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A41604 The anatomie of infidelitie, or, An explanation of the nature, causes, aggravations and punishment of unbelief by Theophilus Gale. Gale, Theophilus, 1628-1678. 1672 (1672) Wing G133; ESTC R29918 143,754 276

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to applie it to himself and improve it Thus every word of God is an infallible oracle to such as have a pious affection for him Thus David describes his faith by his delight in the statutes of God Psal 119. 16. I wil delight my self in thy statutes The original imports to behold with delight or to contemplate with pleasure Oh! What satisfaction did Davids faith find in the Statutes of God But oh how melodious and sweet was the joyful sound of the Gospel to Davids faith If the Law be so delightful to a Believer because he sees therein as in a Glasse al the spots of his soul Oh! how delightsome then is the Gospel to him which discovers the face of God and Christ to him yea and transformes his heart into the same glorious Image Hence it appears that if our Assent to the Reports of the Gospel be not affectionate and chearful it is not saving The Devils believe and tremble but because they do not gladly assent therefore their faith is not saving So essential is an affectionate inclination to divine Assent Whence it naturally follows that such as afford only a forced assent to evangelic Truths do really dissent from them such an intimate connexion is there between Divine Assent and pious Affection 13. Not to know the things that belong unto our peace is not to retain the same when once received This also is a consequent of the former For things forced are not durable when our Assent is only compelled by legal convictions it lasts no longer than that compulsion which gave foundation to it whereas an affectionate Assent is very adhesive it sticks fast unto its object every thing delights to adhere to what it likes If the heart be chearfully inclined towards God it wil delight in its assent unto his word But when our Assent is grounded only on legal Threats and forced convictions how soon doth it wear off and die away This was the case of many unbelieving Jews they had now and then some stounding convictions such as produced in them a great Assent to the words of Christ Oh! What Attention what Reverence and Respect do they give to Christs word But alas how soon is their Assent turned into Dissent Thus John 5. 38. And ye have not his word abiding in you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to abide signifies with John to dwel or take up its fixed habitation The Word of God now and then sound some place in their minds as v. 35. ay but it did not inhabit there it loged there but as a Traveller in an Inne for a night only There are many Professors who entertain the glad tidings of the Gospel for a season but they retain them not Whereas David saith Psal 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in mine heart that I might not sin against thee There seems to be an elegant Metaphor in the word hid drawen from those who having found a choise Treasure they hide it thereby to secure it Thus David hid Gods word in his heart Whence Christ pronounceth a blessing on those that hear his word and keep it Luk. 11. 28. Hence that exhortation Hebr. 2. 1. Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things that we have heard lest at any time we should let them slip 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e let them slide away as water through a Mil which never returnes more He that lets evangelic Truths slide away out of his heart cannot be said to know the things that belong unto his peace Al true Divine Assent is permanent and lasting he that ever dissents from never yet truely assented to Evangelic Notions of peace We find this Divine Retention of Gods word wel expressed by Moses in his exposition of the Law Deut. 6. 6 7 8 9. 14. Such as have not a transcendent estime or great and sublime thoughts of the things that belong to their peace may also be said not to know them For an object or thing is then only known truely when its worth and value is in some mesure known He that has only poor unworthy base thoughts of great things may be said not to know them The efficace vigor and strength of every Assent ariseth from the right valuation of the object For the minds adherence unto truth is more or lesse prevalent according to the apprehension it has of their value unto several truths equally apprehended the minds assent or adherence is not equal but greater or lesse according to the estime it has of their worth Thus the prevalence vigor and efficace of our assent and adherence to supernatural Truths doth naturally arise from the apprehension we have of their value and thence a true assent to divine Notions and Promisses alwaies carries admiration in its bowels he that doth entertain the great Mysteries of the Gospel with a cheap mean estime only doth really disestime the same An undervaluing low assent to divine Truths is real dissent Certainly such know not Christ who estime him not as the Worlds wonder This Christ Ironicly upbraids the unbelieving Jews with John 7. 28. Ye both know me and know whence I am c. He speaks Ironicly in replie to the Jews reprocheful speech v. 27. Howbeit we know this man whence he is c. As if he had said You neither know me nor yet the Messias as you pretend for if you knew me and whence I am you would highly estime me as your Messias sent by God c. Lastly They know not the things that belong to their peace who give only a sterile dead unactive assent to them True Divine Assent is ful of Life Virtue and Activitie A barren dead faith is real Unbelief the end of saving knowlege is Practice Unprofitable knowlege is one of the worst kinds of Ignorance Al sacred Sciences are Affective and Effective That Assent which doth not kil sin wil never give life to the sinner Divine Assent leaves suitable Impresses and sacred Stampes on the Heart Doth thine Assent to the things That belong to thy peace fil thy soul with Admiration of and Love unto them Is there an agreament twixt thine heart and the things thou believest Thou saiest thou assentest to the Truths of the Gospel ay but doth not thine heart dissent from the Duties of the Gospel and is not this a strong argument that thy faith is but a dead Assent So Jam. 2. 26. For as the bodie without the spirit is dead so faith without works is dead also Though works are not the cause which gives life to faith yet they are necessary products which argue life in faith A living faith is ful of vital spirits and operations he that wants these has only a dead corps of faith or the name of a Believer David gives us a better account of his faith Psal 119. 11. Thy word have I hid in mine heart and why so that I might not sin against thee
Do they not come to Christ only as a wounded person to his Chirurgeon for a Plaister to heal conscience They receive Christ but is it not only as a Bankrupt entertains a rich Suretie to pay their debts to the Law Surely such involuntary constrained Receptions of Christ if they do not end in a more chearful Election are but more modest Refusals of him Involuntarie election is a degree of real Reprobation Albeit every Election hath something of the wil in it yet that may be termed an involuntary forced election when the Wil might it with securitie use its own freedome would not elect what it now closeth with And oh how many terrified souls do with such an involuntarie forced Wil receive Christ They see no beautie or worth in Christ only they make use of him to serve a turne to quench the flames of Divine wrath in conscience and when that is done they lay him aside again as an uselesse servant What is such an unwilling choice of Christ but a more courtly rejection of him Do not such forced consents passe for real dissents among more civil persons Such as entertain Christ in ther extremities and perplexities of conscience with such an involuntary Wil how soon do they lay him aside when the storme is over Was not this the very case of the unbelieving Jews even from their infant-state in the Wildernes So Psal 78. 34. When he stew them then they sought him and they returned and inquired early after God When God awakened their consciences by terrible jugements Oh! how early do they inquire after their Messias what chearful Reception do they seem to give unto him Ay but this was but a terrified affrightned wil they did but flatter him with good words their heart was not right as it follows ver 36 37. A forced wil is but a false lying wil it is no real Wil but Nil When there is nothing on the Wil but more compulsive terrors it never gives a fiducial reception to Christ Til the wil be in faith it 's never saving Convictions of sin seconded by legal Terrors may compel some to believe but if there follow not a Spirit of Adoption and libertie that faith proves only legal and temporary We find a good character of evangelic faith in Zacheus's reception of Christ Luke 19. 6. And he made haste and came down and received him joyfully His wil was in his faith he received Christ and would not for a world but receive him He believed and would not but believe His heart was in the work it was his joy and delight to entertain Christ not only in his house but in his heart also But is it thus with al that pretend to receive Christ Are there not many who receive Christ under dolors and rackings of conscience who yet have no liking to him yea who would gladly shift themselves of him were their troubles of conscience once wel over Do not the hearts of such secretly draw back from Christ yea entertain an inveterate old grudge against him while they seem willing to draw near to him and make use of him in their extremitie Have not such soon enough of Christ are they not soon weary of him and therefore turne him off again assoon as he hath served their turne Do they not secretly wish that they might be saved by their own doings rather than by believing in Christ It s true they in a sort receive Christ but how is it Is it not as a wounded captive receives his enemie with fair words to save his life whiles yet he hates him in his heart and is grieved that he should need his enemies favor Surely this is not to receive Christ gladly For to such it is a burden to be beholding to Christ for Salvation They had rather be saved any other way than by Christ Oh how glad would they be if God would but accept of their own goods works instead of Christs merits whereas a true Believer would to choose be saved by Christs merits rather than by his own he is abundantly satisfied in Christ and the way of Salvation by him his wil doth electively hug and embrace Christ as his best friend Thus Zacheus received Christ joyfully It s true many sincere Believers at first whiles under a Spirit of Bondage have only a terrified affrightned wil yea after they have received a Spirit of Adoption and Christ by saving Faith how much of an unwilling heart do they find mixed with their faith What legal selfish regards have they oft towards Christ Ay but this is the distemper and therefore the burden of their souls They are never better pleased than when their wils are most chearful spiritual and forward in closing with Christ How greatly do they approve of and delight in the way of salvation by Christ What contentement and pleasure do they take in believing How much rather had they have their Grace peace and comfort in Christs keeping than in their own But is it thus with Unbelievers such as receive Christ only with a terrified legal Wil Is it not a burden to them that they should be driven to such streights as that none but Christ can relieve them Is there not a secret displeasure and dislike against Christ even while they are forced by reason of their extremities to make use of him Would they not be glad to be eased of Christ were their consciences eased of their trouble Such is the temper of a terrified wil. And so much for the Unbelievers defective Reception of Christ CHAP. VII Unbelief explicated as to its Defects in Adherence to Recumbence on Satisfaction in Obedience to Application of and Waiting for Christ 3. HAving explicated the Nature of Unbelief from its defective Reception of Christ we now procede to those defects which attend the Consequents of such a Reception And we shal begin with the Wils Adherence to Christ which seems to be an immediate consequent of the foregoing Reception of Christ Adherence is an essential branch of Faith and that which naturally follows upon al reception of Christ So that he who doth not firmely yea inviolably adhere to Christ may be justly said never to have received him aright Faith is defined a firme rooted Dispositon or Habit Moses in his Exhortation to the unbelieving Israelites adviseth them to cleave unto God Deut. 10. 20. The Original in its primarie notion signifies a conjugal adherence such as is between Man and Wife as Genesis 2. 24. and so it denotes here that conjugal adherence which the soul ought to maintain towards Christ as its husband which Paul also expresseth by the similitude of Mariage Ephes 5. 25 32. and 1 Cor. 6. 17. by cleaving to the Lord. This conjugal adherence of the Believer to Christ is wel illustrated by Ruths cleaving to her Mother Ruth 1. 14 16. The like Job 41. 17. They are joined one to another they stick together that they cannot be sundred Such ought to be the
subjection to the foot of God Such was Abrahams faith Isai 41. 2. Called him to his foot Faith yields up it self to Christ to be acted as he pleaseth to do or suffer as he thinks fit it leaves the soul with Christ to be wrought upon as he seems good So Paul Act. 9. 6. Lord what wilt thou have me to do Paul makes Christ master of his wil and al he is content to be wholly influenced by Christs Soverain wil and Spirit Whence faith is compared to a Mariage-covenant whereby the wife gives over and resignes al right to her husband So the Believer gives up himself to Christ that he may be his Hence the more resistance there is against the Wil and Grace of Christ the more Unbelief An unbelieving wil is an inflexible wil its mighty stiffe and hard Unbelievers are extreme covetuous and greedy of their own wils to part with their wils is death to them 7. Infidelitie or Vnbelief implies also an unwillingnes to appropriate or applie the Promisses and Grace of Christ for the sinners benefit Faith is a mighty appropriating applicative Grace although it be very silent patient and submissive as to mesures degrees seasons and the manner of receiving Grace yet it is very ready to applie al Promisses or intimations of Grace given it Yea if it has but a general promisse yet it can make particular application of it to the soul yea sometimes though it has but an Item an half-promisse or nod from Christ yet it can applie and improve it for the sinners encouragement As by the acts of Adherence and Recumbence the soul goes forth to Christ so by this appropriating applicative act of faith it sucks in and applies to itself the Grace of Christ according to its several needs and indigences Is the poor sinner laden and pinched with the guilt of sin O then how doth faith applie thereto a Plaister of Christs bloud Doth some powerful lust or tentation assault the soul then faith goeth to Christ for fortifying corroborating Grace Is the Believer called to any difficult piece of service either active or passive for Christ then Faith applies to itself the Divine assistance and direction of Christs Spirit Thus it receiveth out of Christs fulnesse Grace for Grace Joh. 1. 16. But now unbelief is altogether unacquainted with this Divine Art of appropriating and applying the Grace of Christ It doth want not only legs or an active power to go to Christ but also hands or a passive power to receive from Christ Oh! what a prodigiously proud begger is Unbelief in that it scornes to receive an Almes from Christ What! not receive Grace when offered Doth Christ offer an Act of Indemnitie unto sinners and wil not they receive it at his hands Oh! what a proud bloudy sin is Unbelief Alas many convinced sinners think it too much Presumtion and Arrogance for them to appropriate and applie the Grace of Christ to themselves They think it better becomes them to applie nothing but wrath and condemnation to themselves So modest and humble do they seem to be But oh what a world of pride doth there lie at the bottome of this seeming Modestie and Humilitie Is it not rank pride for sinners to refuse that Grace which is freely offered When Christ comes to pour in Grace freely into the soul then to refuse that Grace because we have no monie to purchase it what egregious pride is this 8. The last act of Infidelitie or Unbelief is A diffident removing or putting far from the soul the second coming of Christ and al the great things of Eternitie which ensue thereon Faith has such a miraculous efficace as that it can make things absent present things invisible visible Heb. 11. 1. It gives a prelibation and foretast of approching Glories Ephes 1. 13 14. Here Paul tels them That after they believed they were sealed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is a Translation borrowed from Seals by the impression or stampe whereof we distinguish things true from false things authentic from uncertain The stampe of a Seal impressed on an Instrument renders it indubitable and unquestionable The Jews had the externe seal of Circumcision and the Grecians were sealed with the marque of their Idols ay but saith Paul Ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promisse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Article here is treble which carries in it a great Emphase and demonstrates some extraordinary work of the holy Spirit It seems to refer to the great Promisse of the Spirit Luke 24. 49. as elsewhere But what is meant by this seal of the Spirit I know some understand it of the Seal of Assurance whereby they were assured of their eternal possession and we need not altogether exclude this sense yet I humbly conceive that this Seal is primarily to be understood of the Stampe or Impresse of Grace at first Regeneration which is communicated to al Believers whence it is said they were sealed with that Holy Spirit i. e the Spirit of Sanctification Now this Impresse or stampe of the Spirit of Sanctification after their first believing is said to be ver 14. the earnest of our inheritance c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 comes from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the general signifies al that which is given for the confirmation of a promisse and particularly among the Phenicians whence the Grecians seem to have derived the word it notes earnest-money So that the sense is this Ye who have believed have received the earnest of the Spirit of Grace whereby you have hopes and expectation of glory Hence Faith has the Bridegrooms coming fixed on its eye the sound of the last Trumpe ever ringing in its ear Ay but Unbelief removes al these far from the soul it says in the language of those secure sinners 2 Pet. 3. 4. Where is the promisse of his coming do not althings continue as they were Unbelief is possest with a kind of sleeping Devil it dreams of nothing but building Tabernacles here What a stranger is it to eternitie and the concernes thereof If the secure sinner be now and then a little awakened and startled at the apprehensions of future jugement how restlesse is Unbelief til it has got the soul asleep again How are the eyes shut and the wil bolted against al foresight and expectations of Christs second coming Oh! what a torment is it to the Unbeliever to lie under awakened apprehensions expectations of and approches towards future jugement What would he give if eternitie were buried in oblivion There is nothing in the world that the Unbelievers heart is more alienated from and averse to than the second coming of Christ Faith breeds a great expectation of longing for and has leaning unto that great day But oh how doth Unbelief endeavor to choke and stifle al awakened apprehensions thereof And if the spirit of Bondage worke any lively sense and convictions of that terrible day what dreadful stormes
these his self-jelousies and self-jugements a great spring of his faith in Christ 1 Cor. 11. 31 3. The commun faith of Vnbelievers ariseth from a legal Spirit of Bondage but the saving faith of Believers from an evangelic Spirit of Adoption And oh what a vast difference is there between commun faith and saving in this regard A legal faith arising from a spirit of Bondage may worke dreadful terrors but never solid peace of conscience It brings men under a legal Covenant but cannot keep men stedfast therein Psal 78. 8 10 37 57. It workes in men legal preparations for Christ but it cannot worke a thorow conversion to him It divorceth the heart in part from sin but marries it to the Law not to Christ It plows up the fallow ground but cannot sow the seed of Grace It makes a deep wound in Conscience but cannot heal it It may drive men into despair but it cannot of it self drive to Christ It may restrain from sin and constrain to dutie but it gives no strength for or love to dutie It may kil but it cannot make alive It may rend but it cannot melt the heart It may make sin bitter but it cannot make Christ sweet It may be an Advocate for the Law but not for Christ Such is the commun faith of Unbelievers But now the evangelic faith of Believers arising from a Spirit of Adoption doth not only kil but also make alive in the bloud of Christ It doth not only divorce the heart from sin self and the Law but also espouseth it to Christ It improves al legal preparations in order to an evangelic closure with Christ It workes godly sorrow for sin not only that it may be pardoned but because it is pardoned It is not only compelled to dutie by legal motives but also allured thereto by evangelic persuasives It doth much for Christ and yet rests on nothing but Christ It workes not only evangelic Actions but also evangelic Principles and Dispositions It urgeth the Law much but on Evangelic grounds and designes It destroies not Moralitie but perfects it It frees men not from dutie but in and for dutie Such are the different postures of a legal and evangelic Faith 4. Saving faith turnes the main Bent of the Wil towards Christ and al other good things that belong unto its peace but commun faith affords Christ and al those good things only some imperfect desires The ●rue Believer makes a free and complete Acceptation of Christ and Resignation of al unto him He takes the whole of Christ and gives Christ the whole of his heart He goes to Christ with a plenitude or fulnesse of wil and receives from Christ a plenitude of Grace John 1. 16. He is so amorous of the good things that belong unto his peace that he can part with althings for them yea his wil is carried with a violent propension towards them as the Iron to the L●ad-stone But is it thus with the Unbeliever Doth he not ever adde something to Christ or take something from Christ Alas what is his commun faith but a mere faint velleitie a languid imperfect desire after the good things that belong unto his peace How unable is he to go to Christ with a plenitude of wil How little is he allured or ravished with the incomparable Beauties of Christ perhaps he has some good liking to the good things of his peace but oh what a violent lust has he after other things He may have some evanid or dying wishes after the divine life but oh what a peremtorie obstinate wil has he towards present goods Every smal tentation makes him let go Christ but oh how tenacious how strong is his holdfast of the creature An Unbeliever is the greatest Monstre in the world he hath two hearts an heart for God and an heart for the world Psal 12. 2. and yet when any difficulty approcheth he hath no heart at al Such a coward is he so far from true faith A true believer the more difficult his worke tentations are the stronger is his Adherence to Christ and al the good things of his peace yea though Christ may seem willing to part with al Interest in him yea to turne against him as an enemie yet oh how unwilling is he to part with his interest in Christ or to do any thing unworthy of that friendship he professeth to Christ But is it thus with the commun faith of the Unbeliever Alas on what easy termes can he part with al claim to Christ How unsteadfast is he in al his covenants with Christ How little can he resigne up himself wholly to Christ or receive whole Christ as offered in the Gospel In times of soul-troubles he seems willing to elect Christ but in times of competition between Christ and lust how soon doth he prefer lust before Christ What are al his good wishes towards the things of his peace but broken half-desires Doth he not at the same time when he layes hold on Christ secretly also catch at the world or some beloved lust How unable is he to wil and nil the same things to be constant to his own election of Christ and reprobation of sin Though he sometimes looked towards Christ yet how little doth he follow that look What a latitud● and libertie doth he leave for idols in his heart and thence how little room for Christ So little is his wil fortified and armed with Resolution in adherence unto Christ 5. The true Believers saving faith is a purifier from sin Act. 15. 9. But the Vnbelievers commun faith is a Protector and Promotor of Sin And oh what a vast distance is here betwixt saving and commun faith How impossible is it that the unbelievers heart which is the spouse of sin should be married to Christ Wil Christs jelousie which is so severe admit any Corrival or equal lover into his conjugal bed the heart Must not his royal love have a throne al alone in the heart Is it not then impossible that sin in its dominion should dwel in the same heart with Christ Yet lo is not this the grand designe of the unbelievers commun faith to reconcile Christ and sin two opposite Lords How oft doth commun faith go to Christ for life that so the sinner may live more securely in si● The Believers very fals into sin are as managed by faith a sanctified means to purge out sin But oh the Unbelievers partial departure from sin and closure with Christ is as improved by his commun faith and lust made a blind and engine for the protection concelement and improvement of sin Saving Faith makes the Believers ver●●efects and neglects serve for the promoting of some spiritual good how is he humbled for and by his very sins and negligences But the commun faith of an Unbeliever makes his best duties and performances serve to promote spiritual sins How do al his Covenants and Resolutions against some grosser visible s●s serve only to
to one that daily expects the coming of his Lord But oh How apt are Believers themselves to put far from them that great day Were not the the wise Virgins overtaken with fits of slumber aswel as the foolish Again how little can the most of Believers acquiesce and rest satisfied in Christ as the alone spring and mater of their life Do they not sometimes conceit that there is some grace or other good to be found out of Christ And are they not hereby oft inveigled to wander from Christ Ought not the heart to be where the treasure is And is not the Believers treasure in Christ How then comes it to passe that he is so little satisfied in Christ but for want of faith in him Moreover how short-spirited and impatient are many Believers What confined and narrow hearts have they under the crosse Do not the length and weight of their burdens oft make them extreme short-spirited as Exod. 6. 9. for shortnesse of Spirit So Num. 21. 4. its said They were short-spirited because of the way i. e the length of their sufferings shortned their spirits they could not in patience possesse their souls and many of them were true Believers for the main Oh! how soon do such short-spirited Believers despond and sink under their burdens What faintings under duties are they obnoxious unto How straitned are their spirits as to present or expected mercies What murmurs and discontents have they against the Yoke and Crosse of Christ Yea how dissolute soft and feeble are they in resistance of Tentations How timorous and faint-hearted at the approche of difficulties Whence procede Believers black and dismal Imaginations under Desertions but from their Unbelief Is is not hence also that they are so humorous and il-minded towards Christ so apt to raise black lies and slanders of him Do not their unbelieving hearts change Christ into another Christ by covering his face with a masque of hatred and displeasure Oh! How much are the sinews of many poor believing souls shrunk how much are their spirits cramped and dispirited by Unbelief specially in cases of soul-trouble or tentation So great is the prevalence of Unbelief in many sound Believers 6. Hence we may further collect That Vnbelief is a sin of the first Magnitude a great mysterie of Iniquitie the greatest Monster that ever was This naturally flows from the former Idea and explication of Unbelief For if the character and nature of Unbelief be so comprehensive if it seize so much on the vitals of the soul then certainly it must needs have a very maligne and venimous influence on al sin yea it must contain in it the malignitie and poison of al sin Oh! What a prodigious Sin is Unbelief What Abysses and depths of iniquitie are there in the bowels of it We have seen how it infuseth itself into the whole● soul and dispirits al the faculties thereof Oh! what darknesses and mists doth it infuse into the mind How foolish and sottish doth it make sinners What grand mistakes and prejudices doth it breed touching al the good things of our peace How stupid and senselesse doth it make conscience What a world of securitie and false peace doth it produce What made the old world so secure before the Deluge came and swept them al away but their Unbelief How comes it to passe that both wise and foolish Virgins slumber before the coming of the Bridegroom but from their Unbelief What makes sinners so stout-hearted and opposite to the righteousnesse of Christ but their Infidelitie Isai 46. 12 How comes it to passe that Sinners are so inflexible as to al Chrsts gracious offers but flexible towards sin and its allurements What is it that fortifies the heart so much in its adherence to Idols and false objects of trust What makes mens wils so rebellions against Christ yea destroyeth obedience in the principal root thereof Are not al these the fruits of Unbelief Oh! What a lazy slothful remisse and softnatured thing is Unbelief as to al that is good And yet how vigorous and active is it in and for the production of al sin Yea is not Unbelief virtually al sin Doth it not breed preserve foment incourage actuate and spirit al sin Whence procede the great errors of mens minds hearts and lives but from Infidelitie How comes it to passe that sinners are so hasty in snatching at present goods but so slow-hearted and backward in closing with the good things of their peace Surely it is from Unbelief Whence spring mens confusions and distractions of heart in times of trouble but from their Unbelief Whence also springs al that formalitie and deadnesse in duties but from Unbelief Is not this also the cause of mens hypocrisie both in heart and life Oh! what a world of irregular and exorbitant passions doth Unbelief worke in mens hearts What makes the sensual world so tenacious in adhering to sensible good but their Unbelief as to good things hoped for May not then every sin deservedly cal Unbelief father Is not this sin of Infidelitie to be found at the end of every sin Whence spring the main exorbitances and distempers of mens hearts and lives but from Infidelitie Men discourse variously what was the first sin by which Adam fel but have we not much reason to believe that Unbelief was Adams first sin which opened the dore to al sin and miserie For had not Adam disbelieved the Word of God which threatned him in the day that he did eat of the forbidden fruit he should die he had not believed Satan And as Unbelief at first opened the dore to al sin so doth it not stil hearten and improve al sin Yea is it not the prodigious womb of al sin Yea has it not more of sin than any or al other sins It s true scandalous sins have more of Infamie but has not Infidelitie more of obliquitie and guilt in it Is not that the greatest sin which is against the greatest Laws and Obligations And is not Infidelitie against the greatest Obligations that ever were even a Covenant of Grace which makes such free such ful such rich such suitable such general such importunate such heart-satisfying offers of Grace And can there be a greater law than the Mediators evangelic law which is composed of such sweet alluring precepts and promisses and yet lo how doth Unbelief oppose the royal Law of Christ Oh! what a world of rebellion lies wrapt up in the bowels of Infidelitie How doth it scorne reject yea spurne at bowels of evangelic Love and Grace Yea is it not extremely opposite to al the principles of obedience Is there not also abundance of Idolatrie in Infidelitie Can there be a worse Idol than self idolised And doth not every Unbeliever idolise his own carnal wisdome his proud wil his commun gifts his self-sufficience his legal Righteousnesses and seeming good duties Is not the Unbelievers self-dependence the worst piece of Idolatrie Doth not every Unbeliever by depending on
the mesure of bitter and sweet of good and evil What more efficacious to draw forth every Grace in its exercice than Faith Unbelief is the spring of spiritual sloath and lazinesse but oh how vigorous and active is Faith There is no Grace or Dutie but it is made easy by Faith How easy is the worke of Humiliation made by Faith What makes divine Love more spriteful and vigorous than Faith Yea is not the whole of Christianitie contained in the bowels of Faith Is there any Grace required to the Divine life which Faith cannot supplie us with Yea Faith is so good a Chymist as that it can extract riches out of povertie strength out of weaknesse glorie out of shame peace out of trouble Grace out of sin life out of death something out of nothing Oh! how miraculous are the virtues of Faith It makes a man able to do althings an yet it makes him see he is nothing and can do nothing It makes a man content with any thing that God gives and yet unsatisfied ' til he can enjoy althings in their fountain Again If we consider Faith in its parallel Antithesis or opposition to Infidelitie we shal then see more fully the excellent qualities of it as also the mischievous Influences of Infidelitie 1. Faith breeds jealousie of our selves but confidence in God it reckons it cannot believe God too much nor self too little But oh What self-confidence jelousie of God doth Infidelitie produce How much doth it trust self and thence how little can it trust in God What mutual Influences and Reciprocations are there between self-confidences and jelousies of God 2 Faith keepeth the heart close to God his Word and Ordinances and so keepeth God close to the heart It follows Christ in ways of Dependence Adherence Subjection Submission and Conformitie and so Christ follows it in ways of gracious Communications Consolations Manifestations and Communion But is it thus with Unbelief Doth it not depart from God his Word and Ways And thence doth not God depart from the Unbeliever 3. Faith prepares for quickens in and sweetens every Dutie It sets Prayer on foot Meditation on the wing and drawes forth the Attention and Intention of the Soul in hearing and reading of the Word But oh How doth Infidelitie hinder deaden and embitter the Soul in al gracious exercices How doth it clip the wings of Meditation stifle and choke the breathings of Prayer c 4. Faith fixeth and establisheth the heart by knitting of it to Christ who is an immutable Rock But oh What a mutable variable inconstant thing is Infidelitie How doth it make the heart to stagger and reel by dividing and taking it off from God Isai 7. 9 5. Faith makes a livelyhood out of Divine Promisses Engagements Relations and Influences It sucks sweetnesse out of Promisses and so is nourished by them It feeds on Divine Relations and Influences and so finds a livelihood in the greatest famine of spiritual injoyments It is long-handed and reacheth to Heaven for supplies when al means below fail But oh how short-handed is Infidelitie It 's true it has a long hand to reach forth to the Creature yea sometimes to Hel but it has no hand to reach after Christ or his Promisse how doth it suffer the poor hungry soul to starve amidst al evangelic Promisses and Dainties Whereas Faith takes the Soul by the hand and leades it from one Promisse to another from one Attribute to another and so suckes gracious Influences from al as it need requires 6. Faith conquers the whole Soul to God and thence althings else are conquered to the Soul It subjects the heart to Christ and so makes althings subject to it But Infidelitie captivates the heart to lust and thence it becomes captivated to every thing else Oh! What a vassal is the unbeliever to every base lust Yea to himself 7. Faith fortifies the Soul against al the Blandissements Allurements and eye-pleasing Delights of this lower world It blasteth al the fair promisses of created good by out-bidding of them But alas how soon is Unbelief entangled and overcome by every inveiglement and snare of sinful pleasures It can fortifie the heart against nothing but the convictions and good motions of the Spirit Faith is the shield of the new creature to repel al the poisoned darts of the World and Satan but Infidelitie is the shield of the old man to repel al the Convictions of the Spirit darted into the Sinners Conscience 8. Faith prepares the heart for and preserveth it under every difficultie frown and afflictive crosse It prepares for the worst times yet hopes for and expects the best It takes out the sting and poison of every crosse and infuseth into it a medicinal healing virtue But can Infidelitie do such marvels doth it not unfit us for every difficultie and then betray us into the hands of it Faith never leaves us at a losse it clotheth the mind with a divine light whereby it is inabled to see and passe thorough al dangers But oh How doth Unbelief darken the eye of the Soul and so create black visions of carnal fear and heart-rending troubles Difficulties and distresses are the element of Faith but how unable is Infidelitie to live or breath in such a sharpe Air 9. Faith opens the dore to promissed Mercies and Deliverances It keeps the condition of the Promisse and so keeps the soul under the blessing of the Promisse But is this in the power of Infidelitie Doth it not rather put a bar to promissed Mercies as Num. 20. 12. Heb. 3. 19 Yea doth it not open a dore to al the threats and curses of the Law Yea doth it not bind the Unbeliever fast under a sentence of condemnation as John 3. 36 Whereas Faith on the contrary stops the mouth of al legal Threats and Curses and locks the soul fast under a state of Salvation John 6. 47. 10. Faith improves Mercies received and so makes way for more It giveth God the honor of his Mercies and man a sanctified and comfortable use of them But can Infidelitie thus improve Mercies Doth it not rather by its murmurs and misimprovments destroy former Mercies and so hinder future Was not this the temper of the unbelieving Jews in the Wildernesse as we find it described Psal 78. 11-40 Oh! how doth Unbelief rob God of al the Glorie and so man of al the comfort and right use of Mercies received How unthankeful how discontented is the Unbeliever under Mercies received and thence unfit to receive more Whereas the Believer is content under the want of Mercies and thence fit to receive them He can trust God with his soul and al other Mercies and thence God trusts him with Mercies needful But the Unbeliever notwithstanding the receipt of former Mercies cannot trust God for the future and therefore God wil not trust him with any special marque of Love and Mercie These and suchlike being the admirable Qualities of Saving Faith
99. 1. Vnbelief as to the Scriptures in general 100. 2. Vnbelief as to the Gospel 104. 1. As to maters of Grace 105. 1. The Realitie of Evangelic offers 106. 2. The freedome of the Covenant 107. 3. The Vniversalitie of its offers 108. 4. The Riches of Grace in the Covenant 109. 5. The Immutabilitie of the Covenant 111. 2. Vnbelief as to maters of Providence 112-115 3. Vnbelief as to future Glorie ibid. The formal object of Vnbelief 117. Chap. 4. Vnbelief as opposed to the Assent of Faith 119. 1. Rejection of Divine Truths 120. 2. Non-Attention to sacred Notions ibid. 3. Implicite Assent is Vnbelief 121. 4. When Assent is not supernatural 123. 5. When Assent is only superficial 125. 6. When Assent is not real 126. 7. When Assent is not Spiritual 128. 8. A general confused Assent 129. 9. A suspense douting Assent 130-133 10. An inevident obscure Assent 133. 11. A legal Assent 134. 12. A forced Assent 135. 13. A fluctuating Assent 138. 14. An undervaluing Assent 140. 15. A barren Assent 141. Chap. 5. The real Objects of Infidelitie 142. Infidelitie strikes at 1. God himself 143. 2. His Divine Attributes Soveraintie c. 144. 3. Divine Providences 4. Ordinances ib. Vnbelief rejects Christ 145. Vnbelief rejects Heaven 146. The Acts of Vnbelief 1. Rejection of Chirst 147. 1. By open opposition of him 148. 2. By Dislikes of him 149. 3. By heart-Cavils against him 150. 4. By not approving the reports of Christ 151. 5. By Delays as to a closure with him 153. Chap. 6. The Wils defective reception of Christ 156. 1. As to the Object 1. in receiving a false Christ 158. 1. A compound Christ Ibid. 2. A Divided Christ 160. 2. The true Christ under false respects 163. 1. In regard of Motives Ibid. 2. In regard of Christs Grandeur 164. 3. When Christ is not received as offered 165. 2. The Defects of the subject 1. When the Wil is rotten 166. 2. When the Wil is languid and faint 167. 3. When the Wil is only terrified 169. Ch. 7. 3. Vnbelief as opposed to Adherence 174. 4. Diffidence and Distrust Pag. 178. 5. Dissatisfaction of heart 182. 6. The Disobedience of Vnbelief 185. 7. Non-application of Christs Grace 189. 8. Putting far off Christs coming 190. Chap. 8. Doctrinal Corollaries Cor. 1. Almost-Believers may procede very far and yet remain Infidels 195. 1. How far as to Assent 196. 2. How far as to Consent 197. Cor. 2. There is a boundlesse difference betwixt Saving Faith and Commun As to 199. 1. Knowlege 200. 2. Self-denial 201. 3. A legal and evangelic spirit 202. 4. The Bent of the wil towards Christ 204. 5. Purifying the heart from Sin 206. 6. Transformation of the heart into the Image of Christ 207. 7. The use of means 208. 8. The Foundation 209. 9. The End and Rule Ibid. 10. Gods Faithfulnesse ibid. Cor. 3. No middle 'twixt Faith Vnbelief ib. Cor. 4. Saving Faith most rare but Commun faith most cheap 211. Cor. 5. Believers have much Unbeief 214. Cor. 6. Unbelief is the greatest Sin 217. Cor. 7. This justifies God in his greatest severitie against Unbelievers 221. Chap. 9. Practic Vses Vse 1. Studie the Mysterie of Infidelitie 224. Studie the Causes of Infidelitie 227. 1. Spiritual darknesse 2. Carnal reason 228. 3. Carnal Securitie 4. Self-love ibid. 5. Spiritual Pride 6. Short-spiritednesse 229. 7. Beloved lusts Ibid. Use 2. Of Lamentation and Humiliation for the prevalence of Infidelitie 230. Motives to humble our selves for Vnbelief 232. Use 3. Of Examination whether our Faith be saving or only commun also how far we fal under Infidelitie 233. Heart-examens by way of Soliloquie 236. Use 4. Of Exhortation to deal with Infidelite as our worst enemie 238. Use 5. Pursue after Faith as the most excellent and useful Grace 245. The excellent effects of Faith 246. The opposite Qualities of Faith and Vnbelief 249 Scriptures Explicated Chap. Ver. Page Genesis 4. 7. 19. Deuteronomie 10. 20. 174. 32. 34 45. 38. 2 Samuel 23. 5. 111. 2 Chronicles 28. 22. 37. Job 1. 20. 185. Psalmes 37. 1 7. 187. 37. 5. 179. 63. 8. 175. 78. 34. 171. 78. 37. 178. 119. 11. 139. 119. 16. 138. Esaias 2. 10. 32. 30. 13. 22. 〈◊〉 25. 30. Chap. Ver. Page Jeremie 3. 10. 169. 7. 4. 25. 8. 14 15. 32. 31. 32. 61. Lamentations 1. 9. 30. 1. 15. 41. 2. 1. 42. 2. 14. 26. 4. 16. 42. Hosea 4. 16. 161. 11. 7. 178. Matthew 6. 30 31 32. 113. 11. 6. 149. 19. 20 21 22. 159. Luke 7. 29 30. 152. 11. 41. 182. 12. 22-29 114. 12. 29. 132 14. 26 33. 185. Luke 19. 6. 171. 19. 41. 3 c. 19. 42. 76 c. 19. 44. 44. 20. 5. 151. 24. 45. 124. John 1. 11. 61 161. 3. 36. 286. 5. 38. 139. 5. 39. 129. 7. 28. 141. 10. 24. 132. 12. 12 13. 10. Acts. 2. 41. 135. 17. 11. 137. Romans 2. 17-20 126. 4. 19 20 21. 131. 5. 20. 110. 10. 15 16. 106. 1 Corinthians 2. 14. 128. Galatians 4. 9 21. 184. Ephesians 1. 13 14. 191. Philippians 3. 3. 183. 1 Thessalonians 2. 13. 117. Hebrews 3. 12 14. 175 176. 4. 2. 135. 11. 1. 116. 12. 38 39. 177. James 2. 26. 142. 2 Peter 1. 9. 130. ERRATA PAge 11. l. 5. read pretensions P. 12. running title r. without P. 23. l. 2. for ying r. lying P. 37. l. 28. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 62. l. ● after his own put a Colon. P. 78. l. 7. r. particle P. 85. l. 21. for thenc r. thence P. 111. l. 21. r. whereon P. 144. l. 18. after under adde the. P. 178. l. 18. for me r. him P. 179. l. 11. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 191. l. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 16. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 192. l. 2. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 193. l. 1. for has leaning read hastening The Anatomie of Infidelitie BOOK I. A general account of Christ's Lamentation over Jerusalem Luke 19. 41. And when he was come near he beheld the citie and wept over it CHAP. I. An Explication of the Text Luke 19. 41. AS Israels Temporal Benedictions were Symbolic Images or Types of Spiritual blessings promissed to the believing seed of Abraham so her Temporal Jugements were also Symbols or Typi● Shadows of Spiritual Jugements threatned to and inflicted on Evangelic Unbelievers And to confirme this 't is worth our observation that most if not al of those expressions in Scripture whereby the place of eternal punishment is represented relate and allude to some places or stories remarquable for Gods exemplary vengeance executed on sinners under the old Testament Yea the last Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus here foretold and lamented by our Lord is by a learned Author stiled a Map af Hel. The Contemplation whereof is that which inclines me to pitch on this Scripture as the seat of our ensuing Discourse touching the Nature Aggravations and Punishment of Vnbelief And I
masque of an hypocritic Profession yet we cannot delude Christ He sees that the first principle of such feigned profession is but some commun Illumination or languid Affection He knows who they are that crie him up in profession and yet despise or crie him down in heart and prevalent Affection He considers that such mens forced subjection to him procedes only from legal principles and therefore wil ere long degenerate into secret if not open Rebellion against him He sees such mens light is a burden to them their faith lies level with the Interest of self their starcht holinesse is but an artificial Pharisaic sanctitie or at best but some light touches or superficial Impresses of the Spirit of Grace In brief Christ has as Isai 11. 3. a quick sent to distinguish betwixt commun illuminations and the saving light of life between legal Humiliation and evangelic Repentance betwixt painted watered holinesse and sincere Grace and therefore many Almost-Christians who passe for Sheep in their own and the worlds eyes are but altogether Swine in Christs eye Hence we may learne Vse 1 That awakened sinners may procede very far in the owning of Christ and yet be disowned by him They may as these poor souls here embrace him with much seeming joy submit to him as their King with much pretended chearfulnes crie Hosanna i. e. save now with much seeming Faith and Dependence on him as their Savior and yet al this while Christ not own them as his loyal Subjects This also teacheth us Vse 2 That there is a vast difference between mans jugement and Christs Alas how many are justified by us as also in their own consciences and yet condemned by Christ As on the contrarie how many are condemned by the World and peradventure by their own Consciences as Hypocrites who yet are justified by Christ This further instructs us Vse 3 That a christians main worke is to approve himself to Christ It maters not who condemnes if Christ justifies who curseth if he blesseth who kils if he makes alive who troubles if he speak peace As Christ doth curse the Blessings so also he doth blesse the Curses of the wicked when unjustly pronounced against the Godly Wherefore Christians should mind more how they may approve themselves to Christ than what may commend them to the world This also admonisheth us Vse 4 mostly to intend and look wel to Heart-work For 't is the sinceritie of the heart only that commends us unto Christ Externe formes and Apparences of pietie commend us to the Church but unlesse there be an inward Power and Realitie of Grace in the Heart al our visible formes do but render us more slie cunning Hypocrites and so more loathsome abominable in the eye of Christ Lastly this discovers to us the desperate curse and plague that abides on self-deluding sinners Vse 5 Such as extol Christ in profession but yet continue enemies to him in Affection such as go forth with their Palme-branches of seeming joy to welcome Christ and yet secretly in their hearts crucifie him such as sing Hosanna's to him as their crowned King and yet reserve the Bent of their hearts as a throne for some base lust Certainly such Almost-Christians are no better than Almost-Devils the whitenesse of their fair but false pretences of honor to Christ doth but aggravate the blacknes of of their sin in rejecting of him the masque of their profession serves but to concele a rotten heart Their seeming Godlines serves but more effectually to oppose that which is such in truth CHAP. III. Previous and general Observations from the Text. WE now procede to the bodie of our Text and therein the first thing that occurs is the circumstance of place wherein our blessed Lord made this his doleful Lamentation over Jerusalem contained in that expression And when he was come near Whence observe That the approche of any afflictive or miserable object draws forth grief pitie from a christian gracious spirit What is grief but the emotion or rolling of the bowels at the presence of some grievous object and the nearer the object is to us either by Natural Civil or Religious bonds the greater wil our grief be at the approche thereof Jerusalem was allied to Christ by the most intimate and essential bonds both of Nature and Religion he was borne of a Jewish Womb educated in the Jewish Land the crowned King of Jerusalem which was a federate Citie allied to him by al manner of Civil and Religious obligations and therefore approaching near it his bowels melt and turne within him to think that this Citie so near and dear unto him should not understand or embrace the things that appertain to her peace but on the contrarie be at this very very time meditating and contriving his death and her own ruine But this wil come under further consideration in what follows We passe on to the Act of Christ which ushered in and opened the dore to this his sad Lamentation He beheld Hence observe 1. That the Lord of Glorie did so far condescend to sinners as to clothe himself with human Nature and Organs thereby the more feelingly to commiserate and pitie them And oh What an infinite Ocean of condescendent grace is here What unparalled Dimensions of eternal Love and Mercie are there in the bowels of this tenderhearted Redemer What Was he indeed content to assume a mans heart to bleed over sinners a mans tongue to plead with and persuade sinners to be happie a mans eyes to water his exhortations with tears yea a mans soul and bodie to die for sinners O! what wonders of superlative love and condescendent pitie are here Who would ever question the affectionate regard of such a compassionate Redemer How comes it to passe that the blessed Lord should borrow human eyes to behold and pitie sinners and yet they want an eye of faith to behold their Savior O! what monstrous ingratitude is this that the King of Sion should stand gazing on sinners ' til his heart dissolve into tears and yet they stand amusing themselves with Idols of clay and never mind the gracious Regards of their Lord Fie fie on such blind Idol-lovers 2. From this Act He beheld we may further observe That Christs eye affects his heart his sight moves his compassions There are no sterile jejune or barren speculations in Christs eye but al his contemplations are warme and heart-melting they break forth into Affection and end in Operation Christs eye is not dul or sleepy but vigilant and watchful He watcheth over sinners when they sleep over him He beholds them with an eye of pitie and compassion when they behold him with an eye of bloud and revenge He casts a wist eye of sympathie and lamentation towards Jerusalem whiles she is looking and considering how she may pul out his eyes and heart O! what a compassionate eye is this Hence follows the object of Christs contemplation and that is THE
hunt or inquire into the Scriptures as dogs hunt after wild beasts but oh this the unbelieving Jews were strangers to and therefore no wonder if they were strangers to al the things that did belong to their peace The Scriptures are the Oracles of God the Glasse wherein his glorious perfections shine neither can there the least ray of true Religion shine on lapsed man but what is reflected from this celestial Miroir of the Divine wil. The Splend●r of Divine Majestie is but as an inexplicable Labyrinth unlesse we are conducted thereinto by this thread of sacred Scriptures God is nothing to us but what he testifies of himself God is nothing saith Tyndal but his Law and his promisses i. e That which he biddeth thee to do and believe and hope and to imagine any other thing of God is grosse and damnable Idolatrie The Sacred Word is the Spirits Schole in which he teacheth al the things that belong to our peace so that we may be contentedly ignorant of what is not here taught Hence it is apparent that one main and fundamental part of Unbelief consists in not yielding a real firme distinct certain affectionate deep and practic Assent to the sacred Scriptures And oh what an Epidemic Universal sin is this even in the professing world How many are there among the croud of knowing Professors who never gave an explicite actual chearful spiritual and stedfast Assent to the Word of God and its sacred Autoritie Are not the most of Professors extreme partial in their credence or belief of the divine Scriptures Do not they pick and choose what may correspend most with their Lusts or carnal Interests This word that pleaseth them they can believe but that word which disgusts them they cannot assent unto Do not many in their prosperitie disbelieve the Threats and in their Adversitie the Promisses And what is this but not to know the things that belong to their peace For he that doth disbelieve any one part of Scripture may he not be justly reputed to disbelieve the whole Is not the Reason and Autoritie of a part the same with the Reason and Autoritie of the whole word Wherefore doth not he who rejects a part also reject the Autoritie of the whole It s true al Scriptures are not alike Fundamental or equally necessary to salvation yet may we not justly conclude that al are equally necessary to be believed if we consider their origine and Autoritie as they are al inspired by the Spirit of God and clothed with Indelible Characters of Divine Majestie O then how many knowing Professors are in this point guiltie of not knowing the things that belong to their peace How few are there that yield a rooted welgrounded operative Assent to the whole Word of God who have an ear to hear wherever and whenever God hath a mouth to speak O that Professors would seriously ruminate on this That so far as they disbelieve the Truth Certaintie and Autoritie of any one word of God so far they disbelieve or know not the things that belong to their peace And whence is it that many Professors are so averse from assenting to the whole Word of God Is it not from the prevalence of some lust in their hearts which turnes them strongly another way They disbelieve some Scriptures and why Is it not because they lie not level with their lusts Oh! what a deep Mysterie of Iniquitie is this disbelief of the Scriptures as loged in some carnal hearts What malignant and venimous effusions doth it transmit into their lives Is it not the great Stratageme and plot of Satan to dispirit and weaken mens Assent to the sacred Scriptures And doth he not hereby create in many sincere Believers much unbelief concerning the things that belong to their peace May not the most of our tentations be resolved into some disbeliefe of the Scriptures And on the contrary hath not a real fixed supernatural and saving Assent to the Sacred Scriptures a mighty soverain efficacious Influence on al our Graces and Duties Doth not the vigor strength beautie and improvement of al Grace depend on our belief of the Scriptures O that men would then look wel hereto 2. We procede now to the Particular notional Maters or Things belonging to our peace which Unbelief rejects and those are the Gospel or Covenant of Grace with al the branches thereof The Gospel is Grace's office the shop where the sinner may find both food and physic The Covenant of Grace is faiths Magna Charta the Epistle of Christ writ with his own bloud the Cabinet wherein al our Jewels of Grace and Peace are laid up by Christ yea the words of life wherein Christs heart lies wrapt up and is conveighed unto sinners The Promisses of the Gospel are the Element in which Faith lives and moves they are the Air which Faith sucks in and breaths forth they are the food on which Faith feeds There is no diet so natural so delicious so restaurative so corroborative or strengthening so nutritive so satisfying as the promisses spirited by Free Grace Faith relisheth no food like this Faith never reposeth herself so securely never sleeps so sweetly as when she doth lean her head on the bosome of some promisse If she hath but a promisse to cast Anchor on she can ride confidently in the greatest stormes and laugh at al the proud waves that beat against her Now this being the temper and spirit of Faith hence it necessarily follows That not to assent to the Gospel or Covenant of Grace and the Promisses which lie wrapt up therein takes in much of the vital spirit of Unbelief This wil be more evident if we consider the chief material parts of the Covenant of Grace and the evil aspect which Unbelief casts thereon The Covenant of Grace contains in it 1. Maters of Grace 2. Maters of Providence 3. Maters of coming Glorie Now in al these regards Unbelief may be said Not to know the things that bolong to our peace 1. The Covenant of Grace contains in it Maters of Grace The Law tels us what we are by Nature but the Gospel tels us what we are or may be by Grace The Law discovers to us our sin and miserie but the Gospel discovers our remedie and so opens a dore to Faith Yea the Gospel doth not only declare to us the Objects and Maters we are to believe but also furnisheth us with many gracious encouragements and incentives to believe yea further the Gospel doth not only afford us maters and motives of Faith but also it becomes a sanctified Instrument in the hand of the Spirit to conveigh Faith and al other Graces to us For it is an infallible Maxime in Theologi● that Evangelic Promisses of Grace on such or such conditions without Grace to performe those conditions are as little available to beget faith as the law is Thus we see how ful of gracious Maters Motives and Offers the Covenant of Grace is But
manner that so thereby men might behold as by a magnifying Glasse the proper Dimensions and Merits of their sins Ay but what was Gods end in making Sin thus to abound why that follows But when sin abounded Grace did much more abound Here saith Paul lay Gods bottome-designe in permitting sin thus to abound that thereby Grace might superabound yea that at that very time when sin so much abounded Grace might superabound at that very time when we appeared to be so great enemies to Christ he might appear to be so great a friend to us Thus Mercie in God is more merciful than sin in us can be sinful And oh what a foundation and encouragement for faith is here But alas how doth Unbelief spurne at and despise at least limit these Richesse of Grace 5. Unbelief cals in question the Immutabilitie Certaintie and Fidelitie of the Covenat David gives us an excellent character of the Covenant and its Immutabilitie 2 Sam. 23. 5. Although my house be not so with God yet he hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in althings and sure For this is al my salvation and al my desire although he make it not to grow Notwithstanding al Davids care for the settlement of his familie on the Throne yet he foresaw by a spirit of prophesie how fragile and instable his Throne was only herein he solaceth himself that the Covenant wherein his faith and main hopes were bottomed was most stable and sure and oh how doth this amidst al his prophetic fears touching the instable and tottering state of his familie revive and chear up his spirits For this is al my salvation and al my desire Let althings else sink or swim it maters not so long as the Covenant is sure and inviolable Hence Covenant-Grace is stiled the sure mercies of David The blessed God has obliged himself by Covenant confirmed by Oath and Sacrifice which are the most essential ties and therefore he cannot but be true and faithful to his word otherwise he were not true to himself And yet lo how jelous how suspicious how captious is Unbelief touching the certaintie of the Covenant Men are ready to confide in those who are sufficient and faithful specially if they have their Bond But yet Unbelievers dare not trust the Faithful Alsufficient God albeit they have his Bond or Covenant and that confirmed by oath So much for the Grace of the Covenant 2. The Covenant of Grace is furnished with Promisses not only of Grace but also of Providence which Unbelief is very apt to cavil at The Covenant of Grace is the Believers Charter not only for Spirituals but also for Temporals it extends to the very hairs of their heads the most inconsiderable things Surely they can want nothing who have Alsufficience engaged for their supplie It s true Means sometimes fail Ay but cannot doth not their wise Father feed them without means when he sees it necessary And are not such supplies by so much the more pure and sweet by how much the more immediate they are The lesse there is of the creature is there not the more of God in al our provisions Doth not our omnipotent God oft bring the greatest Triumphs out of the greatest extremites It 's true He doth not alwaies keep his people from the crosse ay but doth he not always keep them under the crosse Have not the most black and seemingly confused Providences an admirable beautie and harmonious order in them Did ever Believer need any thing but what he could better need than have Are not those Needs blessed that secure us from sin and make way for greater mercies Are not al Gods Providences spirited by mysterious wisdome and paternal love Is it not then the Believers Wisdome and Interest to suffer his Father to be wise for him How comes it to passe then that Believers themselves should be so unbelieving as to Gods paternal providence towards them Oh! what a mysterie of iniquitie is there in Unbelief as to this particular This Christ much cautions his Disciples against and upbraids them with very oft and that with sharp Rebukes So Mat. 6. 30. Wherefore if God so clothe the grasse of the field which to day is and to morrow is cast into the oven shal he not much more clothe you O ye of little faith As if he had said Doth God clothe the grasse of the field which is so fading with so much beautie and glorie And wil he not much more clothe you O ye short-spirited ones That which we render O ye of little faith is expressed by the Hebrews in such termes as import the anxious cruciating vexatious cares of such● who though they have enough for the present are stil ful of inquietude and distrust about future supplies Whence he addes v. 31. Wherefore take no thought saying what shal we eat c. i. e be not anxiously solicitous or incredulously thoughtful about these viati●s or necessaries of life And why v. 32. For after al these things do the Gentiles seek As if he had said Is it not a shame that you who are my Disciples should be as unbelieving as anxiously inquisitive about these things as the poor Gentiles who know nothing of my Covenant Thence follows another Argument or branch of the former For your heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of al these things i. e Alas Why do you concerne your selves so much about these poor things Have you not a Father in Heaven who is mindful of and provident for you Doth he not wel understand al your needs And is he not engaged by Covenant to supplie you with al necessaries And hath he not promissed in this very case Psal 111. 5. To give meat to them that fear him and to be ever mindful of his Covenant Why then wil you not believe We find the like character of Unbelief as to the Providence of God Luke 12. 22. Take no thought for your life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 give not way to anxious distracting distrustful thoughts about the necessaries of life And then our blessed Lord gives the reason of this his Admonition v. 24. Consider the Ravens c. Luke makes a special mention of the Ravens because God has a particular providence and care of the young Ravens as both Job and the Psalmist observe The Hebrews have many observations about Gods care of the young Ravens The Philosophers also note how the young Ravens are neglected by their parents Hence Christ argues a minori How much more are ye better than fouls i. e surely if he be so much concerned for fouls how much more wil he concerne himself for you his Children Then he addes another Argument against Unbelief v. 25 26. And which of you with taking thought can adde to his stature one cubit c. Other Arguments are urged v. 27 28. Then he concludes v. 29. and seek not what ye shal eat or what ye shal drink neither be
not Divine Mysteries above the reach of a human Understanding unlesse the Spirit of God come and clothe it with a divine Light Is not the natural mind shut against supernatural objects until Christ by his Spirit open the same Thence it is said Luke 24. 45. Then opened he their Vnderstanding that they might understand the Scriptures They had some habitual Light before but Christ now extendes and stretcheth their minds to a more ful comprehension of the promisses To every degree of saving light there is required a fresh Influence and Assistance of the Spirit It s said He opened their Vnderstandings Men may open supernatural Truths and Promisses to our minds but none can open our minds to take in supernatural Truths save the Spirit of Christ such therefore as are not illuminated by the Spirit cannot know the things that belong to their peace The Believer hath a Divine light a supernatural instinct whereby he understands and assents to the voice of Christ in the Gospel John 10. 27. My sheep hear my voice just as the simple Lamb by a natural instinct discerneth the voice of her Dam from the rest in the flock 5. Men know not the things that belong to their Peace when the Truths and Promisses of the Gospel take not deep root in their hearts Our Assent ought to be commensurate or proportionable to its Object great and weighty Truths must have a rooted and deep Assent A superficial indeliberate Assent to the great things of the Gospel is but interpretative Dissent This was the great defect of the High-way and stonie ground Mat. 13. 19 20 21. The seed sowen by the way-side was lost assoon as received But the word sowen in stonie hearts was received with some joy i. e the Novitie and greatnesse of the things offered made some superficial Impression on their hearts but yet there wanting a depth of earth an hot day of persecution soon blasted al. There is no Assent stable and firme but what is deep and rooted Thus much our blessed Lord assures us in his Parable of the sandy foundation Mat. 7. 26. whereas the sound Believer who digs deep into the heart and builds his assent on rooted welgrounded Principles though windy stormy tentations beat against it yea albeit he hath a thousand objections against what he believes yet his assent is firme and stedfast because the bottome-Principles on which it is grounded remain firme A superficial precipitated and rash assent is very staggering and mutable when men judge according to the apparences of things without solid deliberation and deep inquisition into the grounds and reasons they never arrive to a fixed Assent Thence saith Christ Joh. 7. 24. Judge not according to the apparence but judge righteous jugement A superficial assent is soon turned into dissent 6. Such as yield not a Real but only Notional Assent to evangelic Truths and Promisses know not the things that belong to their peace For things may then only be said to be truely known when they are received as offered Now the things offered in the Gospel are practic or things referring to practice Thence to yield only a notional assent to them is really to dissent Many of these unbelieving Jews whom Christ condemnes in our text had a very great Forme of knowlege or Notional assent to the things that belonged to their peace as 't is evident from Rom. 2. 17 18 19 20. Behold thou art called a Jew and restest in the law and makest thy boast of God and knowest his wil and approvest the things that are more excellent being instructed out of the law c. i e Thou art an accurate Critic in the law thou canst exactly distinguish between things clean and unclean and then he sums up al in one expression ver 20. Which hast the forme of knowlege and of the truth in the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here signifies an Artificial Image Scheme Figure or Picture of knowlege and its opposed to a substantial solid real knowledge which is stiled Prov. 2. 7. Sound wisdome or Essential knowlege These unbelieving Jews had a notional Idea an artificial Scheme a curious picture of knowlege but they wanted the real substantial essential contemplation of those things that belonged to their peace Now as there is a vast difference between the contemplation of things in pictures or shadowes and the contemplation of them in their own proper substances So here the Unbeliever that views the things of his peace only in Pictures Systemes or Notions comes far short of the Believer who views the same Intuitively as they lie wrapt up in Evangelic promisses Faith is described Hebr. 11. 1. The substance of things hoped for i. e it hath a real substantial contemplation of things hoped for as if they were actually present before the eyes and then it follows The evidence of things not seen The invisible things of celestial Canaan become visible to an eye of faith whence it is apparent that he who has only a notional knowlege of the things that belong to his peace is really ignorant of them Mere Speculative Assent to things practic is no better than real dissent For our Assent is then only true when it is agreable to its object formally considered The things of our peace are most substantial and real but the Unbeliever assents not to them as such he sees them only in Words Notions and Imaginations and therefore counts them but mere conceits fine-spun Notions and curious Pictures His forme of knowlege is but real Ignorance 7. Men know not the things that belong to their peace when their Assent to them is Carnal not Spiritual The things that belong to our peace are most spiritual they admit not the least commixture of what is carnal and therefore a carnal mind never truely assents to them Things Spiritual cannot be apprehended by any but a spiritual facultie Carnal assent to things spiritual is real dissent How can he assent truely to any sacred Truth who understands nothing truely of that he assents unto Thus the Apostle argues strongly 1 Cor. 2. 14. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnes to him neither can he know them because they are spirtually discerned 1. By this Natural or Animal man we must understand every irregenerate man who has not his mind imbued with saving Faith 2. Of this man its said he receiveth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it s a Metaphor assumed from narrow-mouth'd vessels which cannot take in things too big for them The things of the Spirit of God which are the same with the things of our peace are too big for Animal Natural Minds Yea 3. He addes Neither can he know them there is a moral Impossibilitie that he should know them and why that followes 4. because they are spiritually discerned As if he had said Alas how is it possible that he should know them What proportion is there betwixt
legal ceremonies here stiled beggerly elements as ver 10 No The Galatians were never before under those Judaic ceremonies only they are said to turne again unto them because they affected a similitude or ressemblance to the Jews herein Oh! how fain would they Symbolise or agree with the Jews and so mingle something of the Law with Christ So it follows whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye desire or ye greedily covet ye greatly wish and long to be under the Law oh how much do you desire what strong wishes have you to join the Law with Christ the like ver 21. Tel me ye that desire to be under the the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e ye who are so hungry and greedy after the law This was the temper of many Judaising Galatians they would fain compound the Law with Christ they could not rest satisfied in Christ alone as the mater of their justification but must needs join the law with him which Paul tels them Gal. 5. 2 3. Was to make Christ of none effect For he that rests not in Christ alone as the mater of his justification trusts not at al in him So also in point of happinesse he that doth not acquiesce in Christ alone as the object of his rest and satisfaction doth not really believe in him whence saith Christ Luke 14. 26. If any come to me and hate not his father c. i. e if he be not satisfied in me as the fountain of his life he hath no share in me For to hate here is to love lesse Christ doth not injoin his Disciples simply absolutely to hate Parents c. No that were sin But he means comparitively i. e whoever doth not love Parents Wife c. lesse than me cannot be my Disciple So ver 33. Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not al that he hath he cannot be my Disciple What doth Christ mean by this Doth he expect that when we turne Christians we bid Adieu to al outward comforts No surely This command of Christ doth not so much respect the Act as the Affection we are not commanded to cast away al but to love Christ above al. 6. Again Vnbelief is ful of murmurs Disobedience and Reluctance against the soverain Wil of God Faith is the most obsequious obedient and dutiful Grace Oh! how ful of Resignation and Submission is the believing Wil so far as it is believing When Christ enters into any soul he expects that every proud imagination every high thought stoop unto him That the whole soul bow before him and adore his soverain wil and pleasure Thus Job 1. 20. Then Job arose This notes his speed courage and resolution in complying with the divine Wil. And rent his mantle and shaved his head these were Symbols or tokens of great sorrow and humiliation under the hand of God Faith doth not destroy natural affections but it regulates and spiritualiseth them When the hand of God is on us our hand should be on our hearts in order to a deep sense and humiliation under Gods visitation Then it follows and fel down upon the ground and worshipped The Hebrew words do both signifie a bowing to the ground Because in their worship they usually fel to the ground or bowed their head knee or whole bodie therefore the same word among the Hebrews signifies both to ●ow and to worship What then doth Jobs falling to the ground and worshipping import 1. A sense of Gods hand in this visitation 2. An Adoration of or bowing before the Divine wil as most righteous 3. A satisfaction in the present issues of the divine Wil. In short it implies a melting or dissolving of his Wil into the Divine wil as most holy and best Hence v. 21. it s said That in al this Job sinned not nor charged God foolishly i. e Jobs faith brought his wil to correspond with the Divine wil. O! What a sweet harmonie was here But this unbelief cannot endure Oh! what risings of heart are there against the Truths Grace Wil Waies and Crosse of Christ How doth unbelief strugle and fret against the supreme pleasure of Christ Hence the same word in the Greek signifies both Unbelief and Disobedience as John 3. 36. He that believeth not the Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies also He that is not obedient to the Son Al faith carries something of obedience in it or a subjection of the mind and wil to the Word and Grace of Christ whence Unbelievers are stiled Ephes 2. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Children of disobedience or unpersuasible untractable children such as cannot bring their hearts to bow and stoop to divine Truths Grace and Commands And indeed much of the nature of Infidelitie is lively exprest by this notion of Disobedience Thus the Israelites unbelief is set forth to us Act. 7. 39. To whom our fathers would not obey but thrust him from them and in their hearts turned back again to Egypt How did they disobey Christ and thrust him from them Was it not chiefly by their murmurs and Unbelief So in like manner we find unbelief set forth by fretting against God which is an high degree of Disobedience Psal 37. 1. Fret not thy self because of evil doers Fret not thy self or be not angrie chide not Unbelief is very prone to be angrie yea to chide God because of the prosperitie of wicked men whereto is opposed vers 3. Trust in the Lord c. This trusting in God is opposite to that fretful spirit v. 1. The like Antithesis or opposition we find ver 7. Rest in the Lord and wait patiently fret not thy self because of him that prospereth in his way Rest in the Lord Hebr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be silent unto the Lord Don't let one murmur or impatient word drop out of thy mouth but wait patiently or expect with much silence and patience relief from the Lord beware how thou doest fret and repine against his Soverain pleasure So that a fretful murmuring spirit is quite opposite to that silence and obedience which faith implies What is faith but a free and chearful resignation of al concernes to God with a complete subjection to his Soverain Wil Grace and Spirit for the accomplishment of al Faith subjugates and captivates our wisdome to divine Wisdome our consciences to the divine Law our whole heart and life to the divine Wil either preceptive or providential A Believer as such lives no longer than he lives in the divine Wil and Grace and no thing is so fit a subject for such a Divine life as a broken heart and what so effectually breaks the heart as faith in Christ Oh! what meeknesse is there in faith How silent is it How flexible to the Divine Wil Certainly the lower the wil lies in subjection and submission to God the higher faith riseth The highest faith is that which lies lowest in
hide strengthen and foment secret invisible lusts as spiritual pride carnal confidence Hos 7. 16 Or at best doth he not make use of al his covenants against sin only as a balsame to heal the wounds of his conscience not as poison to kil the lusts of his heart Such is the curse and plague of commun faith 6. Saving faith transformes the heart into the Image of Christ and thence makes the Believer conforme to his Life and Laws but commun faith workes neither Saving Faith brings the heart near to Christ and so stampes the Image of Christ upon the heart It cannot make men Christ but yet it makes them like unto him and that not only in one particular excellence but in al It changeth the last end and disposition of the wil and thence the whole soul and life It infuseth a divine plenitude or fulnesse of Grace into the soul answerable to that fulnesse of sin that was there before And as Christ is one with his Father by personal union so Believers are one with Christ by faith Hence much of the life of Christ appears in their lives The love and spirit of Christ prevails with them to live the life of Christ and conforme to his Laws And oh what a sweet harmonie and conformitie so far as Faith and Grace prevails is there between the Spirit and Life of Christ and their spirits and life How much do their hearts and lives answer to the primitive Patterne of puritie in the heart and life of Christ But can the Unbelievers commun faith worke such rare effects It s true sometimes his Actions are changed but are not his vital Principles and Dispositions unchanged He may sometimes conforme to the Laws of Christ in appearance but doth he not stil hate them at heart Whereas the Believer whiles he breakes the law of Christ in Action he conformes to it in Affection and desire as Roman 7. 22. The Unbelievers commun faith may lead him to please Christ in shew but is it not al to please himself in truth Doth he not wholly live on self as his spring and to self as his last end Oh! how impossible is it for him to live by faith on Christ and to Christ which is the Believers life 7. Saving faith makes Believers diligent in the use of means and yet keeps them from trusting in them commun faith makes Vnbelievers negligent in the use of means and yet to trust in them Oh! how industrious is Faith in the use of means as if there were no Christ to trust unto And yet doth not faith trust wholly in Christ as if there were no means to be used Yea doth it not trust Christ as much in the fulnesse of means as in the want of them But oh how much doth unbelief trust in means though it be very negligent in the use of them 8. Saving Faith is alwaies bottomed on a Promisse and by it workes up the heart to God But commun faith is alwaies bottomed either on false persuasions or self-sufficiences and by them turnes the heart from God 9. Saving Faith walkes in Gods ways by a strait rule to a strait end But commun faith is always stepping out of Gods way its rule and end both are crooked True Faith looks both to its end and rule it wil not do good that evil or evil that good may follow But commun faith wil do both 10. Lastly Saving Faith values an half-promisse yea a mere peradventure from God more than the best promisse the creature can make but commun faith depends more on the rotten and false promisse of its own heart or of the creature than on al the promisses of God 3. Hence we may further infer That there is no medium or middle between true Faith and Infidelitie Commun faith is but real Unbelief He that is not a sound Believer is a real Infidel He that receives not Christ on his own termes rejects him Not to trust in Christ with al the heart is not to trust him at al in truth A forced election of Christ is a real reprobation of him A mere human or notional or general or confused or instable or inefficacious Assent to Christ is real Dissent Not to rest in Christ alone as our Mediator is not at al to confide in him He that cannot part with al for Christ wil soon part with Christ for any thing If faith purifies not the heart from sin and fortifies it against tentation it deserves not the name of faith Acts 15. 9. If Faith gives not a substantial being to things not in being it doth nothing Heb. 11. 1. If you can believe nothing but what you have reason and evidence for from the things themselves you believe nothing as you ought for though reason may assist faith as an instrument yet it destroyes faith as a principal ground or argument because faith is of things inevident Heb. 11. 1. Faith takes nothing for its formal reason or principal ground but increated Autoritie and therefore it is not the mere evidence of reason but the testimonie of God that makes men believers And if so then oh what a world of that which passeth for faith among men wil one day appear to be real Unbelief What may we judge of those who hang up Christ in their phantasies as pictures in an house but yet never really adhere to or recumb on him Is not this mere fancie rather than faith What shal we conclude of the presumtuous believer who presumes God wil shape his mercie according to his humor Is not his faith mere Unbelief Yea can there be a more cursed piece of Unbelief than a fond groundlesse presumtion that we do believe Again what shal we say of the dead-borne sleepy faith of secure Sinners who lay their head in Satans bosome and sleep securely on the pillow of his rotten peace Is not this a piece of Unbelief which Devils and damned Spirits are not guiltie of For they believe and tremble at the apprehensions of their approching jugement And oh how soon wil these their sweet sleeps end in dreadful hellish awakenings Again may we not judge the same of legal faith which sets up the Law in the room of Christ or at least yokes the Law and Christ together Do not such by joining the Law with Christ disjoin their hearts from Christ Rom. 7. 1-4 Is it not as bad a piece of Unbelief to set up the Law instead of Christ as to set up lust instead of the law Yea is there not much of Idolatrie in such a legal faith for do not such as depend on their own legal performances for life make themselves their God and Christ Oh! how oft doth such a legal faith or carnal confidence end in black despair Were it not easie to shew if opportunitie served how al the false or commun faiths in the world are indeed but real Infidelitie colored over with a tincture of faith O then what a world of Infidels
and Unbelievers are there who walk up and down under the masque and vizard of Believers Surely if al these pretended fancied faiths are real unbelief there can be no middle betwixt Faith and Unbelief and then how many great Professors wil fal under the black character of Unbelievers albeit they may now passe for good Believers 4. Hence also we learne That solid saving Faith is most rare and difficult but commun faith most cheap and easie It s no difficult mater in these knowing times to gain the Notion of Faith but oh how difficult is it to attain unto the thing faith A general implicite Assent to the things that belong unto our peace is very commun but oh how rare is it to meet with a particular explicite real Assent to the things of our peace formally considered Do not the most of Professors yield only a human natural or traditional Assent to Divine supernatural Truths and Mysteries Multitudes now adays receive the Word of God but how is it not as the word of men i. e as clothed with human Autoritie or the evidence of reason not as the Word of God 1 Thes 2. 13 A confused suspense reeling assent to evangelic Doctrines is very commun but is not a distinct fixed deep welgrounded assent as rare Oh! how superficial and feeble is most mens assent to the good things of their peace Or if some awakened consciences arise higher to a more complete and deep assent yet alas how legal is their assent even to evangelic Truths How hard is it even for true Believers much more for those who have only commun faith to see sin as sin and not to fal under a legal spirit of Bondage To assent to the truths of the Gospel when Conscience is fired with the terrors of the Law is no great pain but oh how painful a thing is it to assent to Gospel truths from an inward feeling apprehension of their own worth and excellence To assent to the Doctrines of the Gospel is commun but is it not as commun to dissent from the duties of the Gospel which in divine estimation is but a dead faith How few have impressions suitable to their faith How few are there among the croud of Believers who have an admiring assent an high estime and right valuation of the good things that belong unto their peace It is indeed very facile to yield a barren lazy dead assent to Evangelic Notions but oh how difficult is it to arrive unto a fruitful vigorous lively efficacious practic assent such as may forme and transforme the heart into the very image of those good things we assent unto So also for Consent it is very commun and easie for convinced sinners to be induced to make some indeliberate involuntary partial imperfect election of Christ and other good things that belong to their peace but oh how rare and difficult is it to attain unto a chearful speedy complete and fixed closure with Christ on his own termes as offered in the Gospel Is it not commun with many to adhere to Christ in Profession but to lust in Affection How many commun Believers give Christ good words but give their hearts to some Idol-lover Do not too many also pretend subjection to Christ and his soverain pleasure but really intend subjection to no other Lord than their own Lusts How many seem to depend wholly on Christ for Grace who yet secretly lean on their own understandings and good wils O that men would believe what a difficult thing it is to believe aright Alas how violent is the motion of Faith How much against corrupt nature are the supernatural acts of Faith Was there ever a greater miracle under Heaven excepting the Incarnation of the Son of God than the working of faith in an unbelieving heart Is not every saving faith a standing Miracle Oh! what a contradiction is it to carnal wisdome and corrupt Nature to assent and consent to the imputed righteousnesse of Christ What a painful thing is it to carnal hearts to part with right eyes and right hands every beloved lust for Christ How many thousand ways are there to Unbelief or commun faith but oh how narrow yea indivisible is the way to saving faith Commun faith growes among roses but Saving faith among tho●es What a grand deceit therefore is it to conceit Saving faith easie and commun Certainly he never yet believed aright that has not in some mesure had experience What a difficult thing it is to believe aright 5. Hence likewise we may conclude That Believers themselves have many Reliques and Remains of Vnbelief in them Alas how much darknesse is there mixed with their Notions of the good things that belong to their peace How much dissent is there in their assent to Evangelic truths It s true they dare not when they are themselves reject the good things of their peace ay but do they not too oft neglect and undervalue the same Are their Apprehensions and Impressions suitable to the worth of those objects they believe How then comes it to passe that on the interposure of some tentation they turne aside to lying Vanities Are not Believers themselves oft very confused and instable in their assent to evangelic Mysteries Yea have they not sometimes many prevalent suspensions hesitations and douts touching the sacred Scriptures and their Divine Autoritie How oft have many sincere Believers been violently assaulted with Atheistic thoughts that there is no God What a sealed Book and dark saying is the whole Gospel to many afflicted Consciences in times of Desertion In times of distresse how oft doth their Faith question the realitie of the Promisses What 's the reason why many true Believers are so much shaken in some difficult cases but because they do not bottome their Souls on the immutable faithfulnesse of God in his Promisses Are not the gracious offers of the Covenant most rich abundant and free How then comes it to passe that Believers are so poor and low in Grace Is it not from their want of Faith to draw out that fulnesse that is contained in and offered by the Covenant Have not Believers Gods immutable Word Oath and Fidelitie to confirme his Covenant And yet lo How backward are they to trust him in any straits How frequently do Believers stagger in their adherence unto Christ How much are they off and on up and down fast and loose with Christ How little are they acquainted with the applicatorie appropriating Acts of Faith What great things might Believers receive from Christ had they but a great faith to expect and receive them How seldome are the most of Believers in realising believing views of approching Glories What obscure and strained notions have they of Eternitie Had we eternitie in our eye and heart how would the view thereof darken the glorie of this lower world Did Believers eye much their home how vigilant active and vigorous would they be in their way thither Life and death are the same thing
those to be under the power of Unbelief who were never truly sensible of the power of it Is not Infidelitie as it has been shown the greatest sin and therefore ought to have the greatest sense What is the main and first worke of the Spirit of Bondage but to convince the unbelieving world of their unbelief as John 16. 9 And can men be convinced of it unlesse they studie and observe the nature and workings of it Why is it that the most of men do account Infidelitie so smal a sin but because they never inquired into its black ugly Nature and Aggravations How comes it to passe that many take part with their Unbelief but because they are not sensible what a mischievous pernicious thing it is Alas Did men studie and believe what an hainous sin Infidelitie is how would they abominate and loath it What speed would they make to be rid of it Yea why is it that Believers themselves are so much under the prevalence of Unbelief but because they have not that sense of its indwelling and prevalence which they ought to have Did Believers meditate much of and mourne under the evils of an unbelieving heart surely they would not be so much troubled with it as they are Oh! What a rare thing is it for Believers to have a quick sense of Unbelief What better argument and marque can we have of a sound Believer than a daily sense of and humiliation for Unbelief Yea is it not a good signe of much growth in Faith and other Graces to be inwardly acquainted with and troubled for the remains of Infidelitie dwelling in us Do not the best and most improved Christians usually complain most of this sin Oh! What an invisible slie and subtile sin is Infidelitie How long doth it lie lurking in the soul before it be observed Doth it not like some cunning Politicians animate and encourage every sin yet concele itself in al its actings Doth it not then greatly concerne al both Believers and Unbelievers to studie wel the Nature Causes and maligne Influences of Unbelief Oh! how much of Infidelitie might we find in every sin were we but wel-skilled in the nature and workings of it But alas what Mysteries and Riddles are Unbelievers to themselves How unacquainted are they with the spiritual cunning and subtile turnings and windings of their unbelieving hearts Is it not then the great concerne of al to be greatly intent on the studie of and inquisition into the Nature Operations and Effects of Unbelief But above althings we should much contemplate and inquire into the Causes of Infidelitie Is not he the wisest Philosopher who contemplates and understands best the causes of things And do not men account him the most able Physician who gives the best conjecture at the Causes of a Disease So in like manner may we not repute him among the most understanding Believers who is best skilled in discerning the Causes of Unbelief Surely althings are best known in and by their Causes O then if thou wilt understand the black nature of Infidelitie studie and inquire narrowly into its Causes Inquire into that Soverain venimous black darknesse which dwels in Conscience and makes al the good things of thy peace to disappear Oh! What a Veil doth this thick spiritual darknesse draw on al the excellences of Christ How doth it stain al the Beautie and Glorie of Evangelic offers made to the unbelieving Soul Oh! what an efficacious influence hath the darknesse of Conscience on the darknesse of Infidelitie Studie also how much carnal reason doth promote Infidelitie What more contrary to Faith than carnal reason When men endeavor to mesure the Promisses or Providences the Words or Workes of God by carnal wisdome what black jealousies and suspicions of Gods love care and faithfulnesse procede thence How is the Unbelievers heart filled with black ugly prejudices against Christ and al the offers of his Grace The lesse of carnal reason there is mixed with Faith the more pure it is Again observe how much carnal Securitie doth foment and promote thine unbelief Is not a secure Conscience ever an unbelieving Conscience When men consider not the things that belong to their peace how can they understand or believe them What made the old World so much disbelieve the approching Deluge of Gods wrath but their wretched securitie It s true Unbelief is oft the cause of carnal securitie but is it not also as oft the effect of it Is not the Securitie of the wise and foolish Virgins made a cause of their Infidelitie Matthew 25. 5 Is not faith maintained by an inward tender feeling sense and Unbelief by the want of such a sense Further take notice how much self-love doth feed and nourish thine Unbelief What self-dependence and self-secking it workes in thee How soft-natured and faint-hearted as to Dutie but stout-hearted and resolute against Christ and al his gracious invitations it makes thee Oh! Studie how much self-love fortifies thy heart against al the good things of thy peace but exposeth and layes it open to al the tentations of Sin and Satan Consider also how much Spiritual Pride contributes to thine Infidelitie Oh! how craftie and cunning is the pride of Infidelitie and how much are the Unbelievers bands strengthened hereby Meditate also on thy short-spiritednesse and its venimous influence on thine unbelief How contracted and narrow is the Unbelievers heart And how much is his unbelief promoted hereby A confined short straitned spirit is alwaies pusillanimous feeble and unbelieving as Exod. 6. 9. Lastly Examine if there be not some base darling lust lurking at the bottome of thy wil which secretly feeds and fortifies thine unbelief Oh! what large provision doth any beloved lust make for Infidelitie How much is its Throne maintained by it What stout arguments do darling lusts urge against Christ and al his gracious offers These with some other are the principal causes and most bitter roots of Infidelitie the observation and discoverie of which wil be of great use for the subduing of this sin But the more ful Inquisition into the Causes of Infidelitie wil be the entire Subject of the second part of our Discourse touching Unbelief 2. Another practic Improvement we may make of this Doctrine is by way of sad Lamentation and Humiliation for the prevalence of Infidelitie in the world even among Professors Is the Idea or visage of Unbelief so black and ugly Are its Influences so venimous and contagious How then comes it to passe that this knowing world is enamored and fallen in love with it Could any sober mind imagine that a thing so deformed and pernicious should seem so amiable and desirable in the eyes of men Was it ever known that the Leper was amorous of his Scabs or the Begger in love with his Rags or the Prisoner with his Fetters or the wounded Person with his bleeding Wounds How then comes it to passe that the
own righteousnesse to clothe my nakednesse with the balsame of mine own good workes to heal my wounds c. And as Infidelitie thus puts a bar to al Grace and Mercie So also doth it not open the dore to al the jugements of God Are not the most severe Plagues of God entailed on Infidelitie Doth not this sin provoke God to curse mens blessings Doth it not also cut us off from many promissed Mercies Yea how severely hath God punished this sin in his own people Was not Moses an holy man deprived of entring into Canaan for one act of unbelief Oh! how deep doth Gods wrath sinke into the unbelievers soul How many flourishing Churches have been deprived of the Gospel and means of Grace for their Infidelitie Or suppose that God continues some means of Grace yet doth not Unbelief turne them into means of hardening When men wil not believe the Gospel how oft doth Christ leave such to a spirit of error to believe lies Yea doth not Infidelitie continued in oft cause Christ to give up such to their own lusts which break forth sometimes into scandalous sins Yea how oft doth Christ deliver up impenitent obstinate Unbelievers to a spirit of slumber judicial hardnesse and al manner of Divine vengeance Are these the effects of Infidelitie Is there so much sin and self-murder wrapt up in its bowels and are there so many Curses and Plagues both temporal spiritual and eternal entailed on it May we not then without any injustice conclude that Unbelief is the worst enemie we have in the world Doth not our Infidelitie give us more pain and trouble than al other enemies Oh! then how should we with fire and sword persecute Unbelief as our most mortal enemie Can we be too severe against such a deadly enemie Is not al pitie and compassion that we shew towards Unbelief the greatest crueltie that may be to our own souls Why should we then cease our Indignation and Revenge against Unbelief ' til we have let out its heart-bloud Remember the more you pitie spare it the more cruel you are to your selves 5. This also layes an essential and strong obligation on al both Believers and Vnbelieve●s to put an high value on Faith and to pursue after it as their supreme Interest and Concerne Surely if Infidelitie be so prodigious and pernicious a Sin then by a paritie of reason Faith most be the most useful and excellent Grace Contraries much illustrate and set off each other And oh how doth the black deformed nature and venimous qualities of Infidelitie set off the Beauties and excellent qualities of Faith What a strange and miraculous power and efficace has Faith How doth it make things absent present the invisible glories of the coming world visible as the visible glories of this world invisible and disapparent Yea doth not faith appropriate to itself the whole of Gods Alsufficience and Omnipotence and so may in a sober humble sense be said to be in some sort alsufficient and omnipotent For al that is in God Faith by a strange magnetic virtue can applie to it self and thence it can do althings so far as it has a Promisse to bottome on Doth not the great God make himself a debtor to such as trust in Him How doth Faith ●end a man from himself without violence or pain What more effectual to break al our Idols and Images of jelousie than saving Faith How doth it make al the beautie of the Creature to fade away as a Sun-burned Flower Doth it not also dismount the Believer and make him walke on foot in al manner of self-abasement How soon doth the bottome of al sensible good fal out when Faith comes into the Soul and takes the Chair What doth more elevate and refine reason than saving Faith Have not those that believe most the deepest and soundest reasons Who is the wiser man The Believer that adheres to the First truth and chiefest good or the Unbeliever who rejects the same and adheres to Idols of time How doth Faith corroborate and fortifie the Wil in what is good by uniting of it to Christ and the Divine wil What a sweet harmonie and order doth it inspire into the Affections How doth it make the Believer to fear God under smiles love him under frowns hope in him under difficulties wait for his returne under desertions Yea when our affections are under the greatest disorder and confusion doth not Faith oft draw peace and order out of it Is not Faith both food and physic Doth it not as wel feed Grace as purge out sin Whence springeth the Christians union with Christ but from Faith Could Christ and Sinners ever come together unlesse Faith did unite them Can things contrarie be united but by some efficacious bond of Union Was it ever known that there was a mariage between the living and the dead How then comes it to passe that the dead Sinner is espoused to a living Christ Is not this happy match the alone miraculous effect of Faith wrought by the Spirit of God And hence doth not Faith make God thine as surely as thou art thine own And Faith having united the person to Christ doth it not thence by Grace derived from him purifie the nature also Acts 15. 9 And doth not Faith hence worke a miraculous change in the whole disposition of the soul and conversation And as the member is naturally subject to the head so doth not Faith subject the whole soul to Christ Whence also doth not the Believer entirely give up himself to Christ as Christ gives up himself to the Believer Oh! how doth the believing Soul follow after and adhere to Christ by ineffable groans and acts of Faith though Christ may sometimes seem to depart from him How inquisitive is Faith to understand al the virtues of Christ and to receive from him Grace for Grace What a violence is it to Faith to live act breath speak and walke out of Christ What is it that keeps the heart as a chast Virgin for Christ but Faith Hence also Faith gives the soul solid peace in and with God and oh How satisfying is this peace which Faith gives What child-like confidence and boldnesse ensues hereon And thence how much is the soul satiated in communion with Christ so far as Faith prevails What solaces and delicious suavities doth the believing Soul at times receive from Christ What an active application is there on Christs part towards the Believer and passive application on the Believers part towards Christ How much is Faith delighted in trading with Heaven and Christ Is not this the main businesse of Faith to enjoy Christ to live and die in him What is it that gives the soul an abode in Christ and Christ in the soul but Faith as John 15. 5 Oh! What strong desires and thirsts after Christ doth Faith worke in the soul Doth it not make the absence and presence of Christ
tu quae singulari privilegio in toto orbe praecellis si tu inquam quae e●eleste es in terris sacrarium cognosceres Calv. Doct. 7● Doct. 8. Doct. 9. Doct. 10. Doct. 11. Doct. 12. Doct. 13. Doct. 14. Doct. 15. Doct. 16. Doct. 17. Doct. 18. Doct. The Nature of Unbelief What the things that belong to our peac● are The first part of Vnbelief in respect of its object is Not to assent to the Word of God Joh. 5. 39. Disbeliefe of the Gospel or Covenant of Grace The Covenant of Grace contains 1. Maters of Grace Unbelief questions the Realitie of the offers of Grace Rom. 10. 10 16. Unbelief questions the freedom of the Covena●t Unbelief strikes at the Universalitie of the Covenants offers Unbelief limits the Riches of Grace Rom. 5. 20. Unbelief questions the certainty of the Covenant 2 Sam. 23. 5. Unbelief as to Providence Mat. 6 30 31 32. f 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebraeis etiam vocantur hi qui cùm in praesens habeant sat is futuri in ertitudinecruciantur Grot. Luke 12. 22 29. A istotle Pliny Aelian Unbelief as to future Glorie Heb. 11. 1. The formal Object of Unbelief 1 Thess 2. 13. The several gradations of Dissent from the sacred Notions of our peace 1. Rejection of Divine truths 2. Not to attend to sacred Notions 3. Not to yield an explicite assent to Divine Truths 4. Not to give a supernatural Assent Luk. 24. 45 5. Not to give a deep Assent 6. Not to yield a real Assent Rom. 2. 17 18 19 20. k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O●cum 7. Not to give a spiritual Assent 1 Cor. 2. 14. 8. A general confused Assent Joh. 5. 39. Metaphor A canum sagacitate sumta c. Strigel 9. To suspend our Assent Rom. 4. 19. ver 20. ver 21. Joh. 10. 24 l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hic est quod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luc. 12. 29 Suspensum tenere Grot. Luk. 12. 29 m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Graecis non cum modò declarat qui positus est in sublimi sed etiam cum cujus animus velu● ina●re suspensus modò huc modò illuc inclinat Beza 10. An i●evident obscure Assent n Veritates fidei sunt evidenter credibiles Aquin. 2 Pet. 1. 9. 11. A legal Assent Heb. 4. 2. 12. Forced Assent Act. 2. 41. Act. 17. 11 Psal 119. 16. 13. Not to retain the things of our peace n Jo. 5. 38. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Johanni est infigi Grot. Psal 119. 11. Luk. 11. 28 14. Low estime Joh. 7. 28. 15. A barren Assent Jam. 2. 26. Psal 119. 11. 1. The simple Objects of Unbelief Unbelief refuseth 1. God 1. His Being 2. His Attributes Wisdome Faithfulnes Soveraintie Mercie Justice Omnipotence 3. Providence Ordinances 2. Unbelief rejects Christ 3. Unbelief refuseth Heaven The Acts of Unbelief 1. Rejection of Christ This Rejection of Christ Implies 1. Open opposition Dislikes of Christ Mat. 11. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat propriè tigillum in instrumentis quibus capiuntur Lupi aut Vulpes aut Mu●es Hesychius expressè inquit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commentarius Aristophanis inquit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sunt curva ligna in decipulis Strigel in Rom. 11. 9. Heart cavils against offers of Grace Luk. 20. 5. 4. Not approving the reports of Christ Luk. 7. 29. o. v. 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rec●è vertitur rejicere id enim optimè opponitur verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod est approbare Iaudare Gro● 5. Delays as to a thorow closure with Christ Luk. 9. 59. The Wils defective Reception of Christ The Defects of Unbelief as to its object in receiving 1. A false Christ 1. A compound Christ Christ compounded wi●h the world Mat. 19. 20 21 22. Sup● dum tristis Est enim composita dictio ex Adverbio intendendi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod semper per Paroxytonum est Et significat admodum excellenter valde nimis Schmidius in Mat. 26. 38. Christ compounded with lust Christ compounded with spiritual Idols 2. A divided Christ Joh. 1. 11. p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i e. ut Dominum Grot. q Lori impatiens The D●●cts of Unbelief as to the respects under which Christ is received 1. As 〈◊〉 Motives 2. As to the Grandeur of Christ 3. When Christ is not rec●●ved as offered The Defects of Unbelief as to the subject of its Reception 1. A rotten deceitful Heart 2. A languid faint Wil. Jer. 3. 10. A terrified forced Wil. Psa 68. 34. Luk. 19. 6. 3. The Wils Defects as to adherence unto Christ r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deut. 10. 20. Psal 63. 8. Heb. 3. 12. Heb. 3. 14. Heb. 10. 38 39. Hos 7. 11. Psal 78. 37 4. Diffidence and Dis●rest Psal 37. 5. Cant. 8. 5. Luk 11. 41. 5. Dissatisfaction Phil. 3 3. Gal. 4. 9. t Vocula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non ●●m eandem sed similem vo●picit Idem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Glass Gram. Sacr. u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e qui ultro perindè appetitis velle aliquando pro cupidè optare Glass G●am Sacr. Luk. 14. 26 33. x 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est minus amare Grot. 6. The Disobedience of Unbelief Job 1. 20. Joh. 3. 36. w Qui inobsequiens est filio Grot. Psal 37. 1. ver 7. 7. Nonapplication of the Grace of Christ 8. Putting far off Christs second coming Ephes 1. 13 14. Corollaries Corol. 1. Almost-believers may procede far and yet continue Infidels 1 As to Assent 2. As to Consent Coro●● The 〈…〉 twi●t saving faith and comm●● 1. As to knowlege 2. As to selfdenial 3. As to a legal and evangelic spirit 4. As to turning the Bent of the Wil to Christ 5. As to purifying from sin 6. As to transformation into the image of Christ and conformation to his life and Laws 7. As to the use of means 8. As to the foundation 9. As to end and rule 10. As to Gods faithfulnes Corol. 3. No middle twixt faith and unbelief Corol. 4. 4. Saving faith rare but commun faith cheap Corol. 5. Believers have much of Unbelief in them Corol. 6. Infidelitie the greatest sin Corol. 7. God justified in his severe procedure against Vnbelievers Vse 1. Of Advice to studie the Nature and Influence of Infidelitie Studie the Causes of Infidelitie 1 Spiritual darknesse 2. Carnal Reason 3. Carnal Securitie 4. Self-love 5. Spiritual Pride 6. Short-spiritednes Lastly Beloved lusts Vse 2. Of lamentation and humiliation for the prevalence of Infidelitie Vse 3. Of examination whether thy faith be saving or only commun Heart examens by way of Solil●quie Vse 4. Of Exhortation to deal with Infidelitie as our worst enemie Vse 5. To pursue after Faith as the most excellent powerful Grace Faiths efficace 〈…〉 2. The elevation of reason 3. The fortifying of the Wil and Affections 4. Union with Christ 5. Sanctification 6. Adherence to Christ 7. Peace and Communion with God in Christ 8. The exercise of Grace 8. Al Spiritual goods The opposition betwixt faith and Unbelief