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A04187 Iustifying faith, or The faith by which the just do liue A treatise, containing a description of the nature, properties and conditions of Christian faith. With a discouerie of misperswasions, breeding presumption or hypocrisie, and meanes how faith may be planted in vnbeleeuers. By Thomas Iackson B. of Diuinitie and fellow of Corpus Christi Colledge in Oxford.; Commentaries upon the Apostles Creed. Book 4 Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640. 1615 (1615) STC 14311; ESTC S107483 332,834 388

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trickes of Monckes and Friers to cousen the people by making images wagge or seeme to speake may serue as an embleme of that imposture or Gull which Satan by Gods iust iudgement hath put vpon their subtilest wits in this argument These Couseners made the people ofttimes thinke some Saint had moued or spoken when a knaue did stirre the image or vent his own vnhallowed breath through it or about it and Satan makes them beleeue they are moued by the spirit of God in such actions as are not enspired by faith but thrust vpon them by his wicked Angels Workes of charity they esteeme all such as outwardly resemble the actions of Christ or his Saints though conceiued not by faith but vpon other motiues as motion infused by art may to the eye of man exactly counterfeit motion naturall This is a maine branch of that great mistery of iniquity For by this error as their faith is neuer reuiued so their workes though faire and pompous in outward shew and such as would be most pleasant vnto their God did they spring from minds and affections renewed by liuely faith being superadded onely to this dead faith neither can perfect it nor receiue perfection from it but become like sweet flowers vsually put vpon dead corps the sent of whose corruptions hinder they may for a time but surer at length to participate thereof then communicate their fragrancieto it 10 It is a contemplation very profitable to marke what troopes of errors may issue from one place of scripture mistaken and how priuate opinions conceiued through ignorance and conceiued by negligence are oftimes established by wilfulnesse of publike authority for who but a schooleman that considers morall propositions in scriptures as if they were mathematicall definitions or indemonstrable principles no whit dependent of what went before or comes after could not at first perusall haue obserued that Saint Iames had a purpose in that Chapter to taxe his pupils as well for want of true faith as of good workes yea the workes they did to be nothing worth becouse not wrought by faith had without all respect of persons or partiality in the Law of God But the Romanist not obseruing what is a point most cleare that vniforme fidelity or faithfulnesse in all commaundements of God is the very formall effect of that faith which was in Abraham and Saint Paul so much commends First takes that dead and vaine faith Saint Iames disproues to be the same with that Saint Paul so much commends and consequently to this error denies iustification by faith but as it is informed with charity which is as much as to say we are iustified by charity and not by faith and vnto these two errors annexeth a third most pernitious concerning the nature of workes which either not conceiued by such vniformity of faith as Paul requires or not managed by a paralel vniformity become altogether Iewish and their best righteousnesse that practise them like the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises Lastly to reare vp a roofe euery way answerable to the foundation they leade vs from the Gospell vnto the Law and make the eternall couenant made vnto mankinde in Christ subseruiant to the couenant made with our first parents as shall be demonstrated against them in the Article of the last iudgement And what other consequence could one expect of this error whereto noe other could be paralell which makes Charity the forme or workes the spirit of faith yet that not onely their best priuate writers but their Church representatiue is tainted with this stupide heresie this decree of the Trent Counsell will serue as a testimony vpon record If any man shall auouch that as oft as grace is lost through sinne faith is alwaies lost together with it or that faith which remaines after losse of grace to be no true faith although no liuing faith or the man that hath faith without charity to be no Christian Let him be accursed 11. If these curses could hurt any Saint Paul should haue the fulles measure of them for questionlesse he neuer thought such faith as hee commended could remaine without grace or integrity of conscience Saint Iames I thinke should hardly escape vnlesse he would subscribe to this conclusion that the Diuell was a Christian And were Scotus Ockain or Swisset now aliue they would find all the Iesuites in the world play for these hundred yeares to hold the contrary and defend the Trent Councell in this decree For such faith as the Councell requires to make a Christian may be yea is in the worst kinde of Diuels albeit Valentian hath laboured to find this difference That faith without workes or grace is in men the gift of God so is not the faith of Diuels No more was this answere of his suggested by Gods spirit or the spirit of truth For not to question whether such dead faith as Saint Iames speakes of be the gift of God or no but rather supposing it were this argues a difference onely in the cause none in the essence nature or quality That God created wants in the beginning doth not argue they were of a more excellent nature then ordinary Lions not created but propagated by nature are now of And if the quality of faith be the same in the Trent Councels Christians and in Diuels Valentian doth rather wrong the Almighty in making him the Author of it in the one then prooue either it or his owne cause to be the better by saying it is the gift of God For though it be his gift and yet may be without grace or charity and without these of necessitie as vnfruitfull as the faith of Diuels both which Valentian grants it is no more auaileable to make a Christian then the faith of Diuels is Nay in that it may be without workes theirs is more fruitfull then it for as Saint Iames tels vs theirs workes feare and trembling in them were that faith which the Trent Councell makes the forme of a Christian so operatiue in it nature it could not be as is obserued before without workes or charity For if it wrought a trembling feare of his power it would worke a reioicing loue of his mercie and impell them as to auoid the stroke of the one so to embrace the gentle strokings of the other Their owne writers obserue that to feare God in the language of Canaan is to worship him and is it lesse to beleeue in him then to feare him To conclude what ancient father is there which should not be accursed if God did not blesse where these Trent Fathers curse For though their charity would not suffer them to depriue any professing true religion of that title wherein he ioied the name of a Christian because they knew not what faith they had in their hearts yet few of them but indefinitely auouch thus much That he falsly vsurps the glorious name of a Christian or faithfull man which is not faithfull in Gods commandement
most potent or apt to moue it as a iust ballance is alwaies farthest cast by the greatest waight But though when temptations are a farre off and our corrupt humours not stirred we say with Peter Verba vi●ae aeternae habes Lord thou hast the wordes of eternall life and what pleasures of this transitory life should we affect in comparision of them yet we cannot alwaies approoue our sayings by actuall choice when both are offered to our tast And no maruell seeing our sence of the one is of all others the most quicke our conceipt of it distinct and proper of the other most men in this life haue no semblable apprehension no true or liuely tast but rather a smel some heare-say conceipt or imaginary representation Besides the pleasures of that bodily sence by which we liue and other desires of the flesh too deepely incorporated in our corrupt nature often lust so vehemently against the spirit inclining vs to a liking of the sood of life that we cannot doe as we would nor continue our assent vnto it as better for the time being then prosecution of some sensuall good comming in actuall competition with it lately ad●●dged of farre better worth whilest contrary inclinations were not swared with present oportunity of enioying their proper obiects The immediate cause of this backe starting with the remedy comes most fi●ly to be discussed ced in the article of euerlasting life But albeit euen the best are sometimes yea often ouertaken with this fault the habituall constitution of euery faithfull soule must be much better and our faith howsoeuer defectiue in degrees must be for essence or quality a true tast for as a learned interpreter of sacred writ hath well obserued out of Plato Om●is vita gustu ducitur without tast there is no life The degrees of perfection which our spirituall tast wants in respect of that bodily sence whereto it answeres in proportion is recompenced euen in this life by the greatnes of the good it apprehends or penury of eternall comfort or refreshing wherewith who so will seriously looke into the state of his owne soule shall finde it pinched euen in the abundance of worldly contentments 3. This true tast of Gods word reuealed for our good alone it is which can sweeten affliction to vs and make vs couragious to aduenture vpon all difficulties that can bee obiected to deterre vs from entering into the land of promise Such speculatiue conceipts of this food of life as we may find in the subtile disputes of greatest Schoolemen are of as little force to enflame our hearts with longing after that heauenly kingdome as poeticall descriptions of some farre Countries pleasures o● commodities are to make vs vndertake their Conquest yea as much lesse auaileable to this purpose as their stile is lesse apt to moue affection then the others No imperiall Law I thinke did euer prohibit any prouince to haue maps of the imperiall seat or homericall descriptions of the Emperour and his Nobles banquets though some to my remebrance haue strictly restrained all transportation of grapes or other pleasant commodities into barbarous countries least barbarians hauing experience of their sweetnes might out of loue to the Land wherein they grow be tempted to worke some mischiefe to the inhabitants as the Gals are said to haue beene drawne ouer the Alpes vpon the like temptatiō Generally euery obiect caeterisparibus moues the obiect to which it belongs so much the more and breeds an assent so much the firmer and more stedfast as the conceipt of it is more proper distinct or homogeneall Sight of beauty decent gestures or comely motion more deepely wounds the hearts of louers then the most hyperbolicall sonets that can be made in praise of feature vnseene Smell of meates is more forcible then sight to stirre the appetite because this sence hath greater affinity then the other with tast which alone can rightly iudge of meates and drinkes because the temper of it only rightly symbolizeth with their qualities 4. Euery child of Adam is an old man from his birth iust of Barzillahs temper without all tast of such dainties as the great King hath prouided for him All of vs by nature herein worse then his decrepit age that we neuer had any true rellish of them but soit is with vs vntill regenerated as if we should imagine one grieuously distempered from his cradle to whom others may truly commend sundry meates for sweet and wholesome which notwithstanding prooue distastfull bitter to his palate albeit from a good opinion of their loue and honesty that vppon experience commend them to him still retaining a confused assent to such goodnesse in them as he cannot perceiue but guesses at as many well disposed naturall men doe at the sweetnesse of the bread of life not distrusting the reports of others that so much magnifie it yet erring as much in their conceipt of it as he that had neuer seene house or towne better built then the thatched cottages of that poore village wherein hee was borne should in his imaginations of London Venice or some like famous Citie whose error best appeares when hee comes to compare his former fancies with the distinct view or sight of their greatnesse their stately and magnificent buildings Now as our naturall life beginnes and is maintained by bodily tast so is the new man framed and nourished in vs by this tast spirituall which onely rightly apprehends the nature worth and qualities of heauenly mysteries it selfe consisting in a temper of mind symbolizing with diuine goodnesse or with the heauenly mind of the second Adam Our soules and affections thus affected haue the same proportion to the seuerall branches of Gods will reuealed that euery sence or faculty hath to it proper obiect and this apprehension of our spirituall food by a proper distinct symbolicall conceipt of it goodnesse is the last and most essentiall difference wherein the nature of faith as Christian consists which cannot possibly be wrought but by the spirit of God For as the obiect is such must the assent be supernaturall otherwise it cannot haue that proportion to food spirituall that bodily tast hath to naturall The particular manner of the spirits working this alteration in our soules is a mystery at the least to my simplicitie inscrutable To the capacity of the vulgar we may resemble his working in generall to a Phisitian that restores one desperately sicke and vtterly destitute of tast to a right rellish and appetite of his meate partly by remouing the distempered humours wherein that sence of life lay buried partly by reuiuing his dead spirits by insusing of some pretious water Answerable to one of these meanes is the infusion of supernaturall grace which quickeneth vs vnto life making vs new men in CHRIST IESVS answearable to the other is practice of ordinary meanes appointed by God for mortification of the old man all which without the operation of the spirit are nothing auaileable What is required
on our parts that are patients is handled in the third section of this Booke Whether ability by nature we haue any or any cooperatiue with Gods spirit in this cure shall by the diuine assistance be disputed at large in the seauenth Booke of these Commentaries Here at length we may define the faith by which the iust doth liue to be a firme and constant assent or adherence vnto the mercies and louing kindnes of the Lord or generally to the spirituall food exhibited in his sacred word as much better then this life it selfe and all the contentments it is capable of grounded vpon a tast or relish of the sweetnesse wrought in the soule or heart of man by the Spirit of Christ The termes for the most part are the Prophet Dauids not metaphoricall as some may fancie much lesse aequiuocall but proper and homogeneall to the subiect defined For whatsoeuer internall affinity or reall identity of conceipt there is or can be betwixt life temporall and mortall which no man I thinke denies to be vniuocall the same may be found betwixt food spirituall and corporall if we consider not so much the phisicall matter or corpulency of the later as the metaphisicall quintessence which is one and the same in both saue onely that it is pure and extracted in the one but mixt and incorporated or in a sort buried in the other but of this analogy betwixt food corporall and spirituall in the treatise of Christs presence in the sacrament 5 Whether this Assent be virtuall or habituall I will not so much as question Be it whether the Reader list to make it question there can be none but that it admits many interruptions in acts or operations Nor doth this argue the meanes or pledges of saluation should be lesse euident then matters scientificall so long as this habit or constitution of mind is not eclipsed by interposition of carnall lusts or earthly thoughts wherunto our euidence of spiritual matters is more obnoxious then our speculatiue perswasions of abstract entities so is our bodily taste oftener corrupted then the sight and yet that Assent wee giue in perfect health vnto the distinct quality of wholsome food no lesse euident or certaine then that wee giue vnto the true differences of things seene The minde once thus illuminated with grace and renewed by faith whiles not darkned by exhalations from our naturall corruptions whiles free from passion or motion of bad affection actually moued and assisted by the spirit hath the same proportion to truth supernaturall of this inferiour ranke that the vnderstanding without supernaturall concourse or illumination of grace hath to Obiects meerely naturall nor can it dissent from the truth whiles this temper or constitution lasts as the Iesuite imagines Howbeit so great euidence of matters spirituall as others haue of humane sciences is not required in all Onely this I dare affirme that although it be in some as great or in some greater this doth not exempt their knowledge from the former definition of faith For who would question whether S. Iohn S. Peter and S. Paul had not as great euidence of misteries as either Aristotle had of philosophicall or Euclide of mathematicall principles or conclusions And yet what they so euidently knew they belieued and assented vnto by the supernaturall guifte or habit of faith and it was the greater euidence of things belieued which made their beliefe more firme and strong then ours is and enflamed their hearts with loue of God and zeale of his glorie more ardent then our weake faith is capable of CHAP. X. Of the generall consequences or properties of true Faith Loue Fidelity and Confidence with the manner of their resultance from it 1. THat the goodnesse of whatsoeuer we enioy is better perceiued by vicissitude of want then continuall fruition is a maxim whereof none can want experience Hence the Poeticall Philosopher hath wittily faigned penury and indigence to bee the Mother of Loue with which conceit the vulgar prouerbe Hunger of all sauces is the best hath great affinity For this first affection or prime symptome of sense being but a perception of want or indigence causeth a more quicke taste or rellish then full stomackes can haue of their meate But nature without further alteration or qualification of any other faculty immediatly teacheth vs to like that best which best we rellish and finde most good in Nor skils it whether this loue or liking of meates best relished reside in the sense of taste it selfe or from approbation of it immediatly result in some other faculty by way of sympathie both wayes this internall sense or apprehension of want or indigence of carnall nutriment is still the only Mother of loue to bodily meates Thus hath the folly of man which wilfully depriued himselfe of celestiall food set forth the loue and wisedome of God who hath made this want or indigence of spirituall meate whose apprehension is the first roote of our spirituall sense a meane to quicken our taste or relish of his mercies and louing kindnesse which is the principall obiect of that faith by which we liue But our taste once sharpned to relish his mercies aright without any peculiar reformation of the will or new infusion of other grace into any part of the humane soule then what is either included in faith or concomitant with it cannot but pierce our hearts with loue of his infinite goodnesse whence this sweetnesse distils Euen loue naturall or ciuill if vnfaigned betweene equalls brings forth vnity and consent of minde mutually to will and nill the same things betweene parties in condition of life or measure of iudgement or discretion vnequall a conformity of the inferiours will to the superiours direction Much more doth this spirituall loue of God thus conceiued from a true and liuely taste of his loue and goodnesse towards vs kindle an ardent desire of doing what he likes best whence vnto vs as to our Sauiour it becomes meate and drinke to do our fathers will and finish his vvorke For seeing man liueth not by bread only but by euery vvord that proceedeth out of the mouth of God thus to doe must needs be part of our spirituall foode 2. From faith thus working through loue ariseth that most generall property whose affinitie with faith is such as it takes the same name fidelitie or faithfulnesse in all the seruice of God without respect to the fulfilling of our owne particular resolutions or desires For once assenting vnto euery part of his will knowne as good and fit to be done by vs as if to do it were meate and drinke vnto our soules wee forthwith abandon all sloth and negligence much more deceit and fraudulencie in his imploiments Of this generall fidelity practice of charitable offices to our neighbours is but a part or branch though a principall one as hauing more immediate reference to the loue and goodnesse we apprehend in God towards vs the taste whereof is then sincere
of speech and in all kind of knowledge not destitute of any gift wherewith they might foile their aduersaries at their owne weapons as Moses had done the Egyptians in working such wonders as they most admired in their inchaunters But though all these gifts were from one and the same spirit from which nothing can proceed but good yet brought they forth such bad effects in these mens soules not purified from reliques of heathenisme as excellencie of secular learning vsually doth in the vnregenerate Euery one was giuen to magnifie the guifts wherein hee excelled whence as the oratour saith of Aristotle and Socrates each delighted in his owne faculty despised or which was worse hated and enuied his brother as appeares from the first and twelfth chapters of that epistle To men thus affected what duty more necessary to be inculcated then loue and vnity of soules and spirits which for this reason the Apostle so forcibly presseth vpon them from the vnity of that spirit whence they had receiued their seuerall graces Their faith was fruitfull enough in wonderous workes in healing in excellency of speeches diueisitie of tongues and learned displaies of diuine mysteries What was the reason Because they were desirous of fame and glory by manifestation of their skill in these and faith though of it selfe but weake works strongly when it hath coniunction with strong naturall affections or is stirred vp by vehement desires 5. But that their faith was not fitly quallified for the attainment of life and sauing health not such as could iustifie them in the sight of God though able to magnifie his name before the heathen and declare his wonderfull power is euident in that it did not commaund but rather serue their vainglorious desires or hopes of praise amongst men The stronger it was the prouder were they and more ambitious and the more such the more dissentious so as the strength of faith whiles it swaied this way did ouerbeare the naturall inclination to brotherly loue and kindnesse the vertue and praise whereof not with men only but with God had they knowne or rightly valued it would haue enflamed their hearts with greater loue of it then of that popular ostentation they sought after But what should haue taught them to haue valued it aright Onely faith for by it alone we ●ightly discerne good from euill and amongst good things which is best But by what faith should these Corinthians haue come to the knowledge of brotherly loue The same by which they wrought wonders or some other If by some other the Apostle in all congruity should first haue exhorted them to embrace it otherwise he had commended the beauty of Christian loue but vnto blinde men For this was a disposition so well resembling the nature of God and such a peculiar gift of his spirit as the naturall man could not possibly discerne the vertue of it If by the same faith that they already had then the same faith which with loue doth iustifie did really exist without loue in these Corinthians vntill this time which no protestant must grant This difficulty Bellarmine presseth out of Saint Augustines wordes vpon the forecited place of Iohn yee see how the Euangelist reprooues certaine whom not with standing hee tear●es belieuers who had they held on as they were well entred had ouercome the loue of humane glory by their proficiencie I had reason to thinke any pontifician should haue been afraid to giue vs notice of this place least we hence inferre that faith alone ouercommeth all humane glory and subiects it to the loue of God and of his praises and by this reason it was to perfect loue not loue it in these Corinthians For it was the loue of humane glory which alienated their loue from God and from their neighbour But as his manner is hee wrests this good Fathers meaning to his present purpose If proficiencie in such faith could thus ouercome the loue of humane glory it was certainely true faith euen in the Iewish rulers For faith is the same in the beginning in the progresse and in the period or perfection though not alwaies alike strong otherwise when faith increaseth it remaines not the same it was before but rather vanish and another spring vp in it place This obiection goes wide of the marke he was to aime at vnlesse we hold what we need not that faith doth iustifie by the bare essence or quality without any competent degree or measure For though we affirme That faith which iustifies cannot possibly be without charity we may interprete our selues thus faith if it be in such a degree as is required for iustification or right apprehension of Gods mercies in Christ is alwaies necessarily attended vpon with a correspondent measure of Christian loue yet so attēded not loue but it alone laies immediat hold on life eternall But howsoeuer the obiection it selfe is idle and more sophisticall then theologicall For may not hee be said to profit in learning that brings his opinions to perfect science albeit the essences of opinion and sciences be distinct Or who would denie him to be a good proficient in moralities that brings the seed of chastitie vnto continency continencie vnto the habit of temperance The matter in all is but one the progresse most direct yet not without some rests or stations by which the naturall inclination or affection remaines neither so altogether the same nor so quite different but the old distinction of materially and formaly might resolue the doubt Euery new addition of vnities to numbers or of Angles to figures alters their formes but abolisheth not the vnities or Angles prae existent So might the beliefe whereof Saint Austen speakes be materially the same in beginners and proficients but formally diuerse as getting some alteration in the quality or better consistence then before it had and become not only stronger but more liuely and actiue In beginners because not able to ouersway selfe-loue or foolish desires of humane praises it might be without Christian charity towards God or their neighbours in proficients or such as by it had conquered loue of the world or humane glory it could not be without the loue of God and of his children But most consonantly to the forme of doctrine vsed by our Sauiour in this argument wee may in my iudgement answere to the question aboue propounded concerning these Corinthians by considering faith first according to the essence or specificall quality of it as it was sowne in their soules by the spirit secondly according to the radication or taking of it in their hearts or seate of affections which was to be wrought by the spirit but necessarily required not anie infusion of new spirituall grace numerically much lesse specifically distinct from that they had The quallity or essence of faith if we consider it preciselie as the formall tearme of creation taken as the schoolemen doe it for a momentary act not as Scriptures doe for the whole worke of
not in them much lesse doth our felicitie Now as in all mens iudgements he liues much better that is able to liue of his owne then he which hath the same supplies of life in more competent measure from his friends beneuolence so much happier is that soule which hath delight and contentment competent within it selfe then that which hath them heaped vpon it from without seeing all the delights or pleasures these can beget suppose a precedent paine or sorrow bred from desires vnnecessary in themselues but such as lay a necessity vpon vs to satisfie them whiles wee haue them It is pleasant no doubt to a woman with childe to haue what shee longs for but much more pleasant to a manlike minde neuer to be troubled with such longings Not to need honour wealth bodily pleasures or other branches of voluptuous life is a better ground of true peace and ioy then full satisfaction of our eager desires whilest they are fixed on these or other transitories The strength of our spirits by whose vnited force our vnion with the spirit of truth must be ratified is much dissipated by the distractions which their very presence or entertainment necessarily require so doth the life and rellish of all true delight internall into which the true peace of conscience must be engrafted exhale by continuall thinking on things without vs. Finally whiles we trouble our selues about manie things it is impossible we should euer intirely possesse our own soules with patience or make the best of them for purchasing that vnum necessarium that one thing which is onely necessary But these are points which require more full peculiar treatises to which many Philosophers especially Plato Aristotle Seneca Plutarch and Epictetus haue spoken much very pertinent to true diuinity as shall by Gods grace appeare in the Article of euerlasting life As in some other particular discourses framed some yeeres agoe for mine owne priuate resolution The counsell I here commend vnto the reader is no way dissonant vnto Saint Paules aduice vnto his dearest sonne Godlinesse with contentment is great gaine for we brought nothing into this world and it is certaine we can carry nothing out and hauing food and raiment let vs therewith be content But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drowne men in destruction and perdition For the loue of money is the roote of all euill which while some coueted after they haue erred from the faith and pierced themselues thorough with many sorrowes But thou O man of God flie these things and follow after righteousnesse godlinesse faith loue patience meekenesse Fight the good fight of faith CHAP. VIII Of the goodnesse or honesty of heart required by our Sauiour in fruitfull hearers of the ordinary progresse from faith naturall to spirituall and the different esteeme of diuine truthes or precepts in the regenerate man and him that is not but sincerely desires to be such vacancie to attend all intimations of the spirit to be sought after by all meanes possible That alienation of our chiefe desires from their corrupt obiects is much auaileable for purchase of the inestimable pearle 1. IF riches loue of honour or voluptuous life make the soule so vnfruitfull that temper which in proportion answeares to good soile well husbanded presupposeth a vacuity of these desires The positiue qualification whereto these negatiue properties are annexed is more particularly described by our Sauiour as Saint Luke relates in his exposition of this parable Eut that which fell in good ground are they which with an honest and good heart heare the Word and keepe it and bring forth fruit with patience Vnto such honesty or goodnesse of heart apt thus to receiue and retaine the word of faith heard is required first a sincerity of intention or choice which presupposeth a distinct and vncorrupt notion of good and euill secondly a constant resolution of prosecuting the right choyce made which presupposeth a greater freedome or liberty of practique faculties then can bee found in the couetous ambitious or voluptuous For their desires as all concupiscences of the flesh preiudice the sinceritie of the intention or choice by corrupting the notions of good and euil and maime our resolutions withal to follow what is euidently best by counterswaying or resisting our inclinations vnto goodnesse The point most likely to trouble a curious inquisitor in this argument is whether vnto the bearing of fruit with patience there bee required a goodnesse or honesty of heart precedent to the infusion of sanctifying grace or that faith by which the iust doth liue as vnto a faire croppe there is a goodnesse of soile requisite besides the goodnesse of the seed sowne in it To my capacity he should much wrest our Sauiours words and offer violence to his spirit that should deny the truth or proportion of this similitude Nor can I perceiue any inconuenience not easily auoidable by application of the former distinction of a twofold goodnesse or honesty one commendable onely in it kinde or by way of meere passiue qualification in it selfe of no more worth then a field ploughed but vn●own another acceptable in the sight of God as the croppe or fruit is to the husband-man The former is ordinarily precedent the later alwaies subsequent to true and liuely faith All soiles at least in this our land are though ploughed and man●red alike vnapt to bring forth good wheat sweet grapes or other precious fruit without seeds precedent yet not all alike apt to bring forth fruit sowne or planted in them supposing their ●illage or husbandry were equall It is alike true of all the sonnes of Adam that all by nature are the sonnes of wrath all destitute of the grace of God all alike vnapt to doe any thing truely good yet the degrees or measure of their a●ersion from God and goodnesse not perhaps alike in all albeit wee consider them as they are by birth without difference of education or as they are by meere ciuill education without any naturall knowledge of Gods written Lawe That such as heare the word and are pertakers of outward Christian discipline though not inwardly sanctified are not equally indisposed to bring forth fruit is necessarily included in the difference of vnfruitfull hearers resembled by the high way side and by stony and thorny grounds The framing notwithstanding of this dispotition supposed precedent to the infusion of liuely faith may not be ascribed to our abilities but to the spirit of God directing our thoughts and enabling vs for conceiuing a kinde of preuiall faith more then naturall by some externall or inferior grace so proportioned to these effects as sanctifying grace is to the fruits of true holinesse Probable it is might we speak out of experience that as Bees first make their Cels then fill them with hony or as the formatiue vertue first like an artisicer frames the organs or instruments of life and sense and
makes the body a sitte shop or receptacle for the humane soule which comes afterwards to exercise all her functions and operations in so doth the spirit vsually preorganize the heart for liuely and diuine faith to work the workes of God in it aright But as these workes are wrought immediately by faith though principally by the spirit which infuseth it so likewise is the heart organized by such morall or imperfect faith as they sometimes that had afterwards sinne against the holy Ghost but by it as the spirits instrument vsually preexistent to the faith which neuer failes or vnto the life of grace VVhatsoeuer may bee rightly ascribed vnto the man already regenerate in production of true fruits of the spirit as much I thinke we may giue without offence to our endeauours in framing this passiue capacity or disposition In the former after our regeneration wee are by consent of most diuines coworkers with the spirit of God albeit the works be of a supernatural quaility and so whatsoeuer we are we may without inconuenience be thought in the other it being of a nature as far inferior to the former works as the grace wherby it is wrought is to the spirit of sanctification But in what sense wee are said to cooperate with God by Gods assistance in it proper place where notwithstanding any captious or preiudicate surmise of this assertion it shall be made cleare that I giue as little to mans abilities in eyther worke as he that in reformed Churches giues the least But to our present purpose 2 The meere naturall man whether Infidell or carelesse liuer the excesse of his indocility supposed is so affected to the word of faith as a Barbatian that neither knows letter of booke nor other nurture is to ingenuous arts or liberall scienences Such as submit themselues to sacred discipline and heare the VVord preached with intention though but morrally sincere to profit by it are in this like little children or nouices in good literature that as these abstaine from sport or play for feare of chiding or whipping and follow their bookes sometimes onely for like motiues sometimes for shame least their equals should outstrippe them sometimes in hope of commendation or other childish reward so hee that is not yet but desires to bee regenerated eschews what Gods Lawe forbids but with difficulty and reluctance oft times for feare of ecclesiastique or humane censure sometimes vpon suspition rather then religious dread of plagues from Heauen hee addresseth himselfe likewise to the practise of affirmatiue precepts but vncheerefully and with distraction moued thereto either because he would not be vnlike those men whose vprightnes his conscience cannot but cōmend or from som surmise rather then sure hope of diuine reward for so doing neuer from vniforme and sincere delight in the good it selfe enioyned or in the fountaine of goodnesse whence the iniunction was deriued Yet thus to be held in compasse and as it were bound to good outward abearance much auailes for bringing vs to our right mindes or for our recouery from hereditary madnesse from which our soules in some measure freed still take some tincture from the goodnesse of the obiects whereunto they are applyed and this restraint of desires or interposed abstinence from lusts of the flesh yeild opportunities or fit seasons for heauenly medicines to worke vpon vs which otherwise would proue but as good phisicke to full stomacks leauing no more impression of their sweetnesse in our mindes then wholsome foode doth in distempered or infected pallates The temper of the heart once seasoned with habituall grace is in respect of the word of faith like to a minde come to maturity in choicer learning and reaping fruits more sweet then hony or the pleasantest grape from seedes as bitter as the birch or willow so as now no bodilie paine or griefe not gout or stone or other disease can withdraw him from those studies vnto which smart of the rod in his yonger daies could hardly driue him To enforce or allure him to them vpon any other respects then onely for their natiue sweetnesse were as superfluous and impertinent as to threaten an ambitious man with honour or hiring a miser to fill his bagges with gold The fruits precedent and subsequent to true faith are in shape or outward forme as often heretofore hath been implyed the same but different in their taste or relish as also in their manner of production To abstaine from wrongs personall or reall from all pollution of the flesh to abiure ambitious proiects to mislike reuengefull wanton or couetous thoughts are fruits that may vniformely spring from that honesty and goodnesse of heart vsually precedent as we suppose to the internall renouation of the minde but must bee enforced as it were by art or externall culture The contrary positiue practises which ●esemble the workes of true sanctity notwithstanding all outward helps or enforcements of discipline good example or the like are seldome brought foorth without such testinesse or morosity as wee see in children breeding teeth whereas true faith alwaies brings forth her fruit with ioy Abstinence from euill to the minde once purified by it is as a perpetuall pleasant banquet to mortifie all bodily members more sweet then life accompanied with perfect health or then the liuelihood of youth the choicest pleasures the world or flesh can proffer though lawfull or freed from the sting of conscience seeme but as dregges to be able to represse them or intir●ly to enjoy our soules without them is the pure quintesence of that delight or ioy which others take in them But this is a peace which is not vsually gotten without long warre and many combats ●o thus composed we are in actuall league with Go● full conquerors ouer sinne and Sathan In the conflicts that procure it or rather are precedent to the procurement of it the flesh I take it hath not alwaies the sanctifying spirit for it antagonist these are sorrowes which vsually goe before the conception of true faith of which likewise such as are actuall participants doe not alwaies fight the good fight of faith but euen these sometimes whiles this generall sleeepes as they that haue not as yet taken anie earnest or prest money of him alwaies before regeneration offer battaile to the world diuell and flesh out of such resolutions to renounce them as haue beene obserued to be right in their kinde and suggested by the spirit as only assistant not as inhabitant in the heart But howsoeuer our finall victory ouer the flesh cannot be gotten but by the spirit dwelling in vs yet to entertaine these skirmishes or conflicts though out of resolutions not inherently spirituall is to verie good purpose For seeeing we cannot assigne the very mathematicall point how far reason directed by scripture or ecclesiastike discipline or externally guided by the spirit but not yet quickned by sanctifying grace or faith apt to iustifie can reach nor know the very instant wherein such grace or faith
teneatur Catholicus adhaerere ●alibus Quini●●ò quic quid Chi●roponatur per Scripturam vel Ecclesiam fore credendam nulla alia notitia habita credere tene●ur Ad c●●●imat●on●m cum dititur nullus credidit nisiquia illud sibi constat si loquatur de constantia notitiae ●●ls●m est● si de constantia adhaesionis tunr etiam potest negari quia aequiualet isti Nullus credit aliquod nisi quia credit illud quae in sua proprietate non est vera Greg. Arim. in 1. Sent. dist 1. quaest 1. Act c. 4. The like imperfect solution ●alentian hath where he dispureth this question against the same author Fran. de Mat. and Petir Abaylard or P●ripat which held faith to be assensus euidens * So Valentian tearmes it whose words are cited in the appendix to the third book To this purpose they abuse a saying of Gregory● Fides non habet 〈…〉 cu● humana r●●● praebet experimentum Which notwithstanding he men● of the incomprehensibility no● of the persp●cuity of obiects belieued ●is words at full are these Diuina operatio si ratione aprehendatut non est admirabil●●net ●ides habet mer●●● c. Greg. hem 16. in Euang. But of his opinion in this point we shall haue fitter occasion when wee come to speake of merits h Aquinas and his followers g●●n●● at ve●●●a●es ●id●i sunt e●●den●er ●r●dib●●es It y ●redio●●●y they meane ●o 〈◊〉 then probability as it is opposed to certain●● their doctrine is dāgerous for ●o th●y make articles o● faith to be euidently vncertaine But if they take credi●●●●ty as it is common or indiff●●●n●●● proba●●●●ty and ●ertai●● ● ●ropositions of faith may be as we maintaine euidently certaine vnto some th●ugh but euidently probable vnto others in their particularities ● 2. Cor. 12. v. 1. This I take it is ●●o more then what the learned Hook●r in a Sermon vpon the Prophet H●bak●●● doubtfull c●●tation pa 3 hath expres●d onely wee make that which hee ca●s certainty of adheren●● to haue ●●●dence for i●s ground not of particulars but of the generall choice here mentioned H● e●● we ag●●● that this certainty of ●dherence vnto particulars arri●eth from their worth o● consequence a Riber● a Iohn 3. 2. a John 1. 14. a Psal 30 v. ● b Ier. 31. v 35. 36 b Iohn ● m Phil. 3 ver 8 10. 11. c. * Sicut in rebus inanimalis appetitus est incl●natio natuo● in aliquid dicitur appetitus naturalis ita in natura intellectuali appetitus est est inclinationaturae intellectual●s in quantum intellect u● est prop●erea omn● actus vol●ntatis est inclinatio actualis ipsius naturae intellectualis dare inclinationem a●●●alem tali naturae inclinare voluntatem p●● eodem accipiuntur Ferrain cap. 88. lib. 3. Aquin. contragentes Ex hoc en●m quod Deus est int●lli●ēs sequit●r quod si● vo●ens C●● enim bon●m intellectum sit propr●m ob●e 〈…〉 m ol●ntatis oportet quod bonū intellectum in quantū huiusmodi sit volitum ●intellectum autem di citur ad intel●igentem necesse est igitur quod intelig●ns bonum in quātum huiusmodi sit volens Aquin. contra Gentes lib. 1. cap. 72. b Rom. ● ver 18 b Arist 〈◊〉 lib. 6. cap. ● 〈◊〉 enim tempus experie●●●● facit nam hoc a●●quis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cur Mathematic●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at lap●●Spand●● si 〈…〉 non 〈◊〉 A● quod illa 〈◊〉 eo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 au●●Spand●● experien●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Eccles 2 ver 2 a Acts 24 ver 25 Reade Sect. 2 chap. 2. 3. 4 a Interest autem qualis sit voluntas bominis quia si peruersa est peruersos habebit hos motus si autem recta est non solum inculpabiles verū etiam laudabiles erunt Voluntas est quippe in omnilus uno omnes nihil aliud quam voluntates sunt Nam quid est cupiditas laetitia nisi voluntas in eorum consensionem qu● volumus Et quid est metus atque tristitia nisi voluntas in dissentionem ab his quae nolumus Aug. de ciuitate Dei cap. 6. lib. 14 See § 3. chap. 5 See cha 10 § 1 chap. 11 § 7 This grace notwithstanding is first in the intellectiue faculty● and thence diffused into others ordinarily by the operation of faith nor can the inferior faculties be brought in subiection to the spirit vntill they touched by the same grace which illuminates the mind Fides lampas est quia sicut lampas illuminat domum i 〈…〉 des animum C●●●so●t super Math. 25. Heb. 10. 36 37 a 2. Kings 6 15 b 2. Cor. 4 1● c 2. Kings 6. 15 d Math. 5. 34 a Heb. 11. 2 b Verse 6. Heb. 12 11 c Heb. 11 7 d Heb. 11 7 e Eccles 44 ●8 f H●● ●● ● g Ver. 9 h Acts 7 verse 5 i Heb. 11. 11 k Ioh. 11. 25 26 l Gen. 22 2 m Heb. 118. ● b Math. 3. 9 c Verse 24 H●● 12. 2 d Heb. 11 10 Verse 32 Ver 33 g Ver. 3● 35 Ma ● 7 ● Ver 9 k Ver. 10 11 l Verse 14 m Verse 16 * Luke 14. ver ● 2. Mach. 7 18 19 * Ver. 20 c Ver. 27 28 29 d Verse 37 e Illud insuper nunquam ●●edid●●●es quod videns obstu●es●●s mori●●●●m matrem c●● tulorum quo● Anatomi●us ab vtero ●ius abstraxi● maiorem ●uram gerere quam suimet Nam si coram ipsa ●●lium laedis latr●● v●ciseratur sin illum ●ri illius ad ●oues silet atque magna pietate lābit Quod si aliud non cat●ll●● ori ●ius quam se●as ma●ris a●cedat rabie percita mordet quem naturae 〈◊〉 atque adeo paremū in liberos in●redibil●m charitatem in publicis theatris maxima spectatorum admiratio●e s●pius ostendi Pataui praesertim cum 〈◊〉 mus ac reuerendis●●mus Rainutius F●tne●●us tunt Venetiar●● Prior nune Cardinalu S. Angelinuncupatus c. Colum. lib. ●● ●●vi●● sect o Macc. 2 49 50 p Verse 6● a Ja●●●s 1 ver 5 a Psal ●● verse 31 32 ●3 c. b Vers● 3● c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 14 d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Talis est natu a sidei quātò magis ve tatur tantò magis accenditur Virtus fidei in periculis secura est in securitate periclu●●ur Quià enim alied ita laxat vigorem fidei s●c●t longa tranquilitas Chris●●● in Math. 20 a Ier. 42 1 2 3 b Ver 5 6 c Verse 9 10 11 12. d See Ioshuah 24 verse 15 19 22 24 e Ier. 42. 20 21 22 f Ier. 42 4 i Ierem. 43. 3 Ierem. 44. ●● g Ierem. 44. 15 a Adfirma●an● autem hanc fuisse summam vel culpae suae vel errcris quod essent soliti stato die ante lucē conueni●● carmēque Christo qua●● deo dicere secu● inuicem seque sacramento non in sc●lus aliquod obstringere sed ne f●●●● ne latrocinia ne adulteria committerent ne fidem fallerent ne
or properties of true Faith Loue Fidelitie and Confidence with the manner of their resultance from it p 100. CHAP. 11 Of the diuerse acceptions of faith in Scriptures or Fathers of the Romanist pernicious error concerning the nature of it and charity whereby his in aginarie workes of merit necessarily become either dead apish or polluted p 110 SECTION 2. Of immature perswasions concerning mens present estate in grace with the meanes to rectifie or preuent them of the right vse of faith and other spirituall graces Pag. 135. CHAP. 10 The generall heads or springs of hypocriticall perswasions with briefe rules for their preuention p 136 CHAP. 2 That our Assent vnto the first principles of Christianitie by profession of which the saith of auncient Christians was vsually tryed may bee to our owne apprehension exceeding strong and yet our beliefe in Christ no better then the Heathens that oppugned them that it is a matter of more difficultie to be a true Christian now then in the Primitiue Church did we rightly examine the strength ●p●r faith not by such points as theirs was tried but by resisting pop●●ar customes or resolutions of our times actully opposite to the most essentiall and vtmost as Idolatrie is to the remote or generall differences of Christian faith p 143 CHAP. 3 That we moderne Christians may hate Christ as much as wee do the memory of such Iewes as crucified him albeit readie if we were called to formall triall rather to die then openly to deny him or his Gospell what meanes are surest for iust triall whether wee be better affected towards him then these Iewes were p 163 CHAP. 4 That the fruits of righteousnesse if but of one or few kindes argue the stocke whence they spring to be either imperfect or vnsound of the danger that may come by partiality in the practise of precepts alike diuine or from difformitie of zeale that our Assent to generalities oftimes appeares greater to our selues then indeed it is from our pronenesse or eager desires to transgresse in some particulars p 174. CHAP. 5 That true faith is the soule of good workes that it equally respects all the Commandements of God and can admit no dispensation for non-performance of necessarie duties p 192 CHAP. 6 Of difficulties arising from the former discourses in the Protestants doctrine of iustification by faith without workes That faith is as immediatly a●t to doe good workes of euery kinde as to iustifie Of the diuerse accep●ions of Iustification That the iustification by workes mentioned by S. Iames is proposed as subordinate to S Pauls iustification by faith without works The true reconcilement of these two Apostles speeches contrarie only in appearance from the contrariety of their seuerall ends or intentions p 206 CHAP. 7 Of the differences betwixt vs and the Romish Church concerning Iustification or the right vse or measure of grace or righteousnesse inherent p 229 CHAP. 8 How far the Lawe must be fulfilled in this life of the regiment of grace of the permanencie of Iustification what interruptions it may admit how these must be repaired or in what sense it may be sayd to be reiterated That euerie sinne is against Gods Law though euery sinne not incompatible with the state of grace p 253 CHAP. 9 That firmly to beleeue Gods mercies in Christ is the hardest point of seruice in Christian warfare That our confidence in them can b● no greater then our fidelity in the practise of his cōmandements That meditation vpon Christs last appearance is the surest method for grounding true confidence in him p 272 SECTION 3. Of the right plantation of Faith page 278. CHAP. ● That Christian Faith although immediately infused by God without any cooperation of man doth not exclude but rather more necessarily require precedent humane endeauours for the attaining of it p 279 CHAP. 2 That circumspect following the rules of Scripture is more auaileable for attaining true faith then the practise of morall precepts for producing morall habits That there may be naturall perswasions of spirituall truths and morall desires of spirituall good both right in their kinde though nothing worth in themselues but onely capable of better because not hypocriticall p 283 CHAP. 3 Of the fundamentall rule of Christianity to forsake all and denie our selues That the sincere practise thereof is a method more admirable and compendious for the attainment of faith then any Artist could prescribe the principles of Christianity being supposed That the want partly of instruction in the duties contained in it partly of solemne and publicke personall protestation for their performance is the principall cause of hypocrisie and infidelity p 282 CHAP. 4 That the obseruance of the former rule is most easie vnto men of meaner gifts vnto whom in this respect Gods mercy is greater then if their guiftes were better and yet his mercy iustly to bee esteemed greatest towards such as haue most excellent guifts by nature p 299 CHAP. 5 Our Sauiours Parables especially those Mat 13. Mark 4. Luk 8 most soueraigne rules for the plantation and growth of faith of vnfruitfull hearers resembled by the high-way side and stonie ground with briefe caueats for altering their disposition p 306 CHAP. 6 Of that temper which in proportion answeres to thornie ground of the deceitfulnesse of riches how difficult a matter it is to haue them and not to trust in them The reason why most rich men of our times neuer mistrust themselues of putting this trust in Mammon p 310 CHAP. 7 Of the antipathy betweene true faith and ambition or selfe-exaltation That the one resembles our Sauiours the other Sathans disposition Briefe admonitions for auoiding such dangers as growe from other branches of voluptuous life p. 317. CHAP. 8 Of the goodnesse or honesty of heart required by our Sauiour in fruitfull hearers of the ordinarie progresse from faith natural to spirituall and the different esteeme of diuine truths or precepts in the regenerate man and him that is not but sincerely desires to bee such vacancy to attend all intimations of the spirit to be sought after by all meanes possible That alienation of our chiefe desires from their corrupt obiects is much auaileable for purchase of the inestimable pearle p. 331. CHAP. 9 That faith cannot excercise it soueraigntie our affections or desires vntil ●t be seated in the hart with brief admonitions for bringing it into his throne p. 346. Places of Scripture expounded or illustrated by Obseruation in the Treatise following ⸪ Out of the Olde Testament GENESIS Cha. 22 Verse 2 TAke now thine onely sonne Isaac whom thou louest c. Section 1. chap. 7. parag 5. Verse 12 Sect. 1. chap. 8. par 9. EXODVS Cha. 10 Verse 8 9 10 Goe and serue the Lord your God but who are they that shall goe c. Sect. 2. c. 8. par 5. Verse 26 Therefore our cattell also shall goe with vs c. neither do wee know how we shall serue the Lord vntill we come thither ibid.
euidence of instinct or working alwaies manifest in the effect though the cause oft-times be hidden or doubtfull An euidence likewise there is of bodily strength eyther passiue to sustaine contrary force or violence or actiue to repell it by opposing the like Proportionall hereunto there is an euidence of conscience vpon iust examination alwaies witnessing either our strength or weaknesse to resist temptations or our vigour alacrity or dulnesse in doing of good But this kinde of euidence belongs rather vnto the triall of faith inherent or our perswasions of it after we haue it then vnto the obiects or grounds whence it ariseth 5. The Iesuite hauing defaced the image of his Creator as essentially good as true in his heart and out of the reliques of it erecting an Idoll in his braine to represent the visible Church or Pope both which he adores as gods for their veracity though not for sanctity imagines no euidence possible in matters diuine but meerely speculatiue and hence argues Faith to be an Assent ineuident or obscure because not euident after the same manner Mathematicall theorems or common naturall notions are to the speculatiue vnderstanding or the Sunne Moone or Starres of the first magnitude to ordinary sights As if an English-man Dane or German should conclude Italians French-men Spaniards or generally all forreiners to be Blacke-moores because not of the same complexion they themselues are The like loosenesse we finde in some more ancient Schoolemens collections that the obiects of faith are neither euident nor properly intelligible but only credible because neither of such propositions as euery one that heares will approue nor of euident deductions from such But the question is not of the vniuersality or extent but of the intensiue perfection of euidence and no man I thinke will denie that manie Truths altogether vnknowne to most may be as intensiuely euident to some particular dispositions as generall maxims are to all Otherwise S. Paul should haue had no exact euidence of special reuelations made to him no Prophets of their cleerest visions not CHRIST IESVS himself of his fathers will in whose bosom he was seeing he did not make that enident to the Iewes Euery mans thoughts are as manifest to himselfe as the principles of any science though he cannot so certainly manifest the one as the other to his auditours None of reformed Churches I thinke did euer auouch that he could make the Articles of faith euident to all endued with naturall reason but that the spirit of God which first reuealed and caused them to be written in Characters visible vnto all cannot as euidently imprint them vpon the hearts of all his children what reason haue we to deny Because faith is the argument of things not seene 6. A worke it were worth his paines that is not fit for very great nor necessarily engaged to other good emploiments to obserue how many opinions which could neuer haue been conceiued but from a misconceit of Scriptures haue been fastened to the Temple dore as more certaine then Propheticall oracles First by continuall hammering of Schoolemen afterwards by instruction giuen from the great Pastor to the Masters of Romish assemblies which for the most part do but riuet the nailes the other had driuen or driue such faster as they had entered not without disturbance of their opposites What a number of such opinions as the Trent Councell ties our faith vnto as Articles necessary to saluation were in ages last past meere schoole points held pro con by the followers of diuerse factiōs in that profession And though these Trent Fathers doe not expresly teach vs that beliefe is an Assent ineuident and obscure yet doth it bind vs to belieue it to be such as none euer would haue conceiued but from a mistaking of the Apostles words lately cited which notwithstanding he vttered not anie waies to disparage the euidence but rather to set forth the excellency of that heauenly vertue He supposed as shall hereafter be deduced nor doth that learned Iesuite which long agoe had robbed the whole society of ingenuity and buried it with him in his graue in his Commentaries vpon that place dissent from vs that faith is an assurance or instrument by which the sonnes of God attaine vnto a kinde of sight or glimmering but euident view of diuine mysteries altogether as inuisible but more incredible to the naturall man then Galilaeus supposed late discoueries to meere countrey men vtterly destitute of all other helpes or meanes for discouering such appearances besides the eyes nature hath giuen them Hee that said faith is the argument of things vnseene did neuer deny it to include an euident knowledge or apprehension of some things present which the world sees not yet such as he there describes it is to the regenerate only or vnto them whom God hath giuen this heauenly treasure as a pledge of his future fauours But regeneration renewing of the inner man or fruites of the spirit are termes as vnusuall for the most part in their schooles as their schoole-termes in common talke of the illiterate among vs and yet before our regeneration or participation of Gods spirit wee dispute of the euidence or obscurity of faith but as blinde men may of the differences betwixt day and night not able to frame any distinct or proper conceit truely representing the face of either though daylie hearing liuely discriptions of both or learned discourses about their natures or essentiall properties But when God begins to open our hearts that we may see our naturall misery it is with vs as it was with such as being born blinde were restored to sight by our Sauiour as for illustrations sake we may suppose in the beginning of some dismall night some howers before the moons a●isall At the first opening of their eies they might perceiue an euident distinction betwixt the greatest darkenes inci-dent to night by tempests stormes or ouer-casting and their wonted blindnesse an euident difference againe betweene such darknesse and light shortly after ensuing vpon the remooual of cloudes or apparition of starres And albeit they did heereafter expect a cleerer distinctiō betwixt this time that which they had often heard others call the day yet easie it had beene to haue perswaded them the Moones apparance had brought the morning with it vntill the dawning had cleered the doubt during which as the Sunne did neerer and neerer approach the distinction betwixt day and night grew cleerer and cleerer Euident it was now vnto them that the Sunne should in time appeare although it selfe were yet vnseene whose actuall apparition could onely terminate the former expectation and leaue no place for further errot the brightnesse of it being able so fully to satiate the capacity of the visiue facultie and so all sufficient for presenting other visibles as distinctly and cleerely as their hearts could desire to their view 7. Though not of our outward senses yet of the more excellent internall faculties of our soules all
of vs haue a naturall blindnesse from our birth which he alone cantake away that gaue bodily sight to such as had been shut vp in darkenesse from the wombe The first thing wee apprehend directly and euidently vpon this change is the difference betwixt the state of the sonnes of darkenesse and the sonnes of light and this appeares greater and greater as we becom more conuersant in the workes of light whence springs an eager longing after that maruellous glorie which in the life to come shall bee reuealed whose apprehension though in this present life distinct and euident it cannot possibly be yet from a cleere and certaine apprehension first of the prophets light then of the day-starre shining in our hearts it is euident vnto vs that in due time reuealed it shall be as fully as our soules could wish Beloued saith Saint Iohn now wee are the sonnes of God and yet it doth not appeare what wee shall be but wee know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 8. Euen vnto this great Apostle that had seene the glory of Christ as of the onely begotten Sonne of God the ioyes which hee certainely beleeued to be prepared for the godly and of which he stedfastly hoped to bee partaker were as yet vnseene But was either his beliefe or hope for this reason lesse euident then certaine Not vnlesse wee make an vnequall comparison or measure them partially referring euidence to one part or quality of the obiect belieued or hoped and certainety to another As well the manner or the specificall quality as the distinct measure of those ioyes hee belieued were vncertaine because not euident or apprehensible But that God had prepared such ioyes for his Saints as no eie had seene such as their conceipt could not enter into the heart of man whilest inuail●d with this corruptible flesh was most certaine to him because most euident from their present pledge that peace of conscience which passeth al vnderstanding yet kept his heart and minde in knowledge and loue of Christ Iesus being an infallible euidence of those ioyes which were not euident the sure ground of all his incomprehensible hopes This cleere apprehension of our present estate wee may call an euidence of spirituall welfare or internall sense directly answering to that naturall euidence or certaine knowledge men haue of their health or hearty cheerefulnesse when their spirits are liuely and their bodies strong not disturbed with bad humours their mindes not cumbred or disquieted with anxious carking thoughts Of errours incident to the intermediate state beetweene the sonnes of darkenesse and the sonnes of light if any such there be or to our first apprehensions of this change and of the meanes to auoide them the Reader shall finde somewhat in the two next Sections of this Booke but more particularly in the Treatise Of the triall of Faith or Certainety of inherent grace In this place wee onely suppose as there is no liuing creature indued with those animall spirits that quicken the organs of bodily sense but euidently feeles paine or pleasure so is there none truely partaker of the Spirit of God but hath or may haue an euident feeling of this ioy and griefe of conscience which is to other obiects of knowledge truly spirituall as is the touch to the rest of our senses yet may we not thinke this feeling to bee alike euident in all For one liuing creature excelleth another in apprehension of proper sensitiue obiects all alike euident in themselues but so are not the senses or apprehensiue faculties of seuerall creatures alike nimble quick or strong 9. But for mine owne part the opinion generally receiued amongst the schoole men and other learned Clarkes that faith in respect of speculation or discourse should bee an Assent vneuident hath made mee often to suspect my dull capacity in matters of secular knowledge Aristotles Philosophy I had read ouer and yet could I hardly call any conclusion in it to minde that might with greater euidence be resolued into cleere vnquestionable principles then most effects or experiments reuolution of times affoord may bee into the disposition of a prouidence truely diuine And considering with my selfe how grosly hee should often faile that would vndertake to set forth a comment of my inward thoughts by obseruation of my outward actions when as no alteration of times of persons or places euer swarued from the rules of Scripture I rest perswaded that the same diuine prouidence which guides the world and disposeth all the actions of men did set foorth these euerlasting comments which neuer change of his owne consultations or decrees concerning them Againe acknowledging this eternal diuine power alike able to effect his wil purpose by ordering the vnruly wils of this presentage though their pollicies be of a contrary mould to such as heretofore we haue heard hee hath defeated the former inference as it seemed more religious so more euident then our aduersaries make when from a supposition onely of some infallible authoritie in some present Church they presently assume it must reside in the visible Romish Church representatiue yet this collection they hold euident by the habit of Theologie albeit they admit no discourse in Assent of Faith which is their second fundamentall errour in the doctrine of life another maine roote of Romish witchery For thus farre at least all the Sonnes of God make faith to bee discursiue that fom euident experience of Gods fauours past or present they alwaies inferre a certainetie of the like to ensue To the most of them in their distresse it was euident deliuerance should be sent them although the deliuerance it selfe were not so although they distinctly apprehended not by what meanes or in what manner it should bee wrought The immutability of Gods decree concerning the saluation of his people whether generall or particular being as well knowne as the stability of his couenant for vicissitude of day and night or other seasons the godly euen while they were themselues beset with sorrow and euery where enuironed with calamity or sawe the Church almost ouerwhelmed with vniuersall deluges of affliction might resolue for the generall that all in the end should turne vnto their good that continued in faith and loue to the Redeemer as vndoubtedly as men at mid-night may gather that the Sunne shall arise though they know not in what manner whether vnder a cloud in a mist beeset with vapours or appearing in his naturall brightnesse Thus saith the Psalmist Heauinesse may lodge with vs for a night but ioy commeth in the morning Yea thus saith the Lord which giueth the sunne for a light to the day and the courses of the moone and of the starres a light to the night which breaketh the Sea when the waues thereof roare his name is the Lord of Hoasts If these Ordinances depart out of my sight then shall the seede of Israell cease from being a nation before
me for euer Doubts againe in other points apprehended and assented vnto though but conditionally or imperfectly yet by the habit of Christian faith are finally resolued into the article of the diuine prouidence which is to most others as vndoubted principles to scientificall conclusions whence faith admits such discourse or resolution as hath been mentioned in the former bookes 10. A speculatiue euidence likewise there is intensiuely as perfect as can be expected in most demonstratiue sciences but infinitely more pleasant though we respect only the transient delight of actuall contemplation and extensiuely no lesse though not for facilitie of its apprehension or number of persons to whom it so appeares yet for the multitude of necessary inferences vpon one and the same subiect all which might appeare most euident to all were not many of vs wilfully blinde slothfull or carelesse and yet discoursiue too because analitical the resolution I meane of Euangelicall testimonies into Propheticall predictions legal types or historical figures of the Messiah as in due place by Gods assistance shall be manifested If anie obiect that this resolution can be euident onely vpon supposition if the Scriptures of the old Testament were from God I must answere him as the Parents of that blinde man did the captious Iewes search them For their Characters rightly taken euidently signifie their vndoubted antiquitie to be greater then any record he can bring of this distinct vicissitude betwixt day and night summer and winter seed time and haruest or other seasons the possibility of whose interruption in times past may from some extraordinary changes within our memory be argued with greater probabilitie then any can possibly be brought why the bookes of holy scripture should be suspected for new and counterfait And the antiquity of the old Testament being euident the admirable consonancie of it with the new and multitude of manifest experiments euery kind fully answerable to their rules better ascertaines the truth of Gods promises contained in them then any induction natural reason can frame to proue either the vicissitude of times or seasons or reuolution of the heauens to haue been since the beginning perpetuall The truth of which conclusion as of many others in Philosophy for which great Artists thinke they haue demonstratiue reasons I professe I much better belieue and more euidently know from Gods couenant to this purpose recorded in sacred writ then from all the writings of Philosophers or any reason they or I can bring or our successors shall be able to finde although after vs they study this point till the foundations of the earth be shaken the elements melt with heat and the heauens be gathered like a scrole Yea further to me it seemes an euident demonstration from the effect that there is such a subtill Polititian as wee call the Diuell which cunningly bewitcheth or blinds the eyes of mens soules or else with golden balls auerts them from looking vnto those heauenly misteries in that they seeme either incredulous or improbable vnto such as can discerne the truth of curious and abstruse conclusions in secular arts 11. Lastly of those Articles which seeme to flesh and blood as is their distinct apprehension euen to Gods children in this life most impossible the possibility is directly euident That they shall actually be accomplished depends vpon resolution of promises made to vs in Scripture into his fidelity that hath promised whereof wee haue euident and full assurance The one ranke of especiall marks wherat these present meditations aime shal be to set forth these seueral euidences in the articles wherto they properly belong as the euidence of possibility in the Articles of creation and the resurrection of our mortall bodies the euidence of speculation in the Articles of the God-head diuine prouidence of Christs incarnation life death passion and resurrection the euidence likewise of internall sense answering to touch or taste in the doctrine of Original sinne and life euerlasting Not that Assent in respect of this obiect can be euident to mortality but that there may be a cleere distinct apprehension of such a disposition as hath been mentioned of body and minde more then naturall inclining our soules with patience to expect the accomplishment of those promises concerning ioyes vnspeakable in the world to come which though neuer formally represented may notwithstanding be fully assented vnto in this life as certainly future from sure experiments of his fidelity and ability that exhibited this present pledge or assurance whether the certaintie of future matters yet vnseene or vndistinctly apprehended can possibly in this life bee as great as the euident certaintie of their present assurances or vvhether delay or long expectation necessarily weaken faith as excesse in length makes bodies of equall strength more easie to be broken then if they were shorter hath a more fit place to be disputed in The euidence of Faith answerable to the euidence of bodily motion or impulsion must be reserued as Artists do difficult problems as an appendix to this worke finished he that is desirous of information in this kinde may finde rules not altogether impertinent to this effect in such as write of the triall of spirits or mysticall Theologie 12. Here some happily will demaund whether this Assent we treate of being of things past present and to come or of things partly seene and partly vnseene bee properly termed faith in respect of all or some of these onely For ought I haue obserued in Scripture or from the common vse of speech the name of faith is giuen to it especially in respect of things past or to come which are vnseen but this I dispute not It sufficeth that the habit of inherent grace whereby wee formally assent vnto all the obiects of Christian faith whether they include a relation vnto times present past or to come is one the same and may in part be defined an Assent vnto supernaturall truths reuealed in Scriptures firme in respect of all directly euident only in respect of some Or if any will exclude euidence from the definition because not incident to those obiects with reference to which this habit originally takes his name let him say it is a firme infallible Assent vnto supernaturall truths already past or hereafter to he manifested grounded vpon an experimentall euidence of others present or vpon a true knowledge of scriptures diuine truth or such points as they teach indefinitely considered without peculiar reference to this or that time 13. From these discussions about the imperfect euidence or certainety of some the inexhaustible capacity of all and the incomprehensiblenesse of the two finall ob●ects of Christian faith life and death euerlasting the one distinctly apprehended in its pledge or assurance the other in its presignifications it may appeare the most natiue property of this Assent thus far differenced is admiration horror Admiration is properly of things rare and excellent knowne in part but not comprehended so as the more we know the more
to shake off the yoke of Romish ciuill tyranny neuer had her blasphemous positions been publiquely held in such detestation as now they are Whence hardly could anie doctrine of diuels haue beene distastfull to our distempered soules which had vnaware sucked deadly poison with our first nurses milke If Princes againe or Potentates had not held the doctrine of the Trinity as an ancient religious custome no way preiudiciall but rather aduantagious to their states and therefore religiously to be obserued either discontented Prelates crossed in their ambitious hopes of honour or such curious contemplators as hold ciuil honour in contempt out of vain-glorious affectation of fame amongst posterity by new inuentions had wrought the maior part of Christendome to their faction so as Arrianisme or some worse heresie had long ere this been established by nationall constitutions 14 The necessitie of these collections depends vpon the vnquestionable truth of this maxim which in the sequell will manifest it selfe that carnall desires or resolutions of equall strength are alwaies a like forcible to weaken alter or inuert our Assent to any one point of beliefe as to another if the opposition be a like direct and our beliefe is of it selfe soonest mis-led or infeebled in matters most remote from light of nature as is the Article of the Trinity This obseruation of diuerse coniunctions or oppositions betwixt mens carnall affections and seuerall points of beliefe is the chiefe part of Sathans astrologie whereby he forecasts the fall of most in sundry ages by meanes in shew most contrary in issue the same By this skill he brings his matters so about that the greater part of mankind in latter daies in their owne conceit louingly embrace Christianity vpon the same grounds or motiues that disposed the heathen so bitterly to oppugne it eleuating the one as high in hipocrisie or Pharisaicall perswasions of their misgrounded faith as he depressed the other in infidelity or malignancie to the Gospell It is a rule againe as cleere and indeficient that either habituall neglect of particular duties enioined or indulgent practice of euill forbidden by Gods word do as euidently euince want of true faith in professed Christians as oppugnation of the whole frame of Christianity doth in infidels or of some principall parts in Arch heretiques Difference there is betwixt them none in the internall constitution of the minde onely the doctrine of faith by alteration of times publicke constitutions or references to som priuate ends gets a coniunction with the ones predominant carnall affections retaining opposition with the others The reason of both assertions is perspicuous to the intelligent for seeing supernaturall obiects compared with others exceed them further in worth then in certainty or credibility we must if rightly both certainly and firmly Assent vnto them not onely as truer then any arguments can bee brought against them but as much better then any profit pleasure or other good the world flesh or diuell can profer vnto vs. Both parts of this certaine and firme Assent must be vniuersal in respect of the obiect and perpetuall in respect of time for as he is not to be held an orthodoxal professor that acknowledgeth the speculatiue or general diuine truth of all the Articles in his Creed or matters proposed by the word of God whiles none gaine-sayes but doubts or recants while the aduersary oppugnes them so is he not to be reputed a sincere faithful christian but rather tainted with hypocrisie that assents vnto the goodnes of diuine precepts whiles temptations are far off but disesteems them in the choice whiles they come in competition with sensual pleasure worldly goods ciuil honour estimation or the like And if we could perswade our selues to a liking of scripture phrase which doubtlesse hath a more fresh and liuely form of wholsome doctrine then Aquinas summes or his followers disputes this Assent vnto diuine matters especially such as peculiarly concerne mans saiuation as perpetually good is a more essentiall part of Christian faith then the acknowledgement of their truth which is a difference proper to an orthodoxall professor of Christianity but remote to a faithfull man or true Christian as he is distinct not onely from Infidels or Hereticks but from Libertines or Hippocrites Thus defect in practice is censured by the spirit of God for vnfaithfulnesse albeit euery omission of good or commission of euil doth not conuince the delinquent of absolute infidelity nor is euery intemperate or incontinent act a iust imputation of incontinencie or intemperancy But as euery partiall defect is a degree or portion of vnfaithfulnesse so if the delinquencie bee habituall without remorse or ioined with indulgence it truly denominates the delinquent an Infidel in his sight that knowes his heart So the Psalmist vsually stiles the wicked and obstinate Israelites by the name of Heathens albeit they renounced not the profession of the true God 15. Our vsuall appropriating this delinquency whether habituall or by intermission actual vnto a peruersity or vntowardnesse of the will as if it did not necessarily argue a correspondent defect or weaknesse of that Assent which we call faith and most suppose to be placed in the vnderstanding onely may hence appeare to be a soleeisme of the Romish language in that to the redresse of this enormity no peculiar reformation of the will or other intellectiue faculty we can imagine distinct from the vnderstanding is required sole fortification of the former Assent in what part of the soule soeuer it be seated or abatement of the contrary desire or inclination inherent for the most part in the sensitiue faculty will suffice Yet it may be such as first vsed this dialect now much abused by the Papacie did take the will in such a generall or catachresticall sense as Saint Augustine doth where vnder this name he comprehendeth not only the inclination rational or intellectuall vnto good but euery appetite desire or motion of the inferiour or sensitiue part whose reformation is in part presupposed as necessary but principally consequent to true Christian faith whose first office ere it selfe be perfect is to subdue affections or keep them vnder from doing euil afterwards to vse them as instruments in doing anie good the word of God shal commend vnto vs. Whence it may bee questioned whether this Assent should not belong vnto the sensitiue faculty in which the Philosopher for the reason late alleadged hath placed moral vertue not altogether incongruously to his speculatiue positions For if the efficacie of agents or terme of their actions be in the Patient moral vertue consisting especially in the modulation of sensitiue desires or affections vnto reason may wel bee referred vnto that part of the soule wherein affections are placed which in respect of the intellectiue faculty is patient Or perhaps to speake more properly and reconcile Aristotle with his master Plato moral vertue may consist partly of a directly or commaunding power in the vnderstanding partly of a submissiue obedience
or right mixture of our sensitiue desires or affections Or lastly seeing in true Philosophy the faculties sensitiue and intellectiue are but branches of one and the same soule or at the most but two parts of that compleat forme which distinguisheth a Man from creatures inanimate and takes from him life sense and reason all at once by it departure this Assent of faith being such as we haue sayd may most commodiously be placed in the common center wherein sensitiue and intellectiue inclinations concurre whence it may easiliest commaund the motions of both and diffuse it force and vertue throughout the whole substance and euerie faculty of the humane soule 16. If the Reader be desirous to haue the definition of faith or that part of it which naturally ariseth from this discourse comprehended as the schoole fashion is in two words he shall not much mistake if he terme it a spirituall prudence which includes as much as an Assent of the inteliectiue faculty able to ouersway and moderate the sensitiue or generally all humane affections or inclinations The Romanists conceit that Christian charity should informe true liuely faith is as preposterous as if we should say the affection doth informe the vnderstanding or vertues morall the intellectuall or if we speake of the loue wee beare to God the analogie of speech is no better then if wee should say the gratefull memory of pleasant obiects informes the faculty that perceiues them In what part of the soule soeuer this Queene of vertues lodge it hath the same commaund ouer our affections or practique powers that sense or appetite hath ouer the progressiue faculty which nature hath giuen to sensitiue creatures for accomplishmēt of their necessary desires That our Christian vertue should physically informe another is a conceit altogether dunsticall and now disclaimed in the explication of the old schoole maxim wherein without Iesuiticall comments no man but would thinke it were literally and necessarily included That Faith morally informes directs and commaunds charity as a guide appointed to it by him that is the author of both neither of them consulted by him that hath them will deny Albeit if lawfull it be to enstamp matters sacred with the exact forme of scholastique speech it is perhaps but one and the same spirituall grace which animates and enables the soule as to discerne the truth so to embrace the goodnesse of reuelations diuine and constantly to practice all kindes of Christian duties bearing diuers titles from execution of seuerall offices whiles it inspires diuers faculties of the same soule as one and the same breath hath different sounds in the seuerall pipes of the same organes or other wind instrument As it illuminates the mind or soueraigne part of the rationall soule it is tearmed faith as it moderates euery particular affection or desire it takes the name of the vertue peculiarly appointed to that charge making it of meerely morall truely Christian Vnto Parents kinsfolk acquaintance benefactors or such as wel deserue of them most men naturally are wel affected vnto all as men we owe humanitie and this affection being made conformable and subordinate to the directions of liuely faith becomes christian charity But ere it become such the same grace which as it illuminates the minde to see and strengthens it to embrace diuine truths proposed is tearmed faith doth alter the quality of this affection by purging it from carnall respect of persons or priuate purposes is termed faith doth alter the quality of this affection by purging it from carnall respect of persons or priuate purposes by enapting it to be ruled by faith which fixeth it only vpon such obiects as Gods word commends and in that degree it prescribes Though before we did affect others vpon such motiues as flesh and blood suggested yet afterwards wee must know no man so but all our loue is in the Lord. And though faith teach vs to enlarge our benignity or good minde towards all as well foes as friends yet it fixeth it especially on such as we deeme neerest allied vnto our Redeemer albeit their personall deserts or references towards vs be not so great In like sort doth one and the same grace perhaps for the manner physically but faith morally informe and moderates euery affection disposition or inclination that can be matter or rudiment of vertue It perfects our notions of equity and iustice it ripens and sublimates our seeds of temperance of valour of liberality For all these or other vertues are in a higher degree in minds endued with faith then in such as are destitute of it and principally set vpon such obiects as the naturall man could not affect But because loue thus informed by grace and directed or touched by faith of all christian vertues most resembles the dispositiō of our Lord and Sauiour and if in this life it could be perfect would fulfill at least the second part of the lawe if we compare it and faith as they are parts of our imperfect righteousnesse charity within its own proper sphere is intensiuely the greater or higher in this edifice as being supported held vpby faith but because our righteousnes is in it selfe imperfect and our charity towards others vnable to withstand Sathans malice against vs without externall muniments procured not by the merits of it but by faithfull prayers and supplications therfore as Christ is Alpha and Omega so is faith the first of al christian vertues in plantation and the last we must in this life rely vpon for retaining vniō with this author and finisher of faith CHRIST IESVS Briefly as he is to all the faithfull so is faith to all other vertues in this life a transcendent foundation and complement It remaines we shew first the truth of our maine conclusion by instances of sacred writ or such practices as it ascribes to faith Secondly the philosophicall premises whence we infer it to be most consonant to the phrase of Gods spirit which often teacheth vs more true philosophy in one word then Philosophers do in large volums The conclusion is we are then said rightly to belieue matters of our owne saluation when we Assent vnto them as good as necessary and worthy to be embraced not only whilst considered in themselues or in generall or without such incumbrances or occurrents as doe often interpose or hinder their practice but euen whilst actually compared with present losse of any sensual good or infliction of any transitory euill the world diuell or flesh can oppose to raise their price 17. Such must this Assent be in the habite or constant resolution though often defectiue in the act vpon disaduantages espied by Sathan But euery such defect we must account a dangerous sinne especially if we haue any distinct notice of actuall competition between carnal and spiritual good for this preposterous choice is properly not of faith but rather directly against the very nature of it as it is now defined to be an Assent vnto the meanes of
their personages and reall imitation of their vertues It is a kinde of cunning I must confesse to be able accurately to paint God or his goodnesse but as little pertinent to true Christian knowledge as an artificiall picture of a great feast is to a poore soule almost starued for hunger vnlesse it make vs not painted images but true and liue sonnes of the euerlasting God For our light must so shine before men that they seeing our good workes may glorifie our Father which is in heauen That such a father there is and that we are his sons we must make knowne to others by imitating his perfections 7. To these or like points do sacred writers vsually extend words importing knowledge whether they speake of our knowing God or his knowing vs. The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous sayth the Psalmist And if he know it will he not reward it Yes with life for the way of the wicked because as well knowne to him shall perish Answerable hereto men are sayd to know Gods wayes when their demeanure is such as if they expected he should presently take notice of theirs either to reward or punish them It is a people that doe erre in their hearts sayth the Lord for they haue not knowne my waies As they did erre in their hearts so did they not know Gods wayes in their hearts for such a knowledge of them as is confined within the braine or such as a man that neuer trauelled may haue of a strange country by a mappe no doubt they had But as beaten wayes vulgar directions of the inhabitants are better guides in vnknowne coasts then most accurate geographicall descriptions so is it not this superficiall knowledge of Gods wayes that can conduct vs to his rest whither none come but such as can tread in the steps of holy and religious men that haue gone them and learne that by experience which others paint out and decipher This is life eternall sayth our Sauiour that they might know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent equiualent hereto is that Whosoeuer belieueth in him shall not perish but haue euer lasting life Can faith and knowledge then reach to heauen vnlesse they be lengthened by loue and other Christian vertues He that is warned to receiue a Prince or man of state will make accompt of his necessary traine albeit no mans comming besides be specified Nor is it needful sacred writers should mention loue or other attendants of those queenes of vertues Wisdome faith or knowledge if these be present the rest will certainly accompany them Hee that sayth I know Christ and keeps not his commandements is a lyar and the truth is not in him Faith or knowledge without loue is not Christian but hypocriticall for only he that hath Christs commandements and keepeth them is he that loueth him We know that the sonne of God is come and hath giuen vs an vnderstanding that we may knowe him that is true and we are in him that is true euen in his sonne Iesus Christ This is the true God and eternallife Many were the peoples sinnes in the wildernesse Yet Saint Iude comprehends all in this one that they belieued not This ye know how that the Lord hauing saued the people out of the land of Aegypt afterwards destroied them that belieued not So doth the Psaimist attribute all the disobediences and rebellions of his forefathers vnto this That their spirit was not tied by faith vnto God yea the fire was kindled in Iacob and also wrath came vpon Israell because they belieued not in God and the error of the Israelites that knew not the way vnto Gods rest was in the Apostles construction vnbeliefe The word that they heard profited not them because it was not mixed with faith for we which haue belieued do enter into that Rest. The greatest praise we read giuen to the Israelites in the wildernesse was that they belieued God and his seruant Moses As long as they thus continued they were not ouercome by temptations of the world or flesh And by what meanes do all such as are borne of God ouercome the world Is not this victory from faith Who is it that ouercommeth the vvorld but he which belieueth that IESVS is the sonne of God The same dialect was well knowne in Iewry in his time that sayd The knowledge of the commaundement of the Lord is the doctrine of life that all wisdome was contained in the feare of the Lord performance of the Lawe and knowledge of his almighty power that to belieue the Lord was to keepe his commaundements Which last testimony is very vsefull in the examination of faith further to be insisted vpon in that treatise 8. It was but an effect of such mens folly as spend the best of their daies and spirits in coyning second intentions or terms of art and after they haue gotten the skill to draw solid learning by this deuice into plaine tables mistake these types or shadowes for the bodies or substances which first did seuer beliefe and knowledge of diuine matters from practise whereunto they are as naturally linked as the nerue is to the part which it moueth Nature herselfe not stretched awry by art or misled by passion from whose attraction or impulsion she is most free in matters of ordinary and common vse alwaies frames her language fully paralell to the former rules of sacred speech Into whose heart beside the hypocrites would it sinke that affection should not increase according to the degrees of worth in the obiect though no better knowne then others are Is not the quantity or perfection of goodnesse as intelligible as the bare essence or quality Or can we in part be moued with some few degrees of goodnesse knowne and not as much more moued by equall knowledge of farre more or can we rightly value the consequence of diuine truthes in respect of our selues and not frame desires of them proportionally Doth any man not much affect him whose excellent parts he highly esteemes aib●it he expect no reall fauour or commodity from him To say wee know a man in ordinary speech imports a demeanour or respect towards him answerable to that quality wee know in him To know him for a sweete companion includes a desire of his company or acquaintance an vnwillingnesse to fall out with him or to be estranged from him To conceiue of one as an odde and vnsociable wrangling mate implies a care to eschew all occasions of intercourse dealing or familiarity with him If an inferiour should say hee knew his lawfull Magistrate to be a most vnpartiall seuere Iusticer he need not specifie his vnwillingnes to be iustly accused before him of any crime Or if wee say wee know or belieue one to be a maruellous wise honest friendly man who would not gather that whilest this perswasion lasted we would be readier to commit any
regeneration may be one and the same in such as perish and those that are saued so cannot the radication or working of it be so the seed which fell by the high way side in stony ground among thornes and in good soile is supposed by our Sauiour one and the same but the radication of it was in some none in others too shallow in others it failed in the setling or taking Thus charity was to be raised in these Corinthians hearts by faith for essence and quality one and the same with that whereby they wrought miracles but by the same faith rightly set firm●lier rooted and better taken in their harts or center wherein naturall desires concurre so as it might spread it selfe vniformely with them directing them vnto obiects spirituall and good and fix them fastest vpon such as it adiudged best and most effectuall for edifying themselues and others For had these Disciples by Saint Pauls example a affected no knowledge so much as to know Iesus Christ and him crucified had they gloried in nothing saue in the crosse of the Lord Iesus Christ cructfying them vnto the world and the world vnto them both which were principall lessons of faith or had their Assent or adhaerence vnto Gods loue and mercies in Christ beene as firme and sure as their perswasions of his power to produce effects beyond the course of nature it had wrought as great miracles in themselues as it did in others euen the same minde which was in Christ Iesus such loue to all his members though their corriuals in spirituall guifts as he bare to them when they were his enemies and that was a loue truely wondrous The arguments brought by Pontificians to prooue the faith which worketh miracles and iustifies vs to be the same make in my iudgement most against themselues if we consider that these ministeriall effects wrought vpon others were but emblemes of those internall miracles which faith once rooted in the heart and set vpon it proper and more principall obiects alwaies workes in the belieuers themselues To cast out diuels was but a signe of that conquest which true faith in Christ alwaies obtained ouer hell and death to speak with new tongues but a pledge of that renouation which true faith alwaies workes in the heart and conscience to take away serpents a document of the vertue of faith in resisting or deading such temptations as made way for death into the world the drinking of deadly poison without hurt a sensible token of that soueraign antidote which true faith affords against all the infections our eares are often enforced to sucke from others pestiferous perswasions health restored to others by laying on of hands an irreuocable earnest of that eternall saluation which Faith if firme and rightly set neuer failes to take sure hold of as Gregory excellently expounds that saying of our Sauiour And these signes shall follow them that belieue In my name shall they cast out Diuels they shall speake vvith newe tongues they shal take vp serpents and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them they shal lay hands on the sick they shal recouer 6. Howsoeuer vpon these reasons the Apostle grounds that exhortation in his very entrance into that discourse couet ye earnestly the gifts and yet shew I vnto you a more excellent wa●e Loue he meant wherein they might eagerly striue to excell each other without any danger of dissention Many admirable commendations he bestowes vpon it in the words following to kindle a desire of it in their harts as well knowing their faith to be strong enough in matters they much affected but not qualified for iustification because not rightly planted no● set on such obiects as would bring forth Christian loue and true humility but rather pride and contention Far was it from his thoughts that the ardour of this sweet affection could otherwise kindle then frō a firm beliefe ful adherēce to the loue of God For we loue him because he loued vs first yea because d vve haue knowne and belieued the loue that God hath to vs for God is loue nor can we faithfully apprehend this attribute in him but it will prod●ce the like affection in vs. And yet for the right planting and radication as well of faith as loue spirituall thence springing the exercise of brotherly kindnesse or nourishing of good naturall affection is alwaies auaileable and was peculiarly necessarie vnto this people whose contentious spirits did hinder the right growth and peruert the vse of that faith which God had giuen them Generally the ordinary meanes appointed by God for the right fashioning of Christ in our hearts is the precedent practice of those duties which the doctrine of faith enioines vs as shall hereafter be shewed 7. To such as waigh the circumstances aboue expressed Saint Pauls meaning in the words late cited may best be gathered from the like speech of S. Iames He that keepes the vvhole la●e and yet faileth in one point is guilty of all seeing his failing in the one as shall appeare witnesseth he keeps none aright The ground of this inference presupposed these words If I had all faith so that I could moue Mountaines and had not loue I vvere nothing sound as if the Apostle had sayd though I had faith of force enough to produce variety of miracles and all other effects whatsoeuer and yet not effectuall to bring forth Christianloue neither I nor it were anie thing vvorth For in that it works not loue it is apparently dead in it selfe vnable to giue life to any but once firmely belieuing Christ loued vs it is impossible we should not loue him againe and for him our neighbours not belieuing this truth aright wee cannot belieue any other point as we should nor by that faith which rooted as our Sauiour speakes in an honest heart brings forth fruit with patience to saluation Is there any Iesuite that will or dare affirme that faith the Corinthians had was altogether such as Saint Paul ascribes righteousnesse vnto such as the Prophet speakes of when he sayth the iust shall liue by his faith For of that faith Paul being witnesse the performance of Gods will and patient expectation of his promises or as Romish writers confesse feare of God entire submission of our mindes vnto his will and stedfast reliance vpon his prouidence are infallible consequences 8. The Schoole-mens collections from the former place of Saint Paul that charity is as it were the soule and perfection of faith are of as little validity as if from this of Saint Iames late cited I should inferre some one Commandement to be the form or soule of all the rest because if we transgresse one that for example Thou shalt do no murther our obseruation of all the rest should profit vs nothing to saluation Or if the Reader will remember the definition or proprieties of faith last set down this conceit is as preposterous as if we
but would seeke to merit their fauour by gratefull offices It was extraordinary in this woman firmly to belieue as shee told the messengers but resting so perswaded a worke of no perfection to make her peace with the Israelites ●ad shee doubted whether their title vnto the land of Canaan had been iust or suspected Gods donation of it vnto Abraham to haue been forged by his successors as Constantines is by the baser Roman cleargy shee might without any iust imputation for want of loue or other good works haue aduentured her life amongst her neighbours in defence of her country Or had she vpon the Israelites misdemeanours distrusted their successe she might at last in worldly policy haue rather hazarded their future displeasure then incurred present danger of death or torture of her Citizens for harbouring spies But whiles she firmly belieues both that the Israelites donation was from God that they would certainly preuaile against her people though her entertainment and concealement of them were acts of kindnesse prudence and humanity yet their omission had been properly not of faith because impulsiuely they were from faith nor could they haue been omitted but through vnbeliefe or distrust vnto Gods promises Worldlings would haue condemned her not for vvant of charitie but for excesse folly rather had shee not done as shee was perswaded By faith then those workes become righteous which without it had been traiterous And if we respect not the cause of our knowledge but the thing knowne faith did perfect the workes the workes only made the perfection of faith knowne to men In this sense it is most true of faith what some misapply to iustification of mens persons workes iustifie and perfect faith not in the nature of the thing but in the sight of man to whom they witnesse the liuelihood and perfection of faith no● as causes but effects and signes of our iustifiattion they are not onely signes but conditions concomitant or precedent In the same sense are these other words of the Apostle to be vnderstood As the body without the spirit is dead so faith vvithout vvorkes is dead also For if a humane bodie want spirit breath or motion we rightly gather it wants life yet are breath and motion rather effects then causes of life But the schoole-men dreaming the holy Ghost had been scholler to Aquinas or some chiefe masters of their profession take the sprit in this place for actus primus as the soule by which wee liue and breath and hence they conceiued that grosse error which the Romanist now makes an article of his beliefe to wit that works animate or at least casually perfect faith as the soule of man doth his bodie And wheras Caluin most acutely and orthodoxally infers that if faith without works or charity bedead it is not properly but equiuocally called faith They reply workes or charitie do not informe faith intrinsecally as the reasonable soule doth man for so it would follow that as he is not a man but a dead trunk which hath no soule so it should not bee true faith but an image or dead picture of faith which wants vvorkes or charitie How then do they perfect faith Extrinsecally as the soule doth the body or other halfe of man which remaines a true body though no true man after the soules departure For application of this distinction they adioine when Saint Iames affirmes faith to be dead without workes he tearmes it dead in such a sense as we say a body is dead by the soules absence and yet remains a true bodie Whence sayth Valentian the sectaries haue furnished vs with an argument against themselues Rather this answere is contrary to Valentians and his fellowes assertions for were his illustration true and pertinent workes or faith should constitute one grace and qualitie as the body and soule make one man which no Papist dare affirme of the habite of faith and charitie being graces in their iudgements specifically distinct And Valentian who stands most vpon the former illustration expresly denies that charity much lesse workes can be any proper forme of faith either intrinsecall as the reasonable soule is of man or extrinsecall as whitenesse is of the body Some perfection notwithstanding Charitie giues to Faith in which respect it may by analogie to true and proper formes bee metaphorically said to informe saith The perfection it giues hee so expresseth that the Latine Reader by his words cited at full in the margine for I will not trouble the text with them may plainly perceiue hee was desirous to say somewhat but he knew not what Arias Montanus who better vnderstood Saint Iames his phrase by the analogie of faith and forme of wholsome doctrine then Valentian did himselfe or this fictitious analogie betwixt Charitie naturall formes interprets the former place in part to our purpose To liue as Philosophers say is to operate and vitall operation proceedeth not from the bodie but from the spirit nor doth ●●e Apostle say workes are the spirit of faith where he speakes only of the appellation or name of life His meaning is that faith without workes is as truely reputed dead as the body without the spirit is rightly sayd as it truely is dead But if wee will not wrest the letter against the Apostles meaning but rather gently apply his words to his intent the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies onely breath or motion enspired from the soule for workes in their nature are operations and are more fitly compared to breathings or motions then to the substantiall spirit or soule or the faculty whence these flow which last in proportion best answeres to faith Now as the readiest waie to ●et breath in one fallen in a swound or raise one vp out of a dead ●it is to reuiue the spirits by which vitall motions are inspired and managed so the onely way to bring forth liuing workes or fruites of righteousnes is to quicken or strengthen faith which liuely in it selfe and able to performe it proper acts as firmly to apprehend Gods power iustice and mercie will vndoubtedly giue life to all other powers and affections and impell them to their proper functions The Romanist as ignorant as the Iew of this righteousnesse which is by faith preposterously seekes to make vs new men in Christ not by reuiuing faith which is as the animall spirit by whose influence works become vitall but as if one from this principle in nature man is dead vvithout breath and motion should seeke to bring men out of swounds or dead fits by blowing breath into them with a quill or making them moue by deuises so he grosely mistaking that saying of S. Iames as the body without the spirit so faith without workes is dead also hence seekes to raise vp such as die in Adam after the same manner we haue seene them raised which fall downe dead in an anticke first by wagging one arme then another vntill the whole body moue The anticke
of the particular snares wherein they are most likely to fall is aboue my capascity without my experience and ill bese●ming my place God grant I may anoid● such as are most incident to my calling it must suffice to touch the most generall or transcendent 6. The originall of most temptations in this kinde is a secret presumption which in some breeds an expresse opinion in others onely practises thereto consequent that the receiued lawes or customes of common weales aunciently Christian are rather grounded vpon the law of God then contradictorie to any part thereof or apt to vndermine it This presumption indefinitely taken is most true but vniuersally false and dangerous howbeit many vpon this implicit perswasion that as their country Lawes and ordinances so their obedience vnto them are warranted by Gods word thinke it sufficient to examine their liues and actions by the consequent not nec̄essarie to compare them immediately with particular rules of life and thus by taking an vniuersall liberty from an indefinite warrant become often nonconformitants to Christ by fashioning themselues continually to the Christian world He that will obseruantly peruse auncient records concerning the manner how profession of Christianity was first authorized or the Gospell publikely planted in these Nations in which it now especially flourisheth will quickly informe himselfe that the strength of secular powers before predominant was alwaies readier to root out heresies or quell errors in speculatiue points of Religion then to infringe any popular custome or repeale Lawes beneficiall to publike treasurers or priuate coffers albeit they sucke the blood of the poore or to abandon rites or fashions much applauded by braue spirits or in themselues pleasant to flesh and blood though deadly as poison to new men in Christ though apt to blast the fruites of faith and obstupefie all sence or motion of the spirit the religious and learned Viues out of Saint Austine hath obserued that customes permitted or authorised by the papacie did argue that religion to be but an imperfect mixture of Gentilisme and Christianity His words are Austines verdict is plaine enough that many things are permitted by the ancient ciuill Romaine Law which are contrary to the Lawes of God This notwithstanding they admit not who whilst they labour to wed Gentilisme with Christianitie both being corrupted neither able to brooke the other as consort retaine neither Gentilisme nor Christianisme 7 No commonwealth almost in Europe but more or lesse participates of this sault No kingdome wherein either lawes or customes receiued by ●acite consent aequiualent to lawes doe not either allow or not discountenance such practices and resolutions as flesh and blood are apt to follow yea to glorie in though as directly opposite to the nature and complete essence of Christian faith as it hath beene out of Scripture explicated as heathenish rites or lawes enacted by Romane Emperors against Christians were to the generall heads or articles of beliefe or to the profession of Christianity though to abandon fellowship with these vnfruitfull workes of darknes much more to reprooue the offendors or men in authority through whose negligence or conniuence these snares lie open to catch the simple would certainly procure disgrace from the one if not danger from the other as great as the first propagators of the Gospell amongst the Gentiles were exposed vnto by disswading from Idolatrie Notwithstanding if we would not content our selues with the bare name or title of Christianity either not regarding the principall duties thereto belonging or not considering how faith by reuolution of times alteration of publike constitutions and customes like epidemicall diseases praeualent by course or turnes doth change it aspect from such points as it was sometimes most immediately and directly set vpon vnto others of greater vse for keeeping our hearts vpright in the midst of the crooked generation wherein we liue a little obseruation would serue to rectifie our irregular thoughts and fully instructvs that our triall whether we beashamed of Christ and his Gospell before men doth as immediately lie vpon our approbation or reproouing such popular fashions or practices of our times whether by speech or other significations of our affection publike or priuate according as our calling is as the auncient professors did vpon their consenting or denying to burne incese to heathen Idols to adore Caesars image to reuile Christ or reuoke their calling I speake not of customes or prescriptions in cases of lands goods or worldly commodities For though these and the like vnwritten traditions bee like nets which may bee opened or drawne at some mens pleasures to others great losse and grieuances yet these if borne with pat●e●●e make a man neuer a whit the poorer but rather richer in faith Albeit hee that resolues to vse all aduantage of humane Lawes he can take in such matters against his brother might as well forsweare the Gospell But my purpose is briefly to touch some few resolutions either approoued by ioint consent of men as the world enstiles them because her children of best fashion for noble and heroicall or practises patronized by the multitude of practitioners or example of some men famous in ciuill estimation 8. To begin with Gentillitie taken according to the vulgar and most plausible notion it retaines the substance of Gentilisme with a light tincture of Christianity To omit vnnecessary cost in apparell whereby forraigners are enriched our natiue countrey impouerished and the poore in it oppressed To spend more in one feast or banquet then would relieue the necessities of many miserable pined impotent creatures daily presented to their eies for moe months then the parties entertained are in number is an ordinary practice of this profession much affected by many such as haue liued sometimes of almes but are desirous to transforme themselues into another shape by following fashions most applauded of their betters yet what resolution could be more flatly contradictorie then this is to that precept of our Sauiour When thou makest a dinner or a supper call not thy friends nor thy brethren neither thy kinsmen nor thy rich neighbours least they also bid thee againe and a recompence bee made thee But when thou makest a feast call the poore the maimed the lame the blinde And thou shalt be blessed for they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt bee recompensed at the resurrection of the iust Here then is one especiall point of trying their faith whom God hath blessed with store and plenty if they can assent to this commandement as true and good and delight in the practice of it whiles it comes in competition with the contrary custome so much followed and applanded by men of best place and reckoning in the worldes iudgement Forseeing the good wee haue done or left vndone to such seely ones as Christ here commends vnto our care must be the measure of our faith or infidelity of our loue or neglect of him in that day of finall accompts indulgent or remorcelesse
CHRIST as we doe but terminated his beliefe vnto the generall mercie and prouidence of God whereof the great mystery of the incarnation was the principall branch and CHRIST IESVS in the fulnesse of time exhibited in our flesh the visible fruit of life which that other IESVS did but hope for as yet in the roote not distinctly knowing it nor the vertue of it but ready actually to embrace it and feed vpon it whensoeuer it should be brought forth For as much as I haue obserued out of this speech is implied in the exegeticall repetition of it He that belieueth the Lord taketh h●ed to the Commaundements and hee that trusteth in him shall not be hurt there shall no euill happen vnto him that feareth the Lord but in temptation euen againe he will deliuer him 3. That wee may practice what is commaunded and yet not keepe the commandement Saint Iames hath put out of all question If yee fulfill the r●iall Law according to the Scripture thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe ye doe well But if ye haue respect to persons ye commit sinne and are conuinced of the Law as transgressors For whosoeuer shall keepe the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guilty of all This fulfilling of the Law or keeping of the commaundements which as Solomon saith is the whole man or the whole duty whereunto man was ordained the complete and perfect Christian vertue consists of two parts a bodie and a soule The bodie is the doing of what the written Law commaunds whether by acts positiue or inhibitiue the soule is the reason or internall law of the minde which impels seuerall faculties to such acts or workes For to speake properly and scholastickely all performance of good workes commaunded or forbearance of things forbidden spring not immediately out of faith as the truncke out of the roote the branches out of the truncke or the fruit out of the branches But as the fruits of righteousnesse are of seuerall kindes and qualities so haue they seuerall faculties or affections for their proper stockes out of which they grow The auoidance of adultery fornication or whatsoeuer pollutions of the flesh with the fruites of holines contrary to these vices spring immediately from the vertues of temperance and chastity Abstinence from murder with the acts of mercy opposite to the seuerall branches thereof flourish out of the affection or vertue of humanity courtesie gentlenesse or the like So haue the acts of the affirmatiue precept contained in that negatiue thou shalt not steale as of euery other Commaundement whether positiue or inhibitiue a peculiar habite or inclination out of which they bud yet as all motion is inspired from the head albeit we goe vpon our feete or moue our hands or other member to defend our selues or serue the necessities of nature So although we are truely said to walke in Gods waies to fight his battailes or doe him seruice when we vse any facultie or affection to his glory yet is our firme assent vnto his good will and pleasure reuealed vnto vs by the doctrine ●f faith as the animall faculty which impels vs to these exercises Hence as we gather the body is dead if it want spirit or motion so as Saint Iames implies the image of God and his goodnesse or to vse another Apostles words the forme or fashion of CHRIST IESVS in vs is without life vnlesse our faith and assent vnto them haue this soueraigne commaund to impell and moue euery faculty to execute that part of Gods will whereto by the doctrine of faith it is designed And yet as the exercise of outward members increaseth internall vigor and strength and refresheth the spirits by which we moue so doe the acts of euery faculty vertue or affection righly imploied perfect faith not by communication or imputation of their perfection to it as the Romanist out of his doting loue to his faithlesse charitie dreames but by stirring vp exercising or intending its owne naturall vigor or perfection Vnlesse euery practique facultie receiue this influence from liuely faith or from the image of God or Christ which it frameth in our mindes and proposeth as a visible patterne for ou● imitation in all our workes thoughts and resolutions d●cimur vt neruis al●enis mobile lignum we may be operatiue as puppets are nimble in outward shew but our seeming workes of charity or best other we can pretend will be as a pish and counterfeit as their motions neither in their kinde truely vitall But as puppets are mooued wholly at his direction and bent that extends or slackes the strings whereon they dance so are our soules carried hither and thither as the diuell the world and flesh or our owne foolish affections ●osse them vsually excessiue where they should be sparing and there most sparing where they should exceed This difformity was most apparent in their workes whose reformation Saint Iames seekes for destitute of all good workes most of them were not but onely of vniformity in working They had learned to giue honour not verball but reall where honour was due duty and good respect to whom such offices belonged The rich and men of better place and fashion they did friendly and louingly entertaine which was a worke in it nature good and commendable but their abundant kindnesse towards equals or superiours became as a wen to intercept that nutriment which should haue descended to other inferiour members of CHRISTS body and by these outward exercises of magnificence their internall bowels of compassion become colde towards their poore brethren whom principally they should haue warmed and refreshed Yet such defects or difformities in their actions these halfe Christians halfe gentiles true hypocrites hoped to couer with the mantle of faith whose nature vse and properties they quite mistooke That they were not without workes the world might witnesse and no question but these enterteinments were intended as feasts of charity and with purpose to winne the fauour of the great ones with whom they liued to their profession in which respect their kindnesses might well seeme vnto themselues exercises of religion as the like doe to many of the best sort amongst vs when there is any ground of hope for gaining furtherance and countenance to good purposes as indeed with such references they are if done in fath but that this difformity in these mens workes did proceed from a precedent defect in faith is manifestly implied in that the Apostle seekes their reformation by reducing them to such an vniformity in working as can proceed onely from such true and liuely faith as hath beene described For the rectifying of faith it selfe he expresseth vnto them the exemplary forme or patterne first of the imitable perfection of the godhead then of that which is in CHRIST of both which as hath beene obserued true faith in the minde is the liue operatiue image and must imprint the like character vpon inferior faculties or affections ere their
the dead from whence also he receiued him in a figure And as hee staggered not at the first promise concerning his birth through vnbeliefe so neither did he now dispute with God about the lawfulnesse of his act nor reason how he should be raised againe Iustified he was at both instants by his beliefe not as terminated to his worke or to the possibilitie of Isaacks birth and resurrection but as through them it found accesse to his birth death and resurrection whom Isaac prefigured Hauing performed Gods will in obeying his Commaund to sacrifice his onely sonne hee patiently expected the promise concer-cerning his Redeemer whose incarnation whose sufferings and exaltation are obiects of Faith not of works effected by God and not by man although to the like application of their benefits the right works as were in Abraham be most necessary seeing true beliefe of this promise as in the first section was declared virtually includes the same minde in vs that was in CHRIST a readinesse to doe workes of euery kinde which notwithstanding are no associates of Faith in the businesse of iustifycation Not to bee weake in faith not to doubt of the promise through vnbeliefe to be strengthened in faith to be fully perswaded that bee which had promised was able also to performe were pure acts of faith though virtually including works as proper thereto as forcibly excluding all other vertues from sharing with it in this businesse as can possibly bee conceiued yet sayth the Apostle euen for these acts late mentioned it was imputed to him for righteousnesse How preposterous then and basely shuffling are the glosses put by Bellarmine vpon the Apostle in this place as if his purpose had been to shew that the impious and vniust could not be iustifyed by workes onely because Abraham though iust before was not made more iust by meere workes without faith when as he leuels his whole discourse to the cleane contrarie point maintained by vs That seeing righteousnesse was imputed to Abraham by faith and not through works none after him should in this life at any time whether before or after the infusion of grace or inherent righteousnesse presume to seeke or hope for like approbation from God otherwise then onely by faith Thus much the Apostle hath as fully and plainly expressed as any ingenuous Reader can desire Now it was not written for his sake alone that it to wit the strength and full assurance of his faith was imputed to him sorrighteousnesse but also for vs to whom it the like faith shall be imputed for righteousnesse if wee belieue in him that raised vp IESVS our Lord from the dead The ground of the Apostles reason or similitude here mentioned wherein the force and strength of our argument is included supposeth all our righteousnesse whether actuall or habituall should bee as vnapt to attaine euerlasting life or saluation which is the end of all graces bestowed vpon vs as Abrahams decrepit body was to produce so many nations yet as he onely by belieuing God who was able to effect thus much and more obtained the promise and was blessed with more children from Sarahs dead wombe then the most fruitfull Parents that liued before or should come after them so wee onely by like firme beliefe in the same God which raised vp our Lord IESVS CHRIST from the dead shall bee partakers of the promise made in him heires of eternall life whereto seeing our inherent rightcousnesse hath no proportion it must for this reason still be sued for as a meere gift of God farther exceeding all desert of any supernaturall grace in vs then the mighty increase of Abrahams seed did the strength of his decaied nature 6. The first spring of all Romish errors in this argument issues out of their generall ignorance of Saint Pauls phrase amongst many of whose sayings seeming hard and incompatible with their schoole conceits that Rom. 4. of Gods iustifying the impious and vngodly ministers greatest offence and causeth them to inuert the course of their diuinitie quite contrary ●o the Apostles method● To pronounce him iust that is internally impious and vniust cannot in their schoole learning stand with Gods truth but to make him which ere while was by nature vniust and impious inherently and perfectly iust by plentifull infusion of grace is an argument as they deeme of his goodnesse no disparagement to his iustice as perchance it were not might wee iudge of his purpose to saue sinners by the rules of humane reason neuer consulting the Canons of life But if wee conceiue of Gods grace by his comments in whom it dwelt in great abundance this verie conceipt of being iustified by its inherence includes extreame antipathy to the nature and vtterly peruerts the right vse of it as to restraine th●● same Apostles speeches to the first iustification or prime infusion of inherent righteousnesse which is the necessarie consequent of the former error is cōtradictiously to contest with the spirit by which he vttered these diuine Oracles For if belieuing him which iustifies the impious were imputed for righteousnesse vnto Abraham after he had been for a long time more righteous then the ordinarie sort of Gods Saints or Elect Abraham all this while vnfaignedly belieued himselfe to be a sinner no way iustified in himselfe but seeking to be iustified by him who if he shew not mercie vnto sinners whiles they are sinners all mankind should vtterly perish Against this poisonous leauen wherewith the Pharisee first and the Romanist his successor since hath infected the bread of life and tainted the first fruites of Gods spirit S. Paul prescribes that Catholick antidote There is no difference all haue sinned and are depriued of the glory of God and are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption which is in CHRIST IESVS Abraham was all his life time comprehended in this catalogue and is made by the Apostle as a perpetuall so a principall instance of that finall resolution Therefore we conclude that a man is iustified by faith without the workes of the Lawe Was hee then in no sort iustified by workes Yes hee might boldly contest as Iob did and euery godly man yet safely may with others for integrity of life and plenty of workes in which hee might iustly reioice or glorie yet with men not with God In this sense their resolution which say we are iustified by workes before men not before God is most true and warranted by that place of Saint Paul let them nothence deny or occasion others to forget that such integritie or comparatiue rightcousnesse to inherent is necessarily presupposed to iustification in the sight of God and doth not only declare our faith or iustification to men seeing it implies a contradiction in the vnanimous tenent of all reformed Churches to admit faith precedent and workes onely subsequent to the iustification whereof Paul here speakes His drift and scope in that third and fowrth to the Romans
is onely this That although men may bee truely iust and holy in respect of others and rich in all manner of workes that are good as Abraham was thus farre known and approued not by men onely but by God yet when they appeare before his tribunal who best knows as wel the imperfectiō as the truth of their integritie they must still frame their supplications sub forma pauper is yea sub forma impij alwaies acknowledging themselues to be vnprofitable seruants alwaies praying Lord forgiue vs our sinnes and bee mercifull to vs miserable sinners The onely complement of all inherent righteousnes possible in this life is this perpetuall vnfaigned acknowledgement of our vnrighteonsnesse whereby wee are made immediately capable of his righteousnesse which alone can couer our sinnes as being alone without all staine or mixture of impiety The like vnfaigned acknowledgement of their sinnes or faithfull plea for mercy the hypocrites or men deuoid of faith or grace inherent cannot possibly make as shall anon be declared This absolute necessity and vtter insufficiency of workes or righteousnesse inherent to iustification in the sight of God is as perspicuous from the Apostles instance in Dauid who had resolued this doubt Lord who shall dwell in thy Tabernacle who shall rest in thine holy mountaine with S. Iames He that walketh vprightly and worketh righteousnesse and speaketh the truth in his heart Hee had pronounced a blessing to the man that walketh not in the counsell of the wicked but setteth his delight in the Lawe of the Lord shall we imagine such a man to be without workes The Lord as he addes knoweth the way of the righteous which is as much as Saint Iames meant by iustification as much as was said to Abraham vpon that fact by which as the Apostle sayth hee was iustified For that God should know their wayes implies his approbation of their persons for men vpright and intire in respect of hypocrites and fruitlesse hearers of their workes for such as hee requires in the parties to be iustified by him Were they therfore iustified or finally acquitted by or for their works If finally acquitted then blessed likewise for them Now in opposition to this Pharisaicall conceit S. Paul directed by the Spirit who best knew the Psalmists full meaning in euery passage vpon what occasions and vnto what point hee spake directly brings in Dauid himselfe deriuing the blessednesse vsually pronounced in Scriptures to the intire and vpright in heart from Gods mercies as from it onely true and immediate cause not from their v●rightnesse or integrity with which it hath connexion onely finall as being applied onely to parties thus qualified none originall To him that worketh not but belieueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse euen as Dauid declareth the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes saying Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiuen and whose sinnes are couered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no finne The man then in whose spirit is no guile for of such the Psalmist speaketh is iustified not because of his sincerity but because the Lord imputeth not that sinne vnto him which he still vnfaignedly acknowledgeth to bee in him continually praying Lord enter not into iudgement with thy seruant alwaies confessing Lord in thy sight no flesh liuing shall be iustified to wit otherwise then by not entering into iudgement or by nonimputation of his sinnes Thus you see euen the best of Gods saints seeke iustification onely by faith with Saint Paul and yet require thereto with Saint Iames Pure Religion and vndefiled in the sight of God euen the Father 7. This reconcilement of the seeming contradiction betweene these two Apostles hitherto prosecuted doth voluntarily present it selfe to such as consider the seuerall occasions of their writings and take not their speeches as they now lie most commodiously for application vnto moderne oppositions For one and the same Physician to prescribe medicines much different to diseases altogether diuerse or quite contrarie would neither impeach him of vnskilfulnesse or vnconstancy The very contrarietie of their errors with whom these two Apostles had to deale would drawe speeches from any one of vs that should seuerally entend their refutation in forme as contradictorie as theirs be yet both fully consonant to the truth because rightly proportioned to their opposite ends The Iew whose heresie S. Paul labours to auert from the Romaines and to ●oot out of the Galathians looked for a Messias immediately to crowne the conceited perfection of their workes with honour on earth and glory in heauen not one that should be the end and perfection of the Law to free them from the curse it had brought vpon them or to reconcile them vnto God by his righteousnesse To beate downe this pride there was no remedy possible besides faith in CHRIST no method so auaileable as that hee vseth first setting foorth the haynousnesse of sinne and necessity of it inherence whose consideration might deiect them afterwards pr●ssing Gods mercies in CHRIST offered to all that would denie themselues confesse their sinnes and by faith vnsaigned relie on their Redeemers satisfaction Saint Iames disputes against the opposite error of the Libertines who presumed the merits and perpetuall mediation of CHRIST to be not onely most necessary but in themselues sufficient to saue all that did apprehend them as true although destitute of such workes as their calling required and as Gods decree exacted for the effectuall application of Christs allsufficient merits which for this reason are scarce mentioned by this Apostle because magnified they were though not too much yet amisse by the parties whom he refutes Their contempt or wanton inuerting of Gods graces offered or in part receiued was no lesse hainous or preposterous then if Bartimeus or others in his case called by our Sauiour in hope to recouer their sight should haue desired Him rather to haue made such a new sun as might make blind men see without any internall light in the eye or alteration in the organ of sight Not by any necessity of nature but by the will and purpose of the Almighty grace and righteousnesse inherent though imperfect are as necessary for effectuall adherence or vnion to CHRIST as the Christall humor of the eye or right constitution of the whole organ is for perception of colours or light externall Hence is the seeming inconuenience arising from Saint Iames his causall forme of speech 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 easilie answered For the immediate and principall cause presupposed it is vsuall to attribute a kinde of causality to the qualification of the subiect though requisite onely as a meere passiue disposition without which the principall or sole agent should want his efficacie To one demaunding why the Moon● should be ecclipsed when the earth is directly interposed betweene it and the body of the sunne this forme of speech would neither be improper nor
cause of iustification by which our sinnes are formally remitted is as if we should aske one of their young pupils what were Latine for manus Iustification taken as we doe it for remission of sinnes not by inherent righteousnesse or ought within vs immediatly incompetible with them but by the externall merits of Christ is a forme or entity as simple as any formall cause can be and simple or vncompounded entities can neither haue formall causes or ought in proportion answearing to them Wherefore as I said it is either the follie or knauery of our aduersaries to demaund a formall cause of their iustification that deny themselues to beformallie iust in the sight of God For so to be iust and to bee iust onely by acceptance or non-imputation of vniustice are tearmes as opposite as can bee imagined Hee alone is formallie iust which hath that forme inherent in himselfe by which he is denominated iust and so accepted with God as Philosophers deny the same to be formally hot because it hath no forme of heate inherent in it but onely produceth heat in other bodies To be formally iust we for these reasons attribute onely vnto Christ who alone hath such righteousnesse inherent in himselfe as by the interposition of it betweene Gods iustice and sinfull flesh doth stop the proceeding of his iudgements as Phinehas zeale did stay the plague otherwise ready to deuoure the host of Israell Our aduersaries in that they acknowledge inherent righteousnesse to be the sole formall cause of iustification doe by the same assertion necessarily graunt it to be the sole true immediate cause of remission of sinnes of absolution from death and admis●ion to life This is the onely point from which they cannot start at which neuerthelesse whiles they stand they may acknowledge Christ come in the flesh crucified dead and buried or perhaps ascended into heauen but denie they doe the power of his sitting at the right hand of God the vertue of his mediation or intercession and more then halfe euacuate the eternity of his Priesthood as shall be shewed after this briefe explication of our assertion 2. When we teach iustification by faith and not by workes our meaning is by the doctrine of faith wee are bound to acknowledge and confesse that CHRIST IESVS by his eternall Priesthood whose offices in their seuerall places shall bee expressed is not onelie the sole meritorious cause of all graces or righteousnesse inherent requisite to finall absolution but these supposed in the party to bee absolued hee is likewise the sole immediate cause of finall absolution or iustification The latter part of this assertion may admit this ilustration Suppose a man not destitute of other senses yet ready euery moment to droupe or fall into some deadly fit vnlesse his spirits were refreshed by pleasant musicke we might truely say one in this case did liue by the sense of hearing for deafe hee should quickly die yet were musicke the sole immediate cause of his preseruation without actuall application of whose sound euen this sense it selfe by whose meanes his spirits refreshed better enable his other senses to their proper functions would foorthwith faile him In this sort doe sinfull men drawe life from CHRIST by faith alone by which likewise and not by workes wee are sayd to abide in him as being vnited in spirit to him albeit by abiding so vnited our other faculties are strengthened and viuificated to bring forth the fruits of righteousnesse The former instance notwithstanding doth not exemplifie the first part of our Assertion for musicke only continues life naturall which is supposed to haue another originall But if we speake of life spirituall maintained by saith and of which faith it selfe is a part it was originally and wholly deriued from CHRIST on whom faith and all other graces whatsoeuer tam in fieri quam infacto as well in the first production as during the time of their continuance and preseruation depend as essentially and perpetually as the light of the moone or other participated or reflected splendor doth on the brightnesse of the Sunne Nor may wee imagine that this borrowed and variable righteousnesse in vs though thus depending on the Sonne of righteousnesse is or can be euen whiles it remaines without eclipse or in such fulnesse as in this life the best men at any time are capable of sufficient for the time being to acquit or absolue vs if God should enter into iudgement with vs. This strict dependence of such righteousnesse as we haue on CHRISTS righteousnesse presupposed faith is said to iustifie vs not by any effects in vs deriued from him but by its transeunt acts reciprocally lifting vp our hearts to the fountaine whence grace and spirituall life doth flow and reflecting the beames or raies of our mindes thus illuminated vnto our mysticall head still de●iuing vertue from his crucified body to stint the deadly issues of sinne not vtterly to expell all reliques of vnrighteousnesse For when we take the eyes of faith of him albeit the habite of faith and other graces remaine as intire in vs as euer they were the very memory of transgressions past or the sight of sinnes inherent whilest we look on them deiect vs. According to this disferent aspect euen the best men liuing whilest this brittle glasse of mortality and mutability is in running may bee subiect to the like subalternation of hopes and feare the exiled Po●t hath expressed Spes mihi magna subest dum te mitissime Caesar Spes mihi respicio dum mea facta cadit Strength to my hopes doth still accrewe whil'st Caesars mildnesse I do vie we But mine owne facts whilest I beholde my heart doth faile my hopes growe colde But though sinne may often sting vs by fits and bring vs almost to deaths dore by vicissitude of despaire or disma● yet we recouer as presently by faithfull looking on the glorious author as the Israelites did by beholding the visible signe of saluation 3. The controuersie hitherto proposed and declared in as scholasticke forme as our English tongue well can beare may be reduced in fewest tearmes and fittest for popular instruction vnto the right vse and immediate end of faith and other sanctifying graces We of reformed Churches with vnanimous consent of heart and minde belieue and teach and thou O CHRIST our Lord our life and strength giue iudgement out of thy throne of Maiestie whether not more agreeable to thy minde then shee which sits as Queene of heauen and brags as if she were thy best beloued Spouse or her children do That our Faith our Hope and Charitie or whatsoeuer pledges of thy fathers loue and fauour towards vs we through thy merits haue obtained were giuen vs not to alter but to better that plea we made before we had them Being by nature the sonnes of wrath and groning vnder the heauie burden of our sinnes with teares and sighes by thy precious blood by thy death and passion wee daily besought Him for
for the nature physicall properties or the quantitie of the mettall but for the princes estimate whose image and superscription it beares One corallarie of this conclusion gathered by these authors themselues was that the entitie or qualitie of grace might increase without any necessarie increase of the value or estimate of it with God as the kings maiesty if it should please him might make the same portion of siluer which now goes for a shilling to be currant but for nine pence or rather make that peece as large as the shilling though retaining the same value inscription it now beares We shall perchance no way crosse these professours tenent but onely better illustrate our owne if we say As it is not the legall instrument though bearing the s●ale or inscription royall but the princes will and pleasure thereby authentiquely testified which frees the malefactor from sentence of condemnation so neither is it grace or righteousnesse inherent though these be the image and character of our righteous Iudge but the mercy and free pardon of our God proclaimed indefinitely to all the penitent but sealed to euery faithfull soule in particular by those pledges of the spirit which finally absolues vs from the curse laide vpon vs by the Law and enstates vs in the promises of the Gospel In both pleas the sanctified soule vseth saith all other graces or parts of righteousnes inherent no otherwise then a penitent malefactor would doe the instrument wherein the princes pleasure is contained if he were to plead his cause before the prince himselfe in whose presence though with ordinary Iudges they will sometimes be too bold I presume no malefactor would stand vpon tearmes of integrity or present innocency because he had his pardon vnder seale seeing that was giuen him to plead for mercy not for iustice Not altogether different from these exemplifications of our assertion some schoolemen though seeking to come as neer the Romish Church present tenents as they could thought it no inconuenience to hold that the grace wherby men become truely and inherently iust was not of it owne nature absolutely incompatible with all degrees or reliques of sin in respect of which we might stand in need of Gods fauour and mercy after communication of grace But this and the like opinions are vtterly destroyed root and branch by the thunderbolt of the former decree and their authors and followers censured by Vasquez for holding it but as possible to the absolute power of the Almightie to replenish our soules vvith grace and not take away all staine of sinne for that any reliques of the one should lodge in the same brest with the other implies a contradiction in his diuinity which vaine surmise shall be refuted when we come to handle the nature of sin and the necessity of grace How friuolously he alleageth that of Saint Iohn whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not to this purpose the Reader may perceiue by the true interpretation of that place in the Chapter following 6. For the time I would request as many as feare the shipwracke of faith and conscience to rest contented with this short discouery of two rocks against which all that follow the Trent Councels direction ineuitably dash The first an cuacuation of Christs priesthood for by their doctrine after grace is infused and remaines inherent a man may bee iustified saued and glorified without any more reference to Him then Adam in the state of integrity had Christ say they hath restored vnto vs what we lost in Adam What was that Inherent righteousnesse so we grant with the Antient. But in what measure In as full and perfect as Adam had it before his fall or without admixture of corruption drawne from his loynes So farre the Romanists seeks to extend the authoritie of some Fathers The best vse and end then of grace in his construction is to passe ocuer the euerlasting Couenant of grace in Christ that wee may recoue the state which our first Parents forfeited This is the most immediate and necessarie consequence of the Trent Fathers determination for if habituall grace be as they decree the sole formall cause of iustification that once gotten will exclude all necessity or vse of any other cause or meanes of reconciliation or acceptance with God Agreeable hereto as Vasquez disputes at large they admit no application of Christs merits but onely in the collation of gifts inherent or infusion of Charity Admitting then one of their Church should remaine in the state of habituall grace a weeke or two before his death let vs suppose as for disputation sake or sure tryall of a true formall cause it is lawfull by their rules giuen to this purpose to suppose any impossibility that Christ had neuer beene incarnate crucified raised from the dead or set at the right hand of God the former party notwithstanding should be as certainly saued as hee can be by beliefe of all these Articles and become heire infallible of as great glory and felicity as wee hope for by incorporation into Christs body Nor doth Christ if their opinion may stand sit at the right hand of his Father to make intercession for vs after grace is infused or whiles wee retaine it but that it may be infused and recouered if it should chance to be lost Now what heresie was there broached more blasphemous against Christ than this which abolisheth the principall part of his mediation what could more directlie cuacuate that great mysterie of the true and reall vnion betwixt the head of the Church and the members By this doctrine neither are our persons in this life reconciled to God nor our nature exalted to dignity in the life to come by being vnited to Christ but immediately by our inherent righteousnesse without any intermediation of his person his sacrifice merites or other benefit of his passion as any cause at all or bond of our vnion or acceptance with God after the infusion of grace which is the onely formall linke betwixt the diuine nature and ours whence it necessarily followes that our humane nature must though by another kinde of vnion and lesse measure of an inferiour grace bee as immediately vnited to God as immediately approued for iust as immediately meritorious of glory as immediately capable of Gods presence as Christ was Might not that great Schooleman for such I haue euer accompted Vasquez with lesse danger to his soule or repugnancie to this great mysterie ●hole truth directly to deny he durst not or other tenents maintained by him haue granted that as Christ is truely reputed holy not onely from the Holinesse formally inherent in his humane nature but from the vnction of the deitie or vncreated holinesse whereto hee is hypostatically vnited so might all partakers of such faith as Saint Paul ascribes righteousnesse vnto bee truely and properly called and reputed righteous in the sight of God from the absolute righteousnesse of Christ as man to whom they are by the
book here we suppose what there shall be prooued that while we are in the flesh wee haue sin in vs more or lesse but depriued of rule or soueraignety where faith or grace hath gotten possession in the heart 2. Man as he is rightly called a little world so hath he a true regiment in himselfe His forme of gouernment in the state of integrity may be parralelled by the imaginary model of Platoes weale publique or the vtopia his disordered state of nature before grace infused by an Anarchy or some outcountry infested by outlawes wherein the best are most exposed to spoile his state of grace by a ciuill or well gouerned kingdome or Aristocracie The best and worst Bodies politique anarchies right ordered states do not differ in that the one hath theeues malefactors and the other none but rather as some dialects in this land distinguish in that the one hath re●uers the other onely plaine thieues or briefly in that malefactors cannot so beare themselues out in mischiefe ouersway the Lawes or ouerrunne honest men in the one as in the other they may The times haue bin not long since wherein if any poore man in some quarters of this land should haue followed such rauinous creatures as liued by night spoiles to their dens he should haue had more to take part against him then ioine with him others knowing where there goods were who stole them durst not own them least they should seeme to challenge the felon of theft which would sooner haue endangered their liues then his or procured the burning of their houses ouer their heads or some like mischiefe The honester man more obseruant of his Princes lawes the harder in those daies was his case the ordinary course which the more crafty or politicke could take for their safety was when they saw a thiefe to consent vnto him either outputting their neighbors goods for him to driue or harbouring such as they could not but know to be bootehailers But these misorders God bee praised are much amended their memory though yet fresh fitly serues to set forth the state of the vnregerate or meere naturall man in whom sin is alwaies insolent and audacious euen openly to wound the soule and waste the conscience and persecuted by the Law of God or nature rageth the more and raiseth rebellion in the affections seeking as it were to set all the faculties of the sonie in combustion rather then it should be restrained of it wonted course The onely peace and security the carnally minded thus assaulted finds is to suffer his conscience to sleepe and the eie of reason which I may tearme faith naturall to winke at these disorders of inferiour faculties or tacitely cōsent vnto them But so it is not in the state of grace which not withstanding neuer wants sinfull adherents not only in habite or affection but oftimes bursting out into action to hurt both soule and conscience as there alwaies haue been and euer will be thefts and robberies with other outrages cōmitted euen in the most ciuill best gouerned parts in the land But as in them the mean●st subiect that can make proof of his wrongs or who did them may haue enough to take his part for prosecuting or attaching and safely vse the benefit of knowne lawes for repressing or cutting of the stoutest or proudest malefactors so the faithfull heart and conscience is alwaies resolute bold to challenge his dearest affections of euery least transgression to represse arraigne and conde●n them And as Carthages often prouocation of Rome cost it dearer in the setting on then other Cittie 's vanquished by the Romanes so such delights or pleasures as haue most wronged our soules or done greatest despight vnto the spirit of grace are kept vnder with greatest care and in the end throughliest mo●tified by the law of faith Euen in the regiment of this little world that axiome hath it due force Ex malis moribus bonae leges nascūtur Euery man inuents peculiar lawes secret vowes or the like against such practises or affectiōs as haue most seduced him to transgresse the lawes of his God 3. Now as the state or publike gouernment is not to be scandalized with the infamy of thieues and robbers which harbour in it so long as the magistracie is vigilant to enact and execute seuere lawes for their repression so neither are we accounted by our gratious God amongst the vniust for these sinnes which often make head against vs so long as faith thus fights against them keeps them vnderable to holde such a hand ouer them manifested known as gouernors in a wel ordered body politicke do ouer notorious open malefactors Not that such sins are not in their nature meritorious of eternal death or not sufficient if God shold deale in iustice to condemne vs but that in mercy he doth not impute them whiles thus qualified in the habite we sue for pardon in the name mediation of our Sauior Thus I dare boldly say that not the least sin against the Law of God committed after regeneration but were it possible for the regenerate to giue indulgence to it would at the least exclude them from life eternall Nor doth this argue as some captious reader will perhaps imagine that a man may fall either finally or totally from the state of grace but rather that all impossibility he hath of not so falling essentially depends vpon a like impossibility of not continuing his indulgence to knowne offences or negligence in repeating or bewailing his secret sins Euen after the infusion of faith most perfect faithfull repentance for sins committed is as absolutely necessarie to saluation as the first iususion was Nor is this heauenly pledge while dormant though truely dwelling in our soules immediately apt to iustifie their conceite of these great mysteries is to ieiune triuiall which make iustification but one indiuisible transitory act or mutatum esse from the state of nature to the state of grace In St. Pauls diuinity sure I am ●● hath a permanent duration it is but the next step vnto hypocrisie a meere peruerting of the vse of grace thus to inferre I haue true faith therfore I shall alwayes vse it aright A wise man would rather argue thus I haue the right vse and exercise of grace therefore my faith is true and such as vvill iustifie As the first infusion of it fully remits our sinnes past and is to vs a sure pledge of GODs perpetuall fauour so in no case may wee take it as an absolute antedated pardon for sinnes to come as if they were forgiuen of God before committed by vs for they are forgiuen by the right vse or exercise not by the bare habit or inhabitation of faith in our soules Into the contrary errors men are often led by a ielousie of comming to neere the Papists if they should admit of more iustifications then one And it is true that iustification in some sence excludes plurality or
morall some passiue capacities are equired in vs wherewith they whom CHRIST raised were not qualified whiles naturally dead nor were they capable of renouation in life spirituall but by reassuming life naturall with it properties Nor doth it imply any shewe of contradiction that the actuall endeuours of life naturall or meerely morall in vs or the qualification resulting from them should be as meerely passiue in respect of life truely spirituall as the state of death or vtter depriuation of all sense or motion in such as CHRIST raised vp was in regard of life naturall The proportion then will holde best thus As CHRIST infused not humane life into trees stocks stones but into bodies passiuely organized and figured for the fit habitation of the humane soule so neither doth hee ordinarily bestow supernaturall grace on euerie one that hath a reasonable soule but on such only as are passiuely prepared for it Wherein this preparation consists or what our endeauours can adde vnto it is the point now in question partly to be disputed in this present more fully in discourses following To the assertion last mentioned this obseruation well sutes that in the first workes of creation the omnipotent power did obserue the orderly progresse afterwards appointed vnto nature and proceeded not per saltum but first created a common masse out of which he made the heauen and earth not trees plants or liuing creatures immediately For though these receiued life from their maker after another manner then indiuiduals of the same kinde now do yet the earth and sea affoorded their matter and substance meerly passiue Man he made of the earth but first as is probable externally figured or proportioned the woman likewise was his immediate workmanship but had her bodily or passiue beginning from the man Thus euen the most immediate workes of God presuppose ordinarily such a sub-ordination of passiue capacities as is vsually seene in matters producible by humane labour wit or industrie 3 That grace then is not generated or educed out of the soule but properly created in it ought not in any congruitie of reason to exclude all actiue though but humane endeuours precedent for the better attainment of it Nor haue I euer read of any Protestant or Papist which held mariage as either vnnecessarie or superfluous for the propagation of mankinde albeit the most and best Diuines in both religions be of opinion that the reasonable soule is not generated but immediatly created by God And notwithstanding the supposed truth of this opinion vnlesse the parents of our bodies had been as carefull for our bringing foorth as bruite beasts are ouer their broode few of vs this day liuing had euer enioied the light Now for the auoiding of Pelagianisme or iust imputation of popery in this point it is enough to disclaime all such dispositions preparations or endeauours as actually cooperate or concurre to the production of faith as temperate carriage or behauiour doe for producing the habit of temperance or naturall qualities of moisture heate and cold doe in the education of formes meerely naturall or constitution of bodies totally generable So shall he neuer be able to acquit himselfe from the error of the Stoicks or Manichees that accounts it indifferent what workes we doe or how we demeane our selues before regeneration For as God creates not the reasonable soule in euery matter so doth he not create grace in euery soule And as this inference is good vnlesse the Fathers of our bodies had beene before vs God had not created vs these soules in whose creation our fathers had no finger so likewise in this vnlesse before our regeneration we so demeane our selues as God in his word prescribes he ordinarly creates not grace in vs to whose creation neuerthelesse our best endeauours conferre no more then our parents doe to the creation of our soules or the redd earth did to the making of Adam This fully remoues the former difficulty which seemed to dull our endeauors and from this instance of the reasonable soules creation I would rather commend this meditation to the Reader As greater care is to be had of a woman with children of Queenes and Princely mothers especially then of bruite beasts great with yong albeit the fruit of their wombes be the more immediate worke or blessing of God so should our care and industry for conceiuing faith euen in that it is the sole gift of God be much greater then we vse for the attainement of whatsoeuer can by meanes naturall or ordinary be immediately atchieued CHAP. II. That circumspect following the rules of Scripture is more auaileable for attaining of true faith then the practice of morall precepts for producing morall habits That there may be naturall perswasions of spirituall truths and morall desires of spirituall good both right in their kinde though nothing worth in themselues but only capable of better because not hypocriticall 1. IN that it hath pleased the spirit to write so much for mens directions in the way of life yet not so much to instruct the faithfull what they should doe after their regeneration fully wrought as the vnregenerate what he should doe that it might bee wrought in him to conceiue it but as doubtfull whether his sacred rules were not more sufficient effectuall and complete for attaining true and liuely faith then any Philosophicall methods for planting morall vertues were to derogate as much from Gods wisdome as he should doe from his power that maintained man without direction or assistance supernaturall might worke out his owne saluation Yet shall he much wrong both himselfe and me that stretcheth this similitude further then thus As he that duely obserues philosophicall praecepts of morality shall certainely produce morall habits and become truely iust and honest by often practising acts of iustice temperance and sobriety so he that circumspectly followes rules giuen by the spirit of God for attaining faith shall haue it more assuredly produced in him euen because it is not produced by him but by his God who is more able to create new hearts in vs then the naturall or vnregenerate man to worke any morall reformation in himselfe or others All that is required of vs is onely to submit our knowledge to our Creators wisdome our naturall desires to his most holy will our weake abilities to his omnipotent power But is it not a worke of the spirit to be thus perswaded or resolued 2. That the naturall man should rightly perceiue the things of the spirit of God implies as euident a contradiction as to say a blind man should be able to see things visible For as things in themselues most visible cannot be seene without the visiue faculty so is it impossible matters spirituall should otherwise then spiritually be discerned Notwithstanding I scarce haue knowne any man so blind but might easily haue beene perswaded that he could not see or induced hartily to wish he were as other men are though in what state they were or what pleasures
there were in sight hee were altogether blind and ignorant And I thinke it would be hard for any man to prooue that all such as our Sauiour restored to sight had sauing faith before he opened their eyes or that Naamans condescending to his seruants counsell my father if the Prophet had bid thee doe some great thing wouldest thou not haue done it how much more when he saith to thee wash beclean was an assent of iustifying faith yet were all these cures as immediate workes of Gods power as is the illumination of the minde by faith What God hath wrought in them we know but if Naaman had beene so wilfull as not to haue washed himselfe seauen times in lorden or those blinde men so wayward as vpon the constant fame of former miracles not to haue besought CHRIST to worke the like in them all of them for ought we know or can imagine to the contrary had remained still in their former misery Thus if we graunt that a man altogether vnregenerate vpon the hearing of Gods word or the report that others whom he hath no reason to distrust doe make of the vertue thereof may haue a naturall apprehension of his naturall misery and a desire meerely naturall to bee like them whose estate hee knoweth no better then he that is borne blind doth the light or that as well his apprehension as desire is but a qualification meerely passiue tending onely to this purpose that ascribing the worke of faith to Gods power alone hee may be a subiect not vncapable of this creation we shall auouch nothing contrary to reason naturall or supernaturall For knowledge naturall and spirituall differ not in respect of the materiall obiects knowne but in the manner of apprehending their truth and properties What subiect is there whereof we may not logically dispute albeit demonstration or scientificall conclusions we can haue none but from the proper principles of that science whereto it belongeth first distinctlie and infallibly apprehended And what doth hinder vs to conceiue a naturall or morall assent vnto truths diuine as not impossible though to haue a true tast or homogeniall apprehension of them be the sole and proper effect of faith infused or supernaturall Of the same Diuine truths or rather of the goodnesse annexed to them there may be a naturall or morall desire right in it kinde though not such as Gods lawe requires or can immediately please the lawgiuer yet such as he requires that we may be capable of better None I thinke but would perswade a man whom he knew to be as yet vnregenerate to confesse his sinnes to crie for mercy how spiritually so to perswade him were a mockery but rather to sue for grace that hereafter hee might spiritually desire what now he naturally doth Nor doth he amisse in praying thus albeit his praiers in respect of the fountaine whence they spring be meerely naturall polluted with the poison of sinne Absolutely he praies not aright but in his kinde in as much as his desires are set vpon right obiects though not so symbolized or proportioned to them as they should be This rectitude of naturall desires or endeauours which ariseth from the rectitude of the obiects wheron they are imperfectly set not in respect of degrees or circumstances onely but for the very essence or substance of the act is the point whereunto this discourse is directed Whether this right vse of faculties as yet vnsanctified be in some degree possible to all that heare the word or whether if possible to all any are absolutely excluded from saluation without presupposall of some neglect or abuse of naturall faculties is to be disputed in the seauenth booke From our assertion thus explicated we may inferre the true meane betweene Pelagianisme and Stoicisme to be this Albeit man before regeneration hath no abilitie of doing any thing in it selfe not deseruing Hell yet is there a true and reall possibility left him of doing that which being done maketh him capable of grace to be created in him but which not done by him he shall remaine vncapable of such creation 3. Vpon these plaine grounds we hope now to proceed without offence to God or man It was the meere good will and pleasure of God to ordaine his meere wisedome to reueale those meanes of mans saluation vnto which now reuealed the naturall man may so farre assent as to make some triall of their truth as Naaman did of the Prophets words The deeper apprehension though but naturall man hath of his naturall misery or want of ability to raise himselfe the more apt hee is not to lay but to haue the sure foundation of faith laid in his heart by CHRIST IESVS who is the foundation and chiefe corner stone in the spirituall Temple so he will but frame his life by his masters precepts and example CHAP. III. Of the fundamentall rule of Christianity to forsake all and denie our selues That the sincere practise thereof is a method more admirable and compendious for the attainment of faith then any Artist could prescribe the principles of Christianitie being supposed That the want partly of instruction in the duties contained in it partly of solemne and publicke personall protestation for their performance is the principall cause of hypocrisie and infidelitie 1. THat CHRIST the Sonne of God should suffer so many indignities of the Elders and be killed seemed a doctrine so strange to his Apostles that one of them begins to checke him for abooding so ill of himselfe Bee it farre from thee Lord this shall not come vnto thee What was the reason touching this particular they were not as yet spirituall Thus much at the least our Sauiours reply to Peter imports Get thee behinde me Satan thou art an offence vnto me for thou sauourest not the things that be of God but those that be of men This truth the Prophets long before had deliuered though not so plainly as it could easily bee apprehended without any expositor Our Sauiour therefore vpon this dialogue betwene him and Peter shewes not onely his owne willingnesse to vndergoe all the calamities the Prophet had foretolde but withall that vnlesse his followers which had confessed him for the Messiah were made conformable to him in this point they could not be his Disciples not capable of any other lesson of sauing health If any man will follow mee let him forsake himselfe and take vp his crosse and follow me Necessarie it was the wisdome of God should thus plainly reueale this fundamentall principle of Christianitie vnto whose necessitie notwithstanding men in some sort may assent without the spirit of sanctification or any branch of supernaturall inherent grace Ordinarily it is as true of the first as of the second resurrection First is that which is naturall then that which is spirituall Manie haue assented vnto this rule as true which did neuer spiritually assent vnto it as good in the choyce albeit they haue desired so to do Now
louing toward their neighbours is a fearefull signe that worldly affection hath got the start of faith in the spring and will hardly be ouertopped in the growth that the minde thus affected is sickely and faint yet willing to stay the working of conscience with these repasts And were it not the nature of this disease to put out the eye of reason and relie wholy vpon forced perswasions it were impossible such palpable contradictions betwixt most mens ordinary resolutions and fundamentall principles of faith as any heathen that could but vnderstand what the words of Scripture meant would vpon the first view of both clearely descry should goe so long oft times for ought we can perceiue the whole course of their liues without controle or checke and without notice of their danger He is in worse case questionlesse then the meere naturall or reasonable man euen blinded by Gods iust iudgement for his hypocrisie that can suffer himselfe to be perswaded he hath truely denied himselfe taken vp his Crosse forsaken all and made fit to follow Christ when as the world sees and his practice proclaimes he mindes nothing either so intensiuely or continually as the increasing of his wealth or raising his owne or his childrens fortunes already greater then they are Christianly capable of 8. For this againe is a fundamentall rule whereof there may be perswasions either right onely in their kinde and but naturall or truely spirituall That great estates worldly dignities or plentifull matter of carnall contentments can neuer be rightly managed or morally well vsed without great morall wisdome good education sobriety of life and discretion Much more necessarie as naturall reason rightly perswaded of Scriptures truth will acknowledge is an abundant measure of faith to vse abundance in any kinde or such prerogatiues as flesh and blood are prone to delight in to the glory of God the good of his Church and saluation of our owne soules Hence as we rightlier reckon mens wealth or competence of estate by the ouerplus of their certaine incomes compared with their necessary outlayings then by the largenesse of annuall reuenues without such allocations or deductions so must we measure the strength or efficacy of true faith not by the multitude of degrees or the intensiue perfection of the perswasion or assent in it selfe considered or with reference to it positiue obiect but by the excesse which it hath in respect of contrary desires or temptations incident to our course of life If the assent of faith be as twelue and any naturall delight in prerogatiues though spirituall such as the Corinthians had be as thirteene that mans faith is worse then nothing whereas if six degrees of the same assent should in some other match with three or foure of the like naturall delight or affection the soueraignty of his faith is much greater then the formers because better able to quell all contrary motions or rebellions of the flesh Though faith we had of force sufficient to moue mountaines yet were it possible Achans vast desires might harbour with it in the same brest a wedge of gold would ouersway it or wrest it out of it place and hale the soule wherein it lodged maugre all it force and strength to hell But he that had no minde of earth nor longed not after this bright clay might easily be aduanced to heauen by faith not able to worke any externall effects halfe so wondrous Lucifer and his wicked confederates haue perswasions of some diuine truthes so firme and strong as would almost enforce any man liuing vnto goodnesse which notwithstanding no way benefit but rather exasperate them to mischiefe because ouermatched with malicious hellish inclinations That excellent knowledge which was the ground of their first station though more firme by much then the faith whereby we stand was ouerturned by delight or pride in this their proper excellency The name of grace or faith in scriptures includes besides the quality infused this relation of excesse or soueraignety ouer the desires of the flesh But whether it be possible that grace should be the same as well for quallity as degrees in the carnally minded and truely sanctified I dispute not Howsoeuer let the nature or entitatiue perfection of it be neuer so great vnlesse it can thus conquer affection and bring the body in subiection to the spirit it is not the grace we are finally to pray for nor hath it that faith whose right plantation we seeke for it associate In this sence we may safely admit the opinion of Canus and Victoria That the entity or quality of grace may encrease without any encrease of Gods fauour or good acceptance not onely as approueable and free from Vasquez censure but as necessary and vnquestionable vnlesse our loue vnto the world and flesh or estimate of all delights and proffers they can present vniformely decay as the entity of this infused qualitie or our habituall assent vnto diuine truth encreaseth This decrease of carnall affection may as we said of other perswasions and resolutions be either naturall or truely spirituall the later kinde onely pleaseth God and is the immediate obiect of diuine approbation but through the righteousnesse of CHRIST of which because it is wrought in faith it is capable so is not our naturall resolution to abandon such delights and pleasures as others follow though morally sincere and purposely intended to the end wee may bee fitly qualified for Christs seruice CHAP. IIII. That the obseruance of the former rule is most easie vnto men of meaner gifts vnto whom in this respect Gods mercy is greater then if their gifts were better and yet his mercy iustly to be esteemed greatest of such as haue most excellent gifts by nature 1. GOds vnspeakeable wisdome in recouering the sonnes of Adam his forlorne patients by bringing them low manifested in the absolute necessitie of the former precepts being duly waighed the eunuch can haue no reason to say I am a dry tree nor the siliest catife that creepes on earth any iust cause to complaine of his wretched estate Indeed were good naturall parts whether of body or minde with such ornaments as art can put vpon them or other externall graces of wealth authority or birth bestowed on man for his owne sake or that hee might relie or trust in them hee that excels in any or many of these might haue whereof to reioice amongst his brethren so had they iust cause to be deiected that were conscious of their wants But if we consider the pronenesse of mans heart to waxe proud of good qualities and the direct opposition betwixt all pride and the fundamentall qualification before expressed for the receiuing of faith and grace that the renouncing all delight in these or other naturall dignities is but an appertenance of that precept to denie our selues and forsake all we haue we would quickely subscribe vnto our Apostles resolution that if wee must needes boast or glory we would boast in that wherein
of this desire and height of his fall thereby procured hath the maliciousnesse of his deiected pride and deepe dissimulation for bringing his murtherous plots about continued since Whose sonnes then may we suppose they are who neuer contented with their naturall station much bettered by many casuall accessions and daily additions of Gods temporall blessings searce giue themselues respite to thinke how well God hath done by them alreadie so eagerly are they set to soare higher and higher without fixing any period to their towering thoughts as if they had said in their hearts Wee will ascend aboue the height of the clouds and wee will be like the most high Besides their participation of this hereditary qualitie or first sinne of Sathan the preposterous deuises of men ambitious to effect their wils rightly blazened proclaime their pedigree For as Lucifer since ●●● fall albeit still like himselfe not the sonne but the father or Prince of darkenesse doth outwardly transforme himselfe into an Angell of light So this painted Helen the mistresse of moderne thoughts ambition though alwaies in trauell with rauen murther and cruelty is notwithstanding for outward resemblance as one well obserues the most exquisite ape of that Angelicall vertue Christian charity It suffereth all things it endureth all things it belieueth all things it doth not behaue it selfe vnseemely it is kinde not with respect to Gods glory or any spirituall end but to the recompence of present reward or in hope of gaining their fauour which may aduantage it Not late experience of our owne misery can make vs poore men more compassionate to our miserable brethren then one ambitious man is courteous or kinde vnto another or ready to further him in causes that doe not crosse his owne preferment And happie were they in their mutuall kindnesses were not these full of cruelty towards the poore and needy From a generall consideration how mightily that golden rule Whatsoeuer yee would that men should doe vnto you euen so doe vnto them is violated by the mighty of our times I was moued some yeeres agoe to vtter publikely what no experiments which I could since obserue as yet occasion me to recall that if all the calamities either immediately laid vpon men of meaner rancke by God or procured by their owne follie and ouersight were laid together in one ballance all would not equalize the grieuances which befall them by the mutuall gratifications of great ones who either spare not to sacrifice the life and substance of the needy with whose miseries the huge distance of their places will not suffer them to be affected vnto others luxury or superfluous pleasures with whose vnnecessary wants through the vicinity of their estates and like conditions they easily and exactly sympathize or else to ease themselues of some light care in preferring their dependants respect not what heauy burthens fall vpon inferiours by these vnnecessary aduancements of their fauorites Againe vnto what meane seruices and base emploiments for satisfying bodily lust or desires of reuenge will these infernall sonnes of pride prostitute themselues to gaine some present interest with hope of future soueraignty in seely impotent discontented soules And did he not well characterize the ambitious man that said vt dominetur aliis prius seruit curuatur obsequie vt honore donetur How many in our times would be willing so God would graunt it to take Chams curse vpon them for their present blessing euen to be serui seruorum slaues to great mens seruants so they might hope at length to dominere in the tents of Sem or beare rule ouer the tribe of Leui Lastly there is a property wherein the hellish fiend the bewitched loue and the ambitious minde are vniuocall communicants For though all of them daily complaine of their vexations as being howerly tortured with those things which they most affect yet can no inducement draw them to desist still as it were striuing to entangle themselues faster in the cordes or bonds of their cruell rackes 3. Or if the troubles of minde wherewith the ambitious mans suites are still sollicited and their accomplishment perpetually attended did want that sting whereby euen his sweetest delights become too deare he were to be thought very vnwise or wise in his generation onely that would forgoe the pleasant opportunities of a priuate life for the right setting of his faith for the encrease of his deuotion or gaining greater frequencie of more familiar and secret conference with the spirit of truth albeit he were sure to gaine a kingdome by employing his wits another way For what doth it aduantage a man to gaine the whole world with danger of loosing his owne soule yet is he very likely to loose it that hath but small time to seeke it and as one saith nemo occupatus bonam mentem inuenit he that is much busied in other matters whereunto God particularly hath not called him can hardly be at leasure to search much lesse to finde in what tearmes his owne soule stands with her Creator or faithfully to make vp those accounts our Sauiour exacts at our hands ere we can be worthy of his seruice Yet of all businesses ambitious emploiments most hinder the true knowledge of our selues whose first elements are Dust thou art and vnto dust shalt thou returne Dust then being our natiue foile and last home to which we must by a decree most certaine one time or other but vncertaine whether sooner or later repaire by soa●ing aloft we doe but make our wearisome way the longer and crookedder and our fall especially if suddaine more grieuous And seeing such aspiring thoughts as we harbour did ouerturne the great tempter himselfe that which a religious father obserued of pride in generall is most proper to this branch at whose rootes we strike vntimely desire of promotion such as are ouergrown herewith need not tempter the diuell cannot wish them more harme then they are ready to doe themselues by zealous following that course which brought him to his fall Cease I shall to wonder hereafter what spirit should moue such young and tender oliue plants as scarce thriue vnder the wals of Gods house or such vines as hardly beare fruite in the warme and wel-fenced vale to affect remoouall to the cold and open mountaines exposed to blasts of noisome windes Is it their glory to bee aboue others of their owne rancke and education This might be purchased with lesse danger to themselues and more good to Gods Church if they sought to ouertop them more by their owne proper height or seasonable well furnished growth then by mere aduantage of ground For when euery valley shall bee exalted and euery hill and mountaine made low vntil the crooked become straight and the vneuen places plaine the fruit which hath growne in the vale will appeare both higher and better then the ordinary ofspring of the mountaines O that men were so wise as in heart to consider that the lower their place
refined as the transmutation betweene simbolizing natures is easie may well be assumed into the search of the other To instance first in such as our Sauiour proposeth to our imitation Impiger extremos currit mercator ad Indos Per mare pauperiem fugiens per saxa per ignes In hope of gaine to vtmost Indes the marchant hies And from hard need through Seas through fire and flint he flies Could he conceiue of grace as of a iewell inualuable conuerting his toilesome cares for transitory wealth into industrious desires of euerlasting treasure none more fitly qualified for the purchase of it then he If thou criest after knowledg liftest vp thy voice for vnderstanding if thou seekest her as siluer and searchest for her as for hid treasures then shalt thou vnderstand the feare of the Lord and finde the knowledge of God For the Lord giueth wisdome out of his mouth commeth knowledge and vnderstanding But hee shall shew himselfe as vnfit to traffique for this or other spiritua● gifts as Aesops cock to bee a Ieweller that will wrangle for them as for ordinary ware indenting before hand what he shall pay seeking to beate downe their price or so houer when God shall call him as Pharaoh did with Moses Goe and serue the Lord your God but who are they that shall goe will ye goe with your young and olde with your sonnes and your daughters with your sheepe and your cattell Nay let the Lord be so with you as I will let you goe and your children yet this is too much it shall not be so goe now ye that are men and serue the Lord for that was your desire yet after two more plagues sent his minde was a little altered Goe yee serue the Lord onely let your flocks and your heards bee staid but let your little ones also goe with you But Moses his resolute answere shewes what God requires of vs Thou must giue vs also sacrifices and burnt offerings that wee may doe sacrifice vnto the Lord our God Therefore our cattell also shall goe with vs there shall not an hoofe be left for thereof must we take to serue the Lord our God neither doe we know how we shall serue the Lord vntill we come thither Nor doe wee know when God cals vs first out of this world what peculiar seruices may afterwards be enioyned vs as whether to sacrifice our lands our goods our bodies our honour or reputation in testimony of CHRIST and his Gospell For this reason once called we must resolue to forsake Aegypt wherin we haue been brought vp and seeke after the promised land with all our heart with all our soule as well the brutish part as the reasonable with all our faculties and affections intellectuall as well as sensuall otherwise by secret reseruation of speciall desires for other purposes we make our selus liable to Pharaohs plagues or to the iudgements wherewith Ananias and Saphira were ouertaken Now although to abiure our accustomed delights or waine our desires from choicest matter of wonted contentments may see me very distastefull to flesh and blood before triall made yet did we consider that the desires or affections themselues were not to be vtterly extirpated but only transplanted that such as yeelded greatest store of choicest secular were by this transmutation apt to bring forth most pleasant spiritual fruit in gretest plenty it would much animate vs to take the same pains in a better soile The ambitious man wil patiently watch his opportunities to bow crouch giue all significations possible of good respect towards such as may further his suits which he graceth with seemly complement decent behauiour for the present with deep protestation of future endeauours to deserue any fauour that shall bee shewed him Could he but inwardly fit his soule to these outward characters of humility and bow his spirit vnto the almighty powring forth prayers and supplications with vowes of fidelity in his seruice no man more fit then hee to sue for grace the least droppe whereof suffered to sinke into his heart to make representation of these ioyes whereof it is the earnest in that forme in which the scripture sets them forth as vnder the title of a most glorious Kingdom would sublimate his aspiring thoughts once alienated from their wonted obiect into undefatigable deuotion whose gracious respect with God would much better content his soule then any reflexed splendor from the fauourable aspect of earthly Maiesty Our first inclinations vnto loue which is but a distillation or liquefaction of the soule before they become polluted with the dregges of vncleane lusts or other Sacraments of vnhallowed combinations or extracted from these with penitent teares and true contrition are verie transmutable into Christian charity by the infusion of Christs blood once shed in loue to vs but continualle able to season the bitter fountaine of this and other corrupt affections so entrance were made for it thereinto by assiduous and sober meditation of the sorrows that pierced his heart for our redemption and no man more apt to delight more in his loue then hee to whom much mispence of loue hath beene forgiuen If that inbred delight or mirth whose abundance impels all sociable and good natures especially to hunt after obiects or occasions that may stirre vp exhilerant motions if this deligh or mirth were but drawne from those corrupt issues which excesse of wine or strong drinke vsually prouoke as profane or wanton ditties exchange of vnseemely and offensiue iests it might yeild matter for more sacred melody and vent it selfe with greater ioy in Psalms Hymnes and spirituall songs Thus much in my vnderstanding our Apostle supposeth in that exhortation Be not drunke with wine wherein is excesse but fulfilled with the spirit speaking vnto your selues in psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody vnto the Lord in your hearts And none in my conceipt more likely to beare his part better in the quire of Saints whether in hearty reioicing with such as haue iust cause to ioy or vnfaigned sorrowing with such as mourne then a sweet nature prone to company but preuented by grace before he fall into the sinke of good fellowship or else thoroughly cleanled from the filth hee hath caught by wallowing therein before the staine incorporate in his soule Of this alteration of inclinations naturall into spirituall hereafter or els where more particularly by the assistance of that grace whose infusion alone must worke the sublimation Here I thought good to signifie to the penitent sinner by the way that there is no plant which hath giuen good proofe or signe of fertility in Aegypt but remooued in time is apt to fructifie accordingly in Canaan Now seeing in this first resurrection to newnesse of life our corruptible affections doe not die but only put on incorruption why should it seeme grieuous vnto our Soules to for sake the world and flesh with all their pleasures or
to their deuotion in praier for diuine assistance Others after God had giuen them full assurance of most extraordinarie victories did vse the ordinary stratagems of warre In imitation of them we should remember that albeit our affections will neuer bee loyall vntill faith and sanctifying grace by the sole operation of his Spirit bee seated amongst them yet euen such of these as most resist their admission may be much enfeebled or pined and so made more willing to yeeld when God shall call the soule to parly if wee vse such meanes as haue beene prescribed for cutting off that reliefe or prouision they haue from without Nor can the veriest freshwater Souldier in Christs Campe bee altogether ignorant how the externall obiect nourisheth inbred desires or affections which by sufferance to range abroad increase their strength and confederacie But in all these indeauours we must include praier as a chief associate for God ordinaryly lets in sanctifying grace at the same gate at which honest hearty prayers goe out 2. More particulars concerning subordinate meanes to bee vsed for bringing faith into it throne must bee referred to the place often mentioned onely one admonition remaines for such as would be fit Auditors of these diuine oracles often intimated by our Sauiour but too seldome vrged by his messengers in these daies especially To hide or lay vp Gods word in our hearts which to my capacity implies our secret meditation should farte exceed our table talke discourses of these great mysteries at least while wee are but schollers no professors of diuinitie And if I erre it is rather charitable feare least others wrong their owne soules then any iealousie least they should disparage our profession by proouing Prophets that makes mee thinke one principall reason why the word of faith doth not fructifie or take better roote in the hearts of many indefatigable hearers is because it shootes out too fast in their mouthes they are commonly as swift to speake as to heare which kinde of humour Saint Iames in his time much disliked as knowing perhaps this luxuriant flourish of words did partly hinder the fructification of his hearers faith in deedes and workes But to conclude seeing faith comes by hearing and must be hidden in the heart the surest and most compendious method for setling it therein would bee besides due preparation for ordinary bearing the generall forme of Christian doctrine publiquelie and solemnely deliuered to watch all opportunities when our hearts are throughly affected with vnexpected matter of sorrow ioy griefe feare admiration or the like and forthwith to apply such passages of Scriptures as suit best to the present affection The words though of God whilest vttered by man vsually want weight to make entrance for themselues into hearts not well wrought in tender yeeres by good discipline but yet might easily sinke euen into such being first thus pierced and as it were ploughed vp by reall accidents especially by strange and sad occasions as sicknesse of body or other grieuous crosse or calamity without which neither the threats of the Law nor sweet promises of the Gospell make any great impression vpon many in our daies A faithfull pastor should haue his wits vacant to attend these or such like extraordinary occurrences that happen to his flock alwaies ready in matter of sorrow to poure in salue whiles the wound is open or in occasion of godly mirth or moderate ioy to clap on the seale while the wax is warme and well wrought One short lesson well applyed in such season will worke more vpon the conscience and practique faculties of the soule then a solemne discourse of some howers length though containing much sound doctrine and many very profitable vses without the concurrence of some such internall disposition to receiue them And as the very naming of London Paris or some other great Citie doth stirre vp a more liuely representation of them in his fantasie that hath been in them then a geographicall lecture could doe in his that neuer looked vpon them but in a Mappe so the least after touch or remembrance of the same or like points as haue beene thus seasonably instilled will imprint a more liue working sence of Gods word in the experienced heart then a long elaborate and well pressed exhortation will doe in others Thus much at this time of that faith whereby the iust doth liue and of the qualification required in all fit auditors of the mysteries contained in the Apostles Creed for whose right explication the Lord of his mercie so qualifie my heart and soule that I may be able as to discerne so to deliuer the truth without all respect to mine owne or other persons and so guide euery Christian Readers affections that hee neither be vnwilling to embrace any truth nor willing to entertaine any error for my sake FINIS Omnium Vna 〈…〉 eadē lententia cos qui sie in ac●e procumbebant vitam mereri perpetuam et in pa●●e sortis sanctorum praedestinato collocari in lumine Willerm Tyres Archiepis Hist Lib. 3. Cap. ● vide et 6. Vide prefat ad librum 1. pag. 6 a Perlege Aristotelis librosde partibus animalium * Ca●nden in his description of Richmond shire Quod in montium autem summitatibus vt etiam alibi lapides nonnunquā fuerint reperti cocle●● marinas et alia aquatilia referentes si no● sint naturae miracula refusi in omnem terram sub Noe del●vycerta esse indicia cum Orosio Christiano historico iuaicabo Refuso inquit ille sub N●e in omnem terram mari immissoque d●luvio cum toto otbe contecto vnum s●acium coeli esset ac Pe. laci d●letum suisse vniuersum genus humanum paueis in A●ca fidei suae merito ad substituendā origine ● reser uatis euidentissimè veracissimi scriptores docét Fuisse tamen illi contestati sunt qui praeterita quidē tempora ipsamque auctolem temporum nescientes tamen ex iudicio coniectura lapidum quos in remotis montibus conchis ostreis scabros etiam saepe cauatos aquis Visere solemus conijciendo didicerunt * This importāce of Assent Tullie giues vs in that speech Vberius ista quaeso haec enim spinosiora ori●● ut confitear me cogunt quam vt assentiar ● lib. Tuscul et initio a Vid Vasquez in j●● secundae disputat 79. cap 3. num 12. vide eundem disput 62. cap. 3. num 9 * Vide Aristot Ethic. 3 Cap. d Ad probationemcum assumitur quod n●llus tenetur ●●●mius adhaerere conclusioni quâm sit certitude no ti●ae propter qeam ill●●dherere●●ista posset concedi cum aliqua conditione sci● si ill● teneatur adhaerere conclusioni praecise propter certitudinem no●●●iae vbi autem non subest dicta conditio propositio est simpliciter neganda in proposito autem non subest quoniam non praecise propter certitudinem aliquam notitiae propriè loquendo si●e conclusionis siue princi●iorum