respect mutuall dealing of men amongst themselues and what difference there is herein between good men and euill Of Righteousnesse Apollos THe word Righteousnesse is a large word in Scripture and hath many acceptions But to our purpose it is either that peculiar vertue whereby in contracts and bargaines and matters of iustice men are enabled to deale equally and rightly giuing as good as they take and rendering to euery one their due and it is set against wrong by oppression or deceit as contrary vnto it or else more generally it is put and vsed to signifie that same worke and grace of the Spirit in the soule of a regenerate man whereby hee is willing and ready to respect his Neighbour in euery thing that is deare precious to him causing him to take thought and care not onely not to hurt nor offend any man by thought word or deede as neere as may be either in his excellency and dignity or in his life in his soule or body in his goods or credit or any thing else whatsoeuer belongeth vnto him but in all and euery one of these louingly to tender him with an vnfained desire and labour by all good meanes and with his best might to encrease and preserue all and euery one of them As vnrighteousnesse in the phrase of Scripture comprehends all those vices whereby men are hurtfull to men in any of their good things so vnder Righteousnesse are comprehended all vertues whereby wee become any way or in any sort profitable and helpefull to our Neighbour In this sense is the word Righteousnesse taken in all those places where it is set with holinesse or godlinesse as Titus 2. 12. Ephe. 4. Rom. 1. 18. Vnrighteousnesse set beside vngodlinesse or set alone is the spring of all euils from one man to another and Righteousnesse named apart from godlinesse is the roote of all duties amongst men it is as the Tree and all other vertues of the second Table as the branches it is as a Fountaine they be as the Riuers it is as the body they as the members This Righteousnesse is distinguished into habituall or actuall Righteousnesse habituall Righteousnesse is that gift of God which is poured into the hearts of the Elect to enable them to will and to doe good things tending to the good of our Neighbour whereof in the fourth to the Ephesians Actual righteousnesse is the exercise of this gift whē out of loue we practise such things wherby our neighbor may be benefited Hereof the Apostle spake 1 Iohn 2. 19. He that worketh Righteousnesse is righteous This gift and act of Righteousnesse is that for the which Noah Lot and sundry others are highly commended in the holy Scripture Gen 6. 9 Iob 1. 1. Now as touching the difference about Righteousnesse betweene the Children of God and others this is it The godly through this vniuersall Righteousnesse are disposed freely and of their owne accord to seeke the good of euery of their Neighbours in one thing as wel as in another according to the rules of the Word vnto the glory of God Whereas the wicked doe some righteous things to some persons now and then whom they affect which crosse not their owne pleasure nor gaine or credite not out of any loue to men nor out of any respect to Gods will or glory but out of selfe-loue with by-respects of vaine glory and worldly profit and therefore in nothing doing righteously and in most things committing vnrighteousnesse cleane contrary to the course of iust and righteous persons who doe worke righteous things and that righteously out of charity vnto men and vnto the praise of God and that at all times and towards all kind of men both friends and enemies according to their meanes and as occasions be offered them truly repenting where they faile in any things and afterwards endeauouring to become more 〈◊〉 Of Loue. Aquila SIR it hath been taught me that vnder Righteousnesse are contained all duties towards God and men and that in this sense Godlinesse is a part of Righteousnesse howbeit I perceiue that wee are to speake of it as it is separate and distinct from godlinesse And now you haue spoken thus far of Righteousnesse were it not good that wee first set vpon these workes of Righteousnesse which wee are bound to performe towards others in respect of some degree that God hath put vpon vs for thus it hath pleased God himselfe to proceede in the laying out those duties of the second Table he beginneth with such duties as we owe vnto others in regard of our
place and degree Honour thy father c. Apollos Indeede friend Aquila you say well and this platforme had not beene amisse for the decalogue or ten Commandements of the Law as they doe immediately come from God so they are most perfect for matter and most exquisite for order and manner of deliuery the chiefest and greatest duties first mentioned and after the meaner and lesser and that both in the first and second Table howbeit we are not bound so strictly and precisely to follow that order in our teaching and instruction but that it may be altered without fault A president of which alteration is the Apostle Paul himselfe both in his fift Chapter to the Ephesians and the 3. and fourth Chapter to the Colossians wherein after doctrine he descendeth to morall duties and he affordeth the first place to such as be common and then commeth vnto the peculiar and proper duties in which steppes I thinke it fit for vs to tread in speaking first of generall and next of speciall duties Aquila I mislike not your purpose and yet ere you deale with such particular graces as enable vs to doe duties to other men and to our selues let me call to mind that which you saide before of the workes which we are to doe towards God that truth and sincerity is an affection common to them all to distinguish them from the workes of piety done by Hypocrites who haue a certaine feare of God and loue of God c but it is seuered from truth it being the mercy done to sanctified persons that they should truly loue and feare God and doe all duties towards him in soundnesse right so is it in these duties which belong to men As in our natural body bloud is dispersed through all the body and where bloud is there is spirit too so sincerity and truth runneth through all duties as bloud in the body and where any grace is there is truth with it and all the good things which the godly doe are done in truth and godly vprightnesse They loue their Neighbour in truth and are truly mercifull and truly meeke and truly sober and truly chaste and not in appearance onely to the eye of men but be such before God as they seeme to be before men in all duties seeking to honour and obey the name of God wherein lyeth the grand difference betweene them and the vngodly who doe the same things for matter and substance which holy men doe but not in the same manner because they are voide of sincerenesse Apollos You say right As euery Starre doth partake in the light of the Sunne to take brightnesse from it so truth and sincerity passeth through all Christian graces euen as the soule that doth animate and quicken euery part of the body for all graces if they lacke truth and soundnesse they be as rotten members or as shadowes and dead carkases which carry the semblance of graces and are not the true fire doth not more differ from the painted then grace from grace that is the sincere graces from such as be but counterfet A Man or a Lyon pictured artificially seemes a man or a lyon and is not so vertues seuered from truth and sincerity haue a goodly shew but are not the liuely things themselues But now it were meete that we did set vpon that amiable grace of loue which is the glue and band that linkes all other graces together and holds vs Chistians fast tyed and linked as many stickes in one bundle Therefore worthily it is called the band of perfection without which all humane things fal apeeces and come to ruine Let me heare what you haue heard and learned of this worthy grace of loue wherewith we loue one another whose gift it is whence it springs what it is what are the properties and effects of it the manner and measure thereof and what are the duties of loue whom we are to loue and by what perswasions we may be incited to the exercise of this vertue wherein it differs from faith and finally how we may ouercome the lets and hinderances of loue with such other things as shall come to your remembrance not forgetting to tell vs along as you goe how true loue differs from the counterfet Aquila Sir ye haue enioyned mee taske enough which I had rather it had happened to your selfe but sithence ye haue put it on me I will performe my endeuour be you ready to helpe defects and by your patience I will first tell you what it is I take Loue or Charity to be that grace whereby wee are moued to hold our Neighbour deare vnto vs also to desire and seeke his good in all things that be deare vnto him euen as we would haue our selues and our things deare vnto others This grace it is the free gift of God who is Loue himselfe and author worker of loue in all others Therefore Paul prayeth God for this gift and prayseth him for it as in his salutation of the Churches is to be well perceiued no man nor other creature can worke loue in vs and by nature we haue it not it is God onely who out of his free mercy doth both plant and continually vphold it in vs. And let this generally be spoken of loue and all the other vertues following that they grow not in the barren soyle of our hearts but come from without being the fruites and gifts of Gods Spirit Galat. 5. 22. This Loue giuen vs of God is alwayes linked with the loue of God whose Daughter it is being bred and brought forth by it for therefore we loue our Neighbours because we first loue God Thus the Apostle Iohn teacheth 1 Ioh. 4. 21. Our mutual loue being a beame of our loue to God as our loue to God is a sparkle of his loue to vs neither can any man loue God but because he is first loued of him neither can any loue man who first doth not loue God neither can any but loue men who haue in them the loue of God for this enforceth vs for Gods sake to loue such as he will haue vs loue hauing put his Image and likenesse in them and neerely linked them to vs the parties whom wee are to loue are our Neighbour that is euery one that commeth of Adam of what Countrey Religion Language soeuer euen euery man and woman being so neere to vs as to be of our kind and bloud and hauing any need of vs in any sort euery such is our Neighbour vpon whom we must bestow our loue not as commonly men thinke them onely to be our Neighbours who dwelles in the same streete or burrow The parable of the Samaritan quitteth this who acknowledged the wounded Iew for his Neighbour Luke 10. 33. Christs example also doing good to Samaritans as well as Iewes Iohn 4. 26. cleareth this point Apollos But seeing God onely is to be loued and that with all the heart is it not a wrong to God to giue any