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A55305 The divine will considered in its eternal decrees, and holy execution of them. By Edward Polhill of Burwash in Sussex Esquire Polhill, Edward, 1622-1694?; Owen, John, 1616-1683.; Seaman, Lazarus, d. 1675. 1695 (1695) Wing P2754; ESTC R212920 238,280 559

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could not be without a precedent Decree of giving Faith unto them Wherefore Faith is first decreed and then Salvation and thus the Decree and its Execution harmonize and both sute with the Gospel Method which sets Faith in order before Salvation But neither hath this colourable Reason any Nerves in it For that Proposition Such and in such order as God saves such and in the very same order he decrees to save may be taken two ways Either thus God decrees to save in the very same order as he saves that is as in time Faith goes before Salvation so in Eternity he decreed that Faith should go before Salvation and this is true Thus the Decree harmonizes with the execution and both with the Gospel but thus Faith is not made first in the Decree but first in the execution according to the Decree Or else thus there is the very same order observed in God's decreeing as in his saving that is as Faith is first in time so it was first in God's Decree and thus it is untrue for it stands upon this false bottom in general There is the very same order in God's internal Intention as there is in the external Production that which is first in the one is first also in the other This bottom is such as neither the harmony between the Decree and the Execution nor yet the Gospel-way and Method doth require The harmony between the Decree and the Execution doth not require it for that only requires that that which is decreed to be and exist first should accordingly be and exist first but it requires not that that which is first in Production should be first in Intention In production the Sun was first before the Beams but was it first also in intention then God decreed a Sun and in that instant meant no Beams In production the Chaos was first before the complete World but was it so in intention then God decreed a Chaos and in that instant meant not a complete World Neither can it avail to say that these instances are in Naturals for the harmony between the Decree and the Execution is as accurate in Naturals as in Spirituals Neither doth the Gospel-way or Method require it for that only requires that Faith be and exist first but not that it be first intended or decreed In order of nature Faith is first before Adoption but was it first also in intention then God decreed Faith to some persons and in that instant meant not their Adoption which yet by the Gospel is a necessary resultance from their Faith In order of existence Faith is first before Salvation but was it first also in intention then God decreed Faith to some persons and in that instant meant not their Salvation which yet by the Gospel is a necessary consequence of their Faith And this is the rather to be marked because the Remonstrants assert That God first and antecedently to his Decree of giving Faith did decree in general to adopt and save all Believers and if so then how doth God decree Faith to a person and not in and by the same Decree decree Adoption and Salvation to him These are a Conclusion naturally flowing from Faith by vertue of the general Decree and therefore that Decree which designs Faith to a person cannot but design these also to him In order of nature Faith is before Perseverance yet both are by one and the same Decree for God in decreeing Faith decrees the duration thereof which is but Mora in esse a kind of stay in Being else his Decree would be very imperfect In point of existence Perseverance is not simultaneous or all at once but successive one sand as it were dropping after another and one instant drawing on another yet all Perseverance is in one and the same Decree To imagine a succession of Decrees in Eternity suiting with the succession of instants in Time were strangely to Metamorphose Eternity into Time Thus it evidently appears that there is not the same order in the internal Intention as in the external Production that which is first in existence here is not first in contrivance there Wherefore the Argument for Faiths firstness in the Decree because of its firstness in the Execution falls to the ground In brief waving both these opinions as built on sandy foundations I conceive it is most congruous to say That God decreed Faith and Salvation in the very same Decree yet so as that withal he intended that in the execution Faith should go before Salvation As in Naturals God decrees the Sowing and Harvest in the very same Decree yet so as that in actual existence the Sowing shall precede the Harvest So in Spirituals God decrees Grace and Glory the sowing to the Spirit and reaping of Life eternal in the same Decree yet so as that in actual existence first there is Grace and then Glory first sowing to the Spirit and then reaping Life Eternal Wherefore in God's Decree Faith is not before Salvation nor Salvation before Faith but both are simultaneous nevertheless in time Faith comes forth first according to the Gospel-method and afterwards Salvation crowns it 3. In what manner are these things designed I answer in an Infallible way such as never fails Hence Election is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an infallible Predestination or Predestination of Grace and Glory to the Elect. Thus the Apostle Whom he did predestinate them he called whom he called them he justified whom he justified them he glorified Rom. 8. 30. The first link of Predestination and the last of Glorification are surely joined by the middle links of Vocation and Justification The Remonstrants to decline the force of this golden place tell us that the Apostle here speaks only of Believers such as love God Ver. 29. and of a predestination and vocation to the Cross and of a justification and glorification after it patiently endured But what is this interpretation but mere a perverting of Scripture The Apostle speaks of Believers such as love God but did they believe and love antecedently to God's Election or consequently and as the fruit thereof If antecedently What is the Calling according to purpose What purpose is this but the purpose according to Election Rom. 9. 11 the purpose according to which God saves and calls us 2 Tim. 1. 9 What Calling is this but that efficacious one which makes a man hear and learn of the Father so as to come to Christ by Faith and Love Joh. 6. 45 Wherefore Faith and Love stream out of the fountain of Vocation and Vocation comes down out of the bosom of God's Purpose To say that the called according to purpose are those which are ready to obey all the Will of God is against the usage of Scripture to turn God's Call into man's Obedience and God's Purpose which is the measure of his own acting into his Command which is the measure of man's Again if antecedently what becomes of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 29
formed in the Heart No man perfectly knows the least Atom or Dust in Nature how much less the grand Mystery of Grace Here then we must procede with great modesty and sobriety keeping as close as may be to the line and level of Scripture Now here I shall make a threefold Enquiry 1. Whether the Word of God be the Means or Instrument of Conversion 2. Whether the Will of Man be converted by the Intervention of the enlightned Understanding 3. Whether the Work of Conversion be wrought in an irresistible way 1. Whether the Word be the Means or Instrument of Conversion And here I shall endeavour two things 1. I will prove that it is so 2. I will enquire how far or in what sence it may be called so 1. I shall prove that it is so and that by three Arguments 1. Plain Scripture asserts it 2. Successive Experience shews it 3. The Analogy between the Principles of the new Creature and the Properties of the Word induces it 1. Plain Scripture asserts it Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God Rom. 10. 17. the holy scriptures are able to make wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. the Law is perfect converting the soul Psal. 19. 7. the Gospel is the power of God to salvation to the believer Rom. 1. 16. and for the Unbeliever who accounts it foolishness and weakness the Apostle assures us that the foolishness of God is wiser than men and the weakness of God is stronger than men 1 Cor. 1. 25. so much wiser as to out-reason their carnal Understanding and so much stronger as to out-wrestle their carnal Wills and Affections The Gospel 't is Ministerium Spiritûs the ministration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 8. the Golden Pipe through which the Oil of Grace is emptied out into mens Hearts and the great Organ through which the holy Ghost breathes spiritual Life into them 't is the seed of the new creature we are begotten by the word of truth Jam. 1. 18. born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever 1 Pet. 1. 23. 't is the white horse upon which Christ rides conquering and to conquer Rev. 6. 2. Conversion is a Conquest over the Minds and Wills of Men and for the obtaining thereof Christ rides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the word of truth Psal. 45. 5. and because there be high things and strong holds in mens Hearts the Word is as a mighty Engine in his hands to cast down those heights and holds and captivate every thought to himself 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. The Apostle taking notice of the work of Faith labour of Love and patience of Hope in the Thessalonians 1 Thes. 1. 3. gives us a clear account whence those choice Graces came the fontal Cause of them was Election Ver. 4. and the instrumental the Gospel Ver. 5. For saith he our Gospel came unto you not in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance In a word All the Current of Scripture seals up this Truth 2. Successive Experience shews it St. Peter at once caught 3000. Souls in the Net of the Gospel Acts 2. 41. St. Paul came to the Romans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the fulness of the evangelical blessing Rom. 15. 29. the Corinthians were his seal 1 Cor. 9. 2. and the Thessalonians his joy and crown 1 Thess. 2. 19. In all Ages of the Church God's Ministers have had a proof of Christ speaking in them and God's People have felt the Word to be Spirit and Life to them in all places where God's Name hath been recorded his blessing hath been afforded where the Seed of the Word hath been sown new Creatures more or less have sprung up out of it Were there a general Assembly of the First-born what stories would they tell us about the power of the Word One would say Hell flashed in my face out of such a Threatning another Heaven opened to me in such a Promise a third the Beauty of Holiness appeared to me in such a Precept every one in the Language of his own Experience would speak forth the wonders of the Word How many have been forced by the power of it to fall down and worship and say God is in it of a truth How many have experimentally felt it pointing out their darling Lust plucking again and again at the Iron-sinew in their Wills lifting and thrusting hard at the World in their Hearts and at last carrying away their Souls in a fiery Chariot of holy Affections towards God in Christ The common sense of Christians bears witness to the Efficacy of it 3. The Analogy between the Principles of the new Creature and the Properties of the Word induces it If we compare the Understanding of the new Creature with the Word there is a Principle of excellent knowledge and here is the word of truth Eph. 1. 13. there is a lively and spiritual Knowledg and here are lively oracles Act. 7. 38. and words which are spirit and life Joh. 6. 63. there is a near and intimate knowledg and here is a word quick and powerful piercing into the very soul and spirit Heb. 4. 12. there is a divine Faith or perswasion and here are faithful sayings worthy of all acceptation 1 Tim. 4. 9. there is a clear Vision an open-fac'd Knowledge and here is a clear Revelation a pure glass reflecting the Glory of God upon the heart 2 Cor. 3. 18. there is a practical Knowledge and here is a doctrine according to godliness 1 Tim. 6. 3. Again if we compare the Will of the new Creature with the Word there are holy Desires breathing after and holy Resolutions fixing upon God as the ultimate End and here are the goads and the nails Eccl. 12. 11. which stir up those Desires and fasten those Resolutions in the Heart there is Freedom indeed spiritual Liberty in the ways of God and here is free-making truth Joh. 8. 32. and a law of liberty Jam. 1. 25. there is a fiducial and complacential rest in God and here are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words of faith to lean upon 1 Tim. 4. 6. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words of delight to take pleasure in Eccles. 12. 10. there is a closing with Christ in all his Offices as Prophet Priest and King and here is this Prophet speaking to us this Priest dying and as it were crucified before our eyes this King upon his Throne with a Sceptre of Righteousness in his hand there is a sorrow for hatred of Sin and here is that which pricks us at the heart and shews us Sin as an abominable thing If we compare the Affections of the new Creature with the Word there is a reduction of the Affections unto Reason and here is Reason in its height and pureness there the World hath but a very low place and here it hath but a very mean character there the
divinae Majestati si hominibus tribuitur nihilo rectiùs tribuitur quàm si Divinitas ipsa eis tribueretur quo sacrilegio nullum esse majus possit Sovereign and Supreme Liberty is a perfection too high for any Creature for that by natural and intrinsecal Justice owes subjection to its Maker This is one of God's Crown-jewels who sitteth King for ever and ever dwelling in that light which no Creature can approach unto and in that Liberty which no Creature can attain unto 2. God is blessed for evermore blessed in all perfection and perfect in all blessedness in the fruition of himself he is infinite Light to see his own infinite Perfection he is infinite Love to embrace his own infinite Loveliness As he cannot comprehensively know his own infinite Perfection unless he have an infinite Understanding so neither can he adequately embrace his own infinite Loveliness unless he have an infinite Will God hath but one simple Nature and therefore but one simple Pleasure which is no other than the intellectual and amatorious reflexion of the divine Understanding and Will on the divine Goodness for ever 3. If there be no divine Will at all in God then the divine Arm must needs be shortned so that it can produce no creature at all for if it produce any thing it must do it either freely or necessarily not freely for want of a divine Will nor yet necessarily for then it must produce things ad extremum virium and so must produce all the possible Worlds and Creatures lying in the bosom of Omnipotence which would be infinite actual Beings and produce them all as early as Eternity it self and all those infinite actual Beings so produced should be necessary Beings as well as God himself In all which many great Contradictions are involved 4. If there be no divine Will in God then the Glass of the divine Prescience must needs be broken because as God knows all Essences in his own glorious Essence all Possibles in his own wonderful Omnipotence and all congruities and tendencies to his own Glory in his own unsearchable Wisdom so he knows all Futures in his own Will For all things future were in their own nature but mere possibles and could never of mere possibles become futures without the Divine Will and unless they become futures they could never be known as such no not by the Divine Intellect it self For as infinite Omnipotence cannot effect that which is not possible and potenter non potest so infinite Omniscience cannot know that which is not knowable for this were to erre and not to know and consequently a blemish in the clarity of the Divine Intellect 5. The Glory of God which passes before the faith of his Children is his Grace and Mercy and the Glory of his Grace and Mercy is the Freeness and Self-movingness of it and this Freeness and Self-movingness can no where be found but in the Divine Will alone into which all grace and mercy is resolved by God himself who saith I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious and will shew mercy to whom I will shew mercy Exod. 33. 19. 6. God is a living God and lives the most perfect life because he is the most perfect Being and this Divine Life doth not merely consist in the comprehension of his infinite Understanding nor only in the exertion of his infinite power but also in the volition of his Divine Will With thee O Divine Will is the pure Fountain of Life the precious Well-head of Grace and Glory all the Saints and Angels must stand still and adore thee in the embraces of free Election and Crown of Eternal Glory in every Drop of Christ's Redeeming Blood and Gale of his gracious Spirit CHAP. III. Of the Decrees of God in general HAving proved that God hath a Will I proceed to the Acts thereof The Divine Will although one pure Act is considerable under a double Notion either as it is Voluntas Complacentiae or else as it is Voluntas Decreti Voluntas Complacentiae is that whereby God doth love himself and his own Image Himself for himself as infinite Love doth by an Amatorious Reflexion embrace himself as infinite Goodness And his own Image for where-ever that is found whether shining out in holy Laws or living in holy Creatures there is his delight Voluntas Decreti is that whereby God doth foreordain Events Both these are Acts of his Will and free Acts because they spring out of his divine Knowledge Even God himself through the intuition of his own Beauty loves himself as well as he makes his Decrees out of the Treasury of his Wisdom but herein they differ that God's Act of loving himself is such as cannot be otherwise but his Act of Decreeing if he had been so pleased might have been otherwise framed than it is Pretermitting his Complacential Will I shall direct my Discourse to his Decretive The Decrees of God may be thus described viz. That they are the Wise Eternal Immutable Immanent Acts of his Will whereby for his own glory he decrees whatsoever comes to pass in time Every Decree of God is an Act of his Will hence 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Will of God Acts 21. 14. 't is an Immanent Act hence 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a purpose in himself Eph. 1. 9. 't is a wise Act hence 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the counsel of his Will Eph. 1. 11. 't is an eternal Act hence 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a foreknowing and foredetermining Rom. 8. 29. 't is an immutable Act hence 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the immutability of his Counsel Heb. 6. 17. 't is an Act definitive of Events hence 't is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the determinate counsel of God Acts. 2. 23. and the end of all is his own glory whereby the whole Will of his Decrees circulates into that Will of his complacence whereby he loves himself himself being the ultimate end all meet there as in their true centre Now in the Decrees of God there are four things to be chiefly considered 1. That they are founded on infinite Wisdom 2. That they are situate in Eternity 3. That they are cemented with Immutability 4. That they are crowned with Infallibility as to the Event 1. The Decrees of God are founded on infinite Wisdom God hath a Mass and Treasury of all Wisdom in himself and from thence he draws out all those Orders and Series of things which through his Decrees are poured forth into being Extra Deum there is no Reason of his Decrees but within there is Summa Ratio God even as decreeing dwells in Light though to us unapproachable every Decree is irradiated with infinite Wisdom though our eyes cannot enter into it The Apostle calls the World the Wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1. 21. and no wonder for all the rare Artifices and Harmonies in the Sphear
in God's Eternity which is Nunc stans it is sure in God's Immutability which is ever the same and the seal upon all this is God's unerrable and infallible Knowledge including within it unvariable and unchangeable Love to his people God is the Father of lights with whom there is no variableness nor shadow of turning James 1. 17. The visible corporeal Sun rides circuit round the World but whilest he salutes one Hemisphear in the turn he leaves a dark shadow on the other but God is an immutable and supercelestial Sun there can be no shadow in his eternal and unconvertible Light Neither are the various changes among the Creatures shadows cast by any turn in God or his Will but events ordered and disposed by him And because the Apostle speaks in this Verse of perfect gifts and in the next of Regeneration by God's Will therefore there is a further sence in it That if the Father of Lights purpose to make the Day-star arise in any poor Soul his gracious purpose never turns away from that Soul nor leaves it in the dark shadow of Death The Names of the Elect are all indelibly written in God's Book and if the Scripture cannot be dissolved Joh. 10. 35. surely the Book of life must be irrasible Saint Austin on those words Deleantur de libro viventium cum justis non scribantur Psal. 69. 28. raises an Objection si homo dixit Quod scripsi scripsi Deus quemquam scribit delet quomodo isti inde delentur ubi nunquam scripti sunt To which he answers Hoc dictum est secundùm spem ipsorum quia ibi se scriptos putabant Quid est deleantur de libro viventium ipsis constet non illos ibi esse Deleantur ergo secundùm spem ipsorum secundùm autem aequitatem tuam non scribantur In a word whatsoever God doth in his Decrees is immutably the same his Decrees are as Mountains of Brass Zach. 6. 1. unremoveable by any Creature because situate in the Eternal Will The strength or eternity of Israel will not lye or repent 2 Sam. 15. 29. If God's Time cannot lye but will infallibly shew forth the Verity of his Promises and Prophecies surely God's Eternity cannot lye wherein he decrees and knows all The World is full of Vicissitudes Matter is in a perpetual Flux the Glass of Time is running out and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Wheel of Nature is running round but all the while God's Will is immoveable it doth not rowl about with the Heavens rise or set with the Sun or ebb and flow with the Sea but sits King for ever and ever upon the Throne of its own Immobility Apud te Domine rerum omnium instabilium stant causae rerum omnium mutabilium immutabiles manent origines omnium irrationalium temporalium sempiternae vivunt rationes Now besides what hath been said out of Scripture to prove the Immutability of his Decrees these Reasons may be offered 1. The Decrees of God are Immanent and Eternal Acts in God therefore cannot but be Unchangeable God in framing his Decrees non egreditur extra seipsum goes not out from his own Eternity 2. As the Eternity of Futures proves an Eternity in God's Decrees so the Immutability of Futures proves an Immutability in his Decrees If the Decrees which are the Basis of Futurition may be changed then that which was future by the Decree may yet cease to be future sine positione ejus in esse actuali which is impossible If a new Decree be made in succession after a former then the thing decreed begins to be future which is also impossible 3. If the divine Decrees should change Oh! what amazing Changes what an horrible Tempest must needs ensue Must not God's own dwelling-house even his glorious Eternity sink and fall to the ground Non enim est vera Aeternitas ubi oritur nova voluntas nec est immortalis Voluntas quae alia alia est Must not God's eternal Prescience fall a doubting and faltring about every Future Seeing God cannot now know his own works no not a moment before their actual Existence because even then their being may be prevented by a Change in his Will May not eternal Grace and Truth lose their glorious light and Jesus Christ the Sun of Righteousness drop out of the Gospel-orb and all the Starry Promises in the Word and lightsom Comforts in the Saints go out in a moment leaving all in darkness and confusion May not the Evangelical Banquet let down to poor Worms be called back again into Heaven and the precious Blood of Christ return again into its Veins and his Humane Nature be cast away into nothing and every Saint instead of Grace and Peace in his heart may have a Lye in his right hand and lie down in sorrow Nay in such a case must there not fall a Change upon the very Being of God himself And seeing every Change is a kind of Death must not the Deity suffer and as it were die in this Mutation All which astonishing Catastrophes being to be for ever abhorred I conclude that God's Decrees must needs be Immutable as long as there is any Stability in his Eternity Infallibility in his Prescience Sureness in his Grace and Truth or Immortality in his Life or Essence 4. The Decrees of God are crowned with Infallibility as to the Event the Event is so certain that the Spirit of God in Scripture speaks of future things as if they were already done Behold saith Enoch in the morning of the World the Lord cometh with ten thousand of his Saints as if he had been then in the Clouds coming to Judgment Jesus Christ cries out of God forsaking and men piercing him Psal. 22. 1. and 16. as if he had then been upon the Cross with all the wrath of God and fury of men upon him Whom he did predestinate saith St. Paul Rom. 8. 30. them he called whom he called them he justified whom he justified them he glorified he speaks as if all the Elect were already in Heaven Hence God is said to be Isai. 45. 11. as the Sept. there hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Maker of things to come the Event is as certain as if it were already done Now for the understanding of this point we must distinguish of Events either they are good things or else evil viz. sins Touching the first the Decree of God is Effective touching the last the Decree of God is Permissive The first come to pass Deo efficiente the last Deo permittente but both do fall out infallibly 1. Those Events which fall under his Effective Decree do fall out infallibly This is clear upon a double Account 1. The Will of God is Causa Causarum an Universal Supreme Cause having all things under it It reigns over all the armies in heaven and the inhabitants of the earth Dan. 4. 35. The poor Sparrow is no more forgotten by it than
and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began here the words in Christ relating to Election do not import our being in Christ for the Text saith that he called us according to his Grace given us in Christ and Calling goes before Faith or being in Christ and is the immediate cause or fountain thereof but they import that Vocation and Salvation with all the blessings thereof are communicated unto us in and through Christ and that the eternal Decree or Design was so to communicate them Neither doth the Apostle simply say he hath chosen us in him but he hath chosen us in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that we should be holy thereby pointing out unto us Christ as the designed Fountain of all the holiness in the Elect. Moreover the Apostle saith that he hath chosen us in him that we should be holy and Faith is a choice part of holiness and that he hath blessed us in him with all spiritual blessings and Faith is a prime spiritual blessing and that he hath blessed us according as he hath chosen us and therefore he chuses us to Faith as well as blesses us with Faith but if he chuse us for Faith and bless us with Faith he doth not bless us according as he chuses us By all which it appears that the Remonstrants Interpretation is an Arrow shot besides the Text. But to go on to other Scriptures Blessed is the man saith the Psalmist Psal. 65. 4. whom thou chusest and causest to approach unto thee and what approach can a sinful worm have to the holy one what but by the Faith of Christ and whence is this approach but from God and God electing He chuseth and causeth to approach unto him If Faith were antecedent to Election the approach must have been before the chusing the contrary whereof appears in the Text. As many as were ordained to eternal life believed Acts 13. 48. The Apostle saith not as many as believed were ordained to Eternal Life but as many as were ordained to Eternal life believed But here the Remonstrants tell us that in the Text 't is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that imports not God's eternal preordination but man's present condition or disposition so that the meaning is as many as were disposed or well-affected to Eternal Life believed Should it say they import God's preordination then all of that Assembly which were elected did believe at that one Sermon and all the rest were absolutely reprobated for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text is an universal particle now that all the Elect of that Assembly did believe that day or that all the rest were Reprobates is not imaginable I answer first as to the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the import thereof will best appear by taking notice in what sence St. Luke doth use this word in the Book of the Acts Acts 15. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They decreed or appointed that Paul should go up Acts 28. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 having appointed him a day Acts 22. 10. God promises Paul that it should be told him of all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are appointed or ordained for him to do and what these were Ananias sets forth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath chosen thee to such and such things Ver. 14. Now in all these places of the Acts the word signifying appointing or ordaining why should it be taken otherwise in this controverted Text Nay where in all the Scripture doth this word import an inward quality or disposition In that place which seems most of any to speak that way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints 1 Cor. 16. 15. there this word imports no less than a certain purpose of mind in them to do that work Wherefore I conceive that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text doth import an ordination and that of God neither doth the absence of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at all hinder it for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 2. 23. doth without a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 import God's eternal counsel and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 designs an antecedent ordination and that ordination must be God's unless which is the grossest Pelagianism it be said that they were ordained by themselves to Eternal life But to pass over the word the Remonstrants take the Text thus As many as were disposed to Eternal Life believed but can a man without Faith who neither lays hold on Christ the Prince of life nor yet hath any thing of the Spirit of life can such a man be disposed to Eternal life Every disposition to Eternal life must be such either because it hath some intrinsecal dignity meriting Eternal life or else because it hath some Evangelical congruity to which Eternal life is annexed by Promise As to the former the Remonstrants as Protestants cannot own it and as to the latter they cannot in all the Gospel shew forth one Promise of Eternal life made to a man void of Faith and how then can a man void of Faith be disposed to Eternal life But if he could the Remonstrants of all others must not say so for they assert that none but a Believer can be the object of Election because say they God cannot will Eternal life to any but to a Believer to a man in Christ and how then can an Unbeliever a man out of Christ be disposed to Eternal life Such a mans disposition to Eternal life if it be not such by its meriting condignity must be such divinâ ordinatione and if so what is that but to say this is the man to whom God wills Eternal life and if before Faith God may will Eternal life to him why may not he before Faith elect him Again This disposition to Eternal life must be either some moral Virtuousness or else some better Grace of the Spirit if but a moral Virtuousness how can it dispose to Eternal life if a better Grace of the Spirit how can it precede such a Mother-grace as Faith But let us hear how the Remonstrants paint out this disposition in words of Scripture These disposed ones say they are the sheep of Christ Joh. 10. 4. the drawn of the Father Joh. 6. 44. such as do the truth Joh. 3. 21. such as will do God's will Joh. 7. 17. such as have honest and humble hearts apt and idoneous to embrace the Gospel But what a perplexed Labyrinth of words is here To be the sheep of Christ argues a being in the state of Election which is antecedent to all good dispositions in us they are called sheep before their bringing home to God Joh. 10. 16. and their bringing home goes before all gracious dispositions The Fathers drawing imports God's action and not man's disposition the doing of the Truth is man's
payment from another wherefore Christ's Blood and Righteousness are meritorious as for us not merely by their intrinsecal dignity but by the divine acceptation God receiving them as on our behalf Whence it clearly appears that the divine Will doth guide the Merit of Christ in all its procurements and how then doth the Merit of Christ guide the divine Will in its eternal Election Can it guide its Guide Can it go before its Leader Surely that divine Will which goes before those meritorious procurements by its Acceptation doth not follow after them in its eternal Decrees 5. The Father is the first Person in the sacred Trinity and works from himself the Son is the second and works from the Father Thus he tells us that he can do nothing of himself but what he seeth the Father do Joh. 5. 19. And in his Prayer to his Father he saith Thine they were and thou gavest them me Joh. 17. 6. Thine they were by Election and thou gavest them me as the peculiar purchase of my Passion But now if Christ by his Merits do found the very Decree of Election is not the Order of working in the sacred Trinity inverted Is not the Son the first Origine of our Salvation Doth not the Father even in his Eternal Election work from the Son Might not the Scripture rather have said that the Elect were given by the Son to the Father than by the Father to the Son Wherefore to me it seems most congruous to say That the Fathers Love laid the first plot of our Salvation and then the Sons Blood purchased Grace and Glory for us I shall shut up all with an Answer to an Objection This Thesis that Christ did not merit the Decree of Election seems to abase Christ as if he were a mere medium for the executing of Election nay to nullifie his Merits for it supposes that God doth amare peccatores ad salutem etiam extra Christum that God doth destinate eternal Life to them even without a Mediator and then what necessity is there at all of Christ's Merits I answer Far be it from every Christian to abase and nullifie the Merits of Christ but as I take it the Thesis aforesaid doth neither of these Not abase Christ as a mere medium under the Decree of Election for though he merited not the Decree of Election yet must his praise be ever glorious and his Name above every name in that he is both the glorious Head of the Elect and the meritorious Fountain of all the blessings and good things of Election In Eternity the Elect are predestinated to be conformed to his Image as the first-born of all and in time they are called justified sanctified and glorified in and through him as the purchaser of all Neither doth he vilifie Christ who calls him the grand Medium for the executing of Election the Apostle cries up Christ by those glorious Titles The head of the Church the beginning the first-born from the dead one who hath the primacy or preeminence in all things Col. 1. 18. yet immediatly after puts all under the Father's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 19. His Decree or good pleasure did preordain and direct all Neither doth this Thesis nullifie the Merits of Christ for these consist not in procuring the Decree of Election but in procuring Grace and Glory and these he procured though not the Decree it self Neither doth it at all follow that if Christ merited not the very Decree then God doth amare peccatores ad salutem extra Christum or destinate Eternal life to them without a Mediator For seeing Christ is predestinated to be the Head of the Elect and Fountain of all Grace and Glory unto them and the Elect are predestinated to be the Body of Christ and to receive all Grace and Glory in and through him and both these Predestinations are simultaneous in the heart of God and framed together in the same instant of Eternity There is not nor cannot be any colour at all to say that God doth love sinners extra Christum or destinate Eternal life to them without a Mediator When God in free Election resolves with himself such individual persons shall by an effectual Call be united to Christ as members of his Body and being such shall be washed in his blood filled with his Spirit and at last crowned with his everlasting Salvation when he resolves every grain shall come through Joseph's hands every particle of Grace every income of the holy Spirit every glimpse of Divine Favour every beam of glory in Heaven shall pass through Jesus Christ's hands nay through his very Heart-blood and crucified Flesh unto the Elect Doth he now love them extra Christum Doth he yet destinate them to Eternal life without a Mediator Undoubtedly he doth not If therefore you ask me what necessity there is of Christs merits I must answer That all Grace and Glory Sanctity and Salvation Faith and Fruition are thereby purchased and procured for the Elect. The pure fountain of Election rises of it self in the Will of God but the gracious streams thereof issue forth through the bleeding Wounds of Christ. CHAP. V. Of Gods Decree of Reprobation as touching Men. HAving treated of the Decree of Election as respective of men I proceed to the Decree of Reprobation as it relates to them In the Old Testament we find 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is opposite to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Septuagint rendred by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and importing as much as reprobare to reprobate or reject In the New Testament we have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 importing a rejectaneous or disallowed person and rather pointing out man's State than God's Act. But to pass over the word Reprobation is that Eternal Decree of God whereby he purposes in himself not to give Grace and Glory to some individual persons lying in the Mass of Humane Corruption but to leave them to final sin and for the same to punish them with Eternal Damnation In this Decree the Divine Will hath as I may so say a Triple Act For 1. It purposes not to give Grace and Glory to some persons and this is called among Divines Preterition or Non-election and is of all other the most proper act of Reprobation as it stands in opposition to Election Hence Reprobates are called the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rest or residue in opposition to the Elect Rom. 11. 7. the nunquam noti or never known Matth. 7. 23. in opposition to the foreknown and the not written in the book of life Revel 13. 8. in opposition to the written ones whose names are enrolled in Heaven 2. It purposes to leave them to final sin I say final sin for God permits sin even in the Elect but final sin only in the Reprobate Thus God suffered the Nations to walk in their own ways Acts 14. 16. and thereby gave them pereundi licentiam Thus he hardneth whom he will Rom. 9. 18. and hardening in
done good or evil Artaxerxes decreed that Jerusalem should not be built again because upon search of his Records he found that it had been a rebellious City Ezra 4. 19 21. Should God have founded his Decree of Preterition and Non-election on a Prescience of humane Rebellion the holy City of the Church had never been built nor the divine Image ever repaired therein All men had eternally lay as Sodom and Gomorrah in the dust and rubbish of Adam's Fall with a line of spiritual confusion stretched upon them Who is there that lives and sins not What man on earth hath not rebelled and vexed God's holy Spirit Even little Infants rebelled in voluntate Adae and besides Imbecillitas membrorum infantilium innocens est non animus infantium Neither yet doth final Impenitency and Infidelity do it for there is no final Impenitency and Infidelity but such as is permitted and permitted it is not but out of the Decree of Preterition and Permission wherefore that Decree cannot be caused thereby Final Impenitency and Infidelity may be considered two ways either as being in actual existence or else as foreseen by the divine Prescience but neither way doth it cause the Decree of Preterition and Permission but presuppose the same Not as it is in actual existence for final Impenitency Infidelity come into being after Permission and Permission flows out of the Decree wherefore final Impenitency and Infidelity coming after Permission are not the Cause of the Decree out of which Permission doth issue Nor yet as it is foreseen by the divine Prescience for the Decree of Preterition and Permission is that very Glass wherein final Impenitency and Infidelity are foreseen for had God made no Decree of Preterition and Permission he had seen all men repenting and believing as the fruit of his effectual Grace unto all had he made that Decree universally touching all he had seen no man repenting and believing Wherefore final Impenitency and Infidelity as foreseen do not cause but presuppose the Decree In a word I conclude That the Decree of Preterition and Permission doth merely depend upon the supreme and sovereign Will of God Neither is there any colour of Injustice in all this for 1. Non-electio as Suarez hath it non est poena ut culpam praerequir at sed est quaedam negatio gratuiti beneficii quod Deus ut supremus Dominus negare potest God may do what he will with his own Election the primum indebitum is God's own therefore he may pass by whom he pleaseth the holy Spirit the fountain of all Faith and Repentance is God's own therefore it may breath only where it lists All Souls and Graces are God's own therefore he may infuse or not infuse Graces into Souls ad placitum Neither is it imaginable that God should be obliged to give restituent Grace to fallen Man when he was not obliged to give custodient Grace to the innocent Angels If Faith and Repentance are the gifts of God may he not suspend them If he be bound to give them why is there ae peradventure put upon some mens Repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25 Why a cannot upon some mens Faith John 12. 39 Why a perhaps upon some mens Forgiveness Acts 8. 22 Why aforbidding upon the means of Grace Acts 16. 6 Why a manifestation to disciples and not to the world Joh. 14. 22 Why a Revelation to babes and not to the wise and prudent Matth. 11. 25 In short God's Election must be either arbitrary or necessary If necessary how is his Election free If arbitrary how is Non-election unjust The donation of Faith and Repentance must be Grace or Debt If Debt why is not the Veil off from every Eye and the Stone out of every Heart Why is not Grace as common as Nature and Saintship as Humanity But if Grace then where it is conferred it is freely conferred out of self-moving mercy and where it is denied it is justly denied out of unaccountable sovereignty 2. In the Permission of final sin there is much of Sovereignty but nothing of Injustice the great God is absolutus faber suae permissionis he could let legions of Angels at once drop out of Heaven into Hell he could let innocent Adam as rare a piece as he was break himself all to shivers by a fall and what may he not permit sinful Worms to do What are Creatures to him If they miscarry how many thousand thousand Worlds are there in the bosom of his Omnipotence If he suffer all Nations to walk in their own ways he doth but let a drop fall off the Bucket or a small dust fly off the ballance he doth but leave Vanity to its own lightness and a Quasi-nothing to its own nullity and defectibility If he suffer sinful Man to run into sin and that finally he doth but leave the Dog to his own vomit the Swine to his own mire the Viper to his own poyson a corrupted piece of old Adam to act 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of his own as the Expression is Joh. 8. 44. He doth but let the fountain of blood flow out the corrupt flesh putrifie the vitious womb of concupiscence conceive and bring forth and the depraved Will of man forge out its own iniquities and fetter and intangle it self with the cords and bonds of its own voluntary rebellions and what Injustice can be in all this especially seeing this Permission is not a subtraction of any inherent Grace but only a suspension of assistent Grace as de facto would impede sin If God be bound to afford such Grace where is the Charter of that engagement If he be not bound thereunto where is the Injustice of that suspension The Saints before a temptation cast down their Souls before God and cry out Nèinducas Lead us not into temptation and after a victory they cast down their Crowns before him and sing out Thanks be to God who giveth us the victory through Jesus Christ. Wherefore when sin is prevented God's free Grace is to be praised and when sin is permitted God's absolute Sovereignty is to be adored 3. Justice in God is agere juxta condecentiam bonitatis veracitatis suae therefore the Decrees of Preterition and Permission must needs be just because they cross not either his Goodness or his Truth Not his Goodness for that doth not necessitate him either to diffuse one drop of Grace unto fallen Man or to prevent one jot of sin in him nor yet his Truth for notwithstanding the Decrees of Preterition and Permission all the Promises in the great Charter of the Gospel are Yea and Amen not a tittle thereof fails or falls to the ground 2. As the Decree of Preterition and Permission is from God's Will as cloathed with Sovereignty so the Decree of Damnation is from God's Will as cloathed with Justice In the former God acts as supreme Lord according to his transcendent Sovereignty in the latter God acts as a Righteous Judge according to
God meet us and commune with us in words of Grace we must thank the true Propitiatory or Mercy-seat for every syllable 2. Grace in the proper Seat or Receptacle of it is Christ's purchase and this I shall make out 1. In general Christ purchased the Spirit of all Grace There is a double Oblation of Christ a personal Oblation on the Cross and that is Moritum Spiritûs and a doctrinal Oblation in the Gospel and that is Ministerium Spiritûs and so the holy Ghost is shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ Tit. 3. 6. Christ ascended up on high that he might fill things Eph. 4. 10. One would have thought that his descent should rather have done it but he ascended up in the glory of his Merits he carried up all the Purchase-money to his Fathers house and from thence the Spirit came pouring down upon men some droppings of it were before but then it was richly poured out it came down in cloven fiery tongues and a rushing mighty wind Acts 2. 2 3. Tongues to utter magnalia Dei and above all the master-piece of Redemption and cloven tongues to utter them to all Nations in their own Language and fiery tongues to enlighten and enflame the Auditors hearts with the knowledge and love of Christ and a mighty rushing wind to blow home that fire strongly and insuperably in a thorough Conversion and all this was shed forth from Christ Ver. 33. Never any Tongue truly preached Christ but by a secret touch from him never any holy fire kindled on the heart but by a coal from his Altar never any gales of Grace on the Soul but from the breathings of his Spirit not one drop of his Blood is spiritless but full fraught and flowing with the Spirit of Life 2. In particular and so Christ hath purchased three things 1. The Radical Grace of Faith 2. All other Graces of the Spirit 3. All the Crowns of these Graces 1. Christ hath purchased the Grace of Faith the Apostle is express in it To you it is given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Christ's sake not only to believe on him but also to suffer for his sake Phil. 1. 29. the Apostle evidently points out the merits of Christ as the spring of Faith and Faith persevering unto suffering And in another place he saith we joy in God through Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by whom we have now received the atonement Rom. 5. 11. he doth not only say that by and through him the Atonement was made but that by and through him the Atonement is received and what is this receiving of the Atonement but Faith it self That therefore is part of Christ's Purchase These express places might suffice us but because the Remonstrants oppose this Truth I shall propose two Quaeries unto them 1. Is not Faith comprized within the Covenant of Grace Let 's come to the Touch-stone Is it not written there I will give an heart to know me and is not Faith a justifying knowledge a sight of the just One and a beam or dawning of eternal life Is it not written there I will take away the heart of stone and is not Unbelief a part of that stone doth it not directly resist the Blood and Righteousness of Christ and can there be a worse Stone than this Is it not written there I will give a new heart and is not Unbelief the heart and life of the old Man and Faith of the new Is it not written there I will put my Spirit within you and is not the Spirit a spirit of faith and faith a fruit of the Spirit is not Unbelief of our Spirit and Faith of Gods Is it not written there I will circumcise the heart and is not Unbelief flesh God saith there is life in his Son and the Unbeliever saith No and does what in him lies to make God a lyar and can there be any filthier or rottenner flesh in the old man than this and unless this be cut off can there be a true Circumcision By all this it clearly appears that Faith is within the Covenant and if so is not the whole Covenant Sanctio à sanguine the New-testament in Christ's blood Is not he the Mediator and purchaser of the whole Are not all the Promises Yea and Amen in him Who dares distinguish and say Christ purchased part of the Promises and not all he purchased notional knowledge and not justifying he breaks the stone in the heart all but that which opposes his own Blood and Righteousness the old man is crucified with Christ all but his heart and life of Unbelief the Spirit of Grace flows out from Christ all but the Spirit of Faith the circumcision of Christ Col. 2. 11. so called because it is procured by the Merits and produced by the Spirit of Christ cuts off the flesh of the heart all but that of Unbelief which upbraids God with a lye who dares thus tear in sunder the Covenant mangle the Promises dimidiate Christ and divide the Spirit by unscriptural distinctions Such shuffling is unworthy of Christians Wherefore I conclude my first Quaere thus Faith is within the Covenant and the Covenant is Christ's purchase therefore Faith is such also 2. Is not Faith a Grace of the Spirit It seals to the Gospel sanctifies the heart works by Love waits by Patience overcomes the visible World and sensibly presentiates the invisible for shame let it be a Grace and if so it must be Christ's purchase The Spirit never effected that Grace in fallen Man which Christ never merited As every Creature in the World is of God's making so every Grace in the Church is of Christ's meriting He that saith Yonder is a precious Stone but 't is not of God's making blasphemes the Creator and he that saith Yonder is a precious Faith but 't is not of Christ's meriting does no less to the Redeemer But further Is not Faith the Grace of Union with Christ Doth not Christ dwell in the heart by faith Is not Faith the Mother-grace of all First Faith gives a touch to Christ and then Love is enflamed with him Joy triumphs in him and Obedience follows him Where do all the rivers of living water flow but in the Believers belly Joh. 7. 38 What holds all the starry Graces of the Church but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the firmament of faith as the Apostle calls it Col. 2. 5 Now will it not grate thine ears O Christian to hear that the Spirit of Holiness is from Christ but not the Spirit of Faith all the starry Graces are Christ's but the Firmament of Faith is our own we are blessed with all spiritual blessings in Christ but not with the Mother-grace which broods and teems out all the rest not with the Grace of Union which lies nearest to Christ eating his flesh and drinking his blood that Faith which is nearest to the Merits of Christ in its Union is furthest off from them in its Origination What is this but
Acts as to the rest appear as Extraministerial Blots and Errata's those Invitations to the Gospel-feast which as to the Elect are the cordial wooings and beseechings of God himself as to the rest look like the words of mere men speaking at random and without Commission for alas why should they come to that Feast for whom nothing is prepared How should they eat and drink for whom the Lamb was never slain Wherefore I conclude that Christ died for all mens so far as to found the truth of the Ministery towards them 4. I argue from the Blessings purchased by Christ's Death one great Blessing is Salvation on Gospel Terms Lapsed Angels must be damned but Men nay all Men may be saved on Gospel-terms there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a common Salvation to them and O what a blessing is this especially to such as live under the Gospel there is nothing stands between them and Heaven but their own Will they will not come to Christ that they may have life Oh! what would the damned Spirits in Hell give for such a door of Hope as hath no other bar but what is in their own Hearts how would they sweat and strive with tears and strong cries to enter in at it A second Blessing is the Patience of God which waits upon Sinners and by some glimmerings of Mercy leads them to repentance A third Blessing is the Dispensation of Gifts even in the Wilderness of the Pagan-world there are Moral Vertues and in the Eden of the Church there are even in those that perish some touches of the holy Ghost tastes of the heavenly Gift and feelings of the Powers of the World to come and whence are these but from the Death of Christ As David called the water of Bethlehem the blood of his worthies so may I call these Blessings the blood of Christ. Wherefore Christ died so far for all as to procure some Blessings for them 5. I argue from the Unbelief of Men which is wonderfully aggravated in Scripture through Jesus Christ there is a real offer of Grace made but Unbelief receives it in vain 2 Cor. 6. 1. great Salvation is prepared 〈◊〉 ●nbelief neglects it Heb. 2. 3. Eternal 〈◊〉 is promised but Unbelief comes short of it Heb. 4. 1. the Kingdom of Heaven comes nigh to men but Unbelief draws back from it Heb. 10. 39. God himself bears witness that there is Life in his Son even for all if they believe but Unbelief saith No to it and doth what it can to make him a liar 1 Joh. 5. 10. Christ is set forth before our eyes as the great Expiatory Sacrifice and evidently set forth as if he were crucified among us his Blood runs fresh in the Veins of the Gospel but Unbelief recrucifies the Son of God Heb. 6. 6. tramples his precious blood under foot Heb. 10. 29. and doth as it were nullifie his glorious Sacrifice so that as to final Unbelievers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there no more remaineth a sacrifice Heb. 10. 26. as to their Salvation 't is as if there were no Sacrifice at all for them But if Christ died not for all men how can these things be How can those men receive Grace in vain for whom it was never procured or neglect Salvation for whom it was never prepared How can they fall short of eternal Rest for whom it was never purchased or draw back from the Kingdom of Heaven which never approached unto them How can there be life in Christ for thos● for whom he never died and if not 〈◊〉 way doth their Unbelief give God the lye How can they recrucifie the Son of God for whom he was never crucified or trample on that precious Blood which was never shed for them The Devils as full of malice as they are against Christ are never said to do it and why are men charged with it I take it because men have some share in him and Devils none at all 6. I argue from the Death of Christ which hath a superexcellent Redundance of Merit in it not only because of its intrinsecal value but because of the divine Ordination there are unsearchable riches in Christ enough to pay all mens Debts there are Pleonasms of Grace in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace superabounded saith the Apostle 1 Tim. 1. 14. Salvation flows out from him actually upon all Believers and by a glorious supereffluence it would run over upon all men if they did believe As it was with the Widows litte Pot of Oil 2 Kings 4. 6. the Oil did run till all the Vessels were full and then it staid the Widow called for another Vessel and if she had had many more there the Oil in the Pot would have filled them all Even so pardon the Comparison it is with the immense Sea of Christ's Merits it actually fills all the Vessels of Faith and then it stays as it were for want of Vessels mean-while Christ calls and cries out for more and if all men would come and bring their Vessels to him he would fill them all doubtless if all men did believe all would see the Glory of God all would have the Rivers of living water flowing in them all would feel spiritual Miracles wrought in their Hearts by that Christ who sits at the right hand of Power and consequently all would find an experimental witness in themselves that Christ died for them all 7. I argue from the general and large Expressions in Scripture touching Christ and his Death Christ died for all 2 Cor. 5. 15. for every man Heb. 2. 9. he gave himself for the world Joh. 6. 51. for the whole world 1 Joh. 2. 2. he is stiled the Saviour of the world 1 Joh. 4. 14. and his Salvation is called a common salvation Jude Ver. 3. a salvation prepared before the face of all people Luk. 2. 31. and flowing forth to the ends of the earth Isai. 49. 6. the Gospel of this Salvation is to be preached to all nations Matth. 28. 19. and to every creature Mark 16. 15. there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 grace bringing salvation to all men Tit. 2. 11. a door of Hope open to them because Christ gave himself a ransom for all 1 Tim. 2. 6. I know not what could be more emphatical to point out the Universality of Redemption But you 'l say all these general Expressions do but denote genera singulorum some of all sorts the World of the Elect or the All of Believers In answer to which I shall only put two Quaeries 1. If those general Expressions denote only the World of the Elect or the All of Believers why is it not said in Scripture that God elected all and every man the World and the whole World in that sence 't is as true that God elected them all as 't is that Christ died for them all Why then doth the holy Spirit altogether forbear those general Expressions in the matter of Election which it useth in the matter of
are renewed with the renewings of the holy Ghost but that is shed on them through Jesus Christ they have the Law written in their hearts but that is the Epistle of Christ their filthy flesh is cut off from their hearts that they may love God who is a pure Spirit but this is the circumcision of Christ Col. 2. 11. In a word all the saving Graces of the Elect are as so many Legacies of the New-testament and the New-testament is founded in his Blood Wherefore it is clear from the Covenant of Grace and its special respect to the Elect that Christ died in a special and peculiar manner for them 3. I argue from the Issue of Christ Christ was to have a Seed and this I shall demonstrate three ways 1. From the Preciousness of his Blood 2. From the Purpose of his Father 3. From the Promise of his Father 1. From the Preciousness of his Blood That there should be a Laver made of God's Blood and never a Sinner washed in it that such a vast sum of precious Merits should be paid down and never a Captive released by it is to me no less than prodigious Blasphemy every little Grain in Nature doth confute it if that do but fall into the ground and die it bringeth forth much fruit and shall the Son of God bleed and die in his assumed Flesh and be fruitless God in his waky Providence gives to every little Seed his own body and shall the peerless Flower of Heaven sow his Blood and Righteousness and have none at all A Cup of cold water given in Charity shall in no wise lose its reward and can it be so with the Blood of Christ poured out in a transcendent excess of Love and glorified into an infinite Merit by his Deity When Christ fed the multitude but with Barley-loaves small Fishes nothing was lost and can all be lost when he makes a Feast of spiritual Marrow and Fatness and gives his Flesh to be meat indeed and his Blood to be drink indeed Oh! far be the thought from every Christian 2. From the Father's purpose which as the Scriptures hold forth clearly was that his Son should be a King a Captain a Shepherd an Husband an Head and a Father And what is a King without Subjects a Captain without Souldiers a Shepherd without a Flook an Husband without a Spouse an Head without a Body and a Father without Posterity Empty Names are below him whose name is above every name Wherefore this King must have a Sion a mountain of holiness to reign in Psal. 2. 6. this Captain a Militia an army with banners to fight under him Cant. 6. 4. this Shepherd a flock to hear his voice and follow him Joh. 10. 4. this Husband a spouse a Queen in Gold of Ophir maried to him Psal. 45. 9. this Head a body to be animated with his Spirit and filled with his life Col. 1. 18. and this Father a numerous issue begotten and brought forth into the spiritual World to honour and serve him Heb. 2. 13. 3. From the Father's Promise which was in terminis That he should have a seed Isai. 53. 10. a Seed begotten by his Spirit and by that Generation bearing his Image and in that Image serving of him and to make it sure God engages by special Promises to take away the stony Heart to write the Law there to put his holy Spirit into them and so infallibly to raise up a seed to him and for the continuance of this Seed successively 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filiabitur nomen ejus his name shall be sonned or childed from generation to generation Psal. 72. 17. The special Promises shall be ever budding and blossoming and bringing forth the fruits of Grace thus Christ shall see of the travel of his soul and be satisfied Isai. 53. 11. and as a sign of this Satisfaction he breaks out Behold I and the Children which God hath given me Heb. 2. 13. Should he miss but one of his Seed or Children his Heart would not rest or be satisfied for they are in a peculiar manner the travel of his Soul But now if Christ died alike or equally for all what becomes of his precious Blood How can the Purpose and Promise of God stand Which way shall Christ have a Seed Shall his Seed be begotten out of Man's Will No such Generation ever was there Joh. 1. 13. 'T is not of him that willeth Rom. 9. 16. Nothing less than the holy Spirit which formed Christ in the Womb can form him in the Heart but shall they be begotten by the holy Spirit That Spirit doth nothing in the work of Regeneration but what Christ merited in his Passion every new Creature which is efficiently begotten by the Spirit was first meritoriously begotten by the Death of Christ or else it would not be the Seed of Christ at least not the travel of his Soul Now Christ did not travel or merit for all men that they should be begotten again by the holy Ghost for then either all would be so begotten which Experience denies or else the Merit and Travel of Christ must be lost which the preciousness thereof abhorrs And if Christ did not merit it for all then neither did he if he died alike for all merit it for any and how then shall he have a Seed His Seed must be begotten by the Spirit and the Spirit begets no new Creatures but what Christ merited and Christ dying equally for all did not merit such a thing for any because not for all Moreover when God promised Christ a Seed either the meaning of that Promise was that some men should become his Seed or that all should be so if that some then Christ died not equally for all if that all then all must be begotten by the Spirit and renewed after Christ's Image the Stone must be cut out of every heart and the Law written there for in these things is the very spirit and life of Regeneration But seeing these things are not wrought in all it appears that the promised Seed is not all but some for whom Christ merited the very work of Regeneration 4. I argue from the Working of the holy Spirit As the holy Spirit eternally procedes from the Father and the Son in his personal Subsistence so he goes forth in time from the Father and the Son in his working in Men. Hence he is called the Spirit of the Father and the Spirit of the Son the Father sends him and the Son sends him and as the holy Spirit works in Men from the Father and the Son so he works in them more or less as the Love of the Father and the Merits of the Son do more or less respect them The Father doth in some sort love and the Son did in some sort die for all men Hence the holy Spirit hath some workings in the Non-elect Within the Church many of them taste the Powers of the World to come nay in the Pagan-world
the holy Spirit drops some moral Vertues and Beams of light from whence have issued many excellent Sayings some of which the holy Spirit hath so far owned as to quote them in his own Book But the Father doth in a special manner love and the Son did in a special manner die for the Elect. Hence proportionably the holy Spirit works in them after more glorious strains of Power and Grace as a Spirit of Grace and Supplication he melts them into Repentance as a Spirit of Faith he makes them catch hold upon Christ for Righteousness and Life as a Spirit of Wisdom he unveils their hearts and makes the Light to shine out of Darkness as a Spirit of Liberty he unshackles and unbinds their Wills and makes them free indeed in the ways of God and as a Spirit of Truth and Holiness he leads them into Truth and by inward Law-engravings moulds and changes them into it Moreover the holy Spirit after such glorious workings on them comes and dwells in them and that intimately in the very secrets of their hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will indwel in them saith he 2 Cor. 6. 16. there are two in 's to denote an intimate inhabitation as if God could never be near enough to them As in Christ Personal who is the Head there is God in the flesh by an hypostatical Union so in Christ Mystical which is the Body there is God in the Flesh by a gracious Inhabitation and to shew that he is there he cries Abba Father in their Devotions he is a Spirit of Love in their charities a Spirit of Power in their infirmities a Spirit of Comfort in their distresses and a Spirit of Glory in their sufferings Seeing then the holy Spirit who works in men more or less according to the Fathers Love and Sons Merits works in such a special way in the Elect 't is as clear as if it were written with a Sun-beam that the Father loves them and the Son died for them in a special way Hence we find these three folded and wrapt up together by the Apostle Elect according to the foreknowledge of the Father through sanctification of the Spirit and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1. 2. And again The Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all 2 Cor. 13. 14 If the Father's Love and the Son's Blood had respected all men as much as the Elect doubtless the holy Spirit who in Subsistence procedes and in Operations works from them both would have converted all as well as the Elect why then are not all men actually converted Is it because the holy Spirit works not equally in all or because the holy Spirit is resisted in some Is it because the holy Spirit works not equally in all I answer That the Spirit is sent forth from the Father and the Son and works exactly according as it is sent the inward impulsive Cause of pouring out the Spirit is the Father's Love and the outward meritorious cause of it is the Son's Blood Wherefore if the Father equally love all and the Son equally died for all the Spirit works equally in all for there can be no breach in the sacred Trinity Or is it because the Spirit is resisted in some I answer Their resistance is a grand Obstacle to the work but if the Spirit did roll away the Stone and new-mould the Heart and work the Will in all as he doth in the Elect that Obstacle would at last be removed out of the way 5. I argue from the Blessings purchased Christ's Death is more or less respective of men as it is more or less procurative of Blessings for them Christ purchased a Salvability for all but over and besides he purchased many choice Blessings for the Elect he purchased Repentance for them for he is a prince and a saviour to give repentance to Israel Acts 5. 31. He purchased a room for Repentance even for all men but he purchased Repentance it self for his chosen Israel he purchased Faith for them Unto you it is given for Christs sake to believe in him Phil. 1. 29. For others he purchased a ground-work for Faith but for them he purchased the very Grace of Faith he purchased effectual Vocation for them others have a Call by the Gospel but these have a Call by the Gospel coming in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance he purchased Holiness and Sanctification for them Indeed there is no man living on the Earth but if he did really believe he should have the rivers of living water the Spirit of holiness flowing in his heart Joh. 7. 38. but the Elect were destined and chosen in Christ to be holy Eph. 1. 4. and Christ sanctified himself in a special manner for them that they might be sanctified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in truth actually truly Joh. 17. 19. Lastly he purchased Heaven and Glory for them others may have Heaven upon believing but these shall certainly arrive at it these are the sheep to which Christ gives eternal life Joh. 10. 28. these are the sons which without fail shall be brought to Glory Heb. 2. 10. Now seeing Christ purchased so many Blessings for the Elect 't is evident he died for them in a special way 6. I argue from the Intercession of Christ. Christ intercedes for men more or less proportionably as he more or less respected them in his Death for his Death is the foundation of his Intercession the very same Blood of Christ which as shed on Earth made Satisfaction as presented in Heaven makes Intercession Now how far doth Christ intercede in Heaven What doth his Blood speak there For all men it speaks thus Father let them all be saved on Gospel-terms but for the Elect it speaks thus Father let them have Repentance this the Apostle hints out Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a prince a saviour to give repentance to Israel Acts 5. 31. Israels Repentance on Earth comes from Christ exalted in Heaven for there he intercedes for it by his Merits and from thence he works it by his Spirit Again it speaks for them thus Father let them be made a willing people this I gather from the 110. Psalm where we find Christ sitting at the right hand of God Ver. 1. and sitting there he intercedes for us and from this Session and Intercession comes forth a willing people Ver. 3. Here 's the true original of spiritual willingness the right Hand of God which is a right Hand of Power works it in our Hearts and works it at the instance of Christ who sits and intercedes there for it Again it speaks for them thus Father sanctifie them with thy Grace preserve them with thy Power and crown them with thy Glory in Heaven Thus Christ in his sweet Prayer a little before his bitter Passion interceded for them for their Sanctification Sanctifie them
pouring forth his Blood and reconciling us to God's Justice here we have him pouring forth his Spirit and reconciling us to God's Holiness Now in my discourse touching Conversion I shall reduce all to 3. Quaeries 1. What is Mans state before Conversion 2. What is the Nature of the Work 3. Who is the Worker thereof In the first we shall meet with the extreme Necessity of the work in the second with the intrinsecal Excellency thereof and in the third with the Power and Grace of the great Agent 1. What is Man's State before Conversion I mean Man fallen for Man standing needed no Conversion and this I shall consider two ways 1. What it is in general in relation to the whole Man 2. What it is in particular in relation to the several parts of Man 1. What it is in general and this I shall open in two things 1. 'T is a State of Estrangement from God 2. 'T is a State of Enmity against God 1. 'T is a State of Estrangement from God a natural Man is estranged from the womb Psal. 58. 3. without God in the world Eph. 2. 12. God is all round about him in the witnessing Creatures and yet he is without God in the World God is in him in the Lamp of Conscience yet he is without God in his Heart for there he saith There is no God Psal. 14. 1. Which way soever God comes forth to meet him whether from Mount Sinai in the fiery Law or from Mount Sion in Gospel-charms of free Grace still he flies away from God's presence and if God pursue after him he 'l say to God in plain Terms Depart from me Job 21. 14. and if any reliques of light will not depart but stay behind in his heart he shuts them up in the prison of unrighteousness Rom. 1. 18. His Ubi is with Cain in Nod the Land of wandring and demigration and with the Prodigal in a far Country where he is far off from God Psal. 73. 27. and God far off from him Prov. 15. 29. if ever he be saved he must be brought from far Isai. 43. 6. Now upon a distinct View this is a deplorable Condition for 1. A natural Man being estranged from God the Fountain of Life must needs be a dead Man dead in sins and trespasses Eph. 2. 1. because alienated from the Life of God he is not only as the man in the Gospel half dead Luk. 10. 30. who is there set forth not as a figure of Original Corruption but as an Object of Charity as is very evident by the scope of the Parable which is ushered in with that Question And who is my neighbour Ver. 29 and at last closed up with the like Which of the three was neighbour to him Ver. 36 but he is altogether dead in Spirituals there are no true vital Spirits of Faith in him no true motions of Obedience no pulse of heavenly Affections no breath of Spiritual Prayer no taste of the Gospel-wine and Marrow no feeling of all that massy Sin and Wrath which lies upon him all his Life is a Death-wandering all his rest is in the Congregation of the dead Prov. 21. 16. Give him all the Statures of natural Excellencies strew him over with the flowers of sweetest Morality and spangle him with the Notions of sublime Theology yet still he is but a dead man his Soul a dead Soul his Faith a dead Faith his Works dead works and his Hopes and Comfors but as the giving up of the Ghost But you 'l say Is not Man a living Creature Hath he not a Reason and reliques of Light in it Hath he not a free Will and Seeds of Moral Vertue in it And why then do you call him dead I answer Man is a living Creature alive in Naturals but dead in Spirituals he hath a Reason but because there is no light of life in it 't is but a dead Reason his reliques of Light argue no more Spiritual Life in him than knowledge doth in Devils he hath a free Will but for want of the freedom indeed 't is only free among the dead I mean to this or that carnal or natural Work and not to the Will of God he hath some Seeds of Moral Vertue in him but alas these are of too low an Extraction to be any Particles of spiritual Life Mere Moral Vertues are by God's blessing on humane Industry struck as sparks out of natural Principles but Spiritual Life is a Fire dropt down from Heaven into the Heart mere Moral Vertues descending but from natural Principles never ascend up to God as their end but Spiritual Life as it is originally born of God so it is ultimately terminated in him Wherefore a man may be naturally nay morally alive and yet be spiritually dead 2. A natural Man being estranged from God who is an infinite Spirit must needs be Flesh Thus God calls the Men of the old World flesh Gen. 6. 3. thus our Saviour sets out Regeneration by its opposite That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit Joh. 3. 6. As the Body separate from the Soul is Flesh such as moulders into Dust and putrifies into Worms so the Soul separate from God is Flesh too such as turns into the Dust of earthly things and rots in those Lusts which breed the never-dying Worm in Hell neither is this Flesh only in the lower Rooms of the Soul but in the upmost Faculties of Reason and Will In the Reason there is the cankred flesh of Errors and Heresies and in the Will there is the dead flesh of Impotency and the proud flesh of Obstinacy against the Will of God Hence the Apostle tells us of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a mind of flesh Col. 2. 18. and of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wills of flesh Eph. 2. 3. And therefore the true Circumcision is in the heart and in the spirit Rom. 2. 29. even in the highest Faculties and Powers of the Soul 3. A natural Man being estranged from God who is the Beauty of Holiness must needs be very impure he is filthy or stinking Psal. 14. 3. an unclean thing Joh 14. 4. he lies polluted in his blood with a Leprosie in his head and a Plague in his heart clothed in filthy rags of Sin and rolling in the mire and vomit of Corruption so great is his filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness that he taints whatsoever he touches his very Prayers are an abomination and his Services as dung before God Neither is this pollution only in the sensitive Soul but also in the rational there is filthiness of spirit 2 Cor. 7. 1. and disilement in the very mind and conscience Tit. 1. 15. there is no sound part but all over wounds and bruises and putrifying sores 4. A natural Man being estranged from God who is Jehovah or Beingness must needs be a very Nullity in spirituals If a Creature be separate from the God of
Nature 't is a Nullity in naturals and if a rational Creature be separate from the God of Grace he is a Nullity in spirituals Sure if he were any thing at all he might speak or think but he can do neither As running a fountain of Words as his tongue is he cannot say Jesus is the Lord 1 Cor. 12. 3. and as swarming a Hive of Thoughts as his Heart is he cannot think any thing as of himself 2 Cor. 3. 5. The great Apostle gives a double account of himself an account what he is in himself I am nothing saith he 2 Cor. 12. 11. and an account what he is by Grace by the grace of God I am what I am 1 Cor. 15. 10. all his nothingness is in and of himself and all his spiritual essence is in and of Grace A mere Natural man is nothing in Spirituals his eyes are on that which is not Prov. 23. 5. his joy is in a thing of nought Amos 6. 13. and all the false Gods in his heart are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nihilitates nothingnesses Psal. 96. 5. As they are Creatures in the World they are Beings but as they are Idols in his 〈◊〉 they are nothing nothing to make a God of and he who makes them such is like unto them even nothing in Spirituals 2. 'T is a State of Enmity against God he is not only a Stranger but an enemy too Col. 1. 21. nay which is more his carnal Mind is enmity against God Rom. 8. 7. Enmity is irreconcileable it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be not unless the Enmity be slain in it nay further the Apostle call the Gentiles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 haters of God Rom. 1. 30. and Hatred is Enmity boiled up to the height Hatred saith the Philosopher seeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Not-being of the thing hated and such is man's Wickedness that strikes as it were at the Life and Being of God it had rather that God should not be than that Lusts should be restrained The Scripture sets out some grand Enemies as opposing God openly and upon the Stage of the World and by what they did openly we may discern what spirit and mystery of Iniquity is working in every Natural man's heart secretly there is in him some of the corrupt flesh of the old World somewhat of Pharaoh's spirit which secretly saith Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice Somewhat of the bloody Jew which is ready to crucifie the Son of God afresh and trample his precious blood under-foot somewhat of the proud Antichrist the man of sin which exalts it self above God it s own Reason above the Wisdom of God and its own Will above the Will of God The very same Venom and Poyson of Enmity which the Grand Enemies of God pour out openly privily lurks and works in every Natural Man Thus in general Man's State is Estrangement and Enmity But to procede 2. What is Man's State in particular in relation to his several parts Now here the same Estrangement and Enmity shews forth it self according to the Nature of each part 1. As for the Understanding 't is turned away from God the first and essential Truth and so become a Forge of lying Vanities 't is turned away from God the first and essential Light and so become a dark place nay darkness it self Eph. 5. 8. and if the light be darkness how great is that darkness So great it is that a Natural man sets an higher estimate on the Follies of Time than on the Blessedness of Eternity and rates the broken Cisterns above the Fountain of living waters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the souly man who hath nothing but a rational Soul the Spirit of a mere man in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God 2 Cor. 2. 14. One would think that all Truths should be welcome to a rational Soul and above all the Mysteries of Heaven but he receiveth them not And this the Apostle lays down distinctly The spirit of man knows the things of man because they are within his own Line but the things of God are only known by the Spirit of God because they are above the Sphere of natural Reason As the things of Man are above the Sphere of Sense so the things of God are above the Sphere of Reason and yet as if they were below it the Natural man counts them foolishness which evinces an extreme foolishness in his own heart he is not a Man not an understanding Creature in Spirituals Agur is a Brute in his own eyes I have not the understanding of a man saith he Prov. 30. 2. The Apostle proving all under sin asserts that there is none that understandeth Rom. 3. 11. Millions of ratinal Creatures in the World and yet there is none that understandeth and his proof is invincible there is none that seeketh after God which sure would be done if there were any spark of spiritual Understanding in him 'T is true there may be a mass of Notions in a man unconverted but not a dram of spiritual Knowledge Seeing he sees not he sees the things of God in the image or picture of the Letter but he sees them not in their liveliness and inward Glory Just as the carnal Israelites who saw their Manna and Sacrifices only in the outside but saw not Christ in them or as those false Seekers of whom Christ saith Ye seek me not because ye saw the miracles but because ye did eat of the loaves and were filled Joh. 6. 26. There was a Miracle in those very Loaves but they saw only the carnal and grosser part of the Miracle and not the Glory and Power of Christ's Deity sparkling out in it An Unconverted man knows nothing as he ought to know it no not in the midst of his notions there is no savouring tasting or practical Knowledge in him nothing but a husk shell or form of Knowledg and in the midst thereof a real enmity against the things known Whilest the light of Truth shines only in the Notion he likes it well enough but if it waken Conscience check Lust press Duty or any way offer to assume its Supremacy in his heart or life he instantly hates it as an enemy 2. As for the Will the Principle of Freedom 't is turn'd from God the primum liberum and from his service the vera libertas and so it is become servum arbitrium an arrant Slave bound in the bonds of iniquity and which is the height of Slavery 't is in love with its Bonds and which is the intenseness and intimateness of that love when Christ comes to break these Bonds 't is loth to be made free indeed the iron is so entred into his soul the Bondage is so intimate in the forlorn Will that it looks on God's service as bondage and Sins bondage as freedom and hence it is dead and lame to God's ways but runs and flies
Hos. 9. 7. Now the Heart when this Principle is in it hates and abhorrs the taste of this poison the smell of this vomit the touch of this menstruous cloth the sight or appearance of this filthy excrement the thought of this enmity to God and the very presence of this abominable thing this hatred is the very life and spirit of Repentance As the love of Sin is the vinculum unionis or vital spirit whereby the Soul and Sin are intimately united together so the hatred of Sin is the solutio vinculi or the extinction of that vital spirit whereby the Soul and Sin are separated one from another 3. As it is a Principle of actual Reformation or forsaking of Sin and this is no other than the two former Principles of Sorrow and Hatred conspiring together to make away with Sin Sorrow nails the old Man with all his members upon the Cross there to die in pains and agonies and Hatred pierces into his very Heart and le ts out his vital Blood I mean the love of Sin that he may be sure to die and not revive again where these two are a man suffers in the flesh and ceases from sin 1 Pet. 4. 1. he cannot 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 commit sin 1 Joh. 3. 9. not so as he did before Sorrow forbids it to be the joy of his way and Hatred forbids it to be the love of his Heart and both cast it out as an unclean thing causing God's departure from the Soul 3. As to the Affections there is a Principle which tunes and harmonizes them and that in a threefold respect 1. 'T is a Principle reductive of the Affections to the Rule of Reason God in Creation made Man a Lord over Brutes anointed Reason to reign over the Affections but as soon as Man rebelled against God all within him and without him was hurled into confusion Without the brute Beasts rebelled against his person and within the brutish Lusts rebelled against his Reason but when converting Grace reduces Man into order again then the beasts of the field are at peace with him Joh 5. 23. and the Affections of the Heart throw down their arms and confess their homage to the Kingdom of Reason This Principle makes a man able to rule over his own spirit Prov. 16. 32. and say with Authority to one Affection Go and it goeth and to another come and it cometh 'T is true Moral Vertue doth in its way subject the Affections to Reason but this supernatural Principle doth it in a more excellent manner there the Subjection is to Reason as the supreme Faculty of the Soul but here it is to it as the candle of the Lord even for his sake who lighted it up for the guidance of the blind Faculties there it is to Reason as a natural Light but here it is to it as supernaturally illuminated The holy Spirit makes the Truths of the Gospel to become the Law of the mind and this Law of the mind rules over the Affections the Affections are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Woman-part in us the head of this woman is the Man or Reason and the head of this Man is Christ and his holy unction 2. 'T is a Principle moderative of the Affections as to the things of the World Before Conversion the Earth hath its Throne in the Heart but this Principle shakes the earth out of her place before the Affections are as Sails spread open to the gales of the World but this Principle contracts and folds them up lest the spirit of the World should fill them Earthly things are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the smallest things of all 1 Cor. 6. 2. and where this Principle is a very small portion of them will suffice Agur's dimensum Daniels pulse our Saviours daily bread Pauls food and raiment Luther's Herring any thing with the word of blessing will serve the turn when there is little or nothing without still there is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-sufficiency of holy content within and when there is a concourse or affluence of all outward blessings this Principle is as Balast to keep the Heart from drowning and overwhelming it self therein there is such an holy allay upon the Soul that in the lowest ebbs of adversity it possesses all things in its God and in the highest tides of prosperity it will not be possessed by any thing in the World Alas saith the Soul all this is but thick clay and why should I lade my Eagle-affections with it All this is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much fancy and why should an immortal Soul be set upon it The whole World is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a figure or shadow and that Time which invelopes it is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 time contracted and contracted into a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for so the Apostle calls the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the now world 2 Tim. 4. 10. Wherefore a shadow of Affections is big enough for a figure and the shortest glance of the Heart long enough for a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a transient and momentany thing which perishes with the very using The World in Scripture is set out as a nullity a thing that is not Prov. 23. 5. and this Principle deals with it as such it makes a man rejoyce as if he rejoiced not and buy as if he possessed not the Affections like translated Enoch are not found here below because God hath translated them 3. 'T is a Principle inflammative of the Affections towards God and the things of God before the Affections run down to the World as their Centre but this Principle turns the stream of the Soul upward towards God now Love which is the Key of the heart opens unlocks it unto God Desire which is Love in motion goes out in holy breathings and thirstings after him and if he stay away from the Soul Hope which is Love in expectation looks and waits for his approaches to the Soul and when he doth approach thither Delight which is Love in rest or acquiescence joys and keeps sabbath in his presence and lest this Sabbath should be broken Fear which is the Soul's Sentinel watches against Sin as the great make-bate and incendiary and when Sin offers to enter the Soul Hatred which is the Soul's Guard shuts the doors against it with an holy displicency and antipathy and if it do enter there Anger which is the Soul's Sword strikes at it with indignation and Sorrow which is the Soul's Issue vents and lets out the corrupt blood and humours out of it and which is the heat and height of all Zeal sets the Soul on fire and makes it burn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that which is good for the Glory of God who is the supreme Good and against the commission of Sin which is the supreme Evil. Thus the whole 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trade or converse of the Affections is in heaven Phil. 3. 20. This Principle
spiritually dead to take in the Word of God as from a divine Impression in that the words of Christ entred not at all into the naturally dead in this the Word of God enters into the spiritually dead even intimately into his very heart in that the words of Christ were transient and passed away in this the Word of God though it may pass away as to its sounds and syllables yet as to its substance it lives and abides for ever in the new Creature Wherefore these differences considered I conclude That Christ's words were only declarative in that Resurrection but God's Word is operative also in this The manner how God works gracious Principles in and by his Word as an Instrument is a Secret which I dare not pry into only for a little more illustration of the Words Efficacy in the production of gracious Principles there are two Instants or Moments to be distinctly considered 1. The first Instant or Moment is that wherein there is a close Application and intimate Inning of the Word in the Heart in common Auditors the Word is upon the Heart but here it is in it in temporary Believers the Word is in some degree in the heart but here it is in it intimately This close Application is excellently set out in Scripture 't is a nail fastned Eccles. 12. 11. 't is a word engrafted Jam. 1. 21. 't is instruction sealed Joh 33. 16. 't is the Law put and written in the heart Heb. 8. 10. 't is wisdom entring into the heart Prov. 2. 10. 't is the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or entrance into his auditors 1 Thess. 2. 1. 't is the word having a place in us Joh. 8. 37. and such a place as to root in our hearts thus Joh says of himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the root of the word is found in me Joh 19. 28. and this Root is such as will abide in us and become the incorruptible seed of the new Creature This close Application is a glorious work of God and the Word is not altogether passive therein but in the hand of the Spirit 't is quick and powerful as a sharp Sword piercing and cutting its way into the heart Heb. 4. 12. and as a mighty Engine casting down imaginations and high things there 2 Cor. 10. 5. that it self may have a place and Throne in the same 2. The second Instant or Moment is that wherein God in and by the Word so intimately inned in the Heart doth produce the Principles of Grace there in the first Moment the indwelling Word makes the Heart a spiritual Bethlehem a House of Bread in the second Christ is spiritually born there in the first Moment the incorruptible Seed is sown in the Heart in the second it springs up into a new Creature The Scripture seems to me to hold out this Method very clearly the engrafted word is able to save the soul Jam. 1. 21. the Word saves the Soul but not merely as outwardly expressed but as inwardly engrafted Faith comes by hearing the word Rom. 10. 17. but is that a mere outward hearing No surely there is a hearing of the Father and so a coming to Christ Joh. 6. 45. There is the powerful and intimate demonstration of the Spirit and so faith stands in the power of God 1 Cor. 2. 4 5. that is to say in that power of God which intimately demonstrates and closely applies the Word unto the Heart as its true Cause and Foundation When the Apostle speaks of the Thessalonians Faith and Love 1 Thess. 1. 3. he there opens the causes thereof viz. the fontal Cause God's Election Ver. 4. and the instrumental Cause the Gospel Ver. 5. but how could the Gospel be an Instrument The Apostle tells us that it came to them not in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost it was strongly and sweetly set home upon the Heart and from that Impress came Faith and Love The Wise Man would have the Word kept in the midst of the heart and his Reason is because it is life Prov. 4. 21 22. The Word in the Ear only is but a transient 〈◊〉 but the Word in the midst of the Heart is Spirit and Life Job proves the truth of his Grace thus The root of the word is in me Joh 19. 28. The Word as shining on the Head lights up Notions but as rooted in the Heart springs up in Graces St. John tells the Young Men that they are strong and for a ●eason adds this the word of God abides in them 1 Joh. 2. 14. St. Paul first speaks of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or entrance into his auditors and then of their turn to the living and true God 1 Thess. 1. 9. The entrance of the word into the Understanding giveth light Psal. 119. 130. and when it passeth from the Understanding to the Will 't is spiritually a word upon the wheels and inwardly becomes free-making truth Joh. 8. 32. ennobling the Will with true Liberty in the ways of God Epaphras was in an Agony of Prayer for the Colossians that they might be filled in all the will of God Col. 4. 12. the more filling with God's Will the more true Liberty in ours St. Peter clearly asserts that we are born again of the incorruptible seed of the word 1 Pet. 1. 23. In which words his plain meaning is that the Word being intimately sown in the Heart doth under the warming influences of the ho●● spirit spring up into the new Creature and to make this the plainer he adds that the word lives and abides for ever speaking as I take it not of the Words living and abiding in it self but of its living and abiding in the new Creature As it is with natural Seed or Grain sown the Husk or outward part passes away but the lively or substantial part springs up into the Stalk Blade and Ear so it is with the Seed of the Word the letters and syllables the noise and sound of words pass away but the lively and substantial Truth springs up into the new Creature and in it lives and abides for ever God made two great Promises of Regeneration the one That he would write the Law in the heart and the other That he would give a new heart and the latter he fulfils by the former In these two Instants distinguishable at least in Nature doth God by his Word bring forth the Principles of Grace Now here I would conclude this point but that I am obviated by two Objections The one absolutely against the Words Instrumentality The other against the Method proposed in the two Instants 1. Object That against the Words Instrumentality is this The Production of gracious Principles is a Creation and in Creation there can be no Instrument at all and therefore the Word cannot be an Instrument in that Production In answer to which Objection founded on Philosophical Principles I think it were enough to say with the Psalmist Thy testimonies are wonderful Psal.
penetrates not into the Heart But practical Knowledge being a true Knowledge hath strength and life in it it puts forth vital and spiritual Actions Hence our Saviour calls it no less than eternal life Joh. 17. 3. it forges out the blood and vital Spirits of the new Creature strengthens him with spiritual Bones and Sinews and sets him in Motion towards the Crown of Life in Heaven These differences premised I procede to prove the two Positions laid down 1. The first was this That Man's Will doth infallibly and necessarily follow the practical Understanding and this I shall endeavour to make out 1. From God's Ordination in which there are two things to be considered 1. God never made the Will of Man to stand alone 2. God never made it to go alone both which may yet be if it follow not the practical Understanding 1. God never made the Will of Man to stand alone but he would have it depend upon the Understanding As he made the Sensitive Appetite to depend upon the Senses so he made the Will to depend upon the Understanding Hence the Will which is in it self but caeca Potentia a blind Power in its dependance is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a rational Appetite If the Will do not depend upon the Understanding where doth it stand but upon the Base of its own Independency You 'l say No not so for still it is under the guidance of Providence I answer That Providence which rules all things in a sweet Congruity to their Natures rules the Will not as a Brute but as a rational Appetite and how that can be without its dependance on the Understanding I know not 2. God never made it to go alone 't is in it self but a blind Power and God never made the blind to go alone Even in Brutes there is Sense to light the appetite much more in Man Understanding to light the Will Hence the Understanding is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the leading or ruling Faculty and lucerna Domini the candle of the Lord Prov. 20. 27. without it the Will is all in the dark If the Will can go alone in any Acts surely it must be in Acts of Sin which have much of darkness in them but even there whilest the holy Law of God is violated the Dictates of the corrupt Understanding are observed If the Will can go alone in any Acts of Sin surely it must be above all in such Acts as are most against Knowledge but even there whilest theoretical Knowledge is opposed the practical Judgment is fulfilled Hence such presumptuous sinners as rebel against the light are yet said to walk in their own counsels Psal. 81. 12. because they follow their practical Judgement and to erre in their hearts Psal. 95. 10. because that practical Judgment which they follow is corrupt and erroneous and to make them Idols according to their own understanding Hos. 13. 2. because first the Understanding frames the Idol and then the Will falls down and worshippeth 2. I argue from the Will it self which may be considered two ways either as it is in it self or as it is in dependance upon the Understanding 1. As it is in it self and so it is an Appetite its Object is Good real or at least apparant for malum quà malum non est appetibile and that Good must be proposed by the Understanding for that is instead of Eyes to the Will Suppose then that the Understanding do shew forth to the Will such a thing as good pro hîc nunc and that so good that it is immediately to be embraced and cannot without a present evil be neglected no not for a moment if in this Case the Will may refuse this Object it may appetere malum sub ratione mali that is appetere non appetibile and in so doing it may cease to be what it essentially is an Appetite 2. As it is in dependance upon the Understanding and so it is a rational Appetite and which results from thence it is a free Appetite the root of its Freedom is in the Understanding Why hath a Will a liberty of Spontaneity to some Objects but because the Understanding represents them as good pro hîc nunc Why a liberty of Contradiction to other Objects but because the Understanding looks on them as matters of little or no moment One would think so odious and detestable a thing as Sin could not be chosen by the Will but the erring Understanding gilds and glosses it over with a shew of Good One would think such glorious and all-desirable Objects as are in the Gospel could not be refused by the Will but the blind Understanding sees little or no worth at all in them But now if the practical Judgment propose a thing as Good and the Will reject it 't is no longer a rational Appetite but a Brute neither is it any longer free but cut off and in statu separato from the Root and Fountain of its Liberty neither is its Act a free Act but belluinus impetus a brutish violence for it hath no Understanding at all at the root and bottom of it no more than the Act of a Beast hath What then shall we say Can the Will cease to be a rational and free Appetite Or may it be rational and free without an Understanding Neither of these can be Wherefore it remains that it must follow the practical Judgment and so continue free and rational 3. I argue from the Effect which shews much of harmony between the Posture of the Understanding and the Posture of the Will Is the Understanding determinate So is the Will Hence if the Understanding represent a thing as good the Will embraces it as such if as a greater good it embraces it the more if as a summum bonum it embraces it summo conatu On the other hand if the Understanding represent a thing as evil the Will starts back from it if as a greater evil it flies yet further from it if as malum maximum it can never fly far enough from it Is the Understanding pendulous So is the Will too Hence if the Understanding represent a thing as a matter indifferent having little or nothing of moment in it one way or other the Will doth not infallibly will it as it doth the good nor nill it as it doth the evil but in a pendulous way it hangs off and plays on because the Understanding doth not pronounce it good or evil but only indifferent The Will observes every motion of the practical Judgment if that say Yonder is such a good the Will cleaves to it as Ruth to Naomi if that say There is such an evil the Will flies from it as Moses from the Serpent if that say Such a thing is indifferent the Will stands as the King of Babylon at the parting of the way Ezek. 21. 21. it may will or not will for there is an aequilibrium in the Will answering the aequilibrium
in the Understanding 4. I argue from the consequent Absurdity If the Will do not follow the practical Judgment then although the practical Judgment be never so right yet may the Will transgress and by consequence a man may be a sinner and no fool which is impossible In Scripture Sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an aberration Isai. 5. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a missing of the mark 1 Joh. 3. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an ignorance Heb. 9. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an error Rom. 1. 27. error in heart Heb. 3. 10. and error of way James 5. 20. and which is the fullest expression of all folly foolishness and madness Eccl. 7. 25. as if all words were too little to express the folly thereof Also sinners are straglers or wanderers Isai. 53. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without mind Tit. 3. 3. simple ones such as want heart Prov. 9. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unreasonable men 2 Thess. 3. 2. fools nay madmen Acts 26. 11. nay as if there were nothing of Man in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brute heasts 2 Pet. 2. 12. Even in the first Sin of Man the Apostle tells us that the woman 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being deceived was in the transgression 1 Tim. 2. 14. First there was an Error a false End in her mind and then the forbidden fruit was embraced by her Will. But now after all this if the practical Judgment be right set and yet the Will may turn away unto Sin then that which is impossible in Scripture may be possible in Nature there may be a Sinner and no Fool Sin and no Folly Wandring without Error missing the Mark without any false End Transgression and nothing of Deception in it a Man and a Brute coupled together in the same Act the Understanding playing the Man in its right directions and the Will playing the Brute in its irrational aversation All which Absurdities are unavoidable by such as assert that the Will doth not follow the practical Judgment 2. Posit Leaving the first Position I procede to the second viz. That the Will of Man doth infallibly follow the practical Understanding in the matter of Conversion And here again I might reinforce the former Arguments with an Emphasis If the Will cannot stand alone and upon the bottom of its own independency in other matters much less can it do so in Conversion to which the working and drawing of Almighty Grace is requisite If in other matters the Will cannot go alone without the Torch of Reason surely in Conversion it cannot go alone without the Torch of supernatural Illumination If the Will by deserting a lesser good propoposed by the Understanding do appetere malum sub ratione mali then the Will by deserting God proposed as the summum bonum by the Understanding doth appetere summum malum so if the Will by rejecting an inferiour Good proposed by the practical Judgment must become bruitish and irrational how much more bruitish and irrational must it become by rejecting the summum bonum so proposed If the Will may be determined by the Understanding as to a lesser Good nay as to a false lying Good as in the Case of Sin how much rather may it be so determined as to the summum bonum If by the Wills turning away from the Understanding right set there may be Sin in the Will and no Folly in the Understanding which is impossible then by such turning away there may be no Charity in the Will and yet true Faith in the Understanding which is also impossible But pretermi●ting these I come more closely to the Thesis that is That the Will doth follow the Understanding in the business of Conversion Now whereas the Conversion of the Will is double either it is the production of gracious Principles in the Will or it is the actual Conversion of the Will in the first the Will is Passive in the other Active The Wills following the Understanding is double also as to the Principles of Grace in the Will the Understanding is as the Channel through which those Principles are infused into the Will as to the actual Conversion of the Will the Understanding is as a potent Perswader inducing the Will unto actual Conversion In the first the Will follows the Understanding passively only and by way of reception of Principles in the second the Will follows the Understanding Actively and by way of free Actuation of those Principles I shall speak somewhat to both these 1. As to the Principles of Grace in the Will the Understanding is as the Channel through which those Principles are transfused into the Will God doth not infuse the Principles of Grace into the Will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but he puts in his hand by the hole of the door and so the churches bowels are moved for him Cant. 5. 4. he puts in his Grace at the Understanding and so the Will and Affections are turned to him he purifies the heart by faith Acts 15. 9. that is through Faith in the Understanding he influences Holiness into the Will and this Holiness is called by the Apostle holiness of truth Eph. 4. 24. not only because 't is a real Holiness but especially because 't is wrought through the Truth first entring in at the Understanding and so passing on to the Will and that this is the Apostle's meaning appears because he opposes holiness of truth in the 24. Verse to the lusts of deceit in the 22. Verse As those are lusts of deceit because the lusting Will follows upon the erring Understanding so this is holiness of truth because the holy Will follows upon the true Understanding The practical Knowledge of God is stiled eternal life Joh. 17. 3. and a well-spring of life Prov. 16. 22. the reason is because through it all quickning Graces do as a River of Life flow into the Will Above all that of the Apostle is most pregnant Beholding as in a glass the glory of God we are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. The Glory of God is reflected from Christ upon the Gospel and from the Gospel upon the Understanding and from the Understanding upon the Will and so we are changed into his glorious Image In Man's first Transgression Death entred in at the Windows of the Mind and so got into the secret Closet of the Heart and in Man's first Conversion Life comes in at the Mind and so passes down into the Will All the Grace that a man hath saith Dr. Preston passes in through the Understanding and if it were not so how could the Word be an Instrument of the Wills Regeneration There is no passage for it into the Will but through the Understanding In Regeneration the Law is writ in the heart and how can that be but through the Understanding The appetitive Faculty is naturally crooked and if ever it be made right it must be through the
be their God and they shall be my people Jer. 31. 33. These Promises do most signally set forth the production of gracious Principles here 's the Principles themselves a new heart and a new spirit here 's the principal efficient of them the holy Spirit of God here 's a remotion of the Obstacles unto them the taking away the heart of stone here 's the next immediate Capacity of receiving them an heart of flesh here 's the way or manner of producing them a writing the Law in the heart here 's the effectual fruitfulness of them a causing to walk in God's statutes and here 's the crown or glory of all God will be their God and they his people Now when there is a Worker such as the Almighty Spirit a Remotion of the Obstacles such as the Stone of hardness an immediate Capacity such as an Heart of flesh a way of Working such as the intimate Impression of Truth a Fruit proceding such as Obedience to God's Statutes and a Crown of all such as an Interest in God How can the Grace be less than insuperable You will say These Promises were not made to the Gentiles but to the Jews and not to any singular persons among them but to the whole Nation I answer These Promises extend not only to the Jewes but to the Gentiles for these are Promises of Grace founded in Christ and in Christ Jew and Gentile are all one Gal. 3. 28. so one that the Gentiles are of the same body and partakers of the promise Eph. 3. 6. Indeed before the middle Wall of Partition was broken down they were strangers from the covenant of promise but that being gone they are fellow-heirs partaking of the root and fatness of the Olive Neither do these Promises extend to all the Nation of the Jews but to the true Israel the elect People of God whether they be Jews or Gentiles for in them only are these Promises fulfilled Had these been made to all the Jews the true God would have fulfilled them in every Jew You will say No God's Truth doth not exact such a performance for he promised to do these things not absolutely but conditionally so as men did not resist the operations of his Grace I answer If God only promise these things shall be done so as men do not resist then these Promises run thus If thy stony Heart do not resist I will give thee an Heart of Flesh if thy old Heart do not resist I will give thee a new one if thy own spirit do not resist I will give thee my Spirit and if the Law of Sin do not resist I will give my Laws into thy Heart Which Interpretation doth utterly evacuate the Glory and Power of these Promises for to be sure that Stone that old Heart that Spirit of our own that Law of Sin in us will what it can resist the operations of Grace You will say God gives unto Man a posse convertere a supernatural Faculty whereby he is able to turn unto God Now God promises to do these things not so as men in their mere Naturals do not resist but so as men furnished with that supernatural power do not resist I answer two things overthrow this Interpretation 1. In the Text it self there is not a tittle of such a Condition of Non-resistency nor of such a supernatural Power of Conversion nay on the contrary in stead of the Condition of Non-resistency it speaks of a stony heart which is a Principle of Resistency to be removed instead of a supernatural power of Conversion it implies an old heart which is powerless in the things of God to be made new 2. If God promise to do these things so as men furnished with supernatural power of Conversion do not resist then there is such a supernatural power in men before these things be wrought in them that is before there be a new or soft Heart whilest the Heart is old and stony there is such a supernatural power in them which assertion is as I take it 1. Against Scripture that divides all men into two ranks they are clean or unclean new creatures or old spiritual men born of the spirit or natural men born of the flesh but this Assertion ushers in a middle sort of men such as hang by a posse convertere between Nature and Grace with the natural man they have an old stony Heart and with the spiritual man they have a new supernatural Power in the frame of their Heart they are no better than natural and in their supernatural Power they are little less than spiritual 2. 'T is against Reason All Powers in the rational Soul flow out of Life the Power of knowing and embracing natural good things flows out of the natural Life of the Soul and the power of believing and receiving spiritual good things flows out of the supernatural Life of the Soul but this Assertion supposes a supernatural Power of Conversion without any vital Root nothing of a new Heart or Spirit and yet a supernatural Power of Conversion Wherefore rejecting these Interpretations I conclude that those Promises import the production of gracious Principles in an insuperable way 4. The Production of gracious Principles is in Scripture set out in such glorious titles as do import insuperable Grace 't is a creation Eph. 2. 10. 't is a generation Jam. 1. 18. 't is a resurrection Eph. 2. 5 6. 't is a traction Joh. 6. 44. 't is an opening of the heart Act. 16. 14. 't is a translation into Christs kingdom Col. 1. 13. Now if this be not insuperable Grace then there may be a Creation on God's part and no new Creature on mans a Generation on Gods part and no Child of Grace on mans a Resurrection on Gods part and nothing quickened on mans a Traction on Gods part and nothing coming on mans an Opening on Gods part and all shut on mans and a Translation on God's part and no Remove at all on mans and why then should such stately names of Power be set on the head of resistible Grace You 'l say all these are but Metaphors very well but Metaphors are Metaphors that is they carry in them some image or resemblance of the things themselves but there is not the least shadow of likeness or similitude between these things and resistible Grace What shadow of Creation in that which a Creature may frustrate What of Generation in that which produces nothing at all What of Resurrection when the dead need not rise What of Traction when there is no coming upon it What of Opening when there is a Heart still shut up What of Translation when there is no remove by it Take away the infallible Efficacy of Grace and it can be none of all these no not so much as metaphorically because it hath no print of likeness thereunto 5. The Scripture doth not only set out Conversion under the Glory of Metaphors but in plain terms it stiles it a Work of
known will make us free true Wisdom dwells with prudence and practically leads in the way of Righteousness 't is a Suada to the Will and draws it home to God in actual Conversion 3. From those Scriptures which set forth God as the Author of actual Conversion He gives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the actual believing Phil. 1. 29. he grants repentance unto life Acts 11. 18. he works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very act of willing Phil. 2. 13. he causes to walk in his statutes Ezek. 36. 27. In every true Convert there is more than a mere Man the grace of God is to be seen in him Acts 11. 23. there is God in converting Paul Gal. 1. 24. In the Temple of the new Creature every thing speaks of his glory every holy breath in the Will must praise the Lord as its Author If God did not work the very Act of Willing then which I tremble to utter all the Prayers made to him for converting Grace are but God-mockeries all the Praises offered up to him for the same are but false Hallelujahs then they which glorified God in converting Paul glorified but an Idol of their own Fancy they which glorified God in the repenting Gentiles Acts 11. 18. offered but a blind Sacrifice When we pray that God's kingdom should come into our hearts we do not mean that God should put our Wills in aequilibrio but our Wills should be subdued under God's When David and his People offered willingly unto God he falls into a kind of Extasie Who am I and what is my people 1 Chron. 29. 14 And Thine O Lord is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory Ver. 11. even the victory over hearts and All things are of thee Ver. 14. not only our Gold and Silver not only our Hearts and Wills but our very actual Willingness also You will say All this is true God works the very Act of Willing but not insuperably but so as men do not resist the Work of Grace But what 's the meaning of this God works the Will so as men do not resist not to resist is to obey Wherefore the plain meaning is God works the Act of Willing so as men do will which is very absurd Because it makes the very same Act of Willing to be the Condition of it self Again What is it for God to work the Act of Willing so as men do not resist but to work it in a way of dependence upon Man's Will and what is that but to contradict the Apostle who saith that God works the Act of willing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his own good pleasure if he do it of his own good pleasure surely not in a way of dependence upon Man's Will but in a glorious insuperable manner 4. From those Scriptures whose truth is so founded upon insuperable Grace that it cannot stand without it Turn thou me and I shall be turned Jer. 31. 18. Turn us unto thee O Lord and we shall be turned Lam. 5. 21. If Man's actual Turn do not infallibly follow upon God's turning Grace what truth is there in these And 's which couple both together Other sheep I must bring saith Christ and they shall hear my voice Joh. 10. 16. and which agrees with it The salvation of God is sent to the Gentiles and they will hear it Acts 28. 28. What Connexion is there betwixt Christ's bringing and Man 's hearing or betwixt Salvation sent and Man's hearing without insuperable Grace Again God says I will put my Spirit within you and you shall live Ezek. 37. 14. and I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes Ezek. 36. 27. What necessity of Life or Obedience in them if the holy Spirit be given in a resistible way Again God says to Christ Thou shalt call a nation and nations shall run unto thee Isai. 55. 5. and the Church prays Draw me we will run after thee Cant. 1. 4. Where 's the truth of these Propositions if God's calling and drawing do not infer Man's running Again David prays Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and I shall keep it unto the end give me understanding and I shall keep thy Law Psal. 119. 33 34. Where 's the consequence of David's Obedience upon God's Teaching if Grace be superable Moreover God says I will be as dew to Israel he shall grow as the lilly and cast forth his roots as Lebanon his branches shall spread and his beauty shall be as the olive-tree Hos. 14. 5 6. Here 's Israel very florid but that which secures all is insuperable Grace nothing could hinder their spiritual prosperity who had God for their dew I say nothing not Lusts for Ephraim shall say What have I to do with Idols Ver. 8 not backslidings for God says I will heal their back-slidings Ver. 4. not barrenness for God tells them from me is thy fruit found Ver. 8. not deadness for they shall revive as the corn and grow as the vine Ver. 7. But if the Work of Grace may be frustrated then there is no certain root for all this holy fruit to stand upon 5. From those Scriptures which set forth actual Conversion as a Work of Power Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power Psal. 110. 3. God fulfils the work of faith with power 2 Thess. 1. 11. the Principle of Faith is incomplete without its Act but God by his powerful Grace actuates it in us When our Saviour Christ told his Disciples that it was easier for a camel to go through a needles eye than for a rich man to enter into Gods kingdom they cried out with amazement Who then can be saved but our Saviour unties the knot thus The things that are unpossible with men are possible with God Luk. 18. 24 25 26 27. God by the power of his Grace can fetch off the World the Camels bunch from the Heart and so make it pass as it were through the needles eye into the Kingdom of God But now the assertors of resistible Grace may turn the words thus The things which according to the ordinary working of Grace are impossible with God are possible with Men that crowning Work of actual Conversion which is too hard and heavy for God's free Grace is absolved and dispatched out of hand by Man's free Will In the Parable of the lost Sheep we find God going after it until he find it then laying it upon his shoulders Luk. 15. 4 5. He goes after it in the Means of Grace he finds it by the intimate Inshinings of his Spirit and he lays it upon the shoulders of his power that he may bring it home to himself in actual Conversion But now if Grace be resistible the Almighty Shoulders are only put under mans Will to bear it up in aequilibrio to see whether it will go home to God or not it may be it will it may be it will not Gods Power doth but