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A87161 A glimpse of divine light, breaking through a cloud of errours. Being an explanation of certain passages exhibited by anonymus, to the commissioners of White-Hall, appointed for approbation of publick preachers, against Joseph Harrison Gospel-preacher at Lund-Chappel in Lancashire, for the supposed delivering of which, he was denied approbation. / Published by the said Joseph Harrison, and proposed to the consideration of all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity. Harrison, Joseph. 1655 (1655) Wing H897; Thomason E841_7; ESTC R207225 67,448 83

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3.36 If the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and every Trangression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord c Heb. 2.7 To which we may adde such like as Heb. 10.28 29. Heb 12.25 Acts 3.22 23. The third Scil. whether good works are to be preached to the called I affirm and say they are and that in a special manner For first these things I will that thou affirm constantly that they which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good works Tit. 3.8 Nam ii soli c. as Beza in loc. Secondly Christ having charged his Apostles {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} to discipulate all nations which was done as Mark explaines it by preaching the Gospel addes {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} not {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} and so {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} not {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Scilicet teaching not all the nations but such as should be discipled or called by preaching of the Gospel out of the nations to observe c. Mat. 28.20 Thirdly the called are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus unto good works Eph. 2.10 They are redeemed from the hands of their enemies That they might serve him without fear in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the dayes of their lives Luke 1.74.75 God hath called us not to uncleannesse but unto holinesse 1. Thes. 4.7 Walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called Eph. 4.1 Indeed i● any be so critical as to make the word preach of no larger extent than praedicare amongst the Latins when taken strictly and properly then is the Gospel or the triumph of Christ over the Law Sin Death and the Devil c. The proper object of preaching and Ministers more fitly said to teach then to preach good works to the called But if this Quere or part of the passage though indefinite be intended to run in equipage with the former and that to preach good works to the called shall amount to as much as to preach good works only to the called Then consider that good works may be taken first largely as including all good works whatsoever though the immediate products of the Gospel As repentance and faith or secondly strictly as including only such works as are mediate effect supposing the precedency of faith in which sense good works are commonly said to flow from or follow after faith If we take good works in the former sense It s true that good works Scilicet faith and repentance though not expressely all good works are to be preached to and required from those that are yet passively uncalled For 1. Christ himself having preached the Gospel of the Kingdom or proposed the object which instrumentally begets immediately injoynes the duties or calls for the Acts to be exercised thereabout Repent and believe the Gospel Scilicet which I have preached Mar. 1.15 Secondly In the name of Iesus held out as the Saviour of sinners repentance and remission of sins or as the Syriaok conversion into the remission of sins is to be preached unto all nations Luke 24.47 Thirdly Peter bids the Iewes repent and be converted Acts 3.19 And Paul exhorts the Jaylor to believe on the Lord Iesu Acts 16.31 Take good works in the better sense and though it be true that Sensu diviso the uncalled should do these subsequent works as love the Brethren 1 Pet. 1.22 Call upon the name of the Lord Rom. 10.14 c. as being now immediately called to obey the truth and believe the Gospel by which they may be enabled and privileged thereunto yet not Sensu composito or while uncalled For 1. People under command should hoc agere not only do the things commanded but in that order as they are commanded to do them when servants are bidden come they should not then say they 'l go and when they are bidden go they should not then come or do this though both due in their season but when the Master saith come they are to come when he saith go they are to go and when he saith do this then are they to do it Mat. 8 9. People therefore being immediately and firstly called to repent and believe the Gospel should Hoc agere not set about doing other works of God though right and due in their season But do this work of God now required to be done Scilicet Believe on him whom he hath sent Obey the call which is First to renounce our own righteousnesse next to embrace the righteousnesse of Christ which God freely offereth in the Gospel English Annotat. in Rom. 10.3 Secondly All works which are required and as required by Christ should be done in faith Heb. 11.6 For otherwise though they may be good Ethicé and both taught and done in Genere moralium yet are they not good Theologicé as we now speak nor to be taught or done in Genere spiritualium And if they must be done in faith then not before faith But first should men believe and then through believing do all other works Qui vult bene operari non ab operando sed à credendo incipiat Thirdly the Apostles do constantly direct their practical exhortations to such as are visibly called {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} teaching them and onely them to observe all things c. according to Mat. 28.20 Fourthly Believers only are in a condition for acting in an Evangelical way and upon Evangelical grounds and that an Active obedience is not now to be pressed from or to the Law hath and shall be fuller cleared For as Mr Shepheard no friend to Antinomians in that very tract where he so learnedly opposeth them saith This caution is ever to be remembred that such acting be not to make our selves just but because we are already just in Christ not that hereby we might get life but because we have life given us already not to pacify Gods justice but to please his mercy being pacified towards us by Christ already And if so be that Believers are onely in a condition of thus acting and obedience active is not to be urged from the Law I see not but the {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} or Appendants to the {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} or Gospel should presuppose the preaching of that as Instrumental to bring persons into this condition and especially if not solely be preached to Believers The end or summe of the commandment is love and that out of a pure heart c. 1 Tim. 1.5 The sixth Passage But is it not good for a man to do all that he can viz. in way of obedience to Gods commandments Answ. The summe of all the commandments is that of the Sabbath Now to a Christian the Sabbath is to cease from his own works or working according to
the contrary hath been cleared in the explanation of the sixth Passage Secondly it is evident 2 Tim. 1.9 That God hath saved us and called us with a holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Iesus before the world began Thirdly Christ himself professeth That he came not to call the righteous that is men that can act and do and think themselves able to perform such works or offer such sacrifices as can De congruo at least if not De condigno plead for the acceptance of their persons But sinners that are such as can neither act nor do but find themselves both unfit for and unworthy of any other recompence save the wages of sin which is death He called indeed all of all sorts outwardly {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} to repent but these alone effectually {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} to the thing repentance Mat. 9.13 That is unto an immediate and actual renunciation of all the works that they ever could and now fain would plead for themselves that loosing all they have of their own they may win the Kingdom of heaven not as their right in law according as the Pharisees laid claim unto it but violently at least in the account of all such men videlicet as sinners c. souldiers through the meer gift and absolute conquest of their Captain Iesus Mat. 11.12 13. Rom. 6.23 Nor thirdly as procuring causes of justification For as our own works are not the matter of that legal righteousnesse required in the old covenant So are they not the means of procuring that Evangelical righteousnesse which is held forth in the new Because first there is no Scripture that requireth them for that end but calleth mens labouring with that intent a seeking for righteousnesse as it were by the works of the Law and not by faith Rom 9.32.2 To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of Grace but of Debt Rom. 4.4 So that if works were means to procure the new Covenant Justification we were not justified freely by grace but of due and debt It should not be said to him that worketh not but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly His faith is counted for righteousnesse but to him that doth work and meriteth from him that justifieth the godly his work is imputed for it is righteousnesse 3. Those that assert works to be means or procuring causes say not that they are such Ratione valoris meriti propriè sic dicti By reason of any proportionable inherent worth But only Ratione pacti as they are conditions to some promise or other freely made by God and if that be true neither righteousness nor good works can be means or procuring causes of the the new Covenant Iustification because there is no promise thereof made to him that worketh or doth righteousness It is no where said in Scripture either ex pressely or implicitely that he that will work or perform such and such duties shall be justified by the blood of Jesus Nay though we read Acts 13.39 Whosoever believeth is justified yet it is no where said He that will believe shall be justified Fourthly and lastly Righteousnesse or good works are not profitable to me or other Christians either as the way through which we come as the means by which we shall get or as the condition upon which we may ground our hope of eternal Glory Not as the way For first not works but Christ alone is in Scriptures called the way Thomas saith unto him Lord we know not whether thou goest and how can we know the way Iesus saith unto him I am the way the truth and the life no man cometh unto the Father but by me John 14.5 6. He hath consecrated for us a new and living way in opposition to the old dead legal way through the vaile that is to say his flesh Heb 10.20.2 Works cannot be the way because they are neither the truth that is the substance of the Law and ceremonies nor the life which was held forth in the promises for they being not the truth we who are unworthy must not pass that way and they not being the life we who are sold under sinne cannot passe So that though works were granted to be a way in themselves yet it is impossible that they should be a way unto us The Gulf is so great Luke 16.26 that there is no descending or ascending but by Iacobs Ladder which was put down by God and not put up by men and is of that length that the top reacheth as high as God in heaven and the foot as low as Iacob laid upon the stone Gen. 28.13 14.3 A way is a steady and immoveable thing mounted so high that the waters cannot overflow it and thence called a high-way but works are sandy and slippery soon overflowed and not able to bear us up in the time of Temptation Though we know nothing by our selves yet who dare stand upon this ground and plead not guilty before God 4. Faith might more probably be called the way to heaven than works Sith as the Apostle saith by faith we stand 2 Cor. 1.24 and have accesse by faith into the grace wherein we stand Rom. 5 2. And yet is faith only said to be a coming into the way as Ioh 6.35 and never called the way it self Let therefore works be called as they truly are viae Regni the wayes of the Kingdome or motions of those that are in the way not upwards to God for the good of themselves but downwards to men for the good of others or the going forth of Christians from God like the Angel Heb. 1.14 to do service for Christ in the world and not their coming to God by Christ as in faith and prayer to wait upon and converse with him in heaven Not as a meanes For first The Scriptures hold them forth as such 2. If the works of Christians be the means or instumental cause then are Christians themselves constituted the principal cause and consequently the Authours of their own salvation And then it shall not only be true that Christ is the Authour of eternal salvation to those that obey him Heb. 5.9 But that Christians are the Authors of their own salvation by their obedience unto Christ 3. Promises under the Gospel that seem most legal do not run like those of the Law of Moses He that doth these things shall live by them that is by them as means of life But simply thus He that doth such or such things shall live and be saved Scilicet by the mediation of Jesus Christ Nor as conditions upon which we may ground our hope of glory For first It is not works but Christ in us that is the hope of glory Col. 1.27 In all other grounds there is yea and nay a doubtfulnesse and uncertainty which occcasioned Bellarmines Tutissimum est c. and therefore no sure and stedfast
Anchorage for the soul Heb. 6.16 But all the promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen unto the Glory of God 2 Cor. 1.20 And thence as there needeth not so there is not any other sure and stedfast ground of our future enjoying the things promised but the present indwelling of Christ in the heart by faith 2. As other foundation or ground of hope can no man lay than that is laid which is Iesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.11 So the very attempting to lay another ground is both an overturning of the Faith and a turning back unto the Law of Moses It being not the title and interest to the Kingdom or the Ius ad rem But the possession of the Kingdom or the Ius in Re that was promised in the law and to be hoped for by the Iewes in case they could observe it 3. Let works be made the condition upon which as some assert Christians must necessarily ground their hope of Glory and there will be no ground of hope left for such as walk in darkness and have no light Isa. 50.10 or that cannot by a reflexe Act discern themselves actually performing such and such conditions The conditional promises as a learned writer observeth being made rather to the Acts than Habits And least we as well as they should leave such poor souls comfortless consider First The admonition of the seven brethren in the forecited Epistle Scilicet there is a sturdy stoutness and unyieldingness of spirit in men against the blessed truths of the Gospel made known unto them they must have peace comfort and assurance their own way or else they reject all They would find a principle of life and power within themselves and not go to Christ for it they would bring something to Christ and not fetch all from Christ not knowing that the way which all believers have gone after much wearying of themselves to find some thing in themselves hath been at last to rowle themselves wholly upon the free grace of God through Jesus Christ seeing nothing in themselves yet giving glory to God by believing And if they could bring their hearts so disposed and qualified yet they see the danger of resting in what they are have and do And if want of such and such conditions and qualifications had ground enough to keep them from Christ it might have hindred any that ever did cast themselves upon the free grace of God because they would still have been at a losse finding a defect in them 2. That he that is born of God may have the seed remaining in him that he cannot sin and yet not always be able to bring forth the fruits of righteousnesse at least not always see himself so bringing forth for that the being of grace in doth not necessarily infer the seeing of grace by a christian That which we look upon as Luz may be Bethel the Lord in that place and yet Iacob knew it not Gen 28.16 The promise made good and applied to the soule and yet the soul not make good the condition nor apply it self unto the promise God be with us according to his word Heb. 6.13 and yet we as to our apprehensions at a distance from God Psal. 77.3 10.2 The Scriptures hold it forth as a firme qualication for a believer to see himselfe unqualified {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Poor or beggerly in spirit Mat. 5.3 and that then a man is in the fittest condition for the Kingdom of heaven to come to him when he sees himself able to perform no conditions whereupon he may ground his coming into the heavenly Kingdom {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} The poor are Gospellized Luke 7.22 the rich need not they can Gospellize unto themselves both fetch down a promise suitable to that condition they have performed and form a faith ad libitum out of that condition sutable to the promise 4. Though they be promises made to such and such conditions and such Christians as have them while they can certainly say and see they have them may ground their hopes though neither infallibly nor ultimately thereupon yet are there absolute promises or rather declarations of everlasting love through Iesus Christ to poor wretched creatures that can say nothing for but all against themselves Scilicet that they are ungodly and the chief of sinners 2 Tim. 2.25 And God by these without those is able both to beget and increase faith in the heart of a sinner and keep him by his mighty power alone through faith in that word unto salvation He through the Spirit waiting continually for the hope of righteousnesse by faith Gal. 5.5 For 5. Though saith receive much refreshment and encouragement from sence yet it receiveth life and nourishment only from the word Rom 10.17 2 Pet. 2.2 Abraham the Father of the faithful may part with Isaac the only sensible ground he had of the accomplishment of the promise and yet his faith not be thereby destroyed but proved to be a true working faith indeed And Christians may loose the light of all their works and yet not loose the life of faith nor ground of hope but come experimentally to know the true difference betwixt faith and works what it is to believe on him who justifieth the ungodly Rom. 4.5 and to be justified by faith without the works of the Law Rom. 3.28 O woman great is thy faith saith Christ to her that believed and yet saw and confessed her self to be a dog Mat. 13.27 28. And as that saith Mr. Burges is the best manifestation of love when it is carried out to an enemy So is that faith when relying upon God though feeling terrors and hell within us See Burgesse justificat Lect. 14. Sect. 8. pag. 117. Citing and approving of Luthers two-fold pardon the first of meer faith and obtaineth much of God the latter of experience and takes off from the excellency of faith RIghteousnesse or good works are profitable to me and other Christians 1. As subservient subsequent Testimonies of our adoption in Iesus Christ For there is assurance in a believing soule successively or conjunctly as pleaseth God to order either primary which is the result of a direct act of the holy Spirit or secundary which is the result of a reflexe act of an inlightened understanding The first cometh like faith not by seeing but by hearing and the active instrument if we may call it an instrument by which the holy Ghost gives conveyes or begets it is by his own voyce testimony or word And the Passive instrument through which as the Conduit it is conveyed into the heart or inwards of a Christian is believing the Gospel or word of reconciliation as it is evident from Rom. 8.16 Eph 1.13 1 Iohn 5.10 Heb. 10.22 The second is collected from sence or a visible discerning the effects and fruits of the Spirit of Christ in and flowing from a believing heart and is more properly called Scientia
{non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} knowledge from the effects or an assurance of knowledge than of Faith 1 Iohn 2.3 1 Iohn 3.14 19. because drawn by reason enlightened from fore-granted premises the one whereof at least is evident to sence The former of these is independant as to works infallible hath its evidence in and from its self is fully satisfactory to the Spirit of a Christian and is most lively manifest and vigorous in the evil day The latter is dependant upon works will not amount to a {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} or full assurance hath its evidence in and from the Ergo or manner of inference is very convincing and silencing to reason because grounded upon sence and is ordinarily had in the good Sun-shine dayes of a Christian Secondly they are profitable c. to prevent Satans bringing believers into despaire or shaking us on though he cannot shake us from of the foundation of our faith And hence doth Peter exhort Christians to adde to their faith through which they were already established in the present truth 1 Pet. 1.12 Vertue and to vertue knowledge and to knowledge temperance c. and assureth them that if they do these things they shall never faile 1 Pet. 1 10. Because by the constant going on in these the advantage is taken from Satan of casting stumbling-blocks in our way which the committing of gross or discernably poysonous sins doth afford unto him they being as it were Darts put into the devils hands which he sets on fire in hell and shoots with terrour through the Canon of the Law to batter down that spiritual Kingdom of righteousnesse peace and joy which Christ hath erected in us 3. Though the Testimony of my conscience or my own integrity and innocency in such a particular cause or fact be not able to bear me up to plead at the judgement seat of God for I know nothing by my self saith Paul c. yet is the Testimony of a good conscience or my own righteous dealing in such or such a cause namely instrumental to encourage and embolden me under and against the false accusations aspersions and extra-judicial censures and sentences of all sorts of men and creatures whatsoever Hic murus aheneus esto nil conscire sibi c. could the Poet say And here Paul accounted it a very small thing to be judged of them or of mans judgement 1 Cor. 4.3 And Peter adviseth Christians to have a good conscience and telleth them that it is better if the will of God be so that they suffer for well-doing than for evil doing 1 Pet. 3.16 17. Fourthly and lastly good works are profitable c. To manifest to others the reality of our faith and the purity and undefilednesse of our Religon and undefiled before God and the Father is this To visit the fatherless and widowes in their affliction and to keep himself unspotted of the world Iam. 1.27 RIghteousness or good works are profitable unto others For first The Apostle expressely asserteth That they are good and profitable unto men Tit. 3.8 2. Calvin maketh the very essence of works as good to consist in their being profitable unto others and saith that in tota lege syllaba una non legitur c. In the whole Law there is not one syllable read which prescribeth a rule to man concerning those things which he should either do or omit for the profit of his flesh Insomuch that thirdly It is Antinomianisme with him or contrary to the bent of the Law for a man to love and doe for himselfe first and then secondly To love and do for his neighbour as for himself making love to self the rule and so superiour to the love of his neighbour This saith he was not the intent of the Lord in that Law Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe Sedubi naturali pravitate solebat But whereas by a natural depravity the affection of love was wont to reside within our selves He sheweth that it ought now to be diffused another way it being the property of true love not to seek her own things 1 Cor. 13.5 And hence 4. it was in my thoughts to have discussed the point a little with these Informers and enquired how this work of theirs deemed so righteous can be called good fith it will be hard to make it appear that it is profitable to any save themselves and me To them carnally and Per se feeding though not filling that which in them lusteth unto envy To me spiritually and Per accidens as the messenger of Satan was by his buffeting unto Paul But because I am perswaded it will be harder for them to kick against the prick they have made in their own spirits then it is for me to grapple with that they have made in my flesh I shall be silent as to that and willingly if my God see it good suffer here with Abel as a man of vanity and nothing and leave them Cain-like men of great possession though smally bettered if in the land of Nod And yet I must needs say to give even Cain his due the pattern of all such as sin against the law of love 1 Iohn 3.12 That he dealt farre more candidly with Abel then they have done with me for he first talked with his brother and then afterwards slew him Gen. 4.8 These men have bent their bowes and shot their Arrowes poysoned well nigh four years in the Quiver and are yet to talk and make it out that their sacrifice is of so much worth as to entitle them to the birth-right and impower them cum privilegio to trample upon the necks of their poor younger brethren But notwithstanding this my brethren in your patience do you possess your soules Mat. 21.19 give place unto wrath Rom. 12.19 Let the Lord of the Vineyard do what pleaseth him unto these husbandmen Luke 20.15 FINIS A vindication of the answer to the Queries lieth by me in scattered sheets the publishing called for and at hand Reply to Crand pag. 43. Reply to Mr. Blake page 49. The word is an Instrument of Gods Spirit not cooperative but passive working only per modum objecti as it containes a Declaration of the divine will and it proposeth to the understanding will the things to be known beleeved and practized Blake of covenants Sec. 20. out of Mr. Pemble Grace and faith vbi vid. et Kend answer to Goodwin cap. 4 pag 163. The power of the spirit doth not work upon the word to put life into it but it works upon our soules to put life into them Pemb. Vind. p. 122. vind. leg. pag 142. The doctrine I wil insist upon is this that the Law was delivered by God on mount Sinai in a covenant way page 220 Voluit dicere legem nobis esse mortuam et sic nos ejus jure selutos Sicut mulier mortuo marito ejuslege liberatur sed videtur rationem habere Iudaeorum ne tali
as a description much lesse a definition of repentance but only an occasionall expression holding forth some single Act thereof Secondly I desire that they would be pleased Severally to enter into their closets and there for a while commune with their owne hearts and be still Selah And having compared their notes with what is written in their consciences tell of a truth ethice for Logicee I thinke they cannot First Whether or no they ever heard this passage delivered by mee in these very words Secondly Whether or no by the rules of Orthographie it should be closed with a period or space left for some thing Exegeticall to extend or explaine it Thirdly whether or no this Repentance or not saying in the heart doe this i. e. this or that commandment had expresse reference to any other commandment than this and that of ascending or descending mentioned in the text which being proposed at first by way of Querie by a desttessed distrustful soule came afterwards oftentimes to be imposed upon the soule it self as commandments from God though really they be the dictates of its owne tormented conscience For 1 the soul enquires who shall c. and if not stopt there by the word of grace the next Querie is shall I And then Thirdly neglecting the word of faith is too apt in the time of Temptation to turn back to the Covenant of works and look upon it self as bound by the law of God or legal Covenant either to ascend that is as Diodate to undertake by its own works to obtain a right to eternal life or to descend that is to take upon its self the pains of death and hell for satisfaction for its own sins And doubtlesse Evangelical repentance includes in it a not saying in the heart do this that is this or that commandement whether of ascending or descending which are accounted by a distressed distrustful soul to be the commandments of God or of Gods law yet in force Of the first for the attempting to do that is to bring down Christ from above And of the second for the attempting to do that is to bring up Christ again from the dead Rom. 10 6 7. And if ever such a passage as this fell from me in a publick Assembly Nisi mentis memoriae inops I am verily perswaded and speak it as in the presence of the Lord that first it was grounded upon and occasioned from that Text Rom. 10.6 7. Secondly that it was intended per dicentem by me that spake it in that sense or to that effect as is before explained Though thirdly I dare not aver but that the Dicta or the words spoken simply considered might sound harshly in such mens ears that first are accustomed to press an active obedience from the law of works secondly came filled with prejudice and thirdly never heard me preach nor expresse my thoughts upon any such a subject either before or since these passages were collected I have answered thus farre to this passage in Hypothesi though not to any of the rest because I have some special hints from the Text which containes part of it 1. To what purpose I might possibly speak 2. What might be the ground of these Informers misapprehensions and mistakes 3. That the unprejudiced reader from this to which De facto I can say a little may be directed in some measure how to judge of their dealings with me in the rest I shall now declare as if this had not been said what I conceive of the passage it self in Thesi 1 Repentance is either legal which consists chiefly in a sense of and sorrow for the transgressions of the law and a restlesse fear of the judgements threatned and deserved and this I grant is often followed nay commonly accompanied with a saying in the heart do this or that or what shall I do this commandment or that commandment to free my self thereby from fear and bondage Thus the Jaylour cries Sirs What must I do to be saved Or Evangelical which includes a Renunciation of a mans own Righteousnesse or the works The Ismaels begotten of his own flesh by the law and a turning unto Christ who is the Lord our Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption and this is that hereafter spoken of 2. By this or that commandment of God may here be meant either first those Vtopian fancied commands Deut. 30.12 to which the Apostle seems to allude Rom. 10.5 6. Or secondly some of the ten commandments which are and as they are the condition of the Covenant and Law dispensed by Moses or thirdly such scriptural commands which are and as they are given by Christ himself who hath all authority for a Directory and Rule to the lives and conversations of christians 1. If by this or that commandment be meant those Vtopian fancied commands which the deceitful heart of man not being able to hear or do the word that is nigh enquires to have fetched from heaven or beyond the Sea that it may hear and do them Then doth Repentance include not only a not saying in thy heart Do this but what is not a not saying in the heart So much as who shall ascend or who shall descend to inform thee of this or that commandment For 1. This is a sinful evading of the just sentence of the Law already given by God instead of submitting to judgement and acknowledging the sin and guilt And an hypocritical arrogance enquiring for some new Law as if God knew not how farre short all men come of keeping the old Rom. 3.23.2 It s a neglecting to look up to the Brazen Serpent now when stung with the fiery and a seeking for devised remedies run for a covering but not of Gods Spirit and so an adding sinne to sinne like as Adam did when he sewed Fig-leaves Isa. 30.1 2. If by this or that commandment be meant this or that of the ten as dispensed by Moses and have their bent by him described Rom. 10.4 He that doth them shall live in them then doth repentance include a not saying in thy heart Do this that is this or that commandment of God that by doing of them thou maist live in them For thereby 1. Thou shewest thy self ignorant of Gods righteousnesse 2. Thou vainly goest about to establish thy own righteousnesse And 3. Thou rebellest against instead of submitting to the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10 3. 3. If by this or that commandment be meant the scriptural commands which are and as they are given by Christ himself according to that If ye love me keep my Commandements John 14.15 Then doth repentance include a saying in the heart Do this that is this or that commandement of God nay all the commandements of God together with a deniall of all ungodliness and worldly lusts which war against the spirit and are contrary thereunto Tit 2.12 Acts 3.36 1 Cor. 7.10 11. The fifth Passage There be two sorts of people first the uncalled to them only
a form or letter I Shall not here discusse whether this Solution be pertinent and full as to the objection But expresse the summe of both in four Queries and return answer severally to each of them The first Querie 1. Whether it be not good for a man to do all that he can viz in a way of obedience to Gods Commandments 1. Man may be considered either in the state of nature or in the state of grace Secondly it may be said to be good for a man to do c. either simply in relation to the work it self or in reference to the effects and consequents of the work that is the procuring thereby either a Temporal or a Spiritual good Thirdly by commandments may be meant either the precepts of the Law as a covenant written in nature or Scripture or the commandments given and as given by Christ who is Lord of all even of the Sabbath day Fourthly by way of obedience may be meant either a mans own way in which alone he can obey or Gods way Scilicet Accordingly as he commands 1. It is good for a man in the state of nature to do all that he can in way of obedience to Gods commandments under whichsoever notion considered in relation to the work it self For first Virtus per se ipsa amabilis vertue it self by it self is amiable and vice hateful Secondly a work that is good though only for the substance of it is better then that which is evil both for the substance and circumstances Thirdly it is good and commendable for any man to walk according to that light vouchsafed unto him and not to hold the truth in unrighteousnesse Rom. 1.18 2. It is good for a man in the state of nature to do all that he can in reference to the procuring of a Temporal good For first Because Ahab humbled himself the evil was not brought in his dayes 1 Kings 21 29. Secondly the Pharisees that gave almes {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} have their reward Mat. 6.2 though in the present tense all here and with an {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} a thing distinct from God like Esau's blessing gotten by selfish tears and not God for their reward Thirdly the wrath of God is exemplarily revealed in punishing such as held the truth in unrighteousnesse and have followed lust contrary to the light of Law and Reason And though a man doing what he can cannot prevent Yet if fourthly any say that to him eternal punishment shall be mittigated as to the degrees of it I shall not contend 3. It is not good for a man in the state of nature to do all that he can in his own way of obedience to Gods commandments however considered in reference to the procuring of a spiritual good that is all or any of those blessings which are the peculiar purchase of the blood of Christ for his elect For first This is a seeking them as it were by the works of the Law that is a working to get a right to or possession of the blessings purchased by Christ as if that were to be obtained by the carnal observance of an outward command whereas they are freely given by Christ through a lively faith begotten by the Spirit in the Evangelical publishing of them unto sinners Rom. 9.32.4 5. Secondly All that a man while such can do though pretended and intended in a way of obedience really and in truth is Rebellious Disobedience For the minding of the flesh is enmity against God Rom. 8.7 and so by consequence the more he can do the more he can rebell and procures to himself the greater condemnation The minding of the flesh is death Rom. 8.6 And so the more the more deadly Homo non solum nihil potest suis viribus ad justitiam coram Deo sed etiam adjutus lege docente operibus per iegem extortis deterior efficitur Thirdly Neither Law nor the commands under the Gospel requires any such obedience as this man can perform For the Law requires that which is spiritual to be done in the life and power of the flesh such as man could have performed at his first creation The commands under the Gospel call for an obedience Evangelical to be done in the life and power of the Spiris of Christ such as the elect onely do and can perform after their second creation If all that a man can do were all or part of that a man should do if his way of obeying answered to Gods of commmanding or if the work when done were good by rule of any law there were some probability of it being good for a man to do all that he can in reference to the getting of some good by that Law But all things here being otherwise what can mans doing be good for But as it is sin so to procure the wages of sin which is death There is none in they are all gone out of the way and thence are they altogether become unprofitable Rom. 3.12 Thirdly there is no promise in Scripture of any spiritual good made to a natural mans doings though he do all that he can and how shall any man call them good in reference to the getting of that which God hath never promised upon any such condition Is not piety alone said to be profitable 1 Tim. 4.8 and that as and because it hath the promises Fourthly Paul did what he could in a way of obedience to Gods commandments and yet he confesseth at last he gained nothing thereby in reference to any spiritual good but was a looser and found all his doings to be dung Phil. 3.7 8. The natural mans looking for God to give him Christ or the blessings purchased by him because he doth this or that or works more than other men is not only groundlesse having no promise whereupon to bottom it but abominable even as if a servant should expect a pearl from his Master because he throwes Dirt in his face and that more constantly than other men doth that which is abomination in his sight Luke 16.15 And yet will needs perswade both him and others that he is doing acceptable service a prime piece doubtlesse of that Religion which derives it self à religando from binding of God to man and not man to God Fifthly Christ reclaimes men in the state of nature from doing all that they can in their own way of obedience to Gods commandments to do that which is not onely beyond their abilities to do but beyond their understandings while such to think that they should do it or how it is that God will have it done Scilicet To Repent and believe or to cease from their own dead works and dead way of working and accept of Christ through a saith not gotten by them but begotten by the word as the end of the Law for righteousnesse What shall we do say the Iewes that we might work the works of God This saith Christ is the
praevenitur quisquis fide danatur in Christo ad solum verbi auditum caetera omnem nostram aliam operam and witnesse to the truth of Rom. 10.20 I was found of them that sought me not I was made manifest to them that asked not after me Priùs oportet nos à Deo inveniri quàm ipsum quaeramus Beza in Heb. 11.6 Antevertens venit ad vos regnum Dei {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} propriae significat antevertere seu praevenire sane regnum Dei ita ad nos pervenit ut praeveniat hoc est veniat antequàm nos ipsum quaeramus Piscat. in Mat. 12.28 Abraham the father of the faithful was called when he served other gods and Paul a patttern to them that come after when he breathed out threatnings against the Church and Matthew when he sate at the receit of custom See Ball covent pag. 324. Fourthly It is Bonum in se bonum sibi Good in it self and good for a man in the state of Grace to do all that he can in Gods own way of obedience to the commandments which are given and as they are given by Christ for such reasons and in such respects as are shewen in the explanation of the eighth passage The second Querie 2. Whether that of the Sabbath be the summe of all the Commandements The Commandement of the Sabbath may be taken either literally or mystically when taken literally if we attend only to the outward form and draught thereof forbidding for divers reasons all servile works on the 7th day enjoyning it to be kept holy It is true that then it is no more than one amongst the ten But if we attend to the consequents that depend upon the due keeping and neglecting thereof It is frequently in Scriptures put for all the rest and the keeping of it calls for as if it implied vertually and consequentially all other duties and the polluting of it declares against as containing or making way for all other sins Isa. 56.2 Ier. 17.22 when taken mystically as relating to the spiritual internal Sabbath figured thereby which Calvin conceives Primarium in Sabbato locum tennisse that of the Sabbath is the summe of all the Commandments For first All the commandements except the fifth though implicitly they may be called affirmative and said to require those duties the contrary whereof they forbid Yet explicitly and according to the letter of them they are Negative enjoyning a cessation from our own works or forbidding man to sin which is in effect a bidding man be quiet for he can do nothing but sin And the commandment of the Sabbath requires this very thing Scilicet Feriationem â propriis operibus ut Deum in nobis operari sinamus A ceasing from our own works that we may suffer God to work in us Secondly the Apostle Paul reduceth all the commandements to two Rom. 8.4 Walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit and this of the Sabbath compriseth both these for though it be not lawful to do evil or walk after the flesh any day yet are Christians required to do good or walk after the Spirit even on the Sabbath day and as the Priests prophaned the Sabbath by killing Sacrifices and were blamelesse So may Christians crucifie the flesh with its affections and lusts and do nothing but what is acceptable to God and their reasonable service Thirdly In the state of glory when faith and hope shall cease 1 Cor. 13.13 what other things shall the Saints do but keep this everlasting Sabbath and thereby be compleatly conformable to the will of God which could not be unlesse the Sabbath were the summe of that eternal rule of Righteousnesse and law of love The third Querie 3. Whether to a Christian the Sabbath is to cease from his own works The Spiritual Sabbath or rather the {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} signified by the Iewes though it be not simply a ceasing from works yet it is a ceasing from our own works that is works done by our own strength according to the counsel of our own wills and for our own ends as is evident because the Apostle expressely so describeth it Heb. 4.10 He that is entred into his rest he also hath ceased from his own works as God from his There remaineth another Sabbatisme another I say besides that Sabbath of Canaan which Sabbatisme he defineth in the following verse Pareus in loc. Secondly the Prophets call for this cessation or abnegation of self as the main thing intended in the commandment Is 58.13 Upon which saith Calvin the Prophet reckons the several kinds by which he might make it evident that the true observation of the Sabbath doth consist in a denial of self and entire conversion Hence do we clearly see wherefore God doth so highly commend in Scriptures the observation of the Sabbath for he looked higher than the external ceremony that is the rest and quiet in which the Iewes did think their holinesse to be But rather would have the Iewes bid adieu to the affections and lusts of the flesh and yield up themselves in obedience to him Because no man can live the life of the heavenly Kingdome unlesse he be dead to the world and to himself Now when that ceremony is abrogated neverthelesse the truth doth remain because Christ is dead and is risen again that we may have a perpetual Sabbath that is may keep holy-day or cease from our own works that the Spirit of God may act powerfully in us Thirdly the example of Gods resting from his works proposed for our imitation both in the commandement it self and Heb. 4. as likewise the injunction to the Iewes for a total cessation from all servile works teach and confirm the same thing Whosoever doth work therein shall be put to death ye shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations Exod. 35.2 3. quod nisi eximiu●n aliquid c. But unlesse there had been some excellent and singular thing in the Sabbath it might seem more cruel than was meet to command a man to be slain only because he had cut down a piece of wood Tantum quoniam ligna exciderat Calvin Fourthly though this Sabbath doth not imply a ceasing from but a spiritual acting of good works yet it implies a ceasing to account the good works acted to be ours or our own according to that Not I but the Grace of God that is within me 1 Cor. 15.10 I am crucified with Christ nevrthelesse I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Gal. 2.20 And hence love joy peace faith long-suffering c. are called by the Apostle Not our works but the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Vsque eo patet haec hominis exinanitio ut in bonis quoque operibus violetur Sabbatum quamdiu ea deducimus nostra esse rectè enim Augustinus ultimo capite libri vigesimi secundi de civitate Dei Nam ipsa bona opera nostra