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A43709 The believers duty towards the Spirit, and the Spirits office towards believers, or, A discourse concerning believers not grieving the Spirit, and the Spirits sealing up believers to the day of redemption grounded on Ephes. 4. 30. Hickman, Henry, d. 1692. 1665 (1665) Wing H1906; ESTC R2810 113,118 243

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is denyed by Socinians nor do I purpose fully to refute their blasphemy onely I shall take notice of one Scripture because it not onely proves the Deity of the Holy Ghost but also sheweth the exceeding sinfulness of doing any thing against him seeing he is God Wend. p. 248. Posteriora haec exaggerant declarant priora ut quando mentitus est Spiritui sancto intelligeret peccati magnitudinem quod Deo esset mentitus siquidem Sp. S. est deus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cadem sensu dicitur Synonymum in eodem loco est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 5.3 4. Why hath Sathan filled thy heart to lie to the Holy Ghost thou hast not lied to men but to God There are here three assertions 1. Ananias lied to the Holy Ghost 2. That in so lying he did not lye unto man 3. That he lyed unto God Our argument lies in the opposition of which no fair account can be given if the Deity of the Holy Ghost be not supposed for if so be the Spirit had been an Essence distinct from God the Apostle after he had said Thou hast lied to the Holy Ghost would not have said Thou hast lied not to men but to God but thus Thou hast lied neither to men nor to the Spirit but to God Nor will this argument be evaded by saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the third verse is joyned with an Accusative case and should be translated to counterfeit the Holy Ghost for besides that in some Copies 't is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the propositions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make it all one as if a Dative did follow besides this 't is most certain that sometimes with an Accusative it signifieth to deceive or cheat and it must here so signifie because this sin is called a tempting the Spirit of the Lord How violent would it be to expound that phrase by counterfeiting of the Spirit of the Lord every time we grieve the Spirit of God we grieve God And is that a small matter in our eyes Can there be a greater aggravation of sin If one man sin against another the judg shall judg him but if a man sin against the Lord who shall intreat for him 1 Sam. 2.25 but this would also further be considered by us that though there be no difference as to the Essence of the Persons yet there is a difference in the oeconomy he that grieveth the Spirit grieveth that divine person against whom alone such a sin can be committed as is unpardonable Whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man it shall be forgiven him but whosoever speaketh a word against the Holy Ghost it shall not be forgiven him neither in this life nor in that which is to come Mat. 12.32 To sin against Father or Son is not so dangerous as to sin against the Spirit because he acting not in his own name but in the name of Father and Son from both of whom he is sent to sin against him is to sin against all the authority of God all the love of the Trinity the lowest condescention that divine goodness ever did or can make II. Consider we how little the Spirit hath deserved to be thus grieved by us Many good works saith Christ John 10.32 have I shewed you from my Father for which of them do ye stone me Many good works hath the Spirit from the Father and the Son done you O Christians for which of them do ye grieve him Did I say many I might have said all there is no good gift that is either wrought in you or for you or by you but it is to be ascribed to this Spirit Is Christ precious to you he was conceived by the Holy Ghost in the womb of the Virgin Mary he descended upon him in his Baptism and anointed him to all his offices raised him from the dead bears witness of him and pleads his cause against the unbelieving sinful world Is there any sweetness in the Scriptures why these are all from this Spirit Prophecy came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 Are you taken with those admirable gifts that you see in your Ministers All that diversity of gifts is from the same Spirit 2 Cor. 12.4 called all therefore the manifestation of the Spirit vers 7. Or are you more affected with the works of God in you they are all the fruits and effects of the Spirit whether conviction or contrition or humiliation or regeneration or consolation they are all wrought by the Spirit this is the argument made use of in the Text Grieve not the holy Spirit of God by which ye are sealed to the day of redemption In calling him the holy Spirit of God he meaneth not onely that he is of essential original indefectible sanctity but also because he worketh all the holiness that is in any of Gods servants And when we are said to be by him seaed up unto the day of our redemption by that phrase is signified that he doth all that which answereth to the nature and various ends and uses of Sealing But with that phrase I am not to meddle as yet nor list I to run over all his works but pitch on that of comforting and press that to keep men from grieving him The Spirit is the Comforter sent from the Father upon the prayer of his Son to supply the absence of his corporeal presence to open those wells of Salvation that were hid and did lie under ground in the days that the Messiah did dwell among men In some Churches they have an officer who is called Consolator Aegrorum whose work is to put the brests of consolation into the mouths of those who have received within themselves the sentence of death should any whilst this Officer is at his bed-side labouring to take out the sting of death vex him with untoward language and not to give over till he had forced him to depart his room would not all say that this man were either in a phrensie or else in the very gall and bitterness of spiritual death The wickedness of those who do grieve the Spirit of God is far greater For 1. This sick Comforter cannot alway be with those whom he visits but is now discoursing with them and anon gone either to some other languishing person or to his own relations But the Spirit is a Comforter alway abiding with you John 14.16 Not that he actually comforts at all times but that he always preserves the root of comfort alway tenders comfort were not Christians either so sullen or so stupid as not to receive it 2. The Comforter of the sick may endeavour to comfort and not be able to comfort Men may not be so wise as to open to him the root of their
soul whether our own or others is capable of being vexed in a proper sense but this sense seems not here intended yet this I must tell you that God interprets all that is done against his children as done against himself and therefore do you beware how you grieve the Lords holy ones either by saying or doing any thing which you know their souls cannot but abhor perhaps it grieveth not some of your souls nor grateth on some of your ears to hear the name of God taken in vain or blasphemed or the good ways of God spoken against but true Believers are of another temper Psal 42.10 As with a sword in my bones mine enemies reproach me While they say dayly unto me where is thy God 2 Pet. 2.8 Lot vexed his righteous soul from day to day with the unlawful deeds which he saw and heard in Sodom and Gomorrah Wherefore Sirs be not ambitious to strike father and sons at one blow let it suffice that you dishonour God but do not dishonour him at such times and places when and where his Saints may stand by and see and hear the wrong and dishonour that is reflected on their heavenly Father 2. We may be said to grieve him when we do that which would grieve him were he capable of grief The Scripture calls not things according to success and event he that looks on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery in his heart though he never act that brutish lust Matt. 5.28 He that hateth his brother is a Murtherer 1 John 3.15 not that every one that hateth doth properly kill but that he who hateth his brother had undoubtedly killed his brother could his brother have been thought to death his hatred would have brought forth murder had not something strangled it in the womb So we do by the Spirit we do that against him which would grieve him and more then grieve him were he capable of being grieved or any way altered for the worse O man take it from me every time thou sinnest presumptuously thou dost what in thee lieth to annihilate the fountain of all essences thou dost what thou canst to leave the world without a God He will be in heaven maugre all the malice of men and devils no thanks to them were he capable of being deprived of life they by their sins had deprived him of life long since Hence he complains that he was broken in pieces by the whorish heart of Israel Ezek. 6.9 So true is that of the Schoolmen that omne peccatum is deicidium 3. We are said to grieve the Spirit of God when we make the Spirit of God so to carry it towards us as persons do towards those that have grieved them If by any unworthy carriage I have vexed my friend he intermits all acts of friendship and familiarity So doth the Spirit when any thing is committed contrary to his nature or offices withdraw his benigne influences and consolations which are better then life I judge as do the generality of Reformed Divines that the Spirit of God doth never forsake those totally whom hee hath once chosen for his temple In this we know we are not deceived nor can we deceive you when wee teach that the faith whereby yee are sanctified cannot fail it did not in the Prophet it shall not in you They which are born of God do not sin any such sin as doth quite extinguish grace clean cut them off from Christ Jesus because the seed of God abideth in them and doth shield them from receiving any irremediable wound saith the judicious Mr. Richard Hooker Sermon of the Certainty c. pag. 545 546. But de non existentibus et non apparentibus eadem est ratio the Spirit may when greived so dwell in a man as if he did not dwell in him he may be quite gone as to any present sense and feeling he was so as to David which made him pray Create in me a clean heart and renew a right spirit Quest 2. Why are we rather said to greive the Holy Ghost then the Father or the Son Answ No question we do by sin grieve the Father and the Son as well as by every Renewed act of repentance we do minister joy to them Every wilfull sin is an high affront to the thrice blessed and glorious Trinity Psal 78. v. 40. How oft did they provoke him in the Wilderness and grieve him in the desert Psal 95. vers 10. Forty years long was I grieved with this generation But the Divine Persons though agreeing in their common essence are distinguished by relations and operations or rather by their manner of operation the father being unbegotten worketh of himself the Son from the Father the Holy Ghost from both Father and Son hence though all works terminated on the creature are common to all three Persons yet each work is most commonly ascribed to that person whose manner of subsistence doth most eminently appear in that work It is the appropiate work of the holy Ghost to reveal unto us the mistery of godliness to make application of the death and resurrection of God the Son and therefore when we do any thing contrary to the doctrine which is according to godliness or unworthy of the death of Jesus we cross the Spirit in his work and so are said to grieve him Quest 3. What are the special sinnes by which we do more eminently grieve the Spirit Answ If the question were put concerning the general nature of the sins by which the Spirit is grieved soon might it be resolved for it seems to be past all controversie that we grieve him not by sins of dayly incursion not by meer unavoideable infirmities such as by the measure of grace vouchsafed on this side heaven we cannot escape but by sins that are in some degree deliberate and wilfull but seeing it is put concerning the special kinds of deliberate sins which are most grievous to the Spirit it will deserve a larger answer I say therefore the sins that are more then ordinarily grievous to the Spirit are such as these 1. All the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All those lusts of uncleanness whether natural or unnatural the living in these is called walking according to the flesh which we know is made diametrically opposite to walking according to the Spirit by whose help we are to mortifie the deeds of the flesh This kind of sin hath something in it peculiar for whereas all other sins that a man doth are without the body he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body 1 Cor. 6.18 A Graecis sexcentae dantur huic loco interpretationes Vid. Dr. Fea●ly in lecum saith Clarius that interpretation which seems most proper is that other sins though acted by the body and leaving an ill impression on the body yet have not that force over mans body as to enslave it to another which yet fornication hath for by fornication the fornicator is made a member of the
fears or if they do he may not be able to reach them or if to reach them not to pull them out There are perplexities of conscience which will puzzle and non-plus the most experienced Christian or Teacher But so strong are the Consolations of the Spirit that they break through all opposition of contrary grief and trouble whether arising from afflictions or guilt of sin 3. The sick Comforter may apply comfort unseasonably and nothing is more usual then to lose clave errante to speak peace where God speaks no peace but the consolations of the Spirit are never misplaced or mistimed he pours not the oil of gladness but into broken hearts he puts not the garments of praise upon any but those in whom hath been the Spirit of heaviness he applieth not his strong consolations to any but the heirs of the Promise nor to them neither but onely when they fly for refuge and lay hold of the hope that is set before them Heb. 6.18 19. When they flie as men pursued by the Revenger of blood did to the Cities of refuge or to the horns of the Altar 4. In the absence of the sick Comforter another may do the work as well perhaps as he but the Spirit is so a Comforter as none can comfort without him all consolation therefore is called the consolation of the holy Ghost Acts 9.31 Whilest the Spirit of the Lord did rest on Sampson he could break wit hs and cords but the Spirit being departed Sampson may go out and shake himself and think to do as at other times but he shall soon find a difference the Philistines shall prevail lead him away captive and put out his eyes So those who by the help of the Spirit have in former tribulations been made to rejoice and glorie may think when assaulted afresh to shew like chearfulness but if by any sin they have made the Spirit depart they shall find a little thing too heavy to bear the loss of a child which is but a common temptation shall make them cry and take on more like men then like Christians yea more like children then men Now put all these considerations together and when corruption next stirs say What! shall I grieve my Comforter my abiding my strong my wise my onely Comforter This question will strangle it in the womb if any ingenuity be left in the soul if is be grown hard and carnal through the deceitfulness of sin then nothing but arguments drawn from wrath will work on it III. Let it be pondred who they be that thus grieve the Spirit all men are not in a capacity so to do they that are have of all men least reason to do it Amyraldus in his Theses about the sin against the Holy Spirit hath well observed that a man may be considered under a twofold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or relation one meerly natural or legall having knowledg of duty but no revelation of any mercy or pardon in case he sin he that in this case sins sinneth rather against the Father then against Son or Holy Ghost or else he may be considered as under an evangelical dispensation and that again two ways either so as onely to have heard of remission of sins but not at all to believe it or be affected with it he that sins in this state sins rather against the Son then against the Holy Ghost or so as not onely to have seen the marvellous light of the Gospel but also to have been refreshed with its beams and made to rejoice in it if in this state he sin wilfully he must needs grieve the Spirit but thus to sin is to sin at a very high rate when a man hath been made partaker of the holy Ghost and tasted of the powers of the world to come and of the heavenly gift the Spirit may say What could I have done more to endear religion and inodiate sin that I have not done To grieve the Spirit after all this by returning to folly and vanity is an affront and disingenuity not to be suffered and which shall be most severely punished either in this world or in the other or in both This leads to the Fourth Motive drawn from the sad effects and consequents of grieving the Spirit I will not say with Luther that it may make God ro carry it towards men tanquam si non esset Deus ipsorum sed Diabolus nor dare I so much as adventure to English so harsh an expression but I shall direct to one place of Scripture in which enough is said to terrifie us from grieving the Spirit They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit therefore he was turned to be their enemy and he fought against them so far was he from assisting them against their enemies and he raised up enemies against them and caused Rebels to fall before them God's punishments under the Gospel are more spiritual not less severe As for the temporary beleever the Spirit being grieved by him may so forsake him as that the unclean Spirit may return with seven unclean spirits worse then that which was cast out he may be suffred so to fall as that it shall be impossible to renew him by repentance As for such as by the inhabitation of the Holy Ghost are consecrated and made Temples of God I am so strongly perswaded of the doctrine of perseverance that I do not think they ever again become of the Synagogue of Sathan but their grieving of the Spirit may be so punished as that 1. They may be permitted to fall into very foul and dishonourable lusts He that complieth with the motions of the Spirit is changed into the image of God from glory to glory he renews his strength as doth the Eagle but give me a man that grieves the Spirit he shall in a short time fall into abominable either opinions or practises and when we do consider how ugly have been the carriages and how scandalous the Apostasies of some that doubtless were enlightned and made the highest profession of Religion we cannot rest in any other cause of them then Gods judiciall blinding and hardening of them for vexing his Spirit of truth and holiness 2. All ordinances become unprofitable to them Promises sometimes sweeter then the honey and the honey-comb have no relish in them Commands and threatnings of which their hearts were wont to stand in awe now affect them no more then dreadful tales of men in another world Were it not for shame had they but any handsom excuse they would not come at ordinances at all the Disciples are told John 14.26 that the Spirit shall bring things to their remembrance by which I would not understand a bare calling them to mind but a bringing them to mind in their full vigor authority evidence 'T is the Spirit alone that sets home doctrines with demonstration and power the Spirit grieved the most weighty truths are no more regarded then so many idle dreams at least no more then do the enticing
indeed had his Revelations but those were not the ordinary standing lasting ground of his gloriation but the testimony of his Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God he had had his conversation in the World 2. Cor. 1.12 What that we are bid by St. Peter to give all diligence to make our calling and election sure 2. Epist 1.10 Which implyeth that assurance is not onely to be expected by extraordinary immediate Revelation 2. If we cannot have assurance 't is either because we cannot be sure what puts us into a state of grace or because we cannot be sure that we are in that state of grace To say that we cannot know what puts us into a state of grace or makes us children of God and disciples of Christ is too great an absurdity for the Papists themselves to swallow it doth indeed make the one half of the Scriptures needless for what doth Scripture more design then to lay down the distinguishing marks betwixt sincerity and hypocrysie faith and unbelief the power of Godliness and the form It will therefore perhaps be said that we may know what true grace is but we cannot know our selves to have true grace wrought in us because of the deceitfulness of our hearts Now that the heart of man is deceitfull deceitfull above all things will not be denied by any who either studieth Scripture or his own heart But we may well say that the deceitfulness whether natural or acquired is in part cured and removed by sanctifying grace and the Spirit also doth assist as is more to be shewen hereafter the sanctified faculty to observe and take notice of its own frame and therefore its remaining deceitfulness notwithstanding it may come to some certainty of its own condition To make short I ask Was Conscience designed by God to be a Witness and a judge did he intend it should somtimes justifie somtimes condemn If he did not design it to any such work or office why then all both Heathens and Christians have mistaken its nature and office if he did why then may not a renewed Conscience witness concerning a mans renewed and justified condition Doubtless it may witness and give such a Testimony as God will own hereafter and man may for the present comfortably acquiesce in As from our hearts condemning us we may infer that God will condemn us so from our hearts not condemning us we may collect that God will not condemn us and that with such firmness or certainty as will give us boldness in the presence of God and assure our hearts before him that we shall have the things we ask of him 1 John 3.20 21. Had the Testimony been so obscure and uncertain as Papists make it to be St. Paul would not have so rejoiced and gloried in it as we before observed him to do from 2 Cor. 1.12 3. If no assurance were attainable then some duties enjoined us would be altogether either unprofitable or impossible I instance in two or three Why are we bid to search and try our waies if it cannot be known whether they are right Why are we bid to examine our selves whether we be in the faith 2 Cor. 13. if it cannot be known whether we be in the faith How should we rejoice in the Lord and glory in tribulation if when we have done all our title to heaven must be uncertain if we may at last for ought we know to the contrary have our portion in the lake that burnes with fire and brimstone Set a man upon a very high pinacle and let him know he may fall from it and see whether you can perswade him to rejoice the possibility and much more the probability of any danger that is intolerable must needs damp all joy Much less could a Christian be earnest and vehement in his desires to be dissolved and be with Christ if he could have no sure hope that when he is dissolved he should be found in Christ Why hath God set Promises as thick in the Word as Stars in the Firmament if by no means we can clear up our interest in them If the sweetness of all the Covenant were strained into one single Promise what would that avail me if by no means I could be perswaded that I shall one day be permitted to taste of it This argument did horribly puzzle Bellarmine and in answer to it he recites three opinions of Catholicks as he calls them according to none of which he thinks men will be left under any necessity of doubting concerning their reconciliation with God and at last he tells us that all they contend against is onely a certainty of Faith properly so called but we are wiser then to lay the stress of so material a question upon a School-phrase Let it but be granted that the soul can have such a knowledge of its own sincerity as makes it certain that it is not mistaken we shall sit down under the shadow of that concession and eat the sweet fruit of it leaving it to the Tridentine Doctors to determine whether this may be called Faith Catholick and if not whether yet it may not be called Divine Faith differing from Catholick Faith differing not in certainty and exclusion of doubting but onely in universality I must needs say I understand not how any man can be said to believe that he believes and if any of our Writers have so expressed themselves which is more then I know they spoke not properly Wendeline in his larger System of Divinity propounding against himself this objection as from the Papists What is certain with the certainty of Faith is either expresly contained in the Word of God or by due consequence may be thence deduced But that this or that man I or thou do truly believe is not expresly contained in Scripture nor can by any due consequence be thence deduced therefore it cannot be certain with a certainty of Faith doth well answer The conclusion doth not contradict us for we do not in kind say that we can by a certainty of Faith be certain that we truly believe but indefinitely that we may be certain With what certainty then I answer with a certainty of inward vision or the testimony of our mind enlightned by the holy Spirit who witnesseth to our spirit that we are the sons of God and do truly believe This certainty therefore is not written in the book of Scripture but in the book of our heart and that by the finger of the Spirit Hence we believe not that we believe but see feel As we do not believe that we do think of God but know and perceive by our mind quoting for the confirmation of his answer an elegant sentence of S. Augustine lib. 13. De Trin. Fidem suam quisque qui eam habet videt in corde suo tenet certissimâ scientiâ clamante conscientia In which way if he had proceeded in answering the self same objection
THE BELIEVERS DUTY Towards the SPIRIT And the SPIRITS OFFICE Towards BELIEVERS OR A Discourse concerning Believers not Grieving the Spirit AND The Spirits sealing up Believers to the day of Redemption Grounded on Ephes 4.30 Hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is in us Rom. 5.5 The Spirit it self beareth witness with our Spirit that we are the Children of God Rom. 8.16 LONDON Printed for SA GELLIBRAND at the Ball in S. Pauls Church-yard 1665. A PREFACE TO THE READER Christian Reader HOw needfull it is to have a right belief of the Holy Ghost appears not only from the Ancient Creeds which in how few words soever comprehended did alway make mention of Him but also from the wretched Socinians who blasphemously denying his not onely Deity but also Personality and in their Catechism roundly asserting the no-necessity of any operation of his in order to our assenting to the Gospel have been so filled with a Spirit of Delusion that they retain not truth enough to denominate them either Christians or Hereticks The text upon which the ensuing discourse is founded afforded very fair opportunity of proving the Personality and Deity of this blessed Spirit and of shewing that our natural corruption cannot be cured but by his inhabitation But contenting my self to wave or slightly to touch these matters I mainly insist on our being by this Spirit sealed to the day of redemption a phrase which as most others that are metaphorical hath had the hap to be many ways interpreted Bellarmine who seems to have read holy writ onely to serve a design applies it to that indeleble character supposed by the Romanists to be imprinted on all that are baptized but how vainly appeareth 1. By his own Cajetan who saith Sacramenta imprimere characterem ex scriptura non habetur sed ex Ecclesiae authoritate non multum antiquâ 2. By the miserable shift he is put to before he can find any imaginable foundation for this Chymaera in the words He is fain to read with the vulgar Latine in the day though against the Greek and Syriack yea and against sundry latine Manuscript copies as Estius tells us yet this very writer Ephes 1.13 when he thought it would be more for his turn forsaking the vulgar Latine which readeth in whom believing flyeth to the Greek after ye believed 3. Besides how absurd is it that any indeleble character or cognizance of Christianity should be imprinted on all in Baptisme when as we see that many after Baptisme do utterly and maliciously renounce Baptisme and all the Principles of Christianity Other Pontifician writers do refer the phrase not to the Sacrament of Baptisme but Confirmation So Estius so our Country-men the Rhemists who have this note on Ephes 1.13 Some refer this to the grace of Baptisme but to many learned it seemeth that the Apostle alludeth to the giving of the Holy Ghost in the Sacrament of Confirmation by signing the Baptized with the sign of the Cross and holy Chrisme But they are well told by the judicious Dr. Fulk That rhe learned men they speak of must needs be Masters of the new learning for the ancient learning had no such interpretation instancing in Chrysostome Ambrose Theodoret Augustine Primasius Hierome Oecumenius Theophylact who carry the text quite another way All Protestant Writers are not agreed what may be intended by this Sealing of the Spirit sure it is for our credit that we can allow our selves to differ one from another in expounding a place of Scripture I refer it not to the Holy Ghosts regenerating or renewing us but to his assuring us of the adoption of sons his creating in us a sense of Gods Paternal love towards us and of our filial love towards him in so doing I follow not onely sundry learned sons of our own Church but also Cornelius a Lapide whose comment on Ephes 1.13 being translated is this As by the impression of a Seal the Letters of Kings and publick tables are sealed that those which are authentick may be distinguished from doubtful those that are genuine from false and it may be certainly manifest that these are the Letters and Tables of the King So ye Christian Ephesians as it were The Epistle of Christ written not with ink but the Spirit of the living God not in tables of stone but in the fleshly tables of your heart are signed with the Holy Ghost as it were with a Seal that it may be manifested that ye are the not feigned but authentick Epistle of Christ that ye are truly the people and Church of the true and high God Having thus descanted on the text he frames against himself this objection If this be so then may Believers be certain that they are in the true faith and grace of God and for answer denieth the consequence because this Seal is not altogether and physically certain and evident to them for who certainly knows who dares swear that he is sealed with the Holy Ghost as with a seal but onely probable and morally as it were certain from signs and conjectures so in like manner it is not to them clear and certain that they are in the true faith and grace of God For the further clearing of this doubt He refers us to what he had said on Rom. 8.16 Consulting him on that place I find him to give this note That the testimony of the Spirit by which he witnesseth that we are the sons of God is not certain with certainty of Faith nor certain with infallible certainty as Catharinus and Cajetan would have it but onely with a conjectural certainty which certainty yet increaseth with Holiness so that Vega and Ruard and Pererius following them think that some men very holy without the special revelation of God from the signs and effects of the Holy Ghost which they find in themselves very frequent clear and efficacious have a certainty not indeed infallible so as they dare swear that they are in the grace of God but yet such and so great as excludes all fear of the contrary not onely from the affection and confidence but also from the understanding and perswasion so as such do as certainly know and believe that they are in the grace of God as we certainly know and believe that there is such a place as Constantinople or Alexandria Let the Papists read this and if they have not lost all ingenuity acknowledge that some eminent Writers of their own go as high or higher then we do For we do not say that we are certain with a certainty of faith that we are sanctified or pardoned or if any do so say it is onely a Philosophical mistake for they do not intend that it is to any one revealed by any vocal or written testimony that he is sanctified or pardoned but onely that seeing these Conclusions do arise from Premises the one whereof is Scripture though the other be known onely
can give any ground of Faith Would the Papists but as freely censure the errors of their former Writers as we do the errors of ours soon would all the controversies about Assurance come to an end but that being an happiness rather to be wished then hoped for let all less judicious Christians satisfie themselves to know 1. It is the receiving of Christ that gives us a right to be the sons of God 2. That he who receives Christ shall be by God owned as a son whether he know himself to have received Christ or no. The promises run clear Whosoever believeth in Christ shall not perish but have eternal life Joh. 3. Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Blessed are those those that hunger and thirst after righteousness for they shall be satisfied Matth. 5. The condition of these promises being fulfilled the promises themselves must be fulfilled else God should be unfaithful and deny himself For shall the too hard thoughts the too humble conceit of a man concerning himself wake void the faith of God God forbid scarcely among ingenuous men doth any one fare the worse for an excess of modesty and can the Father of Mercies shut a good man out of Heaven because that conscious to himself of daily weaknesses and manifold passions warting within him and frequently prevailing he cannot be firmly perswaded of his own goodness 3. That it is the office of the Spirit to make us to know the things that are freely given us of God 4. That as he is ready to witness to carnal persons that their ways are ways of sin and wrath and that they are the men who except they become new creatures are marked out for damnation so he is ready to witness to those who are spiritually minded the truth of their graces and by that their interest in the promises of Justification Adoption Glorification 5. That our work lieth in making our selves which yet we cannot do but by the almighty power of the same Spirit fit and meet to receive this testimony of the Spirit which meetness we shall then come to if 1. We well inform our selves about the terms of the Covenant of grace 2. Have frequent serious abiding thoughts about the fulness and freeness of its promises 3. Giving all diligence add to faith vertue and to vertue knowledg and to knowledg temperance and to temperance patience and to patience godliness and to godliness brotherly kindness and to brotherly kindness charity 4. By reflex acts often compare the frame of our heart and course of our lives with the rule 5. Watch and pray that we may be free from that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pride and prejudice which make us though so sharp-sighted as to see a mote in our brothers eyes yet so blind as not to see a beam in our own eyes That thou mayest Christian Reader have some small help in all these matters was the end aimed at in making the following Treatise thus publick The Authors name could not make it more acceptable and is therefore concealed but his prayers are that it may be effectual to beget in all those into whose hands it shall fall 1. A tender care not to grieve the Spirit of promise by which they who believe are sealed up to the day of Redemption 2. A cordial respect to all those upon whom the Spirit of the Lord is and who are by the Lord anointed to Preach good tidings to the meek and sent to bind up the broken hearted to appoint unto them that mourn in Zion to give unto them beauty for ashes the oyl of joy for mourning the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness Jan. 25. 1664. Farewell The Printer to the Reader THough great care hath been used in publishing these Papers yet by reason of an ill-written Copy and the Authors absence some faults have escaped There is in some Pages a change of Persons which though it might be defended yet was not by the Author intended Those few Errata's that can be thought to disturb the sense thus amend PAg. 26. lin 15. r. Praeposition p. 28. l. 26. r. also that He. p. 30. l. 23. r. loose p. 32. l. 17. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 35. l. 21. r. are the enticing p. 36. l. 7. r. more glorious p. 44. l. 28. r. yet is He. p. 86. l. 13. r. speaks but to p. 88. l. 10. r. did not they sometimes p. 152. l. 25. r. till he feel p. 157. l. 9. r. and not heard of Ephes 4.30 And grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption THese words are by some conceived to contain an absolute Independent counsel but the Greek Scholia's suppose them to be brought in as an argument to enforce the immediately preceding dehortation Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth as if the Apostle had said If you think it a small matter to allow your selves in such speeches as have no tendency to edification as are no way fit to minister grace unto the hearers If you have no respect to your own souls nor to the souls of others which must needs be offended by such unprofitable communication yet you will have some regard for the Spirit of God who is himself holy and the author of all holiness and he being as he is grieved by all unprofitable discourse you will account your selves ingaged to abstain therefrom If we receive this connexion as why may we not sith it offers no violence to the context and is backed with so good authority then may we observe in the Text 1. A reason by which the Ephesians are taken off from idle words lest they should grieve the spirit 2. A description of this Spirit from his Nature Office Grieve not the holy spirit of God The form of speech seems to be borrowed from the Old Testament Isa 63.10 They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit therefore he was turned to be their enemy and he fought against them But notwithstanding we have found out a parallel place yet must we still inquire Quest 1. How the Spirit can be said to be grieved for seeing he is God and so infinitely perfect how can we conceive him capable of grief which is not onely a passion but also of all passions the meanest and lowest as arising from the sense of some present evil which we cannot master And this objection is the more considerable because of the emphaticalness of the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which saith Aretius complectitur omnis generis dolores and is therefore used to set out that anguish and sadness of mind which our blessed Saviour did feel in the Garden Math. 26.37 But all this notwithstanding we may give a very fair account of the phrase for 1. There are who by the spirit of God do understand the renewed part of man and indeed it is not unusual in Scripture for God to call his own work by his own name now the renewed
Harlot seeing mans abuse cannot disanul the institution of God by which two are made one flesh Now to take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot is that the Apostle could not think of without abhorrence vers 15. but there is also sacriledg in this sin because the body unto which it is so injurious is the Temple of the Holy Ghost vers 19. To pollute the holy place was a crime of that magnitude that the Jews thought it sufficient to stir up all the people to lay hands on Paul when he was but supposed to be guilty of it Acts 21.27 28. What outcries do the Papists make against K. H. the VIII for pulling down some consecrate places after they were become receptacles of idle drones and witless and worthless creatures and yet these very men do make fornication a venial sin and trick of youth but let them mince the matter as they please we are sure that if any man defile the Temple of God him God shall destroy 1 Cor. 3.17 When there were no Christian Magistrates to punish this sin God gave his Church a power to deliver the unclean beasts that were guilty of it to Satan for the destruction of the flesh 1 Cor. 5.5 Bodily torments as well as Soul agonies did then attend excommunication which yet in its own nature separated from all such attendants is not to be thought on without trembling as being the Churches giving up a man to the devil to do with him what he will Excess in drinking also is very contrary to the Spirit and that as it doth dispose to this sin of uncleanness so much we may collect from Ephes 5.18 Be not filled with wine in which is excess but be filled with the Spirit Here are plainly two propositions and a reason assigned of the first the propositions are Be not filled with wine Be filled with the spirit and there 's an opposition betwixt these two implied in the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but as for the cause in which is excess it s not to be taken for excess in drinking for then the sence would be a little incommodious Be not you drunk with wine in which being drunk with wine Vid. Zanch. et Dr. Hammond there is drunkenness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore here rather signifies excess of venery and brutish lusts the usual effects of following wine and strong drink and the common attendants of the heathenish feasts if not integral parts of them yea and of the Jewish Feasts too when they were become Idolatrous 1 Cor. 10.7 They did eat and drink and rise up to play where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may and perhaps must signifie dancing in a light youthfull lascivious manner Fornication and all uncleanness are so unbecoming Saints that they are not so much as once to be named by them Ephes 5.3 Therefore every filthy obscene word yea and every unclean thought if morose must needs be grievous to the Spirit whose dwelling in Saints makes them to be Saints 2. The sins of Anger Malice Bitternesse and which flow thence Strife and Divisions These are commonly numbred among spiritual sins but I am sure that the Apostle doth reckon hatred variance strife seditions envyings among the fruits of the Flesh Gal. 5.20 21. and that he doth call the Corinthians carnal because there was among them envying and strife and divisions one saying he was of Paul another he was of Apollos 1 Cor. 3.3 4. 'T is thought by some that the Corinthians did not make Paul and Apollos the Heads of their Parties and Factions but that the Apostle doth by a Figure transferr this unto himself and Apollos that they might collect that if it were so foolish and carnal to glory in them endued with extraordinary gifts it was much more foolish to glory in those ordinary Pastors by whose names they did call and distinguish themselves How carnal is it then for one to say I am of Aristotle and another I am of des Cartes In reference to which parties I need not say Was Aristotle crucified for you Were you baptized into the name Cartes but doth there in either of their Writings occurr so much as the name of Christ crucified Certainly so to admire the Tenents either of the one or the other as to vilifie and deny the parts of those who close not with them is very unbeseeming any that profess to be led by the Spirit But let us allow these sins to be called spiritual as in a sense they may that makes them onely Minoris scandali less scandalous not Minoris malitiae less wicked if uncleanness and drunkenness make a man like a beast these make him like a Devil If as the School-men say that in some creatures there be the foot-steps but in others the image of God so we may be allowed to think that in some sins be to be found not onely the foot-steps but also the image of the Devil 't is as much in these sins as in any other Be angry and sin not let not the Sun go down on your wrath neither give place to the Devil Ephes 4.25 26. The order of the words implieth that so much place as we give to Anger so much place we give to the Devil To be sure these sins are so contrary to love which though it be not as Lombard thought the essence of the Holy Ghost yet is one of his chiefest fruits that they must needs hugely grieve him If a contentious woman be a continual dropping in a very rainy day and if any wise man would choose rather to dwell in the wilderness then with a contentious and angry woman how can the Spirit think you delight to dwell with those Salamanders that are never well but in the fire of contention and count themselves not to be in their element any longer then they are wrangling and disputing perversly about substantial forms and qualities or about matter motion and atomes 3. The sleighting the divinely inspired Writings or ministration of the Spirit and preferring thereunto the Writings of any men whatsoever If a person had taken much pains and put together all his Learning to set out some one Treatise and should find after it was published that men neither read it nor much enquired after it whilest the Pamphlets of some others were greedily bought up would not this grieve him And must not then the Spirit after he hath revealed unto us the deep things of God the things which eye hath not seen nor ear heard the wisdom of God in a mystery the wisdom which God hath ordained before the world be grieved if men shall more value and converse with those Writings that can onely contain excellency of Speech and enticing words of mans wisdom Object But can any professing Christianity so do Answ Yes St. Augustine confesseth there was a time when Literarum typho tumidus he despised the simplicity of the Gospel stile Confess lib. 3. cap. 5. So doth Hierom somewhat his senior
waters and when he had so done put it on his own head he had a talent for his pains but lost his life for setting it upon any head but his Soveraignes so they shall have honour for contending for the truth but their souls shall God require of them because they gave not him the glory of all their zeal Wherefore as you would not grieve the Spirit when you see a drunkard say Who made me to differ or say as the Holy Martyr Bradford was wont to say God be mercifull to me a miserable sinner When you hear of one denying the Divinity of our Saviour say Nor could I have said that Jesus is the Lord but by the Spirit of God If either men or devil suggest that thou hast done well say It was not I but the grace of God in me I have nothing but what I have received and must not boast as if I had not received but ascribe all to him who worketh in me both to will and do of his own good pleasure 5. Fathering on him the ugly and monstrous brats of the spirit which worketh in the children of disobedience How much was the mother in Solomons time grieved when her living child was taken away and a dead one laid in room of it More must the Spirit be grieved when Humility Obedience Subjection to higher powers his natural issue are taken away and instead of these disobedience and rebellion laid at his door To do wickedly and to say that we do it by the impulse of the Spirit is to make God such a one as our selves and what a provocation that is you may learn from Psal 50.21 These things hast thou done and I kept silence thou thoughtest I was altogether such a one as thy self but I will reprove thee and set thy sins in order before thee Nor shall they fare better who do not father their impieties on the immediate impulses of the Spirit but yet on the Word revealed by the Spirit For causa causae est causa causati whatever is found in Scripture is conceived of the Holy Ghost if we do wrest and torture Scripture to salve our Phaenomena we do thereby injure and lie against the Holy Ghost This is the honour of Christian Religion that it can wound all other religions with their own weapons and principles They rob it of this honor who go about to fight against is also with its own Sword quoting texts of Scripture to authorize such actions as are perfectly destructive of Christianity No sin so hainous as theirs who pretend to sinne by authority from God 6. The ascribing that to the devil and his instruments which is the work of the Spirit This is not onely to grieve him but also to blaspheme him What was the unpardonable blasphemy against the Holy Ghost mentioned Mark 3. but the Pharisees ascribing that to the Prince of Devils which was done by the finger of God Every work of the Spirit hath not so clear an impression of the Spirit on it as had the miracles of Christ and therefore to mis-call them renders not ones case so desperate as was the Pharisees But yet sure after God hath by the conversion of so many discovered himself to be in the ministers of the Gospel of a truth for any to say that they were all literal legal antichristian which was the language of the late times was a blasphemy of a very high nature and I have observed that such men mostly have waxed worse and worse deceiving and being deceived nor can I conceive much hopes of their repentance who do so far wrong the Spirit as to ascribe all his works of conviction and contrition to the predominance of the melancholy humor or to a cracked brain and all the fervent importunate expostulations of Gods devoutest supplicants to sauciness such speeches do greatly dispose tot he unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost We may hence inferr against the * I say the Judaizing Socinians because this seemeth to have been the opinion of the Jews that the Holy Ghost was nothing but the afflatus or energy of God and therefore Lactantius who denied the substantiality of the Spirit is said by Hierome to symbolize with Jews Epist 55. Yet the ancient Doctors of the Jews acknowledged and believed the Son to be an eternal person of the Divine essence and worthy to be called Jehovah as they who want other books may see proved by Julius Conradus Ouho lib. 1. Gul. Razia cap. 4. Judaizing Socinian the personality of the Holy Ghost Grief is a personal affection How a person should be grieved we can understand how a Divine person should have that done against him which would grieve him were he capable of griefe is not inexplicable but how a quality a power or an operation should be grieved is unconceivable 2. Hence may be inferred the love and tender care the Spirit hath for us and of us Had he not graciously condescended to take on him the offices of Advocate Intercessor Comforter he would not have so far concerned himself in our miscarriages as to be grieved for or by them 3. If we are not to grieve the Spirit then sure we are not to blaspheme or offer despight unto him which cannot be done but by sinnes of the greatest and most hellish malignity and in the highest degree wilfull 4. This will also inform us what to think of them who take up their pleasures in sin which grieves the Holy Spirit of God we may think that either they never were partakers of the Holy Ghost or if ever partakers that now he hath quite forsaken them and an evil Spirit from the Lord hath seised on them If Christ at his second coming would spare all other sinners yet doubtless he will damn all those that believed not the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousnesse 2 Thes 2.12 But the main I intend to dwell on is the counsell of the Text propounded indeed negatively but yet must be supposed to include in it many affirmative duties indeed all by which that good Spirit can be pleased and delighted I will first propound some motives to perswade men to abstain from all sins by which the Spirit is grieved they shall be drawn from the person and office of him whom they grieve from their own estate who do grieve him from the sad and wofull effects of greiving him I. Consider who it is you grieve Were he but some created Angel you ought so farr to respect his ministry as not to grieve him The woman is to keep a covering on her head because of the Angels 1 Cor. 11.10 lest the contrary indecency should offend those pure Spirits Nay were He but a Saint compassed with flesh and blood we must not no not by the use of a lawful thing grieve him unless we will walk uncharitably Rom. 14.15 which would be to break the bond of perfection But he is greater then any holy man or Angel even an uncreated divine person I know this
do receive the Holy Ghost therefore they ought to be honoured and had in esteem for their office and work sake Obj. But doth not the anointing teach us all things and so teach us as that we need not that man should teach us at all Answ So indeed it is said and that by some pretending so much to the Spirit as that their usual compellation to others is Flesh but we are not to believe every spirit but to try the spirits whether they be of God and I heartily wish the spirit from whence this Objection ariseth did not too manifestly discover it self not to be of God The Spirit that Christ promised was to be sent from the Father in the name of Christ and was not to speak of himself but whatsoever he had heard he was to receive of Christ and glorifie Christ John 16.13.14 But the men who make this objection do dishonour and decrey Christ setting up Christ within them in opposition to him that suffered at Jerusalem the Spirit inspired Prophets Apostles Evangelists to deliver down unto us a rule of faith and life but these men do vilifie this written word and ministration of the Spirit and call on their proselytes to follow that light within them and make that sufficient for salvation For my part I am so far from desiring that any should envy for our sakes that I could heartily wish that all the Lords people were prophets and that his Spirit were on them Were there a Seculum Spiritus to be expectted I hope I should as sincerely pray for it and as much rejoyce in the approaches of it as another but so farr am I form finding in the Scriptures any time in which the Ministry shall cease and be useless that I rather find the Spirit is to be received by the hearing of faith and that it is one great work of the Spirit to quicken and give life to the publick Ordinances as dispensed by the Ministers of the Gospel 't is the Holy Ghost that maketh them overseers of the flock Acts. 20.28 As for that place 1 John 2.29 it carrieth it's answer in its own bowels You shall not need that any one teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you i. e. not other things nor in another way then the same anointing teacheth you but do any ministers pretend to teach other things or in another way then this anointing teacheth If they do not as it is most certaine they do not why is this Scripture so frequently urged against ministerial teaching For ever let us abhor those who cry up the Spirit so as to justle out that forme of found words which hath been delivered unto us by menguided by the Spirit Be sure you quench not the Spirit but have a care you despise not prophecyings God having put those two counsels together let no man put them asunder The Spirits Office towards Believers Whereby ye are sealed to the day of Redemption THe old Interpreter reads in the day of Redemption and by it Oecumenius and some others understand the day of Baptisme but because in the Greek t is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and we have no reason to think that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we shall by this day understand the day of Judgment as most Interpreters do and as we are led to do by that twin-place Chap. 1 13.14 where the Holy Spirit of promise is said to be the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession The price of a Believers Redemption is already paid and accepted by God and they are redeemed from their vain conversation but their day of redemption cannot be said to be fully come till this corruptible have put on incorruption at least not till this life be ended for till then 1. Their Redemption from the power and dominion of sin hath not its full effect even a Paul as long as he is in the body hath occasion to complain that he is sold under sin and that the law in the members warreth against the law of the mind and leadeth him captive to the commission of Sin and omission of Duty II. Till then our Redemption the forgiveness of sin Ephes 1.7 is not perfect I know that upon our first closing with Christ our transgressions are blotted out as a mist and as a thick cloud and our iniquities thrown into the bottome of the Sea there is no condemnation to us no obligation to Eternal wrath but yet I am also sure that we are bid repent that our sins may be blotted out when the daies of refreshing shall come from the Lord Acts. 3.19 Whence it may be inferred that a Penitents sins are not so blotted out as then they shall be blotted out indeed upon the first conversion a man is put into a state of justification which is inconsistent with obligation to Eternal death yet is he not freed from all punishment nor from all obligation to punishment for where there is no obligation to punishment there is no justice in punishing The want of the Spirit is one of the punishments we have brought on our selves by sin this punishment is not taken away but by restoring of the Spirit now though the Spirit be so restored as to prevent the dominion of Sin and damnation for the time to come yet is it not given in such a measure as to prevent all sin nor the contracting of new guilt nor shall He be so given in this world III. As to the Redemption of the Body that is so far from being compleat before the Great Day that till then it may seem not to begin While it is joyned to an imperfect soul 't is vile and mortal when separated from it then it becomes yet viler is thrown into a grave and preyed upon by worms and maggots at the Resurrection it begins to be spiritual incorruptible powerfull and like to the glorious body of Christ Jesus The Adoption the Redemption of the Body we do not now enjoy but by Faith and Hope we do wait for it Rom. 8.23 On all these accounts there is reason why that Day should be called as it is The manifestation of the sons of God Rom. 8.19 For though we be now the sons of God it appears not what we shall be 1 Joh. 3.1 The best use that can be made of this Appellation is that which is made of it by the whole Creation The earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for this manifestation that it may be delivered from that bondage and vanity unto which it is subject and under which it groaneth much more should you who have the first-fruits of the Spirit groan within your selves waiting for the adoption 'T is utterly a fault among Christians that they groan so much under the burden of a few Taxes and Impositions and so little under the burden and body of Sin which they carry about with them They should much and frequently bless
God for those enjoyments they have of him in this earthly Tabernacle but yet not be so satisfied with any such enjoyments as not to desire it may be dissolved and so they put into the possession of that house in heavens not made with hands We that are in this tabernacle do groan being burdened not for that we would be uncloathed but cloathed upon 2 Cor. 5.4 I confess in this I look on St. Paul as our Pattern rather then as our Standard I dare not say that all who are partakers of the Spirit do thus earnestly groan after absence from the body and presence with the Lord but all have reason so to do else had not all by Christ been taught to pray Thy Kingdom come As for you who live in sin I cannot exhort you to desire this day rather you may pray as did the Primitive Christians though on a better account Pro morâ finis for to you this Day of the Lord shal not be a day of Redemption but of Confinement to the darkest dungeon it shal burn as an Oven it shall burn you up and leave you neither root nor branch The Devils who believe it do tremble at the thoughts of it and if you tremble not at it it is because you believe it not The best and most seasonable advice I can give you is to kiss the Redeemer and to follow God with sighs and groans till he hath given you hearts soft as wax then shall you also be sealed to the day of Redemption Of this Sealing of the Spirit I am now to speak and that somewhat largely being therefore to build high it is good to dig deep and lay the foundation sure The expression is undoubtedly Metaphorical and must betoken something that bears proportion to Sealing properly so called What that is we should the rather enquire because the Metaphor is so frequently used here and Chap. 1.13 and 2 Cor. 1.22 He that shall read the Learned Zanchy on Chap. 1. vers 13. will not lose his labour nay will think nothing can be added unto what he hath said I shall from him and others in a few words lend light enough to elucidate this matter to those that have a mind to understand Two things among us go by the name of a Seal 1. The Signet that makes the Impression 2. The Impression that is made by the Signet And sealing if considered in its nature is nothing else but the imparting of the Image of the Signet to that which is sealed But then the uses of sealing are divers 1. For secresie or security 2. For ratification or confirmation 3. For distinction or separation Now the question is Whether in allusion to the nature of some or all uses of sealing we are said to be sealed Doubtless the Spirit doth work in us so as to communicate unto us the likeness of God in holiness and righteousness By him we are changed into the Image of God from glory to glory 1 Cor. 3. last According to his mercy he saveth us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3.5 We are born again of water and the Holy Ghost Joh. 3.3 We are washed we are sanctified we are justified in the Name of our Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God 1 Cor. 6.11 But seeing the sealing here intended is in order of nature after believing Ephes 1.13 I humbly conceive it is not the making of the Elect to partake of the Divine Nature but the assuring of them that they do partake of it the perswading our hearts that we have Gods mark on us God seals us with his Spirit not that he may know us to be his but that we may know our selves to be his and rest satisfied that we are his and that he will own us for his when to others he shall say Depart from me I know you not I deny not but we may be said to be sealed by the Spirit when we are by him regenerated and made new creatures but I think Regeneration is rather the Spirits writing the law in our hearts and making us the Epistle of God and that the sealing in the Text intended is the Spirits testifying unto us that we are of the number of Gods redeemed ones and have a right to the priviledges of Gods redeemed ones Now there are five things of which the Spirit may be thought to give assurance 1. Election 2. Vocation 3. Justification 4. Perseverance 5. Eternal life but because of some of these there is dispute and because it is by all sober persons granted that effectual vocation regeneration conversion are the evidences of the other of that chiefly and well nigh onely I shall speak and cast all I have to say about it into an Answer to these six Questions 1. Whether such Assurance may be had 2. Whether the nature of Faith consist in it and whether it may not be separated from Faith 3. How the Spirit works it 4. Why so many Christians are so long without it 5. What motives there be to perswade us to labour after it 6. What means are to be used 1. to gain it if we have it not 2. to keep it if we have it 3. to regain it if we have lost it 1. In answer to the Question Whether such assurance may be had I say it may which I prove 1. By arguing ab esse ad posse Assurance hath by many been attained therefore it may be attained That it hath been attained is so evident that scarce any thing can be more evident there is not one Saint almost in all the Scriptures concerning whom much is said of whom something is not said from which it may be collected that he had sometime or other good assurance of Gods love Was Job think we without assurance who maintained his integrity against the devil and his uncharitable friends clubbing their wits to prove him an Hypocrite Was not that the voice of assurance I know that my redeemer liveth Was not the Spouse assured when she said I am my Beloveds and my Beloved is mine Was not St. Paul assured when he so triumphed in Christ Rom. 8.38 I am perswaded that neither life nor death nor Angels nor principalities c. shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus The Papists do not much deny but that these persons and sundry others mentioned in Scriptures had assurance onely they say they came to it in an extraordinary way by immediate revelation which must needs be looked on as a meer evasion and shift there is not in Scripture the least hint that these came to their assurance in any extraordinary way but many things there be in Scripture which make manifest that they attained their certainty in a discursive way arguing from the effect to the cause from the fruits to the root from their mortifying the deeds of the flesh and walking according to the Spirit to the Spirits dwelling in them St. Paul
hateth his brother is a murderer and hath not eternal life I hate my Brother Therefore I am a Murderer and have not eternal life These are all of them conclusions quite contradictory to the vain principles that did dwell in the secure sinner which being set home by the Spirit must needs make him fear what shal become of him In like manner doth the Spirit bring the heirs of the promise to the assurance of hope by some such practical Syllogisms as these He that loves the Brethren is passed from death to life I love the Brethren Therefore I am passed from death to life Or He that repents and believes shall be saved I repent and believe Therefore I shall be saved Now the Spirit hath revealed and inspired holy men to leave upon record to us the Propositions in these two Syllogisms the same Spirit also works in us that Faith by which we are enabled to believe those Scripture Propositions to be divine infallible truths he also worketh in us every gracious habit and exciteth those gracious acts which be the evidences and marks of our conversion justification and title to glory he also helpeth to feel and discover those acts in our selves and by comparing them with the rule to find their sincerity which is his concurrence with Conscience in making the assumption and lastly he helpeth sanctified reason from the premises to inferr the Conclusion whatever is beyond this is not essential to assurance but something separable from it Sometimes our assent to the premises and conclusion is stronger sometimes weaker hence the different degrees of assurance sometimes upon this assurance peace of Conscience we are marvellously enlarged with consolations called joy in the holy Ghost sometimes nor Obj. Some may say Is there no other way of working assurance but this doth not God sometimes testifie without any such discourse and ratiocination hath he confined himself to Syllogisms doth he not sometimes make some impressions on us by which we are assured that we are the children of God without the help or use of any argumentation Answ I have been alway apt to think that there is no other ordinary way of assuring the soul partly because the Scripture no where encourageth us to look for assurance in any other way and partly because to grant an immediate testimony seemed to me to open such a gap to Euthusiasme as it was impossible well to shut and I am somewhat imboldned in that sentiment by the concurrent judgment of a sober judicious Divine Mr. Tho. Blake who in his Treatise of the Covenant thus expresseth himself They that go about to assert an immediate testimony in any will never secure the soul from delusion Sathan will soon find an artifice to counterfeit this testimony and bear witness in the Spirits stead and when we think that we have the Spirit of truth to assure us we shall have the father of lies to deceive But in regard many of eminent piety and learning do assert an immediate testimony it may not be amiss to enquire a little what they mean by it and how they do bound it and then to shew what may be thought of it By this immediate Testimony they tell us that they do not mean any proper whisper or voice such as young Converts mistaking such Scripture phrases as Say unto my soul thou art my salvation are apt to wait for but they say it is a perswasion impressed upon a man suddenly and he knows not how quieting all his doubts and fears and making him chearfull and comfortable If you ask them How a Child of God who is to try all things dare adventure to take any such comfort how he knows it not to be a delusion of Satan they tell us that as there is in the eye a certain in-bred light to make it discern light and colours without a sound and air within the ear to make it discerne the sounds without So there is in a godly man grace a new nature and habitual instinct of heaven whereby it discernes the consolations of Gods Spirit testifying that he is the Son of God some secret and inexpressible lineaments of the fathers countenance in the child that the renewed soul at the very first blush knows and owns it Moreover they tell us 1. That although the Spirit thus testifie without application of any particular word yet he never testifies contrary to the word he never speaks to those who are regenerate though they do not know themselves to be such 2. That the Spirit doth not ordinarily thus testifie but after or in attendance on some ordinance or performance of some duty or after some very great abasement of a mans Spirit and more then ordinary soul-humiliation or after some very hard adventure for God or after some great combat and conflict with temptation 3. That such of the Testimonies of the Spirit do beget but an actual assurance during the present exigence or in order to some present design that God is working thereby Now to give my sense of this opinion 1. The Authors of it seem so to bound it as that it would be uncharitableness to think that they have any ill or pernicious design in it 2. The things which they say are done by impression are not without ratiocination only the ratiocination is not so distinct and explicite as when a man comes to his assurance by that difficult work of examination Philosophers say that what is done by beasts through instinct and impulse is not done without something analogous to ratiocination they commonly give us the examples of such Syllogisms as they suppose to be made by beasts as namely lambs when they come to their dams and flie away from the wolves So I conceive that in all the impressions made on the soul whether they be by way of comfort or incitation to duty there be some characters either in the matter or manner of them either in their holiness or greatness or vehemence or unusualness by which a Christian knows them to be from God and so accordingly rests in them the which characters did he not find he would either not regard them or reject them with abhorrence 3. I would not have any one lay the stress of his hope of heaven on any such impression nor upon the account of any such impression alter his opinion in reference to any point of Doctrine or adventure upon any practice that is in the least questionable unto him If he should I take it he would give the devil great advantage against him and subject himself to infinite delusions as will soon be manifest to him that will be at the pains to read over the discourses of Dr. Casaubon and Dr. Moore concerning Enthusiasme Mr. John Fox our holy and learned Martyrologist had many impressions some of which are taken notice of by his son in the History of his life but did they not sometimes fail him and discover themselves to be neither Divine nor True Let any one judge
them can it seem marvellous that they are troubled and suffered to despair everlastingly VII Many are kept from Assurance through groundless irrational scruples causing them to forbear the use of Ordinances and other sanctified means in which Assurance is usually wrought Would a sick man ever recover health that should be afraid of Physick or a weak man ever recover strength that should abstain from the good wholesom food that is appointed to beget blood and spirits Why no more will they ever meet with God or enjoy the sense of his love who come not near the place where his honour dwelleth they must needs be in the dark who will not open their eyes to behold the Sun of Righteousness needs be in a perpetual thirst who will not draw water out of the wells of salvation to quench their thirst Yet how many are afraid to come to the fire because they are cold and to put on their clothes because they are naked or to come to the Physician because they are so extreamly sick Tell them they must pray they 'l answer no because being wicked their prayers must needs be an abomination to the Lord invite them to the Sacrament of the Lords Supper they 'l tell you that finding not themselves to be in Christ they should but eat and drink judgment to themselves put them upon hearing the Word preached then they have something to object against either the call or the life of the Minister Such scruples as these are the Thieves that do wast the Candle of the Lord the Worms that eat up the hidden Manna the Veils that hide the new Name from our eyes A Conscience truly tender is the fittest subject to receive the seal of the Spirit but a scrupulous Conscience is a very hell upon earth for it either quite takes a man from the direct immediate acts of Gods Worship and Service or else it confines him onely to such keeping him from the duties of his particular calling It is hard to say which extream is more dangerous the one starving the other surfeiting the Soul Obj. But can any one give God too much time or be too Religious and careful about his Soul A. Surely no he cannot have too much of our time unto whom all our time is due nor can any one have too much of that which is his happiness or be too careful about that which if he should lose nothing can be given in exchange for but yet it is possible for us to bestow too much time on some one part of obedience and we do so as oft as we suffer it to justle out all or any of the rest The works of our Callings are the service of God when done in obedience to his Command and with an eye to his glory and for them when so done we may from the Lord expect to receive a reward and therefore when the Devil transforming himself into an Angel of light suggests What wilt thou eat or drink card or spin study any humane Author when thou knowest not but thou maist be in Hell the next moment He must be answered That obeying God sets no one nearer Hell and that though praying be in it self better then any either natural or civil action yet he that commanded it commanded them also and therefore they also are in their season to be done The Devil hath that soul at advantage enough whom he can perswade either not to pray or to do nothing but pray VIII The greatest and most common cause of the want of Assurance is some unmortified lust some secret bosome corruption unto which men give entertainment or at least which they do not so vigorously oppose and heartily renounce as they might Hinc illae lachrymae this is that which casts them on sore straights and difficulties how should it be otherwise seeing God being infinitely wise and holy either cannot or will not reveal his secrets to those who harbour his known enemies in their bosome either cannot or will not regard the whinings and complainings of those who dally with that very sin which galls their consciences and connive at the stirrings of that very lust for which he hides his face from them Doth any one come to his Minister or to his Christian friends and say Is it peace they must all answer What peace so long as thou livest in commission of any known sin or omission of any known duty All doubts and fears are begotten upon sin either real or imaginary if the sin be but imaginary a rectified judgment may scatter the doubts and fears as the Sun doth mists if the sin be real no curing the doubts thence arising but by an unfeigned repentance If I would produce all the Scriptures that prove this I must transcribe the one half of the Bible but it would be needless so to do seeing it seemeth to have been a notion engraven even on natural conscience That sin so defiles persons that till they be washed from it neither they nor their services can be accepted from whence arose the custome of setting Water-pots at their entrance into their Temples or places of Worship and those phrases Eo lavatum ut sacrificem and Num lavabis ut rem divinam facias Quest 5. What are the Motives or Arguments by which we may quicken our selves to look after this sealing work of the holy Spirit of God Answ Is there any need of Arguments to excite us to this Duty Doth not the New Creature naturally pant after Assurance as the Hart panteth after the rivers of water Yea may not the rational Soul seem to desire it Do not all wicked men catch after certainty and frame unto themselves some kind of certainty in this onely miserable that they either build on a false principle or on a true principle falsly applied To doubt of happiness is an heavy burthen but to fear extremest misery that is intolerable and yet thus must every one do till he have either Assurance or those probable hopes that are next of kin to Assurance Shall worldlings do so much to secure their Lands Goods Estates shall they require Bonds Seals Oaths Sureties and yet think all too little and shall we count any thing too much to assure unto our selves the eternal condition of our poor souls In the fear of the Lord let it be considered 1. 'T is onely the assured Christian that can either desire or so much as adventure in cool blood to die all others must needs all their life time be in continual bondage through fear of death Tell not me that some wicked ruffling Gallants who neither have Assurance nor are in any near capacity to receive it are yet very prodigal of their lives for I am speaking of men and not of brutes of those who are guided by Reason and not by Sense of those who are convinced that their Souls are immortal and that it is their greatest folly and misery to lose them not of those who have banished all thoughts of
forementioned places earnest though by the Rhemists constantly pledge for it doth among the Greek Fathers so signifie and the Spirit is a part of that reward which is promised he that hath this Spirit may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in St. Chrysostome's phrase No wonder that he who hath this earnest of the true riches can part with the unrighteous Mammon no wonder that he who is secured of what is his own can lose that which is another mans especially if called to part with it for the sake of Christ who with his own blood purchased the everlasting inheritance for him III. Assurance will marvellously strengthen against the censures and reproaches of wicked men For why should he count it any great matter to be judged of men who knows that God hath justified him What need it disquiet him that the World accounts him an hypocrite who hath Gods testimony that he is sincere What need he be cast down that some do brand him for a factious fellow so long as he sees himself by the Spirit sealed for a son of peace or others call him a Tobias and Sanballat so long as he is assured that he opposeth none but such as are building Babel and not Sion 'T is because our Conscience gives but a dark testimony that we are so disquieted with the railings of those whose tongues are set on fire from Hell Were we but once sure that we are not the men we are represented to be we might then glory in our reproaches and esteem them great riches knowing that they shall work together for good and that they are the badges of our Sonship and that there is a time coming when our righteousness shall shine out as the light and the mouth of every adversary be stopped 1 Pet. 1.14 If ye be reproached for the Name of Christ happy are ye for the Spirit of glory and of God resteth on you We may rejoyce in as much as we are made partakers of Christ's sufferings and conclude therefrom that when his glory shall be revealed we shall be glad also with exceeding joy If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but let him glorifie God on this behalf vers 16. He that hath the testimony of a good Conscience not onely that he is a Christian but also that he suffers as a Christian he may glory that he is accounted worthy to suffer reproach But when a man hath never so clear testimony that he is a Christian if he should suffer not as a Christian but as an evil door or as a busie-body in other mens matters if he should then rejoyce he would but glory in his shame IV. Assurance will beget holy boldnesse in Prayer 't is therefore made one and indeed the chief effect of the Spirit of Adoption to teach us to cry Abba Father Rom. 8.15 to send us to God with as much confidence or more then we go to our Fathers according to the flesh to make us rest satisfied that what we ask according to the will of God we shall have it in due season as surely as if we had it already If we are once assured that an Act of Indempnity and Oblivion is passed and that God is as much our Friend as if there had been no variance betwixt us we may then sure come with boldnesse to the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with a liberty to say what we list provided the matter we pray for be grounded on Divine Precept and Promise provided also we remember that we have to do with him who abhorreth the sacrifice of fools and unto whom our words should be but few full of weight and affection void of all heartless tautologies and vain repetitions Whereas when Assurance is wanting a man is ready to faint very pusillanimous afraid to look up to God under doubts and fears whether ever any thing will come of the requests he maketh whether God would not be as well pleased if he should hold his peace as if he spake There is as much difference betwixt a Christian with and without Assurance as betwixt a Tree in Summer and Winter as betwixt Sampson when his locks were on and when they were cut off he indeed thought when he had lost his Hair to have done as formerly but he soon found by the prevailing of the Philistines that he could not so he that hath lost the witness of the Spirit may think to rub up his graces and pray with as much life and boldness as formerly he did but he shall find himself mistaken Whatever weakneth Evidence weakneth Prayer also Prevailing of Lust darkneth our Evidences it also deadneth us in Praying Psal 40.12 Innumerable evils have compassed me about mine iniquities have taken hold of me so that I cannot look up they are more then the hairs of my head wherefore my heart faileth me His heart that should have furnished him with matter and affection failed him nor durst his eyes look up to the place where Gods honour did dwell In another Psalm he tells us his mouth was shut Mine iniquity is ever before me I am so troubled that I cannot speak Words which at other times he had at his command were now wanting and he stood as it were a mute O let all who complain of straitness and deadness and dauntedness remember what it is that must quicken embolden and enlarge them viz. the witnessing sealing act of the Spirit that once obtained a Supplicant goes on as doth a Ship with full sail where there is Sea-room enough V. Assurance will sweeten the Reading of the Word and the Receiving of the Sacraments For with what delight must he needs read over all the Promises of the Covenant who hath the Spirit assuring him that they are all his With what comfort must he needs behold the Body and Blood of Christ and meditate on the benefits thence flowing who is perswaded that he hath an undoubted interest in them and that his sitting at the Sacramental Table is but a pledge of his sitting with Christ in the Kingdom of his Father and that when he eats the Bread and drinks the Wine he doth but touch and taste of that with the fuller meals whereof he must be satisfied to all Eternity Yea the Laws and Commandements which formerly seemed burthensome will Assurance once gained be accounted not grievous but easie and delightful because a man then feels that love in his heart which is the fulfilling of them yea the very threatnings and curses of the Law which before Assurance cannot but make the heart exceedingly to quake and tremble Assurance once obtained are read and meditated on with the greatest pleasure because a man knows himself through faith in Christ to be delivered from them It is a kind of Hell on Earth when a man goes up and down fearing lest every place of Scripture he meets with should kill him but it is a very Heaven on Earth when a man can look on all things contained
throw away the bread and water appointed by God for the satisfying of those natural appetites then may he hope to perswade the experienced Christian that all his desires after Christ are but the workings of a melancholy phansie or to despise the Body and Blood of Christ the onely things that ever he found to satisfie those desires Obj. What then can the Assured Christian answer every question that a subtil diputant makes can he solve every fallacious argument of a cunning Sophister A. No perhaps he cannot answer any one of his fallacies but he hath such a sense of the reality and preciousness of the things against which the fallacies are framed that he knows them to be but fallacies and cares not much were it not for others sake whether they be ever answered or no. If a condemned Malefactor dead in Law should have his Princes pardon brought him and had accepted it and upon acceptation of it found himself restored to life again and every thing that made his life comfortable unto him how little would he matter it whether he were pardoned by an immanent or transient action or whether he did receive his pardon by an act of the understanding or of the will by one act or by many or whether the acceptation of his pardon were the instrument or the condition of his pardon As little will he who hath a sense of his faith and of his justification by faith matter it how those controversies are decided that have of late years occupied the pens and tongues of so many both learned and unlearned As little doth he matter it I say as to himself though for the sake of others he rejoyceth to see truth accurately handled and rescued from those absurdities where-with adversaries taking advantage from the less cautious expressions of her friends had loaded her What sayest thou now O Christian is this Assurance worth thy seeking after and praying for or is it not Wilt thou give all diligence to make thy calling and election sure or wilt thou still put all to the adventure and leave thy eternal condition at uncertainties Methinks after so many glorious effects of Assurance have been opened every one that nameth the name of Christ should be restless till he have it and should go from ordinance to ordinance till he could say I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine Till he can see his name written in the Lambs book of life till he find the white stone in his hand till he taste the hidden Manna with his mouth and find the Spirit witnessing to his spirit that he may be of good cheer because that his sins are pardoned I would take it for granted that so it shall be were it not that the flesh will alway be drawing back from and framing objections against every thing that requireth diligence and cometh not till after many Prayers and Endeavours Endless it would be to attempt to answer all the cavils of slothfull persons against the work I have been pressing two it may not be amiss to take notice of Object We have known those who have gloried much in their Assurance whose Assurance was never found to produce any of the forementioned blessed effects Answ I have also known those who have boasted much of their great love to Christ and yet made no conscience of keeping his Commandements this did never make me think that universal Obedience was not the fruit of true Love but onely that their Love was not true Semblably when I observe any who say they have Assurance shewing forth their Assurance by none of the fore-mentioned blessed effects I conclude their Assurance to be the counterfeit Assurance or carnal confidence known commonly by the name of Presumption 't is to me so manifest that he who hath Assurance will I. Be above the tormenting fear of death 2. Despise the perishing vanities of the world 3. Sleight and despise the censures of the ungodly 4. Expresse an holy boldnesse in his prayers 5. Take comfort in the Word and Sacraments 6. Abound in Praise and Thanksgiving 7. Kindly mourn for sin and watch against it 8. Not regard cavils against the Truths the power whereof he experimentally feeleth that where I find not these I adventure to say there is no Assurance and I would have all the fore-mentioned particulars made use of in way of Examination as well as Motive that if any one do not find his perswasion of the goodness of his condition accompanied with them he may thence as he hath the greatest reason inferr that it is not wrought in him by the Spirit of God Object But is it not time enough to get Assurance hereafter Will it not suffice if some time before a man do depart out of this world he be sealed by the Spirit Answ 1. Sure he that makes this Objection doth not believe what I have been all along asserting out of Scriptures concerning the benefits of Assurance else he would be hugely desirous not to want it for one moment longer it would be death unto him to be without it till death seize on him 2. No man can have this Assurance but by the Spirit now he is a most free and arbitrary Agent blowing when and where he listeth He who now refuseth his consolations may perhaps want them everlastingly 3. The longer any one stayes without Assurance with the more difficulty will he obtain it at last The longer any one doth walk in the dark the more hard thoughts doth he insensibly take up concerning God and the more unhappily skilfull doth he grow in disputing against his own consolations the longer that the heart hardneth it self through the deceitfulness of si● the more unfit is it to receive the Seal of the Holy Spirit of God What-ever is brought against late death-bed Repentance may be also brought against late death-bed Assurance with this onely difference that whereas Repentance is necessary to the very being of a Disciple Assurance is onely necessary to his well-being Quest 6. What means are to be used for the attaining of this Assurance Answ Before I direct to means it will be needfull that I premise some things I. That I do suppose true solid Assurance to be intended in the Question As for Presumption 1. It is needless to prescribe any means for the getting of it 't is like some ill weeds which in some soils will grow do the Husbandman what he will or can Satan will both plant and water and also give increase unto it and so deep roots it taketh that the very approaches of Death cannot pull it up Nothing more usual then for men that live under the Sun-shine of the Gospel to drop out of a golden dream out of a fools paradise into Hell 2. If it were in the least needfull to give any Directions for the attaining of this presumptuous perswasion I durst not give them for it is the work of Gospel Ministers to throw down to the ground all those buildings that are built with