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A36185 The nature of the two testaments, or, The disposition of the will and estate of God to mankind for holiness and happiness by Jesus Christ ... in two volumes : the first volume, of the will of God : the second volume, of the estate of God / by Robert Dixon. Dixon, Robert, d. 1688. 1676 (1676) Wing D1748; ESTC R12215 658,778 672

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ordinari ut de posteriori nemo sibi polliceretur qui non de priori habet aliqualem certitudinem aliquoties That is He that hath the least security Title or evidence for Heaven here in this Life cannot fail of the enjoyment of his Hopes in the Life to come The certitude of the object and of the subject and of the promise still continuing the Faithful must needs be sure De se de Jure de Re of themselves of their Right and of the state of God And now let any Man tell me what confidence or assurance a Soul can have of Heaven and Happiness more than that which is here described Et erit mihi magnus Apollo Let there be therefore a holy Faith a holy Life a Holy doctrine a holy worship a holy Hope an holy patience a holy experience and there will be a holy confidence in Life and death and to all Eternity Wherefore give all diligence to make your calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 for if ye do these things ye shall never fall An old MS. reads more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Latin much after that sort saying that the Greek he used had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By these exceeding great and precious promises 2 Pet. 1.4.5 c. we are partakers of the Divine Nature having escaped the corruption that is in the World through lust Besides all this giving all diligence to add to our Faith Virtue and to Virtue Knowledg and to Knowledg Temperance and to Temperance Patience and to Patience Godliness and to Godliness Brotherly kindness and to Brotherly kindness Charity For if these things be in us they make us that we shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledg of our Lord Jesus Christ Deus facit quod suum est nos quoque quod nostrum est faciamus God hath done his part and we must do ours and then all is done This is to work out our Salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2.12 and to strive to enter in at the strait Gate Thus he that seeketh findeth he that asketh hath and to him that knocketh is the gate opened 1 Cor. 5.7 Purge out therefore the old leaven that ye may be a new lump as ye are unleavened c. If a Man therefore purge himself from these he shall be a vessel unto honour sanctified and meet for the Master's use and prepared unto every good work Draw nigh unto God and he will draw nigh unto you 2 Tim. 2.21 James 4.8 cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your hearts ye double minded Put off concerning the former conversation the Old Man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts and be ye renew'd in the Spirit of your mind and that ye put on the New Man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness For it is God that worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure The CONTENTS Doctrine of Masses Of no Salvation without the Pale of the Church Of lying still in sin Imputed Righteousness Collections Cautions Obstructions Rules Election TITLE IV. Of the abuse of Assurance THe Doctrine of Assurance is of great concernment but hath been strangely handled by the School-Men and Casuists so that we cannot by them know well what to make of it And therefore I have been forced to go quite another way to work as well as I could Mart. Siseng One saith Ex hoc uno Articulo quantumvis minutus à plerisque putari queat universus Papatus dependet From this one Article of Assurance although it may seem inconsiderable the whole Papacy takes his rise Mart. Luth. Another saith Etiamsi nihil praeterea peccatum fuisset in Doctrinâ Pontificiâ quàm quòd docuerunt nos debere vagari fluctuare ambigentes dubios de remissione peccatorum gratia Dei salute nostrâ justas tamen habemus causas cur ab Ecclesiâ infideli nos sejungeremus Although there had been no other cause of offence in the Church of Rome than that they have taught us to wander and toss to and fro in doubts and fears concerning Remission of sins the Grace of God and our own Salvation nevertheless we have just causes to separate from them Every one desires comfort content and happiness here and hereafter and if there be no assurance of any such thing how can a Soul enjoy it self quietly Varro is said to reckon up two hundred eighty and eight opinions concerning Summum Bonum But if it be so uncertain what it is or how to come at it where shall we fix Such scepticks are all out of the way they are become vain in their imaginations and their foolish heart is darkned Without this Assurance fluctuat Socrates Aconitum bibens trepidat Adrianus ad mortis pallorem alii aestuant alii stupent alii ululant sub calamitatibus mortis dolore Dum placide Stephanus c. obdormiunt sub tormentis ut Ignatius optat propera ad bestias ut sit frumentum Domini irridet Laurentius Tyrannum tortorem sub craticulâ Christiani tortoribus fortiores That is without this Assurance Socrates trembles while the Cup of Hellebore was at his mouth Adrian quakes at the ghastly countenance of Death others rage and take on like mad Men others are amazed and confounded others howl and roar under their calamities and pangs of death while Stephen and the Martyrs fall asleep peaceably under their tormentors hands As Ignatius who hasted and longed to be ground by the teeth of wild Beasts that he might be good Bread for God Laurence derides the Tyrant and hang-man upon the gridiron and undauntedly bids them turn him and rost t'other side So were the Christians more couragious than their Tormentors Most deplorable was the despair of John de Cunis the Florentine Physician Qui in extremis constitutus ita misere expiravit Mox sciam an Anima sit immortalis That is he being at the point of Death did thus breath out his last breath I shall shortly know whether my Soul be immortal Likewise he whosoever he was that uttered such words as these O Animula blandula tremula vagula In quas Regiones c. O poor Soul of mine whither art thou bound all alone naked and frighted c. Or he that said Dubius vixi dubius morior quò vadam nescio I have lived doubtfully and I die doubtful and I know not what shall become of me Bellarmine reports of an Advocate Bell. de Art Mor. who in his last hour being exhorted to repent and believe with a constant mind spake thus to God Ego Domine concupivi alloqui Te non pro me sed pro Conjuge meâ Liberis meis ego enim propero ad Inferos neque est ut aliquid pro me agas That is Lord I have a great desire to speak with thee at this time not for my self but for
have these things in my memory and keep them in my paper and do them not in my life and conversation I say therefore in brief He that hath ears to hear for every one hath ears to hear let him hear as well as he can And he that hath eyes to see for every one hath eyes to see let him see as well as he can And he that hath a heart to understand for every one hath a heart to understand let him understand as well as he can And he that hath a memory to remember for every one hath a memory to remember let him remember as well as he can And he that hath a will to choose for every one hath a will to choose let him choose as well as he can And last of all he that hath a hand to act for every one hath a hand to act let him act as well as he can Fac quod in te est Use thy Talent to the best advantage and God shall reward thee with a Well done good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful in a little thou shalt be Ruler over much In a word Add to your faith vertue and to vertue knowledge and to knowledge temperance 2 Pet. 1.5 c. and to temperance patience and to patience godliness and to godliness brotherly kindness and to brotherly kindness charity For if these things be in you and abound they make you that ye shall never be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ but he that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see far off and hath forgotten that he was once purged from his old sins Wherefore the rather Brethren give diligence to make your calling and election sure for if ye do these things ye shall never fall SECT VII 1. If therefore Election be a Decree then it is no Promise but a Necessity A Promise may be freely made and effected and may not but a Decree must be made and effected by consequence of Justice upon sin A Promise may take effect by the will of the Accepter but a Decree must take effect against the will of the Sufferer 2. If Election be a Promise then it is no Decree but a thing voluntary A Promise is free to be made or not made a meer grace upon consideration of pity and bounty for Reward undeserved But a Decree is a peremptory sentence in judgment of Law upon consideration of guilt of sin for revenge and punishment 3. If Faith be the Approving and Choosing of God that first approved and chosen us This is Election 4. If Infidelity be the Disapproving and Rejecting of God that hath therefore disapproved and rejected us This is Reprobation 5. A Reprobate is rejected for his Wilfulness 6. An Elect is accepted for his Willingness Ergo From these Premises I conclude with all humble submission to better Judgments 1. That Election with God is not as it is with Men A particular Free Grace of a certain picking and culling out of some few and passing by all the rest though as well deserving and standing in as much need and as willing every way to come in if they could with all their hearts and thank them too that should do them that great favour and benefit 2. But Election with God is an Universal Free Grace offered to all men that they might be saved and willingness that none should be damned upon no desert at all but meerly for love in his Son provided only that they be but a willing People which is the least thing that can be desired namely to accept of Gods choice and to choose him again or else they must needs reprobate themselves and judge themselves unworthy of eternal life Quod erat Demonstrandum Now what mad work have the Disputes of this World made upon this plain Question I leave to the wiser sort of the World to judge 'T is high time for such men and no shame at all to learn better Religion prudence and manners than to think and speak of God in this point after such a fashion I appeal unto the unconceivable Mercies of God to his poor Creatures and to the universal scope tenour and purport of the whole Scriptures of the Old and New Testament Amen The CONTENTS Transition Contracts Real and Personal Marriage Devil an Enemy to Marriage Excellent Laws for Marriage Originals of Marriage Definitions of Marriage Effects of Marriage Who may lawfully marry Members of Christs Church Just Generations of Men. Virginity Why Marriage was ordained Benefits of marriage Abuse of marriage Bastardy Rights by marriage Laws about marriage Age of Persons Quality of Persons Infamous Captives Pupils Officers Kinds of marriage Confarreation Co-emption Vse Rights of a Wife Two Wives at one time Concubine Annus Luctûs Coelibate Marriage for all Estates and Degrees of men TITLE VIII Of Marriage THE Church is the Spouse and Wife of Christ Transition Contracts are either Real by which men communicate or convey their Estates and Patrimonies one to another or Personal by which their very Persons are as it were communicated and conveyed one to another Of this nature are Feudal Personal Contracts and Leagues Contracts Real and Personal where persons covenant to be true and just and loving one to another as if they were of one Soul both in rule and subjection betwixt King and People and in fellowship and communion of the Head with the Members and of the Members one with another unto which are subordinate real feudal Contracts and Conveyances of giving and receiving of holding and keeping the use and profits of the Lords Allodium and propriety upon a Personal Contract of Faith and Allegiance homage and service to him the said Lord and to his heirs and successors for ever Personal Contracts of this nature are the highest endearments and strictest obligations of love friendship and unity that can be imagined because they are the unions of Souls which must be more than of Bodies or Estates because they are Covenants for pure love not for honours or profits or pleasures of goods Because to give our Estates and Honours is a great grace but to give our selves our Souls and Bodies one to another is the greatest grace that can be given Such are the Covenants and Leagues between friends and their Allies and such is the Contract of Marriage which is for communion of Soul and Body in all temporal and spiritual things such are not the Quasi-personal Contracts of Tutor and Pupil Curator and Minor c. SECT I. Marriage Therefore this Title of Marriage with those that follow relating thereunto are not any ways exotick or disproportional with the design of this present book For as in all Feudal kingdoms the Kings are Fathers to their Subjects so in the Church the Fathers of Families are kings to their Children who as Subjects hold in Fide Amore Honore as much as Subjects do to their Princes Subjects are so by election to their Kings and Children
5. Some mens Religion is nothing but a Faculty of Rhetoricating in Preaching and Praying by Inspiration as they call it of the Spirit whereas in truth it is a mere Natural Faculty often helped by Art and Learning in persons grosly hypocritical and debauched There is a mere Natural Enthusiasm of Poetry and Oratory Est Deus in nobis agitante calescimus ipso Sedibus Aetheriis Spiritus ille venit And when such Eloquent and fiery men are imployed in Religious Exercises they are fluent to admiration and become extremely popular to lead Multitudes like Pitchers by the Ears into Fanatick Distempers against Church and State in Peace or Warr especially if they be bred in the Schools of Learning or set in Publick Imployments It is farr from my meaning to undervalue or declare against the sincere and ardent affections of Devout Souls naturally and freely breathing out their earnest Ejaculations to God in private But to caution the Simple well-meaning People from mistaking the Natural and Enthusiastick fervour of mens Spirits and the ebulliency of their Fancies and Expressions for a supernatural Inspiration especially if they meddle with Religion or Polity for which they have no warrant from God or Man Let the World know what wise men judge That the Evidence and Demonstration of God's Spirit consisteth not in words and talk as if God were to be heard for their much speaking or glorified by their loud noises and long harangues For that is chiefly to be discerned in Life and Action though the words be few And therefore when some Corinthians were puffed up by reason of a rich Fancy they had expressed by the sweetness of Attick Eloquence in which they were bred so that the Unlearned had their Persons in great Veneration above St. Paul who had not that strain nor could use the entising words of man's wisdom in the business of the Gospel he tells these deceived Souls having the Word of God in respect of persons and their boasting Teachers the Gnosticks That he would come amongst them for he had the Spirit of Discerning and know not the speech of them that were puffed up but the power For the Kingdom of God saith he consisteth not in Word but in Power and Life Wherefore laying aside all these deceitful Fancies let us really set our selves to mortifie all our Lusts and Affections That being Born Crucified Dead Buried and Risen with Christ here we may live Eternally with him in Glory hereafter Amen SECTION I. From all these Premises we derive these Corollaries or Conclusions Of the Consequences of Christ's Death and Resurrection Material Cross 1. There is a Material Cross of Wood. There are Whips Nails a Crown of Thorns Agony and Death at Jerusalem outward visible matter of Fact a History 2. There is a Spirttual Cross The spirit virtue of Death Spiritual Cross Fellowship of Sufferings Death of Sin in the Heart inward invisible matter of Right a Mystery 3. Material Resurrection There is a Material Resurrection from Death and Grave at Jerusalem outward matter of Fact History 4. There is a Spiritual Resurrection virtue Spiritual Resurrection power of Resurrection from Death in Sin to the Life of Righteousness in the heart inward matter of Right Mystery The Historical Faith is only of matter of Fact for Knowledge only as the Devils and Turks c. believe The Justifying Faith is for matter of Right for Merit Virtue Power Comfort of Christ's Death and Resurrection by the Spirit of Christ So are all the Promises of God accepted by us and sealed confirmed to us So we promise and covenant to and with God So we partake of all the Benefits of his Death and Resurrection 5. Material Ascension There is a Material Ascension of Christ into the holy place of Heaven offering up his Blood to consecrate that place for us sitting at the Right Hand of God and making intercession There he rules over all things from thence he sends down his holy Spirit Matter of Fact History 6. There is a Spiritual Ascension Entring into the Hearts Spiritual Ascension Ruling in our Souls by his Spirit Crying Abba Father Matter of Right Mystery So in Christ's Birth Life Death Resurrection and Ascension there is a History and a Mystery a Letter and a Spirit 1. Christ is born in our Flesh Christ is born in our Spirit We are born in the Flesh we are born again in the Spirit Christ is formed in the Womb of his Mother We are formed in the Womb of Christ We are born in Christ and with Christ and Christ is born in us and with us 2. Christ died in the Flesh we are dead in the Flesh we are dead to the Flesh We are dead in the World we are dead to the World We are dead with Christ and buried with Christ 3. Christ rose in the Flesh Christ riseth in the Spirit We shall rise in the Flesh we shall rise in the Spirit Thus there is a Birth in Sin there is a Birth to and from Sin and there is a Birth for Sin Thus there is a Birth in Sin there is a Birth from Sin and there is a Birth to Sin Thus there is a Life in Sin there is a Life from Sin and there is a Life for Sin So Christ's Death conquers our Sins for us And Christ's Spirit conquers our Sins in us So Christ's Resurrection raiseth us from Sin unto Righteousness Christ's Resurrection justifies his Death to be true and Christ's Resurrection justifies the pardon of our Sins and his Spirit doth actually assure the pardon to our Souls So Christ is in us and with us and we are in Christ and with Christ So Christ lives in us and with us and we live in Christ and with Christ So Christ is crucified in us and with us so we are crucified in Christ and with Christ So Christ dies in us and with us and we die in Christ and with Christ So Christ rises in us and with us so we rise in Christ and with Christ So Christ is glorified in us and with us and we are glorified in Christ and with Christ This is to eat Christ's Flesh and drink his Blood spiritually This is to put off the Old Man and to put on the New Man This is our Regeneration and a New Creature This is our Communion with Christ and Christ's Communion with us This is to dwell in Christ and Christ in us This is to be one with Christ and Christ with us I am my Well-beloved's and my Well-beloved is mine This is to believe all and do all in the Spirit in the Lord and for the Lord. All is our Faith all is his Spirit The words that I speak unto you they are Spirit and Life If ye fast or weep for Christ's Death if ye feast or rejoyce for Christ's Resurrection do all in the Spirit Pray Praise Hear Read Sing Meditate Communicate Live in the Spirit Obj. The Language is hard and high Sol. It is
confirm Testament 1. To confirm a Deed of Testament made by the Eternal God 2. To expiate all Sin and Misery But it must be offered first I and so it will very shortly it must not lie long here you may be sure This Blood must quickly be carried to Heaven never to be spilt more but offered up for an Attonement before the Mercy-Seat of God for ever 'T will be but three daies and this Flesh and Blood shall live again and after fourty daies it will ascend into the Temple of God This Blood will consecrate and dedicate that place for our flesh and blood to enter into This Blood will be a new and living way to the Mercy-Seat of God for us to have free recourse unto at all times in this life for Grace sufficient to help us in the time of all our need This Blood will cry aloud for Mercy and speak better things than the Blood of Abel which was for Revenge But it must be offered first and it will be accepted No Sacrifice can be complete till it be offered First slain then laid on the Altar then offered up in part or in whole so was Christ first slain then offered up to God Well then I will be as good as my word I will mourn and fast and pray a while but I must not think that this will do my business Sackcloth Ashes Hard lodging and fare Whippings Pilgrimages Reliques Watching Fasting Alms and Oblations c. make a great shew and pomp of Devotion and some of them are good as they may be used But I must have a settled eye upon the Power of Godliness and not upon the Form only I must take heed what I do in the Service of my God lest I offer the Sacrifice of Fools In a word I must look to my heart in all my outward actions It will not serve my turn to read hear or see the history of my Saviour's Passion or Resurrection written preached and acted or represented in Books Sermons and Scenes and for me thereupon to hang down my head like a Bull-rush and grow sad upon it for a day or two I must think of an every daies duty of dying daily and of mortifying and crucifying my self all my life long not by Whipping c. but by Self-denial and cutting off my Right hand or my Right eye or whatsoever is near or dear unto me Self-examination Reformation Zeal Faith Love Hope and such Spiritual duties must be my work all the daies of my life For Bodily exercise profiteth little or nothing but Godliness and a New Creature What a fool was Simon Stylites that lived so long standing between two Walls and Dominius Loricatus that gave himself 540000 stripes in one Lent I look upon my Saviour's Crucifixion as do the Literalists and formal Devotionists but Sursum corda is a good hint to me I must look higher The History I believe but the Mystery and Power of his Death I look after It satisfies not me at all if I had been born and laid in a Manger and crucified and slain with Christ if I had been his Brother and suckt the breasts of his Mother it would not have profited me at all except I did believe the Word of God and keep it for then I should be his Brother Sister and Mother indeed If I had been so happy as to have known him in and after the flesh so as to eat and drink with him and see his Miracles and hear his Doctrine and cast out Devils and heal Diseases as he did in his Name yet from henceforth I will know him no more after that but after a better fashion His Sufferings and Death are past and gone from hence now I know him as he liveth in the power of an endless life All the scandal of the Cross is taken away though he was crucified through weakness yet he liveth by the power of God Break my heart no more with grief and hardships of the outward Cross but let me love and love again and delight my self in the inward Cross whereby the World is crucified unto me and I unto the World Then stay me with Flagons comfort me with Apples when I am sick of Love I look upon the Love of God in making and confirming his Promises to me in Christ I make my Covenant with my God to forsake the World the Flesh and the Devil This is the state of Grace this is to be in Christ and a New Creature I have looked down to Christ's Sufferings on Earth but now I will look up more to his glorious Actings in Heaven viz. His Sacerdotal entrance his solemn oblation of Himself his Session at the Right hand of God his Intercession his Kingdom over all in protecting his Church and bringing all his Enemies under his feet his spiritual Scepter and Kingdom in our Hearts beating down all the strong holds of Sin and Satan No need therefore of Crosses Pictures Whips Thorns Nails Reliques c. These may work for a while being in sight upon the outward Man to move admiration and sorrow but no constant Faith and fixed Hope and Love as do the virtue of his Resurrection and the fellowship of his Sufferings which is the true Power of Godliness that brings comfort to the end and in the end and to all Eternity The Flesh I bear it record takes a kind of pleasure in grieving pitying and beholding the shadows of these things but the Spirit of Faith goes higher and rejoyceth in the evidence and demonstrations of the Substances themselves The Letter and Form alone profiteth little it is the Spirit and Faith that must give the true Life Christ saith Except we eat the Flesh and drink the Blood of the Son of God we have no Life abiding in us because his Flesh is meat indeed and his Blood is drink indeed but withal he tells us That these words which he speaketh are Spirit and Life Call we therefore in the last place and hold there to the True work of a Christian To crucifie a Lust to kill a Sin to die to sin to rise from Sin and live to Righteousness I whine not at the Passion I weep not for him but I weep for my self and mortifie my Members which are upon the Earth I remember Christ's death and take the Sacrament upon it as the only Memorial that Christ hath ordained I believe and bear in mind the history of the Passion but my main care is to conform thereunto The Mystery is more to me than the History the Spirit than the Letter The Letter is low the Spirit is high Carnal Devotion is in Images and Reliques but Spiritual Devotion is in Mortification and Self-denial The one is the form the other is the power of Godliness We preach and live too low in the bare History in verbal Masses in superstitious Rites These are some of them very good when contained within their own spheres but alwaies very low and mean and never come up to the height
according to our nature because God is right and good in his nature and to his nature and according to his nature 2. Therefore we are to create and make right and just according to the power that God hath given us because God doth create and make all right and just according to the power that is in himself 3. Therefore we are to bestow and give all Right and Just according to the wisdom and grace that God hath given unto us Because God doth bestow and give all right and just according to the wisdom and grace that is in himself 4. Therefore we are to have and enjoy all right and just in our selves according to the riches and plenty that God hath given us Because God doth enjoy and hold all right and just in himself according to the riches and plenty that is in him 5. Therefore we are to perform and do all right and just to our selves and to all others according to the justice and equity that God hath given us because God doth perform and do all right and just to himself and to all others according to the justice and equity that is in himself 6. Therefore we are to do right to God to our selves and others which is agreeable to our creation and natural because to do wrong to God our selves or others is contrary to our creation and unnatural 7. Therefore to do right to God to our selves and others is agreeable to our redemption and God's Grace and to do wrong to God our selves or others is contrary to our redemption and God's Grace 8. Therefore to do right to God to our selves and others is agreeable to our salvation or glory or God's glory and to do wrong is contrary to our salvation or glory or God's glory and unthankful 9. Therefore to do right to our selves and our Relations and Family is Private Honesty 10. Therefore to do right to our selves and others is Society and State is Publick Honesty 11. Therefore we shall have a reward from God and man for doing right 12. Therefore we shall have a Punishment from God and men for doing wrong 13. Therefore how good a thing is right and just agreeable to God Nature Reason Religion Laws Policy Grace Glory 14. Therefore how base a thing is wrong and unjust contrary to God Nature Reason Religion Laws Policy Grace Glory 15. Therefore all creatures have their rights and dues from God 16. Therefore all creatures should return their rights and dues to God 17. Therefore no creature merits or deserves any thing as his right or due for all gifts are free 18. Therefore all creatures are to give each other their rights and dues Once more I crave leave to handle this same Subject another way Thus. Right and Just is 1. To God 2. To our selves 3. To our neighbours 1. Right to God is to love honour worship and serve him by Prayers Praises Offerings Faith Obedience 2. Right to our selves is 1. To our Bodies Temperance Chastity Labour and not Hurt Bruise Lame Kill our selves 2. To our Souls Art Wisdom Prudence and Virtue 3. To our Estates Keeping Thrift Improvement c. 4. To our Name and Reputations Honesty Love c 3. Right to our Neighbour is 1. To their Bodies to save and defend hurt none by bruising laming killing 2. To their Souls to teach instruct rebuke 3. To their Estates to save and defend not to spoil invade or rob 4. To their Names and Reputations by charity reverence and praise not detract lie abuse SECT XXXI 1. Therefore though to hurt ones self by being Felo de se Collections Rather hurt ones self than others is most unnatural and wrong yet rather would I chuse to hurt my self a little or my Estate or Good name than to do hurt or wrong to another in his Person Estate or Good name And according to the tenderness that is in me I could the better bear my own sufferings and wrongs done by my self or others to my self than the sufferings and wrongs which I have done by my neglect or malice to other men I had much rather complain against my self than give just occasion for others to complain against me If this be not so much wisdom it may be the more mercy and tender compassion I can make a better shift to deal with my self and satisfy my self than to deal with others and satisfy them that perhaps will never be satisfied I had rather crie out against my self and punish my self than that others should justly cry out against me or persecute me And if they clamour or persecute me unjustly I can the better bear it If I be the worse for my self I hope I shall take it patiently and if I be the worse for others I hope I shall take it patiently and if I suffer from God I hope I shall take it most patiently for I have most reason so to do because I am sure I have deserved it God is just and merciful and will lay no more upon me than what is due and what he will make me able to bear and will deliver me in his due time But as for men there is no measure in their Malice and Cruelty Let me therefore rather fall into the hands of God for with him there is mercy but let me not fall into the hands of men for their very tender mercies are cruel But still I say in the mind I am in and I hope I shall ever be of this mind and I am sure it is the mind of Christ whatever becomes of me as to suffering of wrongs from my self or others I will endeavour by the Grace of God that no body shall suffer any wrong directly or indirectly from me that though I be the worse for my self and others yet no body shall be the worse for me in his body soul goods or good name I may possibly do my self as much right as I have done my self wrong but it is for the most part impossible to do others as much right as I have done them wrong to give satisfaction to the full is very hard in many cases Alas others cry bitterly but it is better I should cry than they Of all things I do not desire to have this to answer for that I have wilfully done or intended to do any wrong to any man any manner of way Of all cries let me not have any cries against me from others for mine own Conscience will be sure to cry most of all against me for so doing 1. Let me never have any just occasion O my God to cry out against my self for temporal or spiritual injuries done to my self or mine own flesh that I and they might have been healthy and sound in body or mind if it had not been for my intemperance and wicked counsel infecting my self and them in body and soul That I or they might have been wealthy and rich in Temporal or Spiritual Estate if it had not been for my Prodigality or Injustice or
we shall be saved from wrath c. Do we then make voyd the Law Rom. 8.32 through Faith God forbid yea we establish the Law In all the letter and scope of Scriptures upon this point the form of our Justification appears to be the Imputation or Accounting of our Faith for our right or Justification to the rights promised Ro. 5.17 8. There is mention made of Abundance of Grace and of the gift of righteousness And that by the righteousness of one the free-gift came upon all Men unto justification of life And that by one Man's obedience many were made righteous Phil. 3.9 St. Paul also desires That he may be found in Christ not having his own righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the Faith of Christ the righteousness which is of God by Faith No Man is justified by the Law in the sight of God for the just shall live by Faith and the Law is not of Faith but the Man that doth them shall live in them Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us For it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree That the Blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through Faith And the promise that Abraham should be the Heir of the World Ro. 4.13 was not to him or to his Seed through the Law but through the righteousness of Faith SECT III. But in all those places or any other Christ's Righteousness I cannot find any imputation of Christ's Righteousness The Righteousness of Faith and the Righteousness of God by Faith I find but no other By the Righteousness of Christ must be meant his personal obedience to the moral Law which cannot be made ours or translated to us or accounted to us and reckoned as ours for diverse and weighty reasons First because Christ's obedience was the obedience of a Mediator fitted exactly for such a Person and Office and no other A High Priest harmless undefiled separated from sinners c. Hebr. 7.26 one that makes all Men just and righteous and is made unto them righteousness sanctification and Redemption and is God our Righteousness That hath the Spirit of Righteousness without measure that is anointed above all his Fellows with that fulness from which we all receive Grace for grace whose Glory is the Glory of the only Begotten Son of God full of Grace and Truth and much more than the Tongue of Men or Angels can express Now for a Man to be clothed with the Robes of this Righteousness as they speak is to appear before God not in the habit of a righteous and justified Man but of the justifier of the Sons of Men whose righteousness is too excellent and glorious for our condition of a Mediator God and Man We are the better for his active and passive obedience for it is the cause of our Righteousness by Faith The Members partake of the benefit of the Head The Wife is endow'd by Marriage with all her Husband's goods but the virtue of the Head is not appropriated though communicated nor made over to the Members nor is the estate of the Husband past away or made over to his Wife The Endowment of the Wife is no formal cause nor ingredient of Marriage but a fruit or consequent thereof So our justification or our right to the Righteousness of Christ that is to his Rights and Priviledges accrues to us by our Marriage with Christ which is by Faith the formal cause thereof The Estate Wisdom and Righteousness is Christ's but the benefit of them and of all that is Christ's is ours as is the Wealth and Wisdom and Honour of the Husband to the Wife In a word Christ's Righteousness is that for which Faith is accounted to us for Righteousness Ergo the Personal righteousness of Christ himself is not accounted to us Secondly Because Personal moral virtues cannot be past over to others by act of Nature or Law as by Descent Donation Succession Cession Dereliction Degradation Deprivation or any other way or means Because they are inherent habits of the Mind and therefore inseparable from the Mind and if separable altogether inconveyable to the Mind of another by deed of gift Descent of Blood or any other conveyance whatsoever during life or after death But Jural Rights are of that nature as that they may be derived by act of Law not Nature from Parents to their Children from Predecessors to their Successors or Alienated from the Proprietary to any other Person not only to be reckoned but to be really his or theirs to whom the alienation reversion or derivation is made by any act or deed according unto Law to take place in life or after death Also some act of mine may be accounted for a right to my self as my labour for my wages my purchase for my Estate my Faith for my justification Thus Moral Righteousness is inseparable from the Person to which it doth belong and cannot be reckoned to another but Jural Rights are separable and may be accounted to another I may possibly be respected and saved for another's Virtue and Worth but his Virtue and Worth can no waies be made mine Virtue Learning Vice and Ignorance are habits and qualities which are a Man 's own without accounting but Riches and Honours we have as rights accounted unto us or else we cannot have or hold them My Health or Sickness of Body may be propagated to me and from me to another but not the Health or Sickness of my Soul Who can be healthy by another Man's health while he possesseth it Who can be sick by another Man's sickness while he possesseth it Who can be rich by another Man's riches while he enjoyeth them Who can be honourable by another Man's honour while he enjoyes it Who can be disgraced by another Man's disgrace while he suffereth it Who can be poor by another Man's poverty while he endures it Who can be learned by another Man's Learning while he hath it Who can be virtuous by another Man's virtues or vicious by another Man's vice These Virtues or Vices are really his who hath them not really mine whose they are not or how can these things in another be so much as reckoned or accounted to be mine I may be reckoned guilty of another Man's sin and so of his punishment by consenting or helping c. but not for his acting or suffering I cannot be reckoned virtuous by another Man's virtue or sinful by another Man's sin or miserable by another Man's misery If I have many virtues others may have as many virtues or more than I and I have no less than I have but if I have many rights to such or such things others can have no rights to the same things If they be taken away from me in part I have the less if in full I have none at all but others
which all our Justification tends Now all Pardons are by Grace and the pardoned to his pardon hath no other Title than the Grace and Favour of the Prince For Pardon is above Law the Law hath no power to pardon but is altogether against it and where the party is condemned the Law is all for speedy execution but Pardon is of Grace and that Grace is not against the Law but above it for God's Pardon comes from God's Prerogative SECT X. Reason 4 Because these Rights come by Election All the Righteous are elected and chosen to the Rights they are justified unto Election For the Kingdom of God is an Elective Kingdom not for the Kings part only but for all the Subjects for the Subjects of that Kingdom are not Natives nor born so but all Electives comming in by Election Hence the Righteous are called the Elect for all they and they only are Elected And Justification is but an effect of Election as Filiation is of Adoption And hence our Election so often mentioned is not grounded upon any works of ours but only on the pleasure of God that elects us which is the election of his Grace For all Elections are by Grace Rom. 9.11 and the Elected hath no other Title to his Right by Election than the grace and favour of the Elector hence St. Paul calls it the Election of Grace SECT XI That all the Glory might be to God Titles by Law bring some Glory Reason 5 to the Titulary hence Men are so prone to strive in Suits of Law Glory because the Eviction of their Right by Law is some glory to them The title by Birth is a glory hence all Inheritance and Nobility is grounded For Nobility properly is Honour by Birth the Title by Purchase is more glorious to the Purchaser than to the Seller For every sale of an Estate is a blemish to the Seller The Title by works is a glory to the Work-man but Titles by Grace are altogether glorious to the Donor As in Adoption all the glory is to the Adopter in a Presentation all the glory to the Patron For seeing the Receiver hath all the profit there is great reason the Donor should have all the honour and glory seeing he hath nothing else for the grace he bestows God then justifies thee by Grace that all the glory might be to him God hath predestinated us to the adoption of Children by Jesus Christ Eph. 1.5 6. to himself according to the good pleasure of his will To the praise of the glory of his Grace wherein he hath made us accepted in the Beloved SECT XII That no boasting might be left to Man Titles by Law are subject to Reason 6 boasting for commonly Men boast of their Birth Boasting and for that purpose they set up their Arms. So the Jews boasted We have Abraham to our Father we are the Seed of Abraham And they boast of their purchases as in the Parable did two of the guests that refused to come Math. 22. I have bought a piece of Ground saith one and I have bought five Yoke of Oxen saith another This they say partly by way of excuse and partly by way of boasting And Men boast of their Works so did the Pharisee who instead of praying fell to boasting I am no extortioner no adulterer c. But Titles by Grace bear no boasting to the receiver because boasting seekes for Glory and as was shew'd before all the glory goes to the Donor In Adoption the adopted can boast of nothing unless it be of his Father's goodness and that is to his Father's glory In a Presentation the Clerk can boast of nothing unless it be of his Patron 's bounty and that is to the Patron 's glory God then justifies thee by Grace to exclude all boasting Ro. 3.27 that no boasting might be left to thee This reason follows the Text God is just and the justifier of the Faithful and the Title whereby he justifies them is Grace Rom. 8.26 Why so To exclude boasting that it might not be by the Law of Works but of Faith i. e. by no Law at all but only by Grace therefore it is of Faith that it might be by Grace SECT XIII ☞ Hence it appears that the Grace which makes us this Title is not a moral term that signifies any virtue residing in us For if our Justification were the work of such a Grace then should it be of works But this Grace is a jural term opposed to Law and signifies a work flowing from God from a virtue residing in him which the Scripture calls his Love his Kindness and his Mercy Whereby when God creates a right unto us above Law and above our deserts such an affection in God is called Grace Rom. 4.16 and the effect of that affection upon us is called Grace also As for the Freedom of this Grace it is a work of Gradation for Grace hath two degrees SECT XIV Will of the Receiver 1. When it begins at the will of the Receiver and comes upon the occasion of his motion or else it had not came at all This is but a low and servile Grace such as the Master grants to the Servant and one stranger to another So Christ healed the Centurion's Servant and the Daughter of the Cananitish Woman upon the request of the Master and Mother SECT XV. Will of the Donor 2. When it begins at the will of the Donor and comes upon the occasion of his kindness only or else it had never come This is a high and Filial Grace As when the Father makes the Son his heir whether born or unborn before he have done good or evil or whether he be a Stranger made and adopted to be a Son There is no Law for this Free-Grace for Law is binding but Grace is free God or Man may choose whether they will be gracious or to whom or when or how at their pleasure So God gave the Kingdom to Saul when he was seeking for his Father's Asses To David when he was following the Ewes great with young Thus Paul was called from Heaven in the height and heat of his persecution The Gentiles that sate in darkness saw a great light which they neither sought for nor so much as thought of God's Grace prevents our works our words and thoughts SECT XVI Reason 1 Because God's Free-Grace begins at his own will his will his first and leading Free-Grace begins at God's will ours is secondary and following His will is not against our will but above it and before it not violently forcing it but gently perswading a free rational agent to yield to his most gracious will Thus we are born again Joh. 1.12 16. Not by the will of the Flesh nor by the will of Man but by the will of God Justification is so far from being our own will that it is a Mystery to our Understanding and so could never come