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B23015 The confirming worke of religion ..., or, The true and infallible way for attaining a confirmed state in religion ... with a short and confirming prospect of the work of the Lord about his church in these last times / by R. Fleming ... Fleming, Robert, 1630-1694. 1685 (1685) Wing F1263A 80,672 168

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then with the out going of their affections 2. That as it s not conceivable how a true and firme assent can be to divine truth but on its known certainty so here is no resolving of the Christians faith on the strongest rationall evidences hereof yet must it still be resolved on the testimony of God made clear evident to them to be such 3. It is sure also the Lord hath not given so large a measure of these grounds and demonstrations of his truth with such redoubled arguments of that kind to be of so small regard as is with most but for some great and universall use hereof to the wholl Church and knew how needfull such assistances to the faith of his people would be whilst they are on the earth 4. That these means which tend most convincingly to found a rationall assurence in the judgment are the proper vehicle of the Spirit of God by which his sealing worke should be both sought and expected nor can I judge how the credite and use hereof should be so small and not on the same ground quite any externall ordinance of the Gospell which without the Spirit of the Lord can never profite nor how we should expect and suite his confirming worke on the soul when these greatest confirming means which he hath given to the Church have no just weight but o how wonderfull a teacher is the holy Ghost when such ordinare means fail and are inaccessable by furnishing his people then with these strongest arguments of love and power who having had but small measures of light yet were not unfaithfull to improve the smallest degree of such a talent 5. Yea so great a thing is it to attain a solid faith of things wholly remott from our sense and so far above the reach and apprehension of nature or to have an absolute relyance on an invisible refuge for our present and eternall state as no common assent can answer when the very rest and quiet of the soul must needs ly in the sure and firme persuasion hereof 6. It is too visible also how little the practicall use of such a mean hath yet been essayed in the Church that all who are members therof might no lesse know the strenth and firmnesse of the foundation of their faith by its own evidence then the generall articles of religion but whilst the most usuall instructing worke lyes almost wholly about the noetick part of Divinity there seems not that serious regard to presse the dianoetick part hereof on mens conscience as if this were to be restricted to a few who are more knowing learned and of an inquisitive spirit about the rationall certainty of the truth and for whom these choise and abundant helps of this kind which are in this age seem more peculiarly directed It s sure that the Christian faith in the first times did remarkably then spread and prevail by these clear evidences hereof to the judgment made effectuall by the spirit of God more then by extraordinare miracles nor knew they otherwise what it was to be Christians but by imbracing the truth with a full assurance of understanding no lesse then of delight and affection But if it be objected it is not the same case now where religion is planted in a nation and hath an uncontrollable publick profession under the support of humane lawes I know no weight this can have except that should be admitt therwith quod nunc nascuntur Christiani sed non fiunt 7. Yea is it not sure tho it seems little understood that the primary grounds and evidences of our faith are not only as to their ●nd demonstrative of the truth and divinity of the Scripture but are upon the matter such demonstrations also which most natively result from the same by infallible consequence and are thus to be accounted not as human but divine arguments given us by the spirit of God 8. I shall but further add how such as doe seriously ponder things will find this demonstration to be not more important then clear that to be a confirmed Christian and a confirmed Protestant are convertible terms and that if these as are under that deplorable bondage and darknesse of popery were but once awaked to see the truth certainty of the Christian faith by its intrinsick and objective evidence and taken off that brutish credulity and dependance on the alone credite of others herein it might be said the strongest ingine to hold up that profession were then broke and should see the doctrine and rule of faith to be of such full and perspicuous evidence from the Scripture as without blasphemy they could not seek from the Lord to give them a plainer rule then what he hath there given READER IT s like you may think strang how these few sheets in the close fall in here after the forgoing part was finished but tho they meet in one designe and interest yet was not this then intended untill the former was done and if it might tend to a solid use and fruit unto any I shall forbear a further Apology herein I may trulie say the weight of the subject hath carryed it some further lenth then was designed when I so much sought to be short as I aim at in any thing of this kind that through my desir● to avoide any unnecessare multiplying of thords I sar● least it may make some things seem a litle dark at the first looke tho I hope not upon any serious perusall of the same Two things I must further crave leave to add 1 that when some succinct view of the great assistances and confirmations of our faith is here offered which these of the lowest capacity of the Church might with that advantage improve as in a few howers by reading it some times over may be so far impressed on their mind and judgment that they could give some clear and judicious account thereof it may be by such but seriously weighed taken to heart of what conceirn the use hereof is 2. That I would humbly judge also it were a most speciall service for the truth in this day to have some short Directory and remembrancer of the great acts of the Lord and monuments of his Providence now under the New Testament in that maner held forth as might most tend to some universall use of all within the Church I confesse my desire pressed me to some smal essay herein with intent to have joyned it to this worke but haveing with much conviction laid this wholly aside as to any further appearence that way so is it with an earnest desire that some more qualifyed might take to heart and under their hand so great a service both for their generation and posterity It is sure the Lord hath designed his people to be tought the greatnesse of his workes as well as the precepts of his word and as no duty is more pressed then this under the Old Testament both as to Publick and Family instruction so are we no lesse accountable i● these last times for this improvement of such as are of known publick and uncontrollable evidence and should be th● care of each age to have that solemne remembrance kept up hereof so as not a few but the very multitude within th● Church might be as a publick Library and Repository of th● same FINIS
THE CONFIRMING WORKE OF RELIGION In its necessity and use briefly held forth that each Christian may have a proper ballast of his own of the grounds and reasons of his faith and thus see the greatnesse of that security on which he adventures his eternal state OR The true and infallible way for attaining a confirmed state in Religion from these primary evidences and demonstrations of our faith which the Lord hath himself given so as it may be easy for the meanest in the Church to know the same and be ready to render an account thereof to all that ask With a short and confirming prospect of the work of the Lord about his Church in these last times BY R. FLEMING Minister of the Gospel of Christ At ROTTERDAM Printed by REINIER LEERS M.DC.LXXXV The PREFACE THis small Essay here offered is on the greatest subject can fall under the consideration of mankind and is a study was never more pressingly called for then in these dayes for men to be making peace with God and to have such an assurance of his truth as can fully quiet and support the soul though all sensible props should be brocken and fail Great changes doe surely hasten on this generation and the life of faith is in an other manner like to be put to tryal then since the Churches rise and recovery from Antichristian bondage The storme now visibly grows upon the Churches of Christ though nothing is thus to faint or shake the spirits of any who know their anchor is sure and cast within the vail but the strongest difficulties in following the Lord when overcome yeelds the greatest victory and will be not only matter of joy here but to all eternity in having with patience and hope indured and got well through a throng of temptations and assaults in a resolute adherence to the truth If men think it their wisdome to secure their private interest by dividing it in such a time from the publick cause of the Reformed Church and make light of the greatest truths of God now assaulted of the blood of the Martyrs yea of their own eternal state by any coolnesse or shrinking from the same they will find no temporal motives can ever compense that losse and ruine which inevitably will meet such in the issue yea that these words of Mordecai to Esther Esth 4 13 14. have the same voice and weight in this day What is held forth in the following worke I may with humble confidence say was under some pressure to have such clear evidence and quieting persuasion of divine truth as made it lesse easy to have my own spirit satisfyed herein then possibly it may be to others for if it were not from that blessed assurance of the Lords being God of the revelation of Christ and of the glory to come I should not know what could be conforting or make a rational being desireable Some singulare ingadgments I judge my self also to stand under for putting to my seal to the truth and faithfulnesse of God in his word from many signal confirmations hereof in the course of my pilgrimage if such a poor testimony might be of any weight Let the blessed Lord gratiously accept this small offering to him and for the interest of his truth by so mean an instrument and give some fruit hereof that may abide and be found in the day of Christ I hope the Reader may find by a perusal of the I. Chap. of what serious use and intent the II. is yea that in this day it was not unseasonable or incongruous to the forgoing subject what is held forth in the III. Chapter But oh it is sad and amazing to think how few are under that weight of Religion as once to have a serious inquiry on the grounds and reasons thereof and to accompt the most special assistances to their faith to be the greatest helpers of their joy within time THE True and infallible WAY For attaining a confirmed state in RELIGION c. CHAPTER I. The Primitive Confirmation in the truth of Christianity held forth and cleared in its continued necessity and use to this day in a few Positions THat nothing can have a more sad and threatning aspect on the present state of religion in all the churches of Christ Posit I then that utter estrangment most are under to the true grounds of faith and to those foundamental differences betwixt Christianity every false way which no pretended religion can lay claim to The reasons of the Position are these I. That it is too visibly manifest how no men in the world know so little of their own profession were it of any human art or science as such who bear the name of Christians or are so generally strangers to the truth and firmnesse of the principles therof for maintaining either a due valuation or powerful sense of the same on their soul so that an implicit and traditional profession is the only part and propriety which most can claim in the truth and doctrine they professe II. That so rare also is any such serious worke amonghst men as a personal inquiry and tryal if there be indeed such a thing as an experimental and soul quickning religion in the earth that can bear the expense of the most dismal and afflicting times and hath so great a temporal revenue lying therto as peace with God an immediate communion with him the joy and comforts of the H. Ghost when under such pressours of trouble as are above the support of nature III. That the furthest account why most goe under the name of Christians rather then of any other forme can rise no higher then custome and education that it did bespeak them from their birth and was the religion of their ancestours yea become in that manner naturall to them as the customes and language of their country which are grounds that should determine to the very opposite profession if they were stated under the same circumstances and had the same motives to be Mahumetans since it is sure these can found no other assent then is suitable to the nature and strenth therof IV. That thus it cannot be under debate how the most numerous part of visible professours are so destitute of any defense from internal motives and solid conviction of the truth they professe upon its own evidence as there was never more cause to fear some unusual apostacy from the very visible profession of Christ upon any violent tryal and assault this way when such finds it more easy to render up their religion then to adhere to the same under strongh temptations who yet never knew that substance advantage or certainty herein as could preponderate with the want of all external motives for such a profession That thus one of the highest services of these times Posit II for the publik good of the Church does convincingly lye here to have the faith of assent to the truth and doctrine of Christ in a clear and firme certainty of the
it may be ever seen how with the greatest prosperity of the wicked here there are punishments of another kind dispensed and more dreadful then any outward affliction such as judicial obstinacy and blindnesse of mind in opposition to God even when their own ruine is made visible to them herein VII How oft men are thus evidently condemned to be happy in this world by some strang measure of temporall successe and prosperity before some great fall and ruine as the issue hereof in the last shene of providence doth fully attest VIII That it s seen also how sin doth ever bring its own punishment therewith in some begun degree both of shame and torment and as Seneca an heathen could say that wickednesse was the most exquisite contriver of human misery so the world likewise may see how a present immunity from judgment is no release but when its sentence is not speadily execute yet is it at last surely execute IX And how evident is it that the greatest haters of godlinesse are yet inforced to justify the same and the Christians choise herein as the greatest wisdome upon any surprising state and extremity yea how such would be glad to joyne interests then with such in their death whom they most contemned in their life QU. V. How is it convincing and demonstrable that God hath given any clear and expres revelation of his will and councel unto men and that such a wonderfull record is undoubtedly extant in the world ANSW That I. it is not possible to believe the being of God and not also the truth of an established law and rule of commerce betwixt him and man here so as to know both what we should doe and what to expect and hope from him II. That this also must be known and display its power and efficacy to the world in that manner and by such infallible evidence of its truth as may render all inexcusable who give not intire credite therto III. I can be no more clear and assured there is but one sun in the firmament then that there is but one fountain and repository of sacred light about religion which is the Scripture and its being the alone publick standard of truth to the whole world IV. That no way was ever made known to recover mankind from a state of bondage darknesse and misery compatible with the very use of reason but by this blessed light which shineth there V. Yea that there is as visible a difference betwixt the same and any pretended religion which ever was besides in the world as there is betwixt day and night which is founded in the immutable nature of these things in themselves VI. That there is one proper sphere where this glorious light of divine truth is fixed and wherein it shines forth from one age to another which is the Christian Church QU. VI. But what more peculiare evidences can yow shew of the divinity of the Scriptures that all may see to be of infallible truth ANSW I. That its sure such a book is this day in the earth which no created wisdome could ever have done and contains such things of highest conceirn to mankind as doe infinitly exceed the bounds of human ability and invention or could ever have been discovered but by God himself II. That it gives forth such exquisite laws and constitutions of our religion as men must needs see the holy nature purity and perfection of God most brightly shining forth therin III. Which doth discover so great and proper a relief for all these evils and miseries that doe attend this fallen estate of man as none but an allsufficient God could only doe IV. That he alone must be the author of this blessed record who rules the world and hath determined the changes and revolutions therof when it is not more evident how these visible heavens are stretched forth over the earth then that this line of the Scripture is stretched over the whole worke and frame of providence and doth most clearly illuminate the same V. That surely this was the product of infinite wisdome whence so great a variety of matter doth meet with so visible a concent and harmony in one perfect and intire frame yea knit in so closse a bond of union together as makes the whole Bible to be intirly one piece though in the writing of each distinct part therof it could never have possibly been contrived or forseen by humane wisdome what we see here of so admirable an agreement correspondence as is in all the parts therof VI. That none els could have spoke to the world in so majestick a way becoming the greatnesse and soveraignity of God to assume such a supremacy give forth laws for absolute obedience from all mankind therto on such a penalty of eternal destruction or that any impostures either possibly could or durst have in such a manner personate the same VII That it must needs be his word who perfectly knows what is in man and hath an absolute authority over the soul and is a discerner of the thoughts therof who thus not only gives law to the conscience and our inward parts but doth establish an internal religion there no lesse absolutly then what respects our external worke and actions VIII Yea where all may see the whole penmen therof under so intire a subjection to the doctrine which they tought and to be no contrivance of their own as they did record their own failings and imperfections in behalf of the truth and did thus also require all just respect and obedience to the Magistrates when through the whole earth they were then greatest enemies to the truth of the Gospel IX That this must be his word who alone can derive principles of life to his own institutions and animate the same with a quickning Spirit and is a worke above the contrivance of Angels or men when directed to each new tryal of the Church and personal case of Christians as though it had been alone writt for that time so that I can be no more perswaded in reason there is such a book as the Bible in the earth then that it came from heaven and is the alone rule of religion and of divine revelation for the governing of mankind QU. VII How is the secure conveyance of the Scripture demonstrable amidst all the changes of times past and that no possible accesse could be for its corruption ANSW I. That its so undenyably the first rule which ever was given to mankind of religion and the alone publick standard of truth that hath endured the tryal and inquiry of all times past so as no pretences in the matter of antiquity could yet ever be to the contrare II. That so exact an harmony is betwixt the Old and New Testament as the one is a visible transcript of the other in its accomplishment that I can be no more sure of such a venerable record as the Old Testament and its unalterable conveyance to the Church to
which the whole race of the Jewes is yet a standing witnesse then how it is continued and perfected in the revelation of the Gospel and but one intire frame III. That its deliverance was no private deed but by a publick trust to the whole universal Church so as it were more easy in the way of reason to question the most fundamental statutes and lawes of any nation by which mens private right and property is secured then the truth hereof IV. That under the Gospel it hath been so fully dispersed over the world and in such various languages as an innumerable company of Christians these 1600 years past hath been as a common library of the same V. That these numerous versions and commentaries transmit theron in diverse languages doe fully evidence they had the same Scripture and no other then what we have this day VI. That this was delivered to the Church not only in write but in that forme of sound words for keeping closse therby as could admit no possible accesse to corrupt or alter the same besides the continued and publick reference hath been since the first ages of the Gospel to its decision which all these sharpe controversies that have been in the Church on all sides doe inevitably require QU. VIII What doth confirme the fall of man and entry thus of sin into the world this way from clear and unavoidable evidences of reason ANSW I. That there is such a thing as sin and evil in the world with the sense and conscience of guilt arising hereon amonghst all mankind can need no proof or evidence II. That it is simply impossible this should have been originally created with man or essentially belonging to his first frame and constitution since then there could be no conscience of guilt or remorse for what was given to be a part of himself in his first frame or be any sin to act thus suitably to their own original state III. That it were not conceivable also how one part of man should be in such opposition to another IV. Nor that such a thing as inherent shame could be in the nature of man upon the sence of guilt and by so natural a result follow the same or that such should be ashamed of any part of his own being if this were not upon ane undoubted apostacy from what once he was and that inevitable conviction of conscience that he now is what he ought not to be so as the certainty of mans fall though alone revealed in the Scripture as to the true cause thereof yet may be as evident to reason as the truth of his being now is SECTION II. QU. I. ARe there such assistances to the Christian faith upon that great and astonishing mystery of the revelation of Christ to the world as can fully answer the greatnesse thereof from cleare and infallible evidence to mens judgement ANSW It is sure there could nothing possibly be desired more to satisfy the most doubtfull and suspicious minde then is given for the furthest certainty hereof I. That such a glorious person as the Messiah was to come and be anoynted to that great work of redeeming mankinde from sin and misery and bring man back again unto God and how this promise is the alone foundation whereon the church was founded since man fell II. That all these numerous types and sacrifices under the law did so expresly tend to confirm their faith of that one blessed propitiatory sacrifice which was to be offered up III. That longer the New Testament was writ there was so cleare and exact a portraicture of the Messias drawen forth in the old with such peculiar marks whereby he should be knowen to the church and have infallibly taken place in the event as men could not upon any Scripture evidence exspect his comming in another way IV. That his humiliation and sufferings were so expresly shewed forth and foretold with the peculiar circumstances thereof in the 53. chap. of Isaiah and 9. of Daniel as if they had been eye wittnesses of the accomplishment thereof V. That even the speciall season and period of time for outmaking of this great promise was so far made knowen as upon diligent search and inquiry its neare approach might be discernable and cleare to what or what manner of time this did specially relate for which both the fall of the monarchies and Daniels seventy weekes were set up as highway markes to guide mens faith herein VI. That it s simply impossible according to the Scripture how the promised Messias could be yet to come except the Jewes were put in the same state they were in at his coming when now for these 1600. Jeares there hath been no Scepter nor lawgiver no temple or daily Sacrifice VII That this great mystery could never possibly have entered in our thoughts or be devised by any created understanding QU. II. But are there as cleare and infallible evidences of the truth of this great promise in the event that surely the blessed Messias of the world is now come as that it is sure be was promised ANSW It s beyond all possible debate I. That so divine and wonderfull a person was in the dayes of Tiberius Caesar manifested then to Israel with no outward shew or observation who did so great and marvellous things before all the people as were above all created power yea was crucifyed at Jerusalem under Pontius Pilate and is a truth in the matter of fact that both Jewes and heathens have been enforced to confesse II. That this special season of his comming into the world as the great Epocha and period of time from which the Christian church hath since to this day reckoned her state and succession is undoubted and clear also III. That the time of his appearance unto the world did so exactly tryst with that which was foretold by the Prophets as then the Jewish church was with greatest advertance looking after the Messias so as some remarkable impostors were thus excited to deceive the people herein IV. That in him who was then revealed and whom the Christian church worships its sure was most exactly fulfilled what ever was foretold concerning the Messias in the Old Testament and we do appeal herein to these records which all the Jewes even to this day do acknowledge to be divine V. That this was not done in a corner but in the publick view of men in these dayes most noture and famous yea by the special destination of God at so solemn a time of the passover in Jerusalem where Christ our passover was then sacrificed VI. That no humane interest or policy can possibly be in this discovery of the gospell when nothing more visibly crosse therto or obstructive of its successe then such a publishing of the death and sufferings of our Lord with all the ignominy and abasement which attended the same had there been any accesse here to consult carnal reason or any other ground to beare it out then the evidence and certainty
the same QU. VI. How is it demonstrable that such remarkable sufferings of times past for the truth of Christ were both founded on the alone certainty thereof and carryed out by a divine Spirit above any assistance of nature ANSW That it is sure I. Here was no comedy or personated sufferings which the primitive Christians and in after times did endure for Christ or that these unexpressable torments and paines were any dream and delusion either to themselves or the world and that their adversaries did thus conflict and wrestle with their own shadow in so continued and cruel ane opposition II. That such joy and exultation of Spirit these witnessed amidst their torments who otherwise wanted no sense or feeling of their paines and sufferings could have no rise but what was supernatural III. That this could be no possible dissimulation or counterfit when they were stepping in on eternity nor the product of a distempered judgment whilst all might see what seriousnesse of Spirit tendernesse and bowels of compassion to their adversaries they did then evidence IV. That these greatest sufferings were upon choise and to endure rather then to be safe at the rate of receding in any thing from the truth V. Yea no natural reason can comprehend how such mean and feeble persons as many of these were should endure what would have made the greatest natural courage to faint as if they had foregone humane passions which flesh and blood must needs have herein so as I am constraind to see something no less marvellous and supernatural in the faith of martyres then in the faith of miracles SECTION III. QU. I. IS it fully demonstrable that the faith of a deity and of such an establishment as a religious worship must necessarly determine men to be Christians on this ground that they cannot but see how religion hath not another being in the earth but in the truth of Christianity ANSW It is simply impossible to make a rational tryal herin and not see the certainty of this demonstration to be thus clear I. That there needs no more for any of a serious spirit but to come and see what the whole frame of Heathenisme was and if it be possible to deny even under any sense of the law and dictates of nature its being the highest reproach of mankind and how the very mysteries of that Heathenish worship was so horrid and impure as they needed a vail then from the common view of the world II. Nor can there be a rational reflection this day on that strang monster of Mahumitanisme but of a visible prodigy of the judgment of God on these parts of the earth upon their apostacy from the Christian faith by giving men up to such an imposture as exposeth the very name and form of religion to derision and can never claime a reception either from the purity of its rule or internal evidence of the truth therof or of its having any possible consistence with it self III. That its sure also the Jewish religion had never another being but in the truth and faith of Christianity and where this fundation is divided from it hath none at all yea how that people unto this day are such a confirming witnesse to the Christian Religion as its strang this doth not beget deeper impressions on mens spirit So that there is an absolute necessity we must either forgoe the use of reason or see if there were not such a rule given and revealed for commerce betwixt God and man as the Scripture where the laws and constitutions of the Christian faith are for this end held forth that it s then sure there is no such thing as any religion in the earth but what wer so highly irrational and absurd as should rather justify Atheism QU. II. What special confirmation to Christianity can this visible state of the Jews bear who are in so expresse an opposition to the Gospel of Christ ANSW If this were brought near our thoughts we should find it one of the great assistances to our faith I. That its sure there is such a people and race as a living and visible evidence to our sense of the truth of that renowned nation and church of Israel to which the oracles of God were committed and thus are still as some part of the evident ruines of that once flourishing state II. That the world may see such a people kept by themselves and not mixed with the nations whose fathers from one generation to another did still own the divinity of the Old Testament and doth attest that doctrine in which the truth and substance of Christianity lyes even whilst with greatest malice they oppose the Christian faith to witnesse there can be no possible collusion here III. Their being under a stroak of that judicial induration and blindnesse of mind as no reason could possibly comprehend such a thing how they see not the light in the very noon-day of the Gospel if it were not expresly fortold their being concluded under such an arrest of judgment until the fulnesse of the gentiles be brought in IV. That so immediate an appearence of God is in the judgment of that people both in the manner and continuance thereof as no instance could ever be found to resemble the same since man was formed in the earth and thus as a conspicuous monument of divin wrath set up for every age and time of the Church to turn aside and consider this great sight and inquire what means so strang and amazing a thing as the state of the scattered Jews is now under the times of the Gospel V. That this desolation on them and stroak had such special concurring circumstances for giving light therto as being not above 48. years after the death of Christ with their hands as it were hot and reaking with that blood which they had wished on them and their children that it should be at that time of the Passover which was the very same of the sufferings of our blessed Lord there and pointing as with the finger at the same as also by the Romans whose interest in their opposition to Christ they pretended to own QU. III. Is the way and manner of the Gospels promulgation such as no other profession could ever pretend to and where all may see there can be no human interest or contrivance in the same ANSW It is undenyable that no interest else was ever in such a way promot and does exceed all natural understanding how the truth of Christianity could in this manner prevail I. To perswade men without any motives or inducements from this present world to imbrace a doctrine so wholly repugnant to nature yea to preferr an interest of things not seen and which none ever in the earth saw to the most desirable objects of sense II. To admit no implicit reception from any but on their exactest inquiry and tryal herein or in an other way claime an interest in mens affections but by a full assent of their light
we professe since this only is founded on that sacred revelation of divine truth in the Scripture which is that infallible rule to discerne true miracles and what is Gods seal herein under the undoubted signature and stampe of his own power and working in the same yet hath there been such incontrollable evidence of extraordinare signs and confirmations to confirme the truth of the Reformed Religion since the Reformation as in no ages past was ever known but with the first planting of the Gospel among the Gentiles SECTION IV. QU. I. IS it cleare and demonstrable that the doctrine of Christ is a soull quickening and experimental religion and the trial thereof in its most supernatural truths of such rational certitude and evidence as the world can no more deny or question the same then these experiments of nature that are of most universal use ANSW Though men looked but at a distance here or were come from Heathnism so for as to make a serious trial of Christianity its sure they could not but see and be fully perswaded in their judgement hereof on these grounds I. That such a discovery is undoubted and cleare in the Scripture of so great things as that there is a holy Ghost and his workings on mens souls of peace with God and the joy of his presence which all who receive the gospel are called to know and prove on their oun trial II. That this wittnesse of Christian experience hath as discernable a consent and harmony there with as face answereth to face in the glasse and is cleare to be no casual thing but where every step in this way of trial is by Scripture light and what they did before read there ere they knew it on their oun soul III. That this in all ages of the church and wherever such as served God in the spirit were found in the most remote parts from others hath still been the same and like a great roll is transmit from one generation to another with their confirmatory seal that God is faithfull and true in these truths of his word which seem most incredible to the world now comes to our hand to require the same attestation and wittnesse IV. That these who know and testify these things once found it not easy to beleeve the same and did no lesse judge of such great experiments of religion as a dream or imaginary thing then most now doe until they knew them on their soul V. That such also have been the most burning and shining lights that ever were in the church and these innumerable in all ages who declare the same yea this in the mouth of the grave and entrance to ane eternal state when no outward intrest could sway them here VI. That it must be a matter of greatest assurance which hath then pressed the most tender parents with their last and dying breath to commend the same trial to their children and to obtest their making earnest herein as the greatest interest they could leave them VII That what ever differences be oft among these in some matters of truth yet in the certainty of this great trial of the life power and comforts of religion is ane harmonious onenes in the same testimony in all times of the church VIII That if any question this because so remote from mens senses and the judgement of carnal reason the reality of its effects doth unanswerably prove both the reality and excellency of the cause QU. II. What cleare and rational conviction can yow offer of so great a thing as conversion of men from a state of nature to a new state by grace which doth raise them as far above the residue of mankinde as reason doth above the state of the beastes ANSW Though I should strive against the conviction of such a miracle and demonstration of the Gospel as conversion is yet were it not possible to deny such demonstrative evidences as the world cannot but see hereof I. That it is sure such a change is made essentially requisite to the being and constitution of a Christian by the whole consent of the Scripture II. That there was never yet ane argument in nature for ones being a Christian in the life and power thereof what ever may be for a naked form or shew III. That they are not a few but innumerable instances in all times and of all rancks conditions of men on whom so great a change and difference hath been made thus evident both from themselves what once they were and from the residue of the world IV. That this hath been not only upon such as have been signally impious in their practise but who in their judgment were wont to deread holynesse as a fancy so as Atheists must grant that there have been as profest Atheists sometimes as themselves who have been made such conspicuous monuments of the power of the gospel V. That none can object here as once the Jewes did doe any of the rulers or such as the world counts most wise and knowing stand wittnesses to the same when it is so knowen there have not been more wise learned and judicious in the things of reason upon the earth then such as have been eminent examples of the power of conversion VI. That its marvellous effects in subduing men to what once was there predominant interest and idol and to part from what had been as their right eye or hand could only be from ane immediat divine power VII That such as were greatest adversaryes to the truth have been made no lesse eminent instruments in the service of Christ and choise vessels of honour then once they were in their enmity and opposition VIII That this change hath been so discernable in times of most visible persecutions and hazard when no outward advantage or gaine could have the least influence thereon Now as these are demonstrably cleare so can there be no possible accesse to question this I. That the Scripture is faithfull and true in so great a discovery II. That there is a divine spirit and a power above nature which accompanyes the same in such a change III. That there are surely contrary states in ane other world when they are so undeniably manifest here QU. III. But can so great ane experiment of religion as that of communion betwixt God and men here upon earth be made rationally convinceing to such as are themselves strangers thereto and for a further confirming of the Christian faith ANSW Though this be ane experiment of divine truth of a more transcendent interest and value then all that ever were in nature yet is it no lesse evident there can be no possible delusion herein if I. to which so innumerable a company beares testimony and hath transmit the same as that which not once or twice they have proven but in the continued trial of their life II. That its knowen to the world how such as testify what they doe and have so oft found in the retirement of their
assistence to your faith doth the certainty of these powers of darknesse bring therewith ANSW I. That such a party both in their nature and continued actings are in a stated opposition to the Kingdome of Christ II. That it is so visible the prey which these mighty hunters do follow is not our body or the things of this life but is with respect to ane immortal soul and ane after state and that thus man might be made sharer of the same misery under which they are concluded III. That all may see their being under restraint of a supream power above them under such chaines as do irresistibly bound their rage and enmity against man by ane invisi●le guard and hedge which they cannot breake over IV. How their greatest rage and strugling is against the conversion of sinners to God and to hold fast his possession in such as the Spirit of God doth not more clearely move for their rescue then these doe to crosse that blessed design of the Gospel V. That there are none serious in the truth and life of religion but finde themselves pursued by such ane adversary and to have as discernably another party then themselves or the world to conflict with as if they saw them in a visible shape VI. That by the Gospel and within the precinct of the church is so discernably a greater restraint of Satans dominion and power then in all the earth besides yea that the advantage of being within the external covenant of Baptisme is so demonstrable as the least yeelding or tendency to a renouncing of the same or any acts of homage for making use of his help hath ever made way for some more extraordinary power of the devil over such then others VII Thus also is a most undeniable confirmation given of ane invisible world and of such intellectual beings there as are far above man yea that there is so undoubted ane intercourse betwixt men and spirits as may clearely shew that interest mens soul hath in another state and world then this QU. III. Is that great truth of the immortality of the soull and its never dying state after death as fully demonstrable to reason as it is by the furthest certainty of faith ANSW Though it be so amazing a thing to beleeve ane immortal soull and eternal state wherein it must shortly enter as by few seemes to be apprehended yet are its demonstrative evidences such that except men lose all sence and use of reason it is not possible to deny I. That there is such ane immaterial and active substance as the soull which can admit no cause either of its decay or dissolution from the body yea that the greatest excellency of this visible creation is here that such a vital beam of life light and immortality as the soull of man is therein II. Though we cannot see this rare and wonderful being yet it is here we both see and feel it to be something distinct from the body and to have a distinct interest both in its griefs and comforts III. How it can have no dependance on the body in its being which doth no way depend thereon in its actings and exercise but is oft most vigorous and cleare in its exercise not only when most separat and abstract from sensible things but when the flesh is under the greatest decay and neare its dissolution to shew the soull lyeth not a dying with the body but hath its distinct subsistence to live in a separat state when it dyes IV. It s being peculiarly framed for converse and intercourse with spiritual beings yea is only of the visible creation admit to fellowship with the invisible God and to have reflex acts upon it self V. How it is a being of a higher nature and value then the sun moon and starrs which not only can know and conceive of things above the evidence and impressions of sense but to make a rational choise of good though crosse to any sensual pleasure yea to rejoyce and have its proper delights when the body is afflicted and in pain nor can be defiled from the most loathsome sores and defilements of the flesh so as I must needs see both its dominion and preheminence over the body and to have assuredlie a subsistence without the same VI. That it is such a being as is capable of a happinesse beyond the whole extent of the world hath these intellectual facultyes which cannot possibly want both objects suitable thereto and injoyments above the senses VII That the most choise and excellent are usually most afflicted and crushed under the feet of their oppressours whilst these flourish in the earth and have no bands in their death so as such were of all men the most miserable if in this life both their being and blessednesse were founded VIII That there is so universal a sense of immortality as these who both feare and hate the evidences hereof yet under some constraint of reason hath the same for a continued terrour IX That it is sure the certainty of death makes it simply impossible for things only suited to this life of sense to be the ultimate good or fruition of man since else the beasts should have a greater happinesse then such if it were not from respect to ane after and immortal state QU. IV. What confirmation to your faith does that great and amazing change by death offer when it would seem to be something meerly natural ANSW Though the only wife God moves herein according to the nature of second causes and that it hath various wayes of approach unto men yet may all see with the furthest conviction of rational evidence as well as certainty of faith I. How death in its first constitution is penal and comes by a divine appointment unto all not meerly as men but as sinners and to be thus no natural accident and result of our primitive and original frames II. That its death as a penalty which keepes the feare and dread thereof so much on all living as that last period when the eternal state of men is then cast III. That the sting and bitternesse of sin is so manifest in innumerable diseases and stroakes of death which many feel an 100. times ere they dye once beyond other of the creatures IV. Though the sentence of dying is on all yet so great a difference is betwixt the saints and residue of men here that its penal execution on the ungodly is such as nature can give no support herein V. That supernatural presages and warnings hereof ere it come are in all times so known and sure yea such extraordinare evidences sometimes of the precise time as could have no possible rise from any natural cause VI. That its immediat commission from a supream and invisible power is so evident in such executions oft of this sentence by sword famine and pestilence as the visible finger of God in a just retribution unto men for sin may be no lesse seen and a supernatural
causality then the effects have been undoubted and cleare to shew such is the state of man as this great revolution by death doth each moment depend on a call from heaven VII That the certainty of something supernatural herein as the King of terrours is so known as no releefe can possibly be found but in the truth and power of Christianity to set men both above the feare of death and ane after state when once it comes neere VIII Yea that it is surely above the possibility of nature which can beare out in this great adventure and trial of mens faith both in the truth and strength thereof at death for which end the Lord hath thus choised that by so strange ane entry and at so dark a port they should first passe to the full enjoyment of that glorious state above QU. V. What evidence and demonstration can yow shew to confirm so great a faith of an eternal glory abiding the Saints in heaven and of its earnest and first fruits here as may strike ane undeniable conviction hereof on the world ANSW I. By that visible ripening and resemblance to such a state in all the degrees of a Christians grouth to a more full stature of the man in Christ as may be no lesse evident then the natural grouth of our body II. That though the opening of these gates of the second world be hid as no humane sense can discern the spirit in its ascent through these higher regions to that unconceiveable paradise and glory in the third heaven yet is the triumphant entry and passage of innumerable Christians at death such as hath oft been a matter of sense and clearest evidence to the world III. That such also were both humble tender and sincere in their life and then in so great a composure of judgement as all might see they knew what made them glade and could swallow up both the feares and bitternesse of death yea that this was not given for their own support only but for a more publick use to the conviction and confirming of others IV. That the state of glory is demonstrable and hath been oft brought downe to mens sense by these ravishing joyes of the Martyres of Christ and exultation of spirit even in the flames V. By such supernatural comforts as attend the life of Christianity and can have no possible rise from the flesh and outward causes with that joy and peace which by so natural a result followes well-doing and any service of love for Christ as all may see to be the first fruits of that harvest which is above VI. By so rare and marvellous a frame of the new man set up in this lower region of grace in so discernable a conformity to the blessed God and resemblence to another state then here to which the world is but as a place of pilgrimage trial and a preparatory state only VII By such visible returns of joy and comfort of Christians after saddest conflicts and downecastings and day-break of these vital quickning beames of divine light that have been no lesse evident oft then that of the martyrs at the stake who cryed out Now he is come he is come VIII By these breathings of love after ane unseen Christ and visible effects of its power on men as might shew some begun translation of the soull so far herein as to be more where it loves then it lives IX Though we cannot see here that ineffable glory which is above but should have our faith insteed of eyes yet such is the truth of holinesse as doth not only evidence but in its own nature partake of a future glory so as every degree and act thereof doth enter in a begun state of fruition and blessednesse and makes it simply impossible for a good man in any true exercise of godliness not to be happy also and thus in a more near capacity to know that joy unspeakable and full of glory which is above X. By so sure known and tryed a passage betwixt heaven and mens souls in prayer with so setled a trade of commerce this way and certain returns as with assurance such can say though they must change their place yet not their company XI That the whole dispensations of providence in Isra●ls passage through the wildernesse and to so excellent a country as Canaan is no lesse sure in it self then that i● was given for an embleme and type of the jurt nying and militant state of the faints hereand to be a solemne pledge of that Canaan above XII That such is the magnificence harmony and order of these visible heavens and celestial bodies there with their different degrees of glory though all illuminated from the same fountain of light the sun as we may judge by a divine ordination have some peculiar respect to that end to awake raise our thoughts thus to these higher regions of glory which are above all these by what is thus visible to our eyes where the redeemed of the Lord shall be ever fixed shine forth as the Sun in the kingdome of their Father QU. VI. What visible and awakning evidences are there of the truth of an Hell and that state of horrour and torment in another world which even to mens senses here might present the certainty thereof ANSW I. That it can be no more sure there is such a power and party as that of the Devils then the reality of some such horrid region and place also to which they belong and are adjudged to II. From so innumerable a company of human race as are not only in the visible service of these infernal spirits but partakers of the same nature and enmity against the H. God and his image as doth clearly witnesse their respect and tendency to the same state and place and to be consederate in their judgement as they were here in their sin III. From such visible impressions of vindictive justice on mens souls with such horrour of conscience and unsufferable torments this way as in all ages have been known by most remarkable instances when not in the least distemper of their natural reason that may present to mens senses something of a visible Hell as convincingly as if one had risen from the dead for the same IV. From such a trembling sense and terror of divine vengeance as oft follows upon horrid acts of wickednesse and most eminently then breaks forth upon a surprising sight of death as all may see something more dreadful herein then the dissolution of nature and the power and present arrest of a future judgment made visible in the same V. From such begun degrees as that of blaspheming and rage against God because of his plagues with these prodigies of cruelty exerced by men here in the earth as might be evident to all to be more then human and rather the effects of infernal spirits acting in a human shape VI. From so clear a prelude of the same in that judicial obduration and blindnesse so many
God under the ground its sure none can question such a seal which before the sun to the amazment and conviction of the world hath been put to the truth of the Reformed Religion that we are now sisted under such a call as the Church of Israel was Deut. 4 34. to ask of the times that are past since Israels coming out of Egypt and since the first planting of the Gentil Church by the Gospel whither there hath been so great a thing as this in the earth that God hath essayed to take to himself a people from the midst of other nations by temptations by signs and by wonders and by war and by a mighty hand and by an oustretched arm and by great terrours according to all that the Lord our God hath done for the rescue of his people in these last times from Antichristian bondage and darknesse and settling them in a church state but unto us was this shewed that we might know that the Lord he is God and there is noncelse beside him yea are still called to see and be as eye witnesses to these things I. How bright a day of the Gospel of Christ did goe before this great darknesse on the Church and what a solemne triumph in these late ages the truth hath had over Antichrist so as the full strock and ruine of his kingdome which is sure and established in the promise of God seems not now more marvelous and above human appearence then what we have seen in the begun degrees of its accomplishment II. In how few years also there was as a new Christian world brought forth in that swift course and progresse which the ingathering of the Reformed Churches had so as between the year 1621 and 1560. such famous plantations of the Gospel were setled in a Church state which all may see was the immediate worke and power of God to shew that none should fear or stagger at his promise though the waters yet swell and come to the flowings of Jordan and difficulties appear unsuperable to human sense after this great things which the Lord hath done III. How extraordinare a calling and excitment of instruments was then evident for the service of that time and reapers thus eminently prepared for so great an harvest of the Gospel as might put the world to inquire whence these were in so numerous a concurrence when a few of such a spirit were so rarely to be found in many ages before IV. Yea such an accession also of spiritual gifts and induments then for building of the Church as had not been formerly known since the first coming of the Gospel to the Gentils wherein it may be said the glory of these last times hath even in some degree exceeded that of the first V. And can the most dismal things of this time countervail the confirmations of our faith who have so clearly seen with the first breaking up of the pur doctrine of Christ the power and life of Christianity came therwith to the world as a seal and attestation therto beyond any miracles yea how innumberable a company in these last ages of different tongues and languages and these so remot from one another did not only receive the same truth but with such resolution adventure their souls theron as might fully witnesse they had another prospect of Christianity and to be in some other manner ravished with the glory beuty of the same then is now in these times VI. That such high spring tydes of the power and efficacy of the Gospel might be evident to all after so sad a restraint had been for so many ages before under Antichristian darknesse for whatever was then as a private seall on the spirit of Christians whilst the witnesses did prophesy in sack-cloth yet was there no such evidence and demonstration of the H. Ghost or a publick confirmatory seal to the truth as was after the Reformation VII Yea was it not the most sober serious and inquisitive part of men upon a sure tryal of the grounds of their faith who did most firmly imbrace the same and how many of these also were of the greatest parts and abilities whom none could judge to adventure so far herein without the highest assurances that this was their undoubted interest and upmaking VIII We have seen not only these of mean and low estate but such of the highest place and quality most chearfully adventuring whatever interest could be dearest to them in the earth for the truths sake yea was ever found how such as were most acquaint with the reformed religion in its power and living up in their practise to what they profest thereof were these who with the greatest assurance have most resoluty still adhered thereto IX We have seen also it s most remarkable spreading in the world when there could be no possible pretence of a lucrative interest or external motives for the same X. We have seen something not only extraordinare but even miraculous in the joy and resolution of innumberable martyrs since the Reformation who did bear out with a more then human strenth against a cruelty so visibly inhuman and savage yea which did in some degrees exceed that measure of the Heathens in the Primitive times as being against a greater light then theirs II. And have we not seen of what spirit such still have been since the Reformation who were the most notour instruments in the Churches persecution and how visibly such did act herein under so impetuous an incitment of the Devil that as Tertullien in his Apollogy speaks of Nero the truth might boast in having such adversaries XII It is sure we have seen how no human power could yet ever undoe this blessed interest of the Reformed religion tho no way or change of weapons hath been left untryed but we have thus seen whither so strong and unite a confederacy as the Catholick league in France did at last resolve and not only in the ruine of the greatest acters and contrivers therein but to a further establishing of the Reformed Church there as though such had intentionally acted for the same when if second causes had brought forth their ordinare effects it might have been judged impossible to fail XIII We have seen that issue of the whole councels expense and cruelty of Philip the II. of Spain to bear down the truth of the Gospel in the Netherlands which was to the furthest setling of this illustrious state and the Church of Christ there yea how their conspicuous rise and flowrishing even in the externals and their resolute adherence to the truth of Christ did most visibly keep together XIV We know that deludge of blood which so quickly followed the French massacre and the most dismal time which ever that nation know did then visibly contemporate with such a time of their greatest rage and persecution against the truth and that event of the third vial most clearly fulfilled herein Revel 16 5 6. Thou art righteous o Lord which art
time is clearly shewed II. That we may now with some clear evidence judge and have our faith perswaded hereof that the Churches interest is upon the rising hand and on a present advance though nothing would seem more contradictory then all visible grounds now are since this cannot sail John 3 30. that Jesus Christ in his kingdom in the earth must increase yea that the Scripture so clearly points forth Antichrists ruine and progresse of his fall and douncasting with resemblance to that great judgment on Pharaoh as an evident type hereof in the same judicial strocks of induration on both and gradual progresse herein by one plague after another until the last and greatest assault as was then at the Red-sea hath the same effect for a more glorious appearence of God in the greatest step of judgment and victory over this adversary when not only the song of Moses but of the Lamb also shall be then sung Rev. 15 3. as importing something more glorious and a greater brightnesse to be put on this illustrious act of divine judgment reserved to these last times when a more immediate appearence of the Lord will be seen then in any sormer deliveries of his Church III. It is no conjectural thing but what by a clear Scripture conduct we may see that this time of the Church now under so notable a Crisis in her case is evidently falling under that remarkable assault and conflict with that adversary before the accomplishing of that vial on his seat and throne as we may see Revel 17 13 14. that when so conspicuous a step of the Churches victory is near the opposition thereto also will be in some higher degree proportionable to the same when the great men of the earth and such who shall receive power as Kings one hower with the beast shall have one mind and give their power and strength thereto and shall make war with the Lamb but the Lamb shall overcome them for he is King of Kings and Lord of Lords c. Nor is it found through the Scripture where any great thing the Lord hath done for his Church but some unusual darknesse and sore wrestlings hath still gone before and should be no matter of staggering to our faith whatever be of present fears to see so dismal a time of tryal as now is and amazing hight of trouble beyond what former times have known when one of the greatest events of providence in behalf of the Church since the revealing of Christ to the world until his second coming is assuredly near in the fall and overthrow of the man of sin IV. We have clear ground also to judge that so great an eclipse as seems allmost universally over the state of the Reformed Churches is no goeing down of the sun theron whatever did befall the most famous eastern Churches to an utter dissipation thereof if these different periodes of time be justly considered how their sun-set did then fall in with the entry of that great Apostacy of the Christian Church and with that long and dismall night of Antichrists reign whilst now this hower of tryal on the Churches doth meet in that blessed period of Antichrists begun fall and of a growing light of the Gospel and when the Scripture so clearly warrands our faith herein that the worke of providence is to plant and not cutt of but to bring forward that interest of the Reformed Churches in the founding of which the Mediator hath so eminently appeared in the glory of his power in these last times V. It is sure me now live in the evening and extremity of time when the motions of providence may be expected to be more quick and speady as being so near the center and to the last Epocha and period of all prophetick Chronology wherein the glory of God in his truth and faithfulnesse shall most eminently shine forth and these Scripture truths which were formerly dark abstruse with that evidence shine forth in the event as shall cause men to wonder at their former thoughts and stumblings thereat And here I must say that there is such a sight now in the earth as the Romish Church in its complex frame and state in so different a mould cast from any power or jurisdiction else and such a compound of a civil and Spiritual Monarchy in one and the same person is so solemn and undenyable a seal to the Christian faith and divinity of the New Testament that its strang why this is not improven more against the Atheism of this time that such a visible event of the Scripture is now in being which was so clearly fortold by the Holy Ghost 1500. years ago with its proper circumstances as to the manner of that Antichristian state with its rise grouth duration as is to admiration stil evident to the world when not the least shaddow or appearence of so strang future emergencies was to be seen or could have entred in mens thoughts to shew it only could be revealed to the Church by him to whom all his works are known from the beginning This I have looked on as such a confirmation to the truth of Christianity that no miracles in the first times of the Church could have more evidence for the same yea if such a party were not in being both what it now is and in former ages hath been it might in another manner stagger the faith of the Saints to a questioning the truth of the Scripture then its most formidable appearence this day can doe VI. I shall but add here that we know and are sure the Lord hath reserved his greatest works to these latter dayes wherein his judgments shall be manifest and that one of the most eminent manifestations of his glory before the close of time shal be conspicuous in the fall of Antichrist on whose ruines that glorious hous which Christ is yet to have for himself both of Jews and Gentiles shall be prepared and built up and though this great eclipse of Antichristian darknesse should yet more prevail even over the visible profession of the truth in the Churches of Britain and Ireland there is no cause to be staggered in the faith of Romes fatal period being near but to look hereon according to the Scripture as the Vltimus Conatus of that wounded adversary which will be found in the issue to have the most immediate connexion with his greatest downfall and the reviving glory of the Church for strong is the Lord God who judgeth her SECTION IV. QU. WHat is specially called for in this day of such as are accountable for so great a talent of light and confirmations to our faith ANSW If this were suitably taken to heart we could not but reckon our selves under the greatest excitment and call to such an improvment hereof I. That we account it not enough to have a faith for quieting our own spirits but how to confirme others by putting to our seal that God is true in the great assurances
rule and principles of their profession that can never give the least latitude or connivance therto but is clear as the sun when on the other hand I could know no other way to imbrace such a profession as Popery but by turning Atheist in the first place and quite both religion and reason at once but may say in a resolute adherence to the doctrine of the Reformed Church I fear not to adventure my soul and enter into an eternal state The CONTENTS CHAPTER I. The primitive confirmation held forth and cleared in seven Positions POSIT I. That sad aspect which the implicit and traditional profession of this day hath upon the present state of religion Pag. 1 POSIT II. The greatnesse of that service for the Church to have a clear founding of the faith of assent upon known and solid grounds herein more universally promott Pag. 3 POSIT III. The true primitive confirmation as it was in the times of the Apostles hold forth and cleared from the Scripture Pag. 6 POSIT IV. The continued necessity therof no lesse convincing now for the Churches use then in these Primitive times Pag. 9 POSIT V. That such a confirmatory worke respects not only the more knowing and inquisitive part of men but the meanest within the Church Pag. 11 POSIT VI. VVhat is specially called for in the practicall use of this primitive confirmation held forth in some serious proposals for this end Pag. 14 POSIT VII VVhat special excitment we are under for promotting the same in so remarkable a period of time as this and from that hope of a greater reviving yet of such a Catholick spirit to advance the highest ends of religion amonghst men Pag. 19 CHAPTER II. For giving some clear view of these primary evidences and demonstrations of our faith that the meanest Christian should know and vvith the least expense of time may improve for their dayly use on these greatest principles SECTION I. I. Of the glorious being of God which is the first foundation of all religion Pag. 22 II. Of the original of the world and it s not being eternal Pag. 25 III. Of a supreme providence in the conservation and goverment of the world Pag. 26 IV. Of that special providence which in its continued administration about human affaires doth unchangably difference betwixt the righteus and the wicked Pag. 29 V. How such a wonderful record as that of an immediat revelation of God unto men is so demonstrably extant in the world Pag. 31 VI. Of these special evidences of the Scriptures divinity which men must needs see to be infallible Pag. 33 VII Of the secure convoyance of the Scripture through all the changes of times past Pag. 35 VIII Of the fall of man and entry of sin into the world as it is fully demonstrable to reason as well as by the certainty of faith Pag. 37 SECTION II. I. Holding for t these great assistances to the Christian faith and of the Messias being surely promised to the Church before his coming Pag. 38 II. Of the truth and accomplishment of this great promise of the Messias and how it is now as sure in the event as its clear he was promised Pag. 39 III. Of that special advantage for confirmation of our faith herein that for 4000. years the promised coming of the Messias was deferred Pag. 41 42 IV. Of the nature and internal excellency of Christianity to bear furthest evidence to the truth therof Pag. 43 V. That this is the same Gospel we now receive and injoy which from the first promulgation therof hath had so great effects on the world Pag. 45 VI. That the sufferings of the saints in times past was so demonstrably above the assistance of nature Pag. 46 SECTION III. I. For holding forth on what grounds the faith of a deity must determine men to be Christians Pag. 48 II. What confirmations the Christian Religion hath from that visible state of the Jews Pag. 49 III. That way and manner of its prevailing on the world as no profession else could ever pretend to Pag. 51 IV. The nature of that great evidence which Christ hath himself given to the world of his divine mission in the love and unity of his people Joh. 17 21. Pag. 53 V. How the strenth of such a demonstration stands still clear and evident in these dividing times of the Church Pag. 54 VI. What in these last times is under our hand to compense such a confirmation by miracles which was in the first times of the Gospel Pag. 56 SECTION IV. I. For holding forth with the furthest rational certainty and evidence the truth and doctrine of Christ to be a soul-quicking and experimental religion Pag. 58 II. The truth also of conversion of men from a state of nature to a new state of grace Pag. 60 III. Of so great an experiment of religion as Communion betwixt God and men here in the earth Pag. 62 IV. Of so great a demonstration of religion in the power and workings of the Conscience Pag. 64 V. Of that special confirmation to our faith which doth result from such a demonstration of this power of the Conscience over men Pag. 65 SECTION V. I. For holding forth the truth of a Kingdom of darknesse in the world in opposition to the Kingdom of Christ Pag. 66 67 II. What confirmation to our faith the certainty hereof and of these powers of darknesse doth clearly afford Pag. 68 III. That great truth of the immortality of the soul with the clearest evidence to reason as well as by the certainty of faith Pag. 69 70 IV. How confirming a seal to the Scripture that great change which passeth on all men by death is and how it s no natural accident Pag. 72 V. Some special assistances to the Christians faith of an eternal glory in heaven and to serve an unavoidable conviction thus on the greatest Atheists Pag. 74 VI. Some thing of a visible Hell in some near approach hereof even to mens senses held forth to awake and convince the world of such a state of horrour and torment in another world Pag. 77 VII Some assistances to our faith of that great truth of the Resurrection of the body Pag. 79 CHAPTER III. The Confirming vvorke of religion further improven vvith respect to this dismal and amazing time vve are novv fallen in SECTION I. To hold forth what may be both for light and confirmation upon this great distresse the Churches of Christ are now under Pag. 81 82 SECTION II. How great a talent we stand accountable for in this day of such immediate and extraordinare appearences of the Lord for confirming the same publick cause of the Reformed Church since the Reformation which we are now called to adhere to Pag. 84 SECTION III. What manner of time is the present lot of the Church now fallen in and what judgment we ought to have hereof from the Scripture for our furthest confirming in such a day Pag. 93 SECTION IV. Some special service that we
are now called to and accountable for in behalf of the truth and for sanctifying the Lord in the eyes of others who are under so great a talent of light and confirmation in the same Pag. 99 FINIS AN IDEA Of the confirm'd state of a Christian in dismall and shaking times THo the same measure of Christians establishment in the truth be not alike to all but must have respect to the different trialls talent improvements of such for this end yet may it be cause of astonishment how rare any study of this kinde is now to be sound when it s not only one of the highest concerns of Christianity but in a more then ordinary way called for as the work of this day yea that this is a part of religion which seemes lest improven of any for the more generall state of professours within the Church under some conviction hereof was this essay designed where with humble confidence I may say the truth hath been sought with that serious enquiry into the nature of these things held forth as I judged needfull for such who have so great ane interest venture not only through time but for all eternity to support upon the alone certainty hereof er these dayes of triall which we now see passe over this generation it may be found this was not unseasonable or without cause directed to such a time if the Lord graciously blesse the same nor will it I hope be found incongruous without use to present yet further in such a method way of example some cleare prospect of a confirmed state in religion what these ought to be who with light assurance of minde would follow the Lord fully in such a day as is here offered in a 7 fold Character under which a truly confirmed Christian in the truth of his profession may be stated CHARACTER I. That he is one who hath ane other sence impression of this great study for attaining to a confirmed state in religion is on higher grounds pressed to follow the same then what most of the visible Church seemes to apprehend should be thus considred 1. As one to whom the glory of the Christian profession is in the highest degree deare to have the world see that such as embrace the same does most fully adventure on the testimony of God in his word are these also who walks on the highest principles of true enlightned reason yea who takes deeply to heart that obligation which is on all who desires to advance the repute honor of the truth to be in such tearmes therewith upon its own evidence as they may know how to serve a rationall conviction both on Atheists insidels if called thereunto 2. Who sees also how such is the state of fallen man as stands in need of all the contributions that can be not only to strengthen the Christians faith and beare out against the strong assaults of infidelity but to gain also more credit and veneration to the truth with these who are not easily delt with but by such meanes as beares some congruity to their naturall light and reason for which end the Lord hath affoorded these ministeriall helpes to render the misbeleefe of the world or any pretense of hesitation about his truth more fully inexcusable 3. He thus sees how the most important and fundamentall truths of Christianity needs the greatest confirmation of his faith for these who enter in so high discriminating a profession from the residue of the world to know in what manner they embrace the same yea that the naturall order of things does absolutly require to have the foundation sure laid on which so great a superstructure must rest so as he judgeth it a work by its selfe and to need some peculiar retiring his soul in the most serious recesse and composure thereof to attain a stedfastnes of his own in the truth and to know the strong and firm convoyances of that greatest mystery of the gospell in such a manner as needes no paund of a miracle to confirm the same But he knowes here that no sharpness of mens naturall understanding about the truth can ever attain a true rest and settlement of minde therein without a humble and serious spirit stooping doune before the wisedome of God and to enter as little Children into his Schoole yea that by humble practice and obedience of the gospell there is ane undoubted comming up to the greatest assurance and clearest demonstrations of the same as Joh. 7 17. 4. He knowes that as nothing tends more to shake mens spirits and stagger them about the truth then a light and transient view hereof so does the greatest establishment follow on the nearest approach by a deep and serious enquiry about the same and thus clearely sees that if such who look but at a distance on the way of religion did but once come that length of triall as to have their spirits separat by a more serious reflection thereon the first view they should have could not but be matter of wonder and amazement to think what can determine and support in so marvellous a way as the life and practice of Christianity which is so visibly above nature and wherein they must do violence to the same where they must part with the multitude and oppose themselves to the strongest tyde of exemple and must endure also in hope and believe for things not seen which were never the object of humane sence to any in this earth and are oft called to part with the most desireable things of sence upon the alone credit of their faith yea where they must enter in that profession on no other tearmes then to be martyrs for the same and seall it with their blood so that he must needs see a Christian according to the rule and institution of the gospell to be the greatest riddle and wonder of any sight within time but when such come more closse and neare upon this triall and have once understood the nature and greatnesse of that security which these have to adventure on yea what is the glory of their hope and the sure spring of their supplyes for their work and trialls within time then will this second wonder unspeakably exceed the first how its possible that such are not of a more raised and enlarged spirit in the service of the Gospell in that short season they have here for it on the earth and how their triall should not be more to beare the joy of so great a prospect and expectation then any present griefes and troubles yea how mens life who indeed makes earnest of the Christian profession is not in some more continued transport of ravishment and wondering to know that they are surely made for an eternall state in another world and are among these on whom the glorious God hath choised to have the exceeding riches of his grace shewed forth in these regions of blessedness above for
fitted for that great end of bringing mankind to God but for such an universall use herein as to make the simple wise and that the poor may receive the Gospell and yet believe also that it is a masse of dead and unsensed characters untill the Romish Clergy put a just sense theron tho its sense and meaning is the very soul thereof yea thus passe from the whole letter of the same or any certainty of its truth from intrinsick evidences and these marks and characters of its divinity wherby the Christian cause could be maintain'd against Pagans 3. Where he must believe also that these are the words of Christ Joh. 7 17. if any man doe my will he shall know my doctrine whither it be of God or not and that men errs through not knowing the Scripture Math. 22. and yet believe therewith that these sacred fountains of light should be shutt up to keep men from going wrong and that the sole right of understanding the same belongs to a few but not to the multitude who yet can pretend no extraordinare assistance or revelation herein nor will themselves come to these waters of Jealousie to be tryed 4. Where he must needs believe that the Scriptures are the oracles of God committ to the Church to give answer in every darke case Rom. 3 2. the type and forme of sound doctrine Rom. 6.17 unto whose sentence in all matters both of faith and practise we are expressly referred Is. 8.20 and yet believe also that it hath no authority or decisive voice but what is precarious and dependant on the Romish Church and thus consent to have the whole Christian faith visibly unhinged of that foundation of the Scripture and subjected to a supreme visible and infallible judge here in the earth with such a claime of dominion over the faith of the saints as the Apostles of Christ durst never owne but did fully disclaime 2 Cor. 1 24. 5. Where he must believe that Jesus Christ came for this end to save lost man and by one offering hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10 18. and yet joyn in the same faith herewith a human satisfaction for sin so as men may both merit mediate and supererogate above what is needfull for themselves and be thus saved in the same way of life which was by the covenant of works ascribing that only to Christ to give salvation to their merits which yet their own intrinsick value and condignity doth require as a debt 6. He finds not how in the same creed he could possibly hold by one Mediator betwixt God and man where a plurality for this end is admitt and by the reality of Christs human nature and his having a true and finit body which is subjected to have a new created being each time in the Consecrate Hostia or believe the truth of his sufferings as now fully accomplished and to be repeated no more when it is in that dayly sacrifice of the Messe still offered as a propitiatory sacrifice for the liveing and the dead so as on the most severe and impartial inquiry here he cannot find how one holding by these principles should goe a further lenth then Morality or claim another standing then by a covenant of works 7. Nor knows he how to believe at once the truth of the Gospell to be a doctrine of Holinesse and infinite purity and yet joyne in the same faith herewith such an immunity and indulgence for men to sin as money can stand for merit and the rich have the most easy and large entrey to heaven and account it a priviledge to destroy themselves yea where some externall severities and pennance to the flesh like to the lanching and gashing of Baals Priests are reckoned enough to supply the roome of Christian mortification 8. Yea he finds it not posible to believe that sin by the blood of Christ can only be expiate and is his alone worke who hath purged our sin himself Heb. 1 3. or that there are but two ways that lead to a twofold state of men a strait way which leads to a life and a broad unto destruction Math. 7 14. and yet believe that there is a Purgatory after this life where men must be tormented and suffer extream pains there to expiate such venial sins as their prayers and pennances here could not doe yea is here made to wonder how any that believes such a thing can ever have true peace or comfort in the world but doe either take it as a fiction or forget themselves when they are chearfull where the fear of such a place the uncertainty of release and how long a term it may be er this purging worke be compleat when their own writers assigne no lesse time then 10000 Years as needfull to satisfy for some sins and least it prove a reall hell must still be a present terrour nor can he believe that such possibly doe credit themselves herein who assume this power to change the condition of the dead since were it really believed that the keyes of such a prison were here in mens hand and could by the largest dotations to the Romish Church get a safe outgate thence it were not strang to see the temporall state of Cristendome in a short time made over to these and should Judge they were in a strang manner indead priviledged by the whole residue of men who by such a power over the world to come can make so easy a purchase over this also which is present 9. He finds is sure he could never get his reason and conscience brought to such a faith even tho he made a simulate profession herein of that pretended supremacy of Peter as Bishop of Rome on which the whole frame and structure of the papacy leans and the vertue of all the pardons and absolutions founded theron on which so many have adventured into an other world except he would thus build on the sand only but not on the rock 10. He finds also how such an erection of the Gospell Church in her militant state here as the Papacy in its complexe frame is unite in such an head as the Pope who as the sole vicegerent of Christ in the earth is at once invested with a civill Monarchy and universall impire over the Church to impose and judge in the highest transactions that relate to the eternall state and immortall souls of men is a thing that as to matter of right is as forreign to the Scripture and incompatible therwith as Mahumitanisme can be and as to matter of fact is a trust that no created being could ever exerce 11. he sees is sure that he must either lose sight both of the rule and spirit of the Gospell or have a just abhorrence at that way where he should be inevitably involved in a virtual consent and accession to all that cruelty and blood which for so many ages hath been shed therin when it s so clear that this was no exorbitance