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A55306 Precious faith considered in its nature, working, and growth by Edward Polhill ... Polhill, Edward, 1622-1694? 1675 (1675) Wing P2755; ESTC R9438 262,258 506

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dependence the Spirit comes down in auxiliary Grace and there is an effectual working in every part of the New Creature Love in the Spirit as it is called Col. 1.8 and Joy in Spirit and every other Grace in the Spirit badding and blossoming and filling the face of the life with holy fruits Only it must be remembred that this Dependence is in Gods way where Christ is experimentally Immanuel God with us to stir up all holy Graces into act Thus Faith actuates Graces in a general way common to them all I now proceed to shew how Faith actuates this or that Grace in particular And that I may not be too prolix in running over all Graces I shall single some choice ones out instead of all First I shall begin with the Grace of Love This is the great Command the sum of the Law a Divine Union with God a bond of perfection among Men a holy fire kindled by the Holy Ghost in the Heart and the sweetness and easiness of every good Duty This Grace whether it respect God or Christ or our Neighbour is actuated by Faith As touching our Love to God it is so actuated The very light of Nature reveals a God an excellent perfect Being or the Being of Beings whose Love as the Philosopher said is the principle and knot of the World and so cannot but raise up a kind of Love toward him the Will being necessarily in some sort affected with such an Excellency though seen but by a glimmering light Not that this Love is a Grace or a Love in sincerity or a Love sicut oportet as an ancient Council speaks or indeed in Scripture sense any love at all because it loves not God above all it must needs be inordinate there being the same ataxy in loving God below the Creature as in loving the Creature above God But that there is a kind of Love such as that dark light can raise up in faln man But when the light of Faith comes it raises up the Grace of Love towards God and ever after moves it into act by the pure discoveries of him which it lets into the Heart from Scripture He is saith Faith an immense infinite Goodness Creatures are but drops of Being lying in the shell of Time but he is the Ocean of all Perfections They may be good for this or that in particular according to their finite kinds and spheres but he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the All-things as the Aposile calls him 1 Cor. 15.28 And withal he is Love it self as another Apostle hath it 1 Joh. 4.16 Not shutting up his Allness in unapproachable Glory but letting it out to Believers His Love though he ever had perfect Blessedness in himself would yet pour out it self in making a world of good Creatures and after Mans fall in giving his only Son to take hold of our nature and in it to bring us back again to himself that he might be our God and make over his Allness to us and all this in pure Grace without any Money or Merit on our part and in rich Mercy towards worms and forlorn Sinners and to assure it to us a Gospel is let down from Heaven full of great and precious Promises such as are the very counterpanes of that Grace and Mercy which flow in his Heart towards Sinners Vnder such musings of Faith Oh how the holy fire of Love kindles What high rates and estimates are set upon him How is the Heart inflamed towards Union to be one spirit with him What Complacencies and Sabbaths of rest doth it find in him What little things are Worlds and Creatures What an All is He and an Heaven his Love What tastes are there of his Goodness and surrenders to his Will and Glory Our Love goes after him as his is by Faith let in upon the Heart Moreover Faith excites the Love of him by every act which it sets about in its recumbencies it enamours the Heart that he should give us leave to lean on his Grace and in so doing bear up our weakness with Promises and sweetly answer us in Pardons and suitable Graces in its Obedience it is very ravishing that he should chalk out such pure ways for us and take us by the hand and teach us to go and at last crown our faultring Obedience with Eternal Life Ordinances which to Unbelief are but dry things are to Faith the lovely Chariots of the Spirit Creatures which are Idols to carnal sense are to Faith fair mirrors of the infinite Goodness and Beauty in the Creator Which way soever Faith turns it self it meets with something or other inflammative of our Love towards him who is every-where and all in all As touching our Love to Christ it is actuated in the same manner A meer notion of Christ raises up some Love towards him as we see in those Temporaries who receive the word with joy Mat. 13.20 which though it be but fructus horarius hints out a kind of Love Such a story as that of Codrus the Athenian King 's dying for his Country could not but affect his Subjects much more must the History of Christ dying for a World do so Only this Love to Christ raised up by meer Evangelical notion as the Love to God raised up by natural is not right nor elevated to a Divine pitch till Faith come and shew him forth by a light more congruous than all literal knowledg and then there is as the Church after an elegant description concludes Totus desideria all loves or desires Cant. 5.16 Every thing in him is attractive What a person is the Eternal Word the brightness of the Fathers glory What an Union Immanuel God and Man in one Heaven and Earth admirably blended together as a pledg that God would be at one with us What a robe is his Righteousness made as broad as the Law and woven all of Love from the top to the bottom What a Laver his Blood able to expiate a world of Sins and save a world of Sinners What a treasure is his Fulness where the Spirit is in over-measure and all its Graces in redundance running over into the vessels of Faith and filling all its capacities Who that hath eyes of Faith would not love him To ask why we should love him is as the Philosopher told him who demanded Why Beauty was so taking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a blind mans question nothing but blind unbelief can hold us from his Embraces Whatever posture Faith be in whether contemplating him in the Mount or leaning on the bosom of his Grace or hiding in his Wounds or sitting at his feet for Wisdom or lying under his Scepter for power against Sin still it stirs up an holy Love to him It finds his Blood in every Pardon his Spirit in every Grace his Wine-cellar in every Ordinance his Seal in every Promise and his Purchase in every Creature No wonder if St. Paul count all things dung and dross for him And St. Austin
pardon one way for the pardon of infirmities and another way for the pardon of gross sins but there is one undivided way of faith and repentance appointed for both Which being so it follows that if the believers gross sins be not forgiven till after actual faith and repentance then neither are his infirmities forgiven till then and by consequence the believer cannot continue justified no not for a minute the multitudes of infirmities which are ever swarming in him would put him into a state of death every moment Nay as worthy Mr. Wall hath well observed in ictu mortis None but Christ pag. 322. in the very last stroak of death he may perish unless the last operation of his spirit be actual faith and repentance These things perswade me that the gross sins of believers are at least in some sense pardoned before their fresh acts of faith and repentance touching which Divines speak variously Mr. Baxter saith That Believers as soon as they sin have an imperfect pardon though not plenary Lect. 113. on the 51. Psalm Mr. Hildersham saith They have a pardon upon record in heaven but not the comfort of it till by faith and repentance they sue it out and be able to shew and plead it in the Court of their own Conscience Mr. Burroughs saith When any Soul is taken into Christ Expos en Hos p. 611. it hath not only all the sins it hath committed pardoned but there is a pardon laid in for all sins to come there is no instant of time wherein it can be said that the Believer is under condemnation What is the aptest expression I shall not contend but I conceive such sins in believers are in some sort pardoned before their fresh acts of faith and repentance Neither doth this open a gap to licentiousness for it concerns only Believers whom the stings of Conscience celipses of Gods face languors of inward graces and foul blots upon their Evidences to heaven will under the influences of the Spirit press to fresh acts of saith and repentance as to duties very necessary and incumbent upon them Thus much of the continuance of this holy fruit Fourthly The fourth thing considerable is the perfection of it This holy fruit is never fully ripe till the day of Judgment Repent that your sins may be blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord saith St. Peter Acts 3.19 The day of Judgment is to a believer a time of refreshing then there will be no more scorches from the fiery Law no more stings from the old Serpent no more guilt inflaming the Conscience no more frowns from the holy God but a pure sweet refrigeration breathed out from his gracious presence Caspar Olevian in his last sickness M●●ch A●um in vita ejus was in ineffable joyes so that he seemed to be in prato elegantissimo rore perfusus coelesti in a most sweet meadow with an heavenly dew distilling down upon him Such reviving refrigerations believers have sometimes here much more transcendent will their divine refreshments be at the last day The top-stone of Justification shall be then laid on to make it compleat as may appear by the ensuing Considerations First Here the Believer is justified privately by the Gospel but then he shall be justified openly by the solemn sentence of God before all the World here he hath the white-stone of Absolution given in secret but then it shall be brought forth to view glittering in all the orient colours of Free-grace It was a great honour done to Mordecai to be arraied in Royal apparel and to have it proclaimed before him Thus shall it be done to the man whom the King delighteth to honour But oh what glory will be upon the Believer at that day when he shall stand in the glorious rightcousness of Christ and hear it proclaimed before Men and Angels This is a righteous man when Christ shall confess him before his Father and the holy Angels to be a piece of himself of his flesh and of his bones As it was with the Sons of Jesse passing before Samuel Eliab came and was refused Abinadab came and was resused and so others at last David came and the Lord said Arise anoint him for this is he 1 Sam. 16th Chapter So it will be with the Sons of men at the great day of Judgment The great Potentate may come and be rejected as a vile person the rich Dives may come and be put away as dross the Learned Rabbi may come and be turned off as a fool only when the Believer comes God will say This is he this must reign in glory for ever This is a Justification before God after a most signal manner Secondly Here the Believer stands justified but in the midst of briers and thorns remaining Corruptions vex and tear his righteous soul from day to day He is in the Land of Promise but the Canaanite is not quite driven out the reliques of Sin inmates in the same heart with grace like the Liers in wait for Samson are ready to make an assault upon him Hence the Jewish Doctors say That God calls no man Saint or Holy till he be dead and in the grave because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the concupiscential frame is not quite out of him before death but at that day there shall be nihil damnabile remaining in him Sin shall be no more no more tumors of Pride no more boilings up of Concupiscence no more spots or wrinckles or dark shades of Infirmity nothing but pure spotless Holiness Insomuch that Divines say that from henceforth our Justification shall be in another way than by imputed Righteousness because having perfect inherent Righteousness in our selves we shall need no covering If the Apostle say of a Believer that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is justified from his sins in respect of Sanctification begun Rom. 6.7 how much more will it be true when Sin shall be no more Thirdly Here the Believer is Justified but the dust of mortality hangs about him It may be there is a Stone ready to drop into the Bladder or an Imposthume ready to break in the Head Mors latet in mediis abdita viseeribus in one part of the body or other Death is preparing his arrow upon the string to shoot man down from the perch of this life into the grave But at that day there shall be nihil corruptibile Death shall be no more Diseases which use to sound an alarum to it shall be utterly removed Tears which are Natures pay to Sorrows shall be all wiped off the corruptible shall put on incorruption Mortality shall be swallowed up of Life This is a day of redemption indeed Fourthly Here the Believer is Justified but his comfort is not alwaies the same Now the light of Gods Countenance breaks out like a clear Sun upon him and anon there is a sad eclipse leaving him in darkness one day a banquet of heavenly Comforts is
God in Christ and that must needs in flame the Heart towards him Tamum amamus quantum credimus Hence Aquinas himself confesses That though Faith and Hope may be without Charity yet without Charity they are not properly Virtues And Durandus saith Credere in Deum non est praecise actus fidei sid actus fidei charitatis simul To believe in God is not precisely an act of Faith but of Faith and Charity together So Inseparable are these two Graces But leaving the Schoolmen I shall proceed Faith connects all Graces together in a triple way it connects them in the fontal cause the boly Spirit which it receives all Graces are from the Spirit and the Spirit is received by Faith hence rivers of living water flow in the Believers heart Joh. 7.38 that is All Graces flow there as waters from a fountain it connects them in the Rule the Command of God which it universally respects It is observed by Divines That the five last Commands in Deut. 5. run thus Thou shalt not kill and thou shalt not commit Adultery and thou shalt not Steal and thou shalt not bear false Witness and thou shalt not Govet The word And points out to us that all the Commands are coupled together by God like the Curtains of the Tabernacle all are as it were one body and Faith hath a respect to every one of them and in every one owns the same stamp of Divine Authority He that said Love thy God said also Love thy Neighbour He that said Be Zealous said also Be Meek and Patient and Obedient and abundant in all Grace It connects them also in the end the Glory of God which it looks at in all things all Graces tend to that Glory and Faith is the single eye which guides them all thither Bonum opus intentio facit Enarr in Psal 31. in Pras intentionem sides dirigis saith St. Austin Faith knows what that is wherein God would be glorisied All Graces being thus connected in Faith which is a kind of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or firmament as the word is Col. 2.5 to them all it comes to pass that Faith in actuating any one Grace gives a strength and further growth to every other Grace Thus it is in Graces respecting distinct Tables the more we act our Love to God the more will be our Love to our Neighbour this though belonging to the second Table flows ex fonte pietatis out of that fountain of Piety which respects the first Thus it is in those Graces which are seemingly contrary as in Zeal and Meekness the more we act our Zeal for God the more will be our Meekness towards Men. Hence in the Primitive Christians who were so hot for Christianity was found a very meek Spirit and the reason is because a Man cannot truly actuate one Grace but he will have more of that Spirit which is fontally all Grace and graciously multiplies Talents in the use of them Neither can he truly obey one Command but it will render his Heart more Obediential and ready to obey others also as being enjoined by the same Authority nor can he in one thing look at Gods Glory but it will in some measure encline him to seek it in other things also and so the New Creature grows in every part and his Path shines more and more to the perfect day in Heaven CHAP. XI Precious Faith considered in the Crowns and Statures thereof The Divine Experiences of Faith as it Experiments the Divinity of Scripture in the Precepts Promises Threatnings and Supernatural Truths thereof Concerning the Blessed Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Divine Essence Jesus Christ the Mcdiator and the Efficacy of Grace HAVing treated of Justification Adoption and Sanctification which are Fruits of Faith and are more or less in all Believers I now proceed to some other which are The Crowns and Statures of Faith and to be found not in all Believers at least not at first but in such as have made a good progress in Grace Faith have made a good progress in Grace Faith having obtained the Holy Spirit with all its Graces doth now go on like The Baptized Eunuch rejoycing in the ways of God glorying in Free Grace triumphing in Jesus Christ warring against Corruptions actuating Holy Graces bowing down under the Commands of Heaven sucking the Sweet-Breasts of the Promises and waiting for the Heavenly Dews and Distillations of the Spirit and in this holy Progress gathers up many choice Experiments more worth than a World All learned Men are for Experiments and every one would cry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have found it the Sages of the Law are for tried Cases which have been sub judice the Physitian sets a probatum est on approved Medicines the Anatomists hunts after the arcana of Nature by Dissection of Bodies and the Chymist by Dissolution thereof Experience is procreatrix Artium the very Parent of Arts whose universal Precepts are collected by an induction of particulars but there are no Experiments like those of Faith Dr. Dees Spirits made as if they would reveal great Mysteries to him such as they called the Cabbala of Nature the Numbers of the World the linea Spiritus Sancti the Mirabilia Dei and the Nova terra bringing forth without Tillage but all these were but Dreams and Impostures and so I suppose are many things in Chymistry like Helmonts Alkahest wonderful if true But the Experiments of Faith are great Realities and withal Divine as much above those in the Sphear of Nature as Souls are above Bodies and Heaven is above Earth God in the Prophet calls on his People to baing in the Tythes for his House and so by their Obedience to prove him If he would not open the windows of Heaven and pour out a blessing that there should not be room enough to receive it Mal. 3.10 When Faith goes on in a Tract of Obedience proving of God Heaven opens in wonderful Experiences of him the Manna of holy Truth is then tasted the Hony-combs of Free-Grace drop upon the Heart Promises are realized exemplified in Providences Divine Helps and Salvations come down and call for Eben-Ezers to be set up for them and Discoveries of heavenly things in their certainty and excellency are in a manner made as if a Man could look into the Holy of Holies and see God Face to Face Some such Experiences I suppose the learned Rivet had in his last Sickness in which he said of himself In these ten days I have made a greater progress in Divinity than in all my Life but leaving Generals I shall come to Particulars One great Experiment of Faith is touching the Truths of God a Believer in his holy Progress comes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding as the Apostle speaks Cal. 2.2 At the first he hath a Stock of Divine Knowledg but after Experience Riches and all Riches of it at the first
off from the Will and mountains of earthiness off from the Affections outward miracles in the Churches infancy followed believers for a while Mark 16.17 but inward miracles are ever found in them and no wonder for the exceeding greatness of Gods power is unto them that believe Eph. 1.19 Secondly This precious faith doth compleat the noblest instinct in man I mean that natural pulse which he hath after happiness All men would be happy but none ever hit upon it till faith came The Pagans by natural light have some knowledge of God the supream good but the only access to him is by faith The Philosophers whose profession was the study of wisdom and whose lamp of reason burned brighter then others were no better then the blind Sodomites unable to find the door of happiness De civitat Dei l. 19. c. 1. Hence as St. Austin relates out of Varro the Philosophers might be divided into two hundred eighty eight Sects about the chief good which faith can indubitably immediately point at Some Philosophers placed mans happiness in pleasures which yet are but the sad transformations of men into bruits Some in honours which yet are but great servitudes which made the Noble Charles the fift weep over his Son upon whose shoulders at his retire out of the world he left the burden of a Crown Some in riches which yet are but thorns choaking that precious seed of the word which would grow up if embraced into life eternal Others which were better marks-men in moral virtues yet even these as a learned man observes are but circa res humanas their sphear is but humane converse and they do not as faith elevate the soul into a conjunction with God which is the only true happiness When the Apostle in his Catalogue of graces which minister an entrance into the everlasting kingdom puts in temperance and patience 2 Pet. 1.6 he speaks of them as Graces not as meer moral virtues but as Christianized by Faith which in that place is set in the van But waving the Pagan world let us come to the Christian There the way of life is clearly manifested yet none void of faith ever trod a right step in it nay nor spiritually discerned it unto them that are without all things are in parables Mark 4.11 to the unbeliever though never so great a Scholar Christ and grace and heaven are but as it were in parables The Kohathites whose name as a learned man observes is derived from stupidity carried the holy things covered and so do all the unregenerate Rabbies in the Church till faith waken them out of the stupor of the fall they discern not spiritually the beatitude objectively exposed to view in the Gospel till faith draw off the vail from their hearts but as soon as that is done the way into the holy of Holies is manifest and passable and so the 〈◊〉 instinct after happiness receives a compleature Now this precious faith being precious in the least minim of it may be considered either in its first and lowest measure or in its fruits and glorious progresses In its first and lowest measure it is the very condition of the Gospel and puts a man by virtue thereof into a state of salvation whosoever believeth even with the least degree of precious faith shall be saved I shall therefore first treat of it according to the lowest measure which hath salvation entailed on it and then proceed to the progresses and fruits thereof and according to the lowest measure it may be thus described Precious Faith is a grace of the holy Spirit whereby the heart supernaturally illuminated doth so believe the testimony of God in the sacred Scriptures as in a way of trust or dependance to resign and yield up it self unto Jesus Christ as Mediator and in and through him unto God according to his word In general it is a grace of the holy Spirit in special there is in it first a supernatural illumination which is as the womb of the morning in which this child of light is conceived and then which is the first-born of that light there is a belief of the testimony of God and lastly which makes up the total sum of this grace there is a dependant yielding or resignation of the soul unto the Mediator and through him to God according to the word I shall in order treat of all these and so unsold the description at large The first thing is in generall faith is a grace of the holy Spirit The famous St. Austin once let drop a strange word It is said saith he God worketh all in all but not he believeth all in all therefore that we believe is our own but that we work good it is Gods who giveth the holy Spirit to believers but the good man soon called it back again Aug. Retract l. 1. c. 23. Profec●o non dicerem truly I should not have said it if I had then known faith to be the gift of God The Pelagians of old understood by grace only their own free-will and the Gospel-doctrine hence that impious saying of theirs refuted by St. Austin à Deo habemus quòd homines sumus à nobis ipsis quòd justi sumus faith with them was but the issue of their own free-will and it is no other with the Socinians Peccatum originis saith the Racovian Catechism nullum p●orsus est quare nec liberum arbitrium vitiare potuit there was not so much as a bruise of free-will in the fall we have a free power of our own to believe but what saith the Scripture Vnto you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is gratuitously given to believe Phil. 1.29 and faith is called the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 because it is not from our own spirit and in express terms the grace of God Acts 11.23 it lodges in mans heart as a beam of that eternal grace which is in Gods and to make this clear I shall offer three things First This precious faith is a thing above the natural faculty of man There is in man a natural faith or believing faculty and the very Phiosophers would call for it from their Scholars but as it is in the fall of a house not this or that beam falls but all comes down at once so it was in the fall of man not this or that natural faculty fell but all together and among the rest the believing faculty fell also hence as it lyes in the dust and rubbish of the fall it centers in the creature and without the elevation of grace it can in no wise lift up it self to God and Christ We are begotten again to a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ saith the Apostle 1 Pet. 1.3 Observe there must be a touch from Christ in glory or else there will be no elevation Christ must first apprehend us Phil. 3.12 or else our believing faculty is but as a dead hand unable to apprehend him Secondly This precious faith is
which reason could not elevate to the Creators glory faith spiritualizes by a pure intention towards it Thirdly The light of reason is at a greater distance from God then that of Faith and so doth not see him so clearly in the works of creation and providence as that doth And first for creation though it be a clear glass of the eternal power and Godhead yet the Philosophers as so many Babel-builders are miserably confounded in their language about it Thales fetches all things out of water as if that were the universal fountain Anaximenes out of air as if by the rarefaction and condensation thereof all were produced Hippasus and Heraclitus held that all things came out of a primitive fire or light which by its death or extinction generated all Democritus and Epicurus affirmed that the world was made by chance a lucky concourse of atomes framed it as it is Pythagoras would have all things generated out of numbers and the harmony thereof Aristotle the Prince of Peripateticks asserted the world to be eternal Plato attributed eternity only to the matter and before him Anaxagoras was the first who added a mind to matter saying Omnia simul erant deinde accessit mens eaque composuit O dark and confused Labyrinth of opinions How or which way shall a man extricate himself without faith By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God Heb. 11.3 If Faith do but open its eyes upon the first Chapter of Genesis the Creation which before was dark as the Chaos is all clear as the light The believer sees God in every creature not only in the great Regions of Heaven and Earth but also in the least Atoms or particles of nature I am is discovered wherever there is any thing of Being And as for Providence reason hath not been much clearer among the Philosophers touching it then touching creation Aristotle holding the world to be eternally from God by emanation● as light from the Sun must also hold its continuance to be in the same manner and without any voluntary act such as Providence is God saith he is the first Mover he moves the heavens and those other bodies subalternately so God is the universal cause and all the wheels in nature move under him only contingent things which are not within the chain of natural causality seem according to Aristotle not to be administred by God Epicurus who makes the world to consist of a fortuitous concourse of infinite petit Atoms owns no Providence at all God will not break his rest and serene tranquility with any mundane affairs and indeed in reason a world made by chance must be so governed The Stoicks in stead of Providence brought in a Fate or absolute necessity resulting out of a series or connexion of causes and binding God himself as well as other things Plutarch relating how Timoleon was strangely delivered from two murderers instead of acknowledging a Providence wonders at the artifice of Fortune Nay meer reason is apt to vilifie the great works of God thus some said that Moses in stead of dividing the Sea did but take the advantage of a low Tyde to carry the Israelites over the washes when it was low water But when the light of faith comes the hand of God is seen in every thing not only in the great moments of nature but even in the fall of sparrows and numbring of hairs Thus far of Reason with the Creature-glass before it but to go on Secondly Take reason with the Scripture-glass before it and this supernatural light is yet above it And here I must first admit what reason under the influence of a common blessing can do and then shew how much supernatural light doth transcend it Reason under the influence of a common blessing may attain a rich furniture of humane learning and so perusing the holy Scriptures may understand them by Tongues critically and by School-divinity distinctly and by Logick in the consequences and connexions and by History in some Prophetical parts and by Rhetorick in the tropes and figures and by Comments in the abstruse and difficult places and consequently it may gather in a great notion of Divinity much larger in the extent and latitude thereof then the knowledge of many true believers Yet after all this notional knowledge attained there is in the meanest true believer an higher and diviner light a thing above meer reason and notion and this I shall demonstrate several ways First The light of reason with all it s acquired notions is not a light as yet congruous to the things of God which are spiritually discerned only by a supernatural light To make out this it will be worth our while to consider that famous place 1 Cor. 2. where the Apostle clearly distinguishing two sorts of men the natural man and the spiritual and two sorts of spirits the spirit of man making the natural man and the spirit of God making the spiritual man and two sorts of objects the things of man which are the line of knowledge to the natural man endued with an humane spirit and the things of God which are the line of knowledge to the spiritual man endued with the spirit of God Positively lays down this Thesis the natural man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the soully man or the man that hath only a rational soul receiveth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a full vessel is not capable of the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned ver 14. In this Thesis the Apostle by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or soully man doth not mean a sensual man who hath defloured his reason with sensual indulgences for then he would not have distinguished between the natural man and the spiritual but between the sensual man and the rational neither would he have distinguished between the spirit of man and the spirit of God but between the spirit of man or reason drowned in sensual pleasures and the spirit of man or reason keeping its station and just authority over the sensual appetite neither doth the Apostle here mean a natural or rational man sitting in Pagan darkness without the Gospel for he saith the natural man receiveth not the things of God which imports an offer of the Gospel to him and he receiveth them not because they are foolishness to him which they could not be if altogether unknown and saith he he cannot know them why not because they are not externally propounded which is the Pagans case but because they are spiritually discerned But the Apostle here meaneth by the natural or soully man a man of reason and that never forfeited by sensual lusts and a man of reason with the Gospel set before him and so his conclusion is this A man of reason with the Gospel before him cannot receive or know the things of God But you will say if this be so how can a man of
as the Schoolman hath it true believers nec per argumenta nec per tormenta nec per blandimenta inclinari possunt ut veritatem saltem ore tenus negent nothing could turn them away from the truth So strong a thing is faith when it is set upon the rock the testimony of God but if it have an humane bottom only such as the Churches authority it is weak and wavering more like a fluctuating opinion then a faith Durandus asserts that Science is more certain than faith and to that strong objection that the divine authority by which we believe is more certain then any humane reason by which we know he answers thus Divina autoritas propter quam credimus licet sit certissima in se non tamen nobis qualitèr enim certi simus L. 3. dist 23. quest 7. quod Deus dicat ea quae credimus non nisi quia sic tenet Ecclesia Observe how this great Scholar abates the certainty of faith because he takes up the divinity of Scriptures upon trust from the saying of the Church those who build their faith purely on the divine word speak after another rate Junius reading the first chapter of St. John cried out in a kind of amazement Divinitatem argumenti authoritatem sentio and Reverend Calvin putting the question how we shall be perswaded that the Scriptures did flow forth from God answers as roundly as a man doth touching that which is obvious and before his senses Instit l. 1. c. 7. perinde est saith he ac si quis roget unde discemus lucem discernere à tenebris the Scripture reveals it self as the light doth and to the pure eye of faith it appears divine from its own innate excellency and so establishes the heart in its holy truth To conclude this point faith is a stable and firm thing but by the estimates and lives of men there seems to be but a very little of it in the world Did men as they profess firmly believe the Scriptures could they vilifie the commands of the great God as they do The injunctions of earthly Princes are not served so Would they slight that wonderful charter of grace and glory in the Gospel a Patent of petty dignities and possessions here below will be highly valued by them durst they sin as they do in the face of hell and wrath flashing out of the divine threatnings a Princes sword or Gibbet would cast them into a fit of trembling O how soon would the things of God cast the ballance in the heart and outweigh all the world if the Scriptures were indeed believed but there being in men only levis opinatio a light opinion rather then a solid faith touching the same there necessarily ensues a monstrous disproportion between their faith and their life Thirdly This belief must be explicite as to the fundamentals of Religion A meer implicite faith as to believe in the lump that all things contained in the holy Scriptures are true will not serve the turn In Coloss 2. v. 2. Non est divina sed belluina fides quae nuliam habet conceptionem five comprehensionem illarum rerum quae creduntur saith the excellent Davenant A meer implicite faith without understanding is a bruitish thing an explicite faith as to fundamentals is required this will appear by these ensuing considerations First A meer implicite faith if at any time might have passed for currant in the days before Christs Incarnation whilest religion was wrapt up in vails and shadows but even then faith in holy men was explicite according to the measure of divine light imparted unto them all along they looked to the Messiah the promised seed and probably in an obscure manner to his future sufferings Whilest Adam was in Innocency there was no promise of a Messiah no footstep of a sacrifice but as soon as man was fallen out came that first Gospel the seed of the woman shall bruise the serpents head Gen. 3.15 and sacrifices were set up without doubt not without Gods appointment for God had respect to Abels sacrifice which had it been a piece of will-worship could not have been and Abol offered it up by faith Heb. 11.4 which without a divine word moves not in the least measure These sacrifices were as it were visible Commentaries on that first Gospel and types of a suffering Messiah And if so and so by Gods own institution it is not at all probable that God should hide the sacred meaning thereof totally from the faith of the first believers Adam then as I conceive by the eyes of Faith saw the Messiah in that first Gospel and withall some glimmering of his sufferings in the sacrifices And if he saw it no doubt he did preach and reveal it to others Schola saerif Disp. 4 and probably as Franzius conceives in a solemn manner at the sacrifices Abel saith the Apostle by faith offered up a sacrifice to God not only by such a faith as did it in obedience to Gods command but by such a faith as through his own sacrifice did pierce to the antitype the great sacrifice of the Messiah De satisfact Christi l. 1. sect 5. Thus the learned Essenius cum sacrificia Veteris Testamenti fuerint typi sacrificii Christi ea sides intelligenda est quâ sacrificium illud refertur ad suum antitypum such a faith was proper to his sacrifice In Noahs sacrifice the Lord smelled a sweet savour or a savour of rest such as did saith one of the Rabbins make him ab irâ suâ quiescere rest from his anger Gen. 8.21 and therefore surely there was more in it then meer beasts and fowls Noahs faith fetched in him who was to give himself an offering and sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour Abraham saw Christs day that is his coming and suffering in the flesh John 8.56 a very great sight at that distance and no doubt the faithful Seer did not conceal it but tell his children and servants thereof for the glory of the Messiah his joy was too great to hold it in privately to himself and his zeal too hot to hide so much of heavenly glory Under the Levitical Law the Israelites were to lay their hands on the head of the sacrifice as it were to disburden themselves of sin and lay it off upon the sacrifice and by the offering up thereof they were to make an atonement or expiation The unbelievers among them understood the outward rite of the sacrifice and did the faithful ones see no more in it Could or did they imagine that a poor silly beast could stand under the weight of sin or that the blood of bulls or goats could take it away No surely their faith looked through the outward sacrifice to the Messiah for atonement and reconciliation In David the Evangelical day broke out more clearly O how much of Christ is there in the 110th Psalm there 's his kingdom and eternal priesthood there 's
us Rom. 10.4 and how can this be without an imputation Again if imputed righteousness be impossible what is imputed sin If that be so too how was Christ made sin or an offering for it to what purpose was his blood and sufferings what becomes of redemption all the train of blessings waiting thereon what to those Masters of Reason is but a fancy a spectrum or dream that to the believer is the very thing he would be found in before God Phil. 3.9 Apollodorus offer'd Socrates a pretious garment to dye in Imputed righteousness is the blessed robe which the believer would live and dye and rise in unto the judgment-seat at the last day Upon this he will venture his soul against all the demands of perfect obedience in the Law Moreover instead of satisfying Justice for his debts he hath just nothing of his own to pay but he leaves himself upon the blood and rich merits of Christ his sins are massie burdens too weighty for all the Angels in heaven to stand under but he unloads all upon the Lamb of God who bore away the sin of the world his debts to God amount to a vast sum but he ventures upon the great surety who paid the utmost farthing and had a total discharge in his resurrection and now is in heaven to see the scores crossed in Gods book and the bonds of guilt cancelled and thrown down into conscience If the avenging Law pursue him he slies to Christ as a City of refuge and there hides himself in the clefts of the rock in the bleeding wounds of his Redeemer here is faiths anchor-hold here he ventures his soul against all the curses of the Law Deny himself to be a sinner that he cannot for his conscience is a thousand witnesses oppose the cursing Law that he dares not for it is backed by an infinite justice but he ventures all upon the merit and satisfaction of Christ though in the night of desertion he may lye in a piteous condition as the Levites Concubine forced and as it were dead with legal terrors yet still his hand like hers will be upon the threshold upon Christ the door of salvation till free-grace dawn and break in upon him without this resignation the soul can have no peace Gardiner himself being ready to dye was willing to hear of a justification in the blood of Christ nothing else could expiate the guilt of sin Secondly In and through the Mediator this resignation is made unto God It is God that justifieth God as supream Law-giver the believer wraps up himself in the blood and righteousness of Christ and so yields up himself unto God to be pardoned and justified And in this resignation the great attribute he leans on is Gods grace God is gracious nay he hath riches of grace such as no unworthiness of ours can exhaust he hath glory of grace such as no sinfulness can eclipse he can abundantly pardon or as it is in the Original multiply to pardon Isa 55. 7. His grace can multiply pardons as his power can creatures Here is the beautiful gate where the believer lies for an alms of pardoning mercy here he ventures himself upon God speaking like Benhadads servants I hear that the God of heaven is a merciful God I will put on my ropes and sack-cloth and away to him it may be I may catch a word of grace from him and live for ever or arguing like the poor Lepers if I sit here in my sins I dye eternally if it go unto the world there is a famine of gace let me fall into the arms of a good God if he kill me I thall bat dye but if he save me I shall live for ever after such a manner doth he cast himself upon mercy This act of faith is very precious it touches God as it were in his bowels and sets them a sounding and melting into distillations of savour As soon as the prodigal son returned and cast himself on his fathers mercy his father runs and kisses him and the ring and the best robe and the satted calf are all little enough for him Luke 15. And as it is very pretious so it is very safe De Jusif●●● l. 5. c. 7. Beliarmtne himself after many disputations about justification doth yet conclude tutiss mum est ●●duciam totam in solâ Dei misericordiâ benignitate reponere it is most safe to put all our confidence in the sole mercy and bounty of God Thirdly This resignation is made to the Word as the warrant for both the former resignations Ask a believer why he resigns to Jesus Christ for pardon and justification his answer will be I find in the word that Christ hath fulsilled all righteousness hore our iniquities made an end of sin and reconciled us to God by his cross therefore I resign to him Ask him again why he resigns to God for it his answer will be I find in the word that God is decy phered in blessed titles as gracious merciful abundant in goodness and ready to forgive and that the grace in his heart slows down to us in promises of pardon blotting out iniquity and casting sin behind his back into the depth of the sea therefore I resign Parley with him further and he will tell you that over and besides Gods infallible word he hath his oath As to Christ the atoning Priest God hath sworn thou art a Priest for ever Psal 110.4 And as to his own grace and favour he hath sworn I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live Ezek. 33.11 and in swearing God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 interposes himself as the word is Heb. 6.17 pawns his life and essence upon it to make the thing wholly irrepealable and immutable and thereby to raise up strong and invincible consolation in us and therefore I resign Thus far of the second thing resignation for pardon and justification Thirdly Faith resigns up the soul to be sanctified Sanctification stands in two things mortification of sin and vivification of the soul and for both these faith yields up the soul And to observe the promised order First This resignation is made to Jesus Christ the Mediator And first touching Mortification the believer yields his soul to Christ in a threesold respect First He yields up his soul to Christ as the grand samplar of mortification What Christ suffered in his pure flesh by way of expiation that must we suffer in our corrupt flesh by way of mortification His body was nailed to the cross till the soul separated from it the body of sin must be so nailed till the soul the will and love and delight of sin depart He was free in laying down his life and blood and so must we be in laying down the life and blood of the old Adam 'T is true the flesh relucts and says as Christs humane nature Oh! let this cup. pass from me but the spirit is
his faith eyes the soveraignty of it naturally we would be Gods to our selves and set up our wills as supream and therefore we make war upon God and his Law But when faith comes God is God and the Law a royal Law and all the commands in Power and Majesty by them saith David is thy sorvant warned or as it is in the Hebrew illustrated Psal 19.11 the command to the believer is as if a light shone from heaven and a voice came from the excellent glory saying Do this or that Gods will rides in triumph and mans falls to the earth as not able to stand before the Lord The voice of a superior if perceived puts an awe upon the inferior nature so doth the voice of man upon beasts so doth the voice of Angels upon men and which is the greatest awe because from the highest nature so doth the voice of God upon the believer After this manner doth faith yield up the soul to the command and in it to God and Christ Thus far of the fourth thing resignation for a holy government Fifthly Faith resigns up the soul for the gracious reward of eternal life And here to keep the old Method First This resignation is made to Jesus Christ the Mediator Faith cannot be satisfied with earth that 's but the Paradise of sense no nor with present graces these are but the pawns and earnest-pennies of eternal life faith aspires after heaven Oh! let me go over and see the good Land where the Mountains are all spices the Rivers pleasures the Mountains are all spices the Rivers pleasures the Air pure holiness the Eternal light God himself saith faith and for a title thereunto faith yields up the soul to Christ who as a Priest hath merited heaven for us and as a King is able to give it out to us The Plebeian saith Epictetus looks for his gain from things without the Philosopher looks for it from himself but which is a strain higher the Believer looks for his reward from Christ Evagrius the Philosopher gave as the story goes three hundred pounds to Synesius for the poor to be repaid him by Christ in another world the believer doth all at the same rate hears and reads and prays and gives alms and all to be paid in another world Worldly men wonder at his hot pursuits after grace and holiness but he knows what these will go for in another world that 's the reason he follows hard after them but in the pursuit still his eyes are upon Christ as the great purchasor and pay-master Secondly This resignation in and through the Mediator is made to God It is he that glorifieth eternal life is Gods gift our heavenly Fathers meer pleasure faith therefore yields up the soul to him for it and herein it climbs up to him by his free-grace the pure river of life flows out of the throne of God and of the Lamb Rev. 22.1 out of the regnant grace of God and merit of Christ as out of a fountain the believer expects no eternal life but what issues out from thence Thus the Reverend Soknius on his death bed expressed himself Pendeo totus à Dei miserieordiâ I wholly depend on Gods mercy Thirdly This resignation is made to the Word There is the promise of eternal life extant and there the way to eternal life is chalked out there is the promise of eternal life mapped out a mercy above all the sphear of nature Hence the antient believers were as pilgrims here Heb. 11.13 as if the world were too little for them they were altogether for the heavenly country which faith sees at a distance in the promise There also the way to eternal life is chalked out the world passes away but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1 Joh. 2.17 Riches and pleasures are but the way of time but holiness and righteousness are the way everlasting Psal 139.24 the good acts may pass but their record is in heaven the good men must dye but the holiness shall never see corruption the repentant tears which fall to the earth are bottled with God the charity which seems lost as bread cast on the waters will come to hand again Polycrates when he cast his ring into the sea little thought to have met it again in his fish but the believer doing good works expects to meet them again in another world sowing to the spirit he looks for a crop in eternal life Dorcas may leave her coats and garments behind her but the charity will follow her into another world the commandement is eternal life saith our Saviour Joh. 12.50 the very way to it The believer obeying may in some sense say as dying Pollio jam ingredior in vitam aeternam now I am entring into eternal life into that which will survive the world and live in glory Faith resigns to the word not only as it is the charter of eternal life in the promise but as it is the director to it in the command Thus far of the second thing for what things and purposes this resignation is made But to proceed to the third thing Thirdly What are the Adjuncts and Properties of this resignation Vnto which I shall answer in the following particulars First This resignation is made in the way of God Believers wait upon God for very great things Since the beginning of the world men have not heard nor perceived by the ear neither hath the eye seen O God besides these what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for him saith the Prophet Isa 64.4 But where do they wait for these great things where but in Gods own way Thus it follows those that remember thee in thy ways v. 5. Look in what way or method God gives out a mercy in the same way or method doth faith wait to receive it Would a man have a pardon faith waits for it in Gods way free-grace as immense a sea as it is in God doth not flow out every way upon sinners but through the bleeding wounds of Christ We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ saith the Apostle Rom. 3.24 Mark free-grace issues out through redemption and in that way faith waits for it Thus St. Peter We believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved Act. 15.11 he calls the grace of God the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ as being merited by him The believer waits for pardoning mercy but it must be the mercy of David coming through the Messiah the true David Whether God might not per potentiam suam absolutam remit sin without a satisfaction is a question may be spared Gods will is declared the Scripture is definitive there is no other name given among men but the name of Jesus no other remission but through his blood the glory of the Lord that is his free-grace comes into the Temple of the Church by the way of the East Ezek. 43.2 that
weigh it the natural man may put in the breach of the Law into the scale but he puts in all the bloody aggravations the suffocated light and abused love the quenchings of the spirit and the rejections of Christ the broken vows and lying promises of obedience the stabs of conscience and warning pieces of wrath the measures of delight and obstinacy in sin and the heaps of guilt in reiterated sinning no man makes sin so sinful as he the pure light of faith being up in the heart every scarlet thread in the contexture thereof becomes visible and yet after all this the believer sees more of the holy God about it then others do and that whether he look on the sins of others or his own As to other mens we have many examples in Scripture the messengers that came to Job spake of the Sabeans and Chaldeans oppression but the Lord hath taken away saith holy Job Job 1.21 when Shimei cursed David Abishai looks no further then Shimei why should this dead dog curse my Lord the King saith he but what saith heavenly David the Lord hath said unto him curse David 2 Sam. 16.9 10. In the crucifying of Christ carnal men looked only at the instruments such as Pilate and the Jews were but the Saints saw Gods hand and Gods counsel in it Acts 4.28 As to his own sins there is a famous instance in the Churches complaint O Lord why hast thou made us to err from thy wayes and hardned our heart from thy fear Isa 63.17 What were they not sensible that the error and hardness were their own yes doubtless they were more sensible then others as appears by their mourning and longing for the Lords return yet they cry out why hast thou made us to err and why hast thou hardned us the believer when he looks upon providence and sin hath a spiritual sagacity to determine the matter God is holy while man is unclean God wise while man foolish God merciful while man cruel the light is Gods and the darkness mans the order Gods and the ataxy mans the justice Gods and the unrighteousness mans As to Satan the believer knows him by the word more truly then all the Magitians in the world when Satan shews himself in Magical apparitions he doth but mock the sense and delude the mind but when God shews him forth in the word he appears in his proper colours and true likeness the believer knows him to be of very great power a ruler of darkness a Prince nay a God of this world one that can do great things without in the elements and within in the passions a mighty Leviathan who can make the heart boil as a pot and foam out its own shame and withall he knows that this roaring Lyon is in a chain and cannot go beyond his commission Again the believer knows him to be an old serpent full of methods and devises turning every stone waiting upon every occasion complying with every temper and putting on every shape in his temptations now in the dress and pomp of earthly things and then in Samuels Mantle transforming himself into an Angel of light sometimes carrying men up into the mountain of the world and glorifying vanity before them and sometimes setting them on a pinacle of the Temple to cast them down by the pride of their own duties now speaking in the Language of Nature Master spare thy self and anon in the Language of Scripture it is written thus and thus and all that he may devour or as it is in the Original drink up 1 Pet. 5.8 souls as if he lived upon spirits and no blood would serve him but that of souls And withall the believer knows that the All-wise God can wrap up Satan in his own nets and countermine him in every plot he can awaken us out of the snare and make us see the methods and subtile postures of the devil how he would charm us into presumption or roar us into despair how he stands at our right hand in holy duties and at our left in earthly employments what a murderer he is in stifling holy motions and what a lyar in his false joyes and promises Thus the believer knows more of Satan and his hellish depths then others do As to things past the believer hath a holy sagacity to make a good improvement of them which is most evident in his appropriating Scripture-histories to himself in such or such a state saith he God dealt so or so in a way of mercy or justice and if I come into that state I shall have the same measure because God is ever the same and his mercy and justice have the same aspects towards men as heretofore the believer appropriates good states and good consequents see in what way the goodness of God followed such a man in the very same way will it be with me saith faith if I can strive and wrestle with God in prayer I am in Jacobs state and shall be a prince with God the effectual fervent prayer of the righteous man availeth much James 5.16 if I am in Joshuaes state fighting against lusts the true Canaanites God will never never leave me nor forsake me that was a particular promise made to Joshua yet is by the Apostle accommodated to believers as being in his state Heb. 13.5 If a man suffer for the true God and his worship he is in the fiery furnace and the son of God is with him to comfort and support him if he have a good conscience made so by the blood and spirit of Christ he is in the Ark and shall never drown in the common perdition 1 Pet. 3.20 21. there is a cloud of witnesses in which faith observes righteousness going before and mercy following after Again the believer appropriates bad states and bad consequents see in what way Gods wrath brake out against such a man in the same way will it break out against me saith faith if I am murmuring and unbelieving I am in the Israelites state and without repentance I shall dye in the wilderness and never enter into rest if I wallow in the mire of gross and sensual sins I am in Sodome and Egypt and may expect their line of plagues and eternal fire if I love the wages of righteousness I am in Balaams way and may look for his end if I sleep in my indulged lust I am in Delilahs lap and like to lose my own strength and Gods presence these are our types or figures as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 10.6 in which we have a lively image and pourtraiture of punishments for sin and from thence may by faith divine that if such sins goes before such wrath will follow after As to the present world which is checkered with good and evil things and hath in it as the Ark had of old a rod and a pot of Manna the believer hath a greater sagacity then others As to the good things of the world no man sees so much of their
excellency and withall no man sees so much of their vanity as the believer doth take the world in its own place and station and thus it is a rare monument of the eternal power and Godhead the invisible spirit renders himself visible and as it were palpable in it every being in nature shews forth the Being of Beings every beam of light points to the Father of lights every drop of goodness leads to the great Ocean every harmony among the creatures tells of an infinite Artificer this is the sense of the creation which faith understands better then learning Philosophers and great Naturalists may see more of the creature then the believer but the believer sees more of God in it then they they gaze most on the fine letters and characters in nature but he best knows the sense of all which is God On the other side take the world into the heart and there exalt it as the supream good of man and thus it is a lye a fancy a dream a shadow my a very nothing after all its goodly promises it is but a lye after all its spreading pomp and glory it is but much fancy it casts men into dreams and appearances of happiness in this and that creature but as soon as faith awakens them it is known to be but a dream the day breaking in the heart all the shadows flee away it looks like somewhat of substance but it is as all other Idols are a meer nothing nothing to make a God of nothing as separate from its Creator just as letters without sense and beams without a Sun perfect vanity which as a Learned man hath it is in its true Idea made up of nothing as the matter and a lye as the form thereof A carnal man gazes upon riches and forgets the thorn clothes himself with the creature and forgets the moth drinks of the cup of pleasures as if there were no poison in it and sits under the gourd of worldly things as if there were no worm at the root but the believer sees a vanity in the fairest prospects of the world before the rust appears visibly in the gold faith sees it there before the great Dooms-day dashes down the world actually faith doth it mentally making it as inconsiderable a nothing to mans happiness as it will sensibly appear at last when the whole shall be wrapt up in a winding-sheet of flames Again though the carnal man dote more on creature-comforts then the believer yet the believer pries more curiously about them then he the carnal man is all for the bulk but the believer not so much for that searches into the title he would very fain have what he hath in Jesus Christ and in the good will of God Since sin blasted and forfeited the world he dares not claim any thing upon meer creation but all in and through Christ and free-grace all are yours and you are Christs and Christ is Gods 1 Cor. 3.22 there 's his title the carnal man looks on the world as a mountain of prey and scrambles for as much of it as he can but the believer would have every grain come through Josephs hands and all his bread and wine set forth by the true Melchisedeck the King of righteousness nay such is his holy curiosity that he is jealous of the least adherent guilt which others never mind the oppressing Merchant boasts and smooths up himself yet I am become rich I have found me out substance in all my labours there is no iniquity Hos 12.7 8. but let faith come in and then the stone cryes out of the wall and the rust of the gold and silver witnesses against him There were in Saxony as Thuanus relates two sordid inhumane wretches who for filthy lucre ingrossed a great quantity of corn and afterwards opening their barn-doors to transport it the corn flew up into their eyes driving them into horrid astonishment and desperation should the believer oppress it would flye in the face of conscience and the curse of God would seize upon him upon which account he is very curious about his estate to keep the moth of guilt from it As to the evil things of the world such as crosses and afflictions whilest others pore only on the outward evil lying before the senses the believer looks upward to God the supream Moderator being richly content with crosses as long as God governs the world A story there is of a godly but sickly woman who when an Angel came to her from God proffering her as from him health in one hand and sickness in the other fell a weeping that God should put her to her choice and not himself chuse for her such is the genius of faith which would not chuse for it self but refer all to God kissing every cross as a piece of his government who rules the world Again the believer looks inward to sin as the black fountain from whence all miseries issue forth in the world well knowing that all Physical evils are but the pay of Moral whilest others cry out of the plagues he complains of the sins Pharaoh cries out perii but David peccavi Against thee thee only have I sinned Psal 51.4 and there is great reason for it because sin is the fontal evil which powres out all other evils and puts a desperate sting and venom into them Moreover the believer looks forward to the issue of affliction 't is enough to others to come out of it but he would come out of it as the Israelites did out of Egypt with spinitual jewels and ear-rings whilest they tell over their outward losses he computes his inward gains Oh! saith he what hath God wrought by this cross did not faith roll out as pure gold out of a furnace hath not the fire dissolved some bands of corruption how much of the rusty world hath been filed off from the heart hath not the rod it self budded and blossomed with the peaceable fruits of righteousness what experiments have been made of the love and faithfulness of God in the affliction which of the Promises came in to me and milked out its comforts in my heart how warm were the heavenly affections within when the frost lay upon outward comforts such enquiries as these doth the believer make after the holy fruit of afflictions As to things future and distant the believer hath a notable sagacity the men of this world are wrapt up in the vail of time and see not so far as futurity and eternity but as soon as faith comes it rents off the vail and gives a fair prospect into another world if all the intermediate moments between this and the last day were cut off dooms-day were actually upon us faith can in a spiritual way put back all the middle time and makes us see things as they will be the heavens on fire the elements melting with fervent heat the last trumpet sounding the dead rising out of the dust and gathering to the grand Tribunal faith is
it is great Psal 25.11 a strange argument for pardon for it is great such as no malefactor would use to an earthly Prince but the holy man knows that it will pass with God who loves to make grace superabound there where sin hath abounded Again he extracts hope out of despair When he is ready to faint and swoon away in cold fits of spiritual deadness faith revives and points him to the fountain of life which runs over in quickning graces upon the whole Church and if he scruple his access to that fountain faith tells him that the Well is open to all comers whosoever will may take of the water of life freely whosoever hath the bucket of faith may draw out of it and if he yet reply true whosoever will may do so but oh I want a will I want an heart for God and Christ and heavenly things faith is able if awakened both to tell him that these are living groans and withall to drop some Scripture cordial into his heart such as that is Prov. 9. where Christ the wisdom of God builds his house the Church kills his beasts mingles his wine furnishes his table that is provides all heavenly blessings sends out his virgins his holy ministers and after all invites the simple and him that wanteth understanding to eat of his bread and drink of his wine in the Original it is him that wanteth heart Oh! if thou sensibly wantest an heart for spiritual things here thou art particularly called to the Gospel seast where Christs flesh is meat indeed and his blood wine indeed able to make thee live for ever Again he extracts joy out of sorrow The Apostle Paul rejoyced over the godly sorrow of the Corinthians because they received no damage in it 2 Cor. 7.9 when faith looks over all the tears and groans of the believer it saith there is no damage in these these tears are bottled in heaven the holy spirit breaths in those groans he that goeth forth and weepeth bearing precious seed shall doubtless come again with rejoycing bringing his sheaves with him Psal 126.6 Oh! saith faith observe the word doubtless tears and sorrows in a godly sort are a sure sign that the harvest of joy and comfort is nigh at hand one may see the crop in the seed sown When the Emperor Julian banished Athanasius he said Nubecula est citò transibit it is but a little cloud and will soon be over when the night of darkness and discomfort is upon the soul faith is able to say 't is but a short night of sorrow joyes come in the morning Psal 30.5 and for that morning I will trust the sun of righteousness O how soon can he make it day in the soul Moreover he extracts wisdome out of folly There is not there cannot be any thing in all the world so foolish as sin and yet out of this he picks up wisdom hereby he comes to know more of his own heart There is a Mahometan fable that the heart of Mahomet being a child was cut open and a black grain called the devils portion taken out of the midst thereof A believers sins make rents and holes in his heart and through these the inward core and blackness thereof becomes visible Good Hezekiah by his fall comes to know what was in his heart Peter denying his Master comes to understand the desperate deceitfulness of his own heart which cheated him against his own resolutions into so horrible an iniquity every actual sin is to the believer a sad Commentary on his inward corruption Again hereby he comes to understand free-grace better then before that God should melt as man hardens heal as man falls and bruises himself afiesh drop pardons as man doth sins return the holy spirit as man grieves it away lengthen out patience as man abuses it use lavers as fast as man runs into pollutions evidently argues riches of immense superabounding grace towards sinners Moreover hereby he comes to know the necessity of a continual dependance on God considering the heats and colds of his heart the ups and downs of his life and the interchangeable actings of Hetis and spirit he plainly perceives that he falls of himself and stands from God dies of his own spirit and lives from Gods sins of his own and repents believes obeyes of meer grace and so understands the necessity of depending on God praying continually with the devout Psalmist Hold up my gomgs in thy paths that my footsteps slip not Psal 17.5 Lastly to name no more he extracts all out of nothing Thus the Apostle as having nothing and yet possessing all things 2 Cor. 6.10 all things in God who is all in all Zuichemus gave Erasmus a ring which when it was unfolded represented a mundane sphear with Astrological notes engraven upon it telling him withall that now he might wear the whole world on his finger the conjugal ring whereby the soul is married to God in Christ by faith hath this posie I will be thy God which if it be unfolded is a sphear of all things the believer need not ask with Peter what shall we have Math. 19.27 for he hath all in God It is storied of the Laudanum of Paracelsus that it was almost good in all cases but however that might fail faith well understands that all things may be made out of an interest in God the universal good hence it can rationally part with all for him because it knows that there be fathers and mothers and brothers and sisters and children and houses and lands and infinitely more in God CHAP. VII Of the second holy fruit of Faith in Justification its growth upon Faith as a fruit thereof with the manner continuance perfection and various excellencies of the same THUS much for the first fruit of faith being the spiritual sagacities thereof whereby it appears that the believer is the only wise man who hath eyes in his head whilest all the rest of the world be they what they will in notional knowledge walk on in darkness The second holy fruit of faith is Justification which is a very great blessing so great that in Luthers phrase it is articulus stantis cadentis Ecclesiae and in Chemnitius arx propugnaculum religionis Christianae a blessing that is pregnant with many more which occasioned a good Divine to say sin committed is every judgment radically and pardon of sin is every mercy radically you may cut out any blessing or comfort out of it particular mercies are but pardon of sin specificated and individuated brought into this or that mercy of all blessings you may say this is pardon of sin and that is pardon of sin Touching this precious fruit of faith I shall endeavour to shew these things First That it grows upon faith as a fruit Secondly The manner how it grows there Thirdly The continuance of it Fourthly The perfection of it Fifthly The various excellencies of it First This holy fruit grows upon faith in the
very instant of believing a man is justified before God The Antinomians indeed makes as if it came forth much sooner even as early as eternity it self as if it were an immanent eternal act in God But the error of this opinion may be easily made appear For First An immanent act abides in God and doth not as the transient make any change at all in the creature but in justification there is a great change made in man though not a Physical one such as is made in sanctification yet as moral and a relative one the sins which before cried at heaven gates for vengeance are now cast into the depths of the sea the soul which was at the brink of hell is now in the suburbs of heaven the pure beams of grace breaking forth upon it the prison garments of guilt are changed and the righteousness of God is upon the believer the blood of the Lamb is upon his conscience and the damning destroying Law passes over him Again an immanent act in God is the same with Gods essence and not as the transient the same with the effect produced Gods willing is but the divine essence with an habitude to such an object his decrees are himself decreeing otherwise the simplicity of his nature would be overthrown such an immanent act is the decree of justification but justification it self is an effect in time else Gods judicial act may be exercised about a non-existing creature a non ens may be justified a man that is not may be made righteous fin may be remitted before it is committed absolution may anticipate guilt and righteousness Law all which are things hard to be swallowed If any thing in justification look like an immanent act it is either Gods complacential love or the imputation of righteousness but that neither of these are such is clear in Scripture which expresses the same as things future he that loveth me shall be loved of my father saith our Saviour Joh. 14.21 righteousness shall be imputed to us if we believe Rom. 4.24 a shall be cannot be put upon an immanent act futurity cannot be found in eternity Secondly If justification were an immanent eternal act what means a Mediator God and man were at one before would the Lord of all be made under his own Law to bring in righteousness into an already righteous world would he shed his precious blood on a cross to purge away sins eternally forgiven was his sweet-smelling sacrifice to atone a reconciled God did he pay down so great a sum of merits to purchase a freedom for such as were free-born long before doth he still intercede with God to save those from wrath who before were secure from it by an eternal justification this opinion seems to make void the whole satisfaction of Jesus Christ what the Apostle said of the Law if righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain Gal. 2.21 the same may be said here if righteousness come any other way then by the death of Christ if it come by an immanent eternal act then Christ is dead in vain Thirdly No man can be at once in two contrary states in a state of wrath and in a state of love too every man whilest an unbeliever is in a state of wrath the wrath of God abides on him Joh. 3.36 God is angry with him every day Psal 7.11 and whilest he is in a state of wrath he cannot be in a state of love Joseph whilest he was in prison in his old cloaths was not in change of raiment in Pharaohs Court St. Paul reckoning up a black Catalogue of sins barring men from inheriting the kingdom of God saith of the unconverted Corinthians such were some of you 1 Cor. 6.11 as yet they were in the chains of sin and wrath and immediately after speaking of them as converted he saith but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the spirit of our God then the prisoners were become favourites in the Court of heaven and stood in their robes of grace and righteousness then and not before as evidently appears by the words were and are relating to two distinct states in two distinct times they were not could not be in both states at once but if justification be eternal a man may be at once in contrary states as an unbeliever he may be under wrath and yet as a justified one under love I know a man under wrath may be under a love of benevolence which is the purpose of God to bestow grace and glory but he cannot at the same time be under a love of complacence which is directly contrary to a state of wrath nevertheless eternal justification makes a man capable of both at once Fourthly Justification and sanctification are inseparable companions no more to be sundred then the merits and spirit of Christ which are the respective causes thereof where grace pardons there it heals where Christ is made righteousness there he is made sanctification for he cannot be divided and taken by piece-meal but if justification be an eternal act then these twins of grace may be parted an unconverted man may be justified because that is from eternity and withall unsanctified because unconverted in which case he must needs be in a strange posture at once under two contrary reigns of grace and sin partly in Christ as justified by his blood and partly out of Christ as void of his spirit the light of Gods countenance shines upon him and yet within he wears the image of Satan a blessed one he must needs be because his iniquity is forgiven and an anathema too because no lover of Jesus Christ he is a justified and accepted man and yet a man in his sins all which absurd consequences are unavoidable if justification be an eternal act Thus much may suffice to discover the error of this opinion only there are two Quaeres which must be answered First The first Quaere is this If justification be not an eternal immanent act is not there a change in God God displicentially hates all the workers of iniquity and such are all men before conversion if therefore before conversion he hate and after it he love them is there not a change in him I answer no there is none God such is his infinite sanctity cannot but complacentially love righteousness and displicentially hate iniquity love and hatred are not in God as sin and righteousness are in man in man sin and righteousness succeed one the other but in God love and hatred are eternal and simultaneous the change therefore which is where the succession is and not where the eternal sameness is is in man only and not in God the man who was in a state of sin and so the object of Gods displicential hatred is now in a state of righteousness and so the object of Gods complacential love thus the Apostle you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works
because he is but a dead man and there is no valuation of the dead An unpardoned man is dead while he liveth and as our Saviour saith condemned already Joh. 3.18 His life save only as it is a space for repentance and so for pardon must be rated at little or nothing Bajazet the Great Emperour valued not his life at all when he was carried up and down in an Iron-cage and what is a mans life when he walks up and down in chains of sin and wrath but as soon as the pardon comes he lives indeed His life as little a vapour as it is in it self glitters as a Jewel in the Sun being irradiated with that precious favour of God which is better than it self Moreover he hath more of the sweetness of outward Comforts than others The unpardoned man may have Corn and Wine and all other Blessings flowing round about him but if his eyes be open he can take no more pleasure in them than Damocles did at the Tyrants table spread with all Royal dainties whilest the Sword with the point downward hung over his head by an hair only If he tasts sweetness in them it is an act of meer blindness and irrationality because he seeth not the arrow of Gods wrath which is upon the string and ready in a moment to shoot him down to the lowest hell Do but open his eyes upon the hand-writing of Guilt which is on the wall of Conscience and all his crackling Joyes are in a moment turned into fits of trembling and astonishment but as soon as the Pardon comes every thing relishes with him Moses pronouncing a blessing on Joseph thus Blessed of the Lord be his Land for the precious things of beaven for the dew and for the deep that cometh beneath and for the precious fruits brought forth by the Sun and for the precious things put forth by the Moon and for the chief things of the ancient Mountains and for the precious things of the lasting Hills and for the precious things of the Earth and the fulness thereof adds this as the crown of all and for the good-will of him that dwelt in the Bush Deut. 33.13 14 15 and 16 verses The favour of God pours a sweetness into all outward things Then may he eat and drink and enjoy all his labours for the light of Gods Providence and the light of his Countenance are met in conjunction Fifthly The Justified man hath less evil in Asslictions than others The unjustified man carries a double load one of assliction and another of unpardoned guilt which lies as a talent of lead on the Conscience and makes the Cross lie heavy as a burthen on a sore-back But the Justified man hath only the single Cross which the spirit of a man may bear The Stoicks could shoulder-up their reason against it Nos dicimus omnia ista quae gemitus mugitusque exprimunt levia esse We say Epist 13. all these things which extort cries and groans are but light said Seneca And what then may the Believer say who hath a serene Conscience made so by the pure beams of Divine favour Feri Domine feri clementer ego paratus sum quia à peecatis absolutus Strike Lord strike I am ready because I am absolved from my sins said Luther when he was in fear of an Apoplexy The pardon of sin wonderfully alleviated the Cross Again the unjustified man is a poor helpless Creature Trouble comes and there is no deliverer he falls alone and there is not a reconciled God to help him up God walks contrary to him or as the original may be read He walks at all adventures with him Levit. 26.24 Peradventure he will deliver him peradventure not But the Justified man being in Christ the true Immanuel is sure to have God with him God with him in the fire and God with him in the water whatever the Cross be the Almighty Father puts under the everlasting arms the Eternal Son walks with him in the midst of the Furnace the Holy Spirit drops in heavenly cordials upon his heart as it was with Christ when he hung upon the Cross and drunk up the bitterest cup of wrath The Divinity never left the Humanity no not when he cried out of forsaking So is it with the Believer the man in Christ when Troubles come like Jobs Messengers one upon the neck of another God never leaves nor forsakes him which is a cordial high enough to make any adversity more eligible than all prosperity Hence some good men have been loath to leave their Prisons for fear of parting with those inward joyes which had turned them into a paradice Sixthly The Justified man knows how to die and go to judgment He knows how to die which is a lesson too hard for any other but such as himself The Stoick may seem to vapour over death as a thing of nothing but whilest he doth so it is but a piece of blind rashness never considering the vast gulph of Eternity which is then to be shot in the Christian World where that Gulph is better known Many great Rabbies and Sophies are nonplust at the approach of death The great Cardinal Richelieu a little before his end would have a play called Europe triumphante to be acted though he was not able to be a spectator it seems his Soul hanging about the mud walls as loth to go off that stage where he had acted so many wise parts knew not how to apply it self to that grand affair of death approaching Only the justified man knows how to resign and bespeak his parting Soul as Monica did Volemus in coelum Let us flie to heaven or with Hilarion Egredere anima mea egredere quid times quid dubitas Go out my Soul go out what doest thou sear or doubt And all this upon sure grounds His sin is pardoned his death unstung heaven-gates stand open for him a convoy of Angels are ready to conduct his Soul into Abrahams bosom So little tremendous is death to such an one that Zuinglius being mortally wounded cried out Ecquid hoc infortunii Is this any misfortune the Body only was slain the Soul was untouched and but a little the sooner let out into glory Again The justified man knows how to go to Judgment When the Earl Montgomery was brought before the great Court at Paris he ingeniously confessed That as many great Armies as he had seen without fear yet he could not but tremble at the presence of those grave Judges At the Great day when the last Trump shall sound and the dead rise out of the dust and Jesus Christ shall come with all his glorious Angels to judge the World there will be generally nothing but pale faces and trembling hearts and lamentable out-cries to the Rocks and Mountains to fall upon them and cover them from the presence of the Judge Only the Justified man may lift up his head with joy because his redemption draws nigh Jesus Christ the Judge is his
of Gods Countenance towards me and lye down in the dismal borders of Hell and Death How can I do it Such a restraint as this is a degree of Mortification Sin begins to die when such chains and manacles as these are cast upon it Secondly Faith doth not only restrain the outward acts of Sin but strikes at the life of it that is the love thereof and to this end Faith clearly demonstrates that Sin is not eligible or an object fit for an Humane Will Sin shews it self as eligible many ways but Faith destroys all those eligibilities Take Sin as meer Sin in the abstract and so it is evil and only evil and as the Schools generally determine Sub ratione mali it is not it cannot be eligible at all and yet even in the notion of meer Sin it becomes eligible Sub ratione convenientiae as it is congruous to the corrupt Heart of Man The Socinian and Pelagian Errors are welcome meerly as Parasites to the pride of Reason and Will In Sins of Omission the very neglect gratifies Mans aversness from good in Sins of Commission the very violation of the Law complies with his enmity thereunto Saint Austin in his Confessions Lib. 2 cap. 4. says That he stole Apples that he might Frui non re ipsa sed furto that he was Gratis malus amavit defectum suum casting away the Apples he feasted on the iniquity or if he took any of them into his mouth Condimentum facinus erat Sin was the only fawce thereof Man drinketh in iniquity like water the very sinfulness is connatural This eligibility before Faith must needs be very strong for to Man in the pride and self-flattery of Nature nothing is sweeter or dearer than to walk in the way of his Heart as absolute unaccountable Lord of all his Actions but when Faith comes then it clearly appears that the corrupt Heart into which Sin insinuates by congruity is too vile a thing to be gratified it steals away from holy Duties plays false after fair promises hatches treason and rebellion against God and like a common Strumpet prostitutes it self to every temptation that passes by to gratifie it is to feed a disease or vicious humour satisfie a grave or gulf of inordinate desires put the darling Soul into the mouth of Satan and desperately leap into the bottomless pit that corruption to which Sin is so grateful is an accursed thing destinated by the Gospel to be crucified and slain without mercy and those reliques of it which after the greatest mortifications remain are to be mourned and groaned under as the heaviest burden in the world What the Jewish fringes did typifie that the Christians Faith operates in keeping men from seeking after their own heart but to go on take sin not as meer sin but in the dress of some apparent good let it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a well-circumstanced Sin as a learned man takes that place Heb. 12.1 flowing in riches or rowling in sensual pleasures or holding forth Crowns and Scepters and all Mundane glory nay if it were possible let it invest it self with a Creation all the lower World cannot make it eligible to Faith Set down a World if Faith substract but a God or a Soul what will remain but infinite damage those treasures which glitter so much to dark sense are to Faith but poor rusty moth-eaten things that which is substance to the World is to Faith but a shadow an apparition a thing that is not a mark too low for an Immortal Soul to fly at These things at present and in the Now-World seem something but if Faith look through the World unto the universal conflagration and beyond it to the World to come what will they signifie Are they able to survive those last flames or purchase any thing in the World to come Surely just nothing except only so much thereof as is exchanged thither in Charity and good Works to Faith the whole inventory of them is but a great cheat the Riches are not the true ones the Gold is not that tried in the fire the Land doth not lie in the Country which Faith seeks after there is nothing in them to feed or cloth or enrich the inward man and to hazard a God or a Soul for them must needs be an infinite loss And what are the pleasures of this World to Faith In carnal Sins they are but the titillations of sense in which the Rational faculties were they not Spiritually incarnate and become flesh would have no touch of delight In Spiritual Sins they are but the false gusts of a vitiated Reason and Will which if made right by Faith find no congruity but in what is true and good neither of which can be in a Sin In both momentany as they are they perish in the using and die in the embraces like the dead Son of the Emperour Basilius Macedo who being Magically presented to his Father as alive after a few touches and doting glances disappeared so they go off only they leave a sting and a worm behind them in Conscience and the poor Voluptary without repentance must lie down in eternal sorrow a thought whereof is enough to imbitter all their sweetness And are Mundane glories any better in Faiths account Honour is but a blast a little popular air Monarchies have their periods History gives us a prospect of their vanity and much more Faith which translates the Soul into the everlasting Kingdom and from thence looks on the Empires of the World as the chaff of the Summer-floor rolling away with the wind of time To a man up among the Stars the whole Earth would be but as a small thing and such are Crowns and Scepters to one conversing in Heaven in the midst of them a man may want true greatness the World 's Epiphanes may be but a vile person a slave to his lusts which is the greatest servitude at death he may like Adrian moan over his little Soul and at Judgment cry out to the rocks and mountains to fall upon him and cover him from the presence of the Lord. But to proceed and take Sin in another dress let it come as a worldly Saviour entertain it and you shall be delivered from losses reproaches racks persecuting flames and cruel deaths it will not yet be eligible Faith in the love of its espousals and upon the first contract received a whole Christ Cross and all and so virtually and in purpose hath already swallowed down all persecutions which go along with the Gospel and when the actual trial comes Faith will not escape by iniquity which is an evil transcendently greater than all the rest and whilest it outwardly temporally saves inwardly eternally destroys To Faith there is no loss like that of a Soul no reproach like Sins turpitude no racks like those in Conscience no flames or deaths like those in Hell Which made those tormented Worthies not accept deliverance Heb. 11.35 Sin is meer Sin
totally perfectly evil but suffering for the Gospel is not meer suffering In temporal losses there may be eternal gain in reproaches a spirit of glory in outward racks inward joys In the Burning-bush God may dwell and death may open a door to life everlasting Hence come the famous Triumphs of Martyrs the Apostle rejoyced that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for Christ Act. 5.41 In the Original it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That they were honoured to be dishonoured for Christ Others have stiled their Prisons a Paradise and their Iron-Chains a goodly Neck-kercher and at last have kissed the Stake and thanked the Executioner accounting Suffering the only eligible thing in the World Thus Faith destroys all Sins eligibilities and in so doing as the Apostle speaks overcomes the World which is the purest of Victories The great ones who captivated the World outwardly and martially were themselves captivated by it in one lust or other Not unlike Amaziah who subdued the Edomites and was himself taken with their gods But Faith which overcomes inwardly and Spiritually subdues the lusts themselves Further yet Faith doth not only strike at the love of Sin by destroying its eligibilities but by surrendring the Heart to a better Object whilest the love and joy and delight is in Sin it lives as a body with a spirit in it but when these are surrendred up to God and Christ and Heavenly things it becomes inanimate as a dead Carcase This was notably deciphered in Christ crucified the grand pattern of our Mortification he was not only stript and nailed but commending his Spirit to God be gave up the Ghost Answerably in Mortification Sin is not only stript of its eligibilities and nailed by restraints but it dies away in the surrenders of Faith by which the Soul Enoch-like is translated into Heaven and its affections are not here below to animate Sin Were this surrender in perfection Sin could not so much as be as is evident in Christs Humane Nature upon which no spot could fall because it ever was in perfect surrender to his Father And proportionably where it is but in truth only Sin is a-dying because the love and joy whilest in the raptures and triumphs of Faith afford no quickning thereunto hence the Apostle exhorts Walk in the spirit in the elevations of Faith and other Graces and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh Gal. 5.16 Sin shall grow heartless and be able to do little or nothing Here we see how the dear intimate lusts come to die they cease to be dear as Faith turns the stream of the Heart and give up the Ghost as the love and the joy go out to God It was Luthers method in Reformation that first the Images were to be removed out of the minds of Men and then all would suceed and it is Faiths method in Mortification by holy surrenders to sever the Heart from its lusts and so do the work Moreover Faith casts out the love of Sin by conversing in the holy Word after which the Soul becomes pure and shining like Moses face after he had been with God conversing with the Law it sees a rectitude and pure splendor and then to love Sin is to embrace crookedness and hellish darkness and withal it sees wrath and vengeance threatned against transgressors and then to love Sin is to take death and hell into our bosom Conversing with the Gospel it hath such a fair prospect of Grace and Christ as renders Sin the most ungrateful and unnatural thing in the World Shall God give up his Son his eternal joy to die upon a cross and a man a worm spare a lust a brat of his corrupt Heart Shall Christ pour out his Blood and very Soul to expiate Sin and a Believer a redeemed one fall in love with the Crucifier Shall the holy Spirit come down and dwell in Man as his Temple and he who is so honoured embrace that which is the only offence and grievance to such a guest Or shall the Kingdom of Heaven come down and offer it self and that which is the only bar and obstacle be received Surely a Believer with his eyes open will not do so the more of converse he hath with the Word the less of the love of Sin As Sense when it lies brooding on the Creature inflames the love of Sin So Faith when it dwells on the Word abates it that Concupiscence which at first crept in upon Eve in a slumber of Faith while Sense was doting on the fruit must be driven out again by Faith fixing on the Word and soating above sensible things Thus far how Faith strikes at the love of Sin Thirdly Faith mortifies Sin by watching against all the occasions and inducements thereof The Jews were not to name the Idol-gods the Nazarite was to abstain from the very husk of the grape Valentinian could not bear a little drop of Julians holy-water accidentally sprinkled on his garment without detestation The Children of Samosatane would not play with their Ball after the Ass of the Heretical Bishop Lucius had trod on it but burnt it in the Market-place as unclean Faith is nice and curious it will not go in with such a dissembler nor come nigh the door of such an Harlot as Sin is knowing that the Soul may soon be cheated and adulterated thereby Apprehensions of danger make men watch and to Faith there is no danger like that of Sin If the good man of the house had known when the thief would come he would have watched saith our Saviour Mat. 24.43 Faith knows Sin to be a thief and a murderer to the Soul and therefore sets guards within and without that it may not creep in by the ports of Sense nor rise up out of the deep of the Heart Within there is a watch over the Thoughts and without over the sensible Objects And if a snare appear Faith cries out as the suffering Martyr did when a Box with a Pardon in it was set before him Away with it as you love my Soul During this watch Sin pines and famishes away as in a Spiritual siege the common commerce between the Thoughts and the Objects fails and with it those provisions which use to be made for the flesh Hence our Saviour would have his Disciples To watch and pray that they might not enter into temptation Temptations will offer themselves but the watching Believer will not enter into them by a consent Fourthly Faith mortifies Sin by those actings of Grace which it puts forth in the Believer As Sin the more it is acted makes the fuller blot on the Soul so Grace the more it is acted leaves the purer tincture there You have purified your Souls in obeying the truth saith St. Peter 1 Epist 1.22 Every act of Grace or Obedience doth in its measure purifie from Sin The righteous holds on his way and so grows stronger and stronger Job 17.9 The exercise of Grace renders the inner man more strong and
cry out Sero te amavi Domine Lord 't was late e're I loved thee True Faith would have none but Christ loving him as St. Bernard used to say Plus quam mea meos me More than all my goods my friends my self And as another holy Man did weeping that it can love Christ no more As touching our Love to our Neighbour it is also actuated by Faith Reason and Humanity raise up a Love towards Man the Barbarians kindly received St. Paul and his Shipwracked Company Act. 28.2 Titus Vespasian was called Amor deliciae humani generis the Love and delight of Mankind Suffering none to go away sad from his Presence Nay Herod himself in a Famine turned all his Plate and rich Houshold-stuff into Money therewith to fetch Corn out of Egypt for the necessities of the People Only this Love for want of Supernatural rectitude squints at Vain-glory or moves upon some other selfish Principles or at best rises up out of a simpathy of the common nature True Love towards our Neighbour such as issues out of Faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1.5 is propter Deum for Gods sake And as the School-men say There is but one root or habit of Love whereby we love God and our Neighbour because God as he is supream Goodness is the formal reason of Love to our Neighbour He only being to be loved for himself and others but the material Objects of Love to be loved for him hence also damned or irrational Creatures are not properly the Objects of Love because not capable of Union with God in bliss Unto this true Love Faith presses by some such Divine motives as these is not Love a Command nay the sum of the second Table and must it not be obeyed Can we wait for Promises and not observe Commands Or may we have the Love of the first Table without that of the second Hath not God loved us in an incomparable unparalleld way and shall we not love our Brother Shall infinite bowels open and finite ones be shut If any shut them how dwelleth the love of God in him saith the Apostle 1 Joh. 3.17 A touch a sense of his Love let in by Faith will make ours flow out towards our Neighbour Such a sweet pressure of it was on Mr. Fox That he never denied any that asked for Jesus sake A Believer acting as a Believer cannot be hard to his Neighbour or say Go and come again as long as the Mercy-seat is open And what is thy Neighbour is he not thine own flesh Nay doth he not in a sense bear Gods Image and is he not capable of eternal Blessedness And who that hath a hope of singing Hosanna's in Heaven would not love such an one And will not God be glorified thereby Graces shew forth more of God than Creatures and Love more than all the rest because he is Love it self The Primitive Christians told the World whose they were by their one heart and one soul Terrull Apol. Act. 4.32 And afterward their Love was pointed at by the very Pagans saying Vide ut invicem se diligant See how they love one another And do we know what and how great a thing may be in acts of Love Some entertaining strangers have entertained Angels Heb. 13.2 But possibly we may do more we may feed or cloth or visit Christ in his poor members and in the other World be repaid all again with usury From such Divine Motives as these Faith actuates Love to our Neighbour but this is not all Faith actuates it in a regular and congruous way according to relations and propinquities giving out a Love of delight to the Saints as having most of God in them a Love of mercy to the poor as being Christs Treasurers a love of reverence to Parents by whom we received our being a Love of provision to Children who are our selves multiplied and a Love of benevolence to all not excluding enemies to love enemies is as one saith inter mirabilia legis one of the wonders of the Law and yet Faith in the Gospel-grace will reach it Hence it is observable that when our Saviour bids his Disciples to forgive even such as trespass against them seven times in a day They reply in a Prayer Lord encrease our faith Luk. 17.5 because Faith will move Love into act even in the difficult duty of forgiving others Another Grace actuated by Faith is holy Fear of God the very light of Nature revealing some glimmerings of his Greatness and Justice raises up a Fear of him The Barbarians seeing the Viper on St. Pauls hand cried out of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a revenging justice as if he had been a murderer Act. 28.4 Pythagoras begins his Golden Verses with Veneration of the Gods Among all Nations there hath been a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fearing of God The ancient Gauls out of reverence to their gods would not touch the consecrated Gold lying in their Temples Upon the same account there were among many Ethnicks Nudipedalia sacra barefooted devotions Only this Fear was in it self but servile and further corrupted by false opinions of the Deity and hence sprung all that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 worship or superstition which was among the Heathens The progeny of their ancient Daemons their Charms and Exorcisms their Festivals and Purifications their Lustrations and human inhuman Sacrifices and all their strange Rites and Ceremonies of Adoration whereby they endeavoured to flatter and compound with their gods and guilty Consciences This servile Fear is further advanced when to the light of Nature is superadded that of the pure Law which flashes in upon the Conscience and sets it on sire with reslections upon guilt and expectations of wrath thereupon but it is servile still and chiefly looks at punishment A man in such a state may forbear an act of Sin but he is corrupt within adbue vivit in eo peecandi voluntas the love of Sin is in him still as an Ancient hath it His heart saith to his Sin as the Emperour Bassimus did to his beautiful Mother in Law Quàm vellem si liceret Oh that there were no Law against it or punishment to follow after it He may do good but not well Intus reus est in animo non facit he is guilty within and in mind doth it not as St. Austin saith there wants that love of righteousness out of which true Obedience issues but where Faith is there is castus timor a pure filial fear of God such as reverences his Majesty as supream and sears Sin as the greatest evil and withal punishment in its due place though not principally or in a servile way and among punishments chiefly that of loss and separation from God as a greater evil than the rest And as Faith sees the invisible one more or less so this holy Fear is more or less moved into act Of old the appearances of God in outward Symbols of glory struck an a we
upon men the high Thrones with its train made Isaiah cry out as an undone man Isa 6. the voice out of the whirl-wind caused Job to abhor himself in dust and ashes Job 42.6 The bright thining man turned Daniel's comeliness into corruption Dan. 10.8 And what those outward appearances did in a sensible way that Faith which is an inward Vision of God doth in a Spiritual looking on him by Faith a dread falls on us from every Attribute or Work of his His glorious Majesty makes us go and hide our selves in the dust of our own vileness and nothingness His pure Holiness comparatively turns us and all our comely Graces into rottenness His dreadful Justice sounds so loud in the threatning that we cannot but tremble at every word of it Nay his very goodness and tender bowels lying all about us make us afraid to trample thereon by finning even those in Nature do so much more those richer ones in Grace His very rain calls for out fear Jer. 5.24 And what do those dews of the Spirit which are not common as the other His bounding the Sea doth so Jer. 5.22 and what doth his bounding corruption which else would drown Soul and all in perdition Oh how tremendous is our life our Bodies living on the Blood of Creatures and our Souls on the Blood of God our natural being lying in the arms of that Power which bears up the World and our Spiritual in the arms of that Grace which saves it Earth flowing round about us with Blessings and Heaven it self coming down in Promises and carrying back our Hopes thither Who in such Visions of Faith would not fear the Lord and his goodness Who would not tremble at Sins indignity and ingratitude After such mercies as these should we again transgress against him If we wax wanton under Goodness how soon may Soveraignty come down and recover all from us as forfeited Heaven may shut up it self and the dews of the Spirit cease our Graces may all droop and wither and our Hearts grow hard and stony one lust or other may carry us into captivity and our little remnant of Grace and Life may cry out as the Church doth O Lord why hast thou made us to err from thy ways and hardned our hearts from thy fear return for thy servants sake Isa 63.17 After all our wantonness we shall be glad to come to holy Fear again Soveraignty will make us fear him in every thing such a fight of him by Faith as this makes him practically to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fear as he is called Psal 76.11 Moreover Faith moves this Fear into act by shewing the great evil of Sin Sense looks on penal evils which press on the outward man but Faith on Sin as the greatest of evils it being an opposite to God a blot to the Soul a blast to the World a forfeiture of Heaven and fuel for the flames of Hell a thing not to be done Pro quantiscunque bonis lucrandis aut pro quantiscunque malis pracavendis for the gaining never so great a good or for the avoiding never so great an evil as Bradwardine speaks Hence St. Austin said That a man must not tell a lie to save a world And Henry Flander being a Prisoner for the Protestant Religion would not say That his Wife was his Whore no not to save his life offered to him on those terms Now Fear being a kind of flight from evil the greater the evil is the greater is the flight and when an evil is the greatest of evils such as Sin appears to Faith the flight from it is as from Hell it self and more if possible according to the saying of Anselm That if Sin were set before him on the one band and Hell on the other he would rather leap into Hell than fall into Sin Another Grace actuated by Faith is Zeal which is an intense Love or a mixture of Love and Anger or rather the heat and boyling up of all the affections in the concerns of God and his Glory This is a coal from the Altar which warms Hearts and Lives and sparkles out in every Grace and Duty without it all is in spirituali gelicidio cold and frozen as in a Sunless World Indeed without Faith Zeal is blind as in the Jew who in his heat for the Law opposes the Gospel and true Righteousness Or it runs out upon Humane things as in the Papist who crys up Traditions as a second Oracle or it moves upon selfish Principles as in the Pharisees who did all theatrically to be seen of men But when Faith comes Zeal is according to the Word as its Rule and for Divine things as the worthiest Object and out of a pure intention to Gods Glory as the supream end Faith brings us into Communion with God and makes us one spirit with him and hence it comes to pass that those things which are dear to him are so to us and those injuries which move his jealousie above stir up our Zeal here below To Faith Gods name is nomen Majestativum holy reverend fearful glorious precious a name above every name and therefore cannot be profaned but Zeal will break forth the reproaches cast on it fall more heavily on the Believer than those on himself or his near relations Nay they press harder on him than if he should hear one railing at Princes or Angels Maris the blind Bishop of Chalcedon being brought into the presence of the blasphemous Emperour Julian fell severely on him as upon an enemy of God and when Julian told him That he was blind and his Galilean God would not cure him Maris gave thanks to God who had taken away his eyes that he might not look on so wicked a wretch as Julian Such a Zeal doth Faith put forth for Gods name In like manner the Worship of God is to Faith his Homage honour on Earth Crown of glory Sanctuary of Presence a thing too precious and pure to be allayed with Humane mixtures if this be corrupted our Zeal must needs kindle at it and so much the more because his facred jealousie hangs more over his Worship than over any thing else in all the World To the other Commandments we find this annexed I am the Lord Lev. 19 but to the second I am a jealeus God Exod. 20.5 Hence Moses at the light of the Calf forgets his Meekness and in a holy Passion brake the holy Tables In the Constantinopolitan Council held about the year of our Lord 754 how hot were the Bishops against Images as a meer Pagan custom and when they were cast down how triumphant was the Peoples Zeal crying out Hodiè salus mundo now is salvation come to the world In the fifth Council of Carthage they would have the very reliques of Idolatry totally blotted out Nay Leo Bishop of Rome when the Manichees Worshipped the Sun forbade the Christians to worship towards the East that they might have nothing common with them Such
a Zeal doth Faith stir up for the Worship of God and no less for the Truth of God this is a precious jewel a secret out of the Fathers bosom a beam come down from Heaven to light us thither if this be subverted Zeal will stand up and vindicate it Secundus when he was commanded to deliver up his Bibles to be burnt answered Christianus sum non traditor In the first General Councils how earnest were the Fathers for the Faith they would not exchange a letter or syllable of it The Arrian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not pass instead of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor the Nestorian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 applied to Christ as man instead of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 applied to the blessed Virgin With what an heroical and gallant spirit did Luther cleave to the Evangelical Truth Pia est sancta hac in re nostra pertinacia in this ours is a pious and holy obstinacy saith he Such a Zeal for truth doth Faith ralse up In sum Faith hath a single eye at Gods Glory and so endears all things tending thereunto that upon the least violation thereof Zeal will be ready to break forth in that behalf Moreover Faith gives a further advance thereunto by looking on the unparallelled Love of God O what a Zeal hath he for our Salvation Hath he not writ our poor names in the book of Life and shall we neglect his glorious one Hath not he sent his own Son in the flesh to be the great Ordinance of our Salvation and to fill all the under-Ordinances with his Spirit and Grace and shall we not be zealous in and for his Worship Are not his holy Truths the day-star in our bearts seeds of the New Creature and Cordials of rich Comfort and shall we not earnestly contend for them Will he not glorifie us to all eternity above and shall we not glorifie him in our little span of time here below Whilest Faith is thus musing the fire of Zeal must needs kindle in our Hearts Another Grace actuated by Faith is Meekness which is as cool in our own cause as Zeal is hot in Gods This is the great Moderatrix of Anger that it breaks not out Preter squum bonum not unjustly for a light occasion as that Pope's did who raged upon the missing a cold Peacock and blasphemously added If God was so angry for an Apple he might justly be so for a Peacock Nor upon a just cause excessively as it did in that great Conqueror Stephen King of Poland who was so angry with the Rigenses about the Gregorian Calendar that he sell into Epileptical sus and died Natural Meekness is a beautiful thing and so is Moral but neither is a Grace Natural being but the result of a sweet temper of Body and Moral but the improvement of Reason neither levels so high as Gods Glory In Natural we do but comply with our Temperament and in Moral but sacrifice to our Reason But the Grace of Meekness is a portion of that Dove-like Spirit which rested upon Christ and aims at his Glory whose Goodness is resembled thereby Hence it is observable that where the Meekness is only Natural or Moral Men will be angerless and sintully meek even when Gods Glory lies at the Stake their Meekness being as opposite to holy Zeal as to rash Anger but where the Grace of Meekness is Men in their own concerns glorifie God by a cool converse and in Gods call for Zeal to vindicate his Glory To promote this Grace Faith doth many things as first it looks at the infinite Long-sufferance of God O what doth he bear from Men His Laws are violated Blessings abused Name blasphemed Glory stained and all by his own Creatures and in his own World and day after day year after year nay one age after another and yet the axle-tree of his Patience breaks not under it 〈…〉 a look at this will much meeken us Excellent Melincton under great Calumnies was still of a cool spirit and when his Enemies said That they would not leave him a footstep in Germany all hi● reply was That he should have one in Heaven And what made him so meek we may gather from his own words Nullum hominem tantum sustinere malorum quantum contumeliarum Deus No man bears so many evils as God doth contumelies And if we will be followers of God we must be meek and as a further motive hereunto Faith looks unto Christ in whom Meekness is exemplified in our own Nature that we may not say flesh and blood cannot be so under reproaches injuries contradictions bloody sufferings He was as a lamb not opening his mouth when he was reviled be reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not 1 Pet. 2.23 And the Believer must follow him and the rather because he hath a spirit of Meekness from him to do so Such a spirit shewed it self in Beza who when in a Dispute about the Eucharist the Jesuits called him and his Colleagues Foxes and Serpents only replied Nos non magis credimns quàm Transubstantiationem We believe it as much as we do Transubstantiation Again this Grace is much advanced by Reslections without Faith a man is a stranger at home and knows every thing better than his own Heart as St. Bernard faith of Petrus Abailardus He knew every thing better than himself but where Faith is there is the true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then a Man looks in wardly into his own Heart and there finds such a black nest of Corruptions that upon reproaches and injuries ostered he is ready to commune with himself and say Are not such Sins with me even with me at least seminally if not actually Have not I done worse to God and may I not do so to Men Aut sumus aut fuimus aut possumus esse quod hic est such Reflections wonderfully meeken us Hence St. Bernard saith That he never saw another man sin but he was jealous of his own Heart Ille heri tu hodie ego cras he did it yesterday and thou to day and I to morrow St. Paul exhorts the Gàlatians in the Plural number to restore the lapsed in the spirit of Meekness and adds the reason in the singular considering thy self Gal. 6.1 He changes the number as the Judicious Interpreter observes That every one in particular may deseend into himself and there find an Argument for Meekness towards others Moreover Faith promotes this Grace by viewing the Promises made thereunto which are as large as heart can wish Would we have the things of the World The meek shall inherit the earth and to sweeten it They shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace Psal 37.11 Would we have the things of God The meek shall be beautified with salvation Psal 149.4 And all the good tydings in the Gospel are to be preached to them Isa 61.1 For the true Way They have God to teach them and guide them
immense Treasures of Grace in Christ set open in this Ordinance to all comers Here 's Eye-salve for our Blindness Strength for our Weakness Melting for the hard Heart Cordials for Fainting-fits quenching Grace against the fiery darts of Satan and Healing for the bloody issues of Sin From this Table we go saith Chrysostome as Lions breathing fire terrible to the Devils themselves Ante faciem Vnctionis Christi nullus omnino stare potest morbus animae quamvis inveteratus saith Bernard Before the Vnction of Christ the most inveterate disease of the Soul will vanish away When once the Venetians were boasting of their great Treasures a Spanish Ambassador told them That his Masters Treasure had a root in the Mines of America However worldly Men may boast of outward things the Believers joy is That his Graces have a sure root in the Mines and rich Treasures of Christ in whom dwells all fulness of abundance and redundance running over in shares and measures upon all that are in him As a spirit of Love it inflames the Heart towards Christ Oh! what manner of Love is here set before us the Father 's own Son and Image passing by Angels assumed our frail Flesh and in it stood in our room Having though the Holy One the Sin of the World cast on him by a wonderful Imputation and though the beloved Son the Wrath of God bruising and pressing him into a bloody Agony and Passion on our behalf The Fathers Eternal Joy and Splendor lay for a time in a dark Eclipse of Sorrow and Desertion as one forsaken of God that we might not be cast out into utter darkness and bled and died on a Cross as one accursed of God to keep us from bleeding in eternal flames and to purchase a place in Glory for us And all this in outward Elements is not only limmed out and figured to our senses but sealed to our hearts as that which we have a real share and interest in And what attractives and inflammatives are here Now if ever our Heart will breath out it self in holy Raptures after Christ and faint and swoon away in Love-sick desires till it can catch hold and embrace him and so taste the rare Delights and Complacencies of an Union with Him And the greater those Complacencies are the higher are the Desires and reciprocally the higher the Desires the greater the Complacencies till at last the Believing Soul in rapes of Love breaks forth into Hosanna's and Hallelujahs touching its great Redeemer Such Experiments as these prove this Ordinance to be Divine Thus much touching the Ordinances in Scripture and the Experimenting their Divinity In the last Place I shall mention The great Works of Power Recorded in Scripture many of these are Types of the Magnalia or Spiritual Wonders wrought in or for the Souls of Men. Thus the Ark which saved from the Deluge was a Type of Salvation from Wrath in and through Christ Isaac born of a dead Body and Womb a Type of the New-creature brought forth by supernatural Grace and The bringing Israel out of Egypt a Type of the great Redemption wrought by Christ These a Believer may Experiment in their Spiritual Imports and Mysteries which are more great and glorious than the Things themselves Not to be prolix in this I shall only instance in two Things viz. The Creation of the World Historically set forth Gen. 1. and The Miracles wrought by Christ related in the Gospel As touching Creation as clear a Glass as it is of the Eternal Power and Godhead the Philosophers were much mistaken about it Aristotle asserting That the World was Eternal as if it were possible That there should be an infinite orderly Succession of Things or a third fourth fifth c. without a first or as if a World a Creature could be made as the Son of God was Begotten or joyn Eternities with its Creator The Stoicks dreaming at least of an Eternal Matter or Chaos as if that Axiome ex nihilo nihil fit which runs true in Nature did reach God himself or as if He like our Mechanicks on Earth could not work without Tools or Materials Or as if the Gulf between Nothing and Being were so great that Infinite Power could not fill it up and setch over a Creature from Nullity into Being The Epicureans fancying the World to be made by a fortuitous concourse of Atomes luckily meeting together in the framing of it as if the blind Particles of Matter could range themselves into a World full of delicate Order and Harmony or as if the various parts regular motions and orderly dispositions in the great Universe could be but a chance or as if the admirable consent and confederation of all the parts therein in which contraries conspire and agree together for the good of the whole were but a fortunate casualty Such were the dreams of the Sophi but the Believer by Faith understands That the Worlds were framed by the Word of God Hebr. 11.3 And over and above may experience a Creation a pretious New-creation in his own Heart We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus saith the Apostle Eph. 2.10 In this Creation Almighty Power is as much laid out as in the Old and the Products of it are much more excellent than the other Spiritual Light excels Natural and the Firmament of Faith the outward One. The Living Water within exceeds the great Ocean and Christ in the Heart the Sun in the Heavens Graces are transcendent Creatures and surpass even the Immortal Soul which yet outweighs a World The Believer may look upon his Holy Faith Fear Love Joy Hope and Patience which make up the New-Creature and say All these were created out of Nothing and called into Being when they were not Here is dextra excelsi The right hand of the most High the very same which made the World and Vestigia Spiritûs Sancti The footsteps of that Holy Spirit which of old moved on the Face of the Waters Now I know That God is a Creator indeed and have a practical proof of it in my own Heart every part of the New-creature bearing witness thereunto As to the Miracles of Christ related in the Gospel these were so famous That Josephus mentions them Celsus and Julian in their Writings against Christians durst not deny them Grot. de Ver. Relig. 44. Camero de Verbo 441. Petr. Gal. de Arranis 447. The Jews in their Talmudical Books nay and the Mahometans in their Alchoran confess them And the Heathens moved with envy at them caused the life of Apollonius Thyanaeus and his lying Miracles to be described in meer opposition to Christ and his true ones When John sent his Disciples on that errand Art thou he that should come that is the Messias Christ returns this answer Go and tell John the blind receive their sight the lame walk the lepers are cleansed the deaf hear and the dead are raised up As much as to say In such Wonders as these is
my Glory manifested For the right understanding of these we must note Christ did not come only or chiefly to cure the Bodies of Men no those Miracles which in transitu cured their Bodies Miracula christi corporaliter facta Spiritaliter intelligenda snut were ultimately levelled at their Souls that by Outward Cures they might be led to seek Inward ones from Christ Neither did he do all his Miracles on Earth no being Ascended and Sitting at the Right Hand of Majesty in Heaven he works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those Spiritual Miracles on the Souls of Men which are incomparably greater than those on their Bodies How many blind Hearts and those worse than blind Eyes hath he cured by a Touch as he passed by them in the Ordinances causing them to see himself the True light and Sun of Righteousness together with all the Heavenly Mysteries which stream as so many Beams or Rayes from him How many deaf Souls have upon his Divine Ephatha been obedientially opened to the Commands of God and though lame before have Rose up walked holily and praised God what Spiritual Lepers hath he by a Touch of his Spirit and Word cleansed Quae enim immunditia quae incredulitas quae duritia quod peccatum ad hunc contactum Christi consistere poterit saith Ferus No uncleanness unbelief hardness sinfulness can stand against the Touch of Christ What Sinners of all forts dead in Sins and Trespasses hath he raised up to a Divine Life Saint Austin reciting that Christ had raised up three Persons viz. The Maid in her Fathers House the Young-Man carried out upon the Bier and Lazarus four days dead and stinking in the Grave adds Ista tria genera mortuorum sunt tria genera peccatorum quos suscitat Christus these three dead ones are three sorts of Sinners raised up by Christ As the Maid in the house so is the secret Sinner raised up intra latebras conscientiae within the doors of his own Heart As the young Man carried out upon the Bier so is the open Sinner raised up out of known Sins And as Lazarus dead and stinking in the grave so is the customary Sinner raised up out of his old putrified Sins At the voice of Christ the strongest bonds of custom are broken and the poor Sinner comes forth into an holy life These things being so it appears That the Believer may experiment the Spiritual Miracles of Christ and from thence gather a proof in his own Heart That the very same hand wrought the Corporal ones especially seeing these latter are but types and shadows of the other which he finds verified in himself Thus much touching this Fundamental Experiment of the Scriptures A Believer may experiment the Laws Promises Threatnings Supernatural Truths Sacred Ordinances and Great Works in Scripture to be Divine and so have a Practical proof that the Scripture is of God CHAP. XIII Of the top and highest stature of Faith the Believers Assurance of his good estate of Pardon and Salvation That this Assurance is attainable many ways demonstrated HAving passed over the Believers Experiment touching the Scripture I shall now proceed to another touching his own Estate He may certainly know 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Dionysius speaks That it is well with him That he is in a good state of Pardon and Salvation This is apex fidei the top and highest stature of Faith a Priviledg which transcends Earth and antedates Heaven to us Here are those three things Lumen Laetitia Pax Light Joy and Peace which as the Schoolman Halensis saith render the experiment of Grace in the Soul truly certain Here are Coelestial Beams unspeakable Joys admirable Serenities Sabbaths of Rest Seas of Sweetness and Beatitudes too great for the tongue of Men and Angels to express Before the Believer walked only with the single staff of Recumbency and Resignation but now he hath bands and troops of Comfort following after him from the Promises His darling Soul is now richly provided for to all Eternity Eternal Beanty is in his Eye Infinite Goodness at hand for his Embraces the lines are fallen in a kind of Paradise his Portion is no less than God himself all his Blessings are dipt in Love The World may brand him but the Spirit seals In the midst of sweeping Judgments he is still one of Gods Jewels and as soon as Death dissolves him Heaven receives him Touching this great Experiment I shall first prove That it is attainable by a Believer and then shew in what ways it is to be attained The Romanists hold That no Man without special Revelation can be certain of his Pardon and Salvation not with a certainty of Faith Bellar. de Juslif lib. 3. which is infallible but only with a certainty of Hope which is conjectural The Promises indeed are sure say they but our Dispositions are uncertain The Promises run Conditionally If they return to thee with all their heart 2 Chron. 6.38 and who can be sure that he doth so Who can say I have made my heart clean saith the Wise-man Prov. 20.9 Who can understand his errors saith David Psal 19.12 Some Scriptures put a peradventure upon Remission Who can tell if God will turn and repent Jon. 3.9 Repent if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee Act. 8.22 And the reason is because of the uncertainty of our Dispositions Faith is not Faith unless it lean on the Divine Word and no Word saith Such or such an one hath true Faith and Repentance or is truly pardoned Happy is the man that feareth always Prov. 28.14 The heart of man is deceitful above all things who can know it Jer. 17.9 Assurance if vouchsafed would but puss up Pride and open a door to Licentiousness Thus the Pontisicians Their Divinity in this great Point is much like the Philosophy of the old Scepticks those Patrons of all Uncertainty who used to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reason against Reason puts all Propositions in aequilibrio the Balance hangs even without Declension this or that way after all debates imaginable still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perhaps it is so perhaps not It may be they do see and hear it may be not at least they doubt whether they do it distinctly or no. After the same sort the Romanists do what they can to perswade Believers out of their Spiritual sense out of which Assurance ariseth It may be will they say thou repentest and believest it may be not or if thou dost them it may be not sicut oportet in such a manner as they ought to be done Hence the Council of Trent Can. 9●● calls the certainty of Remission vain and remote from all Piety This is that Doctrine of theirs which Luther calls Monstrum dubitationis the monster of doubting and withal asserts That if they erred only in this it were a just eause for us to separate from such an Infidel-Church Learned Pareus stiles it Desperationis ossicina the shop of
in Charity draw out thy Alms and with them thy Soul give outward Things and which is more thy Self in real compassion Cast thy Bread upon the Waters upon the Tears of the Poor that it may be carried into the Ocean of Eternity and there found again in a glorious Reward When an Object of Charity meets thee Say not Go and come again pass not by as the Priest and Levite did but as the good Samaritan immediately pour in thy Wine and Oyl into the Wounds of thy Brother omit no Season of Charity Now is thy Seed-time scatter thy good Works Sow upon Blessings as the Phrase is 2 Cor. 9.6 Now Christs Bank is open put in thy Money upon holy Usury and God himself will be thy Pay-Master Be still a-doing of good that in thy little sphere thou mayst resemble him who doth good in the great sphere of Nature His Sun shines and Rain falls every-where Be as like him as thou canst shining in good Works and dropping in Charities upon all occasions Give a Portion to seven and also to eight saith the Preacher Eccles 11.2 From this Text the Jews ground a Custom to give an Alms to seven or eight poor people every day However that be we should be much in Charity Look on the Poor as Gods Altars erected on purpose That upon their Backs and Bellies thou mayst offer up thy Charity as an Odour of a sweet smell a Sacrifice acceptable well-pleasing to God Be rich in good Works ready to distribute willing to communicate laying up a good Foundation against the time to come This is the way to Assurance Works of Mercy and Charity make Faith visible and withal put the Believer into a nearer capacity to have the Love of God manifested to him They make Faith visible no Assurance can be had unless that Query Whether we be in the Faith be resolved in the Affirmative That cannot be done unless Faith become visible and more visible it cannot be than in such good Works which as the holy Blossoms of it prove that there is Life at the root The Mercy and Charity which hang upon it may tell thee That thou hast indeed closed by Faith with the infinite Love and Grace above and from thence brought down all those drops and models of Goodness which thou sheddest forth in thy Conversation The Fruit may prove thy standing in Christ the true Root of fatness and sweetness The Image of Goodness limmed and drawn out upon thy Life shews it self to be from the pure Spirit St. John exhorting the little children to a real practical Love adds this as a singular Comfort 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In this Love we know that we are of the Truth and shall assure our hearts before him 1 John 3.18 19. It thou love thy Brother in Deed and in Truth assure thy self that thou art of the Truth That the holy truth of the Gospel is mixed with faith in thy Heart and there grows up into the Divine life and likeness Say not That thy Faith is dead or idle as long as it can shew forth the Coats and Garments the Alms and good Works which it hath done these shew the life and labour of it Nay further these put thee into a nearer capacity to have the Love of God manifested to thee God in the Prophet commands them to deal their bread to the hungry to cover the naked not to hide themselves from their own flesh and immediately after lets out himself in sweet Promises to them Thy righteousness shall then go before thee Isa 58.8 that is thy Graces shall visibly appear to thee And again Thou shalt call and the Lord shall answer thou shalt cry and he shall say here am I ver 9. that is He will be very near and ready at hand to reveal himself to thee And which is more as St. John tells us he will dwell in thee He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God and God in him 1 Joh. 4.16 He dwells in the Divine Life and the Divine Presence dwells in him He hath a Shechinah nay and an Oracle in his own bosom God will speak peace to his Saints Psal 85.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to his merciful ones with them he will shew himself merciful to them he will speak from the Mercy-seat they give but ordinary Bread but receive from him hidden Manna they draw out their Souls to their Brethren and he draws out his Soul to them In the last place if thou wouldst be assured set thy heart on God and Christ and Heaven stay no longer in the straits of this lower World take thy flight by Faith and Love into the sphere of Infinity where thy Soul may open and dilate it self for ever Hang no longer about the drops and little particles of Being put forth thy Soul might and main into the great ocean of Sweetness and Perfection which is able to fill up thy two vast Capacities of Mind and Will with its unmeasurable Truth and Goodness Warm thy Heart no more among the little sparks of Good here below soar up upon the wings of Desire and ardent Affection to that pure immutable Sun of Love and Goodness one of whose golden rays of favour will be more to thee than a World Thou hast O Believer a Soul twice Heaven-born once as it is in its own nature an immortal spark from above and again as it bears the impress of Heaven in its Graces And answerably thou hast a double impetus after Happiness one in the instinct of nature thirsting after it and another in the more Divine impulses of Grace pressing towards it as its Center Think not that such a Soul shall ever find rest till it come back to the first point from whence it issued and resign up it self to its Original in the bosom of God Inflame thy Heart with Love to Jesus Christ who is altogether lovely and wholly desirable In his Righteousness thou maist stand and look up to the sweet reconciled face of God In his bleeding wounds thou hast a passage into the infinite bowels of Mercy through the veil of his flesh the way is open to the Holy of Holies The oyl upon his head can fill thee with joy unspeakable and glorious Lift up thine eyes O Believer to that wonder of wonders God manifested in the flesh from whence come all the admirable indwellings of God in the spirits of Men. Set thy Heart upon that Infinite Mass and Treasure of Merit which paid off all the scores to Divine Justice and over and above bought all the Glory of Heaven for poor worms Ravish thy Soul in the rich redundancies and over-measures of the Spirit upon him which overflow and fill so many thousand precious Souls with Grace Look stedfastly upon that pure mirrour of Love Holiness Meekness Goodness Obedience Patience which is in his flesh look till thou shine with the same image or spiritual Idea of Grace look till thou art captivated in raptures and flames of Love towards
him count the whole World dross and dung for him espouse him in the dearest and sweetest affections Again set thy heart upon Heaven call back thy Affections from this vain World where they have been scattered a-gathering up stubble unto Heaven thy native Country that thou maist have a pregnant proof in thy self that thou art born from thence and a-going thither Follow those attractions which Heaven the great Center of Grace and Holiness put upon thy Faith and Love to draw thee up to it self Long to be up in that pure region of Bliss where God is All in All There are sinless Perfections and tearless Comforts rivers of Pleasures and plenitudes of Joy for ever Thou maist there read all Truths in the Original and satiate thy self at the fountain of Goodness Have thy Conversation above drive on a constant trade there by Prayers and good Works that thou maist have rich returns of Grace and Love from thence This is the true way to Assurance A notable instance we have in the Psalmist O God thou art my God early will I seek thee my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land where no water is Psal 63.1 and what is the issue of it his Soul which had so emptied out it self in holy Pantings and Anhelations after God was soon satisfied with the marrow and fatness of his love ver 5. No sooner was the Spouse sick of love to Christ Cant. 2.5 but his left hand is under her head in Supports and his right hand embraces her in the sweet manifestations of his Love to her ver 6. The more Heavenly the Believer is the sitter he is for Assurance which serves as a lesser Heaven for him till he come to the great one which is above Thus much touching the second thing the ways in which Assurance is attained To conclude all the Believer having arrived at Assurance which is the highest step on this side Heaven may sit down with joy upon his head and begin that Song of Free-grace and the Lamb which is sung above though in an higher tune in the Heavenly quire of Angels and glorified Saints for ever and ever Well may he say Oh! what hath God wrought what was he a lump of dust and sin to be brought hither How did he lie in blood and death till Grace came by and put in the breath of Spiritual life into him Was not his Reason the lightest part in him veiled and covered over with gross darkness when the rosie morn and day-spring of Grace first broke out upon him in Spiritual illuminations Was not his Will though a free Principle fast shut up in Hardness and Unbelief when Grace opened the Iron-gate and made him free to his own Happiness What a poor broken Man and under what innumerable debts was he when Grace came and paid off all by the Blood of the Covenant How much of Earth and Hell was upon him before Grace made him a Son and limmed out the Divine Image upon his Heart What swarms and legions of Lusts kept possession in his Heart when Grace set up its standard and drove them out to make room for the holy seed there And after he became a Saint what an hand had Grace with him to cure his many weaknesses and nurse up his infant-Graces What a vast charge was it at in fresh anointings and supplies of the Spirit to keep the holy lamp and fire from going out And at last how rich and glorious is Grace towards him when it carries him up into the mount of Assurance and there shews him the great things which it hath done and will do for him the true Graces and blossoms of Glory in his Heart and a fair Heaven that lies beyond them where Crowns and Robes of Happiness wait for his coming Oh! Grace infinite Grace thou art the Origine of all Graces and Center of all Praises All the Saints owe their birth and safe conduct to Heaven to thee and to every step of thine from the first beams and drops of Mercy to the Bliss-making Vision and rivers of Pleasures above Hosannabs and Halielujahs must be sung for ever and ever FINIS The TABLE A ADam Preacht of Christ Pag. 376 Adoption a fruit of Faith 241. It s Priviledg 242 to 249 hereby a greater Glory than in Adam Pag. 244 Adriatick Sea a Popish Fable about the calming of it Pag. 104 105. Albertus Magnus his Statue speaking articulately Pag. 164 Ambrose's saying of Cain and Abel Pag. 367 Armas Burgus his Prayer at his Martyrdom 176 His Patience Pag. 318 Andelots brave answer when questioned to Henry 2d of France Pag. 315 Anselm's Interrogatory and Counsel to a Man at the point of death Pag. 80 Antinomians Error about Sin the Law Pag. 121 Assurance and Faith how differ 137 to 149 That it is attainable 397. Of our good estate is attainable 387. Names given to Faith shew it 399 410. Another ground 404. Examples of it 403 Popish errour about it 388. Like the Sceptick Philosophers herein 389. It puffs not up 395 396 Assurance of Pardon 397. Of Perseverance 412. Ways by which it is attained 424. It begins the Song of Free-Grace here Pag. 460 Athanasius his saying when Banished by the Emperour Pag. 198 Augustin's mistake about Faith retracted 6 Strugling against Sin in his own strength he heard a voice 279. His Spiritual application of Christs raising up three from the dead Pag. 385 386 B Baptism several Names given it by the Ancients 371. How a Jewish Custom then a Divine Ordinance 372. Though received in Infancy yet hath a bond on Conscience ibid. 373. One confirmed in Martyrdom by it by his Mother ibid. Burgundians Baptism Pag. 374 Bellarmine died in doubt Pag. 426 427 Belief of the Divine Authority of the Scriptures of what kind 37 to 41. What the consequences of it in order to Resignation 69 to 75. A Believer keeps to the Written Word in all things 122 to 126. The only wise man 170. His knowledg of the Invisible God 171 172. The Presentiality of Things future 186. Vnderstands seeming Contradictions 187. It s spiritual extraction the best Chymist 192 to 201. What he desires to know of himself Pag. 381 Belial a son of Belial what it imports Pag. 160 Bernards reflection on himself when he saw another Sin Pag. 313 Bishop no non-preaching Bishops of old Pag. 377 378 Blessing of Jacob and Esan differ 344. Promise of Temporal Blessings not absolute Pag. 345 Blood a little drop given out to be the Blood of Jesus Christ Pag. 364 365 C Cardinal Cajetan's Commentaries on the Master of the Sentences extold by Papists above Luther yet 200 Errors in it Pag. 156 Christ earthly things often in competition 159 His Conception in the Womb and the Heart compared 288 361 362. He is the Samplar of our Graces 291. How he died in his person and in the Believer Pag. 373 Conditions of the Promises really in Believers Pag.
391 Conflict the Natural Spiritual differenced Pag. 261 262 263. Conscience its testimony of great repute among Pagans 405. Witnesseth integrity 406. Believers converse with Scripture Conscience Pag. 407 Conviction of Sin manifold 70 71 72. Several things ensue thereupon to Pag. 75 Creation the Philosophers misguess about it 17 18. New Creation in the Heart Pag. 383 384. Credere Deo in Deum Pag. 131 132 Cruciger his Death-bed Prayer and Faith Pag. 138 Covenant of Grace and Works difference of Men under them Pag. 278 D Dr. Dees impostures by Spirits Pag. 326 Delilah the import of the word in Hebr. Pag. 150 Dragon poysonous shut up by Sylvester the Bishops Prayers Pag. 266 E Election though from eternity yet buds in time Pag. 413 Evagrius his gift to the poor to be paid in another world Pag. 113 Evidences confirm Assurance Pag. 394 Experiments all learned men are for them 326 Experiments of Faith of Scripture-truth 325 to 370. Where of Scripture Ordinances and great Works to Pag. 386 Examination of our selves espied by the Philosophers Pag. 433 434 Faith the several acceptions of the word in Scripture 1 2. Considered in its measures and in its lowest measure described ibid. Wherein it exceeds Moral Virtues 8 9. The difference between that and Reason alone 12 19. And Reason with Scripture 19 30. Faith explicite required in Fundamentals 41 46. It disciples the Soul to Christ 86 87. Yields to be ruled by Christ in all actings 109. Aspires after Heaven and looks for pay there 113. Where the seat of Faith is disputed between Protestants and Papists 126. Though seems dead yet may be alive 129 130. More than a waked assent 131 to 136. Less than Assurance to 149. Why former Divines desine it by a full perswasion 136. Difference between Assurance and Faith justifying us 140. Hangs on God in all its actings 191. Fruits of Faith and several Conceptions of these 270 271. It is before all other Graces 283 to 288. Sets them all on work 289. It s foundation and infusion 328. It wars against all enticement to Sin 276. Steps by which Faith goes in mortifying it Pag. 280 Fall of man total Pag. 7 Father its efficacy in Prayer Pag. 245 Fear of God to be in all actions 303. Servile and Filial shewed Pag. 304 Mr. Fox never denied any that asked for Jesus sake Pag. 301 Free-Grace its presumption in unholy persons to expect it 119 120. Free-Will hath no Harmony with it 190. Abused by Pelagians Pag. 366 G God most glorious in his Word 12. Confest by all Nations 13. Cardinal Perron one day proved a God the next would have proved the contrary 171. Discovery of God in Grace and in the Creatures how differs Pag. 175 Good 288. Sets about the chief good Pag. 4 Graces spiritual are Creations 8. All act in union with Christ 295. All rooted in Christs Mines Pag. 380 H Happiness all desire it few hit it 3 4. What Aristotle makes it to be Pag. 253 Heart it includes Vnderstanding and Will Pag. 126 127 Hungarians Tradition Pag. 92 I Jews though they reject the Sacrifice of the Messiah yet offer a real one and why 97. Their answer to the Question where believe to be saved by Christs Righteousness with their pious saying over Bread Wine Herbs 344. Their saying of the seventy Souls that went down into Egypt 449. A vulgar rule among them 450. A custom of others about Alms. Pag. 454 455 Illumination Supernatural described 11. Wherein it excels Natural Reason 12 19. It 's requisite to Faith Pag. 30 31 32. Images how at first crept in 16. When cast out the people triumphed 309. Their return again Pag. 331 332 Ingrossers of Corn sore Judgments on them Pag. 184 Instruction the true false way of finding it Pag. 118 Intercession of Christ powerful Pag. 415 Johannes Seneca his Death-bed moan Pag. 210 Israelites the Men go not into Canaan but the little ones its misery Pag. 128 129 Justification three acts required to it 94 98. Bellarmines Conclusion about it 102. How the ungodly may and may not be justified 165. It s great importance 201. It 's not from eternity 202 206. It is double 207. How by Faith 213 to 219. Not compleat till the day of Judgment Pag. 227 to 231 K Kingdom the Primitive Christians talk so much of it that the Pagan Emperours were jealous of them though without cause Pag. 176 Kohathites the derivation of the word Pag. 5 L Law of God demands of us two things 209. Enough in Christ to answer both 210. It s writing in the heart by Nature and Grace differ 338. Impossible to be fulfilled but by the fiu't of man Pag. 401 Legio fulminatrix Pag. 373 Our life how tremendous every way Pag. 305 Light natural improved to the utmost engaged not God to give Grace Pag. 14 Love to God and our Neighbour hath but one root Pag. 301 Luthers Method in Reformation 274. An example of Faith in Mortification his saying of Free-Will 368 369. His answer to the menacing Law Pag. 428 M Mahalath a title of some Psalms interpreted Pag. 194 Mahomets Heart una child cut open Pag. 193 Meris Bishop of Chalcedons Discourse with Julian Pag. 308 Martyrs refusing Pardon Pag. 276 Meekness Natural Moral Spiritual 311. Examples ib. Pag. 312 Mortification a Believer yields to Christ for it in a threefold respect 103. Resemblance between it and Christs death 104. False ways of seeking it and the true pointed at 117 118. The fruit of Faith 250. Degrees of Mortification of Original Sin 260 267. And of actual ibid. Motions holy precious to a Believer Pag. 88 Musculus's Distich in straits Pag. 248 N Nazianzens saying about the difference between begotten and proceeding Pag. 352 O Obedience actuated by Faith 314 315 316. Obedience of the Law fulfilled in Christ and of the Gospel by the Spirit in a Believer Pag. 212 Ordination used by the Jews Pag. 377 Origens saying of some Scriptures that did affect him Pag. 144 P Papists and Hypocrites how they agree 122. All points in Popery additions to the Word 123. It s sandy foundation drawn from Bellarmine himself 147. Natural Popery in every mans heart Pag. 158 Paracelsus his proud boast of himself Pag. 192 Patience its excellency acted by Faith Pag. 318 Pelagians put Free-Will for Grace 6. Place Infants in the same state as Adam Pag. 257 Perfection sinless not attainable in this life Pag. 125 126 Perseverance no condition of it self Pag. 417 Philip Lantgrave's comfort in Imprisonment Pag. 321 322 Plague-sores lookt upon by Munster as Love-tokens Pag. 193 Plerophory of three things in Scripture Pag. 400 Pollio's dying-saying Pag. 115 Polemenia her wish to be cast into a Vessel of burning-Pitch Pag. 319 Providence Reasons mistake about it Pag. 18 19 Popes blasphemous speech about the loss of a Peacock Pag. 310 Promises of Grace and to Grace Pag. 346 Prayer its continuance 383. Its returns 372. How heard and not heard Pag. 374
ocean of reigning corruptions and these keep the heart from taking fire with the love of those excellencies which are known by nature The Gentiles knew God but they did not like to have him in their knowledge Rom. 1.28 millions of unruly lusts like the sons of Belial about Lots house beset this natural light and keep it as it were in prison thus the Apostle they withheld it in unrighteousness Rom. 1.18 and it is too weak to break out of this prison and shew it self practically I shall give some instances hereof All Nations in all climates and through all ages have conspired together to confess a Deity Conscience within bears witness to him and so do all the creatures without also one would wonder therefore that ever Idolatry should get footing in the world but what saith the Apostle they changed the truth of God into a lye and the glory of the incorruptible one into a corruptible image Rom. 1.23.25 there were store of abominable idols among them no doubt natural light gave its secret vote for God but it was but the vote of a poor prisoner altogether insignificant it was not strong enough to make them own God in his own world Again reason and nature say that God must be worshipped with the heart and that a pure heart purâ mente colendus was the old verse in suo cuique consecrandus est pectore said Seneca God hath not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a more proper place upon earth then a pure heart saith Hierocles O divine saying next door to that of our Saviour blessed are the pur● in heart for they shall see God But after all this can this natural light work a dram of true sanctity or holiness in the heart No the very Schoolmen themselves who ever give nature her due with an overplus will not say so only they say facienti quod in se est Deus revelabit Christum largietur gratiam Well if this hypothesis which I am not now to dispute were true can there be an instance given among all the Pagans from the morning of the world till this day of any one man who by the right use of ●●turals arrived at true grace If so what will become of that in the Apostle Who hath called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace 2 Tim. 1.9 If not O what a poor weak light is this of nature and how long and universally a prisoner hath it been indeed true sanctity or holiness is never found without humility but touching that there is no footstep nor shadow of commendation in all the Pagan writers saith the learned Amyraldus it is not so much as a virtue among them on the contrary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 greatness of soul is reckoned among Aristotles virtues Well then might Erasmus his Sancte Socrates have been spared Notable is that of St. Bernard Epist 190. some saith he whilest they go about to make Plato a Christian prove themselves heathens Again because possibly the light of reason may be weakest in the concerns of Religion I shall instance in other things Doth not nature and reason plead for all things of common honesty and humanity and yet in the Laws of Lycurgus which were of high renown and commended even by the Oracle of Apollo and which as Plutarch relates Lycurgus took singular pleasure to see put in ure even as God rejoyced to see the world move and turn about I say in these there are such obscenities and inhumanities as would put any one to the blush to see them in story what else are the dancing of maids naked and throwing weak children into a pit of water spoken of by Plutarch well might the Lacedaemonians have spared the Temple and Sacrifices to their Law-giver unless he had been truer to the Law of Nature Again is not self-preservation an intimate and natural impress in the heart of man it is not scripta sed nata Lex said the Orator and yet this ingraven Law was not strong enough no not in a grave and noble Cato to keep him from murdering himself and tearing out his own bowels and over this unnatural act Seneca sounds a triumph as being a noble and heroical contempt of death it self that that sword of his which was yet pure from the blood of others might let out his own but hear the censure of St. Austin De Civit. Dei l. 19. c. 4. Vtrum obsecro Cato ille patientiâ an impatientiâ se peremit non enim haec fecisset nisi victoriam Caesaris impatienter tulisset and in another place non erat honestas turpia praecavens L 1. c. 23. sed infirmitas adversa non sustinens it was but a proud impatience and miserable trampling upon the Law of Nature Moreover the light of reason doth really produce many moral virtues and yet in these wherein its greatest strength lyeth it is too weak to elevate any one of them to the glory of the great Creator Contra Jul. Pelag. l. 4. c. 3. therefore as St. Austin hath observed the whole body of Pagan virtues for want of a single eye at that great end is full of darkness Thus much of the weakness of reason on the other side the light of faith hath a great deal of strength in it this will not cannot be commonly imprisoned it is an holy unction and at last will be uppermost it is a mighty Engine whereby the h●ly Spirit lifts the heart up into belief and resignation a thing of high birth and great activity being born of God and overcoming the world 1 Joh. 5.4 and because the light of reason was not able to bear up the interest of God among men this supernatural light came to do it In the primitive Church whilest this shined clear there were no such things as outward Idols or Images afterwards upon the declension thereof those things crept in by degrees first into banners and then into Churches and there first for instruction only and afterwards for adoration yet nevertheless this holy spark shewed it self in some as in Epiphanius his cutting the vail and Serenus his breaking the Images and divers others abhorrency of Idolatry and what this supernatural light doth in Churches against outward Idols that it doth in hearts against inward it will allow no Idol to stand in the secret place not an Ashteroth of riches not a Venus of pleasure not a Baal a ruling lording lust in the heart every indulged lust stands upon the unilluminated and unresigned will and after Faith hath purified the heart it must give way for God to set up his Throne there that pure heart which the Philosophers talk of at random as a Geographer of a terra incognita faith plainly discovers and practically operates Those dishonesties and inhumanities which reason could not keep out of Laws faith casts away from private Christians as the common mire and dirt of a wicked world those moral virtues