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A85050 VindiciƦ mediorum & mediatoris. or, the present reigning errour arraigned, at the barr of Scripture and reason. Wherein is discovered the falshood and danger of that late borne opinion, that pretends to an immediate enjoyment and call of the Spirit of God, both above and against its owne fffects, [sic] cause, word, ministry, and witness, in all respects. Occasioned by a pamphlet, intituled, The saints travell to the land of Canaan, or a discovery of seventeen false rests, &c. By one R. Wilkinson, a preacher of this errour about Totnes in the West. In the treatise following, the reader shall finde, most of the maine fundamentall doctrinall truths that this age doth controvert, faithfully vindicated, cleared, confirmed. By F. Fullwood, minister of the Gospell at Staple Fitzpane in the county of Somerset. Fullwood, Francis, d. 1693. 1651 (1651) Wing F2521; Thomason E1281_1; ESTC R202060 131,348 337

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is here held out to be the object of Faith Faith the prime meanes of our salvation and the Scripture the way rule and guide of Faith The practice of this hath attained an honorable record of the men of Berea the Holy Ghost still testifying that they of Berea were more noble then others even in this for that they would not give credit or Faith to the truths delivered by the Apostles themselves further then they made and found the word of Scripture to be the rule thereof they searching the scriptures daily whether these things were so Acts 18. 11. But the men we speake of while they winde up all Religion and rules of Faith into their unadvised presuming spirit what do they less so heinously obnoxious they are to the way of the spirit of truth then to be wise above that which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is written But besides divine Authority seconded also as might be abundantly instanced if occasion did require with the numerous Testimony of the Spirit of God in Holy men of all ages plaine reason proves it viz. That the Word of God or Scripture is the rule of Faith 1. That is and only is the rule of Faith that is of infallible truth But the Scripture is and only is of infallible truth it being the word and minde of truth Therefore the Scripture undoubtedly is and only is the rule of Faith Truth being the proper immediate object of Faith it must needs be the rule Rectum norma sui obliqui therof i. of that that is to be beleived For truth or what ever is streight and right is the rule and measure both of it selfe and that that is Erronious and crooked The Rule of Faith must be certaine and known for if it be not certaine it is no rule at all And if it be not known it is no rule to us But nothing is more certaine nothing is more known then the Holy Scriptures contained in the writings of the Prophets and Apostles wherefore the sacred Scripture is the rule of Faith most certaine and most safe And for the case in hand it is worth our notice that the Scriptures must needs be better known then the spirit in some cases as namely where it is received where it speaketh plainly and the question is concerning the spirit These are Bellarmines own Reasonings not against us but Libertines relying upon Revelations which as they will serve to condemn the Scripture-blaspheming-Papists out of their own mouthes so also to confute our Anti-scripturists in this particular These things are written notwithstanding that we might have the certainty of that wherein we are instructed and that we might beleeve in Jesus and in beleeving have Life Eternal But how many absurdities and dangerous Danger consequences are the issue of the deniall hereof It followes 1. That the scripture is not the word of God it is all one in effect to say so and to deny it to be the rule of Faith for that that is the Word i. the will sense and truth of God revealed must needs be the rule of Faith And if the scripture be not the rule of Faith it may not be received as the Word of God for as we see God by the eye of reaeson in the World through that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Creation and Providence so with the eye of Faith alone in the Holy scriptures as he is there revealed to us by his Prophets and Apostles Thus 2. It robs the Lord of his infinite Glory and injuriously strips the World of the greatest Blessing wherewith ever God in blessing blessed it the scriptures for as to God they are the greatest outward pledge of his admirable favour and as to us the best yea the only ordinary way and meanes of heavenly light life and happiness To refuse the scripture as to the rule of Faith it must of necessity either expose us to the folly of acknowledging unwritten Traditions and to fall professed Papists or worse to the danger of waiting and attending on immediate Revelations and arise to Familisme But since the way of this Errour doth directly lead to the later of these we have a considerable price put into our hand to purchase though short yet seasonable digression touching Revelations of this Quere Qu. Is it not lawfull in these dayes of light to expect Revelations Answ The word Revelation is used in the scripture in the good sense but such Revelations as either take away from or add to the Scriptures and such Revelations as claime to be immediate may not be expected And such are the Revelations we now speake of Such as derogate from i. deny or contradict any part of the scripture is utterly unlawfull and ridiculous and cannot possibly be of the spirit of God For observe When there was but part of the Word express and extant and God shewed at any time by revealing his minde to the Prophets his intention to add an increase and inlargement towards the decreed perfection of the Holy Writ He never argued so much former improvidence or present contradiction to himselfe as by the now reigning spirit of truth to charge the other truth that had been revealed before by the same spirit to be false and Erronious And even as Gods word of six severall daies in that most admirable frame and fabrik of the World doth sing and set forth the praise of the Glory of Divine Wisdome with the sweetest Harmony even so doth the glorious building of scripture though the stones thereof were laid at sundry times by severall instruments and in diverse manners That Land is not surely the Finger of God that endeavours to demolish it yea or to take down a stone thereof But this Errour would remove the very corner stone and with violent hands labours every way to bury the beauty of this building in the ruines thereof denying not only the Word to be the rule of Faith but the triall of Faith at all yea Faith it selfe and Christ himself c. and almost what ever the scriptures affirme unlawfull abominable Revelations For I protest saith our Saviour unto every man that heareth the Words of the Prophesie of this Booke that if any man shall diminish of the Words of the Prophesie of this Booke God shall take away his part out of the Booke of Life and out of the holy City the place you so much boast in and from these things that are written in this Book Rev. 22. 19. That Revelation that adds to the word is as impious unwarrantable also The top stone is laid the work is finished the whole Will and Minde of God is already revealed to us in the scriptures and we may looke for waite for no more Johns writings contemning every thing to be known to the end of the World even till he which testifieth these saith surely I come quickly c. Rev. 22. 20. And yet this Errour will expect more truths yet the scripture being not the rule
neither the spirit infuseth nothing into us while we pray that we had not some kinde of knowledg of before as the spirit in begetting a habit of praier in us at the first it brings things to our knowledge So in the very exercise it brings things to our remembrance viz. Our sins wants c. Gods Fulnesse Goodnesse and promises c. for petition 2. Our mercies priviledges hopes experiences c. For thanksgiving so teaching us how to pray 2. The spirits Office is to assist us in Prayer as well as to teach us to pray bringing things to our sense bearing up our infirmities So stirring up our affections to be carried up to God with our heart might and soul in a Heavenly powerfull importunity that the spirit as a spirit of Praier doth not any way incourage our expectation of an immediate Revelation the spirit only helping our infirmities For we know not what we should pray for as we ought therefore he directeth us the spirit himself making intercession for us with groanings which must be by us though they cannot be uttered Rom 8. 26. Obj. But holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost 2. Pet. 1. 21. Answ Those holy men of God were the men that God made speciall choise of by them to leave his Scripture in the World in so much that had God revealed himself immediately to them it left us no advantage to expect the like The end of all such extraordinary Revelations viz. a visible word to leave Joh. 15. 22. the word without excuse being now attained 2. But remember that these were the men the Prophets whereby God in times past spake unto our Fathers in diverse manners How we have already found and cleared that these diverse manners were all of them meanes and such as stood betwixt a mediate Revelation and an immediate inspiration 3. Lastly Let us consider the Phraze a little neerer it is said they were moved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not said they were inspired Not inspired that they themselves might know it but moved that they might declare it to others and moved in their declaration thereof They were moved i. 1. by Impulsion 2. Guidance As a Scrivener moves his Schollars hand to the paper first and then guides the hand in writing thereupon that it may write and write true So these holy men of God spake and wrote as they were moved by the holy Ghost 1. to speake and write Secondly In speaking and writing so that they could not choose but declare and rightly and truely declare the things that they had seen and heard So the blessed Apostles the great and honorable Pen-men of the Gospell had in a more especiall manner the performance of that promise the Holy Ghost shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you in that their great undertaking But were they not rather moved guided to and in then immediately inspired with the infallible spirit in their glorious Work but in what I have here written concerning the Spirit I leave with submission to wiser and better judgments and pass on to CHAP. IX Of the Word as Judge of Spirits THe fellow of what hath been lately handled comming now to triall is That the Word of God or the holy Scriptures Error is not the Judge or Triall of Spirits This is a Papisticall Tenet Toridem verbis Arg. Now the only Argument that I finde for this part is because it is imagined that thus we set or advance the letter above the Spirit The Judge as so being ever above the Prisoner which we rank into mood and figure thus That which sets the Letter above the Spirit is not to be allowed But that which makes the Word the Judge of the Spirit sets the letter above the spirit Therefore that which makes the word the Judge of the Spirit is not to be allowed Answ The second proposition in answer hereunto is denied by distinguishing as 1. There is a judging or condemning and a judging of or thinking or conceiving of things or persons Now we must be advised that it is not said that the word is to judge the spirit but to judge of the spirit though the first hath its truth and place 2. There is a vertuall and a reall Judge The Law is the vertuall Judge It with a secret kind of vertue even of and in it self condemning the guilty and accquitting the innocent aforehand as it is the rule and square whereby the reall Judge doth actually measure the actions of men and in order to his last and determinate sentence judge of them but observe this judging of may as well precede acquittance as judgment or condemnation And to apply the word or Scriptures in the present sense is not the reall but the vertuall judge i. the Law the rule and measure whereby we judge of our own or others spirits we our selves or others that cal our spirits in question being rather Judges Obj. But thus we go about and is not that worse to lift up men above the spirit of God Answ The answer hereunto will bring us to the nick of the very businesse for we must here be mindefull that the spirit that is now upon the stage is not known but doubted for that which we have the knowledg of what need we put upon tryall Indeed upon assurance of the truth and Divinity of the spirit we speake of the word cannot properly be called the Judge and Triall of it but rather its Proofe and Evidence But as our Spirits are suspitious questionable so only we judge of and try them by Scripture the truth the touch-stone The Law being not made for a righteous man Yet if a righteous man fall under the shadow of Suspition the Law must try and cleere him He is not tried for judgment but satisfaction he is not tried as a good and righreous man but as one that is feared doubted to be an evill doer The Law being made for man and not man for the Law it is inferiour to him yea even his servant in this respect as it serveth to try and judge of suspitious and doubted men No more is the word above but a Servant to the spirit as it is the Judge and Triall of suspitious spirits Moreover 2. The word doth never try any spirit in it self but in its effects it doth properly therefore not judge of the spirit but as it trieth its effects and judgeth of them We finding our waies our thoughts to be truth conclude therefrom that they are guided and acted by the spirit of truth we by the Scriptures likewise trying and measuring mens opinions and practises do thus consequently and accidentally only judge of the spirit Lastly While we make the word of God the Judge and Triall of the spirit we try the spirit only by the word as its own effect and whether it be unreasonable to judge of the fire by its heat the
cause by its effects judge ye Then this is the result and resolution of the case by making the word the triall of the spirits we do no more abase or abuse the Holy spirit of God then we make the cause to stoop as inferiour to the effect by cleering or proving it by the same or then a righteous man is inslaved by the Law when as he is acquitted to liberty by it But somthing it behoveth us to speak in defence of the affirmative part namely That the Word of God and holy The affirmative truth Scriptures is the only Judg and triall of spirits that is to say To end all controversies cleere the truth discover Errour and every false way Which I argue 1. From the matter thus that which contains the Will of God must needs be the judge of the triall of truth and the decider of all Controversie But the Holy Scriptures confessedly contain the Will of God Therefore the holy Scriptures must needs be the Judge of spirits the triall of truth c. The second of these must needs be granted even upon most immediate reason God that is every way truth that cannot ly and speak any thing that is not in his thought or Heart his word must needs containe his mind and will Now for the Consequence in the first proposition viz. That which containes the Will of God must needs be the judg of spirits triall of truth Decider of all Controversies you have most easily the reason of it by considering what it is that the whol world of men do so much argue for what that is that is called and honored with the name of truth by every mouth that speaketh Is it not that very thing which we call the Will and sense of God in other words what is our truth the Helen for which the whole World is at debate and varience but the way the will the virgin truth of Heaven would we know who is true and who a lyar let God be true and every man and spirit else a liar his Word is truth and the measure therefore of it Would we know whether the first in Rectum norma sui obliqui our Land be strait or not the most ready way is by an even comparing it with that that is undoubtedly so So we doubt which way and spirit is of God of truth and which of Satan a liar from the beginning take the fruits thereof the practise and opinions and look into the word for the warrant of them The doubt is whether they be according to Gods Minde his Word revealeth his Minde look there and search the Scriptures The word of God is the Revelation of his Minde whither shall we go for truth or to know what is truth the word is truth Arg. 2 We must either deny the Bible to have the minde and to be the Word of God or else subscribe to this undoubted truth That the word of scripture is the Judge and Triall of truth and spirits From the Charge and Cammand of God concerning the Scriptures the end of Gods intention in giving our use and duty in having them being to try and judge of the spirits by them Isa 8. 20. To the Law and to the testimony if they speake not according to this word it is because there is no Light in them This Text though dis-regarded hath certainly very much in it for the defence and cleering of the truth in hand the whole drift thereof and not only the face of the words directly looking with great respect to our present purpose for here is a cleere command a strait charge we see To the Law and to the Testimony c. the Word of God may be called a Law it containing those rules according to which we must be obedient a Testimony as a standing and visible witnesse and evidence of the Minde and Will of God concerning the World about which we may observe for the better application of the same to our purpose somthing precedent in the verse immediately standing before and somthing consequent in the following words of this same verse The part of the context preceding and observeable is the occasion whereupon this charge is brought in the part of the context subsequent is the reason therof First for the occasion thereof ver 19. It should seem that the People in those daies of old had some wise men among them men wise above what is written who boasting of the spirit a spirit of divination promised an answer and undoubted resolution of all their doubts and inquiries Obj. But what saith the spirit of God as touching these when they shall say unto you inquire at them that have a spirit of Divination c. answer them thus should not a people inquire at their God But it may be demanded now how shall a people inquire at their God Answ Read on and read an answer sufficiently satisfactory To the Law and to the Testimony there and there alone you may know your Gods Minde and finde to your selves satisfaction and quietnesse which is further pressed by the reason and motive already hinted following viz. If they if any man the best Southsayer diviner of them all if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Now did not God know very well that these men were acted by a lying spirit Yes verily but this is spoken for our sakes doubtless that we might have a way to know them also and Southsayers may murmure what their hellish spirit dictates endeavoring to answer by inquiry but rest not here venter not the least weight of credit or faith thereupon untill thou have tried this their spirit by my revealed will written Word For if they speak not according not only not against but if not according to this word it is because there is no true spirit nor light in them All light proceeding from the Father of lights by the beam of his spirit through the Window of his Word both for satisfaction to thy self to the Law and to the Testimony inquire at thy God and for the triall of their spirits to the Law and to the Testimony for if they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Whence we may conclude and conclude with these foure things 1 That spirit that speakes not according to the Word hath no light in it 2 The only Judge and trial of spirits is the written word 3 Upon every doubt and suspition of spirits we are commanded and charged to the Law and to the Testimony 4 So much of Gods will as hath been already revealed hath been alwaies sufficient for his People in generall In Moses his time we read that secret Deut. 29. 29. things belong to God and things revealed to us and not to us alone but to all that shall come after us and to our Children Therefore not only so in Moses time but in these daies of the Prophets to the
see himself in us and not by our eys not through those faculties we had before nor as he is a new form as a new eye or new faculty to us maketh this his seeing of himself in us nothing to us That cannot be a beatificall vision to us which is not our sight thus God seeth himself in every the most stupid yea and most miserable Creature 2. Again if God be indeed our eye as well as light and Object things very different so that as Aqui. expresseth the divine Essence is both the thing seen and Essentia Divina ipsa est quod intelligitur quo intelligitur Aq. upon the question the thing whereby we see both the Object and the faculty And thus truly a new form of our understanding in Heaven is not then the divine Essence ours is not our Essence divine do we not only not cease to be men but even arise to be Gods what now can hinder us for Forma dat nomen esse according to our form even such we are and such we may be called But to conclude and to speak all in a word could we imagine such a thing as that the Essence of God should be the form of the Soule of man doth it therefore inevitably follow that the Soul of man must see and know God in his Essence The Soul of man is the form of the Body yet doth not the Body therefore see the soule yea nor yet the Soul see its own Essence The great Argument that according to The argument for the affirmative Aqnin and others both Philosophers and Schoolemen and Divines maintains and necessitates our seeing of God in his Essence in Heaven is because our happinesse See Aqui. upon the question consists in the knowledge of God But we may reply that do not we know the spirits of our friends yea and our own souls because we do not see them Per essentiam again was not Adam perfect was not he happy yet he confessedly saw neither God nor Angells The scriptures for the affirmative considered in their essences And as reason seemeth to declare against So neither doth scripture for ought that I yet perceive do more then seem to speak for it viz. Our seeing the Essence of God in Heaven The cheifest Texts are only these two 1. The first is this when he shall appear 1 Joh. 3. 2. we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is i say they we shall see the Essence of God But to this we oppose the exposition Beza Camer and Villectus so frequent which taketh it for granted and undeniable that this Him is Cheifely Christ in these words we shall be like the Son of God himself and shall enjoy his sight indeed such as he is now This Exposition is strongly confirmed by that expression before viz. When he shall appear who why surely Christ according to the whole Analogy of the Gospell Which speaks so much for the exercise of Faith and hope concerning the appearance of Jesus Christ our Lord even every where as also by that other viz We shall be like him if compared especially with that of Saint Paul From Heaven we look for a Saviour even the Phil. 3. 20. 21. Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile Body that it shall be fashioned like un to his glorious body The other is we now see through a 1 Cor. 13. 12. Glasse darkly but then we shall see face to face c. The exposition before mentioned teacheth us to construe al this by comparison i. in comparison of what we see now There shall be as much difference betwixt our knowledg of God in Heaven and the knowledg we have of him in this life as there is betwixt our seeing a man in a Compare Gen. 32. 30. with this c. Beza translateth it Coram glass and out of a Glasse Face to Face But why may not this be understood of Christ also God hath not a face Christ hath If we will understand it in a strict sense why not in a litterall sense i so far as it will hold The sense may then be this we here have only some letters of our beloveds which do more mediately and darkly give us some hopes and comforts but this we expect this shall be our happiness another day we shall come into the * Shall see is not in the greek Text. In seculo suturo tam perfectam Dei cognitionem assequemur quam humana mens capere potest c. Morton in Lo. presence of our Lord and Husband seeing Face to face or being face to face We grant that in the World to come we shall attain to so perfect a knowledge of God as our humane minde can take or can be made to take up but as it is finite it cannot comprehend that that is infinite nor see or discern that that is too pure and excellent for it Divine Essence 3. If any man add that we in the resurrection shall be as the Angells of God and that therefore we shall see God then in his Essence I answer that that is to be restrained to the particular purpose and case there spoken to We shall be as the Math. 22. 30. Angells not marrying or giving in marriage 2. Crysostome concludes from this very Text that we shall never see the Essence of God The Angells shall never see God in his Essence and our Estate in Heaven is promised to be but equall to the Angels therefore we when in Heaven shall never attain to see God in Essence so immediately Deum nemo vidit unquam nec ipsae Caelestes Essentiae ipsa dico Cherubim Seraphim ipsum ut est nunquam videre potuerunt Sed hominibus non promittitur nisi equalitas Angelorum Chrys Hom. 14. in Joh. Now to bring these premises to a conclusion as lesse in the same respect can never be more then more So cannot the Estate of Grace our recovery inchoate here bring our Souls to a cleerer and more immediate discerning of God and spirits then our recovery consummate in glory in Heaven hereafter If the fullest injoyment of the spirit of God in Heaven shall not give us to attain to the knowledge of God in his Essence how shall that partiall assistance thereof in this life make us so suparlatively perfect think ye yea even a doubt of the first doth withall certainty deny the later the improbability of that reckons and concludes this impossible 2. And those very scriptures that seem to take into favour the opinion questioned viz. that in Heaven we shall see God and Angells in their Essence doth expresly reject the Error viz. of our discerning of spirits immdiately in this world As for that of Ioh. 3. we shall not see him as he is till the time of his appearance and in the Text to the Cor. Paul professeth that though he shall know as he is known yet here he himself knoweth but in
whether Christ be in them is by a self-searching examination not by a waiting for the immediate invisible shining of the Spirit for its own discovery and evidence Arg. 3 A reflecting upon and reasoning from Grace for Evidence of our true enjoyment of God is but a judgeing of Gods presence by his working what absurdity or but a knowing of the Cause by the Effect and is this a strange thing I would fain know what hinders but that the Spirit may give us to see himself in his own work when as we behold the Creation and Providence of God this is that that may be known of God So the new Creation and Government within us is that that may be known of the Spirit Arg. 4 Since God is too wise a Work-man to make more work then needs why may not he make use of the Reason of man so easie and open and ready a way in this particular Case of Evidence as well as in those particulars following wherein I shall argue The Holy Ghost doth exercise the reason of man to evidence to him this state of Nature then why may he not by the same faculty Evidence to man his state of Grace These are in themselves proper contraries and both equally Relative unto man the one the depravation the other the recovery and reparation of his Nature yet we finde the first foot-steps of God for the Evidence of sinne in our first Parents trod in such a path God comes towards them to finde out and convince them of their sinne and Rebellion in eating c. How By a reasonable expostulation And hath the Spirit of Christ any other way then this according to the Gospell The Truth is my witnesse the Spirit at his comming this glorious dispensation of the Spirit shall convince the World of sinne John 16. 8. the Spirit may discover sinne long enough and I never see it unlesse it be with the eye of Reason and shew me Grace long enough and I never be comforted unlesse I see it with the same eye He shewes us the things of Christ but must not we see them too John 16. 14. else how shall we glorifie him God may accuse but he cannot convince us of sin without the enlightning of our own Reason and therefore that his ancient People might be convinced of their sinne and that he did not accuse them without a cause Come now let us reason together saith the Lord Isa 1. 18. Therefore to conclude as the Reprobate shall not be cast into Hell untill they be fully convinced of their sin by most cleare and invincible Evidence having all their Objections answered their mouths quite stopped when they have read their Debts in the Book that are in their own judgement sufficient to cast them into the Eternall Dungeon Matth. 25. 45. c. So if any of the Saints want the knowledge of the ground of Assurance while they are in the World they shall it seems with their reason enlightned by Christ at that day know it before they enter into his Kingdome Matth. 25. 37. to 40. The Holy Ghost maketh use of the reason of Man for his Conversion then why not also for his Consolation Is it not the same Object that doth convert Man to and comfort him in God On the one hand Hell and on the other hand Heaven and is it not the same Light that doth discover the same Object though for these divers Ends doth it not then require the same Organ the same Faculty Reason enlightned is the eye whereby we apprehend the terrour of Hell Law Justice c. with the glory of Heaven Grace and Happinesse and are changed in our thoughts and wayes and surely also whereby we apprehend the same Objects and our selves as freed from the one kind and interessed in the other and are ravished with joy unspeakable and glorious God is the Primum movens and he must first move our Primum mobile before the inferiour Orbes will turn towards him the will having its immediate Light and Evidence not from the Spirit of God but the mind the Candle of the Lord if the understanding be darkned it walks in darkness and seeth no light the heart is blinded but if this Candle be inlightned by the Spirit of God it is subservient not onely to the will but consequently to the whole Man in its turning from Sin and Nature to God and Grace Now the same light that doth convert the minde by Reflection doth comfort and refresh the heart The Holy Ghost doth work by our reason in the Creation of Faith then why not also for Hope and Assurance God hath provided a Saviour for Sinners the way of their Salvatian by him is beleiving in him Now that God might work up the Souls of sinners to beleive and be saved he hath ordained a Ministery hath put into its hand a word of Reconciliation to shew them the necessity and worth of a Saviour by convincing them of Sin and Righteousnesse offering them a Saviour and Life and Heaven with him will they but beleive beseeching in Christs stead that through him they would be reconciled to God and saved and all this is that he might not force but win Men to the Faith that Faith might come by Reason and in the day of Gods Power his Psal 110. People might be a willing People as we will not beleive so we cannot be assured but by Reason they are both Acts of the same Faith And now what should priviledge the reflex Act of Faith more then its direct from being beholding to Reason I know not The Scriptures say He that believeth shall be saved my reason being inlightned inabled to see the truth and stableness of the Proposition is effectually perswaded to close with this offer and to beleive But now I beleive cannot the same faculty of reason inlightned and assisted by the same Spirit reflect Consolation herefrom He that beleives shall be saved but I believe therefore I am sure I shall be saved this is the Joy of my Salvation What hinders but that the same reason that upon the perswasion of the truth of the Gospell caused me to beleive may upon the assurance of the truth of my Faith together with the veiw of the Glory of Salvation cause me to rejoyce because I did not doubt But he that beleiveth shall be saved therefore I beleived so for that I am assured I beleive I am assured of salvation and therefore am at rest What more neede of the immediate shining of the Spirit in us for Faith of Evidence then for Faith of Adherence as I reason about misery for the work of the first so I reason about happiness for the Act of the second that is the greatest difference Yea insomuch as we having assurance in Adam and not Faith Faith is the more difficult work Secondly insomuch as it being more difficult to attain to any habit then to Act from that habite when attained to act Faith of Evidence is far
have most plainly made it appear out of the Scripture I suppose Christs Will and Way is to make use of his effects in giving us assurance of his favour or presence we must as well acknowledge Christ to be our Lord as challenge him to be our Husband as his way is best in it selfe so let it seem to us For who art thou that repliest against God what is this lesse then a resistance of the Spirit with Carnall reason and our vain imagination while we pretend and plead for him Yet further consider and whether of the two gives most satisfaction to the Wife or best assurance of her Husbands love the expression thereof by mouth and words or its signall Testimony by life and actions Judge ye Moreover we ought to observe that our Saviour is not so properly our Husband here while we are but espoused or betrothed to him there is a day appointed which is not yet come for the Marriage of the Lambe and if we may speak Humano more or after the manner and custome and practice of Men for a Lover to assure his Beloved of his heart affection by the Speciall motions and effects thereof is not more strange then common especially if we commend this course and practice by these three considerable ingredients 1. Our beloved is at a distance of place and absent from us Secondly there are others plead interest in him and such as are inconsistent with ours Lastly we are too apt to delude our selves and to be deluded in this Case Affection is blinde and our hearts are deceitfull and that above measure But lastly were it acknowledged by al to be the most reasonable way among creatures of one nature and language to make their love known by word of mouth whil this bears Analogy to Christ the soul there is I conceive much difference for as a man and one that knows but in part according to my measure I must thus yet humbly Judge that Christ I mean not with regard to his power as absolute but as limited by his revealed Will in condescention to our reason and shallow capacity Christ cannot acquaint himself to the soul of man in such an immediate way and manner as is now discoursed and first not in his Person by reason of distance of place Secondly not in his spirit because of distance in natures to me and yet I humbly submit to higher apprehensions yet to me this seemes defended by the hand of sound and upright reason the presence of Christ in his Spirit is of too subtil and spiritual a nature to fal under or any way to bediscerned by such gross This is largly discussed in Chap. 18. and carnall Creatures as the Sons of men but by and through a medium I mean its effects is any thing that comes under the name of Spirit immediatly or in it self decernable to us Let us bethink our selves with what Eye do we see Spirits Is it not the Eye of Reason which alwayes Judgeth of their presence by Effects Can the wisest man tell me What Man or Beast or Tree is alive hath its formall Spirit in it but by the effects or motions of it Now the Spirit of the Lord is that pure Spirit infinitely far more pure Spirit the very name of spirit being grosse and carnall with respect thereto how shall we then judge of that immediately A man need not indeed to argue his life to himselfe by its motion c. For he knoweth he is alive by the first light and instinct of nature in himself So would we conceive that the Spirit of Christ did properly inform us and was part of our Essence we might know it to be in us in a way more immediate but this is the grossest absurdity imaginable Till then let us follow the Dictate of reformed Reason and hear our Saviour speaking his love by his Actions and revealing his Presence by his Effects whose spirit is therefore compared to Winde by his Word that blowes where it listeth and no man knoweth whence it comes nor whither it goes whose presence is knowable onely by its Effects upon us even so is every one that is borne of the Spirit which is onely perceivable by us as it makes a disturbance in the Naturall Man as it breathes into us Spirituall Life as it sweetly blowes upon the Spices Graces of our Souls and moves us dayly forward towards the blessed Haven Heaven Such gracious Effects and Operations in us The Truth Confirmed But so much may serve for the weakning of the Errour now a few things may be added for the further clearing of the Contrary Truth namely that though the spirit doth onely yet doth it not alone at least ordinarily much lesse of necessitie Evidence it selfe or testifie our true enjoyment of God For there are three that beare witnesse on Earth the Spirit and the Water and the Blood 1 Joh. 5. 8. and these three agree in one i. e. in one end the enjoyment of God Vers 10. With our right and interest in eternall Life Vers 11. And as they agree in their end so in themselves as the means or testimony the Spirit doth witnesse to the purenesse of the Water the truth of our Sanctification and in the Water we see the efficacy of the blood for our Regeneration Generatio fit per Sanguinem per aquam ablutio Indeed the Spirit doth witnesse eminently Zanch. and efficiently but Water and Blood materially and our Spirit and Reason instrumentally So the Spirit witnesseth with our spirits through or by our graces and qualifications that we are the Children of God Rom. 8. 16. As the spirit of God is derived into us through the sacred Ordinances so is it discovered in us by its holy effects therefore is it thus plainely sayd to witnesse with our spirits c. in this 8. of the Romans which Chapter read with impartiall and due observation it is so abundantly full for the present purpose is doubtlesse sufficient to end the controversie betwixt us The case resolved there seemes very neer the case in hand Viz. How wee shall know whether we be in a state of life or death Vers 13. The Efficient is Gods spirit the Instrument ours Vers 16. and the Medium or matter of the argument Viz. The rules layd downe for the tryall of the case such as follow if yee live after the flesh yee shall dye well but if yee through the spirit doe mortifie the deeds of the flesh yee shall live Vers 9 10. The second Argument in order hereunto is Our having the spirit of Christ from the effect to the cause if we doe mortifie the deeds of the flesh it is through the spirit we have the Spirit and if we have the spirit we live therefore the spirit is a spirit of life and as it makes us free from the Law of sin and consequently death v. 2. This Argument is expresly contained v. 9. Now if any man have not the spirit of Christ he
is none of his But this seems to infer another Argument as subordinate to the main Conclusion taken from the spirit not onely as a Cause but as a necessary effect consequent signe adjunct or companion of Christs interest in us or relation to us he that hath not the spirit is none of Christs but he that hath it then is his his Disciple his member his Brother c. Now how shall we know that we have the spirit By sanctification for if the spirit that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Jesus from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies c. vers 9. 11. And how shall we know that Christ hath relation or interest in us by that inseparable consequent or adjunct of the spirit for if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Lastly and that that brings the Conclusion Argument together is an Argument drawn from the highest and choisest effect of the Fathers love and our Saviours Office the principal causes of our salvation viz. our sonship vers 14. For as many as are led by the spirit of God are the sons of God Or we may interpose between the terms of this truth Christs interest in us then thus those that are led by the spirit of Christ are his and those that are Christs i. his Members Brethren are by adoption the sons of God and then it is most clear that if sons then heirs co-heirs with Christ vers 17. and are for resolution of the case propounded in a state of life These and such like are the Rules by which a mans spirit according to Gods Word examining his condition doth either acquit or condemn if this speak peace viz. that he is a childe of God and an heir of Heaven this is the testimony and answer of a mans own spirit but to make this our testimony clear and demonstrative sure and infallible the spirit it self beareth witness with our spirit c. not onely together with as two diverse Witnesses of the same truth but with i. nor yet onely with the qualification of our spirit the matter of evidence Water and Blood but lastly and especially with i. with our spirit as subordinate in the work through by so with making use of the testimony of our spirit sealing and clearing our rational evidence with the truth and light of his that we are the children of God Nothing can indeed perswade us of our sonship to God but the Spirit of Adoption yet the spirit perswadeth us as rational Creatures viz. as we have heard by inabling us to reason our relation to God by Christs relation and interest in us and that by the having of his spirit and that by its holy effects of mortification of sin and spiritual life which gives occasion to close as we began that If ye live after the flesh ye shall die but if ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the spirit ye shall live therefore Examine your selves know ye 2 Cor. 13. 5. not even your own selves how that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be Reprobates and the Lord give you the comfort of the witness in your selves with the contest of the spirit to be an infallible assurance of your adoption to God Col. 1. 9. and of the truth of this point and for this cause also godly Reader since the day you heard of me do not I beseech thee cease to pray that with respect both to one and the other I may fight a good fight and finish my course that henceforth I may be comfortably assured with holy Paul that there is laid 2 Tim. 4. 8. up for me a Crown of righteousness which the righteous Judge shall give me at that day c. CHAP. V. Of the knowledge of Christ after the Flesh or in his Mediatorship BEfore we have reconciled the Spirit and its effects our gracious qualities infused by it But this following Chapter will ingage us to atone the same spirit on its Causes behalf the Person of Christ which I may call without offence the cause of the spirit both with regard to its Person and Office First the Person of Christ is the cause of the person of the Spirit by derivation the Spirit being the joynt breath and issue both of the Father and Son Secondly the Person of Christ is the cause of the Office of the Spirit first by merit 1 Pet. 1. 2. Secondly by mission Joh. 14 15 16. cap. Therefore is the holy Ghost in the Gospel so peculiarly stiled the Spirit of Christ Yet this their spirit and the Spirit of God by them so called how ungratefully wicked doth even stab at Christ himself with these two erroneous Points namely 1. That the Person of Christ is but a form type or shadow onely or a bare representation of the Spirit at his coming as the types and shadows of the Law were before of the coming of Christ See false rests in pag. 103 104. 2. That Christ is not to be the object or Medium of Faith i. We are not to believe on Christ as our Mediator and Saviour See the fifteenth false rest The first of these the Seekers own but the last is the very dregs of Socinianisme which affirms that Christ came not among men to procure satisfaction to God but to be an Object of imitation to men No wonder we have had boisterous Times of late while such Devils such Errours as these have been conjuring up Yet how great a wonder it is that such grosness of darkness should call it self light and that to the face of the Sun it self in this our day of Gospel when knowledge abounds amongst us But I shall not so far question my salvation as to receive my Saviour into doubtfull disputings yea doubtless the mention of such Errours as these is sufficient confutation and confusion of them also in all humble ears and godly judgements Yet though there be not the least shadow of Reason that will entertain either the one or the other there is one notable Scripture that seems to some eyes to cast a very favourable glance and countenance to the first of these Errours viz. That the Person of Christ is but a type of the spirit a dispensation Errour and form that is ruined or dissolved by the coming of the spirit The Scripture Scripture countenancing it is the 1 Cor. 5. 16. Yea though we have known Christ after the flesh yet henceforth know we him so no more To make this Scripture pass for them the Abbettors of this Errour have stamped upon it this Interpretation viz. That the knowledge of Christ after the flesh was the dispensation of his Person a fleshly dispensation which Paul had formerly been under but since the dispensation of the spirit the dispensation of Christs Person it chiefly meant the Office of his Preisthood is dissolved is dissolved to Paul though I have known Christ after the flesh and
of Faith sufficient for it but I Protest unto every man that heareth the words of the Prophesie of this booke if any man shall add vnto these things God shall add unto him the Plagues that are written in this Booke Rev. 22. 18. Immediate Revelations may neither be lawfully expected by us For though it was necessary or at least most convenient for God intending to blesse the World at the length though gradually with a standing visible mean for its recovery in knowledge c. To reveale his will at the first in a more immediate manner to some yet if I mistake not we never read of any such inspirations so absolutly immediate way of Revelation as my Antagonists boast of God for the most part making use of some kinde of mean more or lesse through which he conveyed his minde to the men of God themselves He did not distill inspire and reveale it into them much lesse into the People in so secret insensible a manner as this age mentions Which we shall further cleere unto you by a few meditations upon this scripture viz. God who at sundry and in diverse manners spake of old to our Fathers by the Prophets hath in the last daies spoke unto us by his Son Heb. 1. 1 2. These words may testifie not only that but how God hath declared himselfe to the World both in the first and last dispensation But the question in hand is not about the truth but the manner of these Revelations Quest First then how did God declare himself in the time of the Law Answ This Place informeth that then in diverse manners he spake to our Fathers by the Prophets Observe God did not of old before any part of the Bible was written immediately reveale his minde to our Fathers i. the People but by the meanes of his Prophets Gods speaking to our fathers by the Prophets here must needs be meant of his speaking to the Prophets and rather in then by them to our Fathers For the Prophets for ought I have read had only one way of revealing i. by voice the Word and Will of God to the People but here this speaking must therefore be the speaking of God to the Prophets since it is as that was not only at sundry times but in diverse manners also God spake that truth unto the Prophets that they were to declare to the People in diverse manners i. not immediately but by diverse waies and meanes Somtimes by Vrim and Thummim somtimes by a voice somtimes by dreames somtimes by visions c. these are all mediums in and through which God cannot reveale himself immediately These are all carnall waies of Revelation when compared with our late inspirations the spirit of our daies not only speaking into but in them without the help of the shadow of any meanes whatsoever But Hath in these last daies spoken unto us by his Son Whence observe 1. The Prophet of Gods People in the daies of the Gospell is the Son of God 2. The way wherein the son of God giveth us his Fathers minde and Councell is his word voice or speaking to us 3. Untill the very last of daies shall expire we must look for the Minde and Will of God in the word of Christ his Son Hath in these last daies c. 4. That in these very last of daies the Son of God instructeth immediately by speaking unto us by his Word rather then by speaking immediately in us by his spirit Object Then what use of the spirit is not it promised to lead us into truth yea and to put into our mindes what we shall say when occasion serves c. Answ We admire and adore the promise and blessing of the spirit in all its use yet doth not the spirit or breath of Christ still come with his Word see the Office of the spirit declared expounded Joh. 14. 26. vers 25. These things saith our Saviour have I spoken unto you being at present with you but the Holy Ghost ver 26. shall come and teach you all things but how it is immediately expounded for he shall bring all things to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you Christ by his word both writ and preached declareth to the World his Fathers Councell As writ his minde is revealed as preached his Word is revealed to the World but the spirit can only take off the vaile from our hearts and make it effectuall and thus it doth its Office and maketh the Word to be spirit See Joh. 6 36. and life and the Ministers thereof the savour of Life unto Life and the ministration 2 Cor. 2. 16. of the spirit If it be in point of truth the spirit brings the word to our mindes or understanding and thus it is said to lead us into truth the way of truth is already laid in Scripture the spirit Joh. 16. 13 only leads us into it For he shall not speake of himself but whatsoever he shall heare that shall he speake if in point of Grace and Comfort The spirit doth worke these in us Joh. 1. 17. 17. by and in the use of the Word thus bringing the Word of Christ to our remembrance i. to our knowledge and improvement approving himself according to the Scripture in all respects as a Rom. 14. Acts 9. 31. spirit of truth and Holiness and consolation Obj. But he is also a spirit of supplication to us and doth he not then immediatly inspire when as he speaketh our praiers in us Answ Here is to be avoided a double fallacy 1. There is a difference observable betwixt the spirit speaking in us with respect to God by Prayer and with respect unto our selves by truth the sense we are now about Besides there is a double meaning in this little particle preposition in as in these two propositions it is used His speaking in us by praier is rather a speaking by us But his speaking in us by teaching is a speaking immediately into us 2. But more plainly the spirits speaking in us by Praier or as he is a spirit of Praier in us is not happily to be taken in such an immediate sense and way as some may think of it implieth as I can conceive only 1. A teaching us 2. An helping us to pray 1. The spirit as a spirit of praier teacheth us to pray either before praier or in our praying 2. The Spirit teacheth us how to pray before we pray by preparing our hearts to praier by meanes and by degrees by bringing unto us the knowledge of our estates wants the mercy and fulnesse of God by the word the Law and Gospel and by its daily increasing this habit of praier by daily acts Quest therefore it is that we never see a perfection of ability in the performance of this Heavenly duty of praier in instanti but by degrees But secondly It teacheth us to pray in the very exercise now is not that immediately Answ I answer not totally immediately
not knoweth not God i. He that doth censoriously uncharitably contemn or condemn his Brethren doth not shew himself by love and the carriages of love knoweth not God for God is love Vers 8. Quest But what need of these Rules Is not the spirit of Truth in it self sufficient to discover Error and Heresie I answer Answ Though I have already before sufficiently spoke to immediate Revelations of the spirit I adde that the light of the Text doth clear the contrary for who were they to whom John writeth Were they not such as had the Spirit of God Vers 4. Yet this command of trying the spirits reacheth and immediately falleth on them as if most fit and properly convenient for such as have the spirit to try the spirits though they are Children of Light they cannot immediately discern betwixt things that differ but these must use means for the exercise of their spirit of discerning these must try the spirits Quest But those spirits which are of God have not they sufficient Light with them to discover themselves Answ No not immediately for we must try the spirits whether they be of God if of God we must know them to be so by triall and examination But it is now high time to shake hands with that Text and to weigh the Consequence of this bold Deniall of the Word of God to be the judge and triall of spirits For then Thou canst not possibly convince another of the Error of his spirit upon good Grounds What course wilt thou take with such a spirit Wilt thou tel him that thou art assured that he is in an Error And will not he answer with assurance as stout that he is in the truth And if thou wouldst convince him by reasoning the Case can this be done without some outward Rule and Ground to which both parties acknowledging it Umpire must make their Appeal Now this outward third this Rule Judge Umpire must of necessity be the Word of God or some humane Tradition The Word of God is silenced in the Case by this same spirit and what a Popish Absurdity followeth A man of an erroneous spirit the Word of God not being his triall cannot possibly convince himself of Error upon good Grounds For what shal be the word or Rule of Truth for his instruction reproof conviction if the Word of God be not The spirit that is undoubtedly true But then I demand how shall we know that spirit that is of Truth to be so Or since None know the things of a man but the spirit of a man that is in him How shall I know what is the truth of such a spirit of truth in any man but by his word alone and now is not the word of Man preferred above the Word of God The Word of God must not and must the word of man be the judge and triall of truth and spirits The word of a frail and fallible man exalted above the Word of the true and infallible God The word of a private single man take up the place and Office of the publique Word of God that hath been so highly honored and had in so famous acknowledgment and credit by all religious holy men of all Ages successively Profanum vulgus this way speaks every man true and God alone a Lyar Let God arise and let his Enemies be scattered May not the Word in this use laid aside every man make his own spirit to be the Rule and Standard of all Truth and Faith While one more presumptuous then the rest intrudeth his Tenets for Truth another bringeth in his so a third so a fourth c. Every man self-conceited beleiving his own way and opinion to be truth why may not every man claim the same priviledge By what Law is he forbidden The Law of Gods Word that is repeal'd the Law of spirits they are all equal How shall we now be reconciled What can end the Controversie Whom shall we hear Whom follow How shall we become of one minde one Faith What Town-clerk can allay this Hubburl Confusion Disturbance and make Peace and Union Either every man must yeild retreat draw back to himself into his own opinion going away quickly guided by his own spirit the blinde corrupted Dictates of decayed Nature or by a proceeding and that of necessity either by a Sword or Vmpire First by the Sword one urging thou shalt yeild to me another threatning subscribe to me a third swearing you both are heretical and I am alone in truth you both must and shall be of my way c. untill a Bacillous Argument end the Controversie the strongest arm be the best spirit and the Sword hath cut and decided the matter Or secondly by an Vmpire all pitching upon one to mediate betwixt them to end and reconcile their Differences to whom they must give all power and soveraignty to command them Truth Peace and Union thus creating to themselves a Pope and themselves Papists But to prevent all this let us hold-fast what we have received that the Word of God is both the Rule of Faith and the judge and triall of spirits CHAP. X. Of the Word as profitable for Instruction HAving reconciled the spirit to its Word whether taken absolutely or respectively to our use in the whole body or bulk thereof we now have occasion to make peace betwixt the same spirit and some special parts or particular uses of the same Word for this spirit that claimes to be the Spirit of God denieth the Word to be any way profitable either for instruction obedience or consolation in its Doctrine Commands or Promises First then it denieth the Word to be profitable in its Doctrine for our teaching and instruction Now the Scripture False rest pag. 45. l. 14. saith he doth not reveal Christ within any man his sense must be that the Scripture is not the means appointed or made use of by God for the spiritual teaching of the soul of man This being so general to the particulars behinde we shall have direct and just occasions of Answer hereunto in answering to them yet for present satisfaction I make a Proposal of these two Queres If the Word of God is not a means to reveal Jesus Christ within any man what then is meant by such Attributes of it as are found Heb. 4. 12. The Word of God is lively and mighty in operation and sharper then any two edged sword and entereth through even to the dividing of the soul and of the spirit and of the joynts and of the marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and of the intents of the heart we say not the Word without the spirit but yet the spirit with the Word doth according to most sure and frequent experience all whatever we here have read therefore it is otherwhere called the Sword of the Spirit Eph. 6. 17. and what cannot that do when set home by such a hand Yea the weakness of God is stronger then men but now the
our Soules c. Though we walk through the valley of the shadow of death let us fear no evill concluding thence with the Psalmist that surely goodnesse and mercy Psal 21 shall follow us all our daies and we shall dwell in the house of the Lord for ever 4. And to conclude what is reckoned by God as a more hainous aggravation of the sin of unbleife or mistrust of providence then this means and help of experience for which to passe by many let us fix our serious eye and thought upon that notable Testimony recorded by David against the People of Israell with whom because they beleeved not in God nor trusted in his salvation though he had commanded the Clouds from Heaven above and given them of the Corn of heaven c. Therfore Psa 78. 21 22. 23. 24. the Lord was wroth and a fire was kindled against Jacob and anger also came up against Israell Which is aptly appliable to us in the daies of the Gospell For if we sleight the Experiences of mercy and deliverance hardning our hearts after Heb. 3. 4. Ca. this sinfull similitude according to the judgment of the Author to the Hebrews we shall also fall after the same example of unbeleife chap. 4. 11. CHAP. XVIII Of the spirit of Christ as the Soules immediate Rest and Evidence WE have at length dispatched this Errour on the absolute consideration of it Wherin as you have if very busy to oppose the spirit to its effects cause word Ministry and witnesse so you have us as carefull to make and keep an answerable Peace and Concord betwixt them We are now ascended to the Bench that having called this exorbitant spirit to its last triall we might answerably passe a sinall judgment and sentence upon it But as before we have found it erroneous and and guilty in an absolute capacity so the triall of it here is as it is respective unto its speciall end as a Rest and Evidence The end and conclusion of this Way and Errour is that since all the fore-handled The Errour particulers are but false and unwarrantable means and helps c. The spirit immediate and as alone is the only all-sufficient means to the Soul for all ends and purposes whatsoever but especially fort its Rest and Evidence The specialty subjoyned as being neerer to the shadow of scripture and reason and more dearly imbraced commended by my Antagonists then any and all other of the uses of their spirit I shall cheifely and only question here viz. Whether the spirit be alone and immediately the only all-sufficient evidence of it self or Gods favour to us Though the vanity hereof hath been discovered all along while the right way of means hath been cleered and confirmed in every particuler of it yet my present undertaking shall more directly demonstrate the same and condemn it first even out of the mouth of that very Medium and argument as Umpire betwixt us that this way it self hath chosen and every False rest Pag. 90. 30. and many other places where appealed to against us viz. that is not to be rested upon as an infallible Evidence that may be either true or false Which Medium we grant could the false and erroneous assumption viz. that the truth of our Evidence is not knowable have been made good would have undeniably concluded against us that the best of our Evidence is but fallible and in their sense a false Rest. But as we have fully vindicated the truth of our against the spite and power of this by them abused argument so we shall by the light of the same reflected upon them plainly manifest the fallibility and weakness of this their Evidence The Argument may be thus framed That which for ought we can possibly 1. Argument against the spirits immediate witnesse gather may be true or false cannot be an infallible and undoubted Evidence But the spirit as alone and without the use of any means and considered abstractedly from its effects for ought we can possibly know may be true or false Therefore the spirit as alone without use of any means c. Cannot be infallible and undoubted Evidence There is nothing here questionable but the second proposition viz. that the spirit as alone without use of any means abstracted from all its effects may for ought we can possibly know be true or false which is also cleer from scripture and reason according to scripture 1. First These direct and most visible inferences from 1. John 4. 1. c. Might wholy satisfie as 1. There are false as wel as true spirits 2. The false as well as the as good and true spirit hath access to knock at the hearts of Saints 3. The Saints may be apt to beleeve both the false as well as the true spirit 4. The Saints are forbidden to beleeve every spirit 5. The Saints and such as have the spirit of God cannot discern spirit from spirit but by Triall 6. Therefore it is not commended only but commanded as we see even upon such to try the spirits Beloved beleeve not every spirit but try the spirits whether they be of God for there are many false Prophets gone out into the World The Gleaning after the full Harvest we formerly have reaped from this Text may be gathered thus Our Hearts lying open to the various suggestions both of the good and evill spirit the great question is how we shall know which is the good and which is the evill that we put not evill for good and good for evill how we should discern which is the comming of the spirit of God to make it to us an infallible Evidence Moreover my great Antagonist himself acknowledging that indeed there is no form though never so glorious but Satan will transform himself into it there is no working of the spirit 〈◊〉 God Pag. 127. within man but he will resemble it So that none shall be able to know whether it be true or false untill Christ come in c. how then shall we know in the light of Christ this we grant But how doth Christ enlighten immediately without the use of meanes then I should demand why should not Christ evidence the truth of his word as well as the truth of his spirit immediately to us 2. Again why doth not the spirit while it evidenceth it self discover also every false and erroneous spirit immediately to us as he saith the true rest sheweth us the vanity of every false Pag. 34. lin 18. 3. And then why doth the spirit command us here not to beleeve every spirit much more what need of triall of the spirits or any marks or outward rules Ver. 1. 2. 3. 6. whereby we might know the spirit of truth and the spirit of Errour The Text is thus far most cleer to all that the spirit that dictates to or dweleth in us may be true or false for ought we know until we try and examine it by outward
let a man of reason judge 3. Things especially do make this difficulty more difficult this impossibility more impossible then the rest The First respects the nature of God himself and is its transcendent purity In comparison whereof all other spirits are to be imagined even as Bodies The second proceeds from this and is the distance there is betwixt our capacity and nature and this infinite purity and the last is from the unconceivable subtilty of Satan changing himself into an Angell of light who in his very ministers would deceive if possible the very Elect and whose Ministers themselves as our Saviour warneth cannot be discovered but by their fruits And let us be assured that if the good spirit will perswade us of the truth of it self without tryal much more wil the evil Truth seeks no Corners but the deceiver the Prince of the powers of darknesse he hates the light because his deeds are evill and dare not come to tryall Obj. Though naturall men have no better no other faculty of discerning then the eye of Sense and reason yet we hope that the beleever hath an eye of Faith wherewith he is able to see far above and beyond the gift and ability both of sense reason Answ And therefore he assuredly partakes of such Joyes as neither eye hath seen ear hath heard as never entred into the heart of a naturall Man to conceive of I answer that Faith is not another power and faculty of knowing distinct from reason It is but a higher and more noble act and excercise of reason being seated in and acted by the reasonable soul * Altior cognitio de Deo in hoc vita habetur per gratiam quam per naturalem rationem Ut lumen naturale intellectus confortatur per infusionem luminis gratuiti Par. 1. Aquin sum quis 13. art 13. There is indeed a higher knowledge of God in this life had by Grace far above what is attained by naturall reason yet this is not without but by the heightning and improving of naturall reason Grace not destoying but perfecting nature is Grace or the spirit the light yet certainly reason is the eye of Faith it I mean reason being lightned by the spirit and it only doth discover the ground and receiveth and giveth us the incouragements of Faith By Faith the understanding is alwaies Tides cognitio quaedam est in quantum intellectus determinatur per sidem ad aliquod cognoscibile Ibid. determinated to that that is knowable And what ever we beleeve is known and the cause why we beleeve it is also known by the understanding a reasonable Creature as man is as he cannot beleeve he knoweth not what So will he never beleeve and know not why I will have some ground if it may not be called a reason why I beleeve any thing Though the matter of Faith is not understandable to carnall reason unsanctified nature yet reason inlightned nature changed or according to the Gospell that sound minde renewed spirit is fully satisfied with and seeth reason enough to beleeve even in the will and power of God and such as wil not beleeve they err they are guilty of this errour in their understandings not knowing the scriptures and the power of God Both which to wit the truth of God having said and the power of God to do laying a Foundation sufficient for a man most wedded to reason to beleeve upon And whatsoever we know by Faith whether it be spirits or God himself we know by reason yea in our very knowledge of Faith reason is and wholly is execised Faith brings a higher but yet a regular knowledge Faith giveth a cleerer and fuller knowledge of God yet it s still by Intellectus noster per gratiam fidei Deo adhaeret Ibid. mending and widening the cundit pipe Reason not by forsaking or overflowing it For our understandings themselves adhere and cleave to God by the Grace of Faith Obj. 2 But by the comming of the spirit we are spiritualized and as the scripture calleth us we are spirituall men This principle of the spirit is far above sense or reason This anointing can teach us the knowledge of spirits a more excellent way then by the use of our reason about their effects Can it not thinke yee Answ I answer it doth not the presence of the spirit doth not by any means darken or eclipse the light of reason that finger of God is not to put out but snuff this candle of the Lord in man Or rather the understanding of a man or the reasonable faculty of a man is the very Candle that receives holds out the light of the spirit and the eye or Organ that useth it and seeth with it It is the office of the spirit at his comming as the Sun to bring us light wherein we may see and so shew Objects to us even the things of Christ to see but we see them with our own eyes Therfore it giveth us to know it is not said that it knoweth in us but it giveth us to know the things that are freely given us of God And as we see the Sun in by through its own light yet with our eyes Videlicet of sense so we see the spirit only in its own light yet without our eyes to wit of reason The spirit is so far from hurting or shutting up the eyes of our reason that they do not only agree and shine together but the spirit in his name ab effectu is called 2 Tim. 1. 7. not only the spirit of Wisdome but of a sound mind whose Office is answerable he being sent to open the eyes of the blind the spirit of wisdome revelation being given Ephes 1. 17 18. through the knowledge of Christ on purpose to open the eyes of our understandings and that to this very end now in controversy that we might know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of his glorious inheritance in the Saints But we may further demonstrate the Third way of arguing same by the arguments followings Which are taken from a state of perfection to a state of imperfection And thus first from the perfection behinde us and afterwards from the perfection before us Man in the state of innocency and perfect recovery now if it appeare that man in neither of these two conditions wherein he hath the most perfect injoyment of the spirit did or shall attain to the discerning and knowledge of spirits immediately i. without the use and help of their Effects I think we may safely conclude that the imperfect condition of this life that now is while we injoy but a small nothing of the spirit in comparison here shall not 1. But in the first place there is not any thing more certain then that the soul of man in its state of innocency did not see spirits per Essentiam but per effectum which I shall breifly open First With respect to God
thine Isa 50. 11 own kindling that shall go out in Sorrow Have not as incredible things as this been effected by melencholly men having been so far possessed besotted by it that they have imagined flesh even the flesh of their own Bodies to be glass c. And may not these happily bare Analogy with thee could not they discern of flesh nor thou of spirits thy phansy a little more sublime and lofty seemeth religious theirs as good and true in it self yet a a little lower is plainly rediculous 4. And furthermore doth not he that hateth Qui vult finem vult media ad finem the light most justly deserve to dwel in darkness now he that hath the means of light hateth the light it self how great is our folly it is the most difficult thing in the world to discern betwixt spirits and yet how willfully we fling away the very means that God himself hath appointed and afforded to us with a promise of a blessing to our use and indeavours for this most desirable and difficult end And may we not expect a Judgment answerable and that not only to be given up to a reprobate sense having our understanding darkned here but even that the God of this World whom we would not discern right by triall having blinded our eyes should lead us on in our security in this blind confused and non-discerning way of darkness untill he hath plung'd and fettet'd us in utter darkness and the powers thereof for ever and ever Therefore unto them as unto Children without the use of reason thou didst senda judgment Wisdome 12. 25. to mock them But to draw towards a generall close of this Argument you see that this your A generall conclusion of the argument supposed infallible Evidence Viz. The immediate injoyment of the spirit must needs be fallible The spirit what ever it be being not capable to be known or discerned whether true or false and by consequence granted not able to evidence with any certainty as both Scripture and reason have plainly proved immediately Brethren one end of my labour is Reconciliation and Vnion betwixt us and what doth yet hinder it may we not be happy both with peace and truth we would come over to you but then we buy our Peace too too dear viz. with the loss of truth besides the deceit and rottenness of the ground whereon you stand detected threatning desperately threatning the loss of peace also yea with all our joy our Souls and God too discourageth deterreth But how great and me thinks not gain-sayable incouragement invitement have ye not only from the proved both falacy and weaknesse of your own but also from the tried both strength and truth of ours the ground whereon we stand to come over to us have you not seen our ground to bare up both it self and us under the very same weight that shook and sunk yours before your eyes and hath not the very same beam of light the same principle of truth that discovered the errour and danger of the way you walk in made it manifest to you that the way we plead for is true and safe and even the very way of God Your principle as a curse sent out of a wicked mans mouth it not being able to ceaze on its Object and returning home again doth its mischeif and worst in the bosom of him that sent it it not being able to weaken or shake the ground of our Evidence hath returned home again and ruined yours And now my hearty desire and prayer for you is that God would open your eyes and give you to see the glorious resurrection of Jerusalem truth comming out of the smoake of the great Whore burnt the rumors of Errour that the curse might not ceaze or rest on you And to conclude since this hath been the rule and measure the Law and Judge of both viz. That that which may not be known whether true or false is the fallible Evidence And while yours hath been condemned ours hath escaped and been commended thereby O that you would be wise at length and lay down the Buckler of a cause so desperate and know the things that belong to your Peace both with God and us Ye know not how ready we are to give the right hand of fellowship to you that being agreed we may walk with God together in the good old way for strong consolation according to the scriptures Argu. 2. in ge against the immediate witnesse of the Spirit Lastly And we have but this one word more every letter whereof is a sentence sufficient for ever to condenm the rest pretended had there been nothing yet yea could there be nothing else said against it viz. That that is not true in it self can never be a true rest to us But we trust we have sufficiently proved in this little treatise that the spirit that exalteth us above and against our Qualifications Jesus Christ the word of God the Gospell ministry and all former experiences of Gods grace towards us in e-every perticular of which we have found this spirit deeply guilty is no waies true but a grand impostor and a blaspheming lying spirit Therefore it can never be a true rest to us The breadth of this false winde spirit may seem for a while to fill our sailes and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to mount us up a loft as upon Eagles wings towards heaven it self But when you are soaring neer to the Sun will not the Sun think ye scorch your plumes that have sleighted his beams and then behold you fall even from your highest pitch of boasting Heaven to the lowest Earth that I said not Hell And that your unexpected fearfull downfall unless the undeserved abused hand of grace interpose and save will most certainly break and ruin you without recovery Let us humbly ascend from the doubts and scruples our Companions in the flesh to the Sun by his Beams and who knows but that thus the gracious God of heaven may ecclipse and cool his overbright and scorching beams of Glory and condescend to bless us with some and infallible to him that he is our Father and that we are undoubtedly the Sons and Daughters With Phaeton of the Lord almighty But is not he a Theife that entereth not into our Mr. his joy by the doore and O how sadly will his expectations fail him when the Lord shall say Freind how camest thou in hither Binde him hand and foot and cast him into uttter darknesse where all his stollen presumed joy shal be miserably turned into weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth for ever Be not deceived dearly beloved your boasting is vain and your rejoycing not goood Can your deceived Phansy indeed refresh you with the clusters of Canaan that never set foot upon the borders therof can you build a sure Castle of happinesse and blisse upon no foundation or can aery Notions that have no ground at all bare up
we may take comfort to our selves against both our present and future ends from former experiences These markable Scriptures following especially are largely opened in this Treatise accordingly as the Margin points to ROm. 8. 16. The spirit it selfe beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the Children of God 2 Cor. 5. 16. Wherefore henceforth know we no man after the flesh yea though we have known Christ after the flesh yet now henceforth know we him no more Isa 8. 20. To the Law and to the Testimony If they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them 1 Joh. 4. 1. Dearly beloved belleeve not every spirit but try the spirits whether they be of God for there are many false Prophets gon out into the World 2 Pet. 1. 19. We have also a more sure word of prophesy whereunto ye do well that ye take heed as unto a light that shineth in a dark place untill the day dawn and the day star arise in your hearts Rev. 21. 22. 23. And I saw no Temple therein For the Lord God almighty and the Lamb are the Temple therof c. Heb. 8. 11. And they shall not teach every man his Neighbour saying know the Lord for all shal know me from the greatest to the least A Table of the severall Chapters contained in this following Treatise CHap. 1. Of its Definition fol. 1. Chap. 2. Of the grounds or rise of this Opinion in generall fol. 5. Chap. 3. Of qualifications f. 15. Chap. 4. Of the immediate witnesse of the spirit f. 55. Chap. 5. Of the knowledge of Christ after the flesh or in his Mediatorship f. 68. Chap. 6. Of the Allegoricall sense of Scripture f. 91. Chap. 7. Of beleeving those truths of the Word that we are not yet convinced of by the spirit f. 104. Chap. 8. Of the Scripture as it is the Rule of Faith 115. Chap. 9. Of the VVord as Judge of spirits f. 133. Chap. 10. Of the VVord as profitable for Instruction f. 154. Chap. 11. Of the Scripture as profitable in its command for obedience f. 161. Chap. 12. Of the Scriptures as usefull in their promise for comfort f. 179. Chap. 13. Of the Gospell Communion of Saints or Church fellowship f. 192 Chap. 14. Of Gospell Ordinances in generall f. 186 Chap. 15. Of the Ministry of the word f. 205. Chap. 16. Of Prayer f. 233. Chap. 17. Of Experience f. 252. Chap. 18. Of the spirit of Christ as the Soules immediate Rest and Evidence f. 263. A farewell to the Reader f. 309. THE GENERALL CONSIDERATION of the ERROVR CHAP. I. Of its Definition in Generall IT is a pretence unto the immediate enjoyment of Definition the Spirit of God as alone the onely All-sufficient means to the Soul even for all intents and purposes especially for Evidence 1. It is a pretence Viz. As opposed to that that is true and reall or so indeed 2. The fallacy and formality of the Errour lies hid in the words Immediate as alone Means as they have their place and sense in this Definition 1. Immediate that is not to be taken in opposition to distance of place but to the meanes of enjoying But this word Immediate will be better cleared if we will joyne it with the second terme of fallacy mentioned as alone 2. As alone without the use of any means whatever subordinate thereunto Thus whatsoever we can call Religious helps Gospell means though owned and ordained by God himself is plainly excluded this their Canaan as imperfect or a very needless thing and all use thereof flatly condemned as a living and resting below God and Of false rests which is wholly used in this Treatise therefore oftentimes compared in his Book to the Children of Israels resting in the Wildernesse In a word it pretends to be in the Sunne and holds the beames in contempt trodden under foot It is in an everlasting Light and hath cast a vaile of darkenesse upon these things below it Viz. Ordinances Graces Scriptures Experiences and not onely upon those meanes but upon Christ Jesus the Mediatour himselfe These are forms types shadowes while it is swallowed up in the Power Truth Substance God its glorious Heaven 3. Means it is not said Efficient ' nor yet End I advise the Reader to take speciall notice of both those 1. The question is not whether the Spirit of God be not as alone the onely All-sufficient Efficient of all in the Soul of a Creature Here we dissent not but subscribe with both hands to that of the Apostle That it is God that worketh in us both to will and to doe of his own good pleasure 2. Neither is the question here whether God as alone be the onely All-sufficient End of the Soul in this we agree For God is our Portion for ever Nothing below God nothing but God is the rest of Souls in this sense The sound of this most frequent terme namely Rest is so equivocall and dubious that the weaker Reader had in a most especiall manner need to retain this Item That we controvert not about the Finall rest of our Souls but the means thereof not about our Objective but our Evidentiall rest 3. Therefore the Spirit here is to be understood as means or as the supply of all means to the Soul it is confest we cannot call the Spirit means but in an unusuall and improper sense yet we can no way better if any way otherwise expresse their sense who prefer I am sure and recommend their Spirit in stead both of the cause and means also 3. To all intents and purposes it stands in the room of all the means both of knowledge and grace but especially of comfort all our usuall and most comfortable Evidences of the truth of our grace Gods love and favour to and presence in us these especially are most suspicious and forcibly beat back with an high zealous Arm out of this their rest This Errour will tell you that Christ in us hath this Prerogative to be immediately i. e. without and above the use of any means both the Spirit of Truth Grace and Comfort even All in All unto its subject It pretends to the immediate injoyment of God as alone the onely All-sufficient meanes to the Soul even to all intents and purposes c. CHAP. II. Of the Grounds or rise of this Opinion in generall WEE come now to consider what may be the Grounds and Principles that afford most occasion and help to the bringing forth of this fond conceit into the inventions of men and among many others perhaps we have thought upon these following The first may be either a conceited or perceived abuse of the usuall Gospell means and helps either in themselves or others Sad experience witnesseth that this doth too too often create in many a most zealous prejudice against the very use of lawfull things such is the vulgar unstayed rashnesse it puts too an inconsiderate violent hand
his Earnest Is the Redemption of the Soul that is precious or that his Name his mercifull gracious Name that is exalted above all his Word so sleight or worthlesse in Divine thought Gratia semel recepta non potest am tti respectu Patris Jo. 10. 29. Filii 1 Cor. 6. 7. Spiritus Sancti Ephes 1. 13. Weams that God will or can suffer the one or the other to fail or miscarry Yea He delighteth in mercy and his mercy endureth for ever and precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints see here the heights and depths c. of Divine love and tendernesse to his for our Comfort and Joy with these Obligations God hath tied his own hands he can onely give not take away his Grace given he can blesse and onely blesse and not curse us so that it is but right and equity on his behalf not to deprive us of that Grace and Holinesse he hath once given us Now certainly if God cannot lawfully he cannot at all take away Grace 1 Joh. 1. 9. if he cannot De Jure he will not De Facto who is Just and Faithfull Just with relation to our Saviours Purchase Heb. 10. 23. and Faithfull that hath Promised To conclude then Grace is no fallible Evidence upon this account it is neither changeable in it self nor yet with respect to Gods disposall But were it so that our Grace were at the owners disposall what advantage yet is gained to this way of the Spirit by such a grant Is not Gods Spirit as much Gods own as our Grace We read of our Light our Grace but seldome of any such or so clear an interest we have in the Spirit is Grace Gods right and not much rather the Spirit Is Grace in Gods Power Will Disposal and the Spirit wholly in ours cannot God suck in his own Breath as easily as to blot or put out our Life hath not God the same if not more immediate Power over the Cause as effect Yet this is the way wherein we must walke to meet and close with the Spirits comming Object But it might be further added that though Grace cannot totally yet may it Not quoad habitum yet quoad gradum surely so far perish as not to be decernable and so not evidentiall Answ Suppose we grant yet what weight will it add to the scale in hand The question is not whether there may not be some Cases experienced wherein Grace cannot evidence but whether Grace is not able and apt in it selfe to Evidence or whether it be not lawfull to reflect upon our Grace to clear our Evidence for Heaven 2. For further satisfaction let us a little weigh this case in the ballance of Experience and we shall finde that as there is a two-fold desertion namely of Grace and Comfort so these seldome or never fall in together to the same person for where we finde an Ebb of Grace we usually find a Flood of Confidence and we many times see Streams of Grace flowing from the wounded bleeding Conscience The Spirit is called Fire and it doth many times give much heat and little light when it hath denied to bring with it the Light of Gods Countenance yet it hath been as a Refiners fire to purge the Soul to burn up its lust and to take away drosse and Tinn So that very many even while they do miserably labour under such sad desertions of Comfort they are zealously affected to the glory of God the benefits of Christ the comforts of the Spirit and doe even hunger and thirst after Righteousnesse But to apply If the desertion be of Comfort as is most agreeable to the Case in hand I conclude that all sincerity and fear of God is never so farre gone even under the greatest desertion of Comfort as not to be discernable even by the Soul it self that suffers if Enlightned assisted by the Spirit the Comforter doe not all the expressions of Spirits so laboring experience so much and testifie for them to all the hearers their fear to offend their prizing of Christ c But admit the desertion be of Grace as it is sad to think how far even those that are truely in Christ may fall so is it as hard to imagine how a person while under the state of Apostacy should ever have so serious a self-reflection as to have any occasion to make use of his Evidences t is all one to him while he lies in this state whether they be clear or blur'd Object But suppose him new enlightned newly convicted then he will have need of Evidences and finde none Answ As such light brings Conviction with it so such Conviction brings light with it I mean matter of Evidence and comfort For if a man be so far humbled as to question his condition and to bring himself to Triall and so to Conviction this is undoubtedly a good visible decernable mark in the light of the Spirit even of the true enjoyment of God So that we see it nothing avails either to our Case or indeed to any purpose to Object that Grace may not be visible and so not Evidentiall But let us observe two things by the by 1. That the Change with respect to Comfort is not in our Grace but in the Spirits presence or absence 2. The Spirit it selfe we finde thus far changeable My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Then what advantage hath this way of the Spirit against Qualifications by this discourse The second Argument The second Argument against Qualifications is found in page 23. line 26. It is an abuse of the Gift Viz. Qualifications and an affront put upon the Giver Viz. God to make the Gift and Evidence of the true enjoyment of God This Argument is so absurd and senseless that I shall onely call Earth Earth Sense and Nature to beare witnesse against it Such an instinct we finde in all tameable beasts even by the Gift to acknowledge the grace and favour of the Giver Doth not Nature teach you c. That herein hath God commended his love that while yet sinners Christ died for us Must not we now observe and acknowledge his love herein If we endeavour thereby to know the Love of God that passeth knowledge is this an abuse of the Gift an affront put upon the Giver to conclude acknowledge blesse and admire his Grace and Favour for Gifts and Mercies Earthy yea Heavenly the Graces of his Spirit the Image of his Sonne the Earnest and Seal of our owne Inheritance the proper End yea and appointed End of all Gods Mercies Especiall Spirituall and to his Saints That we might be to the prais of the Glory of his Grace Ephes 1. 6. The third Argument Object The third and most frequent Argument against the Evidence of Qualification is That nothing can be a sure Evidence that may be true or false but our Qualifications may be true or false Answ The second Proposition we deny Qualifications
before we conclude this Chapter we shall subjoyne these necessary cautious as a Qualification to Qualifications First let the Reader take a speciall difference in order to the deciding of the present question betwixt Assurance and Comfort For as assurance is the effect of Righteousness so Joy and Comfort are effects of Assurance and as they are divers in themselves so are they differently obtained by us Even as the Habit and the Act of the Habit. For when I would confirm my Brother in a by him doubted Truth as I fetch all the Arguments from Scripture and Reason to prove it to him even so must I deal with my doubting Conscience to bring it unto an assured knowledge of the truth of my State of Grace and Title to Heaven This as the obtaining of a Habit requires some time with a serious deliberate Exercise of Reason but as when we have gotten a habit there is nothing more ready and easie then to Act therefrom so Spirituall Comfort is the most proper and immediate Effluvium and effect of Assurance obtained Though we come very hardly to the assured knowledge of our state of Grace yet we passe most easily from that assured knowledge c. to joy unspeakable as the reflection of the Sun doth naturally recoile by or from its direct Act so that as it is necessary that there be some glance from the Exercise of beleiving reason upon Pardon Grace God Heaven c. For every Passion must have its Object for the begetting of Spirituall Joy from Assurance so doth it immediately and upon a sudden flash take life from thence as when a Candle is lighted light immediately springs all over the house yet this Joy is most reall sollid and substantiall Secondly it is not at all required especially from such as are already perswaded to Assurance upon good grounds that every Act of their Spirituall Joy should be the issue of their immediate Conception of Grace as if a Christian might never take Spirituall Comfort to himself but as from the reflexion of reason upon his Graces We many times rejoyce in our God and Saviour and by Faith that is the substance of things hoped for even bathe our Souls in those rivers of pleasure c. and that from Assurance already made and not now questioned the Spirit of God doth assure us by shewing us our own things and thus giving us matter of Joy doth comfort us mediately but he doth also shew us the things of Christ and John 16. thus is more immediately and properly our Comforter for we have received the Spirit of God that makes us know the things that are freely given to us of God To conclude as when I have sufficiently proved my Doctrine it would be but a needless perplexity and folly to turn back for the renewing of the proof of my Doctrine for every Vse that I make thereof so for a Saint upon every occasion of Spirituall rejoycing to go so far about as to the triall of the grounds of Assurance as it would be a sign of over much suspicion and infidelity so a grosse in that an ungratefull abuse of Assurance Lastly our reason most diligently exercised even upon the best of our Qualifications can give us but a dark indistinct and uncertain Evidence without the light and helpe of the Spirit of God as our eyes cannot give vs an exact distinct knowledge of colours without the light of the Sun by a candle Now the understanding of a man is the Candle of the Lord Prov. 20. 27. CHAP. IV. Of the immediate witnesse of the Spirit HAving done my Endeavour assisted I hope by the Spirit of God for the clearing of our Evidences we now proceed to lay hold on the other branch springing from the same roote which hath been before delivered in these words Viz. The Spirit of God doth manifest Errour his Presence to the Soul by his own immediate light Arg. 1 The first Reason that endeavours the maintenance of this and is every where hinted by the disturber of the false rests is the Spirits sufficiency to discover himself immediately to us Answ But he ought to know that from a sufficiency to an efficiency is no good arguing the death of that person that was God as well as Man being infinitely meritorious then how falls it out that all Men yea and Devils themselves are not saved 2. From the power to the Act gives no good Argument because the power of God is sufficiently able to destroy the World and all therein therefore will he must he doe it Can the spirit discover himself to the Soul immediately that therefore he will use no means in this work is a pure non sequitur yet this Assertion is built especially when illustrated with that that followes Viz. Arg. 2 The Spirit is a Sunne Page 60. line 17. Now the Sunne doth manifest it selfe unto the World in its owne Light therefore the Spirit in like manner to our hearts Answ It is said that Christ shall come as a theife c. therefore as a theif comes to do that that is sinnefull must Christ also Such it the absurdity of the precedent Argument for comparisons run not on foure feet 2. But secondly this comparison holds at least thus far First the Sunne doth manifest it selfe in its owne Light so doth the Spirit again the Sunne doth convey his Light whereby we see other Objects and himselfe through a Medium Viz. the Aire so the spirit through our Graces Moreover the Sunne requires an Eye of Sense in us whereby we must see and use his light c. so the Spirit an Eye of Reason Lastly we feel as some will have it the heat and comfort of the Sunne by reflection onely and thus by reflection we grant we have the sweet and comfort of this our Spirituall Sunne the Holy Ghost 3. But thirdly the Sun and the Spirit must in somewhat be unlike else not alike and this indeed may be received for full solution The Sunne is a necessary but the Spirit is a free Agent the Sunne must shine and shew it selfe but the Spirit blowes where it listeth therefore some have it and some have it not and others have it and know it not while the Sunne must alwayes and alwayes one way discover himselfe the Spirit is not bound by this means nor yet by that much lesse immediatly to shew himself to us Arg. 3 It hath been objected to me in discourse By one whom I judge both very knowing and Godly that Christ is our Husband and that therefore it should seem more answerable to that relation to tell us he loves us with his owne mouth and immediately then to leave his Spouse to construe his love from his tokens onely Answ For satisfaction hereunto I answer Suppose we that Christ is our Husband and that therefore it seems more fit that he himself declare his Love to us immediately What is it that must Judge of this Meetenesse our Phancy or Faith We
have had communion with Christ in his death suffering satisfaction for my peace righteousness justification yet now I have a more immediate way to God to wit by in through the spirit without Christs mediation in his person therefore henceforth know I Christ so no more thus are both these Errours become one and one Answer may serve for both Answ O Paul might it be retorted now see your inconsiderate rashness where is that shame and sorrow for your former Prosopopeia vain it seems though so deeply resolved determinations Do you not remember your self good Paul how in 1 Cor. 2. 2. how solemnly you determined there to know nothing else but Jesus Christ and him crucified c. But let us reserve one ear unprejudiced to hear Pauls Answer Me thinks I hear him apologize after this manner Alas poor ignorant Wretches how apt to mistake weak and unadvised Babes how easily seduced and overthrown Ah foolish People who hath bewitched you Do you make no difference betwixt the knowledge of Christ after the flesh and the knowledge of Christ and him crucified as a Saviour and Mediator How unworthy of so great a trust as is committed unto me in my great Apostleship should I openly proclaim my self to God the holy Angels and Men should I thus as you would charge me basely deny my Lord and Master and cowardly withdraw my neck from his Cross Should I be but as unstable in my words resolutions as you silly Scepticks are fickle in opinion I should judge my self utterly unworthy of the name of a Christian but you may be resolved that which might have prevented such unworthy uncharitable a Censure of me and so fond a delusion of your own souls that intended nothing less then the denying and dying to the knowledge and communion with Christ in his person or Office of Mediatorship will you reade and understand the Verse but one immediately following the Text abused where I have left my acknowledgement and plain profession of Christ Jesus as Mediator of Reconciliation as a Witness for me expounding the same to the end of the Chapter concluding all out of controversie with this undeniable that Christ was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Did I in my former Avouchment give you any allowance for such a mistake mis-interpretation yet will ye reade on you shall therein be prevented before you have time enough to fasten such a foolish conceit in your mis-understanding But take my Reproof as precious Balm and henceforth I charge and beseech you to tremble with fear of grounding an opinion of so great importance upon one single Verse and expression without an answerable due and sufficiently serious considering the Context and Circumstances But let us reason the case a little further and is there not light enough in the same Verse at least if not fully to clear Pauls truth to convict this erroneous Mistake Henceforth saith he know we no man after the flesh yea though we have known Christ after the flesh c. Now can any man think can any that hath but half the use of his Reason imagine that there is any difference in the here twice mentioned Knowledge after the flesh the invincible meaning of Paul must needs be this We henceforth wil know no man yea nor Christ himself after the flesh So that the carnal knowledge of Christ that he here resolves against must needs be doubtless the very same that he will not take not own men in Now if Paul meant a knowing and acknowledging of Christ in his person in distinction to his spirit of Christ without as the Object of Faith to Christ within as the Author of Holiness then the same sense must be held in our or Pauls knowing of men after the flesh here also Paul then resolves it should seem according to this Errour not to know men in their persons as crucified as Saviours and Mediators but in their spirit as comforting and sanctifying And how ridiculous how absurd is this Object But it may be demanded what then is the true sense and meaning of the words viz. Know Christ after the flesh in this place Answ It might suffice for our present satisfaction and purpose to know it negatively that this is a Mistake and not the true meaning thereof Yet some affirm this knowledge here after the flesh is such as we reade in Rom. 9. 3. A knowing men as brethren and kinsmen according to the flesh So say they Paul in this place resolves not to look on men as men so much as Christians not to acquaint and sociate himself with men so much as they are related unto him according to the flesh but according to the spirit and for Christ himself for that he was being a Jew Pauls kinsman according to the flesh Paul it seems had been too apt to glory too much in his carnal relation to Christ that he came of the same race and stock with the Messias himself but Paul resolves though he have known Christ thus after the flesh yet would he know him so no more this might satisfie But there may be more found happily if we will but a little consider the Context for Paul as is most easie to observe especially throughout the whole Chapter upwards was mightily transported in a rich Contemplation of Heaven now while he was walking upon the Battlements of Heaven by faith and not by sight v. 7. he perceiving how dangerous and hurtfull this carnal distinguishing of men and Christ this claiming an outward relation and interest in them was to the truth spirit and power of Godliness he makes this Resolution Henceforth know I no man after the flesh yea though I have known Christ after the flesh yet henceforth know I him so no more This I judge to be the direct true and onely true meaning of the words and therefore he adds If any be in Christ by faith and profession let the truth thereof appear by his Renovation If any man therefore be in Christ let him be a new Creature that is the thing I will henceforth regard not any man will I henceforth look after that is in Christ by relation or outward profession alone c. unless he be a new Creature But is not this far from knowing owning or improving of Christ in his Person or Office for Peace Attonement and Satisfaction c. Yea we must be in him though not satisfie our selves with the hopes of our ingrafture by the means of any kinde of relation whatsoever into a new stock without bringing forth fruit worthy and answerable we must be in Christ and new Creatures too If any man therefore be in Christ let him be a new Creature But let us directly fix our eyes a little upon these Errours that we may see and abhorr their loathsome monstrousness Is Christ the Truth it self a Type What then is Truth Is our Rock a Shadow What then can support us Must we not believe in
Christ who then shall be saved But Moses it seems must not enter Canaan nay nor * i. Jesus Joshua neither this new Jerusalem Dear Christians Let him that loves not the Lord Jesus be Anathema Maranatha How venomous is the Breath that blasts the mouth from whence it issues How ungratefull the effect that denies its Cause Can that be the ingenuous self-denying Humble Spirit of Christ that defames his Person and nullifies his Office A bad Servant surely that seeks to eclypse the glory of its Master and he that denies the Son is Antichrist O how needfull and seasonable a Caution is that for us viz. Try the spirits But that we may wipe off let us a little The Argument for this Errour examine the usuall gloss and colour which paints and sets off this Errours ugly and deformed face viz. That every new dispensation dissolves the former the spiritual dispensation must therefore put an end to the carnal or fleshly dispensation of Christ the coming of the Spirit which now is must drive away and banish the Person or the use of the Office of the Person of Christ Answ This is the aliquid nihil that would fain be something to mischief our Saviour but how vainly and idlely for 1. Though the dispensation of the means may in part be dissolved as the Figures and Types of the Law were by the coming of a better and higher dispensation of means viz. the Gospel Yet the last end is still aimed at and endeavoured by all viz. the knowledge and honour of the glorious Trinity among the sons of men Matth. 28. 19. 2. There is not any really distinct dispensation of the coming of the Son and holy Ghost into the World no more then betwixt the coming of the knowledge of the Father and Son into the World the Father was though darkly known unto his Children as appears in Malachy If Mal. 1. 6. I am your Father where is my honor Before the coming of Christ into the World But this knowledge I suppose of God as a Father in those days was only by vertue of the promise of the Son For how know we how have we God as our Father but by Adoption And how have we this viz. Adoption but through the Son So in like manner before the great and markable descention of the Spirit by our Saviours ascention there was some knowledge and faith of the Son of God which came from the more ordinary presence of the Spirit among us For flesh and blood did not reveal him to us And as we Matth. 11. 27. see not know not the Father aright but in the light and by the help of the Son None knowing the Father but the Son and him to whom the Son shall reveal him So the coming of the Spirit doth more clearly and excellently reveal them both for thus we receive the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Rom. 8. Iohn 16. Father which Spirit also takes off the things of Christ shewing them to us and for this very purpose That we might glorifie him as our Saviour can affirm Father I have glorified thy Name So the glory of the Son is not as the glory of Moses that must be done away by any future glory that excelleth the three Persons of the Godhead are not like the strong man and the stronger as if the Spirit at his entrance as the stronger man should binde both the Father and Son hand and foot and cast them out a doors Though indeed they come gradually into the World yet not successively when the second comes the first with-draws not and with the last they all appear that God may be all even all in all as Father Saviour Sanctifier for acceptance satisfaction and application in the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost They are co-equal and co-honorable one in essence will power and in glory also not like to such Lights as eclypse and darken each other but rather as Beams of the same Sun or Lamps of an equal glory and lustre whose Lights do sweetly interweave incorporate and every one gains by other And to say no more in this case the Blood and Spirit of Jesus Christ are like the natural moisture and heat in man both mutual preservers of each other and both most necessary for our Salvation and the heat that eats out and consumes tht natural moisture that spirit that dries up the Blood i. mediation of Christ is false preternatural and Antichristian But to come a little closer Is Truth a Type Christ is Truth and that in distinction 3. Joh. 14. 6. with 16. 17. to the Spirit I am the Truth and I will send the Comforter my Spirit the Spirit of Truth c. Now nihil vero verius nothing is truer then Truth and as Christ therefore cannot be a Type so we may beleive the Truth The dispensation of the Son if so called must last and continue even while the last days iast Heb. 1. 1 2. And glory shall be to God by the Church in Christ Jesus throughout all generations Ephes 3. ult And God shall continue to tender salvation and happiness in Christ unto the World even after their new Jerusalem is built untill the last coming of Jesus Christ and by the Spirit himself For the Spirit and the Bride say Come Rev. 22. 17. and let him that heareth say Come and let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him take of the water of life freely And he that testifieth these things saith Surely I come quickly Amen So come Lord Jesus Rev. 22. 17. 20. Further though Christ must give up his Ministerial Kingdom to his Father yet he shall most certainly retain the glory of a Saviour in his Mediatorship to the days of Eternity We that are Christs Sheep shall be set indeed at the right hand of God but our Fore-runner is there before us who therfore shall be still nearer to God then we and if we shal be at yet he is upon Gods right hand and to which of us yea To which of his Angels shall he say at any time Sit on my right hand c. Heb. 1. 13. Now doth not he sit betwixt us and God to the end that what we receive from God we might receive through him He is our Head and shall be our Head for ever And the glory of Heaven must first have its influence and pass first from God upon our Head and thence flow down upon us Even to the skirts of his Garments And we shall most undoubtedly continue in the presence and favour of God in Heaven untill the day we are able to pay our own Debts to the utmost farthing which will be even for ever and a day in the vertue of the Merits and Mediation of him that is the Mediator betwixt God and man the man Christ Jesus For * Psal 75. 3. He that bears up the Pillars of the Earth is the Rev. 2. 10.
need not go beyond the materiall reall Gospel of Christ for one allegorical if this be all you seek to wit a mystery What part of the Gospell of Christ is not deep and mysticall which the Prophets of old counted worthy their inquiry and diligent search and which the intelligent Angells themselves desire to looke into 1. Pet 1. 10 11 12. But in setting my self for the defence or the Gospell that is so mightily struck at by this particular I shall bring some few Arguments for the subversion of this allegoricall way of interpreting the same First Then since that the immediate end and undertaking of the Gospell is for the advancement of Christ both in his Flesh and Spirit together for both our Justification and Sanctification and comfort I desire to be informed whether this way will lead us to an allegory in the former onely or in the later also If in onely one I desire to know the reason of the others exemption But if in the Spirit and Sanctification and comfort as well as in the flesh of Christ and our Justification then my request is what may be the allegory of Sanctification and comfort what is the Spirit of the Spirit But we may be wholly drawn out of this way by the strength of those following Arguments The first is taken from the Author the first and great Preacher of the Gospell to the Sons of men Now we read Heb. 2. 3. that it was at first preached by the Lord himself Moses indeed may be the Minister of types and shadowes but when Moses Antitype the Prophets which the Lord shall raise up Acts 3. like unto Moses he shall doubtlesse bring into the World the truth and substance with him The Son himself shall whatever the servant hath done declare his Fathers minde cleerely and plainly according as our Saviour himself assureth Yee are my freinds for all things that I have heard of my Father I Jo. 15. 15. have made known unto you to which we may heare his Disciples and Freinds ecchoing back an answer Loe now speakest Jo. 16. 27. thou plainly and no parable i. no allegory for though the Law was given by Moses yet Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ Joh 1. 17. The second Argument against this Allegoricall way of expounding the Gospell is taken from the matter thereof The mediate sense and substance of the Gospell Viz. The way and meanes of fallen mans recovery This was first revealed in the first promise as man received it in the serpents curse the seed of the Woman shall breake the serpents head So much of this as was preached before was Gospell this is the Epitomy of that Gospell that is now more fully and clearely revealed to the World which is truly the truth and not an allegory But how is Christ to break the serpents head onely in the spirit surely as the seed of the Woman also who is as distinguished from the spirit the way the truth and the life as Joh. 14. Preist Prophet and King plainly and really so He that came to seek and to save that which was lost is the onely saviour but Christ in his person as well as in his spirit came to seek and to save that which was lost therefore he is as in both the onely saviour whose spirit as it is a spirit of Life so his flesh Joh. 6. 55. is meate indeed and his Blood drinke indeed i. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly and really not allegorically The last is taken from the manner of the delivering of the Gospell to us 1. by our Saviour himself the truth who cannot ly he that eats my Flesh and Joh. 6. 40. 54. drinkes my blood not he that seeks for an allegoricall but metaphoricall meaning in this he that seeth the son and beleeveth on him hath everlasting life and I will raise him up at the last day And secondly by Paul c. 1 Cor. 15. at the beginning which may serve for all Brethren saith he I declare unto you the Gospell which I preached unto you which also you have received and wherein you stand by which also you are saved Well now what is this Gospell to end all controversie verse 3. I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received how that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures that he was buried and rose again according to the scriptures c. Thus we preached you beleived were saved and the truth beleived is no more an allegory then the end therof salvation but all in plainness of speech not in mysteriousness in the simplicity of the truth not with double meaning and in the demonstration of the spirit notallegorically But I am jealous over you with a godly Jealousy fearing lest by any meanes as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty so your mindes should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ 2 Cor. 11. 2 3. But Caveat Emptor for who ever deals with this opinion is miserably deceived She windes up all Religion to the airy Pinacle of towering speculation and there fairely promiseth the discovery of the glory of Heaven the new Jerusalem but in the end this is all it receives at her hand even to be cast down thence into a troublesome sea of uncertainties fallibilities absurdities and what not this spirit of theirs blowes up a specious amiable bubble but if you once but close with it it immediately desolves and vanishes into a meere and empty nothing lay but once a side the literall sense of the Word of God and let the allegorical passe for Authentical there must needs be admitted and that unavoidably as severall mindes of God as there are various Phansies and different apprehensions of men in the world every ones spirit will coin a new mystery Divinity Quot homines tot sententiae what divisions distractions confusions will follow hereupon we can hardly agree about the literall O how shall we then differ about this mysterious Allegoricall Truth and Gospell Methinks and truly I averr it with a minde unprejudiced there glides a perceivable though silent stream through every channel of this Error into the sea of Rome And especially in the case in hand It will have the Scriptures universally allegoricall so will the Papists and as the Papists descend below Scripture to unwritten traditions so this way ascends above the Scriptures into unwritten mysteries The worst of the Papists have said the Gospell was written not to rule our faith but to be ruled by it calling it a nose of wax a dumbe judge c. And doth not this way of allegorizing Scripture speake aloud all this And blush not to say that the Scripture is fitted to the time and variably understood the sense thereof being one while this and another while that according as it pleaseth the spirit to change its dictates as the Papist according as the Church is pleased to change her judgment that is all the difference and
the punishment Lam. 3. of his sin The consequence is cleare as the Sun for what the Spirit hath revealed to us we cannot have an ignorant unbeleif thereof We are to beleive every Truth that God hath revealed to the World in Scripture But there are many Truths in the Scripture that the Spirit hath not yet revealed to most if to any Therefore we are to beleive more Truth and Scripture then the Spirit hath yet revealed to us The Proposition is clear because all revealed Truth is to be beleived First by that Law of Reason that is implanted in every man by Nature Secondly by the Law of God that condemneth every spirit as foolish and bewitched that obeyeth not the Truth in believing of it Gal. 3. 1. But now how shall we prove the Assumption to them that deny the Scripture viz. that there is more Truth in Scripture then the Spirit hath yet revealed to any They will be forced to grant it will they but yeild a little to consult their own experience for they will acknowledge that there are some that are more enlightened inspired with the spirit of Truth then others even among themselves Now that revelation that hath honored them above and beyond their Brethren was either made known by a spirit of Truth or Error but they not acknowledging the later of these then that they have received from the Spirit of Truth must needs be Truth and that may be the Truth for their sufficient conviction that is not revealed by the Spirit to many There is some Truth in Scripture that is not yet revealed to some men all the Truth in Scripture ought to be beleived by all men therefore men ought to beleive more Scripture then the Spirit hath yet made clear and manifest to them But a word to hint at the absurdity and danger of this Opinion and I shake hands yea wash my hands of this And first we must needs infer that there is no sin * Ignorantia Juris of ignorance can possibly be committed for if I am bound to beleive no more then the Spirit doth reveal I can be ignorant of nothing that I ought to know for whatsoever the Spirit doth reveal I must needs know There can be no sin of unbeleif for so far as the Spirit perswades and enlightens I must and cannot but assent There can be no actual sin at all among the Heathens for they either have the Spirit of Christ or not The first is too absurd to be imagined Then if they have not the Spirit they cannot have the Law revealed to them by it therefore the Law concerneth them not and where there is no Law there is no Transgression The Man of sin himself as so cannot sin i. against the Gospel the Saints or Christ since he is not perswaded by the Spirit of Truth that these are true Neither do I well conceive how the People of God can sin either for so far as they receive the Truth from the Spirit so far do they not obey it and no further are they bound to regard it Or to conclude if the Saints can sin the Saints it seems are the onely sinners in the World upon this account However men may wallow and tumble in the grossest prophaneness and yet not lose their Cloak The Spirit hath not revealed it to me it will be said I am not yet convinced that what I do is sinfull or evil And Happy thrice happy are ye blinde and ignorant Indians rise up and cal this way above all other blessed it freeth you from sin and punishment also for where there is no Conviction of spirit there is no Law and where there is no Law there is no Transgression and where there is no sin there is no punishment As this Opinion lays a good Foundation for sin so for Ignorance and Error also Well might the Papist say that Ignorance is the Mother of Devotion it being so good a Preservative against sin and wickedness And for Error this will lead us to deny Jesus Christ and God himself the Resurrection of the Body Immortality of the Soul Heaven Hell and worse if possible and bring a man safely off and free from any sin or check upon this account plea ground and warrant I am not yet convinced hereof by the Spirit of God And to conclude it doth plainly levell the holy Bible with any other Book whatsoever whether godly or profane and make the Word of God of no better Authority then they which even the very very worst of which I am bound to beleive so far as the Spirit I mean by Scriptures shall convince and assure me of the truth thereof And yet which I greive to think and tremble to write this is a most commonly received Opinion among us in this Age. Ah! let us take heed of loosing that if such Errors as these once spread and prevail wherein our very Souls are bound up Religion it self CHAP. VIII Of the Scripture as it is the Rule of Faith WE now shal pass on in the defence of the Scripture to consider it respectively to our use thereof first altogether in the bulk whole therof as denied by this error in these two assertions 1. That the Scripture or Bible is not to be the Rule of Faith Page 128. 2. Nor the Judge and triall of the spirits page 66. line 2. 3. page 127. Both these are also known to every one that hath any knowledge of popish tenets to be ranke Popery The difference lies only in the different use hereof the Jesuist using them to advance his Pope and the men of this Errour making them a mean to carry on the designe of their spirit but of them in order Now in answer to the first viz. The deniall of the Scriptures to be the rule of Faith these popish assertions are found in the Jesuites Books Namely That the Gospell was written not to rule our Faith but to be ruled by it That it receiveth all the Authority it hath from the Church And that we must live more according to the Authority of the Church then Scripture c. Now may we but call the Church here the Pope and the Pope the Spirit a most easie mistake and in these and many other particulers the Abbettors of the Errour we are disputing against do willingly bow do obeysance to his holiness if not even fall down and kisse his Toe But there being nothing to be brought for this Errours upholding that I can think of at present that hath not already The truth proved received an answer upon an other occasion before I shall immediately betake my self for the strength and establishment of the contrary affirmative viz. That the Word or Scripture is to be the rule of our Faith For First we have cleere and pregnant scriptu●e for it 2. Tim 3. 15. The scriptures are able to make us wise unto salvation through the Faith that is in Christ Jesus where observe 1. That Christ
Law and to the Testimony Now if but part of the Minde of God now revealed to the World was sufficient for Gods People in these former daies is not the whole sense and truth of God both in Law and Gospel sufficient for us when as we have so much of written word let us not be so foolish as to be wise above it our Saviour our King commands the like therefore upon us that live under the Gospell Search the Scriptures Joh. 5. 39. The whole Chapter argueth the wicked infidelity of the Jews against Christ himself who did not only doubt of his spirit but said in plain tearmes he was a blasphemer and in any other place that he was acted assisted by the Joh. 5. 18. Prince of Devils the spirit of Belzebub Yet Christ will have his owne spirit tried even by scripture search the scriptures to the Law and to the Testimony your Law is my Testimony they are they that testifie of me I protest to every one that shall add to the Words of this book I will add all the curses that Rev. 22. are written in it Now if God hath commanded this way he hath surely intended it if it be the way of God surely then it is the way and we may conclude it in divine authority to be truth also viz. That the word of scripture is the judge and triall of spirits 3 From example that way that Christ and his Apostles did try and judge of spirits cleere the truth and discover Errour by must needs be the best and surest way But that way that these walked in Mat. 21. 42. 22. 29. Luke 4. 1. Joh. 7. 42. Acts 17. 2. 18. 28. for this end was the written word which must needs be therefore the best and surest way 4 From Divine Testimony 2 Tim. 3. 16. 17. Framed thus that which is able to make the man of God perfect and throughly furnished c. is a sufficient good Judge and triall of spirits But the Scriptures are able to make the man of God perfect c. therefore the Scriptures are a sufficient good Judge and triall of spirits The major must needs be granted as the minor is unquestionable for it most properly belonging to the man of God or a Minister of Christ to try the spirits whether they be of God it being a necessary qualification in him and an essential part of his ministerial perfection to be able to convince Gainsayers if the Tit. 1. 9. Scriptures be not found sufficient for this it cannot make him perfect and throughly furnisht to every good work But doubtless All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable to teach to improve to correct and to instruct in righteousness that the man of God may be perfect and throughly furnished unto every good work From divine encouragement that which the holy Ghost hath not onely appointed commanded to be the judge and triall of spirits in general but hath also highly and honorably commended to all future posterity in holy Writ for the judging and trying of himselfe must needs be the Judge and triall of spirits The Assumption is most clearly found Acts 18. 11. where we have it not onely related not barely commended but highly honoured and honorably recorded for an act of a truly and bravely noble spirit that they searched the Scriptures whether those things were so that they would not receive any truth from Paul himself yea the Spirit of God in Paul without searching the Scriptures making the Scriptures the Rule Judge and triall thereof How easily then may we conclude that the Scriptures are the judge and triall of all other spirits unless we will deny divine truth divine commands divine examples divine authority and divine encouragement and invitation But this Branch will appear more worthily cut off if we will but a little Danger of the Error consider what wilde and dangerous fruit it bears For If this be concluded that the holy Scripture is not the judge and triall of spirits we strip our selves of all possible means for this important and most weighty end Once it is our duty to take heed what we hear to try all things yea and expresly to try the spirits John 4. 1. Doth God command his Children to make him Brick without straw It is their duty totry the spirits and have they no way left no means of obedience Dearly beloved beleive not every spirit but try the spirits whether they be of God I desire my candid Reader to bear with a short Digression for the opening of this Text. We finde the holy Ghost hath not onely laid this Command upon us negatively Beleive not every spirit and positively but Try the spirits but hath also pressed this Doctrine with a Reason or Motive seconding that with Directions respectively The Reason why we should try the spirits is immediately subjoyned viz. For many false Prophets are gone out into the world The fals and heretical Prophets go out into the World but the true ones are sent for how shall they preach Rom. 10. except they be sent But this Motive here hath three steps in it whereon we might ascend to obedience There are false Prophets as well as true and therefore try c. There are men abroad that bearing the name of Prophets though false carry Lies in their right hand that carry on Errour very dexteriously and thou maist if thou take not good heed if thou do not try before thou trust thou maist happily shake such a hand therefore Try the spirits There are many false Prophets as they are deceitfull in quality so numerous in quantity he that walketh in a place over-crept with many Snakes Adders c. will he not take heed be very carefull watchfull over every step he treads Now are there not many Wolves in Sheeps cloathing many Snakes and Serpents under the hearbs in Gods Church Garden Take heed therefore Try therefore c. Many false Prophets are gone out into the World the Plot to deceive is not onely laid but executing and that not in private or secret only but publickly openly the Deceivers very cunning or the Times most corrupt Many false Prophets are gone out into the World therefore beleive not every spirit but try the spirits whether they be of God Quest But how shall we try the spirits Answ There are Rules sufficient in the Word of God and amongst the rest Saint John hath left us two or three here as being more seasonable for those Times and happily not unsuitable for ours For Hereby ye shall know the spirit of Error every spirit that denieth that Christ that is come in the flesh is not of God but this the spirit of Antichrist who is already in the World Vers 3. Whosoever heareth not us i. doth not with Faith and Conscience receive the Word whether written or preach't is not of God for hereby know we the spirit of Truth and the spirit of Error Vers 6. He that loveth
the command of the Letter and therefore the command in the Word is nothing to either Answ To the first of these I positively answer that the commands of the Word are not vain even as they respect dead natural men and such as have no power to obey the same In the clearing hereof I shall first endeavour to shew you the Truth viz. that God doth lay Commands upon such men Secondly the Grounds or Reasons thereof it is most certainely true that God doth lay commands upon men that in the state in which they are at present they are not able to obey doth not the whole Scripture testifie as much both in Law and Gospell Is not this a command Repent repent the great command of the Gospell Repent and beleeve the Gospell Mark 1. Now can a Leopard change his skin or a sinner of himselfe repent or beleeve Take one Text for all for this purpose Ephes 5. 14. Awake thou that sleepest arise from the dead c. As the author of this command is God so the object thereof must needs be impotent naturall and unregenerate men Every one sleeping or dead in sin who ever thou be this command lyes upon thee whether thou art able to obey it or no thou art thus commanded by God himselfe Awake thou that sleepest arise from the dead Now could we finde no reason of such commands yet we ought to beleeve they have their reason shall our lye make the truth of God of none effect this should satisfie us when we read such commands Viz. O the depth both of the wisedome and power of Goa c. and not because we know not Gods end wickedly explode and nullifie his meanes nor terme it in any point tyranny or cruelty for God thus to command more now then before naturall men before being altogether as insufficient and impotent as to their obedience of this great command of Awakening themselves and arising from the dead as now and what use could such commands as these upon such objects as these serve for then more then now But it is queried what possible end or Cursit intention can God have with himselfe in laying such commands upon poore men that are no way able to obey the same Answ I make my reply First by way of exception against and secondly of answer unto this Quere 1. I except against it for that most usually such cavills as these being the bublings up of a corrupt Fountaine flow from the rebellion of unregeneracy For this savours first of a proud and arrogant and secondly of a prophane and disobedient heart there is pride and arrogancy discovered in it for that it replyeth against God calling the wayes of an omnipotency it selfe into question yea and setting the party that ownes it so farr above his Master King and Maker as he that is the party questioning is superiour to him that is questioned such will know a reason why God commandeth them taxing the authority and Justice of him to whom none may say What doest thou 2. Such questioning as this as it savours of pride and arrogance so of a spirit of prophanenesse and disobedience also and that not only as it cleerly argueth a loath and unwillingnesse to obey by asking a reason of the command but likewise as it offereth an easie oppertunity to fling off every yoke and openeth a gapp for the vilest extravagancy whatsoever the drunkard the Whoremonger the Murderer Blasphemer c. will they not all hence argue why doth God command men perswade and why should I spend any of my indeavour about things impossible Can a Leopard change his spots yet can I neuer leave my lust Let us not therefore be too busie too witty in such Queres as these lest we discover our selves more then we should or would but rather let us see the authority of him that commandeth and waite upon him in our faithfull indeavour and prayer for strength to obey for all our sufficiency is of God Yet men of sincere intentions may possibly move such a question as this for their owne satisfaction and conviction of gainsayers I therefore proceed to consider what Gods ends and intentions may be in such commands as these and first as they concerne naturall men in generall secondly in speciall 1. The ends and intentions of God in such his commands as relate to unregenerate men in common i. without difference distinction c. may be first concerning himselfe secondly his creatures Such ends in such commands as respect God himselfe may be 1. To manifest that free and most absolute power and soverainty that he as the great Creatour of all things hath over his Creatures What though we cannot come up to obedience yet we way learne this lesson even by that command that we cannot obey that King Nebuchadnezzar learned in the Wildernesse Viz. That God worketh all things according to his will both in the army of Heaven and among the Inhabitants of the Earth that none can stay his hand or say unto him What doest thou Dan. 4. 32. 2. To declare unto the World That he is God and changeth not with whom is no variablenes nor shadow of turning though we have changed much having lost our strength and power to obey God is the same his will his authority is the same to command and to command the same things God made man perfect and agreeable to his ability God measured his commands but man having found many inventions to loose his ability yet retaineth man his duty and God his soverainty therefore saith God Remember the former things of old Remember how suitable my will was once to the power I gave thee Remember the former things of old and condemne thy owne folly not my Justice thy owne instability ficklenesse and changing not my samenesse and immutability For I am God and change not which declare in my commands which thou art not able now to obey the last things from the beginning and from of old the things that were not done my will that was not fulfilled saying My counsel shall stand and I will performe all my pleasure Isa 46. 9 10. 3. That all the World may know that he a holy God and delighteth in holiness although we cannot leave our sin and become as holy as God is himselfe and commandeth us to be yet his commanding us to be holy declareth it is his will that we should be so proclaimeth holinesse to the Lord all the World over For this is the will of God even our sanctification yee know what commands we gave you by the Lord Jesus and these commands declare the will of God for this is the will of God even our sanctification that wee should abstaine from fornication that every one possesse his vessell in holinesse even our sanctification 1 Thes 4. 2 3 4. 4. Lastly to shew his generall good wil and mercifull respect to falne man as rather inclined to save then to ruine and destroy his poore creatures God
other Professors And the place is to be taken comparatively and not absolutely Answ We need not go about to pick holes in the Coat of the maintainers of this errour But accepting this distinction bot● for this and the Verses or Termes viz. of Temple Sun Moon c. We now are discussing We shall indeavour and desire to end the Controversie and conclude That As it cannot easily be imagined that no unclean thing shall be admitted into this City so neither that there shall be no form or Ordinances allowed or practised there Let both these expressions be received in a sense comparative and not absolute and without much difference we may here shake hands in the receiving thereof Yet Not that we argue in the least we having sufficiently proved the contrary that this way or any other yet in earth is this new Jerusalem but only thus much we consent to that when ever God shall please to send down this holy City from himself in Heaven there shall not be so much of form in the World yea in the Church as now Observe me I dare not say there shall not be even in this City so many forms in your sense Ordinances much lesse none at all but not so much form opposed to power not so much formality opposed to Reality and Spirit in Holinesse and Worship The second thing I have promised to speak to Therefore The true meaning of the Text. 2. Could it be thought that this City is already come or coming down from Heaven I see not that the fall thereof must needs crush Ordinances Must needs take away the use but rather and only the abuse therof The full and genuine meaning of the place being thus viz. The most of this Chapter is a beautifull rare and goodly discription of the glorious Estate of the Church at the conversion of the people of the Jews therefore the Church the Lambs Wife here is called the City of the new Jerusalem Therefore also we read the whole description almost in the language of the Jews we have an Application of the promises formerly made for the restitution recovery Glory of the Jews and to conclude we therfore read here of a Temple a place of worship peculiar to the Jews and something even God and the Lamb to beare Analogy thereto And now when it is said that there shall be no Temple in the City it is not meant that the Gospell Churches of the Gentiles shall loose and leave there Gospell Ordidinances but that the Jews must not here expect a Iewish Temple a rituall Jewish worship as if it had plainly been said that the Iews may not be so far deceived as to expect the restitution of their old Legall and rituall worship Let them know that in this City the wonderfull presence of God in Christ in a purer truer worship of him shall fully supply all their heretofore externall Pedagogy that they had by their Law in their Temple then The Vaile of this errour yet lying over their hearts they being two much wedded to th●ir Law the Law of Moses and the rites thereof in opposition to the Gospell and the spirituall service and worship thereof the Apostle telleth them that this new Jerusalem hath no Temple but that God and the Lamb are Ezek. 48. 33. 2 Cor. 3. ult Rev. 21. 21. the Temple thereof And when their heart shall be turned to the Lord this Vaile shall be taken away and they shall then see with open face as in a Glasse the Glory of the Lord for the Glory of God shall light the City and the Lamb shall be the light thereof And the Jews of the glorious appearance and enjoyment of God and the Lamb among them forsaking their former formall way of worship shall now worship the Father in spirit and Truth for the People that are saved shall walk Joh. 4. 23. Vers 24. in the light thereof Not that all or any the Ordinances of Jesus Christ but of Moses only signified here by the Temple shall be taken away Now Arguments against 1. Cor. 15 24. The performance of them being only cleered brightned and purified in the light of this new Jerusalem holy City For 1. The ministeriall Kingdome of Christ according to his Gospell doth not terminate untill the end shall be 2. Christ must raine in his ministerial ver 25. 26. Kingdome till he hath subdued the last of his Enemies death till there be no more Rev. 21. 4 death As 1. The Sacrament of the Supper of the Lord must be done in remembrance of Christ till he come 2. The Commission of Baptisme reacheth Math. 28. ult alwaies even to the end of the World 3. For the preaching of the word even after this new Ierusalem is come from Heaven there is a tender of the Gospell Rev. 22. 17. and water of life not only the Spirit but the Bride saith come c. 4. And Prayer is exercised after it also for the hastning of the coming of Christ Rev. 22. 12. and 20. to Judgement Amen even so come Lord Iesus Thus it then appeareth that none much lesse not all of the Ordinances of the Gospell of Christ do expire at the coming down of the new Ierusalem from Heaven Much lesse are they to be dissolved or abolished before as the men of this errour would have them But In the Chapters following we shall single out the two maine standing Ordinances in the Church which we finde in these daies too too much neglected sleighted and contemned by many viz. the preaching of the Word and Prayer And indeavour at least if possible to recover their credit and practise again CHAP. XV. Of the Ministry of the Word WE are now discended to the speciall defence of these two speciall and most profitable Ordinances the ministry of the Word and Prayer Against the first of these viz. The ministry of the Word they argue thus Obj. 1 The coming of the spirit brings so much Light and Knowledge with it that we have no need of the teaching of men such low and inferiour meanes of Knowledge We shall Heb. 8. all be taught of God and we shall not need every one to teach his neighbour saying know the Lord for all shall know him from the greatest to the least Answ I wonder how this man can reconcile their Judgements and practise in this very case Preaching is dissolved and yet the World must know this by their preaching they go up into the Pulpit to pull down beat down preaching and yet at the very same time and for that very end they preach is their hand so happy that while they go about to ruine they must needs build or so unhappy that they by building it must needs destroy must all be taught of God immediately then why do they that beleeve make so much haste and darken the work of Gods own hand by being the meanes of teaching themselvs doth not this their own practice discover to
all that they themselves are suspitious that either the spirit of God doth not immediately teach and lead us into truth or that what they vent and publish is not the truth But we know that the Judgement of God is according to truth against them which commit such things For thou that Rom. 2. 2. 22 3. preachest a man should not preach dost thou preach thou that abhorrest Idolls dost thou commit sacraledge thinkest thou this O man that judgest them which do such things and doest the same that thou shalt escape c. 2. Let us search the Scriptures and in the primitive times we shall finde a semblance at least of this glorious day of the Spirits coming Let us observe what an aspect that casts upon preaching there and we may thence partly judge whether it will be so malevolent or not at its fuller appearance Act. 2. We finde an abundant performance of the promise of the Spirit upon the Apostles assembled together And what did it now silence them all and forbid them to preach any more did this coming of Christ in the spirit disanull and dissolve this ordinance of preaching committed unto them by the Person of Mat. 28. ult Christ No certainly it came not to abolish but to fulfill the same Therefore it falls down upon them in no other figure and shape but of tongues and they were all filled with the holy Ghost and began to speak Act. 2. 3. 4. 11. immediately began to speak the wonderfull things of God as the spirit gave them utterance now let not any think that the spirit of the unchangeable God is fickle as themselves ever to despise that way and ministry that he hath so highly before promoted and honored 3. Paul we know was immediately called to his great Appostleship by the voice of the spirit he was a Minister of the spirit and not of the Letter Let us 2. Cor 3. make Paul Umpire then in the case But we finde Paul preacheth and preacheth this Doctrine that Faith commeth by hearing And how shall we heare without a Rom. 10. Preacher Obj. But doth not the Scripture directly tell us that we shall all be taught of God and we shall not need every one to teach his Neighbour Answ This is the strong hold whereby the teaching of the ordinary Ministery is oppugned Can we but preserve and deliver it from hence it hath undoubtedly both safely and fully escaped the snare of the Enemy Now for this end we shall attempt at least these two things 1. To take of the dint of this Argument that flourisheth it self and threatneth so much in this Scripture And secondly to shew the proper and naturall drift thereof 1. And first This Scripture cannot possibly make void the preaching of the Word if we consider this following gradation 1. That it is a branch of the Covenant of Grace 2. Christ is the Mediatour and Performer of it for us 3. Christ promised the spirit for the same purpose even to lead us into all truth 4. That the same Christ when he ascended Ephes 4. gave Ministers also for this same purpose 5. At the same time when as he ascended to give these gifts he sent his spirit upon the same errand And therefore not likely to beat his fellow Servant to jossle the Minister out of the World 2. Now for the meaning of this place In a word it is either to be taken hyperbolically or comparatively but mediately stil or with Calvin restraining the accent to these later words saying know the Lord the meaning then being no more then this As the effect of the powring forth of the spirit there shal be a general profession of the name of God abroad knowledge covering the earth as water doth the Seas in a generall sense of knowing the Lord. Therefore they shall not need every one to teach his Neighbour saying Know the Lord after this manner saying Know the Lord for all shall know me c. And therefore to conclude the Text fore-mentioned speaks not the ministry null but effectuall God will not take away meanes but make meanes more prosperous by a more especiall presence and help of his spirit God will teach us by his Son Christ will instruct us by his Spirit And the spirit shall lead us into all Universale accommodum truth by the faithfull ministry of the word And observe this Covenant was in force as well then as now Then why Note 1. should it null the preaching of the Word more now than then 2. The Ministry therefore was a Co-worker with God in that age and why not now also Obj. 2 Others say we should approve of preaching better if ministers would deal plainly with us and tell us that what they preach is their own opinion and judgment and preach unto us in their own names But they presume to bring us the word of God and that in the name of God also and this offends and troubles us Answ Alas how apt are men to stumble at a straw yea and to make Christ himself in his own Ordinance a stumbling stone and a Rock of offence to themselves we must look upon the Ministry either as of Christ or not of Christ If we receive it not as the Ministry of Christ that we have partly already and shal more fully presently when we prove the succession thereof make cleer to you if you grant it to be the ministry of Christ then are they not Stewards and what Stewards do is it not in the name of their Master again are they not Embassadors and do not Embassadors declare the word of their Master the word of Reconciliation is committed to them and they treat with man yet in the name and with the Word of God Obj. But then what means this expounding raising Doctrines giving reasons and making uses of the word is all this the word of God Answ There is a book abroad and but lately started that upon this very ground doth tax all the Churches of Christ since the daies of the Apostles with gran● Apostasy indeavoring withall to destroy the preaching of the word and to bring us upon the other extream from living immediately upon the spirit to a bare reading of the word But let the Reader beware and consider its falacy indeed we grant that preaching expounding c. Is but the secundary not the primary truth and word of God Therefore our Sermons as they are to be deduced from so they are to be reduced to and examined by the rule the word of God Yet the word of God is either that that is expressed or implyed or that that is deducible from the holy Scriptures And that that is naturally drawn therefrom is as truly and properly the truth and minde of God as the Scripture it self Upon the very same tearmes Divines observe that though the Septuagint sometimes differs from the Text both in sense and words yet those very places are quoted by Christ himself for
Jesus Of perseverance I have prayed saith our Saviour to Peter that thy Faith faile Luke 22. 32. not And of all spiritual and heavenly blessings in one of Salvation it self For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be Rom. 10. saved Whatsoever ye shal ask in my name Knowledge Wisdome Pardon Grace Perseverance Comfort Salvation Heaven John 16. 23 24. And what more can you think of whatsoever you ask in my name the Father will give it you and it is but ask and have O let us then ask and receive that our joy may be full Prayer O the divine prevailency of praier it shutteth and boulteth up the Dan. 6. 11 12. mouths of Lions It openeth the doores of the Prison house It openeth when no man shutteth and it shutteth when no man Acts. 12. 5. openeth Prayer administreth liberty to prisoners Plenty to Famine Health to Sickness Peace Wisdome Fullnesse God Christ the spirit All are stored in the promises and Prayer is the key that opens this Ezek. 36. ult Cabinet and hath access unto this Treasure and by the hand of Faith takes all appropriates all By Prayer our hearts are lifted up to our Treasure we have our conversation above we have talk entercourse and Fellowship with Heaven and are by its glory misterious still wrapt up John 17. with God and Christ in one O the excellency prevalency and Mistery of Prayer But if the black and dark suit of prayer petition which must by Heaven as darknesse by light be done away be glorious How shall not the bright and faire side of it Thanksgiving and praise in the reflection where both Saints and Angells Christ and God shall be glorious for ever exceed in Glory O the Riches Grace the Kingdome Power and Glory of Prayer Who can declare the noble acts of praier who can shew forth all its Praise blessed be that God that heareth Prayer and blessed be the Sons of Prayer CHAP. XVII Of Experiences WE have hitherto indeavored that the spirit might owne his owne effects Cause word and Ministry And it followeth lastly that we reconcile him to the knowledge and acknowledgment of his owne former Seale and witnesse viz. in our Experiences The errour is that all the experiences that we have had of God Errour in his deliverances of us and that not only outward but inward also these saith my frequently quoted Author in his sixteenth false rest are false rests when we make them evidences of Gods Love and matter enough to conclude safety rest and happinesse This same Author would prove this errour with his old argument now applied viz. For saith he some mens deliverances Ground are of God some of themselves and some of Pag. 90. lin 25. Satan but none of these are to be rested upon seeing they may be true or false Answ I answer Spirituall expriences for such he especially instanceth in as true and fals in his sense here must of necessity be meant not to be so in themselves but with respect to our knowledge and judgment of them For as in themselves they must be and can be but one either true or false So in his argument are they supposed to be of God or not of God viz. of man or Satan His meaning is when he urgeth that our deliverances may be either true or false that for any thing we can know they may be either or as well false as true and therefore we can build no infallible assurance of Gods Love thereupon since the knowledge with respect to the evidence thereof is fallible Again hence then there will arise a double question 1. With respect to the matter of deliverance is whether we can know whether we are truly delivered or no whether our deliverance be reall 2. To the Author of deliverance and is whether we can possibly know whether our deliverance be wrought by God or no i. by Satan or our selves 1. First Then let us examine whether we may know the truth and reality of our deliverance And to this I answer what should hinder us if the spirit of God assist us can any thing be more knowable to the Soul then its own actions and passions if I know any thing do not I know that I know it if I love any thing do not I know that I love it if I hate any thing do not I know that I hate it can there be any reall change within me especially more then ordinary any motion alteration conversion more then ordinary and I know it not but what is more sensible then the deliverance from under the bondage of the Lordly power of corruption to use one of his own instances For this same purpose then the cutting off a right hand plucking out of a right eye the mortification of a beloved lust what is more knowable then the peace of God passing all understanding when delivered from a troubled vexed and tormented conscience what more perceiveable then then joy unspeakable and full of Glory to me Obj. But the very heart and core of this objection that is so hard to be gotten out it is viz. that Hypocrites do think their deliverance as true and firm as the best Answ I answer this is not denied and yet this as I have shewed before cannot a jot make a true Christians evidence fallible or the knowledge of his true deliverance weak and deceiveable The Reason is plain for though a man in the dark or blind may easily be deceived yet a man that hath his eyes in his head indubitably knoweth what he seeth or feeleth A man a sleep may dream and phansy to himself that he hath full Barns ful Chests full Tables all the ground and matter and occasion of joy imaginable But though this man doth but dream and is deceived cannot another that hath these things indeed be assured thereof shall another mans lie make my truth of none effect because some menare dead are there none that know themselves alive some blind do none see and know they see because the half recovered blind man in the Gospell saw men as Trees should this make the standers by question whether they did indeed see men or no yea could they not be assured thereof because of his doubting we that are delivered out of the Powers of darknesse we have our eyes opened and are in marvelous light besides and can we see no more then such as are blind and in the dark then Hypocrites our eyes being opened and we seeing in Gods light having received the spirit to this end that we know the things that are freely given to us of God why may not we 1 Cor. 2. 1 2. know and give thanks with St. Paul and Collossians for that he hath delivered us Col. 1. out of the powers of darkness into the kingdome of the Son of his love Obj. 2 Secondly But if it yet be queried whether we may know the author of our deliverance to
means Is it answered that thus it is knowable so is the work thereof in our hearts are they not known to be true or false but by the light of the spirit through our examining no more is the spirit himself Which it acknowledged to be knowable to us in the use of means by his own light we are agreed But this you may not allow that deny and oppose by the same pretended spirit all means of tryall your errour and misery 2. Secondly And doth not right reason also set to its Seal that this is true for thus I argue 1. Where the truth of the effect can-cannot be discerned without light from the cause how shal the truth of the cause be discerned without help from the effect now as to the case in hand it is received by all hands that the truth of the effect to wit Grace cannot be known but by the light of the cause viz. the spirit And the consequence is cleer from this common truth the effect is more knowable then the cause The reason thereof is for that the effect is more obvious to sense then the cause and things are conveyed by sense into the understanding for look how much the more any thing hath de ratione objecti viz. of sense it is so much the more easily discerned again that that is farther off from our knowledg is usually argued by that that is neerer and more known to us as we usually gain acquaintance with strangers by the means of our knowledge and acquaintance before Now according to these rules since the effects of the spirit are neerer to our knowledge then the spirit it self and yet we are not able to discern the true effects of the spirit without the spirits assistance how can we then be possibly at least probably able to make the truth of the spirit indubitable to us without regard to its Effects without use of means Secondly It seems to appeare that the The second way of arguing spirit as alone without the use of any means and considered abstractedly from its effects cannot be known to be true or false from the consideration of the nature of spirits in generall Spirits are knowable to men in their Essence residence and quality With respect indeed to the first of these we may know them both that they are and what they are as by way of Negation so by way of eminence but with respect to their place of residence and qualities where they are and what ones they are whether true or false good or bad we can know them only by way of causality or by their operations symptomes effects c. Secondly for in order hereunto we can only judg of them by sense or reason the only principles competent to man of knowledge and discerning Now therefore let us examine whether spirits either in their where or kind are to be known by sense or reason immediately without some signe effect or other 2. For there where or place of abode this certainly cannot be discerned immediately by sense Spirits being no sensible Objects imagine what kinde of spirit you will whether it be Angelicall rationall animall much more divine and though things of a grosser substance viz. Bodies may yet the spirit cannot Propter ejus excessum or by reason of its excelling purity be thus discovered We may take up a little of the knowledg of spirits for our present purpose from the purest of Bodies viz. Fire though Fire as corrupted may and is yet fire in its Element cannot be seen and as some affirm nor felt c. Therefore our daily experience sheweth us that the fire with us so soon as ever it hath conquered and overcome its matter gotten out of the cage the flame that thickned it it is immediatly invisible if not insensible and though it passeth upward towards its center and Element before our eyes yet who can perceive it now spirits the grossest of spirits are superiour to fire not only in degree but kinde also and that that elevateth the purest fire to exceed our senses viz. its purity is far more eminently contained in spirits and is the very thing that gives spirits their name and the very name that puts a distinction betwixt them and bodies the purest of Bodies fire it self It is a thing most apparant to experience that we cannot know whence any spirit is immediately by sense for wherein can they be sensible They have no colour therefore invisible They are not Bodies therefore not audible They have no sensible qualities not cold hot dry moist c. Therefore they cannot be smelt felt or tasted Therefore we read that when Angells were sent to accompany men they still assumed bodies according to scripture Secondly now since the presence of spirits is not knowable discernable by sense there is no other way left for the knowledge thereof but by reason Angells indeed see and know intuitive but this way of knowledge doth not Competere with us men We are reasonable creatures and know and judge of things not obvious to sense by our reasons only But let us be our selves and seriously consider and how is it possible that we that are reasonable Creatures should judge of the presence of any thing not obvious to our senses without an exercise of reason about some effects signes c. 2. Moreover if we cannot discern the presence of spirits either by our sense or reason how much lesse shal we ever be able to judge aright of their nature kinde or qualities without regard to their Effects without use and help of some signe mean Companion or other thereof As for example how shall I know whether the spirit in thee be rationall or animall onely But because it acteth a humane form or figure of Body in generall Because it discovereth it self by rationall discourse more speciall Giving some signe or Effect or other what spirit it is Further how shall I know whether the spirit in any be weak simple or of ripe understanding but by some outward operations and fruits thereof How do we try a mans Person whether good or bad but by his Actions The Tree as our Sahath taught us being known by his fruit by their fruit ye shall know them Yea neerer yet a man may most easily mistake through self-conceit and flattery in the knowledg and Judgment of his own spirit imagining himself to be informed acted and guided by a discreet wise and upright spirit when indeed there is no such matter unlesse he be so wise as to take a true measure for his knowledge of himself by comparing himself with such rules and patterns as are fit and known for a Foole may be wise in his own conceit But to apply if it be a thing so difficult to know our own so impossible to know anothers spirit how improbable it is then that we should be able to discern betwixt the spirit of God and the spirit of Satan without the help of some Effect or sign or other
Secondly to Angells Quamvis primus homo in statu innocentiae alitori quadam cognitione Deum cognoverit quam nos cognoscamus non tamen Deum per essentiam videt cum peccaverit Tho. Aqu. sum Par. 6. quaes 9. Art 1. 1. Then man in the state of innocency did not see God in his Essence but by or in his effects Adam saw God per effectum Creatum by or through the Creation which being a Medium Tho. telleth us that he saw God in Enigmate or in a Glass the Creature being Quid obscurum if compared with the brightnesse and purity of the Essence of God yet that Glasse of the Creature being far more advantagious to Adam in innocency for the letting in the knowledge of God then the mud wall of seperation that sin hath made we must needs conclude that Adam had then a more cleere and certain knowledge and sight of God though it was also by the word and effects of God then we have Multo eminentius videtur Deus per intelligibiles effectus quam per sensibiles corporeas Ibid. now But if you ask wherein Aqui. answereth insomuch as Adam saw God through the intelligible Effects of God while we see him cheifly through Effects corporeall and sensible a far more inferiour manner a far more dark confused and imperfect way Adam being no way but we every way hindred by these outward thingss from a cleer and firm contemplation Non enim oportebat primum hominem pervenire in Dei cognitionem per demonstrationem sumptamab aliquo effectu sicut nobis est necessarium sed simul in effectibus ●recipue intilligibilibus suo modo Deum cognoscebat Ibidem of intilligible Effects And yet somewhat higher Adam in that state did not need to gather the Knowledge of God as we of necessity must from some Effect but he saw and knew God together at once in the Effect especially intelligible Yet still he was beholding to the Effects of God for the knowledge of him he not being able to see God in his Essence and consequently there being not a third way left he came to the knowledge of him by his effects only 2. Moreover as man in the state of innocency could not see God so neither had he then so neer a society with Angells as to see and know them Per essentiam that neer immediate and familiar way we now speak of But to be breife the reason of both is built upon the very Essence and form of man We read that when God made man at first he breathed into him the breath of Life which intimateth to us that the reasonable soul the form of man is that that giveth him an Gen. 2. 7. 1 Cor. 15. 45. 47. animall life Therefore it is also said that the first man was made a living Soule i. A Soul giving life and that life and life animal As Aquin. glosseth so that in Cum anima 1. Homims in statu innocentiae suerit accommodata ad corporis gubernationem perfectionem sicut nunc atque ita intelligere debuerit per phantasmata non ponit in illo statum Angelos per essentiam didere Par. 1. Aquin. sum ques 94. Arti. 2 Vide. the state of innocency the Soul of man was accommodated fitted to govern act and inform the Body even as it is now and therefore it must needs have had then the like way of understanding and knowledge that it hath now more and lesse not differing the kind which is by a conversion of Objects to the Phantasme and thereby to convey them into the understanding of which way divine Essence and the Essence of angels are by no means capable And now to conclude if a man in the state of perfection yea in the state of that perfection that did cheifly consist in an excellent admirable knowledge of and communion with God and Angells could not see or receive into his knowledge either the spirit of God or the spirits of Angells but by their effects then how shall he be able to do it we that are fallen from that very perfection by sin whose discerning of spirits is by our Fall much more obscured and dark then his and the best among us in the life that now is being but that but in part the renued restored and prepared Adam the same image of God being but in part repaired in us by the spirit of the Gospel and that in the same respect viz. according to knowledge as well as holinesse And therefore as the first even so the in part received and repaired Adam sees God but in a Glasse beholding with open Face as Cor. 3. ult in a Glasse the glory of the Lord we are changed into the same Image 2. Now let us turn our eyes to take a view of Canaan and consider the height of the perfection to come in order hereunto For we shall finde it very doubtfull if not groundedly deniable that the perfection of Heaven it self shall inable us to discern of spirits thus immediately and not in or by their Effects As there is very much reason against so truly I know no Text of scripture invincible for it First reason seemeth to argue against it and first 1. Heaven is indeed the place of perfect and compleat redemprion and of the most absolute recovery to us but are not these Relative tearmes having a respect to our fall as also to the former condition from which we fell may we not partly gather and guesse whither and what our recovery shall be by remembring from whence we are falne Now wee have cleared this before Viz. That the soule of Adam in the state of his innocency could not possibly see either God or Angels Per essentiam but onely Per effectus 2. The perfection of man was this viz. his body being every way subject no way an impediment to his soule from this man fell by sin and by grace he is to this Servato eodem modo essendi secundum naturam Par. 1. Aquin sum quaes 94. Art 2. recovered the same way of being in all estates retained according to nature and also by consequence the same way of knowing Viz. By a conversion of things to the Phantasme to which neither the divine nor intelligent essences can be subject The soule of man in its threefold condition Viz. of innocency Apostacy and recovery being still accommodated to informe the body it cannot be easily imagined to take knowledge of spirits but by their effects in any of them 3. Therefore further we offer that it is not necessary to the very forme and essence of man to come to know this way Viz. By a conversion of things to phansie by reason and when man shall once arrive to this immediate knowledge and sight of spirits God and Angels must he not cease to be man If wee shall be continue to be men when in Heaven I submit but I cannot imagine that then we shall ever enjoy such a
part and this his knowledge here is by reflection in a glasse darkly though he promiseth to himself to see more immediately face to face hereafter Therefore I conclude Si aliquis videns Deum intellexit quod vidit non ipsum vidit sed aliquid corumquae sunt eius Dioni in Episto 1. Adcapiam Monacham and end this Argument with that saying of Dionis If any man whoever have a sight of God and understandeth what he seeth let him know that he seeth not God himselfe but only some effect or symptome of him We might further proceed were it not too injurious to our designe of hast to discover the vanity of this delusion to wit that we may discern the truth or falshood of spirits immediately without regard to their Effects in the light of these and such like Maximes Arg. 2 for the negative Nothing can act beyond its one kind and nature Now it is infinitely beyond the nature of our reason the bounds of Nihil agit extra genus suum our intellect to discern of spirits and not by their Effects To know whether or no they be true or fals immediately i without the use of means about the Effects or signes thereof The Office and naturall work of reason as over and again we have shewed is to judg of spirits by their works and symptomes and no otherwise for men do not gather grapes of thornes or figs of thistles Secondly Phylosophers affirm that Deus ipse non potest supplere vicim causae formalis even God himselfe cannot supply the place of a formall cause i cannot make on the one side spirits to be Bodies and things intelligible to become visible nor on the other side make us to see without eyes to understand without understanding or to know but by our reason All which God must do before we can be able and yet be men to discern of spirits immediately or to know whether they be true or false good or bad without respect had unto their signes or effects But many men are deceived with their Eccle ca. 3. 24 25. own vain opinion and an evill suspition viz. Of Qualifications hath overthrown their judgments yet without eyes thou shalt want light profess not the knowledge therefore that thou hast not Obj. 3 But men of much wisdome and piety great Divines affirm that the spirit Dr. Sibs doth sometimes immediately comfort us then surely the knowledge of the truth of the spirit may be immediate also which is the ground of comfort Answ I answer and grant that some learned and pious Divines have said it yet questionless not intending in the least to lay a foundation thereby for such a rejection of Marks and the means of triall as we have in dispute and therefore they immediately Dr. Sibbs in sealing of the spirit subjoyning this question but how shall we know the perswasion of the spirit of God from a delusion they set down such rules of discerning as may help us to know the spirit of truth and the spirit of Errour intimating to us that upon the least suspition or occasions of suspition of spirits we should have ready and speedy recourse to the Tryall thereof thereby But secondly there is to be observed a considerable difference betwixt the comforts the spirit giveth us and the assurance we give or gain to our selves of the truth of the spirit is the spirits ability the measure of ours yea is it not far more difficult to work assurance out of doubting then comfort from assurance Moreover doth it follow that because the spirit can and sometimes doth comfort us immediately that therefore we must not use means for assurance for no man may imagine that we can as easily work upon the spirit for assurance as the spirit upon us for comfort 3. Yet farther for my part though I reverence the judgment of those Godly I must conclude with Scotus in another case Me magis propter autoritatatesquam propter rationes putare posse men yet I cannot well see how the spirit doth comfort us immediately either the comforts of the spirit are most sollid and consequently most rationall if rationall not immediate because then they are convaid into the heart upon reasonable grounds Now the spirit cannot supply the stead of our reason and therefore doth not give in comfort immediately The spirit cannot inlighten our hearts but by our reason though he be a light he can not be an eye or faculty to us And therefore cannot immediately comfort us If we take suggestions upon trust how shall our reason be sanctified and if our reason be not our conscience can never be satisfied and then how weak how superficiall our comfort and how unworthy to be owned by the spirit of God our comforter or to be called that Peace of God which keeps Phil. 4 our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus 4. We are apt to imagine and mistake a flash of our own spirits which may be occasioned by many unknown secret ways to be the unspeakable ravishing comforts of the spirit of God sensitive joy to be spirituall comfort but the difference is as wide as Heaven and Hell And we may be assured fully that what revishments of spirit we know no account of as they are not reasonable so not spirituall the comforts of the spirit whose office it is as comforter to shew us the things of Christ and to give us to know the things that are freely given us of God being ever built upon grounds most rationall and such as are known to us Obj. But I have heard men of parts and piety both to set forth this mediate comforting of the spirit by the comfort we have from the presence of a 20. Sibs Freind Answ To which I answer that if in this act of our comfort the spirit be taken materially and not Essentially I undestand it well as the Apostle affirms hereby we know Joh. 3. ult that he abideth in us by the spirit that he hath given us But secondly Let us consider how the presence of our Freind doth comfort us Either because he is present or because he is our Freind both how do we know he is present but by the means of seeing him and how do we know that he is our freind but because of our experience in the Effects of his freindship and comforts immediate after this manner we grant are attainable by the presence of our freind the spirit viz. By assurance of its freindship by true experience of as also of its presence by due reasoning about the Effects thereof 3. But now unless thou try for ought either I or thy self can know thy spirit may be false as well as true thy joy counterfeit as well as reall Thy spirit may be of the Devill and thy comfort no other then a flash of Hel Yea thou maist be acted by no other then thine own deceitfull and melencholly spirit and thy joy be but sparks of
the stresse of immortality be not deceived you cannot gather Grapes of Thornes or figs of thistles If the foundation be strong and surely laid the house that is built thereupon may stand But if the foundation be rotten or sandy the house must fall Your ground is false your rest cannot be true O take your Babell down and build your house your soules your rest upon the sure foundation Yea take it down in time least worse it fall and great and lamentable the fall thereof while you are buried in its ruins Now of the things which we have spoken concerning this immediate Evidence of the spirit this is the summ 1. That which cannot be certainly known to be true cannot be a certain or infallible Evidence 2. That which is not true in it self cannot be a true Evidence And we have found that the spirit that refuseth to be tryed by any signes rules effects or relations whatsoever cannot be certainly known to be true yea is in it self certainly untrue Therefore such a spirit cannot be a certain nay cannot be a true though uncertain evidence of Heaven to us And must be therefore concluded and added for the eighteenth false REST. A farewell to the Reader NOW at length have I brought thee dear Christian Reader to my Journies end and since over paths so rocky high and dangerous with as much haste happily as might be with good speed It is said of Anger that when unable to do any more if it Iratus si nihil aliud possit cum molestus inimico fuerit atque animo morem gesserit multum promovisse putat can but a little satisfie it self in molesting its enemy it counts it hath atcheived some great matter and as I must readily profess my self Zealously affected against this Errour though indeed not so much mine as my Saviours enimy so it being now in its increase I should deem my pen very happy in its pains might they be blessed but with so much successe as but to stop it a little in its course and my very service I count would be too great a reward might I with-my labour as Aaron with his Censer stand betwixt the living and stay the Plague from spreading Num. 16. 48. further Yet did I hate the maintainers of this Error with a perfect hatred I would only renew the Atheneans return towards that impious ambious command of Alexander upon it since he hath Quonium vult Alexander Deus esse Deus esto a desire to be a God let him be a God or as Michaiah to Ahab go and prosper For thus I judge that were it but lawfull to suffer it to soar aloft in its Aery notion and Phansy a while without interruption it will certainly and suddenly fall down and setle upon the very dregs of Socinianisme or Atheisme with an interchangeable uncertain motion shee boweth and promiseth herself to both Though for that with saddest eyes the Mother may behold and bewail many of her Children but lately deceased to the Errour in question confusedly miscalling in their Grave of darknesse every thing God but owning none Imbracing The Ranters each other yee serving themselves in stead of God Not only not denying but professing ungodliness and worldly lusts monstrum horrendum c. such desperate experience of late hath discovered her inclining more to the later to wit Atheisme The Serpent was wont to ly hid heretofore under the herb in the way of God and thence to sting the World with delusion and Errour but hath not his late too great success converted the Serpent into a Lion and ah how bold and impudent while casting of and renting the divine Visard the waies of God he roareth out defiance against the God of Israel the Lion of the Tribe of Judah The man of sin is charged with exalting himself above al that is called God or is worshipped 2 Thes 2. 4. in that he as God sitteth in the Temple of God but the way of this Errour razeth the very Temple even with the Ground and willnot suffer one stone thereof to be left upon another of how much higher presumption shall it be thought guilty of how much sorer punishment shall it be thought worthy the Zeal of the house of the Lord hath eaten me up It was Archimedes his fond opinion that had he but a place to stand upon and he could raise the frame of the whole Earth and if he could raise the Earth out of the Center then he could hang the Earth upon nothing and if he might hang the Earth upon nothing then he might stand upon nothing How right hath this Errour attained Archimedes this vain boasting having gotten its footing in the spirit it hath overturned overturned overturned the whole World of Religion and by its witty contrivance having hung it as a Castle in the Aire upon nothing by miserable consequence stands upon nothing It s subtill chymistry resolves and rarifies all into spirit which yet secretly Evaporates a spirituall wickednesse It construeth every thing into a Mistery and there looseth it the mistery of Iniquity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yet though as a Mistery t is difficult to reveil Sententias vestras prodidisse superasse est Prima fronte apparent blasphemi e Jerom of the Palag in Epis ad Tessa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hard to be interpreted since by its discovery its iniquity appears and to know the opinion is to know it an Errour especially with such as have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their intellectuall faculties of relishing their senses exercised this hath been my resolution at least as the light gave ability to comprehend the darknesse Inventum tibi curare metu adduclum My care what ere I may moreover The truth of th' Errour doth discover But to conclude good Reader least I should seem to infringe the Gospel liberty as this is thy priviledge so my advise and yet not mine but Pauls yea and the spirit of God in him Try all things c. the Heathen Poet may add the reason Nimium creduli saepe lactatur animus he that is too apt to beleeve is too easily deceived therefore good Reader consider what is said and laying the same with an even upright hand in the seal of a serious consideration the Ballance of the Sanctuary excercise an act of impartiall judgment upon it and as the end and blessing upon thy true indeavour the Lord make thee able to discern betwixt the cruelty of Errour and the weight of truth things that differ Consider what is said and the Lord give thee understanding 2 Tim. 2. 7. in all things Farewell 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gloria cuncta Deo FINIS