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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A20176 Grace, mercy, and peace conteining 1 Gods reconciliation to man, 2 Mans reconciliation to God. By Henry Denne an unworthy servant of the Church, ... Denne, Henry, 1606 or 7-1660? 1645 (1645) STC 6610; ESTC R175933 37,602 120

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love of Benevolence but a so with a love of Complacence and liking For this ia the voyc of the Father from heaven This my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Matth. 3.17 Here is a revelation of the love of liking I am well pleased The Father is well pleased in his Son With whom Surely with those unto whom hee had given his Sonne that is all his elect Againe this answer if it were beyond all exceptions yet it is very impertinent to the obiection For the Text doth not onely say that God loveth them not with such or such a love but in plaine terms it saith that the Lord hateth them that work iniquity Now what shall we say that God loves a person with infinit a love beyond expression or conceit and yet at the same time hateth the same person with that perfect hatred wherewith hee hateth all the workers of iniquitie Let us take heed that we draw not a vaile before the face of God and delude our selves and others with such frothy and impertinent distinctions But I have by this time bred a kinde of wonder in you what I shall speak seeing that which other men have said thus far liketh me not I answer therefore that this clause God hateth all the workers of iniquity and God loveth the ungodly are both in Scripture and therefore both true yet in a different sense The first The Lord hateth all the workers of iniquity is the voyce of the Law the other the Lord loves sinners is the voyce of the Gospel Now the Law and the Gospel speak divers things the one being the manifestation of Gods iustice tells us what we are by nature the other being the manifestation of Gods mercie tells us what wee are by grace in Iesus Christ The Law saith that every sinner shal be accursed The Gospel saith Iesus Christ came into the world to save sinners The Law saith God will by no meanes cleare the guilty Exod. 34.7 The Gospel saith God justifieth the ungodly The Law declareth wrath without forgivenesse The Gospel Mercy grace and peace in Iesus Christ Thus farre is the obiection answered but yet all difficulty and scruple is not removed For the Law you will say is an eternall veritie whatsoever it saith is true I confesse it so and one iot or tittle thereof cannot faile But I say with the Apostle that whatsoever the Law saith it saith to them only who are under the Law and to none other I say again that the righteousnesse of the Law is fulfilled by Christ for us all yea in all that walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit Rom. 8.4 So that although the elect of God are sinners in the iudgement of the Law Sense Reason yea and oftentimes Conscience yet having their sinnes translated unto the Sonne of God in whom they were elected they have the righteousnesse of the Law fulfilled in the Mediatour and so become to be accounted righteous in his sight that as God on the one side delivered the innocent to death as though hee had been a sinner being made countable for our sinnes So on the other side God loveth justifieth cleareth the guilty and sinners as if they had been holy righteous and blamelesse The summe is this that as Christ was no sinner indeed and yet a sinner by imputation so they that are Chrisis are no sinners by imputation and yet sinners indeed Thus much for the first Obiection The second followes Objection 2. If God be reconciled unto us before all condtions c. How is it that our Saviour saith Matth. 6.15 If you forgive not men their trespasses neither will your heavenly Father forgive you your trespasses Vnto which may be ioined that which we have Matth. 18.35 So likewise shall my heavenly doe also unto you if yee from your heart forgive not every on his brother their trespasses In which place we see first that unlesse we forgive God will not forgive us Nay more that God will reverse the act of his mercy if after hee hath forgiven us 10000. talents wee shall not forgive 100. pence wee shall bee delivered to the tormentors until we pay the whole due For answer to this Obiection we must lay down two grounds the first That God rever reverseth the acts of his mercy communicated to his Elect. For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 112.9 God is not a man that he should lie neither the sonne of man that he should repent 1 Sam. 23.19 The second ground that Gods forgiveness of us is a fore-runner of our forgivenes of our brethren And we cannot truly forgive our brethren untill wee doe apprehend Gods forgivenesse of us Shouldest not thou have had compassion on thy fellow-servant even as I had pitie on thee Matth. 18.33 And upon this ground the Apostle presseth the Ephesians unto kindnesse and tendernesse of heart forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you Eph. 4.3 But then if this be so what meane the foresaid places which strengthen the objection I answer That forgivenesse is there to bee taken for the manifestation of forgivenesse Except ye forgive men neither will your heavenly Father so fully declare and manifest himselfe unto your consciences and so this place pertaineth properly to our reconciliation with God not unto Gods reconciliation with us That this is not a subtile evasion but the truth appeares first by a place of Scripture secondly by the judgement of Interpreters upon a like place The place of Scripture is found Luke 7.47 Her sinnes which are many are forgiven her for shee loved much What have wee here that this womans great love was the cause of remission or that it went before her obtaining of remission as Bellarmine contendeth Verily no but it is plaine that her remission obtained was the cause of her love Simon saith our Saviour A certaine creditor forgave two debtors frankly whereof the one ought five hundred pence the other fifty which of the twain wil love him most Simon answereth well He to whom he forgave most Our Saviour maketh the application Seest thou this woman Thou lovest me a little Thou hast bidden me to dinner But when I came into thy house thou gavest me no mater for my feet but shee hath washed my feet with her teares and wiped them with the haires of her head My head with oyle thou diddest not anoint but this woman hath anointed my feet with ointment Thou seest that I have forgiven thee a few sinnes and thou lovest mee a little but this woman hath much forgiven her Therefore she loved much whereby we understand two things first that her love was not the cause of forgivenes but forgivenesse a cause of her love Secondly That forgivenesse in this place includeth the manifestation of forgivenesse many sinnes are forgiven her the sense is this it appeareth unto this woman that I have pardoned a multitude of sinnes for her This is the Scripture The judgement of