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A33955 A cordiall for a fainting soule, or, Some essayes for the satisfaction of wounded spirits labouring under severall burthens in which severall cases of conscience most ordinary to Christians, especially in the beginning of their conversion, are resolved : being the summe of fourteen sermons, delivered in so many lectures in a private chappell belonging to Chappell-Field-House in Norwich : with a table annexed, conteining the severall cases of conscience which in the following treatise are spoken to directly or collaterally / preached and now published ... by John Collings. Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1649 (1649) Wing C5305; ESTC R24775 174,484 300

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act of it 109 Assent in the first and lowest act of faith What it is Ib. What manner of assent is an act of faith p. 110 1. It must be stedfast 2. Impartiall 3. Cleare p. 110 111 What manner of assent wicked wretches give to Gods Word p. 112 It is a ravish'd assent of their will p. 113 The second act of faith is Reliance this is the justifying act p. 115 Six words which Master Ball hath noted in Scripture setting out the worke of justifying faith p. 116 The third act of faith is Full Perswasion and Assurance What it is p. 117 This is not necessary but comfortable Ib. This is not that which justifieth but fides justificati Ib. What is good and speciall justifying faith p. 118 How farre perswasion comes into justifying faith 1. There is a difference betwixt a perswasion and a full perswasion Ib. 2. There is a difference betwixt a perswasion relating to the present and a perswasion relating to the future 5 Conclusions from the premises to comfort a soule under this trouble Ib. SERM. VII CHAP. VII HOw to satisfie such Christians as conceit their faith is false because they have many doubts and weaknesses Faith is of so good a nature that it will consist in a gracious heart with many doubts and weaknesses p. 121 122 5 Conclusions of Master Sedgewicks concerning doubts in a gracious soule p. 123 5 Arguments of Master Rutherfords to prove that faith may consist with doubtings p. 124 125 CHAP. VIII VVHat doubtings and weaknesses in respect of Knowledge may consist in a truly beleeving soule with true faith The complaint stated p. 126 It is happy for the soule to complain it knowes nothing Ib. Six conclusions shewing what ignorance may be in a true believing soule p. 126 127 128 c. 1. An ignorance in some points of Religion which in some sense may be called fundamentals p. 127 A distinction of fundamentals p. 127 128 What fundamentals are necessary to be knowne and without which can be no faith p. 127 128 The conclusion proved p. 128 129 130 2 Conc. A Believer may have true faith and yet be ignorant in many circumstantiall points of Religion p. 130 The conclusion proved p. 130 131 3 Conc. A Christian may have true faith and yet be ignorant in the History of the Bible p. 131 4 Conc. A Christian may have true faith and yet be ignorant of the meaning of many places in Scripture p. 131 5. A Christian may be so farre ignorant in those fundamentals that are necessary to be knowne that he cannot make them out and yet be a true believer p. 132 6. A Christian may be so farre ignorant in substantialls that hee cannot make them good upon dispute and yet have true faith p. 133 2 Cautions to be mixed with the premised Conclusions Ib. 1 He must not be content with this Ignorance Ib. 2 Hee must not deny nor revile the truth which he doth not as yet know p. 133 134 135 SERM. VIII CHAP. IX VVHat doubts and weaknesses may consist with true faith in a gracious soule in respect to assent The Complaint stated p. 136 5 Considerations to comfort the soule in severall complaints concerning the weaknesse of its assent p. 136 137 138 c. 1. A true believer may think he doth not assent to the truth of God when indeed he doth p. 137 Our assent is to be judged by our Actions p. 138 139 140 2. A Christian may be a true believer and yet sometimes doubt or indeed rather be tempted to doubt whether the word of God be the word of God or no. p. 140 141 Four notes by which we may know whether our Atheisticall thoughts against the truth of the Scriptures be temptations or no. p. 141 142 143 1 If they be they are ordinarily but disputations and not determinations p. 141 2. If they be but temptations thou strivest against them p. 142 3. If they be but temptations they will not dwell with thee Ib 4. If they be but temptations thou leadest not thy life according to them while thou art under them p. 143 144 3. Conc. A Christian may be a true believer and yet not for the present assent to some particular truth in the word of God p. 144 From what causes such a deficiency in assent may arise viz. 1. Ignorance 2. Weaknesse p. 144 145 146 4. Conc. A Christian that is a true believer may possibly not assent to the true meaning of this or that place of Scripture yea possibly close with a false interpretation of it p. 146 147 148 Every Misbeliever is not an Unbeliever p. 147 148 5. Conc. A Christian may truly believe and truly and clearly assent unto the truth of God though he cannot in all things give a clear evidence for his assent p. 148 149 A Truth is two wayes clear to a Christ First To the eye of his Reason Secondly To the eye of his Faith p. 148 149 Many truths of God are not clear to the Christians eye of Reason all are cleare to his eye of faith p. 149 A Difference of Evidences out of Master Ball. p. 148 149 150 The conclusion of the case with a repetition of the conclusions and an addition of two cautions p. 150 151 152 153 SERM. IX CHAP. X. COncerning those doubts and weaknesses which may consist with true faith in a gracious soule in respect to the justifying act of faith viz. Reliance The Complaint stated of such as conceive their faith and reliance is not true because they cannot think they rely or doe not as they conceive constantly rely or cannot find an equall reliance upon all the promises p. 156 Severall conclusions and considerations to comfort the soule under such scruples p. 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 1. Consid A Christian may truly and wholly rely on Jesus Christ and yet not believe he fully and truly relies p 157 158 2. Consid A Christian may have true faith and truly rely upon Jesus Christ and really think he doth not truly rest and rely p. 159 3. Consid Thou mayest question and doubt thy Reliance and yet truly rely Disputing argues a weaknesse not a nullity of the act p. 160 161 Causes assigned of such conceits in Christians against the truth of their reliances and of such disputes in their spirits concerning it p. 162 c. 1. Cause The remaines of naturall blindnesse p. 162 2. Cause The Devils temptations p. 163 3. Cause The misgiving and suspitious nature of Christians Ib. 4. Cause Mists of Melancholy clouding the soules eye p. 164 5. Cause A Christians wilfulnesse refusing to take any evidence of the truth of faith but from sense Ib. 4. Consid Thou mayest at all times truly rely and yet not at all times with equall confidence rely p. 165 166 5. Consid Thou mayest not so fully and equally rely upon some promises at all times as upon other and yet truly rely upon all p. 167 It is hard
is very busie in such manner of temptations yea even Christ himselfe shall not be without them Mat. 4. 6. he had set Christ upon the pinacle of the Temple and bid him cast himself down for it is written he shall give his Angels charge c. in which words I conceive as the Devill tempted Christ in an unwarrantable way to rest upon the promise so he also tempted him to doubt of the truth of the Scripture As if he should have said If the Scripture be true and you beleeve it try a little throw thy self down thou hast a promise to catch thee Psal 91. 11. Throw thy self down and thou shalt see now how true the Scriptures are c. So the Devill deales with Christians often sets upon them to deny the Scriptures and puts such thoughts into their hearts c. which are but temptations and argue not a nullity of their assent to the Scriptures but an assault made upon their faith by Satan But may a Christian say If I could know this it were something how shall I know whether such thoughts be the spawn of unbeleefe and proceeding from an internall cause my own infidels heart or whether they be as you say meerly the temptations of Satan and assaults upon my faith I shall labour to tell thee briefly First They are ordinarily but Disputations and Queries not determinations Thou oftentimes hast Quaeries in thy soule What should I think are the Scriptures the Word of God or no They have strange things in them one would wonder they should be the Word of Truth thou never commest positively to determine in thy soule Tush they are not the Word of God God gives Satan leave to play the Opponent sometimes to see what a Respondent the Beleever can be but hee alwayes keeps the office of the Moderator to himselfe when they never go beyond a dispute in thy heart that thou dost not determine in thy heart the contrary nor declare with thy lips nor practice with thy life the contrary it is a sign they are but temptations though they argue weaknesse and thou oughtest to bee troubled and humbled for them if they were children of thy owne begetting thou wouldst nourish them better Secondly If they be onely temptations thou findest a striving against them Tell me Christian when thou hast such an Atheisticall thought laid at the doore of thy heart that the Scriptures are not the truth of God what dost thou do with it what dost thou take it and suckle it and rock it and nurse it as thy owne childe Dost thou please thy self with such thoughts and labour to coine arguments to maintaine and hug them This is a note of a base heart Or art thou impatient of it but presently cryest out Ah Lord what a base heart have I And dost thou labour to beat such thoughts out of thy heart and pray against them and never listen to any argument Satan would bring to tempt thee to the beleefe of it I beleeve this is thy tempter and know if it be thou mayest have such thoughts and doubts and yet be a true beleever Thirdly If it be not reall unbeliefe but a meere temptation to unbeliefe thy thoughts will not be long Iames 4. 7. Resist the Devill and he will flee from you The Devill if he be left to stand upon his own legs is as very a coward as lives he will come and tempt a beleever to deny the Scriptures to be the word of truth the beleever findes these filthy thoughts cast into his heart he considers Arguments to resist this temptation cryes and prayes and sayes I beleeve Lord help my unbeleefe Away goes Satan presently will answer never an Argument but yeeld the field and the beleevers heart is fixed presently I mark this in 4. Matth. we read there of three weapons the Devill took up at Christ v. 3. Hee tempteth him to distrust Gods providence Christ resists this v. 4. The Devill hath done with this not a word more to say well he flyes to another v. 5. tempts him to presume unwarrantably upon Gods providence and to deny the truth of the Scriptures Christ resists this v. 7. The Devill durst not reply but leaves this too well he betakes himselfe to another v. 8. Christ resists this v. 10. Satan hath not a word to say but the coward quits the field packs up and gets himselfe away v. 13. Try thy thoughts are they dwelling thoughts or transient if they abide not they are Satans that carries bag and baggage with them when he leaves thee Fourthly Thou mayst know if they be temptations by thy life thou art sometime ready to think that the Scriptures are not the word of truth thou canst not assent to them but at this very time durst thou live contrary to the rule of the Scripture Darest thou now go and be drunk and be unclean for what now should keep thee in awe Darest thou then 't is unbeleefe But at this very time if thou durst not but live according to that Word of Truth which yet thou art in doubt whether it be the Word of truth or no say what thou wilt thou dost assent unto it and Satan would but fool thee of thy faith Thus you have heard how a Christian may doubt or rather be tempted to doubt sometimes whether the Scriptures be the Word of Truth or no and yet have and give a true and firm assent unto it as the Word of Truth and you have heard me giving some notes how a Christian may know whether such thoughts proceed from a principle of unbeleef and dissenting to the Word of Truth or from the temptations of Satan I come to the third Conclusion which is this Thirdly A Christian may be a true beleever and yet not fully assent to some particular truth in the Word of God There are many pieces of Gods Truth in Gods Word The Word is the word of an eternal wisdom and of a depth too deep for us that have but narrow capacities and finite buckets to finde the bottom of it Now I conceive it is not essentiall to a true beleefe and assent that I should assent to every thing in the Word of God nay which of us doe doe it The causes of this may be these 1. Ignorance I shewed you before when I handled that point that there may be a great deal of ignorance consist with true faith ignorance in point of Doctrine and ignorance in circumstantialls ignorance in divers things which are not of absolute necessity to salvation Now I conceive that assent doth alwayes imply knowledge How shall they beleeve on him of whom they have not heard was the Apostles question Now I conceive assenting to a particular truth as the truth of God doth nor consist in a bare negation but hath something positive in it I conceive that I cannot bee said to Assent to all things from which I doe not dissent but if I assent I doe ful●y agree and close with something
decipere quia quicquid non intelligit plus miratur I would saith he that thou shouldst so preach in the Church not that the people should be provoked to humming but sighing that the tears of thy hearers may be the praise of thy Sermon The Sermon of a Minister saith he should be seasoned sale Scripturarum with the salt of Scripture he doth not salibus with idle querks And he goes ●n I would not have thee like a declamer in the schools or a brawler or one that should have a great deal of expression without the substance of reason but one that should be skild in the Word and Ordinances of God In short saith he It is the trick of dunces to rumble over words and by their meer expressions make people admire him For there is nothing so easie as to deceive a poor unlearned people with a voluble tongue for they by how much the lesse they understand by so much the more they admire Thus he And yet was not this the designe of our old Cathedrall and University Preachers nay is it not yet of many in this City that have not left making use of the Pulpit to tell us what they have of Greek and Latine Fathers in their common place book A generation of the worst of men Ministers of the Gospel I should lye to call them that go about to convert and heal souls as the Devil heals diseases by charms that the Patient understands not Their whole designe is to make people admire them To this end they preach as if the dayes of Pentecost were still continued The men are Galileans and their hearers too yet if Parthians Medes Elamites and the dwellers in Mesopotamia were there they might hear something of their own language and something possibly that neither the Preacher nor the hearers understand They are admired Verily they have their reward Observe how these men court an humme with their jests and spittings how ambitious they are to smooth up their sentences with an esse posse videatur Such Pulpit-monkies that bring the Ordinance of God into contempt and make the Word of God of none effect They may well be stiled opprobrium Evangelii Thus saith the Lord unto the shepheards Ezra 34. 2 3. Should not the shepheards feed the flock wo be to you shepheards that Feed your selves then that ●at the fat of applause and cloth your selves with the wooll of admiration The diseased have yee not strengthened neither have you healed that which was sick neither have you bound up that which was broken neither have you brought again that which was driven away neither have you sought that which was lost You shall one day without repentance for these Sermons hear your reward in plainer English Mat. 25. 41. While these wretches vend themselves the poor hungry soul starves at meat crying out Death is in the Pett These unnaturall Fathers while poor souls cry for Bread cheat them with Stones and while they call for Fish they beguile them with Scorpions My heart bears me witnesse that in these following leaves I have laboured not to smooth but to settle thy soul which must be by putting thee on to trust in the Lord. Isai 50. 10. If thou mislikest these Sermons for their plainnesse know that I had rather displease thy tast and teach thee to rectifie thy pallate then by studying to please thy childish tooth lose the advantage of speaking to many an others heart Read it thou shalt not leave it without learning something if thou gettest no good in relation to the intended end thou shalt learn yet a lesson of the poor creatures nothingnesse and give glory to God by looking to him and trusting in him for thy souls peace If from any thing in these Sermons thy soul by the blessing of God gets any comfort and settlement Let thy and my God have the glory and his soul the benefit of thy tears and prayers who is and shall be for ever The Worthlesse Ambassadour of Iesus Christ for thy souls good and peace IOH COLLINGS From my study in Chappel-field-house in Norwich August 17 1648. A short Table of those severall Cases of Conscience which in the following Treatise are spoken to more fully or Collaterally the Letter of which are noted with an Asteriske Ser. I. 1. VVHether it be necessary that humiliation should in a soule goe before faith Ser. II. 2. Whether I may refuse to beleeve because I thinke I am not enough humbled Comfort and direction for a soul under that affliction Ser. III. 3. Whether I may refuse to beleeve because I know not whether I am elected or no How to satisfie a Christian under that affliction Ser. IV. 4. Whether I may refuse to beleeve because I am a great sinner and as I thinke too unworthy of mercy How to satisfie a Christian under that affliction Ser. V. 5. Whether I may refuse to beleeve upon a conceit that I have sinned the sin against the Holy-Ghost How to ease a spirit under that burthen Ib. * 6. Whether every sin against knowledge every denying of Christ every hating our brethrens goodnesse be this sin or no Ser. VI. 7. Whether a Christian may conclude he doth not beleeve because he cannot act every act of faith Ser. VII 8. Whether true faith may consist with doubting and how in the same soule Ib. 9. Whether a Christian may conclude he hath not true faith because for the present he is ignorant 1. in circumstantiall points 2. in the history of Scripture 3. in some fundamentals yea 4. in the necessary points of salvation so far as that he cannot make the generals out by particulars nor maintaine them upon dispute Ser. VIII 10. Whether a Christian may conclude his faith is not true because he thinks he doth not assent to the whole Word of God * 11. Whether the true beleever can at any time doubt whether the Scripture be the Word of God or no * 12. Whether a Christian may not be tempted to doubt it and yet not doubt it and how to know such a temptation from our owne corruption * 13. Whether a Christian can have true faith and not assent to every particular truth in the word of God nor to the true meaning of this or that portion of Scripture Ser. IX 14. Whether a Christian may truly relye upon Jesus Christ for salvation and yet doubt whether he doth relye or no and not know he relyes but be strongly conceited he doth not * 15. Whether a Christian may truly relye upon Christ and yet find an abatement sometimes of the strength of his relyance and to his owne thoughts relye sometimes more sometimes lesse * 16. Whether a Christian may truly relye upon Christ and the promises and yet not at all times find an equall reliance upon all the promises but that he can at somtimes as he thinks more adhere to some promises then other and in generall better depend upon Gods spirituall promises for grace and heaven then his
the Spirit hath not the Spirit of prophesie For those Scriptures which it is necessary in point of salvation every beleever should know every beleever understands the nature of them God hath made the water shallow that the Lambs may wade but for those places through which the beleevers passages do not lie to Heaven in which the Elephants may swim God doth not require that every Lambe should sound those depths Fifthly A Christian may be so farre ignorant in the fundamentalls as that he cannot make them out and yet be a true beleever he may be ignorant in the particulars by which the generals are demonstrated as for example he may know that Christ dyed for him and rest upon the merits of his death for eternall life and so truly beleeve and yet not be able to make this out by reason of his ignorance how Christ being God should be capable of death how the humane and divine Nature were conjoyned hee may know that Christ satisfied by his active obedience for his actuall sinne and yet not perfectly understand how Christ being man should be free from sinne being conceived by the Holy Ghost The boyes Exercise may be true Latin though he cannot pierce every word The Disciples were beleevers yet were ignorant concerning the Resurrection yea concerning Christs union with the Father Luk. 24. 25. Ioh. 14. 4 5 6. The knowledge may bee cleare to them in the generall though through their infirmity and ignorance they be not able to cleare it up in the severall particulars Lastly They may bee so farre ignorant in the substantialls of Religion as that they cannot dispute them The faculty of beleeving and the art of disputing are two things I may know and beleeve that which I cannot maintaine upon dispute It is a knowne speech of that female Martyr I cannot dispute but I can dye for Christ if she had not beleeved she would not have dyed she could maintain her faith with her blood which shee could not maintaine with her tongue As every Scholler so every beleever is not a disputant It is good Logick in Divinity for the Christian to hold the conclusion though he knowes not what to say to the Sophisters premises But lest now some should thinke and say that I have laid Heaven a little too wide open I must limit what I have said with two Cautions To satisfie the poore doubting Christian in point of ignorance I have laid downe the truth in these Conclusions and shewed you how farre it is possible that a man may bee ignorant and yet a true Beleever But First It must bee provided hee bee not content with this ignorance but useth the meanes to increase knowledge searcheth the Scripture and heares the Word that this ignorance proceeds meerly out of infirmity not of wilfulnesse otherwise this knowledge will not bee sufficient It is given as the character of unbeleevers 2 Pet. 3. 5. 2 Pet. 3. That they were willingly ignorant Wee have an High-Priest who can have compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the way for as much as hee also was compassed about with infirmity Heb. 5. 2. But for the wilfully ignorant the High-Priest was to offer no Sacrifice Know therefore Christian that thou canst have no comfort that thou beleevest though thou beest ignorant unlesse appealing to thine owne heart thou canst say I have done what I can to dispell these mists of ignorance and learne the whole truth of God Christ Jesus will take the blind man by the hand Mar. 8. 23 24 25. if he beseecheth him to touch him provided hee be willing to receive his sight And as hee did not cast off the blinde man that at first saw men walking like Trees So hee will not cast off the Christian that at his first illumination sees divine truths like Trees not clearely distinctly and fully but as he dealt with that blinde man hee left him not there but hee put his hands againe upon him and made him see every man clearly So if thou belongest to Christ hee will put his hands againe upon thee and make thee see every portion of his divine truth more clearely hee will make thy dawning twilight be growing up to a mid-day of knowledge ● Pet 3. 18. Therefore Saint Peter layes it as his necessary injunction upon Beleevers That they should grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ That 's the first Caution Secondly this gnorance may bee consistent with true Faith in thee provided thou dost not deny the truth that thou dost not know Thou mayest have faith though thou dost not know what the Trinity is or how it is but if thou denyest the Trinity I make a question of thy truth of faith or possibility of salvation Ignorance of some truths is not damnable but the denyall of every truth when revea●ed is damnable want of a cleare knowldge is not damnable but denyall of the truth because thou canst not clearely make it out is damnable Speak not evill of what thou knowest not but wait untill and pray that God would reveale it unto thee 1 Tim. 5. 8. 1 Tim. 5. 8. He hath denyed the Faith and is worse then an infidell There was a great difference betwixt the Disciples that had not yet learnt and the Sadduces that denyed the Resurrection I never yet learnt or read that any of the latter were beleevers the Disciple had not yet known the Father nor yet the son well Ioh. 14. 7 8 9. Io. 14 7 8 9. But the Apostle sayes He is Antichrist that denyeth the Father and the Sonne Ignorance of truth will be borne with but denyall of truth shall not Take heed of denying the truths thou dost not know Thus I have shewed you how true Faith may consist with doubtings concerning the point of knowledge which though it be not properly called an act of faith yet it is supposed in the lowest act and to satisfie you I have shewed you what ignorance may be consistent with true Faith and what not and with what Cau●ions a Christian may bee comforted concerning his faith notwithstanding his ignorance in some truths and some things not unnecessary to be known The Eighth SERMON LUKE 17. v. 5. Lord increase our faith CHAP. 9. Concerning those doubts and weaknesses which may consist with true Faith in respect to its act of Assent and how to comfort a soule under such troubles I Shall now go on to shew you what doubts a Christian that truely beleeves may have consistent with his Assent which I laid down as the first act of faith for knowledge is rather supposed to faith then an act of it You may remember I told you Assent is an act of faith whereby the Beleever doth firmly fully and clearly agree to the truth of God revealed in his Word Now sayes the doubting Christian Alas I have no faith I scarce assent to the Word of God at all or if I
do many truths there are that I cannot assent unto and those which I doe assent to sometimes me thinks I do assent to them and sometimes again no and when I am at the best my assent is so misty and dark that I almost assent to I know not what Now I shall shew thee how much weaknesse and doubting in relation to this act of faith may yet be consistent with true justifying saith in thee I shall shew it for thy direction and establishment in these particulars First of all A Christian that is a true beleever may think that he doth not assent unto the Word of God when indeed he doth It is a known maxime in Divinity That faith may be true without sense of faith True Faith is one thing and sense of faith is another and as it is with the other acts of faith so it is with this also As a man may cheat himselfe that he doth assent and consequently truely beleeve though all the world may see that he doth nothing lesse by his irregular walking contrary to his professed assent So it is as true that a Christian may truly assent unto the truth of God though he conceits he doth not assent wee are ordinarily ill Judges of the acts of our mind because they are secret and occult acts which traffique between the soule and Heaven in an invisible way and therefore the truth or falshood of these acts is ordinarily discerned by the outward acts of our body as if I hear a man professing that his soule doth assent and close with that portion of Gods Word 1 Cor. 6. 9. Neither fornicators nor idolators nor adulterers nor effeminate persons nor abusers of themselves with mankind nor theeves nor covetous persons nor drunkards nor revilers nor extortioners shall inherit the kingdom of God yet at the same time see he lives in them very sinnes he shall pardon me if I do think that he doth not assent and whatsoever his tongue speaks yet his heart doth not close with it as a truth of Jesus Christ So on the contrary if I heare a true Christian complaining that he cannot get his heart to close with the Word of God and what ever the world thinks hee doth not assent to the truth yet if I see this man fearing to sin against God and trembling at the threatning Word of God and walking as even as he can set his feet according to the directive part of Gods Word that as David he makes the Word of God a light unto his feet and a lanthorn unto his paths Let them think what they will they shall give me leave to think that they doe assent unto and close with the Word of God Take a proof of it Ionas 3. v. 5. Ionas there had preached against Nineveh Ion. 3. v. 4. yet 40 dayes and Nineveh shall be destroyed v. 5. So the people of Nineveh beleeved God that is gave a full assent and ●redence to the Word of God were perswaded that that which Ionah spake to them in the Name of the Lord was true But how shall we know that the Holy Ghost tells us it was evident by the effects they proclaimed a fast and put on sack-cloth from the greatest of them to the least it was manifest by their actions in relation to this Sermon studying and labouring what they could to pacifie the wrath of God before the 40. dayes were come about that they did verily think it was a word of truth that Ionas spake to them and that they were perswaded and from this assertion of the Holy Ghost we may certainly conclude that when we see men living and acting according to the Word of God and squaring their lives by the compasse of it they do beleeve that is assent unto it as a word of truth whether they will confesse so much or no As when we see a man build houses purchase lands give great portions to his children keep a great house we may conclude he is rich though he goes as if he were not worth a groat and though he will tell you he is not worth a groat The heart is the seat of assent and the throne of faith confession is not essentiall nor sense materiall to it Sense of faith is comfortable but truth and sincere reality of faith is that which is necessary Confession of faith with our lips brings glory to God externally but it is the reality of faith in the heart which brings glory to God internally It is he that doth assent that doth the will of God not he alwayes that saith he doth it or thinks he doth it Mat. 21. 28. We have a parable propounded by Christ to his Disciples it was of a man that had two sonnes and hee came to first and said Son go work to day in my Vineyard he answered and said he would not but yet hee repented and went And he came to the second and said likewise and he answered and said I go Sir and went not whether of the twain saith Christ did the will of his Father They said unto him The first To apply it God sayes unto all men Beleeve and close with and be perswaded of my truth One sayes I do beleeve and assent but his irregular life is such that all the world ●ees he gives his tongue the lye Another sayes Lord I doe not assent to and beleeve it yet he dares not swerve a foot from it Which of these do you think does the will of Christ Surely the latter though he will not say nor think that he doth it but suffers his tongue to give his heart the lye indeed sense and perswasion of faith is that which we ought to strive after to be perswaded that we do close with the truth of Christ but yet many a one doth that which he doth not know he doth the Christian is his own worst Judge and doth and will do more a great deale for God then he will speak of But I hasten to the second Secondly A true beleever may sometimes doubt whether the Word of God be the Word of God or no or indeed may be tempted to do it rather then do it this is that which troubles many a gracious Christian Alas they do not beleeve the Word of God they are troubled with many Atheisticall and blasphemous thoughts that they cannot tell what to think whether the Word be the Word of God or onely as Atheists dreame a modell of Scripture drawn by some to keep mens consciences in awe c. and this makes them conclude Tush I cheat my own soule to think I have faith when I question even the principles of Christianity c. and shake the foundation with one shake and yet at the very same time they live close to the rule of it and it hath a strict and severe command over their consciences Now this I say is rather a temptation to doubt of the truth of Gods Word in their soules then a reall and positive doubt The Devill
as a truth and it hath the attest of my heart Now in this regard a Christian cannot be properly and positively said to assent unto any truth of God which he doth not know though it be contained in the Word of Truth to which hee doth fully and firmly assent As for example it was a truth that the beleeving Romanes were not after Christ was come tyed to dayes and meats it was a truth of Gods Word yet it is cleare ●4 Rom. 4 5 6. c that they did not know and were not convinced of this truth and so consequently did not could not assent unto this particular truth though in Gods Word yet it is clear that they were true beleevers and so consequently did assent unto the whole word of truth conjunctim though not to every particular portion and piece of truth contained in that word divisim Phil. 3. 15. there is a further revelation of truth for beleevers If any saith the Apostle be otherwise minded God shall reveale this to him but till that revelation there cannot be expected a full assent onely thus farre The Christian that is the true beleever doth not dissent from any truth in the Word of God but prayes for the increase of knowledge that so his faith also may increase in the closing with the truth and giving full assent unto the Truth of the Lord Jesus Christ 2. It may be occasioned through weaknesse Possibly something may be taught from the Word of God which is the Truth of God that I heare and cannot altogether and firmly assent unto and close with for truth As put case it be the baptizing of infants without question it is the truth of God and a truth revealed in his Word that infants ought to be baptized and it is a robbing of the child of its right not to bring it to that holy Sacrament yet through weaknesse some that yet do assent to the Word of God and would gladly close with every portion of truth revealed in it dare not assent to this particular portion of Truth but are grieved for their weaknesse in it and desire to walk up to every portion of truth they know in the word shall wee say their faith is not true in any clearely revealed piece of truth because to this they cannot declare a full assent though even frō this they do not dissent so as to deny this to be a truth but labour after a more cleare manifestation of it God forbid hee that conceales the Truth in unrighteousnesse indeed cannot bee said to beleeve but he that to some particular portion of truth not absolutely necessary to salvation is a debtor through weaknesse I conceive cannot come alwayes within the censure of an infidell 'T is one thing peremptorily to deny any particular portion of truth and another thing not to subscribe to it and by a present assent not to close with it Fourthly A Christian that is a true beleever may possibly not assent to the true meaning of Scripture yea close with a false meaning in this or that particular place Beleevers judgments are not all of a Last and many a one that doth fully and firmly assent to every tittle of Gods Word doth not cannot alwayes subscribe to the judgement of this or that man or to the ordinarily received opinion of godly men concerning such or such a portion of Scripture Scripture is very deep who can finde it out and though the Holy Ghost hath left some shallowes that the meanest Christian may wade through yet there are also some depths which are past finding out places about which the learned in the world have posed themselves VVe see it an ordinary experience even in the dayes wherein we live such or such an Exposition hath been received almost of all former Writers yet when one of us cometh to examine the grounds of such or such a sense and to weigh the context and compare it with other places of Scripture though we assent to the truth if it be one as wrapt up in some other portions of Scripture yet we cannot assent to it as the truth of that place and yet possibly it may be too that theirs is the truth of it and ours is the errour Every misbeleever is not an unbeleever nay yet further A man may misunderstand some places of Scripture and thereupon hold that to be truth which is not so it be not in the points that are necessary and fundamentall to salvation and yet have true faith and yeeld true assent unto the Word of God Every particular imperfection in a righteous mans life will not argue that a man is an unrighteous man in the generall nor every deviation from truth argue a man an heretick nor every mistake of truth argue that a man doth not assent unto the truth of Gods Word The Disciples did verily beleeve that Christ should have a reall Kingdome upon the face of the earth that should break in pieces all other Kingdomes and consume them utterly Acts 1. 6. as is cleare Acts 1. 6. They asked of him Wilt thou at this time restore the kingdom to Israel And the mother of Zebedees children was speaking for Courtiers places for her sons which was but a plaine and cleare mistake of that place in the 2 of Daniel 44. yet who durst but say they had true faith 2 Dan. 44. So many in these dayes do clearly beleeve that Christ shall reign personally here upon earth a thousand years with his Saints it is the Millenaries opinion which for my part I do not think it is true and I think that is the opinion of the most and I think it is a cleare mistake of that place Rev. 20. 4. and other places Revel 20. v. 4. yet I would be loth to say that one cannot assent and truly assent to the Word of God that runs upon this mistake surely such an opinion is consistent with true faith indeed if a man doth not fully assent to those truths revealed in Scripture that hold the foundation of faith firm and stedfast then you may suspect the truth of his pretended faith I come to the last Conclusion Fifthly A Christian may truly beleeve and truly and clearly assent unto the truth of God though he cannot in all things give a cleare evidence for his assent This is that which puzleth many a Christian Alas I cannot clearly discern the truth of God in his Word I may think I assent but can I be said to assent to that which I cannot clearly see and comprehend and make out Yes without question there are but very few truths of God which the Christian hath a clear and full sight of and gives a cleare assent unto for a clearnesse of assent must proceed from a clearnesse of knowledge Now a truth may be cleare to a mans soule two wayes 1. To the eye of his Reason 2. To the eye of his Faith There are some truths which are clear even to the naturall man to
what nature it must be in one to argue him at sinner against the Holy Ghost p. 99. 100. P Perswasion how farre it comes into the definition and nature of justifying Faith Perswasions differ p. 206. 207. 208. A perswasion and a full Perswasion p. 208 A difference betwixt a Perswasion ●ying the future or the present p. 208. What manner of Perswasion there is and is not in all true Faith p. 208. We must Pray though we find an indisposition to the duty Reasons for it p. 245. 246. Promises of Christ are made to humbled Saints p. 17. 18. They require conditions p. 48. But no other then otherwhere they engage to give p. 48. They nowhere require a limited measure of what they require as conditions p. 49. Promises of first grace are absolute p. 49. Those for temporall things harder to bee rested upon then those for Spirituals p. 168. 169. Why Ibid. No good reason why we should not rest upon Promises made for Spirituals p. 169. Particular appropriating o● the Promises not absolutely necessary to true Faith p. 180. Promises distinguished p. 180. Why some are called temporall 181. True faith may not sometimes be able particularly to rest o● Temporall Promises p. 181. Promises if particular are to be generally applyed p. 184. True Faith in dark times may not be able to peculiarize conditionall Promises p. 18● Promises must be clearly understood by the soule that would particularly apply them p. 189. Generall Promises must bee particularly applyed p. 190. 191. 192. 193. If made to the Church of God of old they belong to it now p. 193. They were made to the Iewes under the notion of God's people p. 194. They are branches of the Covenant made with Christ p. 195. Some Promises were made to Christ's person what they were p. 196. 197. Conditionall Promises require not of us a fulfilling in our own strength p. 197. 198. Q Qualifications irregularly eyed hinder the g●●wth of Faith p. 11. They hinder not Graces freenesse being rightly required and urged p. 22. R Repentance whither it goes before Faith or no how the termes are to bee taken in that Question p. 12. 13. c. How it is the effect of Faith p. 19. There is as much Reason on the Creatures part why the Lord should save the greatest sinner as well as the holiest Saint p. 82. 83. Reliance upon Christ it the work and proper act of justifying faith what it is it may bee true though not alwayes alike p. 165. Though not equall on all the Promises p. 166. 167. It may consist with trembling p. 170. 171. 172. 173. A Christian may truly Rely upon Christ and yet not believe h● doth but think he doth not and question whither he doth or no p. 157. 158. 159. 160. It is harder to Rely upon Temporall then upon Spirituall Promises why p. 167. S Scruples must be removed if wee would encrease Faith p. 9. Sinne the greatnesse of it should not hinder us from believing why p. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. There 's at much reason in the Creature why God should save the greatest Sinner at any of his Saints p. 82. Sinners not received for their p●rt on p. 83. Great Sinners bring God great glory three wayes p. 84. 85. A great sinner converted by Iohn the Apostle a Story out of Eusebius applyed against despaire p. 85. 86. The Sinne against the Holy Ghost a case of conscience about it opened and spake to at large 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 102. c. There is such a sinne p. 9● Why it is so called p. 90. It is unpardonable p. 91. The Elect cannot commit it 91. It is incertain what it is p. 92. The Papist's opinion and their six species of it p. 92. How many wayes sinne against the Holy Ghost may be committed p. 93. 94. They must have great knowledge that are guilty of it p. 94. What ingredients must be in it 94. 95. Who have not sin'd it 94. It must be more then an heart-sin p. 96. Twelve Considerations concerning it p. 94. 95. 100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. S. August opinion of it p. 101. It must be accompanied with finall impenitency p. 101. How it is not and how it is unpardonable p. 102. 103. The conceit that we have sinned the Sinne against the Holy Ghost cannot excuse us from the duty of believing we are not excused if wee have ●ired it p. 103. None can kn●w till his dying 〈◊〉 wh●ther he hath ●ired this ●ire or 〈…〉 he hath indeed ●●red it p. 103. A large 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 s●rre p. 104. 105 Wee may bee strengthe●ed to duties though we do not feele it p 235. Gods strength in us 〈◊〉 to be discerned by the ●●ffects p. 235. It may bee seen in us when it is not seene nor selt by us p. 241. T Temptations to doubt how they may foure wayes be distinguished from reall doubtings p. 141. 142. 143. They are ordinarily but Querie and disputations not determinations p. 141. Christ tempted to doubt of the truth of the Scriptures p. 140. Atheisticall and blasphem●ns thoughts when they are ours and when the Devils temptations p. 141. 142. 143. 144. The Doctrine of the Trinity 〈◊〉 understood by some 〈◊〉 Believers p. 127. 128. Trembling is 〈◊〉 with true faith The severall causes of it when so it is usually a companion of true Faith in the begining 〈◊〉 conversion and afterwards in ● Christians 〈◊〉 p. 171. 172. 173. 174. 175. 176. 177. V Unbeliefe not the chiefe principle of the Saints doubtings p. 250. 251. What it meanes in Rom. 4. 20. p. 251. Unbelievers doubt Gods truth p. 253. Their doubts are occasioned by despaire p. 254. They make God the object of their doubts how and why p. 254. 255. 256. They doubt continually p. 257. 259. W Weaknesses may consist with true faith in the act of osse●t p. 137. 138. 139. 140. 141. 142 c. They must not bee cherished p. 152. There are also weaknesses consistent with true faith in its act of adherence p. 155. 156. 157. 158. 159. 160. The causes of such weaknesses p. 162. 163. 164. 165. Will enough in God to save the greatest sinners p. 76. Will in God to save sinners declared in eleven particulars p. 77. 78. 79. Wilfulnesse in Christians oftentimes a great cause of soule-trouble p. 164. FINIS
not beleeve that is apprehend and apply and rest upon Christ as my Saviour We speak not of Faith as it is an infused habit and the gift of God to us but as it is an inherent grace and operative in us Now then we will 1. Enquire what the causes of such complaints in gratious souls may be 2. We will consider how to satisfie the soul in such troubles and scruples For the first complaint I cannot I dare not rest upon Christ and beleeve in him There are many causes of it which I shall speak to One ordinary cause of it is Scrap 1. The souls to much eying of preparatory qualifications I do not say the souls eyeing but the souls too much eying of them Hence it is that if you ask a poor soul under that trouble what 's the reason thou darest not rest thy self upon Christ Faith is a pretious flower that grows as well in the poorest beggars as the greatest Princes garden The meanest arm may as boldly lean on Christs shoulder as that which is gayed with gold-lace Alas saith such a poor soul Gods justice proceeds according to method First he useth to pull down and then to exalt First to lay the soul low licking the dust then to say to it I am thy salvation Alas I was never enough humbled I never saw hell yet would God rend my heart in pieces I could beleeve he would bind it up would he humble me c. Now in order to the satisfaction of a soul under this trouble it would be first enquired 1. Whether humiliation goeth before Faith or no. 2. If it doth what may comfort a soul under this affliction of spirit and what it ought to do in relation to its peace For the first it is a question variously tossed and determined understood and concluded in these times in which God hath cast our lot some utterly denying any such work some too eagerly contending for measure some limitting Gods dealings others misinterpreting if not wilfully mistaking the terms It will not therefore I trust be a lost labour first to enquire the truth of that question which is ordinarily thus termed Quest Whether Faith goeth before Repentance or Repentance before Faith Now for the fuller determination of it I shall first explane the terms Then conclude the truth and prove it by Scripture and Reason And lastly answer those Objections ordinarily made against it First I will spend a little time to open the terms which when rightly explaned I am confident will put the question out of question to those Christians that have any experience of the Lords dealings for the ambiguity of every term hath onely darkned the clearnesse of this truth First let us understand what is meant by Faith both in the kinde and in the act There are divers kinds and divers acts of Faith There is an historicall Faith which consists onely in the knowledge and assent to the truth of an History There is a Faith of miracles There is a temporary Faith and there is a true justifying Faith The question is onely to be understood of the latter which hath also severall Acts. First 〈◊〉 Secondly Relyance Thirdly Perswasion The question is to be understood of the second Act Whether God gives the soul power comfortably and truely to relye upon Christ and the promises for salvation before he hath wrought repentance in the soul Secondly the term Repentance is subject to ambiguity too Repentance is sometimes taken largely for the whole work of conversion and so Godly sorrow is an effect of it sometimes strictly and when we speak of Repentance in the question we onely understand the first parts of it consisting in conviction contrition and humiliation by which the soul is carried out into a loathing of it self both for its sins and in its righteousness And the question is Whether God doth not work in a soul a sorrow of heart and loathing of it self for sin before the soul hath power to rest upon Christ for salvation and relye upon him as its Saviour Lastly we must safely understand what is also meant by going before First we do not understand by going before a precedency in Gods hidden operation he at once infuseth the habits of grace into the soul But secondly by going before we understand a going before in a gratious Act and in a comfortable apprehension Neither farther is the question to be understood as if we thought Humiliation went before Faith as a work wrought by our own strength We acknowledge Humiliation to be a work of Gods speciall grace in the soul And the question is plainly thus Whether God ordinarily gives a poor soul power to act Faith by relying upon Christ and the promises of life and salvation before in some measure he hath brought the soul to be sensible of its lost and undone condition We say he doth not We will grant to our Brethren that are unsatisfied concerning this truth First That a man must beleeve before he can mourn But how not by any saving act of justifying Faith He must beleeve there is a sin-pardoning Saviour that hath fulnesse and freenesse of mercy and enough in his fulnesse for him and that though he hath sinned yet there is hope in Israel concerning this thing Then he puts his mouth in the dust if so be there may be hope Secondly we will easily grant that a man must have saving and justifying Faith before the work of repentance and humiliation will be perfect in his soul As we maintain it to be a precedent work so we denye it not to be a subsequent effect Thirdly we will grant that it is not a work to be done by our own strength it is Gods work onely our dispute is concerning Gods usuall order in working The same spirit that works a power in the soul of dependence upon Christ takes also away the heart of stone and gives an heart of flesh Fourthly we will grant that the habits of these graces are both together in the soul We onely question which God gives the soul power to act first Fiftly We dispute not concerning the measure but concerning the thing We do not question whether the soul must be thus far or thus much or thus long humbled before God will give it power to act Faith by a comfortable reliance on Christ We onely say it must be humbled Sixtly We do not limit the workings of God and say it is so necessary on Gods part that he cannot give the soul power comfortably to apply Christ and the promises but we say it is not his usuall course and ordinary may of dispensing grace to do it Yet his dealings are various he works not alike to all he may and sometimes doth go out of his beaten road The question is not concerning a necessity on Gods part but onely concerning a necessity on our part not concerning his miraculous power but his gracious will nor concerning any extraordinary operation but concerning his ordinary way of dispensations
64. 6. good for nothing in his service c. Doctor Preston gives these directions vol. 4. 1. Labour to see the greatnesse of thy sin 2. To see the inability to help thy self For the first he propounds this 1. Fix your thoughts upon some great sin 2. Think of the number of thy sins 3. Make past sins present think of youth sins c. 4. Be not willing to exi●nuate or excuse any sin 5. Make sorrow abide upon your hearts 2. Consider the inability to help thy self 1. Think of Gods greatnesse and strictnesse 2. Of thy weaknesse and sinfulnesse And in another place he gives these directions 1. Every day search thy heart for the sins thou hast committed that day 2. Study the Scriptures they will discover your vile hearts more to you 3. Keep your hearts and wayes upright that is the way to keep them from ha●dning 4. Bediligent in your calling 5. Remember times and sins past 6. Distinguish betwixt grace in thee and thy self of thy self Many other directions have been and may be given I will reduce all to these two or three heads 1. Consider the nature of thy sin 2. Consider the mercy of thy God 3. Run unto God Now these may be branched out into severall particulars 1. Consider sins in the filthinesse of them 2. In the greatnesse of them 3. In the multitude of them 4. In the aggravations of them 5. In the effects of them 6. In the dangerous consequence and guilt of them 2. Consider the mercy of God 1. That hath spared thee from hell so long 2. That yet will pardon thee 3. That yet will give thee heaven and glory 3. But when thou hast done all what thou canst this way these are but poor helps the surest way is to Fly to God by prayer and intreat him to work his own work So the Church Hos 14. 2. Here thou mayest plead with God First His promises Zach. 12. 10. Ezek. 11. 19 20. Secondly Thine own inability to do any thing towards this work though thou hast tried much and after all this rest upon God to such doubting Christians Now there are divers other things which lye in the souls way in relation to this also some of which I will speak something to being such as are more ordinary and as I my self have met with from some Christians either arising from their too curious inquisition into Gods hidden decrees or too much poring upon their own unworthinesse For the first of these I shall speak something to it at this time Cap. 3. How such Christians may be satisfied and comforted as think they have no warrant to beleeve because they conceive they are not elected or do not know whether they be elected or no. ALas saith a poor Christian why do you tell me of beleeving Sure I am none can be saved that is not elected I can see no ground to make me think that God hath chosen me to life before the foundations of the world nay I am confident God hath not elected me but past me over in his eternall decree Now to this trouble of spirit I will speak something first by way of promise secondly by way of consolation and direction First By way of promise It is an ill way of curing such a wound by breaking truths head to make a plaister as the Arminians Papists and Antinomians do Let me therefore first shew you what the truth is and then shew you with what considerations in a consistancy with the truth a Christian so unwarrantably by this scruple stopt in its way of beleeving may be set a going again and there will be left an even-path upon the road of truth for a troubled spirit to goe on in its way of beleeving and that both steadily and nimbly Know therefore First It is a truth That from all eternity God made choice of a particular and determinate number of persons to save them and none other nor can any be saved but those who were so elected and whosoever are so elected shall not fall away This is the truth of God which must stand firm against whosoever they be that either say there is no election or an election at random as the Arminians hold or a slippery one that is alterable as Papists hold or that it is made in time c. Secondly It is a truth That God never elected any because he foresaw they would beleeve and repent and walk holily but because he hath elected them therefore they beleeve and repent c. Thirdly It is a truth That those that are thus from all eternity elected may come to knew and particularly and fully and assuredly to know they are so elected and chosen of God Nay fourthly It is a truth That it is the duty of every Christian to strive to make his calling and election sure to labour to know that his name is written in the book of life It is that which the Apostle Peter calls for at Christians hands Nay fiftly It is a truth That there are but a very few elected and whosoever is elected shall beleeve and more then are elected neither can nor shall beleeve Many are called and few are chosen and those that are ordained to the end are ordained to the means they are created to good works These are those propositions which I desired to premise and those which the Devil and his instruments abuse to the unwarrantable perplexing of poor souls These are all the truths of God which do and shall remain true though all the world be found liars but what of all this I know none of these premises that will warrant such a conclusion as this Then I have no ground to beleeve except I knew that I were one of those few whose names God hath written in his book of eternity The Papist and Arminian and Libertines now take another course to cure the perplexed spirit and make no bones of it to stay a truth to heal a conscience To this end they have devised such charms to hang about the necks of sick souls as these are There is no such matter as any decree of election or God elects us for foreseen works and if there be an election it is not particular but the decree is entered thus at randome in the Court rolls of eternity All that beleeve shall be saved without a particular entrance of the number or names as if God had not said I know thee by name and if there be any elected they stand upon slippery ground Elected names may be blotted out or added in as if Gods book were more blotted then a Mercers shop-book Or if there be any elected yet it is impossible to know that I am elected nor can I have any assurance of my mansion-house in glory till I have taken possession of it But this is to bruise the head for a plaister for the heel On the contrary another generation maintain election to be the object of Faith and ignorantly maintain Faith to be the eye
this sin how wilt thou know it is finall before thou diest canst thou not yet repent and beleeve strive then Christian God may give thee power and call thee in at the eleventh hour V. Aust T. 10 Ep. 11. de Verbis Domini p. 46. copiose just at thy dying hour as the theef upon the crosse which if he does thou hast unjustly and cruelly condemned thy self and belyed thy own soul To ●umme up therefore all in a word You hear Christians beleeving yet remains your great duty It stands firm beleeve and you shall be saved You have seen one block more thrown out of your way I have shewed you this temptation or suggestion cannot hinder where by the way you have accidentally heard something of the nature of this unpardonable which being well understood by Christians will be enough to satisfie Christians against this doubt And from all that hath been said concerning this You may gather this discription of the sin against the Holy-ghost which is consonant to the sense of most sober and Orthodox Divines concerning it and conteins the marrow of what most of our Divines have said concerning it Take it thus It is for a man that hath been first enlightened by the Holy-ghost A Discription of the sin against the Holy-ghost With secondly Fundamentall Gospel truths Thirdly 1. A subjecto Distinctly Against first knowledge And secondly Deliberation Thirdly Directly Fourthly From the degree Freely and wilfully Fifthly Openly Sixthly A causa procreante Maliciously Seventhly Desperately Without any provocation but the corrupt wickednesse of his own heart drawn out occasionally upon the making known of some Divine Evangelicall fundamentall truths or propagating of them he himself being convinced that they are the truths of God In his heart to envy the credit of the truth amongst others and out of his malice to God From the acts of it whose the truth is and to the truth because it is true to blaspheme and revile the truth of God and oppose it in others malitiously and to blaspheme those gifts of the Holy-ghost From the object of it and that truth which he had formerly been convinced of and received From the end of it and to set himself in such malicious opposition against it as to desire and do what in him lies to spoil the credit From the consequents of it and extinguish the light of the truth and destroy the friends of it because they are so and in this wickednesse to go on making a generall defection from God and the wayes of God and maliciously persisting in such opposition without any repentance and finally perishing in it despairing of Gods mercy if at any time he should have any kinde of remorse This I conceive is a full description of it which if such Christians as ordinarily complain of this burthen would learn they would quickly finde their complaint groundlesse If any yet remain unsatisfied in I shall refer them to a little but full Book concerning this subject called A Discourse of the sin against the Holy-ghost composed by Master Bradshaw in which they shall finde as much as can be said upon this subject Here I shall break off And now I have done with answering the Scruples of those that think they ought not and pretend they dare not beleeve Either 1. Conceiting they are not enough humbled Or 2. Because they do not know they are elected Or 3. Because they conceive themselves unworthy Or 4. Upon a conceit they have sinned the unpardonable sin against the Holy ghost I should now come to a second note of a weak Faith which is a fear of a false Faith which is ordinarily a note of a true Faith O they are confident they do not beleeve so many are their doubtings so little is their perswasion and assurance so weak the actings of their graces are but of this hereafter SERM. VI. LUKE 17. 5. Lord increase our Faith I Am still upon the work of removing such obstructions as hinder the work of Faith in the soul I have done with those of the first sort viz. such as are praevious that make the soul stumble at the threshold while it conceives it may not and pretends it dare not beleeve I am now come to a second sort that are gone a step further then these they will tell you that they are convinced beleeving is their duty and their great duty and the duty for the omission of which they fear they shall perish But they cannot they do not beleeve they may cheat themselves with a presumption but they want such a certainty of perswasion and such a fulnesse of assurance as is requisite to true Faith they are full of ignorance and weaknesses c. Cap. 6. How to satisfie those that are conceited against the work of Faith in their souls viz. against the truth of it NOw for satisfaction to such Christians let us search out the cause of such complaints I conceive there may be a double cause 1. A mistake in the nature and acts of Faith 2. A misjudging of the effects of Faith First The complaints of such a soul which yet all this time truely beleeves may arise from a mistake concerning the nature and acts of Faith and therefore the way to satisfie it will be rightly to inform it concerning them and to this end I shall but propound to such a soul to consider these two things 1. That there are many acts and more degrees then one of true saving Faith 2. That true Faith is of so good a nature that it will and may dwell with many doubtings and weaknesses in a poor soul These two things cleared I trust many souls will be satisfied for commonly the mistake is grounded upon ignorance conceiving there is no Faith but Faith of assurance and that Faith comes to be no Faith if but a dram of doubting be mingled with it c. Consider therefore I say First That true Faith hath severall acts and severall degrees A fulnesse of perswasion is not the least act or degree of Faith no not of true justifying Faith There are notes under that Ela. There is great quarrelling concerning the nature and essence of true justifying Faith some will have it to be a bare knowledge Thus saith the Apostle The devils beleeve and tremble Some will afford us a little more and tell us that Faith consists in an assent but beyond this they will not stride some in too full opposition to these denying any certainty of perswasion and assurance to be have described Faith by an assurance and full perswasion which is the highest and not the direct but the reflex act of Faith when indeed the very essence of justifying Faith lieth betwixt these in an act of adherence to and reliance upon Jesus Christ To Faith we grant a knowledge is required of Gods word But this we say is rather supposed to Faith then an act of true justifying Faith First The lowest act of Faith
is an assent a yielding in thy soul to the word of God an agreement to the truth of it Exod. 14. 31. Israel beleeved the Lord and his servant Moses viz. gave credence and assent agreed that it was just and good and true that the Lord spake and relied upon the authority of him that spake it So by this act of Faith doth the beleever when he hears the word of God revealed concerning his salvation he closeth with it as suppose that Ioh. 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever beleeves in him should not perish but have everlasting life Or that of the Apostle There is no other name under heaven whereby a man may be saved but the name of Iesus or that again This a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation that Iesus Christ came into the world to save sinners Faith now doth not onely know this but closeth with God in these truths And so concerning the promises of salvation when God sayes Though your sins were as scarlet I will make them as snow though they were as crimson yet they shall be white as wooll Faiths work now is to perswade the soul to an assent to and credence of the truth of this good word of God yea and it is not every assent that is an act of Faith neither First It must be a stedfast assent The beleever doth as verily beleeve the promise of God as that he doth live he sayes in his heart and with his whole heart First The word that tells me this is the world of an ever-living and unchangeable God and it is undoubtedly his Word Secondly It is the word of a true and faithfull God The Apostle calls Gods Word The word of truth And it is the word of truth either materially the matter of it is truth or objectively the object of it is truth It hath the God of truth for the Author It is whole truth for the matter And this the beleever gives full and stedfast credit unto Secondly Yea and he gives credit to every truth that the word of God holds out to him as truth Faith quickens the soul to thirst after full discoveries of truth and quickens the soul to receive every beam of the light of truth that shines into it The Hebrews say That there is not the least tittle of the law upon which great mountains do not depend The beleever saith there 's not the least jot in the word of God upon which great mountains of truth do not depend not any leaf but the God of truth is wrapt up in I remember that it was Gods command in the 28. cha of Deut. That when the severall curses were read all the people should say Amen and that not to this or that curse but at the denuntiation of every curse all the people said Amen I do not reade the like command when the blessings were pronounced yet without question their assent was required to them as well as the other But our hearts are ready enough to say Amen to blessings and promises but we would not say Amen to threatnings and curses Now the beleever gives assent and credence to the word of God V. Balls Treat of Faith 1. p. even there where it seemeth most to strike at his own interest and happinesse he beleeves all things that are written in the law and the Prophets Acts 24. 14. Yea and he gives thirdly a clear assent to the word of God and every portion of it He is not like him that saith Amen to any thing he will give his assent to every piece of the word of God and yet not a blinde assent to any piece of it but every truth that he assents unto shines into his soul with a light as clear as the suns at high-noon-day As Christ told the woman of Samaria Ioh. 4. 22. You worship you know not what but we know what we worship The discourse had been very high about very great mysteries Christ had told her of a strange gift he would give her Living water v. 10. That should have a strange quality even a quality to quench thirst for ever v. 14. She gave some assent to this the water pleased her tast but it was but a blinde assent for she dreamed of such a water as might satisfie her bodily thirst that she might no more come thither to draw And v. 20. When she made a confession of her Faith to Jesus Christ that it was just of the same length bredth of her fathers not an inch longer nor shorter a Faith of the same last with most now a dayes Christ told her that in the dayes to come there should be a strange kinde of worshipping the Father Neither at Ierusalem nor yet in that mountain Ye worship saith he you know not what but we know what we worship Many assent this day to the word of God They assent to it that there is a Christ come into the world to save sinners c. None will deny this but it is in their brains but as a dark notion or else they have received it as a tradition of their fathers Our forefathers religion is a great plea in these dayes The Samaritans they worshipped they gave a kinde of a blinde credence and assent to some things that were truths in the word But alas they worshipped they knew not what they had no clear distinct knowledge of those truths that they made an orall profession of and with their mouths did pretend assent to So wicked and profane men now a dayes give a kinde of an assent to the word of God and to the Doctrine of Jesus Christ but it is far from the meanest and lowest act of true Faith When they hear or have received it from tradition that Christ was born of a Virgin or that Christ though eternall God yet was also perfect man that he died for sinners c. The wretches will tell you they beleeve these things But alas they assent not to them as clear distinct truths made out evidently and convincingly to their souls they say they professe they worship they know not what They understand not these things The natural man receiveth not the things of God for they are foolishnesse unto him 1 Cor. 2. 14. nor can he know them for they are spiritually discerned He gives his blinde assent and perhaps will set his hand to them but he doth but set his hand to a blank if he does Nor can it be otherwise for the carnall man hath nothing but the bucket of carnall reason to draw with out of the unfadomable depth of the mysteries of salvation and while he hath nothing else thus reason disputes and cannot but dispute in his soul If Christ be God How could he be born or dye reason cannot answer these questions therefore they seem dark to the poor blinde wretch and though he professes he gives credence to the word of God in these particulars Yet his assent
is but a dark and forced act of his will not a voluntary and clear act of it closing with the truth and embracing of it nor can it be because as I have shewed his assent of his will cannot proceed from a well enlightned understanding without the precedency of which the will is but ravished into an assent The understanding is that which holds the candle to the will in the soul Now the assent and credence which every true beleever gives to the word of truth though it be an act of the will for it is the wills act to delight in and close with and ●eal yet it proceeds from a spiritually and clearly enlightened understanding for it is the understandings office to dictate to the will Now assent in the wicked man is but an act of his will without any clearnesse in the understanding the understanding onely presenting the truth as a notion or tradition or commonly received opinion this is far from an act of Faith but such as the devils have It is like the Athenian devotion Paul coming to Athens Act. 17. 23. found an Altar with this superscription 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the unknown God Their worshipping argued some assent of the will and the will alwayes following the dictate of the understanding It is certain that there was some knowledge the truth was this Their understanding had gathered up some generall notions of the Deity That there was a God c. and these might be seen by the light of nature or heard from their forefathers and suckt in by tradition And it is plain it was no more for they ingenuously confesse that the God whom they worshipped was unknown to them they knew that there was a God and possibly that this God was a spirit and that this God must be worshipped Naturall eyes discern all this but it was not a clear and distinct knowledge and assent they worshipped they knew not what their Altar was to the unknown God As many name-Christians beleevers at large now a dayes mutter over their common-prayers to their unknown God and come to Church to worship an unknown God onely their fathers or mothers have told ●hem there is a God and a Christ and this ●●rist came into the world to save sinners and they must be good Church-men and serve God c. But now where this is an assent in the soul to a truth as an act of true Faith it is out of a distinct and clear understanding It conceives a great deal of reason why it should beleeve such a truth close with such a promise assent to such a word and the soul so clearly and brightly sees the truths that it sets its hand and heart unto that it wonders at the blindenesse of carnall men that they should not see it as clear as they do but yet be blinde to the things of God when for their parts they are as clear to their souls as the sun when it shineth at bright noon-day And therefore Faith is called Heb. 11. 1. The evidence of things not seen The word translated evidence is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a convincing demonstration it commeth of the Greek verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Leigh critica which signifies say criticks so to convince and bring evidence and reason for a thing and prove it by demonstration so clearly that no man can either deny it or object against it or so much as pretend an objection against it Such is Faith to the gracious soul it perswadeth the soul so to assent that the soul is clearly convinced of the thing to be assented to Faith hath so fully perswaded the soul of the word truth promise that it desires its hand and heart to that the soul is fully satisfied in it and is clear in it Though the beleeving soul neither doth see nor expects to see the brightnesse of sublime mysteries by the eye of carnall reason yet it sees by another eye and so clearly every thing that it assents to that it conceives there can be no darknesse in it no reason nor objection pretended against it but frivolous and vain and of no value This is Faiths first act stedfast clear assent Now in this the soul may possibly deceive it self The second Act of Faith which we ordinarily say is the very marrow and essence of justifying Faith is reliance and dependency upon Jesus Christ when the soul having been perswaded of the word of truth and assented to it doth in the next place hang and depend upon it as the word upon which it must live and commits his soul to Christ and hangs upon him as the Christ by which he onely can be saved This I say is that Act which justifieth A learned Author hath noted six words in Scripture Ball in his Treat of Faith by which the Holy-ghost doth expresse to us the nature and work of beleeving First Faith exprest by six words Beleeving put in opposition to fainting Psa 27. 13. I had fainted unlesse I had beleeved Secondly Trusting put in opposition to fearing Psal 78. 22. They trusted not in his salvation they were afraid of the Canaanites Thirdly Betaking to as to a castle Psal 2. 12. Our translation reades it Blessed are all they that trust in him But Mollerus saith it signifies Protectionis causâ aliquò confugere se recipere verbum appositum saith he to fly to some place for protection as to a castle in a time of danger Fourthly By a word that signifieth To lean and relye upon as an old man leaneth on a staff 2 Chron. 16. 7 8. Because thou didst relye upon the Lord he did deliver them into thy hand verbatim say Expositors because thou didst lean upon him as thy staff Fifthly By another word That signifies to stay up the minde as with a prop Esau 48. 2. You stay your selves upon the Lord from fearing despairing from sinking dejections c. A sixth word by which it is exprest is rolling and hanging upon as a drowning man on a boy Psal 37. 5. So that we may say That the very essentiall act in which consists the marrow of justifying Faith is this When the soul being perswaded of the truth of Gods eternall word gives a f●ll and fixt assent and credence to it to every curse and threatning as well as to every promise and yet doth not faint nor sink in despair nor drown in sorrow but in this apprehension of its lost and undone condition runs to Iesus Christ as a safe castle and hangs upon him committing the whole burthen of its soul unto him and stayes there leaning upon him and the promises of life made in him to the soul This is now justifying Faith which afterwards creates in the soul a quiet ●esting in God a sweet delighting in God a stedfast hope in him and a patient waiting for him and at last a confident assurance of him But this is certainly Faith so far as is upon pain of damnation necessary
to salvation The going out of the soul unto Christ and the whole application of it self to the promises of salvation made in and by him and whosoever doth this sincerely and with a faithfull heart is passed from death to life and shall never perish neither in this life nor in the life to come it puts its trust in him that never fails them that do so There is indeed a third Act of Faith Which is an act of assurance and full perswasion commonly called by Divines The reflex act of Faith Now this Act of Faith Is when the soul is fully and throughly perswaded that Iesus Christ hath actually pardoned all its sins and that it is his and he is hers This is not that Act of Faith concerning which the Apostle speaks Rom. 5. 1. Being justified by Faith we have peace with God It is rather a consequent of justifying Faith that peace which floweth to the soul as a fruit and a sweet effect of justification and that this is not that Act of Faith which justifieth is plain Because the soul must be justified before it can put forth it self in this Act. This is a comfortable but not a necessary Act of Faith and is more properly called fides justificati then fides justificans the Faith of a justified person then justifying Faith It is good and speciall justifying Faith for the soul heartily and sincerely to desire and thirst and hunger after the pardon and forgivenesse of its sins through the free grace of Iesus Christ and confidently to rest upon the promises of free remission and pardon But it is another pitch of Faith and of an higher nature to be confidently assured that all my sins are really and fully pardoned It is one thing to beleeve that my sins how many and how great soever shall be taken away and that God will smile upon me and we shall not finally perish And another thing to be fully assured that now God is well pleased with us and all our sins are blotted out Yea it is one thing to be perswaded that our names are in the white book of election and our sins decretally pardoned which was from eternity and meritoriously pardoned which was if ever in Christs death And another thing to beleeve that God hath acquitted us actually from the obligation to death that is in them God so pardons in time and in the Act of justification It is truth we ought to strive after a Faith of assurance but we are not necessarily obliged to an assurance upon our justification Faith precedes actuall and formall justification in our consciences it is the instrument to apprehend it Now the Gospel doth not when it calls to me to beleeve oblige me to a lye If before I am justified I should be tied to beleeve I am actually justified the Gospel would oblige me to that in order to my justification which I cannot upon warrantable grounds beleeve till after my justification So that we cannot conclude that we have not true justifying Faith that we do not beleeve because we cannot be confident God hath actually and formally in the court of our consciences acquitted us from the guilt of our sins for the essence of justifying Faith doth not consist in that And yet we may not altogether shut out confidence and perswasion out of the justifying Act of Faith give me therefore leave to adde a word or two concerning it The Seventh SERMON LUKE 17. v. 5. Lord increase our faith YOu may remember that I have told you that in order to the increasing of faith we must labour to remove those blocks and scruples which hinder the progresse of faith in the Soule And to this end I have spent severall houres in satisfying poor souls in those scruples which often lye in faiths way in a gracious soule I have done with such as are previous to faith and make the soul think it dare not and ought not to beleeve The last day having set the soule so farre on of its way that it is convinced it ought to beleeve but complaines That it doth not it cannot beleeve I came to search out the cause of such complaints which I shewed was ordinarily either First a mistake of the nature and acts of faith or Secondly a misjudging it self from the effects of faith I began with the first and propounded to such Christians these two considerations First That faith hath divers acts and the highest was not necessary to a justifying faith Secondly That Faith is of so good a nature that it will consist with many doubtings and weaknesses and yet retaine its truth For the first of these I shewed you the last day what were the severall acts of true faith and what act was necessary to justification and what act was not necessary I shall repeat nothing of what I then said but go on CHAP. 7. How to satisfie such poor Christians as think they doe not truly beleeve because they have many doubtings and weaknesses ALas Complaint saith a poor Christian I am confident my faith is not true but false I am so full of doubtings and feares and every act which I should think an act of faith is so weak c. To this Complaint now I shall apply my second consideration viz. That true faith is of so good a nature that it will keeping its truth consist with much weaknesse in the severall acts and dwell in a soule where many doubts are This is my Thesis Now concerning this divers have treated so largly that I shall be very brief and rather repeat what they say following them then lead you a worse way of my own Sedgwicks doubting Christian I finde Mr. Sedgwick who hath made it his work in his Book called The doubting Christian to handle this very point and hath done it fully laying down foure or five conclusions by way of premise for the right understanding of this point I shall name them to you First It is without question that all Doubtings are ●infull they are the smoakings of our corruptions they are begotten of sinne the depravation of our originall light with which God in innocencie enlightned Adam that is the cause and they hinder grace and hinder us in our duty c. Secondly They be no part of faith in that a man doth beleeve he doth not doubt Faith and Doubting may dwell under the same roofe but they marry not nor mingle any bloods together they are not at all of a family Faith is of the family of Heaven Doubtings are of the family of Hell they are inmates but have little acquaintance one with another none at all with one anothers natures they are two things though in one soule Thirdly They cannot consist at the same instant with the act of faith Ib. p. 16. for it is impossible that Faith should formally doubt the beleever while he beleeveth and in what he beleeveth doth not doubt I cannot at the same time lay my hand upon the Rock and
not lay my hand upon it c. But Fourthly Christ dying p. 27. saith he Actuall doubtings may be in a soule who hath habituall faith for as he saith they are not opposed as life and death but as cold and heat water may have some cold and some heat in it at the same time Rutherford as life and sicknesse saith Mr. Rutherford sicknesse is neighbour with life Nay fifthly I may say more I thinke Faith and Doubting may be at the same time in the soul though not in the same thing I cannot beleeve this truth and yet doubt the same but I may beleeve this and doubt some other● Yea Sixthly There is no beleever lives but hath had or hath doubtings Abraham Gen. 15. 2 3. David Psal ●16 11. See more p. 17 18 19. ib. The morning dawning of light may be light though there be some darknesse mixed with it Now to prove this position that Faith may consist with Doubtings Christ dying I can say no more then precious Mr. Rutherford hath said p. 27. who proveth it by these five Arguments First because Faith and Doubtings are not contradictories as life and death which mutually deny and expell one another but opposites as sicknesse and health in the same body may be successively Secondly Because Christ when he rebuked doubting yet supposed faith and acknowledged faith though a little faith in his Disciples Mat. 14. 31. Thirdly Because the Disciples prayed Lord increase our faith what needed that they had been at Ela at the highest pitch and note of faith if they had been above all doubtings Fourthly Because Christ prayed for Peter that when Satan winnowed him his faith might not fail it could not faile if every true faith were above all doubtings Fifthly and lastly from the various condition of the Saints of God here sometimes they have a full Moon ●non no Moon-light at all but a dark Eclipse I might adde the constant experience of Gods Saints Who lives and doth not thus sinne against God I appeale to the best experiences of Gods earthly Saints These things I thought good to premise for the right understanding and for the proving of this conclusion Now I will not enter into so large a field as to shew you all the Doubts that Christians may have Mr. Sedgwick hath done a great deale in this work in the Book before quoted but thus much I will doe First I will shew you what doubts and weaknesses and imper●ections may consist with true Faith in a gracious soule in relation to the severall acts of it Secondly I will shew you the differences betwixt those Doubts which often arise in and are consistent with Faith in a gracious soul and those which are damning dispairing doubts of Reprobates And first of the first of these CHAP. 8. What Doubtings and weaknesses in respect of knowledge may consist with true Faith in a gracious soule and how to satisfie the soule in this trouble THough some dispute knowledge to be a● act of Faith yet we say that it is required to the lowest and meanest act of Faith which is assent rather then an act of Faith of it self yet in regard many Christians that strive and labour after knowledge having wanted those meanes that others have had either in regard of hearing the Word or in regard of education have not attained to what they desire walk yet troubled about their condition in respect of their ignorance and because of this are ready to deny the grace of God in the work of true Faith in their soules Give me leave a little to speak something by way of satisfaction to such poor souls you shall heare them complain in this manner Complaint Alas I beleeve I have not yet stept the first step of a Christian. I have not so much as a knowledge of Gods Word I am a poor ignorant soule I know not halfe the mysterious doctrines of salvation can such an ignorant wretch as I be a beleever Besides for what I know I am ready to deny it sometimes I think this is the word and truth of God sometimes again I think it is not I fully beleeve nothing I know nothing I cannot read nor understand when I heare many things in Scripture I know not and for what I know I know nothing as ●ought to know it Here 's the complaint now satisfaction Now to speak a word or two by way of comfort and stay to the soule that labours under this trouble For thy knowing nothing as thou oughtest to know as thou complainest it is happy for thy soule if thou speakest from thy heart that God hath wrought thy heart into so low an opinion of thy self See what the Apostle speaketh 1 Cor. 8. 2. And if any man think that hee knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know it But now for thy reall ignorance that thou so much complainest of I shall propound a few considerations which wil shew thee how much ignorance may consist with true faith in the soule and then conclude all with a caution or two For the first First consider Thou mayest be ignorant in many points of Religion which are fundamentall in some sense and yet have faith true faith I think when we speak of fundamentals we ought to distinguish some fundamentalls are absolutely necessary our salvation stands upon them as to beleeve That Iesus Christ came into the world to save sinners that he became man a Iesus a full Savior that he dyed for us that we might live that there is no salvation in any other but in him and that in him there is a fulnesse of salvation c. These now are those pillars upon which our salvation stands and the knowledge of which is alwayes supposed to true justifying faith none can be ignorant in these and beleeve For how shall they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard which was the Apostles question but now there are other doctrines which are ordinarily called fundamentalls because they are such as Christians learn even in the beginning of their conversion such as are first taught and laid for a foundation to build other truths upon the doctrine of the imposition of hands resurrection of the dead c. are reckoned up by the Apostle for fundamentalls Heb. 6. 1 2. Now for these it is very possible that a Christian may be ignorant of them and yet have a true faith in the Lord Jesus Christ The Doctrine of the Trinity of the persons viz. That in the Deity there are three distinct manners of being three distinct subsistences distinguished each from other by their severall properties This is without question a fundamentall point of the second sort such as is usually taught Christians as a piece of the foundation of Religion yet I do verily beleeve that a Christian may beleeve and be in the state of grace and yet not be instructed fully but be ignorant in this Suppose a Minister should go preach to Heathens
and preach what need men in naturall condition have of Jesus Christ what a wofull condition they are in without him what a readinesse there is in Christ to save them and upon this presse faith doe you think it is not possible that some soule may be startled and run out of it self and rest truly upon Christ and yet not be for the present so well instructed as to give you an account of the Trinity of persons And yet without question it is a truth and a fundamentall truth too Acts 19. v. 2. Paul came to Ephesus and found certain men that were Disciples v. 1. He asks them if they had received the Holy Ghost they ingenuously confest that they were so farre from receiving the gifts of the Holy Ghost that they had not so much as heard whether there was an Holy Ghost or no I know most of expositors construe it of the gifts of the holy Ghost but for my part I cannot subscribe to their opinion but think the latter clause hath more then the former and that there is an emphasis in their answer and so Ioh. 20. v. 9. we find the Disciples of Christ ignorant in the point of Christs Resurrection from the dead and Christ chides his Disciples for their ignorance in this point The Disciples were ignorant concerning the Father Ioh. 14. 8. Lord shew us the Father and it sufficeth us Luk. 24. v. 5. The very Apostles were ignorant in the point of Christs Kingdome and rule and dreamt of Christs restoring the temporall Kingdome to Israel Act. 1. v. 6. This is the case of many a poor Christian it may be it cannot read or it hath not lived where there hath been any faithfull powerfull soule-enlightning preaching but when Gods time comes he brings the soule to heare and it doth possibly heare of its poor naturall undone condition and that there is none other name by which the Christian may be saved but onely the Name of Jesus yet this now being the work of Gods Spirit the spirit carries on its own work and creates faith in the soule brings the soule to trust and rely on Iesus Christ There may be divers fundamentall points that the soule all this while hath not heard a word concerning as how many yeare sometimes doth a Minister preach and not directly meddle with the Doctrine of the Trinity c How many weeks and not preach the Doctrine of the Resurrection But here is now the condition of such a Christian after the Spirit of God hath enlightned him and convinced him c. the poor soule that regarded not instruction before now begins perhaps to learn to read pray now he heareth the Word more enquireth concerning God more c. and every day discovers more truth then other to which the soul by nature was blinded then begins Satans work the soule reflects upon it self and begins to say now Wo is me I have my work still to begin I have made my self beleeve I have been a beleever so long and alas I have been a poor blind ignorant wretch blind to the truths of Iesus Christ c. how could I beleeve while I knew so little Yes Christian thou mayest be a Scholler though thou beest but in thy Accidence there are some truths which are the Credenda ad salutem the very foundation upon which salvation standeth Now true faith is not consistent without these I cannot rest upon Christ and Christ onely for salvation and yet not know that there is a Christ nor what this Christ is how proportionate a Saviour for me without question the knowledge of the Doctrine of faith in Iesus Christ the Son of God and the Saviour of man what he is what he hath done what need we have of him what a fulnesse there is in him what a sufficiencie of salvation for every soule that beleeveth c. is so much knowledge as is absolutely necessary and without which no soule can be saved yet this must not be understood without some caution as I shall shew you anon for though it be truth such a blind soule may be enlightned so far as truely to beleeve yet if so it will deny no truth but labour and thirst after the knowledge of every truth A man may be a Grecian and yet not know every word in the Greek tongue no not every Radix Beleevers shall not bee saved by their Book Secondly A Beleever may be ignorant in many circumstanciall points of Religion and yet be a true Beleever this is clear from many examples in Scripture Peter himself did not know he might eat those birds and beasts Acts 11. which to the Iewes were unclean The beleeving Romanes did not know their liberty in point of holy-dayes Rom. 14. and eating of meats first offered to Idolls Gal. 4. which maketh the Apostle take a great deale of paines for setting Rules to strong Christians how to carry themselves in relation to their weak brethren Gal. 5. whose consciences were stumbled at their eating both in the 24. Chap. of his Epistle to the Romanes and also in his Epistle to the Corinthians he harps upon the same string again The Churches of Galatia and Colosse were ignorant about the point of Christian liberty The indulgent Master will not throw away the childs Exercise for want of a Comma Christ rejects not the Christians Faith because it is not fringed with a knowledge in every circumstantiall in Religion I call no truth circumstantiall as by a slighting and neglective terme for it is a beame of God but as comparatively though they be truths to be known embraced loved practised yet they touch not the vitals of salvation as I may say They are not necessary to be known ad esse to make a true beleever Thirdly a Christian may be ignorant in the History of the Bible and yet have true justifying faith Every Scholler is not a Chronologer nor an Historian no more is every beleever I may know what Christ was though I know not what Moses and Aaron were I may know which way Christ took to bring my soule out of darknesse into marvellous light though I do not know which way Moses took to bring the children of Israel out of Egypt I may know there is but one King of Kings though I do not know how many Kings there were of Israel and Iudah The Disciples did not know all the Prophets had spoken Luk. 24. 25. Fourthly a Christian may be a true beleever and yet not know the meaning of many places in Scripture God would never have appointed expounders of the Law if every Christian qua Christian were to have been a generall Commentator That Well is deep and every one hath not a Bucket to draw There are that tell us that ●e Spirit reveales the meaning of Scripture to the beleever and would thence evince that whoso hath the Spirit must needs bee fit to unty every knot and unriddle every mystery of Scripture but every one that hath
the eye of his reason as that there is a God that we are all gone a stray from the wayes of God in which we were first see to these even the carnall man may give a cleare attest for he sees a great deal of reason that demonstrates these and such like truths unto him But now there are some truths which to the eye of Reason are as dark as midnight as Christs assuming the humane nature and the Doctrine of the Trinity and the sublime Doctrine of Christs union with the soule c. Now these also in some manner are cleare to the spirituall mans eye of Faith in regard that he doth beleeve the Word of God and that so plainly holds out these divine truths it is clear to him that they are truths he sees a great deale of reason for him to beleeve contrary to reason but yet when he comes to think how should these things be and so puzle his faith with reason he doth not clearly then see that upon a particular enquiry which in a generall notion seemed very cleare unto him as in particular that truth concerning the essentiall and reall union betwixt Jesus Christ and the soule the true Beleever thinks he sees it very clearly and beleeves it very stedfastly while he onely considers the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it and looks upon it as it is a truth but now when he comes to consider how should this be there that knowledge which seemed cleare before appeares very dark and misty and so concerning assent which followes the knowledge of any truth I remember a passage of a Reverend Divine of our owne There is a manifestation of things by reason and by revelation an evidence direct and not direct and evidence direct and by consequence an evidence of the thing in it selfe and by the effect matters of faith are manifest by revelation but in reason insearchable and incomprehensible The Divinity of the Scripture is in it self evident to the spirituall man so is it that there is a providence other things are evident from this ground Ball upon faith p. 22. thou mayest not judge that thou hast no faith or that thou dost not assent to the truth of God because every truth in the Scripture is not in it self evident unto thee so as thou canst give a cleare and rationall assent unto it it may be a clear assent to the truth in generall though not in the particulars there it may be dark as in that Doctrine of the Trinity I may be perswaded and clearely to my thinking see that there is a Trinity it may be a notion as cleare as the Sunne unto me because I take the witnesse of Gods Word as a sufficient evidence to me but yet if I will go pose my Faith with Reason I shall not be able from an evidence of Reason to give direct assent unto that truth It may be cleare as any thing to my faith That Gods essentiall presence is wholly every where yet when I come now to look to see this with reason how the incomprehensible God should be wholly in this or that roome when I come neer I have a very dark sight and my assent is scarce clear to this truth Some Pictures the further you stand off them the more you see of them it is a clearer sight that you have of the picture at a distance then close by it So it is with some divine truths they seem very cleare to the Christian aloofe off while he onely views them with the eye of his faith and does not come neer them with the feet of his reason but if once he drawes neer with those earthy feet to them they seem very dark And thus I have shewed you what doubts a Christian may meet withall in relation to his assent what weaknesses may be incident to it and consistent with it though arguing imperfection and weaknesse 1. He may doubt whether he doth assent or or no and yet at that time truly assent and close with the Word of Truth 2. He may doubt whether the Scriptures be the Word of God or no or at least may be tempted to doubt and there I have given some marks by which a Christian may distinguish a temptation to doubting from a reall doubting proceeding from unbeleefe 3. Hee may doubt concerning some particular truths in the Word of God and through ignorance or weaknesse not fully assent to them and yet fully close with the Word so farre as is revealed to him 4. He may doubt concerning the meaning of this or that portion of Scripture and dissent from the ordinarily received truth of it and yet truely assent to the Word of God yea he may mistake a Scripture and hold that as a truth from that Scripture upon his mistake which is indeed an errour and yet savingly assent to the Word of Truth so it be not in necessary fundamentals Lastly he may not clearely by an evidence of Reason or a direct and distinct evidence of Faith assent unto severall truths which are in the Word of God and yet truly assent unto the Word Thus you see true Faith may consist with much weaknesse and doubting as with much imperfection and ignorance in respect of the required knowledge so with much imperfection and doubting in relation to the act of assent Make use of this to see Gods goodnesse that wil take such sacrifices at our hands not to presume to hug these imperfections but be alwayes striving against them 1. Caution provided we alwayes strive against them that thou dost not wilfully cherish any of them there are many and may bee many deficiencies in the understanding that God will passe over but if they come to bee the rebellions of the will thou shalt know hee is angry It is said Rom. 4. 19. 20. that Abraham staggered not through unbeleefe Abraham doubted through infirmity though when he lay with Hagar and bid Sara say she was his sister Strive against these weaknesses and let them be thine meerly through weaknesse if they be not of wilfulnesse meerly of infirmity not through unbeleef and the Lord is mercifull and thy faith may be true If thou dost stedfastly assent to all the Truth of God that is the foundation of faith and necessary to salvation and fully and impartially close with the whole Word of God and every particular portion of truth in it when it is once cleare to thee that it is a syllable of that Word of Truth and livest a life answerable to it though for the present thou thinkest thou dost not assent and though thou mayest be tempted sometimes to doubt of the whole Scripture and though thou mayest doubt concerning some particular truths that are taken for truths and are so and concerning this or that portion of Scripture and mayest take up that as a truth which is an errour from it and though thou mayest not for the present by a cleare evidence of reason or a direct and distinct evidence of faith assent
unto severall truths which are in the word provided 1. That thou assentest to all truths that are necessarily to be beleeved to salvation and the foundations of Faith 2. Provided thou strivest against other doubtings and labourest to get a sense of Faith and a strength to resist the Devils temptations and to be convinced of every particular truth and of thy errour if it bee one which thou hast taken up from some mistaken portion of Scripture and labourest for a more cleare and distinct knowledge of every truth that so thy assent may be more cleare every day than other The Ninth SERMON LUKE 17. v. 5. Lord increase our faith I Am shewing you what doubts may consist in a gracious soule with true faith I have already shewed what weaknesse may consist with faith in respect of knowledge and what doubts in relation to the meanest and lowest act of faith which is assent It is my task at this time to shew you what doubts and weaknesses may consist with saving faith in a gracious soule in relation to the second act which is indeed the essence and marrow of justifying faith that is the act of adhering the soules rolling relying and wholly depending it selfe upon Jesus Christ for salvation for although the soules assenting to the promise and being perswaded of the promise as a sure and stedfast word of truth be an act of faith yet it is concluded by most or all godly and sober Divines that it is not the act of faith that justifies but as it is concluded against the Antinomians and Libertines on one side that it is not faith of assurance that onely justifies so it is also concluded against the Papists on the other side that it is not an assent to and perswasion of the truth of the Word that justifieth the soule but that true justifying faith though it doth suppose both knowledge and assent yet it doth especially consist in the soules rollings and throwing it selfe upon the Lord Jesus Christ for eternall salvation and adhering to the promises as its portion And therefore it is observed by learned and gracious Mr. Ball 1 Par. p. 24. in his Treatise of Faith that there are six words in Scripture by which the Holy Ghost doth in Scripture expresse to us true and saving faith This I have noted before every one of which doth denote unto us that the very essence and marrow of true and saving faith is a reli●nce and dependance of the soule upon Christ The first is Beleeve opposed to fainting Psal 27. 13. it argues a staying of the soule upon something when it was falling swooning fainting c. The second word is Trust his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord. A third word is translated trust but signifies to betake to as a Castle Psal 2. 11. Blessed are all they that put their trust in him A fourth word signifies to leane upon as a man leanes himselfe upon a staffe 2 Chron. 16. v. 7 8. A fifth word signifies to stay and rest the minde upon Isa 48. 2. They stay themselves upon the God of Israel A sixth word signifies to roll a mans selfe upon a thing as a man in danger of drowning catcheth hold of a Willow and hang upon it all which words denote to us that the true and proper distinguishing act of true justifying faith is the soules rolling it selfe upon the promises of life and upon Christ for eternall salvation I take true justifying faith so far as it is the soules act by the vertue and strength of the Grace of the Lord Jesus Christ infused in relation to this act to be this for a soul wholly and stedfastly and solely and obediently to rest and roll it self upon the Lord Iesus Christ for eternall life Now in this act of true and saving faith there may be a great deale of weaknesse and it may be accompanied with a great deale of doubting CHAP. X. Concerning those weaknesses which may consist with true faith in a gracious soule and how to satiisfie the soule that conceives it doth not truly rely upon Christ because it doth not finde that it can rely so fully and constantly as it desires nor upon all the promises alike ALas sayes a poor soul I cannot think that I do really rest and r●l my self upon Iesus Christ and the promises for eternall life when I do rest as I think I am ready again to think I doe not and if I be in a frame of heart one day that I think that now I can roll my self upon Christ and trust his promises another day again I can trust nothing if sometimes I do cleave to the word of life as sweet and pretious and imbrace it as true and prize Christ and value his Word above all sensuall delights whatsoever and hunger and thirst after it and after Christ another while again I cleave to a sensuall good more then to a spirituall promise or an heavenly Christ and besides I cannot rely upon God for the fulfilling of every promise there are some of Gods promises that I think I could rest upon God for fulfilling of others again I cannot for my life though I am perswaded that they are equall words of truth with the other trust God for nor can I be fully perswaded that the promises do really and peculiarly belong to me Now to satisfie the soule in this particular I will shew you what doubtings and weaknesses may be in the soule and yet the soule at that time may have received and may rest and rely and roll it self upon the Lord Iesus Christ for the promises of salvation and may at the same time have true saving justifying faith this is my work to which I am to addresse my selfe Know for thy comfort First Thou mayest fully and wholly rely thy soule upon Iesus Christ and yet not beleeve thou dost fully and wholly rest Reliance and dependance is necessary to Faith not full perswasion of such a reliance I meane justifying faith Reliance is a necessary act of Faith full perswasion of such a reliance is a comfortable act of Faith depending and relying is the act of this hand helped by Gods Spirit full perswasion of this reliance is more the shining of Gods face then the act of our soules Labour more to get evidences of the truth of thy act of faith then of the degrees of it Christ may be in the room and yet not seen he may be in the midst of thy heart and saying Peace be to this soule and yet the doores of thy sense be shut Heaven is a thing unseen and he that measureth his faith by his eye may call an Ephah an Omer especially if thou wilt not think that thou hast faith unlesse thou canst see a truth of the very act and refuse to take an evidence for thy sense from the effects of faith The acts of the minde are secret acts of which as I said before we are very ill Judges Resting and relying upon Christ is
his soule out of his body Another time hee cryes O spare a little give me space that I may recover strength before I go from hence and be no more and again Take me not away with the wicked One while David is troubled to see the wicked flourish like a green Bay tree and himselfe like a withered tree without a leafe another time hee is not troubled at it but can as well trust God when he sends to Nabal for almes as when he sits at his Kingly Table and yet his faith was alwayes true Faith may be interrupted that the pulse of it cannot alwayes beat alike and yet while there is life the pulse of Faith beates though by reason of some sicknesse in the soule the pulse may beat more faintly and deadly then at other times Corruptions though they are never wholly the Christians Masters yet they may be their Masters sometimes more then others the minde may be more clouded with earthly thoughts the tide of passions may bee higher and the stream of Lusts greater the body may be sometimes sick and lesse active and yet living So the soule may be sick and Faith act more weakly then at other times yet Faith may be alive Fifthly Thou mayest not so fully and equally rely upon some promises as upon other and yet truly rely upon all It is a truth that the true beleever closeth with every promise but it is also true that the best Beleever findes a great deal of difficulty more for his soule to close with and rely upon some particular promises then upon others and a beleever shall finde if he be put to it that it is harder to rely upon God for his promises for this life then for his promises for eternall life God hath made promises for this life Earth is made over by Indenture to the Saints as well as Heaven Mat. 6. 32. God hath made promises of protection in times of danger of sufficiencie in time of peuury now a Christian will finde it harder if he be put to it for want of bread to rely upon Gods feeding promises then upon his promises for eternall life O it is hard for a poor creature to trust God for bread and water Hence comes distrusting and distracting care hence covetousnesse and earthlymindednesse in Gods own people And if a Christian be surrounded with swords and be in the midst of dangers it is a hard thing now confidently and without feare to rely upon Gods shield and buckler and trust himselfe within the Castle of his providence I am confident when David manifested such an evident distrust of Gods promise for protection of him 1 Sam. 27. 1. he did not at all distrust God for saving of him we read not a word of such a distrust Now I conceive the reason of it may be two-fold First Because here the flesh is sensible and concerned in it Dangers are obvious to sense The eye sees swords and trembles it sees present dangers but it sees not that speedy reliefe which the promises hold out it must be the spiritually enlightned eye of the soul must see that Elisha's man could see the mountain about Elisha full of charrets and horses but it was onely Elisha himselfe that could see the power of God assisting and defending Elisha was faine to pray before his man could have the scales fall from his eyes to see that Now for beleeving those promises where flesh and sense have a share and a present share the soule will finde it hard for though the flesh will never help the soule in relying and resting upon any promise yet it will hinder the soul very much and very often I appeal to any of you whether you have not found it an easier thing to rely upon a promise for salvation and strengthning and quickning grace which meerely concerns the soule then when you have been in some bodily straights you have found it to rely upon the promises for succour and support and deliverance As take a married man that hath a minde to the warres possibly the man is a very valiant and couragious man and values his life at as cheap a rate as any but his wife cryes and keeps a stirre that if hee were single though the designe were the same and the danger the same yet hee findes it ten times more hard then if hee were to goe a single man So the soule married to the body is ten times more troubled to close with a promise and venture into thickets of a danger by the bawlings and fearings of the flesh then it would be if it were to act single in statu separato or then it doth when it acts clearly for it self There is also a second reason may be given of this viz. Because wo may have more cause to feare Gods fulfilling his promises for this life and for temporall mercies in this life then it hath or can have to feare his promises for spirituall mercies and for eternall life The soule that findes an heart changed and walkes with God can give no reason why it should not beleeve Gods spirituall promises I meane the promises for spirituall mercies and his promises for eternall life What reason canst thou give why thou shouldest not beleeve Gods promises for pardon of sinnes What because thou art a backslider The promise is made to such Hos 14. 4. Is it because thou hast an hard heart the promise is made to such Ezek. 11. 19 20. But now come and ask the soule when dangers are at hand and the soul is ready to mistrust Gods protecting promises here the soule will tell you Alas I have been a backsliding creature and though the sins and backslidings of Gods people be no sufficient reason to warrant the soules distrust for salvation yet there is a great pretence of reason that the soul hath from hence why it should a little fear Gods wonted dispensations of temporall mercies to it for this is a sure rule that although when God hath elected and justified any he hath made a sure promise they shall never again be cast out of his eternall favour and love yet for their sins he will let them know his anger by withdrawing his temporal dispensations of love and mercy in relation to which are the promises of protection and temporall mercies given to chasten them with the rods of men and with the stripes of the children of men 1 Sam. 7. 14 15. See an experience of this in in David when he had backsliden so far as to commit those two great sins of Murder and Adultery 2 Sam. 12. David testified his repentance and Nathan said to him the Lord hath put away thy sinne thou shalt not dye v. 13. but the sword should never depart from his house v. 10. his wives should be given to be defloured by his Neighbour v. 11. The childe should die v. 15. Now though that David could not reasonably because of this backsliding distrust Gods promise for the pardon of his backsliding yet
were in his drowning danger though he be on the shore the terrours had surprized him before are not presently shaken of A second cause may be in regard of some holds that have already failed the soule Faith is when the soule layes hold upon Jesus Christ as the twig of salvation and hangs upon him for life and heaven and happinesse Now the soule hath had many twigs failed It is the nature of man to be timerous and as a drowning man will catch hold upon any thing which comes next hand to save his life on if he catcheth hold on one and that breaks he claps hold on another if that again breaks he claps hold on a third if that also breakes he still claps hold on a fourth beleeving it will hold otherwise he would never lay hold upon it yet so many having failed he cannot but feare lest that should faile him too So it is with a poor soule sin hath almost drowned him in terrour first he claps hold upon moralitie and civilitie resolving to live a sober and honest and vertuous life and thinks this will beare him well this twig breakes and will not hold when God hath a minde to work his work upon the the soule he quickly shewes the soule that this is a bruised reed and broken staffe the soule is plunged into a depth of horror and terror again well then hee claps hold of another twig and that is his duties he prayes and fasts and here he hangs this shall save me saith he this twig also breaks the Lord shews the poor wretch that all its righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloth and as filthy rags in his sight and here the soule is again plunged in feare at last God shews the soule the bough of Jesus Christs Righteousnesse the drowning sinking poor creature layes hold of this but with trembling lest this should also faile at first it feares A third cause may be in regard of the promise Faiths work is to lay hold upon the Lord Jesus Christ but now the soule doth not do this immediately but mediately Christ doth not appear and speak out of heaven to the soule and say I am thy salvation then the work of Faith would be more easie but Christ hath given the soul many both sweet and precious promises and these are the cords that the Lord Iesus Christ throwes out to the soule to pull it to the land with Now the soule takes this but with trembling untill it hath tryed the strength of them in regard it conceives the promises are lyable to many ambiguities bounded with many conditions and limitations and the soule conceives it selfe either not within the bounds of the promise or unable to fulfill the conditions of the promise or that it may make a false application of the promise And hence it is that come to a poor drooping soule that feares its condition and hath a true though a trembling hand of faith for Faith may have the palsey and urge the faithfulnesse of God in promising the surenesse of the promise once made the unchangeable nature of God they will tell you they do not a jot question this they know God is not man that he should lye nor yet as the son of man that he should repent they know that he is both faithfull and true but the promises they feare are not made to them they indeed rest upon them but whether rightly or no God knowes they conceive that either the promises were made to particular persons as to the Nation of the Jewes or they are sure to the particular number of Gods Elect of which they are none c. they will tell you that indeed the promises are true but they are conditionall and they feare that the conditions of the promise are not fulfilled in their soules so that the work lies another way not so much to perswade them of the truth of the promises in generall the cause of their trembling lies not here for feare that the promise should faile those to whom it belongs but for feare that they should misapply and misunderstand the faithfull and true promises of God And now although we must say concerning this trembling this is also our infirmity yet none can deny that it is an hereditary disease to the nature of man and will be in us more or lesse so long as any of us be in the flesh and so long as sinne remaines in our flesh and will be especially and most in those that have lien under greatest feares and terrours and are newly got out of them and begin to have a little of the light of comfort glimmer upon them even as a man that should come out of an horrid and dark dungeon where he hath been in darknesse thick darknesse into the glaring sight of the Sun in the top of the Meridian at the first will be dazeled and rub his eyes and apprehend himself in some darknesse though he be in the light He that had his eyes opened Ioh. 9. first thought he saw men like trees and this trembling may consist with true dependance Iob. 13. 15. Though he kill me yet I will trust in him the last words yet I will trust in him argued faith and a strong faith faith that he would trust a strong faith that yet hee would trust and yet whoso considereth the first words that Iob apprehended himself in a danger of killing will easily think that it was a trembling faith that Iob there acted And as it is ordinary with poor Christians through their infirmity to beleeve tremblingly in the beginning of their conversion so there is also another time when trembling doth ordinarily accompany true faith in the people of God and that is a time of desertion Secondly in time of desertion I think none will deny but Gods children have and act and must act true faith in this saving and justifying act of reliance and dependency but I am sure this they cannot doe without trembling Such was the condition of Iob in that place I before mentioned Iob 13. 15. David did rely and strongly rely in his time of desertion insomuch that in his 6. Psalm v. 8. he speakes confidently of a thing that he beleeved for as if it were already done The Lord hath heard the voyce of my weeping and yet whosoever readeth but the former part of that Psalm will finde that he was in a trembling temper His soule was sore vexed his bones were troubled he was weary with his groaning and he made his bed to swim with his teares c. Now the cause of this trembling ariseth First from the sense of the sinne The sinner saith Ah! the promises did belong to me but I have been a backslider and now what have I to doe with the promises What hath such a wretch as I to doe with these filthy unclean hands of mine to lay hold upon a clean Christ The sense of sin strikes a deep impression upon the soule and puts a shaking into the heart of
of the water of life freely with many such more not as if man could fulfill these conditions in the soule and prepare his owne heart No we abhorre that Popish doctrine though some falsly charge us with it But because Christ wil fulfill them before he bestowes those higher degrees of mercy and favour upon them he will make the soul hunger and thirst before hee will let it know it shall live Is 55 1. and give it power to come unto him Mat. 11. 9. hee will make the soule weary and heavie laden with sin before he will give the soule power to rely upon him comfortably for salvation ●zek 11. 19. He will take away the heart of stone out of the soule and give it an heart of flesh before he will give it power to walk in his statutes and keep his ordinances and do them before he will let it know that he is its God and that it is Gods chosen vessell And thus I have shewed you the distinction of promises and what we shall conclude from hence for our purpose I will shew you by and by when I have done with the distinction of times which I come to The Soule hath its winter and summer 2 Distinction its cloudy and black dayes and its lightsome and glaring dayes First it hath its lightsome summer Sun shine dayes when it is not conscious 1. Of any great sinne committed against knowledge such as Tertullian calls Peccata devorantia salutem Sinnes that swallow up heaven and salvation in the soule 2. When it hath no naturall distempers of body no cloudy melancholy vapours for the soule being to act through the body doth something suffer by it and as it is with a man that looks at the reflection of his face in a glasse if there be a wetnesse or dust upon the glasse he cannot see clearly So the soule if there be a mist or dust of melancholy oppresses the body the soule cannot see and act clearly Or 3. When the body is not under some harsh affliction for the soule sympathi●eth with the body and in its acting through the organs of it shewes the affection that it hath with the bodies sufferings and so also there are black and dark dayes for as it is summer time with the soule and day-light when it is not sad and darkned with desertion and when the body is not oppressed with melancholly or affliction or persecution So on the contrary it is winter and a dark time with the soule when the soule hath sinned some great sinne for which the soule looks up trembling to God and looks upon him as an angry revengefull God or when the body is heavy and oppressed with melancholy vapours stopping the passages of the soule or under heavy and grievous affliction that it is born down even to a back-breaking under them even as it is with a fountaine that runs through Conduit-pipes of lead c. or wood into any house if the fountaine be dirty and muddy in it self dirty water comes into the house or if the Conduit-pipes through which it passeth be dirty and tainted the water bringeth the pollution and tang of bitternesse c. that was in the pipe into the house otherwise if both the fountaine be cleare and sweet and the Conduit-pipes be not stopped nor tainted nor dirty then 〈◊〉 water runs sweetly into the place to which the Pipes lead it So it is with the soule that is the fountaine that runs into acts but through the Conduit-pipes of the body if the pipes be stopt or oppressed or muddy or cleare such is the actings of the soule And thus I have shewed you the distinctions both of times and promises now I shall conclude the truth of this proposition in some four or five Conclusions First of all Particular promises must not be expected to be peculiarized we may not expect that those promises which were made to the people of the Jewes in particular should be made good to us because they had promises to be delivered out of Babylon and Egypt at such a prefixt time it were madnesse in us to beleeve that the Church of God should be now delivered just after 70. years or 400. years and so likewise what promises were made to any particular persons amongst the Jewes as for any now to apply that promise made to Hezekiah I will adde to thy life 15. years I think we have a rule here in Land That if an inheritance be intailed by name it cannot be translated to any other these promises were entail'd by name these thou canst not nay oughtst not to apply they are not a portion by thy father design'd for thee Secondly It may possibly be that in some times thou mayest not be able to appropriate the temporall promises that God hath made to his children amongst which thou art included 1. In the darke time of want and penury to beleeve for bread to eate when I see none like to come O it is hard feeding upon Scripture leaves I shewed you this the last day 't is nothing to doe it or at least to think we doe it in times of prosperity Habakuks faith Hab. 3. 17. was an hard faith though it were a strong and precious one 2. In the dark time of desertions It is hard as I shall shew you by and by to apply those promises that are of neerest concernment to our salvation much more those which are at so remote a distance 3. In a time when melancholy dark cloudy vapours of the body cast a wist before the soules eye and will not give it leave to act clearly 4. In a time when the soule hath sinned thou mayest not fully rely and be so confident as before To peculiarize these promises I shewed you the ground of this before because though God hath promised that his Saints shall never eternally fall out of his favour yet he hath and will punish his Saints for sinne with the substraction of temporall favors as I shewed you before in the case of David and I take that to be an old Antinomian errour instead of a new truth That God doth not with temporall afflictions correctively punish his best servants for sin Lastly It doth not argue a nullity of faith and true saving faith at any time not to be able to appropriate outward temporall promises for although it is our duty to rely and depend upon all the promises yet if wee through infirmity be not able to rely upon these I conceive it doth not null the verity of our faith salvation being not the thing promised in these Thirdly For those that are conditionall promises in dark times the soule may not be able clearly and fully to apply them rest upon them and particularly apply them and yet at the same time truly dwell and rest upon them What spirituall promises are made conditionally in Scripture I have shewed you before now it may possibly be that even these though of great concernment to the soule
and rely upon his grace Ball upon Faith 82. p. and so in event saith Mr. Ball is sure of salvation and yet would give a world to be assured of Gods favour and fully perswaded that its sins are pardoned Fifthly Willets Synopsis Papismi● p. 974. 975. That it is false that the Papists say no particular assurance ought to be lookt for or may be procured it may be procured and it ought to be sought for this might easily be proved Perkins 3. vol. 220. 2. d. 1. vol. 542 2. b. 143. 1. c. 564. 1. d 543. ● d. but I shall not meddle with it it being not my work and it being a question would take up a great deale of time but I shall rather refer him that doubts of this to those learned men that have sufficiently managed this quarrell against the Papists Ball upon Faith 1. Part. ch 8. p. 79. 80. 81. Downams Warfare part 1. l. 2. c 8. p. 102. § 2. p. 103. col 1. 30. 104. § 6. c. 9. p. 106. part 1. l. 2. c. 11. p. 118. cap. 13. p. 127. § 1. cap. 14. c. 11. and many others who have largely discussed this point Rutherfords Christs dying for sinners v. codicem and maintained this truth Sixthly and Lastly It is as false that the Antinomians and Libertines hold that without this well-grounded full perswasion there is no faith in the Soule this a learned Writer of our owne in severall parts of his book hath made out against them Thou mayest have true saving faith though for the present thou canst not be fully perswaded that thy sins are pardoned yea though thou mayest think that they are not pardonable through some accidentall temptation over-powring thee or some corruptions hindring the actings of Faith yet thou mayest be perswaded that they are pardonable and at that time it will appear to all the world that thou art perswaded they shall be pardoned to thy soule by thy fearing to offend God and thy carefulnesse to please him by thy crying fasting weeping lying at the feet of divine grace and resolving if thou perishest to perish at the gate of heaven and meet with hell there if thou meetest with it anywhere Nay be not mistaken this thy Faith is 1 certaine and 2 strong as well as saving First It is saving That I have already shewed you when I fully shewed you that the essence and pith of justifying Faith was a fiduciall rolling our selves and hanging upon the Lord Iesus Christ for pardon Now as it is saving Secondly so it is strong That Faith saith a precious Authour is argued to be strong that hath no light of comfort but walkes in darkenesse upon the margin and borders of an hundred deaths Davids Faith was a strong Faith when though all Gods waves were upon him yet he called upon God daily Psa 88. 7 8 9. when the soule is so far from being perswaded that it is a lovely one in the Lords eyes that it conceives it self a damned wretch in the Lords sight and onely sees a sparkling light in at a crevis of the window and by a little pinhole a beam of hope comes in and it thinks well my sinnes are yet pardonable yet I dare not say there is no hope yet I know not what to think my sins are great Gaole-sinns I am perswaded if my name be in the Charter of grace it is in the bottom and it is sometimes ready to think that the little glimmering of light it sees is rather the counterfeiting light of a Glow-worm then the triumphing light of the Sun yet the soule is ravished with that particle of light and goes and kisseth the hole that gives it a passage and sayes well here 's all my comfort my sinnes are yet pardonable I see the ship of my soule is wrackt possibly this bit of board may save my life I will on to it if I perish I perish I will not lose this pin-hole light I will cry fast weep and pray Lord say my sinnes are pardoned I am perswaded thou canst pardon them and if thou wilt thou canst make me clean Lord here will I lie filthy bloody full of sores at the Poole of Bethesda I will not stirre a step from the Poole I will lie in the way till thou hast cured mee I say this doth argue a strong faith the perswaded assured soule hath cables of comfort who would fear the breaking of them God doth not rap his fingers so often as this poor soule This Believer hath but a twine thred to hang upon yet he catcheth hold and sayes this straw shall bear my souls weight yea God raps off his fingers often his life is full of doubts and feares yet he holds and will not stirre a step doth it not argue a great a reliance The woman of Canaan had no assurance of Christs favour Matth. 15. 21. she cryed he answered her not a word v. 23. nay when she made friends to him he would neither heare her nor her friends mediation though they were Christs own Disciples still she comes and worshippeth him he chides her this yet argued no assurance she replyes he sayes Great is thy Faith v. 28. Mr Ru●therford noteth sweetly upon that that the fewer Externals that faith needeth the stronger it is within little evidence much adherence speaketh a strong faith Now though that perswasion be an inward work yet the grounds are externals for the strength or weaknesse of perswasion is moved by the compasse of sence the lesser my grounds are if my adherence be the same the stronger is my faith if I will trust my friends little finger as much as his whole hand doth it not the more argue my confidence in his strength my reliance upon him that he will do what he can to hold me Oh! it is a sweet thing to see a soul hang upon Christs little finger that only apprehendeth a generall promise is perswaded that its sins are pardonable sometimes doubts of this too yet it cryes and hangs and weeps and relies scorns to lay its little finger upon any thing else any self sufficiency any creature-righteousnesse to bear it up it argues a strong faith O soul be not deceived Great is thy faith nay and such a faith may be certain too thou mayest live at uncertainties upon a certain faith The bruised reed is not broken the smoaking flax is not quenched thy faith is doubly certain though thy life of faith be full of incertainties 1. It is certaine in respect of the Object 2. It is certaine in respect of the Event 1. In respect of the Object A weak faith doth not argue weaknesse in Free grace or weak efficacy in the blood of a pretious Jesus the pur-blinde eye doth as certainly see the Sunne as he whose eyes are best the weak pur-blind-eyed soule doth certainly see apprehend and rely upon Christ though not so clearly and comfortably 2 Thy faith is certain in respect of the Event Even
overjoyed and know not how to believe this glorious word I trust God will be as good as his word but yet to make sure Oh that Ishmael might live before thee This I conceive wee may see is intimated partly by comparing the words with the former God had just then promised him a Sonne by Sarah vers 16. and upon it he uttereth this speech secondly by comparing the words with those that immediatly follow as Gods reply upon that desire of Abraham v. 18. And God said Sarah thy wife shall beare thee a sonne indeed and thou shalt call his name Isaac As if God should have said Art thou disputing Abraham Indeed my words shall come to passe I am not in jest with thee nay more to confirme thee thou shalt call his name Isaac God addeth two things in his reply to confirm Abrahams faith 1. The word indeed 2. He particularizeth his Sonne by name which he should have So that it is plain he doubted yet saith the Apostle he staggered not through unbeliefe unbelief was not the predominant principle for he did believe it but infirmity was the principle from whence his doubting flowed Let us a little consider the words of the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. and they will fully open this particular Rom. 4. 20. He staggered not at the promise of God through unbeliefe but was strong in faith giving glory to God 1. He staggered not at the promise did not quarrell at the truth of Gods word that he believed was true and faithfull his doubt was from himself he was a hundred years old and his wife ninty indeed it is said v. 19. That he did not consider his own body now dead I conceive it is to be understood in fine he did not so consider it as to let it conquer his faith in the promise 2. He staggered not at the promise through unbeliefe That was not the principle a totall unbeliefe it was weaknesse for the present not unbeliefe Thirdly it was not such a donbting but hee gave glory to God in resting upon his word as a true and faithfull word and waiting upon him for the accomplishment Possibly there may be some thing in that distinction which some of the Schoole-men make betwixt disceptatio and dubitatio to our purpose Abraham did a little too much dispute with his sense upon this and said to his flesh a little too loud How can these things be otherwise he would never have gone in unto Hagar his maid his sense of weakenesse said what shall I thinke shall this come to passe it is out of the course of nature but he did not doubt of unbelief I conceive doubting doth argue a more settlednesse of thought in the negative then a meer disputing doth when a man is almost confident of a thing yet hath some scruples against it I might further add that the word in the verse translated unbeliefe is by Criticks noted to signifie rather a perfidiousnesse and rebelling against and falling away from God then a bare not believing of his promises fully for the present and therefore the Schole-men make a great distinction betwixt incredulity and infidelity Abraham was for the present incredulus but not infidelis he did not doubt with such a doubting as is the doubting of an Infidell that beleeved not the word of God but was for the present incredulous in respect of his ●nfirmity now on the contrary the Reprobates doubting proceedes meerely from a root of unbeliefe he beleeves not that the God that hath promised is faithfull and just to performe but secretly denieth God in his heart and doth not indeed so much disceptare or dubitare as apertè negare not so much dispute or doubt as openly and plainly deny Gods truth in his word Now examine thy doubtings by this marke from whence are they do they arise from unbeleef or from infirmity as for example suppose that promise Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will ease you concerning this thou doubtest now whether this promise belongs to thy soule or may be applied by thy particular soule yea or no and thou thinkest he that doubts this is damned But peace Christian whence springs this thinkest thou The promise is this in substance that Christ will ease those weary and heavy-laden soules that come unto him doest thou not now beleeve this yes but thou doest not beleeve the promise doth belong to thee and why Oh! thou art not weary and heavy-laden thou art not in this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that doubts about the Promise of God but one that disputes his owne basenesse and in regard of that doest not so fully beleeve Thou wilt say Ah! I know that that word is a word of truth whose matter is truth and whose Author is truth but I doubt whether the truth of that word doth belong to me and this is the truth of thy heart which doth not doubt of the truth of the promise to those to whom it doth belong but of thy interest in it I say this doubting may be in the dearest Saint of God the unbeleever he doubts the truth of the promise he will not plainly say so with his mouth but in his heart he altogether denies God and denies his word So that thou ●eest here is a great difference betwixt the one and the other in respect of the Principle from which the doubtings of each spring Secondly there is a great difference betwixt their doubtings in respect of the occasion upon which they spring in eithers soule The occasion in the Saints of God may be various 1. Sathans temptations Sathan is alwayes desiring to winnow us like wheate if ●e hath the fanning of us it is no wonder if our hearts be shaken with doubting hence often what the child of God hath firmely and sted fastly believed a great while al upon the suddain he doubts such a sudden doubting now contrary directly to the former temper of our mind is most like to be a temptation of Sathan when it is I say sudden and contrary to a firme Faith precedent and subsequent 2. When thou doubtest only in respect of thy selfe that Sathan cannot prevaile with thee so much as to have a dishonourable thought of God or Iesus Christ or the promises of the Gospel Sometimes the occasion of thy doubtings is thy present sense of thy unworthinesse either thou hast been a great sinner or since repentance thou hast been a backslider or thou findest a continued dulnes and deadnesse and indisposition of spirit Sometimes again the occasion of thy doubting may be a divine desertion God hath left thee in the dark and now thou criest where is my God become sometimes the occasion again of thy doubting may bee a totall absence of sence when God takes away sense altogether and oppresseth thee with a present danger This was Peters case Matth. 14. 28. he was sinking overwhelmed with a present danger These are now the occasions with