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

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Assertion is repeated that God will defend them in Heaven against all opposition Here where their oppositions are innumerable they may shift for themselves but when they come to Heaven where they shall be sure to meet with no opposition at all there the Lord hath engaged his Almighty power for their safety against all that shall arise up against them and this is as is said the naturall and cleare disposition of the Context in this place but Nobis non licet c. There are sundry other texts of Scripture which most clearely and evidently confirme the truth we have in hand which are all well worth our consideration for our consolation and establishment as also something of our labour and diligence to quit them from those glosses and interpretations which turne them aside from their proper intendment that are by some put upon them Amongst which 1 Cor. 1. 8 9. 1. Philip. 6. 1 Thess. 5. 24. Joh. 5. 24. ought to have place But because I will not insist long on any particulars of our Argument from the Promises of God here shall be an end CAP. VII 1. The Consideration of the Oath of God deferred 2. The method first proposed somewhat waved The influence of the mediation of Christ into God's free and unchangeable acceptance of Believers propo●ed Reasons of that proposall 3 4. Of the Oblation of Christ. Its influence into the Saints Perseverance All causes of separation between God and Believers taken away thereby Morall and efficient causes thereby removed 5. The guilt of sinne how taken away by the death of Christ Of the Nature of Redemption Conscience of sinne how abolished by the sacrifice of Christ Heb 10. 3 4 14. 6. Dan. 9. 24. opened Rom 2 34. 7. Deliverance from all sinne how by the death of Christ. The Law innovated in respect of the Elect. 8. The vindictive justice of God satisfied by the death of Christ How that is done Wherein satisfaction doth consist Absolute not conditionall 9. The Law how fulfilled in the Death of Christ. 10. The Truth of God thereby accomplished His distributive justice engaged 11. Observations for the clearing of the former assertions Whether any one for whom Christ died may dye in sinne The necessity of Faith and Obedience The Reasons thereof The end of Faith and Holinesse 12. The first Argument for the proofe of the former Assertions concerning the fruit and efficacy of the death of Christ Heb. 9. 14. The second The third The compact between the Father Son about the work of mediation 14. The Fourth Good things bestowed on them for whom Christ died antecedently to any thing spiritually good in them The Spirit so bestowed and Faith it selfe The close of those Arguments 14. Inferences from the foregoing discourse The Efficacy of the death of Christ and the necessity of Faith and Obedience reconciled Sundry considerations unto that end proposed All Spirituall mercies fruits of the death of Christ. 2. All the fruits of Christs death laid up in the hand of Gods Righteousnesse 3. The state of them for whom Christ died not actually changed by his death 4 On what account Believing is necessary 15. Christ secures the stability of the Saints abiding with God What is contrary thereunto how by him removed The World overcome by Christ as mannaged by Sathan in an enmity to the Saints 16. The compleat victory of Christ over the Devill The waies whereby he compleats his conquest The Rule of Sathan in respect of si●ners two fold 1. Over them 2. in them 17. The Title of Sathan to a rule over men judged and destroyed by Christ. The exercise of all power taken from him 18. The works of Sathan destroyed by Christ in and for his Elect. 19. The Holy Spirit procured by the death of Christ. 20. The giving of the spirit the great Promise of the New Covenant 21. This farther proved and confirmed 22. The perpetuall Residence of the Holy Spirit with Believers proved by the threefold testimony of Father Sonne and Spirit Isa 59. 21. The Testimony of the Father proposed and vindicated 23. Our Argument from hence farther cleared This Promise Absolute not Conditionall No condition rationally to ●e affixed to it The import of those words ●as for me ● To whom this Promise is made 24. That farther cleared not to all Israel according to the flesh 25. Mr G's Objections answered 26. The Testimony of the Sonne given to the perpetuall abiding of the Spirit with Believers Ioh 14. 16. opened The Promise in those words equally belonging to all Believers 27. Mr G's Objections answered No Promise of the Spirit abiding with Believers on his principle allowed The Promise given to the Apostles personally yet given also to the whole Church Promises made to the Church made to the individualls whereof it is constituted 28. The giving of this Promise to all Believers farther argued from the scope of the place And vindicated from Mr G's exceptions 29. The third Testimony of the Holy Spirit himselfe proposed to consideration His Testimony in sealing particularly considered 2 Cor 1. 22. Ephes 1. 13. 4. 30. Of the nature and use of Sealing amongst men The end aime and use of the sealing of the Holy Ghost 30. Mr G's Objections and Exceptions to our Argument from that sealing of the Spirit considered and removed 31. The ●ame farther carried on c THere remaines nothing for the confirmation of the first branch §. 1. or part of the Truth proposed but only the consideration of the Oath of God which because it ought certainly to be an end of all strife I shall reserve the handling of it to the close of the whole if God be pleased to carry us out thereunto that we may give The Oath of God its due Honour of being the last word in this Contest The order of our method first proposed would here call me to handle our Stedfastnesse with God and the Glory created upon our Grace of Sanctification But because some men may admire and aske whence it is that the Lord will abide so Stedfast in his Love towards Believers as hath been manifested upon severall accounts that he will besides what hath beene said before of his owne Goodnesse and Unchangeablenesse c. I shall now adde that outward consideration which lyes in the Mediation of Christ upon the account whereof he acts his owne Goodnesse and Kindnesse to us with the greatest advantage of Glory ad Honour to himselfe that can be thought upon Only I shall desire the Reader to observe that the Lord Jesus is an undertaker in this businesse of perfecting our Salvation and safegarding our Spirituall Glory not in one regard and respect only There is one part of his Ingagement therein which under the Oath of God is the close of the whole and that is his becoming a surety to us of his Fathers Faithfulnesse towards us and a suerty for us of our Faithfulnesse to him so that upon the whole matter the businesse on each side
name in the great worke of Redemption And therefore he informes us Ioh. 17. 4. 6. that when the Comforter whom he procureth for us shall come he shall Glorify him and shall receive of his and shew it unto us Ioh. 16. 14. farther manifest his Glory in his bringing nothing with him but what is his or of his procurement so also instructing us clearly and plentifully to aske in his name that is for his sake which to doe plainly and openly is the great priviledge of the New Testament for so he tells his Disciples Ioh. 16. 24. hitherto have you asked nothing in my name who yet were Believers and had made many addresses unto God in and through him but darkely as they did under the Old Testament when they begged mercy for his sake Dan. 9. 17. But to plead with the Father clearly upon the account of the Mediation and Purchase of Christ That I say is the priviledge of the New Testament Now in this way he would have us aske the Holy Spirit at the hand of God Luke 11. 9 13. Aske him that is as to a clearer fuller Administration of him unto us for he is antecedently bestowed as to the working of Faith and Regeneration even unto this Application for without him we cannot once aske in the name of Christ for none can call Jesus Lord or doe any thing in his nane §. 22. but by the spirit of God This I say then He in whom we are blessed with all spirituall blessings Eph. 1. 4. hath procured the Holy Spirit for us and through his Intercession he is bestowed on us Now where the Spirit of God is 2 Cor. 3. 17. there is liberty from sinne peace and acceptance with God But it may be objected although this Spirit be thus bestowed on Believers yet may they not cast him off Rom. 8. 14. so that his abode with them may be but for a season and their Glory not be safegarded in the Issue but their condemnation increased by their receiving of him This being the only thing wherein this proofe of Believers abiding with God seemes lyable to exception I shall give a triple Testimony of the certainty of the continuance of the Holy Spirit with them on whom he is bestowed that in the mouth of two or three witnesses this Truth may be established and they are no meane ones neither but the three that beare witnesse in Heaven the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost The first you have Isa. §. 23. 59. 21. But as for me this is my Covenant with them saith the Lord my Spirit which is upon thee and my words which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy Seed nor out of the mouth of thy Seeds Seed saith the Lord hence forth and for ever That which the Lord declares here to the Church he calls his Covenāt Now whereas in a Covenant there are two things 1. What is stipulated on the part of him that makes the Covenant 2. What of them is required with whom it is made which in themselves are distinct though in the Covenant of Grace God hath promised that he will worke in us what he requires of us that here mentioned is clearely an Evidence of somewhat of the first kinde of that Goodnesse that God in the Covenant doth promise to bestow Though perhaps words of the future tense may sometimes have an Imperative Construction where the import of the residue of the words inforces such a sence yet because it may be so in some place therefore it is so in this place and that therefore these words are not a Promise that the Spirit shall not depart but an injunction to take care that it do not depart as Mr Goodwin will have it is a weake inference And the close of the words will by no meanes be wrested to speake significantly to any such purpose Saith the Lord henceforth even for ever which plainely make the words Promissory an ingagement of God himselfe to them to whom they are spoken So that the interpretation of these words this is my Covenant with them by Mr Goodwin Cap. 11. Sect 4. Pag. 227. That Covenant of perpetuall Grace and Mercy which I made with them requireth this of them in order to the performance of it on my part that they quench not my Spirit which I have put into them doth plainly invert the intendment of God in them and substitute what is tacitely required as our duty into the roome of what is expressly promised as his Grace Observe then Secondly that as no Promise of God given to Believers is either apt of it selfe to ingenerate or by them to be received under such an absurd notion of being made good what soever their deportment be it being the nature of all the Promises of God to frame and mould them to whom they are given into all Holinesse and purity 2 Cor. 7. 1. and this in especiall is a Promise of the principall Author and cause all Holinesse to be continued to them and is impossible to beapprehended under any such foolish supposall so also that this Promise is absolute not Conditionall can neither be colourably gainesaid nor the contrary probably confirmed so that the strength of Mr Goodwins two next Exceptions 1. That this cannot be a Promise of Perseverance unto true Believers whatsoever their deportment shall be And 2. That it must be Conditionall which cannot as he saith be reasonably gainesaid The first of them not looking towards our perswasion in this thing And the latter being not in the least put upon the proofe is but very weakenesse For what Condition I pray of this Promise can be imagined God promises his Spirit of Holinesse that sanctifyeth us and worketh all holinesse in us and therewith the holy Word of the Gospell which is also Sanctifying John 17. 7. that they shall abide with us for ever It is the continuance of the presence of God with us for our Holinesse that is here promised On what condition shall this be supposed to depend Is it in case we continue Holy Who seeth not the vanity of interserting any condition I will be with you by my Spirit and Word for ever to keep you Holy provided you continue Holy 3. Thirdly It is a hard taske to seeke to squeeze a condition out of those gracious words in the beginning of the verse As for mee which Iunius renders de me autem words wherein God graciously reveals himselfe as the sole Author of this great blessing promised it being a worke of his owne which he accomplisheth upon the account of his free Grace And therefore God signally placed that expression in the entrance of the Promise that we may know whom to look unto for the fulfilling thereof And it is yet a farther corruption to say that as for me is as much as for my part I will deale bountifully with them provided that they doe so
such sinnes and unworthinesse as are inconsistent with the state of Acceptation with God which is the very thing he hath to prove 2. In supposing that if Believers are sealed up infallibly to Redemption the Exhortations to the avoidance of sinnes in themselves and to all that continue in them destructive to Salvation are in vaine which is a figment in a case somewhat alike as to the reason of it rejected by men that knew nothing of the nature of Gods Promises nor his commands nor the Accommodation of them both to the fulfilling in Believers all the good pleasure of his Goodnesse 2. The Assurance the Apostle gives of freedome from the wrath of God is inseparably associated with that Assurance that he gives that we shall not be left in or given up to such waies as wherein that wrath according to the tenure of the Covenant of Grace is not to be avoided From this latter Testimony this Argument also doth flow Those who are sealed of God to the day of Redemption shall certainly be preserved thereunto their preservation being the end and aime of God in his sealing of them Mr Goodwins Answer to this Proposition is that they shall be so preserved in case they fall not into abominable sinnes and practises and so Apostatize from the Faith that is in case they be preserved they shall be preserved but wherein their preservation should consist if not in their effectuall deliverance from such waies and courses is not declared That all Believers are so sealed and to that end as above is the plaine Testimony of the Scripture and therefore our Conclusion is undeniably evinced Thus have we through the Lords assistance freed the triple Testimony of Father Sonne and Spirit given to the Truth under Consideration from all Objections and exceptions put in thereunto so that we hope the mouth of iniquity may be stopt and that the cause of the Truth in hand is secured for ever It is a fearfull thing to contend with God Let God be true and all men lyars CAP. VIII 1. Entrance into the Digression concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit The manner of the ahode of the Spirit with them on whom he is bestowed Grounds of the Demonstratious of the Truth 2. The Indwelling of the Spirit proved from the Promises of it 3. Expresse affirmations of the same Truth Psal. 51. 11. Rom. 8. 9. opened v. 11 15. 1 Cor. 2. 12. Gal. 4. 6. opened 1 Tim. 3. 14. 4. The Spirit in his Indwelling distinguished from all his Graces Evasions removed Rom. 5. 5. Explained The Holy Ghost himselfe not the Grace of the Holy Ghost there intended Rom 8. 11. opened Gal 5. 22. 5. A Personality ascribed to the Spirit in his Indwellings 1 In personall Appellations 1 Ioh. 4. 5. Ioh. 14. 19 17. 2. Personall Operations Rom. 8. 11 15. explained 3. Personall circumstances The Spirit dwells in the Saints as in a Temple 1 Cor. 3. 16. Ch. 6. 9. 6. The Indwelling of the Spirit farther Demonstrated from the signall Effects ascribed in the Scripture to his so doing as 1 Union with Christ. 7. Union with Christ wherein it consisteth 8. Union with Christ by the Indwelling of the same Spirit in him and us 9. This proved from 1. Scripturall Declarations of it 2 Pet. 1. 4. How we are made partakers of the Divine Nature 10. Union expressed by caring the flesh and drinking the blood of Christ. Ioh. 6. 56. opened 11. The Prayer of our Saviour for the Union of his Disciples I●h 17. 21. The Union of the Persons in the Trinity with themselves 12. 2 Scripturall illustrations for the manifestation of Union 13. The Union of Head and Members what it is and wherein it doth consist 14. Of the Union between Husband and Wife aud our Union with Christ represented thereby 15. Of a Tree and its branches 16. Life and quickning given by the Indwelling Spirit in Quickning Life and sutable operations 17. 2. Direction guidance given by the Indwelling Spirit Guidance or direction twosold 18. The severall waies whereby the Spirit gives guidance and Direction unto them in whom he dwells The first way by giving a new understanding or a new spirituall light upon the understanding 19. What light men may attaine without the particular guidance of the Spirit 20. Saving Embracements of particular Truths from the Spirit 1 Ioh 2. 20 21. 21. The way whereby the Spirit leads Believers into Truth 22. Consequences of the want of this guidance of the Spirit 23. The 3d thing received from the Indwelling Spirit Supportment 24. The way whereby the Spirit gives supportment 25. 1. By bringing to mind the things spoken by Christ for their Consolation Ioh. 14. 16 26. 26. 2. By renewing his Graces in them as to strength The benefits issuing and flowing from thence 27. Bestraint given by the Indwelling Spirit and how 28. The continuance of the Spirit with Believers for the Renewall of Grace proved Ioh. 4. 14. 29. That Promise of our Saviour at large opened 30. The Water there promised is the Spirit The state of them on whom he is bestowed Spirituall thirst twofold Ioh. 65. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 2. 31. The Reasons why men cannot thirst againe who have once dranke of the Spirit explained 32. Mr G's Exceptions considered and removed 33. The same work farther carried on as also 3● 35 36. The Indwelling of the Spirit in Believers farther demonstrated by the Inferences made from thence 37. The first Our Persons Temples of the Holy Ghost To be disposed of in all waies of Holinesse 38. Wildome to try Spirits 39. The wayes means and helps whereby the Saints discerne between the voyce of Christ and the voyce of Sathan HAving shewed §. 1. that the Holy Spirit is purchased for us by the Oblation of Christ and bestowed on us through his Intercession to abide with us for Ever a Truth confirmed by the unquestionable Testimonies of the Father Sonne and Spirit I shall in the next place I hope to the advantage and satisfaction of the Christian Reader a little turne aside to consider how and in what manner he abideth with them on whom he is bestowed together with some Eminent Acts and Effects of his Grace which he putteth forth and exerteth in them with whom he abideth all tending to their preservation in the Love and Favour of God A Doctrine it is of no small use and importance in our walking with God as we shall find in our pursuit of it And therefore though not appearing so directly Argumentative and immediately subservient to the promotion of the Dispute in hand yet tending to the establishment guidance and consolation of them who doe receive it and to the cherishing increasing and strengthning of the Faith thereof I cannot but conceive it much conducing to the carrying on of the maine Intendment of this whole undertaking I say then upon the purchase made of all Good things for the Elect by Christ the Holy and Blessed Spirit of God is given to
them to dwell in them personally for the Accomplishment of all the ends and purposes of his Oeconomie towards them to make them meet for and to bring them unto the inheritance of the Saints in Light Personally I say in our Persons not by Assumption of our Natures giving us mysticall union with Christ not Personall Union with himselfe that is not one Personality with him which is impious and blasphemous to imagine by a Gracious inhabitation distinct from his Essentiall filling all things and his energeticall operation of all things as he will as shall afterwards be declared Now this being a Doctrine of pure Revelation our Demonstrations of it must be meerely Scriptuall and such as will instantly appeare we have provided in great plenty In the carrying on then of this undertaking I shall do these two things 1. Produce some of those many Texts of Scripture which are pregnant of this Truth 2. Shew what great things do issue from thence and are affirmed in reference thereunto being inferences of a supposall thereof all conducing to the preservation of Believers in the Love and Favour of God unto the end For the first I shall referre them to 4. heads unto 1. Promises that he should so dwell in us 2. Positive Affirmations that he doth so 3. Those Texts that hold out his being distinguished from all his Graces and Guifts in his so doing 4. Those that ascribe a Personality to him in his indwelling in us Of each sort one or two places may suffice 1. The indwelling of the Spirit is the great and solemne Promise of the Covenant of Grace The manner of it we shall afterwards evince Ezek. 36. 27. I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my wayes In the verse foregoing he tels them He will give them a new heart and a new Spirit which because it may be interpreted of a renewed frame of Spirit though it rather seemes to be the renewing Spirit that is intended as also Cap. 11. 19. he expressly points out and differences the Spirit he will give them from all workes of Grace whatsoever in that Appellation of him my Spirit my Holy Spirit Him will I put with in you I will give him or place him in interiori vestro in your inmost part in your heart or in visceribus vestris in your bowels as the Soule is frequently signifyed by expressions of sensuall things within you In his giving us a new heart new Spirit by putting in us his Spirit certainly more is intended then a meere working of Gracious qualities in our Hearts by his Spirit which he may do yet be no more in us then in the greatest Blasphemers in the world And this in the carrying of it on to its accōplishment God calls his Covenant Isa. 59. 21. This is my Covenant with them saith the Lord my Spirit that is upon thee shall not depart from thee upon thee in thee that dwels in thee as was promised And this Promise is evidently renewed by the Lord Christ to his Disciples clearely also interpreting what that Spirit is which is mentioned in the Promise of the Covenant Luk. 11. 13. Your Heavenly Father will give the Holy Spirit to them that aske him of him that is that pray to him for the Holy Spirit Our Saviour instructs his Disciples to aske the Holy Spirit of God upon the account of his being so promised as Acts 2. 23. All our supplications are to be regulated by the Promise And surely he who as shall afterwards appeare did so plentifully Rom. 8. 27. and richly Promise the bestowing of this Spirit on all those that believe on him did not instruct them to aske for any inferion Mèrcy and Grace under that name That Spirit which the Lord Christ instructs us to aske of the Father is the Spirit which he hath promised to bestow so on us as that he shall dwell in us That the Spirit which Christ instructs us to aske for and which himselfe promiseth to send unto us is the Holy Ghost himselfe the Holy Spirit of Promise by whom wee are Sealed to the day of Redemption I suppose will require no labour to prove what is needfull to this end shall be afterward insisted on 2. Positive affirmations that he doth so dwell in § 2. and remaine with the Saints are the second ground of the Truth we assert I shall name one or two Testimonies of that kind Psal. 51. 11. saith David take not thy Holy Spirit from me It is the Spirit and his presence as unto Sanctification not in respect of Prophesy or any other gift whatever that he is treating of with God All the Graces of the Spirit being almost dead and buried in him he cries aloud that He whose they are and who alone is able to revive and quicken them may not be taken from him With him in him he was or he could not be taken from him And though the Gifts or Graces of the Spirit only may be intended where mention is made of giving or bestowing of him sometimes yet when the Saints begge of God that he would continue his Spirit with them though they have grieved him and provoked him that no more is intended but some Gift or Grace is not so cleare I know men possessed with prejudice against this Truth will think easily to evade these Testimonies by the Distinction of the Person and Graces of the Spirit Wherefore for the manner how he is with them with whom he is the Apostle informes us Rom 8. 9. yee are in the spirit that is spirituall men opposed to being in the flesh that is carnall unregenerate unreconciled and enemies to God if so be the spirit of Christ dwell in you and if any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Not only the thing it selfe is asserted but the weight of our Regeneration and Acceptation with God through Jesus Christ is laid upon it If the Spirit dwell in us we are spirituall and belong to Christ otherwise not wee are none of his This the Apostle farther confirmes v. 11. if the spirit of him that raised up Jesus dwell in you I know not how the Person of the Holy Ghost can be more clearely decyphered then here he is The spirit of him that raised Jesus from the dead Why that is mentioned shall afterwards be considered And this Spirit as he bears Testimony of himselfe dwells in Believers which is all we say and without farther curious enquiry desire to rest therein Doubtlesse it were better for men to captivate their understandings to the obedience of Faith then to invent Distinctions and Evasions to escape the power of so many plaine Texts of Scripture and those litterally and properly not Figuratively and Metaphorically expressing the Truth contained in then which though it may be done sometimes yet is not in a constant uniforme tenure of expression any where the manner of the Holy Ghost The Apostle also affirmes farther v. 15.
that Believers receive the spirit of Adoption to cry Abba Father which being a worke within them cannot be wrought and effected by Adoption it selfe which is an extrinsicall Relation Neither can Adoption and the Spirit of Adoption be conceived to be the same He also farther affirmes it 1 Cor 2. 12. we have received the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given us of God We have so received him as that he abides with us to teach us to acquaint our hearts with Gods dealing with us bearing witnesse with our spirits to the condition wherein we are in reference to our Favour from God and Acceptation with him and the same he most distinctly asserts Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into our hearts crying Abba Father The distinct Oeconomy of the Father Sonne and Spirit in the work of Adoption is clearly discovered He is sent sent of God that is the Father That name is Personally to be appropriated when it is distinguished as here from Sonne and Spirit That is the Fathers work that work of his Love he sends him He hath sent him as the spirit of his Sonne procured by him for us promised by him to us proceeding from him as to his personall subsistence and sent by him as to his office of Adoption and Consolation Then whether the Father hath sent the spirit of his Sonne where he is to abide and make his residence is expressed it is into our Hearts saith the Apostle there he dwells and abides And lastly what there he doth is also manifested he setts them on worke in whom he is gives them priviledges for it Ability to it Incouragement in it causing them to cry Abba Father Once and againe to Timothy doth the same Apostle assert the same truth 1 Epist. 3. 14. the good thing committed unto thee keep by the Holy Spirit which dwelleth in us The Lord knowing how much of our Life and Consolation depends on this Truth redoubles his Testimony of it that wee might receive it even wee who are dull and slow of heart to believe the things that are written 3. Whereas some may say §. 3. it cannot be denyed but that the Spirit dwels in Believers but yet this is not personally but only by his Grace though I might reply that this indeed and upon the matter is not to distinguish but to deny what is positively affirmed To say the Spirit dwells in us but not the Person of the Spirit is not to distinguish de modo but to deny the thing it selfe To say the Graces indeed of the Spirit are in us not dwell in us for an Accident is not properly said to dwell in its subject but the Spirit it selfe doth not dwell in us is expressly to cast downe what the word sets up If such distinctions ought to be of force to evade so many positive and plaine Texts of Scripture as have been produced it may well be questioned whether any Truth be capable of proofe from Scripture or no. Yet I say farther to obviate such Objections and to prevent all quarrellings for the future the Scripture it selfe as to this businesse of the Spirits indwelling plainely distinguisheth between the Spirit it selfe and his Graces He is I say distinguished from them and that in respect to his indwelling Rom. 5. 5. The Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost that is given to us The Holy Ghost is given to us to dwell in us as hath been abundantly declared and shall yet farther be demonstrated Here He is mentioned together with the Love of God and his shedding thereof abroad in our Hearts that is with his Graces is as clearely distinguished and differenced from them as Cause and effect Take the Love of God in either sence that is controverted about this place for our Love to God or a sence of his Love to us and it is an eminent Grace of the Holy Spirit If then by the Holy Ghost given unto us yee understand only the Grace of the Holy Ghost He being said to be given because that is given then this must be the sence of the place The Grace of the Holy Ghost is shed abroad in our Hearts by the Grace of the Holy Ghost that is given to us Farther if by the Holy Ghost be meant only his Grace I require what Grace it is hereby the expression intended Is it the same with that expressed the Love of God This were to confound the efficient cause with its effect Is it any other Grace that doth produce the great worke mentioned Let us know what that Grace is that hath this power energie in its hand of shedding abroad the Love of God in our Hearts So Rom. 8. 11. He shall quicken your mortall bodyes by the Spirit that dwelleth in you This quickning of our mortall bodies is generally confessed to be and the scope of the place inforceth that sence our Spirituall quickning in our mortall bodyes mention being made of our bodyes in Analogie to the body of Christ by his death we have life and quickning Donbtlesse then it is a Grace of the Spirit that is intended Yea the habitual principle of all Graces And this is wrought in us by the Spirit that dwelleth in us There is not any Grace of the Spirit whereby he may dwell in men antecedent to his Quickning of them Spirituall Graces have not their residence in dead soules So that this must be the Spirit himselfe dwelling in us that is here intended and that personally or the sence of the words must be The Grace of quickning our mortall bodyes is wrought in us by the Grace of Quickning our mortall bodyes that dwels in us which is plainely to confound the Cause and Effect Besides it is the same Spirit that raised up Jesus from the dead that is intended which doubtlesse was not any inherent Grace but the Spirit of God himselfe working by the exceding greatnesse of his Power Thus much is hence cleared Antecedent in order of nature to our Quickning there is a Spirit given to us to dwell in us Every efficient Cause hath at least the precedency of its effect No Grace of the Spirit is bestowed on us before our Quickning which is the preparation and fitting of the subject for the receiving of them the planting of the Roote that containes them vertually and brings them forth actually in their order Gal. 5. 22. All Graces whatsoever come under the name of the fruit of the Spirit that is which the Spirit in us brings forth as the Roote doth the fruit which in its sodoing is distinct therefrom Many oher instances might be given but these may suffice 4. There is a Personallity ascribed to the Holy Ghost in his dwelling in us and that in such a way §. 4. as cannot be ascribed to any Created Grace which is but a Quality in a subject and this the Scripture doth three wayes 1. In
Truth it selfe be rendred a Glory to the understanding and the mind be actually inlightned as to the Truth represented it is not to be received in a spirituall manner Those who know at all what the Truth is as the Truth is in Jesus will not take it up upon any other more common account Somtimes in dealing with Godly Persons to convince them of a Truth we are ready to admire their Stupidity or perversenesse that they will not receive that which shines in with so broad a Light upon our spirits The truth is untill the Holy Spirit sends forth the Light and Power mentioned it is impossible that their minds and hearts should rest and acquiesce in any Truth whatever But 4. From this Indwelling of the Spirit §. 23. we have supportment our Hearts are very ready to sinke and faile under our tryalls indeed a little thing will cause us so to do flesh Psal. 73. 26. and heart and all that is within us are soone ready to faile Whence is it that we do not sinke into the deeps that we have so many and so sweet and gracious Recoveries when we are ready to be swallowed up The Spirit that dwells in us gives us supportment Thus it was with David Psal. 51. 22. He was ready to be overwhelmed under a sence of the Guilt of that great sinne which God then sorely charged upon his Conscience and cryes out like a man ready to sinke under water Oh uphold me with thy free Spirit if that do not support me I shall perish So Rom. 8. 26. The Spirit helpeth beares up that Infirmity which is ready to make us go double How often should we be overborne with our burthens did not the Spirit put under his Power to beare them and to support us Thus Paul assures himselfe that he shall be carried through all his tryalls by the helpe supplyed to him by the Spirit Phil. 1. 19. There are two speciall waies §. 25. whereby the Spirit communicates supportment unto the Saints when they are ready to sinke and that upon two accounts First of Consolation and then of Strength 1. The first he doth by bringing to mind the things that Jesus Christ hath left in store for their supportment Our Saviour Christ informing his Disciples how they should be upheld in their tribulations tells them that the Comforter which should dwell with them and was in them Ioh 14. 16 17. should bring to remembrance what he had told them v. 26. Christ had said many things things gracious and heavenly to his Disciples He had given them many rich and pretious Promises to uphold their hearts in their greatest perplexities But knowing full well how ready they were to forget and to let slip the things that were spoken Heb. 2. 1. and how coldly his Promises would come in to their assistance when retained only in their naturall faculties and made use of by their owne strength to obviate these evills tells them that this work he committeth to the charge of another who will doe it to the purpose When ye are ready to drive away the Comforter saith he who is in you he shall bring to Remembrance apply to your soules the things that I have spoken the Promises that I have made which will then be unto you as Life from the dead And this he doth every day How often when the Spirits of the Saints are ready to faint within them when straites and perplexities are round about them that they know not what to doe nor whether to apply themselves for helpe or supportment doth the Spirit that dwelleth in them bring to mind some seasonable suitable Promise of Christ that bears them up quite above their difficulties and distractions opening such a new spring of Life and Consolation to their soules as that they who but now stooped yea were almost bowed to the ground doe stand upright and feele no weight or burthen at all Often times they goe for Water to the well and are not able to draw or if it be powred out upon them it comes like raine on a stick that is fully dry They seeke to Promises for refreshment and find no more savour in them then in the white of an Egge but when the same Promises are brought to remembrance by the Spirit the Comforter who is with them and in them how full of Life and Power are they 2. As this he doth to support Believers §. 26. in respect of Consolation so as to the Communion of reall strength he stirres up those Graces in them that are strengthning and supporting The Graces of the Spirit are indeed all of them supporting and upholding If the Saints fall and sinke at any time in any duty under any tryall it is because their Graces are decayed and do draw back as to the exercise of them If thou faint in the day of Adversity it is not because thy Adversaries are great or strong but because thy strength is small Prov 24. 10. All our Fainting is from the weaknesse of our strength Faith Waiting Patience are small when Davids Faith and Patience began to sinke and draw back Psal. 116. 11. he cries All men are lyars I shall one day perish by the hand of mine Enemies When Faith is but little and Grace but weake we shall be forced if the Wind do but begin to blow to cry out save Lord or we sinke and perish let a Temptation a Lust a Corruption lay any Grace a s●eepe and the strongest Saint will quickly become like Sampson with his haire cut and the Philistims about him he may think to doe great matters but at the first tryall he is made a scorne to his enemies Peter thought it was the greatnesse of the Winds and waves that terrified him but our Saviour tells him it was the weaknesse of his Faith that betrayed him Mat. 14. 31. 32. For reliefe in this condition the Spirit that dwells in the Saints stirres up enlivens and actuates all his Graces in them that may support and strengthen them in their duties and under their Tribulations Rom 5. Paul runs up the influence of Grace into the Saints supportment unto this Fountain v. 3. We glory in Tribulation this is as high a pitch as can be attained to be patient under Tribulation is no small victory to Glory in it a most eminent Triumph a conformity to Christ who in his Crosse triumphed over all his opposers we are not only patient under tribulations and have strength to beare them but saith the Apostle we glory and rejoyce in them as things very welcome to us How comes this about Saith he Tribulation worketh patience that is it sets it a worke for Tribulation in it selfe will never worke or beget patience in us and Patience Experience and Experience Hope and Hope maketh not ashamed It is from hence that these Graces Patience Hope Experience being set on worke doe beare up and support our soules and raise them to such an
tending to the end and purpose we have in hand As 1. First §. 37. because the Spirit dwells in us we are therefore to consider and dispose of our persons as Temples of the Holy Ghost that is of this Indwelling Spirit the Scripture manifesting hereby that the Doctrine of the Indwelling of the Spirit is not only a Truth but a very usefull Truth being made the Fountaine of and the inforcement unto so great a duty He dwells in us and we are to look well to his habitation our Saviour tells us that when the evill Spirit finds his dwelling swept and garnished Mat. 12.44 he instantly takes possession and brings company with him he will not be absent from it when 't is fitted for his turne In reference to the Saints and their holy Indweller this the Apostle urgeth 1 Cor. 6. 19. Your Bodies are the Temples of the Holy Ghost which dwells in you whence he concludes whose ye are not your owne and therefore ought to glorify God in your Bodies From hence is the strength of his Argument for the avoiding of all uncleannesse v. 16. 17. Know ye not that he who is joyned to an Harlot is one body he who is joyned to the Lord is one spirit flye Fornication know ye not that your Body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost On this account also doth he presse to universall holinesse 1 Cor 3. 16. 17. Know ye not that ye are the Temples of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you if any man desile the Temple of God him shall God destroy for the Temple of God is holy which Temple ye are In v. 12. 13. 14. the Apostle discovers the fruitlesnesse of Building hay and stubble light and unsound Doctrines or practises upon the foundation of Faith in Jesus Christ once laid and tells us that all such things shall burne and suffer losse and put the contrivers and workers of them to no small difficulty in escaping like men when the Garments they are cloathed withall are on fire about them On the account of this sad event of foolish and carelesse walking he presses v. 16 as was said earnestly to universall Holinesse laying downe as the great motive thereunto that which we have insisted on viz. the Indwelling of the Holy Spirit in us know ye not that ye are the Temple of God The Temple wherein God of old did dwell was built with hewen stone Cedar Wood and overlaid with pure Gold and will ye now who are the spirituall Temple of God build up your Soules with hay and stubble Which he furthers by that dreadfull commination taken from the zeale of God for the purity of his Temple so that on each hand he doth presse to the universall close keeping of our Hearts in all Holinesse and purity because of the Indwelling of the Holy Spirit And indeed where ever we are said to be Temples of God or an Habitation for him as it still relates to this cause of the Expression which we now insist upon so there is ever some intimation of Holinesse to be pursued on that account Eph 2. 21. 22. In whom the whole building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord in whom ye also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit being made an habitation of the Lord by the Spirits Indwelling in us we grow up or thrive in grace into an Holy Temple to the Lord to be a more compleate and well furnished Habitation for him This then is that which I say The Truth of what hath formerly been spoken concerning the manner of the Spirits abode with us being procured for us by Jesus Christ is farther cleared by this inference that the Scripture makes thereof The Saints are exhorted with all diligence to keepe themselves a fit Habitation for him that they may not be uncleane and defiled lodgings for the Spirit of purity and Holinesse This is and this is to be their daily Labour and indeavour that vaine thoughts unruly passions corrupt lusts may not take up any Roome in their bosome that they put not such unwelcome and unsavory inmates upon the Spirit of Grace that sinne may not dwell where God dwells On this ground they may plead with their owne Souls and say Hath the Lord chosen my poore heart for his Habitation Hath he said I delight in it and there will I dwell for ever Hath he forsaken that goodly and stately Materiall Temple whereunto he gave his speciall presence of old to take up his abode in a farre more eminent way in a poore sinfull soule Doth that Holy Spirit which dwells in Jesus Christ who was Holy Blamelesse Vndefiled separate from sinners who did no sinne neithere was guile found in his mouth dwell also in me that am in and of my selfe wholly corrupted and defiled And shall I be so foolish so unthankfull as willingly to defile the Habitation which he hath chosen Shall I suffer vaine Thoughts foolish Lust distempered Affections worldly aimes to put in themselves upon him there He is a Spirit of Grace can he beare a Gracelesse Corruption to be cherished in his Dwelling He is a Spirit of Holynesse and shall I harbour in his Lodging a frame of worldlynesse He is a Spirit of Joy Consolation shall I fill my bosome with foolish feares and devouring Cares Would not this be a griefe unto him Would it not provoke the eyes of his Glory Can he beare it that when he is with me before his face in his presence I should spend my time in giving entertainement to his enemyes He is the high and the Holy one who dwells in Eternity and he hath chosen to inhabit with me also Surely I should be more bruitish then any man should I be carelesse of his Habitation And should not this fill my soule with an Holy scorne and indignation against sinne Shall I debase my soule unto any vile Lust. which hath this exceeding honour to be an Habitation for the Spirit of God Hence upon a view of any defilement of Lust or passion nothing troubles the Saints more nor fills them with more selfe-abhorrence and confusion of face then this that they have rendred their hearts an unsuitable habitation for the Spirit of God This makes David upon his sinne cry so earnestly that the Spirit might not depart from him Psal. 51. being conscious to himselfe that he had exceedingly defiled his dwelling place And were this Consideration alwayes fresh upon the Spirits of the Saints were it more constant in their thoughts it would keepe them more upon their Guard that nothing might breake in to disquiet their gracious Indweller 2. Secondly §. 38. because be the Spirit we have guidance and direction there is Wisdome given unto us and we are called to a holy discerning between the Directions of the Spirit of Grace and the delusions of the Spirit of the World and the seduction of our owne Hearts Christ gives this character of
of the consistency of Effectuall Grace and Gospell Exhortations A Third Argument is proposed Sect. 18. Cap. 13. in these words §. 1. That Doctrine which representeth God as weake Incongruous and In coherent with himselfe in his applications unto men is not from God and consequently that which contradicteth it must needs be the truth but the Doctrine of Perseverance opposed by us putteth this great dishonour upon God representeth him weake Incongruous c. Ergo. For the proofe of the Minor Proposition to make good the charge in it exhibited against the Doctrine of Perseverance there is a Drammaticall scheme induced to whose framing and Application M. Goodwin contributed no more but the paines of a Translator taking it from the Anti-Synod p. 276. 277. in these words You that truly Believe in my Sonne and have beene once made partakers of my Holy Spirit and therefore are fully perswaded assured from my will and command given unto you in that behalfe yea according to the infallible word of Truth which you have from me that you cannot possibly no not by all the most horrid sinns and abominable practices that you shall or can commit fall away either totally or finally from your Faith for in the midst of your foulest actions courses there remaines a seed in you which is sufficient to make you true Believers to preserve you from falling away finally that it is impossible you should dye in your sinnes you that know are assured that I will by an irresistible hand worke Perseverance in you consequently that you are out of all danger of condemnation and that Heaven and Salvation belong unto you and are as good as yours already so that nothing but giving of thankes appertaines to you which also you know that I will do what you will in the meane time necessitate you unto you I say that are fully and throughly perswaded and possessed with the truth of all these things I earnestly charge admonish exhort and beseech that yee take heed to your selves that yee countinue in the Faith that there be not at any time an evill heart of unbeliefe in any to depart from the Living God that you fall not from your owne stedfastnesse yea I declare and professe unto you that if you shall draw back my soule shall have no pleasure in you that if you shall deny me I will deny you that if you be againe overcome of the lusts of the world and be intangled here with that your latter end shall be worse than your beginning that if you shall turne away all your former Righteousnes shall not be remembred but you shall dye in your sinnes and suffer the veugeance of Eternall fire On the other hand if you shall continue to the end my Promise is that you shall be Saved therefore strive to enter in at the straite gate quit your selves like men labour for the meat that indureth unto Everlasting Life and be not sloathfull but followers of them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises He that shall duly weigh and consider what a sencelesse and indeed ridiculous incongruity there is between these Exhortations Adjurations Threatnings and latter Promises and those Declarations Applications and former Promises doubtlesse will confesse that either the one or the other of them are not from God or according to the mind of God Ans. §. 2. The incongruity of this fiction with the Doctrine it is framed against is so easily manifested that it will not much concerne us to consider the incongruity that the severall parts of it have one with an other For First the whole Foundation of this fanatick Fabrick is ridiculous in it selfe and ridiculously imposed on the Doctrine of Perseverance For whereas it sayes not that all Saints have any comfortable Assurance of their Perseverance and so may by all Gospell wayes whatever by Promises and Threatnings be stirred up to the use of those meanes whereby Perseverance is wrought and Assurance obtain'd so it saies that no one Saint in the world ever had can have or was taught to expect his Perseverance or the least sence or Assurance of it under such an uncouth supposition as falling into continuing in sins Abominations the Promises they have to assure thē of their inseparable abode with God to the end are that he will write his Law in their hearts put his Feare in their inward parts that they shall never depart from him and they shall be kept up thereto by the use of meanes suitable as appointed of God for the attaining of the end proposed being kept by the power of God but throngh Faith unto Salvation God doth not call nor doth the Doct of Perseverance of the Saints or of the stability and Unchangeablenesse of his Promises in Christ to Believers assert it any to Believe that they shall never fall away from him what sinnes and Rebellions so ever they fall into neither hath he promised any such things unto thē but only that he will through his Grace preserve them in the use of meanes from such Rebellions as are inconsistent with his Love and free acceptation through Christ according to the Tenor of the Covenant of Grace so that instead of the first part of this fiction whose inconsistency with the latter is after Argued let this acording to the Analogy of our Doctrine be instituted You that truly Believe in my Sonne Jesus Christ § 3. and are made partakers of my Holy Spirit who being heirs of the Promises and so have a Right to that abundant Consolation that Joy in believing which I am willing all of you should receive I know your Feares doubts perplexityes and Temptations your failings sinnes and back-slidings and what sad thoughts on the account of the evill of your owne hearts and wayes you are exposed to as that you shall never abide nor be able to continue with me and in my Love to the end let the feeble knees be strengthned and the hands that hang downe be lifted up behold I have ordained goodworkes for you to walke in as the way wherein you are to walke for the attainement of the end of your Faith the Salvation of your soules And to quicken you and stirre you up hereunto I have provided and established Effectuall Ordinances revealed in the Word of my Grace whereunto you are to attend and in the use of them according to my mind to grow up into Holinesse in all manner of holy conversation Watching Fighting Resisting Contending with and against all the Spirituall Enemy's of your soules And as for me this is my Covenant with you that my Spirit which gives Efficacy to all the meanes Ordinances and Advantages of Gospell Obedience which I have afforded unto you by whom I will fulfill in you all the good-pleasure of my Goodnesse and the worke of Faith with Power so making you meet for the Inheritance of the Saints in Light and Preserving you to my Heavenly Kingdome shall never depart
consideration of things weighty and serious With you who are continually exercised with severer thoughts and studies then the most of men can immix themselves withal such a condescention to the vanity of men● minds and lightness of their spirits I am sure can find no approbation And as for them who make it their business to run through books of a Polemical nature in what subject soever in pursuit of what is personal ridiculous invective beating every Chapter and Section to find only what ought not to be there and recoyling in their spirits upon the appearance of that which is serious and pressing to the cause in hand I suppose you judge them not worthy to be attended to with such an imposition upon the time and diligence of those who sincrely seek the Truth in love as the satisfying of their vaine humour would require It is indeed of sad consideration to see how some learned men forgetting the loss of precious houres wherewith they punish their Readers thereby in discourses of this naturedo offend against their professed intendments by perpetual diversions in long personal H●rang●es delighting some for a moment instructing none in the mattter inquired into Some parts of this Treatise you may perhaps judge not so closely scholastically argumentative as the regular lawes of an accurate disputation would require In the same judgment with you is the Authour where yet he supposes himselfe not without just Apologie and that such as renders his way of procedure not blame worthy whereas otherwise he should not think any excuse sufficient to exp●ate such an errour He is worthily blammed who had not rather chuse to want a fault then an excuse The truth is neither would the matter treated of nor the persons for whose sakes cheifly this labour was undertaken admit of an accurate scholastical procedure in all parts of the Treatise The doctrine asserted and the errour opposed are the concernments of the common people of Christianity Arminianisme is crept into the bodies of sundry congregations and the weaker men are who entertaine it the more gross and carnal are their notions and Conceptions in and about it Pelagius himselfe was never so injurious to the grace of God as some amongst us Now the souls of men whose good is sought in this work are no less precious in the sight of God though they are unacquainted with Philosophical termes and wayes of arguing than the soules of the most learned Besides that which we account our wisedome and learning may if too rigo●ously attended be our folly when we think to sharpen the reason of the Scripture we may straighten the Efficacy of the spirit of it It is oftentimes more effectual in it's own liberty then when restrained to our methods of arguing And the weapons of it keener in their own soft breathings then when sharpned in the forge of Aristotle There is a way of perswasion and conviction in the Scriptures that is more divine sublime then to be reduced to any Rules of Art that men can reach unto God in his word instructs men to make them wise unto salvation Syllogismes are not doubtless the only way of making men wise with humane wisedome much less divine Some Testimonies on this account are left at their own liberty improved only by Explanation that they might lose nothing of their owne strength seeing no other can be added to them Where the corrupt Philosophy or sophistical arguings or indeed regular syllo●tical proceedings of the Adversaries have rendred a more close Logical way of proceeding necessary I hope your favourable judgments will not find cause to complaine of the want thereof Whatever is amiss what ever is defective what ever upon any account cometh short of desire or expectation as I know none in the world more able to discerne and find out then your selves so there are none from whom I can expect and justly promise my selfe a more easy candid Censure a more free and general pardon a more favourable Acceptation of this endeavour for the service of the Truth then from you Besides that personal Amity and respect which God by his providence hath given me one altogether unworthy of such an allay of common perplexities in his pilgrimage with you and amongst you besides that readiness and ingenuous promptness of mind unto condescention and candid reception of labours in this kind which your own great worth and abilities furnish you withal exempting you and lifting you above that Pedantick severity and humour of censure which posseth Sciolists men corrupted with a desire of emerging in the repute of others You know full well in what streights under what diversions imployments business of sundry natures incumbent on me from the Relations wherein I stand in the University and on sundry other accounts this work hath been carried on The truth is no small portion of it owes it's rise to Journeyes and such like avocations from my ordinary course of studies and imployments with some spare houres for the most part in time of absence from all books and asisstances of that nature whatever Not longer to be burthensome unto you with things of no greater concernment then what may have respect to one every way so unworthy as my selfe what is of the seed which God hath graciously supplyed I am sure will find acceptance with you and what is of it's worthless Author or that I have added I am fully content may be consumed by the fire that tryes our workes of what sort they are My dayly prayer Honoured Brethren shall be on your behalfe that in the dayes wherein we see so many fall from the truth oppose it on the one hand a great indifferency as to the things of God leading Captive so many on the other so few remaining made useful to God in their generations by a conjunction of zeale for the truth and ability unto it's defence and those for the most part so closely engaged in and their hands so filled with the work of publique beseeching Men to be reconciled to God in Christ and building up of them who are called in their most holy faith You may receive helpe from above and encouragement to engage you by all meanes possible to spread abroad a savour of the Gospel of Jesus Christ to labour continually that the truths of God for whose defence you are particularly appointed may not be cast down nor trampled on under the feet of men of corrupt minds lying in wait to deceive alluring beguiling unstable soules with enticing words of humane wisedome or any glorious shew and pretence whatever turning them from the simplicity of the Gospel and the truth as it is in Jesus that you may not faint nor waxe weary notwithstanding all the opposition contempt scorne you do or may meet withal nor ever be turned aside to corrupt Dalliances with errour and falshood as is the manner of some who yet would be accounted sound in the faith but keeping close to the forme of
this Subject of Perseverance In the entrance of his disputation he layes down the same Principles with the Former concerning the necessity of the Peculiar Grace of Perseverance to this end that any one may persevere Disput 103. Then Disp 108 He further manifests that this gift or Grace of Perseverance does not depend on any Conditions in us or any Cooperation of our wills His position he layes down in these words Donum perseverantiae in ratione Doni perseverantiae efficacia illius nullo modo dependet effectivè ex libera Cooperatione nostri Arbitrii sed à solo Deo atque ab efficaci absoluto Decreto Voluntatis ejus qui pro suâ misericordiâ tribuit illud Donum cui vult In the further proof of this proposition he manifests by clear Testimonies that the Contrary Doctrine hereunto was that of the Pelagians and Semi-pelagians which Austine opposed in sundry Treatises And in all the Arguments whereby he further confirmes it he still presses the absurdity of making the Promise of God concerning Perseverance Conditional and so suspending it on any thing in and by us to be performed And indeed all the Acts whereby we persevere flowing according to him from the Grace of perseverance it cannot but be absurd to make the Efficient Cause in it's Efficiency and operation to depend upon it's own effect This also is with him Ridiculous that the Grace of perseverance should be given to any and he not persevere or be promised and yet not given yet withal he grants in his following Conclusions that our wills secundarily and in dependency do cooperate in our Perseverance The second Principle this learned School-man insists on is that this gift of perseverance is peculiar to the Elect or praedestinate Disput 104. 1. Con Donum perseverantiae est proprium Praedstinaterum ut nulli alteri conveniat And what he intends by Praedestinati he informes you according to the Judgment of Austin and Thomas Nomine praedestinationis ad Gloriam felùm 〈◊〉 praedestinationem intelligunt Augustinus Thomas quâ Electi ordinantur efficaciter transmittuntur ad vitam aeternam cujus effectus sunt vocatio Justificatio perseverantia in gratiâ usque ad Finem not that or such a Conditional predestination as is pendent in the ayre and expectant of men's good final Deportment but that which is the eternal free fountaine of all that grace whereof in time by Jesus Christ we are made Partakers And in the pursuit of this proposition he further proves at large that the persverance given to the Saints in Christ is not a supplement of Helps and advantages whereby they may preserve it if they will but such as causes them on whom it is bestowed certainly actually so to do and that in it's efficacy and operation it cannot depend on any free cooperation of our wills all the Good Acts tending to our perseverance being fruits of that Grace which is bestowed on us according to the absolute unchangeable Decree of the will of God This indeed is common with this Authour and the Rest of his associates the Dominicans and pres●●● Jansenians in these controversies together with the residue of the Romanists that having their Judgments wrested by the abominable figments of implicite Faith and the efficacy of the Sacraments of the new Testament conveying really exhibiting the grace signified or sealed by them that they are inforced to grant that many may be are Regenerate made True Believers who are not predestinate that these cannot persevere nor shall eventually be saved Certaine it is that there is not any Truth which that Generation of men do receive admit but more or less it suffers in their Hands from that gross ignorance of the free Grace of God in Jesus Crhist the power whereof they are practically under what the poor Vassailes and Slaves will do upon the late Bull of their Holy Father casting them in sundry maine Concernements of their Quarrel with their Adversaries is uncertaine otherwise setting aside some such deviations as the above mentioned whereunto they are enforced by their Ignorance of the Grace and Justification with is in Jesus Christ there is so much of Antient Candid Truth in opposition to the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians preserved and asserted in the writings of the Dominican Fryers as will rise up as I sayd before in Judgment against those of our Dayes who enjoying greater Light Advantages do yet close in with those and are long since Cursed Enemies of the grace of God To this Dominican I shall only adde the Testimony of two famous Jesuites upon whose understandings the light of this glorious Truth prevailed for an Acknowledgment of it The first of these is Bellarmine whose disputes to this purpose being full and large and the Authour in allmens hands I shall not transcribe his assertions arguments but only referre the Reader to his l. 2. de Grat. l. Ar. Cap. 12. Denique ut multa alia Testimonia c The other is Suarez who delivers his thoughts succinctly upon the whole of this Matter Lib. 11. de perpetuitat vel Amis Grat Cap. 2. Sect. 6. saith he de praedestinatis verum est Infallibiliter quòd gratiam finaliter seu in perpetuum non amittunt unde postquam semel gratiam habuerant ita reguntur proteguntur à Deo ut vel non cadant vel si ceciderint resurgant licèt saepius cadant resurgant tandem aliquando ita resurgunt ut amplius non cadant in which few words he hath briefly comprized the summe of that which is by us contended for It was in my Thoughts in the last place to have added the concurrent witness of all the reformed Churches which that of the most eminent Divines which have written in the defence of their Concessions but this Trouble upon second considerations I shall spare the Reader my selfe for as many other reasons lye against the Prosecuting of this Designe so especially the uselesness of spending-Time and paines for the demonstration of a thing of so evident a truth prevailes with me to desist Notwithstanding the Indeavours of Mr. Goodwin to wrest the words of some of the most antient Writers who laboured in the first Reformation of the Churches I presume no unprejudiced Person in the least measure acquainted with the systeme of that Doctrine which with so much paines diligence piety and Learning they promoted in the world with the clearness of their Judgments in going forth to the utmost compass of their Principles which they received and their constancy to themselves in asserting of the Truthes they embraced owned by their Friends and Adversaries until such time as Mr. Goodwin discovered their selfe Contradictions will scarce be moved once to question their Judgments by the Excerpta of Mr. Goodwin Cap 15 of his Treatise so that of this discourse this is the Issue There remaines only that I give a brief account of some concernments of the
25. and his own keeping in a covenant of Workes that of the Saints since the fall is purchased for them laid up in their head dispensed in a covenant of grace whose eminent distinction from the former consists in the permanency and abidingness of the fruits of it But of this afterwards To others adventitious and added as to all that have contracted any qualities contrary to that Originall Holinesse wherewith at first they were indued as have done all the sonnes of men who have sinned and come short of the glory of God Now the Holiness of these is either compleate as it is with the spirits of just men made perfect or inchoate and begunne only as with the residue of Sanctified ones in this life The certain Perseverance of the former in their present condition being not directly opposed by any though the foundation of it be attempted by some we have no need as yet to engage in the defence of it These latter are said to be sanctified or holy two waies upon the twofold account of the use of the word in the Scripture 1. For first some Persons as well as Things are said to be holy especially in the old Testament and in the Epistle to the Hebrewes almost constantly using the termes of Sanctifying and Sanctifyed in a legall or Temple signification in reference unto their being separated from the residue of men with relation to God and his worship Exod. 28. 36 38. or being consecrated and dedicated peculiarly to the performance of any part of his will Levit. 5. 15. Ezek. 22. 8. or distinct injoyment of any portion of his mercy Heb. 2. 11. thus the Arke was said to be holy and the Altar holy the Temple was holy and all the utensils of it ch 10. 10. Ioh. 17. 19. with the vestments of its officers So the whole people of the Iewes were said to be holy the particular respects of Covenant Worship Separation Law Mercy the like upon which this denomination of Holinesse and Saintship was given unto them did depend are known to all yea persons Inherently uncleane and personally notoriously wicked in respect of their designement to some outward work which by them God will bring about are said to be sanctified distinguishing gifts with designation to some distinct employment is a bottome for this Apellation though their gifts may be recalled and the employment taken from them Isai 13. 3. We confesse Perseverance not to be a proper and inseparable adjunct of this subject nor to belong unto such persons as such though they may have a right to it it is upon another account yet in the pursuit of this businesse it will appeare that many of our adversaries Arguments smite these men only and prove that Such as they may be totally rejected of God which none ever denied Againe §. 16. the Word is used in an Evangelicall sence for inward purity and reall Holynesse whence some are said to be Holy Luk. 1. 15. and that also two wayes for either they are so really Rom. 6. 19. 22. and in the Truth of the thing it selfe or in estimation only 2 Cor. 7. 1. and that either of themselves or others That many have accounted themselves to be holy Ephes. 1. 4. 4. 24. and been pure in their owne eyes who yet were never washed from their iniquity have thereupon cryed peace to themselves I suppose needs no proving 1 Thes. 5. 13. 4. 7. It is the case of thousands in the world at this day they thinke themselves Holy Heb. 12. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they professe themselves Holy and our Adversaries proove none gainesaying that such as these may backslyde from what they have and what they seeme to have and so perish under the sinne of Apostacy Prov. 30. 12. Isa. 65. 5. Againe some are sayd to be Holy upon the score of their being so in the steeme of others Isa. 7. 48 49. which was and is the condition of Many false Hypocrites in the Churches of Christ both primitive and Moderne Isa. 9. 40 41. 1 Thes. 5. 3. Like them who are said to believe in Christ upon the account of the profession they made so to doe Math. 25. 29. 2 Pet. 2. 21 Ioh. 6. 16. yet he would not trust himselfe with them because he knew what was in them Such were Judas Simon Magus and sundry others of whom these things are spoken which they professed of themselves and were bound to answer and which others esteemed to be in them These some labour with all their strength 2 Pet. 2. 1. Act. Synod Dec. sent Art 5. p 266 267. c to make true believers that so they may cast the stumbling-block of their Apostacy in the way of the Saints of God closing with the Truth we have in hand But for such as these we are no Advocates let them goe to their owne place according to the Tenor of the Arguments leuyed against them from Heb. 6. 4. 2 Pet. 2. And other places Moreover of those §. 17. who are said to believe and to be holy really and in the Truth of the thing it selfe there are two sorts First such as having received sundry common gifts and Graces of the Spirit Heb. 6. 4. 1 Sam. 10. 10. 2 Pet. 2. 20. 1 King 21. 27. 2 Cor. 7. 10. as Illumination of the Mind Change of affections and thence Amendment of life with sorrom of the World legall Repentance temporary Faith and the like which are all True and Reall in their kind do thereby become Vessells in the great house of God Math. 17. 3 4. Math. 13. 20. Marke 6. 20. 2 Kings 10. 16. being changed as to their use though not in their Nature continueing Stone and Wood still though hewed and turned to the serviceablenesse of Vessels and on that account are frequently termed Saints believers On such as these their is a lower and in some a subordinate work of the Spirit effectually producing in and on all the faculties of their Soules somewhat that is true Hos. 6. 4. 2 Tim. 2. 20. good and usefull in it selfe answering in some likenesse and sutablenesse of operation unto the great worke of Regeneration which faileth not Ioh. 6. 34. Acts 26. 28. Math. 7. 26 27. There is in them Light Love Joy Faith Zeale Obedience c. All true in their kind which make many of them in whom they are do worthily in their Generation Revel 3. 1. Marke 4. 16. howbeit they attaine not to the Faith of Gods Elect neither doth Christ live in them nor is the life which they lead by the Faith of the Sonne of God as shall hereafter be fully declared If ye now casheere these from the roll of those Saints and Believers about whom we contend seeing that they are no where said to be Vnited to● Christ Quickned and Justified partakers of the first Resurrection Accepted of God c.
End proposed is resolved ultimately into themselves and their endeavours and not into any purpose or Act of God Such as is the foundation such is the strength of the whole building Inferences can have no more strength then the Principle from whence they are deduced If a man should tell another that if he will goe a Journy of a hundred miles at each twenty miles end he shall meet with such and such refreshments all the consolation he can receive upon the account of refreshment provided for him is proportioned only to the thoughts he hath of his own strength for the performance of that Journy Farther If in such Expressions of the Purposed Workes of God we may put Cases and trust in what supposalls we think good where there is not the least Jot Title or Syllable of them in the Text nor any roome for them without destroying not only the designe and meaning of the place but the very sence of it why may not we doe so in other undertakings of God the certainty of whose Event depends upon his Purpose and Promise only For instance The Resurrection of the Dead may we not say God will raise up the dead in Christ in case there be any necessity that their bodies should be glorified What is it also that remaines of praise to the Glorious grace of God This is all he effects by it in case men obstruct him not in his way it doth good God calls men to Faith and Obedience in case they obstruct not his way it shall doe them good But how doe they obstruct his way By Unbeliefe and Disobedience take them away and Gods calling shall be effectuall to them that is in case they Believe and Obey Gods Calling shall be effectuall to cause them to Believe and Obey The Cases then foisted into the Apostles discourse §. 20. in the close of this Interpretation of the place if I may so call it namely that God will justify the Called in case they obstruct not his way and will glorify them whom he hath justified in case they continue and abide in the state of Justification are First thrust in without Ground Warrant or Colour of Advantage or occasion given by any thing in the Text or Context and Secondly are destructive to the whole designe of the Holy Ghost in the place whereinto they are intruded injurious to the Truth of the Assertion intended to be made good that all things shall work together for Good proposed upon the account of the unchangeable purpose of God and infallible Connexion of the Acts of his Love and Grace in the Pursuit thereof and resolve the promised work and designed event wholly into the uncertaine lubricous wills of men making the Assurance given not only to be lyable to just Exceptions but evidently to faile and be falsified in respect of thousands and Thirdly render the whole dispensation of the Grace of God to Lackey after the Wills of Men and wholly to depend upon them Giving in thereby as was said Innumerable Presumptions that the word for whose Confirmation all these Acts of Gods Grace are mentioned and insisted on shall never be made good nor established Take then in few words the sence and scope of this place as 't is held out in the Exposition given of it by M. Goodwin and wee will then proceed to consider his Confirmations of the said Exposition Oh you that Love God many Afflictions Temptations and Oppositions ye shall meet withall but be of good comfort all shall work together for your Good for God hath appoynted you to be like his Sonne and you may triumph in every Condition on this account for if yee before any Act of his speciall Grace towards you Love him he Approves you and then he Predestinates you what that is I know not then it is in your power to continue to love him or to doe otherwise if ye abide not then ye perish if ye abide he will call you and when he doth so either ye may obey him or ye may not if you doe not all things shall work together for your hurt and ye will be like the Devill if you doe then he will justify you and then if you abide with him as perhaps ye may perhaps ye may not he will finally Justify you and then all shall be well This being the substance of the Interpretation of this place here given let us now consider how 't is confirmed That §. 21. which in his own termes he undertaketh to Demonstrate to vindicate from all Objections in his ensuing Discourse he thus expresseth pag. 209. Sect 43. These Decrees or purposed Acts of God here specified are to be understood in their successive dependencies with such a condition or proviso respectively as those mentioned and not absolutely peremptorily or without Condition Ans. The imposing of Conditions and Provisoes upon the Decrees and Purposes of God of which himselfe gives not the least intimation and the suspending them as to their Execution on those conditions so invented and imposed at the first view reflects so evidently on the Will Wisdome Power Pre-science and Unchangeablenesse of God who hath said his Purposes shall stand and he will doe all his Pleasure especially when the Interruption of them doth frustrate the whole designe and aime of God in the mentioning of those Decrees and Purposes of his that there will be need of Demonstrations written with the Beames of the Sunne to inforce men tender and regardfull of the Honour and Glory of God to close with any in such an undertaking let us then consider what is produced to this end try if it will hold weight in the ballance of the Sanctuary This saith he appears First 1. By the like Phrase or manner of expression frequent in the Scripture elsewhere I meane when such Purposes or Decrees of God the respective Execution whereof are suspended upon such and such conditions are notwithstanding simply and positively without any mention of Condition expressed and asserted Wherefore the Lord God of Israel saith I said indeed that thy House and the House of thy Father shall walke before mee meaning in the Office and Dignity of the Priesthood for ever But now saith the Lord be it farre from me I said indeed that is I verily Purposed or Decreed or I Promised it comes much to one When God made the Promise and so declared his Promise accordingly that Eli and his Fathers house should walke before him for ever he expressed no condition as required to the Execution or performance of it yet here it plainly appears that there was a condition understood In the same kind of Dialect Samuel speaks to Saul Thou hast done foolishly thou hast not kept the Commandment of the Lord thy God for now the Lord had established thy Kingdome upon Israel for ever but now thy Kingdome shall not continue the Lord had established that is he verily purposed or decreed to establish it for ever to wit in case his
and Favour to them whilest they wallow in all manner of Abominations and desperate Rebellions against him An Hypothesis crudely imposed on our Doctrine and repeated over and over as a matter of the greatest detestation and abomination that can fall within the thoughts of men And such supposalls and conclusions are made thereupon as border at least upon the cursed cost of Blasphemy but cui fini I pray To what end is all this noyse as though any had ever Asserted that God promised to continue his Love and gracious Acceptation alwaies to his Saints and yet took no care nor had promised that they should be continued Saints but would suffer them to turne very Devills It is as easy for men to confute Hypotheses created in their own imaginations as to cast downe men of straw of their own framing and setting up We say indeed that God hath faithfully promised that he will never leave nor forsake Believers but withall that he hath no lesse faithfully engaged himselfe that they shall never wickedly depart from him but that they shall continue Saints and Believers Yea if I may so say Promising alwaies to accept them freely it is incumbent on his Holy Majesty upon the account of his Truth Faithfulnesse and Righteousnesse to preserve them such as without the least dishonour to his Grace and Holinesse yea to the greatest advantage of his Glory he may alwaies accept them delight in them and rejoyce over them and so he tells us he doth Ierem. 31.7 Yea I have loved thee with an everlasting Love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawne thee he drawes us with his kindnesse to follow him obey him live unto him abide with him because he Loves us with an Everlasting Love 2. That these promises of God doe not properly and as to their originall rise depend on any conditions in Believers or by them to be fulfilled but are the Fountains and Springs of all conditions whatever that are required to be in them or expected from them though the Grace and Obedience of Believers are often mentioned in them as the means whereby they are carried on according to the appointment of God unto the enjoyment or continued in it of what is promised This one Consideration that there is in very many of these Promises an expresse non obstante or a not-withstanding the want of any such condition as might seeme to be at the bottome and to be the occasion of any such Promise or Engagement of the Grace of God is sufficient to give light and evidence to this Assertion If the Lord sayeth expresly that he will doe so with men though it be not so with them his doing of that thing cannot depend on any such thing in them as he saith notwithstanding the want of it he will doe it Take one instance Isai. 54. v. 9 10. In a little wrath have I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee saith the Lord they Redeemer for this is as the waters of Noah unto mee whereas I have sworne that the waters of Noah shall no more cover the Earth so have I sworne that I will not be worth with thee nor rebuke thee for the mountaines shall depart aud the hills be removed but my kindnesse shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee He will have mercy on them with everlasting kindnesse v. 8. Yea but how if they walke not worthy of it Why yet this kindnesse shall not faile saith the Lord for it is as the waters of Noah God sweareth that the waters of Noah should no more cover the Earth and you see the stability of what he hath spoken The World is now reserved for Fire but drowned it shall be no more my kindnesse to thee saies God is such it shall nor more depart from thee then those waters shall returne againe upon the Earth Neither is this all wherein he compareth his kindnesse to the waters of Noah but in this also in that in the Promise of drowning the World no more there was an expresse non obstante for the sinnes of men Gen. 8 21. The Lord said in his heart I will not againe curse the ground any more for mans sake for the imagination of mans heart is evill from his youth Though men grow full of wickednesse and violence as before the Flood they were yet saith the Lord the World shall be drowned no more And in this doth the Promise of kindnesse hold proportion with that of the waters of Noah there is an expresse reliefe in it against the sinnes and failings of them to whom it is made viz. such as he will permit them to fall into whilest he certainly preserves them from all such as are inconsistent with his Love and Favour according to the tenor of the Covenant of Grace and therefore it depends not on any thing in them being made with a proviso for any such defect as in them may be imagined 3. To affirme that these Promises of God's abiding with us to the end do depend on any condition that may be uncertaine in its event by us to be fulfilled as to their Accomplishment doth wholly enervate and make them void in respect of the maine end for which they were given us of God That one chiefe end of them is to give the Saints consolation in every condition in all the straights tryalls and temptations which they are to undergoe or may be called to is evident When Ioshua was entring upon the great work of subduing the Canaanites and setting the Tabernacle and people of God in their appointed Inheritance wherein he was to passe through innumerable difficulties tryalls and pressures God gives him that word of Promise I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Iosua 1.5 so are many of them made to the Saints in their weaknesse darknesse and desertions as will appeare by the consideration of the particular instances following Isa. 4. 3 4. Now what one drop of consolation can a poore drooping tempted soule squeeze out of such Promises that depend wholly and solely upon any thing within themselves he will be with mee and be my God it is true but alwaies provided that I continue to be his That also is a sweet and gratious Promise but that I shall doe so he hath not promised It seems I have a cursed Liberty left me of departing wickedly from him so that upon the matter notwithstanding these Promises of his I am left to my selfe If I will abide with him well and good he will abide with me and so it shall be well with mee That he should so abide with me as to cause me to abide with him it seemes there is no such thing Soule look to thy selfe all they hopes and help is in thy selfe but alas for the present I have no sence of this Love of God and I know not that I haue any true
downe He hath undertaken to worke and who shall let him The Councell of his heart as to the fulfilling of it doth not depend on any thing in us what sinne thou art overtaken withall he will pardon and will effectually supply thee with his Spirit that● thou shalt not fall into or continue in such sinnes as would cut off thy Communion with him And doth not this mixe the forementioned Promises with Faith and so render it effectuall to the carrying on of the worke of Love and Obedience as was mentioned And as this Doctrine is suited to the establishment of the soule in Believing and to the stirring of men up to mixe the the Promises with Faith so there is not any thing that is or canbe thought more effectuall to the weakening impairing and shattering of the Faith of the Saints then that which is contrary thereunto as shall afterwards be more fully manifested Tell a soule that God will write his Law in him and put his feare in his inward partes that he shall never depart from him what can ye pitch upon possibly to unsettle him as to a perswasion of the Accomplishment of this Promise and that it shall be so indeed as God hath spoken but only this according as thou behavest thy selfe which is left unto thee so shall this be made good or come short of accomplishment If thou continue to walke with God which that thou shalt do he doth not promise but upon Condition thou walke with him it shall be well and if thou turne aside which thou mayst do notwithstanding any thing here spoken or intimated then the word spoken shall be of none effect the Promise shall not be fulfilled towards thee I know not what the most malicious Devill in Hell if they have degrees of malice can invent more suitable to weaken the Faith of men as to the accomplishment of Gods Promise then by affirming that it doth not depend upon his Truth and Faithfulnesse but solely on their good behaviour which he doth not effectually provide that it shall be such as is required thereunto God himselfe hath long since determined this difference might he be attended unto What hath been spoken of the Promises of the first sort might also be manifested concerning those of the second And the like might also be cleared up in reference to those other weapons of Ministers warfare in casting downe the strong holds of sinne in the hearts of men to wit Exhortations and Threatnings But because Mr Goodwin hath taken great paines both in the generall to prove the unsuitablenesse of our Doctrine to the promotion of Obedience and an Holy Conversation and in particular its inconsistency with the Exhortations and Threatnings of the Word managed by the Ordinances of the Ministry What is needfull farther to be added to the purpose in hand will fall in with our vindication rescuing of the Truth from the false criminations wherewith it is assaulted and reproached as to this particular And therefore I shall immediately addresse myselfe to the Consideration of his long Indictment and charge against the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints as to this very thing CAP. XI 1. The Entrance into an Answer to Mr G's Arguments against the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance His sixt Argument about the usefulnesse of the Doctrine under consideration to the worke of the Ministry proposed 2. His pr●ofe of the minor Proposition 3. Considered and Answered Many pretenders to promote Godlinesse by false Doctrines M. G.'s common interest in this Argument 4. His proofes of the usefulnesse of his Doctrine unto the promotion of Godlinesse 5. Considered and Answered The inconsequence of his Arguing discovered 6. The Doctrine by him opposed mistaken ignorantly or wilfully 7. Objections proposed by Mr G. to himselfe to be Answered 8. The Objection as proposed disowned Certainty of the Love of God in what sence a motive to Obedience 9. The Doctrine of Apostasy denies the unchangeablenesse of Gods Love to Believers placeth Qualifications in the Roome of persons 10. How the Doctrine of Perseverance promiseth the continuance of the Love of God to Believers 11. Certainty of Reward incouraging to regular Actions Promises made to Persons qualified not suspended upon those Qualifications Meanes appointed of God for the accomplishment of a determined end certaine 12. Meanes not alwaies conditions 13 M. G's strange inference concerning the Scripture 14. Considered The word of God by him undervalued and subjected to the judgement of vaine men as to its Truth and Authority 15. The pretended reason of the former proceeding discussed The Scripture the sole judge of what is to be ascribed to God and believed concerning him 16. The Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance falsely imposed on and vindicated 17. Mr G's next Objection made to himselfe against his Doctrine its unseasonablenesse as to the Argument in hand demonstrated 18. No Assurance of the Love of God not Peace left the Saints by the Doctrine of Apostasy The ground of Peace and Assurance by it taken away 19. Ground of Pauls Consolation 1 Cor. 9. 27. the meaning of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 20. Another Plea against the Doctrine attempted to be proved by M. G. That attempt considered Not the weaknesse of the Flesh naturally but the strength of Lust spiritually pretended 21. The cause of Sinne in the Saints farther discussed 22. The Power ascribed by M. G. to men for the strengthning and making willing the Spirit in them considered 23. The Aptnesse of the Saints to performe what and whence The opposition they have in them thereunto 24. Gospell Obedience how easy 25. The Conclusion 26. Answer to Chap. 13. of his Book proposed THE Argument §. 1. wherein Mr Goodwin exposeth the Doctrine under contest to the triall concerning its usefulnesse as to the promotion of Godlinesse in the hearts and wayes of them by whom it is received he thus proposeth Cap. 13. Sect. 32. Pag. 333. That Doctrine which is according to Godlinesse and whose naturall and proper tendencie is to promote Godlinesse in the hearts and lives of men is Evangelicall and of unquestionable comportance with the Truth such is the Doctrine which teacheth the possibility of the Saints declining both totally and finally Ergo Of this Argument he goeth about to establish the respective propositions §. 2. so as to make them serviceable to the enforcement of the Conclusion he aimeth at for the exaltation of the Helena whereon he is enamored and for the major Proposition about which rightly understood we are remote from contesting with him or any else and will willingly and cheerefully at any time drive the cause in difference to Issue upon the singular Testimony of the Truth wrapped up in it he thus con●irmeth it The Reason of the major Proposition though the truth of it needeth no light but its owne to be seen by is because the Gospell it selfe is a Doctrine which is according unto Godlinesse a ministry of Godlinesse is a Doctrine
provided the Wind served for that end or purpose But who I pray commands the VVinds and Seas Doth the Wind so blow where it listeth as not to be at the command of its Maker Is it not enough that we cast off his yoake and soveraignty from men but must the residue of the Creation be forced so to pay their homage to our free wills as to be exempted thereby from Gods disposall If this part of the Promise were infallible and Absolute as to the certainty of its accomplishment why not the other part of it also Thirdly Paul makes confession of his Faith to his Company concerning the Accomplishment of this Promise §. 47. I believe God saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It shall so come to passe in the same manner as it was told me clearely ingaging the Truth and Faithfulnesse of that God which he worshipped for his Testimony to whose Truth he was then in bonds for the accomplishment of what he had spoken to them viz. that not one of them should be lost Now supposing that any one person had by any accident fallen out of the ship Mr Goodwin tells you there had been no opportunity or possibility left unto God to have fulfilled his Promise true for it had bin wholly frustrated He having undertaken for the lives of every one of them but supposing that ingagement of his he that sayes any one might have so perished is more carefull doubtlesse to defend his owne Hypothesis than the honour of the Truth and Faithfulnesse of God Evident then it is notwithstanding the Tortures Rackes and Wheeles applyed by Mr Goodwin to this Text with the confession pretended and but pretended to be extorted from it which but that it hath gotten Sanctuary under his name wing would be counted ridiculous that here is a Promise of God making an Event infallible and necessary in respect of its relation thereto by a cleare consistency with Exhortations to the use of free and suitable meanes for the Accomplishment of the thing so promised Sect. §. 48. 10. He Objects farther to himselfe That in sundry places of Scripture as 1 Cor. 10. 12 13. Phil. 2. 12 13. Heb. 6. 4 5 9. there are Promises of Perseverance and Exhortations unto it joyned together and therefore men who deny a regular and due consistency between them do impute folly and weakenesse to the Holy Ghost Whereunto he Answers sundry things to the end of the eleventh Section As First they are many degrees neerer to the guilt of the crime specifyed who affirme the conjunction mentioned to be found in the said Scriptures than they who deny the Legitimacy of such a conjunction the incongruity of the conjunction hath been sufficiently evinced but that any such conjunction is to be found either in the Scriptures coted or in any others is no mans vision but his who hath darkenesse for vision Ans. If our Adversaryes ipse dixit may passe current we shall quickly have small hopes left of carrying on the Cause under consideration All our Testimonies must be look't upon as cashired long since from attending any longer on the tryal in hand all our Arguments as blown away like flyes in the summer The very things here in Question viz. That there is an Inconsistency between Promises of Perseverance Exhortations to the use of the Meanes whereby it may be effected that God hath made no such Promises or appointed no such Exhortations an that those who appehend any such things have darkenesse for vision are all confirmed by the renewed stampe of teste meipso to which proofe I shall only say Valeat quantum valere potest But he addes § 49. That in none of the places cited is there any Promise of Perseverance is evident to him that shall duly consider the tenour and import of them For First 't is one thing to say and each that God will so limit as well the force as the continuance of temptations that the Saints may be able to beare another to make a Promise of Absolvte Perseverance yea those very words That yee may be able to beare it clearly import that all that is here promised unto the Believing Corinthians is an exhibiting of meanes to Persevorance if they will improve them accordingly not an infallible certainty of their Perseverance And that caveat Let him that thinketh he stands take heed least he fall plainely supposeth a possibility of his falling Who thinketh upon the best grounds that he standeth sure for that this caveat was not given to Hypocrites or unsound Believers or to such who please themselves with a loose and groundlesse conceit of the Goodnesse of their condition Godward is evident because t' were better that such men should fall from their present standing of a groundlesse conceit than continue their standing nor would the Apostle have ever cautioned such to take heed of falling away whose condition was more like to be made better than worse by their falling And besides to understand the said caveat of loose believers overthrows the pertinency of it to their cause who insist upon it to prove a due consistency between Exhortations to Perseverance and Promises to Perseverance as is evident If then it be directer to true and sound Believers it clearly supposeth a possibility at least of their falling in case they shall not take heed or else their taking heed would be no meanes at least no necessary meanes of their standing And farther it supposeth also a possibility at least of their non-taking heed or that they might possibly not take heed hereof otherwise the caveat or admonition had been in vaine men have no need of being admonish't to do that which they are under no possibility to omit If then the standing or persevering of the Saints depends upon their taking heed least they fall and their taking heed in this kind be such a thing which they may possibly omit evident it is that there is a possibility of their non-persevering Ans. §. 50. This last divison of the tenth Section labours to evince that in the first of the places above mentioned viz. 1 Cor. 10. 12 13. There is not a Promise of Perseverance in Conjunction with Exhortations unto the use of meanes unto that end The words are Wherefore let him that standeth take heed least he fall There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man but God is Faithfull who will not suffer you to be tempted above what you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that you may be able to beare it But First 't is not in the least measure Necessary or can be upon any account whatever required of us that we should produce Texts of Scripture in an immediate dependance and coherence in the same place containing both the Promises and Exhortations mentioned they being for the most part proposed upon most different accounts and for immediately different ends and purposes the one namely as in the
the consideration of what hath been from a like disposition of Causes to an Answerablenesse of Events What Mr Goodwin hath to plead in this Case he insists on §. 4. Chap. 9. Sect. 24 25 26 27. Pag. 167 168 169 170 171 172. The summe and aime of his Discourse is to Apologize for his Doctrine against sundry Objections which in the Observations of men it is lyable and obnoxious unto Now these are such as whatever the Issue of their Consideration prove doubtlesse it can be of no Advantage unto his Cause that his Doctrine is so readily exposed to them The first of these is §. 5. that the Doctrine he Opposeth and in Opposition whereunto that is set up which he so industriously asserts hath generally been received and imbraced by men eminent in Piety and Godlinesse famous on that account in their Generations with the generality of the People of God with them And this is attended with that which naturally insues thereon viz. The Scandalousnesse of the most of them yea of them all of this Nation is it spoken who have formerly asserted the Doctrine which Mr Goodwin hath lately espoused Whereunto in the third place an Observation is subjoyned of the Ordinary defection of men to loose and unsavory practises after they have once drunke in the principles of that opinion which he now so industriously mixeth and tempereth for them It is usually said there is no smoake but where there is some fire It would be strange if such Observations as these should be readily and generally made by men concerning the Doctrine under Contest unlesse there were some evident occasion Administred by it thereuto And I must needs say that if they prove True and hold under Examination they will become as urging a prejudice as can lightly be laid against any cause in Religion whatsoever The Gospell being a Doctrine according unto Godlinesse severall perswasions pretending to be parts and portions thereof if one shall be found to be the constant Faith and profession of those who also have the life and power of Godlinesse in them the other to be maintained by evill men aud seducers who upon their receiving it doe also wax worse and worse it is no small advantage to the first in its plea for admittance to the right and title of a truth of the Gospell To Evade this charge Mr Goodwin premises this in Generall §. 6. The experience Asserted in the Objection is not so unquestionable in point of Truth But that if the Asserters were put home upon the proofe they would I seare doubtlesse he rather hopes it accompt more in presumption than in reasonablenes of Argument For if Persons of the one judgement of the other were duly compared together I verily believe there would be found every whit as full a proportion of men truly Conscientious and Religious amongst those whose judgements stand and have stood for a possibility of falling away As on the other side but through a foolish and unsavoury kind of partiality we are apt on all hands according to the Proverb to account our own Geese for Swannes and other mens Swannes Geese Certaine I am that if the writings of men of the one judgement and of the other be compared together and an estimate made from thence of the Religion Worth and Holinesse of the Authors respectively Those who oppose the common Doctrine of Perseverance doe account it no Robbery to make themselves every way equall in this honour with their opposers The truth is If it be lawfull for me to utter what I really apprehend and judge in the case I doe not find that spirit of holinesse to breath with that Authority height or Excellency of power in the writings of the latter which I am very sensible of in the writings of the former These call for Righteousnesse Holinesse and all manner of Christian conversation with every whit as high a hand as the other and adde nothing to check obstruct or infeeble the Authority of their demands in this kind when as the other though they before many times in their exhortations and conjurements unto holinesse yet other while render both these and themselves in them contemptible by avouching such principles which cut the very sinews and strength of such their exhortations and fully ballance all the weight of those motives by which they seek to bind them upon the Consciences of men And for men truly holy and Conscientious doubtlesse the Primitive Christians for three hundred years together and upwards next after the times of the Apostles will fully ballance with an abundant surplusage both for numbers and truth of Godlinesse All those in the Reformed Churches who since Calvins daies have adhered to the common Doctrine of Perseverance And that the Churches of Christ more generally during the said space of three hundred years and more held a possibility of a totall and finall defection even in true and soun● Believers is so cleare from the Records yet extant of those times that it cannot be denied Ans. To let passe M. Goodwins Proverb with its Applycation it being very facile to returne it to its Author there being nothing in the World by him proposed to induce us to such an estimation of his associates in the work of teaching the Doctrine of the Saints Apostasy and their labours therein or any other undertaking of theirs as he labours to beget in guilding over their Worth and Writings but only his own judgment an overweening of their Geese for Swans Let us see what is offered by him to evince the Experience Asserted not to be so unquestionable as is pretended He offers First his own Affirmation That if an estimate may be made of mens Worth and Holinesse by their writings Those who oppose the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance will be found in the promotion of Holinesse and the practice of it to out goe their Adversaries Their writings he tells us breath forth a spirit of holinesse such as he cannot find in the writings of others But first for this you have only M. Goodwins naked single Testimony And that opposed to the common experience of the people of God What weight this is like to beare with men the event will shew It is a hard thing for one man upon his bare word to undertake to perswade a multitude that what their eyes see and their eares heare is not so M. Goodwin had need have Pythagorean Disciples for the imbracing of these dictates of his The experience of Thousands is placed to confirme the observation insisted on saith M. Goodwin It is not so they are in my judgement all deceived But Secondly § 7. who are they in whose writings Mr Goodwin hath found such a Spirit of Holinesse breathing with Authority as is not to be found out nor perceived in the writings of them that assert the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints Calvin Zanchius Beza c. and to confine our selves home Reynolds Whitaker Perkins Greenham
to deale withall from the place he casteth into this forme He that sinneth not neither can sinne cannot fall away whosoever is borne of God sinneth not neither can sinne Ergo Comming to the consideration of that expression cannot sin he findeth out as he supposeth four severall acceptations in the Scripture of the word cannot giveth us an account of his thoughts upon the consideration of thē that in respect of these sences both Propositions are false Now one of the Propositions being the expresse language literall Expression of the Holy Ghost not varyed in the least there is no way to relieve himselfe from being thought and conceiv'd to give the lye to the Blessed Spirit of God by flatly denying what he peremptorily affirmeth but only by denying the word cannot to be taken in this place in any of the sences before mentioned Doth he then fixe on this course for his own extrication Doth he give in another sence of the word which he accepts and grants that in that sence the affirmation of the Holy Ghost may be true Not in the least Yea plainly for one of the sences he supposeth himself to have found out of the word cannot viz. That it is said of men they cannot do such or such a thing because of their aversenesse and indisposition to it which he exemplifyeth in that of Christ to the Pharisees John 8. 43. He afterwards more than intimateth that this is the sence wherein the words cannot sinne are in this place to be taken Sect. 34. So that he will not allow the Holy Ghost to speake the truth although he take his words in what sence he pleaseth Yea and adding a fifth sence Sect. 31. Which is all it seemeth he could find out for we heare not of any more he denyeth that to be the meaning of the place and so shutteth up the mind of the Holy Ghost into some of those significatiōs wherein if the words be taken he saith they are false The Discourse of Mr Goodwin Sect. 28 29 30. being taken up with the Consideration of the various significations of the word cannot and his inferences thereon taking it in this place this way or that way then it is so or so shewing himselfe very skilfull at fencing warding off the force of our Arguments as perhaps his thoughts of himselfe were upon a review of what he had done we are not concerned in And though it were very easy to mnifest that in the distribution of his instances for the exemplification of the severall significations which in part he feigneth and fastneth upon the words he hath been overtaken with many grosse mistakes some of them occasioned by other corrupt principles than those now under consideration yet none of the sences insisted on by him coming really up to the intendment of the Holy Ghost without any disadvantage to our cause in hand being wholly inconcerned therein we may passe by that whole Harangue That which looketh towards the Argument under Consideration appeareth first in Sect. 31. which he thus proposeth If the said Argument understandeth the Phrase cannot sinne according to the fifth and last import mentioned of the word cannot wherein it soundeth an utter and absolute incapacity and impossibility then in this sence the major Proposition is granted viz. He that doth not nor can sinne cannot fall away from his Faith yet the minor is tardy which saith Whosoeoer is borne of God sinneth not neither can sinne for he that is borne of God is in no such incapacity of sinning of sinning I meane in the sence formerly asserted to the Scripture in hand which amounteth to an absolute impossibility for him so to sin Ans. Because this seemeth to be the sence intended in the Argument and the minor Proposition in this sence to be built upon the Scripture in hand let us consider whether the Reason which is assigned for the said Assertion doth necessarily inforce such a sence thereon What we understand by this Phrase both as to that sinne that is here intended and that impossibility of commiting it or falling into it often in that expression cannot hath been before discovered An impossibility it is of the event from the causes above mentioned that the holy Ghost intendeth An utter and absolute incapacity to sinne on any account we assert not An impossibility of so sinning in respect of the event for the reasons and from the causes above mentioned the holy Ghost averreth In this sence the first Proposition is granted He that doth not commit sin nor can sin cannot fall away from his Faith or cannot utterly loose it The Minor which is the expresse language of the holy Ghost is questioned and found tardy that is as I suppose false and the Reason is added namely that he that is borne of God is in no such incapacity of sinning that is of sinning in that kind of sinning which is here intended which amounteth to an impossibility for him so to sin Not to play fast and loose under those ambiguos expressions of incapacity and absolute impossibility the Event is positively denyed upon the account of the prohibiting causes of it and the incapacity asserted relateth not to the internall frame and principle only but respecteth also other Considerations Whether these are such as to beare the weight of this Exposition is that which cometh nextly to be discussed viz. The causes of this state and condition of those who are thus borne of God and the Reasons investing that universall Proposition every one that is borne of God cannot sinne with a necessary truth In the Reasons added of the former affirmation there is an emphaticall distribution of the two parts of the praedicate of the former Proposition by the way of ascending to a more vehement confirmation of them He that is borne of God sinneth not But why so His seed remaineth neither can be sinne why so because he is borne of God It is an expressive pursuit of the same thing and not a redoubling of the Proposition And this contexture of the Words is so emphatically significant that it seemeth strange how any head of opposition can be made against it There is no reason then to resolve the words into two Propositions of distinct consideration each from other it being one and the same thing that the Apostle intendeth to expresse though proceeding to heighten the certainty of the thing in the minds of them to whom he delivered it by the contexture of the words which he maketh use of What is meant or intended by the seed of God we need not dispute the Argument of the Apostle lieth not in the words seed of God nor in the word abideth but in the whole The seed of God abideth and therefore it were to no purpose at all to follow M. Goodwin in his considerations of the word Seed and then of the seed of God and then of the word abideth divided one from another The summe of his long answer is The word Seed doth not
import any such thing as is aimed at from the Text nor the word abide but to the whole proposition the seed of God abideth in him as produced to confirme the former assertion of the not sinning of the Persons spoken of there is nothing spoken at all I shall therefore briefely confirme the Argument in hand by the strength here communicated unto it by the Holy Ghost and then consider what is answered to any part of it or objected to the interpretation insisted on That he that sinneth not neither can sinne in the sence explained shall never fall away totally or finally from God is granted That Believers sinne not nor can sinne so or in the manner mentioned besides the Testimony of the Holy Ghost worthy of all acceptation in the cleare assertion of it we have the Reason thereof manifested in the discovery of the causes of its truth The first Reason is Because the seed of God abideth in them A tacite grant seemeth to be made that fruit sometimes may not visibly appeare upon them as the case is with a Tree in winter when it casts its leaves but its seed remaineth Grace may abide in the habit in and under a winter of Temptation though it doth not exert its selfe in bearing any such actuall fruit as may be ordinarily visible The Word of God is sometimes called seed incorruptible seed causatively as being an instrument in the hand of God whereby he planteth the seed of Life and holinesse in the heart That it is not the outward word but that which is produced and effected by it through the efficacy of the Spirit of God that is by seed intended is evident from the use and nature of it And it is abiding in the Person in whom it is Whatever it is it is called seed not in respect of that from whence it cometh as is the cause and Reason of that appellation of other seed but in respect of that which it produceth which ariseth and insueth upon it and it is called the seed of God because God useth it for the Regeneration of his Being from God being the principle of the Regeneration of them in whom it is abiding in them even when it hath brought forth fruit and continuing so to doe it can be no other but the New Creature New Nature inward Man new principle of Life or habit of Grace that is bestowed upon all Believers whence they are Regenerate quickned or borne againe of which we have spoken before This seed saith the Holy Ghost abideth §. 67. or remaineth in him Whatever falling or withering He may seeme to have or hath this seed the seed of God remaineth in him The principle of his new life abideth some exceptions are made as we shall see afterwards to the signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remaineth and instances given where it signifyeth for to be and denoteth the essence of a thing not its duration That to abide or remaine is the proper signification of the word I suppose will not be questioned That it may in some place be used in another sence is not dispuited All that lyeth under consideration here is whether the word in this place be used properly according to its genuine and first signification or no It supposeth indeed to be also but properly signifieth only to abide or remaine Now if nothing can be advanced from the Text ot context from the matter treated on or the paralell significancy of some expression that is in conjunction with it that should inforce us to carry it from its proper use and signification the instancing of other places if any such be wherein it is restrained to denote being and not duration is altogether impertinent to the businesse in hand When an Argument is urged from any place of Scripture to pick out any word in the Text and to manifest that it hath been used improperly in some other place and therefore must be so in that is a procedure so farre from an ingenious Answer that it will scarce passe for a tolerable shift or evasion To remaine then or to abide is the proper signification of this word nothing is in the least offered to manifest that it must necessarily in this place be diverted from its proper use According to the import of the word the seed of God remaineth in Believers now that remaining of the seed is the cause of their not sinning that sinne or in that manner as the Apostle here denyeth them to be liable to sinne For that is the Reason he giveth why they cannot sinne even because the seed of God remaineth in them Mr Goodwin granteth that this seed remaineth in Believers alwayes unlesse they sinne by a totall defection from God Of not sinning the sinne of totall de●ection from God the remaining or abiding of this seed is the cause Whilst that abideth they cannot sinne that sin for it is an unquestionable cause uncontrouleable of their not so doing This seed therefore must be utterly lost and taken away before any such sinne can be committed Now if the seed cannot be lost without the commission of the sinne which cannot be committed till it be lost neither can the seed be lost nor the sin becommited The same thing cannot be before and after its selfe He that cannot go sucha journey unlesse he have such a horse cannot have such a horse unlesse he go such a journey is like to stay at home In what sence the words cannot sin are to be taken was before declared That there are sins innumerable whereinto men may fall notwithstanding this seed is confessed Under them all this seed abideth so it would not do under that which we cannot sin because it abideth but because it abideth that sin cannot be committed The latter part of the Reason of the Apostles assertion §. 68. is for he is borne of God which is indeed a driving on the former to its head and fountaine What it is to be borne of God we need not dispute It was sufficiently discovered in the mention that was made before of the seed of God God by his Holy Spirit bestowing on us a new Spirituall Life which by nature we have not and in respect of whose want we are said to be dead is frequently said to beget us James 1. 14. And we are said to be borne of God He is the Soveraigne disposer dispenser and supreme fountaine of that Life which is so bestowed on us which we are begotten againe unto and are borne with and by And Jesus Christ the Mediatour is also said to have this Life in himselfe Joh 5. because he hath received the spirit of the father to give to his for their quickning who taketh of his and thereby begeteth them a new And this Life which Believers thus receive and whereby indeed radically they become Believers is every where in Scripture noted as Permanent and abiding In respect of the originall of it it is said to be from above
not the least service for God but labouring to stirre up strife in his Family to set his poore children and their heavenly Father at variance filling them with hard thoughts of him As one that takes little or no care for them And discouraging them in that obedience which he requireth at their hands continually belying their Father to them and that in reference to the most desireable Excellencies of his Faithfulnesse Truth Mercy and Grace never speaking one good or comfortable word to them all their daies nor once urging them to doe their duty But with-holding a rodde yea Scorpions over their backs And casting the eternall flames of Hell into their faces this is that sanguine indeed truly spiritually bloudy Complexion of this new Nurse which is offered to be received in the roome of that sad Melancholy piece of the Perseverance of the Saints Thus then he proceeds The Consolation of true Believers depends upon their obedience their obedience is farthered by this Doctrine and therefore their Consolation also Ans. What are the springs of true spirituall heavenly Consolation the consolation which God is willing Believers should receive whence it flowes the meanes of its continuance and increase how remote it is from a sole dependency on our own Obedience hath been in part before declared But yet if the next Assertion can be made good viz. That the Doctrine of the Saints Apostasy hath a tendency instituted of God to the promotion of their Obedience and Holinesse I shall not contend about the other concerning the issuing of their consolation from thence All that really is offered in the behalfe of Apostasy as to its serviceablenesse in this kind is that it is suited to ingenerate in Believers a feare of Hell which will put them upon all wayes of mortifying the flesh and the fruits of it which otherwise would bring them thereunto And is this indeed the great mistery of the Gospell Is this Christs way of dealing with his Saints Or is it not a falling from Grace to returne againe unto the Law Those of whom alone we speak who are concerned in this busines are all of them taken into the Glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God are every one of them partakers of that Spirit with whom is liberty are all indued with a living principle of Grace Faith and Love and are constrained by the Love of Christ to live to him are all under Grace and not under the Law have their sinnes in some measure begun to be mortifyed and the flesh with the lusts thereof the old man with all his wayes and wiles crucifyed by the Death and Crosse of Christ brought with their power and efficacy by the Spirit into their hearts are all delivered from that bondage wherein they were for feare of Death and Hell all their dayes by having Christ made Redemption unto them I say that these persons should be most effectually stirred up to Obedience by the dread and terrour of that Iron rod of vengeance and Hell and that they should be so by Gods appointment is such a new such another Gospell as if preached by an Angell from Heaven we should not receive That indeed no motive can be taken from hence or from any thing in the Doctrine by Mr Goodwin contended for suited to the principle of Gospell Obedience in the Saints that no sin or lust whatsoever was ever mortifyed by it that it is a clog hinderance burthen to all Saints as far as they have to do with it in the wayes of God hath bin before demonstrated And therefore leaving it withall the Consolation that it affords unto those who of God are given up thereunto we proceed to the Consideration of another Argument his eighth in this case which is thus proposed Sect. 37. That Doctrine which evacuates and turnes into weakenesse and folly §. 5. all the gracious councells of the Holy Ghost which consist partly in the diligent information which he gives unto the Saints from place to place concerning the hostile cruell and bloudy mind and intention of Sathan against them partly in detecting and making knowne all his subtile stratagems his plots methods and dangerous Machinations against them partly also in furnishing them wiih speciall weapons of all sorts whereby they may be able to grapple with him and to tryumph over him partly againe in those frequent admonitions and Exhortations to quit themselves like men in resisting him which are found in the Scripture And lastly in professing his feare least Sathan should circumvent and deceive them that Doctrine I say which reflects disparagement and vanity upon all these most serious and gracious applycations of the Holy Ghost must needs be a Doctrine of vanity and errour And consequently that which opposeth it by a like necessity a truth But such is the common Doctrine of absolute and infallible Perseverance Ergo. Ans. Not to ingage into any needlesse contest about wayes of Arguing §. 6. when the designe and strength of the Argument is evident I shall only remarke two things upon this First the Holy Ghost professing his feare least Sathan should beguile Believers is a mistake It was Paul that was so afraid not the Holy Ghost though he wrote that feare by the appointment and inspiration of the Holy Ghost The Apostle was jealous least the Saints should by the craft of Sathan be seduced into errours and miscarriages which yet argues not their finall defection this indeed he records of himselfe but of the feares of the Holy Ghost arising from his uncertainty of those issue of the things and want of power to prevent the coming on of the things feared I suppose there is no mention And Secondly that the consequent of the supposition in the inference made upon it is not so cleare to me as to Mr Goodwin viz. Suppose any Doctrine to be false whatsoever Doctrine is set up in opposition to it is true I have knowne and so hath Mr Goodwin also when the truth hath layen between opposite Doctrines assaulted by both entertained by neither with these Observations I passe the Major of this Sillogisme the Minor he thus confirmes If the Saints be in no possibility of being finally overcome by Satan or of Miscarrying in the great and most important businesse of their Salvation by his snares and subtilties §. 7. all that operousnesse and diligence of the Holy Ghost in those late mentioned Addressements of his unto them in order to their finall conquest over Satan will be found of very light consequence of little concernement to them yea if the said Addressements of the Holy Ghost be compared with the State and Condition of the Saints as the said Doctrine of Perseverance representeth and affirmeth it to be the utter uselesnesse and impertinency of them will much more evidently appeare Ans. What possibility or not possibility the Saints are in of finall Apostasy from God what assurance themselves have may have or have not concerning their Perseverance with what is the