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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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or to pull their noses out of the Earth they only give an hoggish grunt and away they goe to the rooting more eagerly in the earth and earthly things But the nature of the Dogge is that if one goe about to drive him from his vomit or from his stinking carrion he will presently flie in ones face and bee ready if he can to pull out ones thtoat so these especilly Iusticiaries Iusticiaries worse enimies to the Gospel than the openly prophane enamoured with their own holy walking and legall righteousnesse if one goe about to draw them from the high prizing of the menstruous cloathes of their own righteousnes lay before them the inestimable riches of Christ and the precious wedding-garment of his righteousnesse they are ready for thy good will with calumniations reproaches and slanders all to rend and teare thee and with false accusations if they can to pull out thy throat but they will not leave their stinking carrion both agree in this to set light of the wedding-garment of Christ righteousnesse that only puts them in possession of heaven and heavenly things though for their ingratitude and grievous contempt of the same they be justly bound hand and foot and cast into utter darknesse where is weeping and gnashing of teeth Matth. 22. 5 6. 12 13. Matth. 22. 5. 6. 12. 13. And to conclude this point if wee would but mark and remember how the world that is the greatest multitude of all sorts that we shall have to doe with all in the world with all their wisdome judgement gravitie and righteousnesse are described in the word of God we would make them no pattern either of our beleeving or doing to the hindering of our walking in the narrow way of the true justifying faith And therefore How to arme our selves against the multitude to a●me our selves against this great multitude neither knowing nor discerning nor believing the excellency of Free Iustification and thereby driving us to doubting wee must remember first that Christ would not pray for the world Ioh. 17. 9. Secondly that therefore Ioh. 17 9. the world cannot receive the Spirit of God to know the things of God Ioh. 14. 17. Thirdly that therefore the whole world lieth dead in darknesse and Ioh. 14. 17. wickednesse 1 Ioh. 5. 19. Fourthly that therefore the 1 Io● 5. 19. world shall bee damned 1 Cor. 11. 32. and therefore no president for us to lead us into doubting though 1 Cor. 11. 32. they by their dead faith deny the excellency of Free Iustification and the excellency of the other benefits of Christ never so impudently because it is notably well said of Calvin upon those words of Christ Verily verily I say unto thee That wee speak that which we know and testifie that which we have seene but yee receive not our testimony Ioh. 3. 11. That this is the complaint of Calvin upon Ioh. 3. 11. Christ against many such jolly grave and learned heads as Nicodemus was saying that wee are hereof to gather that it is as it were a fatall thing to the word of God in all ages to obtain credit but with a few whereupon Christ spake in the plurall number saying But yee receive not our witnesse because this belongs to the greater number and in a manner to the whole body of the people with which we ought to bee armed as with a buckler that notwithstanding all the wilfulnesse of men we may goe forward in the obedience of faith and of the Gospel this principle indeed is to bee holden that our faith be founded and grounded upon God speaking but then when wee have God for our Author being as it were lifted up thereby above the heavens we ought boldly to trample the whole world rather under our feet and set light of it from aloft than that the unbeliefe of any should trouble us or cause us to waver But here it is replyed No I am not so fond as to A reply respect the prophane world or the greatest multitude either led by their great wit or enamoured with their blind devotion But other Ministers being both zealous Preachers and such Teachers as are of great knowledge and of excellent learning doe hold the contrary namely that the children of God are not freely without works made so perfectly holy and righteous in the sight of God that God sees no sinne in them To which I answer that although the expresse Answ Scriptures before alledged were the only ground that first wrought faith in mee yet they were zealous Preachers of Free Iustification and learned Teachers that have greatly strengthned my faith herein who in their judicious Interpretations upon the same Scriptures and other Writings of great knowledge and of excellent learning have so concurred in one consent that they have and doe put mee out of all doubting And if any man will shew me that these zealous Preachers and grave Teachers have in their Writings and Interpretations of those Scriptures said or writ more of the excellency of Free Iustification than they may say by the truth of those Scriptures or that I have said more than they doe say then oh doubting Objector will I also doubt with thee and grant that thou hast some just cause by reason of some learned Teachers to doubt But if thou repliest That thou speakest not of such A Reply learned Teachers as are Writers but of such learned men as are now living Speakers and Preachers And again even of those learned Writers all doe not write of those Scriptures after the same manner and if they doe yet those that are learned can alledge many sayings of the same learned Writers and Interpreters of those Scriptures that in other places doe seeme to unsay and to hold the clean contrarie to that which they have written upon those Scriptures namely shewing that the children of God are not by Free Iustification made so perfectly holy and righteous from all spot of sin in the sight of God that God sees no sin in them A threefold Answer Unto which I give a threefold answer First that thou hast more cause to take heed that the unbeliefe of thine own heart doe not rather beguile thy selfe with a prejudicate opinion that those learned Preachers that thou speakest of now preaching with lively voyce doe hold the contrary than that they disagree from the foresaid learned Writers and Interpreters or that these learned Writers and Interpreters dissent from themselves in other places and unsaying that which they have said doe hold contraries For S. Paul saith truly that if we love not the truth to hold fast unto it God by our prejudicate opinion will in justice send us strong delusions to beleeve our own ●es namely that the learned Teachers doe speak and hold contraries when indeed they doe not true it is that it is possible for good and faithfull men in their writings and preachigns to appeare to speak and so to appeare to
that are freely given to us of God but the naturall man or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the man endued only with a meere humane soule perceiveth not nor receiveth the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse Verse 14. unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned and so forth to the end of the Chapter out of which two descriptions both of the literall knowledge before expressed and of the spirituall knowledge he hath so largely described by the Apostle let us because to discerne these two knowledges the one from the other is a point of great moment the one being but a condemning knowledge making our damnation only the greater and the other being a true saving knowledge let us I say for further perspicuity and cleerenesse herein marke some maine and principall differences whereby they may be discerned the one from the other wherein for brevities Sixe maine differences betweene the literall and the true spirituall knowledge 1 sake I will only briefly touch these sixe following First the spirituall knowledge apprehends the things which neither eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor heart of naturall man can conceive that is it conceives the mysteries of God above reason yea and contrary to naturall reason sense and feeling but the literall knowledge apprehends not the mysteries of God but after a carnall manner as they are new-fashioned as it were and made agreeable to reason sense and feeling and hence come so many objections from reason sense and feeling Secondly the literall knowledge doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 2. 18. but it doth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 2. 12. that is the Rom. 2. 18. literall knowledge so knowes the mysteries of Gods Word as a man knowes a thing by reading of it or 1 Co● 2. 12. as a man knowes a thing that is told him of a strange Countrey but he hath no experimentall certainty of it in himselfe whereby it is true in such that is Matth 13. 14. written Matth. 13. 14. by hearing ye shall heare but not understand and by seeing ye shall see and not perceive but the spirituall knowledge doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is so knowes the mysteries of Christ as he knowes a thing that sees it with his very eyes and hath experimentall feeling of it in his owne selfe so that hee that is in the literall knowledge only is like a man that lying in the morning in his bed and hearing that the day is broke and peradventure seeing a little at the holes and crevisses of his windowes may talke of the day light and of the actions of the day light to be done in the same but because his windowes and doores are close shut he still without doing any thing lies in darknesse when as he that is in the spirituall knowledge is like one that is abroad in the open cleer morning working and walking by the light of the same Thirdly the literall knowledge being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but doth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the literall knowledge doth know as it were by heare-say many things by which they think themselves rich and encreased in goods and have need of nothing but it doth not see the deep things of God whereby they are raysed up to no joy and zeale for the deepnesse and greatnesse of the same but the spirituall knowledge doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 2 10. see the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2. 10. that is as Bez● well expoundeth it excellentiam Evangelicae Doctrinae the excellency of the benefits of the Gospel working joy and zeale of Gods glory by discerning the greatnesse and excellency of the benefits wrought upon us from whence flowes the cold and formall working of great learned Clerks making a shew of doing something and think in their own hearts that to proceed any further is needlesse when they that are in the spiritual knowledge do think both that there is need and also that they can never doe enough Fourthly the literall knowledge judgeth of the mysteries of the Gospel by the Spirit of the world that is after an humane witted fashion saying the same thing that the spirituall enlightened child of God doth as farre as naturall reason and humane wit can reach but pulls down Gods thoughts in the mysteries and benefits of the Gospel and makes them like unto mans thoughts for whereas the Spirit of God useth by certain humane phrases and similitudes to descend down to our weak capacity not to the intent that wee should dwell in them but that we should as it were by a ladder reached downe to Why the holy Ghost speaketh in humane ph●as●s us ascend up to the heigth and excellency of Gods working and dealing upon us correspondent to the glory of his great majesty they that are in t●is literall knowledge doe stick fast in the humane phrase as it were in the foot and first step of the Ladder but ascend not to the greatnesse and excellency of the work of God correspondent to the greatnesse and excellency of his Majesty whereby they hold fast to those phrases that are correspondent to humane reason and to good humane wit but cannot abide to have those humane phrases reduced and understood according to other Phrases expressing in the same case the true nature and excellent working of God above reason and passing those humane similitudes and so compare and flatly measure spirituall things with earthly things because as a learned Dispencer of Gods mysteries saith habent literam sed non habent spiritum whereby they can say in the mysteries benefits of Christ Sibboleth but not Shibboleth Iudg. 12. 6. That Iudg. 12. 6. is they come very neere the truth and are as Christ said to the young man not farre from the kingdome of heaven but they cannot frame to pronounce the asperate that hath God in it that is they cannot yeeld to the truth and mysterie correspondent to the nature and perfect working of God for that is foolishnesse unto them 1 Cor. 2. 10. But on the other side ● Cor. 2. 10. they that are in the spirituall knowledge have received not the Spirit of the world to judge worldly carnally and after an humane witted fashion of the mysteries and benefits of the Gospel but have received the Spirit which is of God that they may see after a spirituall manner the things freely given of God that is correspondent to the high nature perfect operation and glorious working of God whereby although they gladly use the similitudes and humane representations in the Scriptures as an help to their weak capacities yet they stick not in them but ascend by them as it were by steps to the high working of God above all humane representations and earthly excellencies not comparing or measuring spirituall things with earthly things but measuring spirituall things as the Apostle saith with spirituall yea even with ●od