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A89737 The orthodox evangelist. Or A treatise wherein many great evangelical truths (not a few whereof are much opposed and eclipsed in this perillous hour of the passion of the Gospel) are briefly discussed, cleared, and confirmed: as a further help, for the begeting, and establishing of the faith which is in Jesus. As also the state of the blessed, where; of the condition of their souls from the instant of their dissolution: and of their persons after their resurrection. By John Norton, teacher of the church at Ipswich in New England. Norton, John, 1606-1663. 1654 (1654) Wing N1320; Thomason E734_9; ESTC R206951 276,720 371

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7. Mutua immanentia circum incessio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Holy Ghost is God of himself no less then the Father is God of himself Hence there is an Original in regard of the manner of the Essence but not in regard of the Essence it self That Proposition in the Nycene Creed God of God is to be understood of God taken in a concrete sence that is for the Essence and manner of the Essence considered together not for God taken in an abstracted sence that is for the Essence considered absolutely Hence appeareth 1. The in-being of one Person in another John 14.10 11. 1 John 1. Believe me that I am in the Father and the Father in me Because a person signifying both the Essence and its relative property all the Persons having one and the same Essence it followeth that in respect of the Essence one person is in another Thus John saith There are three that is three distinct Persons in respect of their relative opposition adding withal that these three are one namely in respect of the sameness of the Essence And here we may see the reason of those words of Christ John 8.19 If you had known me ye should have known my Father also he that hath seen me hath seen the Father 2. That all the Persons are equal Who being in the Form of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God Philip. 2.6 John 5.18 Either the Persons are equal or else because every Person is God there would follow an inequality and consequently an inferiority in God which is inconsistent with his perfection 3. That all the Attributes in that they flow from the Essence are true of every person because every person hath the whole Essence 4. That all the Attributes whether Relative Negative or Positive or if any other in that they proceed from the Essence are true of every person because the whose Essence as was now said is in every person The Father is Eternal the Son is Eternal the Holy Ghost is Eternal because the whole Essence is in every one of them yet there are not three Eternals but one Eternal because the Essence which is in them all is but one In like manner the Father is Infinite the Son is Infinite the Holy Ghost is Infinite yet c. And so of all the rest 5. That all the Works of God which concern the creature i. e. whatsoever is besides God Tho. 22● qu. 2. a. 3. Vrsin Explic Catech. Part. 2. qu. 25. q. 8. Keck Theol. lib. 1. cap. 3. propè finem are wrought by all the persons joyntly because the efficacy whereby they are what they are proceeds likewise from the Essence it self not from the manner of the Essence Moreover The Knowledge of the Trinity is necessary to salvation because saving faith hath for its object God the Father Son and Holy Ghost and Jesus Christ God-man No man is saved without the knowledge of the Father No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him John 1.18 No man is saved without the knowledge of the Son Whosoever denyeth the Son the same hath not the Father 1 John 2.23 He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father which hath sent him John 5.23 1 John 5.20 No man is saved without the knowledge of the Holy Ghost Now if any man hath not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 Even the Spirit of truth whom the world cannot receive because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but ye know him for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you John 14.17 God heareth none but such as call upon him in the Name of Christ none can call upon God in Christ but such as are taught and assisted by his Spirit We cannot worship God aright without the knowledge of the Trinity As God the Father Son and Holy Ghost is of the object of faith so is he of the object of divine worship Baptism is an Act of Worship and Seal of the Covenant but we are baptized into the Name of the Father Qui Patrem adorat distinctè simul etiam Filium Spiritum Sanctum adorat unitè Alsted Cas● conscien cap. 5. and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Matth. 28.19 God hath committed all judgment to the Son that all men should honour the Son as they honour the Fanher He that honoureth not the Son honoureth not the Father which hath sent him John 5.22 23. Believers are the Temples of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 3.16 and 1 Cor. 6.19 The Lord of the Temple is worshipped in the Temple We worship the Trinity in Unity and the Unity in Trinity All obedience is to be performed unto God the Father Son and Holy Ghost To him that elected us that gave Christ to redeem us that created us that brought Israel out of Egypt that in a word doth all for us is obedience to be performed But God the Father Son and Holy Ghost and that as God the Father Son and Holy Ghost elected us gave Christ to redeem us created us c. Therefore unto God the Father Son and Holy Ghost is all obedience to be performed The Plurality of persons in the Trinity is of great use for the confirmation of the truth unto us John asserts that great truth of Jesus Christ being the Son of God and Saviour of all them that believe not only from the testimony of one God but from the testimony of that one God who is three Witnesses For there are three that bare record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one 1 John 5.7 To the same purpose is the Argument Christ useth disputing against the Scribes and Pharisees proving the truth of what he had spoken concerning himself being the Light of the world because it was averred by the Father and him as two witnesses It is also written in your Law that the testimony of two men is true I am one that bare witness of my self and the Father that sent me beareth witness of me John 8.12.17 18. The Knowledge of the Trinity tends unto the Consolation of Believers Vide Estium in Col. 2.2 Paul affectionately desirous that the hearts of the Colossians might be comforted sheweth two special means thereof viz. The Acknowledgment of the Mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ with the full assurance of understanding and brotherly-love of God i. e. of God and of his Attributes of the Father i. e. of the Persons the first of which is the Father of Christ i. e. of his Person and Office so some without repugnancy to the Analogy of faith or the words of the text Lastly The Knowledge of the Doctrine of the Trinity is requisite to our Communion which as our union is with God the Father Son and Holy Ghost And truly our Fellowship is with the
THE Orthodox Evangelist OR A TREATISE Wherein many Great EVANGELICAL TRUTHS Not a few whereof are much opposed and Eclipsed in this perillous hour of the Passion of the Gospel Are briefly Discussed cleared and confirmed As a further help for the Begeting and Establishing of the Faith which is in Jesus As also the State of the Blessed Where Of the condition of their SOULS from the instant of their Dissolution and of their Persons after their Resurrection By JOHN NORTON Teacher of the Church at Ipswich in New England For I determined not to know any thing amongst you save Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 Moreover I will endeavour that you may be able after my decease to have these things always in remembrance 2 Pet. 1.15 LONDON Printed by John Macock for Henry Cripps and Lodowick Lloyd and are to be sold at their shop in Popes head Alley neer Lombard street 1654. Norton's Orthodox Evangelist To the Church and Inhabitants of Ipswich in New-England Grace and Peace in our Emanuel Worshipful Reverend and dearly beloved in our Lord and Saviour PAuls desire to make known nothing but Christ unto the Corinths his Travail until Christ was formed in the Galatians with other like speeches of him that breathed nothing but Christ What were they else but the effects of that Savior-like disposition wherewith the Lord Jesus still inspires the Instrumental Saviours of Mount Sion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This Ministerial Spirit rested not only upon that great Doctor of the Gentiles but also rests and acts in its measure in all the Ministers of the Gospel for the calling and compleating of the Elect until we all come to be a perfect man So as there is not to be found a more vigorous effusion of the Bowels of Jesus in any of the hearts of the children of men then is in the souls of the Ministry no bowels either of civil or natural relations exceed theirs the love of them is wonderful surpassing the love of Ionathan that passed the love of women By the unbosoming hereof as with a key the Apostle in his Epistle opens the heart of the Reader whilst the Colossians behold the spirit of the writer Col. 2.2 I would to God ye knew what great conflict I have for you Hence I hope in its measure is this present labor for the truths sake for your sake for the sake of any that in the Lord shall accept thereof and for conscience sake To this end was I born and for this cause came I into the world to bear witness unto the truth So our Lord Jesus notwithstanding the Truth was that which the Jews then maligned and Pilate derided see the Spirit of Christ an Hypocrite and a Moralist the difference between piety Malignity and neutrality concerning the truth Nothing is more contended for nothing more contended against then the truth The Gospel truth as it is most dear to God so is it most oppugned by Satan As the Attribute of the Holy One is the Spirit of truth So the wicked one is called a lyar from the beginning Concerning it are the greatest thoughts of heart the most intense endeavors of Tongues Pens and Swords It being much more beloved of its followers then Life and more hated of its opposers then death Truth is the excellency of things where truth is there may be a bad action but where truth is not there cannot be a good action Paul supposeth a man may give his Body to be burned in a good cause and it profit him nothing 'T is not the suffering and the cause alone both suffering cause and Spirit must concur to make a Martyr In a bad cause it holds universally Who hath required these things at your hand Mans interpretation of the Scripture is not Gods mind but mans mistake To confess and suffer in testimony to an error is to be a false-witness not truths witness Pleaders for error not Pillars of the truth To add to the profession of error suffering for it is to add sin unto sin The latter error worse then the first Such sufferers are so far selfe-vassals not Christs Martyrs Such sufferings unto spoyling of goods bonds exile the wilderness or whatsoever are worse then lost a dead birth after sore travel is a double wo Such tears must be wept for again this ungodly sorrow is not to be undone without godly sorrow We may build and work but if it be Wood Hay Stubble we shall suffer loss our work must be burnt though our selves be saved yet as by fire The Scripture mentions Little children Children young-men men Fathers and a perfect man in Christ as concerning your selves unto whom the dreadful bond of office hath endebted me the weakest of many to make known unto you the truth of the Gospel what hath my soul longed or labored for more after your birth in Christ then that you should be not only Babes but men both sound and strong in the faith Sincere and distinct that Christ might not only be formed but perfected That you might not onely have a saving but a satisfactory knowledg of him in whom you beleeve The end of the Gospel is to be known the duty and disposition of the Beleever is to know Even Fundamental Truths which have been the same in all generations have been and shall be transmitted more clear from age to age in the times of Reformation until that which is perfect is come and that which is imperfect be done away Vid. Greynaei praefat locis com Zeged praefix pag. 5. The truth held forth is the same though with more of Christ and less of man Such addition is no innovation but an illustration not new light but new sight The looking glass slurred and cleared more or less is the same glass Columbus did not make a New World when he made a new discovery of the old World Truth wants so much of its glory as it is unseen The understanding wants so much of its perfection as it is short in seeing thereof The Members of the New man have their joynts joynts not fully set are painful and less useful All unbeleif is presumption not faith which hinders nourishment and genders humor Grace Glory and Glorification hold proportion with the truth Though knowledg may be without grace yet there can be no grace without knowledg According to the measure of our approach to an exact total and Adequate Union of the understanding with the truth of the Gospel So is the glory of the truth beleeved and the Communion of the Soul beleeving Men need strong meat at well as Babes need Milk though he who is but a Babe hath not the knowledg of a man yet he that is a Babe labours after the knowledg of a man Babes rest not in being Babes I have endeavored to say something that might entertain the stronger yet so as I hope I have scarce said any thing that weaker capacities may not with due attention attain unto Solid meat
clearly seen in respect of its divers created objects which as they have their being from Gods good pleasure so had he so pleased they had never been but continued for ever in their nothing himself notwithstanding eternal all blessed and all glorious Omnipotency is God able to do whatsoever his wisdom doth conceive Gen. 18.14 Matth. 19.26 Isai 46.10 All Contradictions Impossibilities and Repugnancies unto the revealed Will of God are excluded in this Proposition God is Omnipotent or God can do all things That things which imply a contradiction as namely for the same thing to be and not to be and impossibilities as namely for a man not to be a reasonable creature and the like fall not under the compass of Omnipotency is not from any defect it is indeed from the perfection of power in God but from the impossibility of the things so that concerning matters of this nature it is more convenient to say Vnde convenientius dr Ea non possunt fieri quam quod Deus ea non possit facere Tho. Part. qu. 25. art 3. that they cannot be which sheweth their non-possibility to be then that God cannot do them which seemeth to touch upon Omnipotency So likewise that God cannot sin lye or deny himself is not from defect but from the Eminency of his Power and Absolute Perfection whence he is uncapable of being touched with any imperfection Obj. God cannot destroy Sodom until Lot be gone out of it Gen. 19.22 Like speeches whereunto are used elsewhere it seems therefore God is not Omnipotent Ans The Power of God is either absolute and unlimited by it he is able to do all things that are possible though he never do them or ordinate and limited by his Decree and revealed Will according to which God having freely bounded himself changeth not being immutable These words and the like spoken elsewhere are to be understood of his limited not of his unlimited power Though God be Omnipotent yet he is not Omnivolent that is though God can do whatsoever he pleaseth yet God is not pleased to do whatsoever he can Perfection is God all-sufficient and all-excellent not having need of any thing giving sufficience unto and having in him the perfection of all things Gen. 17.1 2. Exod. 6.3 This Attribute renders God as that infinite Sea of all happiness Perfection is increated Glory that is all the Attributes in one word as Happiness is the Sum of Mans good so Glory is the Sum of all Gods Attributes The Perfection of God is Essential Independent Unlimited without increase or decrease As the Power of subordinate causes is contained in the first cause virtually and as the Authority of Under-Officers is in the Prince after a more excellent manner so the virtue of all second causes is contained in the first cause eminently The word Eminently taken in its strict and proper sence seemeth to intend the effect to be in the cause not only in a more excellent manner then in it self but also in a super-created manner Things are in God agreeable to the Nature of God in themselves according to their proper natures Eminential Continency and Virtual Continency that is for one thing to be contained in another eminently as the Excellency of the creature is in the Creator Or Virtually as all things saleable are in money Eccles 10.9 are not the same the first is proper to the Creator the second is found in the creature The Essential Perfection of God is Increated Glory Eternal alwayes the same from which nothing can be taken to which nothing can be added The acknowledgement of the manifested Perfections of God is Glorification viz. The Act of the creature done in time admitting more or less according as God is known or acknowledged CHAP. II. Of the Trinity FOr our better proceeding in searching into this Mystery of Mysteries Consider 1. The Clearness of the Truth from Scriptures 2. What a Person is 3. What it is that constitutes a Person 4. What a Personal Act is the attending whereunto helps much to clear both the Nature of a Person and the Trinity of Persons 5. The Names or Appellations ascribed to the several Persons in the Scripture 6. The Distinction between a Person the Essence 7. The Distinction between a Person and a Person 8. What terms we are to avoid in speaking of the Trinity 9. Satisfaction to some few Objections 10. The Usefulness of this Doctrine Amongst the Multitude of Scriptures The Clearness of this Truth from the Scriptures holding forth the Doctrine of the Trinity of Persons in the Divine Essence Let it at present suffice to transcribe these And God said Let us make man in our image after our likeness Gen. 1.26 And the Lord God said Behold the man is become as one of us to know good and evil Gen. 3.22 Go to Let us go down and there confound their language that they may not understand one anothers speech Gen. 11.7 But none saith Where is God my Makers so is the Hebrew who giveth Songs in the night Job 35.10 And one cried unto another and said Holy holy holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole Earth is full of his Glory Isai 6.3 And the Heavens were opened unto him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting upon him and lo a voyce from Heaven saying This is my Beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Matth. 3.16 17. Go therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Matth. 28.19 But when the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father He shall testifie of me John 15.26 The Grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the Love of God and the Communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13.13 For there are three that bare record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Spirit and these three are one 1 John 5.7 A Person viz. an Increated Person is the Divine Essence subsisting in a Relative Property What a Person is The Essence with its Subsistence not the Essence alone not the Subsistence alone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Subsistentia but both the Essence and the Subsistence constitute a Person this the Greek word holds forth Heb. 1.3 which is translated a Person Subsistence adds unto substances the independing manner of their existing In reasonable Nature it giveth Created in the Divine Nature it is Increated Personality Subsistence considered in its abstract notion as distinct from Essence the manner of the Essence the manner of the Existence for Essence or Being and Existing in God are all one A Relative Property an incommunicable property are Synonima's i. e. they are divers terms and expressions signifying the same thing they give personality and distinguish one person from another The Subsistences in the Divine Nature are relative and individuating that is they are relative properties They are Relative Hae
ver 10. Had an high esteem of Jesus Christ ver 3.46 Those three thousand Acts 2. ver 37. were pricked in their heart ask what they shall do The like may be observed in the Jaylour Acts 16.29 30. Paul before his conversion was sensible of his sin and death Rom. 7.9 justifieth the Law ver 12. saw the loss of his own righteousness and his need of the righteousness of Christ Phil. 37.8 To this purpose we may read of others else where 'T is certain That many of those who have been converted have had experience of a preparatory work fore-going the conversion but it cannot be proved out of the Scripture That any who have attained unto years of discretion have been converted without some experience thereof Object 1. Objection satissied There is no use of preparatory work because there is no saving work to be wrought upon the Elect which God cannot work without it Answ Were this Objection good there would follow a total uselesness-of any second cause or fellow-creature towards the producing of any effect 2. Not God's Absolute but his Ordinate Power i. e. The common Course of his special Providence is the ordinarily Rule of his proceeding with man the Exercise of his Power is regulated by his Will God is Omnipotent he can do whatsoever he will but he is not Omnivolent he will not do whatsoever he can Obj. 2. Preparatory work seemeth to darken the freeness of grace Ans Preparatory works precede vocation in way of order not in way of causality God giveth Christ after them as the way not for them as the cause Preparatory work is the effect of free common grace as saving work is the effect of free special grace It can therefore be no more prejudice unto grace then a free way is unto a free thing whereunto it is the way No more then freedom prejudiceth freedom i. e. No more then a free act of an inferiour nature prejudiceth a free act of a superiour nature It doth no whit touch it in it self it in many respects cleareth it but no way darkeneth it unto us Obj. 3. The Corinthians 1 Cor. 6.11 that were Idolaters Adulterers Abusers of themselves with mankind received Christ yet we read of no preparatory qualification mentioned Therefore there was no preparatory work Ans It is not said so therefore it was not so is no good consequence 'T is a frequent thing in the Scripture to mention the thing done without mentioning the manner of the doing of that thing Psal 33.9 David speaks of the Creation yet is silent of the Order of creating Matth. 1.2 We read that Abraham begat Isaac but of the manner of his begetting him viz. By faith not considering his own body now dead Rom. 4.19 c. There is no mention Exod. 20.1 The Holy Ghost records the deliverance of Israel out of the Land of Egypt the manner of it namely by signes and wonders and by an out-stretched arme is wholly omitted 'T is in this case between the thing done and the manner of the doing thereof as between the Sacrament instituted and the Order of the institution The Sacrament is sometimes mentioned where the Order of the institution is not observed 1 Cor. 10.16 As therefore he that would inform himself of the Order of the Institution and Administration of the Elements in the Supper is not to learn it from those Texts where though the matter be recited yet the Doctrine of the Order is not held forth so he that would instruct himself concerning Preparatory Work in order to conversion is not to look unto those places where though the work of conversion be recorded yet the teaching of Preparatory Work is not intended but unto such Scriptures where the Doctrine of Preparatory Work is purposely taught Obj. 4. Jeremiah was sanctified before he came out of his Mothers womb Jer. 1.5 John the Baptist was filled with the Holy Ghost even from his Mothers womb Luke 1.15 when they were both uncapable of Preparatory Work Ans Jeremiah's Sanctification from the Womb may be understood not of any actual but only an intentional separation of him to office as Paul speaks in like manner of himself Gal. 1.15 If we understand it actually it seemeth to be but an actual separation of him to the Office of a Prophet By the Holy Ghost whereby John was filled from the Womb we may well understand not the gift of saving grace but eminent gifts of Office to fit this Eliah for that high service whereunto he was appointed Whether we understand by the sanctification of Jeremiah and by the filling of John with the Holy Ghost the grace or gifts of office or the gifts of saving grace The Dispensation of God unto them was extraordinary not ordinary and so teacheth not the question Only in John we clearly see God not only can but doth even in Infants work in a secret manner by his Spirit when he pleaseth CHAP. VII What are the Principal Heads whereunto the Substance of Preparatory Work in the full Extent thereof may be referred IN Answer to this Question Consider 1. What Preparatory Work taken in its Extent is 2. What Parts thereof are wrought by the Ministery of the Law 3. What Parts thereof are wrought by the Ministery of the Gospel 4. Some Cases of Conscience concerning Preparatory Work Preparatory Work taken in its full Extent is the whose frame of inherent Qualifications coming between the Rest of the Soul in the State of Nature and Vocation wrought distinctly and in measure in the Ministery both of the Law and Gospel by the common work of the Spirit concurring therewith whereby the Soul is put into a next disposition or Ministerial Capacity of believing immediately i. e. Of immediate receiving of the Lord Jesus Christ The Parts of Preparatory Work wrought by the Ministery of the Law are 1. Conviction of the Holiness of the Law 2. Conviction of Sin 3. Conviction of Guilt 4. Concluding of the Soul under sin and guilt 5. Conviction of the Righteousness of God in case he should punish us for our sins 6. Inexcusableness 1. The Conviction of the Holiness and Spiritualness of the Law is that Work of the Spirit whereby the Soul is enlightened to see the Conformity of the Command unto the Will of God whether we understand by command the Precept concerning the not eating of the Tree of Life or the Decalogue prescribed unto man in innocency as the rule of life and manners Therefore called the Moral Law or any other Commandement of God Ceremonial Judicial or whatsoever This conviction is called the coming of the Commandement Rom. 7.9 For I was alive without the Law once but when the Commandement came sin revived and I dyed It causeth a Doctrinal Approbation thereof The Law is h ly and the Commandement holy and just and good The Precept is holy the Curse is just the Promise is good I consent unto the Law that it is good 2. Conviction of Sin is the conscience
to be our duty to believe as that the fault of our unbelief lyeth wholly upon our selves Sol. For the better removing of this objection there is need of a threefold Distinction 1. Distinguish between unbelief and unbelief not cured 'T is easie to conceive how a Physician may be the cause why such a disease is not cured of which disease it self he is no cause Unbelief considered in it self is simply a sin Therefore God is no way the Cause or Authour of it 2. Distinguish of unbelief not cured unbelief not cured is considered either Negatively for a meer absence of faith where the rule requireth it not to be and therefore is unblamable so it is in those that never heard of the preaching of the Gospel Or Privatively for the absence of faith where the rule requireth it to be so unbelief is looked upon in those that live under or hear of the Gospel 3. Distinguish between a Physical and a Moral cause A Physical cause is such a cause as though without it the effect cannot be yet it is no ways bound to produce such an effect thus the absence of the Sun is the cause of the night A Physician is the cause why that disease remains uncured which he can cure but is not bound to cure A Chyrurgion the cause why the issue remains unhealed which he is not tyed to heal Thus the King not giving a pardon is the cause why the offender is executed whom no Law obligeth him to pardon A Moral cause is such a cause wherein the Agent stands by duty bound concerning the producing or not producing of such an effect so as by omission of what is commanded or commission of what is forbidden there is a guilt incurred so mans will is moral therefore the blameable cause of unbelief Gods Will is the Antecedent not the Cause of unbelief the abuse of mans free-will in the fall is the cause of unbelief Unbelief not cured considered Negatively is in respect of the Will of God a physical and unblamable effect of a physical and unblamable cause but mans will being a moral cause unbelief in this sence cannot be the effect thereof Unbelief not cured privatively considered is in respect of God as a blamable Consequent of an unblamable Antecedent in respect of the will of man it is a blamable effect of a moral and blamable cause In Adam having received povver whereby vve might not have sinned vve sinned freely Unbelief is the effect of our sin in Adam God together vvith the Object of Faith tenders us means so far sufficient to the begetting of faith as leaveth us without excuse We love our unbelief and resist this means of believing John 1.11.5.41 Our contumacious opposition to the command of believing is the effect of our love to unbelief 'T is then but Justice in God to leave us to our unbelief in so doing he doth us no wrong being free to have mercy upon whom he will The Difficulty of believing The Difficulty of believing appeareth in three things 1. in the Special enmity of the heart against this duty 2. in the Eminence of the Principle requisite to the creating of faith 3. in the Greatness and largeness of the obedience of Faith 1. The Special enmity of the heart against believing appeareth thus there is no obedience that God and Christ love better 1 John 3.23 Or that the Spirit laboureth more in John 16.9 No obedience that either Satan or man oppose more Satan opposeth none more For as the Spirit of truth leadeth unto all truth but into none more then this So the Father of a lye opposeth all truth yet none more then this Men that finally resist believing in Christ by so doing do the will of the Devil do shevv him to be your Father John 8.44 Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father ye will do Vide Zanch. de peccat Angelorum lib. 4. c. 2. Theologitam nostri quam Pontisscis probabile aducunt Christum positum esse non modo in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multorum hominum sed etiam in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsorum etiam Angelorum Twiss de Elect. l. 4. p. 1. To this purpose there is a good use to be made of Zanchy's Discourse concerning the Revelation of Christ's Incarnation and the Exaltation of the humane Nature above the Nature of Angels by vertue of the Personal union the Doctrine of the grace of Christ ncarnate being that truth or at least contained in that truth whereof Christ speaks John 8. in which the Devil abode but hated not from the beginning Many Divines are conceived probably to think That Christ was not only set for the fall and rising again of many men but for the fall and standing of the Angels Man opposeth no truth more John 5.40 And ye will not come unto me that you may have lise What is said of the Jews Rom. 11.28 is true of all As concerning the Gospel they are enemies A formidable curse vvhereby the soul is smitten with an enmity against the Gospel of Blessedness The Gospel of Christ is a Doctrine of Contradiction Luke 2.34 Behold this child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel and for a signe that shall be spoken against A stumbling stone Rom. 9.32 A rock of offence 1 Pet. 2 8. A Doctrine of foolishness 1 Cor. 1.23 If he shall be in danger of hell fire that saith unto his brother Thou Fool What danger shall he be in that upbraideth the Gospel vvith foolishness They put it viz. the Word of God i. e. the Doctrine of the Gospel from them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 13.46 They do not only not go to fetch it but being brought to them they put it away from them The Covenant of Works we could much better close vvith then vvith the Gospel any other Gospel command then that of believing any other person to be believed in then Christ Jesus John 5.43 I am come in mine own Name and ye receive me not if another shall come in his own Name him will ye receive any other way rather then the way of the Gospel Jer. 2.36 Why gaddest thou so much to change thy way Acts 22 4. I persecuted this way unto the death Grace likes no vvay to life so vvell Nature dislikes none so much We are not by nature so averse to the Turkish Alcoran as we are to Christs Gospel 2. The Eminency of the Principle requisite unto the creating of faith The Apostle excellently sheweth Ephes 1.19 20. And what is the exceeding greatness of his Power to us ward who believe according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Where this truth is held forth 1. By a Gradation Power his Povver the greatness of his Povver the exceeding greatness of his Power 2. By a Comparison the Povver which God puts forth in the Work of faith being compared unto
effects of Election which are proper to the Elect. Saving Grace is of another kind therefore specially distinguished from all common grace which may be found in those who are not elected The Holy Spirit doth not work so much as one degree of saving and justifying Faith in those who are not elected Saving Grace is of the same kind with the created grace in the Manhood of Jesus Christ the Manhood of Christ received of the Spirit out of measure John 3.34 We receive from Christ of that Spirit in measure but he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 And of his fulness have all we received and grace for grace John 1.16 The Habits of Grace and Glory both in Christ and us are of the same kind Inherent saving Grace is distinguished from all common grace whether of nature or supernatural In respect of the first cause Est inter Christum omnia Christi membra continuitas quaedam ratione Spiritus Sancti qui plenissimè in Christo capite residens vnus idem numero ad omnia ejus membra diffunditur Dav. Col. 1.18 Cain Servatoris non fuit particeps ut Servatoris nec particeps ejus est impius quisquā Jun. de nat gratia collat confir rat 10.24 27. saving grace is from Election common grace is not from God electing but from him as the Authour of common gifts 2. In respect of the Meritorious Cause Saving Grace is from Christ as so meriting for them common grace is from Christ who did merit but not from Christ as so meriting he did not so i. e. savingly merit for them Saving Grace is from Christ as a Redeemer of them who are made partakers thereof Common grace is from Christ who is a Redeemer but not from Christ as their Redeemer saving grace is from Christ as a Head unto those who partake thereof as a designed Head in the gift of the first saving grace as an actual Head in the gift of following saving grace Common grace is from Christ who is the Head of his Body the Church but not as such a Head unto them who only receive thereof Cain saith Junius was not partaker of a Saviour as a Saviour neither is any other ungodly man 3. In respect of the next efficient cause the next efficient cause of saving grace is a motion of special grace the next efficient cause of supernatural common grace is a motion of supernatural common grace 4. In respect of the Subject the Subject of special grace are only the Elect the Subject of common grace are not only the Elect but also those who are not elected 5. In respect of their formal Nature the Genus or next common Nature of saving grace is a free-saving spiritual gift its Species i. e. it s formal or particular Nature is its sincere disposing the soul to Evangelical obedience as an inherent principle Common grace neither disposeth the soul to obedience nor is it a saving gift 6. In respect of its Efficacy Saving grace reigneth and quickens the new man and gradually mortifieth the old man until sin be wholly expelled Common grace is in this regard powerless neither doing the one nor the other Lastly They are distinguished in respect of their duration common grace is mortal Matth. 25.29 Saving grace is immortal Free-grace What 1 Pet. 1.23 Free grace understanding thereby increated grace is that eternal absolute and constant act whereby God of his meer good pleasure hath willed the infallible application of grace and glory unto elect sinners so as election or the act of willing grace and glory Tua enim omnia à nobis petis nihil nisi salvari 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damasc de Fide Orthodoxa lib. 4. cap. 24. Gratuitas Favor is meerly because it pleaseth him without respect of Christ as any Cause or Motive of Election but the actual application of all that good is with respect to Christ as the Meritorious Cause thereof and both Election and the actual Application of all this good without any respect of good or evil in the Elect themselves as any motive thereunto or hinderance therefrom This grace is briefly called the free favour of God in Christ Jesus By Created Free-grace taken as is usual for saving free-grace we are to understand the Effects of Election that is the saving free-gifts of the spirit viz. Vocation Union Justification Adoption Sanctification Perseverance Glorification c. The Freeness of Grace appears from the first cause viz. the meer good pleasure and will of God For it is God that worketh in you both to will and to do of his own pleasure Philip 2.13 So then It is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy Rom. 9.16 Therefore he hath mercy on whom he will have mercy ver 18. The wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but knowest not whence it cometh and whither it goeth so is every one that is born of the Spirit John 3.4 The Obedience of Christ is meritorious not absolutely in it self but by vertue of the Covenant of God accepting his obedience as meritorious i.e. as that whereunto remission and salvation should be due according to Order of justice The Obedience of Christ was of sufficient value in it self because he was God to redeem all mankind but it could not be a price i. e. a ransom further then as God was pleased to accept The matter offered by Ahab was of equal value with Naboths vineyard but it could not be a price without his acception of it And as the Obedience of Christ becometh merit through the acceptation of the good pleasure of God so the extension of this merit is enlarged and bounded according to the Will of God accepting it for such a number neither less nor more Had there been more to have been redeemed the Merit of Christ was sufficient even for the Redemption of the whole world and if there had been but one to have been redeemed his merit must have been infinite It cost Christ no more blood to save Manasses then to save John the Baptist no less to save Timothy then to save Paul The Freeness of the Application of Grace appears further from the Merit of Christ Grace is given according to the Merit of Christ not with any respect to mans merit of good or demerit of evil The least sin without Christ is incurable the greatest sin by Christ is curable One sting of the fiery Serpent was mortal without looking to the Brazen Serpent and one look thereunto would cure a thousand stings as well as one such is the demerit of sin as that it justly slayes the child that sinned not after Adams transgression such is the Merit of Christ as that it justly saveth Adam the great transgressour No sin is little in it self the Merit of Christ is infinite 'T is a great sin for the least sinner not to be without hope in respect
in no respect active so the soul is not passive God doth not work savingly upon us as upon stocks or senselesse creatures or it is taken respectively for that which notwithstanding in some sense it be active yet in some it is passive the soule is passive in this latter sense it is active in respect of the use of means it is passive in respect of any saving efficacie by the use of means Sarah was active in respect of the use of means yet passive in conceiving by the use of means Rom. 4.19 Heb. 11.11 12. the Shunamites childe notwithstanding any natural heat and radical humor yet remaining in its dead body was passive in regard of the re-infusion of the reasonable soule 2 King 4.34 notwithstanding the noyse of the bones there coming together bone to his bone the sinewes and flesh coming upon them and the skin covering them yet those breathleffe bodies remaine passive in respect of life Ezek. 37.7 8. Though there be difference between Gods manner of working upon them who are dead spiritually Quamvis igitur discrimen sit inter modum agendi cum spiritualiter corporaliter mortuos in via ad vivificationem nihil tamen in eo reperiri potest quod in illis quam in istis effectum à Deominus absolutè pendere facit Coron artic 4 c. 4. and upon those who are dead corporally yet there can nothing be found which makes the effect of life lesse absolutely to depend upon God in those than in these We on the one hand against the Enthusiasts affirm not onely the power to use but the duty of using the means and on the other hand against the Arminians deny that man before grace can do any thing having the power of a cause so far forth as cometh from them in order to Life because we are reasonable creatures God proceeds with us in the use of means because we are dead creatures in respect of the efficacy of the means we depend wholly and absolutely upon God Obj. 2. Where there is a Physical or Natural motion of the will there the soul is not meerly passive but In Vocation or receiving the habit of grace there is a Physical motion of the will because there is a gracious motion which necessarily presupposeth a Physical motion Therefore in Vocation the soul is not meerly passive Sol. In the motion or act of the will in Vocation we must distinguish between the Physical or pure natural act of the will and the graciousnesse of that Physical act the soul is active in respect of the Physicall act Velle nob is est bene vesse à Deo Willer Syn. cent 4. error 33. but in respect of the graciousnesse of that Physical act the soul is meerly passive To will is in our own power to will as we should is of God Obj. 3. Conversion the same with Vocation is a Life-act to affirm the soule to be meerly passive in a Life-act were a contradiction therefore the soule in Vocation is not meerly passive Answ Conversion is taken in a double sense either for the immediate work of God infusing a principle of life Suffrag Brit. Thes 1. 2. and so regenerating the soule this is properly Vocation and in it the soul is passive or for the Life-act of faith c. whereby man being now converted converteth himselfe unto God Conversion in this second notion according to which the objection onely holds is not the same with Vocation it selfe but the answer of the soule to its call or some other action of saving grace So by Arguments the Authorities follow The will of man in Conversion Luth. cent 16. l. 8. c. 8. p. 899 is purely passive Luther Voluntas hominis in convevsione habet se merè passivè For faìth in respect of justification is a meer passive thing Calv. instit lib. 3. c. 14. Calvin Fides enim quoad justificationem est res merè passiva Truly man is dead Zdnch. Epist l. 1.94 and wanteth all sense and motion wherefore he can do nothing towards the making of himself alive Zanchy Homo certè mortuus omni sensu motuque caret quare ad sui vivificationem nihil praestat nihil agit In Regeneration we do not work together with God Beza thes theol c. 15. but are meerly passive Beza In Regeneratione non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deo sed merè 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habemus For we are all dead to sin Bucan loc 18 10. but he that is dead is no otherwise than passive to his being made alive Bucanus Sumus enim omnes mortui in peccatis mortuus autem ad vivifieationem non nisi passivè se habet In the beginning of Conversion Perkins of Gods Free Grace and mans free will p. 737. that is in the setting or imprinting of the new qualities and inclinations in the mind will and affections of the heart we are meerly passive not active Perkins Unto that work of Regeneration which noteth the immediate work of God regenerating man Suffrage Brit. art 3 4. man is passive Suffrage of the Britain Divines Ad hoc ipsum opus regenerationis quo denotat immediatum opus Dei hominem regenerantis habet se homo passivè Before Regeneration man is meerly passive Keck Theol. 8. cap. ult unto special good Kockerman Post Lapsum ante regenerationem ad speciale bonum merè passive home se habet In respect of goodnesse inspired into our minds Willet Synop. err 46. p. 958 idem n. 35. our wils are altogether passive the freedome then of the will is the work and the effect of Grace ergo it is passive Willet The Free-will of a naturall man in respect of Gods working upon him is in some fort after the maner of a subject passively Leiden Divines Liberum naturalis hominis arbitrium habet se respectu Dei agentis Synop. pur Theol. Disp 17. ad modum quadantenus naturae subjecti 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 possivè In the application of the first grace man doth not act but suffers Ames In applicatione gratiae primae Ames de trapeccat ad vitam non agit homo sed patitur Our Churches conspire with Luther in that Article namely that in our first conversion we are meerly passive Dr. Twisse Nostrae Ecclesiae conspirant cum Luthero in isto articulo Twiss de errat 204. quod sc in prima nostri ad Deum conversione habeamus nos merè passivè In effectual calling man is altogether passive Assembly at Westminster being quickned and renewed by the holy Spirit he is thereby enabled to answer this call This Doctrine of the passivenesse of the soul in Vocation is a fundamental truth holding forth the Spirit of Christ in a way of special grace to be not onely the adequate but also the sole efficient cause of faith And therefore Free-will in a man yet without Christ partaker of what common grace soever can do
that is best prepared is not digested without yet is digested with time and the labor of nature The Seed which the husbandman soweth with pains the Earth receiveth not without patience 'T is the Prerogative of God 't is not in the power of man to communicate understanding without study and diligence Though it be in Gods power to give yet according to his ordinary Dispensation he doth not give knowledg unto man without labor and prayer but he giveth unto his a spirit by meditating day and night to search into the deep things of God Who refuseth ripe fruit because it groweth higher then can be had without climbing or the treasures hid in the Earth because they cannot be had without digging And who knoweth but that these poor sheets may find a place with some others especially in the houses and hearts of them of whose house I am out of whose heart they cannot be whilst I am That I may not be as one altogether dead to those whom I should have been glad to have lived and dyed with yea whom I should have been glad to have lived and dyed for My absence from them hath named this Wilderness Gersom their acceptance hereof shall so far name it Ephraim It is with God that knoweth the heart of exiles to comfort exiles 'T is not with me as with Hortensius who though he was weak in writing yet was he able to speak Nor as with Albericus who though weak in speech was able in writing but being contious of my infirmity in both I have added the latter to supply in some measure if God so please the defect of the former Sometimes Pauls writing is more weighty then his speech and some of Christs words after his death were more effectual then in his Life Hence I have desired to sow Seed both by Pen and Tongue present and absent Alive and dead Not knowing whether shal prosper most either this or that or whether they both should be alike good Good Books help both the understanding and memory They are both Teachers and Registers like steeled looking-glasses that do not only reflect but continue reflecting the Image to the beholder Segnius irritant animes demissa per auros Quam quae sunt oculis Subjecta sidelibus The speaker hasteth on and cannot wait the leasure of the hearer but the writer is always at hand attending the capacity of the Reader What is sayd of the poor with a little alteration may be applyed to written Treatises Books you have always with you you may receive good from them when you will Solomon admonisheth not to write superfluously Paul encourageth to write profitably Eccle. 12.12 2 Tim. 4.13 'T is with books as with meats he that refuseth eating as the cure of an unwholesome or unreasonable diet acts the part of a murtherer not of a Physitian He is not a man that distinguisheth not between good and bad He is not a wise man that discerneth not between excess and nothing The Pen-men of corrupt Books must hold up their hands as highly guilty of the evil of the times and superfluous Books do but add to the heap of vanity and vexation of spirit These lose precious hours those lose more precious souls By way of Apologie for this Treatise I shall only say the wise mans admonition I have been conscionably awful of and have aimed at Edification The use of Books is to communicate pertinent truth the excellency of Books is to do it Substantially clearly briefly Abuse takes not away their use nay such books are the cure of evil books The opening of Titus lips is the means to stop deceivers mouths the light of the book of the Gospel consumes the Magicians books to ashes Tit. 1.11 Acts. 19.19 one pin must be forced out by another After forgiveness begged in the Blood of Jesus for what is mine herein Pardon I crave of all pardon and acceptance as I hope for from some so especially from your selves to whom as I could bequeath no greater legacy so then from whom whence could I encourage my self with better expectation for YOU are OUR glory and joy forget not the emphasis in the word OUR Ministers compared with other Christians have little to joy in in this world 'T is not with the Ministers of the present as with the Ministers of late times nor with exiles as with the rest nor with your exiles as with some others Let this our or if you please your condition for therein you have been both partakers with us and supporters of us be your provocation A receiving encouragement whereof is the constant remembrance that you are our companions in this Patmos wherein many of you were before divers of us You know the hearts of strangers for ye are strangers The Lord who in rich grace hath not only Sanctified the tongue of the Preacher but also the pen of the Scribe unto the edification of his So bless all our labours that both Speaker and Hearer Writer and Reader may rejoyce together in that day that they have not run in vain This is the prayer of Your Servant for Jesus sake JOHN NORTON Ipswich in N. Eng. Octob. 7. 1652. To the Judicious Christian Reader THe Penning and Reading of godly Books is a singular improvement of the Communion of Saints as whereby we enjoy sweet and gracious conference with the Saints though unknown to us though absent in place distant in time yea many ages before us and so partake in the Communion of their most precious Gifts as if they were present with us or as if we had been of long acquainted with them which maketh me sometimes to wish that though I cannot nor dare not say that Spiritual Gifts are buried when they are only dispenced in a Pulpit for in a Pulpit they are set upon a Candlestick and give light to all that are in the House of this or that particular Church yet where God giveth an eminent measure of light fit to shine forth to a Nation or to a world of Churches That such Gifts might not be confined to a Pulpit but as clusters of ripe Grapes passing under the press are fit to be transported to all Nations So such Gifts and Labors passing under the Press may be fitly Communicated to all Churches It is indeed a true word which the word of truth hath spoken Eccles 12.12 Of making many books there is no end and much reading is a weariness to the flesh But yet some books there be of which I may say as Fernelius and other Physicians speak of their Pills There are Pillulae sine quibus that is sine quibus esse nolo so there be some libelli sine quibus some books sine quibus esse nolo And this is one of them without which I would neither be my self nor wish thee to be Though most books be accommodated to Popular capacity and they do most good extensively yet there had need to be some which speak accurately that
of the mind within it self and to it self especially in the reflex acts of the understanding Outward viz. the expression which is the perceiveable Image of our cogitation so the Son is said to be the inward Word of the Father i. e. the Knowledg of himself and the outward Word of the Father because he makes known the Counsel of God unto the World The Image of the Invisible God Col. 1.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is he is the perfect and Essential Image of the Father for God here is taken personally not essentially 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 splendorē emitto The Brightness of his Glory Heb. 1.3 The Person of the Father is set forth by a Metaphor taken from the glorious Light the Person of the Son by the splendor refulgence and brightness of that Light The Character of his Person in the same verse for so indeed is the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not the same Word with that which is turned Image Col. 1 that is a person that exactly expresseth the Person of the Father as the impression that is upon the wax exactly expresseth the print ingraven upon the seal The third Person is called the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit 1 Ioh. 5.7 and is from the Father and the Son as from God wholly willing and acquiescing in himself hence he is called the Spirit that is breathed taken passively and Emphatically and is as it were God beloved of himself he is also sayd to Proceed Ioh. 15.26 A Person is distinguished from the Essence not as a thing from a thing The distinction between a person and the Essence Vid Keck log l. 1. sec 2. cap. 5. but as the manner of a Being or a relation is distinguished from the being or thing it self for the better understanding whereof consider that things may be distinguished really rationally or modally Really so one thing in actual being is distinguished from another thing in actual being in respect of their Essences so one apple differeth from another and whiteness in the wall from whiteness in the snow Rationally such is the distinction between the right hand and the left hand of the Pillar this hath no foundation in the things themselves but depends only upon our Conception Modally when the distinction is not between the things and things but between things and the manner or respect of the Being of those things this distinction is more then meerly Rational having its being in the things themselves not in our thoughts yet less then that which is properly real not putting an Essential difference such as is between things and things only distinguishing the manner of the thing from the thing it self see it exemplified in some instances as in a Person and his relations A quality and its degrees viz. Faith stronger and weaker Heat greater or lesser Quantity and its degrees Peter a man and a child A subject and its adjuncts as the hand open and shut A thing and the order of that thing A relation is not the person nor our meer imagination but an actual modification of the person Isaac is a son in respect of Abraham a father in respect of Iacob these relations in him are not his person it self nor our meer conceptions but the actual manner or respects of the being of his Person Degrees are distinguished from the qualities more then in our meer conceit having an actual existence in the thing whether we think of them or not yet not Essentially as divers things for the degree is not a quality but it is a manner of the quality and so of the rest of the instances respectively It remains then a manifest truth that there is an actual distinction the use whereof is great for the help of our understanding between the Essence and the Persons Doctissimiquique Theelogi recentiores personas sacro sancte Trinitatis vccant cum Justino Martyr et Damascene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Keck Theol. l. 1. cap. 4. Vid. lccum as also between a person and a person in the Trinity and therefore the more diligently to be attended to which is more then Rational yet not Real as the manner of the thing is distinguished from the thing the thing it self remaining the same which distinction is called modal such is the distinction of a person from the Essence according to the general Doctrine of Divines When we sometimes read in Authors that a person is distinguished really from the essence we are to understand Really not strictly and properly but in a large sence namely as opposed to a distinction of Reason and it is as much as if they should say the distinction between a person and the Essence is founded in the Divine nature and not in our reason or conception having its true existence whether we think of it or not A Person is distinguished from a Person The distinction between a person and a person as a relation and manner of a being or thing is distinguished from a relation or manner of a being or thing or otherwise they are distinguished by the order of their original their personal properties and the manner of their working upon the Creature It being but now sufficiently shewn what the manner of a Being or thing is and how it is distinguished from the thing it is not hard to conceive especially in the matter before us where the manner of a thing is a relation how the manner of a thing is distinguished from the manner of a thing From the processions and relations arising out of that infinit Sea of being viz. the divine nature Ioh. 8.42 15.26 appeareth the order of the Original of the persons The order of Original in the divine nature Ordo naturae locum non habet in personis quia earum una et indivisa est naturae est lib. 1. dist 9. S. 4. Inter personas divin non est proprie ordo natura sed originis tantum Smising de Deo trino et uno disp 3. q. 1. Num. 33. is that whereby one person is of another The Father is the first The Son is the second The Holy Ghost the third person but we may not say the Holy Ghost is the first and the Father is the third person The Father is he who is not without another and from whom is another viz. the Son The Son is he who is of another viz. the Father and from whom with the Father is another viz. the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost is he who is from others viz. the Father and the Son and from whom is not another In the divine nature there is an order of original or priority of order without priority of duration dignity causality or nature properly A personal or incommunicable property is that which is proper to one person the personal property of the Father is to Beget Psal 2.7 the personal property of the Son is to be Begotten Ioh. 1.14.18 the personal property of the Holy Ghost
is to proceed from the Father and the Son Ioh. 14.26 15.26 The manner of the workings of the three Persons upon the creature is answerable to the manner of their subsistence in the divine Nature The Father worketh of himself the Son worketh from the Father Ioh. 5.19.30 and 8.28 The Holy Ghost worketh from the Father and the Son Ioh. 16 13. Hence though all the Works of God concerning the Creature are wrought joyntly by all the three Persons yet is the work principally ascribed unto that person whose manner of subsistence doth most eminently appear therein Beginning works as Creation are ascribed principally unto the first Person the carrying works on to perfection as Redemption unto the second Person The perfecting of them as the application of Redemption unto the third Person That speech of Hierome What Terms we are to avoyd in speaking of the Trinity Heresies spring from inordinate expressions is especially to be attended to in this subject in speaking whereof if we see not cause to hearken to their advice who commend a prescribed form yet that we may keep far from the Heresies of Arrius who taught a Trinity of Essences answerable to the Trinity of Persons and of Sabellius who acknowledged but one person according to the unity of Essence and from all other errors concerning this great point of Religion we must not use promiscuously any words of Identity i. e. sameness or diversity but in our speech thereof we must carefully abstain from Terms of 1. Diversity and Difference Which take away the Unity of the Essence 2. Seperation and Division Which take away the Simplicity of the Essence 3. Disparity Which take away the Equality of the persons 4. Discrepance Which take away the Similitude of the divine nature or the persons 5. Singularity Which take away the Commonness of the divine nature to the persons 6. Unity if we may so speak Which take away the Number of the persons 7. Confusion Which take away the Order of the persons 8. Solitariness Which take away the Communion of the Persons Obj. 1. There are four relations in the divine Nature viz. Satisfaction to some Objections to beget proper to the Father To be begotten proper to Son to breath forth common to Father and Son and to proceed proper to the Holy Ghost therefore there are four persons Ans 'T is not a relation but a relative property that constitutes a person A person is an Intellectual Individual and singular substance therefore necessarily infers property and incommunicableness But breathing forth though it be a relation in respect of the person breathed forth yet it is not proper to any person but common both to Father and Son Obj. 2. There are more properties then three in the divine nature because the number of the properties is according to the number of the personal notions therefore there are more then three persons Ans A relative property constituteth a person not so a relation without a property nor a property without a relation The Personal Notions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are in number generally accounted five 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jun. sum loc com l. 2. c. 20. though some mention divers more 1. Paternity or Fatherhood 2. Filiation or Sonship 3. Proceeding or being breathed 4. Innascibility or not begotten 5. Spiration or breathing common to Father Son and Holy Ghost They are called notions because they notifie or make known the distinction of the Persons and the Order of their Original one from another The three first were used against the followers of Sahellius who denyed the distinction of the Persons The other two were used by Augustine against some who acknowledged the distinction of the Persons but denyed the Order of their Original one from another The last hath been of much use against the Greeks who acknowledged the Holy Ghost to proceed from the Father but denyed him to proceed from the Son Negative Notions as Innascibility c. cannot constitute a person because a person is that which is positive Negative properties suppose a person constituted but they do not constitute a person they are incommunicable properties but secondary not of themselves being founded in a positive property that is in personality They are founded in this that there cannot be more processions of the same nature i. e. there can be but one Paternity one Filiation one Proceeding in the Divine Nature Spiration or Breathing is not a property being common both to the Father and the Son Paternity Filiation and Proceeding are considered as relative properties so they constitute the persons or as meer properties that is not constituting the persons only notifying their distinction and Order of Original and so looked at they are also called Notions Obj. 3. The Holy Ghost is said to proceed from the Father John 15.26 but no where is he said to proceed from the Son therefore it may seem he proceeds not from the Son and consequently not from the Father and the Son Ans Proceeding signifieth the being of one person of another John 15.26 14.26 Now though the Holy Ghost's being from the Son is not expressed by the word Procession yet it is by the word Mission or Sending which concludes the same in effect That is Scripture which is contained therein by express terms or by sound consequence Hence he is called the Spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 And the Spirit of his Son Galat. 4.6 The Mission or sending of one person from another is the determination of one person by another unto their operations concerning the creature according to the order of their subsistence As the Son in regard of the Order of Being is of the Father so doth he depend upon the Father in regard of the Order of his operation The Son can do nothing of himself but what he seeth the Father do John 5.19 And as the Holy Ghost in respect of the Order of his Being is of the Father and the Son so doth he depend upon the Father and the Son in respect of the Order of his Operation Hence as the Son is of the Father so in this sence he is said to be sent from the Father John 5.24.30 And as the Holy Ghost is from the Father and the Son so he is said to be sent from the Father and the Son John 14.26 and 15.26 The Essence of the three Persons is the same 1 John 5.7 To Vsefulness of the Doctrine of the Trinity John 10.30 The manner of the Existence or Essence though as a personal property it be incommunicable is communicated in respect of its Original from one person to another The Father is not without the Son the Son is of the Father the Holy Ghost is of the Father and the Son The Essence absolutely considered is common to all the three Persons but not communicated for the Son is God of himself Filius est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 F. Hom. disp
sentit qui tantum de illo credit quod suo ingenio metiri potest Greg. but in Divinity Faith makes Argument Argumentum dr in Logicis ratio rei dubiae faciens fidē In Theologicis veroest è contrario quod fidesest faciēs argumentū Obj. 6. The Doctrine of the absoluteness and infallibleness of the Decree discourageth from the use of means Ans So the Massilienses objected against Augustine Superfluous said they is labour in both parts if he that is reprobated can by no industry be saved nor he that is elected by no negligence fall short of salvation This Objection labours of that which Logicians call the Fallacy of Division whereby in our arguing those things are divided which ought to be conjoyned So here the end and the means to the end are divided which God in his everlasting Counsel hath conjoyned More particularly The falshood of this perillous and justly abominable inference appeareth thus 1. It is against Scripture which holds forth the certaine truth of the connexion of the Antecedent and Consequent when yet both the Antecedent and Consequent taken apart are false That is it holds forth a truth in the connexion of both the parts of such a Proposition in either of whose parts considered in themselves there is no truth For example Acts 27.30 Except these abide in the Ship ye cannot be saved Here is a truth in the Connexion of both parts of the Proposition viz. The Antecedent Except these abide in the ship and the Consequent Ye cannot be saved Yet could it not be a truth either that the ship-men should not abide in the ship or that any man in the ship should not be saved God having before determined that there should be no loss of any mans life amongst them ver 22. and that by means of the ship-mens abiding in the ship as appeareth out of the Text ver 27.31 and by the event So in that Proposition If ye Believers live after the flesh ye shall dye Rom. 8.13 Here is a truth in the Connexion of the parts i. e. of the Antecedent and Consequent of this Proposition viz. That if these believing Romans live finally after the flesh they shall dye else the Scripture is not true yet is there no truth in either of the parts thereof considered by themselves Not in the Antecedent viz. Believers live finally afer the flesh Not in the Consequent viz. That Believers shall dye The like is to be seen in this Proposition If Judas believe he shall be saved If John believe not he shall be damned There is a truth in the Connexion of the Antecedent and Consequent of both though the Antecedent and Consequent of both considered by themselves are false For though it be true If Judas believe he shall be saved and if John believe not he shall be damned yet is it not true either that Judas shall believe or that Judas shall be saved or that John shall not believe or that John shall be damned God then having decreed the end by the conjunction of the end and means together 'T is not a truth for us to conclude we shall attain the end though we dis-joyn the end and means asunder It is therefore against the truth of the Scripture for an elect man to say Though he live after the flesh he shall be saved as also for the Reprobate to say Though he live after the spirit he shall be damned 2. It implyeth a contradiction for us to acknowledge the Doctrine of the Decree that tyeth the end and the means together to be a truth and yet to say it is in vain to use the means for that notwithstanding we shall not be partakers of the end 3. It is irrational and it is as if one should argue thus Because God hath decreed such an end to be attained by such means therefore it is in vain to use the means to that end 4. It is at least implicitely legal in that it objects not against the Decree simply but also against our dependance upon the Efficiency of that Decree It implying thus much we will use the means if the use of means be in our power but we have no heart to use the means since both strength to use it and the success of the use of it proceed respectively from an absolute predermination of God Si non vultis obedientiā ad quam nos licendilis in corde nostro frigescere nolite nobis istam Dei gratiam praedicare quâ Deum dare fatemini quae ut nos faciamus fortamini August de deno Perserver l. 2. c. 19. That was a Legal yea an abominable speech of those who said in Augustines time If you would not have that obedience whereunto you endeavor to enflame us to chill in our hearts do not preach unto us the Grace of God whereby you confess that God giveth the things which you exhort us to do 5. Diabolicus sarcasmus si sum electus faciam quae lubet quia mihi non oberit Ursin It is Diabolical 'T is a Diabolical bitter scoff saith Vrsin If I am Elected I may do what I list it shall nothing hurt me But is it not a discouragement to use means whilst we are uncertain of the success To conclude so far is the doctrine of the Decree from being a prejudice to the use of means as that the use of the means is part of it the effect of it and the knowledge thereof an obliging motive unto all that know it an effectual motive unto all that are godly Obj. 7. No event the accomplishment whereof is the fulfilling of the Will of God is sin But sin is an event the accomplishment whereof is the fulfilling of the Will of God Rom. 9.19 For why doth he yet finde fault Answ and who hath resisted his Will Therefore sin is not sin otherwise it should be sin to fulfill the Will of God 1. The Apostles mentioning this in the text alledged as the objection of carnal reason cavelling against the Decree of God is a sufficient ground for the rejecting of it 2. The Law not the Decree is the rule of life Hence sin is described to be the transgression of the Law 1 Ioh. 3.4 The command sheweth what ought to be done the Decree determineth what shall be done God willeth it to be the duty of all to keep the command but he willeth not that all shall keep the command Whether therefore men keep the command or not God falleth not short of his Will which is aways fulfilled Even then when men break the command Ista autē non pugnant tui est officii ut hoc facias nonest mei propositi efficere ut hoc facias Twis de Elect. l. 1. part 2. For who hath resisted his Will that is his Decree Rom. 919. Men by sin do not make God to fall short of his will but they fall short of their duty God doth not punish man for resisting his Will meerly but for resisting the
rule There is no repugnancy between these two propositions 1. It is the duty of man to beleeve 2. It is not the purpose of God to give him grace to cause him to beleeve Obj. 8. The Event out of which according to the Decree of God cometh good yea that great good of the manifestation of the glory of God ought not to be counted sin nor is the doer thereof to suffer vengeance But sin is that event out of which cometh this great good Therefore why should sin be accounted sin or the doer thereof suffer vengeance See Rom. 3.5 7. Ans This Objection is framed in the person of man I speak as a man vers 5. not as from God and being both blasphemous and absurd the Apostle censures it in the same place with an holy abomination God forbid vers 6. Sin in it self tendeth only unto evil it is by accident that it becometh a means of any good 'T is the occasion Lambertus Danaeus censuit periculosam istam Gregorii magni sententiam ubi loquens de culpa Adami sic ait O foelix culpa quae talem tantū habere meruit Redemptorem Twisse de Praed l. 1. part 1. Nisi esset hoc bonum ut essent mala nullo modo sinerentur ab Omnipotente bono August Twiss referente Cr. 3. l. 2. Vid. Cr. 3. l. 2. not the cause of the manifestation of the glory of God That sin which in its own nature tends only unto evil is turned into an occasional commendation of the Righteousness and other Attributes of God doth not at all excuse sin but commends the wisdom and goodness of him that brings good out of evil yea a far greater good out of sin then sin it self is an evil So of the Objections The Decree is to be propounded in the same order in which God hath revealed it in his Word God knoweth best how to reveal his own mind And we speak well when we speak after him In particular these Rules are to be observed Rule 1. What order is to be observed in propounding the Doctrine of the Decree Not Gods Decree but the Command is the Rule of Faith and Obedience Rule 2. Consider of the Decree as proceeding according to the order of the End and the means conducing to that End hereby finding the End of God in them that perish not to be the death of a sinner but the manifestation of the glory of his Justice in punishing man for sin and the blameable cause of death to be sin appears the unwarrantableness as well as the offensiveness of such expressions as God made man to damn him c. together with the groundlessness and sinfulness of blasphemous charging God with cruelty in his Decree of Reprobation O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self but in me is thy help found Hosea 13.9 Here God removeth from himself the being the cause of the destruction of Israel He also denyeth solemnly Ezek. 18.23 32. yea with an Oath Ezek. 33.11 That he taketh any pleasure in the death of a sinner Say unto them As I live saith the Lord God I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live Turn ye turn ye from your evil ways why will ye dye O house of Israel Death as we saw before is considered as the destruction of the sinner or as an execution and declaration of Justice God delights in it as it is a declaration and execution of Justice but not as it is the destruction of the sinner In the execution of Justice upon a Malefactor we must distinguish between punishment and destruction Punishment is from the Judg destruction is from the evil doer Punishment proceeds from the Author of the Rule of Justice as the efficient Cause but destruction from sin as the meritorious Cause Though punishment as it destroyeth the creature be an evil to Nature yet as it is a declaration of Justice it is a moral good 'T is true Condemnation followeth infallibly upon Reprobation yet so as Reprobation is the antecedent not the cause of sin sin both an antecedent and cause of condemnation None are condemned because reprobated but because they sin Notwithstanding man be reprobated yet if he had not sinned he should not have dyed Rule 3. We must not separate between the end and the means That Diabolical Sarcasme and bitter scoffe invented to the abuse and derision of the Doctrine of the Decree is not only an untruth but implyeth a contradiction viz. If I be elected howsoever I live I shall be saved and if I be not elected live I never so well I shall be damned Satan in this Sophism divides the end and the means asunder which God hath joyned together The Decree consists not of the end without the means nor of the means without the end but of both together Both end and means are contained in one Decree Yea so far is the Decree from admitting such an inference as that the contrary infallibly followeth thereupon and in point of Election is not only necessarily concluded but irresistably caused Faith repentance new-obedience and perseverance being the effects of Election Acts 27.24 God had decreed by the ship-mens staying in the ship to run the ship a ground near the shore so as that all there might escape safe to land He concludes unsafely from thence that saith Do now as they will Stay the ship-men in the ship or not there shall no man perish For except the ship-men abide in the ship ye cannot be saved ver 27. Just so do they reasonlesly and to their own destruction conclude who notwithstanding God hath from the beginning chosen us to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth 2 Thes 1.13 Yet infer if they were elected live as they will whether they believe or not be sanctified or not they shall be saved There was one saith Augustine of our society who when his brethren expostulated with him Quidam in nostro Monasterio qui corripientibus fratribus c. August de bono persever l. 2. c. 75 why he did some things which ought not to be done and why he did not some things that ought to be done answered What kind of one soever I now am I shall be such an one as God hath foreknown me to be Who truly saith that Ancient said the truth and by this truth profited not in good but so much profitted in evil that forsaking the Society of the Monastery he became a Dog returned to his vomit again and as yet what he will be is uncertain Rule 4. We must be carefull to distinguish between the Doctrine of the Decree and the Personal Application thereof in point of Election and Reprobation The Doctrine of the Decree is commanded to be taught and learned and is many ways useful both before and after faith respectively But the Personal Application thereof before faith in point of Election or during this life in point of
God unto his Elect who together with the residue of mankind lay equal in the guilt and pollution of Adams sin and of original corruption which made such a difference between us according to his gracious Decree in Jesus Christ as that leaving our fellow sinners unto misery from all Eternity he appointed his Son to descend down as low as Hell to fetch us from thence and to ascend up as high as Heaven to carry us up thither for his alone merit unto an estate more happy then that was miserable which we had deserved notwithstanding all our opposition thereunto This this is the great and glorious Cause of thanksgiving holding forth a worthy demonstration of such Love as became a God to shew to such whom he was freely pleased to make his Favorites a greater good then which God hath not willed to man a greater debt then for the good of which man doth not owe to God The sight of Gods heart in his Decree thus absolutely everlastingly effectually and peculiarly for Reprobation makes Election more admirable affected to his Elect is a means to constrain inflame ravish and unite the hearts of the Elect universally and everlastingly unto God It is an effect of Election to be affected with the Decree of Election As the Elect have their being by grace 1 Cor. 15.10 so their duty and spirit is to be unto the praise of his glorious grace Ephes 1.6 As God openeth himself in no Truth more then this so they that love to see the shining face of God in Jesus Christ delight in no Truth more then this This life is too short and spirits that dwell in flesh too infirm to express their thankfulness for the Love of God that unbosometh it self unto his Elect in the doctrine of the Decree After our experience of the loving-kindness of the Lord much proportioned to the measure of our present taste of and thankfulness for this everlasting free grace of his here the perfection of the service of thanksgiving is reserved to the state of Blessedness in that place of everlasting Hallelujahs For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for ever Amen Rom. 11.36 That pestilent Pelagian doctrine in a high degree adverse to the grace of God August de Persev l. 15 et Twisse de Sc. Med. lib. 1. digr 5. is withstood by the preaching of Predestination So Augustine Doctri a illa pestilens gratiae Dei summe inimica Praedistinationis praedicatione impeditur The Lord saith Calvin shall be my witness Calvin de Predest unto whom my conscience shall subscribe that I dayly so meditate of these his astonishing Judgments as that no curiosity sollicits me to know any thing more no sinister suspition of his incomparable justice stealeth in upon me no lust of murmuring doth at all insinuate it self into me Tastis enim mihi erit Dominus cui conscientia mea subscribet sic me stupenda ipsius justicia quotidie meditari ut nulla me plus aliquis sciendi curiositas sollicitet nulla mihi de incomparabili ejus justitia obrepat sinistra suspicio nulla me obmurmurandi libido prorsus titillet CHAP. V. Of the Efficiency of God IN the Disquisition of this Subject Consider 1. What the Efficiency of God is 2. The Distribution thereof 3. What the Concurse of the first Cause with the second is 4. The Necessity thereof in respect of the second Cause 5. The Manner of it 6. The chief Objections against the All-efficiency of God 6. The chief Objections against the All-governing Providence of God 7. The Use of this Doctrine As God before time by one free Eternal and constant The Efficiency of God what immanent Act decreed the futurition of all things so God in time by many transient Acts doth exactly execute the same only what he did decree all that he did decree and according as he did decree The Decree is God willing the Futurition i. e. The future being of all things The external Efficiency of God is Gods working all that he hath willed according as he hath willed In the Decree is Gods great designe of future action The Efficiency is the execution of that designe In the Decree is as it were the Councel of God the Efficiency is as it were the Hand of God working according to the Counsel of his Will The Efficiency and Decree answer one another as the Birth doth the Conception the fruit the seed as the pattern and tabernacle Exod. 25.40 And the Pattern and Temple were to answer one another 1 Chron. 28.12 As the Idea and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the actual fashioning of Davids body agreed with the platform thereof drawn in Gods Book Psal 139.16 As the letters printed upon the paper answer the printing type Those 700. that could sling stones at an hairs bredth and not miss Judg. 20.16 were not so exact in hitting their mark as God is in answering of his Decree His Efficiency adaequately and exactly in all respects whatsoever answering the Decree and none of them varying from the platform thereof in the least measure here is no variation of the compass The Efficiency of God will make good that concerning the Decree which Christ fore-telleth concerning the Law One jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass till all be fulfilled The Efficiency of God is Creation The Distribution of the Essciency of God Upholding the Creature in its Being Virtues and Actions The Efficiency of God is Providence Governing thereof Creation is the first external and transient Work of God by which in the beginning he made all things of nothing very good Actual Providence is that transient acting of God whereby he upholdeth and infallibly governeth all things and the several natures of things according to the immutable Counsel of his own Will unto their best end namely the Manifestation of his own Glory The Parts of Providence are the Conservation of the creature in its Being Virtues and Operation and the Government thereof Conservation is a continued Creation The Nurse of the world the Schoolmen call it Manu-tenentia Heb. 1.3 upholding all things by the Word of his Power where the creature is compared to a mighty Mass suppose of Lead or of like heavy substance hanging in the air whose weight would cause it to fall were it not upholden by some extrinsecal power the creature must needs return to it s nothing should God but withhold his conserving Power Psal 104.29 Government in general is God's actual ordering of the creature according to his Decree with such reference unto the Rule as keeps it continually in the right way to its end The creature is either unreasonable or reasonable the Rule of the unreasonable creature is the Law of Nature the Rule of the reasonable creature is the Moral Law In the Government of the reasonable creature three things are to be observed 1. An Obediential Power That is a capacity of the creature to become subject
beleeve Paul had a righteousness of his own Phil. 3.9 thought he was alive Rom. 7.9 him Christ came to call though in his conceited righteousness because he was elected but before he obtained mercy to beleeve he is made sensible both of the dung and unrighteousness of his own righteousness Phil. 3.7 8. and also of his sin Rom. 7.9 The second Reason is taken from the Ends that this Preparatory Work serves unto Reason 2. First To convince of sin The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that beleeve Gal. 3.22 For God hath concluded all in unbelief that he might have mercy up n ali Rom. 3.19 Secondly To justifie the Law i. e. the Curse The Law is holy and the Commandment holy just and good Rom. 7.12 the Precept holy the Promise good the Curse just Man must acknowledg himself a lawful captive before God will deliver him Shall the prey be taken from the mighty or the lawful captive be delivered Isai 49.24 Before God will justifie man according to the Promise man must justifie God had he proceeded with him according to the Curse We must condemn our selves before God will pardon us Even in this respect God will make his Law honourable Thirdly To teach the Soul the nothingness of all it is and hath without Jesus Christ You see your calling Brethren c. 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28 29. that no flesh should glory in his presence and that not only after they were called but also in the manner of their calling God calleth them that are not Rom. 4.17 Christ is sent to bind up the broken hearted Isai 61.1 His people know him to be the Lord by the manner of his bringing them out of their graves Vt sentiant suam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cal. in Dan. 4.35 37. Nostrum esse nihil al●ud est quam subsistere in Deo sumus aliqi id in D●o in nobis autē nihil id●m ibid. Ezek. 37.13 As God in the Creation brought the creature by his Fiat i.e. Let there be Gen. 1. from its term nothing unto its being So in Vocation by his word Vive I said unto thee Live Ezek. 16.6 He bringeth it from its term of a spiritual nothing unto its spiritual being Which in time past were not a people but now are the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy 1 Pet. 2.10 1 Cor. 13.2 'T is one of the Attributes of God that those that walk in pride he is able to abase I an 4.37 Job 40.11 14. Fourthly To teach the Soul how to esteem of and magnifie the free mercy of God in Christ Rom. 11.32 For God lath concluded them all in unbelief that he might have mercy up n all See Ez k. 16. ult Isai 30.18 Here God getteth unto himself a Name Rom. 4.17 the Quickner of the dead the Caller of those that are not as if they were the Justifier of the ungodly Hence also the people of God receive their name Isai 62.12 And thou shalt be called Sought out A City not forsaken that they might be called the trees of righteousness the planting of the Lord that he might be glorified Hosea 2.1 Say to your brethren Ammi and to your sisters Ruhamah The third Reason is taken from the season of preparatory Work Reason 3. The fittest season to affect the heart with the sensibleness of sin is between the rest of the Soul in sin and the infusion of faith God works upon man not according to his absolute Power but according to the nature of the subject and fitness of the second cause The fittest time to affect the heart of man with fear is whilest he looketh at the danger as in being not when he looketh at the danger as over If Joseph intend to be an object of fear unto his Brethren he acts this part whilest they look at him as a Judg before he revealeth himself to be a Brother The time between the rest of the Soul in sin and the grace of faith is not only the fittest but the only season to affect the Soul with the spirit of bondage The Soul cannot be affected with the spirit of fear whilest it is at ease in sin to be in fear and not to be in fear in the same respect is a contradiction Neither can the spirit of bondage be in a Beleever Ye have not received the spirit of bondage to fear again Rom. 8.15 This fear is the work of the Spirit of God in the working whereof the Spirit doth two things 1. It threatens the Soul with the Curse as justly due to and impending over it in that estate 2. It causeth the Soul to fear this wrath Now the Spirit cannot cause this fear in a Beleever to whom there is no condemnation Rom. 8.1 for in so doing he should affirm and cause the Soul to beleeve and to be affected with an untruth which vvere blasphemy to think besides the spirit of servile fear and the spirit of Adoption are opposite either then there is no spirit of bondage or it is betvveen the rest of the Soul in sin and faith in Christ Jesus Obj. Fear of eternal Wrath may be caused by the Spirit in a Beleever Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall dye Ans 'T is a threatening of them in respect of their Way not in respect of their Estate 2. 'T is a filial fear not a servile that the Spirit works hereby The fear of punishment for sin is so a means to awe them from sin as they yet fear sin more then the punishment for sin The last Head of Argument Examples is taken from Experiences of the Saints who being asked will bear witness unto this truth The Parable of the Prodigals return unto his Fathers house Senior filius Typum gerit Pharisaeorū Scribarū quemadmodum junior Types est publicanorū peccatorum in genere omnium qui ad Christum consugiunt Aret. in loc is propounded as a pattern of a sinners being brought home unto Christ Jesus In him we may see the conscience of sin Th●ne●ar sea mighty famine in that Land ver 14. The sence of this perishing condition under sin And I perish with hunger ver 17. The experience of his lost estate He fain would have filled his belly with the husks the swine did eat And no man gave unto him ver 16. This my Son was lest ver 32. His sight of his need of Christ and seeking after him And when he came to himself he said How many hired servants in my Fathers house have bread enough and to spare I will arise and go to my Father c. ver 17 18. Hereunto may be added many instances recorded in the Scripture Matthew the Publican before he was effectually called was sick of sin as may be well gathered from Mat. 9. ver 9.12 13. Zacheus confesseth his sin Luke 19.8 felt himself lost
omnibus illis qui convertuntur alii enim gravi●rem sentiunt perturbatione n alii vero leviorem sed omnes qui verè convert nt●r verè etiam humiliantur Ames for some feel a greater measure of trouble others a lesser But all that are truly converted are truly humbled Quest 3. Whether may it not come to pass through want of light either in the Ministery or our selves or want of due observation of Gods manner of working with the soul or of due care to keep the manner of his working in mind that a soul which hath in its measure been made partaker of preparatory work and sincerely converted may yet be unable distinctly to call to mind its former experiences of some principal part of preparatory work Ans Yes But then these three things will follow First Such a soul assents to and closeth with the substance of the Doctrine of preparatory work being made known unto it Secondly Such a soul assents to accepts of and walks in the practise of the humbling Doctrine of the Gospel concerning a Believer The holy Christ-exalting and soul-humbling Doctrine of the Gospel virtually containeth and evidently presupposeth the Spirit of Preparatory Work The Spirit of Dependance and Repentance from falls and wandrings which straying condition is called the lost condition of a believer Psal 119.176 doth in effect include the conviction of the lost estate of an unbeliever inability without recovering grace to rise from sin to obedience here being like our inability without converting grace to rise from death to life there That is called humiliation this humility In the Work of humiliation which is before faith the soul seeth that as it is nothing so it can do nothing without Christ Poverty of spirit in the regenerate Matth. 5.3 hath its proportion to poverty of spirit in the irregenerate Luke 4.18 Revel 3.17 Thirdly Such a soul must expect unsetlings and as it were an after-bondage before it cometh to be setled and attain assurance of its salvation Whereby God doth two things 1. Take off the Soul from its carnal confidences for the less measure of experience of a lost estate before faith the greater measure of carnal confidence and less measure of sensible dependance upon Christ after faith until this cure 2. God hereby provideth further for his own glory by causing the soul to magnifie the Law to condemn sin judge it self and exalt grace in such a degree as a kindly preparatory work disposed to Assurance of salvation presupposeth and the want of a kindly preparatory work until now eclipsed Many darken A Caution concerning fixing Conversion to such a time if not hide from themselves their experience of a preparatory work by unwarrantably fixing their conversion to such a time Whence notwithstanding upon just examination they cannot deny the substance of preparatory work to have been and the effects of saving grace to be in their souls yet they owning no work for preparatory work which was not wrought before nor any work for converting work which hath not been wrought since such a time they cause much unsetledness and uncomfortableness unto themselves 'T is the duty of all that live under the Gospel to be converted unto God and it is the duty of all that are converted to know they are converted but we are no where commanded to know the time of our conversion If upon better light then formerly we cannot find that to be conversion nor consequently that we were converted at that time which we were wont to reckon from yet if we find the works of God fore-going and accompanying conversion to have been Pemble Of the nature properties of grace and f●●th and to be in our fouls it is our duty to bless God that we are converted and not groundlesly to afflict our selves about the time of our conversion To tell saith Master Pemble the month day or hour wherein they were converted is in most converts impossible in all of exceeding difficult observation though I deny not saith he but the time may be in some of sensible mark CHAP. VIII Whether there be any saving Qualification before the grace of faith viz. Any such Qualification whereupon salvation may be certainly promised unto the person so qualified THe Ensuing Discourse in answer to this Question 1. Explains the terms thereof 2. Recites various judgments concerning it 3. Propounds Arguments against ascertaining Salvation to any such qualificatiō 4. Endeavoureth to satisfie the more considerable Argnments of the contrary minded 5. Annexeth two Queries Qualifications are gracious Dispensations whereby the soul is in some measure rendred a more capable subject of faith or conversion and these dispose the soul thereunto The Explication of the more difficult terms of the Question either more remotely as the remainders of the Image of God in man after the fall which is called the grace of nature or more neerly as the common works of the Spirit by the Ministery of the Law and Gospel these last properly come under the name of common supernatural grace and are usually called preparatory works The Notion Preparatory is also carefully to be distinguished Works may be said to be preparatory either in respect of Gods ordinary Dispensation so those dispositions which qualifie the soul with a greater Ministerial capacity in order to conversion are to us preparatory in the judgement of charity in all and but in the judgement of charity in any Or in respect of Gods intention whence he purposeth such a work as a means to and a part of the way unto conversion afterwards to be wrought by him So in the Elect unto God they are are preparatory really but unto us only as they are also in the Non-elect in the judgjudgement of charity Because in that which is known they are alike and that wherein they are not alike is unknown Briefly Preparatory Work is so really or in the judgment of charity only To God really as concerning his Elect to man in the judgement of charity only as concerning any Notwithstanding because we know that such who are not elect are partakers of this common work and who are the Elect whom God will not forsake in this common work as justly he may do all we know not until faith and because we are to hope concerning all in whom we see them wrought and to endeavour in the use of means accordingly that God will not leave the soul here but that he will graciously proceed to the ingenerating of the grace of faith in his accepted time yet being ignorant of his intent we can but hope concerning any Hence to us they are preparatory in judgement of Charity in all whether Elect or Non-elect and not in judgement of Certainty in the Elect themselves before faith Saving Qualifications are taken either properly and formally for some effect of special grace such as are the gifts of the Spirit in Vocation Union and Communion all flowing from election having according to the revealed Dispensation of God
8. These qualifications before faith are saving in the Elect because God intends them as a means unto a saving work afterwards to be wrought infallibly by him in them in his accepted time Ans This Objection is already answered in the distinction of the Notion Preparatory in the explication of the terms where you may please to see it Thus to argue is as if you should thus speak God intends this work present in it self common unto which he hath made no promise of salvation as a means unto a further work Saving yet to come unto the which he hath promised salvation therefore this preparatory work present is saving Or as if in other words you should say God intends to do such a good therefore he hath done it God intends it therefore he hath promised it that is revealed his intent whereas the truth is God having but intended it therefore he hath not revealed it Who seeth not in this reasoning not only a Non-sequitur but an implyed contradiction The Event in a perfect birth sheweth that God intended the formation thereof when it was yet but an Embrio as preparatory unto the infusion of a reasonable soul But none will say This preparatory disposition of the matter for the infusion of the Soul was the infusion of the Soul it self nor could any man God not having yet signified his Intent in that respect have ascertained the after-infusion of the Soul into such conception It might in it self and to us have proved an abortion Exod. 21.22 Gods Intent that it should proceed to a perfect birth was only known to him the previous disposition of the matter was therefore from the first instant to him preparatory really but not so to us We must distinguish between Gods Intent Praedestinatio nibil penit in praedestinato Tho. 1. q. 23.2 and his execution of his Intent His Intent meerly causeth not any alteration in the creature only the execution thereof causeth an alteration therein his Intent is an immanent work the execution is a transient work his Intent is from Eternity the execution thereof is in time his Intent is himself intending as Election is God electing the execution thereof is a creature Obj 9. Vocation is not a sanctifying work Vocation is a saving work Therefore Every saving work is not a sanctifying work Ans Transeat The whole argument granted concludes not the present question The question is not Whether there be a saving work that is not a sanctifying work but Whether there be a saving work before the grace of faith If any notwithstanding the doctrine of many godly learned distinguishing sanctification into sanctification taken strictly and sanctification taken more generally yet judg faith not to be a part of sanctification they may please to consider the concurrence of our most able and godly Writers asserting the contrary in their Disputations against the Arminians together with the occasion of the Query and their Arguments leading them unto the Affirmative It may yet haply be said Where these qualifications are there may be a seed of faith This may be either supposeth faith where salvation is ascertained if so 't is that we defend and yeilds the Cause Or it supposeth salvation may be ascertained where faith is not Polan Synt. l. 9. c. 6. Ames Cor. Art 4. c. 4. Idem de Praepar pec ad conversionē Span. Ex. de gr erot 28. Credere in Christū non est motus successivus sed instantaneus Twiss l. 3. Errat 8. Sect. 1. which hath been disputed against and how far disproved let the Reader judg Or it supposeth a middle condition wherein the Soul neither hath faith nor is without faith as if faith were ex traduce which both the nature of faith and the concurring Judgment of the godly Learned refuse teaching regeneration and faith to be wrought in an instant not successively To beleeve in Christ saith Dr Twisse is not a successive but an instantaneous motion that is 't is wrought in an instant Query 1. What are the Inconsequences of the affirmative Tenet 1. Laedunt enim gratiam Dei in verbo Dei patefactam quotquot eam obsourant terminos ampliores quam Deo visum fuerit ipsi praefigunt Twiss de Elect. l. 1. par 2. sect 27. It obscures the grace of Christ For they saith Dr Twisse hurt the grace of God made known in his Word whosoever darken it and enlarge its bounds above what hath seemed good unto God 2. It denyeth the power of the Potter over a non-beleever thus qualified and so sins against the freedom of the Soveraignty of God and Christ in making God a Debtor of mercy before his time 3. It is a nourisher of spiritual pride teaching the Soul to think far more highly of it self then it ought to do in thinking it self to be in a safe way when it is in a perishing condition 4. It hinders the work of kindly humiliation in exempting the Soul thus qualified from looking at it self as indeed it ought to be prostrate at the feet of the good pleasure of God in Christ Jesus under the Sicredideris of the Gospel 5. If the Soul by parting with sin understandeth a saving parting therewith it holdeth it under an unwarrantable expectation teaching it to seek power to part from sin in that way sc without Christ wherein Wisdom professeth it is not to be had which is to seek the living amongst the dead 6. If by parting with sin the Soul understands a legal parting therewith it is a dangerous way to presumption thus it procrastinates the conversion of both and troubles the kindly conversion of many Witness their after spiritual sorrows and unsetlings for such former carnal considences when they come to be more clearly enlightened 7. Notwithstanding all scruples are always religiously and tenderly to be removed in any measure more or less questioning the work of faith by other gracious Truths dispensed at the same time with this Tenet yet since no Error is a medium of faith the Spirit of Truth refusing to mix with or work by mans untruth if the Proposition disputed against be found an Ercor it will also be found so far from being a help to faith as that the Spirit never did nor ever will work faith thereby Query 2. What Encouragement doth the Gospel hold forth unto a Soul under Preparatory Work before Faith 1. It is truth that every such Soul may be saved Sufficit ex parte objecti consideratio infiniti valoris meriti Christi ab dignitatem personae gravitatem passionum ex parte subjecti quod Deus ei copiam fecit omnium mediorum externorum quae electis Dei salvandis in Ecclesia adhiberi solent Spanh ex de grat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 2. The Gospel that is the free tender of Salvation by Jesus Christ a sufficient Saviour to every one that beleeves is to be holden forth to every such perishing Soul with a Command to beleeve 1 John 3.23
unto God for salvation by Jesus Christ which glorifying of God in way of thankfulness is a more effectual Motive unto obedience vvith a believer notvvithstanding the remainders of sin then the obtaining of life and that according to order of justice was unto Adam though vvithout sin as appears by the Apostacy of the one and perseverance of the other through Grace The means whereby faith is wrought are twofold External Of the means of faith or Internal External scil the Word by divine Institution the Instrument of Conversion hence called the Word of Faith Rom. 10.8 Which moveth by propounding Arguments and by perswading 2 Cor. 5.11 By Woing John 3.29 By Commanding 1 John 3.23 it is by Divines commonly called a Moral Suasion or Moral Cause acting only by way of propounding the Object no cause properly but improperly and Metaphorically it produceth not the effect without the concurrence of the Spirit vvhich is the Efficient Cause The internal means is the supernatural saving and effectual Motion of the Spirit concurring vvith the Word of Faith or which is all one with the Word of Grace and in an accepted time vvorking in the soul that faith which the Word calleth for Hence called the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 Whence the Moral Suasion of the Word becometh effectual by the real persvvasion of the Spirit The Word calleth upon us to believe the Spirit causeth us to believe The Word calls upon us to will and to do the Spirit of Christ worketh in us to will and to do the Word commands us to be according to our duty the Spirit vvorketh in us to be according to the Word God in the Creation spake the Word that such a creature should be and therewithal sent forth a power causing that creature to be according to his Word So whilest the Angel reveals unto Mary the Conception of Christ the Power of the Highest overshadowed her Whence it vvas with her according to his Word Luke 1.35 38. So also whilest Jesus cried vvith a loud voice Lazarus come forth there proceeded from him a Power whereby Lazaras doth come forth John 11.43 44. The Ministery of the Word whether Law or Gospel is but a dead letter and profiteth nothing without the Spirit 1 Cor. 3.7 Neither is he that planteth any thing nor he that watereth but God that giveth the increase After all instructions Timothy must vvait if God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth 2 Tim. 2.25 No Oratory how excellent soever can prevail with the blind to see with the deaf to hear or with the dead to live God is not only an Orator Deus Autor non tantum Orator gratiae Twiss de Elect. l. 1. p. 2. dig 6. Sect. 16. but a Creator of grace Which notwithstanding yet are we vvith diligence to attend upon God in the use of means for though the means cannot work vvithout the Spirit the Spirit ordinarily will not work upon subjects of discretion without the means Man is a reasonable creature therefore God proceedeth with him by vvay of Arguments but because man is a dead creature therefore he must work in him that which he persvvades thereunto The Proposition of the Word of Faith is the External Ames Coron de Convert 4 cap. 1. the Operation of the Spirit of Faith is the Internal Call that as was said before is a moral Suasion this is a real Perswasion that a moral Cause this a physical Cause that commands us who are unwilling to be willing Interna gratiae Efficatia quae praedestinationis decretum exsequitur sine dicenda sit actio physica ut loquuntur Dominica vel potius divina supernaturalis vel occulta cui fortasse aptius nomen non occurrit sicut cautiùs in Augustino nostri fere statuunt uon multum interest Prideaux this through its powerful Efficacy by a real and as it were a physical change of the Will of unwilling makes us willing By the first God stands at the door and knocks Revel 3.20 By the second he opens the door i. e. the hearts of his Elect Luke 24.45.16.14 As the Word is called the Word of Faith Rom. 10.8 And the Spirit the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 So the conjunction of both is called the Door of Faith Acts 14.27 The Manner of the working of faith is irresistable The Manner of working of Faith Non alium enim irresistibilitatē propugnant nostri quam realem efficacem donationem cujus vi effectum certò vel infallibilitur Existit Coron art 4. cap. 3. that is it is such Whence notwithstanding the resistance made by corrupt nature yet at last prevaileth over all opposition whatsoever and causeth the effect certainly and infallibly to follow Jer. 24.7 I will give them an heart to know me and they shall be my people And Chap. 31.18 Turn thou me and I shall be turned ver 33. I will write my Law in their hearts and they shall be my people Ezek. 36.27 28. I will put my Spirit within you Concursus volun●atis cum gratia in opere conversiones non est co-ordinatus sed subordinatus Prideaux Motives to believe and cause you to walk in my Statutes c. And ye shall be my people John 6.37 All that the Father hath given me shall come unto me The Concurrence of the Will with Grace in the Work of Conversion is subordinate not co-ordinate the drawing of the soul is efficacious but not violent God by an Omnipotent Facility on his part and after an experimental impossibility in some measure at least on our part doth not force us unwillingly but of unwilling makes us willing Amongst many other precious means for both the obtaining and confirming of faith Consider 1. The Love of God to man though a sinner Tit. 3.4 'T is not our sin which fell out after the beginning of time that can alter the affection of God which was before time Those of whom the Apostle saith ver 3. That they were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures living in malice and envy hatefull and hating one another When such though not as such God loved God hateth sin loveth not any as sinners but loveth his Elect though sinners Rom. 5.8 2. What Christ hath done for sinners He hath obeyed the Law and suffered the punishment Rom. 5.8 And actually procured the application of grace and reconciliation Col. 2.15 Rom. 5.10 Though there be many strengthless Representatio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dei Christi e●●icacissimum medium ad ingenerandā fidem Spanh ex de grat resp ad Erot. 14. ungodly sinners enemies whom neither God loveth nor Christ died for yet all whom God hath set his heart upon or that Christ died for either are or have been such If thou neither wert nor art nor becomest such Christ never died for thee 1 Tim. 1.15 The high account which that great Preacher of Free-grace and Doctor of the Gentiles had
of himself as it is a great sin for the greatest sinner to be without hope in respect of Christ Carnal presumption of mercy because our sins are comparatively little lessens the demerit of sin Despair of mercy because our sins are great lessens the Merit of Christ A mans nearness unto or remoteness from the participation of grace according to Gods ordinary Dispensation is not to be judged according to his Commission of more or fewer sins but according to his proceeding in the preparatory work A man may have committed many sins yet being Ministerially disposed in respect of the receiving of Grace he is near to salvation A man may have committed fewer sins yet being without the preparatory Work of Law and Gospel he is far from salvation 'T is not a mans former commission of sin but his continuance in sin that keeps him far from salvation For the fuller clearing the description of Free-grace some Objections are to be removed the former whereof concern the Freeness of grace in respect of Election the other in respect of the Application of the good of Election i.e. that good whereunto we are elected Obj. 1. Ephes 1.4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the Foundation of the world Here the Apostle seemeth to make Christ the Cause of Election therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Though it be be rendred through in English 'T is in in the Greek Election is not a free act Ans The Particle In is not always taken causally 2 Thes 2.13 Because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation in sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth i. e. in sanctification and belief of the truth as the way not as the cause of salvation True the Apostle saith We are elected in Christ but he saith not That we are elected for Christ We are said to be elected in Christ because Christ is the Meritorious cause of the Application of the good of Election so that in Christ in this place is the same with by Christ 1 Thes 5.9 For God hath appointed us to wrath but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ 'T is here said We are saved for Christ because Christ is the cause of our salvation but 't is not said We are elected for Christ because Christ is not the Cause of Election To be elect in Christ and to be elect for Christ are not to be confounded * Est quaedam Dei Dilectio erga nos unde profecta est Missio Christi John 3. Twiss vind grat de elect lib. 1. part 2. deg 3. Sect. 1. Etenim ex dicto Petri constat Christū ut Mediatorē qualis hic consideratur non esse praedèstinationis causam sed effectum 1 Pet. 1.20 Pisc de praedest N. 97. Meritum Christi nonest absolutum Cham. To. 3. l. 9. c. 1. S. 7. That we may rightly discern this truth of so spiritual and high a nature we must carefully distinguish between Election and the Application of the good of Election between Gods Act of willing grace and glory to be applyed and the actual application of grace and glory willed by God God electeth that is he willeth grace and glory to be applyed unto his people without any respect of the Merit of Christ as a Cause or Motive of that volition but the actual Donation and Application of that grace and glory is for the Merit sake of Jesus Christ Christ is the Effect of Election or of the Love of God but he is the Cause of the salvation of the Elect. He is the Effect of Election therefore called a Servant and said to be elect of God Behold my Servant whom I uphold my Elect in whom my soul delighteth Isai 42.1 His Incarnation Heb. 10.5 His Office John 6.27 His Acceptation in that Office Jes 53.10 all proceeds from the Love of God Election is God himself electing according to that received and regulating Proposition Whatsoever is in God is God To say then That Christ is the Cause of Election or of the Love of God were to say There might be given a Cause of God yea that God is an Effect and consequently that God is not God God hath ordained that the Merit of Christ should be the cause of our salvation but he hath not ordained that Christ should be the Meritorious cause of his so ordaining which implyeth a manifest contradiction Christ then is the Cause of the gift of Eternal life but not of Gods Will to give Eternal life unto us Christ is the Cause of salvation but not of Gods Decree to save Christ Ephes 1.4 is made the Cause of Sanctification And 1 Thes 5.9 he is made the Cause of Salvation but he is no where made the Cause of our Election Christ is the Meritorious Cause the Application of all spiritual Benediction in Heavenly places but not of Election Obj. 2. Ephe. 1.6 To the prayse and glory of his grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the Beloved If accepted in Christ then loved only in Christ therefore Christ is the cause of Gods Love Ans The Love of God is taken for the Act of Love it self viz. Election or for the effect of his love viz. Vocation Justification c. Christ is the cause of the latter not of the former By Acceptation in this place we are to understand Justification of which Christ is the cause He is the cause why we are justified but he is not the cause of Gods Decree to justifie us Gods special Love is his Will to bestow all saving good upon us All which good he willeth to us without Christ as a cause of his volition but not without Christ as a cause of the application thereof 'T is the same Volition or Act of Willing in God by which he willeth the Being of a Mediatour and the Salvation of the Elect for the Merits sake of this Mediatour The Salvation of the Elect is not the last end of the Merit of Christ but Gods Supream end is the Manifestation of the glory of his grace in a way of mercy tempered with justice whereunto both the Merit of Christ and the Salvation of the Elect conjoyned are the means and make one fit Medium thereunto Like Objections from some other Texts of like nature may receive the like answer Notwithstanding it be a truth That Christ is not the cause of Election yet it is also a fundamental Truth That Christ is the Meritorious cause of the Application of the good of Election 1 Thes 5.9 2 Cor. 1.20 Acts 4.12 Particulo gratis excludu tur merita nostri non Christi Bucan loc 31. quest 16. Foedus graetiae nullā propriè dictam aut antecedentem conditimem requirit Med. cap. 22. th 19 Ex tali inquam conditione si penderēt promissiones Dei actum esset de salute nostra Coron artic 4. cap. 3. Cham. Tem. 3. lib. 15. c. 3. 5. Si feceris hoc vives par●icula si est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
electione fides electorum tantū Spanh exer de grat resp ad erot 24. Nam in Dei Decreto haec reciprocātur Christus mortuus est pro credentibus soli sunt credentes pro quibus Christus mortuus est Rhetorf de grat ex 2. c. 2 Twiss de erratis lib. 3. errat 8. S. 2. that is in this present general defection of the whole Nation there is a remnant a portion of Jews made the people of God by effectual vocation according to the Election of grace Faith and vocation in which is faith are expresly mentioned as the effects of election And as many as were ordained to Eteraal life believed Acts 13.48 Called according to his purpose Rom. 8.28 Other faith will not save the many who are only otherwise called are not amongst those few that are chosen Gods willing the futurition of all things is the cause of all things therefore Election which is his will to have mercy of which mercy faith is a part must needs be the cause of mercy which is the whole and consequently of faith which is a part of the whole 1 Pet. 1.20 I obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithful 1 Cor. 7.25 2 Tim. 1.9 Redemption is the meritorious cause of faith God according to Order of Justice hath bound himself for Christs sake to give faith unto the Elect Iesa 53.10 Because the active and passive obedience of Christ was not only satisfactory but meritorious both of grace and glory But redemption is the effect of election that which is the cause of the cause is the cause of the effect following from that cause In Gods Decree those two Propositions reciprocate that is they are true both ways for Wards and Backwards Christ died for believers and believers only that is such as are or shall be believers are those for whom Christ died The Elect and Believers are reciprocated that is All that are elected do or shall believe And all that do or shall believe are elected CHAP. XI What is the first saving gift actually applied unto an Elect Soul THe Person of Jesus Christ Mediator together with his Spirit whereof Faith is a principall part is the first saving gift actually applyed unto an elect person All Beleevers have received both the Person of Christ and the Spirit of Christ The Person of Christ Job 1.12 Col. 2.6 1 Joh. 5.12 Rom. 8.32 1 Cor. 6.15 Heb. 3.14 The Spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 10. 2 Cor. 13.5 They receive not his Person without his Spirit nor his Spirit without his Person but both his Person and his Spirit together For the clearing of this Proposition consider 1 What the Person of Christ is 2 What the Spirit of Christ is 3 Why it is called the Spirit of Christ 4 Why Faith is called a principal part of the Spirit of Christ 5 What it is to receive the Person of Christ and what it is to receive his Spirit 6 The Arguments concluding the Proposition By the Person of Christ we are to understand God viz. What the Person of Christ is The second Person in the Trinity and man Mediator in one and that an increated Person By the Spirit of Christ What the Spirit of Christ is we are to understand the universal habitual created frame of inherent saving grace The whole body of renewed saving qualities The saving gifts of the Spirit And hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us 1 Joh. 3.24 It is called life Rom. 8.10 The Spirit is Life because of Righteousnesse The Spirit of the command and promise is Life The Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 i.e. The divine qualities of the mind resembling the Nature of God The seed remaining 1 Joh. 3.9 The Image of God consisting of righteousnesse and true holinesse i.e. Of conformity of the understanding and will or the spirit of obedience unto both Tables Eph. 4.24 Col. 3.10 Created in the soul the second time The new man Eph. 4.24 The new creature 2 Cor. 5.17 Here distinguish between the increated Spirit which is the Author the created transient gracious motion of the Spirit which is the efficient cause and saving grace which is the permanent effect thereof It is called the Spirit of Christ Why is it called the Spirit of Christ First Because the Holy Spirit to which the work of saving grace is eminently ascribed notwithstanding it be equally wrought by all the three Persons of the Trinity proceedeth not only from the Father but also from the Son Joh. 14.26 15.26 Gal. 4.6 Secondly Because the motion of the Spirit upon the soul is from Christ as a Head the same individual action proceeds both from the three Persons whose works upon the creature are undivided and from Christ as a Head In the actions of Christ as a Head the whole person acts in way of office the Divine nature principally the Humane nature instrumentally Thirdly Because Christ hath merited the effectual operation of the Spirit Joh. 16.14 15. Fourthly Because the Spirit works according to the wil of Christ Joh. 5.21.26 Joh. 15.26 Fifthly Because the Spirit which we receive in measure is the same in kind with the Spirit which Christ as man received out of measure 1 Cor. 6.17 The soule by faith receiveth the person really and objectively but not personally it were blasphemy so to affirm that is How the soul by faith receiveth the Person of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it apprehends the Person of Christ the immediate object of faith is Christ himself the Divine nature is in the three Persons essentially The second Person of the Trinity dwelleth in the Manhood personally The Spirit is in the Beleever energetically or operatively that is by its saving effects That by faith the soule receiveth the Person of Christ appeareth thus from the nature of Faith whose very being consists in receiving of Christ To receive Christ Jesus as our Lord and Saviour is of the form of faith and principally differenceth it from other saving grace wherewith in respect of its next matter it agreeth we may as well deny a man to be a reasonable creature as deny that the soul by faith receiveth Christ hence faith is called a receiving of Christ John 1.12 Col. 2.6 As therefore by the act of faith the soule actively receiveth Christ so by the habit of faith the soul passively receiveth Christ This appears yet further from the nature of Relates Fides per se est qualitas sed ratione respectus ad objectum vecatur relatio Keck Log. Lib. 1. Sect. 1 cap. 12. faith and the object of faith that is Christ are Relates faith in it selfe considered is a quality but in respect of Christ the object thereof it is a Relate Relates necessarily affirm one the other they are together not onely in time and nature but in knowledge also the one cannot be known without the other as it is impossible to be a Son without an actuall respect unto a
hearing and learning of the Father John 6.45 The Life act of faith is the souls immediate comming unto Christ upon its being drawn taught of God and having heard and learned of the Father By the infusion of the habit the immediate and irresistable work of the Spirit of grace God converteth the soul By the Life-act the soule being converted converteth it self unto God By the insusion of the habit God maketh us his people Hos 2.23 1 Pet. 2.10 By the Life-act we avouch him to bee our God we say it in truth and lye not we unsay it not again By the habit we are made good trees by the life-act we bring forth good fruit The habit or first act doth not alwayes infer the second it may be without the second but the second alayes supposeth the first Two contrary habits may be together in the same subject as grace and originall concupiscence in the soul heat and cold in the same water but there cannot be two second acts proceeding from those contrary habits at the same time The habit is a principle inhering in the wil as its subject and denominating it willing after the nature of a quality the life-act floweth efficiently from this principle and is accountable to us as a good act unto which God in his mercy hath appointed a reward The habit unto the act Suarez Meraph Tom. post disp 44. Sect. 8. is as the faculty of sight to actuall seeing or vision Aristotle compareth the habit to a man sleeping the act to a man waking The habit of faith which also holds in any other grace precedes the second act or exercise thereof The habit of faith precedes the second act or exercise of faith The habit of faith which also holds in respect of any other grace goeth before the second act commonly called the act or Life-operation or exercise of faith appeareth thus from the order of the first and second act The habit is the first act the Life-operation is the second act First as before Second The nature of the thing teacheth the being of grace which is life it self to be before the vital operation of that grace the grace of faith is the being of faith it self called the Spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 The vitall operation of faith expressed by the acts of coming to Christ Joh. 5.4 6.44 45. Eating of his flesh vers 54. Drinking of his blood ibid. answering the call of God must needs follow the being of faith we cannot act before we are we cannot act acts of life such as coming eating drinking answering are before we are alive the cause precedeth the effect the grace of faith is an efficient cause the Life-operation is the effect All creature-effects i.e. all such effects as proceed from the creature according to the order of second causes whether acts or habits for acquired habits follow acts presuppose a principle virtually or formally containing such effects But supernatural life-operations are creature-effects whose principle is the same with an habit as hath been cleared in the explication of an habit therefore supernatural life-operations presuppose a principle foregoing such acts That supernatural life-operations are creature-effects is manifest grace the new-creature whether considered in part or whole is a creature That creature-effects presuppose a principle in the subject formally or virtually containing such effects appeareth by this induction All creature-effects or actions are either supernaturall proceeding from a supernatural principle infused or inspired or moral whose principle is the Law written in the heart Rom. 2.14 hence are actions of external conformity to the Law or artificial whose principle is right reason or natural which flow from inclination or instinct Obj. 1. Acquired habits as Arts and Sciences ex gr the knowledge of a Physician the faculty of a Scrivener the skill of a Tradesman c. are gotten and caused by multiplied acts therefore all creature-effects do not presuppose principles in the subject formally or virtually containing such acts Resp 1. Albeit acquired habits were such creature-effects as did not presuppose their principle as before in the subject it weakned onely the argument not the cause which proceeds onely concerning such natural creature-effects as acquired habits are not but the argument ex abundanti proving all creature-effects and consequently acquired habits to presuppose some principle of them in the subject concludes the question much more evidently in respect of supernatural creature-effects 2 Notwithstanding there be many artificial acts that may be done without a habit acquired as he may scrible that hath not the faculty of writing well yet even those acts according to the ordinary course of second causes be not done without some inherent principle they may be done without a habit i.e. Such a principle that so affects the subject as to enable it to act promptly easily and with delight but they cannot be done without a principle simply to enable the subject to act Obj. 2. The act of Prophesying was not by way of habit therefore there were not principles thereof in the subject Answ The gift of Prophesie was miraculous therefore falleth not under the compasse of creature-effects proceeding according to the order of second causes 2 Principles are either transient or inherent the act of Prophesie flowed from the transient and passing inspiration of the Spirit whence they prophesied when they were inspired though not from an inherent principle therefore could not prophesie when they pleased We may distinguish between the matter of Prophesie and the act of publishing that matter of Prophesie the matter of Prophesie was miraculously inspired therefore without the limits of the question as before the publication of that matter was a creature-effect proceeding from principles natural rational and spiritual Obj. 3 The act i.e. the Life-act of faith by which the soule commeth to Christ is given in the work of Vocation without any foregoing habit Ans 1 This as it is barely affirmed without any reason given may untill then be sufficiently answered with a denial 2 We must distinguish between Vocation wherein is infused into the soul a power to come to Christ and the terme of Vocation wherein is contained our actuall coming to Christ If the act of faith be given in Vocation without any habit in order of Nature foregoing it then it will follow Either that the soul is not passive in Vocation or Conversion a pure Arminian affection justly opposed and abhorred by the joynt vote of orthodox Divines Or that Vocation precedes believing that is one may be a Member of the Catholick Church and consequently be a Member of Christ in order of Nature at least before he is a belecver which none will affirme Or that Vocation followeth the act of faith whereby the Soule cometh unto Christ which were to affirme Vocation to follow our union active receiving of Christ and Justification an assertion in no meane degree repugnant both unto Divinity and Reason That they i.e. the Arminians suppose the act
In the putting on of the Garments of Christs righteousnesse there is a putting off of the filthy rags of our own righteousnesse In this sense Christ cloaths only the naked and he that is cloathed savingly owneth his own nakednesse and the unrighteousnesse of his own righteousnesse Our unrighteousnesse strikes against the Law but our righteousnesse takes away grace that is against God this against God and Christ that makes us need the remedy this keeps us incurable by it that is against the command this is against the promise Gal. 3.14 that makes the Law weak Rom. 8.3 this submits not unto the strength of the Gospel Rom. 10.3 the beleever accounts much of the righteousnesse of Christ and loatheth his own Phil. 3.8 he abhorreth himself for his own high account of his own righteousness onr own righteousness is called our shame Phil. 3.15 Christs righteousnesse is our glory Isa 55.25 In the Lord shall the seed of Israel be justified and shall glory The beleever how great a sinner soever formerly though a Murtherer Adulterer Lyar c. by this one act of beleeving Jesus Christ and his righteousnesse yeeldeth more obedience unto God than ever he committed disobedience honoureth God more than ever he hath hitherto dishonoured him pleaseth God better than if he had ever continued in innocency and never sinned God makes much account of the obedience of faith because faith makes much account of the grace of God It is a name of honour unto Christ to be called Our Righteousnesse Jer. 23 6. and a name of honour to the people of God that according to their duty they are known to acknowledge Christ according to this name And this is the name wherewith He shall be called The Lord our Righteousnesse Jer. 33.16 Object Bellar. de Just l. 1. c. 10. If we are justified by faith then faith is in order before justification and consequently the act is before the object whereas on the contrary the act depends upon the object and not the object upon the act To this effect Bellarmine Answ 1. We may distinguish between the being of Justification and our being justified that is between Justification taken in an abstract sense viz. without the receiving-subject thereof namely the beleever And Justification taken in the concrete sense i. e. together with the beleever Justification considered in the abstract i. e. simply and in it self in which sense it signifieth remission of sins and righteousnesse to acceptation prepared though not yet conferred upon the Elect hath before faith a being not onely in the purpose of God but also in the Covenant between the Father and the Mediator and in the purchase of Christ This truth held forth in the Gospel makes the object of faith and thus the object is before the act Or thus distinguish between Justification actually procured and actually applied Justification was eminentially procured before faith Docet A minius Christum satisfactione sua nactum esse jus peccatorum remittendorum non peccatorum remissionem Twiss de permiss l. 2. er 4 p. 84. in respect of those who beleeved before Christ dyed when it was as entire to God to justifie for the merit sake of Christ to dye as it is now for the merit sake of Christ dead it is actually procured for those who beleeve after the death of Christ though it be not actually applied before faith This actuall procuring of Justification as did also the eminential procuring of it before Christ giveth a being to Justification as considered in it self and constitutes the object of justifying faith Justification is compared to a garment our being justified to the putting on of that garment the garment is made before it be put on Justification is compared to a pardon our being justified unto the Delinquents being pardoned the pardon is procured before the Delinquent is pardoned These then are both truths First Justification hath a being before the Elect do beleeve Secondly That the Elect are not justified before they do beleeve Justification is the object faith is the act the object is before the act our being actually justified is an effect faith is the instrumental cause the cause is before the effect That Justification is actually and absolutely procured for the Elect before faith and shall infallibly be applied to them all in time seemeth to reach the scope intended by the godly Learned whose spirits have more particularly laboured to hold forth the full truth in this precious part of the soul-reconciling and soul-supporting mystery of the Gospèl To say that we are justified by vertue of a singular promise in the Court of Conscience and in our own persons in which sense the Scripture constantly saith that we are justified by faith is not that I know affirmed by any The grounds of this Distinction are thus evidenced Justification was in Gods Decree before faith before sin yea from all Eternity Gal. 3.8 whom God hath set forth that is fore-ordained Rom. 3.25 The Justification of the Elect is absolutely and actually procured for them by Christs satisfaction before faith Col. 2.14 The hand-writing of Ordinances cannot be limited to the Ceremonial Law onely because it had respect unto the Gentiles then living to whom the Ceremonial Law belonged not God hath declared his acceptation of this satisfaction of Christ whereby he hath actually procured Justification for the Elect before faith It is no small part of the Ministry of Reconciliation that God imputed unto Christ the sins of the world of the Elect before they did beleeve and will not impute them unto the Elect 2 Cor. 5.18 19. this great Gospel-truth is of special use to beget justifying faith in the heart of a sinner the same Apostle confirms Beleevers concerning their salvation Rom. 5.10 from this argument namely that their reconciliation was wrought for them when they were enemies that is unbeleevers Here then is a twofold Reconciliation mentioned one at the death of Christ before Paul or the Romans some of them at least here spoken to were beleevers The other at our Conversion The first Reconciliation though it was vertually wrought before by the Lamb slain in Gods appointment acceptance together with his own consent from the beginning of the world Rev. 13.8 yet it was not actually wrought untill the death Christ for this satisfaction sake God imputes not sin unto the Redeemed for he cannot impute sin to Christ and the Elect both yea he accepteth us in the Beloved Eph. 1.6 Loving the persons of the Elect Rom. 11.28 though hating theirs sins and also their state under the curse of the Law Ro. 6.14 Ch. 7.6 Eph. 2.3 The second is wrought at our Conversion when the enmity of nature is slain by the infusion of grace our persons are justified in themselves and our state changed by faith in Christ Jesus This place then seemeth not to be understood as that Rom. 4.5 God justifieth the ungodly viz. objectively that is such who were ungodly till they were justified