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A20752 The Christian warfare wherein is first generally shewed the malice, power and politike stratagems of the spirituall ennemies of our saluation, Sathan and his assistants the world and the flesh, with the meanes also whereby the Christian may vvithstand and defeate them : and afterwards more speciallie their particvlar temptatiions, against the seuerall causes and meanes of our saluation, whereby on the one side they allure vs to security and presumption, and on the other side, draw vs to doubting and desperation, are expressed and answered : written especially for their sakes who are exercised in the spirituall conflict of temptations, and are afflicted in conscience in the sight and sense of their sinnes / by I. Dovvname ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1604 (1604) STC 7133; ESTC S1536 575,484 731

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his iustification So Rom. 4.2 Rom. 4.2 If Abraham were iustified by works he had wherein to reioyce but not with God and ver 3. and ver 3.4 Abraham beleeued God and it was counted vnto him for righteousnesse 4. Now to him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauour but by debt 5. But to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse § Sect. 6 And so much cōcerning the testimonies of scripture which manifestly proue that we are not iustified by our works Reasons to proue that w● are not iustified by our workes Rom. 8.1.33 34. The reasons which may be brought to the same purpose are exceeding many but I wil briefly touch some few only First iustification is manifestly opposed to cōdemnation they are both iudiciall words vsed in ciuill courts therefore to be vnderstood both iudicially not after a diuers maner But to condēne signifieth not to infuse any fault or crime in to the person cōdēned but to pronoūce him guiltie faulty And therfore to iustifie signifieth not to infuse righteousnes into the person iustified but to declare pronoūce repute him as iust righteous Secondly by the same meanes whereby we obtaine the remission of our sins we are also iustified made righteous but wee obtaine the remission of our sinnes not for our workes or inhaerent righteousnes or any vertue that is in our selues but by and for the alone merites obedience and full satisfaction of Christ apprehended and applyed vnto vs by a liuely faith as appeareth Rom. 3.25 And therefore by this meanes alone we are also iustified Rom. 3.25 Thirdly whosoeuer are iustified freely by grace they are not iustified by their owne merits works or inhaerent righteousnesse Rō 3.23.24 but the scriptures testifie that all the faithfull are iustified freely by Gods grace as appeareth Rom. 3.23.24 All haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God Eph. 1.7 2.8 And are iustified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus So Eph. 1.7 By whom we haue redemptiō through his bloud euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace Tit. 3.5.7 and 2.8 By grace are you saued through faith and that not of your selues it is the gift of God and Tit. 3. not by the works of righteousnesse which we had done but according to his mercy he saued vs c. 7. That we being iustified by his grace should be made heires according to hope of eternall life And therefore none are iustified by their owne merits workes or inhaerent righteousnesse Lastly the apostle Paul himselfe gathereth many absurdities which would follow this doctrine of iustificatiō by works first that our faith should bee vaine and the promisse of God voide Rom. 4.14 Rom. 4.14 Secondly that Christ Iesus should die in vaine if we haue righteousnesse by the law Gal. 2.21 Gal. 2.21 Thirdly that wee should haue cause of boasting and glorying in our selues Eph. 2.9 Eph. 2.9 for if a man were iustified by his owne inhaerent righteousnesse hee should haue whereof to glory and so God should be robbed of the whole praise of our saluation Rom. 4.2 Rom. 4.2 But the Lord of purpose hath iustified vs freely of his grace and not for our workes and inha rent righteousnes that all glorying in our selues might be excluded as appeareth Rom. 3.27 Eph 2.9 Rom. 3.27 Eph. 2.9 Fourthly it would follow hereupon that we should still be vnder the curse of the law which is denoūced against all who continue not in all that is written in the booke of the law to do them as the Apostle reasoneth Gal. 3.10 Gal. 3.10 Fiftly that the obedience and satisfaction of Christ should be maymed and imperfect vnlesse it were patched vp with our owne righteousnesse the contrary whereof the Apostle affirmeth Heb. 7.25 namely that hee is able perfectly to saue all them who come vnto God by him Lastly Heb. 7.25 hereupon it would follow that wee should continually wauer in doubting in respect of our manifold corruptions and imperfect righteousnesse and should haue our soules depriued of that peace of conscience which followeth iustification by faith as it is Rom. 5.1 Rom. 5.1 Lastly with the Iewes we shall bring our selues into most certaine daūger of being reiected and cast of from being the people and Church of God if with them we goe about to stablish our owne righteousnesse in the meane time not submitting our selues to the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10.4.6 which is of faith in Iesus Christ as it is Rom. 10.4.6 CHAP. L. That faith alone iustifieth § Sect. 1 ANd thus much concerning the first point How it is to be vnderstood that faith alone iustifieth namely that wee are nor iustified by workes the second is that we are iustified by faith alone whereby we are not to vnderstand that faith by it owne vertue or as it is a facultie habite worke or action in vs doth iustifie vs but as it is the alone instrument whereby we doe apprehend apply vnto vs Christ Iesus his righteousnesse obedience by which onely righteousnesse which is out of our selues in Christ as the proper subiect thereof being offered in the word and Sacraments and applied by faith we are iustified in Gods sight Phil. 2.9 as appeareth Phil. 2.9 Secondly whereas we say that faith alone iustifieth we do not vnderstand such a faith as is alone without workes charitie and other sanctifying graces which were nothing els but imaginarie dead and but as it were a carkase of faith which breatheth not but that amongst all other graces vertues faculties of the soule faith alone and not any of thē is the instrument whereby we apply Christ Iesus vnto vs who being thus applied doth iustifie vs. That though workes do not iustifie vs yet they are necessarily required as fruits of our iustification Otherwise we affirme that other graces of Gods spirit and euen good workes which is a fruite of them all doe necessarily accōpany our iustification not as instruments or causes thereof but as inseparable effects and fruits thereof So that howsoeuer we exclude workes from the act of iustifying yet wee necessarily require them in the subiect or person iustified we affirme that faith alone iustifieth but wee denie that such a faith which is alone doth iustifie vs we maintaine that we are iustified by faith alone without works but with all we affirme that faith which is without workes doth not iustifie vs as being dead false and imaginarie This may bee made plaine by some similitudes to the being of an honest man there is necessarily required honest actions not as causes but as effects neither are his honest actions the cause of his honesty but his honesty the cause of his honest actions to a liuing man there is necessarily required as well breathing which is an action or effect
of life as the soule which is the cause thereof and so to a iustified man there is necessarily required as well good works which are the effects of iustification as faith which is the instrumentall cause thereof for faith and workes are neuer seuered in the subiect or party iustified although they are disioyned in the act of iustifying So the eye onely seeth and not the forehead but yet the eye seuered from the forehead seeth not because it is but a dead eye the hand writeth and not the body but the hand seuered from the body writeth not because it is a dead hand The foote goeth and not the head or heart but the foote which is seuered from the head or heart goeth not and so faith onely iustifieth and not hope not charitie not workes but the faith that is seuered from hope charitie and workes iustifieth not because it is but a dead faith as therefore when we say the eye onely seeth the hand onely writeth the foote onely walketh our meaning is not that these parts being alone and seuered from the rest see write and walke but that amongst all other parts the action or function of seeing belongeth peculiarly vnto the eye writing to the hand walking to the foote so when we say that onely faith iustifieth our meaning is not that the faith which is alone and seuered from other graces and the fruites of them good workes iustifieth but that amongst all other graces this act of iustifying peculiarly and properly belongeth vnto faith and not to any other grace vertue or workes § Sect. 2 Now that that faith alone in this sense vnderstoode iustifieth appeareth plainely Testimonies to proue that faith alone iustifieth vs. Rom. 3.28 both by testimonies of scripture and apparant reasons For the first it is manifest Rom. 3.28 where after long disputation concerning this poynt the Apostle expresly concludeth thus Therefore we conclude that a man is iustified by faith without the workes of the law And chap. 4. vers 5. To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnes and 4.5 So Gal. 2.16 Know that a man is not iustified by the workes of the law but by the faith of Iesus Christ Gal. 2.16 euen we I say haue beleeued in Iesus Christ that we might be iustified by the faith of Christ and not by the workes of the law because by the workes of the law no flesh shall be iustified And cap. 3.11 And that no man is iustified by the law in the sight of God it is euident Gal. 3.11 for the iust shall liue by faith 12. And the law is not of faith And hence it is that the righteousnes of Christ whereby we are iustified is called the righteousnes of faith Rom. 9.30 because faith is the onely instrument which appehendeth and applieth this righteousnesse vnto vs for our iustification § Sect. 3 The reasons to proue that faith alone iustifieth are diuers Reasons to proue that faith alone iustifieth First that which alone applieth vnto vs Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse that onely iustifieth vs but faith alone applyeth vnto vs Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse and not hope charitie or any other grace and therefore faith alone iustifieth Secondly that which onely maketh the promises of the Gospell firme and sure vnto vs that alone iustifieth vs but faith alone resting vpon Gods mercie and Christs merits maketh the promises of the Gospell firme and sure vnto vs which would be most vncertaine if they should depend on the condition of our workes and worthinesse seeing they are most imperfect and we most corrupt and vnworthie of Gods least mercie as the Apostle plainely sheweth Rom. 4.16 Therefore it is namely the couenant of grace by faith Rom. 4.16 that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure to all the seede and therefore faith alone iustifieth vs. Lastly Ioh. 3.14.15 our Sauiour Christ Ioh. 3.14.15 maketh this comparison As Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternall life From which we may thus reason As the Isralites who were stung with fierie serpents were cured not by any outward meanes of physicke and surgerie or any thing in themselues saue onely by looking vpon the brasen serpent which for this purpose was set vp by Gods commaundement so we being stung of the old serpent with the sting of sinne cannot be cured by any meanes without or within our selues but by beholding the true substance Christ Iesus signified by this shadow with the eye of faith And thus haue I proued first that we are not iustified by our workes and inherent righteousnesse and secondly that we are iustified by faith alone not as it is the chiefe and principall cause for in this respect God iustifieth not as it is the matter or meritorious cause of our iustification for in this respect the merits and righteousnesse of Iesus Christ iustifieth vs but as it is the alone instrument and onely cause in vs which applyeth that meritorious cause vnto vs whereby alone we are iustified in Gods sight § Sect. 4 Secondly the tempter will obiect that this imputed righteousnesse wee speake of is but imaginarie That the imputatiō of Christs righteousnesse is not putatiue and imaginarie and a vaine phantasie as if a man who were defiled with durt should be reputed cleane by the imputation of anothers cleanesse or as if a begger should be esteemed rich by imputation of anothers wealth To which we are to answere that the imputation of Christs righteousnesse vnto vs is no imaginarie dreame but a matter plainely expressed in Gods word as also the not imputation of our sinnes is therein specified In the fourth of the Romanes this word is vsed by the holy Ghost an eleuen times Rom. 4 3.4 So vers 3. Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse And vers 4. To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is imputed for righteousnesse And vers 6. Euen as Dauid declared the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes And vers 8. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne c. § Sect. 5 Yea will the tempter say That not our own but Christs righteousnesse is imputed vnto vs for our iustification it is true that we are iustified by imputed righteousnesse but not by the righteousnesse of Christ which is out of our selues but our faith which is formed and perfected with charitie and other graces and good workes is imputed for righteousnesse or more plainely God accepteth of the workes of the faithfull and their inherent righteousnesse though imperfect and vnworthie in themselues for and through Christ for such righteousnesse which may iustifie vs in his sight For the answering of which obiection we are to
first of that which is insensible 483 CHAP. XXXIX Of that hardnes of hart which is ioyned with sense and feeling thereof 487 Consolations for such as bewaile their imperfections in hearing the word 491 CHAP. XL. Consolations for such as bewaile their wants in prayer 495 CHAP. XLI Of the infallible signes of true repentance 504 That the assurance of the remission of sinnes dependeth not on the dignitie of repentance 511 CHAP. XLII How wee may proue against Sathans temptations that wee haue true faith 513 Of the diuers degrees of faith 515 CHAP. XLIII Sathans temptations grounded vpon our want of sense and feeling of faith answered 525 CHAP. XLIIII How the weake Christian is to comfort himselfe when he is depriued of the sense of faith and other graces and sensibly feeleth the contrary corruptions 529 CHAP. XLV Of the meanes whereby our faith may be strengthened and increased 537 Of the meanes whereby we may be preserued from doubting and desperation 541 CHAP. XLVI Sathans temptations concerning smalnesse and weaknes of faith answered 549 That a weake and small faith may be a true and liuely faith 550 That all the power of hell cannot preuaile against the smallest measure of faith 551 CHAP. XLVII Sathans temptation concerning the certaintie and constancie of faith answered 554 Sathans temptation grounded on the strong faith of other of Gods children answered 555 That God both can and will vphold the weakest beleeuer 559 CHAP. XLVIII Of our iustification what it is and the causes parts therof 563 CHAP. XLIX That we are not iustified by our workes and merits prooued first by the scriptures 570 Secondly by diuers arguments 576 CHAP. L. That faith alone iustifietth how this is to be vnderstood 577 That faith alone iustifieth proued both by testimonies and reasons 579 That not our owne but Christs righteousnesse is the matter of our iustification 581 CHAP. LI. Sathans temptations mouing the weake Christian to doubt of his iustification answered 586 THE CONTENTS OF THE third Booke CHAP. I. Of sanctification what it is and the causes thereof 592 CHAP. II. Of the effects subiect obiect and time of our sanctification 598 CHAP. III. Of the parts of sanctification mortification and viuification and how they are wrought in vs. 602 CHAP. IIII. Sathans temptations whereby he inticeth vs to commit sinne answered 608 Many reasons seruing as preseruatiues to keepe vs from the contagion of sinne 610 CHAP V. Of the two sorts of preseruatiues to keepe vs from falling into sinne 616 CHAP. VI. Of some speciall meanes whereby we may be preserued from committing sinne 621 CHAP. VII Sathans temptations whereby hee discourageth the Christian in the worke of sanctification answered 624 That in the most sanctified remaine some reliques of sinne and the causes thereof 624 That our wants and corruptions should not discourage vs but redouble our care and diligence 627 Consolations to keepe vs from being discouraged when we see and feele our wants and corruptions 628 The causes wherefore God doth not perfectly sanctifie vs in this life 631 CHAP. VIII Sathans temptations drawne from our slow going forward in sanctification answered 636 CHAP. IX Sathans temptations whereby he aggrauateth our sinnes in generall answered 640 What it is to walke after the flesh and after the spirit 642 The differences betweene the sinnes of the regenerate and the vnregenerate 643 CHAP. X. That sinnes committed after repentance are pardonable 645 That all sinnes of knowledge are not presumptuous 647 That sinnes committed against knowledge are pardonable 648 Of sinnes often committed 651 CHAP. XI Sathans temptations whereby he perswadeth the Christian that he hath sinned against the holy Ghost answered 653 What the sinne against the holy Ghost is and how it may be distinguished from other sinnes 654 CHAP. XII Sathans temptations whereby he impugneth the certaintie of our perseuerance answered 656 Diuers arguments to prooue the certaintie of our perseuerance 659 FINIS THE FIRST BOOKE INTREATING OF THE POWER and policies of our spirituall enemies and of the meanes how we may withstand the one and defeate the other CHAP. I. That all the godly are assaulted with the spirituall enemies of their saluation § Sect. 1 THE Apostle hauing shewed the mysterie of our saluation and the causes thereof for the confirmation of our faith in the three first chapters of his Epistle to the Ephesians and afterwards in the other chapters hauing set downe diuers duties both generally belonging to all Christians and also particularly appertaining to men of sundrie conditions that he might moue them to repentance and amendment of life in the next place like the Lords Centinell doth discouer and giue vs warning of the approch of mighty enemies willing vs to arme our selues at all points in our owne defence and couragiously to stand vnder the standerd of Christ Iesus that we may be continually in readines to endure the encounter chap. 6.10 11 c. All that will liue like Gods seruants must prepare themselues for the spirituall combat Whereby he giueth vs to vnderstand that as soone as we seeke for assurance of saluation in Christ and endeuour to serue the Lord in a holie and a Christian life wee are to prepare our selues for a combat vnlesse we would suddenly be surprised for the spiritual enemies of our saluation bandie themselues against vs as soone as we haue giuen our names vnto God and taken vpon vs the profession and practise of Christianitie which are the liuerie and cognisance of our heauenly Lord and Master And this is manifest by the example of Gods children from time to tim● 〈…〉 though they liued in peace and securitie before th●● 〈…〉 tained into Gods familie yet no sooner were 〈◊〉 ●itted to be of Gods household seruants but Sathan and the world haue raged against them laboring both by inward temptations and outward furie either to withdraw them from Gods seruice by flattring inticements or vtterly to destroy and ouerthrow them by open violence No sooner had Abel offered a sacrifice of sweete smelling sauour vnto God Gen. 4. but Sathan stirreth vp Cain to become his butcher whilest Moses was contented to be reputed the sonne of Pharaohs daughter he enioyed all prosperitie but as soone as hee ioyned himselfe to Gods people and Church Pharaoh seeketh his life as long as the Israelites worshipped the Egyptian Idols they sate by their flesh-pots in peace and quietly enioyed the fruites of the land but as soone as they made but a motion of seruing the Lord the King stirred vp by the diuell doth rage against them with more then barbarous crueltie whilest Paul persecuted the Church of God Sathan did not so much trouble him either outwardly in bodie or inwardly in minde but no sooner was he truly conuerted to the faith and preached the Gospell but presently he setteth his wicked impes on worke to take away his life which the Lord not permitting he mooueth them to persecute him by imprisoning whipping and stoning him and not content
Gods couenant Secondly the couenant betweene God and vs wherein he professeth himselfe our God and taketh vs for his people and heires of his promises is not the couenant of workes but the couenant of grace in which hee offereth freely in Christ his grace and mercy to all who will receiue it by the hand of a liuely faith And this the Lord himselfe expresseth Ierem. 31.31 Beholde the dayes come saith the Lord that I will make a new couenant with the house of Israel that is my Church Ierem. 31.31 32. Not according to the couenant which I made with their fathers that is the couenant of workes the which my couenant they breake c. but this shall be my couenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people So the Apostle Paul saith that the promise made to Abraham and his seede was not giuen through the lawe but through the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.13 Rom. 4.13 and that it was therefore by faith that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure to all the seede For if the couenant were of workes and not of faith of deserts and not of grace we should continually disanull and make it of no effect § Sect. 3 Thirdly Our redemption not caused by our worthinesse Eph. 1.7 8. as we are elected before all times so were we in time redeemed freely and without respect of our owne worthinesse of the meere mercy and loue of God although our Sauiour Christ payed the full price of our redemption vnto God his father for vs and this appeareth Ephes 1.7 By whom we haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace 8. Whereby he hath been abundant towards vs in all wisedome and vnderstanding So that our redemption was not free vnto our Sauiour Christ for it cost him the inestimable price of his most precious bloud but it was free vnto vs without any respect of our workes and worthinesse For we were like desperate debters deeply ingaged vnto God and not able to pay the least farthing and therefore were cast into the prison of euerlasting death there to be detained till we had discharged the whole debt which being impossible vnto vs it pleased our Sauiour Christ of his meere pitie and free goodwill to become our suretie and to make full satisfaction to his father euen to the least mite that so we might be released and set free We were all of vs miserable captiues held in the thraldome of sinne Sathan and death vnable to deserue in any measure to be set at libertie for wee were the children of wrath who were not sick only but euen dead in our sinnes Eph. 2.1.5 as it is Eph. 2.1.5 But our Sauiour Christ of his vndeserued loue did pay the price of our redemption and set vs out of our captiuitie quickning and raising vs vp from sinne to newnesse of life as the Apostle setteth it downe Eph. 2.3 And you were by nature the children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.3.4 4. But God which is rich in mercie through his great loue wherewith he loued vs 5. Euen when we were dead by sinnes hath quickened vs together in Christ by whose grace ye are saued 6. And hath raised vs vp together in heauenly places in Christ Iesus 7. That he might shew in ages to come the exceeding riches of his grace through his kindnesse towards vs in Christ Iesus So that there is no worthinesse in our selues which the Lord respected for we were all alike the children of wrath and dead in our sinnes but onely of his free mercie and great loue he hath redeemed vs by Christ § Sect. 4 Fourthly Our worthines no cause of our calling as the Lord hath freely redeemed vs so also hee hath freely called vs to the knowledge of the mysterie of our redemption wrought by Iesus Christ and chosen vs amongst all nations to be his Church and peculiar people and that of his meere grace and free goodwill without any respect of our worthines as appeareth 2. Tim. 1.9 Who hath saued vs 2. Tim. 1.9 and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose of grace which was giuen vs through Christ Iesus before the world was So Moses telleth the children of Israel that the Lord had called and made choise of them aboue all other nations to bee his Church and people not for any respect of themselues or their owne worthinesse but of his free loue and vndeserued mercie Deut. 7.7.8 as it is Deut. 7.7.8 Psal 44.3 Our works and worthinesse no causes of our iustification Fiftly as the Lord hath freely called vs so being called he hath freely iustified vs not for any inherent righteousnesse in our selues but of his owne grace and goodwill through the righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ which he imputeth vnto vs. And this is euident Rom. 3.24 where it is said that we are iustified freely by Gods grace Rom. 3.24 through the redemption which is in Christ Iesus And Tit. 3.7 where the Apostle saith that we are iustified by his grace Tit. 3.7 And least wee should ioyne with Gods grace our owne workes and worthines he telleth vs that Abraham himselfe though a most righteous and holy man in respect of his sinceritie and integritie of heart was notwithstanding not iustified by his workes but Abraham beleeued God Rom. 4.3.5 and that was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.3 ver 5. he flatly excludeth works from being any causes of our iustification To him saith he that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse So that wee are freely iustified of Gods grace and goodwill without any respect of our owne works and worthinesse as being any causes of our iustification although they are necessarie and inseparable fruites thereof For the same death and bloudshed of Christ whereby we are freed from the guilt and punishment of sinne and euerlasting death doth free vs also from the death of sin to newnesse of life and doth not onely iustifie but also sanctifie vs as the Apostle plainly sheweth Tit. 2.14 Who gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie Tit. 2.14 that is free vs from the guilt and punishment of sinne to which we were subiect and purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes Sixtly our sanctification and inherent righteousnesse it selfe what is it els but the free gift of God begun increased and finished by his gracious spirit That our sanctification is the free gift of God what are the graces in vs but Gods free and vndeserued gifts what are our best works but the fruites of his
Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith Phil. 3.9 and Gal. 3.10.11 Phil. 3.9 Gal. 3.10.11 Hee affirmeth that as many as rest in the workes of the law are vnder the curse and that no man is iustified by the law in the sight of God it is euident because the iust shall liue by faith So Rom. 4.5 To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is coūted for righteousnesse Rom. 4.5 And our Sauiour Christ teacheth vs to say and acknowledge when we haue done all to our vttermost power which is commaunded vs that we are still vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 Luk. 17.10 § Sect. 4 But vnto these and such like manifest places it is answered that the Apostle speaketh not of the works of the morall law That the former places are to be vnderstood of the works of the morall law and not of the ceremonies onely but of the ceremonies onely to which againe wee reply that no such friuolous distinction can be gathered out of the Apostles wordes nay the plaine contrary euidently appeareth by his maine scope and drift in his whole discourse of our iustification and also by some particular places His chiefe scope is to beate downe the pride of all both Iewes and Gentiles to the end that the whole glory and praise of our iustification and saluation might be ascribed to the free mercy grace and goodnesse of God alone now it is most certaine that the morall duties are in themselues farre more excellent then the ceremoniall and consequently more fit to puffe vs vp with a spirituall pride and to make vs to rest in our selues for our iustification ascribing at least some part of the praise vnto our owne workes and vertues so that if the Apostle had onely spokē of the works of the ceremoniall law mans pride should not bee beaten downe neither should God haue the whole praise of our saluation and so his discourse should be vaine as not tending to prooue inforce that for which end and purpose hee chiefly vndertakes it Againe this should nothing concerne neither the Gentils in former times nor any true Christians since the comming of Christ forasmuch as they did not nor doe not neither were nor are bound to obserue the ceremoniall law cōsequently could neuer once dreame of obtayning righteousnesse by fulfilling the ceremonies but they would rather ascribe the glorie of their iustification to their morall duties to which they found themselues bound by the law of nature written in their harts or doe find themselues bound by the morall law of God written in his worde and therfore it was necessarie for the beating downe of their pride and that they might ascribe the whole glory vnto God of their iustification and saluation that the apostles in this discourse should proue that they were not iustified neither by obseruing the law of nature written in their hartes nor yet the morall law of God reuealed in his word Whereby it manifestly appeareth that howsoeuer the Apostle excludeth the workes of the ceremoniall law from being causes of iustification yet not them alone but the workes of the morall law also § Sect. 5 But this may more manifestly appeare by particular places wherein the Apostle plainly sheweth that he speaketh not onely of the ceremoniall law The former point prooued by particular testimonies but of the morall law also In the second chapter of the Epistle to the Romanes he plainly disputeth as well of the law of nature to the obedience whereof the Gentiles were obliged as of the law giuen by Moses Rom. 3.19.20 Chap. 3.19.20 Hee sayth that all the world are made culpable before God and therefore by the works of the law shal no flesh be iustified in his sight Now if this consequence be good he speaketh not onely of the ceremoniall but of the moral duties for the former belonged not to the gentiles and therefore the neglect of them did not make them culpable nor debarre them of being iustified by their owne workes Rom. 10.5.6 Gal. 3.11.12 21.22.24 Secondly Rom. 10.5.6 and Gal. 3.11.12.21.22.24 The Apostle putteth a plaine difference betweene the righteousnesse which is by the law and the righteousnesse which is by faith and maketh a flatt opposition in the acte of iustification not betweene morall ceremonial duties but betweene doing and beleeuing Eph. 2.8.9 faith and workes Thirdly hee saith Eph. 2.8.9 that wee are saued by grace through faith not of our selues nor of workes least any man should boast himselfe If hee had spoken only of workes they might though foolishly haue wrested it to ceremonies only seeing the Ephesians were not bound to the ceremoniall law as being strangers to the common wealth of Israel as himselfe speaketh ver 12. but whē he saith also not of our selues vers 12. he excludeth al whatsoeuer is in vs from being the cause of our saluation not onely ceremoniall but also morall duties So writing to Titus he saith Tit. 3.5 Titus 3.5 Not by the workes of righteousnes which wee had done but according to his mercy hee saued vs in which place we are necessarily to vnderstand the works of the morall law for Titus being a Grecian was not bound to obserue the ceremoniall law and therefore he was not so much as circumcised as the apostle plainely affirmeth Gal. 2.3 Gal. 2.3 Fourthly Paul speaketh of that law by which wee come to the knowledge of sinne Rom. 3.20 and 7.7.8.9 as appeareth Rom. 3.20 and 7.7.8.9 But the knowledge of sinne came especially by the morall law and therefore of this law the Apostle speaketh Lastly the Apostle speaking of the workes of the law alleadgeth these sentences Gala. 3.10 Gal. 3.10 As many as are of the workes of the law are vnder the curse for it is written cursed is euery man that continueth not in all thinges which are written in the booke of the law to doe them So that he speaketh not of the ceremoniall law alone but of the whole law of Moses and of all things contayned in it and ver 12. ver 12. And the law is not of faith but the man that shall doe those things shall liue in them Which cannot be vnderstoode of the ceremoniall law alone but of the workes of the morall law yea of them especially That the Apostle excludeth as well the workes of the regenerate as of the vnregenerate Secondly it is answered that the apostle speaketh only of the workes of those who are not regenerate nor indued with faith and not of the regenerate and faithfull Which shifting cauill the apostle clearly taketh away not only by applying his speeches vnto all men without any limitation but especially in that example of Abraham which he bringeth for this purpose who though hee were long before regenerate indued with faith and exceeding plentifull in good workes yet hee flatly excludeth all his workes from being any causes of
1. Cor. 1.30 By his obedience many are made righteous Rom. 5.19 And that which was impossible to the law Rom. 5.19 in as much as it was weake because of the flesh God sending his sonne in the similitude of sinfull flesh Rom. 8.3.4 and for sinne condemned sinne in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the law might be fulfilled in vs as it is Rom. 8.3.4 In a word in him alone wee haue all our righteousnesse in him we shine gloriously in the sight of God and he is that bright shining Sunne of righteousnes from whom we borrow all our light without whose raies of holinesse we should remaine in the darknesse of our sinnes and corruptions Lastly the Apostle setteth downe the forme of our iustification namely the imputation of our sinnes vnto Christ and the imputation of his righteousnes vnto vs. 2. Cor. 5.21 He which knew no sinne was made sinne for vs 2. Cor. 5.21 that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him As therefore Christ was made a sinner for vs so wee are made righteous before God in him but Christ Iesus was not made a sinner for vs by infusion of our sinnes and corruptions into his nature for hee was alwaies most holie pure vndefiled and without sinne 1 Pet. 1.18.19 and 2.21 as the Apostle witnesseth of him but by imputation onely as being our suretie who had taken vpon him to discharge all our debt and therefore in like manner wee are made righteous not by infusion of righteousnesse but by imputation onely § Sect. 3 Now whereas they obiect That iustification by imputation is not imaginarie but reall and in truth that to be iustified by imputation is but an imaginarie mockerie as if a poore man should be reputed rich to this we are to answere that it is but a friuolous cauill for we doe not teach that God esteemeth and reputeth vs righteous being wholy defiled with sinne and quite destitute of all righteousnes but that hee maketh vs perfectly righteous by washing away our sins with the precious bloud of Christ and by applying and appropriating vnto vs his perfect righteousnes and obedience by vertue of his spirit principally a liuely faith instrumentally wherby we are vnited vnto Christ and become members of his body and consequently haue right and full interest vnto all that which this our head hath done for vs and so being made partakers of his righteousnes and merits God reputeth vs as we are in truth perfectly iust and righteous If a man being poore and farre in debt should be accounted and reputed exceeding rich and nothing indebted it were indeede but a meere imagination But if another of great sufficiencie shuld take vpon him to be his suretie and not onely discharge all his debts but should bestow vpon him great summes of money and much treasure this man whatsoeuer hee was before time in himselfe may now be esteemed rich and out of debt So if we as wee are farre indebted to the iustice of God and exceeding beggerly yea starke naked of all righteousnesse should be reputed as we are thus in our selues righteous and nothing indebted it were but a meere mockerie but seeing our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ hath taken vpon him to be our suretie who is himselfe all-sufficient and seeing hee hath perfectly and fully answered all our debts wherein we were ingaged to Gods iustice and not onely so but also hath communicated and bestowed vpon vs the infinite rich treasures of his righteousnes and obedience giuing vnto vs full interest and possession hereof outwardly by his hand-writing of the Gospell and his Sacraments as seales annexed thereunto and inwardly by the vertue and cooperation of of his spirit applying them vnto vs and lastly seeing we also haue receiued the full assurance of all this heauenly and spirituall rich treasure by the hand of faith wee are in truth quite out of debt and exceeding rich with his righteousnes which is now become ours and therfore are so reputed and esteemed in the sight of God CHAP. LI. Sathans temptations mouing the weake Christian to doubt of his iustification answered § Sect. 1 ANd so much for answering Sathans temptations That our iustificatiō is plainly reuealed vnto vs in the word of God whereby he laboureth to perswade vs to rest vpon a false and imperfect righteousnesse for our iustification now wee are briefly to speake of those which hee suggesteth into the mindes of weake Christians to the end that hee may make them doubt of their iustification that so hee might if it were possible make frustrate this worke of God or at least robbe their soules of all comfort and peace of conscience which alwaies accompanieth the assurance of our iustification for being iustified by faith wee haue peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 5.1 as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 5.1 First therefore he suggesteth that our iustification is an action of God and therefore vnknowne to vs so that we cannot possibly attaine vnto any certaine knowledge that we are iustified of God vnlesse he assure vs hereof by some speciall and extraordinarie reuelation For the answering whereof we are to vnderstand that this act of God in iustifying a sinner is as cleerely reuealed ordinarily in the Scriptures as any other thing concerning our saluation and that euery true beleeuer may as certainly conclude by vndoubted arguments grounded on Gods infallible truth that he is iustified before God as by naturall reason he can proue that he liueth and breatheth For first our effectuall vocation and iustification are inseparably linked together by the Apostle Rom. 8.30 Rom. 8.30 So that whosoeuer can proue that he is effectually called he may also most certainly inferre that he is iustified But euery true beleeuer may come to the certaine knowledge that he is effectually called as before I haue shewed at large and that not by any speciall reuelation but by the will of God reuealed in his word by the inward testimonie of Gods spirit and the vndoubted signes of effectuall calling which he obserueth in himselfe and therefore without any particular reuelation we may attaine vnto the assurance also that we are iustified that is that our sinnes are pardoned for the merits and full satisfaction of Iesus Christ and we cloathed with his righteousnes Secondly whosoeuer can come to the assurance that he hath a true and liuely faith he may also be assured that he is iustified for it is the nature and an inseparable propertie of true faith to apply vnto the beleeuer Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse whereby hee is iustified before God and hence it is that the Scriptures plainely affirme that we are iustified by faith and not by any thing else which is in vs as before I haue sufficiently shewed But we may come to the certaine assurance that we haue a true faith by the vndoubted signes and inseparable fruites thereof which wee may discerne in our selues as hath been
the Father sanctifieth vs by giuing vs his sonne and sending his spirit and therefore this work is ascribed vnto him Tit. 3.5 Eph. 2.4.5 God the sonne sanctifieth vs by mortifying our sins by vertue of his bloud purging our consciences from dead workes that wee may serue the liuing God and by vertue of his resurrection raising vs also from the death of sinne to newnesse of life and lastly by his death hath merited for vs Gods spirit and rising againe hath sent him vnto vs whereby wee are regenerate and therefore hee also is said to haue sanctified vs and God is said to haue sanctified vs in him Eph. 5.26 1. Cor. 2.11 Eph. 5.26 1. Cor. 2.11 God the holy Ghost also sanctifieth vs by applying the vertue of Christs death and resurrection vnto vs and so immediatly beginneth continueth Ioh. 3.5 6. Act. 11.16 Tit. 3.5 and perfecteth this worke in vs and therefore most vsually in the Scriptures this worke is ascribed vnto him Ioh. 3.5 6. Act. 11.16 Tit. 3.5 And thus it appeareth that God himselfe is the principall and onely efficient cause of our sanctification vpon which point I haue the longer insisted to the end that wee should not in this worke rest vpon our owne strength for then wee shall be subiect to many discouragements and lie open to innumerable temptations grounded vpon our small measure and slow progresse in our sanctification as also vpon the great difficulties and manifolde discouragements which both stay vs in the birth and hinder our full growth in true godlinesse all which in respect of our owne power prooue this worke not onely hard but euen impossible for vs to be perfected and accomplished But rather that wee relie our selues vpon the Lords infinite power and gracious promises whereby wee are assured notwithstanding our owne exceeding weaknesse that he will not onely begin but also finish and perfect this good worke in vs. § Sect. 3 And thus much concerning the principall efficient cause of our sanctification The motiue cause Gods sole mercie the motiue cause which mooued the Lord to sanctifie vs was his owne mercie and Christs merits The first is expressed by the Apostle 1. Pet. 1.3 whereas it is said 1. Pet. 1.3 that God according to his abundant mercie hath begotten vs again c. The other is implied by Paul Eph. 2.5 where hee saith that God hath quickened vs in Christ Ephes 2.5 who by his death merited not onely the remission of sinne for vs but also Gods spirit whereby wee are sanctified So that it was not any good inclination vnto holinesse in vs or any thing els wherein we excelled others which moued God to sanctifie vs Eph. 2.1.3 for wee were all alike the children of wrath and dead in our sinnes but onely his owne boundlesse mercie and the alsufficient merits of Christ our Sauiour were the onely causes which moued the Lord to giue vs his spirit whereby we are regenerate and raised from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life And therefore let vs not arrogate the praise of our sanctification in whole or in part vnto our selues but ascribe all the glorie to God who is the sole author and finisher of it § Sect. 4 The instrumentall causes of our sanctification Of the instrumentall causes of our sanctification Ioh. 15.3 and 17.17 Iam. 1.18 1. Pet. 1.23 are either externall or internall the external are first the word of God of which our Sauiour speaketh Ioh. 15.3 Now are you cleane through the word which I haue spoken vnto you And cap. 17.17 Sanctifie thē with thy truth thy word is truth So the Apostle Iames chap. 1.18 Of his owne will begat he vs with the word of truth c. And the Apostle Peter affirmeth that we are borne anew not of mortall seede but of immortall by the word of God c. The word of God therefore is an instrumentall cause of our sanctification In which respect also the Ministers by whose ministerie wee are conuerted and regenerate are said to be our spirituall fathers who haue begotten vs vnto God 1. Cor. 4.15 Philem. v. 10. as appeareth 1. Cor. 4.15 and Philem. vers 10. in both which places Paul chalengeth this title vnto himselfe Another externall cause of our sanctification are the Sacraments especially the Sacrament of Baptisme whereof it is that Ananias saith vnto Paul Act. 22.16 Arise and be baptized wash away thy sins Act. 22.16 Eph. 5.26 So Eph. 5.26 it is said that Christ gaue himself for his Church that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word The which places as they are to be vnderstood principally of the washing of iustification wherby we are purged from the guilt and punishment of sinne so also of the washing of sanctification whereby we are cleansed from the sinnes and corruptions themselues The internall instrument of our sanctification is a liuely faith without which the other outward instruments are vneffectuall in those who are of yeeres neither must we think that the bare action of hearing or the outward washing take away our sins and corruptions vnlesse the word and things signified in the Sacraments bee applied vnto vs by a true faith For the word which we heare profiteth not vnlesse it be mixed with faith in those that heare it Heb. 4.2 Heb. 4.2 And vnlesse those that are capable of faith beleeue with all their heart Act. 8.37 it is to no purpose to be baptized Act. 8.37 and therefore vnto the other we must ioyne this instrument of a liuely faith if wee would attaine vnto true sanctification For faith purifieth the heart and is fruitfull in the workes of loue Act. 15.9 Gal. 5.6 as the Scripture speaketh § Sect. 5 And thus haue I set downe the efficient causes of our sanctification Of the manner how our sanctification is wrought in the next place let vs consider of the manner how this worke is wrought in vs. For the vnderstanding whereof we are to know that wee being vnited vnto Christ principally by Gods spirit and instrumentally by a liuely faith and so made members of his mysticall bodie doe participate the vertue of his death buriall and resurrection whereby not onely our iustification but also our sanctification is deriued vnto vs. For first by vertue of his death our sinnes are mortified and our corruptions crucified together with him as appeareth Rom. 6.6 Knowing this Rom. 6.6 that our old man is crucified with him that the bodie of sinne might be destroyed that hencefoorth we should not serue sinne Secondly by vertue of his buriall this death of sinne is as it were further continued and thereby our sinnes and corruptions are more and more subdued and kept vnder that they cannot rise and rebel against the spirit And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6.3 where he saith Rom. 6.3 that we are buried with Christ into his death Thirdly by vertue of
and prayest continually and beatest thy braines with daily care to the end that thou mayest attaine vnto some perfection in christianitie yet dost thou not see how little thou profitest by all thy labours seeing thy knowledge is still small thy faith weake thy charitie cold thy heart dull and hard thy good workes few and imperfect and all thy zealous resolutions easily hindred and quite ouerthrowne with euery small temptation Why then dost thou striue against the streame and vndertake a taske which is to thee not onely hard but euen impossible for doe what thou canst yet all will bee to little purpose seeing this worke is full of great difficulties thy selfe disabled with manifold corruptions and thy enemies which oppose against thee exceeding strong and mightie as thy selfe findest by lamentable experience and thy much laboring and little profiting doe clearely proue Cease therefore thy bootlesse trauaile and rather imbrace thy pleasing delights than turmoyle thy selfe with vaine labour § Sect. 2 For the answering of which temptation we are to know That the dislike of our dulnesse and backwardnesse is accepted of God that if we dislike our own dulnesse and backwardnes in profiting and growing forward in sanctification if we be truely sorrowfull and bewaile our great wants and imperfections and labour earnestly in the vse of the meanes whereby we may attaine vnto knowledge faith and all other sanctifying graces and also be enabled to bring forth the fruites of holy obedience then are we accepted of God and shall in the end most certainely obtaine our desire though yet we can see but small profit of all our labours neither shall all the power of our spirituall enemies so farre preuaile against vs as vtterly to hinder vs in this worke but that we shall vndoubtedly goe forward although not so speedely as we desire For this holy desire of profiting in godlinesse this indeauour and carefull vse of those meanes which are ordained by God for this purpose are not naturall but the worke of Gods spirit begun in vs and we are with the Apostle to be perswaded of this same thing Phil. 1.6 that he that hath begun this good worke in vs will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ Phil. 1.6 We are to assure our selues with the Prophet Dauid that the Lord will fulfill these holy desires of those that feare him Psal 145.19 Psal 145.19 We are vndoubtedly to beleeue that the Lord will not suffer vs to be tempted aboue our power 1. Cor. 10.13 but will giue a good issue with the temptation 1. Cor. 10.13 We are not to imagine that he will breake this brused reede nor quench this smoking flaxe seeing he hath promised the contrarie Matth. 12.20 Matth 12.20 And though this little graine of mustard seede for a time lie hidden in the earth and when it sprouteth vp springeth so slowly that wee cannot sensibly discerne the growing thereof yet in Gods good time being watred with the dew of his holy spirit it will become one of the greatest trees in the Lords garden For seeing the Lord hath giuen vs this grace not to be wanting in the vse of all good meanes we may most certainely assure our selues that the Lord for his part will not be wanting in giuing his blessing and graunting the assistance of his holy spirit which he hath promised to those that desire it Luk. 11.13 § Sect. 3 Secondly That Gods spirit dwelling in vs will in the end perfect this worke let vs consider that these small beginnings of grace and first fruites of the spirit are most vndoubted signes that he dwelleth in vs now wheresoeuer he dwelleth he sanctifieth his own lodging and is not idle till he haue effected this worke which he hath vndertaken and begun Though therefore this worke in regarde of thy slowe proceedings seeme hard yea euen impossible yet consider that that which is possible to man is impossible to God though thou seest many difficulties and mighty oppositions by thy powrefull enemies yet let not this discourage thee seeing the Lord who is with thee is almightie and therefore able to repell the violence of all opposers and to make the most heauie and pinching yoke light and easie Though in thy selfe thou art most weake and feeble Matth. 11.30 Eph. 6.10 Phil. 4.13 yet thou art strong in the power of Gods might and enabled to doe all things through the helpe of Christ which strengtheneth thee § Sect. 4 Thirdly let vs consider that as the Lord hath decreed our saluation and promised vnto vs eternall life so he hath also as certainly decreed and promised the meanes tending thereunto That the Lord hath as certainly decreed and promised our sanctification as our saluation which are the effects of his election and the forerunners of our saluation but one especiall effect of his election is our sanctification and the way to saluation is the path of righteousnesse and holinesse and therefore this is no lesse certainely assured vnto vs that we shall be sanctified and enabled to walke in this way of righteousnesse and holinesse then that we are elected and shall be saued Though then we are weake and vnstable 2. Tim. 2.19 yet the foundation of God remaineth euer sure though in regarde of our owne feeblenesse and manyfould imperfections the worke of sanctification seeme altogether impossible yet this should not moue vs to doubting nor discourage vs in our course seeing it hath not any ground vpon our owne strength but vpon Gods immutable decree and neuer failing promises Eph. 1.4 Ioh. 14.16.17 Ezech. 11.19 and 36.26 Ier. 31.33.34 Ioel. 2.28.29 When then our small progresse in true godlinesse caused through the violence of our corruptions and oppositions of our spirituall enemies discourageth vs making this worke of sanctification seeme impossible let vs cal to minde that the Lord hath as certainely decreed that we should be his saints here vpon earth as his saints in heauen that he hath most faithfully promised that he will direct vs with his holy spirit take away from vs our stonie hearts and giue vs fleshy hearts illuminate our blinde vnderstandings with true sauing knowledge indue vs with a liuely faith and with all other sanctifying graces enable vs to performe in some measure holy obedience to his heauenly will mortifying our corruptions and enabling vs to serue him in newnes of life all which gracious promises we are as vndoubtedly to beleeue as those which concerne either the remission of our sinnes or euerlasting happines And therefore though our owne dulnesse backwardnesse and little profiting in sanctification should worke in vs true sorrow yet this should not discourage vs doubting of the issue of all our labours but knowing that God is alike true in all his promises let vs setting aside all difficulties beleene against beliefe and vndoubtedly perswade our selues that the Lord will finish that good worke which hee hath begun in vs though as yet it hath but small
carefull in withstanding this dangerous assault for there is not any one temptation wherewith Sathan preuaileth more than by perswading men to content themselues with a ciuill kinde of honestie which is destitute of religion and the true feare of God And to this end let vs consider that ciuill honestie seuered from true pietie is but glorious iniquitie for when wee haue attained to as great a measure thereof as possibly we can in this age of corruption we shall come short in diuers duties of many of the Heathens who haue excelled in these morall and ciuill vertues and consequently when we are at the best we shall be but honest Infidels and good natured worldlings if wee doe not ioyne thereunto the duties of pietie And how goodly a shew soeuer our workes make in the eyes of men yet are they odious in Gods sight if they be not done in knowledge and grounded on Gods word and commandement but in ignorance and according to our own inuentions and the fond conceit of our blind vnderstanding if they proceede not from the true loue of God which is the onely fountaine of all acceptable obedience but from the loue of our selues and other carnall respects if they bee not the fruites of a liuely faith but done in ignorance and infidelitie for what soeuer is not done in faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 Heb. 11.6 as it is Rom. 14.23 and therefore cannot please God Heb. 11.6 By which we are not to vnderstand an historicall faith whereby wee know and are assured that those workes wee doe are commanded in Gods word but a true iustifying faith which doth applie vnto vs Christ Iesus and all Gods mercifull promises made in him For that our workes may be acceptable before God there is required first that our persons bee acceptable vnto him neither can any thing we doe please him so long as we remaine his enemies in which state we are by nature till wee are reconciled in Christ our Mediatour as appeareth Rom. 5.10 Rom. 5.10 Col. 1.20 Now vnlesse we haue faith we cannot apply vnto vs Christ nor his merits and righteousnes by whom onely wee are reconciled vnto God and consequently we remaine Gods enemies who can doe nothing pleasing in his sight Secondly the best of our workes are imperfect and mingled with many corruptions and therefore cannot abide the examination of Gods exact iustice till their imperfections be couered by Christs righteousnesse and their corruption washed away with his most precious bloud now Christ and his merits cannot by any other meanes be applied vnto vs but by the hand of a liuely faith Lastly if all our works and honest dealing be not done in zeale of Gods glorie referred to this end that Gods name may be magnified they are not acceptable before God for the cause why he would haue our light shine before men is that he our heauenly father may be glorified Matth. 3.16 as it is Matth 5. 16. and the maine and wherefore wee should haue our conuersation honest amongst the Gentiles and vnbeleeuers is that they which speake euill of vs as of euill doers may by our good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of their visitation 1. Pet. 2.12 as it is 1. Pet. 2.12 And therefore let not Sathan deceiue vs in perswading vs to rest in ciuill honestie for if it be seuered from true pietie from sauing knowledge from sincere loue of God iustifying faith and a zeale of Gods glorie it will not be acceptable in Gods sight as proceeding from the loue of our selues and other carnall respects namely to obtaine praise or profit thereby § Sect. 5 And thus Sathan dealeth with ciuil worldlings But if those which he incountreth be professors of religion How Sathan dealeth with professors of religion then hee seeketh to perswade them that if they outwardly perfourme the duties of pietie as the hearing of Gods word the publike and priuate calling vpon Gods name the frequent receiuing of the Sacraments if they attaine to the knowledge and profession of religion and can tip their tongues with godlinesse then they may liue how they list amongst their brethren neglecting all the duties of the second table so they outwardly obserue the first for though they be barraine of good workes destitute of charitie filled with pride addicted to couetousnesse oppression and all deceitfull dealing yet they shall be iustified by their faith and approoued of God for their outward profession sake But let such men know that this is a notable stratagem of Sathan to cause vs to fall into his secret ambushments to our destruction That pietie and honestie are inseparable which if they would preuent and auoide let them consider that pietie and charitable honestie are two such twinnes as are borne liue and dye both together that they are the life and soule of a Christian which cannot possiblie be seuered that it is as possible for the good tree to bring foorth bad fruite for the fire to be without heate and the Sunne without light as it is for a liuely faith to be voide of good workes true profession to be seuered from holie practise and iustification before God from sanctification and holinesse of life before men that whosoeuer braggeth of his loue to God and loueth not his brethren is a liar and there is no truth in him 1. Ioh. 4.20 1. Ioh. 4.20 that though they professe themselues the children of God yet if they doe not the workes of righteousnes as well as the workes of pietie and loue their brethren they are in truth the children of the diuell 1. Ioh. 3.10 Rom. 2.13 as appeareth 1. Ioh. 3.10 that not the hearers of the word but the doers thereof are iustified Rom. 2.13 that not euery one who saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen Matth. 7.21 but they who doe the will of the father which is in heauen Matth. 7.21 that they deceiue themselues who looke to be saued by hearing the word Iam. 1.22 if they practise not that which they heare Iam. 1.22 for in stead thereof they shall plunge themselues into deeper condemnation For the seruant that knoweth his masters will and doth it not Luk. 12.47 shall be beaten with many stripes Luk. 12.47 And it shall be more easie for Tyre and Sidon Sodome and Gomorrah Mat. 11.21 who had not the Gospell preached amongst them nor saw Christs miracles than for Corazin and Bethsaida which enioyed both Matth. 11.21 for there as he giueth great meanes of knowledge there hee expecteth great fruites in practise and as hee will be honoured in all so especially in those that come nigh vnto him as it is Leuit. 10.3 Lastly Leu. 10.3 that the sentence of saluation and damnation shall not be giuen according to our words and profession but according to our deedes and the holie practise of the workes of mercie and Christianitie which are the inseparable fruites and
not the cause of Gods election for Gods election was from all eternitie and the cause of Christs merits which were in time and the effects of Gods election and therefore that which came after could not be the cause of that which was from all eternitie neither can the effect produce the cause but the cause the effect Moreouer we are not said in the scriptures to be chosen for Christ but in Christ Eph. 1.4 And the Apostle Iohn affirmeth that Gods eternall loue was the cause which moued the Lord to send his sonne to redeeme vs by his death and not that his death was the cause of his loue Ioh. 3.16 And so much concerning the efficient cause of our election The materiall cause thereof was the purpose or counsaile of God himselfe whereby hee determined to elect vs. The formall cause was the seuering and setting apart of certaine men which were to bee saued § Sect. 2 selected from the rest who were reiected The end of Gods election was two-fold the first and chief end was the glorie of God set forth by manifesting his grace and mercie in the saluation of the faithfull And this the Apostle plainly expresseth Rom. 9.23 namely that the end of Gods election is that he might declare the riches of his glorie in the vessels of mercie which he hath prepared vnto glorie And Eph. 1.4 5 6. he saith that he hath chosen vs in Christ and predestinated vs to the praise of the glorie of his grace The second end which is inferiour and subordinate to the other is the saluation of the elect and this also is expressed by the Apostle Rom. 9.23 where hee saith that the elect are prepared vnto glorie And Act. 13.48 the holy Ghost saith as many as were ordained to eternall life thereby implying that the saluation of the elect is the end of Gods election And these are the causes of Gods election The effects which inseparably follow-hereupon are Christ the Mediatour and the whole worke of his mediation and our redemption wrought by him our adoption effectuall calling iustification sanctification and glorification and these are the degrees and meanes of our election which are as well contained in Gods decree as our saluation it selfe The subiect in which we are elected is Christ Iesus our Mediatour and head not in regard of his deitie alone for so he is the efficient cause nor in respect of his humanitie alone but as he is God and man And wee are therefore elected in him both because in our selues we were not capable of such glorious dignitie as also because hee alone is a fit Mediatour in whom we should be elected seeing with our election there is an vnion coniunction of vs with God who hath elected vs. The obiect of Gods election are all those who are preordained vnto euerlasting life and whom the Lord will eternally saue which being considered in themselues are a great number but yet in respect of the number of the reprobates but a small and little flocke for though many be called yet few are chosen as Christ himselfe affirmeth Matth. 22.14 The last thing which also is expressed in the definition are certaine properties attributed to Gods election namely that it is eternall free and immutable That this decree is eternall it appeareth Eph. 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world So Rom. 9.11 Secondly that it is free and of his meere grace it is manifest Rom. 9.18 He hath mercie on whom he will and whom he will he hardneth So Eph. 1.11 In whom we are chosen when wee were predestinate according to the purpose of him which worketh all things after the counsaile of his owne will Lastly that it is immutable and most firme and certaine it plainly appeareth 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his Where we may obserue that this immutabilitie and certaintie of Gods decree doth not depend vpon vs or our perseuerance but vpon Gods good pleasure and foreknowledge for it is a foundation in it selfe firme and stable and hath not the seale of our worthinesse or perseuerance in grace but of Gods foreknowledge whereby he knoweth who are his CHAP. V. Sathans temptations concerning Gods election answered and first those wherewith he assaulteth carnall worldlings § Sect. 1 Sathans temptation whereby he perswadeth worldlings that all in the end shall be saued answered NOw concerning this decree of election and the assurance thereof there are two sorts of Sathans temptations the first he suggesteth into the minds of carnall worldlings to nourish in them fond presumption and carnall securitie the other into the minds of weak christians whereby he moueth them to doubt despaire of their electiō to euerlasting life The worldly man he assaulteth with two principal temptations first he perswadeth him that there is no election at al or reprobation but that all in the end shall be saued Which grosse absurditie that hee may make more plausible and probable hee setteth before them the infinite mercie of God and the generall promises and consolations in the Gospell Ezech. 13. and 18. 1. Tim. 2.4 as that he will not the death of a sinner and that he will that all men shall be saued in both places cunningly dissembling that which followeth for to the first place is added but that he repent and in the latter that they who shall be saued must also come to the knowledge of the truth But this temptation is so palpably absurd that it becommeth not Sathans policie to vse it to any but those onely whose hearts are hardned their eyes blinded their consciences seared and who hauing not beleeued and loued the truth are giuen ouer of God to beleeue strong delusions and therfore I will not spend much time in answering this temptation onely let such men as are seduced with Sathans lyes know thus much that Gods mercie is a iust mercie as his iustice is a mercifull iustice that God is infinite in both and no lesse glorified in the manifestation of the one than of the other Let them know that there are no promises of the Gospell so generall which are not limited with the condition of faith and the fruite thereof vnfained repentance Let them know that God who is not onely mercifull but also true yea truth it selfe hath in his word reuealed his will as well concerning the eternall death and destruction of the wicked as the saluation of the godly he hath said Matth. 22.14 and 7.13 that many are called and few chosen that the gate of heauen is so straight that there are few who finde it that he will say to the workers of iniquitie Goe your waies I know you not 23. that hee will make a separation betweene the sheepe and the goates and as hee saith to the one Come ye blessed of my father inherit ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world Mat. 25.34.41
faire volume of the creatures so as none can behold them but he must needes know and acknowledge it yet that this God being one in nature should be distinguished into three persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost without any diuision of substance or confusion of persons mans reason cannot conceiue though the Lord hath reuealed it and much lesse could inuent it seeing now it cannot comprehend it So that the world and the creatures therein contained were created the light of nature sufficiently teacheth vs seeing they haue an end and therefore had a beginning a time of corruption and therefore a time of generation also and as is the nature of euery seuerall part so is the nature of the whole vniuersall seeing also one effect brings vs to his cause and that cause to a superiour cause and that to another vntill we come to the highest and supreame cause which is God who hauing his being of himselfe giueth being to all things but that all this goodly order should bee brought out of confusion this light out of darknes that al these excellent creatures should be created of nothing by the alone word of their omnipotent Creator it passeth the conceit of humane reason therefore his inuention also So that we are wretched and full of miserie not only our reason but euen our senses can teach vs but how wee should be freed out of this miserie and attaine vnto euerlasting happinesse is a thing aboue the reach of mans wisedome And that we are vnable to performe those duties we ought and leaue those sinnes vndone which we should omit and by both offend God the law of nature written in our hearts and the checks and feares which euery one feele in their owne consciences doe sufficiently teach vs but the meanes whereby wee should be reconciled vnto God whom we haue offended as they are set down in his word namely that the second person in Trinitie should take vpon him mans nature and be borne of a pure virgin that in this nature hee should for vs perfourme perfect obedience to Gods law and suffer affliction miserie yea death it selfe to reconcile vs to his Father and procure his loue to free vs from euerlasting death and damnation and to purchase for vs euerlasting life and happinesse and that his obedience and merits should become ours by reason of that vnion whereby hee becommeth our head and wee his members which vnion is made principally by his spirit and instrumentally by faith doe all seeme strange yea absurd to humane reason and therefore the Apostle saith that the natural man perceiueth not the things which are of the spirit of God 1. Cor. 2.14 for they are foolishnes vnto him neither can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned as it is 1. Cor. 2.14 And if he cannot know and conceiue them when in the preaching of the Gospell they are reuealed vnto him how much lesse could hee inuent them hauing neuer heard of them or who can imagine that in policie he would haue deuised such a religion to keep the world in awe and obedience as to euery worldly man seemeth foolish and absurd yea contrary to his nature For what can be more against the haire than to deny our selues and to take vp our crosse and follow Christ than to reiect our owne workes and worthinesse and to seek for iustification in Christs death and obedience alone than to imagine that manifold afflictions and great miserie is the high way that leadeth to glorie and endlesse felicitie and that pleasures honours and riches make vs vnfit to enter into Gods kingdome And therefore seeing the doctrine of the Scriptures are not onely aboue the reach of humane reason but also flat contrary to naturall wisedome it plainly prooueth that they are not the inuention of mortall man for then the effect would bee like the cause but the word of the euerliuing God which sauoureth of his hidden and spirituall wisedome § Sect. 5 The eluenth argument The eleuenth reason taken from the prophecies of holy Scriptures to proue that the Scriptures were indited not by man but by Gods spirit are the prophecies therein contained which were fulfilled in their due time as that there should be enmitie betweene the seed of the woman and the seed of the Serpent and that the promised seede Christ Iesus should vanquish the diuell that the posteritie of Cham should be accursed that Abraham should haue a sonne by his wife Sarah when they were both old and she past the time of child-bearing that his posterity should be bond men in Egypt foure hundred yeres foretold before hee had Isaac of whom they came that Iudaes posteritie who was but the fourth sonne should haue soueraigntie and dominion ouer the rest that the scepter should not be taken from him till the Messias should come that the tribe of Ephraim should excell the tribe of Manasses that hee who should ree difie Iericho after it was destroyed Iosh 6.26 should be punished with the death of his sonnes as appeareth Iosh 6.26 which was fiue hundred yeeres after fulfilled in Hiel the Bethelite 1. King 16.34 as it is 1. King 16.34 that Iosias by name should destroy idolatrie and the idolaters and restore the true religion 1. King 13.1.2 2. King 22. and 23. foretold almost 300 yeeres before he was borne 1. King 13.1 2. 2. King 22. and 23 that the people of Israel should bee led captiue into Babylon and be set free by Cyrus by name Esa 44.26.27.28 prophecied of aboue an hundred yeeres before Cyrus was borne Esa 44.26 27 28. And to these we may adde the prophecies of Ieremy concerning the taking of Ierusalem and their captiuitie into Babylon and the time of seuentie yeeres limited for their abiding there the prophecies of Daniel concerning the foure Monarchies which are so cleere and perspicuous as if hee had seene them in his time the prophecie of Christ concerning the destruction of Ierusalem the prophecies contained in the Reuelation of S. Iohn many of which we see fulfilled in our time especially that concerning the Antichrist of Rome his manner of comming his increasing his workes seate and place of residence and which are so manifestly and plainly described as if the Apostle had written an historie and not a prophecie Which plainly proueth that the Scriptures were not deuised by man but penned by the inspiration of Gods spirit who by his prouident wise dome foreseeth all things and by his wise prouidence ruleth all things § Sect. 6 But here Sathan will be readie to obiect That the Scriptures were penned by the holie men of God which are in them mentioned and not forged in their names by some polititian that we are not able to prooue that these prophecies were written by any such Prophets and holy men as are mentioned in the Scriptures so long before the things contained in them were done and that for ought wee know they might be forged
we attaine vnto fulnesse of perswasion That we must not content our selues with a small measure of faith Otherwise we shall make it manifest that we deceiue our selues with a shew and shadow of faith and that as yet we haue no true faith indeede which as it resembleth the graine of mustard seed in respect of the smalnes at the beginning thereof so also in the growth increase therefore if euer we would attaine vnto peace of conscience and assurance that wee are indued with a true and liuely faith we must earnestly labour in the vse of those meanes ordayned of God for the increase of faith and feruently pray vnto God that he will not onely sowe the seede of faith in our harts but also that he will so water it with the dew of his grace and holy spirite that it may grow from a small seede to a greate tree and that he will neuer cease blowing this smoking flaxe with the breath of the same his holy spirit till it increase from a little sparke to a mightie flame whereby our hartes being warmed with true comfort may with feruent zeale seeke to glorifie his holy name by our christian and holy conuersation § Sect. 4 Secondly we are to know that how weak smal soeuer our faith be so it be true the Lord wil not reiect it That the least faith is acceptable to God Mat. 12.20 nor vs in regard of it for he wil not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flax till he bring forth iudgment vnto victorie as himselfe hath spoken Mat. 12.20 He wil not contemne the least measure of his own grace which he hath bestowed vpon vs for though it be in neuer so small a quantitie yet if it be true it is his owne gift and his gifts are without repentance neither doth he euer contemne that which himselfe hath giuen nor take it away after it is once bestowed nay rather to him that hath shall bee giuen vntill hee haue abundance Mat. 25.29 he that hath receiued 5. talents shall receaue 5. more yea and hee that hath but one if hee doe not hide it but vse it to his maisters glorie shall be accepted and haue his talent doubled We reade in the scriptures that Christ reproued some for their small faith but yet we neuer read nor heard that he reiected and cast of any though their faith were neuer so weake if it were true no not him who cried out in the sense of his owne weaknesse Lorde I beleeue helpe thou my vnbeliefe Mar. 9.24 And therefore if with him wee find a true faith in vs at least in some measure and though it be exceedingly mingled with doubting and assaulted with infidelitie yet if wee can with this man earnestly pray the Lorde to helpe our vnbeliefe and with the Apostles hartily crie out O Lord increase my faith the Lord will accept of our hartie desire and graunt our request which is made by his owne spirite in vs and that according vnto his owne wil. § Sect. 5 Thirdly we must vnderstand that faith doth not iustifie and saue vs by it selfe as it is a vertue or facultie of the mind and hart or in respect of it owne excellencie quantitie That faith doth not iustifie vs as it is a worke or facultie in vs but as an instrument which applieth Christ vnto vs. and worthinesse for what were this but to embrace againe the doctrine of the papists which we haue reiected and to seeke for iustification in our selues and for our owne merites and worthinesse but as an instrument whereby we lay hold of and apply vnto our selues Christ Iesus with his righteousnesse and merites by which onely wee appeare iust before God now a weake faith as truly though not so powerfully doth apprehend and apply Christ Iesus and all his merites and obedience as a stronger faith euen as a small and weake hand if it be able to reach vp the meate to the mouth doth as well performe its dutie for the nourishment of the body as one of greater strength because it is not the strength of the hand but the goodnesse of the meate which nourisheth the bodie So a weake faith laying hould of Christ and applying him and his benefites to the beleeuer is sufficient to nourish him to euerlasting life as well as a stronger because it is not the worthines or excellencie of the instrument but of Christ which it apprehendeth that is effectual for our iustification eternal saluatiō So in like maner as a smal weak hād is able to receiue an almes as a stronger and greater and as a little eye doth see the whole body of sunne or some great mountaine as well as a bigger so our faith though weake and small doth apprehend Christ as truely and effectually for the saluation of the beleeuer as the greatest and most strong our Sauiour Christ compareth himselfe to the brasen Serpent and the beleeuing Christian stong with the stinge of sin to the Israelites which did behold it to the end they might be cured Ioh. 3.14 now we know that all of them were not a like sharpe sighted but some were poreblind some bleare eyed some sawe it but exceeding weakely and dimly but yet notwithstanding as many as looked on it were cured and healed though they were neuer so weake sighted so whosoeuer being stong with sinne do looke vpon Christ with the eye of faith resting vpon him alone for their saluation though they bee neuer so weake sighted yet they shal be restored to health and be eternally saued because it is not in their sight but in the obiect thereof Christ Iesus to iustifie before God and to purchase for them eternall saluation CHAP. XLVII Other tentations concerning faith answered § Sect. 1 ANd thus may we answere Sathans tentations Sathans tentation concerning the certainty and constancie of faith answeved which hee groundeth vpon the small quantitie and weakenesse of our faith besides which he suggesteth diuers others as first that true iustifying faith is a firme certaine and constant perswasion whereas ours if wee haue any at all is weake and feeble instable inconstant and wauering and that it is not onely continually assaulted but also often foiled and ouercome with doubting and infidelitie and therefore that it is but a shadow of faith and not true faith indeed The which tentation wee may easily answere if wee but remember that which already hath beene deliuered namely that the best cannot attaine in this life vnto such perfection of faith as is quite freed from all infirmities and corruption that there is diuers degrees of true iustifying faith some weaker some stronger some in greater and some in smaller quantitie some like smooking flaxe and a graine of mustard seed some like a bright burning flame which giueth light and the liuely heat of true comfort to those who are indued therewith and of as high growth as the greatest tree in the garden and
he will not rest till he hath againe reuiued and quickened vs with his holy spirite Moreouer our Sauiour hath saide Math. 12.20 that hee will not breake the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flaxe Matth. 12.20 but he will support our weakenesse with his almighty power so that though with the reed we be borne downe to the ground with the boysterous blastes of Sathans tentations yet we shal be raised vp againe Psal 37.24 according to that Psal 37.24 Though hee fall he shall not be cast off for the Lord putteth vnder his hand and he will blow vpon vs with the breath of his holy spirit till he turne our small smoke to a great flame which shall neuer bee quenched by all the malice of our spirituall enemies So Matth. 13.12 our Sauiour Christ hath promissed Math. 13.12 that whosoeuer hath to him it shal be giuen and he shall haue aboundance Neither doth he limit or define any quantitie lesse or more but indefinitely promisseth aboundant increase euen vnto the least so farre is he from taking away that which he hath once bestowed And whereas wee through our weakenesse and frailenesse are easily cast downe and fall away and therefore haue good cause if we should onely looke vpon our infirmities to doubt and despaire of perseuerance yet in respect of Gods omnipotent power watchfull prouidence and promissed assistance wee may confirme our selues in faith hope and certaine assurance of continuing vnto the end for the Lord vpholdeth all that are falling and lifteth vp those who are already downe as the Psalmist speaketh Psal 145.14 Psal 145.14 the power of God is manifested in our weakenesse 2. Cor. 12.9 his riches in our beggerlinesse his mercy and goodnesse in our frailenesse and manifold corruptions and with his holy spirit hee helpeth our infirmities as it is Rom. 8.26 Ro. 8.26 Wee haue not an high priest which cannot bee touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sinne and therfore he is able sufficiently to haue compassion on them that are ignorant and out of the way because that hee also was compassed with our infirmities and the apostle reasoneth Heb. 4.15 5.2 Heb. 4.15 and 5.2 § Sect. 5 Secondly it appeareth manifestly by Gods workes The formen point illustrated by examples administration and practise that he wil not depriue any of that sanctifying grace which he hath once bestowed though the measure thereof be neuer so small neither can we obserue either by our reading the whole booke of God or by our owne experience that any man hauing receiued the least graine of true faith hath vtterly beene depriued of it and reiected of God Euen the disciples themselues when they were reprooued for their little faith were by him strengthened and confirmed so that all the power of hell could not preuaile against it and though Sathan indeauoured to sift them as wheate yet Christs intercession was more mightie to defend them then the diuell to destroye them and his intercession a stronger propp to vphould them then the waight of Sathans tentations to ouerthrow and bring them to ruine so he who cryed out I beleeue Lord helpe thou my vnbeliefe though his faith was weak yet it perished not but rather receiued a greater increase Yea he reiected not Thomas in his wilfull doubting and obstinate incredulitie but offered all occasions of confirming his weake faith and neuer ceased till hee had fully assured him of his resurrection In a word all the saintes of God at one time or other haue had experience of this mercy power and goodnesse of God in supporting their weaknesse vphoulding them in their great infirmities and in raysing them when they were fallen to the ground and to this end our Sauiour was annointed by Gods spirite vnto the office of his mediation that hee should preach the gospell vnto the poore heale the broken harted that he should preach deliuerance vnto captiues and recouerie of sight to the blind and set at libertie them that are brused Luk. 4.18 Luk. 4.18 To this ende hee had familiar society with the fraile and weake with those who had little faith that he might increase it and no faith that he might begett it with publicanes and sinners and men full of infirmities to this purpose he calleth such as thirst and hunger feeling their owne emptinesse of grace and earnestly desiring to bee filled and satisfied and such also as labour and are heauie laden with the vnsupportable waight of their corruptions promising that hee will ease them lastly to this end he hath ordayned the ministerie of the worde and administration of the sacraments not only to beget faith where it is not but to nourish and increase it where it is weake and feeble and therefore though our faith be neuer so weake and small let not Sathan perswade vs that therefore it shall bee ouerthrowne and turned into infidelitie for the Lord hath assured vs both by his gratious promises in his word and also by the performance thereof in his works from the beginning to this day that where hee hath giuen the least measure of faith or any other sanctifying grace there he will also increase strengthen and confirme it and where he hath begunne any good worke there hee will finish and perfect it notwithstanding our fraile weaknesse and the forcible violence of all our spirituall enemies CHAP. XLVIII Of our iustification ANd so much concerning those tentations of Sathan which he suggesteth to the end that hee may frustrate our effectuall calling § Sect. 1 Of the efficient cause of our iustification Rom. 8.30 The next subordinate cause and means of our saluation is our iustification for whomsoeuer the Lord effectually calleth those also he iustifieth as it is Rom. 8.30 In speaking whereof I will first shew what it is and afterwards answere such tentations of Sathan as he suggesteth into our mindes to the end that hee may infringe the doctrine of iustification and make it vaine and vnprofitable vnto vs. For the first Iustification is an action orworke of the whole trinitie the father sonne and holy ghost whereby God gratiously and freely imputing vnto euery faithfull man the righteousnesse and obedience of Christ the mediatour doth accept of him and pronounce him to be iust and righteous for the glorie of his name and saluation of the beleeuer The efficiēt cause of our iustificatiō is God alone as appeareth by manifest testimonies Esa 43.25 I Esa 43.25 Ezec. 16.8 euen I am he that putteth away thine iniquities for my owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes So Ezech. 16.8 The Lord thus speaketh to his church and people I spread my skirts ouer thee and couered thy filthinesse 9. Then I washed thee with water yea I washed away thy bloud from thee and annointed thee with oyle 10. Rom. 4.5 and 8.33 Psal 51.4 I clothed thee with broydred worke c. whereby he signifieth
limmitt and restraine it Rom. 3.21.22 Rom. 3.21.22 and 4.5 Where hee saith that the righteousnesse of God is made manifest without the the law to wit the righteousnesse of God by the faith of Iesus Christ vnto all and vpon all that beleeue and 4.5 To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse And our Sauiour hath promised that whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not come into iudgment but hath passed from death to life Ioh. 4.24 Ioh. 5 24. The time when we are thus iustified is first in this life as soone as true faith is begot in vs by the ministery of the word whereby we particularly apply vnto our selues Christ Iesus and all his benefites resting and relying vpon him alone for our iustification and saluation the which shall bee fully perfected at the day of iudgment when as our Sauiour Christ shall pronounce the sentence of absolution saying Come yee blessed of my father take the inheritance of the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the world Mat. 25.34 Mat. 25.34 CHAP. XLIX That we are not iustified by our workes and merites § Sect. 1 ANd so much breefely of the doctrine of Iustification Sathans tentations concerning iustificatiō of two sorts Now we are to speake of and to answere such tentations as are suggested by our spirituall enemie to the end that hee may perswade vs that wee are notiustified or that hee may moue vs to seeke for iustification where it is not to bee had and so in the meane time neglect it where only it is to be found and the alone meanes whereby it is to bee inioyed In speaking whereof I shall not need to handle things so largly as those points which went before partly because our iustification doth inseperably follow our effectuall calling and therefore hee that is assured of the one needs not to doubt of the other partly because the most of those tentations which Sathan suggesteth to impugne and make void our assurance that we are iustified are alreadie answered namely those which concerne the remission of our sinnes and true faith in Iesus Christ and partly because those tentations which Sathan suggesteth into the minds of afflicted christians are the selfe same which the lims of Sathan the antichrist of Roome and all his apostaticall sinagogue doe hold and defend and therefore I shall not need to intreat hereof at large because these points in controuersie haue beene alreadie and will be hereafter so copiously learnedly and religiously handled by others of greater abilities and farre more excellent gifts But let vs come to the matter in hand The tentations of Sathan concerning this point are of two sorts the first tend to perswade vs to labour after and to rest vpon an imperfect and maymed righteousnesse for our iustification whereby wee can neuer be iustified in Gods sight so in the meane time he causeth vs to neglect the alsufficiēt most perfect righteousnes of Iesus Christ by which alone we are iustified before God and eternally saued the other tend to make vs doubt of our true iustification that so hee may either make this gratious worke of God frustrate in vs or els at least depriue our soules of that true consolation and peace of cōscience which dependeth vpon the assurance of our iustification § Sect. 2 For the first How Sathan tempteth vs to neglect Christs righteousnesse to rest vpon our owne he will labour to perswade vs that it is not the righteousnesse of Iesus Christ imputed vnto vs by God and apprehended and applied vnto vs by faith whereby wee are iustified in Gods sight for this imputatiue righteousnesse is but meerely putatiue and imaginacy but by that inhaerent righteousnes which is in our selues for Christ will he say did not fulfil the law died that this his righteousnes obediēce should become ours by imputation but he died for vs to the end he might merite for vs the spirit of God which should infuse into vs an inhaerent righteousnes he shed his blood to the end that our good workes being dipped and died therein might become perfect and so iustifie vs in Gods sight and therefore that wee are not iustified by faith alone but by our other graces and vertues also and our good workes proceedding from them neither by faith at all as it is an instrument which applieth Christ and his benefits vnto vs but as it is a grace or vertue infused into our selues Against which tentation it behooueth vs most carefully to arme our selues as being most daungerous and pernitious for it robbeth God and our sauiour Christ of the whole glorie of our iustification and saluation and deriueth some yea the greatest portion vnto our selues as being chiefly iustified by our owne meanes and also it depriueth our soules of all true comfort and full assurance that we are iustified saued by taking out of our hands the strong staffe of our saluation the perfect righteousnesse of Iesus Christ and by putting into them the weake reed of our owne workes which will presently breake and faile vs when we most rest vpon it and so we shall vnrecouerably fall into the horrible pit of deepe desperation when as we are abandoned of our chiefe hope that is when on the one side the huge waight of our grieuous sinnes and on the other side the great imperfection of our most perfect righteousnesse and the filthie pollution of our most glorious workes appeare vnto vs. And to the end that we may be the better inabled to resist this dangerous and damnable tentation I will first shew that we cannot be iustified before the tribunall of Gods iudgement by our inhaerent righteousnesse good workes and secondly that we are iustified by faith alone as it onely applieth vnto vs Christ Iesus his righteousnesse and obedience § Sect. 3 That we are not iustified by our owne workes and righteousnesse it manifestly appeareth both by plaine testimonies of holy Scripture That we are not iustified by our works prooued by the Scriptures and stronge arguments which are grounded vpon them For the first the Apostle plainely saith that by the workes of the law shall no flesh be iustified in his sight for by the law commeth the knowledge of sinne but now is the righteousnesse of God made manifest without the law hauing witnesse of the law and the Prophets to wit the righteousnesse of God by the faith of Iesus Christ Rom. 3.20.21.22 Phil. 3.9 vnto all and vpon all that beleeue Rom. 2.20.21.22 So Phil. 3.9 He disclaimeth his owne righteousnesse resteth vpon the alone righteousnesse of Christ Iesus which is made ours by faith for his iustification and saluation I haue saith he counted all things losse and doe iudge them to be dunge that I may winne Christ and might bee found in him not hauing mine owne righteousnesse which is of the law but that which is through the faith of
know that this word imputing or imputation is taken two waies in the Scriptures first when as the thing imputed is in our selues and so it is said Psal 106.31 Psal 106.31 Rom. 5.13 that the fact of Phinees was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse so Rom. 5.13 But sin is not imputed while there is no law Secondly when as the thing imputed is out of our selues and of this Leuit. 17.4 Numb 18.27 mention is made Leuit. 17.4 and Numb 18.27 And in this latter sense the word is to be vnderstoode in the doctrine of iustification and not in the former For our sinnes were imputed vnto Christ when he offered himselfe to stand in our place to pay our debt and to make full satisfaction to his fathers iustice by suffering those punishments which we by our sinnes had deserued in which respect the Scriptures say that he was reputed amongst the wicked Mar. 15.28 2. Cor. 5.21 Mar. 15.28 and that he was made sinne for vs 2. Cor. 5.21 not by infusion of our sinnes and corruptions into his most holy nature but by imputation onely And contrariwise we are made iust or iustified not by infusion of inherent righteousnesse into vs but by imputation of Christs righteousnes when as beleeuing in him notwithstanding that our nature is still defiled with sinne and manifold corruptions through the meere mercie and free grace of God for the merits and obedience of Christ wee are reputed iust as though wee had neuer committed sinne and had perfourmed perfect obedience vnto Gods commandements and so adiudged heires of euerlasting life So that this imputation consisteth not in Gods reputing of vs iust in respect of our inherent righteousnesse infused into vs but in the free mercie and grace of God which for Christ his sake couereth our sinnes which are indeede inherent in vs so as they shall neuer be imputed vnto vs for our condemnation imputeth vnto vs the righteousnes which is not in vs but in Christ wherewith being fully possessed he reputeth of vs as most innocent and perfectly righteous § Sect. 6 Now that imputation is to be vnderstood in this latter sense The former point prooued by testimonies of the Scriptures Rom. 4.4.5 it is most manifest where the Apostle Paul setteth down the word in both these senses denying that in this doctrine of iustification it is to be vnderstood of the former and affirming it of the latter To him saith he that worketh the wages is not imputed by fauour but by debt namely because he hath merited it by his owne righteousnes 5. But to him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted or imputed for righteousnes euen as Dauid declareth the blessednes of the man vnto whō God imputeth righteousnes without works In which words he plainly sheweth that there is a kind of imputatiō which hath his ground or foundation in works and inherent righteousnes and this he affirmeth is not of grace And that there is another kind of imputation which hath not it ground and foundation in him to whom it is made but in the free mercie of God iustifying the wicked without his workes and therefore not onely destitute of inherent righteousnesse whereby hee might be iustified but also guiltie of inherent corruption and actuall transgression whereby hee might bee condemned if God should enter into iudgement with him So also hee plainly affirmeth Eph. 2.8 that we are saued by grace through faith Eph. 2.8 and that not of our selues it is the gift of God 9. Not of workes least any man should boast himselfe § Sect. 7 Secondly The former point proued by the example of Abraham this may be prooued by the example of Abraham vpon which the Apostle in the former place insisteth for by that imputed righteousnesse whereby he was iustified wee are also iustified but the Apostle plainly affirmeth that this imputation was not of Abrahams inherent righteousnesse with the which notwithstanding he was plentifully indued for as he saith if Abraham were iustified by workes he had wherein to reioyce but not in God but that Abraham beleeued in God and this was counted to him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.2.3 as it is Rom. 4.2.3 and therefore we are not iustified by our workes and inherent righteousnesse but by the righteousnesse of Christ imputed vnto vs. § Sect. 8 Thirdly that righteousnesse which iustifieth vs That perfect righteousnesse is required to our iustification Iam. 3.2 must consist in perfect obedience and fulfilling of the law of God in that exact manner and measure which Gods iustice doth require but this cannot possibly be done by any righteousnesse which is in vs which is most imperfect and mingled with many sinnes and corruptions for in many things we sinne all as it is Iam. 3.2 and he that saith he hath no sinne is a liar as Iohn speaketh 1. ep 1.8 and our best righteousnes is like a polluted cloath 1. Ioh. 1.8 Esa 64.6 as it is Esa 64.6 but by the alone righteousnesse of Iesus Christ which being imputed vnto vs is sufficient to answere and satisfie Gods exact and most perfect iustice That our righteousnesse whereby we are to be iustified must be perfect Rom. 3.31 and such as the law and exact iustice of God requireth it appeareth Rom. 3.31 whereas the Apostle plainly affirmeth that when faith is imputed vnto righteousnesse Iam. 2.10 the law is not made voide but rather confirmed and fulfilled Doe we then saith he make the law of none effect through faith God forbid Yea we establish the law But this cannot be done by our righteousnesse which is imperfect and mingled with innumerable sinnes but by the alone most perfect righteousnesse of Iesus Christ imputed vnto vs. Againe the Lord hath commaunded and straitly charged that in our ciuill iudgements the righteous shall be iustified Deut. 25.1 and the wicked condemned Deut. 25.1 And the wise man saith that he that iustifieth the wicked Pro. 17.15 and he that condemneth the iust euen they both are abomination vnto the Lord Pro. 17.15 And the Prophet Esay denounceth a woe against them which commit this sinne Esa 5.23 chap. 5. vers 23. Now shall the Lord require this of vs and shall we thinke that he whose will is the rule of iustice wil iustifie any whose righteousnesse is imperfect and not according to his law No he hath told vs that it is more easie that heauen and earth should passe away Luk. 16.17 than that one title of the law should fall vnaccomplished Luk. 16.17 And therefore let vs not trust vnto our owne imperfect righteousnesse but wholy rest vpon the alone righteousnesse of Iesus Christ by a liuely faith for our iustification For he is the Lord our righteousnesse Iere. 23.6 Esa 45.24 Iere. 23.6 In him we haue righteousnesse and strength Esa 45.24 He is made vnto vs of God wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1. Cor. 1.30
alreadie plainely proued though we neuer haue any speciall reuelation And therefore without any such particular reuelation we may attaine vnto the certaine assurance that we are iustified in Gods sight Thirdly that which the Gospell assureth vs of we neede not to make any doubt thereof or once call it into question but the Gospell assureth vs that whosoeuer beleeueth in Christ Iesus and truely repent them of their sinnes shall be made partakers of all the gracious promises of life and saluation therein contained So Ioh. 3.16 Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life And chap. 5.24 Ioh. 5.24 Verely verely I say vnto you he that heareth my word and beleeueth him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life Matth. 11.28 And Matth. 11.28 Come vnto me all ye that labour and are laden and I will ease you And therefore whosoeuer beleeue in Iesus Christ approuing their faith to the world and their owne consciences to bee true and vnfained by the fruite thereof vnfained repentance he may assure himselfe of all the gratious promifes of the Gospell and consequently of the remission of his sinnes and his iustification for the merits and righteousnesse of Iesus Christ Lastly the Lord hath not onely after a generall manner propounded these promises vnto vs and left vs to our owne libertie to beleeue or not to beleeue them but hee hath bound vs to the performance of this dutie by his expresse commaundement Mark 1.15 1. Ioh. 3.23 Mark 1.15 Repent and beleeue the Gospell And 1. Ioh. 3.23 This is his commaundement that we beleeue in his sonne Iesus Christ that is that we doe not onely after a generall manner beleeue that he is the sauiour of mankinde but that we beleeue that he is our sauiour who hath redeemed iustified and wil most perfectly saue vs and rest wholy vpon him alone for our saluation And he that thus beleeueth needeth no other arguments to assure him that he is iustified and shall be saued for he hath the witnesse in himselfe euen the testimonie of Gods spirit crying in his heart Abba father and bearing witnesse vnto his spirit that he is the childe of God and not to beleeue this is to make God a lyer because wee will not beleeue the record that hee hath witnessed of that his sonne 1. Ioh. 5. 10. as the Apostle speaketh 1. Ioh. 5.10 Yea as before I haue shewed at large he hath added vnto the hand writing of his word which containeth also his oath for our better confirmation his sacraments whereby he particularly conuayeth and giueth vnto euery beleeuer as it were proper possession of Christ Iesus and all his benefits to the end that there should bee no place left to doubting nor any neede of any particular reuelation for our further assurance § Sect. 2 Secondly Sathan will suggest that those who are iustified are made iust That we are made iust not by infusion but by imputation of righteousnes and those who are made iust doe continually the workes of righteousnesse but thou will he say to the humbled sinner continuest still in thy corruptions and thy wickednesse cleaueth fast to thee and compasseth thee about and in stead of doing the workes of righteousnesse thou continually heapest vp the full measure of thy sinnes yea thy best actions are so stained with imperfections and so full of infirmities that they iustly prouoke Gods wrath against thee To which we must answere that indeede whosoeuer is iustified is made iust but not by infusion of inherent righteousnesse into our selues but by imputation of Christs most perfect righteousnesse as before I haue shewed for hereby our sinnes are pardoned he hauing taken them vpon himselfe and satisfied Gods iustice by suffering those punishments which wee had deserued and also he hath perfectly fulfilled the law that hee might make vs partakers of his actiue obedience and so imputing both vnto vs hath made vs perfectly iust and righteous in Gods sight So that now the Lord doth not require obedience to his law at our hands to the end that wee should be iustified in whole or in part by our owne righteousnesse neither are we to this end to obserue Gods commandements that we may offer vnto God our workes and inherent righteousnesse desiring thereby to be iustified for as I haue shewed our best righteousnesse is imperfect and mingled with manifold corruptions so as it would rather condemne vs then iustifie vs if the Lord should examine it according to the exact rule of his most perfect iustice but we offer vnto God for our iustification the most perfect righteousnesse and full satisfaction of Iesus Christ which by his merits and sufferings he hath once made for vs desiring thereby wholy and onely to be iustified and saued § Sect. 3 As for our workes and inherent righteousnesse That our works are not causes but effects of our iustification they are not causes but effects and fruites of our iustification neither is it possible that we should doe any good worke acceptable in Gods sight till we are iustified and reconciled vnto God in Iesus Christ for our workes cannot please him till our persons please him and whatsoeuer we doe before faith hath purified the heart it is sinne and odious in the sight of God but as soone as we haue faith begotten in vs presently it apprehendeth Christ and his righteousnes whereby we are iustified and then being iustified faith worketh by loue and bringeth forth in vs the fruites of sanctification which though they bee mingled with much corruption and manifold imperfections yet God in Christ accepteth of them as perfect and will crowne them with glorie and immortalitie That now the Lord doth not require of vs perfect righteousnesse Neither doth the Lord now require of vs that wee perfectly at once shake off all our corruptions but that we labour as much as in vs lieth to mortifie and subdue them according to the measure of his grace and holy spirit which he hath bestowed on vs he doth not straightly commaund that we should instantly banish and expell sinne from dwelling in vs but that we doe not suffer it to raigne in vs nor willingly obey the flesh in the lusts thereof submitting our selues vnto sinne as seruants and vassals to their Lord and maister he doth not inioyne vs that we should wholy vanquish our corruptions and obtaine a full victorie ouer them but that we proclaime open warres against them and manfully fight and striue vnder the conduct of his spirit against the flesh and the sinfull lusts thereof and when we are taken captiue of sinne that we labour to attaine vnto our former freedome in the meane time sorrowing and groning vnder the heauie waight of our corruptions and crying out with the Apostle Rom. 7. wretched man that
I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death and that we confesse our miserable estate vnto our captaine and leader Iesus Christ desiring him to assist vs with the power of his holy spirit that thereby we may be freed out of the hands of these our spirituall enemies whose bondage and captiuitie is so irksome and grieuous vnto vs. Neither doth the Lord now require that we performe absolute and perfect obedience to his commaundements but that to will be present in vs that we consent and approue his law to be good and delighting in it concerning the inner man that we desire and indeauour to performe that good we cannot and forgetting that which is behinde indeauour our selues to that which is before and follow hard towards the marke Phil. 3.13.14 though we cannot attaine vnto the end of our race till wee come to the end of our liues Finally the Lord doth not require of vs a whole haruest of goodnes and righteousnes but the first fruites thereof he doth not stand so much vpon our actions as vpon our affections vpon the perfection of our workes as vpon the alacritie of our willes and integritie of our hearts the righteousnes which he requireth is an humble confession of our vnrighteousnesse a sincere hatred of our sinnes a holy indeauour in the vse of the meanes to mortifie our corruptions and to rise from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnes of life which whosoeuer can offer vnto God they may assure themselues that they shall be accepted through Christ as righteous in Gods sight notwithstanding their manifold imperfections and corruptions The end of the second Booke THE THIRD BOOKE INTREATING OF SANCTIFICATION AND PERSEVERANCE as also of Sathans temptations which he suggesteth against them both and of such answeres wherewith the Christian may refute and repell them CHAP. I. Of Sanctification and the causes thereof § Sect. 1 ANd so much for the answering of such temptations of Sathan as concerne our iustification That God is the principall efficient of our sanctification Now wee are to speake of our sanctification which is the next effect of Gods election and inseparably ioyned with our iustification wherein I will obserue my former order first setting downe the doctrine of sanctification and then answering those temptations of Sathan which doe most impugne it Sanctification what is it For the first Sanctification is an action of the whole Trinitie whereby the beleeuer already iustified is by little and little renued according to Gods image in holinesse and righteousnesse by the mortification of the flesh with the corruptions thereof and the quickening of the spirit And this is our sanctification which is expressed in the Scriptures by diuers names and phrases for it is called regeneration the new birth renouation the putting off or mortifying of the old man and the putting on or quickening of the new man and such like The efficient cause of our sanctification is God himselfe who as he alone iustifieth vs and freeth vs from the guilt and punishment of sinne so he onely sanctifieth vs and deliuereth vs from the tyrannie of sinne so that it shall no longer raigne in our mortall bodies freeing vs in such measure as pleaseth him from our naturall corruptions Leuit. 20.8 which heretofore wholy ouerswayed vs. And this appeareth by plaine testimonies of holy Scriptures Iohn 1.13 Iohn 1.13 It is said that the faithfull are borne not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Ephes 2.10 So Ephes 2.10 we are said to be Gods workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which phrase the Apostle vseth to note vnto vs that as God onely did create vs so he onely doth renue and regenerate vs. The Lord likewise doth appropriate this worke vnto himselfe as belonging to another Ezech. 36.26 Ezech. 36.26 and 34.28 A new heart will I giue you and a new spirit will I put into you and I will take away the stony heart out of your body and I will giue you an heart of flesh And hence it is that the Apostle desiring the sanctification of the Thessalonians beggeth it at Gods hand 1. Thes 5.23 The very God of peace sanctifie you throughout 1. Thes 5.23 Psalm 51.13 And Dauid finding the want hereof in himselfe hath his recourse vnto God Psalm 51.10 Create in me a cleane heart O God and renue a right spirit within me So that as God doth begin in vs this worke of sanctification so likewise he doth accomplish and finish it And therefore as we are wholy to ascribe vnto God our election vocation and iustification so also our sanctification that he may be all in all in the worke of our saluation For as he onely formed vs so he onely can reforme vs as he is the author of our naturall generation Gen. 1.28 for by his blessing we haue our being so also of our spirituall regeneration for by his spirit onely wee are renued Neither must we imagine that it is in mans power to renew himselfe no more than to beget himselfe for as well may the Blackmoore change his skinne or the Leopard his spots as wee doe good who are accustomed to doe euill Ierem. 13.23 Ierem. 13.23 yea as easily may the dead man raise himselfe as wee may raise our selues from the death of sinne to newnesse of life Eph. 2.1 Eph. 2.1 It is onely the water of Gods spirit that can wash away our Ethiopian blacknesse and turne our spotted vncleannesse into snowie whitenesse it is onely the God of life that can make vs rise from the death of sinne to newnesse of life But here it may be demaunded that if sanctification bee wholie the worke of God and not in our owne power why doe the Scriptures exhort vs to sanctifie our selues to mortifie our sinnes and to walke in newnesse of life I answere that though sanctification bee wholy from God yet these exhortations are necessarie for hee worketh this worke in vs not as in stocks and stones but as in reasonable creatures of whom he requireth consent of will desire and endeuour in the vse of the meanes ordained of God for the beginning and perfecting of this worke of sanctification in vs. And although this will desire and endeuour be his work likewise yet these exhortations to godlinesse are to good purpose for with the exhortation God ioyneth the operation of his spirit and whilest he commandeth vs he giueth power also to performe that which he commandeth whilest he exhorteth vs to sanctification hee himselfe sanctifieth vs with his spirit § Sect. 2 Now further wee are to know That the work of sanctification is common to the three persons in Trinitie T it 3.5 Eph. 2.4.5 Heb. 9.14 that as all other workes of God which he exerciseth towards his creatures so this work of sanctification likewise is common vnto the three persons in the Trinitie for first God