Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n word_n work_n zeal_n 107 3 7.3014 4 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
A35955 Therapeutica sacra shewing briefly the method of healing the diseases of the conscience, concerning regeneration / written first in Latine by David Dickson ; and thereafter translated by him. Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1664 (1664) Wing D1408; ESTC R24294 376,326 551

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

from him in fatherly wrath yet must he not yield to the weakening of his faith but rather yet more humble himself in the sense of his sins which have stirred up wrath against him and flye in to Christ and lay hold more closely upon his grace because God being offended is not pacified nor pleased save only by flying in t● Jesus Christ. Quest. II. Q. But what will you say unto them whose confidence is weakened whether they will or not whensoever they apprehend God angry against them and especially when they feel that God being provoked justly removeth gifts and benefits comfortable from them Ans. It is not to be doubted that the confidence of many true converts is shaken and weakened in this case but the question is what shall be said unto them We answer that they must acknowledge that they have leaned too much upon these carnal props the failing whereof maketh them to fall 2. Let them be humbled yet more because of such sins as have provoked God to change his dispensation toward them 3. Let them lean more upon the only rock of free grace in Jesus Christ offered in the Gospel for the comfort and relief of all those who in the sense of sin and unworthinesse in the sense of their ill deserving and of any measure of apparent fatherly wrath that hereafter however it fair with them they may rely upon Jesus Christ who is the only foundation to build our selves upon and whose grace is sufficient to help and uphold them who have their recourse unto him in every condition whether it be adversity or prosperity Quest. III. Q. ALbeit common benefits are not sufficient evidences of Gods favour yet new obedience of faith and fruits of the spirit are sure signes of Gods special favour bestowed only on the Elect Seing then as these signes when they are present serve much for the strengthening of faith so also when they are amissing have as great force of reason to debilitat faith yea seing faith without fruits is dead may it not be concluded where no fruits are no faith is Ans. If the question be of the universal want of all fruits of faith such as is to be found in all unrenewed men whose fruit cannot be good so long as the tree is evil whose seeming service cannot be acceptable so long as they remain unreconciled to God through Christ let the question be yielded unto But we are speaking of the true convert in whom there is a missing of the measure of formerly felt fruits and that in the time present wherein by some temptation or tryal their faith is sifted and winnowed And here indeed there is a vast difference between them that were never humbled in the sense of their sins nor led for relief from sin and misery unto Jesus Christ and the true convert who hath renounced the works of darknesse and hath fled unto Christ and consecrated himself to his service and who is set upon a new course of life hath brought forth new fruits of repentance faith love and hope and hath felt consolation in this course and now under exercise of conscience looketh upon himself as barren ground doth lament his impotency to bring forth good fruits and while he is under this exercise liveth in a sad condition blamelesse and free of scandal-giving great ods between this man and a man yet in nature We grant in the unrenewed man who is a stranger to the life of grace and true godlinesse the sentence holds No fruits no faith but as for the convert who hath had comfort in Christ and brought forth good fruits in some measure he must not reason from his present dead condition felt and lamented barrennesse to the denying of true faith in Christ or to the weakening of his saith or marring his confidence further then to acknowledge he hath leaned too much on his formerly felt fruits and hath not grounded himself wholly on Christ and the rock of free grace in him but may and should maintain his faith in Christ against his discouragment that he may be inabled to bring forth more ripe and aboundant fruits Quest. IV. Q. BUt what shall be said to humbled converts who looking to the holy Law of God and finding no fruits such as should be do passe sentence in the time of tentation upon all their works as unworthy of the name of the fruits of the Spirit and then do dispute against their own faith by the Apostles words Iam. 2. 20. faith without works is dead Ans. If the conscience do pronounce according to the truth as the mater is indeed it cannot be denied but faith without works is dead and God is greater then the conscience and knoweth all things But when the conscience is misled by a tentation powerfully pressed in by Sathan in the time of some sad affliction and appearance of Gods displeasure the testimony of the conscience is not a sufficient proof to infer so hard a conclusion for it cometh to passe oft-times that the convert who liveth blamelesly and entertaineth the love and purpose of well-doing in his heart followeth the exercises of religion constantly is not negligent in his calling and is ready upon occasion offered to let forth the fruits of love to his neighbour for all this sometimes walketh in darknesse and under desertion seeth no light as Isaiah 50. 10. In this case it may be he set all his works at nought as no wayes answerable to the Lords Law I see nothing saith he but sin in me I see no fruit of true faith in me I feel no operation of the holy Spirit in me save the work of convincing me of sin and unrighteousnesse In this case we must not give credit to the afflicted but convince him rather of his error and in special of his leaning too much weight on his works before this sad exercise fell upon him for when a convert maintaineth his faith in Christ only so oft and so long as he findeth in himself the fruits of new obedience but when he hath new experience of the power of the body of death and findeth the course of good behaviour and bringing forth good fruits to be interrupted in himself incontinent he resiles from his confidence such a man certainly giveth evidence that he hath relyed too much on his former felt righteousnesse an himself for he doth as if he durst not for sin approach unto Christ and so he falleth in Peters case who looking on his own sinfulnesse and the brightnesse of Christs Godhead shining in a recent miracle cryeth out Luke 5. 8. depart from me O Lord I am a sinfull man for Peter in this case did forget Christs mediatory office and that he stood so much the more need of Christs drawing near to him as he was a man convinced of sinfulnesse Another answer we give to this question the afflicted person must not think that he wants altogether the fruits of faith albeit he find them to be short of the
whether the believer perceive his absolution or not for the time 4. There is a sensible intimation of this sentence unto the believer joyned with peace and joy which the Apostle calleth the shedding abroad of the love of God in the heart Rom. 5. 5. and the sealing of the holy Ghost stamping the heart with holinesse Ephes. 1. 13. The first three makes the absolution of the believer certain whether the believer thinks so or not but the fourth which is the sensible intimation of this sentence doth make the believer both sure and joyfull As justification is taken passively four things may be distinguished in the believer justified The first is his actual receiving of Christ offered in the Gospel for a perfect remedy of sin and misery The second is the Lords judicial setling of the general sentence of absolution upon the believer as if he had spoken to him by name as he did to the Apostles Ioh. 15. 3. Now are ye clean through the word I ●ave spoken unto you that is you are clean from the guil● of sin by my absolving of you The third is the believers observing in a reflect act of his conscience that he hath fled to Christ for absolution and therefore justified indeed The fourth is the feeling and observing of the testimony of the holy Ghost bearing witnesse with his spirit that he is a child of God absolved from sin and wrath The first two of these to wit the act of faith receiving of Christ and of the right made by Christ to the believer in him of his absolution may be in and on the believer without the other two to wit his observation of the act of faith and the felt intimation of this worl● of grace by the holy Spirit 2. For solving of the doubt then as justification is actively taken as proceeding from the immanent act of Gods eternal purpose and decree to justifie the believer it is no more the actual justification in this life of which we are speaking then the immanent act of Gods eternal purpose to raise the bodies of believers in Christ and to glorifie them in soul and body can be called the actual resurrection of their bodies and glorification of both soul and body in this life But the transient act of justification in a judicial way which is the Lords judicial sentence of absolution of the believer declared by his Word set down now in holy Scripture it is indeed and formally the believers justification and is judicially terminar upon every believer in the act of his conversion whether the believer doth clearly perceive his own conversion or be in suspicion of his being reconciled and justified And this may be made to appear if we compare the condemnation of the unbeliever with the absolution of the believer fled to Christ Ioh. 3. 18. As he that believeth not in Christ is condemned already because the curse of the law and condemnation pronounced in the Scripture by God the soveraign Judge stands against him so long as he doth not believe in the only begotten Son of God And this sentence standeth fast whether the unbeliever take notice of this sentence or not whether he do apply it to himself or not do find grief for it or not So the believer in Christ is relaxed from condemnation and absolved and hath right unto eternal life and begun possession of it albeit for the time of his infancy tentation trembling and fear it be not so albeit he doth not perceive the blessed change of his state nor doth lay to heart as he might the words of Christ judicially pronouncing the sentence comprehending him as certainly as if his name were expressed Ioh. 3. 18. He that believeth on him is not condemned and ver 36. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life and Ioh. 6. from ver 37. to 41. Hence we conclude that the formal act of justification of a man fled to Christ is to be found in the written sentence of the judge absolving every believer and the man we speak of There is another transient act of God in an actual revelation of justification wherein the holy Ghost openeth the eyes of the believer to behold and perceive the gift of saith already bestowed on him Of this speaks the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 12. And after that the holy Ghost hath pointed out his own grace bestowed on the believer he followeth his work by giving remarkable peace and joy as earnest of life everlasting whereof the Apostle speaketh Ephes. 1. 13. In whom ye also trusted after ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your salvation in whom also after ye had believed ye were sealed with the spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance Therefore he that desireth to have the intimation of his justification after flying for refuge unto Christ for relief of felt sin and feared wrath must read his absolution in the Gospel as well as he hath read before that his condemnation in the law Unto which sentence of absolution let him hold fast in his daily endeavour after sanctification The fifth question is how to satisfie the convert who findeth himself pursued for his sins after remission believed and is brought in question what to judge of his case MAny converts have fallen in Iobs case and seemed to themselves to possesse the sins of their youth Iob 13. 26. For after conversion and felt reconciliation they find the sins they did repent of and did believe to be forgiven through Christ objected to them afresh pursued with sharp accusations and signs of wrath joyned therewith Their reconciliation and righteousnesse through Christ they purpose to hold fast their old guiltinesse and sentence of their conscience writing bitter things against them they cannot deny The pinch is here either the remission they did believe is null or the challenge is unjust do they reason with themselves the nullity of their remission they dare not admit and the just ground of challenge they cannot deny and the doubt what to think of this case they cannot shun not seeing how these things can consist and stand together 2. For answer to this doubt these four things must be distinguished and how they may all consist one with another must be timously considered The four things to be distinguished are 1. the reconciliation of a convert with God 2. the remission of the reconciled mans sins freely gifted unto him by God 3. a renewed bitter accusation raised by Sathan against the re●iled convert 4. The holy and wise dispensation of God permitting ordering these renewed accusations of his child by Sathan for the tryal and exercise of his faith and growth of his repentance and other good ends Now for the consistence of these four we need not doubt but the accuser of the brethren can cast up to us forgiven sins and bear upon us that they are not forgiven N●ither need we doubt but God in wisdom and love to his children may suffer Sathan to
seek of God the gift of faith or else be destitute of all excuse if they shall not do what they conceive and professe themselves able to do Thirdly it is equitable to crave faith from them who are able to promise morally the obedience of faith and are able to use the externall means leading unto true faith for the Lord Himself followed this way in his covenanting with the Israelites Exod. 19. where the Lord propounds the condition of the covenant and promiseth to be their God if they should hearken to His voice vers 5. 6. the people did accept the condition and undertook to perform it vers 7. 8. and upon these tearms the covenant was made with them morally in an externall way which did bind the obligation fast upon them Fourthly by preaching of the covenant of grace God doth ordinarly bestow grace and grace for grace on the redeemed in a time acceptable and in craving the condition the Lord giveth grace to accept the condition and to perform it and this course is very sutable to Gods soveraignty or supremacy sutable to His wisdom and his justice and sutable to the freedom of his grace for it becometh the absolute supremacy of God and the liberty of His most holy will to send the Gospel only to whom He will it becometh his wisdom where ever He doth send the Gospel to make offer of grace indifferently to all the hearers whether elect or reprobat that all may be tryed whether they please to receive the offer or not It becometh his justice to withhold grace from such as refuse the offer of it and it becometh his wisdom mercy grace truth and justice both to exact from the elect for whom Christ did satisfie the performance of the condition of the covenant and in the mean time by the offer of grace to make them sayingly to believe using the command of believing in Christ for a fit mean to beget faith hence it is that saving faith is given only to the elect which faith therefore is called the faith of the elect Tit. 1. 1. Hence it is that the elect are called heirs of the promises Gal. 3. 29. and children of the p●omise Heb. 6. 17. partly because they are the children promised to be broughin to Christ Isa. 53. 10. partly because by the promi●ses they are regenerat to a new life and by believing in Christ they obtain righteousnesse and eternall life for 1. Pet. 1. 23. they are called begotten again not of corruptible seed but of the incorruptible seed of the word of God Quest. If it be asked since faith is so necessary what is the object of faith Ans. We answer the truth of God revealed in Scripture or God speaking in Scripture and promising eternall life upon conditions holden forth in these promises among these promises some pertain to the covenant of works such as Gal. 3. 12. do this and live and Matth. 19. 17. If thou wilt enter into life keep the commandments and sundry other particular promises of blessings both spirituall and temporall annexed unto the promulgation of the Law which promises do serve to encourage them to make good their undertaking if they be able as they conceive they are and to humble them when they shall find by experience that neither threatning nor promises can make them to fulfill that law Beside the promises annexed to the covenant of works there are other promises which pertain to the covenant of reconciliation and tend to the making men embrace the covenant of grace and to continue therein such as these which are propounded in the Gospel for giving unto the believer all the sure mercies of David and the benefits purchased by Christ. And of this sort some are more generall some more speciall some of them belong to this life some of them to the life to come for true godlynesse comprehending faith and the fruits of it hath the promises both of this life and of the life to come of all these promises the foundation and fountain is the covenant of Redemption whereof we have spoken Chap. 4. wherein Christ promiseth to the Father to do his will and the Father promiseth to Christ as Mediatour and head of the Church in favours of the redeemed that he shall see his seed and be satisfied and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand upon this covenant of Redemption all the promises made to the Church do depend whether they be absolute promises whether conditional promises whether qualified promises which are like unto conditionall Absolute promises we call for example such as do promise absolutely the taking away the heart of stone and the conversion of the Elect and their perseverance and salvation Ier. 31. 31 32. c. and 32. ver 40. Such are the promises of gathering edifying propagating and perpetuating of the Christian Church to the worlds end as Math. 16. 18. Upon this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it Which sort of promises do serve to move men to come and embrace Christ and after men have fled to Christ in whom all the promises are Yea and Amen the believer may make application and comfortable use of all the precious promises of righteousness and eternal life set forth in the Gospel Conditionall promises are such as make offer of Christ and reconciliation to the hearers of the Gospel upon this condition that in the sense of sin and fear of wrath they ●lye to Christ as the only and sufficient remedy of sin and misery Qualified promises like unto conditionall are these that have in them some qualification of the person who is already a believer and do seem to make that qualification or designation of the believer to be a condition of the blessing promised therein which promises if they be well considered do pre-suppone the qualified person to whom the promise is made to be both a believer and also to be evidently endued with the named quality as for example Math. 5. Blessed are the mercifull the peace-maker the meek the mourners the poor the sufferer of persecution for the Gospel or for Christ c. which vertues if the person be not a believer in Christ do as yet signifie nothing in him nor do not intitle the man to this Gospel-blessedness and being the designations of believers they give the persons endued therewith encouragment to go on and encrease in that grace and all other graces that they may thereby more and more give evidence of their being reall believers Such also are the promises which are made to the confident waiters on God rejoycers in God lovers and fearers of God c. In which promises grace for grace to be derived out of the fulness of Christ is promised to the believer Some promises design fit persons to enter in covenant and do invite them to come to Christ Such as are come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy loaden Math. 11. 28. And Ho!
sin must be made manifest by the law and the merit of sin committed must be shown forth that the man to be converted may see himself in a lost condition and that he must certainly perish except he flee for refuge to Christ the Redeemer that by him he may have remission of sin And after a mans conversion the believer must by the precepts of the law be convinced of his duty and inability to perform obedience except by grace power be communicated unto him from Christ both to will and to do And when he hath gotten grace to give obedience in some measure yet must he examine his best works by the rule of the commands and acknowledge the imperfection of his service that he may be more and more humbled in himself and glory only in the imputed righteousness of Christ and withall give unto Christ the glory of any good thing which he hath in any measure done well 7. The threatnings also all of them must so be applyed in general as both converted and un-converted may be forced to run to Christ who only can deliver the un-converted from guiltiness and wrath and death eternal deserved by sin and who only can deliver those who are converted from the deserved punishment of their sins and from the execution of the sentence which the law pronounceth and who only can make them eshew and hold off the way which God hath cursed And it is easie to judge how much cause of humiliation the godly shall have by daily comparing their actings with the law and how dear and precious Christ must be to them who giveth unto them as many deliverances from death as they commit sins and do fail of their oblieged obedience to God 8. A sinner already convicted of sin and impenitency and hardness of his own heart and who is grieved for the same must not be skarred nor deterred from going unto Christ till first he attain such a prescribed measure of contrition as he conceiveth his sins do call for which measure un-skilfull Physicians do rigidly exact of sinners who are desirous of repentance pretending for their rigidity their fear lest if such sinners should be so easily admitted unto Christ the work of repentance should be marred in them and presumption should have way and be fostered in them this fear is needless because it belongs to Christ alone to give repentance and he came to call sinners convicted of sin and destitute of repentance in their own estimation and sense unto repentance that he may give them repentance We grant that there is a danger lest a sinner lightly touched with the sting of the conscience do not well weigh the weight of his sin and the merit of it and that he go to Christ with his lips only when his heart is far from him but on the other hand there is no less hazard left he who is destitute of repentance in his own sense and not permitted to go to Christ to have it may either be driven to dispair or conceive that by his own pains on his own heart repentance must be wrought before he go to Christ whom God hath exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance unto Israel and remission of sins Act. 5. 31. We must be wary therefore lest a burdened conscience in any measure being excluded from going to Christ till he be in such and such a measure humbled set himself so upon bodily exercise of ordinances without daring to go to Christ as that he put some merit in effect upon his bodily exercise which he useth to bring himself unto contrition or else turn desperatly careless and leave off all using of means We need not fear that instantly upon a sinners coming to Christ he shall find too soon consolation and so not be humbled as need were for Christ is only wise and can prudently deal with the sinner coming unto him he hath eye-salve to give his proud merchant to let him see his blindness poverty and misery as well as gold and garments to the poor and naked but if any be proud and rich in their own conceit and approach toward him without sense of sin he can suspend them from comfort till first he rebuke and chasten them and keep them off from felt access a while till they be truly humbled and thirst in earnest after pardon and imputed righteousness 9. As the narrow way to the kingdom of heaven must not be made straiter then God hath made it So neither must the way be made broader then God hath made it and reignies loosed to mens lusts as if believers sins were either none or but light ones for God is not a favourer of sin and whosoever do turn the grace of God into wantonness undoubtedly they are ignorant both of the Law and of the Gospel Wherefore the Law and the Gospel must be so tempered that on the one hand none who would be at Christ and through him at mortification of their sinfull nature be discouraged and on the other hand that no man boasting of his profession of faith be strengthened in his iniquity for this is the true sense and intent of God both in his threatnings and promises that none despair hearing threatnings but repent and live and that none presume to sin upon hearing his gracious promises but walk in fear before him Ezek. 33. 10 11 12. to v. 20. and Christ doth blot out from the number of the saved all them who break off and make void any of the precepts and do teach men so to do Matth. 5. 19. 10. Because God doth make use of the same arguments in his Word both for moral swasion and for effectual operation of saving faith and bringing forth fruits of new obedience therefore the force of God's arguments and inducements as occasion is offered must so be opened up and sharpned and pressed that the hearers being soundly convinced of the holiness equity verity and necessity of the Lords commands may at least be morally perswaded to yield unto them And to this end that hearers must be exhorted that they call to mind and weigh such and such arguments unto duties that by reasoning with themselves they may prevail by Gods bl●ssing to believe the Word of God So did Paul directing his speech to the governour Felix brash the castle of his conscience with this engine that he near by took it in Act. 24. 25. and so did he deal with Agrippa whom he near-by perswaded to become a Christian Act. 26. 28. and this was his endeavour to perswade all his hearers to believe the truth he taught 2 Cor. 5. 11. Knowing therefore saith he the terror of the Lord we perswade men And the same Apostle hath taught all Christs disciples to exercise the faculty of reasoning in the mater of strengthening their faith and purpose of obedience that having set before them the arguments which the Word of God doth furnish they may sum up the truth in
sort of men the Lord doth speak Deut. 29. 18 19. shewing that he makes his covenant with his people lest there should be among you saith he a root that beareth gall and wormwood And it come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my own heart to add drunkenness to thirst It is possible few shall be found so impudent as that they dar in expresse termes professe this their mis-belief of Gods justice yet they are not a few who foster this error in their heart who having as it were made a Covenant with death and hell are far from fearing to perish in their sins In this sort are all they to be ranked who conceive that all the threatnings in the Scripture are given forth to the intent that men being bridled by terrors might compose themselves to a more humane and social life among others who lest they should seem Atheists in word do cry up Gods mercy bounty and love to man so as they make small reckoning of the Lords truth and justice even as if the justice of God in punishing rebels could not consist with his mercy to the penitent or as if the end of creating man could not be obtained if obstinat sinners be destroyed 2. The main cause of such error is an obstinat purpose to walk after the counsel and imagination of their own heart and because they cannot quiet their conscience in following their own wayes except in promising to themselves impunity in their sinning they presume confidently to go on in their own wayes against all threatenings and so do blow their consciences blind Such profane presumption although it deserveth to be beaten with a rod rather then to be reasoned with yet let the Pastor deal with the presumer as he ought to do with other desperat like sinners and in the first place let him propose for remedy of this evil what the Lord doth speak against such a person Deut. 29. 20. The Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lye upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven And as he findeth this work upon him So let him deal with him 2. Some are near of kindred to such persons who do not reject all threatenings yet do think in their heart that none are in danger except grosse flagitious and notorious sinners but as to themselves they conceive because they are not the worst of men they are without the reach of divine justice especially if their conversation be according to humane laws so regulated as they have the reputation of honest neighbours With such men Christ dealeth Luk. 13. 1 2 5. when word came concerning the Galileans whose blood Pila● mixed with their sacrifices Christ saith to them Suppose ye that these Galileans were sinners above all Galileans because they suffered these things I tell you nay but except ye repent you shall all likewise perish This is the remedy prescribed by Christ to such men 3. Some there are who hope to be absolved before God and do absolve themselves in their own conscience by their good works and obedience done to the law Of this sort was Paul before his conversion who till the time that the spiritual light of the law brake in upon his mind and killed the conceit of his own inherent righteousnesse was no mean man in his own eyes Rom. 7. 9. Such was the rich young man in the Gospel who said to Christ that he had keeped all the commands from his youth up till Christ did prove him a covetous Idolater who put a higher price on his riches then upon Christ and the kingdom of heaven Such were the Pharisees who by their obedience to the law such as it was doubted nothing to absolve themselves and that God should absolve them also But that the met-yaird should be no longer then their cloath or the law of further extent then their imagined possible practice they admitted no metonymie or figurative speech in the law whereby under one branch of a duty commanded all duties of that kind are comprehended and all faults contrary to the duty are forbidden As for example they counted not the sixth command to be violat except the man did take away his neighbours life nor the seventh command broken except by grosse adultery and violation of the marriage-bed nor the eighth command transgressed except another mans goods were openly or privately taken away whose mistake Christ doth correct Matth. chap. 5. and 6. 2. Such men as those are far from repentance far from humbling themselves before God and seeking remission of sin through Christ for they are ignorant of the righteousnesse of the Gospel by faith in Jesus Christ and of the way of coming to ability for doing any acceptable work by faith in Christ and therefore they go about to establish their own righteousnesse Rom. 10. 3. and 9. 31. 32. The false ground which they do lay for their own absolution is this they think to be justified by their works against which ground the Apostle hath pronounced condemnatory sentence Rom. 3. 20. By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in Gods sight for by the law is the knowledge of sin 3. With this sort we may joyn these who not only come short of the obedience due to the law but also are in conscience convicted of many transgressions of the Lords law yet they conceive that God will not exact of them or of any man who is about to obey his law more then the man can in the common infirmity of flesh overtake and do perswade themselves that God will be satisfied with all them in whom is a willingnesse to obey the law their false ground which they lay is this that God will accept a mans will for the deed And to this purpose they do abuse the Scriptures Isa. 1. 19 If you be willing and obedient you shall eat the good things of the land And 2 Cor. 8. 12. If there be first a willing mind it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that he hath not 4. But here is their error whereupon they purchase from their conscience mis-informed an unwarrantable absolution first they lay down for a ground that they must be justified by works 2. Because they know they do come and shall come short in obedience they turn the condition of the covenant of works into other terms then God hath appointed and make the will of a man to obey the law so far as he is able to be the condition of the covenant which God disclaimeth 3. They deceive themselves in this that what is spoken to converted believers in Jesus Christ already justified by faith aiming at new obedience they do apply to themselves lying under the curse
and at length that they shall wholly give themselves to religious exercises and a holy life mean time they conceive they may come in among the true converts and young beginners albeit they come not up the length which they intend but are unde the power of some beloved lusts which they cannot rid themselves of but do hope they shall betime overcome them Such men do miserably mistake the mater first in that they think their purpose of repentance and a new life bred in them by conviction of their duty to be the very grace of regeneration and begun sanctification Secondly they conceive that the lusts which do reign in themselves are common to them and all other regenerat persons of whom few or none think they want their own grosse faults Thirdly they conceive they can repent more seriously when they please and will repent after a whiles following of their beloved lusts as if repentance were not a saving grace of the holy Spirit whom they do daily provoke by their vilenesse but a work in the power of every mans free-will being once convinced of his sin Fourthly they do not consider that by the delay of repenting and turning from all sin unto God their heart is daily more and more in Gods Judgment hardened and God provoked to punish their voluntary impenitence with judicial hardness of heart that they shall never repent Such men our Lord compareth to the disobedient Son who promised to his Father he would go work in his vineyard and went not Math. 21. 30. Such men are they who know the well of the Lord but do it not and therefore worthy of double punishment Math 12. 47. The ●●medy of this evil Christ giveth Luk. 13. 24 25 26. Strive to enter at the strait gate for many ● say unto you will seek to enter in and shall not be able M●n know not how soon God may shut the door therefore men had need while it is to day not to harden their hearts psal 95. 8. 2. Other some are who being of a civil life professe and do perswade themselves that they indeed do repent and believe in Christ and by faith in him do certainly expect salvation freely of his grace If you pose any such men whether they do indeed believe in Christ they shall presently answer that they firmly do believe in him and that they never doubted but he is their sweet Saviour who died for them If you press them to speak in earnest from their heart they shall presently be ill pleased with the question and ask what cause of suspecting the sincerity of their faith and repentance can be justly alledged or what cause hath any man to suspect them or doubt of Gods favour toward them in Christ In whom should we believe say they if not in Christ Is there any other Saviour of sinners beside him If a man please to try the truth of their faith by their repentance they shall forthwith affirm that they repent day and night and have just cause so to do for in many things we sin all and why then should we not alwayes repent If they be asked of their love to God and their neighbour they shall answer after the same maner Such men are these of whom Christ speaketh that they will confidently come to him and call him Lord Lord and yet be found no wayes carefull to do the Lords will but servants to their own lusts 3. Such men do deceive themselves first by framing to themselves such carnal notions of faith and repentance and of the love of God and of saving hope and other spiritual graces as in their phantasie they conceive they do practise which conceptions are not grounded upon the Word of God Secondly they esteem the assent of their mind unto the truth commending these duties unto men as good as the performance of them and they do take the sentence of their conscience concerning the equity of such duties for the sentence of their conscience bearing witnesse of their practice and obedience of these duties and while their conscience saith why should not I do so they take that for as good as if it had said I do so but saving graces go deeper then civil carriage and to commend the duties of repentance and faith in Christ is not enough except they be put in practice also in daily sorrow for sin and hatred of it and flying to Christ daily to be washen and more and more sanctified 4. Some there are who when they have heard that a man is justified by faith in Christ only without the works of the law do imagine a faith which needeth not to bring forth any good works at all and so they take off the justified man from all necessity of following good works as far as they take off good works from being the cause of justification and do open a door to themselves to live after their own will in the lusts of their flesh conceiving that they who believe in Christ are fred not only from the covenant of the law but also from the command of the law against whom our Lord doth speak and doth cut off such libertines and turners of the grace of God into wantonnesse from the kingdom of heaven Math. 5. 17 18 19. And the Apostle to guard against this self-deceit Heb. 12. 14. commandeth to follow holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. 5. Some there are who pretending to esteem well of the offer of the Gospel and of the duty of following the means of making them partaker of the marriage-supper do yet think themselves excusable when they have much ado in their worldly callings albeit they prefer the care of their family and provision for their things out-ward unto the main work of their entertaining communion with God yea they conceive that God will allow them in so doing as Christ doth insinuat in the parable of the ghuests invited to the feast answering the invitation with I pray have me excused Luke 14. 18 19. This is a rise evil in great personages rich persons and such as are much imploved in earthly affairs such men deceive themselves first in laying down this ground with themselves that their earthly affairs the necessity whereof doth first and most sensibly appear must in the first room be cared-for and that the one thing necessar may be followed after as their civil and earthly affairs may permit Secondly they reckon gain to be godliness 1 Tim. 6. 5. for they cannot be perswaded when gain may be had that God requireth of any man to slip the occasion or to put his worldly goods in hazard by defending or following maters of religion Thirdly they think themselves so wise as they can well enough serve two Masters God and covetousnesse albeit when it cometh to the proof they will be found to serve not God but their own lusts This error our Lord refuteth and giveth warning to beware of it Matth. 6. 24. And Luke 21. 34. Take heed
professors of the christian Religion and seeming zealous worshipers crying Lord Lord may deceive themselves and misse heaven but also Preachers of the Gospel yea and Prophets yea and men indued with the gift of doing miracles and casting out of devils in Christs name not a few shall be disclaimed by Christ and condemned by him in the day of judgment If it be asked what can be their mistake and the cause of Christs rejecting of them we answer Such men deceive themselves 1. because both they and beholders also think them holier then they who are inferiour in place and gifts unto them 2. They compare themselves with those they live among and not with the law of God 3. They put not due difference between common gifts and saving graces 4. They consider not that to whom much is given much will be required of them and therefore after tryal they will be found pust up with the estimation of gifts induements imployment and successe which they have had as if these were the undoubted evidences of their regeneration and of Gods special love towards them they will be found men void of repentance and far from humble walking in the sense of their natural habitual and actual sins they will be found void of all fear of wrath which might drive them in the acknowledgment of their blindnesse poverty and misery unto Christ the Redeemer and justifier of sinners and they will be found void of all care of and endeavour after new obedience conceiving that the exercise of their gifts and successe in their imployments are sufficient holinesse and evidence of the holy Ghosts dwelling in them and working by them for otherwayes Christ will never disclaim them who have fled to him in the sense of their sin and haunted him as their refuge in the fear of deserved wrath and studied by faith in him to be furnished to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit which he hath promised to them that abide in him It is one thing to be justified before God another thing to be reputed righteous by men and esteemed so by a mans own self it is one thing to be indued with the knowledge of divine mysteries another thing saveingly to believe them and have them written in their heart it is one thing to teach others the way of salvation whereby the hearers may be saved another thing to apply saving doctrine to themselves and make right use of it it is one thing to cleanse the outer side of the plater and reform the mans outward carriage another thing to be inwardly renewed it is one thing to teach repentance and mortification of lusts another thing by he Spirit of Christ ro mortifie in-bred pride and the love of the world vain glory and other carnal lusts The course which Paul followed is the only safe way though he was a man most laborious in the work of the Lord yet he lived most sensible of his natural corruption and the body of death he did not trust in his holy life but in Jesus Christ Rom. 7. 24 25. he so made use of faith in Christ as he did not neglect the means of mortification of his sinfull nature 1 Cor. 9. 27. I keep under my body and bring it under subjection lest that by any means when I have preached to others I my self should be a cast-away The fifth and last sort of self-deceivers by absolving of themselves without the Lords allowance or approbation are temporizers who for their temporary believing temporary repenting temporary motions of their affections and temporary amendment of their maners do seem to themselves and others also true believers This sort however it be in sundry cases coincident with one or moe of the former four self-absolvers yet because our Lord in the parable of the sower of seed Matth. 13. 21. and Luke 4. 17 doth put a difference between the stony ground and the other sorts of ground we shall give it a room by it self specially because it may have the own proper considerations Temporizers then we call such as upon temporary motives from temporary principles for temporary ends do imbrace the Word of the Lord readily but slightly and do as readily and lightly passe from it upon temporary motives in special when persecution arileth for the Word Mark 4. 16. when they have heard the Word immediatly they receive it with gladness and afterward when affliction or persecution arises for the Words sake immediatly they are offended Lightly they take up truth delivered and lightly do they passe from it again they have no root in themselves or solid believing of the truth for the truths cause but what pleaseth others pleaseth them and what displeaseth others doth displease them in the maters of religion the way of God set down in Scripture when they hear it they can say nothing against it yea they think it good to hear the Gospel and the largenesse of Gods grace and because it sheweth unto them a possibility of their salvation they receive it with a sort of natural gladnesse which sort of believing doth endure for a time to wit so long as the way of others among whom they live and the laws of the country and prosperity and good estimation with others goeth along with the profession of the truth received but when the wind of another doctrine bloweth and doth carry with it power to trouble and persecute them who will not receive it by and by they are offended and renounce the truth controverted because it draweth trouble with the profession of it for such persons suppose that gain ease and applause are very godlinesse It is true sometime the true believer may be surprised with a sudain tentation to renounce the profession of truth in some point for fear of death as Peters example doth shew us but true faith recovereth strength and ariseth after a fall and endureth persecution for that truth as temporary belief doth not but faileth altogether And the temporizers repentance failleth also because it ariseth from natural principles and is for natural motives and ends Such was the repentance of Saul in weeping and justifying David for sparing his life 1 Sam. 27. 21. Such was the repentance of the carnal Israelits Psal. 78. 36. and the humiliation of Ahab and such is their amendment of life all nothing but temporary and which doth not continue as Hosea chap. 6. 4. sheweth O Ephraim what shall I do unto thee O Judah what shall I do unto thee for thy goodnesse is like the morning cloud and like the early dew that passeth soon away Neither is it any wonder that unrenewed men may attain to something like unto faith and repentance and outward amendment of maners if we consider that humane writings find so much credit with men as not to be called in question but believed to be true for experience testifieth that their affections are moved sometime with delight and sometime with indignation and pity not only when they read Histories but also when
dissimilitude of manners or discrepance of judgment or contention about any mater then partiality hindereth a right judgment one of another and affection marreth reason many times that it cannot discern what is right Therefore let the person afflicted with this tentation turn himself to God who searcheth the reines and let him humble himself in his sight renewing the exercise of repentance and faith in Christ and let him apply to himself what the Scripture doth pronounce of these who in the sense of their sin do flye to Christ Jesus that in him they may have remission of sin and amendment of their life for so did the Prophet in the whole Psal. 17. when he had to do with his uncharitable friends and kinsfolk and so let the afflicted do CHAP. XV. Wherein the converts doubting of his being in the state of grace so oft as he doth not feel the sense of his reconciliation with God is examined and answered SO●e true converts are who indeed are indued with the saving graces of faith hope and charity and give evident proof of the in-dwelling of the holy Spirit in them and do rejoyce now and then in God their Saviour when his love to them is shed abroad in their heart but when a cloud cometh over their eyes and they do not feel the warm beams of the Sun of righteousnesse shining in their soul as they before have felt they are assaulted with doubting if any saving grace be in them at all and do entertain these tentations oft-times so far as to suspect and expresse in words that there is no solid faith in themselves no lively hope no christian charity no mortification of sin no purity of heart and such like if when they are thus tempted and tossed they lay hold on Christ as in their first conversion and find the sensible comfort of the holy Spirit by the word of the Gospel applyed unto them then all is well their doubting is overcome for the time they rejoyce and praise God But if the Lord shall delay for his own wise ends to renew their sensible consolations and to renew the earnest-penny of their inheritance forthwith they begin to doubt again and to hearken to Sathans suggestions and to suspect that their former feelings were but temporary and not the special operations of the holy Spirit and at length break forth in many sad complaints And in a word they do not maintain the work of saving grace in themselves longer then the sun shine of spiritual felt consolations abideth with them And albeit their exercise be no wayes so hard as was the Prophets Psal. 77. yet they fall out in the same complaint which the Prophet expresseth ver 7 8 9. Will the Lord cast off for ever and will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone for ever doth his promise fail for evermore hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies 2. For clearing of this case two diseases may be perceived in the afflicted which is here described The one is this the afflicted setteth himself to live rather by sense then by faith and doth put his faith on work of set purpose that he may obtain or recover consolation shortly but if his desire be not shortly granted he maketh not use of the formerly felt consolations to strengthen his own ●aith when consolation is withdrawn The other sicknesse is this the afflicted doth not take up the nature of saving graces nor perceive the beauty thereof except in the sun-shine of sensible divine approbation thereof he doth not take up the right definition or description of saving graces for saith is to him nothing if it be not a full perswasion except he can pour forth tears alwayes he thinks he doth not repent except he find a joyfull expectation of Christs coming in glory he thinks his hope not lively and so of charity and patience temperance righteousnesse and holinesse if he do not find them in some eminent measur as they may near●by stand before the law the afflicted of whom we are now speaking thinketh he hath nothing of saving grace in him We grant that this sicknesse is very rare and few they are that are troubled with it yet where it appeareth it must be speedily cured but with great circumspection cured for the earnest desire he hath of feeling the sweet sense of the joy of the holy Ghost must not be disallowed but commended to him and he taught to cry as it is said Cant. 2. 5. Stay me with flaggons comfort me with aples for I am sick of love yet with holy submission unto Gods will for time maner and measure 2. He is also to be commended that in his trouble he goeth to God in Christ not altogether without faith which he putteth forth in active exercise thereof by confession of sin by supplication and otherwayes but here is he to be reproved that while he is actually exercising faith love hope c. he reckoneth all he doeth to be nothing no faith no hope c. because it is not in such a measure as he would 3. He is to be commended that he doth aime at the highest degrees of faith love hope patience mortification of sin and practice of holinesse and all commanded vertues but here he faileth that he counteth all as nought when consolation and sensible approbation of what he hath is not felt for here he despiseth the day of small things and unthankfully mis-regardeth the lower degrees of these saving graces which notwithstanding are bought to the redeemed by the same price wherewith the highest degrees are bought to wit with the precious blood of Jesus Christ. 3. Wherefore let the afflicted consider first that the will of God revealed requireth of us that we walk by faith and under the sense of our sinfulnesse and afflictions whatsoever hold fast the covenant of grace in Christ Jesus and by adhering unto him hold up our heart and entertain spiritual life in us Secondly let him consider that this way of living by faith and dependence on the word of Gods grace doth please the Lord well for without faith it is impossible to please him and thus living by faith in him doth give more glory of truth grace mercy and constancy unto God then when we suspend the glorifying of him till we find the sense of consolation from him for if we believe in God only because we find the consolations of his Spirit our faith in that case is weak and leaneth more upon the pledge and sensible evidence of his truth bestowed upon us then upon his promise without a pledge for no man will refuse to give credit to a man upon a pawn but God is worthy to be credited upon his word without a pawn yea when his dispensation seemeth contrary to his promise Thirdly let him consider that the Lord useth to give sensible consolations not only to help our faith in the time of consolation but also to help our
and for drawing him to Christ to be his refuge in his worst condition CHAP. XXVIII Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert concerning his regeneration because he findeth the power of the body of death in the pollution of the imaginations of his heart vigorous and powerfull THere are some true converts who albeit they be cleansed from the pollutions that are in the world and have their conversation blamelesse and without giving scandall unto them they live among yet frequently are troubled with doubting of their state in grace because they feel in themselves such a power of in-bred corruption of their hearts as can hardly consist as they conceive with regeneration and saving saith because Iames chap. 3. ver 11. maketh the question thus doth a fountain send forth at the same pl●ce sweet water and bitter c. unto the end of the Chapter This doubt the afflicted wrestles with and saith with himself what shall I think of my self whose heart is so polluted that it casteth forth continually dirt and mire how shall I reckon my self among the Saints how shall I incrude my self among the justified who find so little evidence of the work of sanctification in me For faith should purifie the heart from this pollution whereof I do justly complain 2. For solving of this doubt many things are already spoken which serve for the curing of this case and comforting the afflicted in this condition but because one and the same doubt doth diversely present it self now in one shape then in another and doth vex the afflicted in sundry wayes we shall answer this doubt proposed as it is set down First therefore let the afflicted examine himself whether he may with some measure of honesty say with the Psalmist Ps. 66. 18. I do not regard iniquity-in my heart I do not so delight in sin but that sin is still my affliction and my daily grief Secondly let him examine himself whether the power of corruption doth break forth in words and deeds or not or if it do burst out in some passionat fits whether he doth open the sluce and give it way or whether he sets himself to oppose the out-breaking of sin and is humbled for what doth break forth Thirdly let him examine whether he flyeth to Christ to wash him and help him against the power of sin or not If after examination he can in any measure of honesty joyn with the Apostle in his lamentation and recourse unto Christ for delivery Rom. 7. 24 25. he may be assured he is in the state of grace For there is a vast difference between a mans being sold unto sin by his native corruption captivating him and a mans setting of himself unto sin as a voluntary servant of sin for a renewed man may be in sundry cases a captive to sin and is a fighter against sin But a man selling himself to sin is a slave voluntarily suffering sin to reign in his mortall body Let the afflicted therefore comfort himself because in him there is a perpetual conflict between the flesh and the spirit between his native inclination to sin and the new creature or inclination to holinesse Neither let him by mis-understood Scripture formerly cited vex himself for his faith is indeed upon the work and the way of purifying his heart first because he doth flye to the bloud of Christ which cleanseth him from all sin in respect of remission granted Secondly there is a constant endeavour to be more and more holy and to draw vertue by faith from Christ to bring forth good fruits well-pleasing unto God Thirdly he is about to mortifie his lusts by the Spirit of Christ and to purge out the leaven of all filthinesse of flesh and spirit albeit he cannot purge it out all at once or wholly in in this life And fourthly because albeit his doubting of his estate in grace be not allowable yet it doth bear witnesse that the remainder of pollution in him is his grief affliction and vexation So also that other Scripture Iames 3. 11. which faith that out of the same fountain proceedeth not salt water and sweet is not to be understood so as if no rotten speech could possibly proceed out of the mouth of a regenerat man at any time for Iames doth witnesse that in many things we sin all in thought word and deed But the meaning is that he that bridleth not his tongue his religion is vain and nothing but a presumptuous boasting of that wich is not reall and in truth and that it is inconsistent with regeneration that out of a mans mouth pretending to blesse God cursing of men who are made after the similitude of God should flow forth as waters flow forth from a running fountain without controlment CHAP. XXIX Shewing how to quench the fiery darts of Sathan and resist his sinfull suggestions whether of shorter endurance or of longer continuance SOmetime on a sudain Sathan casteth a fiery dart of tentation unto some sin as his messenger seeking to prepare the lodging for him which tentation he doth so furiously presse as if he would not be refused or could not be resisted and possibly may so bear-in his tentation as the convert may be afraid that Sathan shall prevail finding himself as it were over-powered and unable to bear out in such a case as the Apostle had experience of 2 Cor. 12 7 8 9. who found himself as it were buffeted and abused by the messenger of Sathan and unable of himself to resist him The remedy whereof is that the afflicted with the Apostle be humbled in himself in the sense of his in-born sinfulnesse and inability to overcome tentations 2. That he flye to Christ the captain of militant souldiers and do pray unto him instantly to help to bear out in the conflict and to be rid of the Tempter 3. Let him hold fast the faith of promised grace and wrestle on so long as it shall please God to exercise him so With such a tentation Iob also was exercised which so far prevailed as to make carnall and corrupt nature speak for it The tentation was very fearfull and no lesse then self-murther Iob 7. 13 14 15. When I say my couch shall ease my complaint then thou scarrest me with dreams and terrifiest me with night-visions so that my soul chooseth strangling and death rather then life The remedy whereof is with Iob to flye to the Redeemer and fix faith upon him and to present the tentation unto God by prayer and humble lamentation striving against the suggestion and never to give over relying on God as he did 2. Sometime Sathan when he cannot find instruments to charge the convert with hypocrisie and a course of wickednesse as he found in Iobs tryall by his uncharitable friends he useth immediately to fall a railing against the whole course of the work of grace in the convert and charge him falsely with deep guiltinesse as calumniators use to do in their furious flyting and slandering
conscience and felt wrath pursuing me for sin may be clear to me by its own light and scriptural evidence albeit it being possibly the very instant of my conversion I cannot produce any fruits or evidences of my conversion past or else what shall be said of malefactors on the scaffold presently to be put to death and possibly not wakened in conscience before not fled to Christ before What shall be said of sick persons near unto death who being self-condemned do betake themselves in their last agony unto the grace of God in Christ offered to self-condemned sinners in the Gospel 2. I must put difference between a reason to prove that I have believed and a reason why I may and must now believe The reason to prove that I have believed is from the effect to prove the cause thereof to wit faith to be in me but the reason why I may now and must believe is from the cause to infer the effect that should be in me the cause of believing in Christ is Gods command to self-condemned sinners which command I must now obey left I perish and so if I find fruits I prove I have believed because I feel the love of God shed abroad in my heart and that I love God who hath freely loved me and here I reason from the effect to prove that the cause of this fruit to wit sa●ing faith hath preceeded and is gone before Again I prove that I should believe because the offer of the Gospel and of free grace in Christs made to all self-condemned persons renouncing confidence in their own worth or works is made to me with a command to believe in the Son of God Christ Jesus for which cause I may and ought to cast my self upon his grace who justifieth the ungodly flying to him without the works of the Law 3. I must put difference between my having fruits of faith in me and my observing and finding these fruits in me for a true convert may have both faith and fruits and for the time being under tryal and temptation may be so darkened that he can see nothing in himself but sin and apparent wrath pursuing him for sin as may be seen in Ionah in the belly of the fish Ionah 2. 4. and David Ps. 51 9 10. 4. I must put difference between my perswasion that I have been and am a true convert and a sincere believer and my perswasion that I have right reason and good warrand to believe in Christ in my lowest condition howsoever then I find my self emptied of all signes of saving grace in me for the time yet my perswasion that I should in this sad condition flye to Christ and believe in him doth serve to make me consent heartily unto the offer of the covenant of grace in Christ doth serve to make way for my justification and looseth all doubts and objections of Sathan tempting me to mis-believe and to run away from Christ and the offered mercy in him 5. And last of all I must put difference between making use of good fruits brought forth by me for confirmation of my faith and my putting confidence in or laying weight on these good fruits for many true converts do here fail and do not mark the mistakes for when they find love to God and his Saints with fear and holy reverence and such other like signes of grace in their hearts and outward fruits thereof in their life then they do believe in Christ and rejoice in him but when at another time they find hardnesse of heart profanity and perversenesse of a wicked nature in themselves they are like to quite their interest in the covenant of Grace and to stand aloof from Christ like strangers when they should most be humbled and creep in to him for remission of sin a●d hiding of their nakednesse by his imputed righteousnesse And what is this in effect else then in the first place to lean on their works and holy disposition as if there were merit in them and then after in the next place to believe in Christ who hath furnished them those fruits whereas they should in the sense of their sin and unworthinesse first flye to Christ and firmly adhere to him by faith that out of his fulnesse they may receive grace for grace according as we are taught to do by Christ himself Ioh. 15. 5. He that abideth in me and l in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me you can do nothing CHAP. VII Concerning the case of the convert in some point of doctrine deluded and pleasing himself in this condition TO speak of delusion and bewitching in the general requireth a large Treatise It shall suffice our purpose to speak of it as it hath place in the point of doctrine and practice erroneous Which we describe thus Delusion is a powerfull operation of a lying Spirit whereby he obtrudes to men some noysome error in doctrine or practise contrary to true doctrine fairded over with sophistical deceits and doth perswade inconsiderate souls effectually to receive the error for truth and to defend and spread it in their rash zeal For explication of which description we say 1. delusion is a powerfull operation of a lying Spirit wherein Sathan in Gods judgment is permitted to put forth his power in lying effectually Therefore in all his effectuall delusions there is a concurring righteous judgment of God in loosing reins to the rempter that by delusion one sin in one degree may be punished by a following sin in a higher degree No wonder therefore that a lying Spirit do work more effectually when he is not restrained by the powerfull hand of God 2. We say that delusion is in some dangerous error tending to the damage of the Church and hazard of souls And this we say not as if we did think that any sin doth not draw with it the merit of death for the wages of every sin is death but because Sathan is not so busie to spred and foment such errors as are lesse perillous as he is active in such errors which do most tend to pester the Church and divert the professors of religion from the path way of saving doctrine And to this purpose he essayes all means that he may obscure and darken the truth and devise and spread abroad the most pernicious errors Mean time he is not idle in sowing and spreading lesser errors that he may stir up contention and jangling in the Church whereby precious time which should be spent for mutual edification may be idly wasted in needlesse disputes and mens minds may be prepared to receive grosser errors Thirdly we put some difference between errors in doctrine and errors in practice albeit there cannot be one error in practice whether it be in the external worship or government of the Church or in outward conversation which being stiffly maintained hath not some error of judgment and doctrine joyned with it or else it should not be contrary to sound doctrine
every grace in the convert and this amongst the rest 2. This preposterous and bastard zeal doth render the deluded person too pertinacious in the defence of the error wherewith he is overtaken that rather then he will quite his error he will imbrace another error to maintain the former error for which he doth contend And this cometh to passe partly by a sort of necessity and partly by corrupt willfulnesse Partly of necessity I say because one absurd error being received draweth after it many other errors for it is impossible to defend one error in religion but by broaching and maintaining moe errors I say partly by corrupt willfulnesse because when the deluded person findeth himself in dispute intangled so as he must either renounce the error which he hath imbraced or receive and maintain another error which followeth thereon he chooseth rather to imbrace the error which followeth upon his first error wherein he was first insnared 3. Holy zeal loveth every truth yea loveth other points of truth as much as it loveth that particular doctrine of truth which discovers the error neither will it suffer a believer for the defence of any point of doctrine to passe from another truth but preposterous and bastard zeal is contrair for if many points of truth come in comparison and competition with the error which the deluded man hath drunken in he will mis-regard them all rather then forsake his error albeit he professe other truths to be more precious and necessar then his erroneous tenet A proof of this we have in the Pharisees who made the great things of the Law of none effect for upholding of their own traditions Mat. 15. 6. And the same power of delusion may be seen among Papists who will not so hotly pursue or punish so severely the breach of Gods commandments as they do pursue and punish the neglect of superstitious ceremonies 4. Preposterous and bastard zeal is very busie to spread and propagat an error by all means venting false doctrine And such mens speeches do spread as a gangren 2 Tim. 2. 17. and a little leaven of this kind is ready to leaven the whole lump Gal. 5. 9. In which case Christ advertised and exhorted his disciples to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees whereby they were about to leaven the whole Church And this furious zeal as experience hath taught doth spare no pains or labour to draw on moe and moe to the profession of the zealots errors as may be observed in Pharisees who compassed sea and land to make proselyts Math. 23. 15. 5. This bastard zeal of deluded persons carrieth them to have respect unto and estimation of them that embrace their error and to seek respect and estimation from them who are overtaken with their error This was evident in the schisme of the Corinthians of whom some did choose to be called such mens disciples other some did choose to be called the disciples of another man and all did glory in their leaders 1 Cor. 3. 5. 21. And on the other hand the heads of the schisme did glory in the multitude and excellency as they conceived of their disciples This the Apostle observed in the seducers of the Galatians and in them that were seduced by them Gal. 4. 17. They zealously affect you but not well yea they would exclude you from communion with God us his Apostles that you might affect them 6. This bastard zeal of the deluded doth drive them to disdain and contemn all them who oppugn their error yea and to hate them as experience did shew among the Corinthians for so soon as schismes did arise in Corinth dissentions also did arise 1 Cor. 3. 3. and 2 Cor. 12. 20. and of this ●vil the Apostle doth complain Gal. 4. 16. Am I become your enemy because I tell you the truth And this much may serve for our purpose concerning the effect and signs of delusion Quest. 3. The third question is what are the causes of delusion For answer the causes are many and various for some causes are principal causes some subservient some meritorious causes and some promoveing and helping forward of this evil And which causes and instruments God doth so over-rule in his justice power and wisdom that he turneth all to his own glory and welfare of his Church This we learn from the Apostle 1 Tim. 4. 1 2. Now saith he the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith giving head to seducing spirits and doctrines of devils speaking lies in hypocrisie having their conscience seared with an hot iron forbidding to marry and to abstain from meats which God hath created to be received c. Where first he foretells that there shall be a departing from the doctrine of the Apostles whereof he giveth an instance of that which might seem furthest from suspicion of delusion to wit a putting of a religious restraint upon the use of things lawfull in themselves as marriage and meats The authors of this delusion 1. he points forth to be lying spirits and men seduced by a lying spirit 2. The way of seduction he foretells shall be by lyes spoken in grosse hypocrisie 3. Left any should wonder how this could come to passe that any man against his conscience should dare to speak lyes he points at the cause procuring to wit the stupidity and senslessenesse of the conscience they have their conscience seared with a hot iron And 2 Cor. 11. 14 15. speaking of deluded seducers of the people Such are false apostles saith he deceitfull workers transforming themselves into the Apostles of Christ. And no marvel for Sathan himself is transformed into an Angel of light Where among sundry wayes of deceiving he points forth one of Sathans stratagemes to tempt men to make a shew of piety and counterfeit appearance of holy zeal and to pretend the authority of God to delude the simple By which delusion whosoever are insuared they are ready to put on the same coat for being deceived they deceive others pretending Scripture that they may fight against Scripture and pretending holinesse and piety that they may hinder in others the true exercise of holinesse As to the causes of ready embracing of errors 1. there is propension aboundant in the natural corruption of the heart to lay hold on any error offered Ier. 17. 9. The heart is deceitfull above all things and desperatly wicked who can know it Another cause is pointed forth by Christ Mat. 22. 29. You erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God A third cause is the want of mortification for the Apostle doth reckon heresies and schismes among the works of the flesh and in particular 1 Tim. 6. 10. The love of money is the root of all evil which while some have coveted after they have erred from the faith And concerning the instruments of delusion and division in the Church the sentence of the holy Spirit doth stand sure for he knoweth the evils
Lord of the Conscience and no man may take upon him that power to prescrib unto and command another mans conscience let him know that God indeed is the only Lord of the conscience and because he is Lord therefore hath he appointed his Ministers to teach men the truth and to presse the disobedient members of the visible Church with censures and hath put the sword in the Magistrats hand to see his will done and to punish such as refuse to give obedience to his commands that so obedience may be procured to God the only Lord of the conscience In which case albeit the acts commanded by the will and conscience are curbed and restrained yet the will and conscience is not compelled but is brought to a better determination of its own elicit acts that having obtained a clearer light about its duty it may command the outward man to say do what is right If he pretend that religion is not to be propagat and press'd by force but by the word preached and heresies are to be rooted out not by the sword but by the power of truth holden forth to the heretick let him know that there is a difference between propagation of religion among Pagans or people not under the charge of the civil Magistrat or Church Judicatories and the preservation or purgation of religion among them that are within the visible Church and under the power of the civil Magistrat For albeit the only way to bring religion in request among heathen nations and strangers to the covenant of promises be that way which the Apostles did follow preaching the Gospel to all and receiving such as embraced the Gospel into Church-fellowship yet the Magistrat having civil dominion over heathen Idolaters may after information of them by the Preachers of the Gospel break their Idols and abolish them and restrain them from doing contempt unto the true Religion or abusing of the Sabbath as the fourth command of the moral law doth give warrant yea and may compell them to use the means whereby they may be instructed in the true Religion Again let him know there is a difference between dealing with Pagans and strangers from the commonwealth of Israel and dealing with these who have given up their names unto Christ have entered in covenant with God and by baptisme have consecrat themselves and their children unto the faith worship and obedience of God and do professe the christian Religion and yet go about by their errors and practices to corrupt and over-turn the true Religion and saith of others among whom they live for such may and should be not only instructed by Sermon con●●rence and dispute but also punished by the civil Magistrate for their deceiving of the people and troubling the flocks of Christ Deut. 13. and Rom. 13. If he pretend that Church-censures and civil punishments can serve for nothing but to make men dissemblers and hypocrits in the mater of religion which is most odious in the sight of God and wise men let him know that every hypocrit shall bear his own iniquity Ecclesiastick censures and civil punishments concern the words and deeds of the outward man that they may be ordered so as Religion and the peace of the Kingdom may not suffer detriment If any man say and do that which is right in hypocrisie and dissimulation the society wherein he liveth is safe but for his hypocrisie let the dissembler answer to God for it And yet it is not to be presumed that all who by censures and fear of civil punishments do forsake error and embrace truth are dissemblers and hypocrits in so doing because they are means appointed of God for curbing and reclaiming erroneous persons wherewith he giveth his blessing when it pleaseth him for by censures and civil punishments the allurements which have enduced them to error are cut off such as are applause of men vain glory worldly advantage sensual pleasure and such like wherein the erroneous have been taken as in an evil net which being broken the insnared captive may come freely off his error and embrace the truth and take in good part the censures and civil punishment which drew him out of the snare into the right way As we are assured by the prophesie of Zechariah chap. 13. 6. And one shall say to wit to the converted sectary what are these wounds in thine hands Then he shall answer those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends But whether by those means the erroneous be reclaimed heartily or in dissimulation respect must be had to Gods commands and his peoples good by curbing of vice and error according as God hath given power to the Church and to the civil Magistrat Rom. 13. 3 4. who is appointed the minster of God for the peoples good If he shall object that he who chargeth him for his error is no lesse subject to error then he whom he chargeth yea that Governours ecclesiastick and civil are no more exeemed from the danger of erring then privat persons yea that the determinations of Synods and Councils are not infallible yea that he is perswaded the error he is charged of is no error but not perswaded of the truth which the reformers of him pretend unto Let him know that the force of his objection doth assert that truth and righteousnesse is settled upon the mis-perswaded sectaries part and that the Church and Magistrat who ●indeth fault with him hath nothing to perswade them of the truth which they do presse upon the sectary and so cannot condemn or punish him but he must know that it is one thing to say one may erre in the latitude of a possiblity indefinit another to say one doth erre in such a particular wherein he hath the light of Scripture and reason clear for him The sectary will not deny he may erre but he will maintain that in such one or other article of his profession he doth not erre Shall he maintain his plea that he doth not erre in such a point of error and shall not the Magistrat and Church maintain their plea that they do not erre in punishing such an obstinat erroneous person Christ hath committed the keyes of doctrine and discipline to his Church that privat persons may know Christs will by the ministery of the Church except he will be holden for an heathen or publican Mat. 18. 17. He hath also committed the power of the sword unto the Magistrat who doth not bear the sword in vain Rom. 13. And therefore let the Church and Magistrat do their duty and let erroneous persons cease to stumble the Lords people by their error and practice and suffer themselves to be brought in order by such as have commission and power to move them by censures and civil punishment thereunto If still he will insist and alledge that by this means a Christian by censures and civil punishment is compelled to sin against his conscience let him know that a scandalous sectary or
be ready for new conflicts and assaults from Sathan and not be afraid of being deprived of the peace of God while he by faith in Christ is yoked in battel against sin which he seeth in the world and feeleth in himself CHAP. XII Of the case of a convert taking some acts of justifying faith to be high presumption in his person THis case is like the former Some true converts are who have fled to Christ for remission of sin and delivery from ●erdition and have applyed the promises made for sanctification and consolation and full salvation after this life in such a measure as doth suffice them for encouragment to wrestle with difficulties wherewith with they may meet in their way to heaven But when the highest and most excellent priviledges of the Gospel are presented to them and come to be made use of such as are sitting together with Christ in heavenly places E●hes 2. 6. being co-heirs annexed with Iesus Christ Rom. 8. 17. So esteemed of and loved by Christ that they who touch his Saints do touch the apple of his eye Iudging the world and the damned Angels 1 Cor. 6. 3. and such like other priviledges they are at a stand and dar not apply these priviledges for fear of high presumption 2. Neither must we wonder that a soul should fall in this exercise and yet adhere to Christ as a convert and true believer For when a sinner for fear of perdition is chased to a Saviour and dar not loose his grips lest he fall in the pit he may seem to himself to be in good case if he get in to Christ albeit he do not thrust himself upon such high priviledges and joyn himself with Abraham and the Patriarchs and Prophets Like unto Mephibosheth who judged himself to have found grace enough at Davids hand that his life was spared but trembled when he was priviledg'd to come to the Kings table who in his own eyes was like a dead dog for his unworthinesse as he judged of himself Or like the prodigal in the Gospel who in his own eyes was not worthy to be counted a child of the family but content to be as one of the hired servants in his fathers house And true it is that the wonderfull largenesse of the promises of the Gospel maketh the true convert lately come forth of the slavery of sin and Sathan to stand so astonished that he dar not take to him so glorious titles priviledges and consolations as the Scripture doth allow him yea when he would lift up himself to believe the glory promised he can no more apprehend the infinit love and grace of God propounded and adjudged unto him then he can measure the heaven with his span or comprise in his hand the great Globe and round of heaven and earth From such a consideration was it that Peter did at first utterly refuse to suffer Christ to wash his feet and that Martha in the beginning of her conference with Christ could not think of so great a benefit as the resurrection of her brother Lazarus before the day of judgment 2. The convert in this case doth wrong to himself and to the Word of God and to the liberality and rich grace of God for so long as he suffereth himself to be born down from imbracing as safely he may the rich allowance of God upon a soul reconciled to him by ●aith in Christ he not only cuts himself off from that measure of joy of the holy Ghost which he may have but also giveth occasion and advantage to Sathan to brangle and call in question whether the man hath indeed believed in Christ at all or whether he hath laid hold on Christ for righteousnesse and salvation by faith un●ained for if it be presumption for a self-condemned sinner flying unto Christ by faith to lay hold upon the benefits which Christ hath prepared purchased and offered unto him upon this pretended reason that these benefits are so hudgely great and the man so small and unworthy in his own eyes why may not Sathan with as great reason if there were any weight in it call it presumption for such a man to lay claim unto Christ who is greater then all his benefits and so beat him off from faith and confidence in Christ the great gift of God made of God to poor sinners fled unto him wisdom and righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 3. Wherefore to help the convert in this condition let him consider he doth well to be feared for presumption for it is a fearfull evil but let him remember to put due difference between presumption and true faith and confidence for 1 presumption is proud and pu●t up with self-conceit but we pre-suppose the convert to be humble and laid low in his own eyes in this condition we are speaking of 2. Presumption is secure and negligent in the discharge of commanded duties but the convert we speak of is about the use of the means and in some measure diligent in discharging commanded duties in his calling 3. Presumption layeth hold upon promises not made to the presumptuous and troubleth not it self with precepts and threatnings but the convert in this condition we are speaking of regardeth both precepts and threatnings and is so far from putting forth his hand without a warrant unto promises that he stands aloof from laying hold on moe promises then he conceiveth necessar to save his soul from hell 4. The presumptuous promiseth to himself felicity albeit he walk in his own wayes and turneth the grace of God into lasciviousnesse incouraging himself to sin because God is mercifull but this convert● sheweth sin and followeth the way which may lead him to the possession of all promises Therefore 1. let the convert in this condition remember that Christ and all his benefits are so joyned together in the grant of grace that he may confidently say with the Apostle Rom. 8. 32. that seing Christ is given to the believer flying unto him it cannot be but God with him will give all things also 2. Let him consider that it is a dangerous mater not to give credit unto Gods faithfull Word holden forth in one promise as well as in another For seing he is worthy to be believed in the first promise of receiving into favour a sinner flying to Christ why shall he not have the glory of truth and grace in the rest of the promises which belong to the accomplishing of the full glorification of the man reconciled 3. And last of all let the convert in this condition consider how near he draweth to a popish error in this practice for Papists do measure the gifts of God unto men by the mans merit and well-deserving and not by meer grace only and upon this ground do reckon it presumption for any ordinar Christians to be assured in this life that God will guide them with his counsel and at their departure out of this life immediatly receive them into glory For if the