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A09277 VindiciƦ gratiƦ. = A plea for grace More especially the grace of faith. Or, certain lectures as touching the nature and properties of grace and faith: wherein, amongst other matters of great use, the maine sinews of Arminius doctrine are cut asunder. Delivered by that late learned and godly man William Pemble, in Magdalen Hall in Oxford. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1627 (1627) STC 19591; ESTC S114374 222,244 312

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not properly an assent of Christian faith I prove thus To assent or dissent is an action of the Vnderstanding or of the Will if of the Vnderstanding the object of it is Truth or Falsehood if of the Will the object of it is goodnesse or evill For the assent of the Will the case is manifest that it doth never assent unto and allow of the goodnesse of the obiect or dissent from and disallow the evill of it untill there be knowledge and apprehension of both For this approbation or reprobation of any thing by the Will cannot bee without Election nor Election without foregoing deliberation and judgement of the understanding upon the thing that is chosen or refused Againe for the Vnderstanding how can it assent unto the Truth or dissent from the Falsehood of such things whereof it hath no apprehension at all For so here should be an Act without an Object at least an irrationall act of the rationall part of man For if the Vnderstanding assent or dissent without understanding of whereto or from what is not a non-ens the object of such an act and is not such an act more like the naturall propensions of senslesse creatures whereby they are carried to unknowne ends than the judiciall determination of a reasonable man Though the things beleeved exceed reason yet the revelations of them are not above our knowledge and our assent unto them must be so farre forth rationall that if wee cannot give a reason of the thing beleeved yet wee must give a reason of our beliefe A reason of our beliefe is then rendred when we understand that testimony and authority wherein the thing to be beleeved is revealed unto us This only makes our assent reasonable For as in Scientificall knowledge and opinion the understanding never assents till the nature of the thing it selfe be knowne either fully or in part so in beliefe the understanding assents not till the meaning of the relation or testimony be understood what that thing is distinctly whereto it must assent In the two former wee give the reason of our assent from the thing it selfe knowne in the last wee give the reason of our assent from the authority of the revealer In every one our assent presupposeth knowledge in the former of the thing it selfe in the later of the Revelation Wherefore that implicite faith of the ordinary Papist who following the doctrine of his Teachers contents himselfe that he gives his assent in grosse unto all what ever is in the Bible Churches traditions that it is true whilst yet he understands scarce any Article of his religion distinctly this their implicite assent is meerely bruitish and unreasonable Contrary to the expresse precept of the Apostle Paul Rom. 12. 1. commanding us to offer unto God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a reasonable service and Peter 1 Pet. 3. 15. bidding us be ready to give an answer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not a bare answer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but with a defence to every one that demandeth of us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Reason of our Faith Now it would be knowne of the Romish Laiety what reason they can give for their faith what Apologie they are able to make for it when as they are utterly ignorant of Scriptures the only reason and defense of our Faith And is not their service and worship of God the very unreasonable motion of an unintelligent beast that 's ordered by his driver but understands not why and for what reason and ground Where particulars are not knowne there may be a generall kinde of beliefe But this generall beliefe is not an actuall assent to the truth of any particular thing revealed till that particular bee knowne and understood Actuall assent to particular truths is then only when they are knowne and according to the increase of distinct knowledge so this assent increaseth Before there is this distinct knowledge there can be no more but Praeparatio animi a resolution of the minde to yeeld assent to any particular if it bee once knowne Which though it be good when wee can doe no otherwise by reason of unavoydable ignorance yet to teach that this is sufficient to true faith is to teach men to be carelesse of all religion T is good where there is knowledge in part and when for the rest ignorance is seene bewayled and avoyded by all earnest desire and possible endevour to get knowledge in all points but t is monstrous flothfulnesse to bee content with this that in generall we beleeve all though we assent to nothing in particular This were indeed a short cut to heaven if no more were required to Christian faith but to force upon ones selfe such a resolution as this Here is the Bible I am resolved to beleeve all that it saith but for particulars I le looke no further let the Church and those that are learned looke to that How farre such a blinde resolution is from Christian faith and pietie besides experience which testifies that all those who have true faith in some things doe alwayes much lament their ignorance and eagerly desire the increase of distinct knowledge the Scriptures also doe abundantly witnesse unto us Wherein no exhortation more common then this unto the encrease of Knowledge yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. as the Apostle prayes for the Collosians Col. 2. 2. And for the Corinthians hee wisheth the like 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 8. 7. How many prayers of the Saints doe wee finde they have made for knowledge every where mentioned How often is Faith and Knowledge coupled together Ioh. 10. 38. 1 Ioh. 4. 16. c. yea many times confounded and taken one for the other 2 Cor. 4. 14. Esa. 53 ●1 Ioh. 17. 3. c Againe this knowledge is easie to be had by the ayde of the holy Spirit inwardly inlightening and teaching the faithfull when they use such meanes as hee hath appointed See for that purpose Ier. 31. 33 34. 1. Cor. 2. 10. 12. 2. Cor. 4. 6. Ioh. 14. 21. where Christ promiseth to shew himselfe visibly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to those that love him Were knowledge a thing impossible or very difficult or unprofitable some pretence there were to pleade for ignorance but when t is so often commanded us when it may be so easily had when t is so usefull in the having so dangerous to want it it s now impudence to patronize ignorance as a friend to Religion which is a professed enemy to mans reason Wherefore it is a shamelesse assertion of Bellarmine De Iustif. l. c. 5. That Faith may better be defined by ignorance than by knowledge A pestilent conceit which once rooted in men breeds in them an horrible contempt distaste and neglect of Scriptures and all Religion as matters not possible nor necessary for them to comprehend But this is a gull put upon poore people by the Clergy thereby to excuse their owne idlenesse in not teaching them or to gaine the
our assent vnto Diuine Truths springs from these three fountaines 1 From the Infallible Authority of the Reuelation 2 From the excellent greatnesse and worth of things Reuealed 3 From the manifest experiment of some part of their Truth knowne vnto vs. Of these in order The first and chiefest ground whereon is built the Certainty of faiths assent is The Infallible truth and Authority of Diuine Reuelations I call this the chiefest ground because it is that whereunto finally all our Beliefe is resolued For aske the question wherefore do you firmely belieue the Articles of the ●reed The answere is Because God hath reuealed them in Scriptures to be belieued The reason of which answere is this because What euer God saith istrue Now this is a principle in Nature aswell knowne to the reasonable creature as that they haue reason it is grauen deepe vpon the conscience of euery one which tels him That God is so infinitely Wise that hee can be ignorant of nothing that none can circumuent and ouer each him And againe that he is so infinitely good holy and Iust that no ●ie can come of this truth as Iohn speaketh Iohn 2. 21. Wisedome it selfe cannot bee deceiued Truth it selfe cannot deceiue and God is both Wherefore none but a Iesuite like Beca●… whose wits haue serued an apprentiship in the mystery of lying and aequiuocation vnder the Father of ●ies would haue affirmed that the Prophets and Apostles though they knew it was God that reuealed heauenly mysteries vnto them yet they knew not Euidently whether God was not deceiued himselfe or would not deceiue them Alying surmise much like that of the Serpent when hee tempted the Woman Yea saith he hath God indeed said so Yes the woman answeres God hath said so and we know it But Satan replies Are you sure that God spake true when hee said it The Diuell then denyed it and Becanus staggers at it as a thing very doubtfull telling vs that when God speakes man cannot be euidently certaine whether he speaks true or false But we reiect with abomination such a suggestion to Infidelity that strikes at the roote of all Christian Faith and shakes the lowest foundation-stone in all that building we know and are euidently assured That God is truth and in him or of him there is no Lie From this first ground of faith in Gods Essentiall truth wee draw another that whersoeuer any Reuelation is certainely known or belieued to be of God there the reasonable creature doth fully assent to the truth of things reuealed Whence all the holy Pen-men of Scriptures did for themselues most certainely belieue the truth of all things they deliuered though sometimes they vnderstood but darkely what was the meaning of that which they spake and wrote because they knew that they were taught them immediatly from God Yea the diuels themselues when they know as they doe these reuelations to be from God howeuer they tempt men to distrust and out of malice raises vp lies and slanders vpon Gods truth yet in the meane time are themselues cleerely conuinced of this truth and doe assent vnto it in their consciences The diuell knew well that Gods threatning to Alam was a certaine truth euen whilst he perswaded him it was but a lie And when he inspired the Pharisies to call Christ. Samaritan Belzebub a possessed Daemoniacke a Deceiuer and all to nought euen then himselfe could not but confesse that he was that Christ Iesus the Sonne of the most high God Mar. 5. 7. But this is the malice of Hell to sight against the Light and furiously to oppose what we cannot but acknowledge to be truth Well Thus far then our Faith goes vpon a sure ground That whatsoeuer God saith is true And againe When wee know euidently that God sayes it wee are ready to belieue it without further question But here in the next place is all the doubt How know wee infallibly that God is the Author of the Scriptures and that such things as therein are proposed for vs to belieue are reuealed by God himselfe This is a fundamentall Question wherein it greatly behoues euery Christian to be rightly informed It would require a large discourse to bee prosecuted through euery particular I shall but onely touch vpon the generall and giue occasion to each one carefully to bethinke himselfe that his faith be built on the rocke and not vpon the Sand. The Question is How is it knowne certenly that the Scriptures are the very word of God it hath two brāches 1 Toaching each seuerall part of Scripture as it was reuealed and giuen to the Church of God How did the People of the Iewes know that what was deliuered by Moses and other Prophets after him from time to time was the word of God To which I answere they knew the writing and Preaching of Moses and the Prophets to be of diuine Inspiration partly by the holinesse of the Doctrine which they taught the liuely power and worke whereof the hearts of the godly then felt partly by the miracles which they wrought for confirmation of their propheticall office partly by the certaine and infallible accomplishment of all their prophecies Of which triall of Prophets and their prophesies wee haue a generall rule set downe Deut. 18. 18. c. I will raise them vp a Prophet from among their brethren like vnto thee and will pur my words in his mouth and hee shall speake vnto them all that I command him 19. And whosoeuer will not hearken vnto my words which hee shall speake in my name I will require it of him 20. But the Prophet that shall presume to speake a word in my name which I haue not commanded him to speake or that speaketh in the name of other gods euen the same Prophet shall die 2● And if thou thinke in thine heart How shall wee know the word which the Lord hathnot spoken 22. When a Prophet speaketh in the name of the Lord if the thing follow not nor come to passe that is the thing which the Lord hath not spoken but the Prophet hath spoken it presumptuously thou shalt not so be afraid of him By the same meanes were the preaching of Christ also the preaching and writing of the Apostles knowne in their times 2 Touching the whole Scripture as it is now compleatly deliuered vnto vs in writing How can it euidently and infallibly appeare vnto vs that what wee finde written in the Bible is of diuine inspiration the very oracles of God not mans Inuentions In the solution of this Question our aduersaries of the Romish and wee of the Reformed Churches differ irreconcileably Wee affirme that the Scriptures are knowne to be of God by themselues they maintaine that we cannot bee certaine of the Scriptures Diuinity by any other argument then the testimony of the Church which say they doth infallibly propose vnto vs what is to be belieued what is not to be belieued So that ask a Roman Catholike Wherfore do you
abates more or lesse or as there is greater necessity and use of one grace more than another For the case is not altogether alike in our New as in our Naturall birth here all parts are nourished alike and grow proportionably unto full perfection if the body be healthy and of good temper But in the birth of the new creature it is otherwise he is crazic and sickly from the very wombe and first conception infirmity and corruption hangs upon every joint and limbe of him so that although life be in every part yet every part thrives not equally nor is alike active in its operations It s with him as with instants that are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syderati planet strucken or as wee say taken with some ill aire in whom some parts grow wearish and withered whilst others grow strong and lusty All grow and have life but those more slowly and weakely which diversity make the body somewhat deformed though not monstrous So in Grace every faculty is quickened with spirituall life and strength and yet one may have a more free exercise of this gracious power than another which may bee hindered and kept under through some stopping of the Spirit some ill humour unpurged some corrupt custome company or example inclining it another way And this appeares by manifest experience of that great diversity of the degrees of grace which are found even in one regenerate man who many times proves eminent in some one or few graces yet in others attains but to a very meane mediocrity This distinction between the Vnity of the Habit and Multiplicity of the Operations of Grace infused may be further cleered by comparison with other things as namely with originall justice and originall sinne That was but one Image of God ingraven universally in Adams whole nature possessing and sanctifying every part which were thereby disposed at all occasions to all convenient and due operations without let This also is not a particular but universall depravation indisposing all parts to good ill-disposing them to naught Which as originall justice should have beene is in all infants together with life but shewes it by degrees and with much diversity as with increase of yeares custome of education force of temperature strength of temptations provoke and inslame it So our sanctification being the restoring of originall righteousnesse and doing away of originall corruption is for its inherence one generall habite sanctifying all at once and working in every part a gracious disposition to its proper holy performances though the execution it selfe be with much variety as also hinderance and difficulty by reason of the contrary habite of corruption Againe health is not a particular but universall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or right temper of the whole body which in divers parts hath divers names by which every part workes diversly and all orderly In a universall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 on the contrary And such are the habites of grace and corruption Lastly as the reasonable soule in infants hath all its faculties entirely though the exercise of each of them appeare not but in time by degrees so in our regeneration grace is entire even in its infancy and first birth though the operations of it are more or lesse according to our growth in Christ. Now to make application of this to our enquiry touching the originall of faith you may perceive by what is spoken Whereof faith is a part and When faith is wrought in the soule Namely that faith is a part of our sanctification that faith is wrought in the soule then when we are regenerate by the infusion of the habite of grace into our whole man This will appeare if we distinguish between 1. The habite of faith which is in generall the renued quality of the soule whereby it is made able to discerne and yeeld assent unto and also willing to put affiance in all divine truth revealed 2. The act of faith when the understanding and will do actually know and relie upon Gods truth and goodnesse This is a fruit of the former and followes it in time the former is a branch of the Image of God restored unto us a streame of the common fountaine of sanctification whence all graces slow a part of our inherent righteousnesse as is most apparant It being impossible that the understanding and will of man should bee effectually inclined towards their spirituall and supernaturall object to give credence and put confidence in it untill such time as they bee first rectified by grace and purged from their habituall inbred blindnesse and rebellion Which change when it is wrought in the soule by the Spirit of grace sanctifying and quickning it in all the powers thereof with spirituall life then follow those living actions of Faith Hope Love c performed by the strength of inherent and assisting grace Wherefore wee are not to imagine that faith is infused eyther Before or without other graces or that the soule is not at the same time and as soone disposed to love feare God as to beleeve in him or to Humility to Patience to Charity to Repentance as for Faith The seed of all these graces is sowne at once and for their habites they are co●vall stemmes of one common roote of inherent sanctity though yet some of them shoot up faster and beare fruit sooner than other Those that doe so are the two principall graces of Faith and Repentance the actions of both which seem to appeare first in the regenerate which of them shew first I will not now dispute but certaine it is that the regenerate soule workes here most lively and stirring and after the infusion of spirituall life the pulse beates strongest in those arteries The reason whereof I take it is the singular use of these two graces arising from the manner of our conversion which being wrought by the sight of sinne and misery on the one side and the representation of grace and mercy on the other of necessity drawes the newly-regenerate soule by strong motions immediately to conceive sorrow for and detestation of its sinnefull misery and also to a vehement desiring and looking after the promise of grace which may bring it deliverance from an estate so damnable But in this point of the priority of one grace before another wee may not be too bold nor curious for as the working of the holy Ghost is secret and wonderfull in making us wild gourds partakers of the sap and sweetenesse of the true Vine so is it not possibly observable in all or the most where and in what branch this sap first buds forth into blossomes and fruit Hence this conclusion is to be observed 1. That Eaith properly is not the roote of all other graces nor the first degree of our sanctification and spirituall life Take faith in which sense we please for the Act or for the Habit If for the Act the Habite is Before that and the roote of it If for the Habit
am very sensible that hitherto you may judge my Discourse hath had more Philosophy than Divinitie in it If it be an errour in this place I confesse it and crave your pardon for it only thus much let me say that I could not tell well how to avoide this generall consideration of the nature of Beleefe in regard that the knowledge thereof will cleere our passage to that which followes You have then heard what evidence there is in the object of Beliefe what certainty in the assent given to it how it differs how it agrees with Knowledge There remaines but one thing more to be cleered in the Generall and then I have done with it Beliefe was at first defined to bee an Assent to things knowne by revelation but now yee are further to know that all assent is not of the same kinde and degree but differs according to the diversitie of the Objects assented unto Therefore we must observe that of the Objects of Beliefe 1. Some are represented unto us only as True and Good in themselves without any speciall relation to our benefit and commoditie Vnto such things whether past present or to come the understanding and will of Man doe yeeld that common assent and approbation whereby they allow of the Ttuth and Goodnesse of every thing that is apprehended by them as true and good in what kinde soever it be This is called a bare assent or Credulitas Beliefe in strict termes when wee only beleeve t is good and true and goe no further 2. Some are revealed unto us not only as True and Good in themselves but more specially as contayning some excellent truth and goodnesse that concernes us in regard of some benefit that wee shall get thereby In these things our assent is with adherence affiance trust and dependance upon the thing revealed For as in generall all Truth and Goodnesse drawes the faculties of the soule to an approbation of them when they are knowne so much more doth the goodnesse and truth of those things which are proportionable to our nature and necessities wherein we may claime speciall interest and commodity unite our wills and understanding in strong assent and adherence unto them This kinde of assent is in strict termes called Faith or Trust Fides Fiducia which imply much more than Credulitas Beliefe Fidere in the property of the word is a degree beyond Credere importing an assent with reliance and confidence Now the proper object of this assent is nothing but Promises of some good hereafter to befall us And promises are never beleeved unlesse they bee trusted upon as a Captive cannot be said to beleeve him that promiseth to ransome him upon a day unlesse he trust and depend upon him In which case we cannot distinguish betweene Beleefe and Trust Fidem and Fiduciam to make them two severall Acts which are but one and the same as is manifest thus A promise is a revelation of some such truth as shall be beneficiall to me in particular The truth of such a promise consists in the certaintie of performance The goodnesse of the promise consists in the qualitie of the thing promised more or lesse excellent But now to trust fiduciam ponere fidem habere upon a promise is not to beleeve the goodnesse of the thing promised for that often is knowne perfectly enough but to bebeleeve the Certaintie of Performance of it unto me as for instance if a rich man promise to pay a poore mans debts the poore man needs not beleeve the goodnesse of the promise for he well knowes the benefit thereof What then must hee beleeve The truth of it where in stands that in the performance that the rich man will certainly doe for him what he hath said Now what is this else but to trust him So that Beliefe and Trust or Affiance are here essentially one and the same thing Thus much of Faith or Beliefe taken in its largest extent I come in the next place to the Speciall consideration of Faith as the word is Christian applied unto Divine and Supernaturall matters revealed in the Scriptures Faith in this use of the word hath a double acception 1. Improper and so it is taken three wayes 1. For the object of Faith the things beleeved either 1. Generally for the whole doctrine of faith delivered in Scriptures as 1 Tim. 4. 1. In the latter times some shall depart from that Faith and shall give heed to spirits of error and doctrines of Divells See many the like place 1 Tim. 3. 9. Gal. 3. 2. 1. 23. Act. 6. 7. Iud. vers 3. 2. Specially for Christ himselfe the chiefe object of Faith Gal. 3. 23. before Faith came id est Christ compared with ver 19. 24. 25. 2. For the externall profession of Faith and Religion as Rom. 1. 8. Your Faith is published throughout the whole world See Act. 14. 22. 3. For that vertue which we call Fidelity or Faithfulnesse in words or deeds whether it be in God Rom. 3. 3. shall their unbeliefe make the Faith of God without effect or in Man Tit. 2. 10. that they may shew all good faith or faithfulnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This of the word taken improperly the next acception of it is 2. Proper where to give such a description of Faith as may comprise in generall termes all the degrees therof it may be fitly defined thus Faith is an assent given by the reasonable creature to the truth and goodnesse of all divine revelations The termes of this definition are large and require a diligent explication that we may with more facility attaine our chiefe intent in judging aright of the nature of saving or justifying Faith Wherefore in the definition I prove three things to be considered of it 1. The Object of Faith divine Revelations 2. The Subject of Faith the Reasonable creature 3. The Genus of it viz. Assent Of the nature and properties of these in that order I have proposed ¶ 1. The compleat Object of Faith is All divine Revelations of whatsoever things the Creator shall make knowne unto the reasonable creature These Revelations are of two sorts 1. Some immediate from God himselfe by vision dreame or other secret but infallible suggestion Such revelations of divine things were made unto the Prophets Apostles and other holy men of God who as they beleeved certainly the thing revealed so they knew infallibly the truth of the revelation it selfe that it was from God and not an illusion of Satan or their owne braine If you aske me how they knew it as when the Word of God is said to come unto any one of the Prophets telling them inwardly what they should preach or answer in such or such a businesse or when Saint Paul indited one of his Epistles how did he or they know that the thoughts which then came into their mindes were from immediate worke of the holy Ghost I answer t is not possible for any man to describe the manner of
proue themselues by their owne naturall light manifesting their Diuine Originall whence they are and their right meaning how they must be vnderstood They are Primum ●●sibile not like Colour which cannot be seene till light make it apparant but like Light it selfe which maketh all other things manifest it selfe too by it own proper Quality Wherefore when we are asked why we doe beleeue the Articles of the Creed we answer Because they are reuealed in Scripture Again How are you sure the Scriptures are the Word of God we answer we know it by the Scriptures themselues the Spirit of God opening our eyes to see those naturall and liuely caracters of Diuine truth which are imprinted vpon those sacred volumes Lastly If we be asked How know you that this is the right meaning of such or such a place We answer We know it by the Scriptures which being diligently examined and compared together plainly discouer their own right expesition In these answers we rest finally resoluing our Faith into the Word of God alone and nothing else As for the Authoritie of any one man or all men in the Church we giue it all due reuerence according to its place and degree We acknowledge the Decisions of Councels and Synods about controuersed Articles of Religion the continuall Preaching of the Word by the Ministers therof the manifold expositions of Doctrines of Diuinitie and Bookes of Scriptures by the Learned in their Writings all these we acknowledge with due regard thankefulnesse to be blessed meanes for the breeding and growth of Christian Faith because they all doe or should point vs vnto the Scriptures holding forth the light of them that we may the more cleerly diseern it in its true brightnesse Thus they are helpes to make vs see the truth but no causes why we belee●e it this we do for its own sake not their saying And vnlesse what they teach doe appeare vnto vs cleerly out of the Scriptures we freely confesse that although their Reuerence will cause vs to Suspend our Iudgement and thorowly to examine the Cause yet their bare authoritie cannot command our assent to any article of Religion that shall be proposed vnto vs. The rule of the Apostle prohibits vs 1 Cor. 2. 5. Our faith may not stand in the Wisedome of Man but in the Power of God Our Aduersaries here thinke that they haue vs vpon an aduantage and caught vs in a circle too as if we also ran round from the Scriptures to the Spirit againe from the Spirit to the Scriptures thus How know you the Scriptures to be Gods Word By the Spirit reuealing the same to my heart and conscience But how know you this reuelation of the Spirit to be true By the Scriptures that testifie The secret of the Lord is reuealed to them that feare him Ps. 15. But how know you this the like places of Scriptures to be Gods Word By the Spirit again Thus they suppose we are intangled but they mistake vs and our doctrine greatly in this particular We teach indeed that we know the Scriptures to be the Word of God by the Spirit of God inwardly Reuealing and Testifying the truth of them vnto our Consciences But it must here be diligently obserued what kind of Reuelation or Testimonie of the Spirit it is wherby we may be said to be sertified assured of the Scriptures Diuine Truth It is not any inward suggestion and inspiration different from those reuelations that are in the Scriptures themselues as if the Spirit did by a second priuat particular reuelation assure me of the truth of those former reuelations made in the Scriptures We haue no warrant for any such priuat reuelations now nor is there any need of them and such as looke for them may easily embrace their own presumptuous fancies in stead of a Reuelation from heauen How then doth the Holy Ghost reueale vnto vs the truth of Scriptures I answer By remouing those impediments that hindred by bestowing those graces that make vs capable of this knowledge There is in vs a two-fold Impediment First Ignorance whereby our eyes are closed that we cannot see the light 〈◊〉 Second Corruption whereby although we see the light yet we cannot but naturally hate it and turne from it The Holy Spirit cures both by a double remedy First of Illumination restoring our decayed vnderstanding to some part of its primitiue perfection Second of Sanctification infusing into our desires and affections some degrees of their primitiue Holinesse and puritie By this worke of the Spirit Opening the eyes of our minds that we may Vnderstand the Scriptures see the wonders of Gods Law and also Rectifying our corrupt affections that we may loue and embrace the Holinesse of Diuine things by this meanes I say is the Diuine truth of Scriptures reuealed to vs. For presently vpon this Opening the eyes of our minds we see the glorious brightnesse and light of the Scriptures shining into our hearts and we discerne in them the apparant characters of heauenly Maiestie as cleerly as a seeing man beholds the Sunne Also after this renewing of our Sinfull inclinations we find presently that our Soules and those things which the Scriptures do reueale vnto vs haue a singular sympathy one towards another our loue that we beare to the beautie and Holinesse of the Word is strong that command which the Word hath ouer vs is most powerfull awfull so that now we haue as kindly a relish of the goodnesse and excellency of Scriptures as a healthfull stomacke hath of wholesome food By these things which we cleerly see in the Scriptures euidently feele in our selues we are fully ascertained in our soules that none but God is the Authour of so He menly Holy Mysteries In this sence we still pray for the Spirit of Reuelation Eph. 1. 17. so called in that place because it inlightens the eyes of our vnderstanding as in vers 18. that then we may see the excellency of Diuine mysteries reuealed to the Church Other inward and secret reuelation of the Spirit we acknowledge not in this businesse Now there is no such circle as our Aduersaries would driue vs into but a plain straight way How know you that the Scriptures are Gods Word We answer By the Scriptures themselues by that wonderfull light excellency of truth and Holinesse shining in them Here we would rest and goe no further But yet if we be asked How we come to see this Light We answer It is by the only worke of the Spirit of God giuing vs eyes to see and hearts to loue this Light If we be further vrged How know you that you doe indeed perceiue such a light as you speake of or how can you make it appeare to another that you are not deceiued therein To these questions we answer That the former is idle iust as if one should aske him that ga● then the sun How know you that you now see
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rooted and stablished in the vndoubted perswasion of this truth We are all very backward in this study and that 's one argument the Scriptures are diuine because our wretched sinfulnes cannot brooke them And againe wee are very dull of vnderstanding in these things which is also a good proof that they come from a most diuine vnderstanding because our Naturall wit is sharpe enough in other things yet comprehend not these mysteries but yet for all this let vs be perswaded with prayer in humility to follow the counsell of Christ. Search the Scriptures the Commandement of our King the seruant of Christ to set the Scriptures in the head of our studies therein laying a sure ground-worke of our beleefe before we haue to doe with men Following this course we may be bold to expect a full resolution of this great Question and experience will in the end make it manifest a most sure word as S. Peter cals it 2 Pet. 1. 19. whereon to build our faith We shall find that this word is a light shining in a darke place and that God who in the creation commanded the light to shine out of darkenes will by this meanes shine also into our hearts to giue vs the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ as it is 2 Cor. 4. 6. Thus doing we shall be constant in our Religious profession while we liue and also vnconquerable in our Spirituall consolation when we are to dye Hitherto of the first ground whereupon the Strength of Taiths assent is built namely the infallible truth of Diuine Reuelatinos I proceed vnto the next two the former whereof is The Greatnesse and excellent worth of the things reuealed They are not toyes tristes matters of smal moment that God proposeth vnto vs to be embraced beleeued But they are the Great things of his Law that he hath written vnto vs Hos. 8. 12. A Law that is Perfect conuerting the soule a Testimony that is Sure making wise the simple Statutes that are Right reioycing the heart Commandements that are Pure enlightening the eyes Iudgments that are True and Righteous altogether more to be desired then what men desire most then Gold yea then much fine Gold sweeter then the Heny that droppeth from the best Hony combe as the holy Prophet Dauid Ps. 19. 7. c. most emphatically amplifies the dignity worth of that part of Scriptures which was in his time giuen vnto the Church Since then we haue a large increase of this heauenly treasure The Gospel fully reuealed and written for our benefit containing in it The Wisdome of God that in a mysterie hid from the princes of this world 1 Cor. 2. 7. the deepe things of God v. 10. the riches of his glorious mysterie Col. 1. ●7 the vnsearchable riches of Christ Eph. 3. 8. All both Law Gospel old new Testament are full of admirable perfection goodnesse excellency in themselues and towards vs they contain matters of greatest consequence in the world He that doth these things saith the Scripture shall liue in them if he doe them not then Cursed is euery one that continueth not in all the words of that B●oke to fulfill them Againe He that beleeueth shall be saued he that beleeveth not shall be damned Mar. 16. 16. No lesse matters are set forth vnto vs in Scripture then Blessing and Cursing Saluation and Damnation Grace Sin Gods fauour and his Displeasure Heauen and Hell Now lay all things in this world together there 's nothing worth the speaking of in comparison of these or that can beare any proportion of worth greatnesse with them Wherfore this ought to be a forceable motiue vnto vs to giue all diligence that we fasten our faith vpon these things with all strength and stedfastnesse not barely and sleightly passing them ouer as things of little moment but laying them vp in our hearts by deepest most attentiue meditation It is strange to see how ●xedulous and apprehensiue men are in other matters that may concern them in their name goods or life Euerie little circumstance is enough to perswade them to a strong beleefe of that which they feare or hope for But in matters of religion there 's scarce any thing will ' worke vpon vs we heed not what we heare or reade promises or threatnings exhortations or admonitions all 's one to vs we passe little for one or other but as the i●●es of old we count these things as Strange matters that little concerne vs. Naturally we are all Atheists Insidels and that of Saluian is true euen of the best of vs. Omma a mamus omnia colimus solus nobis in comparatione omnium Deus vilis est We can study any thing but the Scriptures we can beleeue any thing but Articles of Christian Religion we can loue any thing but God goodnesse The truth is we doe but talke of Religion being far from any thorough apprehension of the excellency worth therof whence it comes to passe that our thoughts of it are sleight and vanishing our affections towards it cold and forced our beleefe of it neerer to a fancy weake imagination then a well grounded faith Wherfore let vs henceforth value Diuine things according to their worth esteeming of them as better to vs then thousands of gold and siluer or whatsoeuer is by the world had in highest account Hence shall we gather strength and vigor to cleaue faster vnto Religion in Faith and zealous affection The last ground remaines whereupon the firmenesse and strength of our assent standeth and that is The manifest experience of some part of the Truth of those things we beleeue It is indeed a commendation of Christian faith that it can beleeue before against Experience And Abrahams faith is herein a glorious pattern to all others who beleeued strongly the promises when for a long time he found but smal performances as may be seen in the storie of his life But gen●●ally Faith is but weake till it be confirmed by Experience this giues it life making the Heart of a man strong in Confidence and Resolution See this in an example or two 1 Sam. 30. we find Dauid his men in great distresse for the losse they had sustained at Z●kla● Dauid sorrowes as well as his seruants his losse is as much as theirs but this doth not pacific them Dauid is their Captain and they thinke this nuthap comes by his fault so in their rage they intend to stone him What shall Dauid do in this case he is but one man in the middest of a f●rious multitude slight or resistance cannot helpe him see how his faith helps him out in this exigent He was now in danger but he had bin in as great many a time before and very narrowly had he escaped the snares that Saul and his Courtiers had layd for his life But God deliuered him there and
doth not teach that 't is honest to beleeve him Can any thing be more senselesse or will not every man in the world excepting a Iesuite confesse that the very light of nature teacheth him to acknowledge that it is a very good and honest thing to beleeve Gods authority let him reveale his will unto us which way hee please But t is the fashion of these writers to dorre their readers with a distinction and so to leave them with a prius conceditur posterius negatur distracted and confounded rather than any whit satisfied This of the first reason That a man may beleeve without the helpe of Gods grace the second followes which also confirmes the former viz. 2. That is no act of Iustifying Faith which is found in Divells Heretickes Hypocrites and Reprobates But this assent unto divine Revelations because of Gods authority is in those both divells and men Ergo It is no act of Iustifying Faith The major is agreed upon that the acts of Iustifying Faith are found onely in those who are justified which cannot be said those persons mentioned The minor is likewise evident That Divells Hereticks Hypocrites and Reprobates may and doe assent unto such propositions as God reveales and that because of Gods authority who doth reveale them This hath beene formerly shewed unto you in the explication of the nature of a generall Faith and t is so cleere by Scriptures and experience that our adversaries cannot deny it The forenamed Schoole-man grants it manifestly as concerning Hypocrites and wicked livers who yet professe the Catholicke Faith for disputing Cap. 8. de Habit. Fidei touching that vertue which is infused into the Will whereby it may if it list command the Supernaturall assent of the Vnderstanding heetelleth us that this Vertue is a distinct vertue from all others and is neither Charity nor Obedience § 10. in conclus and that it is perfect in it selfe though it be without them according as other morall habites of justice temperance c. are Whence hee tells us § 11. in plaine termes Potest esse sin● charitate ut patet in Christiano peccator● qui Fidem habet siue gratia charitate A Christian that is a sinner may have Faith without grace and charity What Iustifying Faith yea according to the Romish Divinity for he may beleeve the truth of the articles of Religion because of Gods authority who hath revealed them and to do this is a Supernaturall assent and the proper act of Iustifying Faith as these men teach Now touching the Divells and Heretickes the man is a little more coy He will not confesse that the Divels yeeld that assent of Faith he speakes of They doe not beleeve the mysteries of Religion Per assensum supernat uralem i. e. because of Gods authority but Per assensum quendam naturalem qui non oritur ex pio affectu sed ex vi pondere argumentorum quibus intellectus illorum convincitur cap. 11. quaest 2. § 4. We grant willingly that they doe not assent out of any good affection nor is that needfull to make their assent supernaturall for in hypocriticall impenitent and reprobate Catholickes there 's no pious affection moving them to beleeve and yet if wee beleeve their Doctors there is in them a supernaturall assent of Faith But for that other thing That the divells beleeve onely ex vi pondere argumentorum t is utterly false seeing it cannot be doubted but that they beleeve the truth of many future contingents wherof they are not convinced by any force of argument from the things themselves but from authority of Gods Revelations in his Word or otherwise Which infallible truth of God in all his revelations is so cleerely apprehended by these damned Spirits that it makes them to acknowledge the truth and goodnesse of that which otherwise they abhorre Wherefore that comparison which hee makes betweene the faith of 〈◊〉 and wicked Christians is most vaine and erroneo●… 〈◊〉 ●…ith hee you consider the faith of either of them w●…●egard to the Object there 's par ratio both being ●…d about the same things But if you take it with r●●ard 〈◊〉 honesty of the act so the assent of the Divells is farr●… 〈◊〉 than that of bad Christians who have faith an●●…rkes But wherein He tells us The Faith of Ch●… Supernaturalis Voluntaria Honesta The Faith of Divells is Naturalis Coacta pravis circumstantijs vitiata All which are false For the Faith of Divells is Supernaturallas much as that of wicked Christians seeing both beleeve propter authoritatem Dei revelantis which is formalis ratio of Supernaturall assent Againe the Faith of divells is as voluntary as that of wicked men for it cannot bee wrought in either by compulsion simply and if the Majesty of Gods infallible truth command the assent of Divells to that which they love not doth not the same cause also prevaile with ungodly men who beare as little true affection to God and Goodnesse as the divells doe Lastly the Faith of Divells is as Honest as that of wicked men For let any man speake Is it not as Honest a thing for wicked ang●lls to beleeve what God saith as it is for wicked men If not wherein lies the dishonesty of that act in the angells or wherein stands the honesty of that act in men Can there be named any circumstances which make the Divels Faith dishonest but that the same or as bad may bee alledged against the honesty of the Faith of wicked Christians Sure I am what everthese men conceit of the Honesty of Faith without workes in men Saint Iames is plaine in his comparison that t is no whit better than the Faith of Divells Iames 2. 19. Thou beleevest that there is one God thou doest well the Divells also beleeve it and doe not they doe well too Yes haply better than thou for they beleeve and tremble which thou doest not To conclude in the last place we object that Heretickes have such a kinde of Faith as the Romanists call Iustifying For though they erre in some articles of Faith yet others they assent unto because of Gods authority revealing them This Becanus denies telling us that Heretici qui ve● in uno articulo sunt infideles omnem fidem amiserunt cap. 11. quaest 3. § 4. which answer hee makes upon this ground That the Habite of Faith is lost by any one act of infidelity § 2. and therefore whereas Heretickes beleeve many things t is but upon a kinde of custome and by a humane faith We reply and say that that position One act of infidelity destroyes the habit of Faith is false and contrary to reason and Scriptures as hereafter I shall have occasion to shew speaking of the opposites of Faith For the point we grant that He who is a persevering Heretick though but in one fundamentall article he hath no justifying faith not because he hath lost it but because he never had it But
Atheisticall to denie his truth or strangely subtle to shift it off from it selfe when t is pressed with it in particular But when the spirit of Grace hath overshadowed the soule sanctifying all the powers thereof throughout t is admirable to see how it stoopes to the command of the Word There is then a singular harmony betweene the holinesse of the Will and of the Word this food of spirituall life relisheth as sweet and savoury unto the soule as milke to Infants or strong meat to able and healthy men Regeneration hath restored health unto the soule whereby it hath recovered a true taste of the Lords bounty and goodnesse whence followes a constant appetite thereunto asmuch as unto corporall nourishment as the Apostle argues 1 Pet. 2. 1. 2. 3. Hence the soule begins to conceive a high esteeme of the dignity of the Word it sees now nothing so reasonable excellent as the wisedome thereof it beholds nothing ●o terrible as Gods threats nothing so lovely as his favour it sees no ornament of the soule comparable to Grace no pleasure like unto the peace of Conscience it comprehends an end of all other perfection but the further it lookes into Gods law the deeper wonders it discernes it lookes upon the world and reades Vanity in all the things thereof and strange folly in mens desires of them and now it counts no preferment any whit comparable to the hope of heaven it hath now Reall apprehensions of Divine things and conceives of Religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as of a Worke to be done not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a businesse to bee discours'd and talked of it judges now that there is an absolute necessity of obeying God though all the world bee displeased and that the regard of saving a mans soule must thrust out of the way all importunate pleasures and profits that would presse in upon us Being thus illightened and inwardly touched by the finger of God the soule presently puts it wholly upon the certainty and excellency of Gods truth revealed it stretcheth forth the armes of her strongest confidence affiance unto every branch of the Scriptures embracing absolutely and without all limitation the truth goodnesse power and wisedome of God shining therein it beleeves what it knowes and as it can where t is ignorant it prayes for knowledge where weake it sues for strength and increase of faith where stubborne it offers it selfe unto God to bee bowed or broken if he please counting it now a happy thing to be crossed in sinne to bee met with at every by-turning with some reproofe or chastisement let him chide or strike it falls downe at his feet and without quarrelling disputing and arguing the case takes all with a Benedictus Dominus c. Blessed be the Lord and blessed bee his Ministers and blessed be their counsell who have kept me from committing this sinne against the Lord. When thus the heart is softened and sanctified then and not before is wrought that habituall Grace and blessed disposition of the will which we call true Faith whereby the Creature is willing to resigne up its understanding desires affections thoughts words workes and all to the disposing of his Creator in such a sort as by his revealed Will hee hath or shall make known beleeving certainly that in every thing t is best to follow his counsell This for cause of true Faith next followes 2. The Object of this particular Faith which is twofold 1. The whole Will of God revealed unto us in his Word containing all Histories Doctrines Commands Threatnings Promises of what kind soever 2. The particular Promise of Remission of sinnes and Everlasting Life by the death of Christ which in one word we call the Gospell It is needfull thus to distinguish of the object of Faith because although it be but one and the same infused grace of true Faith which respects both forasmuch as by the same sacred Habite of the soule we are inclined to beleeve both the whole and each part of Gods will be it in it selfe more or lesse excellent or more or lesse needfull to us neverthelesse Faith as it hath reference to these Objects The whole Will of God and The particular Promise of the Gospell admitteth of divers considerations names and uses Faith as it assents to the whole Will of God in what kind soever I call Legall because it is such a Vertue as is immediately required by the Morall Law in the same manner as other duties of the Morall Law are Forasmuch as all men are bound by the Law of their creation to give full assent and affiance to all things whatsoever God shall reveale unto them And as all other Morall dueties are required of us in their degrees as parts of our outward obedience and inward sanctity necessary to salvation so is this of Faith commanded as 〈◊〉 principall grace of the soule and a prime part of our obedience to the first Commandement And so Faith in this respect may bee called Saving namely as all other Graces are because required in their measure as needfull to Salvation Faith as it assents unto the speciall promise of grace I call Evangelicall because it is such an Act as is expressely commanded in the Gospell the object thereof being not revealed by the Morall Law It is called also properly Saving and Iustifying in regard of the use it now hath through Gods gracious appointment to be the onely instrument of our Iustification and Salvation by Christ. In which distinction between Legal Evangelicall Faith we must not conceive of two distinct Habits of Faith it is but one gracious quality of the soule disposing it to the beliefe of all divine truth which for the substance of it was the same in innocent Adam with that which is in regenerate men The difference stands onely herein 1. In the Degrees Adams Faith was perfect because his understanding was fully inlightened and his affections absolutely conformable to all holinesse Wee know but little and by reason of our inward weaknesse beleeve but weakly what we doe know 2. In the Originall in Adam it was naturall by creation in us t is supernaturall from the holy Ghosts infusion 3. In the particular Object Adam beleeved God without reference to Christ the Mediatour wee beleeve chiefly the promise of Grace in Christ and all other things with some relation to him Here then is no new Faith but a New object of Faith not revealed unto Adam whereto our Faith is now directed and here 's also a singular priviledge newly granted unto Faith that God accepteth it to our Iustification in his sight Otherwise if wee looke unto the grace it selfe as it was in Adam a part of Gods Image given him by creation and is in us a part of the same Image restored by regeneration so there 's no difference at all and therefore in that question whether Iustifying Faith bee commanded in the Morall Law there needs no great dispute t is manifest that
it is injoyned and that in the first Commandement as a singular part of that inward worship due unto our Creator consisting principally in those three graces of Faith Love and Feare These things thus explaned let us proceede to the unfolding of Faith taken in the forenamed double relation and first as it hath reference to the whole Will and Word of God True ●aith respects all this and onely this Only this because in divine revelations onely is to be found that Infallible truth which gives satisfaction to the soule And againe all this because every part of Divine truth is Sacrosancta worthy of all Beliefe and Reverence threatnings as well as promises precepts exhortations admonitions histori●s every part of the Word falls in some degree or other within the compasse of Saving Faith By the same holy Faith whereby a penitent sinner beleeves the promise of mercy of Christ doth hee also beleeve all other promises of this life with other inferiour matters declared in Scriptures This is certaine but the chiefe point to bee noted here is an essentiall property of true Faith which standeth in Vniversality and Vniformity of assent to all things that are from God This Vniversality of assent is to be taken in a twofold regard 1. Of the Object the things beleeved when the faithfull soule gives full assent unto all things revealed by God not onely to such as it may assent unto without crossing its owne desires and purposes but unto those also that directly crosse and oppose carnall reason carnall affections worldly pleasures and all other provocations to infidelity 2. Of the Time and other particular circumstances whilst it doth most heartily and inwardly acknowledge the truth and goodnesse of these things not then alone when this may bee done without any contradiction and resistance but even then also most eagerly fixing the a●●iance of the heart upon them when temptations rise when Heretickes dispute and cavill when humane reason failes and falls to arguing of impossibilities and unlikelihoods when sinnefull lusts hale this way and that when the world threatens or slatters when Satan rages or speakes faire then doth true Faith supported by the Spirit of grace stand fast as Mount Sion or if shaken a little t is not moved out of his place but looking beyond all present temptations to unbeliefe unto the everlasting and infinite truth and goodnesse of God it preferres that which he saith above all that the flesh the world the divell can promise or threaten to the contrary Now in this point stands an essentiall difference betweene the faith of Gods Elect and of Hypocrites These have alwayes their limitations they beleeve something but not all if all t is but in generall when it comes to particular proofe they bid ●arewell to saith when such circumstances come in the way as they love or feare more than they doe God But the faith of Gods Elect is sincere faire open universall without distinctions equivocations mentall reservations or other hypocriticall and Iesuiticall sh●fts The reason is because the sanctified soule rightly apprehends the soveraignty of Gods truth and wisedome outstripping in Certainty and Excellency all things that can be set against it it judgeth than no good can be equall to that which God promiseth no evill so great as what hee threatens no course so safe as what hee prescribes whereupon abs●lutely without all qualifications the soule casts it selfe upon God resolving to beleeve and doe as hee pleaseth Whereupon though in particular practice it may be ignorant of some things and weake in the application of others yet in the Habituall resolution and disposition of the heart it doth willingly yeeld assent and conformity to all T is most true that David in a passion may call Samuel a lying Prophet for 〈◊〉 him hee should be King and after abusie dispute maintained upon politicke worldly considerations c●nci●de that ther●● no remedie but he must one day perish by th● hand of S●●l So Peter in a bodily feare may chance denie him in whom yet hee truly beleeves so in a●l a strong sit of pleasures or other violent incounter may push their buckler of faith aside but yet it cannot strike it out of their hands if they give a little ground they will not flye the field but because the heart is holy and entire they returne to themselves and their standing where the shame of a foyle taken makes them knit their strength together and stand more stoutly in the combat But my brethren here 's the mischiefe and miserie of all when there is a false heart within that keepes it selfe in an habituall resolution not to beleeve and trust God in such things or upon such and suchoccasions For in this case what ever shew of true faith they seeme to have in the generality or some few particulars t is most certaine that there is indeed nothing at all in that heart but horrible hypocrisie and infidelitie Such neverthelesse is the temper of all those who having not thoroughly searched out and resolved to renounce their evill affections nor exactly calculated what the profession and practise of Religion will cost them nor yet duly considered upon what grounds they undertake this profession are become their owne carvers in matter of Religion taking only so much of it into their beliefe and practice as the love of the world and their deere lusts will give leave These men are just of the Samaritans Religion that feared God and served their Images so they will beleeve God yet obey their lusts But as it was then none were found more bitter enemies to the restoring of the Iewish Church and State than these Samaritans who by reproaches accusations and conspiracies cruelly vexed that poore people and hindered the restauration of their afflicted estate even then when with fained flattery they proffered their service telling the Iewes they would build with them because they also sought the Lord the God So fares it with these men whose beliefe and forwardnesse in some things cannot make demonstration of so much friendship to Religion as their constant baulking and faltering in others testifies their hearts to be full of rottennesse and corruption bearing hatefull enmity against God and his Grace Take me any man who bewitched with custome commodity or pleasure gives himselfe scope and liberty to live in the breach of any of Gods commandements be it secret or open as constant neglect of the duties of religion in private accustomed mispending of pretious houres due to the businesse of our studies and callings usuall swearing secret thoughts and practices of uncleannesse unsatiable desires of earthly greatnesse and abundance unjust increase of wealth by usury bribery or other secret indirect courses excusing love of some though lawfull pleasures c. I say take me such a man that allowes himselfe in these or the like practices contrary to Gods most holy law and hee will be found though in name a Christian yet in heart an Infidell For trie now
plunging him into some abominable practice to his owne destruction and the disgrace of his Religion Who could have thought that many Starres in the Church shining bright in all outward holinesse could have fallen from Heaven their light bin put out in utter darknesse had not after times discovered that they alwayes lived in some secret ungodly practice For our selves if wee will duely consider the state of our soules it wil be easie hereby to make a prognostication unto our selves what will become of us hereafter Hee that can shift and distinguish and put off from himselfe be content to give God the hearing yet choose to think and doe what hee lists let not his forward faith and zeale in something deceive himselfe as it doth the world but let him write downe himselfe for a counterfeit whose Faith will certainely ●aile when it shall bee assaulted by stronger temptations Now on the other side that Faith which is true and sound hath alwaies this essentiall marke that it doth assent Vniformely to all Gods revealed will It makes not choise of some where it must embrace all it knowes God must have all or he will have nothing and therefore it divides nothing to times and seasons and private respects it beleeves what it likes not as well as that which contents it as well that that brings disadvantage as where there 's likelihood of honour or profit It compares all things within and within us on the one side with Gods truth and goodnesse on the other so reckoning the worst it finds Gods anger to be worst of all forecasting the best it beleeves Gods favour to be better than it Then it resolves let God say what he wil to beleeve that that is good honest profita and excellent to bee followed at all times in all places above all things that can be set against it This is that temper of the soule which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith without faining 1. Tim. 1. 5. this is faire sincere hearty plain dealing This is to ascribe glory to God and give him his full due setting our seale unto his truth ratifying it by a most willing absolute subscription to all Such hath beene the Faith of the Saints That of Abrahams is admirable conflicting with so many yet conquering all oppositions being throughly grounded upon the infinite truth goodnesse and power of God If God bid him leave all his friends his fathers house the land of his nativity to goe into a strange countrey upon hopes of great matters he is upon his journey straight and no intreaty can stay him in Mesopotamia When hee is in Ganaan where bee now his great possessions Hee hath not so much as a foote of land given him Act. 7. 5. not so much as his grave without a purchase from the Hittites But shall his seede enjoy it yea they shall but is a long time first some three hundred yeares after Abraham is dead when the wickednesse of the Cananites is full But where 's the seed it sel●e that shall enjoy it Abraham waits a hundred yeares before hee have Isaack Now hee hath him shall hee live in Gods sight No Abraham must goe and cut his owne sonnes throate and Isaack the hope of Abraham and of the world must dye by the hand of his old Father Who but Abraham would not here have quarrelled with God and laid slacknesse falshood unjustice and cruelty to his charge But Abraham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doubts nothing all this while let God command or promise the most strange unlikely unpleasing unreasonable thing in the world hee will not question it t is God that saith it and therefore hee is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fully assured that hee which hath promised is able to doe it Rom. 4. 21. Moses had a faire way to pre●erment he was learned wise a proper person brought up at the Court beloved as the Sonne of Pharaohs Daughter every way a man of singular hopes to become Great in AEgypt This would have made a Courtier of these times to have borrowed many a point of Law and Conscience and strained hard to conceale his Religion denie his Nation and turne AEgyptian at least his head would have beene hammering upon a piece of pollicy that the poore Hebrewes might have beene much releeved by him being a great man with Pharaoh But Moses hath no such thoughts his Faith turnes his eyes another way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the Recompence of Reward and then Moses comparing the adversitie of Gods people with the pleasures of Pharaohs Court the rebuke of Christ with the riches of AEgypt hee concludes that it is better to bee a bond-man among the Hebrewes than a revelling Courtier among the AEgyptians that its farre farre better to bee poore and religious for Christs sake though rebuked and scorned of the world than to be great and ungracious Heb. 11. 24 25. 26. In a word reade that whole chapter once and againe and see what is the practice and power of Faith in the Saints of God you shall behold in them an absolute Vniforme and constant resolution to beleeve God above and against all that can bee opposed when temptations come on every side reproaches bonds imprisonment banishment the sword the fagot the gibet and a thousand difficulties present themselves their faith makes way thorough all and come what 〈◊〉 come they are resolved to Follow the Lambe whithi● soever hee goes Rev. 14. 4. For Conclusion of this point let me intreate you to be exhorted each one to looke unto this matter to trie how his heart stands affected in point of religion and to remember as long as you live this most pretious and certaine truth That true faith is uniforme and equally respecteth the whole revealed will of God without limitation to this or that particular without reseruing to our selves such or such a wicked resolution without all provision that no inconveniences accrew unto us Hee whose faith is thus patched up and dawbed with untempered morter let him know for certaine that in a frost t will shatter all to peeces and when temptations beates upon it the whose building will runne to ruine Take therefore I beseech you that counsell of Christ which hee gives in this matter Luk. 14. 25. seq Great multitudes then as now did runne after Christ very forward to heare and beleeve his doctrine Christ turnes unto them and tells them that t is another manner of matter than they are aware of to bee his disciple Hee that will be so must hate his father and mother and wife and Children and brethren and sisters yea his owne life for his sake forsaking all taking up his crosse and following him Doubt yee not but this seemed to them a harsh doctrine a very rough and unpleasant religion But t is neither better nor worse and therefore our Saviour bids them bethinke themselves what they have to doe like wise builders to cast up their charges aforehand like provident warriours
the Morall Law 110 Faith Legall and Euangelicall the same in substance and differ only in the vse and obiect 111 The excellencie of Faith 158 What Faith or beleefe is in generall 159 How it agrees with and differs from knowledge opinion 160. c. Three grounds of the certaintie of assent in Faith 164. 206 The first 206 The second 220 The third 222 Faith a degree beyond beleefe being an assent with confidence and reliance 170 Faith taken in a speciall sence as it is Christian Faith described 171 Diuers acceptions of it ibid. 172 The obiect of Faith described 172. c. The subiect euerie reasonable creature 197. 198 Faith is in the whole heart euen in the will as well as in the vnderstanding 199. 230 Faith which Papists call iustifying is the faith of diuels and reprobates 237 Faith foolishly distinguished by Papists into formed and vnformed 237 Faith without works differs in nature from Faith with workes 238 Particular assent in Faith and the root and cause of it 241 The obiect of it two-fold 244 Faith of the Elect wherein it differs from Faith of Hypocrites 247 Faith vnfained 253. 254 Faith of Hypocrites doth not assent to all Diuine truth at all times 147. 148. c. Faith implicit of Papists confuted 194 Faith in the particular promise of grace defined 257 The iustifying act therof propounded proued 258 How it is wrought 259 The comfort of it 260 Faith of the Elect by what degrees of assent and essentiall differences it is distinguished from other Faith 226 Temporarie Faith 227 The causes of it 228. 229 G GOD as Creator how far he may be knowne to naturall men 65 Goodnesse of the naturall man not generall 80 It resp●cts others more then himselfe 79 Grace what the habit of it is 7 It is infused all at once 10. 11 The actions of it appeare sooner or later stronger or weaker in some 9 It is so firmely wrought in the Elect that it shall neuer be blotted out 34 Grace preuenting assisting inciting helping 13 By what meanes Grace may be quenched 37 Grace sufficient for conuersion not giuen to the Gentiles while they are out of the Church 55. 56. 57 Nor to all Christians in the visible Church 88. 89. c. Grace of conuersion friuolously distinguished into sufficient and effectuall 89 Grace sufficient to conuersion is alwayes effectuall and effectuall Grace onely is sufficient 91 Grace giuen to those who are within the Church set forth in the diuers kinds thereof 94 Grace doth not rectifie inferiour faculties first 127 Grace sufficient to beleeue and turne to God is no other but the Grace of regeneration 92. 93 It is not giuen to all 93 Grace preparatiue to conuersion how it may be resisted 140. 141. c. H HOly Spirit giuen two wayes 26 I IGnorance of the very time of our conuersion no iust cause of doubting fear that we are not conuerted and why 44 Illumination both naturall and spirituall described 94 95 When it is not sufficient for sanctification of the heart 101. c. Common Illumination not giuen to all hearers of the Word 100 Image of God wherein Adam was made 4 Implicit faith of Papists confuted 194. c. Infants dying without Baptisme may be saued 45 Infants are charitably supposed to be regenerate in Baptisme 45 Why they may not receiue the Lords Supper 49. 50 Infusion of grace hath no concurrence of mans naturall abilities but onely requires in him a passiue capacity to receiue 32 K KNowledge of Christian Religion must be alwayes increasing and fruitfull Preface 14 Knowledge meere naturall of the Morall Law brings little practise 70 Knowledge more certaine then beleefe in things of the same kind 166 Perfect Knowledge takes away all beleefe 167 Knowledge by sight so far as sight goes takes away faith 191 Knowledge distinct and explicit of Diuine things necessarie to the being of faith 192 L LAw morall how far it may be knowne to a naturall man 66. 68 Learned men vnsanctified fit to make hereticks pr. 19. 20 Loue of God reacheth to the Elect before they be regenerate 17 Considered in it selfe it differs from the manifestation of it to vs 18 Gods Loue to our persons and actions 19 Light of nature well vsed by the Heathen doth not bind God in Iustice to giue them supernaturall light 84 MEanes of common faith 229 Meditation of what things will stir vs vp to praise Gods rich grace and mercy in our conuersion 38 Ministers dutie in preaching the Word 113 Miraculous faith ground on immediat reuelations 173 Motions naturall and spirituall which are wrought by the Word described 95. 96 NAturall man cannot by the most industrious vse of all helpes naturall attaine to the least knowledge of God as he is mans Redeemer in Christ 64 His knowledge of God confined within two limits 65 How far his knowledge of God as Creator reacheth 65 He neuer goeth so far in practise as he might and as he knowes he ought to doe 71 He neither knowes the cause nor can iudge aright of the nature of sin 74. 75 His vertue and goodnesse how far it goes and is approued of God 76 He cannot possibly desire grace and mercy and why 84 Necessitie doth well stand together with libertie in the will regenerate 156 OBedience of regenerate men how it is made irregular 152 Obscuritie in the obiect of faith as it is held by the Papists confuted 187. 188. c. Obseruation of Gods mercies iudgments on our selus or other a speciall meanes to increase faith 223. P PAssions and affections naturall not subiect to reason 124 Plainnesse of speech and matter to be vsed in preaching of Gods Word Pref. 22. 23 Priesthood of Christ and how Christ and Aaron agree and differ Pref. 23 Promises the obiect of faith 170 QValities in the reasonable soule differ three wayes according to the threefold state of man 4. 5 REgeneration improperly ascribed to the Word 97 Regenerat man hath in him two contrarie qualies grace and corruption as he is spirituall he neuer resists the worke of grace 148 Resistance of grace in Regenerat men whence it flowes 151 How the preuailing act of it is taken away 152 VVhy it preuailes many times 153 Religion breeds ciuility knowledg of all arts 68. 69 Righteousnesse of the naturall man not acceptable to God 81 Rather negatiue then positiue 79 More outward then inward 76. 77 SAnctification how it goes before iustification 21 It is infused into Infants 43 VVrought in a maner meerely supernaturall 29 Sanctification how it hath mans free-will concurring to it two waies 31 Man not a moral agent in it 33. 34 Schollars how made complete Pref. 20. 21. c. Scriptures freed from Popish imputations of obscurity 177. 178. c. How they are certainly knowne to be Gods VVord 208. 209 By themselues 213 and by the Spirit 214. 215 Sin what a snare it hath layd to intrap wicked men 139 Spirit how far
hee had rather enter upon the Church by undermining the Faith with Heresies than at an open breach upon good manners Ill manners finde more resistance there 's feare of lawes and rod of discipline to curbe them they want their apologies and colourable excuses so lye open to the reproofe and hatred of morall honesty they come accompanied with shame and disgrace following at the heeles which hinders their appearing and entertainment in publike But Heresie easily enters and quickly spreads abroad it findes favourers enough having the advantage of mens common infirmity who are apt to entertaine novelties and take a pride to bee singular it comes armed with reason and such justifications as it thinkes it needs not blush being painted over with the colour of truth lastly it aimes at the fairest the Leaders of the flocke whose authority and example speedily infects the rest With this weapon hath the Dragon made warre with the woman raising up even of her owne children such as have fought against her by damnable Heresies against all the Articles of Faith Of which part have been cut asunder by the sword of the Spirit and yet some againe reviving have been brought into the field under new colours part though convicted condemned yet stand it out under the support of tyrannicall violence remain to this day in that Augean stable that sink or common sewer of the Romish Synagogue whereto all Heresies almost of former latter times have made their confluence Besides a new breed of Hereticall opinions not plainly denying but by consequent overturning sursum vorsum the maine Articles of Christian beleefe and therefore are so much the mo●e dangerous by how much the lesse easily they are discernable in their damnable issues So as the Doctrine thereof is no lesse perplexed with strange disputes and difficulties than the Grace it selfe is continually assaulted by fearefull doubting and distrust Whether it bee mans infelicity to be ignorant of that which stands him in most stead or the divells malice to lessen our comforts in the vse of Faith by confounding our understanding in the knowledge of the nature thereof that so we might either dangerously erre or discomfortably doubt touching the truth of it in our selves or Writers misexplication of that excellent grace through their own weaknes or want of faith sure I am if any point of Divinity this touching faith is full of much obscurity and contention T is much men should have a grace so divine and powerfull and yet know not what it is but as the Apostle speakes of men Faith is not of all so may wee say of Writers All have not faith that write of it especially Popish Doctors who speaking of faith but by imagination have profanely censured the faith of Gods elect expounded by Protestants according to Scripture to bee but a very fancy Among whose curious and Metaphysicall discourses of this subject he that wants faith shall never finde it and hee that hath faith may chance lose it at least the life and powerfull practice of it whilst his head is intangled in subtile and nice speculations about it For our selves let it be our care so to speake and judge of faith as that most precious grace which is given us to save our soules not exercise our wits the knowledge whereof by contemplation is most empty and vain without the reall inhabitation of it within our soules It shall be my weake and yet best endeavour by the helpe of Gods assistance to give you the knowledge thereof so farre as the word in manifold precepts and examples of the Saints together with the paines of the learned have discovered it to my poore understanding In the unfolding of the nature of it I must spend more time than at first I purposed to doe because in this point some other parts of Divinity are so enterwoven and linked one with another that without the knowledge of all wee shall not cleerly discerne of any alone Such are our Vocation the forerunner and our Iustification the follower of our faith All that I have to say I will reduce to these foure generalls 1. Touching the antecedents of faith namely our Conversion Vocation of which so much as shal serve to discover unto us the generation and birth of faith 2. Touching the nature of faith it selfe wherein the being of that most heavenly vertue consists 3. Concerning the consequents and concomitants of faith both in regard of God as Iustification and our selves as Obedience whereby we may be able to judge as of the benefit so of the truth of our faith 4. Concerning the opposites and enemies of faith the knowledge whereof may arme us against them For the first namely our Conversion the knowledge thereof will give us some light to finde out how faith is wrought in us which by Divines is made the first degree of our Conversion and last Terminus of our effectuall Vocation However a part it is and that a principall one too of our first resurrection from the death of sinne to the supernaturall life of grace Which that it may appeare we must distinctly consider of the threefold difference of such qualities as are in the reasonable soule and doe either help or hinder it in its operations This difference is according to mans triple estate 1. In the state of innocency man was created right or upright Eccl. 7. 29. and very good Gen. 1 ult endowed with such strength and integrity in all parts as did wholly dispose them to all operations conformable to Gods will His understanding so farre as was needefull before his translation had a cleer apprehension of the Deity in his nature attributes and worship as also of the creatures in their essence and qualities His will embraced and clave fast unto God whom Adam knew to be the author of his being and happinesse His affections and all inferiour faculties obeyed without all resistance the rule of reason and motions of the sanctified Will This universall holinesse and perfection in the whole man was that Image of God or originall justice wherein Adam was created but continued not For in the second place 2. After his fall for a punishment of his wilfull transgression God withdrew from Adam this his Image and stript him naked of that habite of grace and perfect holinesse wherewith he was before in all parts qualified leaving onely here and there some few traces or lines of that excellent Character unblotted out And now in place of originall justice succeeds originall corruption being an universall depravation and disability of mans whole nature to work well and conformably to the law of his first creation The understanding is dark erroneous confused in the apprehension of naturall stark blinde in perceiving spirituall things The will froward averse from affecting or choosing its chief good The affections and lower faculties disorderly violent untameable And this universall corruption of mans nature is that which we call the image of Satan to whom Adam
that prayer To give a reason of this different working why grace is bestowed on some presently at baptisme in others t is deferred till a long time after is to unlocke the treasurie of Gods secret counsells onely this wee may say that God will shew that no age is uncapable of grace and that he will bee glorified aswell in sauing some from falling into the fire as by pulling others out of it by the gentle and easie deliverance of one and by the more violent torments and panges of the New-birth in another that both wayes he may have the Thankes and wee the Benefit of this his grace and power 3. A Defence of the salvation of Infants dying before Baptisme against the Popish assertion to the contrary For this ground being certaine No uncleane thing shall enter in the kingdome of Heaven it followes by the law of contraries that whatsoeuer is cleane may enter thereinto But Infants such as are elect may be cleane and holy before their Baptisme as is manifest whether we respect the guilt of Sin or the corruption of it They are cleane from the guilt of originall sinne by the death of Christ which God hath accepted to their perfect justification long before they were borne They are likewise made cleane in part from the Corruption of originall sinne by the infusion of Habituall sanctity into their soules For being justified by Christ from the guilt and punishment of sinne what should hinder why they may not be sanctified by the Holy Ghost in part whilst they live and perfectly upon the severing of the Soule and Body when originall corruption is in a moment done away and the soule invested in the robes of righteousnesse fit for its entrance into happinesse Cannot this worke of Sanctification be wrought in them before Baptisme it may as well as after seeing it is not baptisme but the Spirit is the cause thereof whose worke is free and not so to be tyed unto that ordinance as they of the Romish Synagogue would make us beleeve but that hee may sanctifie the Elect sometime before sometime after and not alwaies at the present celebration of it Now if Infants thus justified and sanctified depart this life what should stoppe their passage to heaven It will bee vaine to object that they have not actuall Faith and therefore must be excluded Wee may aswell say they want repentance and therefore cannot be saved seeing the Scriptures make alike necessitie of both graces to our salvation And the objection holds aswell after Baptisme as before when yet all grant the salvation of Infants For t is a thing inconceivable and inexplicable how Infants should have Actuall Faith whilst they are not yet able to exercise any one faculty of their reasonable soule The truth is that the Habits of Faith and Repentance they have as of all other Spirituall graces infused into them which if they lived would also appeare by their actuall opperations but for that time they have not the Acts of those graces nor are they capable of them nor is it simply needfull they should have them The case is extraordinary and God as before they were hath pardoned them of their originall righteousnesse by the bloud of Christ so can hee aswell bestowe Holinesse and Happinesse on them without any actuall faith of theirs comming betweene as an instrument to receive both If this may not bee said touching such elect Infants I must confesse that unto me the knowledge of the salvation of their soules is as inscrutable as the fashioning of their tender bodies in their mothers wombe And this which hath beene said of Infants may be also applied to such as are Deafe or ●ooles having such naturall defects as make them uncapable of Discipline 4. A just apologie for the lawfulnesse of Childrens Baptisme against Hereticall impugners of the same For how can the Signe be denied unto them which have and enjoy the thing signified That which is signified in Baptisme is our Iustification by the blood of Christ our Sanctification by the Spirit of Christ. Baptisme is the Scale of both unto us and Infants may be partakers of both being washed from the guilt of sinne by the blood of Christ in whom they are reconciled to God and actually justified before him and also purified in partfrom the uncleannesse of sinne by the infusion of Grace from the Holy Ghost What then should hinder why these Infants should not also be washed with the water of the Sacrament thereof If it be demanded how wee can presume that Christian Infants have a part in the graces of Iustification and Sanctification I answer we have good warrant so to thinke from the Covenant and Promise of God that hee will be the God of the faithfull and of their seed But for Heathens and Infidells wee haue no such promise whereon to ground our judgement of Charity and therefore albeit some of them who are out of the Church may bee within the compasse of God selection yet seeing God hath excluded them by an apparant barre wee may not venture to give them the Sacrament of Baptisme till such time as they shall make profession of their faith and that by their appearing conversion wee may charitably judge they belong to the Covenant of Grace Now although of such as live within the Church we know for a certainty in the generall that many both of Christian parents are not faithfull and of Christian children that they have no part in Christ yet we may not exclude them from Baptisme because no man dares be so hardy as to passe his peremptory censure of this or that persons rejection in particular This is one thing if wee did know infallibly now that any one were certainely excluded out of Gods election and should never have benefit by Christs death such a one be hee Infidell or borne of the most Christian parents in the world wee ought by no meanes to baptize no more than wee may admit of that person to come to the Lords Supper that hath apparantly sinned against the Holy Ghost or as the Church doth with such as are justly Excommunicated who for the time of their open inpenitencie declare themselves publikely to have no Faith nor part in Christ. For it were a manifest mockery and abuse of this sacred institution to apply this Seale to a Blanke and to dip them in the water of Baptisme whom wee know shall never be washed with the Holy Ghost Further it helpes not the Ca●abaptists a jot that when Christian Infants come to age and ability to make profession then wee may discerne and judge of their estate For that 's impossible no man can infallibly perceive by any words or actions what the Heart is whether there be in it true faith or not And so in this case if Baptisme should never bee administred till other men may judge of their Faith it shall bee afforded to none at all or if it be given to every one that professeth and saith hee
hath faith it must be administred to all and among them to some that have no faith indeed Wherefore it is as good and safe to baptize them in their infancy as to deferre it seeing at that time as well as afterwards the judgement of Charity holds good and tarry we never so long wee can goe no further than this charitable beliefe of them Wherefore to conclude the absurdity of Paedobaptisme because Infants have no knowledge nor actuall Faith whereby to embrace the promise is at the least an absurd conclusion as well for that the like inconvenience holds in Circumcision as also because where Iustification and Sanctification is given it is injurious to denie the benefite of Baptisme And wee are to know that in this case of Infants faith is not required as a Condition absolutely necessary to partake the benefit of Iustification howsoever in adult is such as are of age it be an instrument simply needfull to give them an Evidence and Assurance of it which assurance seeing it cannot be in children the actuall operation of Faith is not needfull in them But in such as are of age the case is farre otherwise whether they be Infidells or Christians children that have beene so long neglected they must have knowledge and Faith too so farre as the Church can judge of the tree by the fruit because if they have neither or knowledge only but no Grace nor sanctity of life the Church cannot but presume the worst of them as of those that yet are out of Christ rectified by their ignorance and profanenesse of Conversation which witnesseth to all the unbeliefe and impenitency of their hearts If it be now objected not to leave that scruple untouched that the Lords Supper may aswell bee given to Infants as Baptisme seeing the same presumptions may bee used here as there and that infants may make as much use of one as of the other being alike insensible of both to this I answer besides the dangerous inconveniency to their tender age which cannot endure the taking in of the very Elements of Bread and Wine that God himselfe the author of these two Sacraments hath in the manner of their Institution made a plaine difference of the persons that are to partake of them Thus briefly of the Substance of both Sacraments is one and the same viz. to set forth unto us the benefits of Christs death in our Iustification Sanctification and Glorification The Ceremonies of Administration are divers and in that sort differenced as in Baptisme they require nothing but Passion in the baptized and so may be administred to Children but in the Lords Supper they require such Actions as cannot bee performed but by those only that are of yeares of discretion such actions are those of Discerning the Lords body thankfull remembrance of the death of Christ Examination of our spirituall estate which together with that circumstance of often repetition apparantly shew that God in this Sacrament intended such an exercise of our Faith and Piety as cannot be performed by Children I will not stand longer upon this point the full descussing whereof belongs more properly to the doctrine of the Sacraments and therefore I conclude this Discourse touching the Conversion of Elect Infants with this generall rule That the Scriptures are very sparing and silent touching the case of Infants so that when they speake of Vocation Conversion Faith Repentance and such other workes of Grace done by us or in us by the Spirit of God they are generally to be understood of those that are of age and by proportion only to bee applied unto Infants Which would be observed for taking away of some doubts that may arise in reading of the Scriptures The next sort of Elect persons are those that are of Age who having some while g●ne astray are at length brought home to the Sheep-fold of Christ under the obedience of that great Shepheard of their soules Of these some are let runne longer others recovered sooner some have a more gentle and sweet passage from Mortality to Grace whose lives have beene ordered by the rule of stricter discipline others whose conversation hath beene notoriously disordered are converted with more bitter plunges terrors and anguish of Conscience some are strangely changed on a sudden upon the reading of a sentence in Scripture or hearing of a gracious word uttered in due season and deeply apprehended others wrought upon with much paines and long time in a word so various is the dispensation of Gods grace in our conversion that as Christ speakes of his comming in the flesh so may wee of this in the Spirit The kingdome of God commeth not with observation and impossible it is to set downe a generall rule that will hold in all Converts But though the manner be divers yet the meanes are Vniforme and Constant namely the Spirit of God the chiefe worker and the Word of God the subordinate instrument by which it workes our Conversion The word discovers what is to be done the Spirit inables us to the performance In Infants the Spirit without the Word in those of yeares the Spirit and the Word joyne together to work our Sanctification In which respect their conversion is properly tearmed a Vocation or Calling because it is effected by the preaching of the Gospell which is Si●ilus Pastor is the whistle or voyce of the good Shepheard which the sheepe heare and follow And from hence the whole Company of Saints is properly styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Evocatorum coetus Saints by calling and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as t is 1 Cor. 1. 1. that is such whom God hath called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an holy calling 2 Ton. 1 9. or unto Holinesse 1 Thes. 4. 7. by the voice of the Word from out of the corruptions of this present evill world to the communion of grace and glory All this is most excellently set downe by the Apostle Paul in those few but most pithy words containing in briefe the whole administration of the workes of our Redemption 2 Thess. 2. 13. 14. But wee ought to give thankes alwayes to God for you brethren beloved of the Lord because that God hath from the beginning chosen you to Salvation through Sanctification of the Spirit and the Faith of truth whereunto hee called you by our Gospell to obtaine the glory of our Lord Iesus Christ. Now we might iustly in this place enter upon an inquiry how and in what sort the Word and Spirit doe worke together in causing a sinners conversion a search needfull in these times wherein it is peremptorily denyed by those of the Arminian faction that there is or need to be any inward power of the Spirit working on the soule besides the outward ordinary preaching of the Word Which opinion is but the issue of their maine errour touching the liberty of Mans will in his conversion which cannot stand if withall they grant that inward Force of the Spirit giving life
basest ranke mistaking the manner of this Service falling from that Spirituall service which by the lawes of Creation was onely required to a thousand carnall outward Ceremonies and observations of their foolish devising some ridiculous and senselesse some strange cruell and horrible against all good nature and humanity some furious madde and drunken some obscene and beastly all superstitious and divellish mistaking lastly the time of this service in appointing a number of Festivalls but neglecting utterly the Sabbath the knowledge whereof was quite worne out among the Gentiles Which particulars are all manifest by records of old and experience of latter times in those places where the Gospell hath not beene yet preached A reason of this generall corruption in the whole frame of Gods worship we may conceive to be this The worship of God that man was to performe in his innocency was wholly Spirituall not consisting in outward Ceremonies Ordinances and Observations according as the same shall againe bee performed by us in Heaven hereafter Such was the perfection of Adams nature that he being fully replenished with the love of his Creator did alwaies more cheerfully delight himselfe in the contemplation of his excellency and obedience to his commands without such externall helpes True it is that to Adam in his innocency was prescribed the observation of the Sabbath and two Sacraments of the Tree of Life and Knowledge of good and evill But for these Sacraments the latter was rather of Abstinence than Action a triall rather than a helpe of his obedience the former was a pledge of his happinesse if hee stood but no meanes of his upholding and so both of them mainely differing from all Sacraments afterwards given unto the Church for the support of our infirmities Likewise the Sabbath was then to bee spent in exercises meerely Spirituall not in any such outward bodily observations as since the Fall have beene instituted by God in regard of our weaknesse And though God alwaies required to bee worshipped in spirit and truth yet since the Fall there have beene certaine externall rites added thereunto which were not needefull in time of innocency Now then this whole frame of the outward and instituted worship of God man once corrupted could not so much as ghesse at God therefore revealed it from time to time in the Old and New Testament and that with many straight prohibitions of adding or altering any things out of our owne invention for who can or could tell with what outward things God would be pleased but he himselfe So that the Heathen being destitute of this light it was no marvell if they became vaine in their imaginations and in this point sought out unto themselves many strange inventions They found by experience how needfull it was by some outward services to give testimony that they beleeved and worship ped a God whom else they might seeme to deny in regard of their monstrous impieties but in what manner to doe this they knew not Onely this you are to observe that the whole world almost retained the custome of sacrificing unto their gods which you must not thinke was a thing learned from the light of Nature for what ground in reason had they to imagine that the wrath of God against a man for sinne should bee appeased with the slaying of a beast but it was a practice received by tradition from the beginning of the world this custome of Sacrificing being the most eminent and principall outward service of God commanded first to Adam and by his precept and practice delivered to posterity Who retaining the outward worke and ceremony as mans corrupt nature is ceremonious enough but forgetting the mystery and signification did quickely pervert that sacred institution in all abominable Idolatry and esteemed the Numen or Deity offended to bee directly pacified by that which in its Originall was onely a figure of that propitiatory sacrifice of Iesus Christ. 2. Let us in the next place enquire of the meere Naturall mans practice as it concerneth man in all Morall duties of the second Table wherein hee will goe much further than in the former So that there is scarce any sin therein forbidden which the Heathen have not condemned or duety commanded which some of them have not praised and practised Instances might be shewed in those many excellent patternes of vertue whose lives have been left registred unto us by the Ancients and hardly is there any man so bad in whom wee shall not finde some one or other eminent part of goodnesse But in this point touching the Vicious or Vertuous practices of the Heathen you are to observe two things wherein the Naturall man will alwaies discover his ignorance and error 1. In determining the right cause and Originall of sinne whence all this disorder which is evidently perceived in mans nature had its beginning and how it came into the world Here the Naturall man is at a stand and cannot possibly ascend so high as to finde out the fall of Adam in his Sin Gods Curse thereupon to discover the fountaine of all our uncleannesse and wretchednesse So that every Naturall man would upon examination of this matter easily fall into that opinion of some that there were Duo principia the one summum Malum the cause of all Evill the other summum Bonum the cause of all Good Wee not much wonder that the remembrance of so memorable an accident as Adams fall should quite bee lost in his posterity seeing that Adam himselfe having that Fact of his in horror and detestation whereby he made himselfe and all the world miserable was not willing to publish his owne shame but rather conceale it from his children as hee would have done from God and as for the most part of his posterity they little heeded to know that whereof they cared not to repent 2. In judging aright of the Nature of sin either in regard of the Punishment of it or in regard of the Evill of it For the Punishment of it though the Heathen had a grosse apprehension of Gods wrath against wicked persons in this life and some kind of punishments they should feele afterwards in Hell yet they never could come so far as to see that all men were in one condition under the Curse of God subject to everlasting damnation in body soule without speciall grace shewed from God And for this cause that knowledge of the Law which the Gentiles had could not worke in them that effect as in the Iewes and Christians it doth These it drives unto Christ to seek after a Saviour from the curse and punishment which the Law threatens them withall but in the Gentiles who apprehend not this Curse it cannot take any such effect Againe for the Evill and Vitiousnesse of sinne they never conceived of it according to the full extent of it They knewit to be bad but not so bad as to deserve such horrible punishment as the Scriptures tell us to be due unto it
opposite which at most are but subordinate and differ only as the cause and effect For is it not the fancy of some crackt braine to affirme that there is a Grace every way sufficient and powerfull enough in it selfe to worke the conversion of a Sinner and yet when this grace is given to such a sinner with a purpose and intent to convert him by it it shall be found to be utterly unsufficient to Effect it T is strange whence or how men should conceit a sufficiency in the power of such grace when they finde insufficiency in the performance of the worke 2. By the word Grace we understand some Supernaturall gift freely given unto man from God himselfe 3. By the word Christians wee meane all those that live in externall communion with the militant Church enjoying the ministery of the Word and being of yeares to make use of it for this Question toucheth not Infants 4. Lastly by Conversion as heretofore hath beene shewed we are to understand two things either 1. The Roote and Cause of that act namely the Sanctification of all the Faculties by the Infusion of Habituall Holinesse 2. The Fruite or Act of Conversion properly so called when a man regenerate and renued in all parts doth actually imploy them in loving and obeying God The first is Gods worke upon us the next our worke performed toward him when by the strength of inward Grace given we after convert our selves in Thought and Worke towards God This latter is not here to bee understood in this Question but the former namely that Conversion of a man which God workes in him by infusion of the grace of Regeneration into all parts This infusion of Grace into the Soule by an immediate act of Gods Spirit the Arminians can by no meanes endure to heare of in this businesse of our Conversion and therefore they burden this assertion with odious but untrue imputations of Anabaptisticall Enthusiasmes and of a Lazy expectation of all Grace to be poured into us sleeping without any endeavour of our owne to get it Which slanders are only devised for the countenance of that impious opinion of their owne namely That mans Conversion to God begins in some act which man himselfe performes and not in a worke first wrought in us by God Now that act of man is his assent and actuall Faith given to the promise A lewd imagination sufficiently confuted and cryed downe in the venerable assembly of the last Synod as most derogatory to the whole worke of Grace in our Vocation most repugnant to reason and Scriptures which tell us That the tree must bee good before the fruit can bee so it being impossible that an action so Holy and good as is the yeelding of Assent and Beliefe to the promises of the Gospell should be done by a man unlesse he be first regenerate and sanctified in all his faculties The termes thus explaned the state of the Question is more fully thus Whether God doe bestow upon all such as Heare the Word preached any such Supernaturall gift as is sufficiently powerfull to worke in them true Sanctification though it doe not alwayes effectually produce it Our Adversaries affirme it but we truly maintaine the Negative part opposing against their assertion these two Conclusions 1. That there is no supernaturall gift given unto the unregenerate which is Sufficient to worke his Sanctification but that only which is Effectuall to worke it This hath appeared manifestly enough in the explication of the termes of this Question and will bee more and more evident to us if we consider that maine mistake of our Adversaries in this businesse of our Conversion which is that they imagine our Conversion to begin in some act of ours namely our Assenting and Beleeving not in some act of God sanctifying the Soule before it can Assent and Beleeve Now because this act is good and therefore must be done by Gods helpe for to salve this they have found a daintie new devise of Spirituall strength infused into the Soule by the Holy Ghost which strength when it is inherent in the soule a man may use it if hee will to the producing of the act of Faith If he doe use it then by that act he is converted if not yet that was sufficient to bring forth the Act if it had beene thereto applied As in a like Case when Christ said to the sicke man Arise take up thy bed and walke Hee gave him bodily strength sufficient to doe what he bad him but yet the man might have let his bed lie and stood still if hee list So when God commands us to beleeve he gives us strength sufficient so to doe it albeit we may if we will neglect to make use of it This foule error hath bred all that confusion and darknesse wherein this controversie is wrapped up and it containes two grosse absurdities in it 1. That they suppose a supernaturall abilitie of beleeving infused into the soule by the Holy Ghost which yet shall be no sanctifying grace of the Spirit an opinion altogether new and against reason For aske them is not the inward disability of our soules to beleeve and convert a part of our corruption It cannot bee denied Well is not then the infusion of an Ability to Beleeve and Convert the doing away of that corruption It is And then shall not that gift which abolishes our sinfull infirmities bee justly called a Sanctifying grace It is most evident and none but such as are possest with the Spirit of wilfull contradiction to all manifest truth will affirme That the Rectifying of our weake and corrupt faculties by a supernaturall ability put into them and disposing them to the most excellent worke of Faith can be any thing else than the grace of Regeneration An Act so Holy must come from an Habit as Holy 2. That they suppose the Act in Divine graces goes before the Habit an assertion in Divinitie not tolerable which tells us that the Tree must be good before the fruit can be good And that Question which Christ put to the Pharisees Mat. 12. 34. How can yee that are evill speake good things is more than any Arminian cau tell how to answer This pincheth them and puts them to this choyce either that an unregenerate man who certainely is utterly Evill may by the helpe of such a gift as hath not sanctified nor made him Good not only speake but doe that which is eminently Good namely Beleeve and Convert or that the Act of Faith performed by such a one is not good and sound and so no beginning of true Conversion or that they doe confesse the Habit of Faith as of other graces to be first implanted in our soules in the universall renovation of all the Faculties thereof whence the operation of faith doth afterwards issue And this is the truth which under those obscure and unexplicated termes of Supernaturall strength to Beleeve they grant in effect for the strength is either Nothing
occasion to handle at large Having now thus distinguished them let us see how these effects are appliable to their Causes the Word and the Spirit the dependance is thus 1. Common illumination and the naturall movings of the Will that follow thereupon are the effects of the ordinary grace of the Spirit in the ministerie of the Word preached 2. Proper illumination with the Spirituall affections thence arising are the Effects of the Speciall Vertue of the Holy Ghost in the ministery of the Word regenerating the Soule But we must goe further yet and whereas the Word and Spirit are both joyned together in this worke of regeneration wee must carefully see what belongs to one what to the other Wherefore we are to distinguish betweene the 1. Instrument For whatsoever can be ascribed to the Word agrees to it but only as it is an instrument of the power of Gods Spirit Now instruments are either Cooperative or Passive and the word must be one of the two Cooperative it is not moving and working on the soule by any inward force of it selfe For it cannot bee declared what operative force there should be in the bare Declaration of Gods Will to produce the reall effect of Sanctification in the unregenerate heart It is therefore in it selfe a Passive instrument working only Per modum Objects as it containes a Declaration of the Divine will and as it proposeth to the understanding and will the things to be knowne beleeved and practised Now 't is well knowne that no Object whatsoever hath any Active power per se to worke any thing upon the Organ but is only an occasion of working which some Force in or about the Organ makes use of But whence then hath the word its effect from the 2. Principall Agent the Spirit of God who by his immediate and proper vertue workes upon the Vnderstanding and Will causing in that a thorough apprehension of the things proposed and in this a cheerefull obedience to the things so understood The Object of this worke of the Holy Ghost is not the Word as if the Holy Ghost did infuse into it any speciall Vertue wherby it should worke together with himselfe as a partiall Coordinate efficient cause in our Coaversion the Word working one part the Holy Ghost another as the Arminians vainely dispute Act. Synod Defens Act. 4. p. 136. But the object of this Worke is the Soule of man whereinto this vertue of the Spirit is Infusa or Affusa or rather whereabout this Vertue is imployed quickening changing renuing the Faculties of the Soule with such spirituall strength and holinesse that so it may performe what the Word declares is to be done Which effect of Regeneration though properly it commeth only from the Sanctifying power of the Holy Ghost yet by a cōmon Metonymie it is ascribed also to the Word and for that cause wee are said to be borne againe by the Word 1 Pet. 1. 23. to get Faith by Hearing Rom 8. to bee begotten by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 4. 15. to be sanctified by the truth id est the Word Ioh. 17. 17. and hence such proporties as these are ascribed to the Word that it is the Power of God to Salvation Rom. 1. that it is mightie in operation sharpe as a two edged Sword Heb. 4. 12. that it is a Sword Eph. 6. 17. Revel 19. 15. that it is Fire and a Hammer to breake the Rocke Ier. 23. 29. that it is Powerfull to cast downe all strong bolds of Mans proud imagination 2 Cor. 10. 4. with many the like which though they properly belong to the invisible power of the Holy Ghost giving effect unto his owne Word yet are figuratively attributed unto the Word it selfe which he useth as his visible Instrument I cannot better expresse the manner how the Holy Ghost useth the Word in the worke of Sanctification than by a Similitude or two Christ meeting a dead Coarse in the Citie of Nain touches the Beare and utters these words Yongue man I say unto thee arise Heare the Command and that given to a dead man But could these words doe any thing to raise him No t was Christs invisible power that quickened the dead not his words which only declared what hee meant to doe by his power Againe to the sicke of the Palsie Hee saith Arise take up thy bed and walke Here 's the Command given to a sicke man But was it the vertue of these words that heald him No 't was that secret vertue which went from Christs Deity which did the Cure His words declared what that should bring to passe So in this matter of our Conversion Christ bids us Awake wee that sleepe and stand up on our feet he bids us Beleeve repent obey turne unto him c. But all these commands worke nothing of themselves but take effect by the only Power of God working upon the Heart In which case the Word is truly the Voice of God not of man Now Gods Voice is not a bare sound or word carrying such or such a meaning with it and no more as mans doth but it is Verbum factivum as well as significativum it deeth and really brings to effect that which it commands to bee done it makes a world when it bids a world to be made it raises us when it bids us arise it awakens us when it bids us awake it workes faith in us when it commands us to beleeve it gives repentance when it bids us repent it makes us holy when it commands us to be so According to that of the Apostle 2 Cor. 10. The weapons of our warfare are mighty but it is through God and that in Esa. 59. 21. My word saith God shall abide in you but this cannot be till he have first put his Spirit within our hearts Wherefore where this vertue of the Spirit is wanting as it is in most there the Word hath no other vertue than to bee as a faire Mappe presented to the eye wherein are described many matters of excellent knowledge which the unregenerate may gaze upon in a kinde of shallow heartlesse speculation which will differ asmuch from good knowledge as the knowledge of a Countrie by the Mappe and by the eye in travelling it And this is the Sentence of the Orthodox Church touching the Nature and distinction of these two Callings Inward by the worke of the Spirit Outward by the voyce of the Word The Arminians are of another opinion whose judgement about this matter is thas The Word say they and the Spirit alwayes goe together and wheresoever either the Law or Gospell is preached there and then the Quickening power and effectuall vertue of the Holy Ghost is present in all even those that are unregenerate untill such time as by Contumacy and Rebellion against the Spirit they have made themselves unworthy of further helpe But now what is this effectuall power according to the Arminians and what doth it in all men It doth say
it unlesse himselfe had been acquainted with the like Revelations But this is certaine God-where he comes makes himselfe knowne and such were the lively characters of heavenly majesty brightnesse and cleernesse imprinted on those Revelations that mortall mindes were infallibly ascertained of their Divinity Yea Balaam himselfe though he could have wished with all his heart not to have knowne or beleeved those revelations that so unkindly crost his hope of preferment yet when once the Spirit of God comes upon him he utters his parable with this preface Balaam the son of Beor hath said and the man whose eies are open hath said Hee hath said which heard the words of God which saw the vision of the Almighty falling into a trance but having his eies open He that was at other times driven by the divell into furious motions of mind procured by spells inchantments is now as forcibly moved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or borne away by the power of the holy Ghost who in this revelation makes so cleere a discovery and strong impression of divine truth in the minde of Balaam that the Wizard cannot but speake what he knowes and beleeves though it quite undoe his owne desire of Greatnesse and Balacks hope of Victory Whence also this rule followes generally true That where the revelation is infallibly knowne to be of God there will be a firme assent to the truth of the things revealed Now we are further to note that upon such immediate revelations and suggestions of the Spirit is grounded that Faith which is usually stiled the Faith of working miracles A gift proper to the primitive times of the Church bestowed then on many for the better establishment of the Gospell among unbeleeving Gentiles or Iewes Though the words of the Promise runne largely Marc. 16 17. yet it seemes not likely that every private true beleever had this priviledge but rather that it was bestowed on such as were Preachers and Publishers of the Gospell for confirmation of their doctrine And amongst them t was given not onely to the truely faithfull beleever but to others also as appears by Iudas to whom this power was given as well as to the rest of the twelve Matt. 10 1. and in many other reprobate Matt. 7. 22. Lord Lord have wee not by thy name prophesied c The proper ground of this faith and assurance of working some miraculous effect was the speciall and particular suggestion of the spirit Other motives there were further off as the generall perswasion of Gods omnipotency the beliefe of that promise which Christ made to his Disciples Matt. 17. 20. Verily I say unto you if yee have Faith as a graine of mustard-seed yee shall say unto this mountaine remove hence to yonder place and it shall remove and nothing shall be impossible to you but more specially that larger promise hee made at his Ascension Mark 16. 17. 18. And these signes shall follow them that beleeve in my name they shall cast out divells they shall speake with new tongues They shall take up Serpents and if they drinke any deadly thing it shall not hurt them they shall lay their hands on the sicke and they shall recover But these grounds were not sufficient to give assurance of performing this or that miraculous act without a speciall and particular suggestion of the Holy Ghost informing them inwardly both touching the time when and matter wherin they should worke a Miracle For as all beleevers had not that power so such as had it could not doe wonders when and in what kinde they pleased but were to expect a speciall warrant and direction from the Spirit like unto Peter who though a faithfull beleever yet durst not venture upon a miraculous attempt of walking dry-shod upon the water without a speciall word from Christ bidding of him come unto him in that manner Matt. 14. 28. 29. In these times wherein this speciall direction ceaseth and also miracles have no use unlesse for conversion of a Countrey where the Gospell hath never beene preached this gift also is ceased Thus much of the first sort of Revelations to bee beleeved the other followes 2. Some Mediate delivered from God by others unto us Such were the answers Sermons which the Prophets and Apostles made by word of mouth unto the people such is now unto us the whole written word of God which is now the only ordinary object of our Faith Now touching the Scriptures wee are to enquire how farre things revealed in them may be knowne how farre they must bee beleeved You have heard before the difference betweene Knowledge and Beliefe that is an assent to things evident this to things not-evident therefore seeing those things that are written are generally the object of our faith wee must diligently examine what evidence there is to bee found in these things or whether any at all that so wee may know what to judge of that assertion of our adversaries the Papists who make obscuritie one essentiall property of Faith In the opening of this question Whether things revealed in Scriptures be evident to Mans understanding let these distinctions be observed in the first place 1. The Scriptures containe in them matters of three sorts viz. 1. Precepts and Declarations of the doctrines of Religion whether in the higher mysteries thereof as of the Trinitie Incarnation of Christ c or in other inferiour points of Sanctification Piety and morall Practice And unto this head may be referred all such discourses of naturall things as are found in the Scripture as of the windes thunder c. 2. Histories of matters of Fact past and gone as of the Creation Fall of Man the Floud c. 3. Predictions of things to come hereafter whether they be meerely Propheticall or withall doe containe some speciall Promise or Threatning concerning those to whom the prediction is made 2. There is a twofold Evidence 1. One of the Narration when it is made in Words and Sentences so plaine perspicuous that the Vnderstanding conceives cleerely what the Speaker or Writen meanes 2. Another of the thing it selfe that is related when either our senses doe plainely perceive it if it be a thing sensible or our understandings doe manifestly behold the truth and reason of it if it bee only intelligible This distinction is most manifest in all discourses and specially in Mathematickes where the meaning of a Proposition or Probleme may be cleerely understood what is to bee knowne or done before one jot of the Demonstration be understood how and wherefore it must be so 3. Wee must distinguish of Mans understanding in a twofold estate 1. Of Naturall corruption as it attaines no further light of knowledge than that which may be gotten by the ordinary gift of God in the course of a learned education and painefull studie of Humanity and Divinity for such ends as men propose unto themselves 2. Of Grace and Regeneration when the Vnderstanding is inlightened and
the eyes of the minde opened to discerne of spirituall things according to their spirituall nature Herein also lies a great difference because all things that are inevident to a man unregenerate are not so to the regenerate These things thus distinguished let us set downe the truth touching this point in some few conclusions which follow 1. All things revealed in the Scriptures whether they be Doctrinall Historicall or Propheticall may be knowne in the evidence of the Narration not only by such as are truly sanctified but by those also who remaining unregenerate enjoy only the benefit of common illumination This conclusion is to be observed against that injurious accusation wherewith those of the Romish Church have standered God and his written Word that the Bible is an obscure booke not to be understood A fond and impious conceit if ever any were The Scriptures are obscure say they but to whom trow yee To their learned Clergie and illuminated Doctors No they can understand them well enough they are able to reconcile all seeming contradictions to reduce all tropes and figures to their plaine meaning to note the various acceptions of words to dive into all hidden mysteries of the text and over and above the just meaning finde out many spirituall senses of it that the author never thoughton This they can doe and for witnesse of it we have of their owne writing infinite volumnes both of Controversed Divinitie decided if wee beleeve them by Scripture rightly understood and also of Commentaries upon the text which testifie unto us as no small painfulnesse in searching out so much peremptorinesse in defining the true sense of the most Difficult places of Scriptures And surely well they may bee confident having besides their owne and others wits the helpe of the Popes infallibilitie in which respect one would thinke they should now make an end of writing or at least of jarring one with another in their opinions and interpretations For may we not thinke that the Popes are very uncharitable who being endued with an infallible Spirit doe not sitting at ease in their chaire compile at last an absolute Commentary upon the Bible after which no Iesuite of them all should dare to vent his owne private opinions or it may bee t is bashfulnesse in the Friers not to trouble his Holinesse about so small a tri●●e as is the right meaning of Scriptures unlesse we say that the Romish Apollo is not at leisure to utter Oracles from his trivet unto every poore Frier that intends to trouble the world with a new booke Here questionlesse is a great fault but let them take it among them meane while wee see their owne practice confuting their owne opinion of the Scriptures obscurity unlesse they will give us leave to thinke that all their preaching disputing and writing hath beene about they know not what But say they the Scriptures for all this are obscure to the Laity And are they so whose fault is that but the Clergies whose duty it was if pride and lazinesse would have given leave to have seene their people better instructed If Scriptures are plaine unto themselves why did they not make them plaine unto others or must we in earnest speak that of the Romish Clergy which Iob doth of his friends in derision No doubt but they are the people and wisedome shall die with them as for the poore snakes the Laickes they simple soules have not wit enough to understand the meaning of plaine words To such their proud contempt of Gods people we may with indignation oppose that of Iob Even these have understanding as well as they yea are not inferior unto the greatest part of them unlesse they could give the world better proofe of their deeper wisdomes But what if they be inferior are the Scriptures obscure because some things are hard to be understood by the ignorant and unstable mindes So we might say of the plainest book that ever was written of Logick that t is obscure because a fresh man doth not understand it It is no prejudice to the cleernesse and perspicuity of the Declaration that there be some things in it which are hard to be conceived by some men at some times We doe not account the prophecy of Esay touching Christ which the Eunuch read to be a darke and obscure prediction but we know t was cleer and plaine enough though the Eunuch a raw proselyte understood not the meaning of it T is much we cannot be as charitably minded of the Scriptures as we are of other bookes in our ordinary studies wherin when we find some things difficult we can suspect our selves rather than the author when afterward we understand him we doe not censure him of obscurity but blame our owne dulnesse that could not apprehend things plainely enough expressed And me thinkes the Iesuites might be content to give God Almighty leave to write but even as men of greatest understanding do namely to comprise much matter in few words They might know that in such writing and such is the stile of all the Scripture things may be expressed very distinctly and properly which yet cannot ●●ply be understood at first reading but after some study In which case t were a reasonable thing for our adversaries to perswade the world that the Bible were at least as easie a book as some humane author and that the abundant riches of knowledge in it did by the least deserve as much paines in the search of it as a piece of Aristotle some hard Poet on some intricate crabbed scholasticall discourse of some Iesuite Did they not greatly mistrust the discovery of their owne errors by such an insinuation of Scriptures facility they would never discourage their disciples from them and yet exhort them to the study of many an obscurer author For our selves we have learned better things than to bring God in suspicion with man of envie and fraud as if hee had caused a word to be written for instruction of men which they should not understand and in it had laid a snare to intrappe mens soules in Heresie and false opinions by perverting the Scriptures to their owne perdition No against such calumnies we oppose Christs censure of his owne words for such are the Scriptures Prov. 8. 8 9. All the words of my mouth are in righteousnesse there is nothing froward or perverse in them no danger of Hereticall infection They are all plaine to him that understandeth and right to them that find knowledge nor intricate obscurity that no man can tell what to make on 't Yea we dare avouch that did the simplest of people use but halfe that diligence that they ought in attaining Christian knowledge and would take but as much paines to understand the Scripture as they doe of the Evidences of their Land● or the Statute booke or such like experience would quickly tell them that the Scriptures are not so farre above the reach of their understandings as now generally all men
not book-learned doe conceive to the infinite prejudice of Christianity But however must the Scriptures be obscure because men are carelesse is the Bible a hard booke because common people understand it not in Latine are all things in it darksome and intricate because one man understands not this or that particular which yet another doth or those of the present age perceive not the meaning of such or such a prophecy which the next age may cleerly understand These are weak inferences and such as cannot overturne our first conclusion namely that all Doctrines Histories Prophecies and whatsoever else in Scriptures may be knowne and understood by the perspicuity of the narration in the literall meaning thereof by all sorts of men bad and good For what history of the Bible can be named that may not be plainly understood I say not by a learned or godly but even by any man What prophecy the meaning whereof hath not or will not be plainly found out What text of doctrine whereof some have not or shall not understand the right meaning and when t is once found out may not all understand what one doth yea take the deepest mysteries of Religion as about the Trinity Incarnation of Christ Resurrection Life everlasting Regeneration and the like there is none of them so obscurely set downe in Scripture but that the declaration of them hath light enough to discover unto us what that thing is which we do beleeve so that we may give an account of our Faith in that behalfe Nor is this knowledge of divine things by tht evidence of the narration any peculiar priviledge of the godly but common unto the unregenerate For Charity though it could wish yet cannot be so blinde as to suppose that every one who is able to interpret Scriptures and to write or preach soundly of the doctrines of Divinity is a man truely sanctified by the Spirit of grace Experience and Reason make good the contrary that a singular measure of knowledge and no measure of sanctification are competible Who sees not abroad in the world many wicked and ungodly wretches abounding in knowledge and yet destitute of all true piety and is it not so in the Divell who as in knowledge he surpasseth the best of men so in malice far exceeds the worst of all creatures The cause is for that this knowledge is onely a degree and necessary antecedent unto saving Faith and is not so essentially linked unto it but that it may be where Faith is not It s easier to informe the understanding than to subdue the will and affections the minde may be plainely taught whilst yet the heart remaines froward unbroken and untractable the very heart and life of Faith is the strong inclination and union of the Soule unto the truth and goodnesse of spirituall things preferring them in our choyce above all other things whatsoever which gracious motion is the proper worke of Gods spirit powerfully binding and drawing the heart to embrace that good which is offered unto it but it doth not necessarily follow the right and cleere information of the Vnderstanding Whence it is both possible and easie for an unregenerate Christian by the helpe of common illumination to goe farre I say by common illumination understanding thereby that course of the Revelation of divine truths now usuall in the Church consisting in the knowledge of all Arts skill of Languages use of other mens labours in their Writings and Commentaries conference and hearing of the learned living and accustomed painfulnesse in study of any kinde of knowledge By these meanes a Christian presupposing the truth of holy Writ may in the state of unregeneration prove excellent in the understanding of Divine mysteries Hee may understand all and every the Articles of Christian beliefe all Controversies in matter of Religion all duties of Piety in Christian practice any Sermon or Treatise tending to holy instruction any place of Scripture of darkest and doubtfullest interpretation Yea in these things many times Sanctity goes not so farre as those common graces doe and you may know by experience that the holiest men have not beene alwaies the happiest expositors of Scriptures nor soundest determiners of Controversies but that both of Papists and Protestants many times men of ungodly lives and Idolatrous profession have equalled and exceeded others in their Commentaries and Treatises And doth not the triall of every day shew that many a wretched man and vile hypocrite may yet make so good a Sermon even about the most spirituall points of Christianity and so heavenly a prayer that those who are of quickest sight yet seeing him but a farre off may deeme him sound hearted So easie a matter it is for love of this world to learne Religion by rote and to teach the tongue to speake what the heart doth not affect This of the first conclusion the next is this 2. All Histories and Predictions are knowne unto the most illuminated understandings by no evidence of the things themselves but only by evidence of the relation I shall not need stand long in proving this conclusion In many precepts and doctrinall discourses sense and Reason may have something to doe but in matters Historicall and Propheticall Faith only beares sway For Histories of things past and gone there is no knowledge at all to be had of them otherwise than from authority of Scriptures relation That the world was drowned Noah saved in the Arke c doth not appeare unto us by any argument from the things themselves evident to sense or reason but only by the story So for Prophecies promises threatnings they are not evident till the event make them evident As that the Iewes shall bee converted the Papacy rooted out c. we know these things only by the Word foretelling them In neither of these kindes can our sense be informed or our understanding convinced of their truth and therefore wee must rest upon Revelation beleeved Of these two kindes principally is the Apostle to bee understood in that description of Faith which hee makes Heb. 11. vers 1. where he useth two words to expresse the objects of Faith the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Things not seene the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Things hoped for Things not seene are of a more large extent and comprise all both past and to come things hoped for have a speciall relation to promises of some future good Both are the proper objects of Faith which is alwayes drowned in the sight of things that were unseene and possession of things that were hoped for The third and last Conclusion followes which is this 3. Precepts and discourses of Dogmaticall points mentioned in Scriptures are in part knowne by the evidence of the things themselves both to the regenerate also the unregenerate This conclusion is of manifest truth as shall appeare thus In Scriptures there are doctrinall discourses of divers sorts some of matters belonging to Nature and Morality others of mysteries peculiar to Divinity
the meaning We have reason to yeeld as much respect to Gods writings as Socrates did sometime to an obscure booke of Heraclitus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so when in reading the Scriptures we meet with many hard sentences dark prophecies wee know not the meaning of we also can say That which I understand I beleeve for truth that which I understand not yet I beleeve too that is a truth whatsoever it be But in this case it is manifest that this assent is full of trouble and confusion and whereas faith gives rest and satisfaction to the minde this fills it with anxiety and distraction will any man not strangely carelesse and blockish becontent with such a faith as this I beleeve I know not what And if in some particulars even pure necessitie cause us for the present to bee contented with such a beliefe because of our ignorance must it therefore be brought in as a generall and essentiall property of Faith that t is an assent to things obscure or unknowne But this makes much for the advancement of the Catholike cause and therefore the factors for Rome have reason to stand stiffely in defence of this their doctrine for so when they have dropped in the eares of their disciples this poyson that the faith of a Christian is an assent to things obscure to he knowes not what they have at one stroke nayled their eares to the doores of their Church and made them their slaves for ever and wonne them over to their blinde Canonicall obedience as to beleeve so to doe they know not what The summe of our Adversaries doctrine in this point is briefly expressed by Becanus in his Theolog. Scholasttom 3. cap. 1. Quaest 3. who therein followes his leaders the rest of the Iesuites and Schoolemen To the Question An Revelatio primae veritatis ut sit formale objectum fidei debeat esse obscura he answeres affirmatively that Divine revelations as the objects of Faith must bee obscure and that in a twofold respect 1. Ex part● rei revelatae Revelatio enim non debet clard evidenter ostendere rem revelatam A very strange conceit Revelations must not declare things plainely and evidently why so When God revealed his will to the Patriarches Prophets and Apostles did hee not doe it plainely and did not they clearely understand what was meant by the Revelation They did But happly the Iesuites meaning is a little better The revelation must not clarè evidenter ostendere rem that is no revelation hath this force of it selfe Vt rem revelatam exhibeat nobis Praesentem ut clarè intuitivè videamus rem narrat●● If this were all the Iesuites meane by this doctrine wee would subscribe unto them and willingly grant that revelation doth not make things Present and offer them to our view for if they were present and seene what need a Revelation In this sense we easily admit the proofes which they bring for Faiths obscurity out of Heb. 11. 1. that faith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of things which we behold not by the eye of sense or reason and out of 1 Cor 13. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 True the things that wee beleeve are now knowne by us in this life no otherwise than as wee doe know a man whose face we behold in a glasse but doe not behold his person but our knowledge of the same things in the life to come is as when we know a man standing before him and looking him full in the face So the Scriptures are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a glasse wherein we may behold the shape and picture of all things to be beleeved but t is the picture only not the substance and body it selfe Were this all our Adversaries intended the difference betweene us were at an end things beleeued are obscure id est Non-praesentes non-visae we grant it But this doth not fully fit their turne for though the things themselves bee obscure that is not immediatly seene and looked upon yet the narration of them in Scriptures may be perspicuous and plaine to be understood Now they like not this all is quite marr'd if they give way so farre as to grant that the Scriptures are plaine to be understood This may not bee tolerated in their Schooles and Pulpits and therefore t is that in their Sermons and writings upon that subject they so bestirre themselves like a heard of wilde beastes to raise up all the dust they can wherby to darken the light of that bright most Sunne And this is the thing that they aime at in their description of Faith when they tell us that it is an assent to obscure propositions their meaning is villanous to lay a ground for ignorance and implicite beliefe that it suffiseth a religious Christian to salvation that he beleeve in grosse the truth of all which the Scriptures and Church doe deliver though he understand nothing at all distinctly Let him jumble over his Creed in Latine and understand never a letter yet is he a good beleeving Catholike and it sufficeth that the Creed be recited by him in Persona Ecclesiae as Becanus out of Thomas very conceitedly affirmes So in stead of distinct knowledge necessary unto saving faith they breed in their people a dull turbulent and confused assent to something but they know not what which is indeede rather a stubbornnesse and wilfulnesse of resolution than the well advised beliefe of a Christian. Iust so doe Sorcerers and Witches beleeve confidently in the vertue of a number of Verses Spells Characters c. which they cannot tell what to make of and such is the Magicall Faith of those whom the Romish Whore hath bewitched with her inchantments Nor hath this opinion of Obscurity in matter of Faith any ground at all in those two places before alledged For the first in Heb. 11. ver 1. Faith is an argument of things not seene Most true they are not seene because Faith apprehends them and sight destroies Faith But what then are they unknowne too No for Faith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an evident argument even of these things that are not seene Yea but whence doth Faith fetch this argument not from the things themselves for they are unseene Whence then from the Revelation and Declaration of them in the word which makes them cleer to the apprehension of the beleever Againe in that 1. Cor. 13. 12. Wee now see through a glasse darkely True wee see things but as in a looking glasse therefore wee see them darkely for let a man first view the shape of any thing in a glasse and afterward look on the thing it selfe his first knowledge of it will bee but dark in comparison of the latter Neverthelesse it is not so darke and obscure but that a man may describe what thing it is hee sees if hee behold a mans face in the glasse hee may distinctly tell that such a man hath such a visage
In the like manner the Revelations of Scripture are like a cleere well polished glasse free from dust ●lawes crackes or other deformities in them wee may behold all the mysteries of Religion cleerly represented in their shapes and proper colours so farre forth as is needfull for us to see them in this life and when attentively we marke what is shewne unto us wee may take distinct notice of every thing that is to be beleeved by us in all articles of Christian Faith And this knowledge is in it selfe distinct and cleere though compared with that other proper immediate beholding of the things themselves face to face as the Apostle speakes it may justly be termed Darke and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let one instance make all plaine in Gal. 3. 1. the Apostle saith that Christ was described unto the Galatians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before their eyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being crucified among them Why this was not possible that what was done at Ierusalem on mount Golgatha should bee seene in Galatia many hundred miles from it How then was Christ described and crucified in the sight of these Galatians It was in the cleere and manifest declaration of him by the Apostles preaching Which though it could not make the sufferings of Christ so evident unto the Galatians as they were unto such as stood by the crosse of Christ and saw him suffer yet so cleere and distinct was the representation thereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the mirrour of the Apostles preaching that the Galatians faith in this case was not an assent to things obscure which they understood not It s one thing then for a matter to be present unto us in it owne nature another for it to be perspicuously plainly set forth in a narration in which latter sense we affirm against the Romanist that all objects of Faith are not Obscure but Evident in those Revelations of them which are made in Scriptures 2. Ex parte Dei Revelantis For non constat nobis clarè evidenter revelationemillam propter quam credimus articulas fidei à Deo factam esse No is it not evident to us that the Scriptures are of God To whom then was it evident to the holy men of God to whom they were first inspired Yes the Iesuite grants that but yet heare his words Num. 12. Prophetae Apostol● saith hee habuerunt tantùm evidentiam revelationis non autemevidentiam Primae veritatis Tamet si enim evidenter cognoscerent Deum esse qui ipsis revelabat mysteria fides non tamen evidenter cognoscebant Deum esse summè veracem qui nec falli possit nec fallere Vnde sequitur assensum illorum quem habuerunt circa mysteria fidei fuisse obscurum ejusdem speciei cum assensu fidei nostrae See ye this Iesuite how hee would blow away with one blast all the certainty of Christian faith and so bring the matter about that there shall be no sure footing for it unlesse it be in the authority of the Church and the Popes infallible fancy Revelations of Scripture are not evident to us that they are of God to the Prophets and Apostles they were indeed evidently knowne to bee of God but yet see the mischiefe the Truth of God the Revealer was not evidently knowne unto these holy men nor were they infallibly certaine but that God might and would tell them a lie A foule blasphemy and I know not whether hee doe deserve the name of a Reasonable creature who is not himselfe or thinkes there is any that is not infallibly evidently and most certainly convinced of this truth that God cannot bee deceived himselfe nor will deceive any But touching this point that wee have no such obscure tottering foundation for our faith but a most sure and cleere word full of brightnesse and majesty like light shining into our soules and by it owne characters discovering it owne divine originall of this hereafter more fitly in handling the certainty of Faiths assent Now in the meane time for conclusion of this first point touching the Objects of Faith How farre forth they are Evident or Inevident these two confectaries may be noted out of what hath been said 1. Knowledge by sight takes away Faith that is so far as sight goes but no further for as we said of Beliefe in generall so here Evident Experience of the truth in some things doth helpe our Faith in other Whence t is usuall with the godly to strengthen their faith in the promises for time to come by calling to minde Gods mercies of old and that evident triall of them they have had in time past And Thomas because hee saw the Evident truth of Ghrists Resurrection did more firmely beleeve the rest of the mystery of mans Redemption by him But otherwise in the same things as sight waxeth so Faith waineth the greater light certainty drownes the lesse where Knowledge is perfect the Faith though it remains in the Habit yet it ceaseth in the Act. This is manifest by that opposition which the Apostle makes betweene Faith and Sight 2. Cor. 5. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what this walking by Faith is is plaine Chap. 4. 18. We looke not on the things which are seene but on the things which are not seen for the things which are seene are temporall but the things which are not seene are eternall 2. A distinct explicite knowledge of divine things in the Revelations of them in Scripture is necessary to the being of Christian Faith By explicite knowledge I meane the understanding of the articles of Beliefe so farre forth as they are plainly declared in Scriptures This Historicall knowledge for so we may terme it synecdochic●● of the letter and meaning of the Scriptures in such things as it proposeth to be beleeved is required to the being of Christian Faith as a necessary antecedent thereof For though this knowledge may be where Faith is not yet Faith can never be where this knowledge goes not before Ignorant in this sense and Vnbeleeving are termes reciprocall As perfect knowledge by sight excludes Faith of the thing seene so doth perfect ignorance of any thing destroy all Faith of the same thing I say of the same thing for a man may bee absolutely ignorant in some things yet a beleever in others and therefore wee doe not meane that such an explicite knowledge is necessary to faith as that wee must distinctly apprehend all points of Faith before wee beleeve for the Apostles when yet they were true beleevers were ignorant in many articles of Faith as Christs Resurrection Ascention c. But this wee affirme that where there is totall ignorance of any one article of Faith there can be no Beliefe at all of that article as for example Hee that saith I beleeve a holy Catholike Church and yet knowes not what a holy Catholike Church is what ever hee say hee doth not beleeve it That such a blinde credo is
admiration to themselves for being the only oracles of Religion that so they may beare rule over the peoples faith Or else the god of this world hath blinded these Leaders eies and they not willing to goe to hell alone put out also the eyes of the people to the end they may not know more than themselves or all that themselves doe and so their knavery be discovered For us let us detest a doctrine so contrary to the profession of Christianity that takes away all care and study after godly knowledge and makes way for the entrance of Heresies Profanenesse and Irreligion nor rest we in our seach after divine things till wee bee able to say with the Apostle I know whom I have beleeved 2. Tim. 1. 12. and with the true worshippers of God Wee worship that which wee know Ioh. 4. 22. Hitherto of the First Part proposed to bee handled in the Definition of Faith generally taken namely the Obiect of it which are all Reuelations of what kind soeuer made by God vnto the Creature We come vnto the Second point namely the Subiect in which this Quality of Faith is inherent which in the Definition was expressed to be the Reasonable Creature Within which Latitude wee comprise all created vnderstanding whether of men or of Angels Of liuing men there is no Question not of the best of men that euer were Adam in his innocency and Christ. That Adam had Faith it cannot be doubted by any who knowes that the cause of his fall was his not perseuering in a firme beliefe of that threatning In the day that thou eatest thou shalt die When his ascent to the truth of this reuelation once tottered Satan presently closes in vpon him and so plyes him vpon the aduantage that he leaues him not till he had laid the Happinesse and Honour of that glorious creature in the dust For the Humanity of Christ what was in innocent Adam was also in him as is apparant by those Prayers and Supplications which in the dayes of his flesh he offered vp with strong crying and teares vnto him that was able to saue him from death Heb. 5. 7. and that complaint vpon the Crosse in his greatest agony My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Mat. 27. 46. Those prayers were made in Faith and so Hee was heard in that which hee feared nor was his complaint though very pitiful and fetcht from the lowest depth of Misery without much strength of Faith whilst yet he cals him his God whom for the present hee found his enemy Moreouer though Christ as the Son of man was ignorant of the time of the end of the world yet no question but he did perfectly belieue the Article of the last iudgement Touching Angels wee haue S. Iames testimony of the euill Spirits Iam. 2. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They belieue that those chaines of darknesse in which they are now imprisoned shall bee euerlasting and that they shall bee made much heauier vpon them by a multiplication of their torments in the iudgement of that great Day as Iude speaketh Iude 6. This they belieue with such horror besides a world of other particulars which by reuelation of Scripture they know will fall out For there is no doubt but the diuels though they tempt men to vnbeliefe yet doe themselues belieue the truth of the Scriptures which they know well enough to bee of God Their rage and malice against them proues it euidently For the blessed Angels we cannot deny vnto them nothing what wee grant vnto the accursed but as their knowledge of many things is more cleare and exact then it is in the Diuels so is their faith vnto others much more firme and resolued Whence though they know not the day and houre of the end of the world Mar. 13. 32. yet they belieue it with ioy expecting the augmentation of their owne happinesse by accesse of the Churches accomplished glory Nor doe the Spirits of iust men who liued by Faith in this life vtterly cease to liue by Faith after their translation into heauen for euen when they are there they yet still belieue many things both past and to come as the resurrection of their bodies euerlasting life c. And that prayer which the Saints in heauen make for auengment of their bloud-shed vpon the Earth How long Lord Holy and true doest thou not iudge and auenge our blood on them that dwell on the Earth Reu. 6. 10. is certainely a prayer made in Faith Wherefore you see that euery part of the world hath faith in it Faith on earth Faith in heauen and Faith in Hell too Whereas there is Created Reason there also there is Faith The reason is this because Perfect Vision only takes away all Faith and where all things that may be knowne are euidently seene and looked vpon being comprehended in their proper nature there is no faith at all But now there is no Created Intellectuall Nature but it may vnderstand more by reuelation then it can comprehend Intuitiuè by beholding the thing it selfe And therefore all Future things which doe nor naturally depend vpon necessary causes cannot be knowne vnto the Angels themselues but onely by reuelation from God Whence the Apostle Peter speaking of the mystery of mans redemption by Christ 1 Peter 1. 11. affirmeth that euen the Angels were greatly desirous to behold that wonderfull mystery 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sto●pe downe and looke into it as wee doe into darke and obscure places For such was the mystery of the Gospell euen secret and hidden from the knowledge of Angels till God by reuealing it vnto the Church made it knowne also vnto them as the Apostle shewes Eph. 3. 10. In like sort for matters of Fact long agoe past euen the Saints in heauen haue no euident knowledge by Uision but onely by reuelation they must still belieue the stories of the Bible know them they cannot by sight vnlesse we should belieue that vaine opinion De Speculo Trinitati● that the Saints beholding the face of God doe as in a glasse behold in Sin all things present to their view which is iustly reiected by the learned as an impossible thing Wee dare not be curious in these things pressing too farre into those matters which wee haue not seene thus much wee may with reason affirme that God alone is without all beliefe whatsoeuer because hee onely is Perfect in knowledge most distinctly comprehending at once all things past present and to come calling the things that are not as if they were in whose sight all things are manifest yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 4. 13. stripped starke naked and presented to his view in their proper shapes Only such an absolute infinite knowledge takes away all Faith in any kinde whatsoeuer As for the creature it knowes but in part and therefore it m●st in part bee alwaies bound to belieue whatsoeuer the creator shall reueale vnto it Thus in the generall you see that
tho Reasonable Creature is the Subiectum quod of Faith but we may yet more particularly enquire of the Subiectum quo in which Facultie of the Reasonable Creature Faith is resident In euerie Intellectuall nature there are vsually made two Distinct Faculties First The Vnderstanding Secondly The Will The Obiect of that is Truth The Obiect of this Goodnesse Now then Faith being an assent to the Truth and Goodnesse of Diuine reuelations we must see in which of those Faculties it is resident or whether in both Our Aduersaries teach that the Assent of Faith is an act of the Vnderstanding onely not of the Will This opinion we reiect as erroneous because Diuine Reuelations are essentially as Good as they be true nor hath their truth any prerogatiue aboue their goodnesse and so Faith is giuen but by halues vnto one part of the Obiect where there is not as well an Election and Approbation of the Goodnesse of it by the Will as an ascent to the truth of it in the Vnderstanding Wherefore we affirme that this Assent of Faith is an act of the Vnderstanding and of the Will both together approuing and allowing the truth and goodnesse of all Diuine things In which assertion you are to note that we doe not make the Habit of Faith to be inherent in two diuers subiects nor this act of Assent to come from two diuers Principles or two seuerall Faculties of the mind but we affirme the subiect is but one and the same namely the intellectuall Nature For I take it with diuers of the Learned yet as they doe vnder correction of the more Learned that those Speculations about the reall distinction of Faculties in such Spirituall Substances as are the Angels and soules of men are but meere subtleties of the Schoole without any true ground in natu●e it selfe He that shall in an vnpartiall search after Truth and Full Satisfaction thoroughly examine the same Distinction of Faculties in the Sencitiue Soule that the Common Sence Phantasie and Memory are three powers of it really distinct as in Nature so in place let him but examine the weakenesse of the ground of this distinction and the inexplicable difficulties that doe accompanie it he shall find vpon study of the point that it is no Heresie in Philosophy to hold that our grand Master hath herein affirmed more then will be euer vnderstood or thoroughly iustified by any of his Disciples As in these materiall Formes so much more in those Spirituall Essences Faculties haue beene multiplyed beyond necessitie and that thought to be done by more that may be performed by fewer helpes Our Sences haue in this case deceiued our Reason and because we find in Compounded bodyes diuers actions and motions to flow from diuers qualities we haue therefore imagined that in Simple Spirituall Substances the case must be alike and there is no remedy but we must Vnderstand by one Facultie Will or Nill by another Remember by a third Whereas all these seuerall actions flow immediately from the liuely and actiue essence of such a Spirituall Substance without any such distinct faculties that need come betweene the Agent and the Action For our purpose it appeares that the Vnderstanding and Will are not distinct Faculties that haue distinct actions Thus First The Vnderstanding essentially includes the Will For the Vnderstanding hath a naturall inclmation to Truth as the Will hath to Goodnesse It abhors Falshood as that doth Euill This desire and loue of Truth is 〈◊〉 this refusall and hatred of Falshood is Nolitio and so Velle and Nolle are actions euen of the Vnderstanding too and this proposition Intellectus vulirerum non 〈◊〉 salsum is most true and proper Secondly The Will essentially includes the Vnderstanding For to will or nill any thing good on●uill is an action either of knowledge or of ignorance If of ignorance then the Will in reasonable nature shall be an vnreasonable Facultie which is blindly carried to the embracing or refusing of that which it selfe knowes not at all but only it is knowne to another facultie the Vnderstanding But this were an absurd imagination to make the Will Facultatem non-intelligentem and to appropriate vnto it such a motion as is destitute of knowledge like a blind man that is led by the seeing he knowes not whither So should the Doctrine of Free-will in any kind whatsoeuer fall to the ground For how is the Will free but because it may choose this or that How can it make choyce vnlesse it doe also vnderstand campare aduise and deliberate about the nature and consequences of things offered vnto its choyce Wherefore it is manifest that Intelligere and Iudicare are actions belonging vnto the Will also and that this proposition Voluntas intelligit bonum aut malum is true and proper Thus in regard of the actions Valends and Intelligendi we haue no reason to make a distinction of Faculties where the actions are common and indifferently agree to each of them If one facultie can doe both what reason is there to make two And if the Philosopher be in the right denying a distinct facultie for the Memorie in the reasonable soule because the Vnderstanding sufficeth to that for as much as eiusdem est seruare Habitus ●●s vti we haue the same reason to hold the Vnderstanding and Will to be no distinct Faculties seeing eiusdem est intelligere velle Thirdly The Obiect of the Vnderstanding and Will are one and the same For Truth and Goodnesse are essencially the same thing In Naturall things it is most plaine that their Truth and Goodnesse is all one Their goodnesse is nothing but the Truth of their Being in their perfect conformitie to Gods vnderstanding and will when their Essence and Qualities are perfectly the same which they had by their creation When the Creature is as it was made then it is both True and Good so farre as any part of truth is lost so much of goodnesse is gone And this appeares by the contrarie Malum and ●alsum in the creature opposed to this naturall goodnesse and truth of it are both but one thing namely any Defect or Excesse in the parts or degrees of their Essen●e and Qualities otherwise then according to the Truth of their Creation Such defects and excesses we call Errors Vntruths and Euils in nature So that if we consider Truth and Goodnesse in the nature of things themselues it is not possible to make any reall distinction between them What things are in our opinion it matters not much Our conceit we haue of them makes them not either true or good Nor is gold and precious stones any iot the better or worse because ciuill nations haue them in greatest account or Tartars and other Sauadges despise them as toyes and vnnecessarie to mans life Where the Essence of any thing is entire and perfect there is Truth and goodnesse though all thinke nothing or thinke otherwise of it And let vs thinke as long as we
certainely belieue such and such Articles of Faith His answere will bee Because the Church which can discerne what is what is not of God hath infallibly decreed such and such things to be belieued Against which impious doctrine we except and say That by this meanes our Faith is resolued either into nothing at all or at the furthest but only into humane Authority 1 That is resolued into iust nothing but runs round in a Circle like a mill-horse For aske a Roman Catholike why doe you belieue the Pope cannot erre His answere is because the Scripture saith so Tues Petrus c. and Orauipro te ne deficiat sides tua and Sum v●b scum ad consummationem saculs with such other places But how know you that those places are Scripture and that that is the right meaning of those places He answeres because the Councell of Trent and the Pope say so Yea but how know you infallibly they doe not erre in saying so Hee answeres Because the Scripture affirmes they cannot erre for Thou art Peter vpon this rocke c This is the Fayries dance wherein men smitten with the spirit of giddinesse are led round in a ring being neuer able to free them or finde any resting place whereon to fixe the assurance of their Faith 2 That at best their faith is resolued finally into Mans Authority Which appeares thus aske a Papist Why doe you belieue Purgatory He will say Because God in his word hath reuealed it as an Article of Faith Zach. 9. 11. I haue loosed thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water i. out of Purgatory and Luke 16. Lazarus was carried into Abrahams bosome i. into Purgatory with such like Well but why doe you infallibly belieue that this is Gods word and that this is the meaning of it Hee sayes Because the Church i. Counceis and Popes say so Hee can goe no further vnlesse hee will runne round Here then hee must stay resting his Faith on mans Testimony and Authority Which hee doth manifestly forasmuch as it appeares not by any argument from the Scriptures themselues that such a doctrine as Purgatory is contained in them and therefore he assents to the truth of it finally and onely because the Church for sooth hath conceiued the meaning of those places to be such Now this is not to belieue the Scriptures but to belieue the Opinion of the Church that is to say of men like our selues Heere Becanus helpes at a dead lift by a schoole distinction thus Fidesresoluitur Formaliter in Deumprimam veritatem reuelantem Directiuè in Ecclesiā propter infallililitatē proponēdt The shift of a Sophister What Faith is it that is thus resolued Theologicall or Humane Neither saith hee Theologicall Faith is resolued into Gods authority Humane is resolued into mans authority as to belieue an Article because Calui● or Lutber teach it or say wee because Pope Paul the fift Gregory the 13. or any other Pope Cardinall Bishop or Bishops teach it What saith is it then which is resolued into the Churches authority It is saith the Iesuite neither saith neque purè diuina neque purè humana sed quasi media inferior is cuinsdam ordinis Iust so I take it men vse to speak when they cannot tell what to say It is Quasi and Aliquomodò and Alicuius generis c. It is something if they could tell what But be it what it may be if it be not a diuine Faith What shall become of the vulgar sort in their Church must they bee saued by such a middle kinde of Faith betweene Diuine and Humane This is a new way to heauen of the Iesui●es inuention wherein it will bee a matter beyond his skill so to conduct a poore vnlearned Catholike that he step not aside leaning too much vpōmans authoriti whereon he should not trust at all and too little on Gods on whom he should altogether relie Plaine folke haue no skill in such nice distinctions of belieuing God Formaliter and the Church Directiuè and it will trouble the authors of them to giue a reasonable meaning of them For what is it to belieue the Church Directiuè is it to be drawne by the Churches direction in the ministeriall Preaching and application of the Scriptures vnto beleefe of the Articles of Faith Wee grant such a resolution of our faith into the Churches authority as a motiue to induce and persivade vs to belieue But Becames denies that the Church is to be reckoned inter motiua fidei and therefore he must needs account it inter formales rationes fidei as a case of reason and proper foundation of our faith whereinto it is resolued formaliter And so it is for there is neuer a Papist that wil belieue any thing that God saith but onely for this reason because the Church allowes of it It is not the light and Euidence of Gods word by it owne selfe Euincing its owne Diuinity and Interpreting its owne meaning t is not this they rest vpon if they did what need they goe further but it is meerely formally and directly the Testimony and Opinion of men whether Fathers Councels Popes or whomsoeuer they please to style the Church This impiery is horrible and so maine an errour in the foundation of Faith that it makes the whole frame to ●otter fastening the consolation and Hope of man vpon the vncertainty of another mans testimony therby throwing him into inextricable difficulties and doubts besides offering intollerable indignity vnto God in giuing such authority vnto his seruant and vassall as tends to the contumely of the Lord and Master For so it is when a few men met together in a Councell-house or one poore sinfull illeterate Pope shal be deemed of power sufficient and iudgement infallible to set themselues downe vpon the bench and to call that word which shall iudge them at the last day vnto the bar and there to interpret ratifie or nullifie what and how themselues best pleaseth Wee might wellbe ashamed of our religion when wee dispute with Athiests and infidels if wee had no better reason to confirme our Religion but our owne testimonie because we say it is the truth and the Romish Church might blush when she pleads for her infallibilitie from those places formerly mentioned yet in sine hath no other warrant from them but onely this it is so and it shall be so because shee her selfe hath decreed that onely to bee the true meaning of those Scriptures But to leaue these absurdities blasphemies and come to the truth that which we maintaine touching the Certaintie of the Scriptures Diuine authoritie is this viz. That we are infallibly ascertained of the Scriptures Diuinitie by the Scriptures themselues I or as in other Sciences there are alwayes some principles Per se not a indemonstrabili● whence other things are proued so in Diuinitie all conclusions in point of Beliefe and Practise are proued by the Scriptures but for the Scriptures they
the Light And for the later it demands an impossible thing as if a blind man should require him that sees to proue vnto him by sound argument that he beholds such or such things which cannot be done In short A man inlightened and sanctified by the Spirit doth perceiue the truth of holy Scriptures infallibly by their owne proper light and for his own proper vse albeit he be not able to demonstrate so much to another to make him see what himselfe doth Now here we should goe further in the explication of this assertion that the Scriptures are knowne to be the Word of God by themselues and all such arguments as do demonstrate this truth should be layd forth before you But it would take vp a long discourse and the point more directly belongs vnto those generall cōtrouersies about the Scriptures which are moued between vs and the Papists amongst which this touching the Infallibly certaintie of Scriptures is at large handled and maintained by the Learned of our side Amongst whom the learned ●ackson deserues due prayse and thankes of all that loue Learning for his diligent examination of this point in his first second Booke of Commentaries vpon the Apostles Creed Books that are fruitfull of exquisite obseruation in this kind and being as painfully studied as they are with much diligence and labour compiled will I perswade my selfe giue much satisfaction to those that honestly seeke for it I conclude all touching this point with a threefold admonition which by way of application I shall briefly dispatch intending only to perswade euery one not to slight so serious a matter but carefully to examine vpon what certaintie his faith is built 1 Admonition is this That in this enquiry after the Scriptures certainty wee must looke that wee giue satisfaction vnto our owne soules but that is impossible to satisfie all others who are disposed to cauill The truth of Scriptures is knowne vnto them for whose benefit they were written namely the elect and as in another case the Apostle spake Rom. 11. 7. The elect haue obtained it the rest haue beene hardened so here The ●lect doe see this light the rest are blinded Wherefore when the eyes of our vnderstanding are opened to see the wonders of Gods Law to behold the admirable maiesty purity holinesse and oxcellence of diuine reuelations in the Scriptures when we feele vpon our foules the awfull commanding power of them to binde our consciences vnto obedience to master our vnruly lusts and wholy to captinate vs vnto their Soueraignety wee must not now begin to doubt of the truth of this which wee so sensibly see and feele because another cauils dispises vs and will not be won with our perswasions to thinke as we thinke For he that sees the Sunne hath no cause to distrust his owne eye-sight because he cannot perswade a blind man by any argument possible that he beholds a most glorious and excellent light 2 Admonition is to put you in minde of that danger wherein carelesse men who build without hauing laid a sure foundation Come to most men and aske them Why doe you beliue the Scriptures and these points of religion out of them Their answere is Because they bee the Word of God Yea but what perswades you to thinke so Here they are staggered and haue nothing to say but they are lead vnto this beliefe by Custome of Education in a Christian Church wherein the Scriptures Diuinity is generally receiued for an vndoubted truth and they belieue what they see others doubt not of else it were a shame for them But in the meane time themselues haue neuer laboured to get infallible assurance vnto their owne consciences from the Scriptures themselues by prayer study all due obseruation Now what is the issue of such an ill grounded beliefe I le tell you t is partly Disobedience against and Apostacy from the Truth partly Dispaire and losse of all comfort in time of need Where there is onely a slight opinion of the Scriptures authority there easily followes Disobedience to all their commands Tell the Ambitious and distrustfull worldling That the kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof is first to be sought for and then other things shal be cast vpon him That godlinesse is great gaine That Humility goeth before Honor c. Tell the vncleane person that Whoremongers and Adulterers God will iudge Tell the Drunkard That they who doe such things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Tell the Swearer That for Oathes the land mournes and God will not hold him guiltlesse that taketh his name invaine What doe these men thinke when the Scriptures are thus brought against their faults Doe they verily belieue that this is the word of God They will not say otherwise for shame of the world but who can belieue that their consciences are thorowly conuinced of it when there is to be seene so strange a disproportion betweene their Faith and practise in these particulars No they laugh secretly in their hearts at the simplicity of silly men who tremble at the word and dare not for their liues venter vpon the practise of such things as it forbids which they meane while freely follow to their great contentment Furthermore these men that do thus rebel against God in one religion will be ready if occasion serue to reuolt from that vnto another religion seeing the grounds whereupon they embrace any religion are alike in all Besides let mee tell them thus much that this loose and vnsetled faith is one of the ficry darts forcible engines of Satan whereby he affaults and ouerthrowes the hope and comfort of many a dying man Who hauing not strengthened himselfe on this point by vndoubted arguments and experiments is there laid at where hee lies open and vnarmed by such cunning cauils shifts and elusions brought against the authority of Scriptures that the poore man not able to cleare himselfe from such suggestions fals into an vniuersall doubting of all Religion and at last percciuing his Faith hath onely grasped at the ayre and embraced the empty shadow of mans authority insteed of the Substance of Diuine truth he is vtterly confounded and sinks downe in despaire If I am able to iudge any thing of the Methods of Satans temptations I dare say that this weapon is reserued vsually for the last combat and that many a mans faith hath perished vpon this rocke both in life and especially in the last agonies conflicts with the powers of death and darknesse 3 Wherfore let this be a third Admonition that euery one of vs be well aduised to prouide our selues of such arguments for confirmation of our faith in this point as wil hold water and abide the siery triall of Satans temptations Vnde seis is a sore question and Satan can tell how to enforce his arguments with better skill then any Iesuie and Heretike Wherefore let vs looke to it in time that we wauer not but may be 〈◊〉
things past will fill the heart with boldnesse confident expectation of the like successe for the time to come And so much touching the three grounds of Certaintie and Strength in the Assent of Faith I come now to the second point proposed touching this Assent or the diuers degrees of it and those essentiall differences whereby sauing faith in Gods Elect is distinguished from that Faith which is in others We haue shewed you that faith may be in all reasonable creatures and the Scriptures testifie that there is some kind of faith in the Diuels and wicked men We must therefore enquire what their faith is and what the faith of Gods Elect is by what essentiall difference they are distinguished You are therefore to obserue that this assent by which generally all Faith was defined is two-fold 1 Generall to all Diuine Reuelations as good and true whilst barely considered in themselues or as they haue no opposition to our desires being applyed to ourselues 2 Particular when assent is giuen to all Diuine Reuelations as most true and good in regard of our selues when they are applyed to all our particular occasions and compared with all contrarie desires and prouocations Herein lies a substantiall difference of this assent of Faith there being a great Diuersitie betweene an Assent vnto the truth goodnesse of things taken in the generall and an Assent vnto the truth goodnes of the samethings particularly applied as you shall see in the progresse of this discourse The former is but an inferiour degree of Faith and only a step vnto that faith which is true and sauing It is commonly called by two names 1 Historicall Faith synecdochically from one part of the obiect of because it beleeues the Letter of the Scriptures whether Histories or doctrines that are expressed therein 2 Temporarie Faith from the Euent issue of it because it perseueres not vnto the end but failes in time of Temptation It is but one and same degree of faith that hath these two names which assenting to things in grosse flies off and disallowes when it coms to particular application Such a general assent there is in the Diuels who know the Scripturs to be of God and acknowledge the things contained in them to be in themselues true good because from God though mean-while they hate both the one other bitterly The truth of God his Word Essence Attributes works vpon their vnderstandings a deep apprehension of its certainty excellency euen when they with vnspeakable hatred and horrour thinke of it According Iames saith They belieue tremble Such a Faith there is in thousands of Hypocrites reprobates who being inlightened and conuinced of the Truth of the Word yeeld a generall assent vnto it for the time as in those Luk. 8. ●3 Who receiue the Word with ioy but they haue no root which for a while beleeue but in time of temptation go● away In those Heb. 6. 4 5 Which were inlightened tasted of the heauenly gift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost And haue tasted of the good Word of God and of the Powers of the world to come are salue away In those Many that beleeued in Christs Name but yet Christ would not trust them because he knew them all that they were not found at heart Ioh. 2. 23 24. In those many againe that at another time beleeued in him but Christ giues them a caueat that they looke their faith be ●ound 〈◊〉 ye continue in my Word ye are verely my Disciples Ioh. 8. 30. 31. Such a faith was in Simon the Witch Act. 8. 13. who beleeued the Apostles preaching and was baptized euen whilst yet he remained in the gall of bitternesse and bond of iniquitie i. a ●ierce enemie to that truth which he seemed to beleeue and professe and fast bound vnto the loue of those sinnes that he seemed willing to forsake verse 23. Such a conception of Faith there was in Falix who trembled when he heard Paul dispute of righteousnesse temperance and the iudgment to come Acts 24. 25. He beleeued and like the Diuels trembled But Faelix was not temporate his wife Drusilla was another mans wife Felix was vnrighteous and couetous and looked for a bribe and this likes him not that Paul should come so close to him wherefore he hath a shift and put him off in complement to a more conuenient season which Faelix will take at leasure The same imperfect faith there was in King Agrippa who hearing Pauls Apologie could haue found in his heart to haue beene a Christian had it beene a thing in fashion with Kings at that time Acts 26. 28. So was the Case with Herod who heard Iohn Baptist gladly and reuerenced him as a Iust man and holy and did many things willingly Marke 6. 20. But if Iohn be so bold with H●rod as to tell him of his Incest He shall to prison for it and for all that he is a Prophet yet he shall dye if Herod did not feare the multitude more then he reuerenced Iohn Matth. 14. 5. And thus it is with many men still who knowe the Scriptures and assent to the truth of such things as they containe but this goes no further then generalities whilst they approoue and allowe of such things as they know to be good and excellent considered abstractiuely and in the Vniuersalitie and as they doe not crosse them in any of their maine desires and delights And so long they seeme to bee as forward in faith and practise as the best The Causes of this Kinde of Faith in men are many as 1. That common grace of the Spirit whereby men are inlightened in the knowledge of heavenly things Which grace God bestowes upon the unregenerate and unsanctied more for others than their owne good Some light shines upon them whereby they may know and assent unto divine truths for a common good of the Church that others may be instructed by their teaching For Christ in the building of his Church doth also use the helpe and ministery of such men according as Salomon did in the building of the materiall Temple who imployed not the naturall Israelites but the reliques of the Cananites and strangers that lived in the land to be bearers of burdens and hewers of stone and overseers of the worke 2 Chron. 2. 17. And these men though unsanctified and such as doe not themselves heartily esteeme and affect that which they know yet in the generall they beleeve it and willingly teach it to the benefit of the Church Againe 2. Authority of men in high account for their knowledge and wisedome The esteeme that the people had of Iohn the Baptist to bee a great Prophet made Herod reverence him the more and the fame that went of Christ drew many to hearken to his doctrine And so t is still with hundreds whose faith in matters of religion standeth or falleth with their admiration or disesteeme of mens persons The same effect
wee affirme that for that other generall faith in assenting to the truth of divine things because of Gods authority this faith as he had when hee was a Catholike so hee still hath it in part now he is an Hereticke and by the same faith he beleeved matters of Religion before his Heresie by the same he beleeves them afterward And those that are Heretickes indeed or such whom wee stile by that name let them bee asked why they beleeve such and such points of religion they 'le answer truly and resolutely they beleeve them because of Gods authoritie that hath revealed them in his Word and for such things wherein they dissent could they be perswaded the Scripture did teach the contrary they would for the same authority sake beleeve the contrary The Iesuite is yet urgent upon us and tells us that no Calvinist or Lutheran beleeves Gods authority but doubts of it Wee tell him againe that 's a foule slander and more than hee can make good yes that he will by a distinction too Gods authority considered Abstractivè in it selfe so indeed we doubt not of But Gods authoritie considered practicé in respect of the Church as it is proposed unto us by the Pastors of the Church so we doubt of it because wee admit not the judgement of the Church but follow our owne phantasie ibid. § 7. To this we answer that we passe very little to be judged Infidells upon such a ground because wee call in question the supposed infallibility and authority of the Romish Church We finde in Scriptures no such straight relation betweene her authority and Gods authority that if wee call hers in question wee must needs doubt of his Wee doubt not of the authority of Scriptures but we denie that the Romish Church hath any infallible authority of judging and interpreting them No one man nor all men ought to usurpe such authority over our faith And let the truth be judge who be the greater Insidells Calvinists and Lutherans that beleeve the Scriptures authority for its owne sake or popish Catholikes that will not beleeve but for mans saying Thus you have this second reason somewhat largely that Faith which our Adversaries call Iustifying is in Divells and ungodly men therefore it is not that justifying faith which the Scriptures speake of and appropriate unto the Elect Tit. 1. 1. Here it is but a vaine shift our Adversaries make to runne unto that poore distinction of Fides Formata and Informis namely that Faith may exist two wayes 1. Vt est conjuncta cum charitate ut in homine iusto and then Faith is called formata viva because Charity is Vita animae In this case Faith can Elicere operationes vitales seu aeternae vitae moritorias Gal. 5. 6. Faith worketh by Charity 2. Vt est separata à charitate quod fit in homine peccatore qui amissa per peccatum mortale charitate retinet fidem quamdin Catholicus est This Faith is called Informis mortu● nec potest habere operationes vitales seu meritorias Iam. 2. 17. Faith if it have no workes is dead in it selfe and ver 26. as the body without the spirit c. Becan tom 3. cap. 10. § 4. 5. 6. Thus they would have the quality and proper act of justifying Faith to be in reprobate men and divells but yet it doth them no good because t is without Charity Faith without Workes may be in its nature justifying Faith because t is an assent to the articles of Religion upon Gods authority but yet it justifies not because t is without workes Hereunto we reply that in this distinction there is not a syllable of sound doctrine nor yet of reasonable sense Thus much we grant that there is according to St. Iames. a kinde of ●aith without Workes namely a generall assent unto the truth of divine things but we denie that this kinde of Faith is for the substance one and the same with that Faith which is properly called Iustifying Faith without workes is of one kinde Faith with workes is of another not onely in regard of consequent because one hath workes the other hath not but in regard of their proper nature because the quality and acts of the one differ from the quality and acts of the other Wherefore in vaine doe they tell us that the same Faith is sometime with sometime without Charity Iustifying Faith is never without Charity and that which is is not Iustifying Vnto that conceit that Charity is the forme of Faith wee say t is Metaphysicall and such as no good construction can be made of it He saith Charity is Vita animae hee would say Vita fidei but take his meaning Faith lives by Charity as the body by the forme or soule Here 1. T is absurd to make one habite of the minde the forme of the other wee may as well say that Temperance is the forme of Liberality Each habite of the minde is distinguished by its proper object and actions and this the Schooleman cap. 18. quaest 2. § 3. grants in the strict sense 2. How doth Faith live by Charity We say it lives with Charity as its fellow-grace not by Charity as its soule We say without Charity it is dead yet t is not Charity that gives it life The Ies●it saith it doth for being joined with it Faith can elicere vitales operationes performe vitall acts Yea but what are these actions Faith hath but two acts 1. proper and immediate viz. Credere seu Assentiri 2. by consequent Iustificare Neither of these comes from Charity even by these mens owne doctrine Not the first for Catholickes without Charity may assent to the articles of Faith for Gods authority sake Not the second for to Iustifie in the Popish sense is to Sanctifie of a bad man to make a good Now how absurd is it to say Faith by Charity Iustifies i. e. Faith by the love of God and our neighbour sanctifies us or taking Charity for the Act not the Habite Faith by good workes of prayer fasting almes-deeds c. sanctifies us Both these are senselesse propositions for t is manifest that hee who hath Charity i. e. loves God and his Neighbour and doth good workes is not as yet to bee sanctified and made good of bad but is thereby sanctified already T is true that Faith is one part of our sanctification or inherent grace and Charity is another but neither doth Faith sanctifie by Charity nor Charity by Faith but we are sanctified by both together If there by any other vitall acts of Faith they should have beene named The glosse which the Iesuit addeth whereby he interpreteth what hee meaneth by vitall operations viz. aeternae vitae meritorias such as deserve eternall life carrieth with it as absurd a sense as the other Thus Charity is the forme and life of Faith i. e. Charity makes the acts of Faith to be Meritorious s●il our love of God and man or our good
workes makes our Faith i. e. our assent to the Articles of Religion because of Gods authority to deserve eternall life Is there in the Scriptures the least intimation of such a strange and uncouth meaning when it tells that wee are justified by Faith To the places of Scriptures Gael 5. 6. Faith workes by Charity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee answer the meaning of the place is no more but That in Christianity no outward matters are of value that onely which is to be regarded is Faith that bringeth forth good workes These good workes come from Charity or inward love of God and man This Charity is stirred up and provoked to worke through Faith So that Faith workes by Charity as by that chiefe instrument which Faith imployes in the doing of all good works but Charity works by Faith as by the moving cause whereby t is excited to worke according to 1. Tim. 1. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith is the first wheel in the clock that moves all the rest Faith stirs up and directs the other graces of the soule in their operations whose strength and vigour increaseth according as Faith increaseth Tantum amam●… quantum credimus t is cleer in all experience those that have the strongest Faith they shew the greatest love to God and man as in Abraham Moses Paul all the Martyrs But of this more in shewing the connexion between Faith and Obedience To that other place Iames 2. 26. As the body without the Spirit is dead even so Faith without workes is dead we answer that S. Iames understands by that similitude not modum Informationis but necessitatem Vnionis that good workes are necessarily coupled with a justifying Faith not that good workes are the forme and life of Faith à priori They are arguments and effects of a living Faith they are not causes that make it living as is apparent because it is impossible any good worke should goe before justifying Faith Heb. 11. 6. Wherefore this similitude is not so to be strained unto a Philosophicall construction where the Apostle intends no more in all his dispute but to shew that true saying Faith must of necessity bee conjoyned with good workes And if our adversaries bee so strict upon the termes of this similitude t is manifest that they fit not their doctrine for so as the soule is the forme of the body so workes shall be the forme of Faith i. e. an Act shall bee the forme of a Habite which is against reason and their owne doctrine who make the Habituall grace of Charity not good workes the fruits of it to be the forme of Faith S. Iames therefore is to bee taken in the former sense or else wee may without any violence interpret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that place not Spiritum i. e. Animam but Spiritum i. e. Halitum Respirationem and thus the comparison is exact as the body without breathing and motion is dead so Faith without workes Thus it appeares how Faith is sleighted by our adversaries whilst they hold that the Faith wherby a sinner is justified is nothing but an assent to Articles of Religion because of Gods authority Some places of Scriptures there are they would faine build this upon as Heb. 11. 1. Rom. 4. 3. Tit. 1. 1. Ioh. 20. 31. but their arguments thence are so inconsequent and weake they are not worth the mentioning or refuting I proceed therefore from this generall Faith unto that other which is speciall particular Particular assent of Faith is when all things revealed by God are assented unto as most true and excellent in regard of our selves when they are particularly applyed to our proper occasion and compared with all desires and provocations whatsoever to the contrary When we know and beleeve those things that are generally delivered for our selves in application to our owne use and practice as Iob was counselled by his friends so that wee beleeve in this particular aswell as in that at this time aswell as at another In the Explication of the nature of such a particular assent I propose to your consideration two things 1. The Roote and Cause whence it springs 2. The Object of it whereto it is directed 1. The true root and fountaine whence this Blessed assent of Faith ariseth is that grace of sanctification wrought in the heart by the holy Ghost renewing the soule in all the powers thereof T is not common illumination for many know and despise the truth or beleeve it but in generall T is not the Authority of all the men in the world that can perswade to it wee should not then have had so many thousand ●…rmons of Prophets Ministers learned holy and powerfull in their doctrine yet preached to very small purpose with the most of m●n T is not miracles and strange accidents that can force this Faith the Iewes had plenty of them yet continued still unbeleeving T is only the sanctifying Grace of Gods spirit that brings this to passe For consider with your selves how deadly an opposition there is betweene a mans unsanctified nature and the wisedome and goodnesse of God all his counsells seeme but craft his words foolishnesse his mercies light and not worthy of estimation His exhortations promises or threatnings are entertained with inward disdaine and the heart saith within it selfe Who is God that I should feare him or what profit shall a man have by beleeving his Word and walking in his wayes Yea men that are otherwise ingenuous and of fairer temper in this case are full of secret scorne and despite of God and goodnesse they account basely of the holinesse of Religion being privie scoffers and bitter deriders of the power of Grace when they are alone by themselves or in company that fits them They make a tush at Scriptures and smile at such perswasions to pietie as they afford counting it an indignitie for men of parts and resolution to bee moved with faire words of a simple man though hee speake in the words of God If their beliefe and knowledge of the truth be good in the generall yet in the application the heart makes violent opposition it begins to hold probable dispute whether it be wisedome to doe so or so whether they be bound in conscience considering such and such circumstances it casts all inconveniences that may possibly be thought on to discourage it selfe yea perchance the truth it selfe shall be called in question and it thinkes Sure I am deceived Gods meaning is otherwise at last it resolves I may doe this and yet fare well enough and If I doe no worse I hope t will not be much amisse and I trust that these commodities and pleasures I enjoy may well countervaile the neglect of such or such a small matter Thus the heart not washed by the holy Ghost in the laver of Regeneration but abiding in its naturall corruption is not nor can be subject to the law of God but proves either impudent and
the temper and disposition of this mans soule bring but the word of God unto it and you shall see it presently Lay upon these sinnes the censure of the Word in a faire ingenuous and direct reproofe without scossing and bitter gybing presse it upon the conscience once and againe lovingly and sharpely and see now what strange entertainment Gods word shall finde at such a mans hands The blood begins to be warm'd with wrath and choler the stomacke riseth and the gall of unchristian malice overslowes the conscience and powers of the soule are of purpose turmoyld that the water being troubled their owne image may not appeare in it the head is presently imployed in all cunning tricks and distinctions to avoide the stroke of the Word the tongue is ready with an apologie to defend it and if the hand hold from violence t is well Now whence is all this frowardnesse Hence because the heart is resolved let God say what hee will yet in this point not to beleeve that it is better to follow his counsell than our owne desire In which case t is strange to see with what rage and unmercifull fury the Prophets of old Christ and his Apostles in their times were persecuted by those to whom they preached in all meekenesse and demonstration of good will towards their soules The like fiery opposition have the Ministers of the Gospell and faithfull Preachers of Christ crucisied found ever since at the hands of their people when once they have beene touched where they would not bee medled withall Straightway a whole Parish will be in an uproare durt and scorne is hurld in the face of the Minister and his doctrine all froward courses taken to worke him woe and shame and all this done by those that wil yet be counted obedient and beleeving Christians But are they so indeed they doe not deserve so much as the name A Faith indeed they have but not that which is true and rightly planted For know this that True Faith and a constant wilfull refusall to be guided by God in any one particular whether the doing of a duety or leaving of a sinne are as incompetible as Christ and B●●●al For aske a man that is thus partiall in his courses You say you firmly beleeve the promises of the life to come that God will pardon your sinnes and save your soule why do you not as firmly beleeve the promises of this life but are altogether caring and distrustfull in your affaires You beleeve verily that God is offended with murder adultery c. and therefore you leave them why doe you not beleeve also that hee is as much angry at swearing lying drinking and such like disorders You beleeve God hath forbidden stealing and you are perswaded t is nought why doe you not beleeve that usury bribery or idlenesse in a mans calling are as bad being as much forbidden You beleeve that t is a good thing to seeke unto God in time of adversity and when a man 's old sick and now neer unto death then to pray fast do all good works and live religiously is excellent why doe you not beleeve that the same courses of Piety and Holinesse are as acceptable to God as much required of us in time of health youth and prosperity s●●ing God hath equally commanded them at all ti●… Aske a thousand such questions he connot answer you to on● For is it from a through consideration of Gods t●uth wis●●ome power revealed in the Word that he is moved to beleeve such and such things If that were the cause why doth hee not equally beleeve all when Gods authority is the same in all Is it from true love to God and Goodnesse that he is content to be ruled in such things If that were the cause t is certaine he that loves goodnesse for its owne sake would love all things that are good and love alwayes in a good matter as the Apostle speakes What is it then I le answer for him t is that which the Apostle speakes of Heb. 3. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an evill heart full of unbeleefe that having embraced certaine truths not prejudiciall to it selfe upon vaine and worldly considerations in others slips the collar and departs away from the living God refusing to accept of his counsell The truth of this is most certaine from that excellent rule of S. Iames Chap. 2. 10. 11. Whosoever shall keepe the whole Law and yet faileth in one point he is guilty of all For he that said Thou shalt not commit adultery said also thou shalt not kill Now though thou doest none adultery yet if thou killest thou art a transgressor of the Law What is it equall that he who transgresseth the Law in one point should be held guilty of the breach of all the Commandements Yea it is most equall and just for Gods Soveraigne Commandement is the same in all Hee therefore that for conscience sake obeyes in one will obey in all Hee that breaks one wilfully and customarily keepes none at all for conscience sake and if all things hit aright he will be as ready to transgresse in the rest as in that one Wherefore God judgeth him according to the disposition of his heart that he is a transgressour of the whole Law So in our obedience of ●aith Gods truth is the same in every part of his Word he that hath spoken this he hath spoken that also he therefore that upon right grounds beleeves in one point will for the same beleeve in another if Gods authority cannot prevaile with him in one that is not the motive which makes him assent to others and therefore if occasion serve such a one will dissent alike from all according to which Habituall disposition of the soule he is rightly to be judged an Vnbeleever He that rejects Gods command in one thing doth not much regard it in any thing hee that willingly slights Gods authority and truth in this point makes as little account of it in another You have now here my brethren opened unto you that Master-veine wherein runnes all that corrupt bloud of Hypocrisie and secret Infidelity wherewith the greatest part of men professing Christianity are infected This is that bitter roote of mens Apostasie and back-sliding from Piety to profannes or from a true Religion to a false Even this partiall and ill directed Faith is that which one justly calls the greatest part of the Divells Iudiciall Astrology whereby he prognosticateth the downfall of many who yet seem Saints in the Church zealous professors of Religion Oh when he sees a man take a dispensation without asking God leave craving pardon with a God be mercifull unto me in this and so standing out in this or that knowne evill practice he now knowes what to judge of such a man he sees a prey within the reach of his snares which thereupon he sets so artificially fitting his temptations to his humors till in the end he catch his heele in the grin
to muster up their owne forces and duly consider their abilities lest venturing rashly they at last sit downe with losse and disgrace The same I speake to you my brethren Sit yee downe first take counsell reckon the cost see what religion will stand you in your lusts must be crossed the world must be displeased and despised too Sathan must be fought withall hazzard of disgrace and dammage must be undergone friends and goods and life must be parted withall if need require the crosse must be borne daily If now upon these conditions thou art heartily and freely content to plight thy faith to God and take Religion with all its inconveniences then goe on and prosper in this resolution thy heart is sincere and thy faith sound But if upon heady and slight considerations thou hast put thy selfe forward upon the profession of Religion not forecasting the worst aswell as the best of it then know that thy case is like that of the Scribe Mat. 8. 18. who there tells Christ in great forwardnesse Hee would follow him whithersoever he went But when the silly man heard Christ reply otherwise than hee lookt for The Foxes have holes and the birds of the ayre have nests but the Sonne of man hath not whereon to rest his head implying that there was little hope to be rich and honourable by being one of his followers this now fits not his covetous and ambitious humour and therefore upon such an unexpected answer hee slinches Christs company is too meane and poore for his great hopes and for him he shall goe alone A miserable thing it is for a man thus to come in at last with a Non putâram I had not thought religion had required such absolute obedience I thought I might have done so and so and yet have beene a true beloever Hadst thou not thought it The more foole thou that wouldest not bethinke thy selfe better in so serious a businesse Thinke then of it now and thinke alwayes of it that hee who beleoves and does only what him pleaseth hee neither beleeves nor doth any thing as hee ought Thus wee have done with Faith as it respects the whole course of Religion and every part of the Word of what nature soever Next wee are to consider of True Faith as it lookes towards the particular promise of Grace and is directed unto Christ. Which Act though it be particular yet is of greater necessity and excellency than all other because it gives life as to our soules so to our beleefe of other things which are beleeved with relation unto Christ. Faith in regard of this particular Object and Act I thus define It is a grade of sanctification wrought by the holy Ghost● in every regenerate man whereby for his owne particular hee trusteth perfectly unto the promise of Remission of finnes and Salvation by Christs righteousnesse I neede not stand at large upon every particular That Faith is a sanctifying Grace part of our inherent righteousnesse that the Spirit of God is the onely author of it that a regenerate man is the onely subject of it these things have beene shewed heretofore The Object also of it is manifest by what names soever the Scriptures expresse it namely the Lord Iesus Christ or God in Christ or the Gospell or the Promise 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all comes to one and wee neede not be curious But touching the proper Act of Faith as it justifies us a little more at large It consisteth in Trust or Reliance upon the promise for our owne particular when the soule depends wholly thereupon looking after no other helpe You have heard heretofore that to Beleeve the truth of a particular promise is to Trust upon the performance of it to mee and that the Assent of Faith which is given to such a promise is properly called Fiducia or Trust. Now the Promise of grace in Christ is made unto us in particular termes both in the Word preached and Sacraments to assent unto this promise is not barely to acknowledge that there is such a thing in the world as Remission of sinnes by Christ to bee bestowed on some God knowes who for this is to beleeve the Promise not as a promise but as an History but this assent is of the whole heart in Trust Reliance Dependance Adherence Affiance or if there bee any other word expressing that action of the regenerate soule whereby it casseth and reposeth it selfe onely upon Gods Promise in Christ for the obtaining of eternall happinesse That Fiducia is of the essence of Iustifying Faith wee make good 1. From the phraso of Scripture used in this businesse Those phrases 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Beleeve in or upon or into God Christ the holy Ghost are not used as the learned know by prophane Writers but only by Ecclesiastical implying that in Divine matters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies besides the naked acknowledgement of the Head the confidence and affiance of the Heart 2. From that opposition which is made betweene Faith and distrust or Doubting ●am 1. 16. Let him aske in Faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nothing doubting and Rom. 4. 20 Abraham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doubted not thorough unbeleefe 3. From that excellent place 2. Tim. 1. 12. where it is apparant that to beleeue is as much as to commit our selves to Christs trust and keeping I know saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in whom I have beleeved or whom I have trusted for as it followes I am perswaded that he is able to keep● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that thing wherewith I have entrusted him or delivered up to his keeping What was that His Soule unto everlasting Salvation Wherefore to Beleeve the promise is with Confidence and Trust to relye upon it resting our soules upon the performance of it Which assent of Faith is wrought in the soule in this manner 1 A man is inlightned to see his sinne and miserie and therewith an utter impossibilitie to satisfie God for the one or free himselfe from the other by any power and merit in heaven or earth but onely by the Name of Iesus Christ And this drives him from seeking helpe elsewhere 2 The promise of Grace is proposed and Christ freely offered unto him 3 Whence in the third place the Heart touched by the Spirit of Grace drawes neere unto Christ throwes it selfe into his armes grasping about him with all its might hiding it selfe in the clefts of this rocke from the stormes of Gods furious indignation It bespeakes Christ in all termes of confidence and affiance My Lord my God my hope my fortresse my rocke my strength my salvation Save me or I perish Have you seene how a tender infant in the apprehension of some danger approching runnes into the armes of his Parent for succour so doth a soule pursued by the terrors of the Law and affrighted with the fearefull sight of
will we cannot conceiue any naturall thing as true but we must conceiue as Good too Witnesse all I ogicke rules Philosophy Mathematickes there is no conclusion how vnpleasant soeuer it seeme to be but if it be apprehended as True it also affects the vnderstanding with ioy delight and contentment in the goodnesse of it It delights because it is true and so Truth quatenus Truth is good So that vnto such as aske wherefore are the Mathematickes good I answer Because they are True a part of Gods created truth of which it is blasphemy to hold and affirme that any the least part is euill and nought worth nor deseruing a mans study All Truth is amiable like God the Authour of it and goodnesse is so essentially incorporated together with Truth that they cannot be seuered in our knowledge or affection Now in morall and Diuine things the case is much more plaine That their Truth consists wholly in their Goodnesse nor can it be imagined how vertue should be said to be true but onely because it is good or what the Truth of Grace is but onely the Goodnesse of it Wherefore generally that rule is Cortaine Bonum Verum conuertuntur and their praedication each of other is not onely in the Concrete Verum est bonum but also in the abstract Ver●… est bonitas ò cont● 〈◊〉 And so the Scripture takes these two indifferently as Gen. 1. 31. When God had created all his workes he looked on them and saw that they were Very Good They were true as well as good but one includes both And Iohn 8. 44. it is said touching Satan that He abode not in the Truth that is in that perfect and good condition wherein God created him for he fell from his goodnesse as well as from his Truth By this it appeares that this distinction which is made betweene the truth and goodnesse of things is not from their Nature but from our esteeme and conceit of them We measure the goodnesse of things by our owne ends and the vse we haue of them such things as fit our purposes are proportionable to our necessities those we account good and Such things we make the Obiect of our wils because wee desire them with a more notable degree of Constancy and vehemency Other things though very good in themselues yet because they touch vs not and our desire of them is slight and vanishing we make them the obiect of our vnderstanding only as if wee apprehend in them nothing but bare Truth As for example he that shall discourse vnto an intemperate man in his temperate moode how shamefull and vnseemely a thing it is for a Christian to be ouercome of drinke to be a seruant to his appetite to wallow in filthy pleasures to bee seene in base company and hase places and shall tell him how comely and commendable a vertue sobriety is how gracious an ornament of a man how necessary a duty in euery Christian when you tell him of these things he vnderstands you and assents not only to the truth but to the goodnesse of what you say But heere is the mischeefe his resolution stands otherwise sottish delights preuaile against all sober aduise and the stronger desires of pleasures drowne those faint affectious towards Temperance How in this case the truth and goodnesse of the vertue commended is but one thing and the intemperate man did a●t that same time apprehend and approue of both in generall wishing that it were with him as it should be and is with other men But now when anon after he comes to put in practise what he thus knowes and allowes of long Custome and ill perswasions doe so farre darken his former apprehension of the Goodnesse of the thing that now there seemes to be nothing left in his head but a generall notion of the Truth of that which he heard at such a time So then Truth and Goodnesse are not two seuerall things nor apprehended by two seuerall faculties but one and the same thing knowne and desired by the same facultie The difference lyes onely in the diuers degree of our apprehension which varies according as the things apprehended seeme to haue more or lesse agreement with our particular vses and necessities Where matters fit vs in particular there our desires are Strong and Constant When they agree to vs onely in the generall then our Generall Desires not well rooted are choked and stisled by contrarie affections in the particular performance It fares with men as it did with Shimei Salomons commandement of not Departing the Citie is Good till Shimei haue a Seruant take his heeles and run to Gath and then Shimeis beliefe of Solomans threatning must giue way to his Couetous desire of recouering his runnagate Seruant So in matters of Religion men know and approue of their truth and goodnesse in generall wishing that themselues had all the grace and pietie which is so much spoken of but when after they compare it with their more pleasing contentments in this or that kind they renounce the Goodnesse of Religion and hold it onely as a Truth Of which diuersitie in assenting to the goodnesse of things in generall and in particular more shall be spoken hereafter in the next point For conclusion of this point touching the subiect of Faith we doe not appropriate faith either to the Vnderstanding or the Will nor yet refer it to both as vnto two distinct faculties but we place it immediately in the whole intellectuall Nature whether of mans soule or of Angels In which wee follow the sentence of the Scriptures that seate Faith in the whole heart as Rom. 10. 10. With the Heart man belieueth vnto righteousnesse and Acts 8. 37. If thou belieuest with all thine heart Now it is a thing manifest that in Scripture the heart is taken for the Whole soule with all its powers and operations as of vnderstanding 1 King 3. 9. Salomon asketh of Godan vnderstanding Heart of Willing and Choosing Act. 7. 29. In their harts they went backe to Egypt 1 Cor. 7. 37. He that st●n●●th firme in this Heart i. in his purpose and resolution Againe of the Affections Mat. 6. 21. Where the treasure there is the Heart also i. Loue for Rom. 1. 24. of the memory Luk. 1. 16. They did those words in their hearts so Luke 21. 14. We need not goe seeke on t any trouble some distinction of faculties wherein to place faith seeing the Scriptures speake simply of the whole soule and neither Nature nor Scriptures do intimate any necessity at all of mal●ing such a difference Wee come now to the third and last point proposed in the definition or the Genus vnder which it is comprehended that is Assent about which wee must enquire after two things 1 The Certainty of this Assent of Faith 2 The Diuers Degrees and Essentiall Differences whereby the assent of Faith in Gods Elect is distinguished from all other Faith The Certainty and strength of