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A53688 The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some degressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject / by John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1654 (1654) Wing O740; ESTC R21647 722,229 498

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only this but all other Promises uttered by Christ to his Apostles as we had thought not for their own behoofe alone but also for the use of the Church in all ages are tyed up in their tendency and use to the men of that Generation and to the employment to which they to whom he spoke were designed But let us see whether these things are so or no. I say 2. There is not any necessary cause of that disjunctive proposition The Promise of the perpetuall residence of the Spirit is made either to the Apostles personally or to the whole body of the Church By the Rule formerly given for the Interpretation of these Promises of Christ it appears that what in this kind was made to the one was also given to the other and how Mr Goodwin will inforce any necessary conclusion from this distinction framed by himselfe for his own purpose I know not The Promise was made both to these and those the Apostles and all other Believers because to the Apostles as Believers 3. The making of the Promise to the Apostles personally doth not argue that it was made to them as Apostles but only that it was made to their Persons or to them though under another qualification viz. of Believing 'T is given to them personally as Believers and so to all Believers whatever This also sets at liberty and plainly cashiers the comparison instituted between the Apostles Infallibility as Apostles and their sanctifying grace as Believers by the Spirit of Grace given for that end The Apostles Infallibility we confesse was from the Spirit for they as other Holy men of old wrote as they were moved by the Spirit of God 2 Pet. 1. 21. but that this was a distinct guift bestowed on them as Apostles and not the teaching of the Spirit of Grace which is given to all Believers 1 Ioh. 2. 22. we need not contend to prove Besides to what end doth he contend that it was made to the Apostles in the sence urged and by us insisted on seeing he denies it in the close of this Section and chooseth rather to venture upon an opposition unto that common received perswasion that the Apostles of Christ the sonne of perdition only excepted had an absolute promise of Perseverance then to acknowledge that which would prove so prejudiciall and ruinous to his cause as he knowes the confession of such a Promise made to them would inevitably be He contends not I say about the sence of the Promise but would faine divert it from other Believers at the entrance of the Section by limiting it to the Apostles but considering afterward better of the matter and remembring that the concession of an absolute Promise of Perseverance to any one Saint whatever would evidently root up and cast to the ground the goodliest engine that he hath set up against the Truth he opposeth he suits it in the close of the Section to an evasion holding better Correspondency with its associates in this undertaking 4. I wonder what Chimericall Church he hath found out to which Promises are made and Priviledges granted otherwise then upon the account of the Persons whereof'tis constituted suppose I pray that Promises of the Residence of the Spirit for ever with it be made to the Church which is made up of so many members and that all these members every one should loose their interest in it what subject of that Promise would remaine What Vniversall is this that hath a reall existence of it selfe and by it selfe in abstraction from its particulars in which alone it hath its being Or what whole is that which is preserved in the destruction and dissolution of all its essentially constituent parts The Promises then that are made to the Church are of two sorts 1. Of such Grace and Mercies as whether inherent or relative have their residence in and respect unto particular persons as such of this sort are all the Promises of the Grace of Sanctification as also of Justification c. which are all things of mens personall spirituall interest The Promises made to the Church of this nature are made unto it meerely as consisting of so many and those Elected Redeemed persons whose right and interest as those individuall persons they are 2. Of all such good things as are the exurgency of the collected state of the Saints in reference to their spirituall invisible Communion or visible gathering into a Church constituted according to the mind of Christ and his Appointment in the Gospell and these also are all of them founded in the former and depend wholly upon them and are resolved into them All Promises then whatever made to the Church the Body of Christ doe not respect it primarily as a Corporation which is the second notion of it but as consisting of those particular Believers much lesse as a Chimericall universall having a subsistence in and by it selfe abstracted from its particulars This evasion then not withstanding this Promise of our Saviour doth still continue to presse its Testimony concerning the perpetuall residence of this Holy Spirit with Believers The scope of the place inforces that exception of these words §. 28. which we insist upon Our Blessed Saviour observing the trouble and disconsolation of his followers upon the apprehension of his departure from them stirres them up to a better hope and confidence by many Gracious Promises and ingagements of what would and should be the Issue of his being taken away v. 1. He bids them to free their hearts from trouble and in the next words tells them that the way whereby it was to be done was by acting Faith on the Promises of his Father and those which in his Fathers name he had made and was to make unto them Of these he mentions many in the following verses whereof the Fountaine Head and Spring is that of giving them the Comforter not to abide with them for a season as he had done with his bodily presence but to continue with them as a Comforter and consequently to the discharging of his whole dispensation towards Believers for ever He speakes to them as Believers as disconsolate dejected Believrs quickning their Faith by Exhortations and gives them this Promise as a solid Foundation of peace and composednesse of Sprit which he exhorted them unto And if our Saviour intendeth any thing but what the words import viz. that he will give his Holy Spirit as a Comforter to abide with them for ever the Promise hath not the least sutablenesse to relieve them in their distresse nor to accomplish the end for which it was given them But against this it is excepted Cap. 11. Sect. 13. Pag. 233 1. Evident it is that our Saviour doth not in this place oppose the abiding or remaining of the Holy Ghost to his owne departure from the hearts or soules of men into which he is framed or come but to his departure out of the world by death which was now at hand Ans. 1. This
these persons and their Judgment in the point under debate more afterwards For the thing it selfe last proposed on what foot of account it is placed and on what foundation asserted The Treatise it selfe will discover That the thing aymed at is not to be straightned or restrained to any one peculiar Act of grace will easily appear The main foundation of that which we plead for is The Eternal purpose of God which his owne nature requireth to be absolutely immutable and irreversible The Eternal Act of the will of God designing some to salvation by Christ infallibly to be obtained for the Prayse of the glory of hu grace is The Bottome of the whole Even that foundation which standeth for ever having this seale The Lord knoweth who are his For the Accomplishment of this eternal purpose and for the procurement of all the good things that lye within the compass of it 's in tendment are The Oblation and Intercession the whole mediatory undertaking of Chist taking away sinne bringing in Life and immortality interposed giving further causal influence into the truth contended for In him and for his sake as God graciously powerfully and freely gives his Holy Spirt faith with all the things that accompany salvation unto all them whom he accepts and pardons by his being made sinne ●or them and Righteousness unto them so he takes them therby into an everlasting Covenant that shall not be broken and hath therein given them innumerable promises that he will continue to be their God for ever and preserve them to be and in b●ing his people to this end because the principle of Grace and living to him as in them inherent is a thing in i'ts own nature changable and lyable to failing he doth according to his promise and for the Acccomplishment of his purpose dayly make out to them by his Holy Spirit from the great treasury and store-house thereof the Lord Jesus Christ helps and supplies encreasing of faith Love and Holiness recovering them from falls healing their back-slidings strengthening them with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long suffering with joyfulness so preserving them by his power through faith unto salvation And in this way of delivering the doctrine contended about it is clearly made out that the disputes mentioned are as needless as groundless so that we shall not need to take them into the state of the controversy in hand though I shall have occasion once more to reflect upon them when I come to the consideration of the doctrine of the School-men in reference to the opinion proposed to debate The mayne of our enquiry is after the Purpose Covenant and promises of God the undertaking of Christ the supplies of Grace promised and bestowed in him on which accounts we doe assert and maintaine That all true Believers who are in being so interested in all those causes of preservation shall infallibly be preserved unto the end in the favour of God and such a course of Gospel obedience as he will accept in Jesus Christ. That as was formerly sayd which at present I ayme at in Reference to this Truth is to declare it's Rise and Progress it 's course and opposition which it hath found in several Ages of the Church with it's state and condition at this day in respect of Acceptance with the people of God It 's rise with all other divine truths it owes only to Revelation from God manifested in the Scriptures of the Old and new Testament some of the most eminent places wherein it is delivered in the old Testament are Gen 3. 17. chap 17. 1. Deut 33. 3. Josh 1. 5. 1 Saw 12. 22. Psal 1. 3. Psal 23. 4 6. Psal 37. 39 40. Psal 52. 8 9. Psal 89. 31 32 33 34 35. Psal 33. 9 10 11. Psal 92. 13. c. Is 27. 3 4. Is 46. 4. Is 59. 21. Is 54 9. 10. Is 4. 4 5. Is 40. 27 28 26 30. Is 43. 1 2. 3 4 5 6 7 8. Jer 3 3 31 32 33 34. Jer 32. 38 39. 40. Ezek 36. 25 26 27. Hosea 2. 19 20. Zach 10. 12. Mal 3. 6 with innumerable other places In the new Testament God hath not left this truth and work of his Grace without witness as in sundry other places so it is testified unto Math 6. 13. Mat 7. 24 25 Mat. 12. 20. Mat 16. 18. Mat 24. 24. Luk 1. 70 71 72 73 74 75. Luk 8. 5 8. Luk 22. 32. Joh 3. 36. Joh. 4. 13 14 16. Joh. 5. 24. Joh 6. 35 36 37 38 39 57. Joh 7. 38. Joh 8. 35 Joh 10. 27 28 29 30. Joh 13. 1. Joh 14 15 16 17. Joh 16. 27 Joh 17. throughout Act 2. 47. Act 13 48. Ro 6. 14. Rom 8. 1 16 17 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 c. 1 Cor 1. 8 9. 1 Cor 10. 13 14. 1 Cor 15. 49 58. 2 Cor 1. 21. Eph 1. 13 14. Eph. 3. 17. Eph 4 30. Eph. 5. 23. Gal 2. 20 Phil 1. 6. Phil 2. 13. 1 Thes 5 24. 2 Tim 4. 17 18. Tit 1.1 Heb 6. 19. Heb 10. 38 39. Heb 12. Heb 9. 14. Heb 13. 5 21. 1 Pet. 1. 2 3 4 5. 1 Joh. 2. 19 24. 1 Joh 3. 9,19 1 Joh. 5. 14 18. Jude 1 Rev 20. 6. So plentifully hath the Lord secured this sacred Truth wherein he hath enwrapped so much if not as in the meanes of conveyance the whole of that peace consolation and Joy which he is willing the heires of promise should receive Whether the faith hereof thus plentifully delivered to the Saints found Acceptance with the primitive Christians to the most of whom it was given not only to believe but also to suffer for Christ to me is unquestionable And I know no better proof of what those first Churches did believe than by shewing what they ought to believe which I shall unquestionably be perswaded they did believe unless most pregnant Testimony be given of their Apostacy That Paul believed it for himselfe and concerning others is evident Ro. 8. 38 39. 1 Cor. 1. 8 9. Phil 1. 6. Heb. 6. 9 10 are sufficient proof of his faith herein That he built up others in the same perswasion to the enjoyment of the same peace and Assurance with himselfe is undenyable And if there be any demonstration to be made of the beliefe of the first Christians of any evidence comparable unto this I shall not deny but that it ought to be attended unto But that we may not seem willing to decline the Consideration of what those who went before us in the several Ages and Generations past apprehended and have by any means communicated unto us of their thoughts about the businesse of our contest having no reason so to be I shall after a little preparation made to that work present the Reader with something of my Observations to that end and purpose Of the Authority of the Ancients in matters of Religion and worship of God of the Right use and
hanc haeresin Tychoni● quae nostro tempore exorta multum nos ut gratiam dei quâ per dominum nostrum Jesum Christum est adversus eam defenderemus exercuit secundum id quod ait Apostolus oportet haereses esse ut probati manifesti fiunt in nobis multò vigilantiores diligentioresque reddidit ut adverteremus in Scripturis Sanctis quod istum Tychonium minus attentum minusque sine hoste solicitum fugit That also of Hierome in his second Apologie against Ruffinus in reference to a most weighty Article of Christian Religion is known to all fieri potest saith he ut vel simpliciter erraverint vel alio sensu scripserint vel à librariis imperitis corum paulatim scripta corrupta sint vel certe antequam in Alexandria quasi Daemonium meridianum Arius nasceretur innocenter quaedam minus ●ante locuti surt quae non possunt perversorum hominum calumniam declinare And what he spake of the writers before Arius in reference to the person of Christ we may of them before Pelagius in refernce to his Grace Hence Pererius in Rom. c. 8. disput 22 tells us how truly ipse viderit I am not altogether of his mind that for those Authours that lived befofe Austin's time that all the Greek Fathers and a considerable part of the Latine were of opinion that the cause of Predestination was the foresight which God had either of man's good works or of their faith either of which opinions he assures us is manifestly contrary both to the Authority of the Scriptures and particularly to the doctrine of Saint Paul I am not as I said wholy of his mind partly upon the account of the observations made by his fellow Jesuite out of Austin before mentioned partly upon other accounts also Upon these and the like Considerations much I presume to the buisness in hand will not be produced on either side from the Fathers that wrote before the Rise of the Pelagian Heresy And if any one of the parties at this day litigant about the Doctrines of the Grace of God should give that advise that Sisinniuss and Agellius the Novatians somtimes gave as Zozomen reports of them Hist. Eccles lib. 7. cap. 12 to Nectarius by him communicated to the Emperor Theodosius to have the quarrel decided by those that wrote before the Rise of the Controversy as it would be unreasonable in it selfe so I perswade my selfe neither party would accept of the conditions neither had the Catholicks of those dayes got any thing if they had attended to the advise of those Novatians But these few observations premised something as to particular Testimonies may be attended unto That we may proceed in some order not leaving those we have nothing to say to nor are willing to examine whilest they are but thin and come not in troopes unsaluted The first writings that are imposed on us after the Comical Scriptures are the eight books of Clement commonly called the Apostles constitutions being pretended to be written by him at their appointment with the Canons ascribed to the same persons These we shall but salute for besides that they are faintly defended by any of the Papists disavowed and disclaimed as Apocryphal by the most learned of them as Bellarmine de script Eccles. in Clem who approves only of 50. Canons of 85 Baronius An. D●m 102. 14 who addes 30 more and Binius with a little inlargement of Canons in Tit. Can. T. 1. Con. pi 17 and have been throughly disproved and decryed by all Protestant writers that have had any occasion to deale with them their folly and falsity their impostures and triflings have of late been so fully manifested by Dallaeus de pseudepigrapis Apostol that nothing need be added thereunto Of him may Doctor H. H. learne the Truth of that Insinuation of his dissert de Episcop dis 2da cap 6. Sect. 3. Canone Apostolico secundo semper inter genuinos habito but of the confidence of this Author in his Assertions afterwards This indeed insisted on by Daellaus and the Learned Usher in his notes upon Ignatius is childishly ridiculous in them that whereas it is pretended that these constitutions were made at a convention of the Apostles as l. 6. c. 14 they are brought in discoursing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. They they are made to informe ns lib. 2. cap. 57. That the Acts written by Luke and read in the Churches are theirs and the foure books of the Gospel Whereas the story of the death of James here said to be together with the Apostles is related Act. 12 and John by the consent of all wrote not his Gospel untill after the dissoluton of his Associates Also they make Stephen and Paul to be together at the makeing of those constitutions Const lib. 8. cap. 4. whereas the Martyrdome of Stephen was before the convesiron of Paul and yet also mentions the stoning of Stephen lib. 8.46 They tell us whom they apointed Bishops of Hiesalem after the death of James and yet James is one of them who is met together with them l. 7. c. 48 nay mention is made of Cerinthus and that Marke the heritick Menander Basilides and Saturnilus were known and taken notice of by the Apostles who all lived in the second Century abought the Raigne of Hadrian as Eusebius manifesteth and Clem. Alex. Strom. lib. 7. But to leave such huskes as these unto them who loath Manna and will not feed on the bread that our heavenly Father hath so plentifully provided for all that live in his family or any way belong to his house let us look onward to them that follow of whose Truth and Honesty we have more assurance The first Genuine piece that presents it selfe unto us on the Roll of Antiquity is that Epistle of Clemen's which in the name of the Church of Rome he wrote to the divided Church of Corinth which being abundantly testified to of old to the great contentment of the christian world was published here at Oxford some few yeares since A writing full of antient simplicity humility Zeal As to our present business much I confesse cannot be pleaded from hence beyond a negative impeachment of that great and false clamour which our Adversarie have raised of the consent of the primitive Christians with them in their by paths and and waies of errour It is true treating of a Subject diverse from any of those heads of Religion about which our contests are it is not to be expected that he should any where plainly directly evidenty deliver his judgment unto them This therfore I shall only say that in that whole Epistle there is not one word iota or sillable that gives countenance to the tenent of our adversaries in the matter of the Saints perseverance but that on the contrary there are sundry expressions asserting such a foundation of the Doctrine we maintain as will with good strength inferre the Truth of it Pag. 4. Setting
this Subject of Perseverance In the entrance of his disputation he layes down the same Principles with the Former concerning the necessity of the Peculiar Grace of Perseverance to this end that any one may persevere Disput 103. Then Disp 108 He further manifests that this gift or Grace of Perseverance does not depend on any Conditions in us or any Cooperation of our wills His position he layes down in these words Donum perseverantiae in ratione Doni perseverantiae efficacia illius nullo modo dependet effectivè ex libera Cooperatione nostri Arbitrii sed à solo Deo atque ab efficaci absoluto Decreto Voluntatis ejus qui pro suâ misericordiâ tribuit illud Donum cui vult In the further proof of this proposition he manifests by clear Testimonies that the Contrary Doctrine hereunto was that of the Pelagians and Semi-pelagians which Austine opposed in sundry Treatises And in all the Arguments whereby he further confirmes it he still presses the absurdity of making the Promise of God concerning Perseverance Conditional and so suspending it on any thing in and by us to be performed And indeed all the Acts whereby we persevere flowing according to him from the Grace of perseverance it cannot but be absurd to make the Efficient Cause in it's Efficiency and operation to depend upon it's own effect This also is with him Ridiculous that the Grace of perseverance should be given to any and he not persevere or be promised and yet not given yet withal he grants in his following Conclusions that our wills secundarily and in dependency do cooperate in our Perseverance The second Principle this learned School-man insists on is that this gift of perseverance is peculiar to the Elect or praedestinate Disput 104. 1. Con Donum perseverantiae est proprium Praedstinaterum ut nulli alteri conveniat And what he intends by Praedestinati he informes you according to the Judgment of Austin and Thomas Nomine praedestinationis ad Gloriam felùm 〈◊〉 praedestinationem intelligunt Augustinus Thomas quâ Electi ordinantur efficaciter transmittuntur ad vitam aeternam cujus effectus sunt vocatio Justificatio perseverantia in gratiâ usque ad Finem not that or such a Conditional predestination as is pendent in the ayre and expectant of men's good final Deportment but that which is the eternal free fountaine of all that grace whereof in time by Jesus Christ we are made Partakers And in the pursuit of this proposition he further proves at large that the persverance given to the Saints in Christ is not a supplement of Helps and advantages whereby they may preserve it if they will but such as causes them on whom it is bestowed certainly actually so to do and that in it's efficacy and operation it cannot depend on any free cooperation of our wills all the Good Acts tending to our perseverance being fruits of that Grace which is bestowed on us according to the absolute unchangeable Decree of the will of God This indeed is common with this Authour and the Rest of his associates the Dominicans and pres●●● Jansenians in these controversies together with the residue of the Romanists that having their Judgments wrested by the abominable figments of implicite Faith and the efficacy of the Sacraments of the new Testament conveying really exhibiting the grace signified or sealed by them that they are inforced to grant that many may be are Regenerate made True Believers who are not predestinate that these cannot persevere nor shall eventually be saved Certaine it is that there is not any Truth which that Generation of men do receive admit but more or less it suffers in their Hands from that gross ignorance of the free Grace of God in Jesus Crhist the power whereof they are practically under what the poor Vassailes and Slaves will do upon the late Bull of their Holy Father casting them in sundry maine Concernements of their Quarrel with their Adversaries is uncertaine otherwise setting aside some such deviations as the above mentioned whereunto they are enforced by their Ignorance of the Grace and Justification with is in Jesus Christ there is so much of Antient Candid Truth in opposition to the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians preserved and asserted in the writings of the Dominican Fryers as will rise up as I sayd before in Judgment against those of our Dayes who enjoying greater Light Advantages do yet close in with those and are long since Cursed Enemies of the grace of God To this Dominican I shall only adde the Testimony of two famous Jesuites upon whose understandings the light of this glorious Truth prevailed for an Acknowledgment of it The first of these is Bellarmine whose disputes to this purpose being full and large and the Authour in allmens hands I shall not transcribe his assertions arguments but only referre the Reader to his l. 2. de Grat. l. Ar. Cap. 12. Denique ut multa alia Testimonia c The other is Suarez who delivers his thoughts succinctly upon the whole of this Matter Lib. 11. de perpetuitat vel Amis Grat Cap. 2. Sect. 6. saith he de praedestinatis verum est Infallibiliter quòd gratiam finaliter seu in perpetuum non amittunt unde postquam semel gratiam habuerant ita reguntur proteguntur à Deo ut vel non cadant vel si ceciderint resurgant licèt saepius cadant resurgant tandem aliquando ita resurgunt ut amplius non cadant in which few words he hath briefly comprized the summe of that which is by us contended for It was in my Thoughts in the last place to have added the concurrent witness of all the reformed Churches which that of the most eminent Divines which have written in the defence of their Concessions but this Trouble upon second considerations I shall spare the Reader my selfe for as many other reasons lye against the Prosecuting of this Designe so especially the uselesness of spending-Time and paines for the demonstration of a thing of so evident a truth prevailes with me to desist Notwithstanding the Indeavours of Mr. Goodwin to wrest the words of some of the most antient Writers who laboured in the first Reformation of the Churches I presume no unprejudiced Person in the least measure acquainted with the systeme of that Doctrine which with so much paines diligence piety and Learning they promoted in the world with the clearness of their Judgments in going forth to the utmost compass of their Principles which they received and their constancy to themselves in asserting of the Truthes they embraced owned by their Friends and Adversaries until such time as Mr. Goodwin discovered their selfe Contradictions will scarce be moved once to question their Judgments by the Excerpta of Mr. Goodwin Cap 15 of his Treatise so that of this discourse this is the Issue There remaines only that I give a brief account of some concernments of the
offence and scandall Indeed ever since the Reformation there have been some indeavours against this truth to corrode it and corrupt it The first serious attempt for the totall intercision of the faith of true believers though not a final excision of the faith of elect belie●ers was made by one in the other University who being a man of a debauched vicious conversation no small part of the growing evils of the daies wherein he lived did yet cry out against the doctrines of others as tending to loosnesse and profanenesse upon whose breasts teachings was written Holinesse to the Lord all their daies ' Afterwards Armin. Antiperk Arminius with his Quinquarticulan Followers Rem Coll. takeing up the matter though they laboured with all their might to answer sundry of the Arguments whereby the truth of this doctrine is demonstrated Hag. Artic. 5. yet for a season were very faint and dubious in their own assertions not daring to breake in at once upon so great a Treasure of the Church of God * Nos cùm mentem nostram super hoc argumento categoricè dogmaticè in alteram par●em definivimus nullo jure levitatis insimulari posse propterea quod novem ab hinc annis eam non ita disertè rotundè enunciaverimus sed solummodo disquirentium adhuc in morem professi simus Declar. sent Rem circa 5. Artic. and therefore in their Synodalia are forced to Apologise for their Haesitation nine years before in their Conference at the Hague But now of late since the glorious light of Socinianisme hath broken forth from the pit men by their new succours are † Socin Praelect Theol. cap. 6. art 7. c. grown bold to defie this great truth of the Gospell and grace of the Covenant as an abomination for ever to be abhorred Audax omnia perpeti Gens humana ruit per vetitum nefas In particular § 12. the late studious indeavours of a Learned man in his Treatise Intituled Redemption Redeemed for to dispoyle the spouse of Christ of this most Glorious pearl where with her beloved hath adorned her cals for a particular Consideration And this discharging a regard unto any other motives upon cheifly this accompt that he hath with great paines and travell gathered together what ever hath been formerly given out and dispersed by the most considerable Adversaries of this Truth especially not omitting any thing of moment in the Synodall defence of the fifth Article with an exact translation of the dramaticall Prosopopoeias with whatsoever looks towards his designe in hand from their fourth attempt about the manner of conversion giving it a new not only an elegant dresse and varnish of Rhetoricall expressions but moreover reinforcing the declining cause of his Pelagian Friends with not to be despised supplyes of appearing Reason Col. 2. 4. and hidden Sophistry So that though I shall handle this doctrine in my owne Method with the reason whereof I shall instantly acquaint the Reader not follow that Author 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet handling not only the main of the Doctrine it selfe but all the concernments and consequences of it in the severall branches of the Method intended I hope not to leave any thing considerable in that whole Treatise as to the Truth in hand Undiscussed no Argument Unvindicated no Objection Unanswered no Consequence Unweighed with a speciall eye to the Comparison instituted betweene the Doctrines in contest as to their direct and causall influence into the obedience and Consolation of the Saints That we may know then what we speake and whereof we doe affirme § 13. I shall breifly State the Doctrine under consideration that the difference about it may appeare Indeed it seemes strange to me among other things that he of whom mention was lastly made who hath liberally dispended so great a Treasure of Paines Reading and Eloquence for the subverting of the Truth whose explanation and defence we have undertaken did not yet once attempt fairely to fixe the State of the difference about it but in a very tumultuary manner fell in with prejudices swelling over all bounds and limits of ordinary reasoning Chap. 9. Rhetoricall amplifications upon a doctrine not attempted to be brought forth and explayned that it might be weighed in the Ballance as in it selfe it is Whereas there may be many Reasons of such a proceeding it may well be questioned whether any of them be candid commendable Certainly the advantages thence taken for the improveing of many Sophisticall Reasons and pretended Arguments are obvious to every one that shall but peruse his ensuing discourse Although the Substance of this Doctrine hath been by sundry delivered § 14. yet least the termes wherein it is usually done may seeme to be somewhat too Generall and some advantages of the Truth which in it selfe it hath to have been omitted I shall breifely state the whole matter under those Termes wherein it is usually received The title of it is § 15. the PERSEVERANCE OF SAINTS A short discovery of whom we meane by Saints the Subject whereof we speake and what by Perseverance which is Affirmed of them will state the whole for the Judgement of the Reader God only is essentially holy and on that account Isa. 6. 3. losh 24. 19. the only holy One. In his Holynesse as in his Beeing and all his Glorious Attributes Revel 15. 4. there is an actuall permanency or samenesse Heb. 1. 10 11 12. Nothing in him is subject to the least shaddow of change Exod. 3. 14. not his Truth not his Faithfullnesse Deut. 32. 4. Isa. 40. 38. not his Holinesse all principles causes and reasons of alteration stand at no lesse infinite distance from him Ch. 41. 4. then not being Ch. 43. 10. His Properties are the same with himselfe and are spoken of one another Ch. 44. 6. Ch. 48. 12. as well as of his nature His Eternall Power is mentioned by the Apostle Rom. 1. Reve. 1. 4 17. So is his Holinesse Eternall Immutable Of this we may have use afterwards Mal. 3. 6. Iam. 1. 18. for the present I treat not of it The Holinesse of all Creatures is Accidentall and Created 1 Sam. 15. 29. to some it is innate or Originall as to the Angels the first man Gen. 1. 26. our Saviour Christ as to his humane nature of whom we treat not Math. 19. 17. Adam had originall holinesse and lost it so had many Angells who kept not their first habitation It is hence argued by Mr Goodwin Eccles. 7. 29. that Spirituall gifts of God being bestowed Heb. 7. 25. Ezek. 36. 26 27 28. may be taken away nowithstanding the seeming contrary engagement of Rom. 11. 29. From what proportion or Analogy this Argument doth flow Isa. 4. 3 4. Rom. 6. 4 5. 6 is not intimated The grace Adam was endowed with was intrusted with himselfe Ephes. 4. 22 23 24
whole Booke of God 2. That it is a case surmised by him suitable to his owne Hypotheses neither true in its selfe nor any way Analogous to that wherewith 't is yoked being indeed a new way and tone of begging the thing in question For instance It supposeth without the least Attempt of proofe 1. Conditionall Decrees or a disjunctive intendment of Events in God it shall come to passe or otherwise 2. A middle science conditionall as the foundation of those disjunctive Decrees with 3. A futurition of things Antecedent to any determining Act of the Will of God and 4. A possibility of frustrating as to Event the Designes and purposes of God and 5. That all medium's of the Accoplishment of any thing are conditions of Gods intentions as to the end he aymes at 6. That God appoints a series of mediums for the compassing of an End and designes them thereunto without any determinate Resolution to bring about that End 7. That the Acts of Gods Grace in their Concatenation mentioned in this place of Rom. 8. are severally Conditionall because he hath invented or faigned some Decrees of God which he sayes are so All which with the inferences from them Mr Goodwin knowes will not advance his Reasonings at all as to our Understandings being fully perswaded that they are all Abominations of no lesse base alloy then the Errour it selfe in whose defence and Patronage they are produced To our Argument then before mentioned §. 35. prooving an equall indissolveablenesse in all the linkes of the Chaine of Divine Graces drawne forth and insisted on from the equall dependance of the designe Purpose of God on the mutuall dependance of each of them on the other for the fullfillng of that Purpose of his and obtaining the End which he professes himselfe to intend this is the summe of Mr Goodwins Answer If I can invent a series of Decrees and a Concatenation of Divine Acts though indeed there be no such thing neither can I give any colour to it without laying downe and taking for granted many false and absurd supposalls and though it be not of the same nature with that here proposed by the Apostle nor any where held out in the Scripture for any such End Purpose as this is neither can I assigne any absolute determinate end in this Series of mine whose Accomplshment God ingages himselfe to bring about as the Case stands in the place of Scripture under Consideration then it is meet and equitable that laying aside all inforcements from the Text Context Nature of God the thing treated on all compelling us to close with another sence and Interpretation that we regulate the minde of the Holy Ghost herein to the Rule proportion and Analogie of the case as formerly proposed This being the summe of that which Mr Goodwin calls his Answer made naked I presume to its shame valeat quantum valere potest I shall only adde that 1. when Mr Goodwin shall make good that order and Series of Decrees here by him mentioned from the Scripture or with solid Reason from the nature of the things themselves suitably to the Properties of him whose they are And 2. Proove that any eternall Decree of God either as to its primitive enacting or temporall Execution is suspended on any thing not only really contingent in it selfe and its owne nature in respect of the immediate fountaine from whence it flowes and nature of its immediate cause but also as to its Event in respect of any Act of the will of God that it may otherwise be and so the accomplishment of that Decree left thereupon uncertaine and God himselfe dubiously conjecturing at the Event for instance whether Christ should Dye or no or any one be saved by him and 3. Clearely evince this notion of the Decrees and Purposes of God that he intends to Create Man and then to give him such advantages which if he will it shall be so with him if otherwise it shall be so To send Christ if men doe so or so or not to send him if they doe otherwise so of the residue of the Decrees mentioned by him and 4. That all events of things whatsoever Spirituall and Temporall have a Conditionall futurition antecedent to any act of the Will of God When I say he shall have proved these and some like things to these we shall further consider what is offered by him yea we will confesse that Hostis habet muros c. Of the many other Testimonies to the purpose in hand §. 36. bearing witnesse to the same Truth some few may yet be singled out and in the next place that of Jeremiah 31. 3. presents it selfe unto tryall and Examination Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawn thee It is the whole Elec● Church of the seed of Iacob of whom he speaks the foundation of whose blessednesse is laid in the Eternall Love of God Who the persons are thus beloved and of whom we are to interpret these expressions of Gods good will the Apostle manifests Rom 11. as shall afterwards be more fully discoursed and cleared He tells you it is the Election whom God intends of whom he saies that they obtained the Righteousnesse that is by faith according to the purport of Gods good will towards them though the rest were hardned God who adds daily to his Church such as shall be saved Acts 13. 48. drawing them thereunto upon the account of their being so Elected He calls them also the Remnant according to the Election of Grace and the People whom God did foreknow v 1 2. or from Eternity designed to the participation of the Grace there spoken of as the use of the word hath been evinced to be These are the Thee here designed the portion of Israel after the flesh which the Lord in his Free Grace hath eternally appointed to be his peculiar inheritance which in their severall Generations he drawes to himselfe with Loving Kindnesse And this everlasting Love is not only the fountaine whence actuall Loving Kindnesse in drawing to God or bestowing Faith doth flow as they Believe who are ordained to eternall life but also the sole Cause and Reason upon the account whereof in contra-distinction to the Consideration of any thing in themselves God will exercise Loving Kindnesse towards them for ever That which is everlasting or eternall is also unchangeable Gods everlasting Love is no more liable to mutability then himselfe And it is an alwaies equall Ground and Motive for Kindnesse On what account should God alter in his actuall Kindnesse or favour towards any if that on the account whereof he exercises it will not admit of the least Alteration He that shall give a Condition on which this everlasting Love of God should be suspended and according to the influence whereof upon it it should goe forth in Kindnesse or be interrupted may be allowed to boast of his discovery That of
thing beautifull in its season 4. They know that all the workings of the Spirit of God as they are good so also they tend unto a good end Doth that stirre them up to close walking with God It is that God may be glorified his Graces exercised in them their soules strengthened in obedience and their progresse in Sanctification furthered Doth it assure them of the love of God It is that they may be more humble thankefull watchfull When all the compliances and combinations of Sathan and mens corrupt hearts even when they compell to good duties are for false evill and corrupt ends Duty is prest to pacify Conscience Peace is given to make men secure Gifts are stirred up to tempt to Pride and indeed it may easily be observed that the Divell never doth any work but he will quickly come for his Wages By the help I say of these and such like Considerations the Saints of God in whom this Spirit doth dwell are inabled to discerne and know the voyce of their Leader and Guide from the neerest resemblance of it that the Spirit which is in the World doth or at any time can make shew of And this Indwelling of the Spirit yeelds a considerable contribution of strength toward the confirmation of the maine Theses undertaken to be proved Our Adversaries dispute about the removall of acquired habits but how infused habits may be cast out or expelled they have not any tolerable measure been able to declare If moreover it shall be evinced as it hath been by plentifull Testimonies of Scripture that the Holy Ghost himselfe dwelles in Believers what way can be fixed on for his Expulsion That he cannot be removed but by his own will the will of him that sends him I suppose will easily be granted Whilest he abides with them they are accepted with God and in Covenant with him That God whilest his Children are in such a state and condition doth take away his Spirit from them and give them up to the power of the Divell is incumbent on our Adversaries to prove But to returne at length from this digression Thus farre have wee proceeded in manifesting upholding and vindicating that influence which the Oblation of Christ hath into the preservation of the Saints in the Love and Favour of God unto the end His Intercession being Eminently effectuall also to the same end and purpose comes in the next place to be considered CAP. IX 1. The Intercession of Christ. 2. The nature of it It s ayme not only that Believers continuing so may be saved but that they may be preserved in Believing 3. This farther proved from the Typicall Intercession of the Judaicall High Priest 4. The Tenor of Christs Intercession as manifested loh 17. v. 11. opened and v. 12. 13. 14. 15. 5. The result of the Argument from thence The Saints Perseverance fully confirmed 6. Rom. 8. 33 34. at large explained 7. 8. M. G's Interpretation of the place in all the parts of it confuted Vaine supposalls groundlessely interserted into the Apostles discourse What Christ Intercedes for for Believers farther manifested The summe of what is assigned to the Intercession of Christ by M. G. How farre it is all from yeelding the least consolation to the Saints manifested 9. The Reasons of the foregoing Interpretation proposed and answered 10. The end assigned of the Intercession of Christ Answered God works persevere actually a supply of mercies that may not be effectuall not to be ascribed thereunto 11. Farther objections Answered Christ not the minister of sinne by this Doctrine 12. Supposalls and Instances upon the former Interpretation disproved and rejected 13. A briefe account of our Doctrine concerning the Intercession of Christ for Believers and of the true end of the Act of his Mediation 14. The close of the Argument and of the first Part of this Treatise OF the Intercession of Christ §. 1. both as to the nature of its typicall Representation by the high Priests entring into the Holy of Holyes every yeare with blood Heb. 9. 7. and its effectuall influence into the perfect compleate Salvation of Believers so much hath been spoken by others and the whole of the Doctrine delivered with so much clearnesse spirituallnesse and strength that I shall not need to adde any thing thereunto That Christ intercedes for the preservation of Believers in the Love and Favour of his Father to the end is that which I intend to manifest and which may as I suppose be very easily undeniably evinced Some few Considerations will make way for the demonstration of the Truth which is under Consideration or Confirmation of the Perseverance of Saints from the Intercession of Christ. First the Intercession of Christ being his Appearance for us in the presence of God Heb. 9. 24. He is gon into Heaven §. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make a legall Appearance for our defence before the Judgment seat of God by being there is our Advocate I John 2 1. he is said to save us to the utmost Heb 7. 25. There is certainely some thing or other that he puts in for in the behalfe of them in whose Cause he appeares and sues that so he may save them to the utmost Now this must be either that being and continuing Believers they may be Saved or that they may believe and continue Believers unto Salvation That the first is not the sole import and aime of the Intercession of Christ may be manifested from this double Consideration 1. From the nature of the thing it selfe There is nothing but the establishment of the very Law of the Gospell He that believeth shall be Saved wrapt up in this interpretation of the Intercession of Christ. But this neither hath Christ any need to intercede for it being ratified confirmed and declared from the beginning neither is there or can there any Opposition be made against it to shake weaken or disturbe it in the least it depending solely on the Truth and Unchangeablenesse of God not being vested by any Condition whatsoever in any other subject nor would this be availing to his Militant Church whose preservation he aimes at and intends in his Intercession For the whole of his desires may be granted him to the uttermost and yet his whole Church at any time militant perish for ever Though not one soule should continue believing to the end though the gates of Hell should prevail against every one that names the name of Christ in the world yet that Truth He that believeth shall be Saved taken in the sence of our Adversaries for a Promise to Perseverance in believing and not a promise to actuall true Believers might stand firme for ever To say then that this is the whole Intercession of Christ for his Church is to say that in his whole Intercession he Interceded not at all for his Church Ioh. 11. 44. He is heard in his Intercession and he may be heard to the uttermost in this and yet his
Glorified with his Father according to his Promise Heb. 12. 2. and yet upon the account of that Glory which he was so assured of being set before him he addressed himselfe to the sharpest and difficultest passage to it that ever any one entred on He indured the Crosse despised the shame for the Gloryes sake whereof he had assurance Heb. 12 And why may not this be the state of them to whom in his so doing he was a Captaine of Salvation Why may not the Glory and Reward set before them though injoyed in a full Assurance of Faith in the excellency of it when possessed as promised stirre them up to the meanes leading thereunto 4. The truth is the more we are assured with the assurance of Faith not of Presumption that we shll certainly obtain enjoy the end whereunto the meanes we use do lead as is the Assurance that ariseth from the Promises of God the more eminently are we pressed in a Gospell way if we walke in the Spirit of the Gospell to give up our selves to Obedience to that God and Father who hath appointed so pretious and lovely meanes as are the pathes of Grace for the obtaining of so Glorious an end as that whereunto we are appointed And thus I doubt not but that it is manifest by these Considerations of Mr Goodwins Objections to the contrary that the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints asby us taught and delivered doth not only fall in a sweet Compliance withall the meanes of Grace especially those appointed by God to establish the Saints in Faith and Obedience that is to Worke Perseverance in them but also to be eminently usefull to give Life Vigour Power and Efficacy in a peculiar Gospell manner to all Exhortations Threatnings and Promises appointed and applyed by God to that end and purpose CAP. XIII 1. The maintainers and propagators of the severall Doctrines under contest taken into consideration 2. The necessity of so doing from M. G. undertaking to make the comparison This inquiry confined to those of our own Nation 3. The chiefe Assertors of this Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance in this Nation since it received any opposition what was their Ministry and what their Lives 4. M. G's plea in this case 5. The first Objection against his Doctrine by him proposed Second and Third 6. His Answers to these Objections considered Removed His own Word and Testimony offer'd against the experience of Thousands 7. The Persons pointed to by him and commanded considered 8. The principles of those Persons he opposeth vindicated 9. Of the Doctrine of the Primitive Christians as to this head of Religion Grounds of mistake in reference to their judgements 10. The first Reformers constant to themselves in their Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance 11. Of the influence of M. Perkins his judgement on the propagation of the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance 12. Who the Persons were on whom his judgement is supposed to have such an influence 13. The consent of Forraine Churches making void this surmize 14. What influence the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance had into the holinesse of its Professors 15. Of the unworthinesse of the Persons who in this Nation have Asserted the Doctrine of Apostasy the suitablenesse of this Doctrine to their practises 16. Mr G. attempt to take off this charge 17. How farre mens Doctrines may be judged by their lives 18. Mr G's Reasons why Episcopalise Arminianised the first 19. Considered and disproved 20. His discord c. 21. Generall Apostasy of men entertaine the Arminian tenents 22. The close AS to the matter in hand §. 1. about the usefulnesse of the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints in and unto the Ministry of the Gospell and the obstruction pretended to be laid unto it thereby It may be somewhat conducing and of Concernment to consider who the Persons are and were and what hath been and is the presence of God with them in their Ministry who have been Assertors and Zealous maintainers of this Doctrine And withall who they were and what they have been in their Ministry and the Dispensation of the Word committed unto them who have risen up in opposition thereunto How also those different Partyes have approved their Profession to the World and acquitted themselves in their Generation in their walking with God may be worth our Consideration doubtlesse if the Doctrine whose declaration and defence we have thus far ingaged in be of such a pernicious tendency as is pretended so destructive to Gospell Obedience and so evidently rendering that great Ordinance of the Ministry uselesse it may be traced to its product of these effects in some measure in the Lives Conversations and Ministry of those who have most zealously espoused it most earnestly contended for it and been most given up to the forme and mould thereof It were a thing every way miraculous if any Roote should for the most part bring forth fruite disagreeing to the nature of it A Taske this is §. 2. I confesse which were we not necessitated unto I could easily dispence with my selfe from ingaging therein But Mr Goodwin having voluntarily entred the list as to this particular and instated a comparison between the Abbettors of the severall Doctrines under Contest Chap. 9. of his Booke a matter we should not have expected from any other man it could not but be thought a grosse neglect of duty and high ingratitude towards those great Blessed Soules who in former and latter dayes with indefatigable pains and eminent successe watred the Vineyard of the Lord with the dew of this Doctrine to decline the Consideration of the comparison made and dressed up to our hand Now because it is a peculiar taske allotted to us to manifest the imbracement of this Truth by those who in the Primitive Church were of greatest note and Eminency for Piety Judgement and skill in dividing the Word aright with the Professed Opposition made unto it by such as those with whom they Lived and succeeding Ages have branded for men unsound in the Faith and leaving the good old Paths wherein the Saints of old found peace to their Soules As also to manifest the receiving propagation of it by all not any one of name excepted those Great Famous Persons whom the Lord was pleased to imploy in the Reformation of his Church walking in this as in sundry other particulars closer up to the Truth of the Gospell than some of their Brethren that at the same time fell off from that Church which was long before fallen off from the Truth I shall in my present inquiry confine my selfe to those of our owne Nation who have been of Renowne in their Generation for their Labour in the Lord and of name among the Saints for their worke in the service of the Gospell For the one halfe of that small space of time §. 3. which is passed since the breaking forth of the light of the Gospell in this Nation
we are disenabled from persuing the Comparison instituted The one part being not to be considered or at least not being considerable The time when first Head was made against the Truth we professe and Criminations like those managed by Mr Goodwin hatched and contrived to Assault it withall was when it had been eminently delivered to the Saints of this Nation and all the Churches of Christ by Reinolds Whitakers Greenham and others like to them their fellow labourers in the Lords Vineyard The poore weake Wormes of this present Generation who imbrace the same Doctrine with these men of name are thought to be free some of them at least from being destroyed by the poysonous and pernicious embracing of it by their owne weakenesse and disability to discerne the naturall genuine Consequences and Tendency in the progresse of that which in the Roote and Foundation they imbrace Their ignorance of their owne Doctrine in its compas Extent is the Mother of that Devotion which in them is nourished thereby So our great Masters tell us against whose Kingly Authority in these things there is no rising up For the Persons formerly named the like reliefe cannot be supposed He that shall provide an Apology for them Affirming that they understood not the state nature consequences and tendences of the Doctrines they received defended preached contended for will scarce be able by any following defensative to vindicate his owne credit for so doing In the lives then and the Ministry of those men and such as those if any where are the fruits of this Doctrine to be seene If it corrupted not their lives nor weakned their Ministry if it turned not them aside from the pathes of Gospell Obedience nor weakened their hands in the Dispensation of the Word in the Promises Threatnings and Exhortations thereof to the Conversion of soules and building up of those who by their Ministry were called in their most holy Faith it cannot but be a strong presumption that there is no such venomous infectious quality in this Doctrine as of late some Chimicall Divines pretend themselves to be able to extract out of it Now what I pray were these men What were their Lives What was their Ministry All those who now oppose Mr Goodwin's Doctrine do it either out of Ignorance or to Comply with Greatnesse and men in Authority thereby to make up themselves in their Ambitious and worldly aymes and to prevaile themselves upon the opinion of men for what cause else in the world can be imagined why they should so ingage what though they really believed the whole fabricke of his Doctrine wherein he hath departed from the Faith he once as they say professed to be a lye A lye of dangerous and pernitious Consequence to the soules of men a lye derogatory to the Glory of God the efficacy of Grace the merit of the Death of Christ and the honour of the Gospell and full of disconsolation to poore soule● being in and under Temptation What though they suppose it secretly to undermine the maine fundamentals of the Covenant of Grace and covertly to substitute another Covenant in the Roome thereof what though they have observed that the Doctrine they have received was Imbraced Preached prized by all those great and blessed soules which in the last Generation God magnified with the conversion of so many thousands in this Nation given into their Ministry whilst they spent their dayes under continuall Aflictions persecutions what though they have the generall known consent of all the Reformed Churches beyond the Seas with them in their zeale for the Doctrine under consideration What though under these the like apprehensions they profes in the presence of God his holy Angels and men that the eternall Interest of the precious soules of men is more valuable to them ten thousand times than their owne lives and that that is the sole Reason of their opposition to M. 〈◊〉 in his attempts against the Doctrine they have so received and imbraced yet it is meet for us to Judge and for all to whom evill surmises are not esteemed to be among the workes of the flesh that all their opposition is nothing but a cōplyance with and pursuit of those worldly low and wretched aimes that they are filled withall But as to those Persons before mentioned what shall we say Their Piety Literature Zeale Diligence Industry Labour with successe in the worke of the Ministry and that under manifold discouragements are so renowned in the world that how or wherewith they shall be shifted of from being considerable in their Testimony I cannot imagine If ever Persons in these latter Ages had written upon their breasts Holynesse to the Lord If ever any bare about a conformity to the Death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ they may put in for an eminent esteeme and name among them will doubtlesse be found at last to be of the thirty if they attaine not to the first Ranke of the Worthyes of Christ in these ends of the world How is it that they were not retarded in the course of their Gospell Obedience by their entertainement of this wretched Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance But what though they kept themselves Personally from the pollution of it yet possibly their Ministry was defiled and rendered uselesse by it And who I pray is it that in this Generation can so support himselfe with successe in the Ministry as to rise up with this accusation against them Many thousands who were their Crowne their Glory and Rejoycing in Christ are fallen a sleepe and some Continue to this day Of the Reasons given by Mr Goodwin why all the Zealous Fruitfull Faithfull Preachers of former dayes imbraced this Doctrine we shall instantly undertake the Consideration In the meane time this seems strange that God should magnify and make famous the Ministry of so many throughout the world and give in that visible blessing to their Labours therein which hath filled this Island with such an increase of Children to Sion as that she hath not lengthned the cords of her Tabernacle to such an extent and compasse in any proportionable spot of earth under Heaven if any one eminent part of their Doctrine and that whereon they lay'd great weight in their Ministry which they pressed with as much fervency and contention of Spirit as any head of the like importance should indeed be so apparently destructive of Holinesse and of such a direct and irresistible efficiency to render uselesse that great Ordinance of the Ministry committed to them as this is clamoured to be What will be the successe of them in their Ministry who shall undertake to deny and oppose it I hope the People of God in this Nation will not have many Instances to Judge by The best conjecture we can for the present make of what will be hereafter must be taken from what hath already come to passe and the best guesse of what events will be are to be raised from
the consideration of what hath been from a like disposition of Causes to an Answerablenesse of Events What Mr Goodwin hath to plead in this Case he insists on §. 4. Chap. 9. Sect. 24 25 26 27. Pag. 167 168 169 170 171 172. The summe and aime of his Discourse is to Apologize for his Doctrine against sundry Objections which in the Observations of men it is lyable and obnoxious unto Now these are such as whatever the Issue of their Consideration prove doubtlesse it can be of no Advantage unto his Cause that his Doctrine is so readily exposed to them The first of these is §. 5. that the Doctrine he Opposeth and in Opposition whereunto that is set up which he so industriously asserts hath generally been received and imbraced by men eminent in Piety and Godlinesse famous on that account in their Generations with the generality of the People of God with them And this is attended with that which naturally insues thereon viz. The Scandalousnesse of the most of them yea of them all of this Nation is it spoken who have formerly asserted the Doctrine which Mr Goodwin hath lately espoused Whereunto in the third place an Observation is subjoyned of the Ordinary defection of men to loose and unsavory practises after they have once drunke in the principles of that opinion which he now so industriously mixeth and tempereth for them It is usually said there is no smoake but where there is some fire It would be strange if such Observations as these should be readily and generally made by men concerning the Doctrine under Contest unlesse there were some evident occasion Administred by it thereuto And I must needs say that if they prove True and hold under Examination they will become as urging a prejudice as can lightly be laid against any cause in Religion whatsoever The Gospell being a Doctrine according unto Godlinesse severall perswasions pretending to be parts and portions thereof if one shall be found to be the constant Faith and profession of those who also have the life and power of Godlinesse in them the other to be maintained by evill men aud seducers who upon their receiving it doe also wax worse and worse it is no small advantage to the first in its plea for admittance to the right and title of a truth of the Gospell To Evade this charge Mr Goodwin premises this in Generall §. 6. The experience Asserted in the Objection is not so unquestionable in point of Truth But that if the Asserters were put home upon the proofe they would I seare doubtlesse he rather hopes it accompt more in presumption than in reasonablenes of Argument For if Persons of the one judgement of the other were duly compared together I verily believe there would be found every whit as full a proportion of men truly Conscientious and Religious amongst those whose judgements stand and have stood for a possibility of falling away As on the other side but through a foolish and unsavoury kind of partiality we are apt on all hands according to the Proverb to account our own Geese for Swannes and other mens Swannes Geese Certaine I am that if the writings of men of the one judgement and of the other be compared together and an estimate made from thence of the Religion Worth and Holinesse of the Authors respectively Those who oppose the common Doctrine of Perseverance doe account it no Robbery to make themselves every way equall in this honour with their opposers The truth is If it be lawfull for me to utter what I really apprehend and judge in the case I doe not find that spirit of holinesse to breath with that Authority height or Excellency of power in the writings of the latter which I am very sensible of in the writings of the former These call for Righteousnesse Holinesse and all manner of Christian conversation with every whit as high a hand as the other and adde nothing to check obstruct or infeeble the Authority of their demands in this kind when as the other though they before many times in their exhortations and conjurements unto holinesse yet other while render both these and themselves in them contemptible by avouching such principles which cut the very sinews and strength of such their exhortations and fully ballance all the weight of those motives by which they seek to bind them upon the Consciences of men And for men truly holy and Conscientious doubtlesse the Primitive Christians for three hundred years together and upwards next after the times of the Apostles will fully ballance with an abundant surplusage both for numbers and truth of Godlinesse All those in the Reformed Churches who since Calvins daies have adhered to the common Doctrine of Perseverance And that the Churches of Christ more generally during the said space of three hundred years and more held a possibility of a totall and finall defection even in true and soun● Believers is so cleare from the Records yet extant of those times that it cannot be denied Ans. To let passe M. Goodwins Proverb with its Applycation it being very facile to returne it to its Author there being nothing in the World by him proposed to induce us to such an estimation of his associates in the work of teaching the Doctrine of the Saints Apostasy and their labours therein or any other undertaking of theirs as he labours to beget in guilding over their Worth and Writings but only his own judgment an overweening of their Geese for Swans Let us see what is offered by him to evince the Experience Asserted not to be so unquestionable as is pretended He offers First his own Affirmation That if an estimate may be made of mens Worth and Holinesse by their writings Those who oppose the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance will be found in the promotion of Holinesse and the practice of it to out goe their Adversaries Their writings he tells us breath forth a spirit of holinesse such as he cannot find in the writings of others But first for this you have only M. Goodwins naked single Testimony And that opposed to the common experience of the people of God What weight this is like to beare with men the event will shew It is a hard thing for one man upon his bare word to undertake to perswade a multitude that what their eyes see and their eares heare is not so M. Goodwin had need have Pythagorean Disciples for the imbracing of these dictates of his The experience of Thousands is placed to confirme the observation insisted on saith M. Goodwin It is not so they are in my judgement all deceived But Secondly § 7. who are they in whose writings Mr Goodwin hath found such a Spirit of Holinesse breathing with Authority as is not to be found out nor perceived in the writings of them that assert the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints Calvin Zanchius Beza c. and to confine our selves home Reynolds Whitaker Perkins Greenham
Believers hath been formerly beyond contradiction manifested and maintained That expression then they went out from us is not an Answer by concession to an Objection but a description of seducers by their Apostacy Which words also in their regard to the Persons as before by him described do manifest their utter declining and forsaking the Communion of the Saints they so going from them as also going into an opposition to the Doctrine of the Gospell Thirdly That the Apostle here insinuates an advantage these Antichrists had to seduce from their former communion with him a thing not in the least suggested as was observed in the occasion of the words as laid downe by Mr Goodwin himselfe is proved from the use of the words they went out from us Acts 15. 24. Whence this undenyable Argument may be educed Some who went out from the Apostle had repute and authority in their preaching thereby these Antichrists went out from the Apostle therefore they had repute and authorety thereby younger men than either Mr Goodwin or my selfe know well enough what to make of this Argument Besides though there be an agreement in that one Expression all the neighbouring parts of the Description manifest that in the things themselves there and here pointed at there is no affinity Those in the Acts pretended to abide still in the communion and Faith of the Apostles these here expressively departed both from the one and the other to an opposition of them both The former seemed to have pretended a commission from the Apostles these according to Mr Goodwin himselfe did so farre declare against them that it was a scandall to some fearing that all had not been well among the Apostles Fourthly That which is called an Answer by way of Exception as in it lye the expression of it so used upon the matter is as much as we urge from these words The import of them is said to be they were not of us though they were with us yet they were not such as we are didnot walke in that uprightnesse of heart as we do they were not men of the same principles and spirit with us that is they were not true thorough sincere and sound Believers at all no not while they converst with the Apostles Now evident 't is that in those words as is manifest by the assuming of them againe for the use of an inference insuing for if they had been of us they would have continued with us the Apostle yeilds a Reason and Account how they came to Apostatize and fall to the opposition of the Gospell from the profession wherein they walked 't was because they were not men of thorough and sound principles true Belivers and consequently he supposeth and implyeth that if they had been so they would not they could not have so Apostatized for if they might there had been no weight in the account given of the Reason of their revolt In what followes §. 44. that these words but they were not of us do not necessarily imply they were Believers formerly but perhaps they had been so and were before fallen away being choaked by the cares of the world an observation is insinuated directly opposite to the Apostles designe and such as makes his whole Discourse ridiculous An account he gives of mens falling away from the Faith and tells them 't is because though they have been professors yet they were never true Believers yea but perhaps they were true Believers and then fell away after that fell away that is they fell from the Faith and then fell from the Faith for that is plainely intimated in is the sence of this doubty Observation But to proceed with his exposition §. 45. he sayes It followes for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us in these words the Apostle gives a reason of his Exception telling them to whom he writes that this was a signe and Argument that those Antichristian teachers were not of them in the sence declared viz. That they did not continue with them that is they quitted their former intimacy and converse with the Apostles refused to steere the same course to walke by the same principles any longer with them which saith he doubtlesse they would not have done had they been as sincerely affected towards Jesus Christ the Gospell as we by which Assertion John plainely vindicated himselfe and the Christian Churches of his communion from giving any just occasion of offence unto those men whereby they should be any wayes induced to forsake them and resolves their unworthy departure of this kind into their own carnall and corrupt hearts which lusted after some fleshly accommodations and contentments that were not to be obtained or enjoyed in a sincere profession of the Gospell with the Apostles and those who were perfect of heart with them Ans. First That no aspersion was cast on Iohn or the Churches of his Communion by the Apostasy of the Antichrists of whom he speakes from which he should need to vindicate himselfe and them was before declared There was not indeed nor possibly could be the least occasion for any surmize of evill concerning them from whom men departed in turning ungodly opposers of Christ For any thing that is here offered 't is but an obscureing of the Light that breaks forth from the words for the discerning of the Truth in hand 't is granted that the Apostle manifests that they were not of them that is true upright sound believers that walked with a right foot in the Doctrine of the Gospell because they forsooke the communion of the Saints to fall into the condition of Antichristianisme wherein they were now engaged Now if this be an Argument that a man was never a true believer in the highest profession that he makes because he falls from it and forsakes it certainly those that are true believers cannot so fall from their stedfastnesse or the Argument will be of no Evidence or conviction at all Neither is any thing here offered by M. Goodwin but what upon a through consideration doth confirme the inferences we insist upon and make to the worke in hand Truth will at one time or other lead captive those who are most skilfull in their Rebellion against it What is added Sect. 24. concerning the Righteous Judgement of God §. 46. and the gracious tendency of his dispensations to his Churches use in suffering these wretches so to discover themselves and be manifested what they were I oppose not The discovery that was made was of what they had been before that is not true Believers not what now they were yea by what they now shewed themselves to be was made manifest what before they were Words of the like import you have 1 Cor. 11. 19. % For there must be also heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you as here those who fall away are manifested to be corrupt so there are those who
higher then outward dispensations when the words expressly mention the Spirit already received Evident it is that the whole Grace Love Kindnesse and Mercy of this eminent Promise and consequently the whole Covenant of Grace is enervated by this corrupting Glosse Doe men think indeed that all the mercy of the Covenant of Grace consists in such tenders and offers as here are intimated that it all lyes in outward endearements and such dealings with men as may seeme to be suited to win upon them and that as to the reall exhibition of it it is wholly suspended upon the unstable uncertaine fraile wills of men The Scripture seemes to hold out something farther of more efficacy Ezek. 11. 19. The designe of these exceptions Jere 31. 32. 32. 40. is indeed to exclude all the effectuall Grace of God promised in Jesus Christ upon the account that the things which he promiseth to work in us thereby are the duties which he requireth of us In summe these are the exceptions which are given into this Testimony of God concerning the abiding of the spirit with them on whom he is bestowed and for whom he is procured to whom he is sent by Jesus Christ. And this is the Interpretation of the words As for mee for my part or as much as in me lieth this is my Covenant I will deale bountifully and gratiously with them the whole Nation of the Jewes my spirit that is in thee that they ought to take care that they entertaine and retaine the Holy Spirit and not walk so extremely unworthily that he should depart frō them the residue of the words wherein the maine Emphasis of them doth lye is left untouched The import then of this Promise is the same with that of the Promises insisted on before with especiall reference to the Holy Spirit procured for us and given unto us by Christ. The stability and establishing Grace of the Covenant is here called the Covenant as sundry other particular mercies of it are also Of the Covenant of Grace in Christ the blessed Spirit to dwell in us and rest upon us is the maine and principall Promise This for our consolation is renewed againe and againe in the Old and New Testoment As a Spirit of sanctification he is given to men to make them believe and as a spirit of Adoplion upon their Believing In either sence God even the Father who takes us into Covenant in Jesus Christ affirmes here that he shall never depart from us which is our first Testimony in the case in hand With whom the Spirit abides and whilest he abides with them they cannot utterly forsake God nor be forsaken of him for they who have the spirit of God are the Children of God sonnes and Heyres But God hath promised that his Spirit shall abide with Believers for ever as hath been clearly evinced from the Text under consideration with a removall of all exceptions put in thereto The second witnesse we have of the constant abode and residence of this spirit bestowed on them §. 26. which Believe for ever is that of the Sonne who assures his Disciples of it Joh. 14. 16. I will saith he pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever As our Saviour gives a Rule of Interpretation expressely of his Prayers for Believers that he did in them intend not only the men of that present Generation but all that should believe to the end of the World Ioh. 17. 20. I pray not for these alone but for them also who shall believe on me through their word so is it a Rule equally infallible for the interpretation of the gracious Promises which he made to his Disciples that are not peculiarly appropriated to their season and worke in which yet as to the generall Love Faithfulnesse and Kindnesse manifested and revealed in them the concernements of the Saints in all succeeding ages does lye they are proper to all Believers as such For whom he did equally intercede to them he makes Promises alike They belong no lesse to us on whom in an especiall manner the ends of the World are fallen then to those who first followed him in the Regeneration Let us then attend to the Testimony in this place and as he shall be pleased to increase our Faith mix it therewithall that the Spirit he procureth for us and sends to us shall abide with us for ever and whilest the Spirit of the Lord is with us we are his Doubtlesse it is no easy taske to raise up any pretended plea against the evidence given in by this Witnesse the Amen the great and faithfull witnesse in Heaven He tells us that he will send the Spirit to abide with us for ever and therein speaks to the whole of the case in hand and Question under debate All we say is that the Spirit of God shall abide with Believers for ever Christ saies so too and in the issue what ever becomes of us he will appeare to be one against whom there is no rising up Against this Testimony it is objected by Mr Goodwin §. 27. Cap. 11. Sect. 14. Pag. 234. This Promise saith he concerning the abiding of this other Comforter for ever must be conceived to be made either to the Apostles personally considered or else to the whole body of the Church of which they were principall members If the first of these be admitted then it will not follow that because the Apostles had the perpetuall residence of the spirit with them and in them therefore every particular Believer hath the like no more then it will follow that because the Apostles were infallible in their judgments through the teachings of the spirit in them therefore every Believer is infallible upon the same account also If the latter be admitted neither will it follow that every Believer or every member of the Church must needs have the residence of the spirit with them for ever There are principall priviledges appropriated to Corporations which every particular member of them cannot claime the Church may have the residence of the spirit of God with her for ever and yet every present member thereof loose his interest and part in him yea the abiding of the spirit in the Apostles themselves was not absolutely promised Ioh. 15. 10. 1. The designe of this discourse is to prove Ans. that this Promise is not made to Believers in generall or those who through the word are brought to believe in Christ in all Generations to the end of the World and consequently that they have no Promise of the Spirits abiding with them for that is the thing opposed and this is part of the Doctrine that tends to their Consolation and improvement in Holinesse What thankes they will give to the Authors of such an eminent discovery when it shall be determined that they have deserved well of them and the Truths of God I know not especially when it shall be considered that not