Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n inward_a spirit_n worship_v 1,944 5 9.2934 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A93117 Sincerity and hypocricy. Or, the sincere Christian, and hypocrite in their lively colours, standing one by the other. Very profitable for this religion professing time. / By W.S. Serjeant at Law. Together with a tract annexed to prove; that true grace doth not lye so much in the degree as in the nature of it. Sheppard, William, d. 1675?; Barlow, Thomas, 1607-1691. Tract annexed to prove. 1658 (1658) Wing S3210; Thomason E1822_1; ESTC R209797 215,937 433

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

saveing faith is built upon better principles as proceeding from the Spirit of Christ and being built upon his immediate illumination and testimony which is evidently divine and infallible and so begets an assent of faith like the cause and principle from whence it comes divine and infallible Now this latter assent must of necessity differ from the former more then in degrees Now I beleive that no sober and intelligent person who understands Philosophy and Metaphysiques will say that an assent which is humane dubious and Incertaine differs onely gradually from an assent which is divine and most infallibly certaine as proceeding from and relying immediately upon the Testimony of the regenerateing Spirit of Christ For the further explication of this take this Instance This conclusion Omnis homo habet potentiam Intellectivam is the same material object of Science properly so call'd and Opinion but formally different So that those 2. Habits though they have the same objectum materiale yet they have objectum formaliter diversum Which formal difference is taken from the tendentia and Habitudo those two Assents have to that object in relation to severall a Vide Martini Smiglecii Logicam Dispurat 11. Quaest 2. pag. 414. mediums produceing such assents For he that assents to this conclusion Omnis homo habet potentiam Intellectivam per medium necessarium demonstrativum his assent like the medium which produces it is necessary and scientifical But he that assents per medium probabile onely his assent proportionable to the medium which inferres it is onely probable and opinative So that although that Conclusion be the object of science and opinion too and be materially the same yet it is formally a different object from whence ariseth not only a gradual but a formall and specificall difference between science and opinion For many probable mediums may dispose to an higher probability and produce an habituall and more firme opinion but all the probable mediums in the world can never produce science a necessary and infallible assent that being an assent of a higher not degree onely but nature which no argument lesse then demonstrative can possibly produce So that as opinion and science though about the same conclusion are Habits specifically distinct and knowne and confessed to be so by reason of the different mediums which produce such assents so likewise are common and saveing faith more then gradually different by reason of the several mediums and motives which are the Premisses and foundations upon which those assents are built and constitute their objects in a several formality and habitude in relation to those Assents To bring all this home to our present purpose I grant that common and saveingly beleiveing Christians may beleive these and such like conclusions Christ dyed for us satisfyed Gods justice interceeds for us with his Father c. to be divine truthes 2 But they can have no greater assurance of the divine truth of these conclusions then they have of the mediums and premisses which inferre them 3. Hypocrites and impious persons who may have common faith have no premisses to inferre them but such as are humane and dubious at least not absolutely infallible that is they have onely Topicall and probable arguments such as the authority of their teachers of councells Fathers and Tradition c. If it be said they have Scripture for them I reply that the same Question returnes what mediums and motives have they to beleive that to be Gods word for their assent to the divine truth of Gods word can be no firmer and certaine then the premisses which inferre that assent Now Hypocrites neither have nor can have any premisses or motives to beleive the Divinity of that word but such as I named before that is Topical and probable inducements and ergo their assent proportionable to those motives must of necessity be onely probable and opinative But on the other side regenerate persons who are borne of God and have true saveing faith have surer and more infallible principles which induce them to beleive and know the divine truth of those conclusions For besides all those inducements which Hypocrites have they have the inward testimony of the Spirit of God beareing witnesse to those truthes That this may appeare I say 1. That 't is evident that all regenerate persons have the a Rom. 8. 9. Spirit of Christ dwelling in them 2. It is as evident that this good Spirit of Christ gives testimony to these saveing truthes and conclusions Inlightening the understandings of his childeren that they may know the truth and omnipotentissima facilitate induceing their assents for 1. Our Soviour saith b John 7. 17. If any man will doe his will he shall know of the truth of the doctrine whether it be of God c. He shall know when others shall not And ergo holy regenerate persōs have some c Deus illustrat eos qui vitiis suis non patrocinantur H. Grotius in Joh. 7. 17. Glossa Ordin Si ●is intelligere crede Si quis credit in filium Dei cognoscet de Doctrina c. better meanes of knowing truth then Hypocrites have 2. Hence the regenerate are said to be ledd by the d Rom. 8. 14. John 16. 13. Spirit of God and he leads them into all truth at least all necessary truth if it be e And if in this place it be granted to be meant onely of the Apostles yet you have the same expression by he same John extended to other beleivers 1 Joh. 2. 20. meant of any but the Apostles And no question the Spirit of truth doth in some proportion teach the truth and illuminate the understandings of all those who are borne of God He is as Tertullian calls him Vicarius Christi Spiritus his deputy as to his prophetical Office and as Christ taught he truth in person while here so he still teacheth it by his Spirit being gone 3. If you continue in my word saith our a John 8. 32. Saviour then are you my disciples indeed and ye shall know the truth They shall when Hypocrites shall not who continue not in his word and therefore are not his disciples indeed Ye shall know the truth by the illumination of the Spirit and his confirmation of you in it Whence it is said that we are b 2 Cor. 1. 21. 22. unxit nos scilicet Spiritu Sancto Primasius in locum Vide Johan Calvini Instir lib. 3. cap. 2. Staplet de sola fide Justif lib. 8. cap. 25. pag. 399. c. annoynted sealed by the Spirit and established and he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pignus the earnest given in part to assure us of all the promises c Ambrosius seu Comment quisquis sit in 2 Cor. 1. 22. pag. 886. in edit Eras Qui signavit nos dando Spiritum Sanctum nobis pignus ut non ambigamus de promissis ejus Hypocrites those who have common faith onely have no
such principle to assure them of the promises and therefore no such infallibility in their faith And a most learned Commentator on the same Text to the same purpose on these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that establisheth you with us and annoints you is God Adds thus a Hug. Grotius in 2 Cor. 1. 21. pag. 459. Qui confirmat nos in Christo i. e. In side Christi Et unxit nos spirituali unctione Spiritus Sancti Dionys Carthusianus in loc pag. 260. A Deo procedit ista Vnctio id est Spiritus operatio interior FIDEM in Christo FVLCIENS ET ROBORANS So that in the regenerate not so in hypocrites and those who have onely common faith the internal operation of the Spirit doth support and roborate and confirme their faith in Christ 4. And to this purpose is that of S. John b 1 John 2. 20. Hinc fit ut docente vos interius Spiritu Sancto minus indigeatis hominum Institutione Beda in loc pag. 119. But ye have an unction from the holy Ghost and know all things and need not that any man teach you save as that annointeing teacheth you Whence it is evident that the holy Ghost teacheth the regenerate all things that is all necessary things at least in reference to their seducers c Grotius in 1 John 2. 20. Quod ait 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intellige quae ad vitandos impostores erant necessaria And although the Papists miserably pervert this Text yet they grant that by unction here the Holy Ghost is meant d Estius in 1● John 2. 20. pag. 1267. col 6. c. Quo velut oleo mentes fidelinm persundit Christus multiplicem eis gratiam largiendo tum Doctrine tum Scientiae 5. Lastly by the Testimony of the Holy Spirit within they who are borne of God may and doe know that God is reconciled to them and is now their a Rom. 8. 15. 16. Father that he b 1 John 3. 24. dwelleth in them and therefore that their sins are pardoned c. This blessed Spirit is a c 1 eohn 5. 6. witnesse in the hart of all true beleivers and d 1 John 5. 10. Rom. 8. 16. Ephes 1. 17. testifyes of the truth of their faith and as S. Paul tells us beareth witnesse with our Spirits that we are the Childeren of God But enough of this if not too much for I am persuaded there is hardly any thing in Scripture more manifest then this That all regenerate persons have the Spirit of Christ in them which testifyes and beares witnesse to the truth of the Ghospel beleived by them illuminates their understandings that they may know it and is a seale and confirmation of their assent to it So that saveing faith in regenerate persons relying upon the inward testimony of the Spirit of Christ which common beleivers have not a Divine and Infallible Testimony their faith must of necessity differ from the faith of Hypocrites more then onely in degree 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod erat demonstrandum And here give me leave to ad these considerations 1. That they of Rome laugh and jeare at our Divines when they speake of this Inward testimony and call it a Vid. Tho. Stapletonum de Authorit Interpretandi Scriptur Controvers 6. lib. 10. cap. 4. pag. 359. c. 360. private Spirit and so thinke to fright us out of our true faith with false calumnies and a good opinion with bad names Ans Non sic abibunt odia We will not cannot be jeared out of our profession and a manifest Ghospell truth All we say is this 1. That the regenerateing Spirit of Christ is in all his reall members in every true Christian who is indeed borne of God 2. That the good Spirit is 1. A Spirit of illumination inabling them to know 2. Of corroboration and confirmation inabling them to assent to the truth so discovered and knowne and. 3. A Spirit which workes adhesion constancy and perseverance in that truth by beareing witnesse with our Spirits and giveing testimony to that truth and victoriously assisting the regenerate in continueing in it against all temptations and persecutions whatsoever Whereas the want of this is the reason why those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the common and temporary beleivers fall away and loose that which they seeme to have Now this Spirit which onely we assert is noe private Spirit as they ignorantly or malitiously would make the world beleive but the publick spirit of the true Catholique Church the Mysticall body of Christ which actuates and animates every member of of that great body and communicates spirituall life to it a Vid. Johan Calvini Instit lib. 3. cap. 2. penè per totū Calvin nor any sober Protestant Divine sayes no more and they b Vid. Thom. Stapletonum de Authoritate Interpretandi Script Controvers 6. lib. 10 cap. 4. pag. 359. 360. sequēt Aquin. 1. 2. Quaest 68. Art 1. in resp ad Arg. 2. 3. themselves though with much Sophistry and impertinency they would palliate the businesse after great Tragedies and longe harangues to obscure the truth in the Issue neither dare nor doe say lesse 2. Why but all heresies and sects pretend to the spirit Anabaptists Seekers Quakers c. And possibly at least some of them really beleive they have it and yet run into wild and monstrous errors both of saith fact fitter to be conceal'd and buryed in eternall silence then repeated And therefore little heed to be given to this pretēce of the spirit Answere 1. That this our age and Country hath been unhappily fruitful quae est fundi nostri calamitas in produceing wild herefies and I feare it is the crime of our Nation as well as the calamity 2. That these as nothing else in the world come by change a Pagan could tell us a Sophocles in Ajace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 385. pag. 36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 'T is the good providence of God which for reasons infinitely wise in themselves though many times unknowne to us permits their ingresse into the world puts limits and bounds to and orders their progresse to the glory of his name the good of his owne and the punishment of others and for their egresse will in his good time put a period to them That he will speedily doe it is my b Bona quaedam spes habet animum meum fore● ut hanc Ecclesiae tempestatem dominus inscrutabili suo Consilio vertat in bonos exitus excitetque nobis Irenaeos aliquot qui compositis dissidiis pacem orbi restituant D Erasmus Epist Nuncuparoria Epis Tridentino Jrenaeo praefixâ hope and prayer Haereses orationibus suspiciis Lacrimis sunt refellendae their refutation may possibly be as soon effected by our prayers and piety as by our pens 3. But what if Heretiques falsely pretend to the Spirit of truth shall their lye make the direction and illumination of that
1. 2. and dangerous Errors under glorious pretences Rom. 16. 18. These things are considerable as to workes And this not only whether it be a work really done from his heart that doth it but that it be such a work as is good and ought to be done And so Hypocrisie and Sincerity are considerable in relation to all the actings of a mans whole life as that of Amaziah 2 Chron. 25 2. Scribes and Pharises Mat. 23. and others 1 Kings 8. 62. Or to some particular actings of a mans life as that Gal. 2. 10. 2 Chron. 29. 34. 1 Kings 8. 48. 1 Chron 12. 38. 2 Chron 19. 10. Hypocrisy also as to the work may be said to be either expresse which is either where the thing done is being a good thing and commanded by God is done either against the heart or not with the whole heart or to a good but to a sinister end So Jer. 3. 10. Phill. 6. 5 6 7. Coll. 3. 23 22. Hosea 7. 16. Or it is Implicite and interpretative And so are all the glorious works of Piety Mercy Charity and Justice done by the Professor of Religion by men out of Christ and without Faith though done with never so much seeming integrity seeing they are not of faith without which it is impossible to please God For as the works are but Splendida peccata glorious sinnes so are they in some degree more or lesse done in Hypocrisie and they Hypocrites that doe them 1 King 21. 27 28 29 Acts 26. 29. And all these things thus done in Hypocrisie as before in any sort are opposed to the sincere obedience of the Faithfull Deut. 30. 10. 2 Kings 23. 25. 2 Jo. 4. Jer 24. 7. Esay 29. 13. Of such Hypocrites as we have spoken of that are rotten at heart there are diverse sorts There are Hypocriticall Nations that is such Nations as live not up to their Profession Such was the Jewish Nation Isa 10. 6. And such is any Nation now professing the Christian Religion that live not becoming Christians And there are Hypocriticall persons And amongst these Hypocriticall The Grosse Hypocritie Persons There are Grosse Hypocrites and Refined Hypocrites The Grosse Hypocrite is also either more Grosse or lesse Grosse yet both of them are very grosse The more grosse is one that either doth notoriously dissemble against his own light in what he doth of purpose to cheat and deceive others The lesse Grosse is one who doth maintain some grosse Errors or live in some grosse practise of Sinne. There are Hypocrites in Opinion The Nature of his Hypocrisie and Hypocrites in Action The Hypocrite in Opinion we call him that pretendeth to Truth of opinion to hold forth the very truths of God out of love unto them and yet maintaineth Error and Heresie And the Hypocrite in Action we call him that pretendeth to holinesse of life and reall cōformity to Gods will without in his conversation where he hath no inward and hearty affection thereunto And both these are either more grosse or more refined The more grosse Hypocrite in Opinion is one who maketh a great shew outwardly of holding forth Gods Truth where he is inwardly in his heart such an enemy to it that he spreadeth abroad his errors and this he doth knowingly and of purpose to deceive So it is more then probable did the Pharises in some of their opinions which they could not but know to be Erroneous So some of the Gnosticks of old taught a lawfulnesse in Christians to commit Fornication by a Gospell liberty and to deny Christ in case of persecution to save themselves from death So Papists and other Hereticks now who teach unlawfulnes of marriages of meats and other such like things contrary to the clear evidence of the word These no doubt many of them did and doe know that they did and doe maintain Errors and Heresies and yet they did and doe continue to maintain them for some advantage to themselves 1 Tim. 4. 2. Speaking lyes in Hypocrisie The more Grosse Hypocrite in Action or practise is he that assumeeth a forme of Godlinesse and pretends to a forsaking of sinne and infidelity by Faith and Repentance within him when he hath only the shew and appearance thereof And he neither hath nor intendeth or desireth to have or doe any such thing and knoweth he doth dissemble and doth it of purpose to deceive others thereby This indeed is an Hypocrite in graine or an Hypocrite in the highest degree when a man shall pretend to the Truth of Religion and doth make it his whole designe trade or work therein to act Hypocrisie only Such a one is said to be a Cheator or Juglor that sheweth tricks and maketh appearances of things that really are not so as they appeare the same word in the originall it is said serveth for both And he is compared to a person disguised or a Stage-player who in the sight of others may act the part of a King or honest man but when he is in his tyring house is but a base varlet and he knowes himselfe to be so And such an Hypocrite the Devill is that sometimes appears like an Angell of light that he may doe the more mischief we call him so that Saints may not be ignorant of his wiles and the Scripture warrants it 2 Cor. 11. 14. Mark 1. 24. And so when he appears most innocently and piously he acts most wickedly and dangerously so Joab covered his perfidiousnesse to Abner and Amasa with friendly words and Syren like salutations when he murthered them 2 Sam. 2. 27. and 20. 9. And Ismael covered his bloody purpose to kill the eighty men Crocodile-like with Teares Jer 41. 6. Such were the Scribes and Pharisees who Viper-like covered their venemous teeth under their gumms of glorious shews and pretences Mat. 22. 15 16 Jo. 8. 3 6. Luke 10. 25 26. Such were Cain Saul and others mentioned in Scripture who made their Religion and profession a cloak only for the wickednesse And such a one is Antichrist the Arch-hypocrite of the World who covereth his Lyons teeth and Serpents taile with Womans haire a Mans face and the hornes of a Lamb Rev. 9. 8. 13. 1. So false teachers do cover themselves and their Wolfish cruelty with sheeps cloathing Mat. 7. 15. and these Scribes and Pharises made their Religion but a colour and cloak for their wickednesse Mat. 23. 14. Woe unto you Scribes Pharises Hypocrites for you devoure Widdowes Houses and for a pretence make long prayers c. So Absalom pretended the worship of God Zeale to Justice and love to the people of God when he intended nothing but the advancement of himselfe to the Crown with the death of his Father 2 Sam. 15. 2. to the 11. so Iehu pretends to a zealous Reformation in Religion and execution of Gods command when he intended nothing but his own advancement to the Throne 2 King 10. 15 16 17 18 30 31. So those named in Rev. 2. 9.
there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth Psalm 125. 5. And as he is of all sinners the greatest for his counterfeit holyness is in Gods sight a double wickedness so will his punishment in hell be the greatest Mat. 23. 14. Therefore ye shall receive the greater damnation Job 20. 5. 23 24 25. God shall rain down the fury of his wrath upon him c. He shall suck the poyson of Asps the Vipers tongue shall slay him c. God shall cast the fury of his wrath upon him All darknes shall be hid in his secret places and fire not blown shall consume him c. This is the portion appointed to such a man by God And this portion is the portion of unbelevers expressed in Ps 11 6. Vpon the wicked he shall rain snares fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest this shall be the portion of their cup they shall be cut asunder and torn in pieces there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Luke 12. 46. compared with Mat. 24. 51. the Lord of that servant shall come c. and shall cut him asunder and appoint him his portion with the hypocrites there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Psalm 50. 16. 22. Now consider this ye that forget God least I tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver CHAP. XIII Arguments to perswade to Sincerity and against Hypocrisie in Services AND now to perswade us to Sincerity in our particular Works and Services especially in the service of God we may take up and use these motives 1 God is upright in his work and all that he doth he doth in uprightnesse and wee are to be followers of God Ier. 32. 41. And I will plant them c. with my whole heart and whole soul Ephes 5. 1. Be ye therefore followers of God as dear children 2 God requires uprightness in us in all that we doe in his service Heb. 20 22. Let us draw near with a true heart c. Deut. 10. 12. And now Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to fear the Lord c. and to serve the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul 1 Sam. 12. 20. 1 Pet. 1. 2. Love one another with a pure heart fervently 1 Sam. 12 10. Rom. 12. 8 9. 1 Chr. 28. 9. 3 This sincere service agreeth with the nature of God whom we serve 1 For he is a Spirit Iohn 4. 24. God is a spirit and must be worshipped in spirit and truth 2 He is a great King Mal. 1. 14. For I am a great king saith the Lord of hosts my name is dreadful c. He is not as man but as far above man as the heavens are above the earth Ps 55. 9. Mal. 1. 6. A son honoureth his father and a servant his master If I then be a father where is mine honour and if I be a master where is my fear saith the Lord of Hosts unto you O Priests that despise my name Eccles 5. 1 2. Keep thy foot when thou goest into the house of God c. For God is in heaven and thou upon earth c. 4 This is Gospel service and fit for Gospel times and Gospel worshippers and such service as God doth call for Ioh. 4. 23. The hour cometh and now is when the true worshippers shall worship him in spirit and truth for the Father seeketh such to worship him Jer. 24. 7. with 3. 10. Ezek. 36. 26 27. 5 This is the only beautiful and excellent service where there is an harmony and consent between the soul and the body in the work Heb. 11. 4 6. By faith Abel offered to God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain 6 By this the meanest service may become a glorious work have much acceptance and reward from God Luke 21. 2. the widdows two mites Mat. 10. 42. And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water onely in the name of a disciple verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his reward Exod. 1. 17 21 22. Jer. 35. 18 19. 7 Such are the services of the true servants of God 1 Thes 2. 3. Ps 119 7. 2 Tim. 2. 22. 8 The services so done only are accepted and wil be rewarded with God 1 Chron. 28. 9. Neh. 13. 14. Ezek. 18 24. 9 For no outward service can or doth please God or is accepted with him for it self or the work done but as it is joyned with sinceritie in the inward worship of Faith and love to God a desire to please and purpose to obey him Gen. 4. 4. Ps 51. 16 17. For thou desirest not sacrifice c. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Isa 66. 1 2 3. But to this man will I look even to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my word He that killeth an oxe c. Hosea 8. 13. and 9. 4. Amos 5. 21. Micah 6. 7 8. Heb 11. 4. 10 The Hypocritical service is a lye and a lye not to men so much as to God Hosea 11. 12. Ephraim compasseth me about with lyes c. Acts 5. 3. 11 The Hypocritical service albeit it be not despised by men yet God doth know it and will make it known to others to the shame of him that doth it 1 Chr. 28. 9. And then Solomon know thou the God c. and serve him with a perfect heart c. for the Lord searcheth all hearts and underst●●deth all the imaginations of the thoughts c. Mat. 6. 5 6. Mat. 19. 29. with Ps 44. 21 22. And it is not onely not accepted but sleighted of God it being a grievous sin a pollution and prophanation of Gods name it is a provocation of his wrath and doth draw down grievous judgements upon men that doe so perform it Mal. 1. 7. 13. 14. Should I accept this saith the Lord c. But cursed be the deceiver which hath in his flock a male and voweth and sacrificeth unto the Lord a corrupt thing Lev. 10. 8. Ezek. 23. 38. Numb 18. 32. Ob. But here may be objected that hypocritical service hath had a reward 2 Kings 11. 18 19 20. 1 Kings 17. 18 c 27 28 29. 2 Kings 10. 14 15. c. Ans It cannot be denyed but that God may sometimes doth give for an outward hypocritical service for the work done because it is that he would have done a temporal reward But this will not at all preserve him from the punishment of the hypocrisie of his service here nor help to prevent the eternall punishment that will unavoidably come upon him for it hereafter Mat. 6. 5 6. and 23. 33. 2 King 10. 14 c. compared with Hosea 1. 4. CHAP. XIV Meanes or helpes to get and keepe Sinceritie IF any now shall desire and will labour for sincerity and would know by what meanes he may get
good spirit ineffectuall to those who are so happy as indeed to have it Was the title of the Athenian merchants any worse to their ships which came into the Piraea or Port of Athens because the madd man in the story thonght and confidently said they were all his May not those who have good and well disposed eyes see and certainely know the objects they looke upon are immoveable and fix'd because they who have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quibus omnia rotari circumferri videntur thinke otherwise The mad man in the Tragedy said and I doubt not beleived it too that he saw two sunnes and another Thebes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and yet those who were not guilty of so much Phrensie did and might trust their owne eyes that both Thebes and the the sunne were single The Church of Rome was sure enough of the truth of her beleife by the Ghospell and the good Spirit of God confirmeing and witnesseing the truth of it to their soules even then when Donatus sayd that the Church and Spirit of Christ was onely in him and his faction Those first and commonly call'd purest times haveing a Vid. Jrenaei lib. 5. advers Haereses cum Epist Erasmi Nuncupatoria Augustinum de Haeresibus ad Quod vult Deum cum Notis Lamb. Danaei Gen. 1595. Philastrii Brixiensis Catalogum Haeresium cum Supplemento Helm 1611. Epiphanii Responsad Epist Acacii Pauli libros 3. adversus Haereses as many and as wild Heresies as we now The truth is the errors and heresies of those who confidently pretend to the Spirit of Christ but have it not are no prejudice to or argument against those who are so happy as to have it but that they may and ought to rely upon the witnesse and Divine testimony it gives to the truth So that their faith and theirs onely is divine not onely respectu objecti the sacred word of God containeing the truthes beleived but respectu principii too the regenerateing Spirit of Christ from whom their understandings have divine illumination to know and strength and confirmation to beleive and obey the truth 4. I have onely this to add that this witnesse and testimony of the spirit is onely argumentum ad intra a convinceing argument to him that has it whereon he may rely and be assured himselfe not argumentum ad extra whereby he may convince others This is that inward witnesse which did so confirme the primitive persecuted Christians in their faith so persuade and convince their understandings of the present truth of the Ghospel and that all the gratious promises contained in it would be fulfilled and made good for the future that they who could not dispute could and did dy for their faith and that with so much courage and miraculous constancy as amazed their persecutors and made even the Pagan world beleive that such strange courage and confidence in the losse of what this world calls dearest livelyhood life too could not proceed from any principle lesse then divine Whence it was that Sanguis Martyrum was semen Ecclesiae the death of many old gave life to more new Christians Sed manum de tabula enough of this Rat. 6. If saveing and common grace be essentially the same then irregenerate and impious persons who may and many times have common graces might be call'd and indeed were as truely gracions and as truely beleivers as the best Saints and Sonns of God although not in so high a degree For by this hypothesis against which we now dispute they have as true faith and grace as regenerate persons themselves seeing common in the wicked and speciall grace in the regenerate are by this hypothesis essentially the same For as the smallest wire of good gold is as truely gold as the whole wedge though not so much and as a body hot in the second or third degree is as truely hot as that which has heate in the 6. or 8. degree So if common grace in hypocrites and saveing grace in the Saints be essentially the same then such impious persons for common grace may be in such may be justly call'd as true beleivers and as truely gratious as the most regenerate persons in the world But this is certainely untrue and repugnant to the receaved and cleare principles of Divinity and Philosophy too The Morall Philosopher truely tells us that a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist de moribus lib. 2. cap. 5. Commentatores universi ib. virtus est habitus rectâ ratione electivus prout vir prudens definiverit So that he that has not morall prudens that great Virtus directiva has indeed no morall vertue for all vertues as Philosophers b Vides is Aristotelem Ethic. lib. 6. cap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Idem habent A. Aphrodisaeus G. Pachymerius G. Burlaeus Commētatores in Aristotelem universi ut Scholastici ut videre est apud Aquinat 1. 2. Quaest 63. Art 1. c. quem sequuntur Medina Suarez Vasquez Universa Scholasticorum turba universaly aggree sunt in prudentia connexae Now c 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Qui voluptate corruptus est ei statim principii videndi facultas eripitur neque cernere potest se hujus rei causa omnia agere opor tere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Ethic. lib. 6. cap. 5. Vide Aphrodisaeū Averroem Eustratium Hyperiū eâ de re idē asserentes Aristotle saith truely that no vitious person is or can be prudent vice and the irregular passions in such corrupting that great vertue And ergo wicked men whatever common graces or vertues they may seeme to have neither are nor can be truely vertuous no not in respect of Morall vertues 2. And. ergo much lesse in respect of those vertues we call Theologicall as wanteing faith which is the first and foundation of all Theologicall Vertues and Christian prudence all wicked men being in scripture phrase and really fooles But I shall not insist upon this which I believe no sober person will deny if they should 'tis by a Vid. Baron Exercitat de Fide c. Art 30. pag. 279. Rat. 7. others proved 7. M. Baxter b Aphorismes in explicat Thes 69. pag. 277. tells us 1. That the wills acceptance of Christ is the essentiall forme of saveing and true justifying faith 2. That love to Christ as our saviour and Lord is c Ibid. pag. 266. essentiall to this acceptance Whence I inferre thus If the essence of saveing faith consist in accepting Christ and loveing him as our Lord and Saviour then those who doe not so love and accept him have not the essence of saveing faith but no irregenerate person lett him have what common faith he will doth so accept and love Christ as it evident and ergo No irregenerate person hath the essence of true saveing faith Now this being granted it further followes That common and saveing beliefe are not essentially the same