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A15527 Saints by calling: or Called to be saints A godly treatise of our holy calling to Christ, by the gospell. With the seuerall gifts proper vnto the called: and their counterfeits in the hypocrites which are not partakers of this effectuall calling. Written by Thomas Wilson, minister of Gods word, at S. Georges Church in Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1620 (1620) STC 25796; ESTC S103067 273,228 442

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and constancie in his good course by the remembrance of the great recompence to come Heb. 11 26. so did Christ animate his Disciples Mat. 5 11 12. by the example of the Prophets promise of reward Also Paul thus quickned the Corinthians to constancie 2 Cor. 4. verse last The things saith he which wee see not are eteruall therefore faint not And 2 Tim. 2 12. If we suffer with him we shal reign with him therefore be resolued to sticke to Christ in life death Doe we not see by common experience how men of all Trades Husbandmen Soldiers Merchants are made hardie and bold to attempt and do great and dangerous things vpon hope of receiuing good things in the end as either victorie or spoile or commodity or such earthly perishing things How much more may true Christians by the hope of neuer-withering treasures prouoke themselues to enter into endure the trauailes and 〈◊〉 of that way which bringeth to heauen in the end They haue many things within them and from without them from satan euill men and themselues to make them faint and languish therfore it will be needfull to take all helpes and meanes of courage heart vnto themselues seeing God allowes them so to do and godly men in al ages haue done so By which it appeareth how the Papists in the Rhemish Testament wrong vs in saying That wee teach not our hearers either to do good or abstaine from euill for hope of heauen or feare of hell Aquila This is indeede a speciall good that comes to our selues of good workes which though they deserue nothing yet he that doth them and aboundeth in them is not sentaway empty handed but rather hath entrance made aboundantly into the blessed kingdom of glory Which beeing giuen as a free reward as it more sets foorth the mercie of God to reward that which he might condemne so it moueth his children the more heartily to loue him who not only without but against all merit on their part doth vouchsafe so richly to requite their poore endeuours in dooing his will But be there not other good vses wherunto good workes do serue and for which the godly do cheerfully take them in hand Apollos Yea verie many and excellent euerie one seruing as a strong motiue to procure all care of dooing them For that God that hath not made nor ordained ought in vaine no not the least of his creatures nor the meanest of his ordinances much lesse is it to be thought that good works were ordained to no vse or to small vse But if any thing in the world be rich plentifull for happy most gracious vses good works may haue the first place and ranke as being fruitfull on euerie side For if we looke vnto God himselfe then the good workes and good life of his children expresseth their great thankefulnesse towards him for the great benefite of their redemption Also it cheareth him and reioyceth his heart as I may so speake euen as our euill workes do greeue him and are to him as gall or sowre grapes to our teeth Deut. 32 32. so the righteous workes of all the godly bee as an odour or sweet sauour as precious spices as pleasant fruits himselfe so testifying that his soule is delighted with them And lastly God is both pleased and obeyed and honoured by good workes which are fruits of righteousnesse by Christ to the praise of God Phil. 1 11. Therfore wee should let our good workes breake foorth that men seeing them may glorifie our heauenly Father Mat. 5 16. For as the euill and loose behauiour of such as professe God to be their Father doth discredite him amongst men as himselfe complains My name is blasphemed amongst the Gentiles through you Rom. 2 24. so it is much to the glory aduancement of Gods name when the professors of godlinesse line as becomes the Gospell Now if wee looke to the Gospell of God that is beautified and adorned by the good works of such as know and professe it as it is written Let seruants shew all good faithfulnesse that they may adorne the doctrine of God in all things Titus 2 9. If the good life of a seruant be an ornament and renowne to the Gospell when he deals vprightly and faithfully toward his master what countenance do we thinke shall be gained to the holie doctrine of the word when men of greater degrees places be full of good workes Surely as it turnes to the reproach of the word if any who liue vnder it liue otherwise then well so on the contrary part their godly and honest conuersation turnes to the credit and honour of the Word Which is a thing that Gods children ought earnestly to thinke vpon that God is contented that himselfe and his Word should haue no more respect and estimation amongst men then our good actions and liues shall winne and purchase vnto it Now if we turne our eyes home to our selues besides that which was touched before our good workes are profitable euery way First to purchase vs a good report which is better then siluer to haue such as feare God to speake well of vs is more worth then all riches Prouerbs 22. 1. This fruite Abraham got by his workes Iames 2. 24. For hee was iustified viz. approued and commended for a iust person by his workes Also the faithfull mentioned Hebrewes 11 were well reported of through their faith and fruites thereof Thus Timethy got himselfe a good testimony but yet further our good workes they be testimonies of our faith to shew it to be no dead but a liuely faith which being an inuisible grace is yet after a sort made visible by well liuing as it is written Shew me thy faith by thy workes Iames 2. 18. Euen as health is knowne to be good and sound by good disposition of all outward parts of the body so our faith our calling our election be manifested and confirmed vnto vs by our study and practise of good workes 2 Peter Chap. 1. verse 5 6 7 8. Make your calling and election sure by good workes Finally a man is not more knowne to liue a naturall life by speaking seeing mouing then a Christian is knowne to liue the life of faith by his godly and righteous workes What should I say that it is more then likely that as our workes shall haue a reward of free fauour so the measure of our workes as they exceede in number and excellency shall haue a proportionable measure of glory Certainly much will be required of them who haue receiued much and why may we not thinke that much will be rendred to them who haue done much For to euery one shall be giuen according as his workes shall be 1 Cor. 3. To proceede if we regard other men the exercise of good workes is fruitfull to all sorts and kinds of men for they which belong vnto God and be yet vnconuerted by
this poore testimony of my thankfull minde who daily mention you in my prayers that all sauing blessings may be powred on you and continued to you till my sonne through Gods mercy prospering in his studies may expresse a morefull measure of a gratefull mind vnto you all to whom he hath beene and may yet be so much bounden which the Lord of his fauour in his good time enable him well to performe Fare ye well From my House in Canterbury the 10. of Iuly 1620. Yours euer euen to his vtmost Thomas Wilson An Aduertisement vnto the Reader COurteous and Christian Reader there bee foure seuerall things which I purposed to effect in this whole Dialogue Treatise First for the Matter to deliuer so neere as my iudgement could attaine all those workes of the Spirit euen in their particulars which are peculiar vnto Gods elect children who liue to be partakers of an outward effectuall Calling that when the manifold riches of Christ his grace should be in some sort discouered and laide foorth to their eye to view and looke vpon them it might stir them vp to a marueilous loue and thankefulnesse towards him who hath called them to such riches honour Also that finding themselues endued and blessed with such graces as they shall learn from the Word to belong onely to the chosen of God it may settle them in the perswasion and full assurance of their election to life Secondly for the Manner Because euerie one of the workes of Christ in his elect hath his counterfet in the reprobate which liue in the Church and partake onely in a generall vocation therefore I haue somewhat endeauoured to descry what the truth of euerie grace wrought in Gods Children and to discouer it from that apparence and shadow which an Hypocrite hath of the same grace for this purpose that whether the godly Reader would proue himselfe and make triall of his owne sincerity either in the whole worke of Christianity or in some special part or duty thereof heere he may find what may further him Thirdly for the Order I haue followed so precisely and truly as euer my skill would direct mee that very order of causes in this whole Treatise which God himselfe doth keepe in the bestowing and working of the graces propounding them to the Reader to be considered as they haue necessary and naturall coherence one with another and dependance one vpon another setting causes afore effects and giuing cheefe place to the principall effects By this meanes the carefull Christian in the search of himselfe shall by effects be able to finde out causes the roote by the fruites and how to value each grace and fruite according to his proper worth Also the Conscionable Minister which hath not as yet thought vpon such an order and shall approue of this as good sound may in his teaching helpe himselfe to deliuer such things first as by order of nature ought to haue precedency for the better edification of their hearers Finally as touching the Persons for whose sake I wrote this Dialogue I meant it though not onely yet cheefly for the godly vnlettered Christians to further them in this knowledge how to examine their owne estate before God As for the more Learned they can helpe themselues in this part of our Christian science or else may fetch direction from other manner of Lights then mine Whatsoeuer it is that I haue performed I pray thee good Reader take it in good part make thy profit of it and praise God for all Farewell Yours in the Lord Thomas Wilson The particular Contents of the whole Dialogue diuided into ten Portions The first Part entreateth of Calling 1. OF common and outward Calling 2. Of inward effectuall calling 3. Of differences betweene them 4. What effectuall Calling is 5. Of the meanes thereof by the Word of God 6. Time of Calling that it is diuers and vncertaine 7. Persons who for the most part are vncapable thereof 8. Of what quality and estate be the persons which be commonly called with a true effectuall Calling 9. Effectuall Calling may be knowne of them in whom it is 10. Of the tokens whereby it is knowne 11. Meanes whereby such are prepared to Calling who as yet are not called 12. Of the sundry wayes that God taketh in the worke of Calling 13. The ends or finall causes of a true Calling 14. The mouing cause thereof 15. Differences amongst those which are called in the act of their Calling 16. Election to be iudged of by Calling 17. Rash iudgement about the calling of other men to be auoyded The second Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the Graces which flow from Calling 1. ALl sauing Graces come together at one time with our Calling 2. One Grace before another in order of causes 3. Of illumination of the Minde the first worke of Grace 4. Opening of the heart 5. Of the engandring of faith and what workes of the Spirit goe thervnto The third Part of the Dialogue entreateth of a true and liuely Faith 1. A Liuely faith is a fruite of effectuall Calling 2. A gift proper to the Elect. 3. What it is and how it differeth from the faith of hypocrites and wicked men 4. Of the parts of Faith and of the properties thereof 5. Of application by Faith how it is proued and what things belong to it The fourth Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the degrees of Faith 1. A Little Faith and a great Faith a weake and strong Faith 2. Wherein they are like each other 3. The least measure of Faith what it is 4. That it must and doth labour to encrease it selfe 5. Of a strong Faith what it is 6. Of the seuer all measures thereof and which is the highest degree of beleeuing 7. By what steps Gods Children climb vp to the greatest degree of beleeuing in this life The fifth Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the rarenesse and fruitfulnesse of faith 1. OF the rarenesse of Faith or the fewnesse of beleeuers 2. Of the signes or causes thereof both common and proper to this age 3. Of the efficacy and fruitfulnesse of Faith in generall 4. Of the manifold encouragements to beleeue 5. Of discouragements and how the obiections of Satan and our corruption against beliefe in Christ are to be repelled The sixth Part of the Dialogue entreateth of the fruites of faith in particular 1. OF vnion with Christ that there is such a gift and that it is by faith 2. Two things necessarily required to the working of this vnion 3. The nature and neerenesse of it expressed by Scripture similitudes 4. In what respect this vnion with Christ is necessary for vs. 5. Of the great and seuerall fruites thereof 6. Of Iustification the second maine fruite of Faith 7. What Iustification signifieth 8. In what sense wee are instified by Faith 9. Of the double righteousnesse of Christ actiue and passiue 10. Of the two parts of Iustification forgiuenesse of sinnes and imputation of Iustice.
first and second one before another after for it is not in this new creation when this our little World of our selues is brought out of the world of sinne and vnbeliefe vnto the Christian World of grace as it was in the creation of the great World of Heauen and Earth when the parts of that world were made one after another in order of time the worke being distinguished according to the number of dayes in the weeke but here in this new creation we haue the blessed sauing workes and graces of the holy Spirit powred into vs all at one instant We are not at one time called and at another time iustified and at another time sanctified and then receiue graces of hope and loue and wisedome c. but these come as Iosephs brethren came into AEgypt for Corne all together As the prodigall childe returning to his Father did at once receiue all those fauours from his kinde Father of kisse embracing ring robe and charge to kill the fat Calfe Indeede the sauing graces for their encrease and growth to perfection require succession of time euen as Infants become not tall men till after many yeeres but these graces at the beginning and first begetting like grapes in a cluster doe all come together Euen as it standeth with the naturall body in the quickning of it the soule comming into it giueth power of motion and sense to euery member at one instant not to one sooner to another later so in our new birth all the faculties of the minde and body being before dead in trespasses and sinnes are by grace the soule of the soule spiritually at once reuiued and enabled to all functions duties of godlinesse The truth whereof appeareth in that Paul reports of the Romans that being made beleeuers they were iustified and being iustified by faith they had withall other graces as peace with God hope of glory ioy in that hope sense of Gods loue And of the Ephesians he saith that when they were called and heard the Gospell with an obedient care they also beleeued and had the seale earnest of the Spirit In a word the Elect comming to Christ at the time of their calling and Christ with his merits graces being so ioyned as one cannot haue himselfe but withall he hath all his It is therfore an vndoubted truth that howsoeuer some sauing graces may appeare before others or be felt sooner then others yet they are put vpon into the Elect at one and the same time but in order of causes one grace doth precede afore another and they are to be handled of vs one after another according to that order as neere as we can hit vpon Aq. Wel then I yeeld willingly vnto this truth acknowledge that that most mighty God that at one moment could deck adorn the firmament of heauen with so many glorious stars he also is able to fixe so many sundry glorious graces at once in the firmamet of mans heart But seeing the God of order in this supernaturall work doth obserue a natural order according to which some graces must be first as causes others must follow as effects of those causes would it please you then to declare vnto me which grace is first in the order of causes Apol. As I conceiue of it I will declare vnto you and I verily trust that I conceiue aright thus the case stands Before our effectuall calling our mindes are couered with darknesse of ignorance vnbeliefe our hearts being ful of obstinacy by reason therof so as we are wholy estranged from God Now in the worke of God in our calling the Spirit of Christ by the Gospell hauing mightily cast downe these strong holds and scattered these foggy mists doth illuminate effectually the mind and vnderstanding distinctly soundly to know beleeue the promises of forgiuenesse reconciliation by Christ made 〈◊〉 the word withal 〈◊〉 opening the heart obediently to assent to it and embrace it with a faith affiance in the mercy of God the promiser the by this faith of the promise the elect is brought euen to Christ to be neerely vnited 〈◊〉 to him who being a stranger before now by faith dwels in the heart as a familiar guest rather as the master of the Family to guide rule keepe in order all Now being made one with Christ they straight way haue comunion first with his righteousnesse actiue passiue for iustifying them to the great tranquility ioy of the conscience and also to the raysing vp of their hearts to a sure certain hope expectation of heauenly glory Then afterwards they haue fellowship with his Spirit for sanctifying in which work of their sanctification is giuen that excellent grace of repentance or turning to God also of hearty loue toward God their father now reconciled appearing so to the cōscience quieted 〈◊〉 through the atonement felt perceiued this begetteth loue to all men especially to the Saints carieth with it all the traine of Christian vertues It coming hereof that the Elect are patient temperate peaceable meeke good long suffering modest humble c. because through that faith hope which they haue in God by Christ they are moued so to loue him to be affected to seek his honor to doe his will as withall their heart is affectioned in all things which concerne him themselues or others to please him by obedience and practise of his Word in sincerity and truth Aquila By that which hath beene spoken I perceiue what order ye thinke to be kept of God in the working the workes proper to the Elect. First there is calling in which there is 2 illumination or opening of the eye Thirdly opening of the heart Fourthly liuely faith Fiftly vnion with Christ or our incorporation into him Sixtly Iustification or imputation of Christs righteousnesse Seuenthly peace of conscience Eightly Ioy in the holy Ghost Ninthly hope of glory Tenthly Sanctification 11. Repentance called our turning from sinne 12. Loue of God 13. Charity to our neighbour 14. Patience in affliction 15. Obedience to the will of God Let me aske of these in order what I am desirous to know for my further instruction and first touching illumination where doe yee finde ground in Scripture for it Then describe it and shew what it is and what kindes there be of it and how the illumination of the Elect doth differ from the worke of the Spirit in illuminating some of the reprobate Apollos In the calling of a sinner to faith there are two workes of the Spirit The one opening of their eyes Acts 26. 18. The other the opening of their hearts Acts 16. 14. The Lord opened the heart of Lydea the former is Illumination or enlightning whereof the holy Ghost speaketh in Heb. 6. 4. They which were once enlightened And Luke 1. 79. To giue great
of an earthly Monarchy full little then thinking that the life of the Lord and Master should be the worlds ransome and that his resurrection should be the worlds conquest and victory they dreaming of an outward glorious reigne ouer the World and hoping to be great men in great place vnder him howbeit they giuing credit to his doctrine and embracing him for the Messias depending vpon his mouth in matter of duty and saluation they had a measure of faith though a little and weake one as Christ himselfe doth testifie of them all O ye of little faith and of Peter by name O thou of little faith wherefore didst thou doubt Mat. 14. 31. and as they signifie of themselues by their owne petition Luke 17. 5. Lord encrease our fasth The other sort of weake ones in faith be such as hauing more knowlege in the mystery of Christ touching the worke of saluation by his sufferings and righteousnesse yet doe very weakely apply this their knowledge not being perswaded of the forgiuenesse of their owne sinnes and of their reconciliation with God but earnestly desiring to embrace and beleeue the promise of it and of this sort of beleeuers there haue been in all ages very many in the Church of God euer since the ascension of Christ as daily experience proueth in many honest Christians which can speake well and distinctly of the doctrine of grace and yet haue laide but poore hold of it for their own safety and comfort much doubting themselues Aquila But Sir by this meanes it wil come to passe that many which are farre enough from true faith will be ready to imagine themselues to haue some measure of faith for euery one will by and by alledge for himselfe that he hath a good desire to beleeue in Christ and so be lulled asleepe to their own perdition presuming of that which they in truth doe want Apollos Indeed Aquila you say well this is a thing may be feared howbeit there be diuers good and sure workes to discerne a sound desire to beleeue in Christ which is the lowest degree of a liuely faith from all vaine desires of wicked men hypocrites which may pretend to haue it and yet haue it not The first is that in them whose desire is sound and godly there is a coueting rather of reconciliation then of saluation rather to bee in grace and fauour with God then to bee happy in heauen for their desire commeth from a brused heart greeued and cast downe for the offence of God and his displeasure conceiued against their sinne so as to haue but one good looke of God one smile of his louing countenance it is more desired of them then the World nay then the glory of Heauen as Dauid prayeth O lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs Psal. 4. 7. And elsewhere the Church prayeth Returne and let the light of thy countenance shine vpon vs and we shall be whole Psal. 80. 3. And in another place the godly professe saying In thy fauour is life It is true that one cannot haue the fauour of God but he is sure to be saued and it is lawfull to desire saluation but yet the thing which the beleeuing broken heart doth cheefly looke vnto it is to be loued and fauoured of God Againe this godly desire is vehement not slight or light but very feruent like to the desire after meate of one pinched with hunger which is very earnest as we say hunger wil breake the hard stone wals or to the desire and longing of a woman with childe which vseth to be very vehement such is this sound desire of them who begin to beleeue they couet more to be satisfied with a full sight of Gods face then worldlings desire siluer and gold the doctrine of grace being to them more desirable euen then the finest gold Psal. 19. Wee haue heard of the desire of the Cananitish woman for her Daughter being vexed with a Diuell and we reade of the chased Hart breathing panting after the coole water brookes euen so the soule chased by temptations scorched with the heate of sinful lusts hauing begun once to taste the sweetnesse or but to feele the neede of sauing mercies doth most eagerly and sharpely desire to attaine vnto them This earnestnesse of desire it is not in them by fits and starts like Pilates desire to know the truth Iohn 18. which as a weake sparkle quickly died of it selfe but it is constant as is the desire of a thirsty man whose desire ceaseth not till his thirst be quenched such as Anna her desire was after a childe it was great and continued till the thing was granted which she did desire so it fareth with a sound desire to beleeue and find Christ it lasteth till faith bee formed in the heart and Christ be borne in them they are not quiet till then nor then neither still more and more desiring to bee knit and ioyned neerer to Christ their loue their ioy their crowne their treasure Lastly this witnesseth the soundnesse of this godly desire to beleeue in Iesus Christ that it bringeth forth some good affections which are accompanied with some reformation of life and manners They in whom it is being carefull according to that they know to obey and please God hauing with their desire to beleeue ioined an vnfained desire to repent and to liue honestly keeping a good conscience towards God and men in all things There is the quite contrary of all these to bee seene in vnfaithfull men for their desire it is of happinesse and not at all of Gods loue as Balaam would be blessed but tooke no thought to be reconciled to God or to reforme his way Againe their desires be faint and be soone quelled being neither vehement nor constant and no maruell for they are vnsound rather seeking themselues that it may be well with them then that God may set his heart vpon them and loue them and be glorified in his mercies towards them And finally they desire to be forgiuen saued but it is without desire to repent and amend their liues they like Heauen well but not the way that leadeth thither their desire being to bee glorified with God by hauing his blessing and ioy and not to glorifie him by doing his will Aquila Will not this thinke you doe some hurt to teach that there is a desire of faith which is an acceptance with God for faith it selfe may it not cause men thus to content themselues seeing now they haue some measure of faith which is sufficient to saue them Haply it will be thought that here they may fixe their staffe and set their rest Apollos No Aquila there is no feare of this in this sound godly desire that being a portion of sauing grace whose property is to grow still and waxe greater euen as young figges or raysins grow till they be ripe and come to their full bignesse as all things which haue a vegetatiue or
graces Psal. 23. throughout and the carefull obseruations both of them and of Gods mighty prouidence protection against dangers with his assistance against euils and enemies of all sorts doth not a little auaile to put more life and heart into faith as appeareth by the example of Dauid 1 Sam. 17. 36. where he grew to that strong confidence of ouercomming Goliah by the former triall of Gods might in helping him against the Lyon and the Beare Also Paul resolued strongly for time to come that God would deliuer him because he had deliuered him 2 Tim. 4. 17 18. So as the faithfull should doe well to keepe a Register of Gods mercies and deliuerances and often goe ouer them in their remembrance and thoughts as Papists supersticiously numbred their prayers ouer their beads so to refresh their faith by recording and numbring Gods seuerall sauours learning more strongly to trust in him whom they so well know by experimentall knowledge Let them which know the Lord put their trust in him Psal. 9. 10. Finally amongst other things which further to bring to this highest pitch of faith it is of no small moment to haue a care and watchfull endeuour in all things to keepe a good conscience for it is not written in vaine that Abrahams faith was perfected by his workes There is a great neerenesse of kindred betweene faith and obedience as faith in the promise of mercy breeds obedience to the Commandements so obedient walking before God giues more courage to a faithfull man the more boldly and surely to expect the performance of the promise being made to such persons as out of loue to God obey his will Therefore in Psalme 119. the Prophet often encourageth himselfe to beleeue certainly and firmely that God will be good to him to saue him because he had this testimony within himselfe that he endeuoured the keeping of his statutes Saue me O Lord for I haue kept thy Testimonies and againe I haue great delight in thy Statutes therefore quicken me according to thy word and many suchlike Thus friend Aquila in so short roome as I could I haue answered your foure demands and for an ouerplus as before I laide out certaine markes to trie out the soundnesse of desire to beleeue remission of sinnes which is the least measure of faith so I will here deliuer some tokens of the strongest faith wherby it may be known The first whereof is this when a faithfull man is able to beleeue the promises though the meanes seeme euen to fight against the truth of them as Dauid being a priuate man yea and persecuted yet beleeued the promise of his aduancement to the Kingdome And Abraham resteth in the word of Gods promise for Isaac and the blessing of all nations in him euen when Gods own word of commandement to kill his sonne did warre against the word of promise to blesse all people in that sonne Secondly in many and manifold dangers yet still to cleaue to God with trust in his mercies as the Saints spoken of Heb. 11. They were imprisoned scourged racked slaine with the sword driuen into dennes and caues and yet they still by faith beleeued God Thirdly when any are able to reioyce in their suffering and to endure their tribulations with gladnesse as they that suffered the spoyling of their goods with ioy Hob. 10. 34. and the Apostles that went away reioycing that they were counted worthy to suffer for his name Lastly if any be ready if the will of God be to aduenture their liues for Christ as Antipas as the Martyres who loued not their liues vnto death these things as also the contempt of the world the deniall of our selues the manifold fruits of charity when any doe as it were forget themselues to seeke the good of others distributing liberally vnto the necessity of the Saints these I say are great testimonies of a great measure of Faith and nothing such a sure token thereof as to be much and earnest in all kinde of supplications for our selues for others and for the whole Church watching vnto prayer and being feruent therein But now good friend Aquila it is meet we should thinke of repairing to our owne houses to see if all there be in peace and safety Aquila Sir I am greatly beholden to you for your good endeuour in opening these things thus distinctly and plainly and well content to hearken vnto your motion of returning home reseruing other matters which now cannot be dealt in to our next meeting The fift part of the Dialogue of the rarenesse of Faith and fewnesse of Beleeuers As also of the efficacy and fruitefulnesse of a true faith Of encouragement to beleeue with answer of Obiections against Faith Apollos I Am bound to affoord you my best helpe for of you Aquila I haue bene made to know the way of GOD more perfectly I wil euer acknowledge it and be ready to shew all thankefulnesse for it But our time will slide from vs and though wee haue all peace at home yet it is not good to giue prouocations Let vs therefore fall close to our businesse that wee may dispatch in due time Wherin would you wish vs now to deal me thinkes we haue sayd much of Faith shall wee passe to some other thing Aquila No Sir I pray you let vs dwell a little longer in this argument For I couet to heare you deliuer your minde touching the efficacie and fruitfulnesse of faith whereof little hath bene saide scarse a touch giuen of it and what may be the matter that true Faith being such a noble and necessary such a woorthy and wonderful gift yet there be so few so very few euen within the Church of God liuing vnder the Ministry of the Gospel which are endued there-with as is too manifest by their manner of liuing for very many liue very il now one can neuer liue ill that beleeues well as on the other side hee that beleeues ill cannot liue well Apollos Heerein you say most truly For true Faith is neuer idle nor barren but working and fruitefull in good workes Thence it is called Effectuall Faith 1. Thess. 1 3 and elsewhere it is sayde that Faith workes by loue Gal. 5 6. of Abrahams faith it is said It wrought with his works Iames 2 22. where the Apostle maketh voydnesse of workes or want of charity a note of a dead faith For as dead men can woorke no more any humane or naturall worke so that faith that works not by charity is dead Nothing therefore is such a testimony of the lacke of liuely faith as mens euil and wicked liues Many other things there bee which doe descry this truth that Faith is a rare gift to be found but in a few as namely the great ignorance of God and his will For there being as we haue seene before required in faith a competent knowledge nay faith being for the nature of it a diuine wisedom put into the heart os the elect
God for separating and choosing vs out of the world of vnbeleeuers They shall deserue to lose their faith that will not ioyfully and much praise God for it and endeuour greatly and continually to set it on worke And so to returne to the other part of your question about the working and efficacie of a true faith it is a point worthy your remembrance and worthy of a more worthy discourser then my selfe am Ye can but haue my best performance and that I promised you I finde by the Word as I beganne to shew that a liuely faith is a most powerfull and fruitfull gift bringing forth many sundry and excellent workes and effects whereof that 11. Chapter to the Hebrues giueth plentifull proofe And it will not be amisse to runne through a few of those examples named there We reade of Enoch that his person by faith pleased God and Abels sacrifice through faith was accepted of him Noah by faith beleeued and feared the iudgement and threatning of God and prepared the Arke being moued with reuerence of his authority that commanded it Abraham by faith obeyed God euen to the forsaking of his natiue countrey to goe to a strange place which he knew not and to the offering of his son Isaac the sonne of the promise Moses by faith contemned worldly honours 〈◊〉 by faith being an Heathen and an Harlor was made courteous and peaceable to the spies of Israel Finally by faith other Saints attempted to doe very hard and suffered most heauie things yea euen women by faith 〈◊〉 death and 〈◊〉 most 〈◊〉 Aquila Now that ye haue made entrance into the treatise of the efficacy of faith go forwards I pray you and shew me as distinctly as you can what bee the seuerall workes of faith being once created in the heart and what the due meditation thereof ought to worke in vs. Apollos I was minded so to doe but I must doe it heere more breefely because it must be the subiect of all our conference for the time to come Of a liuely effectuall faith there be some workes without vs which yet neerely concernes vs or some inward or wrought within vs which are so wrought as they sticke and abide within our selues For these outward workes we are to note that a liuely faith it is that effectual instrument whereby an elect person is vnited and knit vnto Christ to become a member of Christ that whereby hee becomes partaker of Christ his perfect righteousnesse performed by his manhoode vnto remission of sinnes and iustification before God as it is written We conclude that man is instified by Faith Rom. 3 and also of his spirit for sanctification as it is written 〈◊〉 the Spirit by faith Galath 2 14. and the heart is purified by faith Acts 15. So as our faith carrying vs vnto Christ effecteth for vs those three most excellent graces of vnion with him instification by him and sanctification which I call outward because faith goeth out of our selues to finde them in Christ. Now the inward effect and worke offaith are all those workes of Christ dwelling in our hearts euen whatsoeuer Christ dwelling in vs 〈◊〉 within vs the same are workes of faith As a peaceable and setled conscience in regard of finne pardoned an accesse vnto the gracious presence of God a marueilous ioy of heart by this meanes a certaine hope of heauenly glory a sense and feeling of the former benefits and of the infinite loue of God shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost cheerfull patience in all tribulations all which effects do spring from the application of Christ by faith as it is apparent by Rom. 5 1 2 3 4. Moreouer whatsoeuer spirituall graces there bee with the increase of them all they bee the effectes of faith as is cleare by this that often in Scripture fayth is set before other Graces as the roote mother and spring of them all see 2 Peter 1 5. Ioyne with your faith vertue c. all Graces being as handmaides to attend vpon Faith as their Mistris and Queene yea following and resting vpon it as vpon their beginning ground For faith beeing the instrument of our vnion with Christ and of our partaking with his righteousnes and Spirit it must necessarily follow that the whole traine of sauing Graces be the fruites of faith which as it taketh holde on his sufferings and obedience for our iustifying so it deriueth vertue and force from his death and resurrection for the killing of the old man or for the defacing of the image of Satan which consisteth in all manner of vices and for the quickening of the new man and erecting of the image of God which consists in righteousnesse and holinesse so as he which hath true faith can lacke no sauing Graces And finally our faith in Christ is our victory ouer the world 1 Iohn 5 4. treading downe in our hearts that corruption which reignes in the world strengthening vs to beare the reproaches troubles and persecution of the world and arming to resist yea enabling to conquer Satan the prince of the world 1 Pet. 5 8 9. And which is most of all such is the power of faith as it doth enable vs in some sort to ouercome euen God himselfe For it was by faith that Iacob had power to preuayle with God Gen. 32 28. and that Moses did as it were binde the hands of God to withhold iudgement from his people whom he was minded to destroy had not Moses his seruant stoode in the breach before him to turne away his wrath lest he should destroy them Psa. 106 23. And in Exodus when Moses prayed by faith Let me alone faith God Exo. 32. as if faith could manacle and binde Gods hands The due meditation of all these effects and workes of faith plainly proueth men of euill life to haue no faith It conuinceth hypocrites to be vnfaithful because professing faith they haue not the power of it in their hearts Also it stoppeth the mouths of Papists who charge the 〈◊〉 to teach and commend an idle faith which should giue liberty and open the windowes to all licentiousnesse Also it serueth to direct euery one in whom is true faith to discerne of himselfe that he is endewed with it whereof he feels the proper effects in himselfe Lastly it must stir vp and encrease the diligence of all Gods children to nourish a gift which is of such force and efficacy of such mighty power and manifold profit Aquila Sir me thinkes ye haue as it were brought me into a costly banket well set foorth with varietie of most delicate iunkets whereof one may feed to the ful or into a rich wardrobe full of all sorts of robes and ornaments For these workes offaith which you haue spoken of with so short a breath they are the deckings wherewith Christ Iesus doeth adorne his spouse euen euery Christian soule and the sweet and pleasant banket dishes and goodly fruits and spices where with shee againe
transgressions bond-men to Sathan enthralled to sinne and hell and most miserably poore destitute of all righteousnesse indebted to God the Soueraigne Monarch and iust Iudge of the World both to be for euer kept from eternall life in heauen for fault of perfect holinesse and besides to be plunged ouer head eares into the damnation of hell through breach of the Law yet through the wonderfull benignity and grace of God freely giuing them his Sonne with his righteousnesse actiue and passiue for the wiping out of all guilt of sinne and desert of punishment and the adorning decking them with perfect holinesse and innocency by the imputation of faith freely made they are now of bond-men and beggerly wretches of heires of hell and exiles from heauen become most free rich and glorious euen heires yea fellow heires with Christ of that excellent inheritance which is immortall in Heauen Here is indeede a most happy and ioyfull change which is happened them by the iustification of faith so as no maruell though the holy Apostle make so light account 〈◊〉 all other things whatsoeuer in comparison of this Neither is it to bee wondered though Sathan in all ages haue laide such battery against this mount bulwarke of Christianity No one point of all Christian doctrine which he hath so dangerously so often so many wayes assayled as this sometime carrying men from Christ to seeke forgiuenesse and some part of righteousnesse at least out of him in some other thing and sometime annihilating faith and voyding it as though there were no power in it at all so much as to helpe toward our iustification by apprehending our righteousnesse for he knowes this Article to be the key of all Religion the very heart and soule of Christianity the most comfortable and sure stay the very rocke and foundation of all hope so as ouerthrow this and ouerthrow all preaching and all beleeuing were in vaine if this one fundamentall truth could be peruerted and depraued either by defacing the gift of Christs righteousnesse by adding something to it of our owne or by cutting off the hand and arme that should receiue and embrace it It behoueth therfore al Gods children namely Gods Ministers so much the more to study striue to maintaine this truth and keepe it vnuiolable also such as haue this grace imparted to them to be iustified by beleeuing to make much of it enforcing and prouoking themselues to all hearty and ioyfull thankfulnesse for it in word and deede to all earnest care to grow and encrease in this grace continually I mean in the sense and feeling of it and in the more full apprehension of it euen in respect of such wonderfull effects as arise thence But neighbour Aquila because the day drawes toward an end and night approching calles vs home therefore we will here ceasse deferring the prosecution of your third motion touching the neerest effects and fruites which spring from the true sense of this benefit till another time when we may haue more leysure to call them to minde and to consider of them Aquila Well pleased I am to haue it so for the opening of these effects which follow vpon our iustification by faith being a thing of that great consequence would not be dealt in rawly and slenderly or passed ouer in few words So fare ye well for this time The seauenth Dialogue The nine effects of Iustification by Faith Apollos NOw Neighbour Aquila may I know of you whence doe you come for ye were not wont to come that way as ye now doe Aquila I came not long sithence from home with a friend of mine that came to visit me drew me out to goe with him to set him on his way which I did willingly for his good company sake but I haue made the best hast I could that I might keep touch with you and it falleth out well that I doe so happily and fitly meete you for I was somewhat afraide lest you should haue tarried too long for me Now Sir that wee are so well come together will it please you to lay forth those nine neerest fruits which spring from the feeling of iustification by faith what effects vse to follow hereupon in the soules and consciences of iustified persons Apollos The blessed Apostle Saint Paul shall giue you your answer vnto this question for hauing most diuinely in the 2. 3. and 4. Chapters to the Romans laid forth the doctrine of Iustification and very substantially proued it to be not by our workes which we doe not onely for that we are all sinners but because they answer not the iustice of the Law no not in the regenerate which haue most grace and doe most good but by faith apprehending the sufferings and death of Christ full absolution from sinne and his actiue obedience to the Law for our perfect iustice with God At the fifth Chapter he commeth to those proper and immediate effects of this grace of Iustification which you now enquire after and there as I conceiue them he rehearseth distinctly these nine 1. and 2. peace with God 3. Accesse vnto his grace 4. Standing in that grace 5. Hope of glory 6. Reioycing vnder that hope 7. Ioy in tribulation 8. A sense of Gods loue in Christ. 9. A glorying in God These are the most secret hidden workes of the Spirit as so many markes to the Christian soule whereby to finde and try out the truth and certainty of her own iustification Also being as it were rich Iewels or most precious ornaments affixed vnto that most glorious robe of righteousnesse wherewith shee is cloathed so sumptuously to the great contentment of Christ her husband and her owne vnspeakable comfort Aquila Of these foresaide effects I do desire now to heare you speake some-what in that order as they are named And first touching peace with God what do ye vnderstand thereby make it plaine to me what manner of gift that is Apollos These fruites of iustifying faith being many nine in number I had not neede to be long in thē we hauing so much other worke yet behinde And yet being both weighty matters and remoued from common vnderstanding I cannot well tell how to speake briefly lest I speak not plainly enough but this easeth me of some care that these things are spoken vnto one that hath them and feeleth them by good experience and therefore can sooner comprehend the nature and truth of these worthy gifts Now touching the first of them it is peace with God whereby two things are meant First reconciliation or truce with God in which sence the word is vsed in those Scriptures where Christ is termed our peace the Prince of peace our peace-maker and peace is made by his blood that is attonement or reconcilement with God whiles our sinnes which bredde an enmity betweene God vs and made a separation of vs from him and of him from vs his infinite iustice
fauourable vnto them as being well and throughly resolued that howsoeuer the force of Adams disobedience ioyned to their owne sinnes was very great for the spoiling of them of perfect integrity and filling them full of the infection of sinne to the casting them downe from an happy estate to infinite misery yet the grace of Christ in the merit of his passiue and actiue righteousnesse to wit of his sufferings and doings is of far more exceeding might and vertue for the ouercomming of their sinnes and the restoring of them to a farre more surpassing blessednesse then that they lost grace superabounding aboue sinne So as their hearts be replenished with ioy and glorying not onely because of the glory they looke for in Heauen but also in the vnderstanding and beleefe of that wonderous fauour which God the Father in his Sonne Christ and for his sake beareth to them here in their pilgrimage Aquila Ye are at the length come through this large Sea of doctrine touching Iustification and the nine neerest Effects thereof and are arriued safe at the doctrine of sanctification which followeth next in order to be spoken of but that we haue already by our former discourse exceeded the bounds of our appointed time Therefore it were meete we did now after this recreation of minde repaire thither where we may haue some refreshing to our bodies and if it please you Sir to goe with me wee shall finde little fare and great welcome Apollos Agreed friend Aquila so ye will passe your word to me that at our next conference ye will doe as much for my sake I had rather feede with you of your little with such great loue as you will sawce it with all then to haue great aboundance of good cheere with little sound good-will The eighth Dialogue Entreating of Sanctification the third maine fruite of Faith Aquila SIR I am glad ye are come I had so long waited for you that I began to doubt lest you had been someway letted that you could not haue kept appointment which I would haue beene sorry for Apollos No good friend not so I would haue sent you word of it if there had beene any such matter my late comming was occasioned by some vnlooked for affaires It is not with men of my function as it is with you and men of your condition who hauing lookt to your selues and some few which depend on you or haue to deale with you there is an end of your care but our care stretcheth further and is publike not priuate onely Wee know not when wee haue done so many sundry occasions of employment offer themselues so many soule cases so many soule necessities there be Sathan will find vs worke enough wee must be faine to wake when others sleepe and though I will not mention any party to you yet the matter about which I haue been stayed from you I will impart vnto you It was of one that did acknowledge himselfe to beleeue truly vnfainedly in Christ for the remission of his sinnes and yet doubted of his sanctification he found his heart so encombred and toyled with the vile corrupt motions of finne which arise vp in him as hee saide euen like sparkes out of a burning Furnace or as vapours out of a low moist and waterish ground Aquila See the notable malice and subtilty of that old Serpent when hee cannot preuaile against Gods Children in the maine to make them doubt of their faith and whether they haue their sinnes forgiuen them he troubles them about the bye and wil stirre vp doubting about their sanctification whether they be renewed If hee cannot come directly to strike at the heart yet he will haue a blow at the thigh or the leg so as hee may wound any where it is enough to him but with his malice he couples vnmatchable policy for by breeding scruple about our renewing by the Spirit of sanctification his purpose is to draw the temptation vnto this That therefore they haue no faith they are not forgiuen their sinnes they are none of Gods Children Apollos Ye say right and very truly touching Sathans drift in this temptation but herein Sathan declareth himselfe a sot to seeke to perswade one that hath his faith whole and vncrackt and doth beleeue himselfe iustified and pardoned that hee is not sanctified For whomsoeuer Christ iustifieth them at the same time he doth sanctifie These two workes in the soule of a Christian can no more be diuided then the two natures of God and man can be diuided in Christ for that death of Christ which hath merited remission of sinnes to the beleeuer the same hath merited the holy Ghost to be giuen him for the creating of holinesse in his heart And that faith which apprehends the merit of Christs death and obedience for iustification doth also lay hold vpon the vertue and power of his death and resurrection for the renewing of the minde and will vnto Gods Image of holinesse and righteousnesse Faith doth as well purifie the heart from filthinesse as deliuer it from guiltinesse of sinne Acts 15. And God the Father which gaue his Sonne to be righteousnesse made him also to be sanctification to vs not onely in that his holinesse imputed couereth all our prophanenesse of nature and life but for that the effects of his most holy Nature powred into our corrupt nature changeth both minde and will from darknesse of ignorance and sinne to the light of knowledge and holinesse Therefore Iustification and Sanctification be ioyned in Scripture as Chickens of one broode 1 Cor. 6. And Paul when hee had named the Ephesians Saints by calling and presently addeth the faithfull in Christ Iesus he would teach not onely who be worthy to be entitled Saints but also how the Elect come by this grace euen through faith in Christ Iesus faith as an Instrument receiuing as well the Spirit of Christ vnto sanctification or making vs Saints as his righteousnesse vnto iustification that wee may stand iust And thus faith of the truth and sanctification of the Spirit are put both together 2 Thes. 2. because they cannot be seuered but it is of necessity that he that beleeueth the truth of the promise for forgiuenesse of sin hath a power from the Spirit applying the vertue of Christ dead and raised for the destruction of sinne that he may walke holily And now we are thus put vpon this argument of sanctification if it please you wee will consider of it more distinctly and throughly Let me heare of you by what names this gift vseth to be called in Scripture and amongst Diuines and then how ye doe describe sanctification what be the causes and parts of this benefit in what measure we hold it how it is to be discerned in a mans selfe by what markes and such other things as doe concerne this doctrine Aquila As vnion with Christ incorporation into him engrafting or coniunction or communion with Christ doe all import
euill company alone but whatsoeuer occasions of sinne by place persons times or things must be taken heed of for occasions being taken hold of giue great strength to our sinfull nature but being taken heed of doe much pull it in I would also counsell men sometime to faste and refraine from meate and all pleasures of life for at certaine fit times they can beare it and alwayes to vse great temperance in meates and drinkes and other lawfull delights but aboue all thought and study must be had that these priuate meanes be holpen by the publike That men put themselues vnder a good Ministerie it being the principall instrument of our calling for howsoeuer the word of God read or preached if we respect the letters sillables hath not any strength at all nor the action of reading or preaching as it is performed by man how well soeuer they be as weake as water to this purpose of conuersion and calling yet being both the good and holy ordinances of God they become strong because the God of strength and might worketh by them yet in a seueral degree For the Scripture teacheth vs that ordinarily it pleaseth God by preaching Christ to saue such as beleeue 1 Cor. 1. 21. That is to say both to begin their saluation by it drawing them effectually out of their infidelity making them to beleeue Also to build them vp further in their holy faith and godlinesse of life vntill they come to possesse fully saluation in Heauen Hence it is that the preaching of Christ crucified is there verse 18. termed the power of God to saue that is the powerfull instrument by which it pleaseth God mightily to worke for the sauing of the Elect. Moreouer we are taught in Rom. 10. 14 15. that ordinarily we are not otherwise being of yeeres brought to haue faith to beleeue in God then by hearing such Preachers as be sent and furnished from God with authority and gifts for that ende as it is written How shall they beleeue in him except they doe heare and how shall they heare except they preach and how shall they preach except they be sent In the Acts of Apostles Chap. 26. 18. Saint Paul reporteth that hee was called to this very ende that by his preaching the Gospell hee might open the eyes of the blinde turne men from Satan to God from darkenesse to light Finally to omit infinite authorities of Scripture as Ephe. 4. 11 12. 1 Cor. 14. 24 25. and such like places which oftentimes yoake or ioyne preaching and beleeuing as cause and effect Acts 11. 20 21. and 14. 1. c. I doe beside reade of innumerable soules euen by thousands at once called to Christ by the opening and application of the word Albeit then we are to leaue to Christ to engender encrease faith and sanctification by what meane he himselfe will yet for our selues we are to depend vpon such meanes as wee find in the word to be ordained for such workes and this is principally by preaching the word that is by a faithfull deliuery of the sense of Scripture by the Scripture with wise and fit application of doctrines to exhortation confutation rebukes comforts threatnings as it is written He that prophecyeth speaketh to men to edification to exhortation to consolation 1 Cor. 14. 3. In the 24 25. verses of this Chapter we may reade the mighty operation of this Ordinance of Christ for begetting and confirmation of a liuely faith most notably to be commended If saith Paul all prophecie and there commeth in one that beleeueth not or is vnlearned he is rebuked of all and so are the secrets of his heart laide open and so he will fall downe on his face and worship God and say plainely that God is in you indeede By this it is cleere that together with preaching God coupleth his owne arme and power both to enlighten the minde to see inward and secret corruption hid from vs before and to bow the heart to reuerence and obey God As men therefore for the health of their bodies doe chuse places conuenient to dwell in where there is wholsome ayre sweete water and other commodities so they wil much more doe this duty to their soules for the health and safety thereof as to prouide for it good diet by the wholsome preaching of the word ordinarily on the Saboath which together with Catechizing and the benefit of publike prayer and Sacraments shall in Gods appointed houre effect this blessed worke of a true calling to their present comfort and euerlasting saluation of their soules Where these meanes be not at all vsed if so be they may be had or some and not all or vsed negligently or by fits and starts onely there the case will goe hard For howsoeuer our calling hath God alone for the Authour and beginner the finisher also and perfiter of it yet there is a necessity laide vpon vs to serue the gracious prouidence of Almighty God as instruments therein by attending and exercising the meanes appointed Therefore as Paul Acts 27. hauing a warrant from God of good security yet saide If these Mariners doe not tarry in the Ship we cannot be safe so I may say Gods ordinary dispensation considered that if these meanes be cast off and not cared for we cannot be called Now for such as be already called and can finde in themselues the true markes thereof as this is the greatest comfort in the World so if they will preserue this comfort then they must see to it that such meanes as it pleased God to blesse vnto them at first for the obtaining of an effectuall vocation and conuersion these very meanes they addict themselues vnto vsing them still and them all if there be no necessary let and being constant without being weary in a right manner also sincerely and humbly with a feruent desire of Gods glory aboue all things being much in prayer and godly meditations and as euer they will be thankefull for such a grace as their effectuall calling is let them striue to walke worthy of the vocation wherewith they are called in all lowlinesse and meekenesse long suffering and loue Ephe. 4. 1 2. Apol. Friend Aquila ye haue reported vnto me verie much of that which ye learned touching effectuall calling now if ye will let vs passe on to the other point namely the graces which doe necessarily goe with this calling except ye haue somewhat further to speake of this matter which if ye haue I will gladly giue you the hearing Aquila Yes Sir I will craue your patience alittle for I forslowed to tell you when ye asked me of the meanes of calling that it hath seemed good in the eyes of God to call some immediately without any ministry of Angels or Men as Adam in Paradise Abraham in Charran Paul in his iourney to Damascus to declare himselfe to be most free not bound to the meanes which are rather
for vs then for God who can without them pull a sinner out of the hell of his sinnes into the heauen of grace here and of glory hereafter Moreouer in the means which God vseth to work a calling there is to be marked a maruellous great simplicity especially now vnder the Gospell far from worldly shew pompe and power hauing committed the charge and commission of calling Kingdomes to the faith of the Gospell vnto his twelue Apostles who were men much remoued from the glittering glory of this World being meane men of low estate and condition here in earth and vsing no other meanes to effect the conuersion of the people to God then the preaching of the Gospell in all plainnesse without all wisedome of words and by feruent prayer with patient sufferings These were the weapons of their warfare which hauing no outward brauery or beauty to allure and draw liking or might and external force to compell yet proued mighty through God to cast downe strong holds and very high imaginations lifting vp themselues against God 2 Cor. 10. 4. And hauing once planted Churches and called infinite men and women to God by his simple Apostles and other their like helpers Euangelists and Prophets it hath pleased Christ to haue his mystical body further builded vp his Saints gathered and the worke of the Ministery done by Pastors and Teachers in the power of simple and euident demonstration of his truth And to this ende he would haue this heauenly treasure put into such earthen vessels that the power of calling as it is of God and not of men so it might appeare and be knowne and acknowledged so to be to his owne eternall praise Also it would be further considered that the most good God in his most wise and gracious prouidence so disposeth things here below as that hee causeth afflictions and miseries crosses and sundry troubles which in their owne nature are bitter and greeuous and a part of the curse threatned to mans sinne and more likely to driue men quite away from God yet he causeth them I say very often to serue his purpose of helping on the calling of his Elect who by meanes of such punishments as are laide vpon them by Gods hand for sinne and inordinate walking in the time of their vnbeliefe before they came to Christ are not a little tamed and so made the fitterto hearken and to stoope to Christ Whose voyce they presumptuously contemne till the crosse hath brought downe their great spirits and stomackes as is to be seene in Paul whose sudden and terrible striking downe from his Horse and amazing him by lightning from Heauen made him somewhat milde and tractable As also in Manasses and in the thiefe vpon the Crosse who were called the one when his body was laden with Irons in prison the other when he was fastened to the Crosse suffering a very painefull and infamous punishment Neither is it onely the will of God to vse sometimes no meanes or weake meanes or vnlikely meanes but sometimes euen quite contrary meanes to helpe forwards the conuersion of a sinner to wit euen sinne it selfe Making some one grosse fall or many grosse sinnes which his chosen haue run into and liued in before their calling to be as a weight or plummet of lead to bring and keepe downe their proude hearts and so to shame and terrifie their consciences so as by that meanes there is a passage made for grace more easily to enter in them Whereas otherwise they would haue set to both their shoulders and their brest to haue kept it out if their fiercenesse and courage had not beene so danted and dismayed with the sight and horror of their owne manifold and monstrous iniquities And suffer mee here to remember my selfe in one matter that whereas I said to you before that for God to draw one from sinne to Christ is as easie as for vs to call one to vs or to speake a word I would haue ye to vnderstand it in regard of the infinitenesse of his might to which the greatest and hardest things to our sence and opinion are as easie as the least and slightest things When he would create the World there being no matter existent before he needed but command it was done and that vnformed masse out of which all creatures were hewen being extant by his commandement hee did no more but say Let it be light and out of it there presently sprang light and so of all other things which he made they were made by his word without Instrument or trauell euen as now they all consist by his word It is right so in the conuersion and calling of a sinner The dead in their sinnes heare the voyce of the Son of God and hearing they liue Ioh. 5. 25. And howsoeuer in this worke of new creation there is not onely no present matter to worke on but an vtter repugnancy and rebellion in our nature fighting and warring against God being strengthened and armed with the whole power of Satan and the World yet these many and mighty obstacles and hinderances are without any difficulty ouercome by him to whom nothing is hard and vnpossible In that he vseth such meanes as wee haue spoken of both for preparing to our calling and effecting of it yet it is not because he could not performe this worke by his very word onely but because so it pleased him and to enure vs to obedience Howbeit for all this our calling is not to be helde a slight worke as if I speake this any whit to lessen and diminish the credit and praise of Gods grace and power but rather the more to extoll and magnifie them in as much as our vocation to Christ being a worke as glorious and wonderfull as our creation of nothing is if not more and as the resurrection from the dead which yet to the wise men of the world those great Philosophers haue euer seemed things absurd and impossible so as they haue scorned the doctrine of these things Acts 17. 28 29. May wee know say they what this new doctrine meaneth and againe verse 32. when they heard of the resurrection from the dead some mocked yet in the calling of a sinner to faith in Christ there being that exceeding greatnesse of diuine power set on worke as was expressed in raysing Iesus from the graue see Ephe. 1. 19 20. for all this to bring a wretched sinner held and lockt vp in the bolts and fetters of his lusts captiuated to Satan and vnder the power of that mighty Potentate I say to bring such a one to know beleeue in to loue Christ so easily as wee would call one to come to vs or as it is to vtter a word how doth this aduance the praise of Gods almighty grace to which sinne the world and hell doe quickly though most vnwillingly yeelde And here to shut vp this Treatise of calling because I haue beene very
whether they were little or great against God or men after this there followes a reuelation of all the fearefull punishments and curses temporall and eternall for the plaguing of body and soule now and for euer by the threatning and denunciation whereof and haply by a sensible experience of some part of it the holy Spirit breedeth terrour feare and astonishment vpon the view and apprehension of so many erroneous sinnes and such lamentable dolefull estate as is due thereunto Hereof called the Spirit of feare and bondage Rom. 8. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Whereupon the saide spirit bringeth to a speciall griefe vpon the sence of Gods heauy wrath for some especial sinne called Pricking of the heart Acts 2. 37. whereby it bereaueth men of their chiefe desires putteth them out of conceit with the best things in themselues turning their mirth to mourning their chiefe delight to bitter griefe taking downe their hearts courage and stomack because they see they haue to doe with a righteous most rigorous Iudge who will remit nothing of his iustice but taketh reuenge vpon all sinne and iniquities and finding no strength or meanes in themselues to escape his wrath they despaire of euer obtaining his fauour by any their owne worth or goodnesse These are the workes of the Spirit in the ministry of the Law and in Ioh. 16. 8. They are called the rebuking of the world of sinne Here the office of the Law ceasseth and can bring no neerer to Christ but onely to bewray vnto vs our great neede and want of his sufferings righteousnesse and thereof the Law is termed our Schoole-master to Christ Galat 3. 24. Thus then the Spirit hauing brought the sinnefull soule by the preaching of the Law in the view and dread of her iniquity and misery to beholde what great and extreame neede shee hath of Christ and of euery droppe of his blood of his Spirit and of euery grace thereof doth after this by the Word of the Gospell begin to open her a doore to the grace and fauour of God shewing God vnto her as a Redeemer and Sauiour of sinners freely offering mercy for forgiuenesse and saluation in the promises of the Word enlightening the minde to know the truth and certainty of them mouing the iudgement to yeeld and subscribe vnto them being known to be from God and then further making poore sinners to perceiue and beleeue that all sinnes how many and horrible soeuer for all the multitude and hugenesse of them are pardonable and such as may be forgiuen them as being far and very farre lesser then the infinite mercies of God and most vnualuable merites of Christs passion and death the infinite price and worth whereof being wrought by the same Gospell to see and consider the distrustfull hearts be therewithall stirred vp by the holie Ghost to make particular confession of sinnes and to seeke mercy and pardon of them from God by Iesus Christ with trust of finding it as also to hunger and thirst after that perfect righteousnesse of Christ there set before them and finally by the operation of that Spirit applying to them the promises concerning Christ and righteousnesse by him they are sure'y perswaded that they belong to themselues wherupon flying from the terrour of iustice threatned in the Law they dare approach to the Throne of grace saying Abba Father in respect whereof the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of adoption of faith and of a sound minde Rom. 8. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 7. Aquila I doe acknowledge my selfe now well content with this your Anatomy and opening of the works of the Spirit in calling illuminating and opening the heart that it may beleeue Christ to saluation whereby I see how farre many are from faith which suppose themselues neere to it and also perceiue how manifoldly and greatly the Elect which doe beleeue are beholden to God for his wondrous working in them And lastly more and more discerne the continuall and sincere preaching of the Law and Gospell to be of great vse in the Church that Gods Elect thereby may bee translated from infidelity to faith Now if you thinke good we will hold our selues content to haue proceeded thus farre at this present and at our next meeting we will conferre further if God will concerning this great worke of Faith to the creating whereof we haue seene so many and sundry workes of the Spirit to be behouefull and requisite Apollos I am well pleased so to doe for my businesse calleth me away and it may be also your Family or calling may craue your presence and meete it is that these lesser duties giue place to the greater At our next meeting together I will try your knowledge about the nature and office of faith and other things which belong to that worthy and noble gift the Mother-gift and Queene of all graces which bee inspired into mans hear The third part of the Dialogue concerning a true and liuely Faith in Iesus Christ. Apollos WEll saide Neighbour Aquila I see you will not faile me in that you keep your appointed time so duly for you are here euen iust at the time we agreed vpon Aquila Sir I loue to stand to my word in euery thing which is in my power to performe I will be aduised what I promise but hauing once giuen my faith I will not breake it willingly Fidelity in keeping promise with men is one of those Christian graces which are proper to Gods children as there will be occasion hereafter to declare but in the meane time the thing that wee are now to deale in it is not concerning ciuill faith betweene man and man but about Christian faith in the promises which God hath made to man Which because it is a large theame and wil take vp much time I haue purposely set apart some and ouercome othersome businesse that wee might intend the through-sifting of this point Apollos And my leysure doth serue mee very well Therefore because you thought it no ease vnto you to propound Questions ye shall now vndergoe the burthen of an answer which you liked so well of Let me see how you proue that Faith is a fruite of our calling and a gift proper to the Elect seeing it is reported of many that they haue beleeued which yet were not Elect as of Simon Magus Actes 8. 13. Also some in Iohn 2. 23 24. Yea of the very Diuels that they doe beleeue Iames 2. 19. In which place verse 26. the same Apostle telleth vs of a dead faith which one may haue and yet be no true Christian. Aquila For your former Question whether it be a fruite of our effectuall Calling If there were no euident testimony to proue it yet the thing is plaine enough for all know which know any thing that in our Calling wee are made to beleeue this being the very terminus or end wherein the worke of our Calling resteth to bring vs
to Faith in the Sonne of God Of which yet there is proofe by expresse places or good consequence out of holy Scripture When the Apostle saith Rom. 8. 30. Whom he calleth them he instifieth of this it followeth that men being called and iustified at one time and all doe or should know that there can bee no Iustification but by Faith that therefore in our Calling we are made to beleeue vnto Iustification Againe such places as yoke preaching and beleeuing together as Actes 11. 20 21. They preached the Lord Iesus and a great number beleeued and Acts 14. 1. They spake so as that a great number beleeued with innumerable places of the like kinde These manifestly confirme to vs that where G O D S Spirit effectually calleth to the heart by the call and voyce of the Preacher to the care there followeth Faith as an immediate worke of such a Calling Now to your second demand I answer not euery Faith is a fruite of effectuall calling and proper to the Elect for there is a Faith which is so called vnproperly as a painted fire is called fire or a dead man is named a man Such is the faith which doth accompany a common outward Calling and may be found in hypocrites and wicked men and in some of them there is historicall faith onely by a generall illumination being made to vnderstand and beleeue the doctrine of Scriptures to be of G O D and therefore to bee most true and worthy of credit and thus much the Diuels doe beleeue and so farre the blinde Scribes and Pharises came but in others of them the Spirit worketh further to bringthem to haue a certaine ioy delight in that which they know and beleeue with a kind of loue and liking to the Ministers of the word and a reuerence after a sort vnto them and to the message which they bring Yea moreouer they are brought by the same Spirit to see and confesse a great neede of Christ and to haue some hope that their sinnes may be pardoned them to desire it in some manner to confesse their sinnes and that often and particularly to aske pardon and that onely in the name and for the merit of Christ and all this while their Faith is but temporary they neuer come to bee rooted and grounded in Christ and so their faith doth faile them and vanish away Such was the faith of them which were likened to the stony ground Mat. 13 also of Simon Magus of Demas of Iudas and of all hypocrites who are deceiued themselues and doe deceiue others with the shadow and appearance of faith in stead of a true liuely and substantiall faith Which in Scripture for distinction from dead Fath is called an effectuall Faith 1 Thess. 1. 3 and Faith vnfained 1 Tim. 1. 5. and Faith of Christ and Faith of the operation of God Col. 2. 12. and Faith of the Elect Titus 11. giuen to them who are ordained to life Acts 13. 48. which euidenceth vnto vs that there is a true liuely Faith which springs from election as a fruit of it and is proper vnto the chosen Apollos I desire to heare of you what this liuely Faith is 2. wherein it differeth from the faith of hypocrites and wicked men 3. what be the parts thereof 4. and also if it haue any degrees and what they be Aquila This liuely Faith is a precious gift of God enabling the Christian soule to know and beleeue the whole doctrine of God as it is contained in the Word especially that which concerneth saluation by Christ and to apprehend or receiue particularly and certainly Christ offered in that doctrine vnto eternall life in heauen When I affirme Faith to be the gift of God it agreeth with Scripture Ephe. 2. 8. Faith is the gift of God which is to teach that men haue it not by industry as they haue Arts and Sciences nor by nature as they haue reason memory speech for then all men might beleeue But all men haue not faith 2 Thes. 3. 2. Which must admonish the faithfull of thankfulnesse in acknowledging that thorow Gods great goodnesse it is giuen them of God to beleeue especially seeing it is no ordinary gift or common which all professors may haue but a very precious and rare gift 2 〈◊〉 1. 1. being giuen to Gods owne peculiar and chosen people a people purchased with an inualuable price This gift of faith looketh to the whole word and doctrine of God Whatsoeuer is in Scripture taught and set downe it knoweth and beleeueth it to be most true be it a word of rebuke or admonition or exhortation or threatning or commandement and precept it doth beleeue and know all that God speaketh to be most true and faithfull mouing the heart and that effectually to receiue the word of admonition to grceue at the rebukes of the word for sinne to obey the word of commanding to feare at threatnings faith hauing obiect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no other euen or equall obiect but God speaking in his word as it is written Abraham beleeued God Gen. 15. 6. And againe The people beleeued God and his seruant Moses Exod. 14. 31. Howbeit the word of promise of the Euangelicall promise promising Christ and with him remission of our sinnes righteousnesse and life euerlasting this word is the more speciall neere and proper obiect and marke that the eye of a liuely faith looketh vnto and betweene this faith and Christ promised or the promise of Christ there is a mutuall relation or reference the promise being set forth to be beleeued by faith and faith embracing and leaning vppon this promise it findeth no stay to rest on for saluation till it come to this word of promise For as mans naturall life is preserued by eating yet not by eating euery thing but by eating wholsome and fit foode So the soule is saued by beleeuing Ephe. 2. 8. yet not by beleeuing euery truth nor euery truth of the Bible but by beleeuing that Word of truth which is the Gospel This faith of Christ crucified saueth there being nothing whereby we can be saued but Christ onely Acts 4. And no gift of God whereby we can haue Christ but faith He dwelleth in our hearts by Faith Eph. 3. For this power of receiuing Christ vnto saluation belongs to faith onlie amongst all the gifts of God Where of there is cleere proofe for it is neuer written of any other gift that thereby Christ is receiued but this is attributed often vnto faith as Iohn 1. 12. Beleeuing in the name of Christ and receiuing him are put the one for the other As many as receiued him to them hee gaue prerogatiue to be the Sonnes of God euen to them which beleeue in his name And Rom. 5. 11. By whom wee which before were sinners and enemies verse 8. 10. haue now that is since we had faith to beleeue to instification verse 1. receiued the atonement And hereunto that in Galat. 3. 14.
It is written that by faith we receiue the promise of the Spirit that is the promise concerning Christ and righteousnesse by him which is called the Spirit because the Spirit is Authour of it reuealer of it and by his operation the applier of it This receiuing of Christ by faith it is done by a double act or worke one of the minde renewed seeing acknowledging and considering him as our owne Sauiour giuen to vs of God with all his merites and rich gifts the other of our will renewed embracing affecting and with ioy feeling his mercies being fully satisfied with him now made vnto vs of God wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1. 30. and become to vs as well of water springing vp in vs to life euerlasting Ioh. 7. 38. Now the reason why Christ with his benefits are receiued rather by faith then by any other gift of the mind is very plaine for it is so decreed of God in his eternall counsell that neither by repentance hope or loue or any other grace then by beleeuing onely we should become partakers of Christ and his righteousnesse according to that which is written This is the will of him that sent me saith Christ that euery one that seeth the Sonne of God and beleeueth in him shall haue eternall life Iohn 6. 40. And Galat. 3. 8. It is saide that the Scripture foreseeing that is God foreseeing and fore-appointing and in Scripture long before it came to passe reuealing that God would instifie the Gentiles through faith And this is a sure rule in Diuiniry that whatsoeuer comes to passe in time was ordained to be before all time therefore the Word and experience hauing taught that whosoeuer lay hold on Christ to their saluation it is by faith they doe it it must follow hereof that it was Gods will from all eternity The end of Gods counsell herein is twofold First is because this way of receiuing Christ with his righteousnesse to life it taketh from vs all matter of reioycing and boasting in our selues and giueth the whole glory vnto God as it is written God hath set forth Christ to be a reconciliation through faith to this end to declare his righteousnesse that is that he might be known to others as hee is in himselfe to be a most true and mercifull God in his promises to the praise of his righteousnesse And a little after Where is then the reioycing It is excluded By what Law that is to say by what doctrine of workes No but by the Law of faith Therefore it is written Rom. 4. 3. That Abraham had by his workes nothing whereof to reioyce with God but by his beleeuing the promises of Christ he had for when we must goe out of our selues for eternall life and all that belongs to it to receiue that from another in whole and in part what can there be left for vs to glory in and what can be more to the glory of God then to be acknowledged to be the Sauiour of empty miserable beggars which haue nothing of their owne but the old ragges of sinne and wretchednesse And how must not this exceedingly reioyce the beleeuing heart to see it selfe blessed with Christ and all his merites and that freely Another end of Gods counsell herein was not onely to prouide for the glory of his owne grace but for the stablenesse of our mindes that we might be sure of the thing promised which could not haue beene if it had come to vs any other way then by beleeuing the promise therefore the promise by Christ and the heauenly inheritance by him purchased it must be by faith that it might come by grace and the promise might be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 Rom. 4. 16. Apollos I haue willingly heard you opening the nature and proper office of a liuely faith the faith of Gods Elect enabling them euen to the apprehension of Christ which cannot be done by the faith of hypocrites and wicked men Whereof it is that this finely faith is termed the faith of Christ not onely because Christ is the giuer of it or the proper and especiall obiect but especially because it carrieth vs to Christ. As the sicke of the palsie who himselfe could not goe was by others carried to Christ to be healed of him Mat. 8. 1. 2 So wee being maymed and lame yea dead yet when wee thorow grace are quickened to beleeue the promise wee are carried to Christ as it were on the shoulders of our faith which is also the foote whereby we walk to him the eye whereby we see him the mouth whereby wee eate him the hand of our soule whereby wee receiue him and apply him to our 〈◊〉 decreed to bee thus by his Father for the manifestation of his truth and mercy and for our benefit in the establishing of our mindes in the assurance of enioying of Christ and all the good promised by him Now if ye please branch out this faith into his parts and acquaint vs with the seuerall measures of it that so the doctrine of faith may yet bee fuller and cleerer to our vnderstandings for I thinke ye are of this minde that all haue not a like faith neither doe ye take faith as some thinke to bee onely a generall knowledge and 〈◊〉 to the doctrine of Christ let me heare you what you will say to these masters Aquila Here in I will apply my selfe to fulfill your desire if first I doe deliuer somewhat vnto you of the two adioynts or qualities proper to this faith to wit particularity and certainty it being a particular and certaine receiuing of Christ Iesus First for certainty it is of the nature of faith to breede certainty or assurance of the thing beleeued we are not more certaine that we see what we see or do hold what we haue in our hands then we are certaine of hauing and enioying that which by faith we see and receiue In as much as doubting is ioyned with faith the faithfull hauing many doubts this commeth of the weakenesse and infirmity of faith as the shaking and daddering of the hand proceeds of some naturall imbecility and feeblenesse and yet the hand holds surely that it hath caught so it commeth of the frailety of faith that we stagger and doubt O ye of little faith why doe ye 〈◊〉 Mat. 6. yet faith for the nature of it doth surely receiue and hold the promise Hence it is that faith is defined for the certainty and cleerenesse of it to bee the ground or subsistence of things hoped for the euidence or demonstration of things which are not seene Heb. 11. 1. The meaning whereof is thus much as if the holy Ghost should say Faith is the very substance or essence of things hoped for because the things which bee but hoped for are yet to come and be voide of essence or being faith therefore whereby they are beleeued to be is a ceraine essence of
of Christ by faith there belongs these fiue workes of a renewed soule The first is to approue the worthinesse of the doctrine of grace knowne and beleeued to hold and esteeme it better then all Merchandize precious stones or the finest gold 〈◊〉 3. 14. yea and to iudge both these and whatsoeuer things else but dung in respect of Christ Phil. 3. 8. Then secondly to desire Christ and his merites offered in that doctrine euen as hungry persons desire meat and as Sampson thirsted after drinke when he said Giue me drinke or I die Iudges 15. 18. Thirdly so to lay hold on Christ as the man in Acts laide hold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not let goe againe and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to haue 〈◊〉 hold on a ship hee would not 〈◊〉 his hold goe till his hand was stricken off Fourthly to delight ones soule in Christ as the gracious Wife delighteth in her Husbands loue or as one is delighted with some great treasure or with the sweetnesse of hony Lastly looking for the full fruition of Christ and all his benefits as Dauid lookt for the promised Kingdome and the people of Israel lookt for their full deliuerance out of AEgypt and Babylon or as the Fathers lookt for the Messiah his first comming in the flesh Thus haue I shewed you my knowledge about the parts of faith and for the degrees thereof it is sure that there be sundry measures of this liuely faith as the Apostle 〈◊〉 when he saith The 〈◊〉 of God is reuealed from faith to faith Rom 1. That is to say from such a faith as is subiect to waxing and growth and 〈◊〉 daily from one degree to another it being also plaine by other places that there is a little faith and a great faith a weake faith and a strong faith Rom. 4. 19. 20. Mat. 16. 8. But seeing this matter will require some time to discourse it and we haue drawn the day already to night wee will now depart to visit our Families and to doe such offices there as belong to our Callings Apollos I hold it best so to doe if I say first this one word that that gift of faith which requireth so many seuerall workes of the Spirit for the 〈◊〉 of it and needeth so many actions for the setting it on worke and performing that which is the proper 〈◊〉 of it it cannot chuse but bee a most precious thing greatly to be sought and loued of all that liue in 〈◊〉 Church and loue their owne happinesse And now Aquila fare ye well till wee meete againe which I pray you let it be to morrow at the same houre and in this same place if God will The fourth part of the Dialogue touching the degrees and diuers measures of a liuely Faith Aquila I Haue made haste because I would not disappoint you and to tell you truth I am vnlike a Schoole-boy in this case who when he parts from his Booke he cares not how long it be ere they meete againe contrariwise when he and his play meete they play loath to depart Now I when our conference is broke off my fingers itch till we ioyne againe I find no better gaine then that that comes of time thus well bestowed for this sticketh by vs and enricheth to God-ward when worldly gaine fleeteth away apace and serueth for this life onely Apollos I pray you then let vs proceede in our purpose We began to speak of the degrees of a liuely faith and to shew that neither all Gods Children haue like measure of it nor euery one alwayes the selfe-same measure for indeede it is with the Church of God as with a Family or fold where the persons of the household be some young and tender some aged and lusty and in the flocke there are both Lambes and Sheepe so it is in Christs Family and fold there be Christians of all sorts some of ripe age for wisedome some children in vnderstanding some like lambes for their infirmity in knowledge and grace some like sheepe for their spirituall strength and growth And as a man differeth from himselfe in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being sometime 〈◊〉 Infant and afterwards 〈◊〉 to the full strength and age of a man so euery true Christian in his spirituall estate differeth from himselfe being not so strong in faith at first when he beginnes to beleeue as afterwards This being the condition of Gods people to bee as trees planted in an Orchard which spread themselues and are more fruitful the longer they continue so are the faithfull as plants in Gods house they are more full of faith and fruit in their old age Psal. 92. 13 14. Whereunto tend those frequent exhortations in the Word to encrease more and more and to grow in grace and to ioyne grace to grace and still to hasten to perfection Apollos Sir seeing you haue taken the 〈◊〉 out of my hand will it please you to wield it now you haue it and I will make bold to aske you what I desire to remember of that which was taught vs about this matter of sundry degrees of faith And first seeing the Apostle writeth that Faith is one Ephe. 4. 5. and that Saint Peter saith All the Elect haue attained like precious faith 2 Pet. 1. 1. how truly then may we affirme that there is a little and great a weake and strong faith Apollos Well friend Aquila you take me at the aduantage I had meant to haue troubled you with this charge for that I see you can well discharge it yet I will not refuse it seeing you put it vpon me Therefore to your demand this I say When Paul saith there is one faith he speaketh not of the degrees of 〈◊〉 and little and great weake and strong be but names of degrees but hee meaneth the substance of 〈◊〉 to be but one and the obiect to be but one which is Christs or one doctrine concerning saluation by him and in the other place of Peter the faith of all the Elect is saide indeede to be like precious but not like firme strong He doth not teach that it is of like quantity and measure but of like quality and worth for the faith of euery one of the Elect hath the same Authour euen the holy Ghost the same meanes the Gospell and Word of truth the same obiect whereunto it looketh Christ and his righteousnesse Also one and the same marke whereunto it tendeth the glory of God and saluation of the soule In all these things there is likenesse and agreement betweene the weake and strong faith yea and sundry other things there be wherein this likenesse holds for euery faith euen the strongest is still vnperfect we beleeue in part as we doe but know in part the best beleeuer hath need to say Lord encrease my faith It doth therefore belong to euery degree of faith as a thing common to take the vse of
sensitiue life their property is to encrease vnto a certaine proportion whereunto nature aymeth as ye may see in plants and in beasts and birds so it is in the spirituall life it will not stay in beginnings but loueth still to attaine to that proportion and measure appointed to it of God As by the exhortation of Peter may be gathered Grow in grace and in knowledge of our Lord 1 Pet. 5. verse last for the faithful doe that which by him they are exhorred to doe and by likening faith to a graine of mustard-seede whose quality is to grow till it be a large tree but though this be the nature of sauing grace to waxe and encrease yet exhortations to quicken mens care they may doe very well Christians are to be called vpon so to be 〈◊〉 and thankfull for euery true measure of true faith as withall they neuer content themselues with any measure labouring after perfection This it is we desire faith Paul euen your perfection 2 Cor. 13. And sure it is the will of God it should be so 1 Thes. 4. 3. I beseech you 〈◊〉 en encrease more and more The which will of God his Children are the rather to hearken vnto because as their faith encreaseth so will all their graces and comforts proportionably encrease for as a man beleeueth so he loueth and so he feareth and so he obeyes and so hee prayes And after the measure of faith and of the fruits thereof so will be the measure of glory hereafter he that had two talents and the other which had fiue by vsing and encreasing them gained this of the Lord to haue rule ouer the more Cities The examples of the Prophets Apostles and other Saints which haue continually striuen to encrease in godlinesse must also stirre vp others to doe the like wherein we shall be followers not of them onely but of Christ Iesus of whom it is reported that he encreased in stature and wisedome and fauour with God and men Luke 2. v. last Aquila If it please ye let mee heare what ye count strength of faith or a strong faith which is the other or second measure of faith before spoken of and whether in this measure also there be not differing measures of strong faith one to be stronger then another and which is the highest pitch of faith that can bee attained vnto here in this our pilgrimage and by what steps the children of God climbe vp thereunto Apollos Friend Aquila you will I see prouide mee worke enough your questions be like a chaine with many linkes which must be loosed not all together for that were a breaking and not a loosing but apart one after another That there is such a measure of faith which deserues to be termed strong it is very plaine by these few Texts following Abraham being strong in faith Rom. 4. 20. And O woman great is thy faith Mat. 15. 28. and of the Centurions faith I haue not saith Christ found so great faith no not in Israel Luke 7. 9. That the Centurion which was a Gentile by nature a Souldier by profession and saw in Christs person for outward appearance nothing saue weakenesse and infirmity should yet haue such firme perswasion of his power and goodnesse hauing no particular promise as to beleeue and to be resolued in his minde that Iesus was able to helpe his sicke seruant and that without his bodily presence or touching onely by speaking the word hee should chase away such an inueterate malady this was a strong faith indeede The like ye may see in Abraham that hee being an hundred yeeres old and his wife barren stricken with age neuer hearing of any before to be made Parents at these yeeres yet without any former example to beleeue vpon the word and promise of God that he should be a father and that of such a childe of whom should come Nations and in whom all nations shuld be blessed and when he was to be sacrificed yet then to be perswaded surely that God would keepe that promise this was a great faith and a strong But this is none of the linkes of your chaine the first whereof is when faith may be counted strong and great when by the worke of the Spirit ones heart is carried beyond that desire of pardon which before was spoken of euen vnto a sure and setled perswasion that through Gods mercies in Christ his owne sinnes are pardoned to him and hee fully reconciled to God vnto the cleere certainty of his owne saluation The weake faith already described is truly perswaded that sinnes may be forgiuen and desires to haue them forgiuen with some certainty to obtaine but this strong faith besides desire and certainty hath setlednesse and fulnesse of perswasion that all is already remitted and couered As it is reported of Abrahams faith that he was fully assured thereby that God which had shewed himselfe willing to promise was also able to doe it Rom. 4. 19. Such a perswasion was in Iob when he could say I will trust in God though he kill me Iob. 13. 15. And againe I know my Redeemer liueth Iob 19. 25. And in Dauid when hee so confidently professed that hee could lacke nothing because God was his Shepheard Psal. 23. 1. and that God was his shield and fortresse his buckler and his strong Sauiour Psal. 18. 1 2. Lastly in Paul and others we know 2 Cor. 5. 1. and Rom. 8. 35. I am perswaded neither height nor depth shall separate vs. Yet take this withall that when I speake of this strong faith that it is a full perswasion I meane it not absolutely as if there were any such strength of faith as hath no weakenesse no wants or defects at all vnlesse haply in some particular thing as in that which was said to Abraham that he should be Father of many Nations wherein it is saide hee was not weake in faith or doubted through vnbeleefe Rom. 4. 19. For all faith as before was saide is vnperfect but strong faith is called a full perswasion in comparison of a weaker faith which hath not such a measure of certainty and perswasion Now to the second linke whether this measure of strong faith doth not admit sundry measures and differences It is true there is so Moses might beleeue more strongly then Iacob and Iob more strongly then Moses and Dauid more strongly then Iob and Paul yet more fully then Dauid and Abraham more strongly then they all Amongst men of strong constitution some may excell others in courage and strength so amongst them which be strong in faith one may exceed another in power of beleeuing but of this strong faith there be two euident degrees The first is of such as throughfull assurance of faith doe feele in their hearts vnspeakable ioy and glorious 1 Pet. 1. 8. euen in tribulations Rom. 5. 3. Others which be fully perswaded in their soules of Gods mercies towards them in Christ and yet are without feeling any
and hope Rom. 15. 4. Therefore let faint sinners plucke vp their feeble hands that hang downe and their weake knees and the rather calling to minde that they haue by vowe in their Baptisme and by promise often iterated in the profession of Christianitie bound themselues as to doe the cōmandements so to beleeue the promises of God And better it were wee had neuer made such a vow then to breake it hauing once made it Eccl. 5 5. But what encoragement shold this be to thinke not onely of that band wherewith we haue obliged our selues to God to beleeue him vpon his worde which as a pure virgin neuer was defiled with any vntruths but also to weigh the bond wherewith God hath bound himselfe to vs not onely in our Baptisme but namely in the Lords Supper where vnder his seale hee assureth euery true beleeuer that examineth himselfe and so eateth and drinketh that he is as verily partaker of Christ and of his passion with all the fruits thereof to remission and mortification of sin as he is partaker of the outward pledges of his body blood they being particular testimonies of assurance to euery one of his owne saluation by Christ according to the tenor of the couenant so as a token from a most trusty friend cānot more confirme our perswasions of his loue towardes vs then the Lords Supper duly receyued may warrant and assure our heartes of the especial loue of God in Christ for our eternal happinesse Vnto all this we may adde as a spurre to quicken vs the great and diuers hurtes which will redound to our selues if we beleeue not God and the maruellous dishonour that thereby should be offered to himself For if once vnbeleefe take roote in our hearts a bitter root or roote of bitternesse it will prooue For by it all our actions naturall ciuill religious indifferent good actions will be defiled and made hatefull to God For Whatsoeuer is not of faith it is sinne Rom. 14 23. And without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11 3. and to him whose minde and conscience is vncleane thorow infidelity and sinne all things are vncleane Titus 1 5. And what a matter this is let any man duly consider of it that as faith gets all sinnes both to bee forgiuen and to turne to our good Rom. 8 28. so infidelity gets all our best workes to become naught to turne to harme to vs and offence to God Neither this onely but through vnbeleefe we do euen bind vp the hāds of God and seale vp the fountain of his liberality that it should not flow vpon vs either in earthly benefites or heauenly graces His protections and deliuerances in our dangers and against our enemies are withhelde As it is sayde in the Gospell Christ could doe no great workes there in Capernaum because of their vnbeleefe so our vnbeleefe doeth after a sort disable God at the least it depriues vs of his gracious good things and great preseruations Neither onely doth it keep good things from vs but pulleth down euill things yea euen vpon Gods Children their particular and partiall vnbeleefe draweth many and greeuous iudgements from heauen Moses for his distrust died in the Wildernesse and might not be suffered to enter the Land of Canaan Deuterono cha 4 4. Also Zachariah otherwise a iust man yet for his vnbeleefe sake was stricken dumbe and for manie moneths was not able to speake Luke chap. 1. vers 22. If the vnbeleefe of the godly being but an infirmitie of faith were so sharpely chastised what marueile if the infidelity of the wicked being a meere absence of faith do cause vnto them many heauy plagues in this life Examples whereof are rife in the Book of God and in common life but the chiefe hurt of incredulity is that it shutteth out from the blessed and glorious kingdome of God For without shall be fearefull vnbeleeuers Reuel 21. 8. yea and throweth downe head-long into eternall perdition to suffer vengeance in flaming fires because they obey not the Gospel of Christ For he that beleeues not the wrath of God is vpon him Iohn 3. 36. and such shall be condemned Marke 16. 16. So as if obtaining of all promised good things cannot be offorce sufficient to stirre vp our dul hearts to embrace the promises yet when the manifold and certaine euils which befall men for want of faith be thought vpon this should helpe to awake our heauy mindes to make vs abhorre euery vnbeleeuing thought chiefly considering that the danger to our selues by yeelding to vnbeleefe is nothing though it be much most fearefull being compared to the dishonour that will thereby redound to God for by our vnbeliefe he is spoiled as much as in vs is of his essence being namely his mercy truth and power which is to make him no God For if we make him a lyar as euery one doth which beleeueth not in the onely begotten Son of God 1 Ioh. 5. 10. then we strip him and rob him of his chiefe glory yea of his very essence Nay which is yet more feareful we doe equal match him vnto Satan as if there were no more truth in his sayings then in the father of lies as on the one side then they doe much glorifie God that doe beleeue his word witnessing of him that he is true in his promises able for performance Rom. 4. 21. yea they do themselues a speciall honour for they doe make God a testimoniall as it were and set to their hand seale that he is faithfull Ioh. 3. 33. So on the other side they do exceedingly dishonour themselues and God also which doe through infidelity cast away his promises Thus you haue heard good friend Aquila the best encouragements which I can thinke of to quicken a fainting faith which if they hit vpon a presuming heart will make it more presumptuous but if they meet with a beleeuing humbled heart for whose sake I haue collected them then they will be as drie sticks heaped vpon a dull dying fire to reuiue and cheere it Now that ye are so well acquainted with the vsuall discouragements hinderances of faith you hauing had so many strong assaults made against your faith if you wil deliuer them and also shew how they may be repulsed ouercome it will doe well in my opinion and so wee will shut vp our conference about faith Aquila I haue a good mind to doe the one that is to lay forth the obiections which the flesh Satan make against the stedtastnesse of faith to shake it but for the other you that haue truly opened the encouragements can also tell how for to fit them for the resistance and beating backe of hinderances First how shall I be assured that the gracious promises offorgiuenesse by Christ and other promises of the Gospell are from God and not deuised by men Apollos Tell me haue you not been moued to doubt whether there
Well shall we consent and agree to set vpon onr worke afresh For therefore ye are come I am sure Aquila It is so I come about that very thing and haue here indeed somewhile expected you It is my quality you say right that first hauing made choyse of good and rightful things I loue to goe thorow stitch and like the constant builder to proceede in laying one stone vpon another till he come to the loouer But goe we to our taske it is about the first and cheefe fruite of a liuely faith which hauing but lightly mentioned before as in his passage a Traueller would looke vpon a faire Tower now we are to make a more neere and particular suruey and to dwell vpon it especially the point being of so good vse and great moment What will ye Sir that I doe moue to you by questions such things as concerne it or will you put vpon me the office of a replyer for though I cannot doe either to purpose yet looke what ye enioyne mee that I will frame my selfe vnto with my best skill Apollos Nay friend Aquila I meane to be your poser and examiner this day First let mee vnderstand from you by what plaine place of Scripture yee proue that there is such an vnion of the Elect with Christ and that faith is the instrument of it Aquila Herein I will quickly satisfie you if first I tell you that there is an vnion of seuerall persons in one Nature so are the Father Sonne and Spirit one Secondly there is an vnion of seueral Natures in one person Thus God and man are one Christ. Thirdly there is an vnion of sundry persons in one Spirit Thus the Elect amongst themselues and with Christ be one This vnion is our being one with Christ and Christ his being one with vs by the band of one Spirit For plaine places to proue such an vnion it is written 1 Iohn 1 3. That the Gospell is therefore preached that wee should haue communion with the Father and the Sonne Also it is expresly saide 1 Cor. 10. That we haue communion with his body and bloud 1 Cor. 6. 17. a Christian is said to be ioyned to the Lord And 1 Cor. 12. 12. Christ and his members are there affirmed to be one body Also the faithfull are saide to be his members Flesh of his flesh bone of his bone Ephe. 5. 30. All those places wherein we are affirmed to be in Christ doe proue this vnion In Iohn 17. 21. Our Sauiour praying that such as beleeue might be one in him and in his Father doth teach both that there is such an vnion and that faith is the Instrument thereof Which is cleered also by Ephe. 3. 17. That Christ dwels in our heart by faith Vnto which we may adde that which is written Gal. 3. 26. For yeare all the sonnes of God by faith in Iesus Christ. And in Iohn 1. 12. When Christ had said that such as beleeue haue this dignity done them to be sonnes of God he addeth which be borne anew not of flesh and bloud but of the will of God where he plainely teacheth that our vnion with Christ where by our new birth wee are brought forth into the Christian World to become members of Christ and children of God that this is effected by faith So as this our vnion with Christ it is not by touching or bodily mixture or as it were by souldering one soule into another but it is a spirituall vnion made in a spirituall manner and by a spirituall band an infinite diuine power creating faith in vs as an hand whereby we graspe and take holde on Christ applying him to vs that hee may be most neerely ioyned to vs. As the soule of man conioyneth together the head and the foote which be farre asunder so the mighty Spirit of Christ in an vnexpressable manner by meanes of faith ioyneth him to vs and vs to him notwithstanding all the distance between vs. Whence it is that though the faithful be ioyned to the very substance of his manhood as wel as to his godhead touching the operation and efficacy thereof yet it is a spirituall vnion being from the Spirit as authour by faith as a spirituall Organ and to this ende to leade a spirituall life Apollos Shew vs now more distinctly first what is required to the working of this vnion secondly by what similitudes it is exprest thirdly what is the necessity of it fourthly as also the commodities and fruites doe come from it Aquila Two things necessarily required to make this vnion one is donation or free gift of God the Father freely bestowing Christ his onely Sonne vpon the Elect and the Elect vpon Christ for thus it is written That he gaue his Sonne to vs Es. 9. 9. and for vs Rom. 8. 32. And on the other side it is saide The Elect are giuen to Christ I declared thy name to them whom thou gauest me out of the World Iohn 17. 6. And Iohn 10. 29. My Father which gaue them me is greater then all Vnto this donation we must adde a second thing which is a mutuall agreement and consent betweene Christ and the soule of an elect sinner each consenting to be one with the other Christ comprehends the faithfull soule as his owne the soule apprehending Christ as her own Phil. 3. 12. As in marriage the coniunction betweene man and wife is effected both by the gift of the parents each giuing their children to liue in maried state together and also by each party agreeing to bee ioyned to the other and so they twaine become one flesh and are no more twaine so it is betweene Christ and his Church And now to your second point this of marriage is one and the most frequent similitude whereby the neere coniunction betweene Christ and the faithfull is shadowed out The whole Booke of Canticles alludes to this similitude and by a continuall allegory setteth forth vnder it the most sweet and happy fellowship betweene Christ and his Church Againe in the Gospell the similitude of a mariage feast is vsed also Ephesians 5. 24 and Romans 7. verse 3. 4 5. and in many other places And indeed there is no straighter band in humane society then this of mariage by the band whereof and the vertue of Gods institution they which were before twaine are now no more so but as it were one body which light of Nature taketh notice of Therefore by humane Lawes there lieth no action against the woman the man being aliue shee is no person to be sued in Law so as this fellowship was very apt and meete to declare that most neere vnion which the soule as Spouse hath with Christ as her Husband For as in mariage the man communicateth his person and all his goods whatsoeuer hee hath to the woman so it is here Christ and all his good things whatsoeuer are bestowed vpon euery soule beleeuing in him
beholding this iustice of the man Christ with the eye of his strict Diuine iustice he doth finde nought in it to mislike giuing to it De iure euen according to good right the recompence of life eternall This was well knowne to the wise and blessed Apostle Paul who hauing in his owne person yeelded obedience to the morall Law before his conuersion while he was a Pharisie but much better and more obedience after his calling to be a Christian yet beeing well assured that it could not stand before the tribunal of Gods iustice which condemneth the least obliquity and sweruing from the Law therefore hee renounceth it as hauing no affiance in it nay reiecting it as losse and as dung that he might be found not hauing his owne but the righteousnesse of Christ Phil. 3 6 7 Teaching all Christians euery where in his Writings namely in his Epistles to the Romanes and the Galathians to seeke after their perfect iustice from and in Christ agreeable to the rest of Scripture which exhorteth all men as they will euer enioy life to thirst hunger after the same For this all men are to take notice of that as Christ Iesus suffered not for himself but for sinners so the righteousnesse which he wrought in his humane Nature by his actiue obedience it belongeth to all his members being a mantle or robe large and broad enough to couer and cloath both himselfe and all his Howsoeuer our garments doe but fit one body at once to couer it yet this Wedding garment is able to apparrell both husband and spouse Christ his whole inuisible church which is the society of chosen and beleeuing ones There being deriued from his Godhead an infinite worth valew and price as to the sufferings of Christ so also to his passiue and actiue obedience and workes which he did that he might bee able to iustifie thereby all his elect These things being thus opened now a way is paued for vs to speak somthing of that worthy benefit of Iustification which according to your desire I will declare what manner of blessing it is and how it is by faith Iustification what it is Amongst sundry significations of this word Iustification which I meane not now to meddle with there be three especially to bee obserued One is to make iust which except it be with some commodious interpretation doth not agree to this matter wee haue in hand for we are not made iust by a iustice in our selues or in our persons Secondly it importeth as much as to declare shew foorth and allow for good and iust that which before was so as in that saying Wisedome is iustified of her children Luke 16 15. Againe the Publicans iustified God Luke 10 29. And in Iames 2. Abraham is sayd to be iustified declared such by his Workes In a third signification to iustify it is according to the vse and custome of speaking among the Hebrewes to absolue one from guilt and to pronounce him innocent As in all these places where Iustification is set against condemning as in the Prouerbes He that iustifieth the wicked or that condemneth the innocent both are like abhomination c. And Rom. 8. who shall condemne it is God that iustifieth and Acts 13 39. All that beleeue in him are iustified from all those things c. and innumerable the like places It is a word borrowed by the holy Ghost from Courts of ciuill Iustice where such as being accused and are found guiltlesse they bee by the mouth of the Iudge absolued and pronounced innocent In this third signification we vse the word here when we speake of the iustification of an elect sinner by faith not for infusion of iustice into vs whereby wee should be made iust by an inherent righteousnesse of our own nor for the declaration of our iustice before men but for the absoluing of a sinner from his guilt of sinne and the accounting or pronouncing him iust before the tribunall of God In which sence the worde is taken without all exception to the contrary in Acts 13 39 where it is written Through this man is preached to you forgiuenesse of sin and from all things from which ye could not be iustified by the Law of Moses by him euery one that beleeueth is iustified Which words in good and right interpretation can haue no other meaning then this That whereas by the Law by the workes and ceremonies thereof men could not be acquitted and assoyled from their sinnes yet by Iesus Christ so we by a liuely faith lay hold on him we shall bee absolued from our sinnes before the iudgement of Almighty God And in this selfesame meaning doth the blessed Apostle vse this word throughout his disputation of this matter in his Epistles to the Romanes and Galathians so as now it will be no hard thing to shew what benefite our iustification is Iustification of an elect sinner before God it is an action of the most mercifull God freely according to his couenant of grace absoluing him at what time he beleeueth from his sinnes before his Tribunall by the passiue righteousnesse or sufferings of his Son imputed and an accounting or pronouncing him for perfectly iust by the actiue righteousnesse of Christ imputed also vnto such a beleeuing sinner For the fuller vnderstanding hereof we are to note that in this worke of Iustification there is a two-fold action of God to be considered One is an imputation or reckoning of all our sinnes and the whole punishment thereof vnto Christ vpon whom as our surety or husband they were put by the decree of his Father and his owne election that he by bearing them might so acquit vs from them The second is an imputation or reckoning of Christ his whole righteousnesse both passiue and actiue to vs for the forgiuenesse of sinnes by the merit of the former and the acceptation of vs as absolutely righteous in his sight for the merit of the latter Euen as in a marriage where a Noble man marrieth a begger there is an exchange made The nobility and riches of the Husband is communicated to the Wife and her meannesse or extreme pouerty is now esteemed his or at least extinguished in his greatnesse so it fareth here All our faults and punishments were by imputation of God the Father so put vpon his Sonne as if they had beene his owne he was recounted a sinner yea made a sinner by it and the chastisements of our peace was vpon him he became a curse for vs and on the other side the whole righteousnesse of Christ both in his keeping the Law and in his suffering paine and death for the breach of it is so beeome and made ours by imputation as if wee in our owne person had suffered and fulfilled all So as a mans body and soule is no more his owne his sicknesse or health is no more his owne then vpon Gods imputation the passion and obedience of Christ are
effected by force of Christs death applied vnto vs for that same diuine power of Christ which sustained his manhood in the suffering of death and gaue it merit to deserue for vs remission of sinnes the same godhead and diuine power worketh in the members of Christ thereby the death and mortification of sinne that it should be lessened in force as well as it wipeth away the guilt of their sinnes Hence it is saide Our sinne is dead by his body and againe Our old man is crucified with him because the body of Christ crucified did deserue for vs that his diuine power should kill and crucifie sinne in them which beleeue in his death The second part of Sanctification is the buriall of sinne which is the continuall proceeding of mortification euen as buriall is the proceeding of death sinne wasting in the Elect touching his vigour and strength euen as corpes waste and moulder in the graue this is wrought by Christ buried whiles that diuine might which preserued the body of Christ in the graue without putrifaction doth effect in the members of Christ by meanes of his buried body a greater degree of mortification euen to the burying and casting mould as it were on their sinnes then they are saide to be buried with him The third part of Sanctification is the quickening of the new man which consists of two parts to wit holinesse containing all vertues and duties whereby we are fitted for the loue and worship of God 2 Righteousnesse which hath all such vertues and duties as enable to loue and profit our neighbour in all things which concerne him This proceedeth from Christ raised againe from the dead that same diuine vertue which wrought in Christs body for the quickening and raising it being dead working also in the soules of his members in whom sinne is already wounded by his death and buriall for their raising vp and quickening vnto godlinesse that they may liue to God hauing strength to practise and doe the workes of God as before they did the workes of sinne For the Elect being coupled to Christ by faith and being one with his manhood touching the substance of it yet spiritually are also one with the godhead touching the efficacy thereof whence it is that the godhead which vttered force and might in Christ to vphold him in his death preseruing him from corruption in his graue and to raise him againe the third day the same godhead powerfully effecteth in Christs members the mortification of sinne by his death and buriall and newnesse of life by his resurrection As the graft which is set in a new stocke taketh iuyce and life from that stock into which it is newly planted so the faithfull partake of the vertue and power of Christ dead and raised with whom they haue communion being grafted into him by his Spirit through faith But this power of Christ communicated to the beleeuers to the killing of sinne and to the quickening of them to God and all godlinesse it doth not effect this worke all at one time but after a long time bringeth it to perfection They therefore are in a dangerous errour such as tendeth to the making of such swel as do beleeue it for truth and others to tremble which feare it may be a truth namely that the grace of Sanctification doth perfectly deliuer from sinne in this life so as thereby one shall be able to liue here without doing any sinne which is the next way to pitch downe headlong to despaire such as find not this perfection or to lift vp vnto hellish pride such as dreame they haue such a perfection Besides the falshhood of it all Scriptures both examples and testimonies crying the contrary and euery mans owne conscience and experience proclaiming aloude that we neuer ceasse to sinne till wee ceasse to liue and that the breath of sinne and our breath be both at once stopped In so plaine and vndoubted a matter proofe is needlesse yet the forme of prayer by Christ appointed to all Christians to be vsed of them as a prayer and patterne of all prayers to be made by them in their pilgrimage enioyning them to aske forgiuenesse of sinnes past to craue deliuerance from temptations of Sathan and sinne for the time to come and the Sacrament of the Supper which belongeth not to men which want nothing but to such as hauing many and great wants do in the sence of them hunger after Christ and his graces and finally the chastisements of God common to all his children which are corrected of God to preuent future faults and offences especially that iudgement of death which taketh hold of all doe demonstrate to euery one that is not wilfully blind that there is none of all the Saints which here in this World doe or can liue without sinne Therefore it will be good to spare this labour and in stead of prouing this which were as if one would bring a candle to giue light to the Sunne to declare rather the ends of Gods counsell therein and withall seeing sanctified persons haue still sinne stirring and striuing in them and bringing forth most loathsome fruites how they may perceiue that they haue the grace of Sanctification Apollos Friend Aquila I doe well allow of your purpose for I am of this minde that for many proofes in matters not darke nor doubtfull nor of great profit it is but waste time and rather bewrayes the vanity of the speaker his indiscretion at least then any whit auailes the hearer may it please you then to goe to those points which you haue propounded and sithence it is so that it had beene as easie for God in the regenerating of his Elect to haue freede them vtterly of sinne and put into them absolute holinesse as he did at first create man righteous voide of all corruption and this had beene much better for vs as one would thinke at once to be rid of such an enemy and had also more expressed Gods power to haue quelled it at one blow rather then by many strokes what might therefore be the reason why it is otherwise that his children after sanctification not onely haue sin still abiding but more troublesome to them then before Aquila That it hath pleased God to haue it thus the matter it selfe speaketh and being he is most wise therefore he will haue it so for most iust causes For touching his power there is no doubt but thereby he could haue caused it to be otherwise for how could not he quit the soule and body from sinne in the time of life that can doe it at death in one instant and his goodnesse is such that had it been more expedient for his children to haue had it so it had surely beene so But the truth is Gods way as in all other things so in this is the best way For as it was Gods wonderful mercy at all to giue them sanctification in any measure and so to put them out of that 〈◊〉
Finally which is an admirable thing euen by the grosse sinnes of his Children it pleaseth God to doe them much good both to greeue them for that is past to humble them and shame them for the present to worke more feare and warinesse for the time to come Besides it turnes greatly to Satans great confusion their fales prouing medicines and remedies and preuentions of future sinnes and this as it much redoundeth to Gods honour so it cannot choose but vex Sathan at the heart that such sinnes as he hath drawne the godly into with great diligence and long deuice hoping therby to choke them and quite to spoile them should bee made meanes through Gods wonderfull goodnesse and wisedome euen to whet and sharpen them the more against Sathan the procurer of their wounds and woe by stirring vp themselues and strengthening others vnto all good duties He had been better to fit still then to haue tempted Dauid and Peter to such sinnes as he did as I could further proue saue that in our conference of Repentance this very thing wil be happily reuiued and come againe to be spoken of but it is now meete that wee seeke out the markes whereby Sanctification is knowne to be truly wrought and to speake of the duties of sanctified persons Apollos I doe well allow of your purpose onely by the way let me put you in remembrance that by the remainder of sinne in the new borne Christians and by those daily bitter fruits which spring from thence there is more occasion giuen to the godly to exercise their faith touching the forgiuenesse promised and their hope touching the blessednesse to come and all other their graces which if they were perfect and all sinne done away at their regeneration then what great vse of faith or hope when there should bee no vnbeleefe or doubting within them or what vse of any other vertue when it lacked the opposition resistance of the contrary vice to set it on worke Here is our warfare and there must be a continuall strife inwardly in our selues betweene grace and sinne as well as out wardly against the wicked In Heauen our warfare shall be ended and not before and further by how much the godly oftner sinne here so much the mercies of God in pardoning and Christs righteousnesse in couering such and so innumerable transgressions are manifested to bee the more glorious and excellent There being no lesse grace if not more expressed in forgiuing sinnes done after the Spirit of God and faith receiued then such as were done before Sithence the more Gods Children are beholden to God and the more meanes they haue against sinne and the more they are enlightened to vnderstand their duty the more grecuous is their fault which yet being all remitted freely vpon their repentance it declareth the abundance of the grace of God toward them Aquila It was well thought vpon by you for I had forgotten these things but now to follow my purpose Amidst so much darknesse of minde as yet remaineth after regeneration in Gods Children and so many and great imperfections Sathan also with his iuglings laboring to trouble their iudgements it seemeth then a hard thing to discerne that true sanctification of the Elect from that generall grace whereby a naturall man may liue for outward comfort and carriage as if hee were truly sanctified There bee sixe or seauen tokens by which the difference is to bee found and euery sanctified person shall by them know of himselfe that hee is gone beyond a ciuill life First a sanctified man hath care to order his life his whole way and euery step of it by the knowledge of the Word of which he enquireth what hee may doe and what not still taking counsell from thence doing all his things as necre as hee can by that diuine direction and with application of Christ beleeuing that his weaknesses are in him hidden and the vncleannesse of his worke wiped and purged by his death whereas the ciuill man dependeth vpon the allowance and reputation of men which if hee obtaine it contents him he lookes no further but to haue a good estimation in the World And whereas the sanctified man aymeth at this most how to please God euen with the deniall and displeasure of his owne corrupt heart the ciuill man doth not take thought nor trouble his head about the pleasing of God in the good he doth nor in leauing euils for the offence of God but seeketh and studieth to please himselfe and such whose fauour hee desireth to liue in ordering his course to his owne and their liking Thirdly whereas a ciuill man is very carefull in duties that concerne affaires and dealings with men that hee may get a good report that way and doth religious duties coldly and of custome the sanctified man though he will not be negligent in workes that belong to his calling yet he is cheefely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duties which concerne God and his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that both publikely and priuately Adde heereunto fourthly that ciuil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no great conscience of smaller sinnes as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 talke lesse oaths gaming c and not at all 〈◊〉 against naturall corruption to get it killed nor in 〈◊〉 bled for it It is otherwise with a sanctified man he laboureth most against the roote of sinne to get it mortified to haue the fountaine drained hee 〈◊〉 him and conceiues much 〈◊〉 euen for the 〈◊〉 of sinne Psal. 51 4 5. Hee hath a great care to meete with sin in the bud to resist it in the 〈◊〉 and euill desires and auoyding conscionably euen such offences as the most men iudge but 〈◊〉 For hee 〈◊〉 the danger of death the displeasure of God in euery sin euen the least Dauid will greeue for touching the lap of Sauls garment the Lords annointed The heart of a godly man wil smite him euē for a vile vnhonest thoght for euery little ouer sight if it be but in a circumstance of an action Yet 〈◊〉 ciuil men neuer take any 〈◊〉 to auoid the sins of the time or of their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 turall peculiar sinnes the sanctified man of all other most setteth himselfe against these And to shut vp because the differences are infinite the euill man is 〈◊〉 about the 〈◊〉 of grace to get more strength against 〈◊〉 more power to obey God he doth not marke in himselfe the decrease of grace or increase of sinne that being humbled therefore he may vse the means appointed without 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and faintnesse not by fits and girds It 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the sanctified person who 〈◊〉 how corruption workes and how grace decayes betakes himselfe vnto the vse of al good means 〈◊〉 all good care and conscience for the helping him 〈◊〉 a greater measure of the Spirit that he may grow vp in grace and knowledge For he considereth 〈◊〉 himselfe amongst sundry other things what duty he 〈◊〉 to God and to his owne soule and that this 〈◊〉 is laid vpon him by
his glory in their hearing and his owne sinne and shame against himselfe And as it is in the first Repentance when a sinner is newly conuerted so also it fareth with renewed repentance which vttereth it selfe by the fruite of good workes as is manifest in the repentance of Dauid after his fall with Bathsheba which brought forth diuers good workes as instruction of the Church praise of God both priuate and publike confession of his sinnes euen to the cracking and weakning of his priuate estimation and royall dignity So in Peters repentance the like is to be seen as his teares his confirmation of others and infinite good deedes more testifying the truth of his repentance Aquila This certainely is so therefore by good workes or amendment of life we are to iudge of Repentance as of a tree by the fruit the Repentance is dead which is without amendment euen as faith is dead which is without good workes But now I would haue you tell me which workes wee shall call good workes and what things are necessarily required to a worke that it may be reckoned a good worke Apollos For your first question what a good worke is I say it is euery duty which concerneth God or men others or our selues whether it bee performed in thought word or deed either in our generall calling as we are Christians or particularly in our vocations which wee haue in Family Common-wealth or Church Thus the worke of the Ministery in teaching reprouing conuincing instructing though it be done in words yet it is called a good worke 2 Tim. 3. 17. Being made perfect to all good workes The 〈◊〉 of the oyntment on Christs head Mat. 26. is there called a good worke Shee hath done a good worke vpon me Abrahams offering of Isaac is of Iames called A good worke Iames 2. 21. And not to be long in this plaine matter the Scripture saying that we must be iudged by our workes Rom. 2. 6. And in Eccles. 12. Salomon doth affirme that euery secret thing shall come to iudgement And Christ saith that an account shall be giuen of euery idle word Mat. 12. 36. It is by this apparent that as secret thoughts and words if they be euill are to be numbred amongst bad workes so thoughts and words being good are to be esteemed for good workes especially the Scripture in so many places so largely vsing this phrase of good workes for all fruites of Repentance as we haue seene before therefore they doe erre which thinke workes of mercy to be the onely good workes required at our hands Now to your second question what is required to a worke that it may be held for a good worke There must goe these three things First the matter and substance Secondly the person must be good Thirdly the end all these must be good A good worke for the stuffe substance and matter must be commanded in the Word of God for besides that wee are willed to doe that onely which God commanded and not to turne therefrom to the right hand or to the left And wee reade also in the Word that of all things done without warrant of his Word as thereby to please and serue him he will say Who required these things at your hands Sound reason may tell vs that nothing is to be held for a good worke saue that which God willeth to be done because his will onely is the rule of all righteousnesse so as a worke is then righteous and good when it is agreeable to his reuealed will and when it swarueth therefrom it is euill The will of God being I say as the leuell lime or rule to direct our actions which are straight or crooked as they come neerer or goe farther from that line Moreouer the seruice of God standing in this that we doe such good workes by which he is serued and worshipped of vs and he liking of no seruice saue that which is done according to his owne will therefore they cannot be esteemed for good workes which hee willeth not to be done in his Word In vatne doe they serue and worship me saith the Lord by his Prophet teaching my feare by the Precepts of men Esay 29. 13. Which reproueth first of all some ignorant Christians who hearing of good workes to be done cannot stretch their thoughts beyond workes of mercy commonly called Almes deeds as if these onely were meant by good workes or not beyond externall Acts which incurre into our senses Moreouer they offend which imagine that all they doe vpon a good intent and meaning should straight way haue allowance before God for a good worke whereas in truth no intent is worthy to be held for a good intent whatsoeuer seemeth to vs saue that which is according to Gods will Not what we deeme to be good is therefore by and by good for that it appeares so to vs but what God will approue for good that indeed must stand for good not ours but his will being the met-yard of goodnesse How many might we call to mind who haue thought to doe some good thing and yet haue beene refused of God because they consulted not with his word to square their meaning thereafter Consider of Vzza putting his hand to stay the Arke of Peter counselling Christ not to goe to Ierusalem to suffer and going with Iohn his fellow Apostle into the high Priests house all being done of good intention yet we know how ill it was taken of God might haue proued their eternall ruine Finally the 〈◊〉 are also to be taxed who haue deuised a number of workes wherein they busie themselues which we may call will workes or done out of the election of their owne will and not by prescript of Gods Word the greatest part of their workes being such whereby yet they think not onely highly to please God but to merit somewhat at his hands They faile in this first part of a good worke they doe not bring the stuffe and substance whereof a good worke is made which must be as we haue saide something commanded of God in his Law not deuised of men in their owne braine for whatsoeuer man deuiseth therewith to please God it is abominable in deed be it neuer so goodly in shew Luke 16 15. Aquila What be the second and third conditions of a good worke Apollos As it is required that the thing to be done or matter of the worke be good being approued of God so the next thing is that the man be good which doth the worke the goodnesse of the worker and the third thing is that the end be good for which it is done First saith our Sauiour make the tree good and then the fruite will be good for a good tree cannot bring forth euill fruite Mat. 12. 33. It is not the good worke that makes the person good as the fruite makes not the that makes the person good as the fruite makes not the tree good nor
the Riuer makes not the Fountaine sweete but the person being first good that which he doth according to Gods will becomes good And as it is amongst men that we cannot like a gift when wee brooke not the giuer so it is with God hee neuer accepts any thing that is done how good soeuer in the nature of the thing done except the doer be first accepted Now that which maketh the doer good it is his faith in Christ whereby hee is purged from all his iniquities and hath the righteousnesse of Christ accounted to him to make him righteous in the sight of God Hence it is that no worke of ours can please God vnlesse it come from faith Hence also it is that the works which wee doe borrow all their commendations euen from hence that they are the children of faith begotten and brought forth by it See Hebrewes 11. throughout From hence it was that Caine and Abel offering each sacrifice vnto God Caines sacrifice was reiected and Abels receiued and pronounced to be better then Caines because it was offered in faith Abraham offering his sonne though the work were strange exceeding wondrous yet it had had no grace nor respect with God except it had come from faith What shall I say more a poore Kitchen-maid an Hostler a Chimney-sweeper or any other how base soeuer their trade be being a lawfull vocation if he doe his worke out of a true faith in God through Christ and out of obedience of Gods will his worke is more glorious and pleasing in Gods sight then the best and most goodly worke of a King or of a Preacher being not faithfully and obediently performed Whereof it is written that many things which are great glorious amongst men are abominable before God for if faith 〈◊〉 vs not a worke to doe our workes let them be how bright or glittering soeuer for shew and appearance to men yea and very profitable for fruite toward men yet they are no better then beautifull sinnes So the holy Ghost teacheth that what is done without faith it is sinne Rom. 14. 23. And that without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. Now wee are here to consider that faith in euery good worke doth set it selfe a worke three manner of wayes Or thus if ye will the act of faith in a good worke it is threefold The first is to enable vs to know that the thing which we doe it is such as God alloweth of being commanded of him The perswasion hereof it is called Faith Rom. 14. 22 23. He that doubteth sinneth if he eate because he eateth not of faith that is out of a perswasion and certainty that he doth well The second act of faith it is to assure the minde that this worke which wee are resolued of to be in it selfe lawfull to be done it is such as God will accept through Christ pardoning the spots and imperfections of it freely for his merit for all out workes hauing their staines and defects as wee haue touched in our Treatise of vnperfect Sanctification and shall hereafter declare it is of necessity that there be an application of Christs merits to our workes for the cleansing of them that so they may please God This is done by faith whereby the heart is assured that God who hath graciously loued vs in his beloued will also vouchsafe for his sake to be pleased with that wee doe after his will Thirdly and lastly there is another worke of faith and that is it which Saint Paul speaketh of Galat. 5. 6. Faith worketh by loue for it quickeneth and stirreth the heart to the loue of God and man in our good workes which we doe to be led not by selfe-loue and carnal respects but by this charity and louing affection of our good God and of our Neighbour which is a thing very necessary in euery good thing which we doe that all be done in loue This being the end of the Commandement euen loue out of a pure heart and faith vnfeined 1 Tim. 1. 5. Now whosoeuer truly beleeueth in Christ Iesus that through him hee is reconciled vnto God and hath his offences forgiuen him this faith will moue him to loue that God againe sincerely and his Neighbour for Gods sake who commanded it to be so and hath put his Image in him and vpon him that all our workes comming out of this sound loue to God and our brethren wee may abandon all by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pleasing or profiting our selues or of our owne praise or of shame or feare or whatsoeuer it is that preuaileth with hypocrites and end eauour to referre all wee doe to Gods glory and the welfare of our Neighbour This is a third maine condition in euery good worke that the end and marke whereat the doer aimeth be good and right the badnesse of the end marres the goodnesse of the action He that takes a good thing in hand and propounds a wrong scope he is like to one who hath a good bow and arrowes to shoote withall but looketh from the marke when he shooteth such an one shall neuer shoote well Here is the priuiledge of faithfull persons that by the Spirit of God they are carried in their willes and affections to desire and seeke in all that they doe Gods glory and the edification of their brethren euen in truth and singlenesse of heart and not in profession onely as hypocrites who will talke much of glorifying God when their eye is neuer bent to this marke but rather is cast-vpon their owne glory which as the hearbe Colloquintida marreth euery worke that is spiced with it but the Child of God hauing learned that all his workes must come from God as the Authour and looke vnto God as their end like as the Riuers which come originally out of the Sea and returne thither again Therefore as he desireth to please his neighbour in that which is good for his edifying minding this still in all such things as doe concerne his brethren how hee may better and helpe them either to God-ward or some other wise so he desireth that by his obedience good workes which he doth euen in the least of them in his eating and drinking and in his honest recreations and not onely in the serious businesse of his calling and seruice of God but in euery thing which he doth he may doe them to Gods glory that others vppon sight and knowledge of his carriage in his duties may be occasioned if they be conuerted to acknowledge Gods worke in him to the glory of God if not that then by his example they may be won drawne to godlinesse and so to glorifie God in the day of their visitation Finally in the doing of a good worke besides all the former conditions it is needfull that the meanes be good when meanes are needfull Men may not imagine that if the thing be good they doe then it is lawfull and free to
vse what meanes they list good or bad without choyse Good things must be compassed by good meanes Good hath no neede of euill to helpe it And the Apostles rule is sound that euill is not to be done that good may come of it Rom. 3. 8 no not the least euill to procure the greatest good It was 〈◊〉 sinne that shee would draw the promised blessing vppon Iacob by a deceit And Dauids sinne that he would counterfeit himselfe an Idcot or franticke man against the dignity of his person to deliuer himselfe from the Philistines Also it was Lots infirmity to seeke to deliuer the men which came vnto him by prostituting his Daughters to the Sodomites lust A good action is spoyled by wicked meanes as well as by a bad ende Howsoeuer God at his pleasure may so order the successe of such actions as it shall proue good yet the party must be more humbled for the sinne doing amisse then lifted vp with the happy issue of the deede Moreouer it would not be forgotten that in doing good duties a great care is to be had of circumstances as time place persons and such like Wherein great wisedome is required to be able to discerne of these how to doe good things meetely and fitly according to time and other circumstances for the missing or failing but in a circumstance through lacke of discretion and good insight or fore-sight rather hath caused many good workes to miscarry and haue full heauy successe Of all this it followeth that no euill man can do a good work If the tree be euill the fruite will be euill Mal. 12. And that good men neede wonderfull care and circumspection as also feruent prayer for great aide from God to be enabled to doe such things as shall be good when they are done but here withall let it be obserued that when they haue done all and brought with them all the conditions of a good worke yet their worke will still haue both wants and blemishes As cleere water that passeth thorow a muddy chanell or pure liquour put into a musty caske takes corruption from them so our workes as they passe through our vnderstanding and will which are not renewed but in part and are partly flesh therefore draw filth and vncleannesse from our inbred corruption to the defiling of them yea and iustly deseruing that they should be refused and we also the doers as certainly they would be if with the eye of rigorous and exact iustice God should behold them Whence it is that no godly man can be iustified by his workes for the workes of the Law doe make vs righteous before God when they are fully performed without any the least default for then euen by the compact of Gods owne mouth saying Doe this and liue Gal. 3. there belongs vnto them as a debt eternall life But sithence none euer kept the Law thus since mans fall saue Christ therefore Righteousnes is not to be sought by the Law which rather reuealeth our vnrighteousnesse and Gods wrath against the same And as it is impossible the Law should iustifie vs because of the infirmity which is in vs whereby we are hindered from answering the strictnesse of it so we neede not fetch Righteousnesse from the Law because we haue it by grace imputing freely to the beleeuers the doings and sufferings of Christ for our perfect iustice with God besides our good workes following our Iustification as fruites effects they cannot goe before as causes of it Wherfore all Christians are to be admonished to lay aside all opinion of their owne Righteousnesse as not thinking euer to obtaine life from God by their good doings be they neuer so many or worthy when as one sinne alone spoyles all the righteousnesse of our workes euen as one droppe of Inke doth spoyle a whole goblet of Wine And hauing vtterly renounced all affiance in our works to put no manner of confidence in them for saluation let them striue to catch fast hold vpon that Righteousnesse of Christ which alone hath power to merit eternall glory to euery one that beleeueth in the name of Christ that abandoning the righteousnesse which is by the Law wee may be found in Christ hauing bis Righteousnesse which is by faith Rom. 10. 2. Aquila But Sir if it be so that such 〈◊〉 doe sticke to out best workes as you say that they cannot 〈◊〉 vs and merite ought at Gods hand vnlesse it 〈◊〉 eternall death how commeth it that God is so much pleased with them as to liken them to a fruite and to an odour of sweet smell and to sacrifice and sweet 〈◊〉 and many other such comparisons there bee in holy Scripture which declare the workes of godly Christians to be highly pleasing to God And withall seeing we cannot if we had a world of good workes by them all obtain purchase forgiuenes of one sin or the possession of heauenly ioy no not so long as for one hour to what purpose then are we so to labour in the doing of them as we are often commanded to doe with very great charge of great care to be shewed vsed in the working of them and there to come no good of them towards our saluation it should seeme it is labour lost Apollos Though there be in the most perfect worke of any Child of God here vpon earth so much fault both through the want that is in it and the blot that sticketh to it selfe loue pride hypocrisie and other corruptions being blended and mixt with it as that God might worthily cast the doer into hell if mercy set apart he should iudge it extremely and therefore iust cause of being deeply humbled is ministred to euery godly man for his choysest actions euen for them to entreate the Lord not to enter into iudgement with him marking narrowly that which is amisse yet the good workes of the faithful euen the very least of them are very pleasing and acceptable to God as the Word euery where beareth good witnesse both in particular of some of his childrens workes as that of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. 4. God had respect to Abel and to his offering and Noahs sacrifice that God smelt a sauour of rest Gen. 8. 21. Of Abrahams offering his sonne ye see likewise what testimony there is of it Gen. 22. verse 12. 16. And also in generall of all good workes done by which of his Children soeuer that they are sacrifices accepted of him through Christ 1 Pet. 2. 5. And such sacrifices as God is well pleased withall Heb. 13. 16. And certaine it is that God would not command the doing of them not make such liberall promises to them being done were it not that hee hath a pleasure in them and liked well of them and sundry are the respects for which he is so delighted euen with the vnperfect and stained workes of his Children First because they are his owne worke in them as it is written Ye are the
our good workes which they shall see may be moued more readily to hearken to that truth that worketh so mightily in vs. Therefore Peter counselleth faithfull wiues by their good workes to winne their vnbeleeuing husbands 1 Peter 3. 1. Also 1 Cor. 7. 16. For how knowest thou O woman whether thou shalt saue thy vnbeleeuing Husband But if any be vnconuerted and belong not to God these by our good workes shal haue their mouthes stopped that they cannot speake euill of vs or of our Religion For so is the will of God that with well doing we may stop the ignorance of foolish men 1 Peter 2. 15. Towards such as be already conuerted and become faithfull our good workes haue their proper vse either to confirme and strengthen them if they be weake in the faith as Christ saith to Peter Confirme thy brethren Luke 22. 32. Or else to comfort and reioyce such as be strong as Iohn reioyceth because the elect Lady and her children walked in the truth 2 Iohn 2. And Paul is greatly comforted by the faith and godlinesse of the Philippians Philip 3. 5. Insomuch as that which is spoken of the Vine and the fruite thereof Iudg. 9. 13. agreeth better to good workes the fruites of our faith that by them God and men are cheered Which should exceedingly worke preuaile with all good men to doe them and to doe them yet more cheerefully and plentifully not onely because as we vse to say of things we buy there is the more to put into the Inuentory so the more good workes we haue the more there is to further our reckoning but that our name may shine as the Sun in brightnesse our faith and saluation be sealed our God glorified our Religion beautified our Neighbour edified in his soule by godly admonition refreshed in his body and bowels by the fruits of our mercy and loue finally Sathan and our aduersaries confounded And for the better furthering of our selues in the practise of them let vs further remember these few things that our life is short oportunity will be taken away from vs therefore while we haue time let vs doe all the good we can considering that we haue lost much time already and heretofore haue done many things to the displeasure and discredite of so gracious a God Moreouer we haue receiued many fauours from God namely remission of all our sinnes and adoption by Christ sanctification by his Spirit with infinite other benefits for soule or body Let these mercies encrease constraine our loue to well doing and set vs on fire with zeale of good workes seeing Christ purgeth vs from our iniquitie to the end that we should be a peculiar people feruently giuen to doe good Titus 2. 14 15. And as we like to see other things fruitfull our Kine and Sheepe our Orchards our Fields so let it be our care and loue to see our selues fruitfull as it were our shame and reproach to be barren that wee may be like vnto Iesus Christ our head of whom it is written in the Gospell That he went about dooing good c. and that hee did all things well that we treading now in the steps of his faith and loue obedience and patience wee may at length reigne with him in glory For such as follow him now in the pathes of godlinesse shall hereafter sit with him at his Table in his Fathers Kingdome whither Christ Iesus safely and speedily bring vs for his name sake Amen The ninth part of the Dialogue Of particular good Workes first concerning God Of the Loue of God Apollos NOw Neighbour Aquila your constancy in following this conference makes me thinke you are like him of whom it is written That where hee beginnes a good worke he will finish it You haue taken in hand a good worke and you are desirous to accomplish it and to tell you truth so am I too and now that we draw toward an end let vs keepe close to it till we arriue where we would be there is nothing so hard but constant labour will ouercome it at last Aquila Constancy in any thing aduisedly taken vp is a very commendable thing but Sir according to your counsell let vs fall to our worke● Wee haue spoken of good workes generally wee are now to handle some especiall good workes which are more excellent and necessary and whereupon all the rest doe depend what choyce shall we make what good workes shall we single out from the rest therein to spend our time Apollos My aduice is this Whereas good works be all duties whereby either God or our neighbour be serued and benefited and the duties which we owe to God are cheefe as cause and ground of the rest first we will cull out such principall good workes as concerne God immediately namely the loue of God 2. his feare 3. of trust in him 4. thankesgiuing 5. prayer 6. reuerence towards his name 7. sanctifying his Sabbach and lastly of patience in suffering and then wee will descend to such fruites of faith and repentance as do belong to our neighbour For the first and great commandement is to loue God with all the heart and next to loue my neighbor as my selfe Aquila I do well approne of this order not onely because I know no better but because I iudge it to bee the best and fittest Let me then heare you tel me what it is to loue God wherefore wee stand bound to loue him and what it is that begets in vs the loue of God And then if ye wil declare the measure and manner of this loue how much it ought to bee and how it may be discerned to be in vs withall of the effects which this loue will be get in his children Apollos Loue is such an affection of the heart as desireth to be knit and neerely ioyned to the thing or party loued This is the nature of loue so to carry the heart with desire vnto that which is loued as nothing will content till it be enioyed and had The trueth of this may appeare in that loue which is inordinate and also in all well gouerned loue The theefe the adulcerer the gamester the couetous are by their loue such as they beare to their booty their whores their game and gaine so possessed as they are then quyet and not before when they haue and bee ioyned in one to that which they loue as their parting from the thing loued and losing it is their greefe yea sometime their death so their being with it and hauing it is their contentment and ioy and life Stories and experience afford vs sufficient proofe heereof We see the Gamester neuer well but when hee is at dice or cardes or other game The Fornicator is neuer at rest vnlesse he bee with his harlot The Couetous man is best pleased when he lookes vpon or fingereth money Now in well-gouerned loue it is right so whether it bee naturall or humane or
vs from the sight of the Sunne so the blessings of God stand betweene the eyes of the wicked and God himselfe that they cannot looke vpon him whereas the godly by the eye of their soule pierce thorow all meanes to behold God himselfe the Authour and disposer of all good things in whom they see a secrer blessing prouided for them which is hid from others But now Sir seeing true and vnfeined trust in God bringeth forth prayer vnto God because wee trust in him therefore wee call vpon him and vppon the happy successe of prayers followes thankefulnesse I would haue you in the next place to deale in these things and to shew me how the godly and vngodly doe differ in these workes seeing one as well as another doth performe them for it is common to all to pray and to giue thankes The Pharisie both prayed and gaue thankes Luke 18. so did Iudas as well as Peter Cain as well as Abel Apollos It is true which you say that therefore Christians doe lift vp their mindes vnto God euen because of that trust which they put in him Hence it is that they are bold to come vnto God for that they assuredly trust that he will doe them good As we neuer haue an heart to seeke to any men for helpe in whom wee haue no affiance that they will regard vs but wee readily get vs to such for kindnesse of whom we haue some good hope so it is with Gods Children their confidence which they haue in God breedes in them a willingnesse by prayer to craue his helpe whereof when they are made partakers they burst out into thankfulnesse and prayses of that goodnesse which respected and releeued them it being the property of Gods children not to be more forward to desire Gods benefits and protections for them and theirs ouer their soules and bodies then to returne thankfull acknowledgements after they haue receiued mercies And whereas hypocrites and euill men doe pray and giue thankes it is true generally that there is no worke touching the outward act which Gods Children doe but the Children of this World doe the same but that which these doe in hypocrisie the other doe in truth and particularly there bee in these workes of prayer and thankfulnesse many differences betweene the one and the other as that the wicked are more ready to beg in their wants then to be thankefull when they haue sped and they are thankfull rather for prosperity then for aduersity whereas the godly see great cause to giue God thankes and praise in and for euery estate because all things are made to worke together for the best towards them Rom. 8. Againe the wicked doe quickly faint in prayer if they be not heard whereas the godly perseuere in asking till they be heard like the woman which followed the Iudge with importunity Luke 18 and the man which in the night time got his friend to arise out of his bed to fetch him a loafe to refresh his friends which came to him so Gods children howsoeuer they are long delayed for triall of their patience and constancy in prayer and to sharpen their affections and for sundry other good regards yet they pray and ceasse not till God doe send a gracious answer their prayers being like messengers which will not returne without their answer or like Ionathans arrowes which brought Dauid to him Moreouer the wicked pray coldly and out of a custome the children of God pray with care and conscience and doing their duty with feare of displeasing God The wicked pray generally the godly aske particular graces more begging sauing graces then others Whereas euill men aske temporall things more often and more earnestly neither doe they aske these out of faith to be heard Againe the godly take no worke in hand but they begin it with prayer and end it with thankesgiuing so doe not the wicked Moreeuer the godly doe continually pray with an earnest desire of the thing asked in prayer and with a sure perswasion of obtaining it both which the wicked want Finally besides many other things this is one maine difference that the godly in their prayers and thankesgiuing performe these workes in respect of and with a loue to the commandement which enioynes them and in a true and vnfeined desire of glorifying God by their obedience to his will and herein are Gods Children vnlike the wicked as in these so in all other workes which they doe being good or leaue vndone being euill that therein they consent to the law of God in their minds and wils approuing the good they doe and hating the euill which they flye and may not doe studying and endeauouring by such their submission to Gods Law to set forth and extoll the name and honour of their heauenly Father These are the rules they walke by both in prayer and prayses in reading and hearing the Word and in receiuing the Sacraments as also in the practise of all other duties towards God or men Of the Word and Sacraments Aquila SIthence ye haue mentioned the Word and mysteries and our actions about them are workes which belong to Gods worship declare wherein the godly doe differ from other men in their worke of hearing and partaking in the Word and Sacrament for all sorts of men doe these workes euen that Fox Herod will heare Iohn and the Pharises came to heare Christ and Iudas was at the Passcouer and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desired baptisme what is it that discerneth one from another in these common duties Apollos Sincerity and soundnesse called truth in Scripture discerneth worke from worke and duty from duty The hypocrite and wicked euen for their hearing the Word and being partakers of the Sacraments because they lacked vprightnesse in the doing seeking not God but themselues therefore they shall for them heare at the last day Ye workers of iniquity depart from me Mat. 7. 23. For this shall be saide to such which did prophecie cast out diuels and doe great workes in Christ his name because their outward workes were voide of inward sincerity And this is a thing worthy to be marked that euen a good worke done of an euill man with an euill and 〈◊〉 heart vppon pretence and shew of seruing and pleasing God when in truth no such thing is meant but the pleasing of himselfe or some other carnall respect leades him it doth become a worke of iniquity Howbeit besides vprightnesse there are to be found sundry things in godly men doing these workes which are not to bee found in the vngodly and hypocrites As first that the godly when they heare or partake in the mysteries they vse great and serious preparation before by religious meditations of their owne wants and vnworthinesse on the one side bethinking how little they deserue such mercifull helpes and yet how great neede they haue of them and on the other side of the aweful 〈◊〉 before whom they must
patience and no worke more proper to an elect man then this therefore called The patience of the Saints Reuel 13. 10. To teach vs that it is peculiar to them alone and it is there annexed to faith as also in Heb. 6. 12. as a fruite thereof Also to hope as an vnseparable companion of it 1 Thes. 1. 3 Remembring the patience of your hope And very worthily is hope matcht with patience and that for two respects seeing the thing we hope for which is eternall blisse and rest from our labours in Heauen is not onely deferred and put off but derided and scorned 2 Pet. 3 4 yea and we afflicted too 1 Tim. 4. 10. Therefore hope hath neede of patience to sustain it Secondly thus yoking hope with patience we are admonished that as hope cannot consist without patience so neither can patience exist or be where there is not hope Hope bringeth forth encrease of patience and patience encreased doth confirme hope Rom. 5. 3 4. Finally there is no worke wherein wee more resemble and shew our selues like vnto Christ the president and patterne of true patience then this as we are plentifully taught Heb. 12. 1 3. Also 1 Pet. 1. 20 21 22. Which places of Scripture teach vs thus much that Christ in patience abiding his Fathers will suffering willingly the shame and smart of the Crosse became an example to vs that we should follow his steps Insomuch as the Apostle Paul Rom. 8. and 2 Tom. 1. affirmeth that such as doe sallow Christ in patient suffering shall partake with him in reigning and glory It will therefore be very fit that this grace of Patience be distinctly and fully entreated of and feuered from that shadow of patience which is in the wicked who seeme to haue it and yet are nothing lesse then patient Apollos This had beene spoken of before when we entreated of Hope whose supporter patience is as hope is the prop of Faith but that I thought it sit to place it amongst those workes of godlinesse and to the last place I haue referred it because it being a large argument it will aske vs more time then at this our meeting could well haue been affoorded to such a copious theame and spacious matter Therefore if it seeme good to you we will let it alone till our next comming together The tenth Part of the Dialogue Of Patience in affliction Apollos FRiend Aquila since we first entred vpon our conference of effectuall Calling and of the fruits of it you neuer tryed my patience till now I haue here expected you a good while and if you had not come iust thus as you did surely I had returned whence I came somewhat discontented with you Aquila Sir I am but quit with you for thus you serued me once but you that haue seene me so forward in keeping times for prosecuting this businesse might haue imagined in your selfe that it was something more then ordinary which kept me thus long from you Apollos Nay I tell you that very thought held me and so ruled my mind at that as I did not grow vnpatient Aquila Sir I pray you lay aside your quarrell to me about my long tarrying and now we are so well met let me heare you speake of the nature and property of the obiect and office of Patience Apollos There is no Christian grace but it hath his speciall obiect to worke vpon and whereabout it is exercised Promises of saluation are the obiect of faith whose property is to beleeue and receiue them by the mind and will 〈◊〉 to them and embracing them for most true the thing promised is the obiect of hope whose office is to expect it till it be giuen vs. The office of loue is to knit our affections to God who is the proper obiect of our loue Repentance is busied about sinnes and the vse of it to greeue after any sinne with a purpose to offend so no more Temperance gouernes our mind about pleasures of life meckenesse about iniuries from men Mercy is exercised about miseries of others Humility bridles the mind about praises and honours And to be short the power of moderating the heart in crosses and afflictions which are put vpon vs by Gods appointment doth belong to Patience which hath afflictions or aduersities for his proper obiect for this is the will of God that no man should liue in this World without crosses and afflictions Our dayes are few they are also euill and very euill Our yeeres are few but miseries are not few they are many and manifold and some of them great and doe continually follow vs as the shadow doth the body These miseries when they happen they stirre and moue the mind to griefe euen as presence of pleasure delights tickle the mind with ioy to sorrow assaults the mind in the presence of afflictiue and heauy things wherewith it should be ouerturned were it not for the helpe of patience which doth temper our griefe and stay the mind steddy and quiet in good contentment vnder the hand of God This then is the office of patience to confirme settle the mind against the force of sorrow arising from the sence of tribulations Aquila I perceiue well by this ye haue vttered that the office and power of patience will better be declared if withall and first of all afflictions and the kindes thereof which be the matter whereabout patience is set on worke shall be opened and saide forth Will it please you then to follow this course to speake generally of afflictions to acquaint vs with those grounds of patience which be common to all afflictions and after that to handle the seuerall sorts of afflictions and the speciall grounds of patience 〈◊〉 to euery kind of afflictions 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 grounds whereon worldlings build the frame of their 〈◊〉 patience Apollos Aquila you haue well chalked out away wherein we may walke Thus then the 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 the Scripture saith That death 〈◊〉 into the World by sinne Rom. 5. 12. By death is vnderstood not onely that dissolution of soule and body but all troubles and afflictions as the 〈◊〉 of death men are not 〈◊〉 sinne 〈◊〉 able to death then to afflictions It was not onely saide to Adam To 〈◊〉 thou shall returne but that in sweate of his browes 〈◊〉 should 〈◊〉 his bread and to Eue That 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bring forth children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 afflictions 〈◊〉 vpon Adams 〈◊〉 among whom some may be found haply which neuer knew what prosperity meant but not one which hath not tasted of afflictions Our entrance into the World is with danger cryes our passage out of the World is by fearefull painfull death the middle between birth and death cradle and graue is full of vanity and vexation affliction being a cup which all men are to drinke of some more some lesse God measuring vnto each person a portiō of trouble as drinke was wont to be measured in cups that each in the Family
godlinesse compriseth all our duty towards God whereof as wee find sundry branches so hath Righteousnesse many members as Gal. 5. Paul there rehearseth loue ioy peace long suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith meeknesse and temperance and Colos 3. 12. besides these there are reckoned vp mercy kindnesse humblenesse of mind forbearing and forgiuing one another Also in 2 Peter 1. 5. we find there vertue patience brotherly kindnesse in Iames 3. 13. meekenesse of wisdome in Titus 2. grauity and chastity in Ephe. 4. speaking truth in Heb. 13. 5. contenteanesse in Acts 20. 19. modesty Vnto all which wee must adde all respectiue graces and workes which are to be done of vs in respect of some degree which is put vpon vs as we be Parents or Children Masters or Seruants Husbands or Wiues Subiects or Gouernours c. Now the Scripture nameth all these graces in one place the fruits of the Spirit Galat 5. 22. In another exhorteth the Elect of God to put them on Col. 3 in a third telleth vs that who so hath them he shall neuer fall 2 Pet 1. 7 8. By all which it is manifest that they be such graces as are proper to the regenerate and which none but Gods chosen children can haue The appearance and shadow of them is to be found in others who as Apes doe Men would imitate the godly in these vertues and yet haue them not because they haue not faith the roote of them Aquila I see there is more worke behind then I was aware of yet it doth no whit discourage me let vs prosecute our purpose time and diligence with a little patience will ouercome great matters And tell me now I pray you would not these graces be handled in that order as ye haue named them otherwise how thinke ye good we should proceed ye haue found vs stuffe for a new conference ye must also deuise the frame to Apollos Let me alone with that though I be no good builder yet I will endeauour to haue this matter put in good for me I thinke it meete to speake first of the generall then of the specials and amongst these first of them that in common belong vnto all men and afterwards of such duties as are to be performed in respect of a degre put vpon vs. Aquila Let vs then take our beginning at Righteousnesse touching which declare vnto me what it may import as it doth respect mutuall dealing of men amongst themselues and what difference there is herein between good men and euill Of Righteousnesse Apollos THe word Righteousnesse is a large word in Scripture and hath many acceptions But to our purpose it is either that peculiar vertue whereby in contracts and bargaines and matters of iustice men are enabled to deale equally and rightly giuing as good as they take and rendering to euery one their due and it is set against wrong by oppression or deceit as contrary vnto it or else more generally it is put and vsed to signifie that same worke and grace of the Spirit in the soule of a regenerate man whereby hee is willing and ready to respect his Neighbour in euery thing that is deare precious to him causing him to take thought and care not onely not to hurt nor offend any man by thought word or deede as neere as may be either in his excellency and dignity or in his life in his soule or body in his goods or credit or any thing else whatsoeuer belongeth vnto him but in all and euery one of these louingly to tender him with an vnfained desire and labour by all good meanes and with his best might to encrease and preserue all and euery one of them As vnrighteousnesse in the phrase of Scripture comprehends all those vices whereby men are hurtfull to men in any of their good things so vnder Righteousnesse are comprehended all vertues whereby wee become any way or in any sort profitable and helpefull to our Neighbour In this sense is the word Righteousnesse taken in all those places where it is set with holinesse or godlinesse as Titus 2. 12. Ephe. 4. Rom. 1. 18. Vnrighteousnesse set beside vngodlinesse or set alone is the spring of all euils from one man to another and Righteousnesse named apart from godlinesse is the roote of all duties amongst men it is as the Tree and all other vertues of the second Table as the branches it is as a Fountaine they be as the Riuers it is as the body they as the members This Righteousnesse is distinguished into habituall or actuall Righteousnesse habituall Righteousnesse is that gift of God which is poured into the hearts of the Elect to enable them to will and to doe good things tending to the good of our Neighbour whereof in the fourth to the Ephesians Actual righteousnesse is the exercise of this gift whē out of loue we practise such things wherby our neighbor may be benefited Hereof the Apostle spake 1 Iohn 2. 19. He that worketh Righteousnesse is righteous This gift and act of Righteousnesse is that for the which Noah Lot and sundry others are highly commended in the holy Scripture Gen 6. 9 Iob 1. 1. Now as touching the difference about Righteousnesse betweene the Children of God and others this is it The godly through this vniuersall Righteousnesse are disposed freely and of their owne accord to seeke the good of euery of their Neighbours in one thing as wel as in another according to the rules of the Word vnto the glory of God Whereas the wicked doe some righteous things to some persons now and then whom they affect which crosse not their owne pleasure nor gaine or credite not out of any loue to men nor out of any respect to Gods will or glory but out of selfe-loue with by-respects of vaine glory and worldly profit and therefore in nothing doing righteously and in most things committing vnrighteousnesse cleane contrary to the course of iust and righteous persons who doe worke righteous things and that righteously out of charity vnto men and vnto the praise of God and that at all times and towards all kind of men both friends and enemies according to their meanes and as occasions be offered them truly repenting where they faile in any things and afterwards endeauouring to become more 〈◊〉 Of Loue. Aquila SIR it hath been taught me that vnder Righteousnesse are contained all duties towards God and men and that in this sense Godlinesse is a part of Righteousnesse howbeit I perceiue that wee are to speake of it as it is separate and distinct from godlinesse And now you haue spoken thus far of Righteousnesse were it not good that wee first set vpon these workes of Righteousnesse which wee are bound to performe towards others in respect of some degree that God hath put vpon vs for thus it hath pleased God himselfe to proceede in the laying out those duties of the second Table he beginneth with such duties as we owe vnto others in regard of our
Mathew 19. 17. Christ onely hath right to eternall life in Heauen because he alone is perfectly iust others come thither by his right 1 Passiue righteousnesse Ephes. I. Rom. 4 last verse Tit. 2. 1 Tim. 2. Heb. 9. 1 Cor. 11. ver 32 33. 1 Pet. 1. Rom. 5 verse 3. 4 5. Simile 2 Actiue righteousnesse Two parts of actiue righteousnesse He that made Adam without sin could giue Christ our Nature without our sinne which is but an accident to our Nature 1. He did all 2. He did all perfectly 3 To a right end Iohn 5 4 Being constant in doing all was commanded 2 Cor 5 v last Acts 3 14 1 Pet 3. 1 Cor. 1 30. This righteousnes being in Christ it doth become ours by an action of God called imputation of which afterwards * As sanctifie to make holie rectify to make right mollifye to make soft glorifie to make glorious c. Iustification what it is An imputation of Christs whole righteousnesse to the beleeuing man 1 Imputation Esay 53. Galat. 3. 2 Cor. 5 verse last Rom. 5. 19. Of imputatiō Reade Rom. 4. The merit of right is eternal life 2 Faith These two actions meete both together at one time God then accounting and imputing all Christs iustice to a sinner when he truly beleeueth Rom. 4 verse 22 23 24. In what meaning wee are iustified by faith Iohn 1. 12. Gal. 3. 14. Rom. 3. 27. Why God would haue his Elect so iustified by faith in Christ. Two parts of Iustification 1 Remission of sinnes 2 Accounting iustice to vs. Eternall life the fruite of imputed righteousnesse Rom. 1. 17. Galat. 2. 20. This is Popish error in their second iustification they say it is of faith and workes The first iustification with the Papist is remission of sinnes apprehended by faith Second iustification after their doctrine whereby of iust already by the first iustification he becomes more iust this is by our owne works in part This second iustification being in truth our sanctification there being but one onely iustification taught in the word which for the beginning middle and ending by faith are knowne Phil. 3. vers 9 10. See and reade Luthers Preface before his Commentary to the Galathians Rom. 5. v. 1 2 3 4 6. 11. Peace with God containeth 1. reconciliation with God 2. and peace of conscience First fruite of iustification by Faith 1. Reconciliation Esay 0 6. Ephes. 2 14. Colos. 1 20. What it is 2. Peace of conscience What. 2 How it differs from false peace of the wicked 2 How peace of conscieuce is to be got 4 How preserued 5. How farre lost 6. By what meanes lost How recouered Rom. 8. 26. Psal. 51. 17. 3 Fruite of Iustification As we neede not Saints to intercede for vs or merits to commend vs to God 4 Fruite of iustification Stand in the way 〈◊〉 sinners Stand fast Iohn 13. 1 2. Ieremy 32. Iohn 10. 28. Rom. 8 25. Iohn 16. Let them look vpon what ground they stand which think the grace of God may be finally lost and wholly Standing in grace opens no window to security So as where security reigneth it is a sign that such are not in the state of grace 5. Fruit of Iustification hope of glorie 1. Glorie of God Reuel 7 21. 2. Hope of Glory 3 Why it is certaine 4. How certainty comes to be ioyned to hope 1 Peter 1. 3. 1 Peter 1. Psalme 51. 6. Fruite of iustification Ioy spirituall Ioy by hearing 7. Ioy in tribulations Of worldly ioy Rules and cautions for worldly ioy Let Salomons example proue this cause the godly to feare worldly comforts Grounds of hope Of the despaire of the faithfull The occasions As in Dauid hath God forgotten to be mercifull The ends of Gods counsell in it The effects of Hope Hope differeth from presumption Wicked men haue no hope in God Hope ioyned with some presumption 8. Fruit of Iustification 1 Iohn 4. 19 20. 9. Fruite of Iustification * Seeing the sinnes of the Elect could not hinder their reconciliation by the death of Christ their sinnes done after reconciliation cannot keepe them From hope of saluation and in this regard also they doe glory Iustification and sanctification both together Sanctification it is by faith Iustification and Sanctification be as two twinnes which came together into the world of the beleeuing heart Iustification being the elder fister * Therefore Sathans temptation is thus to be returned I beleeue therefore I am sanctified I haue my sinnes forgiuen therfore I am renewed Renewing Regeneration Sanctificatiō 2 Pet. 1. 5. 2 Pet. 1. 2. Parts of Sanctification Cause of Sanctification Rom. 7. 4. Rom. 6. 6. Of all men 〈◊〉 Adam before his 〈◊〉 and the man Christ voide of sinne all others haue sin euen til death * Before their sanctification the Elect and finne do agree as husband wife afterward they are at variance as two enemies The manifold profit which is to be taken by finne 1. Watchfulnesse 2. Prayer 3. 〈◊〉 4. Charity to the 〈◊〉 To Enemies 5 Humble confession Psal. 32. 5 6. Psal. 34. 1 2. Modesty and lowlinesse in our whole life 7. Experience of Gods power 8. Sins made remedies of sinnes 9. Giue aduantage against Sathan We had neede to make some vse and benefit of sin for wee take a great deale of harme by it How Sanctification differeth from a ciuill life Markes of Sanctificatiō This would not be forgottē that a 〈◊〉 man though hee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet in some 〈◊〉 sinne will beare with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who though he cannot bee free from sins 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 none but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an enemy cuen to his darling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if it offend 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his hand if it offend Causes of spiritual combat Rom. 6. 9 10 11. Difference between Repentance Sanctification Repentance hath sundry acceptions what they be Godly sorrow beginning of renewed Repentance Godly sorrow whence it ariseth Wherein Repentance consisteth 7. Signes of renewed Repentance 1. Care Clearing 〈◊〉 3. Anger 4 Feare Blessed is the man that thus feareth 5. Desire 6. Zeale 7. Reuenge Meanes to quicken our daily Repentance 12. Cautions about Repentance Prou. 28. Some scruples about Repentance Of this kinde was fornication thought to bee among the Corinthians 1 Cor. 6. Held in those times for nosin but some indiffrent thing So many amongst vs thinke of interest for lone of money He is no sinner who wold be no sinner M. 〈◊〉 Peccata vastantia conscientiam Scrupis Sinnes of 〈◊〉 lapse in the obiections against faith in Christ for for giuenes of our sinnes Repentance vpon great extraordinarie fals is se dome without teares 1 Sam 7. Mat 26. Luke 7. Psal. 119 57 69 112 115. Rom. 7 15 16 17 18. Psal. 51 1 2 3 Of encouragements to Repentance 1. Truth of our faith Christianity discried by our Repentance 2. Great promiles made performed to repenting sinners Of earthly things Esay 1. Of
Spirituall things Repentance a note of a person to be saued not any cause of saluation 3. Vnrepentance hath vnfitnesse for any seruice of God or any good worke Vnablenesse to take any profit by the meanes of saluation 4. Repentance hath the contrary 5. Consideration of a iudgment day 6. Repentance the ioy of Angels and men 7. Good consequents of Repentance Hind erances of Repentance Example of the oyle in the cruise Also Danieis pulse Rom. 6 22 23 Reuel 7. Mat. 5. Lu. 23 Math. 25. 1 Tim. 5. Psal. 51. Ecclesiastes 2 Cor. 7. 11. True Repentance is a turning from euery sinne to do euery good worke Iames 2. 10. Eccles. 10. 1. Simile Simile Simile Exod. 17. 14. Simile Es. 〈◊〉 3. Perfection is here set agaiust hypocrisie A double perfection 1. Of measure 2. Of parts Mar. 6. 20. 2 King 10. 31. Acts 8. 13. Simile Simile Worthinesse put for meeknesse and vnworthily for vnmeetely 1 Cor. 11. 27. Heb. 6. 7. Luke 19. 1 2 3 4 5. Luke 23. Iames 2. 26. What a good worke is How many things required to a good worke 1. Good matter Deut. 12. verse last 2 Kings 26. from verse 16. till verse 21. 2. Perso good that the manner may be good Simile Simile A threefold act of Faith in euery good worke 1 Pet. 2. 5. 〈◊〉 3. 14. 3. Good end Actions are measured by their ends Simile 4. Good meanes Good things must haue good meanes Gen. 27. Shee sinnes by impatiency 1 Sam. 21. 13. Psal. 34. 1. 5. Circumstances 〈◊〉 3. Good workes please God and why Woe be to the most cōmendable life of any man if it be iudged without mercy saith Augustine Philip. 2. 13. Deus in nobis coronat sua dona Good workes merit not and why Debitum non est meritum Merita nostra Domini misericordia meritum meum mors 〈◊〉 Christe Bernard A reward due vnto good workes and Why A reward of fauour not of debt Rom. 4. 4. God is not obnoxious 〈◊〉 his creature Heb. 1 3. Simile 2. Pet. I II. Our merite is misery It is sufficient for our merite to know we do not merite Vse of good workes 1. Vse of good workes in respect of God See M. Iohn Shaw his trea tise of Maries blessednesse Fol. 89 90. 2. In respect of the Gospell 3. In respect of our selues Simile 4. In respect of other men Vnconuerted 1. Elect. 2. Not Elect. 〈◊〉 1. Weake 2. Strong First of the workes of the first Table Mat. 22. Loue of God what it is to loue 1. Commandement What it is to loue God Why God is to be loued How much God is to be loued By what rule our loue is to be guided Whence our loue to God springeth 2 Cor. 5 14. What be the effects and signes of our loue to God More proofes of the sound loue of God Such as loue God do loue his word which they shew forth by 1. hearing 2. marking 3 remembring 4. laying it vp in their hearts 5. delighting in it 6. by meditation 7 praise 8 and practise or keeping it Hypocrites delight in knowledge but not in the thing to wit Christ known Their loue to Gods Children it is both in affect and effect in word and in worke * A feeling suffering together Acts 14. They rent their cloathes c. Amor sui diffusivus Iames is reported to haue made his knees hard 〈◊〉 Camels knees with labour in prayer 2 Sam. 15. * Dauids mourning Pe ters teares Christs agony doe manifest this truth Prayer a fruit and token of our loue Of the feare of God The feare of God how it belongs to the wicked Rom. 2 verse last Feare of God twofold Exod. 20. 20. 1. A seruile feare of this feare it is true which is commonly saide Whom wee feare we hate and wish they were not 2. Filial feare Simile Simile Psal. 112. 1. Prou. 26. 27. Prou. 8. 13. Of Ezra it is said hee feared God greatly God must be feared accordingly Trust in God proper to the faithfull Heb. 3. Heb. 10. Psal. 53. Tim. 1. 6. Psal. 18. Psal. 112. Psal. 32. What it is to trust in God Ground of trust in God The godly vse meanes but haue their trust in God onely Wherein the trust of the godly differs from the trust of the wicked Markes for triall of our trust in God Encouragements to trust in God Simile Of Prayer and thankfulnesse 2 Commandement Difference betweene good and bad in Prayer and thanksgiuing Col. 3. 17. Marke 9. Rom. 7. 16. Mat. 5. 16. 1 cor 10. 31. Note this When ones minde is vncleane it defiles his best workes Eccle. 4. verse last Exod. 19. Luke 11. 15. Mat. 5. 6. Simile The true vse of Gods Name 3. commandement As men vse their holy day cloathes And for the titles words properties Sacraments workes of God their care is to mention them with a godly reuerence 4. commandement The true vse of the Sabbath And with what 〈◊〉 they beare their absence from the Assemblies see Psal. 84. 1 2 41. Patience a vertue proper to a true Christian. Afflictions the obiect of Patience Simile Tentatio seductionis 2. Probationis Punishment Correction Triall Of Chastisements 2 Simile First ground of patience 2. God smiteth not for euery offence 4. He correcteth with wisedome and loue Kepentance furthered by chastisements Dan. 9. Luke 15. 〈◊〉 7. Humility furthered by chastisements 1 Pet 4. Esay 57. Of Tiyals 〈◊〉 14. 28 〈◊〉 30. Esay 43. * This Righteousnesse is commutatiue and distributiue * This Righteousnesse is habitual or actuall * Hence it is that such righteous persons as these doe turne away from their righteousnes and so lose themselues their labour Eze. 18. Sincerity or truth is in all graces as a common adioynt or quality The fixt commandement Loue. What brotherly loue is How our Neighbour may be loued without iniury to God An enemy is a neighbour and a brother if he be a christian Difference betweene a neighbour a brother Degrees of Loue. Rules to guide our loue Reasons why wee ought to loue Properties of Loue. Actions of Loue. Difference betweene Faith and Loue. Brotherly kindnesse Foure kinds of Peace Prouerbs 17. Humility Micah 6. 8. col 3. 10. Grauity Gentlenesse It is reported that Peter he wept so often as he 〈◊〉 the mildnesse and gentlenesse of his Lord. Luther Long sufferance peace Forgiuing offences Goodnesse Meekenesse Mercy Philip. 3 18. Prou. 12. 10. Neh. 13 14 31 Gouernment of the tongue for speech and silence Prou. 10. Selfe-preseruation Seuenth commandement Vprightnesse towards our Neighbours goods Psal. 15. 3. 7. Eze. 18. Ninth commandement Truth vprightnesse in speech 〈◊〉 in keeping of promises Iob 1. verse last Three doubts Master Luther confesseth that hee was not troubled great ly with this vice Philarguria Pleonexia 〈◊〉 Honesty Zeale a Election b calling c Meanes of calling d Illuminatiō e Opening the heart f Faith g Vnion with christ h Iustification i Sanctific atiō k Spirituall conflict l Repentance m Good workes n General graces o Vprightnesse p Particular gifts q 〈◊〉 r Encrease or growth s Glorification
resolued of the truth of the doctrine which he knew as he was willing to suffer euen death rather then to renounce it All the Martires of Christ in yeelding their liues for Christ did witnesse to the world that they had firmely assented vnto and were throughly resolued of the vndoubted truth which they knew and professed The third part of faith is application when the beleeuing party is perswaded not onely of the truth of the doctrine touching Christ to yeeld firme assent thereunto but that the same truth belongeth vnto himselfe As this is the greatest so it is the hardest duty of faith impugned mightily by the Papists who cannot abide to heare of it and also it is performed with much difficulty of the best Protestants in the time of temptation when they are sore assayled by their sinnes and Satan But letting other things passe here I will onely proue it to be the duty of faith to appropriate the doctrine of Christ touching eternall saluation by him to a mans selfe particularly and to shew that faith makes a man beleeue his owne saluation and not onely that there is saluation purchased for sinnes by Christ as the Scripture teacheth First the Commandement is to beleeue the Gospell Marke 1. 15. To beleeue in the name of Christ 1 〈◊〉 4. 23. Shall we say that the meaning of this Commandement is no more but to beleeue the doctrine which teacheth Iesus to be the Sonne of God and a perfect Sauiour of the World to be of God and a most true doctrine What will let then but that 〈◊〉 may be a true beleeuer and be saued for either he beleeued this or hee beleeued nothing yea he preached this Mat. 10. 7. And doth not Christ say of some of the Pharises that they knew him also whence he was Ioh. 7. 28. 15. 22 that they had no cloke for their finne because by hearing him they did see and know his doctrine and workes to be of God And in sooth how could hee in Mat. 12. 31 32. charge them with that 〈◊〉 of the Spirit vnlesse they had beene enlightened by the worke of the Spirit so farre as to vnderstand that which he taught and wrote to be diuine and not from men or by humane power And who can doubt which will not hoodwinke his eyes not to see that which is so manifest that many in the Church come so farre as to see and to assent vnto the whole doctrine of Christ euen to the professing declaring it to others distinctly learnedly of whom yet there may be great doubt made that all such are not true beleeuers endued with this liuely faith effectuall to saluation Wherefore the Commandement pressing vs to beleeue the Gospell hath meaning to presse vs to beleeue it with particularitie that the doctrine of saluation by Christ belongs to our selues as the Elect may passe further then a naturall man can doe Secondly it may appeare to be so because beleeuing and eating are put one for the other Iohn 6. 47. compared with verse 50 51. Now euery one knoweth this action of eating to be an appropriating to a mans owne selfe a portion of meat which is prouided for all so is beleeuing an application to a mans selfe of such promises as are commonly propounded to the whole Assembly Tell me will itsuffice a man for the nourishing and preseruing of his bodily strength when hee commeth to a Table well furnished with meate to perswade himselfe that the meate is very wholsome good for nourishment and well dressed or may hee not goe away hungry and feeble if hee doe not take the meate and by eating make it his owne So when a sinner commeth to a Sermon where hee heareth the doctrine of the Gospell so mildly and distinctly taught and proued will it suffice him to saluation to credit it certainly to be a diuine truth onely able to saue poore sinners and to haue beene truly and wisely handled May he not for all this goe home in as bad case as he came as far from saluation except by beleefe he receiue that meate of heauenly truth into his owne heart particularly to be refreshed by a sure perswasion of the same that it appertaines to himselfe Moreouer doth not the Apostle say that Christ is put on by faith Gal. 3. 26 27. and that he dwels in our hearts by faith Ephe. 3. 17. And doth not this imply application to be louing to faith What is putting on but an application of a garment to the body for warmth and comelinesse What is dwelling in our hearts but the presence of Christ there by his Spirit to doe all the parts of a Sauiour to him in whom he dwelleth And this is done by faith And tell me how we are bound to beleeue that the thing wee aske by prayer according to the will of God shall be giuen vs and the forgiuenesse of our owne sins also our owne saluation to be by the will of God asked in prayer and yet wee not bound to beleeue the remission of our owne sinnes and our owne saluation Moreouer when Paul said Christ loued me and died for me and saith also that hee liued by faith in the Sonne of God Gal. 3. 20. And Mary called Christ her Sauiour 〈◊〉 1. 46. And Thomas confessed saying My Lord and my God Ioh. 20. 28. And 〈◊〉 God is my 〈◊〉 and my saluation Psal. 18. 1. Did not their faith apply that Sauiour God particularly to themselues who is the common Sauiour of all beleeuers And if this were not done by their faith how then And how doth the Church in framing prayers say Our Father but in making confession of faith say I beleeue If this bee not the iudgement of the Church that euery one must haue particular faith to beleeue the doctrine for himselfe and out of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prayers for others with himselfe Also when Sat an tempteth any about particularity of saluation to doubt that himselfe cannot be saued Christ died not for him will it not be too weake a buckler to beate backe this assault to say I doe surely beleeue the whole truth of doctrine concerning redemption by Iesus Christ that hee alone came from God and is the onely Sonne of God and that there is saluation by no other Nay will not the tempter replie I my selfe beleeue so much and yet tremble And Iulian beleeued and protested so much and yet an Apostata Wherefore as when a rich gift is bestowed amongst many poore people euery one must take to himselfe a portion of it for it will not releeue their pouerty if they onely beleeue it to bee a good gift and doe not take it to themselues so the gift of Christ which is offered to poore sinners in the doctrine of the Word to enrich them withall must of euery one by his faith as by an hand bee applied to himselfe or else they will remaine poore and beggerly still Vnto this action of application