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A13547 The parable of the sovver and of the seed Declaring in foure seuerall grounds, among other things: 1. How farre an hypocrite may goe in the way towards heauen, and wherein the sound Christian goeth beyond him. And 2. In the last and best ground, largely discourseth of a good heart, describing it by very many signes of it, digested into a familiar method: which of it selfe is an entire treatise. And also, 3. From the constant fruit of the good ground, iustifieth the doctrine of the perseuerance of saints: oppugneth the fifth article of the late Arminians; and shortly and plainly answereth their most colourable arguments and euasions. By Thomas Taylor, late fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge, and preacher of the Word of God, at Reding in Bark-shire. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1621 (1621) STC 23840; ESTC S118185 284,009 494

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A contrite and an humble spirit such as Hannahs A woman of a bruised spirit for in such sacrifices God delighteth Because this hath griefe for want of grace and present corruption and a thirsting after God and the Well-springs of grace to which the promise of acceptance is made 2. It must be a ready and cheerfull spirit Exod. 25.2 and 35.5 The Lord will haue none to offer toward the Tabernacle but whose heart was free and whose spirit made him willing Gods Spirit being a free Spirit makes the spirit of a Beleeuer free also Hee loues a cheerfull giuer a free will-offering 2. Cor. 9. 3. It must be a sincere and innocent spirit voyd of guile and hypocrisie voyd of raigning sinne offering his worship not for shew and ostentation not couering deceit and hollownesse with a shew of holinesse For well it knowes that God requires pure hands to be lifted vp euery where and that one sinne suffered in the soule ingrosseth and eateth vp all the inward worship due to God as the seuen leane Kine did eate vp the fat 4. It must be a feruent and zealous spirit not worshipping coldly nor perfunctorily Our tongues naturally are tyed or frozen and cleaue to the roofe of our mouth but the Spirit makes vs speake with new tongues with fiery tongues with heat and feruency in prayer praises and all the parts of Gods worship Thus is God onely and truly worshipped from a good and honest heart which onely is the Temple of the holy Ghost In this Temple the Arke of the soule keepes the Manna the Word of God In this Temple the sweet Incense of praises is daily offered vpon the Altar of a pure heart In this prayers are preferred which are the breathing of the Spirit not onely for vs but in vs crying Abba Father In this the candle of faith euer burneth before God and neuer goeth out In this lastly wee haue the Oracle of God counselling vs and his Mercy-seate couering vs. But an euill heart cannot performe spirituall worship cannot pray or praise or confesse because it wants the Spirit It neuer thinkes it needs helpe to pray or serue God which is the hardest worke of a Christian neuer done without helpe from heauen It can sometimes easily speake of God hardly vnto him or to him can vse many words of prayer but wants the sigh●s and grones excited by the Spirit Any language is readier to it than the language of the Spirit It can content it selfe with the deed done and neuer care for the Mouer or manner whereas no sacrifice did euer please God without fire from heauen kindling it It can performe bodily worship offer a thousand Rammes and ten thousand riuers of Oyle yea and the first borne of his body but cannot offer his heart nor part with his deare sinnes It is vncheerfull and heauie in such parts of Gods seruice because there wants an internall mouer he is driuen from without not drawne or led by the Spirit within and is as a Fish out of his element Prayer and Sermons are too long too many and euery thing too much this way It can pretend zeale and forwardnesse but it is in some superstitious and formall deuotions and in the meane time bee most zealous against the power and sincere practice of true piety In a word Of all the seruice and sacrifice of wicked men Salomon saith Prou. 15.8 It is an abomination to the Lord. For 1. The sacrifice is an vncleane beast and hatefull Tit. 1.15 To the vncleane all is vncleane 2. They lay it not on the Altar that is tender it not in Christs mediation 3. They want fire and feruency zeale and affection to put to it 4. They lay not their hands on the head of the Calfe confessing in the sense of sinne their owne vnworthinesse and guiltinesse How can God accept a seruice wanting these foure things The third sort of Rules concerning the Spirit of God is for Spirituall Graces These in soundnesse are a sure signe of a good heart I will instance in fiue The first is humiliation and sound inward sorrow as there is cause what way soeuer it lookes 1. If it looke to God it sees him infinitely prouoked who yet is great yea infinite in power and iustice therefore falls downe lower and oftner than Iacob before Esau to procure compassion Againe it sees that a broken and contrite heart is a sacrifice of Gods delight Psalm 51.17 It sees Gods eye euer vpon it and hath an awfull sence of his presence It sees the method of the Lord who first smites and then heales who neuer comforts such as neuer mourned nor promised a ioyfull haruest but to a sorrowfull seed-time It sees the Lord ready to dwell in a contrite soule Esa. 57.15 to grace it 1. Pet. 5.5 and to glorifie it for humilitie goes as an Vsher before honour And therfore it humbleth it selfe vnder the mighty hand of God 2. If it looke into it selfe it sees iust cause of humiliation it hath sight of his vnworthinesse sence of temptation a slauish subiection vnder a law of euill and in daily sinnes matter of daily humiliation It sees a gulfe of corruption lie so deepe as it is still in examination of the sinnes and debts and can neuer finde out the broken estate But for those it findeth it confesseth freely and yeelds it selfe into the Creditors hand and beholding his insufficiency to pay and discharge craues pardon and remission as for life and death 3. If it looke on any other thing all increaseth his humiliation It abaseth it selfe vnder all creatures sees no Toad so vile as it selfe is lesse then the least mercy but exalts Christ and his merits aboue all that heart can thinke and thinkes it happy if as a dogge it might gather crummes vnder the Lords Table It is thankfull for small things and content with any thing And the soundnesse of this grace bewrayeth it selfe 1. In that it mournes not so much for offending God a terrible Iudge as a mercifull Father not so much for feare of hell as for loue of God and Heauen 2. There will be smitings of heart for all sins small sinnes as well as great Dauids heart will smite him for cutting Sauls lappe as if he had cut his flesh and for numbring the people as if he had murdred them It will startle at vaine oathes as at periury at adulterous words as actions for secret sinnes as open because all are open to him whom we deale withall yea for faylings in good duties as well as for open and foule euils 3. Seeing tendernesse of heart is a notable meanes to preserue the goodnesse of it the good heart is soone awakened after sinne committed Iosiahs heart melted at hearing the Law read One word of Nathan to Dauid brought him to confession And it is no sooner awakened than humbled and not raised but by serious repentance But is an euill heart thus humble or rather is
is necessarily required moisture of grace as to the fruits of earth moisture in the earth But what moisture is in a stone A stone indeed may be moyst on the outside in moyst weather The walls and Marbles seeme to weepe and drops stand on them in rainy seasons not because moisture is in them but moisture offers it selfe vnto them but they hold it not so as they remaine as hard and dry within as euer before So with this stony heart where hardnes of heart raigneth no moisture of Grace no relenting or giuing within Indeed in foule weather when the storme of God is risen an inuincible hard heart as hard as a Marble may seeme soft Pharaoh yeelds and giues againe on the outside You may see drops of water standing in Esaus eyes who wept when the blessing was gone Iudas seemes moystened with repentance Balaam melts a little and wisheth to die well Foelix moulders a little and trembles But we must distinguish this from sound moysture of grace 1. These be flashes and sudden motions and as seldome as the weeping of walls 2. This moysture comes not from an heart softened but from slauish feare or present smart euen from the present disposition of the weather from without 3. So soone as faire weather comes againe the stones are as dry as euer they were so these returne to their former lusts so soone as the foule weather is ouer as Pharaoh Foelix c. Vse 1. Doest thou heare the Word preached without any great fruit Then lay the blame where indeed it is Some impute it to the difficulty of the Word Others to the fault of the Minister who pleaseth them not either in the matter or manner But it were far more commendable for thee to impute thy vnprofitablenesse to the hardnesse of thine owne heart and so take thy sinne home to thy selfe so did the Apostle Paul Rom. 7.14 when he perceiued that the Law of God was not so efficacious to him as he desired he accused not the Law but maintayned it to be spirituall but himselfe as sold vnder sinne He condemned himselfe not the Word so doe thou for the Gospell is the power of God to saluation it is spirit and life and mighty in operation If it worke not so mightily on thy hart then see thy hardnesse bewaile it let godly sorrow and griefe daily dropping make this stone hollow till it haue broken it Vse 2. That of the Apostle Hebr. 3.7 To day if ye will heare his voyce harden not your hearts All the seed cast vpon an hard heart is lost as if a man should sowe on a rocke where is no place for root or moysture Beware of an hard heart there is no curse to that almost no sinne to that Better that all thy field were couered ouer with stones than thy hart should Nay it were better for thee to be a dead stone than a liuing stone Now the markes to know an hard heart are these 1. When Gods Word makes no impression or gets not within the heart to renew or reforme the man though sometimes it may scratch the outside and restraine him When the Law is threatened hee either blesseth himselfe or turneth his eare from it or applies it to others not himselfe And the Gospell enters not because the Law hath not pierced nor been as a needle to make way Let all the mercies of the Gospell be shewed to the wicked he will not repent nor learne to doe well 2. Neglect or light ouer-passing the workes of Gods Mercy or Iustice vpon himselfe or others For mercies when the goodnesse of God leades him not to repentance Rom. 2.4 5. Our Lord makes this a cause euen in his owne Disciples in whom the sin raigned not that they forgat the matter of the loaues because their hearts were hardened Mark 6.52 For the Iudgements of God his workes of Iustice doe moue somewhat more than Mercies but nothing to amendment Pharaoh when iudgement puts him to a plunge could say I haue sinned here is a little scratch on his heart as on a Stethy but the hardnes recoyles the stroke that should breake the heart to pieces so as after all the strokes of God there is no reformation 3. Vnfeelingnesse of hardnesse and vnwillingnes to feele it no mislike of it no desire to vnderstand the danger of it When men desire to sit quiet in sin and nothing so offends them as to heare their sinne disgraced when they turne their backes and stop their eares Zech. 7.11 Being as loth to bee drawne to a Sermon powerfull against sinne as Israel to come neere the Mountaine Whereas a soft heart is most sensible of much hardnesse in it and counts no burthen comparable thereto 4. For the maintaining their estate credit and fauour in the world or their lusts and pleasures to oppose and dislike such Doctrines courses and persons as haue the Word on their sides Pharaoh must not seeme to be ouercome by such meane people and therefore seeing euidently the Lord stand for them he obdured himselfe The Scribes and Pharises conuinced in their conscience of the truth of Christs Doctrine and the innocency of his person did out of hardnesse of heart euer oppose both his Doctrine and Person because they must maintaine their credit in the world and vphold their pompe and glory against him though hee had truth and equity and innocency on his side The like of all hardened persecutors of the poore Saints 5. Out of resolution of following a mans owne present course whatsoeuer perswasions or Doctrines he heareth to the contrary to fly occasions and companies which might touch or worke vpon his conscience Some cannot abide to heare strict Preachers that allow them no vnlawfull liberty no not affoord them a looke on the forbidden fruit Others cannot endure the society of a faithfull friend that will truly tell them of thēselues No such string must be touched This argues a soule or soyle settled in hardnesse 6. Habits and customable sins which make the heart as a path-way A soft heart smites it selfe for once sinning and for small sinning Dauids heart smote him for cutting off the lap of Sauls garment How would it haue smote him for cutting off his head But custome of sinne hardeneth exceedingly Heb. 3.13 Take heede lest any be hardened through the deceitfulnes of sin And by hindring repentance it holds men in the trade of sinne Hardnesse and the heart that cannot repent are ioyned together Rom. 2.5 Vse 3. As euer thou wouldest heare the Word to saluation labour for a soft and melting heart such as good Iosias had whose soule melted to heare the words of the Law read The greatest blessing heere below is an heart flexible and bowed to the obedience of God And hereunto consider these Motiues 1. That it is a note of a child of God to haue his natiue hardnesse mollified and his naturall stubbornnesse corrected and altered by the Spirit of sanctification 2. Thes. 2.13
vs constant both in peace and persecution Presume not of thine owne strength None haue more boasted of their valour at home then they that most cowardly lost the field Remember Peter and pray for the mighty power of the Spirit to make thee of weake strong and altogether vnmoueable in this worke of the Lord 1. Cor. 15. vlt. Alwayes remembring the great danger of falling away both in the good things lost and in the multitude of euils pull'd vpon thy selfe Thus much of the second sort of bad ground We come now by Gods assistance to the third Vers. 7. And some fell among thornes and the thornes sprang vp with it and choked it THat which our Sauiour taught his Disciples namely what an hard thing it is to be saued wee haue euidently seene in the explication of the former ground wherein we haue discouered a number of Hearers who haue gone so farre in the way of heauen as most of our Hearers come not neere them to be but reprobate ground and lose all their labour and expectation But yet we shall more cleerly discerne that truth and haue more occasion seriously to consider of it when wee shall in this last ground the best of all the bad ones make manifest that they that step before and beyond the former shall yet fall short of their ayme and bee shut out of heauen as well as they For there was nothing good in the former which is wanting in this but some further commendation in this which was not in the former Consider heere with me three generals 1. The kinde of soyle some of the seede fell among thornes 2. The successe of the seed in it 1. commendable 2. lamentable 3. The reason or the causes of failing For the soyle it is thornie ground For the commendable successe 1. It goes as farre as the former in hearing vers 14. in receiuing Math. 13.20 and Mark 4.14 and in growing as our Text hath it 2. It goes farre beyond it for first the ground is softer the mould moyster the soyle deeper and so more hope secondly it springs beyond the other the other growes but this sprang vp not onely to a blade but to an eare though not a ripe one neither doth the stone hinder the rooting while they are hearing but after they are departed thornes choke it thirdly they hold on their profession still which the other lose they are not driuen off by persecution but would obey still did it not crosse their pleasures and profits For the lamentable successe it is set downe ver 14. they bring forth no fruit that is either no good crop or no lasting fruit to the haruest or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bring no fruit to the end or to maturity for fruit they bring though not to perfection The causes of this failing are set downe 1. in generall to be thornes namely inward lusts carnall affections and corrupt desires 2. In speciall of three sorts 1. Cares of the world vers 14. and Mat. 13.22 2. Riches vers 14. called deceitfulnesse of riches Math. 13.22 3. Voluptuous liuing vers 14. called by the other Euangelist lusts of other things these enter and choke the Word Mark 4.19 Thus in one view you haue the summe and method of the Text enlarged out of the other Euangelists Now for the exposition of the first consider 1. Why lusts are compared to thornes 2. Why these Hearers are compared to thornie ground Carnall lusts are fitly compared to thornes in fiue respects 1. There are some flowers and some shew on thornes small fruits and many pricks So whateuer appearance these lusts make no good fruit riseth of them but many pricks and sorrowes by them in the end Thornes pierce the body lusts the mind 2. Thornes are euery where armed and ready to wound and teare him that meddling with them doth not carefully fence himselfe So they that nourish the cares of the world or addict themselues to pleasures or profits pierce themselues thorow with many sorrowes 3. As a thorne held softly prickes not nor hurteth but when it is held hard and crusht it easily draweth blood So a man may vse this world as not vsing it without danger and hold softly the profits and pleasures of this life but gripe them and fasten on them there is certaine hurt 4. Thornes and briers are the dennes and receptacles of Serpents and poysonfull wormes and creatures so are these vnmortified desires the harbours of infinite noysome sinnes which shall creepe as thicke into the soule as the Frogs into Pharaohs lodgings As Israel not content with Gods daily allowance but out of a couetous and distrustfull desire against Gods Commandement saued some of the Manna till morning but it was all full of wormes and stunke So doe fleshly mindes by nourishing vnlawfull lusts turne Manna into wormes 5. As thornes and briars are at last good for nothing but fewell for fire so these thickets of lusts and pursuit after the profits and pleasures of this life are the proper fewell of the fire of the great Day and prepare the ground it selfe which all worldlings are without timely repentance as fewell for the fire of hell which is vnquenchable These bad Hearers are as aptly compared to thornie ground For as a thorny and weedy soyle chokes and kills at length such seeds as come vp hopefully so an heart stuffed with vnmortified affections at length resists and chokes the Seed of Gods Word that it shall not prosper to the saluation of that Hearer in the haruest for 1. These thornes supplant the Word and vnroote it againe as thornes to roote themselues vndermine the seede below 2. These thorny corruptions hinder the comfortable heate and shine of the sunne from the heart namely the sweet beames and influence of the Spirit of grace which cannot come so sweetly and freely to the hart to cherish the growth and worke begun● as thornes hinder the Sunne from plants 3. Thornes draw away the moysture which should preserue the plants in their growth and greenenesse Euen so these inward lusts draw the heart from meanes of moysture of grace they sometimes giue a man leaue to heare but as they preuaile and take vp the heart there shall bee little time allowed to remember meditate or apply that which is heard and as small leaue to bring things into practice Doctr. In that our Sauiour compareth bad Hearers to thornie ground wee learne that thornes and lusts of any sort suffered to grow in the heart doe soone ouergrow the Word of God and suffer it not to prosper For as the Husband-man that suffers thornes and weeds to choake his seed comming vp loseth his haruest Euen so that man loseth his part in the Gospell that cherisheth lusts and disordered desires in his heart together with the Gospell Hence the Apostle Iames chap. 1.21 telleth vs that if we would heare the Word so as it may be ingraffed in vs we must first cast away or put
first Bring forth fruit and multiply so now creating him againe in Iesus Christ he begets them that they may goe forth and bring fruit and glorifie him 3. Because the Beleeuer is now led by the Spirit who is not barren or idle in him but fruitfull in all variety of fruits of grace as they are described Gal. 5.22 23. A tree must liue before it beare fruit Now we are quickned by the Spirit The same spirit plants vs in Gods House and adds his blessing to that plantation Psal. 92.14 The same Spirit waters vs with the waters from vnder the Sanctuarie Ezek. 47.12 and so makes vs fruitfull by a spring of liuing waters The same Spirit purgeth vs to be a peculiar people zealous of good workes Tit. 2.14 4. There is the same reason of the parts and of the whole But the whole field the whole Church is a fruitfull ground Cant. chap. 4. vers 13. The Church is compared to the goodliest Garden that euer was heard of stored with the most precious plants vnder heauen most delectable fruits and the chiefest spices shadowed by Pomegranats Camphire Spikenard Calamus Saffron Cinnamon c. It is not a Waste an Heath a Wildernes but a new Paradise of God planted by his hand A Garden of greatest pleasure and God takes pleasure no where else A Garden in which the Tree of life that is Christ Iesus is to be tasted and fed on to eternall life A Garden in which a Riuer runnes foure wayes from the same Fountaine that is the Gospell runnes freely streaming from the foure Euangelists A Garden in which man was placed to til and dresse it so in the Church men are gathered to exercise duties of piety and loue A garden furnished with all manner of trees for fruit or delight Cant. 7.14 A Vineyard in which are all kindes of sweet fruits old and new Whence euery member being a part of the whole must also abound and flourish in all holy vertues and the sweet fruits of faith and loue Vse 1. Let vs try as men doe the goodnesse of our ground by the fruitfulnesse of the crop it yeelds If it be good ground it brings fruits answerable to the seed The Rules of triall are these 1. If barrennesse be a signe and a true informer against bad ground how many that haue long professed Christ and been long Hearers are conuinced to be bad and cursed earth because of their barrennesse and fruitlesnesse Numbers of carnall gospellers content themselues with a forme of godlinesse denying the power like the cursed Figtree they haue leaues but no fruit vnder the meanes they liue voyd of faith voyd of Gods feare voyd of loue to the Word voyd of obedience scorne to reforme any thing are as loose and disordered as at first as hatefull and scornfull of the meanes as euer Are these good ground No no their fruits bewray them what they are Let them beware in time at their own perill This barrennesse in the Gospell is accursed with cutting downe and with euerlasting fire Math. 25.41 2. Rule If good ground bring timely fruits so soone as euer the seed falls on it are they good ground that are so slowe and heauie to any good fruits as somtime they are resoluing seuen and seuen yeeres to giue vp some vnwarrantable lusts or vndertake some commendable duty Nay some neuer resolue to doe good till they die but then they will repent and be better c. But what darest thou liue so neere the curse of God as that ground on which the raine often falleth Heb. 6.8 which yet is not seen on thee Diddest thou marke in the Theefe conuerted what a number of excellent fruits presently appeared Seest thou not the commendation of the Colossians chap. 1.6 that the Gospell was fruitfull among them from the first day they heard it and truly knew the grace of God For thou neuer truly knewest the grace of God who abidest vnfruitfull takest dayes with God Considerest thou not what a singular praise yea and mercy of God it is to haue the Word worke speedily and to hasten our fruits were it possible from the day that we heard it How many sinnes should then be cut off how many good duties vndertaken and the reckoning furthered Oh heare at length Christ knocking resolue presently to open If thou hearest his voyce this day harden thy heart no more How long shall he be with thee how long shall he suffer thee Take heed of that sentence Pro. 1.24 Because I haue called and you would not answere behold it shall come to passe that you shall call and not be heard yea I will laugh at your destruction c. 3. Rule Good ground bringeth fruits in kinde answerable to the seed and the fruitfulnesse in Christianity is a godly conuersation beseeming the Gospell Phil. 1.27 It bringeth not weeds not Thistles not brambles But how comes it that the seed being so pure holy yeelding the fruits are so contrary Did not the Master allow the seruants cast in good seed Whence then are these Tares of generall profanenesse ignorāce swearing lying Sabbath-breaking in most vnconscionable maner cōtempt of Magistracy of Ministry iniustice vsury slandring scoffing at goodnes drunkennes gaming hatred of the light bringers of it repining at their prosperity and the like Whence I say are they Are these fruits beseeming good ground Or are they any way like the seed I dare say a man may finde as good fruits as these among the Turks and barbarous Heathens where the seed neuer came nay in hell it self where is no other ground but such as this Let no man deceiue himselfe such rotten fruits argue rotten hearts God wil reape no such haruest he will owne no such ground 4. Rule If good ground bring ripe fruits with constancy and continuance euen in their age Psal. 92.14 what goodnesse is in that ground that hath giuen ouer his fruits that hauing had leaues and shewes of profession and some goodnesse hath euen cast away the leaues farre worse than the cursed Figtree which had leaues yet escaped not the curse These were neuer planted into Christ for had they been so the Father had purged them to haue brought forth more fruit Neuer members of the Church for had they been of vs saith the Apostle they would haue continued with vs Neuer good in deed and in truth for a good mans leafe shall not fall Psalm 1.3 And if euery man shall receiue according to his fruits Ier. 17.10 these men shall one day know feed vpon the bitter fruit of their declining Apostasie whē they shal beleeue or feele what they will not now beleeue that it had beene better for them neuer to haue knowne the way of truth then haue departed from the holy Commandement Vse 2. Labour to be fruitfull Christians content not your selues with leaues and the forme of Religion but as trees of righteousnesse shew forth your Grapes and Figges
not 2. Christs prayer was heard which was not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not that his Faith should not faile in part but not vtterly and altogether vanish So Chrysostome non dicit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For by Christs care and fauour it was that Peters Faith did not altogether vanish He failed in confession not in affection His Faith was not ficta fayned therefore not fracta broken It was concussa non excussa shaken but not shaken off Corde tenuit illum quem voce denegauit saith Gregory He denied Christ with his mouth but held him still in his heart Wee graunt Peters Faith wounded not dead his confession oppressed with feare not wilfully reiected his sinne miserable not mortall or deadly in Thompsons sense 6. Ground taken from Gods continuall being with the Elect their in-being in Christ and the Spirits in-being in them First the presence and ayde of God in trials will not suffer them to bee tempted aboue that they are able 1. Cor. 10.13 God is continually present with his Esa. 46.4 in sixe troubles and in seuen in their passage thorow fire and water and to this end that they be not drowned and ouercome but to supply both strength and euasion Obiect In that place God promiseth say they sufficient strength to ouercome all temptations but onely to them that are waking yet God abides faithfull in forsaking them that forsake him Answ. 1. But the question is Whether is God faithfull in this promise of preseruing them in Faith and in not suffering any tentation to befall aboue their strength or whereof he will not giue a good issue And if he be whether they shall forsake him whom hee forsaketh not 2. The whole Word is giuen not to them that sleepe but them that wake But who is it that makes vs awake and keepes vs waking but the Lord Psal. 121.4 Or who calls vs out of our beds but he Cant. 5.2 Secondly their in-being in Christ preserues them as liuing members of a liuing Head who therefore is called the sauiour of his body Eph. 5.23 Obiect This is true of his members so long as they be liuing louing dutifull obedient members Answ. 1. There is no elect person and regenerate but is a liuing member for the Head preserueth life in euery member 2. He that made him a member being no member can and doth restore and recouer him though sicke vnsound and hurt dealing with his members as wee doe with ours who tender and wrap and make much of sore and weake members not considering them as full of corruption but as members Ioh. 6.37 Whatsoeuer the Father giueth me commeth to me and he that commeth to mee I cast not out Obiect True if hee alway come to Christ but hee may depart and goe away of himselfe Answ. No Christ shewes in the 40. verse what he meanes by not casting out namely hee shall euer abide in my fellowship and family for I will effect that hee shall haue eternall life Againe Ioh. 17.12 Whom thou hast giuen mee I haue kept that not one of them is perished and Iude 1. Such as are called and sanctified are also preserued of Iesus Christ. But how is he preserued that departs and goes away Thirdly in whomsoeuer the Spirit dwelleth hee must needs perseuere in grace so long as hee dwels there but the Spirit dwels alway in the Elect after conuersion Ioh. 14.16 17. I will pray the Father and he shall giue you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for euer Which cuts off their thred-bare answere of So long as the Spirit dwels and also their distinction of abiding for a time and for euer Whosoeuer hath the Spirit of God is borne of God and whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not that is so as sinne recouer his raigne and power The reason is because the seed of God abideth in him 1. Ioh. 3.9 that is either the Spirit of God whose vertue is a principall efficient or the Word whereby as an instrument we are regenerate and begotten to God Obiect True so long as they are borne of God and so long as the seed abideth in them they sinne not Answ. So Bellarmine answereth Non potest lethaliter peccare quamdiu perseuerat filius Dei changing the casuall particle of the Apostle quia into a conditionall quamdiu So Thompson also cha 20. But the Apostle is expresse against their absurd euasion He is alwayes borne of God because the seed of God abideth in him and is in him for euer Nay his natiuity of God keepes him that he cannot fall from God finally and returne into the Kingdome of Satan againe so chap. 5.18 Hee that is borne of God sinneth not but preserues himselfe and the wicked toucheth him not that is hath power giuen him of God whereby to preserue himselfe that Satan touch him not in his Free-hold or snatch him backe againe to death and destruction These are some of the grounds by which this comfortable Doctrine is confirmed with which to auoyd prolixity I will content my selfe Now for the manifold Obiections which are made against it I will endeuour to preuent them all in some fewe Conclusions The first is this No precept to beware of falling away no promise to perseuerance no commination or threatning against Apostates doth proue that a true Beleeuer can fall away wholy or finally For the former where we are exhorted to beware of falling away from the grace of God Heb. 3.12 and to take heed that standing we fall not 1. Cor. 10.12 and where blessednesse is promised to him that feareth alwaies Pro. 28.14 none of these exhortations to so great diligence and feare and watchfulnesse argue such an absolute defect in all them to whom they are giuen and in whom they are found but agree with certaine perseuerance as meanes with the end the cause with the effect Because 1. They are deliuered to hypocrites as that in 1. Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest hee fall because they wanting Faith deceiue themselues with a vaine presumption and opinion of Faith and fall away But what is this to the sound Beleeuer 2. If they be deliuered to the godly who may also grieuously fall from Faith and other graces they proue not they can fall from true sauing grace at least in the habit and gift but onely in the measure degree and parts all which they ought to maintaine and preserue But one thing it is to fall another to fall away One thing to fall from the first loue another from all loue 3. No feare of falling impeacheth the certainty of not falling away Our Lord Iesus himselfe feared and fasted and prayed forty dayes and forty nights before his temptations that in his example we might see that our feare is not then frustrate when perseuerance is certaine 4. Meanes of perseuerance and not falling away cannot be certaine proofes of falling away but rather against
treateth whereby we destroy so farre as is in vs and plucke him from Christ but if hee be a true Beleeuer the mighty hand of God vpholds him perhaps not from falling but from falling away 2. Christ is said to dye for a man two wayes 1. Improperly and generally for the whole visible Church for whom his death is sufficient 2. Properly truly and specially for the faithfull and Elect to whom it is effectually applyed in the vertue and merit of it Many of the former may bee destroyed none of the latter 3. Members of Christ are so two wayes 1. In the iudgement of charity and of the Church all outward members of the Church are to be reputed redeemed and iustified till by their Apostasie they declare themselues hypocrites for whom Christ neuer dyed 2. In the iudgement of certainty he dyed not for all and euery one Now the weaknesse of the argument appeares euidently That because some fall away for whom Christs death is sufficient therefore they may to whom it is effectuall or because some who in the iudgement of charity onely are redeemed fall away therefore such as are certainly redeemed by his death may 2. Pet. 1.9 We reade of one who was washed but forgets he was purged from his old sinnes Answ. There is a twofold washing One outward by the water of Baptisme by externall profession and outward reformation as Simon Magus The other inward true and reall by the blood of Christ applyed by the Spirit and faith by meanes of the Word and by the waters of sanctification And accordingly there is a twofold purging one reall and existent the other in opinion profession and iudgement of ones selfe and others The former being truly washed cannot forget their purgation as the latter may One drop of that water springeth vp to eternall life But it is no good argument Some professing cleannesse and purity fall away therefore such as are cleane indeed some washed with outward water therefore such as are baptized with the holy Ghost and fire Heb. 6.4 and 10.26 Some that are inlightened and taste of the good Word of God and are partakers of the holy Ghost and are sanctified by the blood of the Couenant fall away and cannot bee renewed by repentance Therfore Elect persons may fall away finally Answ. 1. In generall None of all these phrases implyeth true Regeneration Besides the Apostle speakes of hypocrites and such as sinne against the holy Ghost not of any true Beleeuer 2. In speciall and to the particulars Some that are inlightened fall away But this is of knowledge in iudgement not in affection of knowledge in the braine not in the heart of bare illumination without thorow-renouation or reformation of science without conscience experience practice What a great measure of knowledge had Demas Iudas and Iulian attained by which they seemed to haue cleane escaped such as are wrapped in errour And yet they were againe intangled in errour the greatest errour being to know and not to doe Now what argument is this It is possible for some truly inlightened to fall away therefore for some truly regenerate They taste the heauenly gift and the good Word of God and yet fall away Answ. By tasting may be vnderstood two things 1. An approbation in iudgement seeing in some measure the excellency of the gift Ioh. 4. but this in generall not in speciall in others not in himselfe as Balaam and Agrippa 2. An inclination in the affection rauished with that excellency as the bad ground receiued the seed with ioy and hearing and seeing the happinesse of the Saints wish and desire to partake of it if by wishing they could winne it but deale as hard Chapmen who see a commodity and their owne need of it and prize and cheapen it but will not giue so much as it must cost them and so goe away without it Balaam wished to dye the death but would not liue the life of the righteous And the young man in the Gospell was loth to sell all and so went away without saluation Whereas a sound Beleeuer will sell all with the Disciples and account all but losse or dung with Paul and exchange the treasures of Egypt with the Crosse of Christ as Moses Thus the hypocrite onely tastes the gift and feedeth not but the Elect feed on the Bread of life and drinke of the water of the Well of life vnto life eternall Now this is no good argument because some that taste doe fall away therfore so may he that feedeth on Christ. They that are partakers of the holy Ghost and sanctified by the blood of the Couenant fall quite away Hypocrites are sanctified by the blood of the Couenant 1. in respect of profession not of the power of holinesse 2. in respect of externall communion with the members of the Church in the Word and Sacraments not of inward society or sanctification 3. in respect of the application of the blood of the Couenant not by the Spirit but by the meanes but diuersly from that to the Elect To the Beleeuer truly by faith and to his saluation To the hypocrite in outward shew and appearance in opinion in the iudgement of charity onely and to his greater condemnation 1. Cor. 11.27 They are also partakers of the holy Ghost that is excellent gifts of the holy Ghost as 1. the spirit of feare howling for sinne and sorrow wishing the sins had neuer been committed as in Cain and Iudas but alwayes want the Spirit of loue 2. Externall reformation in great measure as Herod did many things but kept one Herodias 3. Feruent zeale for the Lord as in Iehu 2. King 10.16 but for a start at the beginning and for the sinnes of others not the owne 4. Holy motions with which the Spirit inspires them and often purposes and promises to follow them as Saul had many But 1. they neuer haue any but common gifts not the speciall gifts of faith charity true repentance proper and peculiar to the Elect 2. Though they haue the gifts of the sanctifying Spirit yet not the gifts of Sanctification 3. They neuer come to be sanctified throughout in body and soule and spirit 1. Thes. 5.23 nor to be throughly changed into the Image of God 2. Cor. 3.18 Now this is a weake argument Because some hauing the gifts of the sanctifying Spirit fall quite away therefore some also that haue the gift of sanctification They that taste of the powers of the life to come fall away This tasting also is incident to hypocrites and standeth in two things 1. Thoughts and meditations of the life to come 2. A powerfull working and forcing of the heart to looke somewhat that way and to doe something seeking to enter Yet they shall neuer enter 1. Because they onely taste not digest these meditations to follow them home 2. Because if they performe any thing they doe it not purely not for Gods glory but themselues not for loue of God but selfe-loue Gods glory and seruice