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A37598 The honey-combe of free justification by Christ alone collected out of the meere authorities of Scripture and common and unanimous consent of the faithfull interpreters and dispensers of Gods mysteries upon the same, especially as they expresse the excellency of free justification / preached and delivered by Iohn Eaton ... Eaton, John, 1574 or 5-1641. 1642 (1642) Wing E115 344,226 528

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despising of God appearing in all that Majesty and a contemning of that high authority of the law-giver so terribly appearing yea the sinner by his lust and concupiscence against the law doth as it were trample under the feet of his affections all that Majesty of God that was manifested in such fearefull thundering and lightening Is it any marvell then that God said unto David Why hast thou despised me in doing that which is evill in my sight 2 Sam. 12. 9 10. 2 Sam. 12. 9 10. Secondly hereby sinne is become rebellion against God as Daniel confessed saying We have sinned and broken thy Commandements and have rebelled against thee Dan. 9. 5 6. But how horrible Dan. 9. 5 6. Rebellion is Samuel declareth saying Rebellion is as the sinne of witchcraft and transgression is wickednesse and idolatry 1 Sam. 15. 23. And thus the Law entring 1 Sam. 15. 23. upon sinne doth make the fault thereof so greatly to abound Rom. 5. 20. that sinne is made out of measure Rom. 5. 20. sinnefull by the Commandement so terribly forbidding it Rom. 7. 13. so that in sinne these six evills Rom. 7. 13. doe concurre first a despising and contempt of the 1 Contemptus majestatis Dei● 2 Superba contumacia adversus Legem majesty of God forbidding the least sinne in such terrible thundering and lightning Secondly a proud stubbornesse against the law and revealed will of God 3 Nefanda imaginis Dei conspurcatio destructio 4 Imitatio Satau●● hostis Dei improba prodit●●ne defectione 5 Intolerabilis ingratitu●o 6 Imago Satanae Thirdly an horrible defiling and destroying of the image of God wherein man was created Fourthly an imitation and doing like the Devill the enimy of God by a wicked treason and revolting from God Fifthly an untolerable ingratitude and unthankfulnesse of the creature against the Creator Sixthly that which in it selfe is a foule and abhominable thing that sinne is the very image of the Devill which for men to beare that were made to the image of God nothing can bee more detestable the least sinne for the horriblenesse of it though it be but in thought only defiling us and all our good works and holy walking and making them in the sight of God like a menstruous cloath Mark 7. 23. Esay 64. 6. now if Mark 7. 23. Esay 64. 6. our good works be by sinne so loathsome how horrible then are our evill works have we not just cause to cry out every one of us and say with David Bee mercifull to my sinnes O Lord for they are great Psal 25. 11 The second maine thing to work this true feeling The second maine thing concerning sinne of our lost estate is to look into the multitude of our sinnes which we daily commit in thought word and deed by breaking all Gods tenne Commandements which wee must know not only in a grosse confused generality but take notice of particulars in each Commandement wherein we have offended both in leaving undone that which we should have done and by doing that which we should not have done if not in the grosse act which the world and light of nature condemnes yet in the spirituall breach which as we have heard is horrible before God For the Law Rom. 7. 14. Ioh. 4. 24. is spirituall saith S. Paul And God is a spirit saith Christ and must be obeyed and worshipped in spirit and truth and herein we may see our sinnes to be many and innumerable concerning which although I referre thee to such Catechismes as lay open Gods tenne Commandements at large for the fuller sight hereof yet to sharpen thy stomack unto Free Justification and because the Paschall Lambe must bee eaten with sowre herbs give me leave to give thee a glimse of this pure glasse of the Law that thou maist see some few spots of thy foule leprosie in the spirituall breach of all Gods Commandements As in the first Commandement namely Thou shalt have no strange gods before me containing the inward A pithy opening of the 10 Commandements worship of God though herein differing somewhat from the Gentiles thou confesse but one God which also the Devils doe yet look how many profits and pleasures doe steale away thy love feare trust and obedience from God to the committing of sinne so many idols in this lost state hast thou in the sight of God yea look how many sinnes thou dost commit in thought word and deed in a day so much thou corruptest in thee the pure inward worship of God and so many idols art thou guilty of and so many strange Gods hast thou in the sight of God Secondly in the second Commandement contayning the outward worship of God although peradventure thou makest not grosly to thy selfe any graven Image of God the father nor any Picture of Christ as the Papists doe yet look how often and how many allurements have enticed thee to neglect either the preaching or the zealous hearing of the word being offered either in season or out of season look how often thou hast neglected to bow thy knees in solemne prayer to God three times a day with Daniel David and Peter for the holy Ghost to be given thee look how often thou hast neglected to conferre as the prudent Sergius Paulus did with the faithfull minister and with other faithfull children of God to be resolved of such doubts of the assurance of thy Justification and salvation as may arise in thy minde look how often thou hast neglected either the administring or receiving of the holy Sacraments so many Images art thou guilty of that have stolne away thy heart from the zealous performance of the pure outward worship of God Thirdly in the third Commandement although peradventure thou art not guilty of grosse blaspheming of God yet look what zeale thou wantest in life for the threefold works of God upon thee as namely of Creation Redemption and continuall preservation look how often in word thou hast sworne by thy faith and troth by the fire by the light by bread or any other creature of God so often art thou guilty Christ being witnesse Mat. 5. of taking Gods Mat. 5. 34 35 36. name in vaine look how often thou hast rashly taken up and used the titles of God as Lord and Iesus and Christ who is God blessed for ever c. look how often thou hast unreverently used the properties of God as his grace to practise vanity his mercy to sinne his Judgements to cursing and hast abused his providence in crying out upon luck and fortune and such like look how often in the creatures thou not marking the power of God in making the creatures his wisedome in fitting them to thy necessities his goodnesse in giving them unto thee but turning them from their right use as the drink to drunkenesse thy tongue to lying and such like so abusing them to sinne and vanity so often art thou souly guilty of
the Gospel and that these are the things which the holy Ghost shewes unto them Christ himselfe testifies saying When the spirit of truth is come hee shall glorifie mee mark that but how or after what manner shall hee glorifie Christ it followes for hee shall take of mine namely that the blood of Jesus Christ the Sonne of God doth make us cleane in the sight of God from all sinne 1 Ioh. 1. 7. Ioh. 1. 7. Ioh. 16. 14. And shall shew it unto you Ioh. 16. 14. certainly if the spirit doe not shew us this nobody will shew it us for the whole world the flesh our own sense and feeling and the Devill do all shew us the contrary but yet saith Christ when the spirit shall come he shall judge contrary to all these for he shall judge the whole world of Beleevers in my ascension of nothing but righteousnesse verse 10. Because as Luther truly saith Verse 10. upon that place In eo enim transitupeccatum in justitiam absorptum est that is in that passage of his into heaven the sinne of Beleevers is absorpted and swallowed up into righteousnesse Whereupon it followes of necessity that such preachers as blend these two glasses and intermix them and so do darken them and such people as see not that they are cleane from all sinne in the sight of God freely may justly suspect themselves to be sensuall as Iude saith not having the Spirit shewing plainely that they see no more of the foulnesse of sin then the light of nature teacheth and so did never look rightly by the spirit into the glasse of the Law to be truly touched with the foulnesse of sin it selfe Secondly they did never look rightly into the glasse of the Gospel to see themselves translated out of sin into righteousnesse and unbeliefe being blind to discern these things of the spirit 1 Cor. 2. 14. 1 Cor. 2. 14. as before shee went about to make God blind so now shee falsifies the witnesse of the holy Ghost saying that he testifies of ●inne the work of the Divell in the justified children of God when taking only of Christ and of his benefits and shewing them to Beleevers he testifieth only of righteousnesse Iohn 16. 10. and so glorifies Ioh. 16. 10. 1 Ioh. 1. 7. Christ and his blood 1 Iohn 1. 7. THe sourth reason objected is this The Lord by Fourth Reason objected his spirit doth mortifie our sinnes daily Rom. 8. and shall he not see those sinnes which by his spirit he doth mortifie ergo the children of God are not with the wedding-garment of Christs righteousnesse made perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely To which I answer That as this reason doth seeme Answ most plausible to naturall reason so it is that by which these Objectors doe not only most of all delude and deceive themselves and others but also is the Papists cunningest thiefe which they use after the cleanliest manner to rob Christ of his glory against which my heart yearns But oh that it did burne more against it But that we may understand the deceit of this argument we must mark two things first that the expresse words of the Text in this objection serpent-like suppressed are these If ye that is the faithfull doe mortifie the deeds of the body by the spirit Rom. 8. Rom. 8. 13. 13. Secondly we must mark that this mortifying is all one with that saying of S. Iohn And he that hath this 1 Ioh 3. 3. hope doth purifie himselfe c. And with that saying of S. Paul who although as an elect vessell to preach unto the Gentiles did most of all urge and presse free Act. 9. Iustification yet hee saith Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit 2 Cor. 7 1. Now 2 Cor. 7. 1. wee must not understand that wee purifie that wee mortifie that wee cleanse our selves no not by the spirit properly to the sight of God For this is the meere and only and proper work of Christs blood and of the spirit cloathing us with Christs righteousnesse who thus alone by himselfe only purifieth us from our sins properly in the sight of God as the Apostle saith Heb. 9. 14. For if the blood of Buls and Goats sprinkling Heb 9. 14. the uncleane sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternall sprit offered himselfe without spot to God purifie your conscience from dead works c. and is set downe to be one of the maine things that declare the glory of Christs ●od-head Heb. 1. 3. where among other praises Heb. 1. 3. of the power of his Godhead this is one That hee hath purified us from our sins by himselfe and therefore it is rightly said in the Doctrine of our Church taught by the first Restorers of the Gospel in this land in King Edward dayes That it is the greatest arrogancie and presumption of man that Anti-christ could set up against God to affirme that we take away that we purifie that we cleanse our own sinnes out of the the sight of God either in whole or in part But how then will some say doe we purifie and Quest cleanse our selves I answer that wee cleanse and mortifie and purifie Answ our selves only Declaratively to the sight of men that is we only declare both to our selves and to others in the way of thankfulnesse that the holy Ghost hath by cloathing us with the wedding-garment of Christs righteousnesse purified mortified cleansed and utterly abolished all our sins out of Gods sight freely Whereby the holy Ghost sees us not properly mortifying cleansing and purifying our sins out of the sight of God our selves for then hee should see us robbing Christ of that glory which his blood hath freely done before wee begin but when the wedding-garment wrought by his blood hath freely purified them out of Gods sight then the spirit we being thus first clean in his sight enters into us to dwell in us which otherwise he would not doe but being entred and dwelling in us he enables us by walking holily and righteously to avoyd and purifie out of our own sight sense and feeling and out of the sight of other men that sin which the wedding-garment hath purified and abolished before out of the sight of God and so we meerely declare before the spirit that hee himselfe and Christs righteousnesse have originally and properly cleansed and purified away and utterly abolished them out of Gods sight freely And this is that which S. Paul expresly teacheth in the sixth to the Romans for having shewed in the three next precedent Chapters how freely of unjust we are made just that is perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God freely unto naturall reason objecting that then we may live freely in sinne as we list hee answers nay that is
that which is worse by a perverse and preposterous judgement wee refuse the better things and approve the worse Yea in one and the same Authors we attribute and apply that authoritie and Title of holinesse to their worser things which they have deserved for their best things spoken after the Spirit and not after the flesh and naturall light of reason My second answer to this objection that other Ministers doe speak and seeme to hold the contrarie is this that it is an undoubted truth that although all brethren in the Ministry may bee enlightened with one and the same truth yet all are not ●enlightned All are nor enlightened with the same measure of truth with one and the same measure of truth who thereupon may disceptare that is argue about a matter but not dissentire that is bee of a contrary judgement and resolution flatly to hold the contrary And it is possible that one man may have laboured more and so see further in some one point than another though he come behinde many others that are rich in all other gifts and of excellent learning who yet should shew themselves to be of Cains brood and Devils incarnate if wee should willingly and wilfully envie an higher talent in our brother in some one gift non omnia possumus omnes and wee bee all of us set and appointed by God to bee by our particular gifts mutuall helpers of another but not hinderers and enviers one of another And thirdly I answer that although some one or more of seeming great learning will in the heigth of their owne conceit and in the opinion of their great learning oppose themselves against this common consent of the learned Orthodox writers and so flatly hold the contrary yet is their great knowledge and great learning no sufficient cause to drive thee into wavering and doubting of the excellency of Christs benefits because the holy Ghost hath so sufficiently armed us against this scandall in teaching so plentifully in his word that there is a twofold knowledge A twofold knowledge or learning the one a literall knowledge or a literall learning and the other a spirituall knowledge the understanding and marking of which point because it is of so great use that thereupon depends in a manner the whole essence of salvation both to discerne in what state thou thine owne-selfe dost stand that makest this objection who peradventure maist bee learned and of great knowledge and also to keep thee from many scandals and delusions by others that seeme to be of great learning and knowledge therefore to leave us without all excuse is the holy Ghost most diligent to describe these two knowledges unto us very largely First the literall knowledge is described Rom. 2. 1 Literall Rom. 2. 17. from verse 17. to the very end of the chapter after this manner Behold thou art called a I●w that is thou art called to bee a member of the Church of God even of one called and professing Gods revealed glorious truth and restest in the Law that is thou takest the word of God and the doctrine from heaven to be thine only rule and warrant and wilt not as thou sayest goe one haires breadth from the word yea and gloriest in God namely that he is thy Father Saviour and Redeemer and knowest his will that is thou art skilfull in the word of God and canst try the things that differ and are excellent by reason thou ar● instructed and very learned in the word of God Neither only hast thou thus knowledge enough for thy selfe and for thine owne use alone but also art a rich store-house for others for thou art confident and takest upon thee to be a Guide to the ●linde a Light to them that are in darknesse an Instructer of them that lack discretion a Teacher of the ignorant and hast the whole forme of knowledge and of the truth in thy breast is it possible that the exquisitest knowledge that is can be more gloriously described and yet all this is there shewed to the end of the chapter to be no knowledge indeed but only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a meere shadow or shew of great knowledge and of the truth quans vulgo apparentiam vocant which as Calvin Calvin ibid. saith men commonly call an appearance of knowledge because as the Apostle saith in divers verses following it consisteth but in the letter only that is is meerly literall learned by good wit and good memory but is not by the working of the spirit of God in spirit and in truth being agreeable with that which the Apostle saith in another place habent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is they have a shew of very godlinesse but they deny the power of the same for they had which is the Apostles scope in this description a confession of the forgivenesse of their sinnes by Gods mercy in the Messiah but they had not a joyfull spirituall feeling knowledge of the excellency of Free Iustification which is the soule of all this great knowledge and when the soule is away all the rest is nothing else but a dead carcasse of knowledge as the Apostle shewes in all the whole Epistle following Chap. 9. 30 31. and 10. 2 3. Whereby they that are in this literall knowledge although they seeme to bee greatly enlightned in the whole word of God and to be excellent learned men yea and very zealous with a legall zeale Rom. 9. 31. and 10. 2. yet because they are in Rom 9. 31. and 10. 2. this point destitute as Calvin speaketh interiore luce of the true inward spirituall light it is incredible to think how blinde they are in understanding the excellency of Christs benefits so that none is so blinde as such as are in this literall knowledge as it is plainly testified by the Propher Esay 42. 18 19. saying Heare Esay 42. 18 19. yee deafe and look yee blinde that you may see Who so blinde as my servant or deafe as my messenger that I send yea who so blinde as the perfect that is that by this literall knowledge think themselves perfect and who so blinde as the Lords servants yea such in this literall knowledge are not only more blinde than the very plough-boy but also more blinde and ignorant than the oxe and the asse that the plough-boy drives before him as the same Prophet witnesseth saying The oxe knowes his owner and the asse his masters crib but Israel hath not knowne my people as by this literall knowledge they professe themselves hath not Esay 1. 3. Object understood Esay 1. 3. But how then will some man say may these blinde men seeming so learned in this literall knowledge be discerned from such as are truly enlightened I answer this the same Prophet Esay Answ plainly expresse●h in the former place saying thus Two manner of wayes how we may see know many things and yet not keep them Seeing many things but thou keepest them
not for such an one as is in this literall knowledge doth not keep that which he professeth that he knowes and that also two manner of wayes that is neither in word nor in deed For first he failes in the foundation that is hee I Not ●● judgement keepeth it not in judgement for how can he keep that which he hath not that is doth not understand Indeed let a man runne with them in the same round of the ordinary letter or usuall phrase that they like blinde mill-horses are customably without understanding used unto thereby rocking themselves and others asleep in the cradle of custome what in Christs mysteries is carnally and customarily conceited and ordinarily spoken rather than caring to understand what is said and whilst they are applauded for learned men so long they are reasonably quiet and will sing the same song of the dead letter containing the outward shell of Christs mysteries and will some of them run as fast as you will with you in a legall zeal flowing from the light of nature of works works works and a preposterous holy walking But if a man presse the same truth which they seeme to hold and to awake them out of their lethargy of Custome doe preach Novè but not not Nova nay if one expresse the same truth which they seeme to hold but even with an old phrase used of the best Interpreters that understand rightly the mysteries of Christ which they have not before heard of or which they are not customarily acquainted withall especially if it be a phrase going to the quick of the truth and expressing the excellency of the matter which they daily like Parrots doe blindefoldly prattle of then although it be but one and the same truth and the old doctrine which is daily taught yet upon presumption and high conceit of their great learning they cry out New doctrine errors false doctrine heresie blasphemy and what not adding ever something thereto out of their owne Cimmerian darknesse to make the matter more odious and thus they keep not no not in word and judgement to that which they seemed to hold but when the excellency of Christs benefits are pressed upon them by the expresse word of God then they fall to sophisticating equivocating and plaine deniall if they cannot fashion it to agree with their naturall reason and earthly conceit and humane wit even of that truth which they seemed before to hold at leastwise in letter so that by not understanding what they have spoken in one sentence they are so farre from keeping to that which they have said especially dealing in the mysteries of Christ that are above humane wit and the light of reason that they often times speak the flat contrary in another sentence thus as I said not keeping neither in judgement nor in word and confession to that truth which they themselves professe in other termes An evident example hereof is Nicodemus who being a great learned Rabbin and teacher in Israel knew by the dead literall knowledge those usuall places often repeated in the Prophets where God promiseth to give unto his people new hearts and new spirits that they might serve him in walking holily in all his Commandements And yet because he felt not the power and truth of it in himselfe being but in this dead literall knowledge although in his daily teaching he talked of these promises and called for a new life in holy walking in all Gods Commandements yet when Christ giving an example to all preachers how they should awake people rocked asleep in the cradle of custome not by teaching Nova but yet by preaching Novè spake of the same truth which he daily beat upon but in a new phrase that he had not heard of expressing but the excellency of the doctrine namely that A man must be new borne then was Nicodmus quite beside his books and thought that Christ spake very absurdly if not erroneously the old doctrine uttered with a new phrase expressing but the truth and deepnesse of it made it seeme new and false doctrine to the old blinde literall Doctor and therefore it is well noted upon the same place by Musculus saying Exemplar quoddam in hoc viro propositum est in quo deprehenditur doctos alioqui prudentes viros nondum renatos ad doctrinam regni Christi capiendam plane stupidos esse ineptos that is there is in this man a certaine example set before us wherein we may see That men although wise and learned yet not being new borne againe are to the conceiving of the mysteries of Christ and of the doctrine concerning his kingdome meerely blockish and sottish Yea and he addeth further saying ut non solùm rem ipsam non intelligant sed neque declarationem illius Christi verbis propositam capiant that is they are so farre from understanding the matter it selfe that they conceive not the very declaration thereof set before them by the words of Christ himselfe Whereupon as the learned well note Christ seeing that he lost both his time and labour in teaching a man so high in his owne conceit and yet so greatly ignorant is constrained to fall to chiding of him saying Art thou a principall teacher in Israel and knowest not these things quasi diceret O miseram ovium conditionem c. as if hee should say oh miserable condition of those sheep whereof the Pastor that hath the cure of them is so grossely blinde and so unskilfull in divine matters hitherto thou hast been reverenced as a principall Teacher in Israel and yet knowst not those things of which it is a shame that thy very schollers should be ignorant and lest any should think that this was a blindenesse and just reproofe peculiar and proper only to Nicodemus and not of all such as are in this dead literall knowledge it is upon the same place well noted of the learned saying Est autem haec generalis objurgatio qua Christus c. But this is a generall reproofe wherewith Christ reproveth all such Rabbins and great Teachers as lie by the literall knowledge in the same blindenesse with Nicodemus And thus we see the first way how they that are in this literall knowledge do only but sophisticate about the mysteries of Christ seeing many things but they keepe them not viz. they doe not keepe to them in word and judgement but professe them one way and deny them and speake contrary to themselves divers other wayes The second way how these doe see many things but they keepe them not consisteth herein that what they professe that they know they keepe not in life practice and conversation their life conversation and Not in life and conversation action nothing agreeing with that which they professe and seeme to know and see As for example such as are in the meere literall knowledge of Free Iustification doe finde by reading and thereupon doe professe that Free Iustification is the strong Rock and foundation
men they doe nothing else but with their cavills sophisticating and calumniations under a colour of cleering the truth paint over and hide their own ignorance bemuddy the cleer truth disquiet the minds of the simple and trouble mens consciences and so are the true and proper authors of dissention and sects And this Paul complained of not only respecting the present times but also foresaw in spirit that there should bee an infinite number of such in the Church even to the Worlds end for when God sendeth faithfull labourers into his harvest by and by Satan raiseth up his ministers also who will in no case bee counted inferiour to those that are rightly called here straightwaies riseth dissention the wicked will not yeeld one haires-bredth to the godly for they take themselves that they far passe them in wit in learning in godlinesse in spirit and in all other vertues And on the other side the godly although The godly in matters of charity are flexible but unyeelding in matters of faith in matters of charity they are as flexible as a reed enduring all things and suffering all things yet in matters of faith knowing that a little leven doth leven the whole lump they dare not and much lesse ought they to yeeld to the wicked lest the doctrine of faith doe come in danger For alas the faithfull Minister knowes that the Gospel is not delivered unto us that we should thereby seek our own praise and glory or that the people should honour or magnifie us which are the Ministers thereof but to the end that the benefits and glory of Christ might be published and known and that the Father might be glorified in the bounty and riches offered unto us in Christ his Son who thereby enricheth us with his heavenly and eternal good things as for the other they regard not this but to get praise and liking and estimation with the people doe rather sophisticate and wrangle against the benefits of Christ thus provoking one another and envying one another which is a sure token that neither such Teachers nor such Hearers doe live and walk after the spirit but after the flesh and works thereof and so consequently with the Galathians to hold the truth they with the Galathians doe loose the true Doctrine Faith Christ and all the gifts of the holy Ghost and by kicking against the benefits of Christ become worse than the heathens and prove meere minist●rs of Satan some of them never failing from time to time to accuse the benefits of Christ not only of error but also of heresie and blasphemie Whereupon comes most truly to passe that Luther saith in the former alleaged place That he that will preach Christ truly and confesse him to be our righteousnesse must be content to heare that he is a pernicious fellow and that he troubleth all things because it cannot be but that Ismael must persecute Isaac and yet Ismael was outwardly and in his own opinion a lover of religion he sacrificed and exercised himselfe in well-doing therefore he mocked his brother Isaac and so persecuted him But Isaac again persecuteth not Ismael Whereupon the same faithfull Dispenser of Gods mysteries concludeth with a weightie saying That who so will not suffer the persecution of Ismael let him not professe himselfe to be a Christian But if those that lie in this literall knowledge bee such meere mocking and persecuting Ismaelites untill God opens their eyes and converreth them let any man judge whether they bee any just cause by their sophisticating and wrangling to stop our faith and to make us to doubt and waver in the excellency of Christs benefits though they excell in all literall learning and in the legall zeale shining as I said before in the righteousnesse and glorious workes of the Law and holy walking never so much THe fifth Remedy to overcome doubting to grow The fifth Remedy against doubting strong in saith is to set often before our eyes the dignity glorious nature and exceeding excellency of beleeving namely that the beliefe that the blood of Christ doth make us cleane from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely is such a good worke in the sight of God as passeth all other good workes whatsoever nay rather if all the good workes and holy walking that were even done or shall be done in the world were heaped together and compared with this one work of beleeving yet all they joyned together are not comparable to beliefe which is not only testified by Christ himselfe in his answer to the Jewes when they asked him dreaming of workes What shall we doe that we may worke the workes of God He answered and said This is the worke of God that is the work of all workes that ye beleeve on him whom he hath sent namely to justifie and make you freely righteous in the sight of God but also many reasons grounded upon the very heart and Essence of the Gospel confirm the same as especially may appear by these three maine priviledges of faith As Three maine priviledges of saith 1 It giveth exceeding glory to God foure wayes to Iustice First for the exceeding honor glory that we give to God the Father that also foure manner of wayes as first this beliefe laying hold only of Christ his righteousnesse as only able and ful sufficient to make us from all spot of sinne perfectly righteous in Gods sight freely makes us as Chrysostome saith to conceive a right and high estimation of God for his perfect justice of hating all sin and loving perfect righteousnesse in that he could bestow no benefit upon us as a benefit excepthe had first given us so wonderfully his own Son to justifie and make us perfectly righteous in his own sight and so we give him the praise honour glory of his justice Secondly if we beleeve and take 2 Of truth fast hold of this benefit that God by washing us in his Sonnes blood hath made us cleane from all spot or wrinkle of sinne in the sight of God freely thus perfectly blessing us Galath 3. 8. we give him the glory Galat. 3. 8. of his truth having so gloriously and manifoldly promised the same and by beleeving doe set to our seale that God is true Iohn 3. 33. Thirdly if so farre beyond Iohn 3. 33. our carnall sense and feeling and outward appearance 3 Of power and all outward likelihood we beleeve that God by clothing us with his owne Sons righteousnesse hath made us cleane from all spot of sin in his owne sight freely truely performing upon us such unlikely to present sense and feeling yea and impossible things wee give him the glory of his omnipotent Rom. 4 19 20. power Rom. 4. 19 20. Fourthly by beleeving that God by cloathing us with the wedding-garment of 4 Of rich grace his Sons perfect righteousnesse hath made us perfectly holy righteous from all spot and wrinkle of sin
only are meer patients suffering another ab extra even God to work all in us as may be further cleered in the manner Two similitudes how by two fit similitudes lively representations as First take a drinking glasse that is blue or red and put water or drink into the same and in some glasses I my selfe have seen that the drink or water in the same looseth to the present view it s own colour and becomes as blue or red as the glasse it selfe and yet not inherently and actively for the bluenesse or rednesse is inherently agently operatively and actively only in the glasse but yet whilst it doth abide in the glasse it becomes communicatively and passively as blue or red as the glasse it selfe but what is the reason hereof because as I my selfe have observed the glasse doth conveigh by the force of the light certain beames of its own colour into the drink and so makes it to lose its own colour and to be of the same colour that the glasse is of Where it is pretty to observe that the liquor in the glasse hath lost its colour and hath not lost it First the liquor hath not lost it inherently and to it selfe because if it be put out of the glasse it is found only in its own colour But yet hath lost its own colour in two respects first in respect of the glasse which it is in that hath by conveighing her beams into it made it own colour and secondly to the view of the beholder it is truly abolished and gone and nothing remaines but the colour of the glasse Now although the truth represented by this similitude passeth the representation as farre as a substance passeth the shadow yet it is sufficient for a shadow and is a notable representation of the truth because that Gods powerfull imputation after a more reall mighty and effectuall manner doth the same in truth that is but resembled in this shadow and faith that went so far as to say wash thou me and I shall bee whiter than snow goes higher than any similitudes can reach unto and seeth the soule being cloathed with Christs righteousnesse to be although not inherently yet lesse imaginarily and colourably but truly and reipsa in very deed made perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God so effectually that the very power thereof begins inherently to change the heart by sanctification also to the eyes of men more and more whereas wee see that the bluenesse or rednesse of the glasse worketh no inherent change upon or in the drink but because faith reasoneth and concludes from the power of God thus That if so poore and silly a creature as a piece of glasse be able by the force of the light to cast her beames into it and to make the liquor to lose to the view and sight of men her own colour and to look whilst it is in the glasse of the same colour that the glasse is of were it not impiety and flat blasphemie not to grant that Christ can much more being true and Almighty God translating me out of Adam to bee a member in himselfe by cloathing me both within and without with his own righteousnesse conveigh much more by the power and force of his spirit his own righteousnesse to bee thought not inherently and actively yet objectively and passively in us so by this means abolish all our sinnes from before God and make us only perfectly holy righteous in the sight of God freely herein consisting the Analogie of the truth with the similitude that Christ by reason of his Godhead and power of his spirit doth that in truth above our reason sense and feeling which the red glasse doth only in shew that is make us in truth perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God freely not imaginarily colourably as the Papists fondly cavill but really truly and reipsa in very deed like the working of an Almighty Creator this faith I say shall finde by the very fruits of sanctification flowing from the same that he is not made only colourably righteous but that he is verè reipsa truly and in very deed with Christs righteousnesse made perfectly holy righteous in the sight of God freely Hence for the lively representation of this truth do so many Divines both learned and judicious so much use this similitude saying thus As he that beholdeth any thing through a red glasse doth take it to bee red as is the colour of the glasse so God the Father beholding us in his Sonne doth take us to bee of the same nature and quality that he is that is perfectly righteous for which cause he saith to his Spouse in the Canticles though she felt and complained that shee was black and full of infirmities to her sense and feeling and own inherent active righteousnesse yet saith Christ that knowes better what in this respect he hath wrought upon her than shee her selfe Behold thou art faire my love behold thou art all faire and there is no spot in thee And for this cause it is that he loveth us and sets his heart upon us and will not bee removed from us c. Which is not for the shadow but for the true substance of his own righteousnesse though not inherently to our sense and feeling and actively yet by Gods imputation objectively and passively conveighed into us so utterly abolishing our sins from before God and making us not imagina●ly but truly and reipsa in very deed perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of ●od freely A second similitude illustrating this truth yet The second similitude more fully is this Let an house or shop be made towards the East and let the Sun beat upon the same all day long yet whilst the windowes and doores are fast shut up the house still remaines dark and unprofitable because the walls being corpora opaca dark bodies can cast forth nothing but darknesse but let the windowes and doors be opened then doe the Sun-beames beat in and dispell all the darknesse that was there before and the house is made all light and profitable to the use of man But yet it is not inherently and actively light as the Papists conceit of their manner of Justification for if that light did come actively out of the walls then the house would not at the least immediately be beholding to the Sun without it in the Firmament but the house would be inherently and actively light immediately enlightning its own selfe but in that it is enlightned by the Sun-beames the house is all light in deed yet no Agent and Doer in making its selfe light but is altogether passively and objectively light so is it in the case of our Justification and being a similitude much used by the holy Ghost it passeth all other humane similitudes by running contrary to the old proverb quatuor pedibus for First mans soule and body is like this house or shop of Gods wonders
righteous in Gods sight whereupon those large promises made in the Psalms unto the Iust and righteous must needs be understood of the first way by which they are objectively and passively with Christs righteousnesse imputed though mystically yet truly made perfectly righteous just and Saints in the sight of God freely therefore it is well and truly noted by Calvin saying to this effect I grant that the Saints are called righteous declaratively of their inherent holinesse of life yet for as much as by all their endevour they doe not fulfill righteousnesse it selfe it is meet that this inherent righteousnesse such as it is doe give place to the Being made righteous by faith from whence it hath that which it is But yet Luthers observation out of Paul strikes this naile more fully to the head saying That Paul calleth them only righteous which are justified through the promise or through faith in the promise without the Law And no marvell that Paul calls them that are justified only righteous seeing God himselfe having freely justified Abraham made him thereby so truly God calleth Abraham Iustice and righteousnesse righteous in his own sight that God was not content to call him by his justification righteous but even justice and righteousnesse it selfe saying Esay Esay 41. 2. 41. 2. Who raised up Iustice or Righteousnesse from the East and called him to his foot Now seeing it is most true that Luther collecteth That if the Father of the Jewish Nation was made so truly righteous in the sight of God without the Law and before the Law that God called him Justice and Righteousnesse it selfe in his sight so that we his children may much more assure our selves now under the time of the Gospel that wee are made as righteous as he was by the same meanes What greater joy fuller assurance can we have than that we are not imaginarily counted and titularly called righteous but are though mystically yet in truth and in very deed formed and made perfectly righteous in the sight of God freely seeing with the first and with the last I am the same saith the Lord Esay 41. 4. Whereby wee Esay 41 4. may see how true that testimony of Master Downham and of other our English Divines is effectually beating down that Popish slander That Protestants hold in Free Iustification only a false-reputing and imaginary counting righteous in the sight of God saying expresly of Free Justification in divers places after this manner Neither are we imaginarily righteous but God makes us perfectly righteous indeed by washing away our sinnes with the precious blood of Christ and by appropriating and applying unto us his sonnes righteousnesse by virtue of his spirit principally and a lively faith instrumentally and so being made really and in truth partakers of Christs righteousness God reputes us not imaginarily but as we are mark as we are and that in truth perfectly just and righteous The selfe same thing doth Zanchius in his Treatise of Iustification upon Ephes 2. 5. Zanchius abundantly testifie in his Treatise of Justification upon Eph. 2. 5. saying likewise expresly in divers places That we are not only reputed and counted but also verè sumus truly are perfectly righteous before God and that also because God by clothing us with his Sonnes righteousnesse doth reipsa in very deed make us so For saith he God forbid that when the Apostle saith God doth justifie the ungodly we should so understand it as that he which is simply wicked and ungodly him God should absolve as godly and should p●onounce him to bee righteous which is in very deed unjust seeing the Scripture saith that God doth hate the wicked and his wickednesse And for as much as God is the highest wisdome truth and justice but all men by their own nature are unjust and no man can make himselfe just and righteous but only God Therefore it followes saith he that God doth absolve no man and pronounce him just and righteous but him quem prius fecerit justum that is whom first hee hath made righteous by his grace then hee shewes how God doth make a man righteous by his grace saying thus But as the righteousnesse is twofold as we shewed before by which wee are justified that is saith he by which fimus justi we are made righteous so God bifariam facit homines Two manner of wayes made righteous justos that is doth two manner of wayes make men righteous First when not imputing their sinnes unto them he forgives all their iniquities because they are extinct and clean put out by the blood of Christ and on the contrary by clothing them with his Sons righteousnesse doth make them righteous as the Apostle testifies saying By the obedience of one man namely imputed are many made righteous Seeing then this is a true and perfect righteousnesse who saith he may say that they are not of unjust verè justos esse factos truly made just and righteous which have in Christ gotten and attained this righteousnesse Secondly God sanctifieth them by inherent righteousnesse Seeing then saith he God doth with both these righteousnesse nos justos reipsa efficere that is make us in very deed righteous with the first righteous before himselfe with the other righteous before men It can by no meanes be said when God doth justifie his Elect that hee doth absolve men that are simply wicked and unjust and pronounce them just and righteous because this were directly repugnant both to his high justice and truth sed justos à se factos absolvit God absolveth only the just that is first he makes them just and righteous and then absolves them Again he saith thus Although God doth make them righteous with both these righteousnesse yet he doth not absolve and pronounce them righteous for their inherent righteousnesse because it is unperfect but only because he hath made them perfectly righteous before himselfe with his Sons righteousnesse imputed standing complete before God only by that Last of all concerning this point he shewes how a man may know in his owne heart and how hee himself and others may discern that he is justified absolved before God from all fault and blame and freed from all sinne guilt and punishment and pronounced just before God and an heire of his heavenly kingdome and so as I said before is made a true Christian freely Zanch. in loco communi de Iustif in Ephe. 2. 5. before God namely when he assenteth to this maine proposition of the Gospel and assumes the assurance of it to himselfe in his own heart to wit That The maine proposition of the Gospel whosoever beleeves in the Son of God Christ Jesus that by his obedience tam justus factus sit coram Deo he is made as righteous before God quam per inobedientiam Adae injustus factus fuerat as he was by the disobedience of Adam made unrighteous for as much as the obedience of Christ
as the balm of Giliad to heal all the sores and imperfections of our sanctification Rom. 8. 2. 3. 4. our sanctification before God Rom. 8. 2 3 4. and when wee have apprehended by Faith free Justification to heale us of the same are wee not perfectly healed from this menstruous cloath and continuall running sores of the imperfections of our sanctification in the sight of God how then doth God behold us in the imperfections of our sanctification that are perfectly healed out of his sight Psalme 103. 2. Psal 103. 2. I say 53. 5. Esay 53. 5. Againe if Justification doe not heale the children of God of the imperfections of their sanctification from before God what serves it for after their conversion have the children of God any sinnes to heale after their conversion but the imperfections of their sanctification and if it heale not these out of Gods sight is not Justification nullified and made of no use after a child of God is converted saith not the Scripture every where the flat contrary was it not from the spots and wrinkles of imperfections of their sanctification whereof S. Paul said to the converted Ephesians that they were to shew the like to their Wives as Christ in love had made them clean from all spot or wrinkle or any such thing before God was it not from the imperfections of their sanctification whereof S. Paul said to the converted Colossians That they were made so holy that they were without all blame and without all fault in the sight of God was it not most directly of the imperfections of our sanctification of which S. Iohn spake saying If we walk in the light as God is in the light the blood of Iesus Christ his Sonne doth make us clean from all sinne 1 Iohn 1. 7. And mark how hee saith from all sinne 1 Iohn 1. 7. and therefore from the imperfections of our sanctification except the imperfections of our sanctification which sometimes are too soule even to the eyes of men bee no sinnes But if our Justification by the blood of Christ doe not make us in the sight of God clean from all the foule imperfections of our sanctification who then makes us clean from the imperfections The pri●e of cu● na●ure of our sanctification but we our selves by the spirit as the Papists say and this is that which our proud natures would faine challenge to our selves and is in truth the very kore of this sore but what saith the Doctri●e that first reformed our Church from Popery taught by them which afterward confirmed the same by their blood saying For a man to goe about by his own works as by repentance mortification and such like to take away and purge his Sermon of f●ee Iustification and tr●e salvation second part o●n sinnes and so to make himselfe righteous by his own works either in whole or in part is the greatest arrogancie and presumption that Antichrist could set up against God And yet we must marke that Antichrist alledgeth for himselfe That he cannot so take away and purge his sinnes either in whole by his first Justification by Christ or in part in his second Justification by Christ but by the merit of Christ and aide and strength of the holy Ghost assisting him But yet he is worthily condemned for Antichrist because he doth not give the glory of taking away and purging our sinnes and so making us perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sinne in the sight of God freely to Christ to have done it alone by himselfe Heb. 1. 3. because Heb. 1. 3. to purge away sinne out of the sight of God and to make righteous before God is the proper work of To purge away sinne before God is the proper work of the Godhead the Godhead and too high a work for any creature to performe Whereupon it followes seeing we cannot purge and put away from before God the imperfections of our sanctification because it is true which Luther saith that whilst wee goe about to purge and put away one sin we defile our selves with many more as if one to put away one spot in his face should wash himselfe in puddle mire and if Justification neither abolish nor put out of Gods sight the imperfections of our sanctification we must needs remaine miserable still in the filthy menstruousnesse of our sanctification but alas this is such a grosse absurdity of an unbelieving dead heart that it is not worthy to spend so much inke and paper in confuting it only by the falling of these two Pillars to the ground holding up this proposition the proposition it selfe namely that We are both righteous and sinners also in the sight of God Foure Arguments proving that we are not both righteous and sinners in in the sight of God being the last refuge of unbeliefe falls flat to the ground the falsnesse whereof although it might bee proved with many arguments yet these soure shall be sufficient First it is contrary to the expresse and plaine Scriptures and Word of God That when we are Justified we are both righteous and sinners also in the sight of God for Paul saith Ephes 5. 8. Yee were once in times Ephes 5. 8. past darknesse There is the time of our being sinners and in our sinfull nature passed and gone But now are light in the Lord There is the time of our Justification and being righteous in the sight of God now present and it only still abiding Walk saith he as the children of light There is sanctification shewing and declaring to men our new condition and state that wee are now only in before God So likewise saith Saint Paul to the Corinthians And such were some of you that is some one way and some another way were all of you foule and defiled in the sight of God with all manner of sinnes in time past But saith hee as the Word of the present time imports now yee are washed now yee are sanctified now yee are Iustified in the name or power of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God What can bee more plaine That the time state and condition wherein they were foule and sinfull was past and gone but the time state and condition wherein they were washed and made righteous to God-ward by Justification and also to men-ward by sanctification was only present and abiding for ever So likewise Rom. 5. 8 9. Seeing saith the Apostle Rom. 5. 8. 9. While wee were yet sinners Christ died for us much more then being now Iustified by his blood wee shall bee saved c. Where we see plainly that the time and condition The estate ●f justification abideth for ever of being sinners is confined to the time past and the time and condition of being Justified and made no sinners but perfectly righteous in the sight of God is confined to the time and condition present to abide forever Secondly that wee are both righteous and
c. Gal. 5. 22. This is the voyce of the Bridegroome and of the Bride that is to say sweet cogitations of Christ wholsome exhortations pleasant Songs and Psalmes praises and thanksgiving whereby the godly doe instruct stirre up and refresh themselves Therefore God loveth not heavinesse and dulnesse Heavinesse must be abandoned and why of spirit he hateth uncomsorrable doctrine heavie and sorrowfull cogitations and loveth cheerfull hearts for therefore hath he sent his Sonne not to oppresse us with heavinesse and sorrow but to cheere up our soules in him Mark what great joy all the Prophets doe prophesie of and even extort at our hands for the first comming of Christ so do the Psalms so doth Christ and so doe his Apostles not only exhorting us but even commanding us to rejoyce Rejoyce thou Daughter of Zion bee joyfull thou Daughter of Ierusalem ●ach 5. for behold thy King commeth to thee Againe for the fruits of his comming Rejoyce yee heavens for the Esay 44. 12 23. Lord hath done it Shout yee lower parts of the earth burst forth into prayses yee mountaines why what is done and wherefore must there be such great joy For I have put away thy sinnes as darkness and thy transgressions as a mist And thus hath the Lord redeemed Iacob and will be glorified in Israel And albeit wee Luth. Se●m in Phil. 4. 4. fall sometimes into sinnes which by nature bring sadnesse and sorrow with them yet forasmuch as they cannot bring so much hurt as Christ if we believe in him bringeth power of abolishing them with profit and safety Joy in the Lord ought alwayes to have the first place with us and farre to overcome the sorrow and sadnesse that commeth by reason of our sinnes Hence doth the truly faithfull soule the Bride of Christ burst forth into this extasie saying I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord and my soule shall bee joyfull in my God Why Because hee hath cloathed me with the garments of Salvation What garments are those He hath covered me with the Robes of righteousness he hath decked Esay 61. 10. me as a Bride tireth her selfe with her Iewells Esay 61. 10. And hereupon saith Luther Beholdhow for this knowledge Luth. in Gal. 3. 13. and benefit of Christ to come the Saints of the Old Testament rejoyced more than we now doe when he is so comfortably revealed and exhibited unto us Indeed we do acknowledge that this benefit of Christ the righteousnesse of faith is an inestimable Treasure But wee conceive not thereby such a full joy of spirit as the Prophets and Apostles did Hereof it commeth that They especially Paul doe so plentifully set forth and so diligently teach the Articles of Justification for this is the proper office of an Apostle and of a Minister of the Gospel to set forth the glory and benefits The proper office of a Minister of the Gospel of Christ to the working of this joy and therefore doth S. Paul define a Minister to be but an help to the peoples joy 2 Cor. 1. 24. When such a rejoycing 2 Cor 1. 24. faith possesseth the heart and the Gospel is so received indeed then God appeareth sweet and altogether loving neither feeleth the heart any thing but the favour and grace of God it standeth with a bold and strong confidence Luth. serm in Phil. 4. 4. it feareth not least any evill come unto it it being quiet from all feare of displeasure is merry and glad of so incomparable grace and goodnesse of God given unto it freely and most abundantly in Christ Wherfore there must needs forthwith proceed from such a faith love joy peace gladnesse giving of thanks praise and a certaine marvellous delight in God as in a most deare and favourable Father which dealeth so fatherly with us and poureth forth his gifts so plentifully and in so great measure upon them also which doe not deserve them Behold of such joy Paul speaketh here which ●ruly where it is there can be no place for sin or feare of death or hell yea nothing is there but a joyfull quiet and omnipotent trust in God and in his favour wherefore it is called joy not in gold silver delights singing health knowledge wisedome power glory friendship favour no nor in works holinesse and such like but joy in the Lord wherefore Paul speaketh saying Rejoyce in the Lord alway and againe I say rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. And Peter Phil. 4. 4. testifieth that the faithfull by beleeving did rejoyce 1 Pet. 1. 8. with joy unspeakable and glorious For in this righteousnesse wherein I am made passively righteous I Luthers argument in Galat. have no sin no feare no sting of conscience no care of death for where Christ is truly seene indeed there must needs be full and perfect joy in the Lord. Wherefore if any man feele himselfe oppressed with Luther in Gal. 2. 20. heavinesse and anguish of heart he must not impute it unto Christ although it come under the name of Christ but unto the Devill who oftentimes commeth under the colour of Christ and transformeth himselfe into an Angel of light for if there be any feare or any griefe of conscience it is a token that this passive The cause of feare and sadnesse of heart righteousnesse wherewith I am freely made perfectly holy and righteous is withdrawne that grace is hidden and Christ is darkned out of sight wherefore we must Luther in serm of the lost sheep in Gal. 4. 7. fight against sadnesse and heavinesse of spirit caused by the law and give no place to the Devill who would by the law break up the bride-chamber of Christ and thrust himselfe into his place that is take away from the conscience her joy and comfort whereby he may not bee able cheerfully to lift up his heart and head before God ever remembring that the Kingdome of heaven into which we by our effectuall calling are translated as the Bride of Christ into his bride-chamber is righteousnesse and peace and joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. Rom. 14. 17. Fourth Effect Good judgement right discerning of all spirits The fourth effect or fruit declaring the utility of Free Iustification is that it worketh a good judgement and right discerning of all Religions works and worships to the utter overthrowing of all Superstitions Sects and Schismes and doth reduce people from their contentious and dangerous by-paths and doth rectifie their blinde legall zeales mentioned Rom. 10. 3. Rom. 10. 3. declining to sundry Sects and contentious opinions and brings them to the pure and sincere worship of God in spirit and truth that is in one faith only and one Baptisme Ephes 4. 2. to 6. unto which they Ephes 4. 2. to 6. cannot be wonne but by understanding the excellency of Free Iustification and how compleat they are made by it alone before God Colos 2. 10. but will be carried Colos 2. 10. away
with self-deceiving and appearing zeales of God as S. Paul testifieth saying I beare them record they have the zeale of God why what is the zeale of God which they had that is First for matter not following now as in ancient times their owne inventions and false worships of grosse idolatry but now zealously following the law of righteousnesse even the works of Gods owne Law Rom. 9. 31. 32. And secondly for end Rom. 9. 31 32. ayming at the glory of God why what was more to be desired yes but it was not according to knowledge why but they wanted no knowledge as wee may see granted by Paul himselfe Rom. 2. 17. to 20. and Rom. Rom. 2. 17. to 20. and 9. 4. 9. 4. for they knew the whole word of God and how often any word of moment was repeated from the beginning of Genesis to the end of Malachy True but yet they were ignorant of one maine point by which Iustification the heart and life of all knowledge they were ignorant of all for they only knew not free Iustification which is the forme soule heart and life of all the rest because that alone giveth both unto God and unto Christ their full glory for so it followeth in Paul for they being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God did goe about to establish their owne righteousnesse For because the nature of man dares not think The ground of the establishing of our owne righteousnesse of any fellowship and communion with God without a righteousnesse therefore they being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God freely and compleatly wrought upon them by God must needs goe about to establish their owne righteousnesse that is to winne and retain the love and favour of God by their fervency of good works and zeale of Gods glory in doing his law and when this blinde affection of false-doing Gods will doth reign in men being ignorant of the excellency and full and true doing of Gods will in free Iustification then they desire by some notorious zealous good works to out-passe the ordinary course and road-way of walking every man within the limits of his vocation doing the duties of the same comfortably and faithfully to Gods glory in winning and Blinde and rash zeale profiting his neighbours but out-starting others will have some singular zealous works to winne and retaine the said love and favour of God towards them hence flow the superstitious inventions of Popery hence commeth the rash zeale of the Brownists hence commeth the blinde holinesse of Familists hence commeth the painted zeale and holinesse of Anabaptists little differing in truth from Papists they do so stablish their owne righteousnesse of holy duties and works but that encroaching and returning neere to Judaisme they keep themselves closer as they think to the Morall Law of performing universall obedience to all Gods Commandements and so likewise of all other Sects and Religions and of all other Ape-Saints and Peacock-Christians as Luther truly calleth them whatsoever being ignorant of free Iustification But when they come by true faith to see rightly into free Iustification how utterly their sins by the imputation of Christs perfect righteousnesse are freely abolished out of Gods sight and how perfectly and compleatly holy and righteous they are made freely without works and what a full entrance there is hereby into the full favour of God peace and joy of conscience and to all the rest of the glorious benefits of the Gospel then they begin to say Here are the words of eternall life and whither shall we goe then they begin to see that God hath placed them in their vocations for them thereby to practise and testifie their thankfulnesse for those free-given benefits of the Gospel that doe make them so compleat before God and therefore they care for nothing but to keep themselves within the limits of their vocations and to doe the duties of the same faithfully and zealously to Gods glory in benefiting their neighbours And thus they serve God in spirit and truth of faith when all the world runneth awhoring after their owne inventions both of false-supposed true worships and also of doing their vocations in a false manner And therefore doth Luther truly say thus of this powerfull operation and effect Luth. in Gal. 2. 20. of free Iustification Wherefore I say as I have oftentimes said That there is no remedy against Sects or power to resist The only remedy against all Sects them but this only Article of Christian righteousnesse if we lose this Article it is impossible for us to withstand any errors or Sects As we may see at this day in the fantasticall spirits the Anabaptists and such like who being fallen away from this Article of free Iustification will never cease to fall erre and seduce others untill they come to the fulnesse of all iniquity except they be reduced home to rest only in free Iustification For whiles this doctrine pacifying and quieting Luth. in verse 16. the conscience remaineth pure and uncorrupt Christians are made judges over all kindes of doctrine Idem in Chap. 1. 4. The danger of work-mongers whereby a light is opened and a sound judgement is given unto us so as we may most certainely and freely judge of all kindes of life whereby we easily discerne all such Sects as trust rely and hang upon their works to be wicked and pernicious whereby the glory of Gods wrath against sin and Christs works and doings are not only defaced but also utterly taken away and our owne advanced and established Yea upon faith alone of Free Iustification by Christ followeth a most certain knowledge and understanding a most joyfull conscience and a true judgement of every Chap. 3. 28. kinde of life and of all things else whatsoever For they which know and understand it can judge of faith they can discerne a true feare from a false feare they Chap. 3. 23. can judge of all inward affections of the heart and discerne all spirits c. So that if we stick to this anchor-hold of the true manner of free Iustification both the Pope and Satan shall be put to flight because where this knowledge of free-Iustification is retained and this doctrine preached all Heresies and Sects are easily overthrowne Fifthly the laying out of the excellency of free Fifth Effect It rooteth up Covetousnes the root of all ●●ill Iustification worketh also this powerfull effect namely it is the only meanes to eradicate and utterly root out that inbred originall corruption called Covetousnesse the root of all evill and the love of all vaine pomp and earthly riches so deeply rooted and inwardly infecting the heart that if the heart be not seisoned with some feeling of the worth of the heavenly riches the naturall man in the dead Faith is violently carried upon the least occasion for a little lucre not only to break all lawes both of God and man but also to betray himselfe his soule his
axiome in true Religion that bona opera non praecedunt justificandum sed sequuntur Iustificatum that is good works of prayer or any such like doe not goe before a man be justified but they follow after a man is before justified Whereupon Luther agreeing with Austin Captivitate Patylonica Tom 2. pag. 71. b. saith promissio Dei non impletur orando sed solùm credendo Credentes autem oramus quodlibet opus bonum facimus that is the promise of God justifying us is not fulfilled by praying but only believing but when wee beleeve then wee pray and doe any other good work And thus as I said at the first have I handled this point the more fully because it is exceeding weighty THe third Reason objected is this The holy Ghost Third Reason Objected is God and shewes us our sinnes and shall not hee being God and shewing us our sins much more know and see sin in his justified children ergo the children of God are not made by Christs wedding-garment so perfectly holy and righteous that they have not one spot or wrinkle in the sight of God freely To which I answer that the holy Ghost being true Answ God knowes the sins of all men infinitely more perfectly than they themselves doe but in his justified children sees them abolished for although men themselves know something of sinne and of the wages thereof which is death by the light of nature whereby they are left without excuse Rom. 1. 20 31. 2. 14. 15. Rom. 1. 20. 31. 2. 14. 15. Yet none comes to know and see them rightly and effectually except the holy Ghost doe shew them their sins But to shew his children their sins he useth two glasses and puts them into the hands of his Ministers for that purpose the one is the glasse of the Law the other is the glasse of the Gospel Now whilst his children are unconverted the holy A twofold representation of sinne Ghost both knowes their sins and also sees them in them and wills his Ministers to hold out unto such constantly the glasse of the Law that they may see the Leprous faces of their soules in the same wherewith the spirit working open the eyes of their conscience Gen. 3. 7. to see better then by the light of nature that Gen. 3. 7. the foulnesse of sin is so horrible that he must needs curse the creature that hath the least sin in his sight saying Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the Law Gal. 3. 10. Gal. 3. 10. and to see the unchangable truth of this definitive sentence that Heaven and Earth may passe away but one jot or tittle of this sentence cannot passe untill it is fulfilled and to see the horriblenesse of Gods curse due to the least sin thus the holy Ghost shewes us our sins whereby they begin to see their Leprosie to bee very foule and their miserie most fearefull for one sinne much more for many sinnes whereby they are so terrified and so effectually humbled that they desire nothing more between heaven and Earth than to be healed of this their deadly Leptosie and hellish poyson of the lest sin this is the holy Ghosts and not the light of natures first shewing us our sinnes Now when this first work is thus wrought then the spirit wils his Ministers to hold forth likewise constantly before their faces the glasse of the Gospel wherein they hear that nothing can heale them of their spirituall Leprosie and wofull miserie but the blood of the Son of God which they apprehending the spirit also doth by imputation cloath them with the wedding-garment of Christs righteousuesse wherewith he abolisheth first out of his own sight all their sinnes and then gives them the eye of faith whereby they also see their sins utterly abolished out of the sight of God the Father Son and holy Ghost one God blessed for ever And yet they seeing with this eye of faith no lesse image and Idea in this glasse than the gaping wounds and goared bloody side of the Son of God hanging upon the Crosse and streaming out his blood and life to wash away and abolish all their sins as they see them thus utterly abolished so the spirit shewes them hereby the horriblenesse of their abolished sin more in the blood of Christ than before when they saw them not abolished in the glasse of the Law as if a father his sonne having committed some A smile act of theft should not be content to chide beat and all to rate him saying he should be hanged and were worthy to be hanged but also lead him out strictnesse of justice so requiring and shew him a man hanging as his pledge and surety and dying for him upon the Gallowes this sight must needs pierce his affections and although it shew him his foule fault abolished yet hee sees therein the vilenesse of it more than before so although the spirit of God doe shew us in the death of Christ our sinnes abolished out of his sight yet hee maketh us thereby both to discerne in our selves and with S. Paul in the seventh to the Romans to bewaile in our feeling for the exercise of our faith those sins which before wee counted but small or no sins and to see the exceeding vilenesse of them farre more by viewing them in the blood of Christ by which they are abolished out of Gods sight than if they were still abiding in the sight of God and although the sight sense and feeling of these sins be by a greater light in the Law never so strong in their own selves as sometimes it is stronger than it should be being re●dy to cast the children of God down into despaire Yet as before whilst they were under the Law the spirit did by the glasse of the Law simply shew them their sins with the curse and wrath of God due to the same so now being under the Gospel and under grace he doth not simply shew them their sins as before but it is the true office and true work of the spirit to shew them their sins abolished out of Gods sight that is as hee himselfe doth see them cloathed with the wedding-garment abolishing their sin and making them perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God and in his own sight freely and thereby enters into them himselfe as fit Temples for himselfe to dwell in and also knits them as meet and fit members into the body of Christ so doth he open their eyes of faith to see contrary to their Reason and to their strong contrary sense and feeling that Testimonie of Christ to be true and verified in in them viz. Thou art faire my Love behold thou art all faire and there is no spot in thee Cant. 4. 1. 7. And that Cant. 4. 1. 7. this is the testimonie of the holy spirit unto the children of God under