Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n believe_v faith_n fundamental_a 1,746 5 10.1277 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A31037 The Christian temper, or, A discourse concerning the nature and properties of the graces of sanctification written for help in self-examination and holy living / by John Barret ... Barret, John, 1631-1713. 1678 (1678) Wing B907; ESTC R20482 253,096 440

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

against their Wills There Assent is a forced not a free Assent As some are willingly Ignorant so some again are knowing unwillingly As Light is troublesome to sore Eyes so Knowledg and Convictions to unsound Minds And they put off convictions as long as they can Though they may take some delight in speculative Truths though they may not be offended at some practical Truths yet those Soul-searching and practical Truths that would come nearest and that most concern them they are strongly prejudiced against A true Believer would not resist the Truth would not shut it out He willingly yields to and takes part with God's Truth when he knows it even against any Errour or sinful practice he had been for before And so 4. Faith assents impartially A Believer assents to the whole Word of God in general and to every thing which he sees held forth in God's Word as true And we receive no Truth upon the Testimony and Authority of God in his Word if we receive not every thing for Truth which we see his Word for A quatenus ad omne valet consequentia A partial Assent or yielding to some Truths with a rejection of others which we see as clearly laid down in the Word will not stand with true Faith Certainly I cannot have the Faith of a Christian without believing the Trinity in Unity the Incarnation Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ and the way of Mans Redemption and Salvation by him But now when carnal reasonings are subdued and a Man is come to assent to those great Mysteries and chief Articles of Faith where the greatest difficulty lay he will more easily assent to other points of less difficulty seeing them confirmed by the same Divine Testimony upon which he rests assured of the Truth of those higher Mysteries Thus though good Men and true Believers may err and differ in controvertible points in points not fundamental or essential to true Christianity yet they are agreed in this common Principle That whatsoever the Lord saith in his Word is true And therefore when they see the Scripture against any opinion they have held it immediately puts an end to the Controversy They dare not hold any opinion contrary to known Scripture As for those that are for bringing Scripture to their opinions and not for bringing their opinions to Scripture and such as obstinately maintain their errours against clear evidence of God's Word which they see and will not see they must needs be of corrupt Minds and reprobate concerning the Faith Yet further to shew the impartiality of Faith's assent to Divine Truth 1. Hereby a Believer assents to the Truth of any thing he sees God's Word for without any other reason As indeed it is most unreasonable not to believe that God who cannot Lye who cannot be deceived or deceive Heb. 11.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith is the evidence of things not seen Faith takes it for sufficient proof and good demonstration that a thing is so because God saith it when it doth not otherwise at all appear to a Man's Sence or Reason 2. Where the same thing may be proved both by Scripture and by humane Reason e.g. that the World was created and had a beginning as we are taught in the Scripture we may also prove it by Reason yet a Believer more chearfully acquiesceth in the Testimony of God in his Word is better satisfied with that than with any Arguments a Philosopher could bring for it To a Believer there is more weight in one single Scripture-Testimony to ballast his Judgment than in a multitude of Philosophical Reasons besides the Scripture 3. A Believer assents to the Truth of the Word in things that are quite above Mans Reason Fides nostra super ratione quidem est non tamen temerarie irrationabiliter ad sumitur Junilius Ep. Afri As that there are three Persons yet but one God that the Son of God took Mans nature that there are two natures in Christ yet but one Person that there shall be a resurrection of the Body the same numerical Body though resolved into Dust shall be raised again and re-united to the Soul Such points as quite non-plus humane reason Faith takes for great and certain Verities Where natural Reason would say How can these things be Faith will readily conclude they must certainly be true being attested by the God of Truth And yet by the way here is nothing for the Popish Monster of Transubstantiation for where hath God said that upon the words of Consecration the Bread is turned into Christs Body Or from what Word of God is so much necessarily inferred 4. A Believer assents to the Word in things that are purely contrary to the Wisdom of the Flesh and carnal Reason That which was to the Jews a stumbling-Block and to the Greeks foolishness a Believer admires as the Wisdom of God It is marvellous in the Eye of Faith That Godliness is great gain this passeth with Believers for currant Truth and an unquestionable principle though carnal Reason judgeth otherwise even that it bids Men loss Faith concludes with the Word that he that walketh uprightly walketh surely that Integrity is the best Policy when carnal Reason says that nothing sooner or more surely runs Men upon Rocks of danger Faith will give us to see that the righteous is more excellent than his neighbour even when such are commonly esteemed as the filth of the World and off-scouring of all things Thus Faith assents to divine Truth impartially 5. The Assent of true Faith is an holding Assent Men have not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Plato said a stable belief touching the Idea of Good The lusts of Mens Hearts are ever and anon streaming up and casting a Mist over their Minds Thus it is with the most They have a glimpse of their Truth sometimes but they soon shut it out There is great fickleness and inconstancy in their assent to the Truth A temporary Faith and a temporary Assent that comes and goes but stays not But Saving-Faith is such a Faith as is never lost And so its assent is holding and abiding They have damnation that cast off their first Faith 6. The Assent of true Faith is practical and efficacious It is an operative Assent According to that before-cited It acteth * Putásne Filium Dei repurat Jesum quisquis ille est homo qui ipsius nec terretur comminationibus nec attrahitur promissionibus nec praeceptis obtemperat nec consiliis acquiescit Nonne is etiam si fateatur se nosse Deum factis tamen negat Bern. in octav pasch Ser. 1. differently upon the belief of the Commands Threatnings and Promises of the Word That is it acteth suitably to the nature of each A belief of the Promises working Consent and Affiance a belief of the Threatnings Fear a belief of the Commands Obedience A dead Man is not a Man so neither is a dead Faith true Faith A sound Assent produceth a real
1. I say how dark are such a ones apprehensions of the Sun compared with ours who enjoy its Light Spiritual Minds are for such an experimental Knowledg of God and Jesus Christ Yea they are for an appropriating Knowledg The more they know of God the more earnestly they desire and endeavour to discover their special propriety in God They cannot be satisfyed till they know him to be their God The more they know of Jesus Christ the more they long to know that he is their Jesus and their Lord. 2. Spiritual Minds are for knowing more of themselves There can be no Sound Knowledg without Self-Knowledg Nil prosunt lecta nec intellecta nisi teipsum legas intelligas Let a Man Read Study Understand never-so-much all his Knowledg is vain and unprofitable without an application of it to himself Job 5.27 Hear and know thou it for thy good In the Hebrew it is know thou for thy self or with thy self Many hear as for others are more ready to apply the Word to others than to themselves Such are not likely to get good by what they hear are no better for what they know The Word is compared to a Glass And it concerneth every one to look his Face in this Glass Yea it is not enough to look with a sudden Glance and so away again but we must continue therein to know what manner of Persons we are and ought to be Jam. 1.23 24 25. And Spiritual Minds are for Self-Acquaintance Spiritual Knowledg will put Souls upon and help in examining and proving themselves that they may know themselves 3. Spiritual Minds would know all the Counsel of God so far as concerneth them and especially they are for knowing what most nearly concerneth them Knowledg without Wisdom as one says is usually curious Dr. Manton on Jam. 3.13 p. 384. and censorious Sound Minds would be acquainted with the Word of God pro or con They are ready to receive it whether it make for them or against them And so The Ear that heareth the reproof of Life abideth among the Wise He that heareth reproof getteth Vnderstanding Prov. 15.31 32. See also Prov. 19.25 What a strict charge did Eli lay on Samuel not to hide any thing from him that the Lord had told him 1 Sam. 3.17 And when he was told of the evil determined against his House he did not fret and fume but said It is the Lord let him do what seemeth him good So Hezekiah 2 King 20.19 But how few that would like to hear of their Sins or are willing to hear of the Judgments God has denounced against them in his Word Such Knowledg is too painful for the most They had rather sleep on in their Sins than be so disquieted God's Messengers are accounted their Enemies and Tormentors when they tell them the Truth Alas we can meet with but few in comparison that are for right things that will endure sharp reproof though needful to set them Sound But few that would have their Sores touch'd But a Sound Mind would hear and know the worst of it self It is the Prayer of such a one Make me to know my Transgression and my Sin What I see not teach thou me and wherein I have done Iniquity I would do so no more Search me O God and prove me and see if there be any way of Wickedness in me and lead me in the Way Everlasting Such would know their Sins to be humbled for them and to turn from them So likewise Sound Minds would know more of their Duty to discharge it These would be more knowing not only in matters of Faith but as well in matters of Practice Prov. 10.8 The Wise in Heart will receive Commandments The Wisdom of the Prudent is to understand his way In the point of his Duty here he would not be to seek Such have little time to spend have little Heart to spend time about such Notions though true that have little or no influence on the Heart and Life Others study those things most that do least concern them And are taken up with by-matters neglecting the main But wholsom words and the Doctrine of Godliness agree best with Sound Minds As the Psalmist says Psal 119.104 Through thy Precepts I get Vnderstanding And prayeth ver 27. Make me to understand the way of thy Precepts And again ver 73. Give me Vnderstanding that I may learn thy Commandments As John's hearers came and asked What shall we do What shall we do Luk. 3.10 12 14. Serious Minds make little account of that Knowledg which hath no influence on is not reducible to practice Now the Lord grant that we may be filled with the Knowledg of his will in all Wisdom and Spiritual Vnderstanding that we may walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitful in every good work and encreasing in the Knowledg of God HEB. 10.39 But of them that believe to the Saving of the Soul SAving Faith is omnium virtutum radix Fundamentum as the Foundation in the Spiritual Building as the root of other Graces What Glorious things are spoken of Faith in Scripture Where is the Christian that will not acknowledg that doth not in some measure understand the usefulness excellency and the necessity of Faith A Christian could not live without it nor can he perish with it But the Question is How Saving-Faith may be known And wherein it is differenced from other Faith that is not Saving Indeed there is an Historical or Dogmatical Faith and there is a practical Faith there is a dead Faith and a living Faith there is a temporary Faith and a grounded and permanent Faith there is a counterfeit Faith and unfeigned Faith It ought to be our great care that we take not Leah for Rachel that we take not up with a Fancy instead of Faith Here first I shall shew what it is not 1. True Faith is not a blind implicite Assent to one knows not what Not a believing as the Church believes I grant as there is a general Repentance and humiliation so a general Faith As there is an Humiliation for unknown Sins when a Man is humbled and heartily grieved to think that he is more vile and sinful than he sees himself to be and to think that he is guilty of a multitude of Sins more than he is able to find out and discover in his Heart and Life whereby he is disposed to a particular Repentance for any of those unknown Sins as he cometh to a knowledg of them so there is a general and implicite Faith or Assent to Divine Truths contained in God's Word such as one hath not yet attained to the knowledg of when a Man believeth that whatsoever God saith in his Word is most certainly true and would yeild his Assent readily to any Truth which at present he has no knowledg of as soon as he sees the Scripture for it But this general implicite Faith and credence of the Word of God is
quite different from that implicite Faith and credence of the Churches Testimony which some Popish Doctors so much commend And that this is not true Faith is very plain and evident For 1. The Popish implicite Faith is but the belief of an humane Testimony And can that be a Divine Faith which resteth on an humane Testimony 2. It prepares Men for receiving and drinking in abundance of Errors contrary to the Word contrary to Sound Faith They must believe as the Church believeth and therefore may not question much less deny any thing the Church holdeth how contrary soever to the word of Truth 3. It fostereth a Multitude of their poor deluded People in most lamentable Ignorance Yea indeed it seemeth to have been devised to put out Mens Eyes that so they might lead them even which way they please Notwithstanding many of their Writers cannot but grant that this implicite Faith hath no place about the necessary Articles of Faith but that these must be explicitely believed Only they say it is sufficient for the common People to believe with an implicite Faith those points which are besides the necessary Articles of Faith yet it is famously known that the Ruling part of their Church have even denied the common People the use of the Holy Scriptures in their own Tongue where they well could and have been also for imposing on them Service in an unknown Tongue whereby People commonly understand not either what is said by the Priest or what themselves say Of which Sr. Europae Speculum Quarto p. 8. Edwyn Sandys sayes well Their Service is no other than as a Lamp put out which bringeth no Light at all to the Understanding nor can bring any due warmth to the Affection And thus notwithstanding the fair Comment that some of their Doctors School-men and Casuists put upon their implicite Faith their common practice would teach us to take it in a worse sense scil as an Engine contrived to keep People in Ignorance and in blind Obedience and fast subjection to their Prelates 4. It is a great Absurdity Their Implicite Faith is no Faith but a meer Cloak for Ignorance As * Arch-Bishop of 〈…〉 on 〈…〉 p. 39. One that had been well acquainted with them Verily for any Man to say I believe that which another Man believeth is as much as if he said I see that which another Man seeth though my own Eyes be shut What rare learned Doctrine was that of Altenstaig That an implicite Faith availeth so much Dictionar in verbo credere that if any one having it should think falsly moved with his natural reason that the Father was greater than or before the Son or that the three Persons were locally distant from one another or the like yet he is not an Heretick he sinneth not whilst that he doth not pertinaciously defend his errour and believeth this because he believeth the Church doth so believe What a rare device is this that would keep an Arrian a Nestorian an Audian or Anthropomorphite from being an Heretick But how absurd is it to hold that a Man believeth Non tantum qui actu ut loquuntur non assentit Panstr tom 3. p. 377. §. 13. sed etiam qui actu dissentit as learned Chamier notes who not only doth not actually assent but also actually dissenteth But enough of that 2. True Saving-Faith is not a bare Historical or Dogmatical Faith The Papists quarrel with the term Historical But by Historical Faith our Divines do not mean a Faith confined to the Historical part of the Scriptures but such a Faith which though it taketh in the whole Word of God for its object yet assenteth no otherwise unto it than as a Man may give credit to an History of things that nothing concerneth him This Historical or Dogmatical Faith which is their Fides informis formless Faith they hold to be one and the same with the Faith which is Justifying and Saving That Faith whether it be joyned with or separated from Charity hath all that is essential to Faith only the conjunction of Charity with Faith makes it Living and Saving But if Historical Faith was the same with Justifying Faith Thes Theol. in Folio p. 3. §. 11. vid. §. 12. then whosoever had Historical Faith hoc ipso he should have Justifying Faith as Le Blanc argues And then all that have Historical Faith having all that is essential to Faith should be saved For he that believeth shall be saved The Scripture cannot be broken which hath entailed Salvation upon all true Believers Either Faith necessarily includeth more than a bare Assent to the Truth or all that assent to the Truth are saved Indeed we have some that hold Faith to be only an Assent of the understanding a giving credit to the Word of God as true As to believe a thing is to assent to the truth of a Proposition for the Authority and Testimony of him that speaks it And this they would confirm by Scripture As that Text is urged Joh. 11.26 27. In which words says one we see Hobs Philosoph Rudiments c. 18 p. 349. that the Question Believest thou in me is expounded by the Answer Thou art the Christ To believe in Christ therefore is nothing else but to believe Jesus himself saying that he is the Christ So Mat. 16.16 and 1 Joh. 4.2 is likewise alledged here But it is certain the Scripture doth not take the words Faith and Believing in so strict a sense as a Philosopher would take them but more largely And so as others have noted the expressions alledged are not to be taken exclusive Vid. Ames Medul c. 3. §. 20. Shepherd Sound Believer p. 159 160. but inclusive not as excluding other Acts of Faith which other Texts of Scripture expressively attribute unto it but as including and supposing them And there was a special reason why Faith should be described then as a believing that Jesus was the Christ the Son of the Living God and a believing that Jesus Christ was come in the Flesh Because this was a new Article of Faith necessary to be believed and was in those times a main point in question and by the Men of the times strongly I mean violently opposed Thus it was a greater matter to believe and confess Jesus to be the Christ at that time than for us to assent to this Truth when it is generally owned and professed As one well noteth We must distinguish times Dr. Manton on Jam. 2.19 p. 305. The Truths of God then Suffering under so many prejudices c. The Wind that bloweth on our Backs blew in their Faces and that which draweth on many to assent to the Gospel was their discouragement But to prove that a bare intellectual Assent is not true Saving-Faith we need look no further than that Text Jam. 2.19 Thou believest that there is one God thou dost well the Devils also believe and tremble The Apostle instanceth in this
Article as Estius says because in it especially the Jews differed from Pagans or because it is the first Article of our Faith But he might questionless have added other Articles which the Devils as well believe and are convinced to be certain Truths They believed Jesus to be the Son of God Mat. 8.29 And that he was the Christ Luk. 4.41 The Devil that puts others upon questioning whether there be a God Or whether the Scriptures be the Word of God hath no doubt of these things himself He that would have Men Atheists or Infidels is far from being either himself Atheism and Infidelity are Sins which the Devil cannot be guilty of An Atheist or an Infidel is in that respect worse than the Devil himself Now certainly that Faith which the Devils have cannot be true Saving-Faith But the Devils have such a Faith as this they are clearly convinced that the Scriptures are the Word of God and that what God's Word holds forth is certainly true How absurd and irrational is it to suppose that the Devils that are Damned have that same Faith for the nature of it which the Scripture calls precious Faith and which it maketh the condition of Salvation And yet mistake me not I grant a Dogmatical Faith is included in Saving Faith As the Vegetative Soul is included in the Sensitive or as both these are included in the Rational Soul So a believing that there is a Christ that he is come in the Flesh and a believing the Word of Christ is included in our believing in him And indeed they that believe not what is spoken of him in the Gospel that believe not the Son of God his taking Mans Nature on him uniting it to his Person that there was such a one as Jesus Christ that was born of a Virgin that suffered was crucified at Jerusalem and rose again from the dead and ascended up to Heaven according to the Scriptures they that allegorize the true Christ out of Doors and only acknowledg a Christ within them they do not believe in that Jesus whom Paul preached whom all the Apostles preached whom the Father sealed I further grant that to believe with a Dogmatical Faith is part of Man's duty It is a setting to our Seal that God is true Joh. 3.33 And he that believeth not God hath made him a Lyer 1 Joh. 5.10 Think what an heinous Sin it is to give God the Lye If you deny his Truth you deny him to be God If he were not the God of Truth he were not the true God And further we must grant that the Word is a great gift of God that it is a wonderful favour that he is pleased thus to reveal his Mind and Will and make himself known to the Sons of Men. And that it is a work of the Spirit though but a common work which such may have as shall not be saved to bring Men to assent to the Truth All this is granted But yet though we know the Truth and cannot but assent to it in our Judgments if we do not embrace it with suituble Affections if we do not heartily cleave to it and sincerely submit to it our simple belief of the Truth is so far from being a Saving work that it will increase our Condemnation as our guilt is increased by it 3. True Saving-Faith is not a meer perswasion that my Sins are pardoned that I shall be Saved Some have gone this way Believe that your Sins are pardoned for Christ's sake and they are pardoned and you justifyed Believe that you shall be saved by Christ and you shall be saved A short cut to Heaven But how little need is there to teach Men Presumption or to encourage it But to shew you the Vanity of this conceit 1. All that hear the Gospel are bound to believe in Jesus Christ But all such are not bound to believe that they are pardoned justifyed and shall be saved 1 Joh. 3.23 This is his Commandment that we should believe on the Name of his Son Jesus Christ And what Duty is more pressed in the Gospel But where doth the Gospel command all to believe that they shall be saved How many alas that are in their Sins that are such as the Word of God condemneth Know ye not that the Vnrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Such as the Apostle speaketh of 1 Cor. 6.9 10. believe contrary to the Gospel if while such they believe that they are pardoned and shall be saved The Gospel calleth us to repent that our Sins may be blotted out And we have no ground to believe or hope that our Sins are pardoned till we repent When we find unbelief spoken of as the great condemning Sin we must not take it so as if Sinners were condemned because they would not believe that their Sins were pardoned Nor is it the sense of that Article in our Creed I believe the Remission of Sins that I believe my Sins are remitted Too many lay down this Conclusion that yet stand condemned by the Sentence of God's Word All impenitent Sinners are bound to believe that at present they are in a state of Wrath Heirs apparent of Hell that except they repent they shall perish they cannot be saved 2. Are we not justifyed by Faith Deny that and you deny plain Scripture Now we cannot be justifyed by Faith if we are first of all to believe that we are pardoned and justified Le Blanc Thes Theol. p. 212. §. 103. Quomodo enim possemus justificari per actum qui justificationem jam factam praesupponit Must we believe our Sins are pardoned that they may be pardoned Must we believe we are Justifyed that we may be Justifyed What can be more absurd Then we must believe what is not that it may be as we believe If the first Act of Faith be to believe that I am pardoned and justifyed then Remission and Justification must needs go before Faith The Act supposeth the Object In order of Nature Faith is before Justification otherwise we are not justified by Faith and in order of Nature at least we must be justified before we can truly believe that we are justified Therefore we cannot be justified by believing we are so It is a plain contradiction to say that we believe before we are justified and yet are justified before we believe 3. It cannot be the first Act of Faith to believe I shall be saved except instead of the Word some special Revelation besides the Word be the Ground of my Faith This is plain because it is not at all credible to me according to the Word that I shall be saved till I know I have Faith such a Faith as hath Salvation annexed to it by promise such a Faith as purifieth the Heart worketh by Love c. According to the Word only he that believeth with such a Faith shall be saved That I cannot believe according to the Word that I shall be saved till I find such a Faith
hold on by consent and affiance Or thus there is the primary and principal Object of Faith and the secondary and less principal Object The primary and principal Object of Faith are the fundamentals essentials and most necessary points of the Christian Religion Such Divine Doctrines Promises and Precepts without assent and consent unto which we cannot believe unto Salvation or be sound Christians Yet I shall not contend with those that make Christ the only Mediator and Saviour the principal Object of Faith forasmuch as I doubt not but we are agreed that the belief of all that is necessary to be known and believed of Christ doth suppose and include the belief of all other points that are absolutely necessary to Salvation And as he is the Chief and principal Means of bringing us to God the Scriptures have a chief reference and respect to Christ Luk. 24.44 Joh. 5.39 The secondary and less principal Object of Faith takes in other things contained in the Word that are of good use indeed Rom. 15.4 2 Tim. 3.16 But though all Scripture be of use and profitable yet all that is there written is not absolutely necessary to be distinctly known and explicitely believed And yet you may not hence infer that if you know and believe so much as is absolutely necessary to Salvation there needeth no more None are to stand at a stay in Religion All that are in the School of Christ must be making proficiency growin Faith and Knowledg We should diligently improve the means that the Word of Christ may dwell in us richly that we may be filled with the knowledg of his Will And further as a late Writer noteth there are points of Faith secondarily fundamental Fowler Design of Christianity p. 235. the disbelief of which cannot consist with true Holiness in those to whom the Gospel is sufficiently made known And all such Doctrines as are with indisputable clearness revealed to us the belief of these is absolutely necessary from an external cause though not from the nature of the points themselves viz. in regard of their perspicuity that nothing can cause Men to refuse to admit them but that which argueth them to be stark naught and to have some unworthy and base end in so doing or in the phrase of Scripture 2 Tim. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reprobate concerning the Faith Note one thing more touching the Object of Faith scil That more is taken into the necessary Object of Faith now under the Gospel than was necessary before The Mystery of our Redemption by Christ being more fully unfolded in the Gospel a more distinct explicite Faith in Christ is required of us than was required of those to whom less was revealed Revelatio est mensura Fidei Le Blanc Though Noah Abraham and all the faithful before Christ were justified and saved by Faith yet not by that special kind of Faith that such as live under the Gospel are saved by I mean there are new Articles of Faith relating to Christ his Office and Undertaking as Mediator essential to a Gospel-Faith that were not essential to Faith before the promulgation of the Gospel Nor did the Apostles themselves believe some of them till after Christ's Resurrection concerning whom excepting Judas we have no doubt but they were true Believers Next to shew you the special and proper Acts of Faith They speak much in a little that call Faith a practical Assent and a fiducial Consent I cannot exclude any of these three Acts Assent Consent and Affiance The two last are plainly expressed in the shorter Catechism and all three fully in the Confession of Faith forecited And so the learned and holy Bishop Vsher Body of Divinity p. 197. Edit 1648. to the Question What is true Saving-Faith Answereth It is such a firm Assent of the Mind to the Truth of the Word as flows into the Heart and causeth the Soul to embrace it as good and to build its eternal Happiness on it And it should not seem strange that so much is taken into the nature of true Faith As Divines now generally place it not in the Vnderstanding only or in the Will only but in both faculties conjunct if they be distinct faculties and not the very essence of the Soul disposed and acting differently towards the Object considered in a different notion and respect And methinks it is plain in Scripture that the Faith to which Salvation is promised doth not consist in one single Act for there are these diverse Acts even now mentioned attributed to it 1. It is an Assent An Assent to the Truth of the Word in general and particularly to the Promise of Salvation by Christ Though I shewed before that Faith consists not barely in Assent that this is not the whole of Faith yet we cannot deny but this is part of it We find Faith thus described again and again that we must acknowledg it one Act of Faith It would be strange indeed if a belief of the Truth be no part of Faith Then Martha answered nothing to the Question Joh. 11.26 27. when she said yea Lord I believe that thou art the Christ So see Rom. 10.9 But how does Faith assent to Divine Truth 1. Faith assenteth really not feignedly A true Believer doth not only profess or confess with his Mouth but believes in his Heart as he professeth to believe 2. Faith assents firmly not waveringly It riseth higher than opinion It is more than a Semi-perswasion of the Truth As they said We believe and are sure Not as Agrippa almost thou perswadest me to be a Christian I grant that as all Christians have not the same measure of Spiritual-Knowledg and as there are different degrees of Faith so all Believers have not the same degree of firmness of Assent And Faith does not wholly exclude all doubtings but overcometh them Indeed sometimes very horrid thoughts arise or are injected that would put the Soul upon questioning all but they are not entertained but ordinarily abhorred and rejected as they come As one says Herb. Palmer Paradoxes p. 64. §. 72. He is sometimes so troubled that he thinks nothing is true in Religion and yet if he did think so he could not be at all troubled It is true thus a Believer sometimes is sore shaken yet not quite taken off from all but rather put upon earnest Prayer and indeavours to be more rooted and grounded in Faith So these shakings are wont to end in his more firm establishment And take the weakest Believer out of such a swounding-fit and he has ordinarily a deeper sense of Divine Truths and a stronger assent to them than others whose Faith is unsound though these may have a far greater measure of Notional Knowledg even such an Assent that he dare venture his Soul and all his hopes and concerns deliberately upon them 3. Faith assents freely In this sense it is true that with the Heart Man believeth Some are convinced of the Truth but sore
Consent And this As Dr. Of Faith p. 102 103. Preston says Is the least degree of Faith when there is so much weight as will cast the Ballance the right way though there be something left in the other end of the Ballance that is some doubting some fear yet if I so far believe the Promises and the Word of God that I am willing to take Christ for my Husband and to bestow my self on him this is Faith If there be so much Assent so much firmness of perswasion as to bring us to take Christ for our Lord and Saviour this is the least degree of Faith And though doubtings even of the Truth of the Word and Gospel may sometimes arise yet the Souls Assent to the Truth is certainly predominant when thus it casts the Seale Such doubtings are not predominant and therefore not inconsistent with Faith Thus I am led to the second Act of Faith II. Faith doth not barely Assent but Consent Thus with the Heart Man believeth Rom. 10.10 And they that suppose Faith to be seated both in the Vnderstanding and Will cannot make it one single Act. So it is not a bare assent to the Truth of the Promise but an hearty consent to God's terms a willing acceptance of what God offers upon his terms And to believe in Christ and to receive him are made one and the same Joh. 1.12 If I truly believe the Promise then I no otherwise expect or hope that it should be made good and performed to me then upon my consenting to and performing the condition And the soundness and firmness of ones Assent may well be questioned here when this consent does not follow Baxter Direct to sound Conversion edit 2. p. 271. As all Men would take another course says an excellent Writer if they did but see Heaven and Hell with their Eyes so all Men would presently throw away their worldly fleshly pleasures and turn to God and an holy Life if they did but as throughly believe the Joys and Torments to come as if they saw them And that saving-Saving-Faith does always include in it a consent to the condition on which Salvation is promised is plain and evident because no other Faith is Saving but that which does thus consent The strongest assent to the Truth without this is but the Faith of Devils so likewise the most confident reliance on God and Christ and the Promise without this is meer and gross Presumption But after what manner does a true Believer consent and accept of Gods terms 1. He consents fully not partially He consents to the whole New-Covenant not to a part only That cannot be Saving-Faith which consents not to all that God hath made of indispensible necessity to Salvation without which God hath declared that we cannot be saved Therefore the fore-cited Author as I remember somewhere calleth Faith The great summary Duty of the Gospel and the summary Condition of the Covenant implying including or inferring all the rest and to which they are reducible Thus If the Gospel require as necessary to Salvation that we take God for our chief ultimate End and Happiness and take Christ for our only Redeemer as Prophet Priest and King and take the Holy Spirit for our Sanctifier as certainly it doth and our Covenant with God in Baptism obligeth to all this to all this Faith consents If we take that description of Faith in the shorter Catechism scil That it is A receiving Jesus Christ as he is offered to us in the Gospel it implieth as much He is offered not only as a Priest but as a Prophet to teach us the Will of God and as a King to rule us by his Laws and by his Grace and Spirit This is certain there can be no receiving of Christ but as he is offered No thinking to have Christ whether he will or no whether God will or no. He that is called the Gift of God must be received as God offers him or we have nothing to do with him we have no Title to him And Christ was never offered to any as a Saviour only Indeed he is held forth in the Word as the only Saviour there is Salvation in no other but not as a Saviour only Him hath God exalted to be a Prince as well as a Saviour Act. 5.31 and Chap. 2.36 And to this end Christ both died and rose and revived that he might be Lord Rom. 14.9 And he is the Author of Salvation only to them that obey him Heb. 5.9 So we read of Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ Act. 16.31 and 20.21 So true Faith does not only eye his Cross but also boweth to his Scepter acknowledgeth his Sovereignty as well as his Satisfaction As Dr. Preston well We must take heed of disjoyning those things Of Faith p. 42. that God hath joyned together We must take Christ as well for a Lord as a Saviour Mark it diligently If thou wilt take Christ as a Saviour only that will not serve the turn Christ giveth not himself to any upon that condition only to save him but we must take him as a Lord too to be subject to him to obey him And as another that I have somewhere met with To receive Christ only as a Prophet is but a speculative Faith to receive him only as a King is but a legal kind of Faith to receive him only as a Priest is but a carnal Faith but to receive him in all his Offices together this is a true Evangelical and Saving-Faith Here I am upon a point of grand concern indeed not to be hastily passed over As a partial Assent so a partial Consent will prove ones Faith not to be sound Saving-Faith willingly accepts of whole Christ accepts of Christ in all his Offices and not only of some particular benefit by him Christ will not be divided We must have all or none Who would not but be pardoned and saved But we cannot have Remission and Salvation alone Christ will not be their Priest and Saviour who will not accept of him for their Prophet and King their Teacher and Ruler Indeed we cannot receive Christ as a perfect Saviour if we receive him not in all his Offices He is Prophet Priest and King that so he may be a compleat Redeemer that he may save his People 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the uttermost Heb. 7.25 So he hath his name Jesus because he saves his People from their Sins Mar. 1.21 and not only from misery and Wrath to come 1 Thes 1.10 Therefore if you are not for Christ himself but only for some of his Benefits if you are for some of his benefits but not for others for Remission Justification but not for Sanctification for Salvation in the end but not for the way leading to it if you would be saved in your Sins not from your Sins if you are willing to hear of a Christians Priviledges by Christ but have no such mind to hear of Christian Duties if you
the Beloved and only begotten Son of God should die for us Sinners for Enemies to reconcile us to God and not only offer us a Pardon written in his Blood but a Kingdom an heavenly Inheritance purchased by his Blood how admirably taking are such expressions of Divine Grace and Love Shall not such love constrain us 1 Joh. 4.10 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our Sins And ver 16. with ver 19. We have known and believed the love that God hath to us We love him because he first loved us Suppose a condemned Traitor that could have expected nothing but the stroke of Justice and a shameful Death should yet have a Pardon offered him under his Princes Hand and Seal with a Promise of the greatest Dignity and Promotion in the Court and Kingdom that a Subject was capable of if he would heartily acknowledg his offence and faithfully promise Loyalty for the future how would his Heart melt as overcome of such kindness and Clemency But we may well say here Is this the manner of Man O Lord God Is there any parallel to be found or thought of to the love of God and Jesus Christ towards poor lost Sinners When David had spared Saul's Life 1 Sam. 26. how it wrought upon him Is this thy Voice my Son David I will no more do thee harm because my Soul was precious in thine Eyes this day But Faith will give us to see that our Souls were much more precious in the sight of Christ who gave himself a ransome for them Again As Faith shews the Soul the wonderful and matchless love of God and Christ to Sinners so likewise it presents God in Christ to the Soul as the most desirable Object in all the World and the most worthy of Mans Love By Faith Moses indured as seeing him who is invisible and by Faith Souls fall in love 1 Pet. 1.8 A sight of God and Christ by Faith will work love to him Faith discovers the greatest amiableness to be in him And thus indeed there is some degree of love in the very first act of Faith as saving It is impossible to conceive that a Man should accept of Christ without a desire of him without affecting and embracing him as a most sutable Good Though the Act of Assent be before the Love of Desire yet this Love ever goes along with the Act of Consent and Acceptance As one sayes We do not accept Mr. Baxter or marry Christ first and only love after but lovingly accept him When we give up our selves to God and Jesus Christ to be saved by him in his appointed way surely we have a liking of him to whom we give up and make over our selves We must needs prefer him in our Judgment and Will in our desire and choice before all other Therefore our Faith is not Saving if it worketh not love yea if it doth not cause us to love God and Jesus Christ above all so that we could forsake all for God and Christ And the predominant love of God and Holiness as Mr. Cathol Theol. Book 1. Part. 2. §. 17. p. 91. B. hath it is the very Heart of the new Creature And as Christ as Mediator is the summary means and way to the Father to bring Man home to his Creator So Faith in Christ is a mediating Grace to work in us the love of God And then Faith worketh by Love Indeed when this Love is kindled in the Heart it is a most powerful a leading and commanding Affection it will work upon all the Affections Then there will be grief and sorrow for having offended God there will be fear of displeasing him an hatred of what is offensive to him a desire to please and enjoy him delight in his Service and in ways of communion with him So Love will put a Man upon Action This would make us active for God to promote his Honour and Interest And his Commands would not be grievous to us Yea this would make us ready not only to do but also to suffer for him This would help us to hold out in a way of Obedience and patient Suffering If we love the Lord we shall cleave to him with full purpose of Heart But of the Grace of Love see more afterwards 4. True Faith overcometh the World 1 Joh. 5.4 5. This is the Victory that overcometh the World even our Faith Who is he that overcōmeth the World but he that believeth Faith is a victorious Grace and every true Believer is a Conqueror He is a greater Conqueror then Alexander the Great He obtaineth a better Victory a more gainful and glorious Conquest of the World It is true that Believers do not here obtain a full and absolute Conquest of the World And where Faith is but low and weak this Victory is less discernable But as the more a Christian is raised above the World the more doth the Truth and soundness of his Faith appear so while a Man is at the Worlds command and plainly captiv'd by it he may know that his Faith is not sound and saving That Faith will never bring a Man to Heaven that cannot raise him any degree above the * Nee sane mirum videri potest si nequaquam vincit quae nec vivit quidem Bern. World 1. True Faith will overcome a smilling flattering enticing World The World indeed as it is God's Creature is to be loved and used for him But as Man's Corruption hath made an Idol of the World as it is that wherein Men commonly place their Happiness as it is set in Competition with God and Christ or set in Opposition thus it is to be despised renounced and crucified Thus the World is an Enemy indeed an Enemy that we did vow and covenant against in our Baptism when we were solemnly listed into Christ's service It is a deadly Enemy if we do not overcome it it most certainly overcometh us and a we shall fall and perish by and with the World The Apostle hath told us plainly That their End is Destruction whose God is their Belly and who mind earthly things Phil. 3.9 And such as are Lovers of Pleasures more than Lovers of God have no more than an empty Form of Godliness denying the Power thereof 2 Tim. 3.4 5. When Man fell from God he fell to the Creature he fell down to the World and he cannot return to God without being loosened from the Creature and raised above the World While a Man rests in the World he stayeth at a broken Cistern he neglects and forsakes God the Fountain of living Waters And how can ye believe which receive Honour one of another and seek not the Honour that cometh from God only Joh. 5.44 So such cannot be sound Believers that are more for the World's favour than for the favour of God Such cannot be sound Believers that are more for carnal Pleasures than for
sense emulate them We should strive at least to overtake those that are foremost Yea true Zeal for God and Godliness will not set it self any bounds or limits You cannot call them zealous that stint themselves and count it an high point of prudence and discretion not to be too forward in Religion But as Love so Zeal is like Fire that cannot be hid it will break forth Quis enim celaverit ignem Lumine qui semper proditur ipse suo Such as are afraid of being counted zealous as if it was a matter of disgrace are far from such a spirit as David had who when he was mocked and despised of Michal spake resolvedly I will yet be more vile than thus if this be to be vile Fire is one of those things which say not It is enough Prov. 30.16 So true Zeal never says It is enough A zealous Christian would have more Grace more Zeal for God They that are zealous of good works desire to abound more and more in good works 18. True Zeal is not for a spurt for a flash it is constant a Fire that never goes out Like that Fire upon the Altar Lev. 6.13 Though I must grant the Zeal of a true Christian doth not flame up at all times alike yet it is never totally extinguished It is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing Gal. 4.18 And this is a good sign thy Zeal is right if it be constant There are some whose Zeal is but a flash scarce any sooner in than out again Some have a burning fit of Zeal for a while that is quickly over Their praeter-natural heat stays not But true Zeal is like the natural heat of the Body that continues as long as one lives Yea though it is like Fire in green wood subject to go out if it be not blown up yet that Spirit which first kindled this spark in Believers is given to dwell in them and to abide with them for ever And therefore though there may be some decays of Holy Zeal for a time yet it is stirred up again in the Faithful and usually burneth clearer after it is recovered As we sometimes see Fire blaze up more after a dash of water cast on it Yea ordinarily as we may observe a flame mount highest before it goes out ordinarily I say a Christians Zeal is most raised the nearer he is to his end But such as once seemed very forward for that which is good but are quite fallen off again have quite out-lived their Zeal they even give others cause enough to suspect that they were never sound OF A Lively Hope ROM 12.12 Rejoycing in Hope TO go on to the Trial of all other Christian Vertues might upon some accounts cross my design in what is Written which is to help and direct ordinary Christians in the Trial and exercise of Grace even such as cannot purchase or have not time to peruse large Volums I have spoken of the chief Cardinal Graces and shewed how they work how they may be known Prove these in your selves and there is no question but you have the whole Train of those better things that necessarily accompany Salvation As without these any other Vertues you may seem to have as Temperance Patience Meekness c. are but Shadows and Counterfeits So that I might make a Full-stop at what is Written Yet because many are kept off from any serious examination of their Estates satisfying themselves with this That they have Hopes and some That they have Joys too never enquiring How they came by them or of what kind they are Therefore before I conclude this Treatise I shall shew you how you may know whether your Hope and Joy be sound or no. And first of Hope But let me premise these Three Things 1. It is unquestionable that there is a false a deceiving Hope as well as a true and certain Hope There is a dead Hope as well as a lively Hope There is a confounding Hope as well as an Hope that maketh not ashamed There is the Hope of the Hypocrite Job 8.13 as well as the Hope of the Righteous Prov. 10.28 2. Better no Hopes than false Hopes As we may allude to that Prov. 26.12 Seest thou a Man wise in his own conceit There is more hope of a Fool than of him So there is more Hope of Sinners that are most despondent in one sense without Hope than of such as are very confident high in their Hopes but without any ground And how sad is it as I remember one says to sail on smoothly to Hell having Heaven all the while in view Hope that is like to end in horrour and utter desperation is not worth having 3. It is justly to be suspected that their Hopes are groundless and false who are unwilling to bring them to the Test and Trial. That part of a Man's Body which he could not endure to have touched we would conclude not right or sound But if your Hope be right it would not suffer any injury or damage by a fair impartial Trial but be more confirmed Now if you ask What is Christian Hope I answer It is a longing and fiducial expectation of Good promised to come in God's Time and Way Faith and Hope are very near akin Yet thus they differ 1. In Order Faith in order of nature is before Hope Hope is the Daughter at least the youngest Sister of Faith 2. In the Object Faith has respect to the whole Word of God Hope to the Word of Promise Good only is the object of Hope And Future Good Quod speratur non possidetur good to be received and enjoyed Rom. 8.24 Or if I may be said to hope that I am in a state of Grace that my Sins are pardoned which is hope of a present Good if my Hope be sound or if I say I hope God heard my prayer at such a time and gave in such a Mercy in answer to it here seems to be Hope of a thing past Here the word Hope seems to be used more improperly or taken more largely It is more properly a Perswasion though short of full Perswasion or Assurance But properly Hope looks at Good to come Whereas what is past may be the object of Faith as well as what is to come As we believe the Creation of the World a thing past as well as the Resurrection of the Body which is future 3. In their proper formal Acts. Faith apprehends and assents to the truth of the Promises Hope expects and looks for the Good promised An expectation of Good is the formal Act of Hope And herein also it is differenced from or contrary to Fear which is an expectation of Evil not of Good But that which I mainly intend is to shew wherein sound Hope differs from Presumption or from a false Hope Or how we may know whether our Hope be sound 1. True hope is not ordinarily obtained but after sad doubts and fears As it is Hos
Hope will give Courage will put a Man in heart and make him resolved for God A true Christian to maintain his Hope will not care to quit present worldly Possessions If we could be perswaded to disclaim all interest in and Hope of Heaven to embrace this present World if we could be content to take up with the World for our Portion then certainly we have no sound Hope of Heaven It is a weighty saying O that it may be well weighed They are no true Hopes of Glory to come Mr. Baxt. Ep. ded before his 32. Directions c. if you cannot cast over board all Worldly Hopes when the Storm is such that you must hazzard the One. 11. A sound Hope will raise ones Thoughts Heart and Desires Heaven-ward What is Hope but an expectation with desire or a desiring expectation As the Apostle speaks of his earnest expectation and Hope Phil. 1.20 So we cannot have a lively Hope of Heaven without lively desires after Heaven Rom. 8.23 We which have the first-fruits of the Spirit groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the Redemption of our Body It cannot be that such as have a sound Hope of Heaven should place their happiness or terminate their desires in the World 12. A lively Hope will quicken and raise the Heart in praise and thankfulness to God Psal 71.14 I will hope continually and will yet praise thee more and more This Hope is called good Hope through Grace 2 Thes 2.16 And Souls that have it cannot but see cause greatly to admire extol and magnifie Divine Grace 13. Sound Hope is a furtherance of Spiritual Joy Rejoycing in Hope As Bernard sed nunquid tantae laetitiae spes erit sine laetitia Yea this Hope oft causeth Joy even in Affliction Psal 119.49 50. Remember the Word unto thy Servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope This is my comfort in my affliction for thy Word hath quickened me The word of promise giving Hope thus brings in Joy and comfort too Sound Hope will chear the Heart and keep it alive under troubles without which it would faint and sink If our Hearts die within us like Nabals under worldly Troubles this would shew we have not a lively Hope of Heaven Such as rejoyce in Hope of the Glory of God will be ready even to glory in Tribulations as Rom. 5.2 3. Of Spiritual Joy ANd so I come to the Trial of Mens Joyes As there are counterfeit Graces so there are false Joyes As we read of the Hope of the Hypocrite so likewise of the Joy of the Hypocrite Job 20.5 A Joy that will end in sorrow and consternation Yea It is possible for Souls that have true Grace yet to be mistaken in their Joys As we find the Seventy Disciples returning with Joy Luk. 10.17 saying Lord even the Devils are subject unto us through thy Name Notwithstanding says Christ v. 20. in this rejoyce not that the Spirits are subject unto you but rather rejoyce because your names are written in Heaven Where he at once corrects and directs their Joy As one says Many times the more excellent a Sermon is Mr. A. Burg. the more carnal the heart of the Preacher may be So Christians may rejoyce carnally in Spiritual Enlargements and Spiritual Experiences As Grace can find something even in natural comforts to feed and increase Spiritual Joy Joy in the Lord So Corruption sometimes prevailes on the contrary making Spiritual Duties and Spiritual Priviledges and Mercies the matter and ground of carnal rejoycing And further as some Christians through weakness yield to needless fears and take up sad conclusions against themselves and their own Estates debarring themselves of comfort belonging to them So others again through heedlesness please themselves erroneously in their own fancies and rejoyce in sparks of their own kindling which they take for the comforts of the Spirit That we should not only try our Graces but our Comforts For which purpose take these following notes 1. Spiritual Joy is not wont to come in till Godly Sorrow hath prepared and made way for it Bernard Opportunè post tristitiam gaudium subit post laborem quies post naufragium portus Thus the Lord oft turns Water into Wine turns his Peoples Sorrow into Joy Christ was anointed to give the Oyl of Joy for mourning the Garments of Praise for the spirit of heaviness Isa 61.3 They that sow in Tears shall reap in Joy Psal 126.5 6. Hearts that were never broken are not yet prepared for Christ to bind them up Paul had a casting down to the Earth before he was caught up to the third Heavens They that have great elevations of Joy and yet were never humbled for Sin have cause enough to suspect their Joy is not right 2. Spiritual Joy hath the Holy Spirit for its Authour Thus it is the Joy of the Holy Ghost 1 Thes 1.6 As I said of a lively Hope it is a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Ministers may be helpers of a Believers Joy as 2 Cor. 1.24 but under the Spirit He is the principal efficient Now they that have not the Holy Ghost their Sanctifier cannot have him their Comforter The Disciples were filled with Joy and with the Holy Ghost Act. 13.52 This fruit of the Spirit never grows alone but hath other fruits accompanying it Indeed there may be Saving Sanctifying Grace without actual Joy and Consolation but there cannot be true Joy without Saving Sanctifying Grace 3. Spiritual Joy is never to be found without Saving Faith Rom. 15.13 Now the God of Hope fill you with Joy and Peace in believing No other way that it can be attained Sound Joy is the Joy of Faith Phil. 1.25 Being justified by Faith we have Peace with God and rejoyce in hope of the Glory of God Rom. 5.1 2. Without true Saving Justifying Faith no Peace with God and without Peace and Reconciliation with God no ground for Joy So then if we would know whether our Joy be right we must inquire after the truth of our Faith Certainly a temporary Faith can have no betrer than a temporary Joy following it 4. Spiritual Joy ordinarily is not attained without self-probation without self-searching Gal. 6.4 Let every Man prove his own work and then shall he have rejoycing in himself The ground of an Hypocrites Joy ordinarily is out of himself in the good opinion and esteem of others But says the Apostle 2 Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is this the testimony of our Conscience And this we see is the Scripture-way and method for attaining Spiritual Joy to commune with our own Hearts to ask our own Consciences seriously what evidence they can give that we are in a state of Grace that our works are done in Sincerity And when Conscience can give testimony of our Godly Sincerity and Integrity then indeed we have good ground to rejoyce But therefore such as are great strangers to themselves and fear examining their Consciences strictly lest
perswasion that their Sins were pardoned for Christ's sake Which is a quite different thing from Faith as I have before shewed And yet Alas how many poor Souls that are still under the same mistake Many that complain they cannot believe when their meaning is they cannot but fear that they are not such unto whom God hath promised the benefits of Remission and Salvation And yet if they be asked Do you not believe the truth of whatsoever God hath spoken or promised And are you not willing to have Christ as he is offered to sanctify as well as justify you to rule as well as redeem and save you And do you not believe both his Power and Willingness to save all that heartily accept of him on his own terms and that Salvation can be no other way obtained And therefore notwithstanding all your doubts and fears about the sincerity of your acceptance of him yet do you not resolve to cast your selves on him and do you not look to him alone for Salvation This they could not deny without bearing false Witness against themselves Now this is Faith though all that have it cannot see it in themselves and therefore many true Believers doubt whether they are pardoned and shall be saved In Faith there is a believing application of Christ and the Promises As those Believers spoken of Heb. 11.13 were perswaded of the Promises and embraced them They did not only assent to them as true but embraced them as good not only as good in themselves but as good and proper for them they clave to them Indeed the holy Angels assent to the truth of the Gospel fully and are marvellously taken with admire and delight in the glorious Mysteries of Divine Grace therein contained but it is not their duty and concern to apply these things to themselves But Believers apply these things as most nearly concerning them Though there be not always a sensible application of Christ and the Promise with Faith which one calleth an Axiomatical Application so as to say and conclude that Christ is mine and the Promise or promised benefits are mine yet there is a real application a willing acceptance of Christ and resolved adherence recumbency and dependance on him And yet I grant that this Affiance and Recumbency on Christ though it is certainly in the habit and in Truth where Souls truly accept of Christ on his own terms it is but weak yea sadly clouded with doubts and fears in many true Believers As Cruciger on his Death-Bed Invoco te quanquam languidâ imbecillâ fide sed fide tamen c. When a Soul hath let go its hold elsewhere to take hold on Christ yet many times it takes hold on him but with a trembling hand That it is with a Believer as with the four Lepers 2 King 7.3 4. Why sit we here till we dye Let us go to the Syrians if they save us we shall live As with Esther Chap. 4.16 I will go to the King If I perish I perish As with the poor Prodigal Luk. 15.18 I will arise and go to my Father Though he knew not whether his Father would look on him and bid him welcome when he came As one says There is a Faith that is called a coming to Christ Vines is a motion a strugling to the Rock as well as a Faith resting and setling upon him Nec qui Serpentis aenei aspectu sanabantur pariter erant perspicaces P. Molin They that were cured with looking up to the Brazen Serpent were not all alike quick-sighted Aliud est luctarifiduciam cum dubitatione Chamier Panstrat tom 3. l. 13. c. 8. §. 11. p. 416. aliud nullam esse fiduciam True Faith may be with many doubtings And when one doubteth not of the truth of God's Word and Promises but only whether he be such an one to whom the promised benefits belong this is not the Sin of unbelief And commonly the doubtings of Believers are of this sort viz. not a distrust of God but a mistrusting themselves a suspition of themselves a jealousy of their own hearts that they are not right Surely most Believers are troubled with doubtings of this kind And indeed they have great cause to doubt of the truth of their Faith that as they say never doubted of their Salvation in all their Lives Yet further to lay down a few notes whereby you may judg of your Affiance and trust in Christ whether it be sound or no. 1. A Sound Affiance in Christ is not without a self-distrust and self-despair Haec vera hominis fiducia à se deficientis innitentis Domino suo Bern. Have we received the Sentence of Death in our selves not to trust in our selves Do we let go all broken Reeds and forsake all false props are we taken off our own bottoms that we put no confidence in the Flesh Indeed Sinners are not so well inclined towards Christ as to come to him before a sense of their necessity drive them They come not till they see they have none else to go unto that all other refuge fails them And so long as any are for establishing their own Righteousness they are it's true like Paul while he was a Pharisee as the Pharisees were Men that trusted in themselves that they were Righteous Luk. 18.9 but contrary to Paul after he was a Convert a Christian who then would be found in Christ not having his own Righteousness c. Phil. 3.9 In Hab. 2.4 A Soul that is lifted up is opposed to one that lives by Faith And I remember One observes a more direct opposition betwixt self and Christ than betwixt Sin and Christ for says he Sin does accidentally drive us unto Christ but Self does altogether draw us from Christ It is indeed a fatal mistake for Men to ascribe and attribute that to their own works or to any thing in themselves which is proper to God's Grace or to Christ's Righteousness Satisfaction and Merits If ever we be saved we must see our selves lost and undone in our selves and that we cannot be saved but by Grace in and through Jesus Christ that there is Salvation in no other It is true most certain and unquestionable that without Holiness no Man shall see the Lord Heb. 12.14 The unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 So we cannot be saved without an inherent Righteousness yet we are not saved for it This is a necessary qualification unto not the procuring cause of Salvation It was the carnal Jews overthrow as we see Rom. 10.3 that they set up their own Righteousness confronting God's free Grace and Christ's Merits Mr. A. Disc of the two Covenants p. 124 125 126. gives a threefold account why it might be called their own Righteousness in opposition to the Righteousness of God 1. Because they sought the pardon of their Sins by that only which was their own their own Sacrifices 2. Because they did not think Regeneration or
the Christian Society As Colledges have their Statutes and other Companies and Societies their particular Orders This is an Order for all that are of Christ's School And without renouncing Self we cannot rightly depend on Christ without forsaking Self we cannot follow Christ without crossing Self we cannot comply with the Will of Christ without denying self we cannot be ready to confess Christ we cannot be willing and prepared to die to suffer for Christ How easily are Men brought to deny the Faith and Truth to deny God and Jesus Christ that have not learnt to deny themselves Will Lovers of themselves will Self-seekers stick to Christ and his Truth when put upon trial whether indeed they are content to sell all for the Pearl of price Whether they can forsake all for Christ When the Cross shall follow those that follow Christ will not such flinch from him then Yea before any such Trials come all that have not learnt to deny themselves have denied God and Christ already in their Hearts and are daily denying him in their Works and Lives Though Men have a form of Godliness yet while they deny the power thereof so far they deny God And to deny the power of Godliness is a sad preparation and introduction to the grossest and most shameful denial of God and Christ when a Temptation thereunto shall come No wonder therefore that Christ says here Whosoever will come after me let him deny himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him utterly deny himself The simple Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is as much as to deny that with this Preposition added it seems to signifie more to deny with an Emphasis to deny with contempt and abhorrence of ones self Quest But what is it to deny our selves Answ 1. In the Negative 1. We must not deny our selves to be what indeed we are as we must not feign our selves to be what we are not As the Prophet Ahijah said to the disguised Wife of Jeroboam Why feignest thou thy self to be another It is one thing to disguise and another to deny our selves The Hypocrite that seems to be what he is not and would not appear to be what he is is yet far from that Self-denial Christ calls us to he deceives himself and others while he does not deny himself So likewise many a sensless Sinner when admonished of his Faults will not acknowledg that he is the Man whom such a repoof concerns He will justifie himself though his Lips prove him perverse and though it may further provoke the Lord to plead with him as Jer. 2.35 To deny the Truth here is quite opposite to Self-denial Again Some there are in another Extream For whom God hath done much yet being clouded with Melancholy c. they cannot see so clear as otherwise they might and thereupon soon question yea deny any good wrought in them The condition of these is far better than the others spoken of before Yet they are to be pittied and such an Humour not to be fed or encouraged It is one thing to deny our selves and another to deny God's goodness to us It is no way contrary to Self-denial for a Christian to say with the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.10 By the Grace of God I am what I am Some go further yet and charge themselves more deeply than there is just cause As some poor troubled Spirits will not down with it but that they have sinned the unpardonable Sin c. But though we are not to deny our selves we are not falsly to accuse our selves 2. We are not to deny our selves in that sense wherein it is said that God cannot deny himself 2 Tim. 2.13 He abideth faithful he cannot deny himself He is ever as good as his Promise constant to his Word We may not in this sense deny our selves may not go back from lawful promises made either to God or Men. We should not use lightness yea and nay 3. We are not to renounce the use of our Reason That is no piece of Self-denial intended or required here That would be to make the Christian Religion unreasonable And how great a reproach would that cast upon Religion What is Man but Animal rationale or Ens ratione praeditum a Creature endued with Reason That it is as natural to him as congruous to that form and kind of being which his Creator has given him that he should use his Reason as that the Sun Moon and Stars should shine and give forth their light And it is certainly the highest and noblest use our Reason serves for to help us in the discovery of Truth and to direct us in the choice of Good Therefore no doubt we may be the Servants of Christ upon more Honourable terms than Nahash would have put upon the Men of Jabesh-Gilead Christ never required his Followers in this sense to put out their right Eyes though we must part with our dearest Lusts which have been as our right Eyes yet when these are pluckt out we should see never the worse But it is the way of Antichrist to perswade Man to an implicit Faith and to blind Obedience It is the drift and design of the Synagogue of Satan to get Men hood-winkt that they may be content to see with the Eyes of their Rulers and Leaders and follow them which way they please But we should be ready always to give an answer to every Man that asketh us a Reason of our Faith 1 Pet. 3.15 And can we give a Reason of our Faith without using our Reason And how oft doth the Lord reason with Men about Matters of Religion See Isa 46. from ver 5. to ver 9. Then would he not have Men use their Reason here Yea how does he upbraid Men that they used their Reason no better that they did not shew themselves Men See Isa 44.19 Chap. 27.11 It is a People of no understanding And it is plain the Scriptures that are a Rule for our Faith and Practice could not be rightly applied and made use of without putting forth our Reason Mat. 22.29 31 32. Where Christ telleth the Sadducees that denied the Resurrection Ye do err not knowing the Scriptures No Man could discover the Resurrection of the Dead in that Scripture brought for it without the use and exercise of Reason And farther We must have Reason to convince those who as yet believe not the Divine Original and Authority of the Scriptures How else should Heathens Infidels be convinced and converted Would we have them change their Way and Opinions without seeing any Reason for it And while Hereticks and Men of unsound Minds abuse their Reason setting it against the Truth should not we use and improve our Reason in defence of the Truth Can we 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 confute Gain-sayers without using our Reason And the Apostle would have Christians not as Children but Men in understanding 1 Cor. 14.20 And that is a weighty passage which some have laid down who have written to good
purpose Of the concurrent judgment of Protestants concerning the Interest of Reason in matters of Religion The more the understanding of a Christian discerneth the Evidences Pag. 14. §. 24. and true Reason of all things in Religion the far greater advantage his Will hath for the love of it and fixed resolution never to forsake it and for seriousness and constancy in an holy Self-denying Life and for patience in Sufferings and joyful hopes of Heavenly Glory For Grace worketh on Man as Man That is as a rational free Agent whose Will must be guided by the light of his understanding So they And yet we must say that there are many Points in Religion which Mans Reason without Divine Supernatural Revelation could never discover as ver 9. the Mystery of the Trinity the Incarnation of Christ c. Though part of the Christian Religion be evident by the Light of Nature yet what is not of Natural Revelation the soundest and strongest Reason and Understanding of Man could never reach unto without the help of Supernatural Revelation As there is no seeing without Light so there is no Knowledge without some intelligible Evidence Again This we must not hold That what is Supernaturally revealed though in it self never so much above the reach of Natural Reason is not to be doubted of but must be concluded infallibly certain Though we may not take any thing to be the Word of God without Reason Mr. Baxt. of Self-denial pag. 280. yet when we have Reason to take it to be his Word we must believe and submit to all that is in it without any more reason for our Belief Since it is evident by many Infallible proofs that the Scriptures are the Word of God the God of Truth that cannot Lye we have good reason indeed to yield our ready and full assent to whatsoever is taught and held forth in the Sacred Scriptures And it is unreasonable not to believe the Word of God that God who is Omniscient and All-wise that he cannot be deceived and who is infinitely Holy and Good that he cannot deceive Thus those high Points of Faith which could never be cleared by natural proof or evidence yet we are to receive as unquestionable Verities upon account of God's Veracity they being revealed by him in his holy Word In such cases to acknowledg the short-sightedness of our imperfect understandings is but reasonable But to deny or question the truth of Divine Revelation is most unreasonable and impious Yet it must be noted That this no way befriendeth those who would impose new Articles of Faith upon Christians or put a false sense on any part of Scripture that it may be thought to favour their Errors and Absurdities Such are like the false Prophets of old Ezek. 13.7 that would tell the People The Lord saith it albeit he had not spoken Thus the Papists would father the first-born of Monsters and grossest of Absurdities their Transubstantiation upon God and Jesus Christ A Doctrine full of Contradictions contrary to common Sense and Reason and to many plain points of Faith But from what Scripture do they learn or can they prove it that a Priest hath power by mumbling over a few words to turn Bread and Wine into the very Body and Blood of Christ It 's true we read This is my Body And so it is Sacramentally and Representatively notwithstanding it is naturally Bread still And how oft is it called Bread even after Consecration shewing that its substance is not changed by its Consecration but only its use It is Bread still when Consecrated when Administred when Eaten 1 Cor. 11.26 27 28. As often us ye eat this Bread c. Whereas the Papists contrary to plain Scripture and to all our Senses will needs have it to be no more Bread One thing more must be laid down here that Man's Reason and understanding Faculty since the Fall is naturally blind and dark depraved whence it is apt to judg sinisterly and falsly of Spiritual things unable spiritually and savingly to discern them without the special Illumination of the holy Spirit Yet it will not follow that Men must lay aside their Reason either waiting for immediate Revelations with the Enthusiasts or subscribing to the dictates of Men hand over head right or wrong true or false with the Papists But they are to use their own Vnderstandings the best they can to get Instruction from the Word of God which was written to make wise the Simple not leaning to their own Vnderstandings which are so lame but earnestly calling in the help and guidance of the Spirit of Truth to lead them into all Truth And they are in the most hopeful way to find the Spirit 's assistance here who are most diligent and careful in the use of those means whereunto he directs Men such as Reading Hearing the Word Meditation Prayer Conference But observe as to the sight of an Object these three things are joyntly-necessarily required Scil. 1. The Eye or Visive Faculty 2. The Object to be seen 3. The Light to irradiate the Object So to the knowledg of Religion and the Doctrine of Salvation these three things are no less necessarily concurring 1. Our Reason or understanding Faculty 2. The Object or Doctrine of Truth to be known 3. Nam et oculus sic factus est ut videre lumen possit sed videre non potest nisi se illi lumen infuderit Fulgent Epist 6. That the holy Spirits's enlightning the Mind or opening the Understanding to apprehend and discern this Object Which illumination of the Spirit is twofold common or special Pardon this Digression For several Reasons I have thought it not unseasonable at this time to speak something of the Interest of Reason in the matters of Religion Concerning which for fuller Satisfaction peruse those few sheets forecited But thus that denying of our selves which Christ calleth us unto doth not include a renouncing of the use of Reason 4. When we are required to deny our selves the meaning is not that we should destroy our selves or unnecessarily do any thing tending thereunto Self-denial is an eminent and precious Grace but Self-murder a very great and dreadful Sin To be ready to lay down our lives when God calleth to it is an eminent act of Self-denial but to cast away our lives in a discontened humour or by neglect is quite another thing 5. To wrong our selves by denying our selves the needful comforts God alloweth us is not Christian Self-denial As some poor melancholy persons almost famish themselves To deny our selves a sober moderate use of Creature-comforts that we have need of is more than the Lord requires Some there are so covetous that though they have great Wealth and Riches yet they have not power to eat thereof Here is Self-denial even from the basest selfishness A denying of natural self for worldly self But the greatest wronging of our selves is a rejecting Grace offered This is Self-undoing not right Self-denial 6.
believes any Truth upon the Testimony of God in his Word upon the same ground for the same reason must believe the truth of whatsoever God hath said in his Word So he that obeyeth in this or that particular because God hath commanded it hath a will to obey all that God hath given in Command Thus the upright Man's obedience to one Command is upon a general Ground common to all God's Commands And hereupon he is uniform in his Obedience But the obedience which the Hypocrite performeth is upon lame unsound Reasons and partial Grounds and so his obedience is lame short and partial like the Grounds of it But attend well to this note I am upon To walk Uprightly is to walk in all the Commandments of the Lord as Zacharias and Elizabeth did Luk. 1.6 And so 1. The Upright Man hath a respect to both Tables An Upright Heart is another Arke where the Tables of God's Laws are kept even both Tables Those which God hath joyned one after God's Heart would not separate Such a one would keep a Conscience void of offence both towards God and towards Men Act. 24.16 Look what kind of honesty to Man that is which is not accompanied with Religion towards God the same sayes Mr. R. Bolton is that Religion towards God which is not attended with honesty to Men. Both in one predicament as he sayes How can he be Upright before God who does not make Conscience of Duties to God Job was Perfect and Vpright and one that feared God as we read Job 1.1 And further Uprightness teacheth to make Conscience of Duties towards Men. For which see Job's serious profession of his Upright carriage chap. 31. So the Apostle sayes Heb. 13.18 We trust we have a good Conscience in all things willing to live honestly So the Upright Man is a good Man Mic. 7.2 The good Man is perished out of the earth and there is none upright among Men. Psal 125.4 Those that be good and them that are Vpright in their heart go together The Upright set themselves to follow the rule of the Word which teacheth them to be good in their Relations As Psal 101.2 I will behave my self wisely in a perfect way I will walk within my Soul with a perfect heart The Upright Man will be a good Master Or such a one will make a good Servant if he be in that Relation Obeying not with eye-service but in singleness of heart Col. 3.22 not purloyning but shewing all good fidelity Tit. 2.10 The Upright Man is a just Man Job 12.4 The Just Vpright Man He is just in his dealings Uprightness and Injustice are at great odds as can be these will never agree while the World stands Sincerity will not mingle with fraud and deceit Sincerum quasi sine cerâ The honest heart is for honest dealing Such as are Sincere before God will deal truly sincerely fairly candidly with Men. As there is an expression Judg. 9.19 If ye have dealt truly and sincerely with Jerubbaal and with his House Such as make a trade of cozening defrauding wronging their Neighbours let their pretences be never so fair their course of practice will prove them false unsound How incongruous is it to have Jacob's Voice and Esau's rough hands Verily a cheating Professour is much worse than a known professed Cheater And see Deut. 25.13 14 15 16. Deceitful Weights and deceitful Measures are the inventions of deceitful Hearts How many that are enriching themselves with the wages of Vnrighteousness Such cannot say as the Psalmist Psal 18.23 24. I was upright before him Therefore hath the Lord recompensed me according to my righteousness according to the cleanness of my hands in his Eye-sight Nor are such ever likely to have any evidence of their Uprightness till they come to follow such Counsel as that Dan. 4.27 Break off thy Sins by Righteousness and thine Iniquities by shewing Mercy to the Poor As God smites his hand at Mens dishonest gain Ezek. 22.13 So will the Upright despise the gain of oppressions or deceits and shake his hands from holding of bribes Isa 33.15 Yea the Upright Man is not only just but Merciful Psal 112.4 Unto the Vpright there ariseth light in darkness he is gracious and full of compassion as well as righteous So the Merciful and Vpright are put together and opposed to the froward Psal 18.25 26. 2. The upright Man would not despise the least of Gods Commands He is for keeping them as the apple of his Eye as there is an expression Prov. 7.2 with all care and tenderness His care is to walk circumspectly exactly That preciseness which prophane spirits deride and scoff at he sees to be necessary That supposing a Man to keep the whole Law excepting one Point which he allows himself to offend in by contemning God's Authority therein his Obedience would thus be proved unsound and he be proved guilty in respect of the whole Law James 2.10 He thus despising that same Authority upon which the whole Law depends For one to allow himself in the breach of the least of Christ's Commands accounting it of little weight that it was no matter if he regard it not this is enough to shut one out of the Kingdom of Heaven Mat. 5.19 3. The upright Man though he does not despise and contemn the least of God's Commands yet he looks first and most to the greatest Commands He has a special regard to these As the contrary detected the Hypocrisy of the Scribes and Pharisees that as strict as they were in lesser matters yet they were grosly negligent of the greater and more weighty Mat. 23.23 24. To be very observant of and zealous about Circumstantials but careless of more necessary Duties and substantials of Religion is one ill-favoured mark of an Hypocrite whereby he may be known 4. The upright Man has a respect to the hardest Commands even to such Commands as are most cross to his Carnal interest and Natural inclination So this evidenced Abraham's integrity that when God called for his Isaac he withheld not his Son his only Son from him Thus on the other hand the unsoundness of the young Man that was ready to boast of his obedience was discovered Mat. 19.21 If thou wilt be perfect Mark 10.21 one thing thou lackest Go and sell that thou hast and give to the Poor and come and follow me Christ knew his mind how his heart was let upon the World and to shew that his heart was not right nor he so perfect as he took himself to be he tried him with a Command that was cross to his Carnal Interest and to his special Inclination which soon laid him open As willing and forward as he seemed to know and learn his Duty yet when he hears of selling all and taking up the Cross Mark 10.21 he leaveth this hard work for others 12. The upright Man carries uprightly in reference to holy Duties Here 1. He has a care to engage his heart to