〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. THE REFINEMENT OF ZION: OR, The old Orthodox Protestant Doctrine justified, and defended against several Exceptions of the Antinomians, methodically digested into Questions, wherein many weighty and important cases of conscience are handled, Concerning the nature of Faith and Repentance, or Conversion to God: of his eternal Love, and beholding of sin in his dearest children: of Justification from eternity, of of Preparations to the acceptance of Christ, of Prayer for pardon of sin, and turning to God: of the Gospel Covenant, and tenders of Salvation, on the terms of Faith and Repentance. For the establishment of the scrupulous, conviction of the erroneous, and consolation of distressed Consciences. By Anthony Warton, Minister of the word at Breamore in Hampshire. Mal. 3.2, 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. LXXII. Jer. 6.16. Thus saith the Lord, stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls. LONDON, Printed by John Streater, and are to be sold by the Booksellers of London, 1657. To the Christian Reader, Grace, mercy and peace be multiplied through the Knowledge of God, and of our Lord Jesus Christ. GOod Christian Reader, I am one who through decrepit old age, and other impotency and disability of body, have of late years kept almost, and altogether at home, and therefore have not heard of any of our late illuminated Preachers, only I have been told, that they do in their Sermons much censure that way of preaching, which the Protestant Ministers both in England, and in other Countries, have hitherto used, D. his Doctrine of Joh. Baptist. 2. A Conference with a dying man. 3. God's Reconciliaetion to man; and man's reconcil. to God. S. Of Freegrace. Tit. 1.9. telling their hearers that we are Legal teachers, and not Evangelical. But otherwise what the particulars were that they did find fault with in our Doctrine, I understood not until ●f late, a friend of mine did put into my hands, and sent me for a few weeks three small Treatises of an Antinomian, and requested me to make some animadversions on them, because he taught divers things which seemed strange unto him. After this, I met with sundry Authors of the same strain, who also censured, and condemned the Doctrine commonly taught by Protestant Preachers. Now because it is the duty of every Minister of the Gospel, not only to teach the truth, but to convince those that contradict, and gainsay it, lest the people of Christ should be led into error, I have adventured therefore to publish this small Treatise: wherein, I hope, I have by God's gracious assistance, detected and laid open, not all indeed, but many of the most subtle, and deceitful fallacies of these men, especially of Mr. D. (as by my friend I was requested) and have confirmed the truth, which he and they oppugn. God of his goodness so settle and establish all throughout this Land, in the truth of his Gospel, that we may not be separated, and divided one from another, but with one mind, and one mouth glorify God and our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. So prayeth Thine unfeigned friend, and well-willer in the truth, Anthony Warton. A Catalogue of the Questions. Quest. 1. WHether Christ be made ours by Faith? And whether we do put him on by Faith? Or rather whether he be not to be set forth freely in the preaching of the Gospel, without any conditions? pag. 1 Quest. 2. Whether a man when he is converted from infidelity to Faith, do change his estate before God? pag. 26 Quest. 3. Whether God may be said to love us eternally, before we do repent, and believe in Christ, even while we do live in sin? And whether God do love his children as much while they lie in sin, as when they rise out of it by repentance, and live holily? pag. 29 Quest. 4. What is meant by our reconciliation to God? pag. 38 Quest. 5. Whether the doctrine of reconciliation, as Mr. D. hath propounded it, be a better means of comfort to distressed Consciences, than our Protestant Doctrine is? pag. 43 Quest. 6. Whether all the Elect be justified ab aeterno, from ale eternity, before they do believe in Christ? and consequently, whether the Scripture, when it saith we are justified by Faith, meaneth that Faith justifieth us only in tribunali conscientiae nostrae, in our own consciences as a learned man speaketh; or declaratively, as saith, Mr. D.? Or whether it doth not justify us instrumentaliter et correlatiuè as the learned Protestants de commonly teach, that is, as an instrument, or means whereby we are made partakers of Christ's righteousness to our justification before God? pag. 45 Quest. 7. Whether any previous dispositions, preparations, or qualifications be required of men in the Gospel, that they may be partakers of salvation by Christ? pag. 72 Quest. 8. Whether we are made the sons of God by Faith in Christ? or but declared so to be? pag. 114 Quest. 9 Whether a man is to pray for the pardon of his sins, after he is regenerated, and doth believe and repent? pag. 1 Quest. 10. Whether it be heinous, and hateful impiety for the Churches, and children of God, to fast, and pray, that God would turn away his anger, and indignation from them, when they lie under his judgements; or at other times, when their consciences are terrified, and troubled with their sins? And whether God may be said to be pacified and appeased by our fasting, and prayers, or by any such things? pag, 12 Quest. 11. Whether God do correct his children for their slns? p. 22 Quest. 12, Whether a man may be assured of salvation by his love to the brethren, and by other effects, and fruits of sanctification? Or, whether he can be assured of salvation no way else, but only by Faith in Christ? pag. 33 Quest. 13. Whether the Gospel may properly be said to be a Covenant, as that of the Law was? pag. 30 Quest. 14. Whether those Ministers that do offer remission of sins and salvation by Christ, not to all absolutely, but upon condition that they do repent, and believe in Christ be legal Teachers? And whether by their doctrine they do make the Gospel a Covenant of works as the Lawis? p. 77 Quest. 15. Whether the Orthodox Protestant Ministers, who teach men to believe in Christ, and to repent, that they may obtain remission of sins, and salvation by Christ, or those who offer Christ and remission of sins to all without requiring any thing of them, either Faith, or Repentance, or new obedience, do preach Christ the more truly, and more to the edification, and consolation of their hearers? pag. 84 At the end of this Treatise, these places of holy Scripture are expounded, and vindicated from the false glosses, which Mr. D. setteth upon them. Matth. 6.14. If you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your heavenly Father forgive you your trespasses. 1 Cor. 6.9. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God? Be not deceived, neither fornicators, nor adulterers, etc. shall inherit the Kingdom of God. Heb. 12.14. Without holiness no man shall see the Lord. 1 John 3.14. We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren. The Refinement of Zion. Quest. 1. Whether Christ and his righteousness be made ours by faith. And whether we do put on Christ by faith? Or rather, whether He be not to be set forth freely in the preaching of the Gospel without any condition. SECT. I. A certain Author's Opinion concerning this Question. SOme Protestants, holy men, The Doctrine of John Baptist. (saith this Author) do say, that Christ is made ours (in the sight of God) by faith alone, Christ being the garment, our Faith the hand that putteth this Garment on; yet methinks (saith he) that here is Christ set forth upon some conditions, & not so freely given. I must here (saith he) profess my Ignorance, that I cannot conceive, how faith should put on Christ, apply Christ, or make Christ ours in the sight of God. I therefore profess myself openly, to lean unto them that say, that Christ's righteousness is made ours before God by God's imputation, before the act of our faith, and therefore necessarily without it. Even as our sins were made Christ's, so is his righteousness made ours. Now how were our sins made Christ's? Let the Prophet Esay speak, The Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all, so that the Lord who calleth things which are not as though they were, makes us righteous by His imputation of Christ's righteousness. Thus far this Author. SECT. II. Christ's Righteousness is made ours by Faith. NOw that I may examine these things, It is true, Christ's righteousness is made ours by imputation, ours who believe in him, and hereupon we are said to be justified by faith: But where in all the Scripture do you read that we are justified without faith, or that God imputeth Christ's righteousness, & consequently remission of sins to any Infidels, or unbelievers? Object. But, saith he, Christ's righteousness is made ours by imputation: therefore not by Faith. Answer I answer, Subordinata non pugnant, the latter of these is in some sort subordinare unto the former, there is no repugnancy therefore between them; for Christ's righteousness is made ours, ex parte Dei, on God's part by Imputation; but ex parte nostra, on our part by Faith, whereby we receive both Christ and remission of sins, John 1.12. Act. 10.43. & 26.18. and salvation by him, offered unto us in the Gospel. I do therefore retort this argument upon the Author of it thus, As our sins were made Christ's, so is his righteousness made ours; but our sins were made Christ's not only by God's imputation, but by his voluntary taking them upon him: therefore we also are made righteous, not only by God's Imputation, but by our taking and receiving Christ's righteousness by Faith. Again, saith he, as Christ became sin for us so are we made the righteousness of God in him: Confer. p. 17. Isa. 53.6. But (say I) Christ became sin for us, not only by his Father's imputation, (or as I say, faith) by his laying on him the iniquity of us all; but by his own taking of our sins upon him to satisfy Divine Justice, Joh. 10.15, 18. Rom. 8.32. and to expiate them by his passion, as these, words of His, bear witness, I slay down my life for my sheep, no man taketh it from me, I lay it down of myself. Again as St. Paul saith, that God spared not his own Son, but delivered him up, Eph. 5.2. (that is to death) for us all. So saith he also, That Christ gave himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour. Wherefore seeing we are so made the righteousness of God in Christ, as he became sin for us, it followeth necessarily, that together with God's act in imputing Christ's righteousness unto us, there concurreth also our act in receiving his righteousness, when, in the Gospel, it is offered unto us. But of this, more at large hereafter in the sixth question. SECT. III. Christ is made ours by Faith. LEt us now in the next place, examine and see, whether Christ be made ours in the sight of God by faith? Mr. D. thus expresses himself, concerning this, I must here profess my ignorance, that I cannot conceive how Faith should make Christ ours in the sight of God. It should seem he doth not altogether deny that Christ is made ours by Faith, but will not yield that he is thus made ours in the sight of God. Now, what his meaning in this may be, I do not certainly know, unless perhaps it be, that he is made ours by Faith, declaratively only, to our own consciences, of which see Quest. 6. But when those holy men, of whom he speaketh, do say that Christ is made ours in the sight of God by Faith, they do not exclude neither God the Author and principal efficient of this work, nor the word, the external instrumental cause thereof; but all our own works in opposition to faith. Their meaning therefore is, that Faith is the only internal instrument ex parte nostra, on our part, or the only hand as it were of the Soul, whereby we do receive Christ; and he (according to his gracious promise unto all that do believe in him) is made ours. Again, when they say that Christ is made ours in the sight of God by Faith alone, they do oppose God's judgement unto man's. Men indeed, judging according to the judgement of charity, do hold him to be a good Christian, and one that is interested in Christ, who outwardly maketh profession of Christ, and in the sight of man is unreprovable in his life and conversation. But as Almighty God himself said unto Samuel, The Lord seethe not as man seethe, 1 Sam. 16.7. for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord seethe the heart. In his sight therefore who seethe things, and pronounceth of them as they are, Christ is made ours, not by an outward profession, but by Faith alone. I am induced to be of this judgement with these holy men & good Protestants, which Mr. D. here speaketh of, by these Reasons following. First, Christ is not ours, until we are made one with him, and he with us, no more than a woman can say, that her husband is hers, until they are made one by marriage. 2 Cor. 11.2. It is their union, or their being joined together in marriage, which maketh the husband to be his wives, and the wife to be her husbands. And even in like manner, is Christ made ours, when we are espoused unto him by faith, and not before; whereupon it is that Christ's Spouse speaketh with great rejoicing, and saith, My wellbeloved is mine and I am his. Cant. 2.16. Again, when it is said, that Christ is ours, what is the meaning hereof, but that he is our Head, and our Saviour? Now he is the Head and Saviour of his Church, which is his Body, as St. Paul plainly teacheth, Eph. 2.22. & 5.23. Seeing therefore we are engrafted into Christ and into his Church by Faith, and are saved by Faith, Eph. 2.8. It followeth necessarily, that Christ is made ours by Faith. All unbelievers and ungodly men, are limbs & members of the Devil, they cannot therefore be said while they continue such, to be members of the Lord Jesus. For what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness, and what communion hath light with darkness, and what concord hath Christ with Belial? saith the Apostle, 2 Cor. 6.14. Now if men be thus estranged from Christ until they do believe, it must needs follow that by believing they do become Christ's, and Christ theirs. Moreover the Scripture teacheth, that we do receive Christ by Faith, John 1.12. Now what is this but to say, that he is made ours by Faith, and a man is not said to receive that, which he hath already, but which he wanteth, or which he is destitute of, until he do receive it. He that saith, he received a man into his house, or that he received this or that into his custody, implieth that neither the man was in his house, nor that thing in his custody before. And he that saith, he received such or such a piece of gold, or silver of another, implieth that he had it not before. So in like manner, seeing we are said to receive Christ by Faith, what doth this import or imply? but that we were without Christ as long as we continued in unbelief, and consequently that he became ours, when we believed in him? Lastly, St. Paul telleth the Ephesians, that at that time, to wit, Eph. 2.12. when they were drowned in infidelity, they were without Christ, and without God in the world: But (saith he) Now in Christ Jesus, that is, now that you do believe in Christ Jesus, Ye, who sometimes were far off, are made nigh, that is, unto God, by the blood of Christ. From hence also it is evident, that by believing in Christ it is that we come to be interested in God, and in his Son Christ Jesus. Perhaps it will here be said; Objection. That Christ is not ours in actual possession, until we believe in him: but that otherwise we had right unto him before, he being given unto us by God ab aeterno, or at least that he was ours, and we his, ever since the time that he purchased us by his passion. I grant that Christ after a sort had right unto us and we unto him, before we believed in him, Answer. both because we were gi●en unto him, and he unto us by his Father ab aeterno from all eternity, and because when the fullness of time, decreed by God, was come, he purchased us by his Passion: but he had no right in us, as in his members, nor could we be said to have right in him as in our Head, while we lived in sin and unbelief, and were not united unto him by his Spirit: For the Apostle telleth us plainly, Rom. 8.9. that If any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his. Now if those who have not the Spirit of Christ (which is the case of unbelievers) be none of his, certainly then until they do by Faith receive Christ, they cannot be said to be his, nor he theirs. Objection. But here it may be said, that, A child many times in his infancy, or before he is born, hath right unto that which is given him then, though he doth not, nor cannot then receive it. Answer. It's true indeed, if the gift be absolute, and not suspended upon an uncertain condition, than the child had right ad rem (as the learned speak) unto that thing which was thus given him, sed non in re, but had no right in it, until being born, it became his at the time appointed by the Donor. And even in like manner, seeing Christ and his merits, are by himself and his Father in the Gospel, as it were in a deed of gift, Seu in Charta Magna Regni Coelorum, or in the Great Charter of the Kingdom of Heaven, conveyed and passed over, not unto all absolutely, but unto believers only. I cannot see how we can be said to have any right in or to Christ at all, or how he can be said to be ours until we do believe, except only in his and his Father's intention and Decree, which shall be accomplished in the due time appointed by him and his Father. Thus a Son that is taken into a Copyhold after his Father, hath a right unto that Copyhold; and therefore it may be said to be his, but not simply and absolutely, but only in reversion. So all the elect of God before they do believe, have a right unto Christ, in that sort, as I have before expressed; but they have no right nor interest in him nor can he be said to be theirs absolutely, until they do be ieve and receive him by Faith, no more than a Son, (Qui jus habet hereditatis ad Paterna bona, that is Heir unto his Father's Lands and goods) can say while his Father liveth, that they are his own; for were they so, then Solomon could not say, that He that robbeth his Father and Mother, Pro. 28.24. and saith, It is no transgression, is the companion of a destroyer. For a man cannot be charged with robbery, when he taketh nothing but that which is his own. Thus (as I suppose) I have made it manifest, that we have no right in Christ until we do believe in him, and that therefore he is made ours by Faith. It is true God gave Christ his only begotten Son, and Christ gave himself unto death for us, but it was with this purpose, intention and Decree, that we at the time appointed and determined by him and his Father, should by Faith receive him, being offered unto us in the preaching of the Gospel. Until therefore he shall be thus received of us, we cannot be said to have any right or interest in him, nor he ●o be ours any otherwise than as hath been said. For the further c●ea●ing of that which I have before spoken, concerning right in and to a thing, I ha' e thought good to insert these things following, which I humbly submit to the censure of the Learned. To have right in a thing, there is more required then to have right unto it, Jus in re, et jus ad rem, right in a thing, and right to a thing. Jus in re dicitur, quod habetur de re, quae est nostra, Sayr. lib. 9 cap. 3. Cas. consc. et existens: unde ad comparandum jus in re, non est satis rem existere, sed ulterius requiritur eandem rem esse nostram. i e. nobis traditam. Jus ad rem dicitur illud quod habetur ex aliquo vinculo o●ligationis circa rem nobis debitam, nondum tamen factam nostram. Hence I infer these three Conclusions. 1. That a man may have right to a thing, and yet no right in it. 2. That as long as he hath no right in it, it is none of his. 3. That it becometh his by being delivered unto him. Now I demand, Is not Christ delivered unto us by God the Father and by himself, when in the Gospel he is preached, and offered unto us, and we by Faith do accept of him, and not before? These things being thus premised, I will now by God's gracious assistance, examine Master S. his 7. Arguments, whereby he endeavoureth to prove, that Christ is not made ours by Faith. Object. It is an act of Omnipotency (saith he) to make Christ ours: God only therefore doth this, and no act of ours. Answer. Whereunto I answer, that God only doth make Christ ours, as the Author of this Divine Act: and that Faith doth make him ours after a far inferior manner, that is, as an instrument created by God in our hearts, whereby we do lay hold of Christ, and receive him being offered, and given unto us of God. Christ then is said to be made ours by Faith in the same sense, as we are said to be justified by Faith, that is, Organice, instrumentally. For as Keckerman hath observed in his Logic, the Act of the Author or Principal efficient cause, is many times attributed to the Instrument. Thus not only our justification, but also our sanctification, which is God's proper Act, an Act of his Almighty power, is in holy Scripture attributed to Faith, sometimes to the word of God, and sometimes to the Ministers who do preach the word. To Faith, Acts 15.9. where St. Peter saith, that God did purify the hearts of the believing Gentiles by Faith, to wit, both from the guilt of sin in their justification, and from the tyranny and dominion of sin in their sanctification. To the word, 1 Pet. 1.23. We are born again not of mortal seed, but of immortal by the word of God. Lastly, to the Ministers of the word; 1 Cor. 4.15. For St. Paul saith to the Corinthians, I have begotten you by the Gospel. And he calleth Onesimus his for, and saith, Philem. 11. that he begat him in his bonds. He telleth us also, that God sent him to the Gentiles, to turn them from darkness to light, Act. 26.18. and from the power of Satan to God. Now in the same sense that we are said to be purified, converted, and born again by Faith, the word, and the Ministers that preach the word, Is Christ said to be made ours, and we to be justified by Faith; to wit, instrumentally, as by means, which it pleased God to use in our engrafting into Christ, and in our justification, which are wrought only and altogether by his Divine power; and not by any power of the means, which receive all their efficacy from him, and can do nothing towards a sinner's conversion of themselves. The result of all thit I have said, is this; It is an Act of God's Almightiness to make Christ ours by his own power and authority, as the Author of this work. But it is no Act of Omnipotency to make Christ ours instrumentally, that is, to receive him by Faith, when he is offered to us of God. A second Objection of M. S. is this, Objection. If Faith should give us our interest in Christ, then as our Faith increaseth, our interest should increase, and we should be more and more justified and forgiven, which none allow. It is true indeed, Answer. if Faith did justify us by any inherent virtue or dignity of its own, then, as M.S. saith, the more we grow in Faith, the more we should be interested in Christ, & be more & more justified: but he well knoweth, that the Protestant Doctrine is, that Faith justifieth not as it is a virtue, or any act of ours, sed objectiuè et correlatiuè, but in regard of Christ the object thereof, whereunto it relateth; Even as a Chirurgeon may be said to heal a man that is wounded, with his own hands; not that his hands, had any virtue in them to heal, but because by them he searched the wound, and applied a healing plaster unto it, which drew out the purulent corruption, and cured him. For even so, are we in like manner said to be justified and saved by Faith, because we do by Faith lay hold of Christ, and apply his merits to our souls. So that, it is not so much Faith, as Christ in whom we believe; by whom we are justified and saved, that is, who hath both merited our justification, and doth actually acquit and absolve us from our sins. And in like manner doth Faith interest us in Christ, not for the dignity and worthiness thereof; but because it is God's Ordinance and appointment, that we should receive Christ, and have him dwelling in our hearts by Faith. Wheresoever therefore there is true Faith to be found, though never so weak, and faint, or feeble, that man is a true member of Christ & perfectly justified and absolved from all his sins. Those of old amongst the Israelites, that were stung with the fiery Serpents were perfectly cured, if they did look up to the brazen Serpent and beheld it, although their sight was never so dark and dim, as well as the younger sort, whose sight was most perfect: so a weak Faith, as well as a strong, doth lay hold of Christ, and of justification and salvation by him; For as the Israelites were healed by beholding the brazen Serpent, because it was God's Ordinance, that health, which was otherwise wrought miraculously, only by his own Divine power, should hereupon follow and ensue: so the same is to be said of Faith. And therefore from hence an answer may be given to that question, which Mr. S. asketh in his next words, where speaking of some, who call these other acts of Faith, that is when it is grown and increased, Faith of assurance, and Acts of manifestation, he faith, If Faith be thus in its other degrees of working, Objection. Why not in its first? His meaning is (as I take it) if Faith when it is increased, doth only assure a man of his salvation, and maketh the pardon of his sins manifest unto him, why doth not the first, and least degree of Faith also, give us only an assurance, and manifestation of our salvation by Christ; but otherwise not any interest in him at all? Answer. Whereunto I answer: First, that a strong Faith doth give us that assurance, and evidence or manifestation of our salvation by Christ, which a weak Faith cannot; because it doth lay firm hold on the promises of the Gospel (that are the only ground of assurance) which of a weak Faith are apprehended but weakly: even as an Israelite with a quick sight, could by that natural virtue that was in his eye, more clearly behold the brazen Serpent than he that had a dark and dim eye sight. But as he that did lift up his eyes, and beheld the brazen Serpent, though never so weakly, was through God's Ordnance as perfectly cured, as he that saw and beheld it most clearly and most evidently: so Faith in the least degree, through God's Ordinance, is as effectual to interest us in Christ, and to make us partakers of salvation by him, as the strongest Faith that is. Thus I have showed the cause, or the reason why a weak Faith, can give us an interest in Christ, and the salvation which he hath purchased for us; although it cannot so firmly assure us hereof. But whereas he holdeth, That Faith when it is increased, and grown stronger by an addition of more degrees than it had at the first, doth only give us a greater manifestation, and assurance of salvation by Christ, but no interest in him; I cannot assent unto him in this, for the interest which we have in Christ and his merits, at the first by believing in him, is continued by perseverance in the same Faith: and therefore, John 1.12. Eph. 3.17. as we are said to receive Christ by Faith, so he is said to dwell, that is to remain and make his abode in our hearts by Faith. Consonantly whereunto the Apostle telleth us, Heb. 3.14. that We are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end. And on the contrary he saith, Heb. 10.38. If any man draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him. Thus Faith not only in the first act, or beginning of it, but in the continuance also, and greatest height, or strength thereof, doth interest us in Christ, and as the Apostle saith, maketh us partakers of him, as well as it doth evidence unto us and assure us hereof. Here therefore I would know whether it be not a manifest contradiction, to say as Mr. S. doth, Christ is ours without Faith, but we cannot partake of him as ours, but by believing. Thirdly, he objecteth also, and saith, If Christ should be ours by Faith in this sense, that is, actually: then, when Faith ceaseth, shall we cease to be justified. Whereunto I answer, That no such thing followeth hereupon: but the contrary; For upon our Faith and Repentance, our sins are pardoned, and forgiven us, not for a time, but for ever, Ezek. 18.22. They shall never therefore be mentioned unto us, that is, imputed and laid to our charge any more, no not when Faith ceaseth. Neither needeth this to seem strange to Mr. S. or any other, that Faith which is but temporal should obtain an eternal pardon; for a salve which by its own inherent virtue, doth in a few days heal a wound, needeth afterwards to be used no more; much less will there be any need of Faith in Christ, or of repentance, for the continuance of the remission of our sins, and of our justification in the world to come, seeing by Christ's Promise, and by his Ordinance, (which hath more force in it, than the most Sovereign or precious balm, or salve) upon our repentance and Faith in Christ, we are for ever acquitted and absolved from all our sins. Whereas then Mr. S. in his next words demandeth, and asketh, Shall Faith begin our interest here, and not be able to continue it hereafter? John 3.46. I answer him; No, it shall not, For he that believeth on the Son of God hath everlasting life. His Faith indeed shall cease with this corruptible life of his; 2 Cor. 13. but he himself shall be raised up by the power of Christ, and not die any more forever. John 11.26. Fourthly, Mr S. proceedeth and asketh, Can a sinner be too soul for a Saviour, and too wounded for a Physician to heal, and too filthy for a fountain opened to wash? To all which several demands of his, I will answer severally. First, Whereas he asketh, whether a sinner can be too foul for a Saviour? I answer, No, if he will carefully and conscionably practise and observe the means of salvation, which he doth prescribe him, which are Repentance, Faith, and new Obedience. For as the Apostle telleth us, Christ being (in his passion) made perfect, he became the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him. Heb. 5.9. On the contrary therefore whosoever he is that doth not obey Christ, but doth wilfully contemn, or carelessly neglect the means of his salvation, (as many do) it is in vain for him to look for salvation by Christ, for as St. Augustine saith elegantly, De verbis Apostoli Ser. 15. Qui fecit te sine te, non te justificat sine te, He that made thee without thee, doth not justify thee without thee. His next demand is, Can a sinner be too much wounded for a Physician to heal? Surely no. Not for Christ our heavenly Physician: but then he must take his Physic, and observe such a Diet, as he prescribeth him, that is, he must receive Christ and his merits by Faith, and live orderly according to his Gospel, that is, as St. Paul setteth it down. He must deny ungodliness and worldly lusts, and live soberly, Tit. 2.12. and righteously, and godlily in this present world. On the contrary therefore, as long as infidelity, or incredulity possesseth his heart, and lieth putrifying and rotting in his carnal lusts, it is in vain for him to think, or to persuade himself that he is healed by Christ. Lastly, Whereas he asketh, Can a sinner be too filthy, for a fountain opened to wash? Surely no, not for that fountain of which Zachary speaketh, That is opened to the house of David, Zac. 31, 12. and to the Inhabitants of Jerusalem, for sin and for uncleaness. But did he ever hear that a fountain, though never so limpid and clear,, did cleanse any, unless they did wash themselves with the water of it? And even in like manner shall none be purified, and cleansed from their spiritual filthiness and uncleanness, until they do by Faith-sprinkle their souls with the blood of Christ: For as we have heard St. Peter tell us, Christ purifieth the hearts of sinners by Faith. As long therefore as Faith with the inseparable effects thereof are wanting, it is in vain for any to imagine that he is purified from his sins. Fifthly, He that offereth Christ (saith M. S.) offers all the conditions in him both of Faith and Repentance, for Christ is exalted to give repentance unto Israel. Acts 5.31. Gal. 2.21. And Faith is called, The Faith of the Son of God. Here first of all, it is to be observed, that he acknowledgeth Faith & Repentance to be conditions required of us in the Gospel; that we may be saved by Christ, which elsewhere he denyeth. Secondly, he saith, That God in offering Christ, doth offer these conditions in him. Which words of his, may receive a double construction, or understanding. First, that Repentance and Faith are not in our power; but that Christ hath merited these graces for us, and that he doth work them in us by his spirit, when the Gospel is preached. This the places of Scripture alleged by him do prove, and we do constantly profess and preach the same; but by that which he hath written in other places of this Treatise, I know that he hath another meaning, and that is, that Christ performed the conditions of the Covenant of grace, or of the Gospel for us, that is, as he speaketh, that he repent for us, and believed for us, and that his Faith and Repentance are in the Gospel offered unto us, and are accepted of God for us, as if we ourselves did repent and believe. This strange opinion of his, I have examined, Quest. 13. Wither I do refer you, for more ample satisfaction in this matter. Sixthly, It's no more (saith Mr. S.) to offer Jesus Christ, than any grace of Christ's, or gift of Christ, unto a sinner. For a sinner is as unprepared, and unfit for the one as the other, equally in sin and pollution to both. All this is true, I grant, if he do speak of a sinner, as he is by nature and of himself. But what can be inferred, or concluded hence against the Protestant Doctrine, that hath been hitherto constantly taught, I cannot see nor perceive: but may rather wrest his weapons out of his hands, and use them against himself. For if it be all one, or, as he saith, if it be no more to offer Christ then any grace of Christ, or gift of Christ, unto a sinner, then seeing the grace, and gift of remission of sins, or of justification is received by Faith, as both St. Peter teacheth, Acts 10.43. and St. Paul, Acts 26.18. Christ himself also is to be received of us by Faith: and as our sins are not forgiven,, but we are bound over unto punishment for them in God's word, until we believe in Christ; so neither can any have any interest in Christ, as long as we remain in infidelity and incredulity, & do not believe in him contrary to Mr. S. & Mr. D. new doctrine. Thus I have answered this Objection also, according to the generality of the words, wherein it was propounded. But thinking more intentively with myself what M. S. his meaning might be, I guessed that his words must be taken Restricte, in a more restrained sense, as if he should reason thus, The graces of Faith and Repentance are freely and absolutely offered in the Gospel, without requiring any antecedent act of Faith or Repentance, whereby they are to be received and made ours; therefore Christ is also as absolutely offered without any condition, either of Faith or Repentance. Now hereunto I do answer, that all are in the Gospel commanded to believe in Christ, and to repent that they may be saved by him, but Faith and Repentance were never offered to all, neither by Christ himself, nor by his Apostles when they preached the Gospel, nor are the Ministers of the Gospel now so to offer them. It's true, Christ giveth Faith and Repentance to his spiritual Israel. This we are to teach, Acts 5.31. that men may be stirred up to seek both Faith and Repentance of Christ, in the use of such means as he hath prescribed. But it is one thing to teach this, and another to offer Faith and Repentance to all absolutely. It is Christ and his merits, that are offered unto us in the Gospel: but Faith is required of us, as the means whereby both himself and his merits are received, and Repentance and new Obedience is in joined as a necessary condition, without which we can have no communion with Christ, as I shall have occasion to show hereafter. But if I shall grant that Faith and Repentance are offered unto us in the Gospel, yet I may retort the Argument of Mr. S. upon himself; for Faith and consequently Repentance, are not offered unto us, nor wrought in us, nisi mediante verbo, but by the means and ministry of the word, For Faith cometh by hearing, Rom. 10.17. and hearing by the word of God; therefore Christ is neither absolutely offered, nor absolutely made ours, sed mediante eodem verbo, et fide, but by means of the same word, and Faith, whereby we receive him. Lastly, I do argue thus, eternal life is not to be had without Faith in Christ. This St. John giveth us to understand when he saith, John 20.31. These things are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God, and that believing ye might have life through his name. Seeing therefore (as Mr. S. saith) we are alike indisposed to any gift of Christ, as we are to Christ himself, it followeth therefore necessarily, that seeing the gift of life is not ours without Faith, neither is Christ himself ours without Faith, which if it be granted, it cannot be avoided, but must needs be acknowledged, that he is made ours by Faith. And this the Apostle expressly avoucheth, Eph. 2.12. Ye were at that time without Christ, that is, whilst they were Infidels and unbelievers. Lastly, This spiritual work (saith Mr. S.) is a new Creation, and so works of preparation are not so proper in that; Eph. 2.10. We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus. Answer. That our regeneration is a new Creation, we do all acknowledge; but that every work of Creation doth exclude all precedent preparations, will not so easily be granted. For Beasts, Birds and Fishes, were not made immediately of nothing, but of a precedent matter. And God created man also not immediately of nothing, but his Body was first prepared and created of the dust of the earth, and when that was perfectly form, he breathed the breath of life into his nostrils, that is, he infused his Soul into his Body, Gen. 2. and so he was made a living Soul. The same course also doth the Lord ordinarily take in our regeneration, which is a new Creation. For, that there are certain preparations, such as are the hearing of the word, some knowledge of sin, and of a man's own misery by sin, and of the grace of God in Christ, ordinarily thereunto precedent in adultis, in those that are of capacity and understanding, shall be showed afterwards (God willing) in the seventh Question. It doth not appear therefore neither by this, nor by any former Reasons of Mr. S. that Christ is ours before we do believe in him, or that he is not made ours by Faith. Objection. Whereas therefore he saith immediately before the first of those aforesaid seven Reasons of his, that we are not to consider neither Faith nor Repentance, as bringing-in Christ in the Soul, but Christ bringing-in them, and working them more and more in the soul. Unto this I answer, Answer that Christ by bringing-in (as he speaketh) that is, by working Faith and Repentance in the Soul, doth bring-in himself into it, and taketh, and keepeth possession of it, and so we are interested in Christ. For until Christ worketh these graces in us by his Spirit, we are altogether aliens from him, and have no communion with him at all. It is no good reasoning to say, Christ worketh Faith in us therefore we do not receive him by Faith, or he is not made ours by Faith: for he therefore worketh Faith in us, that by the same Faith we may lay hold on him and on his merits. Posita primâ causâ, non tolluntur secundae. The working of the first cause doth not exclude the secondary, and subordinate from acting that which appertaineth and belongeth unto them. Christ's apprehending therefore of us by his Grace, and by his Spirit, doth not exclude, but necessarily inferreth our apprehending and appropriating of him to ourselves by Faith. For as St. Paul saith, Phil. 3. we apprehend him, or rather are apprehended of him. His meaning is, that we both apprehend him, and he apprehendeth us: but the firmness and certainty of our salvation, consisteth rather in his apprehending of us, then in our apprehending of him; these two do always go together, and are never separated. To make this yet more plain, briefly thus it is, Christ is made ours 1. On God's part. 1. By his eternal Decree of Predestination, ordaining him to be ours; in the due time appointed by him, but not before. 2. By his word, wherein he offereth Christ, and of his grace giveth him unto us, when we do believe in him. 3. By his Spirit, whereby he regenerated us, and infuseth into us the habit of Faith, and exciteth the Act. 2. On his own part, By meriting for us, and working in us grace, whereby we do believe in him, and are made partakers of him, and of his merits. 3. On our part, by Faith,, whereby we do receive Christ offered unto us in the Gospel, and upon our hearing thereof do believe in him, reposing and placing the whole confidence of our salvation in him, as in our only Mediator, I come now to Mr. S. his Conclusion of this matter, which is this; Question. And now, Why should any servant of Christ refuse to give out the blood of his Master, which runs so freely to sinners? Answer. Whereunto I answer, that Christ's blood is to be offered, and reached out to all sorts of sinners, upon condition that they will leave their sins, and lay hold of Christ by Faith, and show themselves thankful unto him for their salvation; But as long as they continue in sin, and incredulity, they are to be taught and told, that they have no part nor portion in Christ; for he that believeth on the Son hath life, John 3.36. but he that believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him. Question. Mr. S. moveth yet another question saying, And why should any sinners refuse to receive Christ's blood, because their vessels are not clean enough for it, when it is such a blood as makes the vessels clean for itself? To this I answer, That to receive Christ's blood, is not, for a wicked sinner, to believe (while he continueth in drunkenness, and whoredom, or in any other vile sins) that he is reconciled to God by the blood of Christ, as Mr. D. and he, do understand it; but it is to rely on Christ's blood, both for the pardon, and purging away of his sins, according to the promises of the Gospel; which whosoever doth, though he were never so unclean before, his soul being thus sprinkled with the blood of Christ, by a true and lively Faith, will become pure and holy: for neither shall his former sins be imputed unto him, nor will he welter, and wallow in the puddle of sin any more, but will serve God in righteousness, and holiness all his days. SECT. FOUR We do put on Christ, and apply him unto ourselves by Faith. I Will now leave Mr. S. for a while, and return to Mr. D. I cannot conceive (saith he) how Faith should put on Christ. Can you conceive then, what St Paul meaneth, when he saith, Gal. 3.26. Ye are all the children of God by Faith in Christ Jesus, for as many as have been baptised into Christ, have put on Christ, to wit, by that Faith of theirs, whereof in their Baptism they made profession. The meaning of this metaphorical speech of his, is to teach us, that if we do appear before God naked, as we are of ourselves, our filthiness and deformity is such, that God will loathe and abhor us. We must therefore put on Christ, or ourselves with Christ, as it were with a garment, that we may be amiable in God's eyes, that is, we must be united unto Christ, as a man's garment which he putteth on, is to his Body, before we can find any acceptance with God,: For he hath made us accepted in his beloved, Eph. 1.6. This was typified and presignred by jacob's obtaining of his Father's blessing, by coming and appearing before him in the garments of his elder brother; for so we do obtain the blessed inheritance of Heaven by being invested with Christ's righteousness. But contrary hereunto Mr. D. telleth us, Reconcil. of man to God, pag. 57 That this is our receiving of Christ, our putting on of Christ, our living by Faith, that Faith assureth us of God's favour, and good will towards as in Jesus Christ. But who seethe not, that he doth here confound things that differ. For it is one thing to receive a thing, and to put it on; and another to be assured that we have done both these, that is, not only received it, but put it on. And in like manner to live, and to be hereof assured are divers things. To receive Christ therefore and to put him on, and to be assured that we have received him and put him on, are divers things. And our living by Faith, and being hereby assured of God's favour, and good will towards us, Objection. are divers things. But, saith he, I can not conceive how Faith doth apply Christ, or make Christ ours in the sight of God. The Reason of this his asserion is, because (as he conceiveth) Christ was ours befor● we did believe in him. Now a man needeth not receive that, which is his own already. Answer. But I answer, That although Christ in God's eternal counsel, was given us before the foundation of the world was laid, that is, decreed to be given us and to be made ours; yet he is not actually ours, until we receive him. For Christ is offered unto us in the Gospel, as the gift of God, John 4.10. But as we all know, a gift when it is offered, must be received before we can have any interest or propriety in it. And hereupon it is, that Christ when he came amongst his own Countrymen the Jews, and offered himself unto them, St. John saith, that to as many as received him, he gave power to be the Sons of God, even to those that believed in his name; giving us to understand who they were that received him, to wit, such as believed in him. Now why doth the Evangelist speak thus, if Christ be not received by Faith? The Apostle telleth the Ephesians, Eph. 2.12. that they in the days of their ignorance and infidelity were without Christ. I would know therefore how they came to have Christ, but by receiving him, when he was offered unto them in the preaching of the Gospel? But here it may be said, Christ in his Gospel, Question. requireth of us Repentance, and new Obedience, as well as Faith, Mark 1.15. Heb. 5.9. Acts 3.26. Why then should we be said to receive Christ, and to apply him, and his merits unto us any more by Faith, then by our Repentance. To this I answer, Answer. That Faith is required of us as the only instrument, or means, whereby we are to receive Christ, and his merits, when they are offered unto us in the Gospel. For so ye have heard the Scripture tell us, that Christ is received by Faith, and Paul saith, Acts 26.18. that forgiveness of sins, and the inheritance of Heaven, which Christ hath purchased for us, are received by Faith. Now there is no such thing spoken, of Repentance, or new Obedience, but they are required in another respect, or for another Reason, to wit, That we may have communion with Christ, and glorify the name of God, and his Gospel by living holily. Thus both Faith and Repentance are Conditions of the Covenant of Grace, or of the Gospel; but, in divers respects. For by Faith we receive Christ, and salvation by him; and without Repentance, we cannot receive him, or the salvation which by his death he hath purchased, and in his Gospel offereth unto us. Briefly then, thus it is. Faith is a condition necessary to be performed by us, that we may thereby receive Christ, and be incorporated, and united unto him: Repentance is Conditio sine qua non, that is, a necessary condition without the performance whereof, 2 Cor. 6.14. Heb. 5.9. we can have no communion with Christ, nor hope of Heaven. SECT. V Christ is freely given, notwithstanding the Conditions that are required of us. Object. BUt he objecteth again and saith, Yet methinks that Christ is here set forth upon some conditions, and not so freely given. Answ. Yes he is freely given, that is, gratis, notwithstanding these conditions. For they are not meritorious, as in many compacts and Covenants that pass between man and man: but conditions, to which Christ and his merits are freely offered, and given in the Gospel, through the mere mercy and goodness of God, and not for any merit, or desert of these conditions. I would know of these men, whether the Kingdom of Heaven, and the glory thereof be not freely given us of God? Yet I hope they will not deny, but that Faith, Repentance, and new Obedience, must go before tfie fruition and possession thereof, Heb. 12.14, as conditions, or as things on our part to be performed, or else we shall never come there. What, doth not the Apostle set it down as a condition of our glorification, and salvation in Heaven? when he saith to the Collossians, Now hath Christ reconciled you in the body of his flesh through death, to present you holy and unblameable, Col. 1.22. and unreprovable in his sight, if you continue in the Faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel? Like whereunto is that of the same Apostle, 1 Tim. 2.15. where he saith, that the woman notwithstanding the dolorous pains in childbirth, which God hath laid upon her, shall be saved, if they continue in Faith, and charity, and holiness with sobriety. The like conditionals we meet with, Rom. 11.22. Rev. 3.20. and in divers other places of the new Testament. Whence these men who take upon them to be the only Patrons of free Grace may see how absurdly they reason, when they say, Grace is free; therefore nothing is required of us, antecedenter, to the receiving of Christ, or of justification, or of any other grace. For I would know of them, whether eternal life be not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the free gift of God, or a gift of God's grace, as the Apostle calleth it, Rom. 6.23. Now what will they say, that nothing is to be done of us, that we are neither to repent, nor believe, nor to do any good works before we come to Heaven, that we may be saved by grace? If so, then let them profess themselves Libertines, or if they will not do that, let them take heed, that they do not lay down such Principles, whence Libertinism may necessarily be inferred. For I would know of them, where, in all the Scripture, remission of sins is so granted by God that nothing is required of us neither Faith nor Repentance? Where there is such an absolute grant, a man is tied to nothing; whence it will follow, that he may have remission of sins, and consequently be saved, although he never believe, repent, nor amend his life, but live in sin all his days. But that I may let them see wherein they do deceive themselves, Whereas they say, That grace is free, Objection. therefore nothing is required of us: but Christ is freely to be offered, and preached to all, even to those that live in sin, as well as to any others, without any conditions. I answer, That they do deceive themselves and others with an equivocation. For when they say, grace is free, Answer. the meaning hereof is, that it is gratuita, free in regard of any recompense or satisfaction; and so freedom in this sense, is opposed to merit: but the meaning is not that we are, inde liberati à conditionibus fidei et resipiscentiae, thereby freed from the conditions of Faith, and repentance, without which there is no remission of sins, nor salvation to be had, no more than we are freed, ab officio gratitudinis erga Deum, from our duty of thankfulness towards God, after we are justified and in the state of grace. Yet thus do these men speak of freedom, when they say, grace is free, opposing freedom not to merit, but to any bond of duty towards God, in the same sense as St. Paul doth, when he saith, that a woman is free from the Law of her husband, when he is dead. Rom. 7.3. SECT. VI In what sense and signification this word Grace is used, and taken in holy Scripture, and that we do ascribe our salvation wholly to Grace. BUt that I may make this yet more plain, I say that Grace is taken in several senses and significations in holy Scripture, but principally in these two. First properly, pro gratuita Dei benevolentia et favore, for the free good will and favour of God, as when the Apostle saith, Eph. 2.8. Ye are saved by Grace, that is by the free favour and mercy of God. Rom. 3.24. Rom. 4.16, Eph. 1.5.6. And so it is to be understood in those say. All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God, being justified freely by his Grace. And therefore it is of Faith, that it might be of Grace. And having predestinated us to the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will, to the praise of the glory of his Grace. Secondly, Grace is taken by a Metonymy, for a supernatural gift of grace, Eph. 4.7. 2 Cor. 6.1. as in these places following, Unto every one of us is given grace, according to the measure of the gift of Christ, etc. We beseech you that ye receive not the Grace of God in vain. Under this latter signification of Grace are comprehended both Christ himself, John 4.10. for he calleth himself the gift of God, and all the several Acts also, or parts of our salvation, which he hath merited for us, and worketh in us, or bestoweth upon us, as our justification, adoption, sanctification, preservation in the state of Grace, redemption from hell, and eternal glorification, and salvation in Heaven. Now judge, whether those can be enemies to Grace, or whether they are justly charged not to preach free Grace, who do thus ascribe our whole salvation to the Grace of God? It is true indeed, we do teach men to repent and believe in Christ, that they may be saved by him; but withal we do teach them, that Faith and Repentance are Graces of God, or dona ex gratiâ, gifts of his Grace, and that they cannot practise nor perform them, viribus liberi arbitrii sui, by their own free will, or by any power of their own; but must seek and sue unto God for them in the use of such means, as he hath prescribed. For God doth not force his graces upon us, nor doth not work upon us, as on stocks or stones: but seeing he hath made us reasonable creatures, he therefore speaketh unto us by his word, and persuadeth, and enableth us by his Spirit, to do those things, which he requirerh of us. Thus he dealeth with us, as with men; but yet so, that still our salvation is wholly of his grace, both the beginning, middle, and the end thereof. For though it be, we that do repent, and believe, and obey; and not God: yet we do all this, not of ourselves, but by his grace. Thus do we always, and in all things magnify, and extol the grace of God acknowledging it to be the only cause of our whole salvation by Christ. Yet all this that I have said, Objection. Mr. S. thinketh to overthrow, by saying, That all sorts, even Papists and Arminians, do thus acknowledge grace, in general, as we do. But who seethe not, that we do more than so? Answer. For whereas they do divide the salvation of a sinner, between man's , and Gods free grace, yea do terminate his conversion, ultimately, and leave it in the power of his own ; we ascribe it only to grace. Quest. 2. Whether a man when he is converted from Infidelity to Faith, do change his estate before God? Reconcil. of God to man, pag. 32, MAster, D. saith that a man's believing doth not change his estate before God. Whereupon, that I may pass my censure, this I say; that if before God, he meaneth only, according to that he is in God's eternal predestination, this may be admitted; for so he is a believer, that is, decreed to be a believer from all eternity. But if his meaning be, that his estate before he believed, and after his conversion, is the same before God, that is in God's account, or in reality and truth, as well as in outward appearance, in which sense Zachary and Elizabeth, are said both to be righteous before God, this may not be granted: For upon Zacheus his conversion, our Saviour spoke unto him and said, Luke 1. This day is salvation come unto this house. He was not in the state of salvation therefore before. Now the same is to be said of all other converts and true believers, whereof is to be seen in the Ephesians, Eph. 2.1, 2. of whom St. Paul saith, You hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins, wherein in times past ye walked; and afterwards he speaketh unto them and saith, Ye were sometimes darkness, Eph. 4.8. but are now light in the Lord. Now I would know whether he doth not change his estate that passeth from death to life? (which our Saviour our in express words affirmeth of the believer, John 5.24.) and from darkness to light? As manifest a change of their estate, do those words of the Apostle import, and imply, when he saith unto them, Remember that ye being in times passed Gentiles in the flesh, that at that time ye were without Christ, Eph. 2.11, 12, 13. being aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the Covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the world. But now in Christ Jesus, ye who were sometimes far off, are made nigh by the blood of Christ? Can any thing be spoken more plainly? to show what a great difference there was between their former estate, and condition whilst they remained in infidelity, and their present, since they were converted to the Faith of Christ? To be without Christ, and without God; and to be nigh unto God, and unto Christ, that is, to be the children of God, and members of Christ, must needs argue a great change in a man's spiritual estate. Those words also of St, Paul Col. 1.13. do evince as manifest a change of our spiritual estate, when he saith, That God the Father hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son. For how is it possible, there should be any such translation, if our state remained unalterable, and still the same? It is false therefore that Mr. D. teacheth, to wit, Reconcil. of God to man, pag. 27.28. That our Faith only giveth us evidence, and assurance of our salvation which we had before: but, that we are not to believe, and to serve God that we may obtain salvation, (non per modum meriti, not by way of merit; I mean not so, but that we may obtain by Faith, both right unto, and possession, or fruition of, that salvation in Heaven, which Christ hath purchased for us) In this he contradicteth the Scripture, for St Peter calleth the salvation of our souls, the end of our Faith. Now I would know, 1 Pet. 1.9. whether a man doth undertake, or do any thing, nisi ex intuitu, et cum intentione finis, but for some end, or other, which he propounds unto himself? When we do therefore believe in Christ, and Repent us of our sins past, we do it with this intention, and for this end, That we may be partakers of eternal salvation in Heaven through Christ. Whereupon, when the Jailor demanded of Paul & Silas, Sirs, What must I do to be saved? Acts 16.31. They said Believe in the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved, thou and thine house. He findeth fault with this question. Reconcil. of God to man. pag. 34. If the Jailor had asked this question of Mr. D. he in cho●er & scorn would have answered him, What thou ignorant and impious man, dost thou ask me what thou must do to be saved, as if Christ had not throughly wrought and finished the work of thy salvation? I tell thee, thy salvation is not now to be begun, thou hast been in the state of salvation, ab aeterno, from everlasting, or at leastwise ever since Christ suffered his bitter Passion on the Cross. Believe only in the Lord Jesus, and this thy Faith, hujusce rei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 erit evidentissimum, shall be a most clear evidence hereof. Thus Mr. D. would have answered; but St. Paul knowing well, that the Jailor did only inquire concerning the means of his salvation, which were by him to be used, he answered him therefore, Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, Phil. 2.12. and thine house. And in a like sense did St. Paul bid the Philippians, Work out their salvation (not in regard of the merit, but the means thereof) with fear and trembling. And St. Peter prescribeth repentance, as a means to be practised by us, that our sins may not be laid to our charge by Christ at his coming, but that we may be absolved from them; Acts. 3.19.20. for so he saith, Repent and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord, and he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you. Let it be considered therefore, whether Mr. D. doth nor deal most injuriously with us, when he censureth our Religion for a fal●e Religion, because we do thus prescribe unto men Faith and Repentance, as means of their eternal salvation by Christ. Certainly St. Paul speaking of himself and of the rest of the Ministers of the Gospel saith, 2 Cor. 5.20. As though God did beseech you by us, we pray you in Christ's stead, that ye be reconciled unto God. Now how is this to be understood, but in respect of the means of our reconciliation, Reconcil. of God to man. pag. 34. which are to be performed by us? Yet Mr. D. is not ashamed to write thus, Now this is the common character of all false Religions, of what sort soever, Jews, Turks, Papists, Pharisaical Protestants, Heathen, all propound in some degree or other, an angry God, a Deity not reconciled, and then prescribe certain means, and services whereby to appease his wrath, and to quench his displeasure, or to obtain his love and favour: that is, in regard of the effects thereof, so it must be understood, or else he fighteth not against us, but against a fancy of his own. We are told, that the wrath of God abideth on him that believeth not. John 4 36 Are not all then under wrath, or as St. Paul calleth them, the children of wrath, until they do believe? Eph. 2.3. But for the better understanding hereof, our next Question shall be, Quest. 3. Whether God may be said to love us eternally before we do repent, and believe in Christ, even while we do live in sin? And whether God do love his Children as much while they lie in sin, as when they rise out of it by Repentance, and live holily. SECT. I. Mr. D's. opinion concerning this Question is set down, and censured. MR. D's. resolution, and determination hereof is this: Ezek. 16.4. God loved us with as great love when we were in blood and pollution, as he did ever afterwards when we were cleansed: as well before, as after our conversion; He loved Paul with as great a love, when he persecuted the Church, as when he preached the Gospel. Thus speaketh Mr. D. of this high mystery, without distinguishing of the di●ers acceptions of God's Love, which cannot but greatly offend many godly & good, souls, and confirm & harden profane ones in their wicked courses; yea, embolden them to do evil. For (will such carnal ones say) seeing God loves his elect as much when they welter and wallow in sin, as when they live holily and purely; I'll therefore take my pleasure, and deny myself nothing that is delightful unto me. For though I be not so strict as some are, yet I see that I may be as highly in God's love, as the holiest of them all. For preventing of such presumptuous thoughts. And for clearing of the truth, I will lay down the answer to the Question in two several conclusions. SECT. II. How Gods love is ever the same without any alteration. THe former whereof is, That if the Love of God be taken properly, as it is in itself pro actu divini amoris, for the internal Act of God's Love, so it is immutable, eternal, and ever the same, accidens enim in Deo nullum est, and hereupon it is that St. John saith, 1 john 4.11. God is Love; his Love therefore must needs be immutable, and eternal, as he himself is. Wherefore if we shall speak of God's Love properly, so it must be granted, that he loved his people from all eternity, even before they did believe in Christ, and forsake their sins. This is that which the Lord maketh profession of by his Prophet when he saith, jer. 31.1. I loved thee with an everlasting love. And our blessed Saviour saith, john 13.1. that whom the Lord loveth, he loveth unto the end. When any of the children of God therefore, are at any time or other supplanted by the Devil, and do fall into sin, as David did, the Lord ceaseth not to love them; for it is his love that upholdeth them, that they do not fall totally and finally, and that recovereth, and raiseth them up again. Thus God's Love is eternal in itself, and hath neither beginning nor end, as our love hath. Objection. But how then are we to understand those words of David, Psalm 5.5. where he saith, Thou hatest all workers of iniquity: for hatred is contrary to love. Wherefore seeing the elect of God, as well as others, before their calling and conversion, were workers of iniquity, How can it be said, that God loved them eternally. Reconcil. of man to God, pag. 19, 20, 21, 22. This Objection Mr. D. encountreth. And first he bringeth three answers of Others. The first whereof is, That God hates the works, but not the persons of his elect. The second, That God loveth his elect before their conversion, amore benevolentiae, sed non complacentiae, with a love of benevolence, not of complacency. The third, that God loveth them with the love of election, but not of justification: all which he scornfully rejecteth. And then taketh upon him to untie the knot thus. The Lord hateth all the workers of iniquity, is the voice of the Law; The other, the Lord loves sinners * He should say, workers of iniquity. , is the voice of the Gospel. Now the Law and the Gospel speak divers things; the one being the manifestation of God's justice, tells us what we are by nature: the other being the manifestation of God's mercy, tells us what we are by grace in Jesus Christ. Thus he: Now I do acknowledge indeed, that the Law doth reveal God's wrath against sin, and passeth sentence of condemnation, not only on those that are workers of iniquity; but on every one that committeth the least sin that is: for so it saith, Deut. 27.26. Gal. 3.10. Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the Book of the Law to do them. But where doth the Gospel reveal God's Love, or offer any mercy to those that are workers of iniquity? Not any where; but on the contrary saith, that he that committeth sin that is, that sinneth, dedi● â operâ, of set purpose, or pleno voluntatis consusu, with full consent of will, as Zanchius saith, or as Polanus fitly expresseth it, qui facit artem peccandi, he rhat maketh a Trade of sin, which is to be a worker of iniquity, he is of the Devil. 1 John 3.8. Again it is not the Law, but the Gospel also that saith, Except ye Repent, Luke 13.3. John 3.38. ye shall all perish, And, he that believeth in the Son, hath eternal life; but he that believeth not the Son, shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him. Thus, not only the Law, but the Gospel also revealeth the wrath and hatred of God against all that are workers of iniquity. It is true, the Gospel offereth pardon, and revealeth God's love to repentant sinners; but I believe Mr. D. will not call such, workers of iniquity. Whereas then Dav●d saith, Question. The Lord hateth all workers of iniquity. First it may be said, that if we shall speak of the elect themselves, not as they are elect, but being considered as they before their calling and conversion were workers of iniquity, as well as others, so God hated them, though not odio, redundante in personas illorum, or odio inimicitiae, that is, so as to reprobate, or to reject and cast them off, yet odio abominat onis, that is, so that he was offended and displeased with them while they took such courses, and did not love them (amore complacentiae, with a love of complacency) but loathe them while they were polluted, and defiled with their sins. Thus afterwards in the very next verse, the Prophet saith, Virum sanguinum et doli abhominabitur Jehovah. The Lord will abhor the bloody and deceitful man. I find that Estius in tert. Sent. et in D saint. 32. and others, do say, That God doth hate the elect, quoad statum presentem suum, while they live in sin, and are unconverted; alleging for confirmation hereof, this very saying of David, The Lord hateth all the workers of iniquity, and that in the 14th Chapter of the Book of Wisdom, Similiter odio sunt Deo, impius et impietas ejus, The ungodly and his ungodliness are both alike hateful unto God. Thus do they speak of the elect being considered, as they were sinners before their conversion. But otherwise if we shall consider the elect, as God in his eternal Counsel and Decree saw them justified and sanctified, so he loved them, not only amore benevolentiae, that is, with such a love whereby he did will their good, sed complacentiae, but of complacency, or delight. For thus all things are present with God, ab aeterno, from all eternity, and there is nothing neither past, nor future unto him. And the the reason hereof is, God knew all things most perfectly before any of them were. because he seethe all things that either are, were or ever shall be in the world, non extra se in creaturis not without himself, in the creatures, as we do; but in se, in himself, that is, in his eternal Counsel and Decree, or, in se, non solum tanquam in causa efficient, sed exemplari rerum omnium. Wherefore although being considered, as we were in ourselves before our calling and conversion, that is, full of sin, and void of all goodness, we may in some sense, be said to be objects of God's hatred; yet, as we were vessels of Election, so we were always beloved. For as St. Augustine saith, Tract. in Johan. 112. Deus omnes sanctos suos ante mundi constitutionem dilexit, sicut praedestinav●t, God loved all his Saints before the foundation of the world, as they were of him predestinated. For we must not say, that God absolutely and simply, first hateth, and then loveth the same things, as men do; for than we shall make him variable & mutable as we ourselves are, whereas there is neither Variableness nor turning, Jam. 1.17. nor so much as any shadow of turning with God. If this answer do not give full satisfaction, Answer. than I say further That when Dav●d saith, The Lord hateth all the workers of iniquity, he speaketh of those that do work iniquity perseverantly, that is, who do continue in sin without Repentance, as the next words may seem to declare, when he addeth, thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing. For it is certain, God will destroy none eternally, but obstinate and impenitent sinners. This answer I do prefer before the former. For if we shall speak of hatred, as the word is commonly used, than I cannot but subscribe to Zanchius, whose thesis, or position is this, Electos nunquam odit Deus, trascitur quidem illis, ut illos duriter castiget saepe; De natura Dei lib. 4. c. 7. Quest. 2. sed hoc facit ex amore ad illorum salutem, odit tamen nunquam. In English thus, God never hateth the elect, indeed he is angry with them, so that he doth oftentimes chasten them sharply: but this, he doth out of love to their salvation; notwithstanding he doth never hate them. For saith he, odisse dicitur Deus, quibus male vult, God is said, to hate those whom he beareth ill will unto. And thus also doth Cicero speak of hatred, when he saith, Quem quis odit periisse expetit, whom a man hateth, he desireth his destruction. In which words, he letteth us see, what is commonly meant by hatred. Thus I hope I have cleared this matter. And now I would know of Mr. D. why he doth say, that Faith doth justify declaratively, if the Gospel which preacheth Faith in Christ, doth declare the love of God, either to all, or to any, that are workers of iniquity? For Faith cannot be without a reformed conversation, as he himself acknowledgeth? All the workers of iniquity therefore are destiture of true justifying Faith, Reconcil. of God to man. pag. 44. whereby to be assured of God's love & of their salvation by Christ. Mr. D. therefore, will he nill he, must needs acknowledge, that if Faith do justify declaratively, than the Gospel doth no where declare the Love of God towards the workers of iniquity, and consequently, That it is not only the voice of the Law, but of the Gospel also, that saith, The Lord hateth all the workers of iniquity. SECT. III. How God way be said to love his children sometimes more, and sometimes less. THe second Conclusion is this, If we shall speak of the Love of God, as it doth manifest itself by its effects, so it is neither eternal, nor always the same, but sometimes greater, and sometimes lesser towards his children. And in this sense David speaketh of God's Love, Psa. 147.8. when he saith, The Lord loveth the righteous: and Solomon Prov. 8.17. where he bringeth in the Son of God, the eternal wisdom of his Father, speaking and saying, I love them that love me, that is, them only and none else. Now there was a time when the elect did not love God, but the world and the things thereof, a time when they were not righteous, but wicked; they were not at that time therefore loved of God in this sense, as Solomon and David here speak of his Love, that is, so as to taste, or to be made partakers of the comfortable effects thereof. The Lord also speaketh of his Love tanquam de re futura, as of a thing to be accomplished in time to come, when he saith or his revolted people, I will love them freely. I will, Hos. 14.4. saith the Lord, he did not therefore thus love them always. Now this also must be understood, not of the internal Act of God's love, which is eternal; but of the manifestation of his love, in the saving effects thereof. Thus also are we to understand St. Paul when he blesseth the Corinthians, and prayeth for them saying, 2 Cor. 13. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Love of God be with you. For his meaning is not, that God would then first begin to love them, as if he had hated them, or had borne them no good will before; but that he would multiply the effects of his Love upon them, or that he would continue the gracious influence of his Love towards them, in the most comfortable and saving effects thereof. In the same sense also doth our Saviour speak of God's Love, John 14.21. He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them, it is he that loveth me; and he that loveth me, shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and manifest myself unto him. When Christ saith here, He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, he speaketh (as the next words do show) of the manifestation of his, and his Father's love, by the saving effects thereof, Tunc enim Deus nouâ ratione suam exhibet dilectionem, cum novo homines afficit beneficio. For than doth God exhibit his Love after a new manner, when he bestowetn on men a new benefit, saith Jansenius. Like whereunto are the words of Dionysius Carthusianus on this saying of Christ. God loveth all that are predestinate eternally, and simply even then, when they do not love him, but are wicked. For he first loved us. 1 John 4.19. He loveth them (I say) according to that he seethe them to be, in his Decree of Predestination. But when they are converted and do love God, he bestoweth on them the effects of his Love, which he doth fully, and finally vouthsafe them, when they obtain the inheritance of Heaven, Peter Lombard also Lib. 3. Sent. Dist. 32. doth excellently unfold this matter, I will therefore shut up this discourse in his words. The Love of God (saith he) is considered two manner of ways, secundum essentiam, et secundum efficientiam, according to the essence & according to the efficiency of it. It is neither more nor less according to the essence; but according to the efficiency of it: In which regard those may be said to be more loved, for whom out of his love he hath from eternity prepared majus bonum, the greater good, or a greater blessing; and doth in time confer the same upon them: and those less lo●ed, quibus non tantum, for whom and on whom, he hath from eternity prepared, and in time bestoweth, not so much good, or not so great a blessing. Thereupon also it is, that some when they are converted, and justified, are said then to begin to be loved of God; not that God can love any one nova dilectione with a new love: yea, he loved with everlasting love before the foundation of the world, whomsoever he loveth. But they are then said to begin to be loved of him, when they receive the effects of Gods eternal love, to wit, grace or glory. Whereupon Augustine saith, Far be it from us that we should say, that God loveth any one temporally, as it were with a new love, which was not in him before, with whom, nec praeterita transierunt, neither the things that are past, have passed away, et futura jam facta sunt, and those that are future, are already present or are done. Therefore he loved all his Saints before the foundation of the world sicut praedestinavit, as they were predestinated by him. But when they are converted and do find him, than they are said to begin to be loved of him, Ut eo modo dicatur, quo potest humano affectu capi, quod dicitur, to speak after that manner, that the thing which is spoken, may be comprehended by man's capacity. Thus also when God is said to be angry with the wicked, and well pleased with the good, the change is in them and not in Him, as light is offensive to weak eyes, but comfortable to strong; to wit, through the change that is in them, not in itself: so when any one gins to be God's friend being justified, he himself is changed, not God. Now if the Question be asked, whether one may be said to be loved of God more at one time then at another, distinguenda est dilectionis intelligentia, that we may understand this aright, we must distinguish of love; for if it be referred unto the effects of love, concessibile est, it is to be granted, that God doth love some, more at one time than at another; but if it be referred to the essence of Gods Lo e, inficiabile est, it is to be denied? Hitherto Peter Lombard. And thus this deep mystery, or matter is sufficiently cleared. I'll only add two things more to pre●ent the mistaking of this Doctrine. The former is, that all those, quibus ab aeterno Deus bene vult, whom God eternally loveth, shall in time, have all those good things, that is, those effects of grace, wrought in them which he decreed for them. As long therefore as men do live in sin they cannot conclude, nor they cannot believe, that God loveth them with any special love, as he doth his Elect, whom he hath appointed heirs of salvation▪ because as yet no effects of Election do appear in them. The other thing which I think good here to add is that Mr. D. hath no cause so sharply and bitterly (as he doth) to reprove some of our Protestant Preachers and writers, because they tell men, that if they forsake sin, and follow after God's commandments, and do that which is acceptable in his sight, than God will love them. For seeing they speak not otherwise of God's Love than the holy Scripture doth, Why should he so rack their words, as if they taught, that God were mutable in his Love, as man is, and not rather understand them to speak popularly of the Love of God, as the Scripture itself doth in those places, which I have before alleged, that is, not in regard of the essence, but of the efficiency and influence thereof, in its gracious and most comfortable effects. He hath the more reason thus candidly to inrerpret their words, because they are (at least some of them) not such babes, that they can be thought to be ignorant of the eternity and immutability of God's Love, being considered simply as it is in itself, any more than of his other Attributes. Quest. 4. What is meant by our Reconciliation to God? SECT. I. Wherein is showed, What it is. Reconcil. of man to God, pag. 48. Reconcil. of God to man. pag. 34. MR. D. distinguisheth hereof, and saith, That it is twofold. 1. God's Reconciliation to us. 2. Our Reconciliation to God. Of which he speaketh thus, We have not one jot, not one apex in all the new Covenant to be found of reconciling God to us: but of our reconciliation to God. Why then doth he write so much of God's reconciliation to us, not well weighing what he saith? For Reconciliation importeth precedent enmity, or at least some distaste, and displeasure taken for some fault committed or offence given. For as Zanchius, In Epistolam ad Coloss. Davenantius, and other learned do say, Reconciliare nihil aliud est, quàm amicitiam offensione aliqua diremptam resarcire, et sic inimicos in pristinam concordiam reducere. To reconcile, is nothing else, than to repair friendship after it hath been broken off by some offence, and so of enemies to make them agree again, as they did formerly. In this sense our Saviour himself speaketh of Reconciliation, when he saith, If thou bringest thy gift to the altar, Matth. 5.23. and there remember'st that thy brother hath aught against thee, that is, that he is offended with thee for some fault, or offence or other, which thou hast committed against him, leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way, and be reconciled to thy brother, that is, go and confess thy fault to him, and give him that satisfaction, which is meet and so regain his favour. Now thus cannot God be said to reconcile himself unto us, seeing there is no need thereof: nay seeing it is altogether impossible there should be any such thing. It is therefore but an improper, or an abusive speech, to say that God was always reconciled unto us. And this indeed Mr. D. ingenuously acknowledged; Reconcil. of God to man. pag. 5. for because God always loved his elect: therefore saith he, he cannot properly be said to reconcile himself unto them. And may not I say further, Because he never wronged them, nor gave them any just cause of offence; therefore in propriety of speech, he cannot be said to reconcile himself unto them. But I have no intent to carp at words so that no wrong sense be couched under them. For I know th' at good Divines & other good Authors, do now and then speak of Reconciliation, as common to both parties. See Estius in Lib. 4. Sent, D●st. 35. Sect. 7. Uxor marito reconciliatur, quae offensa est. Erasmus annot.: in 1 Cor. 7. I come therefore to the other branch of his distinction, that is, Our reconciliation unto God. In remissione igitur peccatorum cum primis consistit haec reconciliatio, in quit Zanchius in haec verba Pauli ab illo citata ad Eph. cap. 2. Reconcil. of man to God. p. 48. 50. St. Paul showeth us, wherein this doth consist, when he saith, that God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them. For hereby he giveth us to understand, that our reconciliation to God consisteth in his pardoning of our sins, and accepting of Christ's Passion, as a satisfaction unto his justice for them. But Mr. D. taketh it in another sense, For he distinguisheth of man's reconciliation to God, and saith, that it is, either Original whereby our nature was reconciled unto God by the death of his Son, without any condition or qualification wrought in us: or Actual, which he calleth, the reconciliation of our persons, or consciences, and saith, that it is wrought within us, although not by our own power. Now he understandeth hereby nothing else, Reconcil. of man to God. pag. 51. but (that I may use his own words) the manifestation of God's reconciliation to us, and of the reconciliation of our nature to God in Jesus Christ. But surely, not only our natures, but our persons are reconciled to God by the death of Christ. Heb. 9.14. Yea the blood of Christ (as the Apostle saith) doth purge our Consciences from dead works, to serve the living God: because Christ by his death hath purchased, not only the pardon, but the purging away of our sinful corruptions. By Christ's death than we are reconciled to God in regard of merit: but we are actually reconciled unto God, when by Faith we do receive Christ, and do apply his merits unto our souls. Of the former the Apostle speaketh, 2 Cor. 5.19, 20. viz. Rom. 5.10. Eph. 2.16. when he saith, God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself; and in the other places alleged by Mr. D. Of the latter, when he saith, We pray you in Christ's stead, that ye be reconciled unto God. Now how the former can be said to be Original, and the Reconciliation of our Nature, I cannot see, nor conceive; seeing it was wrought for us by Christ without us, and is not originally neither propagated to us, nor inherent in our Nature, as Original sin is. Again, what reason hath he to call the manifestation of our Reconciliation to our consciences, by the name of actual Reconciliation? For though nothing doth appear, or show itself unto us, until it doth actually exist. Yet many things do actually▪ exist, and have being, though they are not presently discerned of us. SECT. II. Objections answered. Object. BUt saith Mr. D. We were never out of God's favour, he always loved us: by our actual Reconciliation therefore unto God, can be meant nothing else, but the manifestation of God's Reconciliation to us, and of the Reconciliation of our Nature to God in Christ; and not any actual bringing of us into Grace, and favour with God. Answer. Hereunto I answer, That although we were never absolutely out of God's love, and favour, to speak of his Love as it is in itself: yet notwithstanding he did not approve of us, but disliked us, and was offended and displeased with us while we continued in our sins; we were in this regard therefore reconciled unto God, until we were converted unto him, and did by Faith lay hold on Christ: even as David, though he always loved and favoured Absalon, yet when he had slain his brother Ammon, was offended and displeased with him, and would not admit him into his presence, until Joab wrought the means of his reconciliation. But here it will be said, So also did Christ reconcile us unto his Father by his death, Object. therefore we were reconciled before we did believe in Christ. It is true, we were reconciled to God, by his death, Answer. 1 quoad meritum, vel quoad pretium redemptionis et reconciliationis nostrae, in regard of the merit, or price of our Redemption and Reconciliation; but we are not actually reconciled until by Faith we do believe in Christ, 1 John 5.11, 12. and are united unto him. For he that hath the Son hath life, but he that hath not the Son hath not life, but the wrath of God abideth on him. And hereupon it was, that St. Paul accounted all he had, but as dung that he might win Christ, Phil. 3.8. Math. 17.4. and be found in him. For why, Christ is the beloved Son of the Father, in whom it is that he is well pleased with us. As long therefore as we are out of Christ, and remain in our sins, we are liable to God's displeasure, and therefore had need to be reconciled unto him. For though God loveth us ab aeterno, from everlasting, amore complacentiae, with a love of complacency and delight, secundum intuitum praedestinationis suae, that is, as he beholds us, justified and sanctified in his Decree of predestination; yet being considered as we were of ourselves, when we remained in our sins, and were aliens from Christ, he could take no pleasure in us. If this answer do not give full satisfaction, than I say Answer. 2 further, that although God loves his elect eternally, yet he suspendeth the saving effects of this his love towards them, until they do believe in Christ. In that regard therefore they may be said to be reconciled unto him, when they are converted and do believe, because he than taketh off this suspension, by working in them the saving effects of his love, and not only declaratively. For first, God works these effects in them, and then by them declares and manifests his Love unto them, and assures them thereof. Answer. 3 Lastly, Though God loved us eternally, as we were elected of him, in his eternal Decree of Predestination, that is, in regard of the felicity and happiness, which he always intended us: notwithstanding we were by God in his word bound over unto eternal punishment, and condemnation for our sins, while we lived in them; but when we did return unto God, and believe in Christ, than we were justified, and absolved from our sins, and from the sentence of condemnation, and consequently were actually reconciled unto God: for there is no real difference between the justification and reconciliation of a sinner. When a sinner by Faith in Christ obtainerh pardon of his sins, than he is reconciled to God. St. Paul therefore useth the words justification and reconciliation promiscuously, Rom. 5.9.10. and indifferently, as importing the same thing, being justified by the blood of Christ (saith he) we shall be saved from wrath through him: This he proveth thus, for if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, (where, you see he putteth reconciled for justified, implying there is no real difference between them) much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life. See this proved afterwards Question 6. Now we are not actually justified from the sentence of condemnation, which God in his word hath denounced against us for our sins, until we do believe in Christ. It follows necessarily therefore, that we are not actually reconciled unto God until we do believe in Christ, and are united unto him. Quest. 5. Whether the Doctrine of Reconciliation, as Mr. D. hath propounded it, be a better means of comfort to distressed consciences, than our Protestant Doctrine is? FIrst, He teacheth that God was reconciled to us, that is, as he understandeth it, that he loved us, ab aeterne, from all eternity, without any precedent dispositions, or qualifications, which he found, or foresaw in us, or any conditions to be performed by us, to gain His love and His favour. Now whatsoever comfort this can afford to any, if it be a means to keep those that are great sinners, or such as are troubled with the apprehension of their own unworthiness from despair, our Doctrine will do the same also. For there is no judicious, nor no orthodox Protestant, who teacheth not, that God loved us freely from everlasting, and that His love is the cause of our loving Him, and of all the goodness that is in us, as St. John saith, We love him, because he loved us first; 1 John 4.19. and not that he loveth us, because we love Him, to speak properly of his Love, as it is in itself: though otherwise when we speak of God's Love, according to the influence it hath upon us, or according to the gracious effects thereof, we say as the holy Scripture doth that the Lord will love those that love him, and keep his commandments. In this sense our Saviour speaketh of God's Love, If a man love me, he will keep my words, John 14.23. and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him. And John 16.27. The Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, & have believed that I came out from God. Where we must not so understand our Saviour, as if he made his Disciples loving of him, and believing him, to be the cause why God did first set his Love upon them, for he loved them erernally: but to be the cause, why God did abundantly testify his Love towards them, by many gracious, rare, and most comfortable effects thereof, rather than to the world. We may say therefore as Dionysius Carthusianus doth, That our Saviour in these words, setteth down the cause of God's Love, à posteriori, that is, he cause of the effects of God's Love, and so maketh his Disciples loving of him, and believing in him, a sign and an assurance unto them, that his Father loved them. Reconcil. of man to God. pag. 49, 50, 52, & 57 Secondly, speaking of our Reconciliation to God, that is, as he expresseth himself, of the declaration or manifestation of God's Reconciliation to us, he teacheth, that we are thus reconciled to God by Faith only; but maketh joy in the Holy Ghost, and the Love of God, and of our Brethren, and new Obedience, inseparable Companions of this our Reconciliation. Now it a man cannot find these graces in himself, What great comfort can he take that God's Love is eternal without any conditions on our par● to be performed? Or, how can this encourage men against desperation, more than our Doctrine, which is, That God's Love may be known by the inseparable effects thereof? For he will not say, that God loves all, or that he was from all eternity reconciled unto all, but only unto the Elect. Until therefore a man shall find in himself the undoubted effects of his Election, he can take no great comfort in this, that God's Love is free, and without any conditions. He speaketh therefore not so advisedly when he saith, Reconcil. of God to man. pag. 64. If you search into the reason of your many years bondage, of your miserable doubting, you shall find your disease, in that which hath been spoken, & I hope the remedy also. And as frivolous are those words of his, Ib. pag. 65. Let us learn to distinguish when God speaketh of his Reconciliation to us, and when he speaketh of our Reconciliation to him. For, how shall we learn this, seeing he hath told us before, that there is no mention in the Scripture of God's Reconciliation to us, Quest. 15 but of our Reconciliation to Him. But this matter shall be discussed more largely, when I come to the last Question, Quest. 6. Whether all the Elect be justified ab aeterno, When I say, that we are justified by Faith instrumentally, I do not mean, that Faith is properly, but analogically, the Instrument or means whereby we do receive Christ, and his righteousness to our justification. from all eternity, before they do believe in Christ? and consequently whether the Scripture, when it saith, that we are justified by Faith, meaneth that Faith justifieth us only in tribunali conscientiae nostrae, in our own consciences, as same of the learned Protestants speak; or declaratively as saith Mr. D.? Or whether it doth not justify us instrumentaliter et correlatiuè, as other Orthodox Protestants not a few do teach, that is, as an Instrument, or means whereby we are made partakers of Christ's righteousness, renouncing ourselves and our own works altogether, and relying on Christ only for our justification. SECT. I. Pro●ed by Scripture, that we are actually justified by Faith. IT is not denied by any that we are justified ab aeterno from all eternity, in God's eternal Counsel and Decree: but so are we also eternally sanctified and glorified. The Question is, Whether we be not actually justified? Or, whether our sins do not remain upon record against us, until we do believe in Christ? Doubtless the Scripture every where avoucheth that we are justified by Faith in Christ? St Paul affirmeth, that the Scripture, that is, of the old Testament saith, Abraham believed God and it was imputed to him for righteousness. Where the Apostle telleth us, Rom. 4.3. whom they are to whom God impu●eth righteousness, that is, Believers. It is false therefore that Mr. D. saith that men are justified by God before they do believe. St. Paul also telleth us, That he counted all things he had but as dung that he might win Christ, & be found in him, not having his own righteousness which was of the Law, Phil. 3.8, 9 but that which is through the Faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by Faith. In these words, St. Paul giveth us to understand, that there was a time when he was not in Christ, for otherwise, why doth he say, that he accounted all things but dung that he might win Christ and be found in him, if he had been in him already. And he here teacheth also, that this benefit did accrue unto him by being in Christ, that whereas he was of himself a sinner, as we all are, it was by Faith in Christ only, that he came to be righteous before God. For why doth he say, That the righteousness which is of God is through the Faith of Christ, and by Faith? but because we are made partakers of this righteousness to our justification before God by Faith in Christ, and not otherwise. Those words of the Apostle also do fully confirm this, We who are Jews by nature, Gal. 2.15, 16. and not sinners of the Gentiles, knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the Law, but by the Faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified by the Faith of Christ, and not by the works of the Law: for by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified. Hence I do reason thus, In the same sense that the Apostle denieth justification to works, he attributeth it to Faith. This is evident, because he maketh a manifest opposition between justification by the works of the Law, and by Faith in Christ. But he denieth us to be justified by works before God, and not declaratively to others, or to our own consciences. On the contrary therefore, when St. Paul saith, that we are justified by the Faith of Christ, his meaning is, that we are justified actually and before God by Faith, and not declaratively only to our own consciences. Again, I do reason thus, Without Christ there is no remission of sins, Eph. 1.7. 1 John 1.7. Apoc. 1.5. But men before they believe, are without Christ, Eph. 2.11.12. Therefore before they believe, their sins are not pardoned, or, which is all one, before they believe, they are not justified, nor absolved from their sins. Moreover St. Paul teacheth us. Acts 26.18. that we receive forgiveness of sins by Faith in Christ, not before, but after our conversion. For so he saith, that God sent him unto the Gentiles to open their eyes, and to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, that they might receive forgiveness of sins, and inheritance amongst all that are sanctified by Faith in Christ. Hence I infer, that they were not justified and absolved from their sins, before they were enlightened and believed in Christ, even while they walked in darkness, and were under the power of Satan. For what needs the Apostle to say, that he was sent to turn them from darkness to light, that they might by Faith receive forgiveness of sins, if they had had it before? Like hereunto is that of St. Peter, Be it known unto you men and brethren, Acts 13.3. that by this man (by Jesus Christ) is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins, and by him all that believe (not any before they believe) are justified from all things, from which you could not be justified by the Law of Moses. For the Law justifieth none, but condemneth all that do not in all things observe it, Deut. 27.26. From which condemnation (as St. Peter here teacheth) they are not absolved and freed, but by Faith in Christ. Now what is this but to say, that we are justified by Faith and not before Faith, or without it? I may also reason thus, Whosoever is justified, is reconciled unto God, and through Christ doth please him: For he is that beloved Son of the Father in whom he is well pleased with all that are in Christ, Matth. 3.17. But without Faith, it is not possible to please God, Heb. 11.6. Therefore neither is it possible that any one without Faith should be justified. Again, there is no remission of sins to be had without repentance; for our Saviour hath joined remission of sins and repentance together. He telleth his Disciples, That repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name amongst all Nations, Luke 24.47. And Peter also saith, That God hath exalted Christ with his own right hand, to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance to Israel and remission of sins, Acts 5.31. To whom also hath God promised remission of sins? Verily not to those that do live in sin, but that do leave their sins, and return unto GOd, Ezek. 18.21, 22, 23, 24. Pardon of sin therefore, or, which is all one, justification and absolution from sin, is not to be had until a man do repent and become a new man. But what need I to heap up any more testimonies, or to use any more reasons, seeing St. Paul shutteth up his disputation of justification in these words, Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by Faith without the deeds of the Law, Rom. 3.28. It will not serve M. D.'s turn to say, That Paul's meaning is, that we are justified declaratively to our own consciences by Faith only, and not by works. For St. Peter who spoke by the same Spirit that St. Paul did, teacheth us, That by the constant practice not only of Faith, but of other virtues and good works also, we are to make our Calling and Election sure, 2 Pet. 2.10. that is, to our own souls and consciences. Consequently therefore, by the same works may also be assured in our consciences of our justification before God, and of our reconciliation to his Divine Majesty. For he that is assured of his Election, and of his effectual Vocation, is assured of his justification and salvation. Mr. D. therefore setteth a false gloss upon St Paul's words, when he saith, that his meaning is not that we are actually justified before God by Faith only; but declaratively to our own consciences: for thus are we justified by other Virtues, as well as by Faith. SECT. II. Mr. D. his Objections answered. ALL these plain Testimonies, and many more Mr. D. thinketh to avoid and put off, by saying, that we were justified actually by Christ's righteousness before we did believe, even at that very time, when he suffered his bitter Passion, and bore our sins on his Body on the Tree, and that therefore (as I intimated before) the Scriptures which say we are justified by Faith, must be thus understood, That Faith justifieth declaratively, that is, that our Faith declareth, and maketh it evident unto our consciences, that our sins are forgiven, and that we are justified before God. But the Scriptures (as I have showed) do speak so plainly, that they will not suffer themselves thus to be wrested. Notwithstanding, he goeth about to prove this his exposition, by these Arguments following. Object. Confer. p. 14. Rom. 4.5. Rom. 5.10. 1. That the Act of our Faith is a Consequent of our justification, and not an Antecedent, is plain. For God justifieth the ungodly. And we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, when we were enemies. Now (saith he) Believers cannot be called enemies, but friends. But we were reconciled when we were enemies. The answer hereunto is easy, to wit, Answer. That we were ungodly and so enemies, antecedenter ad reconciliationem nostram, that is before we were reconciled, but not when we did actually believe. The Apostle therefore in these words of his, denotat tatum terminum (à quo) istius reconciliationis, non terminum (ad quem), that is, And so speaketh in the same sense as Isay doth c. 3. when he saith, The lame man shall leap as an Hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing, which as Chamier saith, must be understood, in sensu diviso, non in composito. he showeth what manner of persons we were before we were reconciled to God, not what we are being reconciled. He speaketh therefore in the same sense, as our Saviour doth when he saith, Math. 11.5. the lame walk and the deaf hear. The meaning whereof no man will conceive to be that the lame, still continuing lame, did walk, and that the deaf still continuing deaf, did hear: but that those who formerly were lame and deaf, being cured by Christ, did go and hear. And even so in like manner when the Apostle saith, that God justifieth the ungodly, and that we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, when we were enemies; the meaning is not, That the ungodly remaining ungodly, are justified, or that any are enemies to God after they are actually reconciled unto him: but that we who by nature and of ourselves were ungodly, and therefore enemies, were justified from that ungodliness of ours, and reconciled unto God when we believed in Christ. Objection. But (saith he) We were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, & Christ bore our sins in his body on the Tree. Remission of sin therefore, is even as ancient as satisfaction for sin, and at what time Christ Jesus taketh our sins upon himself, at the same time are the persons of God's Elect, just before the tribunal of Almighty God. Answer. Hereunto I answer, That we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son meritoriè, that is, in regard of merit; but are not actually reconciled, until we do by Faith receive Christ & apply the merits of his Passion to our souls. In the same sense is Christ said to bear our sins on his Body on the tree, that is, the punishment of our sins, whereby he purchased the pardon of them. It doth not follow therefore, neither from these, nor from any other the like say, that actual remission of sins, is as ancient as satisfaction for sin; nor that the persons of God's Elect, were just before the Tribunal of God at the same time, when Christ Jesus took our sins upon himself. Mr. D. therefore doth indeed wrest those places of Scripture, which speak of the actual performance of the price of our Redemption, when he allegeth them to impugn actual remission of sins by Faith. Another of his Objections is this. Object. Confer. p. 15. They that are engrafted into Christ Jesus, are justified: but we must be engrafted into Christ Jesus before we can believe, therefore we must be justified before we can believe? What force, and what strength, there is in this reasoning of his, I will request him to consider by the like. Answer. They that are engrafted into Christ Jesus are holy, for so are all his members; but we must be engrafted into Christ Jesus before we can believe: therefore we must be holy before we can believe. Will he say, that this is rightly concluded from the premises? No, he must not; for he telleth us, that holiness cannot go before Faith, but must follow it. But to answer his Argument, Confer. p. 21. When he saith, They that are engrafted into Christ Jesus are justified; But we must be engrafted into Christ Jesus, before we can believe. If here he do understand priority of time, I deny this Assumption of his. For at the same time that we are engrafted into Christ, we receive power from him to believe. Again, seeing Christ is offered unto us in the Promises of the Gospel, How can we be made partakers of Christ, if we do not by Faith believe and receive those promises? To say nothing, that to be engrafted into Christ, is nothing but to believe in Christ. For God by working Faith in us, doth engraft us into Christ. I deny therefore his minor Proposition, for we are not engrafted into Christ at all, until the Spirit hath wrought Faith in us. He allegeth, That the effects of righteousness is Assurance: but to what purpose I know not, Object. Esay 32.17. unless it be against himself. For if righteousness do always bring assurance with it of God's Love & favour, or of the forgiveness of sins, and of our justification, than it cannot be said that we are assured of our justification only by Faith, as he teacheth. Afterwards I find him reasoning thus, St. Peter saith, Object. That Christ bore our sins in his own Body on the tree, that we being delivered from sin might live in righteousness. 1 Pet. 2.24. St. John tells us, John 1.29. Christ takes them away. Behold the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world. If the justice of God hath laid allour iniquities upon his back, hath not his mercy taken them from us? If the Lord Christ did take them away, than they are no more. Answ. For answer hereunto, I say first, That they are taken away, and are no more, in regard of any satisfaction to be performed by us; for so Christ bore them, and took them away, as I have showed before. Again, I do here further add, That the persons of whom both St. Peter and St. John do speak in these words, are Believers. Christ bore our sins, that is, ours who believe in him: for of them St. Peter speaks, and to them he wrote this, and not to infidels. So also when St. John saith, Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world. By the world here, he meaneth all those throughout the world both Jews, and Gentiles, that do believe in him, and receive him for their Saviour in the same sense as St. John the Apostle speaketh, when he saith, If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the just, 1 John 2.1. and he is the propitiation for our sins, (ours of the Jewish Nation, or of the Israelites who do believe in him) and not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world; that is, of all both Jews and Gentiles, that do believe in him throughout the world. SECT. III. An Objection answered. I Have done with Mr. D. And must now essay if I can give satisfaction to a stronger reason than any of his, which I find alleged by an acute and learned Divine, for whom I am no fit match. Vindic. Gra. Lib. 1. Sect. 4. For thus doth he reason, Justificatio est actus Dei immanens, non transiens, that is to say, an internal, not an external Act of God, est ergo aeternus, non temporaneus, it is therefore eternal, and not done in time, as the outward works of God are. Whereupon he inferreth and concludeth, that when the Scripture saith, We are justified by Faith, the meaning hereof is, that we are justified by Faith in tribunali conscientiae, that is, that God when we believe in Christ justifieth us in the tribunal which be setteth up in our own souls, and consciences, but that otherwise we were justified ab aeterno apud Deum, eternally with God. But methinks this exposition of his quite overthroweth the Doctrine of justification by Faith, as it is taught by the Protestants. For the Protestants Doctrine is, First, that our justification is, actus individuus, an individual act, that is, accomplished all at once, in one and the same instant. Secondly, quòd non admittit majus et minus, that it is not increased nor diminished by degrees, as our sanctification is. But this justification is not any such indivisible act. For frequent and ordinary experience showeth, that those who are. Believers and in the state of grace, yea, excellent Christians otherwise, are sometimes confident that their sins are pardoned, and that they are in God's favour; and, at other times, though they rely still upon God, for the pardon of their sins, and for salvation by Christ, yet they cannot say, that they are pardoned. In a word, the Children of God, have sometimes a greater, sometimes a lesser assurance of the pardon of their sins, and of their salvation, and sometimes hardly any at all. The reason whereof in many of them, is melancholy abounding, which depraveth the fancy, depresseth the heart, and always raiseth fears in opposition, contrary to that which a man's heart is set upon, and which it most desireth. Sometimes again, the Faith of the Believer, is assailed with strong, strange, and hideous temptations, which deprive him of that assurance, which formerly, he had, or were it not for these temptations, would have. And sometimes also weakness of judgement in those whose hearts are upright with God, is a great cause, why they cannot lay hold of that comfort which belongeth unto them. Now if we shall say, that a man is justified by Faith, when his Faith doth declare and evidence unto his conscience that his sins are pardoned, than we shall exclude some of these good Christians from the state of justification, and of others of them we shall say, contrary to the common tenant of Protestants, that they are sometimes more, and sometimes less justified. Object. But how then shall we answer the aforesaid Reason, which is alleged to prove the eternity of the justification of God's Elect? Answ. I answer it thus, That the Decree indeed of justifying, or absolving Believers, is an immanent and eternal Act of God. Thus they are justified ab aeterno in ment Dei, eternally in God's counsel, or in God's mind and purpose, even as those that are arraigned in Courts of justice here in this world, are acquitted, or condemned in animo et ment judicis, in the Judge's mind and decree or determination, before he passeth sentence of judgement upon them. But they are not actually judged, until this sentence is pronounced, and published. Now the same is to be said concerning the actual justification of those that do believe in Christ. For justification, as the Protestants do prove by the Scriptures, est vocabulum forense, is a judicial term, and therefore is to be taken, in sensu forensi, in a judicial sense. It importeth therefore an external judicial act of God, that is to say, his pronouncing or publishing of sentence of judgement. For than is a Judge said to judge him that is arraigned before him, when he giveth either sentence of absolution, or condemnation upon him: and even in like manner, God the judge of all the world doth justify those that believe in Christ, by passing sentence of absolution upon them, and condemneth all unbelievers, and ungodly sinners, by giving sentence of condemnation against them. Object. But it may be, you will say unto me, It is true, Christ at his coming will judge the quick, and the dead; but where doth he now pass sentence, either of absolution, or condemnation upon any, that they may be said to be judged by him? I answer, that he doth this in his word, Answ. in verbo Evangelij where every true believer may find himself already justified from his sins in scriptis (as the Lawyers use to speak) sententia finali, with such a definitive sentence, as shall stand for ever, and never be revoked, but confirmed by Christ at the latter day. This answer offered itself unto me long since, when I read the former Objection, and I have found since, that it was no new invention, or device of mine own, but the old Protestant Doctrine. Zanch. de attributis Dei lib. 4. cap. 2. q. 6. For thus writeth Zanchius, a learned, judicious, and an ancient Protestant This grace whereby we are justified before God, data fuit ab aeterno, was given us from all eternity, because he loved eternally in Christ, and made us accepted unto himself in him, as the Apostle saith to the Ephesians. Notwithstanding we are not reipsa, really justified by his grace, but when we do by Faith apprehend it. For neither is the arraigned person said to be absolved, that is, justified, (though the Prince have decreed that he shall be absolved) until the arraigned person himself, hath heard the voice of absolution, and hath assented thereunto. When we hear the voice of the Gospel, we hear the voice of absolution; when we assent thereunto, we do reipsa, really or indeed receive absolution, or are justified. Therefore the Apostle when he speaketh of this grace, as we are justified thereby, doth not name only grace, but joineth Faith with it, as it is every where manifest in his Epistle. Thus hath the most learned and judicious Zanchius opened this matter. I have also of late (since I penned this) met with a Treatise of learned Mr. Rutherfurth, The Trial & Triumph of Faith, p. 62. wherein I find that he fully accordeth with Zanchius: his words are these, Justification is a forinsecal sentence, in time pronounced in the Gospel, and applied to me now, and never while the instant now that I believe: it's not formally an act of the understanding to know a truth concerning myself, but it's an heart-adherence of the affection to Christ as the Saviour of sinners, at the presence of which a sentence of free absolution is pronounced. Suppose the Prince have it in his mind to pardon twenty malefactors, his grace is the cause why they are pardoned; yet are they never in Law pardoned, so as they can in Law plead immunity, † that is. until. while they can produce their Princes Royal sealed pardon. Thus far Mr. Rutherfurth. Mr. Gataker Two other learned Divines also, whom I have lately read, do thus answer the former Objection, they say, That justification is not an Act immanent and eternal in God; Mr. Ball in his Treatise of Faith. p. 89. but transient and in time, inferring some change in the person justified, not physical, but moral & in respect of state, whereby it comes to pass, that the person is in another condition and account than he was before. This answer, I conceive is the same in sense with the former. For I demand, What change of estate is there in him that is justified? (I mean not as he is also sanctified, but as he is justified) but this, that whereas before he was guilty of eternal damnation, and bound over to eternal punishment for his sins, he is now absolved from the guilt of his sins, and from the sentence of condemnation? But where is he thus absolved now, and was not so before? Profecto non in ment Divinâ, certainly, not in God's mind and purpose, for God is unchangeable. I would gladly therefore be taught and informed, where this is done any where else, nisi in verbo Evangelii? But by Christ in his Gospel. For although Christ do by his Spirit absolve the Believer in foro conscientiae suae in his own conscience: yet hereby he is not justified before God, but in his conscience assured of his justification, as hath been before declared. See Mr. Baxter, who (I think) hath excellently unfolded this matter in his Aphorisms of justification. SECT. FOUR Two Reasons more, proving that we were not justified ab aeterno. BY this that hath been said, I suppose, this matter is sufficiently cleared: but were it so that a satisfactory answer could not be readily given to such intricate doubts, and difficulties in such high mysteries, as this is, Communem tamen Protestantium doctrinam, relinquendam, et repudiandam non esse, judicarem, I would judge, that it were not good hereupon to departed from the common received doctrine of the Protestants, that is so well grounded on the holy Scripture. For, besides all the former testimonies that I have alleged, St. Paul reckoning up the several links of the golden chain of our salvation, and setting them down in order, doth not rank our Justification with our Election; but placeth it after our Vocation: for so he saith, whom God hath predestinated, them he hath called; whom he hath called, them he hath justified; whom he hath justified, them he hath glorified. Now it is certain, we are called in time, non ab aeterno, not from everlasting. It followeth necessarily therefore, that we were not eternally justified, but at that very time, when being effectually called, we did believe in Christ. For as the Apostle here informeth us, objectum justificationis adaequatum sunt vocati, the called of God, (that is, effectually by his spirit engrafting his word in their hearts) are the adequate object of justification, that is, all such, and only such called one's doth God justify. 'Tis evident therefore from these words of St. Paul, that none are actually justified until they are called. The force of this Reason will not be avoided by saying, That St. Paul speaketh here of a declarative justification, or of justification, not as it is really acted, Object. but only as we are by Faith assured of it. Answer. Fo● saint Paul speaketh here of things as they are in themselves, not of the bare manifestation of them; of real predestination, real vocation, and real glorification, and therefore also of a real justification. Again, in this golden Chain of our salvation, predestination is the first Principle, or first cause of it, glorification is the end or consummation of it, and the means by which we do proceed from predestination to glorification, are our vocation and justification. Whence it followeth, that the Apostle speaketh here of a real justification; for the manifestation thereof unto a Believers conscience, is no necessary means of his salvation. A very hard and harsh sentence it would be to say, That none can possibly be saved, who is not assured of his salvation, by having it made evident to his conscience, that his sins are pardoned, and that he is in the state of grace. A more comfortable, and truer assertion it is to say, that every one, though he be never so much terrified, and troubled in his mind with doubts and fears, shall yet be saved, if he do cast himself upon Christ, and constantly rely upon him for salvation, according to the gracious Promises in the Gospel: For blessed is every one that trusteth in him. Psal. 2.12. Lastly, That I may add one Reason more, The opposition which St. Paul maketh between the Corinthians former estate while they lived in sin, and their estate since they believed, plainly proveth that Justification goeth not before, but after Faith. Such (saith he) were some of you, that is, spotted and polluted with those vile sins, which he had before mentioned, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified: they were not therefore justified before, no more than they were before sanctified: for of both these he speaketh alike; neither will there be any real opposition, between the Corinthians estate before and after their calling and conversion, unless we shall say, that as they were really adulterers, idolaters, etc. and not only in outward appearance; so now, after they were converted and did believe, they were really and actually justified, as well as sanctified, and not declaratively only to the conscience, or eternally only in God's Decree. SECT. V Another Objection answered. LOng after I had finished this Treatise, a Soldier that quartered with me, in a calm conference, that we had together, reasoned thus against me, to prove that men are justified before they do believe, even from everlasting. St. Paul saith, Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect? It is God that justifieth, that is, the Elect. But men are elected before they do believe, therefore they are justified before they believe. To the Major proposition, to wit, That God justifieth the Elect, I answer, that all the Elect are actually justified, not as soon as they are elected, but in that time, and after that manner as God in his Decree of Election hath determined & set down, that is, when they do believe, as St. Paul explaineth himself in the words following, where he first moveth another Question like to the former, saying, Who shall condemn? And then he answereth, It is Christ that died, yea rather that is risen again, who also sitteth at the right hand of God, and maketh intercession for us, [us believers.] And then he asketh us again, Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? us, he meaneth, who do believe in Christ, and are his members. Thus he useth these two words indifferently, Elect and Us, as expressing the same persons, and so giveth us to understand, that when he saith, Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect? It is God that justifieth, he speaketh of the Elect as they are Believers, in the same sense as he said before, those whom he did predestinate, them also he called, and whom he justified, them also he glorified; not that they were actually called, as soon as they were predestinated; or glorified, as soon as they were justified. But either, because they were so apud Deum with God, to whom all things are present. Or else he saith not, whom he hath predestinated, them he will call; & whom he hath justified, them he will glorify: but he hath called, he hath glorified them, because they shall in the due time, appointed by God, he as certainly called and glorified, as if they were so already. And even so in like manner, when the Apostle saith, It is God that justifieth the Elect, he speaketh thus, because of the certainty of their justification. SECT. VI The Objections of the most Learned Chamierus answered. BEing put in mind by a worthy friend of mine, that the most learned Chamierus (who by his acute, elaborate and most excellent works and writings, hath very well deserved of the Church of God) doth oppugn the former Doctrine of actual justification by Faith in Christ; I have thought good in the last place, to examine those things that are asserted, & objected by him, against that which is most commonly taught, and professed by other Protestant Divines. Object. First, He teacheth, That a man must be justified before he can be loved of God: Whence it will follow, That seeing Gods love to his Elect is eternal, they are justified therefore not in time, but from everlasting; and therefore, before they do know Christ and believe in him. Now that God loveth none but those that are justified, he endeavoureth to prove by divers Reasons. First, Panstrat. de justif. he argueth thus, Paul testifieth, That God loved us even then when we were enemies. Now this cannot be without imputation of righteousness, for it cannot be imagined, that God should love any sinner, as he is a sinner; But when we were God's enemies, and as yet did nothing that was good, we were only sinners, secun●um inhaerentiam, according to inherency, or inherently: therefore we could not be loved of God. But say I secundum essentiam, Answ. according to the essence of our humane nature, wherein sin is inherent, we were the creatures of God. It followeth not therefore as the learned and most worthy Chamier would have it, that God loved us merely as sinners, but as his creatures. As a father redeemeth and releaseth his riotous son out of prison, into which he is cast for debt, non quatenus prodigum, not as he is an unthrift, but as he is his son, whom he loveth, though he hate his vice. This most learned man therefore, did not so well confisider of the Matter when he said Monstra sibi fingunt, they feign monstrous conceits to themselves, who say that sinners who are just neither by their own, nor by another's righteousness are loved of God, that is, merely as sinners, than which nothing can be devised more abhorrent to divinity. This is true indeed, if we should be compelled and enforced by our Doctrine to say, that God loveth sinners, as sinners: but it driveth us not upon any such rocks. We are not necessitated therefore to grant his Conclusion, which is, There was need of this imputed righteousness, preventing whatsoever good can be in us, that is, as he meaneth, that we might be loved of God before we were and had my being, even from eternity. For if imputation of righteousness, do prevent whatsoever good can be in us, than it must needs prevent, and go before Faith. And so it will follow, that our justification is an immanent and an eternal Act of God, which this learned Divine will have in God's consideration to prevent his loving of us. But, that it is no such immanent Act, is proved afterwards. I find this great learned Divine in another place reasoning thus, De Sola fide justificante, lib. 22. c. 8. to prove that God loveth none but those that are justified & have their sins forgiven them by him, Dilectio Dei opponitur odio, etc. God's love is opposed unto hatred. Object. But God's hatred is for the guilt of sin, Therefore so long as a man is guilty of sin, so long must he needs be hated of God. If therefore he whom God loveth, must not be guilty of sin, and there is none but he is guilty of fin unless sin be pardoned & remitted unto him, that is, unless he be justified. Hence he leaveth it to be inferred and concluded that a man is not loved of God until he is justified. Answer. Here are many Propositions linked together which I shall examine in order. And first, whereas he saith, God's love is opposed to hatred, To this I answer, That Love and hatred in God, as also the rest of his Attributes, are the same single and undivided essence of God: they are not therefore opposite as they are in God, but in their Effects, or in their Objects in quibus contrarie operantur, in which they work those things, which are contrary one to another. For example justification and condemnation are opposite Effects of God's Love, and of his hatred. But it doth not follow hereupon, that because God damneth none but obstinate sinners whom he hateth, that he loveth no man unless he be first justified from his sins. For though God doth not condemn any, nor hate any but for their sins; yet he doth gratis freely justify, as many as he justifieth through his grace, without any merits of theirs; yea, contrary to the merit of their sins, as St. Paul teacheth, Rom. 3.23, 24. And this indeed the most Learned Chamier not only acknowledgeth, but abundantly confirmeth by most valid testimonies of holy Scripture. Probat enim justificationem effici per charitatem Dei, tanquam efficientem causam. For he proveth that our justification is through the love of God, as the efficient cause thereof, After that the kindness, & love of God our Saviour toward man appeared, not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, Tit. 3, 4, 5. God commendeth his love to us, that whereas we were yet sinners, Christ died for us, Being justified therefore by his blood, we shall much more be saved now by his life, Rom. 5. Seeing these things are thus alleged and delivered by Chamierus himself, I wonder that he could so far forget himself, as after a few lines to say, Deum non amare aliter nisi remissis peccatis, that God doth not lo●e us, unless our sins be first forgiven us. For if it were so, How could God's Love be said to be the efficient cause of our justification. For sure I am, he will not say, Causam effectu suo posteriorem esse, that the Cause is after its Effect. In the next place, whereas he saith, the hatred of God is for the guilt of sin, therefore as long as the guilt of sin remaineth, so long must we needs be hated of God. I grant, that God hateth none but for sin: but it doth not follow hereupon, that every one is hated of God, as long as the guilt of his sins doth remain. For then seeing the guilt of sin in all the Elect, doth go before the remission thereof, (Quod enim non est, non remittitur, for that which is not, cannot be said to be forgiven) it would follow, that the Elect themselves, as well as others, were once hated of God, and not beloved of him: whereas the Lord himself saith, That he loved them with an everlasting love, Jer. 31.3. Thus than it is; God hateth sin in all, yea in the Elect themselves: but he pitied their persons, and loved them from all eternity, as they were his Creatures, and, out of this his love, provided for them a Saviour. Whereas then this most worthy Divine, concludeth thus, If therefore it behoveth him whom God loveth, not to be guilty of sin: but there is no man but he is guilty of sin, unless his sin be pardoned and forgiven him, that is, unless he be justified, and so leaveth it to be inferred, that we must be justified before we can be loved of God; That which I have said already, doth sufficiently manifest the inconsequence hereof. Whereunto this I add further, that where three is alike guilt, we cannot always infer a necessity of like condemnation. As for example, a Sovereign Prince, or King, when many of his Subjects are risen up against him in rebellion, and are all alike guilty of death, doth of his mercy and free grace, pardon some of them: but others he as freely maketh examples of his justice, for terror unto the rest of his Subjects, and causeth them to be put to death. Even thus it is in this present case: for whereas all of us for our sins have deserved eternal death, God of his grace converteth, absolveth, and justifieth some, and others he leaveth in their sins, and condemneth them according to their demerits. Thus God's love, or his grace, is the cause of our justification, and not our justification the cause of Gods loving us, as hath been showed before, and shall now by God's grace be further proved, tum ex concessis Chamieri, both from that which Chamier granteth and delivereth for truth; and from other places of Scripture, beside those which I have already produced. Lib. 22. cap. 12. de sola fide justificante. Mat. 26.28 Mors Christi est vera causa justificationis, saith he, The death of Christ is the true cause of our justification. And this indeed is most truly spoken of him; for our blessed Saviour himself telleth us, That he shed his blood for the remission of our sins. Now, how is this to be understood, but that he shed his blood to purchase the pardon of our sins? Eph. 1.7. For thus St. Paul also saith, that we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of our sins. And St. John likewise saith, that the blood of Christ cleanseth us from all sins. 1 John 1.7. Now, what is this, but for him to say, that the forgiveness of our sins, is an effect of Christ's blood which he shed for us? Or, that I may speak in Chamier's words, that Christ's death is the true cause of our justification. Now from hence, I do first infer, that our justification cannot be the cause why God loveth us. Quicquid enim est causa causae est causa causati; For whatsoever is the cause of the cause, is also the cause of that which is caused by that cause. Now God's love was the cause why he sent his Son to be a propitiation for our sins. 1 John 4.10. Our propitiation therefore, and consequently our justification, which is therewith necessarily connexed, or which is involved in it, Rom. 3.25. cannot be the cause of God's love, for then Gods love should both be the cause and the effect of our propitiation and justification by Christ. Again, if Christ's death be (as it is indeed) the true cause of our justification, than we cannot be actually justified ab aeterno from all eternity. Temporale enim non est causa aeterni, for that which is in a definite time, cannot be the cause of that which hath been for ever. But Christ suffered for our sins, non ab aeterno; sed tempore à Deo definito, not from eternity; but at that time which God had determined, Gal. 4.4. His Passion therefore, either must not be the cause of our justification, or if we shall say that it is, as this most learned Divine, and all other (for any thing that I know to the contrary) do: we must needs grant, that we were not actually justified ab aeterno, from all eternity, but in time. Lastly, Whereas St. Paul teacheth, Rom. 3.24, 25. that We are justified by the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through Faith in his blood: from hence also it followeth, that our sins are actually pardoned, and we justified from them in time, and not from all eternity. For it cannot be said of our Election (and there is the same reason of every other immanent, and eternal Act of God) that we were elected through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, as a cause thereof. For our Election is immediately of God's grace, and not effected by any external means, or for any external cause, extra Deum without God himself, no more than are opera ulla ejus ad intrà any of his internal acts, or works. For as much therefore, as the Apostle teacheth, That we are justified by the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through Faith in his blood, unto me it seemeth very evident, that our justification can be none of the immanent and eternal works of God, that are acted altogether within himself. Object. I know, there are those that do object against this that I have said, those words of St Paul, 2 Thess. 2.13 where he telleth them, That God had from the beginning, chosen them unto salvation through sanctification of the Spirit, and belief of the truth. But his meaning is not, That sanctification of the Spirit, and Faith of the truth, were any causes, no nor means of their Election, but of their salvation; as if he should have said, God hath from the beginning chosen you unto salvation, to be enjoyed and possessed of you, by being sanctified by God's Spirit, and by believing in Christ, as by means leading thereunto. Thus the Apostle, in saying he hath chosen you unto salvation, that is, to obtain salvation by sanctification of the Spirit, and the belief of the truth, maketh these means, of their salvation not of their Election. Yea not only the Orthodox Protestant Divines, but Popish Doctors also do thus expound these words of St. Paul, amongst whom Estius commenteth thus upon them. The effects of God's Election, ordained unto salvation are hereby signified; as if he should say, God hath chosen you; or hath taken you unto salvation, by means thereunto allotted, to wit, through sanctification of the Spirit, and Faith of the truth. Theophylact also (alleged by him) thus expoundeth these words, God hath from the beginning, that is, from eternity, chosen you unto salvation through sanctification of the Spirit, that is, (saith he) he hath saved us in sanctifying us by the Spirit. Thus our salvation is by means, but our Election is the immediate work, or act of God whereof there can no cause or reason be given, nisi bene placitum Divinum, but Gods own gracious good pleasure. This that I have thus taught, is the Doctrine of the most Orthodox Divines. I cannot therefore but wonder, what should move the most illustrious Chamier to say, quòd amari mereamur à Deo per imputationem justitiae Christi, et quôd inde diligamur, et destinemur vitae aeternae, that we deserve to be loved of God through the imputation of Christ's righteousness, and that thereupon we are beloved and allotted, or elected unto eternal life. This, I say, seemeth unto me, a most strange assertion: for hence it would follow, that God's Love and his Election, were not free, or altogether gratuitous. But God speaking unto his Church and people saith dilexi te gratis, I have loved thee freely. And St. Paul teacheth, that God hath predestinated us to the adoption of sons by Jesus Christ, according to the good pleasure of his will. The same Apostle also saith, that the Election of God's people, is of grace. Now merit and free love and grace cannot stand together. Christ indeed hath merited all the saving effects of God's Love: at, dilectio ipsamet Dei est gratuitae, but Gods love itself is not merited, but free. He loveth us merely ex beneplacito suo, of his good pleasure. This love of his is the cause why he gave us his only begotten Son to work our salvation, John 3.16. This love of his therefore must needs be the cause also of all Christ's merits, both of our redemption, justification, adoption, sanctification, and glorification. Neither our justification therefore, nor any other of these can be the cause of God's love, if we shall speak properly of his love, and not of some one or other effects thereof. But proceed we to the next thing, wherein Chamierus dissenteth from that which is most commonly taught by other Protestants, concerning our justification. This learned man also teacheth, contrary to the common Doctrine of the Protestants, that there are no preparations unto our justification. Now if it were, as he saith, that our justification is an eternal Act of God, this would necessarily follow. But seeing we are not actually justified until we do believe in Christ, and are not ordinarily brought to renounce ourselves, and to put the whole confidence of our salvation in Christ, until we be wrought upon, and prepared thereunto both by the Law and the Gospel, as is to be showed in the next Question: therefore seeing he produceth nothing that I have met with, for confirmation of this his assertion, I will leave the further examination, and sifting of it unto its due place. And so I come to the last thing, that by the learned Chamierus is asserted in opposition to the common Doctrine of Protestants, and that is, That we are not justified by Faith in Christ: for he speaketh expressly and saith, falsum est fidem impetrare justificationem, It's false that Faith obtaineth justification. For confirmation whereof he reasoneth thus, If it were so, then Faith should go before our justification, both in reason, and in time, which may by no means be granted. For Faith itself, is by itself a part of our sanctification; but there is no sanctification, but it is after justification, which in deed, and in nature, is before it. Which is the cause why we do say, that Faith doth not otherwise justify but relatively, that is, because it hath for its peculiar object the mercy of God, on which it relieth: Now this is that properly that justifieth, as the Church is built relatively upon the Faith of Peter, that is, upon Christ, whom the Faith of Peter confessed. That I may examine these things in order, as they lie. First, whereas he saith, If Faith should obtain our justification, than Faith should go before our justification, both in reason, and in time. I deny this consequence, for from hence it followeth only, that Faith goeth before our justification in order of nature, or in reason; but not in time, because a man is justified at the same instant that he layeth hold on Christ, & believeth in him. But he denieth, that Faith goeth before our justification in any respect at all, & his reason is, because Faith is a part of our sanctification: but there is no sanctification, but it is after justification, which indeed and in nature is before it. The first of these Propositions, I do willingly grant, that Faith is a part of sanctification: but whereas he assumeth, that there is nosanctification, but it is after justification, I cannot assent unto him in this. For many worthy Divines do hold, that sanctification is before justification: their judgement therefore, I might oppose unto the learned Chamiers, & others that hold the contrary: For the clearing of this matter, I do distinguish of sanctification, and say, that it is either habitual, and so God doth sanctify us by infusing holiness into us; or actual and so we do sanctify ourselves by renouncing the works of sin, and living holily. Of both these Moses speaketh, when he saith, Sanctify yourselves and be ye holy, for I am the Lord your God, and ye shall keep my Statutes and do them, Leu. 20.7.8. for I am the Lord which sanctify you. When the Lord saith here, Sanctify yourselves and be ye holy; this must be understood of actual sanctification, that is, of holiness that is to be actually performed by us. But whereas the Lord useth this as a reason to stir us up hereunto, [for I am the Lord which sanctify you] this is spoken of habitual sanctification. For how doth the Lord sanctify us, but by infusing the habit, or the internal grace of holiness into us, whereby we are enabled to perform the several acts of holiness, or to live holily, the effectual excitation of God's blessed Spirit herewith concurring. But because these words of the Lord, which I have alleged, though they speak of a twofold sanctification, are taken in another sense by very learned Divines, than this that I have given: for confirmation therefore of habitual sanctification, I do allege those words of St. Paul, 1 Thess. 5.23. where he prayeth, that God would sanctify them wholly, or throughly. And those 1 Cor. 1.30. where he saith, That Christ is made unto us sanctification, See also 1 Pet. 1.2. Now of actual sanctification St. Paul speaketh when he saith, This is the will of God, even your sanctification, that ye should abstain from fornication: that every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour: not in the lust of concupiscence, even as the Gentiles which know not God. Hereof also speaketh St. Peter in that precept of his, Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts. In these, and in other places, the Scripture speaketh of Sanctification both habitual wrought in us by God; himself, and of sanctification acted, and wrought by us through the assistance of God's Spirit, exciting us unto holiness. Whereas then this most learned Divine saith, That there is no sanctification but it is after justification, this is true, if it be understood of actual sanctication. For we are first justified by Faith, and then this Faith inflameth our hearts with the love of God, and stirreth us up to glorify him, and to serve him in holiness and righteousness, according to all his commandments. Thus the several works of holiness and righteousness, do proceed from Faith, Etiamsi non elicitiuè, imperatiuè tamen, though not elicitly, yet imperatively, Faith stirreth us up unto them. For as St. Paul saith, The end of the commandment is love, out of a pure heart, and a good conscience, 1 Tim. 1.5. and Faith unfeigned. It is true therefore, that Faith and therefore justification, which is thereby laid hold of, and obtained, is before actual sanctification. For (as this learned man saith well) fides vera est fons et scaturigo omnium bonorum operum in fidelibus. De sola fide justificante, Lib. 22. cap. 12. True Faith is the fountain and source of all good works in the faithful. But I cannot say that there is no sanctification, but it is after justification: for habitual Faith is a part of habitual anctification. Now the infused habits of grace, such as Faith is, are before their acts. If therefore it can be proved, that adulti, or such as are of capacity and understanding, are not justified without, or before actual Faith, than it will inevitably follow, that there is some sanctification, that is not after justification. Yea, (beside what hath been said already, to prove that we are actually justified by Faith and not without it) methinketh Chamierus himself doth as good as grant it, when he saith, Verum est, proptereà nos factos in Christo justitiam Dei, quòd Christo nos simus incorporati per fidem; It is true that we are therefore made the righteousness of God in Christ, because we are incorporated into him by Faith. We are not then justified before Faith, or before we do believe in Christ. Again, this most excellent Divine saith, In adultis fatemur remissionem peccatorum ab inhaerente justitiâ nunquam sepaerari, We confess, that remission of sins is never separated from inherent righteousness in those that are grown in years. But, say I, many of the Elect after they have the use of reason and understanding, being well grown in years, do yet live in sin for some time, and do not serve God in righteousness, until he by his grace doth afterward convert them. According therefore to his own Doctrine, it followeth, that justification from sin, at least in adultis, in those that are grown in years, doth not go before Faith; But, saith he. Faith justifieth relatiuè, as it hath for its proper & peculiar object the mercy of God, on which it relieth. Whence (as I conceive) he would have it inferred, That seeing the mercy of God is eternal, therefore our justification is so also, and therefore before Faith. Now hereunto I answer, that though Christ's righteousness be materialiter the proper object of our justification, or that which is imputed to us for our justification. Yet I will not deny, burr that God's mercy considered as the internal cause moving God to justify us, may thus be said to be the proper, and peculiar object on which our Faith relieth for justification. But it doth not follow hereupon, that we were justified ab aeterno, from everlasting, because God's mercy is the cause of our justification: no more than that we are sanctified and glorified eternally, because our sanctification and glorification are wholly of God's mercy: Quest. 7. Whether any previous dispositions, preparations, or qualifications be required of men in the Gospel, that they may be partakers of salvation by Christ. SECT. I. The Preparations that go before our Regeneration and Conversion. THose that take upon them to be the only Preachers of Freegrace, do condemn us, who teach that men must repent and believe, if they will be saved, for requiring such qualifications and preparations in them. If the promise of salvation, and justification, (saith Mr. Hobson) had been tendered to us, as a looking upon some qualification in us, and not bringing, in the bowels of it, a power to produce all qualifications in us, it had not been free, but still a Covenant of works; but it is free, therefore there is a great deal of comfort to poor Souls. And Mr. S. saith, That Christ is offered to sinners as sinners, and that no qualification is required of them, that they may be saved by him. Reconcil. of God to man, pag. 40. Mr. D. also telleth us, That a man is to believe, that God is his Father in Christ, without any precedent qualifications. Thus do they teach: but we think it not good to speak thus confusedly of this matter, knowing that many by these and the like speeches, which they meet with in these men's writings, are led into most dangerous errors. To avoid therefore mistaking, we say, that salvation may be taken either pro salute inchoatâ, or consummatâ, that is, either for our salvation as it is begun in us, in our regeneration, or in our conversion from sin to righteousness, and from infidelity or incredulity, to Faith in Christ; or else for our salvation, as it shall be consummated and perfected in us in heaven. If we shall speak o salvation in the former sense, we do not say, That Faith and Repentance are precedent qualifications or previous qualifications, or previous dispositions unto it; for than we should be said to be saved, before we are saved; or saved and not saved, which is a manifest contradiction. For our salvation is begun in our conversion to God by Repentance and Faith in Christ. It is no new light, but the constant Doctrine formerly taught, as well as now, by all Orthodox Protestants, that homo in primo puncto conversionis suae se habeat mere passiuè, et obedientialiter, that is, that man in the first instant of his conversion, is no actor, but a receiver of grace, wrought in him by the Spirit of God; but in the next instant, actus agit, being thus acted, or wrought upon by God, he also acteth, or cooperateth, and worketh with God. And yet though we do constantly teach thus, we do not reject all previous dispositions, or preparations to saving grace, or to the very first beginning of our salvation in our conversion to God, & to Christ. For the Law, Rom. 3.21. must ordinarily first be preached unto sinners, to prepare and make way for the Gospel; For by the Law cometh the knowledge of sin. As long as men are ignorant thereof, they are ready to rely on themselves, & do not see that they stand in any great need of Christ, as it is to be seen in our ignorant people, who put the confidence of their salvation, not in Christ only, and in his merits, but in their good prayers, & good serving of God, and good meaning, boasting and bragging, that they serve God truly, and keep all his commandments. Now our blessed Saviour, offereth not himself unto such justiciaries, as such, or while they continue such: but rejecteth them, Matt. 9.13. and telleth them, that he came not to call the righteous, his meaning is, those that justify themselves, and are righteous in their own conceits, but sinners, that is, such as acknowledge themselves sinners, unto Repentance, and consequently unto salvation. And in the same sense he telleth us, Matt. 9.12. that the whole have no need of the Physician, but they that are sick; hereby giving us to understand, that as men slight the Physician, and will not send for him, until they are afraid of sickness; so neither will any seek to him, or rely upon him for salvation, until they feel their sins, which are the deadly sicknesses and maladies of their souls. Such poor and such distressed sinners therefore they are, whom Christ inviteth unto him, and promiseth to relieve them, when he saith, Matth. 11.28. Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will ease you. And Esay 61.1, 2, 3. he telleth us, that the Lord sent him to cure, and to save, not all in general, or sinners as sinners, as Mr. S. speaketh, but poor, contrite, and broken hearted sinners; for so he saith, The spirit of the Lord is upon me, therefore he hath anointed me, he hath sent me to preach the Gospel unto the poor, to bind up the broken hearted, and to comfort those that mourn in Zion. All these say of our blessed Saviour himself, do evince and make it manifest, that there are some previous dispositions, necessary to the receiving of Christ, even those which I have thus spoken of with some others. Concerning which our own learned Divines, at the Synod at Dort, in their Suffragium Collegiale do speak excellently. I'll therefore set down their words at large, as they are delivered in two distinct Theses. I. There are certain outward works ordinarily required of men, before they are brought to the estate of Regeneration, or Conversion, which are wont sometimes to be freely done by them, and sometimes freely omitted; as to go to the Church, to hear the word preached, and others of the like sort. Rom. 10.14. It is manifest that such are required. How shall they believe in him, of whom they have not heard. Now that these are in our own power, both reason telleth us, seeing every one hath ability to move, or not to move from place to place; and experience proveth it, seeing we see that men in outward things, do either do this or that, as they think good, or omit them both. They may sit still at home therefore, when they should go to the Church, & they may stop their ears when the Minister is preaching the Gospel. Mark 6.20 Acts 13.14. Herod heard John willingly. The Jews refused to hear the Gospel. Psal. 58.5. The wicked do stop their ears like deaf asps. II. There are certain internal effects previous unto a man's Conversion, or Regeneration, which by the power of God's Word and Spirit, are excited in the hearts of men, as yet not justified; such as the knowledge of God's Will, the sense of sin, the fear of punishment, thoughts about their deliverance, and some hopes of pardon. God by his grace is not wont to bring men to the state of justification, wherein we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by a sudden enthusiasm; but being first subdued, and prepared with many previous actions, in the ministry of the word. This we may see in those who upon the hearing of St. Peter's Sermon, feel the burden of sin, are afraid, do mourn, desire deliverance, and conceive some hope of pardon; Acts 2.37. all which may be gathered out of those words, When they had heard these things, they were pricked in their hearts, and said unto Peter and the other Apostles, Men and brethren, what shall we do? This is the very nature of the thing required. For as in the natural generation of a man, there are many previous dispositions, which go before the introduction of the form; so also in the spiritual, by many antecedent actions of grace, do we come to our spiritual maturity. This lastly, is apparent by the instruments, which God useth in regenerating men: for he useth the ministry of men, and the instrument of the word, 1 Cor. 4.15. I have begotten you by the Gospel, But if God would immediately regenerate and justify a wicked man, prepared hereunto with no sorrow, no desire, no hope of pardon, there would be no need, neither of the ministry of men, nor of the word preached, for the effecting thereof, neither need the Ministers to take any care to divide the word aright, first by wounding the consciences of their hearers, aptly and prudently with the terrors of the Law, and afterwards by raising them up with the Promises of the Gospel, and exhorting them to seek Repentance and Faith of God, by prayers and tears. Thus far, those worthy Divines. SECT. II. The Preparations that are necessary to our future glorification, and perfect salvation in Heaven. THus I have showed what qualifications are necessary to the receiving of saving grace, and consequently to the first beginning of our salvation by Christ. Now if we shall speak of our salvation, as it shall be consummated, and perfected in Heaven, it is most true, that we must also by God's grace, and by his Spirit be qualified, renewed and prepared for it, as our Saviour himself assureth us in these words, Matth. 5.20. For I say unto you, that except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharises, ye shall in no case enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. Heb. 12.14. Consonantly unto this the Apostle telleth us, that without holiness no man shall see the Lord, that is, in his kingdom, and to his comfort. For all unclean persons shall be excluded out of the new Jerusalem, as St. John also beareth witness, 1 Cor. 6.9. Revel. 21.27. Whereunto St. Paul also subscribeth, when he saith, Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God. Wherefore if salvation be taken for our complete salvation in Heaven, so Sanctification, Faith, Repentance, John 3.16.38. Luke 13.3. Rev. 19.7. and good works go before it, although not as any meritorious causes thereof, yet as preparations to it, as we are given to understand, when it is said, The marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself ready; and the next words show how, not by any natural power or ability of her own, sed dono Dei, but by God's free gift or grace; for so it followeth, and to her was granted, that she should be arrayed in fine linen, clean and white, for the fine linen, is the righteousness of Saints. And that it is necessary for us thus, (subsidio gratiae divinae) by the assistance of God's grace, to prepare ourselves to meet Christ in his Kingdom of glory, both the parable of the five wise Virgins, Matth. 25. that prepared their lamps to meet the bridegroom showeth, and St. John also confirmeth it, when he saith, 1 Joh. 3.3. whosoever hath this hope in him, that is, to see Christ Jesus in his glory, and to be glorified with him, he purifieth himself as he is pure. These things which I have thus alleged, do manifest and make it evident, that God sanctifieth, prepareth, and maketh his Elect fit for his Kingdom of Glory, before he doth admit, and receive them into it. SECT. III. An Objection answered. Object. BUt against this Doctrine Mr. H. Mr. S. and the rest of them, do object and say, That if such previous dispositions, qualifications, and preparations, do go before our justification, and salvation, than our salvation shall not be of grace, but of works, Answ. and so the Gospel will be a Covenant of works. It's true indeed, if we did hold as the Papists do, that we by such works of preparation, do merit our salvation, than it should be of works, and not of grace: but we are far from this. For first, we say, that God of his grace, by his Word, and Spirit doth work these preparations in us, and not we ourselves, by any strength or power of our own free will. Secondly we therefore acknowledge, and say, that it is of his mere grace, that he doth both justify, and sanctify us, and after our warfare is ended, crowns us with the glory of his Kingdom. Over, and besides all this, we do also acknowledge that many of those in whom the common graces of the Spirit are wrought, whereby the Elect are ordinarily ●ted and prepared for the work of regeneration, 〈◊〉 through their own negligence, and wickedness que●● the Spirit, and fall away from the grace, which they 〈◊〉 thus received, and so are never regenerated; but ju●● rejected of God for their unthankfulness, and ne●●r brought by him into the estate of salvation. We do 〈◊〉 therefore say, nor do we hold, that the regeneration, 〈◊〉 conversion of a sinner doth necessarily spring as it were or arise out of these previous dispositions, as natura forms do out of the matter, when it is rightly disposed for them: for even the Elect themselves after they are thus wrought upon, and disposed by the Word and Spirit of God, do many times grow careless, and do too much neglect the means of their salvation, and so would utterly perish, if God should leave them to themselves: but high Love towards them is such, that he rouseth and raiset them out of their security, and in due time by his wor and Spirit, converteth them, and bringeth them into th' estate of grace. This that we thus teach, and acknowledge, doth make it evident, that our justification, sanctification, and whole salvation, is of grace, and not of a● works of ours. It's false therefore, that we (as they char us) do by our Doctrine make the Gospel a Covenant works. But hereof more at large Quest 14. SECT. FOUR More Objections answered. A Good while after I had thus answered the former Objection, in a private conference, which I had with ●ne, who denied all antecedent preparations to a sinner's conversion, he spoke unto me to this effect. Let Christ be offered unto sinners, Object. and let the riches ●f God's grace be manifested, and made known unto ●hem, for that alone will be a sufficient means to make ●hem to receive Christ, and to come in unto him, yea, ●nd to love and obey him. Whereas on the contrary, the preaching of the Law, hath kept men from Christ, and hath hindered the salvation of many souls. Hereunto I replied, that no doubt many will be ready to come in unto Christ, Answer. and make a formal profession of his name, when the Gospel is thus preached unto them; but unless they be humbled by the Law, and brought to see in what need they stand of Christ, their conversion will prove no better, than that of those heathen people, whom the King of Assyria, 2 Kings 2.17. when he had carried away the ten Tribes, brought from Babylon, and other places to inhabit the Cities of Samaria, instead of the children of Israel. For as those heathen people, when one of the Priests of the captivated Israelites, was by the King of Assyria sent unto them to instruct them, how the God of Israel was to be worshipped; are said after this to have borh worshipped the Lord, and the gods of those Nations whence they came. So if the Gospel only be preached, to men before they have been brought by the Law to see what miserable sinners they are, they hearing, that Christ by his death hath redeemed us from hell, and purchased Heaven for us, may readily receive him for their Saviour, and profess his name: but so, that they will still retain the same ignorant and proud conceit of their own good deeds, and good deserving as they did before, For so we see many of our people that are ignorant of the Law, in words to acknowledge Christ for their Saviour, and yet if they be asked how they hope to be saved, they will tell you, for their good prayers, and for their good meaning, and good serving of God. And thus indeed all men naturally, are ready to rely upon themselves until by the Law they come to see their sins, and the great wrath that is hanging over their heads for them. Wherefore as the Law was first given, and, after that man had transgressed it, Gen. 3.15. the Gospel, or evangelical Promise of salvation by Christ, was made known unto him: So the Law is first to be preached unto men, and set before them as a lookingglass, that they may by comparing themselves with it, see their sins, and see and perceive in what a woeful state and condition they are. And when they are humbled and do renounce and deny themselves altogether, acknowledging that if God should enter into judgement with them, they must needs be damned to the everlasting torments of hell: now is the Gospel to be preached unto them, and Jesus Christ and the merits of his grace are in their excellency & greatest lustre, to be set forth before them. For now when they are truly humbled with the sight & sense of their sins, and of that woeful condition wherein they are because of them, they will highly esteem of Jesus Christ, and long, and thirst after him, and desirously lay hold on him, and renouncing all other means of salvation, will rest themselves only on him. Yea, now, the more miserable they see themselves to be, the more will they magnify the riches of God's mercy in their salvation by Christ, and the more ardently, and affectionately will they love Christ, and study and strive, to be so much the more thankful unto him for their salvation all their days. For, what is it that enlargeth the heart in thankfulness, but an hearty acknowledgement of the greatness of the benefit, that is done us? As long therefore as a man is ignorant of his sins, and of the danger that he is in by the means of them, he can never acknowledge how greatly he is indebted and beholding unto Christ, for his redemption and salvation, and therefore he can never truly love him, as he ought, nor be truly thankful unto him. You see then how necessary it is, that the Law should be taught, as well as the Gospel. Now, whereas it was objected unto me, Object. That the preaching of the Law was so far from preparing men for Christ, that it hindered the salvation of many. To this I answered, Answ. That if any did preach the Law alone without the Gospel, or if they offer Christ unto their hearers, upon condition that they do exactly fulfil the Law, and so urge and press it on them, as it is the Covenant of works, by the practice and performance whereof, and no otherwise salvation is to be had; no doubt in thus preaching the Law, they may drive some into desperation, and hinder others from Faith in Christ; but shall never be a means of the conversion of any, because no man living can observe the Law, to be justified by it. Yea, I will say more, if any do preach the Law to those, who have timoratas conscientias, tender and trembling consciences, which are so cast down with the sight and sense of their sins, that it is high time to pour the oil of joy, and the balm of the Gospel into their contrite & broken hearts, such undiscreet preaching of the Law, cannot but be a great means to weaken Faith, where it is wrought already, and to hinder others from believing, who by the comfortable Promises of the Gospel, might be encouraged to lay hold of Christ by Faith, and to cast themselves confidently on him for their salvation. But though this be so, yet the preaching of the Law, is as necessary to humble those that see not their sins, and the danger of them, but live securely in them; that so despairing of salvation in themselves, they may seek it by Christ only. Again, after that men do deny themselves, and their own works altogether, and rely only on Christ for salvation, although the Law is not to be pressed on them, as it is a Covenant of works, nor preached in the full latitude thereof; yet that they may not turn the grace of God into lasciviousness, (as St. Judas speaketh) but carry themselves so, that they may glorify the name of God, and not cause it to be blasphemed, it shall be necessary for them, to set the Law before them, as the Rule of their actions, or as a directory, according whereunto they are to frame, and conform their life and conversation. In this regard the moral Law (for of that only I speak) is not abrogated, but subordinated unto the Gospel, yea, and after a sort incorporated into it. For all the duties of the moral Law, may be reduced to these three heads, 1. Piety towards God. 2. Justice or Righteousness towards a man's neighbour. And thirdly, Sobriety, or temperance in ordering of himself. Now all these the Gospel prescribeth and requireth, as well as the Law. ●. 2.11.12 For as St. Paul saith, the grace of God which bringeth salvation, hath appeared to all men, (to wit, in the preaching of the Gospel, not of the Law) teaching that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godlily in this present world. Thus both the Law, and the Gospel do bind us to the practice of all moral duties. Whereupon it is that St. Paul saith, that he did herein exercise himself, Acts 24.16. to have always a conscience void of offence toward God, Object. and toward man. But I know that some of those with whom I now deal, will confess, that such duties are taught in the Gospel, but that we are not bound to them by the Law, it being wholly abrogated. Answer. To whom I return this answer, That the Law indeed is abrogated to Believers, as it is the Covenant of works, or in respect of the condemning power thereof, or of any power we receive thence, to do the duties therein prescribed. Thus as St. Paul hath told us, We are not under the Law, but under Grace. But otherwise the moral Law hath not lost its power, nor its authority, to bind us to to our duties, that we own to God and man. For in this regard, St. Paul allegeth the authority of the Law, to prove that children ought to honour their Parents, Eph. 6.2. and that Christians ought by love to serve one another, For (saith he) all the Law is fulfilled in one word, Gal. 5.13.14. even in this, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. And by alike Argument from the authority of the Law, he proveth, that we ought to love one another. Rom. 13.8, 9 Own no man any thing, but to love one another: for he that loveth another hath fulfilled the Law. For this, thou shalt not commit adultery, thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not bear false witness, thou shalt not covet. And if there be be any other Commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. Jam. 2.8, 9, 10, 11. St. James also teacheth, that believers are bound to the obedience of the Law, when he saith, If you fulfil the Royal Law, according to the Scripture, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself, ye do well. But if ye have respect to persons, ye commit sin, & are * If believers be not bound to the obedience of the Law, they cannot thereby be convicted, as transgressors though they fail never so much in the duties that are therein required. convinced of the Law as transgressors, etc. Now let any reasonable man judge, whether the Apostles of Christ, would thus have alleged the Law to stir up believers to mutual love, and the offices thereof, if the moral Law were altogether abrogated, and had no authority to bind us to the obedience of it, no more than the ceremonial? If any one should tell Christians, that they are bound to be circumcised, or to abstain from the eating of Swine's flesh, because the Ceremonial Law forbiddeth the eating of Swine's flesh, and commandeth every malechild to be Circumcised the eighth day; every one would laugh at such reasoning as this, because the Ceremonial Law is abrogated, and is of no force to bind us to the obedience of it. Now thus ridiculous would these men make both St. Paul and St. James to be, in pressing us to love one another by that precept of the moral Law, which saith, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself, if the moral Law be of no authority now, to bind believers to obedience, but altogether abrogated, as is the Ceremonial. But far be it, that any Christian should thus blasphemously slight, or extenuate the force of the Apostles Argument. It standeth us upon therefore, all of us to say, and to acknowledge every one, 1 Cor. 9.21. for himself, as St. Paul doth, That he is not without Law to God, but under the Law to Christ, that is, as it is Regula vitae et morum, the Rule of our life and of our actions. In this respect St. Paul said of himself, That he did with his mind serve the Law of God, Rom. 7.25. acknowledging that he was subject unto the direction and commanding power and authority of it. And doth not St. Paul also say, That the Woman that hath an husband, is bound by the Law to her husband as long as he liveth, Rom. 7.2. The Law therefore is not abrogated as it is the rule of righteousness, whereby our actions are to be regulated; but we are thus still bound unto the obedience of it. SECT. V Other Objections answered, whereby Mr. S. endeavoureth to prove, that sinners as sinners are called to believe in Christ, without any precedent Qualifications, or Preparations. These for the avoiding of tediousness, I do divide into several ranks. Object. 1. That Faith is not the only work of the Gospel. FIrst he objecteth thus, Faith is the only work of the Gospel. This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom he hath sent. John 6.29. And this is his commandment, that we should believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ, 1 John 3.23. Whence his Conclusion seemeth to be, therefore no Preparations, nor any thing else is required of us, but Faith only. For answer hereunto, I say, Object. that it is one thing to say as our Saviour doth, that Faith is the work of God, and another thing, that it is the only work of God, or of the Gospel, as Mr. S. avoucheth. For when our Saviour saith, this is the work of God, that ye believe in him whom he hath sent, his meaning is, (as St. John in the latter place alleged by him, expresseth it) that Faith in Jesus Christ, is a work commanded and required of us by God. Now so is repentance also, for as St. Paul saith, Acts 17.30; Now, that is, in these days of grace, the Lord commandeth all men every where, to wit, to whom the Gospel is preached, to repent. The Lord also in the Gospel commandeth good works, as necessary effects and fruits both of Faith and Repentance. For Faith worketh by love, Gal. 5.6. And hereupon the Apostle saith, Tit. 3.8. This is a faithful saying, and these things I will that thou affirm constantly, that they which have believed in God, might be careful to maintain good works, these things are good and profitable unto men. And afterwards, ver. 14. he layeth down this precept, Let ours also, that is believers, learn to maintain good works, for necessary uses, that they be not unfruitful. By these places it appeareth, that there are other works commanded of God in the Gospel, beside Faith, and that as Faith hath its necessary uses, so have they also theirs. It doth not follow therefore, because Faith is called the work of God, nor because it is said, this is his Commandment, that we believe in his Son Jesus Christ, that it is the only work of the Gospel, as Mr. S. inferreth; for St. John even in the place which he allegeth, speaketh the same of charity, and saith, 1 John 3.23 This is his Commandment, that we should believe on the name of his son Jesus Christ, and love one another, as he gave us commandment. Again, Faith is also called the work of God, not as if Repentance, and all other good works, were either to be contemned, or neglected; but because it is the only act, or work prescribed us by God, whereby we are to apprehend and receive Christ the bread of life, that we may live eternally by him. Christ in that chapter, calleth himself the living bread which came down from Heaven: 1 John 3.23. and saith, that if any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever, Whereas then our Saviour said unto the Jews, this is the work of God, that ye believe in him whom he hath sent, we may very well conceive his meaning to be, that it is Faith only, and no other work whereby we do receive Christ, and feed upon him to the salvation of our souls. Lastly, It may also be said, that Faith is by our Saviour called the work of God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, seu per modum eminentiae, by way of excellency and eminency, because it doth though not formally, yet virtually contain all other good works in it. Calv. in locum. For, as Calvin saith, Faith excludeth not either charity, or any other good work, seeing it containeth them all in it. For Faith is called the only work of God, because we possessing Christ by it, are made the Sons of God, that he may govern us by his Spirit. Because therefore Christ doth not separate Faith from its fruits, non mirum est, si in eâ constituat proram (ut loquuntur) et puppim, it is no marvel if he do include all in it. By this that hath been said, it appeareth evidently, that although faith in Christ be the only work of God, which he requireth of us to our justification; yet it is not the only work of God absolutely, as if he required nothing else but Faith of us, or as if he commanded us to practise none other good works in our life and conversation: though otherwise in some sense, or in some respect and to some purpose (as hath been before showed) it may be said to be the only work of God. Before I do proceed unto Mr. S. his second Objection, I have thought good to demolish those other fortifications, which he hath raised, and reared up to uphold his former assertion, that Faith is the only work of the Gospel. Object. First, He argueth thus, Salvation is not a business of our working and doing, it was done by Christ with the Father. All our work is no work of salvation, but in salvation. We here receive all, not by doing any thing that we may receive more: but doing, because we receive so much, because we do not that we may be saved. And yet we are to do as much as if we were to be saved by what we do; because we should do as much for what is done already for us, and to our hands, as if we were to receive it for what we did ourselves. Answ. That I may examine these things severally, 1. Whereas he saith, Salvation is not a business of our working and doing, it was done by Christ with the Father. Hereunto I answer, That Christ only saveth us, per modum meriti, by his merits purchasing our salvation. Secondly, He also only saveth us, tanquam author salutis nostrae, as the author or principal efficient cause of our salvation, by his Spirit regenerating us, and by his power delivering us from the servitude of sin and Satan. There is nothing therefore for us to do by way of merit, neither can we do any thing, that may any way conduce to our salvation virtute propriâ nostrâ, by our own power, or by our own strength. Notwithstanding there are many things for us to do by the grace of God, before we shall perfectly be saved, even all those good works that God requireth of us, which are as it were the way to Heaven. Eph. 2.10. For as St. Paul saith, We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them. In this regard we are not to be idle, or to do nothing; but as we are commanded, we are to work out our salvation with fear and trembling, that is, Phil. 2.12. we are to use the means, which God hath appointed, that we may come to Heaven, and take possession of that salvation, which Christ hath purchased for us. In which regard St. Peter also counselled his hearers, Acts 2.40. to save themselves from that untoward generation of the incredulous Jews amongst whom they lived, to wit, by departing from their infidelity and evil works. 1 Tim. 4.18 And St. Paul exhorteth Timothy, to attend unto himself, and to doctrine, and to continue therein, telling him, that in so doing, he should both save himself, (by the faithful discharge of his duty) & those that did hear him, by converting them to faith in Christ and leading them in the right way to Heaven. But saith Mr. S. All our work is no work Of salvation, but In salvation. But I answer him, It is both: for the work of a Christian, is to work out his salvation in that sense and in that manner, as he is commanded by St. Paul (as I have already sufficiently showed). And it is a work also In salvation, because it is performed and done by those who are in statu salutis in the state of salvation, or whose salvation is already begun in their Regeneration and Sanctification. But saith he, We here receive all, not by doing any thing that we may receive more: but doing because we receive so much, because we do not that we may be saved. What, Mr. S.! Do we here receive all? that is, if you speak consonantly to yourself, all our whole salvation? I had thought, that we had received only the a Rom. 8.23. first fruits of the Spirit, as b 2 Cor. 1.22. Eph. 1.13.14. an earnest, or a seal of our salvation, to be perfected in Heaven as St. Paul teacheth, and that we are in regard theteof only saved in c Rom. 8.24 hope, and do here wait for d Rom. 8.23, 24. the accomplishment of our adoption, the redemption full and final of our body. How then can you say, that We are not to do any thing, that we may receive more? more than we have, & are actually possessed of already? But say you, We are not to do that we may be saved. Is it so indeed? Are we to do nothing that we may be saved? This is new light, or rather a new delusion of the Devil. For when those Jews that were pricked in their hearts with sorrow and remorse at the hearing of St. Peter's Sermon, Acts 2. said unto him, and to the rest of the Apostles, Men and Brethren, What shall we do? Peter answered them not, Ye need to do nothing, Christ hath done all for you: but Repent, Acts 2.37. and be baptised every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins. Thus St. Peter teacheth, that there is something to be done of us, for the obtaining of the forgiveness of our sins, Acts 16.30. and consequently of salvation by Christ. And in like manner when the Jailor came trembling to Paul and Silas, and said unto them, Sirs, what must I do to be saved? St. Paul did not check him for this question of his he told him not that it savoured of gross ignorance, for him to ask what he was to do that he might be saved? but answered him and said, Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house. Both these Apostles, do inform us, that there is something to be done of us, that we may be saved, that is, that we must repent, and believe in Christ, and be fruitful in all good works, which are inseparable effects of Faith and Repentance. Whereupon St. Paul exhorteth us, not to be weary of well doing, Gal. 6.9. and to encourage us hereunto, he telleth us, that in due time we shall reap if we faint not. There is something then to be done or us, (contrary to Mr. S. his assertion) that we may receive more than we have already. For (as we are here by the Apostle given to understand) this present life of ours, is but the seed time, wherein we are to sow the seeds of virtue and good works, and hereafter at Christ's appearing, the harvest cometh, when we shall reap a crop of glory. This is the expectation of all true believers, for as St. Paul saith, 1 Cor. 15.19 had we hope in Christ only in this life, we were of all men the most miserable, Lastly, Whereas he saith, We are to do as much, as if we were to be saved by what we do; because we should do as much for what is done already for us, and to our hands, as if we were to receive it for what we did ourselves. Hereunto I answer, That seeing God's glory is to be preferred before our own salvation, therefore we ought both to desire, and to endeavour, were it possible, to do not as much, but more for what is done for us already, as if we were to be saved by what we do ourselves. But otherwise, I must tell him, that if we would obtain our salvation for our own works, than we must look to it, that they be pure and perfect, and that we do all that the Law requireth, without failing in any thing. But he that shall challenge such perfection to himself, is to be ranked amongst proud Pharisees, and deserveth not the name of an humble, and lowly hearted Christian. For a farewell therefore to this first reason of his, I would know how Faith can be the only work of the Gospel, if the Gospel do teach us to do as much in way of thankfulness to God for our redemption, and salvation, as if we were to redeem, and save ourselves. Object. 2 I come now to his next Reason, whereby he endeavourete to prove, That Faith is the only work of the Gospel. Salvation (saith he) is a short work. Believe and thou shalt be saved, Rom. 10.10. Answ. But I must tell him, As short as he maketh it, there will be work enough for the believer all his life long; for the Faith which St. Paul speaketh of, will not suffer a believer to be idle, or unfruitful, but, as he himself telleth us, Gal. 5.6. 1 Cor. 15.58 it worketh by love; yea it stirreth up believers, always to abound in the work of the Lord. Mt. S. his Faith therefore, if it be without works, and do set all upon Christ's score, as if he had repent for us, and done all for us, that we ourselves should do, is no better, as St. James telleth us, Jam. 2.17. than a dead Faith. Object. 3 Now whereas he saith, It is the Gospel way of dispensation to assure and pass over salvation in Christ, to any that will believe. Answ. I grant it is so, but must tell him, that true Faith, (as our Saviour himself teacheth us) is to believe the Gospel, Mark 1.15. The Faith therefore that is not founded on the Promises of the Gospel, but a man's own fancy (as is the Faith which Mr. S. requireth) is not a true, but a false Faith. Object. 4 But, saith he, There needs no more on our sides, to work or warrant salvation to us; but to be persuaded, that Jesus Christ died for us, because Christ hath suffered, and God is satisfied. Now suffering and satisfaction that great work of salvation. How Christ by his Passion hath wrought the great work of our salvation, I have already showed. But it followeth not hereupon, that there is nothing to be done by us in a lower way for we must walk in that narrow way of which our Saviour speaketh, Matth. 7.14. Matt. 7.14. that leadeth unto life, or else we shall never come to Heaven, nor have any part in that salvation, which is there purchased, and prepared by Christ for his Saints. It's therefore not only a false, but a most impious, and most dangerous assertion to say, as here Mr. S. doth, That there needs no more on our sides, to work or warrant salvation to us; but to be persuaded that Jesus Christ died for us. If this were so, then indeed salvation would be a short work. For not only all those must needs be saved, who are persuaded that Christ died for all men absolutely, and therefore for themselves in particular, but also the most lose, and licentious Libertines, and carnal Gospelers that are; for even those, if not all, yet many of them do persuade themselves, that Christ died for them, as well as for any other: but this Faith of theirs, is nothing else, but most deadly and damnable presumption, as is showed in the 15. Question. Lastly, Whereas he objecteth, and saith, They only Object. 5 are justified who believe, Rom. 1.17. Acts 13.39. And that we are justified by grace, not of works. Rom. 3. 2●. Answ. This we willingly grant, but tell him that there is more required to our salvation, than to our justification. For as Bernard saith excellently well, Bona operae, De gratiae et libero arbitrio. sunt occultae praedestinationis indicia, futurae glorificationis praesagia, via regni, non causa regnandi. Good works are tokens of our predestination, that otherwise lieth hidden from us, foretokens of our future glorification, the way to the Kingdom, but not the cause of the crown. Whosoever therefore liveth here idly, and worketh not, nor employeth the talon, which he hath received of his heavenly Lord and Master, shall never come to Heaven; Matth. 25.30. but be cast into utter darkness, where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Again whereas he saith, They only are justified who believe. We acknowledge this true, but tell him, that no man believeth until he seethe his own misery by sin, and in what great need he standeth of Christ, as hath been already showed. Albeit then we are justified by Faith only, yet this Faith is not ordinarily to be had, without some precedent qualifications, such as are the hearing of the word, denial of a man's own self, and of his righteousness, and a belief of persuasion, that salvation is to be had by Christ only. Object. 2. God's love is not offered to all equally and indifferently, or to all absolutely. Object. 2 Secondly, He allegeth also these say of holy Scripture against us, as if they excluded all preparation to Faith, God commendeth his love towards us, in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us, Rom. 5.8. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him might not perish, but have eternal life. John 3.16. And this offer, is an offer of God's love wherewith he loved us from everlasting. Answ. So he: but to the contrary, I say, That God's eternal love is not here offered to all, as he would have it; there can no such thing be deduced and drawn from either of these places: for in the former St. Paul showeth, what manner of persons believers were in themselves, when Christ out of his love died for them, they were not righteous, but sinners; in the latter, our Saviour himself showeth, what it was that moved God to give his Son to death for us; it was his surpassing, and incomparable love, and nothing else. Now, how Mr. S, will frame an Argument, either from the Apostles, or from our Saviour's words against preparations before Faith, I know not, unless it be thus. God loved all equally, loved them to make them partakers of Christ, and of salvation by him; therefore in preaching the Gospel, nothing is to be required of any, but all are to believe, that they shall be saved by Christ, whether they be penitent for sin, or rejoice and delight in sin; and whether they purpose, and resolve to leave sin, or to live in sin. Now I grant indeed, That this Conclusion were to be admitted, if the antecedent whence it is deduced were true, that is, if God did love all absolutely unto their eternal salvation, and had no purpose to work any change or alteration in them, while they live here. But this is palpably false, for whom God loveth eternally, and before all time, they receive in time through the gracious operation of his Spiit, the necessary effects of this his love, that is contrition and compunction of heart for sin, Faith in Christ for the forgiveness of sin, conversion to God from all sin, and all other saving graces, to the accomplishment of their their salvation. It's false therefore, that sinners are only to believe, that God loveth them, and that they are reconciled unto him by Christ's death, as Mr. D. and Mr. S. do teach, and that nothing else, but such a bare Faith is to be required of them, that they may thereby know, and be assured, that they are justified, and partakers of Christ. For God loveth not all unto salvation; but the Elect only, whom in time he bringeth by degrees to the possession of that salvation, by preparing them for it in that manner, as the Gospel teacheth, and letteth none lie still rotting in their sins, without any true Faith, or Repentance, but only wicked reprobates, whom he suffereth to walk in the broad way, that leadeth unto destruction. Object. 3. It exalteth Grace more to receive broken hearted than Object. 3 obdurate sinners. He farther urgeth, It exalteth Grace more to receive a sinner, who hath no money, no price, no righteousness. His meaning is, That it maketh more to the glory of God's grace, that he receive sinners as sinners, without any sorrow for, or sense and feeling of their sins, rather than humbled and sinners, that see and perceive how miserable they are in themselves, and in what great need they do stand of a Saviour. But I answer him, That maketh most to the magnifying and exalting of God's grace, which he himself requireth, and prescribeth; and not which sinful men in their carnal, and fleshly wisdom do fancy and like best, or which they judge to be most for the setting forth of his grace. Now it is evident, that God offereth Christ to none, but to those that acknowledge their sins, and feel the burden of them. Matth. 11.5.28. Isa. 61.1, 2. Yea, even that very place which Mr. S. allegeth, proveth against him, that some preparations go before Faith in Christ, to wit, a thirsting after him, and his graces, which cannot be unless a man feel his misery by sin, and see in what need he standeth of Christ; even as a man never thirsteth corporally, until he is pained with heat, and dryness, and feeleth in what need he standeth of drink. These very words therefore of the prophet Isay, Ho every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath no money: come ye, buy and eat, yea come, buy wine and milk without money and without price, are produced by him against himself. For all are not here invited to come to Christ, and to be made partakers of his graces, not sinners as sinners, as he will have it, that is sinners continuing in their sins, without any purpose to leave them, yea not so much as acknowledging their sins, and their misery by means of them: but first, such sinners, who feeling their great need of Christ, do thirst after him; and secondly, such as have no money, and therefore do offer no price for him; that is, who do acknowledge that they have no merits of their own, nor can do any thing to purchase, or procure God's favour. Having thus wrested his weapon out of his hands, and turned it against himself. I must now tell him, that whereas he saith, That it exalteth grace more, to receive a sinner that hath no money, no price, no righteousness, that is, in his sense, all sorts of sinners, though they do not so much as feel nor acknowledge their sins; rather than those, that being cast down with the sight and sense of their sins, do acknowledge they have no money, no price, nor no righhteousnesse of their own; I must (I say) tell him, that he is much deceived in this; for first, it standeth not with God's justice, and his hatred of sin, to pardon sinners without working any change in them at all; but suffering them to continue, and remain still in their sins. The holy Prophet David disclaimeth this, and speaketh against him when he saith, Psal. 5.4. Thou art not a God that hath pleasure in wickedness neither shall evil dwell with thee. The foolish shall not stand in thy sight, thou hatest all workers of iniquity. Again, I say further, God's grace is most exalted when sinners do most acknowledge the riches of his grace, and are most thankful to him for it. Now so are they, who do most feel the burden of their sins, and do most apprehend their spiritual misery, as it is to be seen in the penitent woman, Luke 7. Luke 7.47. the sight and sense of whose many and great sins made her greatly to love Christ. But on the contrary, if God should pardon those that feel not their sins, but are whole in their own conceit, they would either with the Pharisees, ascribe their salvation more to their own works, then to God's grace, or turn the grace of God into lasciviousness, and wax wanton against Christ, as Libertines and carnal Gospelers do, who rely so much on the grace of God, that they have no care to live holily and righteously, to the glory of God's grace, but by their wicked works and deeds of darkness, do cause the name of God to be blasphemed. Rom. 2.24. 1 Tim. 6.1. Object. 4. The Type of the brazen Serpent teacheth us, that we must feel our sins, and be pained with them, before Object. 4 we can come to Christ. Another of Mr. S. his Objections in this, It's right lifting up of Jesus Christ upon the Cross, as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the wilderness, not for the healed to look upon, Answ. but the wounded. But whom doth he here reason against, not the ancient and Orthodox Protestant, for the preparation which they require, to a sinner's conversion, and to his Faith in Christ, is that he do feel the spiritual sicknesses, and diseases of his soul. Now shall we say, as he doth, that this is to be healed. I trow, as long as one feeleth himself sick, he is not healed. But I take it, his meaning is, though by his words he doth not so well express it, That the Israelites that were stung with fiery Serpents, were to do nothing for the recovery of their health, but to look up unto the brazen Serpent; therefore we also are only by Faith to look up unto Christ, and to believe in him, that we may be saved, without any other preparations. Now unto this Objection of his, I do answer, First, that it is not to be expected, that any one Type should absolutely shadow out all things, that were either to be done by Christ, or that are necessarily to be performed by those that shall be saved by him. This Type of the brazen Serpent doth excellently prefigure all these things; First, Our spiritual misery by sin, For as the Israelites were wounded to death with the fiery Serpents: so were we become guilty of eternal death, through the malice of the old fiery, and infernal Serpent the Devil. Secondly, As the brazen Serpent, exalted by Moses, was the only remedy against the venom of the fiery Serpents: so Jesus Christ exalted upon the Cross, is the only remedy against the venom of sin, infused into our nature through the malicious subtlety of the old Serpent the Devil. Thirdly, As the only means whereby the Israelites were cured, that were wounded to death, was by looking up unto the brazen Serpent: so the only means whereby we are saved, is Faith in Christ, whereby we do with the spiritual eyes of our souls look up unto him, as he was exalted on the Cross, and do put the whole confidence of our salvation him. Lastly, As the wounded Israelites that looked up unto the brazen Serpent, being miraculously by this means cured, did not die but live: so whosoever looketh up unto Christ crucified by the eye of Faith, and believeth in him, shall not perish, but have eternal life. All these things are excellently shadowed, and set forth 〈◊〉 our eyes, in this most illustrious Type of 〈…〉: but otherwise it typifieth not the mystery of 〈◊〉 ●●viours incarnation by the immediate power of the holy Ghost, nor the union of his two natures, nor his burial, resurrection from the grave, ascension into Heaven, sitting at the right hand of God, and coming thence to judge the world: yet all these are principal Articles of our Christian Faith, and necessarily to be believed of us, as well as our Saviour's Passion upon the Cross, whereby he paid the price of our redemption. We read not, neither is any mention made of the Israelites thankfulness to God, when they were cured of their deadly wounds, which the fiery serpents gave t 'em: but on the contrary, that they after this rebelled against God: yet I presume it will not be denied by any, that we ought to be thankful to God, for our redemption and salvation by Christ. But to let this pass, I say further, that this type of the brazen Serpent, teacheth us that we must feel our sins, and be afflicted in mind, and pained with remorse of conscience for them, before we can come to Christ, and by Faith lay hold of him to our salvation; for it was the scalding and fiery venom, which those Serpents infused into the bodies of such as were wounded by them, that hastened them unto the brazen Serpent, which Moses had exalted; and that made them to look up unto it, for the obtaining of help and health. If any had been insensibly bitten by one of those Serpents, so that he had felt no smart, nor no pain at all, he would have taken himself to have been well, and would never have had any recourse to the brazen Serpent at all. And even in like sort, it is the sense, and feeling of sin, and of the burden and misery of it, that driveth men unto Christ, and maketh them to rely on him for salvation; for such, as feel not their sins, do sleep securely in them, without any fear, and do not perceive, that they stand in any great need of Christ▪ but do rest and rely on themselves much more than they do on him. This Type therefore here alleged, or alluded unto by Mr. S. m●●●● for us, and against him. Such a felicity he hath to 〈…〉 that do confute his own Opinions, and 〈…〉. Object. 5. Object. 5 He saith further, It leaves men under greater condemnation, when Christ is brought home to the soul, for then there can be no objecting; Lord, had I been thus and thus fit and prepared, than I should have received thee, but I was a foul sinner at the same very time, and so guilty. O, will the Lord answer, I came therefore to pardon thee, and to wash thee in my blood, because thou art foul, and that is no excuse. Answ. Here are many words, and much vehemency used to little purpose, for this objection of his toucheth not us at all. First, It presupposeth, that they which are qualified with such previous dispositions as we teach, do come unto Christ. Secondly, That at that time in regard of these their preparations, they are no foul sinners, nor guilty of damnation. And thirdly, That they do therefore merit grace, and must necessarily be accepted. All which are false suppositions, and not acknowledged by us, as hath been sufficiciently showed before. Object. 6. Moreover, he telleth us, That it is most agreeable to Object. 6 the Gospel-way of dispensation, that sinners as sinners. that is, that all sorts of sinners, should be received by Christ: whether they acknowledge their sins or no. And to prove this, he allegeth those words of our Saviour, The whole have no need of the Physician, but the sick. Matth. 9.12.13. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners unto Repentance. To this Objection of his, I answer, Answ. that the righteous of whom our Saviour here speaketh, are not such as are perfectly righteous, and no sinners; for thus, as St. Paul telleth us, there are none righteous no not one. Rom. 3.19. It were such justiciaries as the Scribes and Pharisees, that falsely supposed themselves to be righteous, whom our Saviour saith, that he came not to call: and yet such as these, Mr. S. will have to be the fittest of all other for Christ, and for his grace. Now in opposition unto these hypocritical righteous ones, we are, by sinners, whom Christ professeth that he came to call, to understand contrite and broken hearted sinners, that being terrified with the judgements of the Law, do acknowledge, that they stand in great need of Christ the heavenly Physician, and of every drop his blood, which he shed for them. But of this I have spoken enough before. Object. 7. He goeth on and saith, All that ever received Christ, Object. 7 Corinthians, Ephesians, Colossians, received him in a sinful condition, when they were unwashen, darkness, dead in sins, enemies in their minds by wicked works. Answ. Here also Mr. S. setteth up an adversary unto himself of his own devising, and then dischargeth fiercely and furiously upon him. For no Protestant teacheth, that those that are only prepared for the preaching of the Gospel by the terrors of the Law, are washed from their sins, and do live the life of grace: but on the contrary they hold, That as yet they are dead in sin, and if they proceed no further, shall perish everlastingly. Object. 8. Object. 8 Lastly, He thus also objecteth, God offereth Christ in time, as God gave him. God before all times gave him to us, because we were sinners; and now he is but offered as he was given. Answ. Hereunto I answer, First, That God neither before time, gave Christ in his eternal decree, because we were sinner; nor in time doth he give us him, because we are sinners. For there is no cause in us at all of our salvation; it is to be ascribed wholly to God's grace. As for sin, it is in itself a cause of damnation, not of salvation. But if his meaning be, that God before time considered us as sinners, when he gave us Christ, there followeth nothing more from hence, but that God in time offered Christ unto us, when we were sinners, which we willingly grant. But we add further, that God before all time decreed, not only to give Christ to sinners, but that those sinners should by the power of his Spirit be brought in time to acknowledge their sins, and spiritual misery and woeful condition under sin, and so be driven out of themselves, and be made to fly unto Christ. Seeing therefore whatsoever God decreed before time, shall be fulfilled and accomplished in time, hereupon therefore it followeth, not that all sinners absolutely, but that those only, who do acknowledge their sins, and their eternal misery by sin, are they to whom Christ is offered in the Gospel, and that do come unto him. SECT. 6. Two Objections of Mr. D. answered. THere are two Objections of Master D. which I formerly passed over at my first reading of his Book, whereunto I have thought good now to return an answer. First, Object. he reasoneth thus against any qualification, or preparation or other to be wrought in us before we be justified. Reconcil. of God to man, pag. 16. Let us hear the Lord speaking of his own work upon the Creature, Isa. 57.18. He went on frowardly in the way of his heart; I have seen his ways, and will heal him; I will lead him also and restore comforts to him and to his mourners. Whom will't thou heal? O Lord, Whom wilt thou restore? Even him whose ways I have seen. What are those ways? Even frowardness and perverseness. He went on frowardly, in the way of his heart. See again Isa. 43.25. I, even I am he, that blotteth out thy transgressions for my own sake, and will not remember thy sins. Whose sins will the Lord blot out? Look we back unto the 22. verse. Thou hast not called upon me, O Jacob, thou hast been weary of me, O Israel, Thou hast made me to serve with thy sins. Thou hast wearied me with thine iniquities, verse 24. See, Thou hast been weary of me, Yea thou hast wearied me, This is jacobs' qualification. This is Israel's preparation. Then follows, I even I am he, that blotteth out thy transgressions. As if the Lord should say unto his people, as he speaketh by the prophet Ezek. 36.22. Say unto the house of Israel Thus saith the Lord God, I do not this for your sakes, O house of Israel but for my holy names sake, which ye have profaned among the heathen, whither ye went. See also Deut. 9.6. Isa. 48.9. alleged by him. And then his conclusion is, This is all the qualification we bring unto God to win his love and mercy. Answer. But I answer, whereas the Lord saith, he went on frowardly in the way of his heart, etc. This is not jacob's qualification, but a description of his perverse disposition, being considered as he was in himself, to the magnifying of Gods most rich mercy, and superabundant grace towards him in pardoning his sins. His qualification precedent to his justification, was his humiliation, and abenegation of himself, wrought in him by God's Spirit, opening his eyes to see his sins, and the great wrath that was due unto him for them. This was that which through the gracious working of God's Spirit, drew him unto Christ, the promised redeemer of his people, when he was offered unto him, that he might be saved through faith in him. But it was not this, nor any thing else that Jacob did, or could do, that merited the pardon of his sins, or that moved & made God to justify him: for we acknowledge that our justification is wholly of grace, yea that this preparation is also of grace; yet not necessitating our justification, as if it did always follow it. But of this enough hath been said before. Yet Mr. D, Dr. C, and others do so represent our doctrine, as if we taught precedent qualifications to win God's love, & to procure him to have mercy upon us, & to forgive us our sins. Object. Master D. second Objection against precedent qualifications, not only to our justification, but to our Conversion and Sanctification, Reconcil. of God to man, pag. 31. is this, John Frith whose Learning was by his adversary commended, whose constancy and patience in his Martyrdom was admired, writeth to this effect, Thou mayst preach Hell & Damnation, and the rendering of a terrible account to a severe Judge, seven years together, and yet not make one good Christian. He that would make a good Christian, let the love of God be the first stone which he layeth for the foundation. Answ. That which this holy man saith, I acknowledge, to be most true. A minister may preach not only seven, but seventy time; seven years together, and yet (if he preach nothing else but Hell and Damnation) not convert one soul. For it are not the terrors of the law, but the glad tidings of Salvation by Christ in the preaching of the Gospel, whereby the Spirit of God worketh faith in us to our conversion and salvation, and stirreth us up to love and thankfulness towards God. Notwithstanding the terrors of the Law are necessary, by way of preparation hereunto. For how can a man se of apprehend the great love of God to him, in giving his Son to death for his Redemption? if by the terrors of the law, he be not first made to see in what a woeful case and condition he was by his sins, to wit, that he should have perished, and been damned to unspeakable and unconceivable torments in Hell, if God out of his surpassing love, pity, and compassion towards him, had not provided and given him a Saviour. Thus must we first be brought by the Law, and the judgements and terrors thereof, to apprehend our own misery, before we can acknowledge the depth of God's mercy, and be inflamed with love towards him; and stir up ourselves unto thankfulness unto his Divine Majesty, for the great and most gracious work of our redemption, and salvation by Christ. The preaching then of Hell and damnation, and the rendering of a terrible account to a severe Judge, is not the laying of the foundation neither of Faith, nor of our justification and sanctification, whereby we are made good Christians; but a digging deep, to remove the rubbish of selfconfidence, and spiritual pride and presumption; that so the foundation of our conversions, may be laid in the Love of God, and of his comprehensible mercy towards us in Christ Jesus. SECT. VII. Objections answered, and the truth in this Controversy cleared. AS long as any colourable, specious, and plausible objections against the truth remain unanswered, men who have been taken and deluded by them, will hardly be brought to renounce their errors, no, not when the truth shall be solidly taught, and confirmed from the alone ground of all Divine and supernatural truth, the holy Scripture. Having therefore of late met with a Book of very high esteem with many, entitled The exaltation of Christ in the days of the Gospel, by T.C. and finding that the Author thereof doth teach, that men are not at all prepared for Christ, and Faith in him; by the preaching of the Law, but by hearing of the Gospel only: I have thought good therefore not to pass over in silence but to examine those things he delivereth; and the rather, because his reasons and allegations, do differ from those, which I have before met with. Exalt. of Christ. pag. 216. Edit. 3 First, he telleth us, that though all are under the Law by nature; yet it is the preaching of the Gospel that discovers it, that is, as he after explaineth himself, that discovereth unto them, that they are under the curse and condemnation of the Law, See also before, pag. 112. and so most miserable creatures. He teacheth therefore that a man must first in the preaching of the Gospel see Christ, and then by reflecting upon himself, see his own misery, which otherwise is not to be seen, and discerned by the Law. But in this he contradicteth St. Paul, for he telleth us that by the Law cometh the knowledge of sin. And he instanceth in himself, Rom. 3.20. Rom. 7.7. and saith, I had not known sin, but by the Law: for I had not known lust, except the Law had said, Thou shalt not covet. Thus the Law showeth us our sins, yea and the punishment also, Deut. 27.26 Gal. 3.10, that by them we have deserved when it saith, Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things, that are written in the Book of the Law to do them. 2 Cor. 3.7.9 And hereupon it is that the Apostle calleth it, the ministration of death, and of condemnation. For as the Law at the promulgation and publishing thereof upon Mount Sinai, was delivered with great terror; so it still of itself terrifieth and astonisheth the consciences of sinners accusing them when they do evil, as both St. Paul, Rom. 2.15. and every man's own experience teacheth. But let us take notice of the Arguments of Mr. C. whereby he endeavoureth to make good that which he hath taught. Object. First, he telleth us, That a man never savingly seethe his evil condition without Christ. And again, That it is the Spirit of God that discovereth sin unto him. Now the preaching of the Law bringeth not this Spirit, but the hearing of Faith, as witnesseth St. Paul, Gal. 3.2. But here first, I would know of him, why he saith, Answ. a man never savingly knoweth his evil condition without Christ? For our salvation consisteth not in knowing of our evil condition, but in the knowledge of Jesus Christ. John 17.3. Isa. 53.11. For a man to know his evil condition by sin, is to know that damnation is due unto him for his sin. Now many a man hath attained to this knowledge; who was never saved. Salvation therefore doth not at all consist in this, but in a man's flying unto Christ, and laying hold of him, when he seethe how miserable his condition is become through sin. Now whereas he allegeth the Apostles words, Gal. 3.2. to prove, that a man is not brought by the preaching of the Law, but of Faith, to be made partaker of the Spirit, without which he cannot see his miserable condition by sin. I answer him, That the Apostle speaks there, partly of the miraculous gifts of the Spirit, which were by God bestowed on none but those that had heard the Gospel, and made profession of Faith, in Christ; and partly of the Spirit of adoption, which also is peculiar to believers. Now thus indeed we do not receive the Spirit by the preaching of the Law: but otherwise, Rom. 8.15. as the same Apostle giveth us elsewhere to understand, we did by the Law receive the Spirit of bondage to fear. His meaning is, that the Spirit of God, which we received from him, illightning our minds with the true knowledge and understanding of the Law, did fill our hearts with fears and terrors, and so did put us as it were, in a state of bondage, at, or before our conversion unto Faith in Christ. We have need therefore of the illumination of the Spirit, that we may throughly understand the Law. For as long as men are left to themselves their very knowledge of the Law, is but shallow and superficial, as it to be seen in the Pharisees, and in all those, who are only civilly honest, which sort of men are either not at all, or but a little troubled in their souls and consciences with the fear of their sins or of hell and damnation. Whereas then Mr. C. saith, The Apostle was once alive without the Law, that is, without the spiritual understanding of the Law, but when the Commandment came sin revived, and he died, that is, when Christ had opened his eyes to see into the spirit of the Law, (the spiritual sense thereof I trow he meaneth). In all this I do agree with him: but not in that which followeth, when he addeth, That we come thus to know the spiritual understanding of the Law, only by the preaching of the Gospel. For I have already proved the contrary, to wit, that when the Law is preached, men come to understand it by the illumination of the Spirit, opening their minds to see the true meaning of the several precepts thereof. Object. But Mr. C; thinketh by instancing in Paul's conversion Acts 9, to prove that men come to know themselves, that is, their misery by sin, by the preaching of Christ, and that the preaching of the Law, doth not prepare us for Jesus, that we may believe in him. For the ministry by which Paul came to see himself, and to believe, was the voice of Christ, Answ. I am Jesus of Nazareth. Whereunto I answer, that Paul's conversion, was miraculous and extraordinary; it cannot therefore be concluded from thence, that men are ordinarily brought to Faith in Christ, or enlightened to see their miserable estate by sin, without the preaching of the Law. But he goeth on forward, and saith, Object. It is the sight and knowledge of Christ, that brings men truly to see and know themselves (not as they are in the estate of grace, he meaneth not so, but as they are in the estate of damnation) for proof whereof he saith, Saul Acts 9 thought himself a very holy, and happy man till he met Christ in the way. And biddeth us note, that Christ taught him in the first place, the knowledge of himself, Who art thou Lord? (saith Saul) I am Jesus of Nazareth (saith Christ) whom thou persecutest. Christ did not tell him of his sin: O, thou art an accursed persecuting creature, Dost ask who I am? Thou hadst more need know thyself, etc. No, no, he discovereth Himself unto him. And this I know was Gods usual dealing in the Gospel, those whom he taught, he taught them first to know Christ, and this Christ our Prophet must teach thee if ever thou be taught. Answ. But I would know, whether the Lord did not take another course with Adam, when he was fallen? Sure I am, he first brought him to the sight and sense of his sin and misery, by reproving him for the transgression of his Law, before he comforted him, & raised him up with that Evangelical promise, The seed of the woman shall break the head of the serpent. And our blessed Saviour layeth it down for a general rule and direction, Luke 24.47. That repentance and remission of sins must be preached in his name amongst all nations. First, repentance, which cannot be without the knowledge of sin, and then remission of sins, by Faith in Christ. Now as for the example of saul's conversion, which Mr. C. so much, and so often urgeth, it is not true which he saith, as it were triumphantly;" Christ did not tell him of his sin, O, thou art an accursed persecuting creature, etc. For did he not plainly speak unto him and say, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? And again, I am Jesus whom thou persecutest. It is hard for thee to kick against the pricks. It's evident, that he did as manifestly, and as soon, if not before, tell him of his sin in persecuting him, as he told him, that he was Jesus. We may conclude therefore from hence, that a man must be brought to know himself, and his miserable estate and condition by sin, either at the same time, or before that Christ is preached and offered unto him. But of this more hereafter, only I will say this now, that Paul was terrified and cast down indeed, by those terrible words of Christ, and by beholding his glorious Majesty: but for the perfecting of his conversion, Christ sent him to Ananias, by whom he was to be taught, and instructed what he was to do. By him therefore he was taught all things necessary unto his salvation, and so was comforted, and raised up again by Faith in Christ from his former terrors, and fears. I say therefore, as Mr. C. doth, It is Christ in the preaching of the Gospel, that is glad tidings for sinners, remission of sins for believers; and this Gospel, this glad tidings cannot rightly be held forth unto the world, but withal men must be showed that they are sinners, and the emptiness of duties, and of all other foundations must be discovered, and the danger of not accepting Christ. But I demand, whether this is not to be done, by showing unto men their sins by the Law, and their disability to do any thing of themselves, that is pleasing unto God, through the corruption that is in them by the fall of Adam. For this impotency of doing good, and the great wrath that is due unto us for our sins, the Law re ealeth and maketh known unto us; which when a sinner once apprehendeth, than the Gospel is to be preached, and he is to be exhorted to lay hold of Jesus Christ by Faith, Object. as the only means of salvation. But let us examine another of Mr. C's. Arguments, and see whether there be any more force in that, Beloved saith he, God hath appointed the Spirit to be the means in the preaching of the Gospel, to convince the world of sin. Joh. 16.9. It is the Spirit of God that convinceth the world of sin, and that in the preaching of the Gospel. But hereunto I answer, that our Saviour saith not, Answ. that the Spirit of God doth in the preaching of the Gospel only reprove the world of sin absolutely, but of the sin of infidelity: for thus he saith, When the Comforter is come, he will reprove the world of sin, because they believe not in me. Now, what shall we say, that none believed in Christ before this coming of the Spirit, and reproving of the world of unbelief? Verily no, for the Apostles with many other did before this believe in him. For our Saviour speaks here of the coming of the Spirit in the miraculous gifts thereof, as he came upon the Apostles, and other believers in the day of Pentecost, and afterwards, until those gifts ceased in the Church, when the Gospel had been by them sufficiently confirmed. Besides, the world of which our Saviour there speaketh, though it was convinced of sin by the miraculous gifts of the Spirit, yet it never believed: for our Saviour calleth it the world, that believed not in him. Lastly, If we should say, they were unbelievers and worldlings before, but afterward believed, when they saw the miraculous gifts that were by Christ poured down and bestowed on his Apostles and others, that reproved their infidelity. yet it cannot hence be inferred, that all in all succeeding ages, are thus to be converted and brought unto Faith in Christ. But of this more hereafter, when I shall examine that which he allegeth out of Acts 2.37; In the next place, he reasoneth thus, All preparations and qualifications whatsoever, which are not of Faith, Object. are sin; and I am sure, Faith comes by the preaching of the Gospel, not of the Law. Therefore the preaching of qualifications before Faith is sin: for all things before or without Faith, are sin. His Reason, if we put it in form, will be thus. Sin cannot prepare us for Christ, but all preparations before Faith are sin: therefore no such preparations, or qualifications can prepare us for Christ. Here I would wish him first of all to consider, that by reasoning thus, he striketh himself, as well as us. For he will not deny that the hearing of the Gospel goeth before Faith; Now, what shall we hereupon conclude, that none but believers are to heat the Gospel? I trow not. For then there will be no hope of any man's conversion from infidelity, or incredulity, to Faith in Christ. But that I may show the weakness of his reasoning, First, I grant the major Proposition, Sin cannot prepare for Christ. The knowledge of sin may, but not that which is absolutely, and altogether sin, or wherein nothing is to be found but sin; for sin in this sense, is opposite to all goodness. Now, whereas he assumeth in the minor Proposition, and saith, But all qualifications before Faith, are sin. Here I distinguish of sin, and say, that it is so, vel per se, vel per accidens, either in itself, and its own nature: or accidentally, because being otherwise good, through the corruption and unbelief of him that committeth it, it becometh sinful and evil, as it proceeds from him. Now of this latter sort, is the hearing of the word, both of Law and Gospel, and all preparations wrought before Faith, that is to say, legal terrors, confession of sin, humiliation, hope of pardon, and the like. For these are not evil, but good in themselves, and evil only by accident: therefore in regard of the good that is in them, they through God's grace do prepare and dispose us unto our conversion, and unto Faith in Christ. I do wonder therefore, that Mr. C. should say as he doth, not only that all preparations and qualifications going before Faith are sin: but that the preaching of such before Faith is sin. Indeed it cannot but be great and gross sin, to preach and to stir men up to adultery, whoredom, rash swearing, lying, or to any thing that is simply, and in itself sinful & evil: but otherwise, I think, no wise man will say, that parents ought not to teach their children to know God, and themselves, to praise God, and to perform all necessary duties, both to God and man, until they shall give good proof that they do believe in Christ. There remaineth now only the last of Mr. C. Arguments, which I shall briefly dispatch. Object. Christ (saith he) brings those Acts 2.37. from beholding of Christ, to behold themselves, and makes them cry out, Men and brethren, what shall we do? etc. For answer hereunto, I say, Answ. that it cannot be concluded hence, that men by the ordinary preaching of the Gospel, are at all times without any sight of sin, or any terrors wrought in their hearts by the Law, brought to believe in Christ, and so after this to see their sins. For those Jews Acts 2. were, by the miraculous gifts of the Holy Ghost bestowed on the Apostles, convinced that Jesus whom they preached, was the Christ. And because they had consented unto, and conspired his death, hearing themselves accused of this by St. Peter, they were pricked in their hearts, with fear and sorrow, knowing partly by the Law, whereof they were not ignorant, and partly by the Miracles which they saw, that they were guilty of a most heinous murder. But now, that no such miracles and wonders are wrought, what ordinary way is there to convince men of sin, and of their danger thereby, but by the preaching of the Law? For by the Law cometh the knowledge of sin. Rom. 3.20. Having thus examined Mr. C. Arguments, and manifested the invalidity of them, I will shut up this matter, with showing, contrary to his Assertion, that Christ is not always first to be preached, and that this is not the only way, to bring m●n not only to Faith in Christ, but also to the knowledge of themselves, and of their sins; and that therefore God never taught his people otherwise. Unto this his Assertion, I do oppose that which is to be read in St. Paul's Sermon unto the Athenians, Acts 17. wherein he beginneth, and preacheth the Law of nature unto them, and thereby convinceth them of gross idolatry, and then showeth them the necessity of repentance, and preacheth Christ unto them. It is not true therefore that Christ is always first to be preached and offered, and that men never come to see their sins, until they do believe in Christ; but rather on the contrary, by seeing of their sins, they come to see the necessity of Faith in Christ. We read Acts 2●. that Foelix the Governor of the Jews under the Roman Emperor, sent for Paul, and heard him concerning the Faith in Christ. And as he reasoned of righteousness and temperance, (which ar● moral virtues, taught, and prescribed in the Law of nature) and of judgement to come, Foelix (who was a most unrighteous and intemperate man) trembled. Now, hence I infer, 1. That it cannot be concluded, that the Apostles did not preach the moral Law, where it is said, that they preached Christ, or the Faith in Christ. 2. That the knowledge of sin by the Law, is necessary to prepare men for Faith in Christ. For, wherefore was it that Paul preached unto Foelix of righteousness and temperance, but to bring him to the sight of his sins, in which he lived contrary to those virtues, that so despairing of salvation in himself, & being terrified with the judgement of God, he might be dri●en to receive Christ by Faith, and to put the whole confidence of his salvation in him, Yet, I do not deny, but that the children of God, after that Faith is wrought in their hearts, do ordinarily come to a more full sight and apprehension of their sins, that are contrary to moral equity & honesty: but that is by a more perfect knowledge of the law whereby they see themselves guilty of more sins against it, than they took notice of before, and of more impiety in sinning against greater light: Even as the more they do grow in the knowledge & understanding of the Gospel the more they do see what sins they are guilty of against the Gospel. Yea, and in general also, the more they do by the Gospel see and apprehend God's mercy towards them in Christ, the more wretched sinners do they acknowledge themselves to have been. The sum of all is this, God's children are prepared unto Faith in Christ, not always, (we say not so) nor only, by the preaching of the Law, and the terrors thereof: but more immediately, and much more by the preaching of the Gospel, by hearing whereof, they conceive some hope of pardon, and are thereby kept from being swallowed up of desperation, and do desire and pray for the forgiveness of their sins, and salvation by Christ, and do never cease meditating of the gracious Promises of God in Christ, until at length Faith is by the Gospel, as the proper instrument, or means thereof, wrought in their hear●s. For it is not the Law, but the Gospel, that, as the Apostle saith, is the power of God unto salvation, Rom. 1.16. to every one that believeth, Again, it cannot be denied, but that men sometimes have been prepared unto their conversion, & to Faith in Christ, by God's Judgements, 2 Chro. 33.12, 13. Luke 15. wherewith he hath visited them, and awakened their consciences, and by meditating of the shortness, and uncertainty of their life here in this world, and by other the like morives, and considerations. And it is manifest, that not a few, but many have extraordinarily been prepared unto Faith in Christ, by miracles, and strange works, Mark 16.20. John 11.45 & 20.31. which have been wrought by God, for the confirmation of the Gospel. Lastly, It is not to be denied, that God both can work Faith, yea, and that he hath extraordinarily, and most marvellously wrought it in some, without any precedent qualifications, or preparations at all. To teach the contrary, is to deny God's power, Luke 1.44. and to contradict the holy Scripture. Quest. 8. Whether we are made the Sons of God, by Faith in Christ, or but declared so to be? Reconcil. of man to God. pag. 66. Gal. 3.20. MR. D. his peremptory resolution is, We are not made the Sons of God by Faith; for we were before reconciled unto him, and were his sons. And whereas S. Paul saith, ye are all the sons of God by Fa●th in Christ Jesus, he will have the sense, and meaning hereof to be, That we are declared to be the sons of God by Faith in Christ Jesus. But the Apostle saith, you are; and not, are declared to be the sons of God, though that be true also. He speaketh therefore of the essence of sonship, and not of the manifestation or appearance hereof, only. Object. But here it will be said, Were all the Galathians that made profession of the Faith of Christ, the sons of God really? Answ. It is not likely they were; St. Paul's words therefore must be understood per reduplicationem, to wit thus, you are all the sons of God, that is, all of you who are the sons of God, are his sons by Faith in Christ Jesus: Or else we are to say, that he speaketh of them according to the judgement of charity, when he saith, ye are all the sons of God; presuming them to be so; and then specifieth the means how they came to be his sons, when he addeth, by Faith in Christ Jesus. But if they he will not admit of this Exposition, I would know of him, what it is that maketh a man to be a son? Is it not his parents begetting of him? Sure I am that is fundamentum hujus relationis, the foundation of this relation. Now St James telleth us, That God hath begotten us by the word of truth. Jam. 1.9. 1 Pet. 1.23. St. Peter also saith, that we are renati, born again, not of mortal seed, but of immortal by the word of God. Whence it followeth necessarily, that we are not the sons of God, until we do hear his word, and are thereby converted to the Faith and obedience of Christ. But Mr. D. t●inketh to avoid and put off this also by saying, that the Apostles do say, Object. that we are regenerated and born again by the word, because we are declared so to be: and not, that we are in deed and in truth regenerated by the word. But this will not serve his turn: Answ. for the word being made effectual by the spirit, is that which begets faith in us, for Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of of God. Now, it is absurd to say, that a man is regenerated, while he liveth in infidelity, or incredulity, and is void of Faith. Again, until men hear the word, their minds are blined with ignorance, and their lives are full of impurity and uncleanness. And hereupon St. Paul saith, that God sent him unto the Gentiles, to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan unto God, that is, by his preaching Gods word unto them, which they had not heard before. Yea, our Saviour's own Disciples were unclean (as all men are by nature) until they heard the word, as those words of Christ do testify, Now ye are clean through the word that I have spoken unto you. They were not so therefore before, and how then could they be said to be regenerated without the word, For by regeneration men are made partakers of a new nature, which they had not before? St. Paul also speaking of the whole Church of Christ in general, saith, that he sanctifieth and cleanseth it with the washing of water by the word. All therefore generally, and ordinarily without the word, are unclean, and unregenerated. Object. But let us see how Mr. D. endeavoreth to prove that we were the sons of God before we did believe. The Holy Ghost (saith he) declareth sonship to be the cause of giving the Spirit, when he saith, Because ye are sons, Gal. 4.6. God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts, crying Abba Father. Seeing therefore a man cannot believe without the grace of the Spirit, it followeth necessarily, that we are the sons of God before we do believe. Answ. But hereunto I answer, that the Spirit is given diversely, First, to regenerate us: for we are born again, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, John 1.13. but of God, by the powerful operation of his Spirit: Even as our Saviour himself also teacheth, when he saith, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, John 3.5. he cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. Thus the Spirit is not a consequent of our regeneration, whereby we are born the sons of God, but a precedent cause thereof. 2. Again, the Spirit is also given, to increase Faith and holiness in us, and to strengthen and establish us in grace, after we are regenerated. For as Christ by his Spirit beginneth the good work of grace in us, so doth he by his Spirit perfect the same, Phil. 1.6. 2 Cor. 3.5. and not we ourselves by any power of our own. Lastly, After we are born again, the Spirit is also given to comfort us, and to assure us of our Adoption by crying in our hearts Abba Father. Thus (as Mr. D. saith) sonship, is in some sort the cause of giving the Spirit. But otherwise we are not sons, before and without any work of the Spirit at all: for he is the Author, or principal efficient cause of our being regenerated, and born again the sons of God. Another of Mr. D's. Objections is this, The Apostle saith, Object. that God the Father hath predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself. We were not therefore begotten in time by the word, but it is an eternal grace. Whereunto I answer, that he might as well infer, Answ. and conclude, that we are alteady glorified, and in actual possession of Heaven, For God hath predestinated us to be made partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light. It's strange that he cannot distinguish between the Decree of Election itself, which is eternal, and the effects thereof, that is to say, the things whereunto we are Elected, which shall be all of them accomplished and fulfilled in us, in their due time. When the Apostle also saith, that God hath chosen us unto sanctification of the Spirit: it followeth hence, not that we were actually and really in our own persons sanctified from all eternity, as he reasoneth; but that we shall be sanctified at that time which God hath decreed and appointed. But let us see how Mr. D. confirmeth this former exposition of his. These places, saith he, (that is, Object. James 1.18. 1 Pet. 1.23.) are to be understood of the manifestation of adoption; not of the act of adoption itself. And that it is so, is plain▪ God hath begotten us again unto a lively hope; by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. A lively hope is the thing whereunto we are begotten. It is ordinary in Scripture, to call the manifestation of things by the name of the things themselves. I grant, the Scripture, Answ. though not so ordinarily as he would have it, yet sometimes doth call the manifestation of things, by the name of the things themselves; but we must not therefore take liberty to set this gloss upon whatsoever places of Scripture. we shall think good ourselves, as Mr. D. and others now, but too commonly, do. For it is agreed upon by Divines, that the Scriptures are to be taken, and understood in that sense and meaning, which the words do plainly import, except it be contrary to the Analogy of Faith, or to good manners, or abhorrent to common sense and reason, or to some other plain and manifest places of Scripture, none of all which can be said of these two places of Scripture, Jam. 1.18. 1 Pet. 1.23. Those words therefore of both the Apostles, are ro be taken in their native sense as they found. Now whereas St. Peter saith, that we are begotten again to a lively hope, he showeth in the words following, what this hope is, when he saith, to an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in Heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through Faith unto salvation. Object. But whereas Mr. D. saith, a lively hope is the thing whereunto we are begotten, will he therefore infer hence, as he seemeth to do, that our Adoption is eternal, surely then, he may deduce, quid libet ex quo libet, chalk out of cheese, for there can nothing be concluded hence, but that the inheritance of Heaven, is a consequent of our Adoption, according to that of St. Paul. If children then heirs, heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ. Answ. But though Mr. D. passeth it over in silence, it may be some one, or other will say, St. Peter telleth us, that we are begotten again through the resurrection of Christ. When St. James therefore, and St. Peter do say, that we were begotten by the word of God, this must needs be meant of the manifestation of our Adoption, and not of the act of Adoption itself; for Christ was risen from the dead, long before the Word was preached either to us, or to those Christians to whom the Apostles wrote, and directed their Epistles. Whereunto I answer, That neither will this prove the eternity of our Adoption, as Mr. D. teacheth it; For Christ risen again at that certain and determinate time which God had decreed, and foretold, that is to say, the third day after his Passion on the Cross. But not to make any use of this, whereas St. Peter saith, that we are begotten again to a lively hope, by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, the meaning hereof is not, that we were at that time regenerated, or begotten again, when Christ risen from the dead, unless it were virtually only: but that our regeneration, which is actually wrought, and effected by God's Word and Spirit, (as was the regeneration of all God's children, from the beginning of the world) depended on Christ's resurrection, as on a virtual cause, or power producing it, in that time, and by those means which God hath appointed. For as St. Paul saith to the Corinthians, If Christ be not raised, your Faith is vain, ye are yet in your sins. Thus I have answered Mr. D.'s Objections, and (as I take it) sufficiently cleared this matter. Quest. 9 Whether a man is to pray for the pardon of his sins, after he is regenerated, and doth believe and repent? SECT. I. The Children of God do, and aught to pray for the pardon of their sins I Have taken occasion to discuss this question, in regard of those many giddy Sectaries, that do pertinaciously Reaso. n 1 deny it. And first I reason thus, David was the Child of God in high favour with him, as that Testimony, which the Lord giveth of him doth bear witness, I have found David the Son of Jesse a man after mine own heart, which shall fulfil all my will. Acts 13.23. Notwithstanding he prayed hearty, not only for the pardon of those two heinous sins, of adultery and murder, when he had been overtaken with them; but of those other sins, whereof he had repent, and which were forgiven him long before. For Psal. 25.6, 7. he cryeth unto the Lord, and saith, Remember O Lord thy tender mercies and thy loving kindness: for they have been ever of old. Remember not the sins of my youth, nor my transgressions. And in many other Psalms, doth he petition the Lord for the pardon of his sins. Daniel also a most worthy and renowned Servant of God, one that was greatly beloved, maketh confession of his own sins, as well as of the sins of the people, and prayeth most hearty, for the pardon of them, saying, O Lord hear, O Lord forgive. Dan. 9.10.20, 23. Thus did these holy men, pray by the inspiration and instigation of God's holy Spirit; it followeth necessarily therefore, that the Children of God both may, and aught to pray for the pardon of their sins. For I hope none now living will dare to say, that they are holier than David, or Daniel were, or that they are in higher favour with God, or have more Reaso. n 2 assurance of his love and favour. Again, our Saviour taught his disciples (whom all do acknowledge for God's Children; nor will any dare to say, that they were the Children of the Devil) to pray for the pardon of their sins. For when they upon a time came unto Jesus Christ, and said, Master teach, us to pray, as John taught his Disciples, Luk. 11.4. he said unto them, when ye pray say, Our Father which art in Heaven,— forgive us our sins. It is manifest and most evident from hence, that it is our blessed Saviour's will and appointment, that those who are the true Children of God (as his disciples were) should pray for the pardon of their sins. SECT. II. There was forgiveness of sins before Christ's Passion. BUt will you see, how these our adversaries do think to avoid the force of these Testimonies. They confess, (for so, a foul mouthed Sectary * One that called me bald Rogue bald Priest, & Baal's priest; I think ten times over, and Minister of the Devil. Doct. of John Baptist. Page 36. 37, 38. did unto me) that Christ's Disciples at that time, and all the servants of God under the Old Testament, were to pray for the pardon of their sins, because Christ had not then paid the price of our Redemption, and purchased the pardon of our sins by his Passion. Now here Mr. D. joineth with them, and confirmeth them in their error; For he saith, that there was no pardon of sin, in the Old Testament, because Christ had not then redeemed us. But against this Assertion of his, I shall by God's grace both prove that there was the same forgiveness of sins in the Old Testament, that is in the new; and then afterwards I shall answer his Arguments, which he allegeth to the contrary, First the Scripture itself of the Old Testament showeth, not darkly nor obscurely, but plainly and manifestly, not in a few but many places, that the sins of all that did in those days truly repent, were blotted out, and forgiven by God. The truth of this is to be seen in David; he no sooner repent of his sins of adultery and murder, crying out in the anguish and bitterness of his soul, and saying, I have sinned against the Lord, but presently the Prophet Nathan pronounced his absolution, and said, 2 Sam. 12.13. The Lord hath put away thy sin. He hath forgiven, he hath put it away, saith Nathan, not he will put it away, when the Messiah shall come and lay down his life for thy Redemption. The same also doth David himself acknowledge, and profess, saying, I acknowledged my sin unto thee, Psal. 23.4, 5. and mine iniquity have I not hid: I said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord: and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. But what do I stand upon a such particular examples? The Lord himself speaking of, and to, his people in the Old Testament, saith, I, even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for my own sake, Esa. 43.25. and will not remember thy sins. And by his Prophet Ezekiel, he proclaimeth a general pardon for all, as well in those days, as in these, that would repent and turn unto him, saying, Ezek. 18.20, 21. The soul that sinneth, it shall die: but if the wicked will turn from all his sins, that he hath committed, and keep all my Statutes and do that which is lawful and right, he shall surely live, he shall not die. Hereupon the Prophet Micah magnifieth the mercy of the Lord, and saith, Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage. Micah 7.18. The Protestants do hold against the Papists, that the souls of the ancient Patriarches and of the godly and faithful, that died before Christ's passion, went after the dissolution of their bodies, not into limbus patrum, but into Heaven. But surely this could not be, if their sins remained, and were not forgiven them. For it is nothing but sin, that openeth Hell, and shutteth Heaven. Let Mr. D. therefore advise himself, whether he will in this join with the papists, or with the protestants. Sure I am, as many as took the protestation which was put out by the Parliament bound themselves by a solemn vow, to defend the protestant religion, against all popery & popish innovations: but how well this is performed ●y many of the Sectaries▪ the event showeth. Thus have I manifested that there was remission of sins in the Old Testament. SECT. III. Objections Answered. LEt us now examine Mr. D. reasons whereby he and divers Sectaries do think to prove the contrary. It is not possible (say both he and they) that those who lived under the Old Testament, Object. could have their sins actually pardoned, because Christ then had not purchased the pardon of them by his death and Passion. But I answer, Answ. they are much mistaken. For the sins of all the elect people of God, that lived before Christ's passion were pardoned, because he had undertaken to satisfy the law, and justice of God for them. Whereupon it is that Christ is called the surety of a better Testament, Heb. 7.22. that is, than the Law was, to wit, because he became our surety to his Father, and undertook to satisfy his justice for our sins, and to bring us to God. Wherefore as the debtor is discharged from prison, when the surety taketh the debt upon him, although he doth not pay it presently; but bindeth himself to satisfy it, at a set time agreed upon: So seeing the eternal Son of God, became surety unto his Father for us, and took our spiritual debt upon him, and bound himself to redeem us by his death, at that fullness of time, which was decreed, and agreed upon by his Father and him: all those therefore that by faith did rely upon the alsufficient sacrifice & satisfaction of Christ, from the beginning of the World until his passion, had their sins pardoned, and were saved by means of that their faith in him, as well as we are, who now believe in him after he hath suffered, and paid our debt. For this cause he is called The Lamb slain from the beginning of the world, Rev. 13.18. not only because he was in God's decree and counsel from all eternity appointed to be slain; or because he was from the beginning of the World slain Mystically in the sacrifices that were offered: But in this regard principally because the validity and virtue of his death did extend itself unto Adam, and to all the elect of God, that lived at any time, or other, from the beginning of World. Object. But saith Mr. D. those that lived, before Christ had by his death redeemed them, were under the Bondage and curse of the law, Answ. therefore their sins were not pardoned and forgiven them. I answer, they were in bondage to the Ceremonies of the Law, Gal. 5.1. which Paul called a yoke of bondage. And St, Peter saith, That neither they nor their Fathers were able to bear it but they not were in bondage to sin and Satan. Acts 15.10. For what godly heart can endure to hear, that Abraham the Father of the faithful, or Isaac, or Jacob, or David; and the rest of those holy Patriarches, should be said to be in bondage to sin, or to be Satan's bondmen? As aborrent also it is to Christian piety to say, as Mr. D. doth, that they were under the curse of the law, for than they should have been in the state of damnation, and liable to God's wrath. We confess indeed they were under the law; but how? under the pedagogy or School-Mastery, not under the curse and condemnatory sentence of it; for from that were they freed and delivered by their faith in Christ to come, as we are now by our faith in the same Christ who is come. But saith he, Object. St. Paul telleth us that as many as are under the law, are under the curse. No, he doth not: Gal. 3.10. but as many as are of the works of the law, that is, who seek and go about to be justified by the works of the Law, Answ. are under the curse. But this did not the Fathers before Christ's coming, for as St. Peter saith, Acts 15.11. As we do believe that we shall be saved through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, so did they. Object. He allegeth also those words of the Apostle, They received not the promise, Heb. 11.39. as if the meaning of them were, that those under the Old Testament, were not made partakers of forgiveness of sins, and salvation before Christ's coming. By'r I have before proved, Answ. that there was the same remission of sins in those days, that there is now. For of those that lived at that time, as well as now, David speaketh plainly, and saith, Psal, 32.1, 2. Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, and whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity. Whereas then the Apostle saith, they received not the promise, he speaketh of the promise of Christ's incarnation, and manifestation in the flesh, and his meaning is, that that promise was not then accomplished, but differred until the days of the New Testament, wherein we see those things, and hear those things, which Abraham and the Prophets, and faithful people of God in those days, desired to see, and hear, but could not, God providing better things for us, (as the Apostle speaketh in the next words) that they without us might not be made perfect, that is, in the knowledge and faith of the full Revelation of the Messiah, but held in the state and condition, as it were, of children in their Minority. Object. He urgeth also against us, those words of the Angel Gabriel unto Daniel, Dan. 9.24. Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people, and upon the holy City, to finish the trangression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness. For from hence he inferreth and concludeth, that the sins of the people of God, were at that time remaining, and that they were not reconciled to God. Answ. But hereunto I answer, that the Angel in these words speaketh of the finishing of transgressions, and making an end of sins, and of making reconciliation for iniquity by way of satisfaction and Redemption, which Christ was to do in his passion; Isai. 53.10. when (as Isaiah saith) he was to make his soul an offering for sin: but not of taking away sin and making reconciliation by actual remission and forgiveness thereof: For thus all those were reconciled to God, and were discharged of their sins, who before Christ's passion did expect his coming, and built the hope and confidence of their Redemption, and salvation on him. I do not remember (for I have not his book by me) any thing else, that Mr. D. allegeth to infringe the force of my two former reasons. I have nothing therefore more to say unto him in this Question. SECT. FOUR Two reasons more proving that the Children of God, are to pray for the pardon of their Sins. THirdly, therefore I do reason thus against the aforesaid Reaso. n 3 Sectaries; If the Children of God are not to pray for the pardon of their sins, than it will follow, that pardon of sin is to be had without any prayer, which is a great and gross absurdity, for we have no promise of any good thing from God, unless we pray for it. Math. 7.7. Ask (saith our Saviour) and you shall have. Here the promise is made to him that asketh. But on the contrary, ye have not, James 4.2. because ye ask not, saith St. James. James 1.7. Now when men are unregenerate, they cannot pray in faith, and therefore, as St. James saith, shall obtain nothing of the Lord. And after they are regenerated, and do believe, these men will not allow them to pray for the pardon of their sins. According therefore to their doctrine, pardon of sin is to be had, without any true prayer. The grossness, and absurdity of which conceit who seethe not, that is not stark blind in spiritual things? Fourthly it hath been Reaso. n 4 constantly taught until this time not only by others, but even by those also, that would not allow the Lords prayer to be used as a prayer, that it is a platform of prayer, according whereunto we are all of us to frame and form all our prayers at least wise, for the matter of our petitions. Now, as I have showed already, Christ therein taught his Disciples to pray for the forgiveness of their sins. It it a novellous conceit therefore, and upstart error, to hold, That the Children of God, ought not to pray for the pardon of their Sins. SECT. V The several Causes, or reasons, why the Children of God, are to pray for the pardon of their sins. Object. But, say these men, when we believe in Christ our sins are pardoned, we are therefore to praise God for this his mercy; but not to pray for it, seeing we have it already; for than we should take God's name in vain. Answ. 1 But I answer them, that the promise of pardon of sin, at leastwise for the continuance of it, is not made unto one individual act of faith only, but to perseverance, and continuance in the faith; for so we are given to understand, Heb. 10.38 Heb. 10.38. The just shall live by faith: but if any man draw back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him. But, saith the Apostle, We are not of them that draw back unto perdition: but of them that believe, (perseverantly) to the saving of the Soul. And before in the third Chapter, the same Apostle hath told us▪ See also Joh. 8.31. verse 14. that we are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the beginning of our confidence, steadfast unto the end. After therefore we are justified, and absolved from our sins, yet we are to pray still for the pardon of them, because as Amesius, and other of the Learned protestants generally say, Continuatio hujus gratiae est nobis necessaria, the continuance of this grace is necessary for us. For as it is not to one individual act of faith only, so neither of repentance nor of prayer; but to perseverance and continuance in all these, that God hath promised and granted pardon. This is to seen in David, for after his sins were pardoned, and he the true Child of God, yet he prayeth still, remember not the sins of my youth nor my transgressions. And after David was pardoned, (for Nathan upon his repentance said unto him, the Lord hath taken away thy sin, 2. Sam. 12.13.) yet he prayed most earnestly for pardon, Psal. 51. We are still to pray for the pardon of our sins, Ut sensus et manifestatio hujus gratiae, magis magisque percipiatur, prout singularia peccata postulant, that the sense and manifestation of this grace may be more and more evident unto us, as our several sins do require. For so it is, there are hardly any of God's Children, whose consciences are not more troubled with the remembrance and remorse of some of their sins then of others. It will be necessary for them therefore to pray daily, as for the pardon of their other sins, so especially of these, that so they may grow more and more assured of the pardon of them, considering what gracious promises Christ hath made to these their paayers. Verily verily I say unto you, Joh. 16.23 whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. And what things soever ye desire when ye pray, Mar. 11.24 believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them, Sure I am, there is no man living upon the face of the earth, that attaineth unto such a perfect assurance of the remission of his sins, that he cannot have that assurance of his increased. For all graces are here imperfect in us. 2 Pet. 3.18. Whereupon we are all of us commanded to grow in grace. In this regard therefore he that is most assured of the remission of his sins, hath still need to pray for the pardon of them. Thirdly, We do all of us daily commit new sins, Thirdly. we have need therefore daily to solicit the Lord for the pardon of them. Jam. 5.16. St. James exhorteth and stirreth us up unto this, when he saith, Confess your sins one to another, and pray one for another. For I would know of these men, what he would have us to pray for? Not unlikely they will say for increase of grace to conquer and overcome our sins, and for health in time of sickness. It's true, no doubt: but not for these only, but for pardon of those sins of ours, which do pull down God's judgements upon us; for so he giveth us to understand when he saith. Is any sick among you? let him call for the Elders of the Church, and let them pray for him. And the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and if he have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him. Here first the Apostle excepteth none, no no not the best Christian that is, but speaketh universally, and saith, Is Any man sick, let him call for the Elders of the Church, and let them pray for him. Secondly, he setteth down a double consequent of these their prayers, when he saith, the prayer of faith shall save the sick; and Secondly, if he have committed sins they shall be forgiven him. It is most evident, and manifest therefore from hence, that prayer is to be made for the forgiveness, not only of the sins of those that are unregenerate and unbelievers, as St. Stephen prayed for his persecutors, saying, Lord lay not this sin to their Charge, Acts 7.60. but as well also for the sins of believers. Fourthly. Lastly, we are daily to pray for the pardon of our sins, because the day of judgement is not yet come, when Christ with his own mouth will pronounce sentence of absolution on believers, and of condemnation on all unbelievers, and ungodly men. There is none of us, I presume, that will say that he is holier than Epaphroditus, or that hath more assurance of his sins than he had; Notwithstanding Paul, as much as he commendeth him, prayeth hearty for him, that the Lord would show mercy unto him at that day, the day of judgement, in which he should be presented, and appear before Christ. Now what meaneth he hereby, but that the Lord would be merciful unto him in blotting out his sins, 2▪ Tim. 1.18. then, as St. Peter speaketh, that is, in passing sentence of absolution upon him, See Acts 3.19. and in freeing him from the dreadful sentence of condemnation, which he will then pass and pronounce on the ungodly: For that there shall then be, not only an execution of the sentence already given in the word, but a real judgement, the Scripture maketh plain, Acts 17.31. God hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the world in righteousness, by that man whom he hath Ordained, 2. Tim. 4.1. that is, by Jesus Christ. And, I Charge thee therefore before God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick and the dead, at his appearing, and his kingdom. St. Peter also speaking of himself, and of the other Apostles, saith, that God commanded them to preach unto the people and to testify that it is he, Acts 10.42. that is, Jesus Christ, which was Ordained of God to be the judge of quick and dead. Here, in the courts of this world, the judgement goeth before, & the execution followeth after: the former is the act of the judge himself, the other of his Ministers, that do it by his Authority, and never till the judgement is past. So Christ himself will sit in judgement on all the world at the latter day; Math. 25.31 Math. 13.41, 42. but the execution of his judgement, he will commit to the Angels. As long therefore as we live here, who seethe not that we have all need to pray that our sins may be pardoned, and that we may stand in judgement at that dreadful day, when we shall appear before the judgement Seat of Christ, Psal. 1.5. and every one receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad. 2 Cor. 5.10. SECT. VI Another Objection, answered. AFter I had thus finished this Question, a friend of mine acquainted me with an argument drawn a Simili, from a similitude, which he heard a Soldier use, to prove that he was not to pray for the pardon of his sins: it was this. If one give me a garment, shall I still after I have it, petition and pray him to give it me? It were absurd so to do. Seeing therefore God upon my repentance and faith in Christ, hath forgiven me my sins, it will be no less absurd in me, still to pray for the pardon of them. Whereunto I answer, that an apt similitude doth excellently illustrate a matter after it is proved; but otherwise there is little, or no force in it at all of itself to prove any thing that is doubtful, or called into Question, especially, Si illo pede claudicat if it do halt on that foot, wherein the force and strength of the Argument lieth. Now so fareth it with this Similitude of his. For that garment he speaketh of, was absolutely given, and he put into possession of it, without being further bound to the performance of any thing for the time to come, unless it were to a duty of thankfulness: But our sins, are not forgiven us absolutely by God, but upon condition that we do repent and believe in Christ, and pray for the pardon of them: yea and this pardon is also granted, not to one individual act of repentance, or of faith, and prayer: but to perseverance, and continuance in all these, as long as we live here, as I have showed already. We can have no assurance, nor no hope therefore of the forgiveness of our sins, if we fall away from the faith, revolt to sin, or leave off praying. Again, a garment is given but once for all, but our sins, were first forgiven ab aeterno, from all eternity in God's predestination; Secondly, upon our repentance and faith in Christ, they are forgiven in verbo Evangelii in God's word, in his word of the Gospel. And lastly, at Christ's coming we must all appear before his judgement seat, to be judged openly before all the world, that the equity of his Justice may appear, and be made manifest unto all; to the glory of God, the comfort of his Saints, & the confusion of all the wicked. Until therefore we shall personally appear before Christ, & be absolutely absolved by him: we have need still to pray for the pardon of our sins. Quest. 10. Whether it be heinous, and hateful impiety, for the Churches, and Children of God, to fast and pray, that God would turn away his anger, and indignation from them, when they lie under his judgements, or at other times, when their consciences are terrified, and troubled with their sins. And whether God may be said to be pacified and appeased by our fasting, and prayers, or by any such things. SECT. I. It is lawful for us to pray that God would turn away his anger from us: And, how this is to be understood. Mr. D. sharply reproveth the practice of this, saying. How often have we thought God like unto ourselves? Recon: of God to man, page 36. How many times have we imagined an angry God, a wrathful Majesty? And thought to appease his indignation by fasting, by praying, by alms, by tears, and such like things? O foolish man! if his wrath should not be before appeased, what Creatures could stand in his sight? Because of this, he chargeth us to have set up an Idol in our hearts throughout the Land. But I would know of him, whether it be not safe for Christians, both to speak and pray in the language of the holy Scriptures? Sure I am, David prayeth thus. Psal. 6.1. O Lord rebuke me not in thine anger, neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure. And Psal. 79.5. he speaketh and saith, How long Lord wilt thou be angry, for ever? shall thy jealously burn like fire? And then he prayeth, Pour out thy wrath upon the heathen, that have not known thee, and upon the kingdoms that have not called upon thy name. In Psal. 85.3. He also speaketh unto God and saith, Thou hast taken away all thy wrath, thou hast turned thyself from the fierceness of thine anger. And then he prayeth and saith, Turn us O God of our salvation, and cause thine anger towards us to cease. Wilt thou be angry with us for ever? Wilt thou draw out thine anger to all generations? After the like manner, doth David speak of God's anger in divers other Psalms. Moses also told the Israelites, that the Lord was angry, and wroth with him for their sakes. But, Deut. 1.2, 7, & 3, 26, & 4, 21. not to allege any more the like say, whereof we meet with many in the holy Scripture; doth not the King of Ninive, both speak, and practise that, for the averting of God's heavy judgement from himself and his people which Mr. D. greatly condemneth in us, Joh. 3.8, 9 the people of this Land? For he proclaimed a fast and commanded his people to cry mightily unto God, and to turn every one from his evil way, and from the violence that was in in his hands, Saying, who can tell if God w ll turn, and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we perish not? What? shall we say, the King of Nineve did evil in speaking thus,? No, for this is related here in the prophet, not by way of reproof, but of Commendation, and for our imitation. We are not therefore to find fault with any for fasting and praying, that God would turn away his wrath from them, and from the whole Land, at such times, as this is, for so we should hinder, the people's repentance, and make them profane. But that they may not conceive amiss of God's anger, we are to teach them, that anger is in God, non per modum affectus, sed effectus, that is to say, that by the anger of God, we are to understand, not any such turbulent passion or affection, as is in us, when we are angry. For then God should not be immutable and unchangeable. For such passions do work a great change and alteration, Mal. 36. Jam. 17. both in the body, and in the mind and soul of man. Again, if God should be moved, and disturbed as we are, when we are angry, than he should not be perfectly blessed, because he would for that time, or at that present want inward quietness, and contentment of mind. By the anger of God therefore, we are to understand such effects of God's justice, or such actions as anger produceth in us. Now these are reduced by Zanchius, and after him by Polanus; unto these three heads. First all men when they are angry, do decree and resolve with themselves, to be revenged on those that wrong them, and punish them: And secondly, do threaten them in words; And lastly, do indeed perform that which they have threatened. So by God's anger, are meant these three things, first, his most just will and decree to visit and punish sinners, temporally and eternally. Rom. 1.18. Thus St. Paul saith, The wrath of God is revealed from heaven, against all ungodliness, that is, saith Zanchius, by effects it is manifest, what the will of God, that dwelleth in heaven, is against all iniquity. Secondly by God's anger is also meant his terrifying and threatening of sinners, & denouncing of judgements against them, whether it be by his word, or by portentous, or prodigious signs and tokens. In this sense doth the King of Nineve speak, when he saith, Who knoweth if God will turn, & repent, & turn a way from his fierce anger that is, ab executione suarum Comminationum, saith Zanchius, from executing of that fearful destruction on them, which by his prophet he had denounced and threatened. Lastly, by God's anger are meant also the judgements, and punishments themselves, which he inflicteth on sinners, in which sense the Apostle speaketh, when he saith, Thou treasurest up for thyself wrath against the day of wrath, id est (saith Zanchius) poenas in illud tempus, quote Deus puniet, that is, punishments, against that time, in which God will punish thee. And in the same sense and signification, is the anger, or wrath of God to be understood, Math. 3.7. Eph. 5.6. Luke. 21.23. as Zanchius showeth. To lay down this matter, yet more fully. By God's anger, we are sometimes to understand the severity of his justice upon obstinate sinners, whom he punisheth without showing them any mercy. Thus David speaketh of God's anger, when he saith, O Lord rebuke me not in thy hot displeasure, that is, according to the rigour of thy justice: Psal. 6.1. unless we shall say as Zanchius and Polanus do, that he prayeth that God would not execute the threaten of his word upon him. So also, whereas the Lord saith, I will not execute the fierceness of mine anger, Psal. 11.9. I will not return to destroy Ephraim. By the fierceness of God's anger here, we may either understand the severity of his revenging justice, or his heaviest judgements, or else those terrible threaten, which he had denounced against the ten Tribes, for their Idolatry, and other sins. And in the same sense he speaketh, Hos. 13.11. I gave thee a King in mine anger, and took him away in my wrath. Again by the anger of God in other places of the Scripture, we are to understand the effects of God's revenging justice, on the wicked, and of his correcting justice on his own Children, both denounced in his word, and executed in his punishments and corrections. Thus when Moses told the Israelites, that the Lord was angry with him for their sakes, he spoke this, because the Lord had reproved him for the words which he by their instigation spoke hastily, at the waters of Meribah, and told him that he should not enter into the Land of Canaan. And when the Lord saith, that he swore unto the rebellious Israelites in his wrath, that they should not enter into his rest; by his wrath here, is meant that destruction, which he had denounced against them. Now by the anger of God in other places, are meant the effects both of God's revenging justice executed on the wicked, and of his correcting justice on his own Children. An example of the former, we have in the unbelieving Jews, of whom St. Paul saith, wrath is come on them to the utmost, that is, 1 Thes. 2.16 Isa. 54.8. extremity of punishment. And of the latter in the believing Jews. In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment, but with everlasting kindness I will have mercy on thee, saith the Lord thy redeemer. Thus have I briefly showed, what the Protestants do hold, and what they do teach, concerning the anger of God, against which I presume Mr. D. will not reply. No cause hath he therefore, to find fault with us, for praying that God would be merciful unto us, and turn away his wrath and indignation from us, and from the whole Land; unless he will say, that it is not lawful for us to speak Tropically, or Figuratively in our prayers, as the Scripture doth. SECT. II. How Gods wrath is Pacified. THe next thing which I am to clear, is how God can be said to be pacified, and appealed by fasting, and prayer. For Christ only hath pacified his Father's wrath, by that propitiatory sacrifice of his, which he offered unto him for the sins of all the elect. If any therefore shall take upon them by their prayers, or by their fasting and tears to turn away God's wrath from themselves, or from the Land, instead of pacifying him, they shall provoke him so much the more, by robbing Christ of the glory, that is due unto him. This is another thing (as I conceive,) which Mr. D. in those words of his, which I alleged at the beginning of this Question, doth intent to charge us with. But hereunto I answer briefly, that God's wrath may be said, to be appeased two manner of ways, 1. Stricté et proprié, in a more strict and proper sense, by satisfaction made to his justice, Answ. for the sins whereby he is provoked. Now thus only hath Christ pacified his Father's wrath, Rom. 3.25. Eph. 2.14. Col. 1.20. Rom. 5.10. and reconciled us unto him by his death. We do willingly therefore acknowledge, that both the Papists, and all other that do think to satisfy God for their sins, and so to pacify his wrath, by their prayers, fasting, and weeping, and afflicting of themselves, with any such penal works, or sufferings, do take upon them Christ's Office, and rob him of his glory: But the Protestants are not guilty of this, but do condemn it, and speak against it; as their works and writings do bear witness, Secondly, God's wrath may be said to be pacified laté et improprié, in a large & in an improper sense, when such duties are practised and performed, upon the doing whereof, God doth turn away his indignation, that is, removeth his judgements, not for the merit of the works that are done, or as if by them, his justice were satisfied; but for Christ's sake, who hath merited pardon for such as * Heb. 5.9. obey him in doing the things which he requireth; to whom therefore God hath promised that he will be gracious, and favourable. Thus is God, through Christ, pacified towards sinners, when they repent and turn unto him, and pray, and humble themselves before him according to his gracious promises, which he hath made unto them, Therefore also, now saith the Lord, turn ye even to me, with all your heart, and with fasting, Joel 2.12.13 and with weeping, and with mourning▪ and rend your hearts, and not your garments, and turn to the Lord your God: For he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness, and repenteth him of the evil. And Jer. 18.7, 8. At what instant I shall speak concerning a Nation and concerning a Kingdom to pluck up & to pull down and to destroy it: If that Nation against whom I have denounced, turn from their evil, I will repent of the evil that I thuought to do not them. See also Zach. 1.3. 1 Cor. 11.13. 1 Kings 8.33. The sum of all that hath been said, is this: God's wrath is pacified upon our humiliation, repentance, prayer, and faith in God's promises; not for these acts or works of ours, but for Christ's sake in whom we do believe, and whom we do obey: or else thus; Gods wrath is not pacified By our fasting, and repentance, to speak properly (for then we should be justified by works,) but When we repent, and pray, and turn unto him: for as long as we live in sin, we are under God's wrath. SECT. III. Objections Answered. Having thus finished what Mr. D. hath given me occasion to say concerning this Question; before I do proceed unto the next, I have thought good to answer certain Objections, which I find urged by one to prove that God neither is, nor can be angry with any of his Children: which if it were true, then indeed the Children of God, should have no need to pray at any time or other, that God would turn away his anger from them▪ or if they pray so, they shall take God's name in vain. The first of these Objections is this. God seethe no iniquity in his people, he cannot therefore be angry with them, for nothing offendeth him, nor causeth him to be angry but sin. Now to prove that God seethe no iniquity in his people, these Testimonies of holy Scripture are alleged. He hath not beheld iniquity in Jacob, Num. 23.21 neither hath he beheld perverseness in Israel. At that time (to w●t when they shall be converted unto the Lord) the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for, and there shall be none. Jer. 5.30. Our blessed Saviour also speaketh thus unto the Church his spouse. Behold thou art all fair my love, and there is no spot in thee. Cant. 4.7. That I may answer these things in order, first I grant, that if God did not at all see any sin in his people, he could not be angry with them; but the Testimonies here alleged do not prove this; for first, the Lord is said, to have beheld none iniquity in Jacob, and to have seen no perverseness in Israel, to wit, at that time when Balaam uttered these words: non absolutè, sed comparatiué, not absolutely none at all, but none in comparison of those foul, and fearful sins of Idolatry, sorcery, and the like abominations, to which the Heathen were addicted; and whereunto Balaam by his wicked counsel, which he gave afterwards to Balack, drew many of the Israelites to their destruction, (those I mean which committed adultery both spiritual and corporal) and hoped by this means, to have ensnared them all, that so they might have been open to God's Judgements, and have been destroyed by the King of Moab. Again, the Lord is here said, not to have beheld any iniquity in Jacob, nor to have seen perverseness in Israel, with a revenging eye to condemn them, or to cast them off for it, and to deliver them up as a prey into the hands of their malicious enemies: but otherwise he saw all the iniquity, and all the evil that they did, with the eye of his providence, from which nothing is concealed, nor lieth did, for as the Apole saith All things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do; Heb, 4.12. And, as Solomon saith, Pro. 15.3. the eyes of the Lord are in every place beholding the evil with a loathing of it, and the good, with an approbation of it. Those therefore who hold that the Lord doth not at all behold any iniquity in his Children, must either deny their sins, to be evil, or else ●ay that they do not sin at all, directly contrary to most express, and plain places of holy Scripture. Ecles. 7.20. For, as Solomon saith, There is not a just man upon the earth, that doth good, and sinneth not. See also, Rom. 3.10. James 3.2. 1. Joh. 1.8. Thus I have answered the first Testimony of holy Scripture, admitting that the words are to be translated, as they are commonly read in our English Bibles, and as they are by this Author alleged: But the truth is, they are so rendered by some most learned and judicious Interpreters, that there cannot so much as any show, or colour of an Objection be raised from them, to prove that God seethe not any iniquity in his Children. For thus do they translate them, he hath not beheld wrong against Jacob; nor hath he seen grievance against Israel. For the exposition and justification of which interpretation, I refer my reader to a large, and most learned dissertation of Mr. Gatakers, upon this very place of holy Scripture, which I saw not, until I had finished this Question. Hujusmodi dicta, non sunt intelligenda de Simplci cognitione Dei, quasi non ea amplius nórit sed de cognition judiciali ad paenam, Zauch lib 3. de natura Dei, Chap. 2. q. 14. The next Scripture that is alleged that is, Jer. 50.20. Where he saith, At that time the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for, and there shall be none, the meaning whereof is, that there shall be none to be imputed unto them, because it shall be forgiven them, and the sins of Juda shall not be found, that is, to be charged on them, or rise up against them to their condemnation, because they shall be justified and absolved from them. In the same sense doth our Saviour speak of his Church, † Cant. 4.7. Behold thou art▪ all fair my love and there is no spot in thee; for this is not spoken of the spotless purity, and perfect beauty, or fairness of the Church by inherent sanctification, but of perfect righteousness imputed unto her in her justification: for although none of the Children of God be perfectly fair in themselves, but defiled in part with many spots of sin while they live here; yet being considered as they appear before God's tribunal clothed with Christ's righteousness, so they are all fair in Him, and there is no spot in them, which is not washed away in his blood, in regard of the imputation, or guilt thereof. Hereunto I add further, that the holy Scripture speaketh sometimes of the Church of Christ, not only as she beginneth to be purified from sin here in this life, but as holiness shall be perfected in her in the world to come, at what time she shall be all fair, not only by justification, but internal sanctification also, so that no spot of sin shall at all adhere unto her. Even now while Christ's spouse so journeth here on earth, he beginneth by his word and spirit to sanctify and cleanse her from her spots and impurities: but when her warfare shall be ended, he will present her unto himself, a glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing, Eph. 5.26.27. but holy, and without blemish. The next thing which I find alleged to prove that the Children of God are not to fast, nor pray, that God would turn away his indignation from them, are certain places of Scripture, which say expressly that God is never angry with is people, Isa. 27. Fury is not in me. Isa. 54.9. As I have sworn that the waters of Noah shall no more go over the earth, so have I sworn that I will be no more wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee. Whereunto I answer that there is a two fold anger, the one of a revenging Judge, that executeth justice strictly according to men's deeds and deserts; the other of a loving Father, who is angry with his Children, when they do evil, for their correction and amendment. Of the former, the Lord speaketh to his Church, when he saith, Fury is not in me, and I will be no more wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee, that is, in wrathful revenge, to satisfy my justice on thee. For otherwise the Lord saith plainly, As many as I love I rebuke and Chasten, be Zealous therefore and amend. Rev. 3.19.20. Thus the Lord is angry with his own Children, with the anger of a Father, that is, not out of hatred or any ill will, but out of mere love, tendering their good, and reclaiming them from evil, that they may not perish, but be saved eternally. So he was angry with Moses and Aaron at the waters of Meribah, as I have showed before. And of this anger David speaketh when he saith. His anger endureth but a moment. Psal. 30.5. And again, the Lord is merciful and gracious slow to anger, and plenteous in mercy. He will not always chide, neither will he keep his anger for ever. Psal. 103.8, 9 After the same manner speaketh also the Lord himself. In a little wrath I hide my face from thee for a moment, but with everlasting mercy will I have compassion on thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer. It is evident that the Lord speaketh here, of his own Children, for his everlasting mercy belongeth to them and on them it is, that his anger remaineth but a moment. For on wicked reprobates, it shall rest for ever; according to that Joh. 3.36. He that believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him. Quest. 11. Whether God do correct his Children for their sins. This Question I thought good to add unto the former, because it is of great affinity with it, and the rather indeed have I done this, because an Acquaintance of mine did lately, long after I had finished this Treatise, take upon him to maintain, that God doth never correct his Children for any sin, that is committed by them; against whom I reasoned thus. God doth either correct his Children for sin; or for righteousness, for there is no mean betwixt these two. For our actions, although being considered simply as they are per se et sua natura, in themselves, and in their own nature, are many of them indifferent, that is neither good nor evil morally: yet in actu exercito, that is, being clothed with such circumstances, as they are when they are practised by us, so they are all either good or evil. Now, said I, God doth not correct any for righteousness, or well doing; therefore it is for their sins and for their evil do that he correcteth his Children. But hereunto he answered, that it is for righteousness that God correcteth his Children, for said he, God correcteth them from their sins, and maketh them to live righteously. I perceived his meaning was, as if he should have said, God correcteth his Children for righteousness, not that righteousness which they have done, but which he would have them to do. Now this I willingly yielded unto him, that the terminus á quo of God's corrections, or rather of our sanctification which he worketh in us by his corrections, is sin; and the terminus ad quem, is righteousness, that is, to speak popularly and plainly, God by his chastisements driveth us from sin unto righteousness. For as the Apostle saith, No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, Heb. 12.11. but grievous, nevertheless afterwards it yields the peaceable fruit of righteousness, unto them which are exercised thereby. Thus the end of our Heavenly Father's Chastisements is to make us to leave our sins, and to follow after righteousness. But doth it follow hereupon that we are not corrected for our sins, whereby we do provoke God, and make him to afflict us? If we should never be overtaken, nor be at all defiled with any sin, he would never correct us. We may truly therefore be said to be corrected for our sins, because sins are they that do pull down God's corrections upon us. But here mine adversary replied and said, Object. Christ hath either born all the punishment of our sin, or he hath born none of it at all. Whereunto I answered, that punishment is of two sorts, either satisfactory to God's justice: Answ. now all this Christ hath born. For as I say, saith, He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities, Isa. 50.5.6. the Chastisement of our peace was upon him, and with his stripes are we healed. All we like sheep have gone astray, we have turned every one to his own way, and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquities of us all. Or else punishment is for the humiliation and reformation of the party offending, and such are Gods corrections, whereby he nurtureth his Children for his own glory, and their amendment. It is for our profit that we are thus corrected, as the Apostle telleth us; Heb. 12.10. Christ therefore by his passion hath not redeemed us from such Chastisements, but sanctifieth them unto us. After I had answered these Objections, I proceeded and proved unto him that God correcteth his Children for their sins. The arguments which I then used, I shall now somewhat enlarge, not tying myself strictly to the order in which they were propounded unto him. First of all then, I say, that the holy Scripture in express words affirmeth that God correcteth his Children for their sins, for thus speaketh the holy prophet David unto the Lord, This Testimony is universal of all men, of all times. Psal. 39.11. When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquity: thou makest his beauty to consume away like a moth. And presently he addeth, surely every man is vanity, in regard, he meaneth, of God's corrections, which do weaken and waste him. He excepteth none out of this number; not the Children of God, more than others. For it were his own afflictions that made him to utter these words. For having said, I am consumed by the blow of thine hand, presently he inferreth. When thou with rebukes dost chasten man, thou makest his beauty to consume away. David also bringeth in Almighty God speaking thus of his posterity, whereof it cannot be denied, but many were God's Children, If his Children forsake my law, and walk not in my judgements: If they break my statutes, and keep not my Commandments: then will I visit their transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes, Psal. 89.30.31.32. Now what is this, but to correct them for their sins? And I pray you, did not joseph's brothers, when they suspected that they were brought into great hazard and danger of their lives in the land of Egypt, acknowledge that this was God's punishment or correction on them for their sins? for thus they spoke one to another, We are verily guilty concerning our Brother, in that we saw the anguish of his soul, when he sought us, and we would not hear: therefore (they mean for their sin in oppressing and betraying their Brother,) is the distress come upon us, Gen. 42.21. When Job also saith, Thou makest me possess the sins of my youth, what meaneth he, but that God laid his hand heavy upon him, and chastised him for the sins of his youth? 2. Besides these and many other testimonies that might be produced, I reason thus, If the sins of God's children be the cause of their corrections, than they are corrected for their sins; for what is it to correct one for his sins, or for his faults; but to correct him, because of such faults and offences, as are committed by him. Now the holy Scripture testifieth, that God's children are corrected, because of their sins which they have committed, and not only to keep them from sin pro futuro, for the time to come: therefore it cannot justly be denied, that God correcteth them for their sins. That their sins are the cause of God's corrections, these places of holy Scripture do evidence: first, the Lord speaketh to David by his Prophet Nathan, and saith, The Sword shall never departed from thine House, because thou hast despised me, and hast taken the Wife of Vriah, See also Luk. 1.20. the Hittite to be thy Wife, 2 Sam. 12, 10. And afterwards he saith, Because by this deed (by the murder of Uriah) thou hast given great occasion, to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme, the child also that is born unto thee, shall surely die, Vers. 14. That the death of David's child was a correction to him, it cannot be denied. Now the cause of this correction is here said to be his evil deed, or his sin which he had committed, it followeth necessarily therefore, that God correcteth him for his sins, his sins past; and not from sin only, that he might live righteously for the time to come; for the end of David's corrections was not only his own humiliation and reformation, and the restraining of others from the like sins, through the terror of God's judgements inflicted on him, but the vindication of God's glory in the execution of justice, and the manifestation of his hatred against those sins of David, whereby he had made the enemies of God to blaspheme his holy name. These corrections of David, as also the corrections of all God's children, sunt actus justitiae Divinae cum misericordia temperatae, are acts of God's justice, tempered with mercy; for God, seeing he will not spare, no not his dearest children, such as David was, but sharply chastizeth them, hereby he openly declareth, that he is a just God, that will not wink at sin in any, though otherwise this his justice is tempered with singular mercy towards the Elect, because their afflictions are through God's grace and goodness sanctified unto them, and do turn to the furtherance of their salvation. That one end of Gods correcting of his children, is the manifestation of his justice, and hatred against sin, David himself acknowledgeth in his own particular, when he saith, Psal. 51, 4. Against thee, thee only have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight, that thou mightest be justified, that is, acknowledged to be just, when thou speakest (against me, and reprovest me) and be clear, that is, appear pure and clear from all fault, when thou judgest me by thy punishment and corrections. David also, when God's hand did lie heavy upon him by sore sickness, did acknowledge that his sin was the cause of all this; for thus doth he complain unto God, Psal. 38.7, 3. There is no soundness in my flesh, because of thine anger; neither any rest in my bones, because of my sin. But I shall not need to allege any more testimonies to prove that David was corrected for his sins. For those whose opinion I do now oppugn do grant that God did chastise David for his sins; but they say, that David in these his sufferings, was a type of Christ. They hold therefore, Object. that that which is testified concerning the cause of his sufferings, is not to be applied to all God's Children generally, as if they also when they are afflicted, should be said to be corrected by their heavenly Father for their sins. But this that they say is no solid answer, but a mere evasion. For first, Though David were a type of Christ in his sufferings, Answ. as he was unjustly persecuted by Saul, falsely slandered by Doeg and saul's Courtiers, and perfidiously and traitorously dealt withal by Achitophel and others, whereof he complaineth in divers of his Psalms, which the Evangelists do allege, as fulfilled in Christ. Yet, it is not enough barely to say, but it would be as solidly proved, that he was also a type of Christ in all those evils, wherewith God visited him for his sins, in numbering the people, and for the wrongs which he did to Uriah. What shall we say, that whereas David's Wives were defiled before all Israel, and in the sight of the Sun, that this befell him only as he was a Type of Christ? and not rather as a correction for his sin, in defiling Vriahs' Wife? To hold therefore, as these men do, that David suffered only propter rationem typicam, that is, that he might typify Christ's sufferings, seemeth strange unto me; for seeing he was one of God's Children, no doubt the Lord disciplined him, as he doth the rest of his Children; For what Son is he, whom the Father chasteneth not? saith the Apostle Heb. 12. David therefore was chastised for his sins, not only as he was a type of Christ, (as these men will have it) but as the rest of God's Children are, for his humiliation, and future reformation and repentance: as also that God by scourging him, might manifest and make known his hatred of those sins, which he had run into, and warn others to beware of them, as I have before shown. But if I shall grant that all David's afflictions befell him as he was a type of Christ, what will these men say to the sufferings of Asa, the King of Juda, 2 Chron. 16, 7, 8, 9 and of Miriam the Sister of Moses and Aaron, for both these were chastened of God for their sins, Asa, because he trusted not in the Lord, but relied on the King of Syria, for help against his enemies; and Miriam, because she murmured against Moses. Will they say, that both these were in this a type of Christ? Indeed I do willingly grant, that Asa was a type of Christ, as he was the anointed King of Judah. But that otherwise, as he suffered for want of confidence in God, and Miriam a woman in suffering for her murmuring, should be a type of Christ, seemeth as yet somewhat strange unto me, until I shall by these men be better instructed. And although I do grant, that Moses was a type of Christ, as he did in some sort perform the Office of a Mediator, between God and the people, yet (I think) it cannot be said, that whereas he was excluded out of Canaan for his sin, that he committed at the waters of Meribah, that he was in this a type of Christ, saving us by his sufferings; but rather shadowed out the Law, which bringeth none to Heaven. In which regard Joshua that brought the Israelites into Canaan, and not Moses, who for his sin died in the Wilderness, was a type of Christ. But whatsoever is to be said of Miriam, Asa, Aaron and Moses, I know they will not affirm, that the Corinthians that came irreverently unto the Lord's Supper, without due examination, and preparation of themselves, were any type of Christ. Notwithstanding, St. Paul telleth us, That for this cause many of them were weak and sickly, and many of them did sleep, that is, the sleep of death. It cannot be denied therefore, that these were scourged & corrected for their sins. This is so evident, that they are enforced to grant it, but they think to put it off thus. Object. They say, that there were many hypocrites, and wicked men in the Church of Corinth, that did give their names unto Christ, and made an open profession of faith in him, as the true believers did. Now they tell us, that the Apostle speaketh of these counterfeit, and not of true believers, when he saith, for this cause many are sick and weak among you, and many sleep; for, say they, could such impious and wicked Beasts be the members of Christ, who came drunk to the Lords Table? Answ. I answer, It is not impossible, that a Child of God, drinking Wine liberally with others, at their love feasts, might as well be overtaken with drunkenness, as Noah was, whom St. Peter calleth a righteous man. But suppose that they were all wicked hypocrites, that thus profaned the holy Sacrament of Christ's body and blood: 2 Pet. 2. yet seeing the Church and people of God at Corinth, tolerated them in their Communion, and did not censure them for this foul fault: therefore God's judgement might break in among them all, by an epidemical disease; and take away some, if not many of the better sort, as well as all the Israelites fled before their enemies, and divers of them were slain for the sin of A chan. Josh. 7. And that this was the case of the Corinthians, whom God visited some of them with death, and others with sickness, and weakness: the words immediately following in the Apostle do manifest when he saith, for if we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged. But when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not be condemned with the World. T●ese words do evince, that St. Paul speaketh in this place of true belee●ers, and not only of counterfeit hypocrites. First▪ This i● evident from his scope, in uttering these words; which was to comfort, not only those which were living, and yet lying under God's judgements; but others also for the death of their dear friends, who were thus taken away, for profaning the holy Sacrament of Christ's blessed body and blood. The former of these might think thus with themselves, seeing this our sickness and weakness is a judgement of God upon us, what hope can we have in him? And the latter might say, seeing God hath taken away our friends in judgement, alas, what is become of their souls? The Apostle to comfort them against such sad thoughts as these, telleth them, that this was indeed a judgement upon them: but a judgement only of castigation for their reformation, that so they might escape the judgement of eternal condemnation in the world to come. Again, St. Paul includeth himself in the number of those that are thus judged. For he saith not, that those men only that came irreverently to the Lords Table were judged: but when we are judged, (speaking of himself, and all believers) we are chastened of the Lord. Rom. 8.1. Thirdly, He informeth us, how happy the end and issue of this judgement of castigation is to all God's children. It becometh a means (God sanctifying it unto them for this end) to free them from condemnation: which is the portion, and proper and peculiar privilege of the godly, and not common to them with the wicked. 4. & lastly, Therefore he opposeth the persons that are thus judged, unto the world. It is not possible therefore, that St. Paul should speak only of wicked hypocrites, when he saith, For this cause many are sick, and weak among you, and many sleep. For such wicked ones belong unto the World, and are no true members of Christ, nor of his Church, which consisteth of Saints, that are gathered out of the World. 3. & lastly, I would know of these men, whether a Father doth not correct his children, and a Schoolmaster his Scholars for their faults? To deny this, is to contradict all men, and the truth itself. For a Child when he groweth wanton, and stubborn against his Father; and a Scholar when he playeth the trevant, and neglecteth his book, do both of them deserve the Rod of correction. Their faults which they have committed, are causa meritoria, the meriting cause of their correction, though the final cause, or the end of such correction, is their reformation. And even so also by a like reason, do Gods children, when they forget their duties, and wax wanton against their heavenly Father, deserve to be corrected by him, for their amendment. Object. But here it may be said, God correcteth his children in love for their good. Answ. Now what? Can they by their sins be said to deserve good, and not rather evil? For answer hereunto I say, that although the afflictions of God's children are good unto them in their end and issue, whereunto they are sanctified and directed by God. In which regard, God's Children do say with David, Heb. 12.11. It is good for me that I have been afflicted, for before I was afflicted, I went astray, but now do I keep thy Law, Psal. 119. Notwithstanding, as the Apostle saith, and as we feel in our own experience, our afflictions in themselves are grievous, and bitter to the flesh. And therefore as it is said of him that cannot rule his appetite, that he deserveth to fall into the hands of the Physician, who by bitter Pills, or potions purgeth away the ill-humors, which his delicious Cups, and sweet morsels bred in his body. So when God's children do satisfy their carnal lusts, and surfeit upon sin, they deserve the bitter pills of affliction, which when the heavenly Physician of their souls shall administer unto them, they have cause with Job, not only to be patiented, and contented but thankfully to submit themselves unto his corrections, and to say, Job 2.10. Shall we receive good at the hand of God, and not receive evil? Ye see then, that the afflictions of God's Children are evil in themselves, though good in their end. The force of this reason, Object. our adversaries do think to avoid, by saying, that a Father is indeed angry with his children when they offend him, and correcteth them for their faults. But so doth not God to his children, for he is never angry with any of them, because Christ hath born all their sins, and pacified his Father's wrath for ever. This Objection I shall not need here to answer, Answ. for I have removed it in the former Question, where I shown that Christ hath freed us from God's revenging wrath, which would have overwhelmed us in perdition and destruction everlasting; but not from his paternal indignation, which tendeth to the furtherance of our sanctification, and salvation. And therefore it would not be for our good, but to our hurt, if he should not thus cause us to feel his anger, when we forget ourselves, and go a stray from him. I would know also, wherefore God calleth himself our Father, and us his children? but because he dealeth with us, as a Father doth with his children, as in other respects, so particularly in nurturing us for our sins, when we offend him by them, as the Apostle expressly showeth, Heb. 12.5, 6, 7, 8. This that I have said, cannot but be of singular use unto the children of God, when they are visited with his corrections. For if they believe that their sins are (at least wise in part) a cause of their afflictions. 1. This will make them so much the more diligently to search and examine themselves, that they may both find out their sins, and purge them out by repentance, saying with the Jews, Lam. 3.40. Lam. 3.40. Come let us search and try our ways, and turn again unto the Lord. 2. It will make them also to humble themselves so much the more before the Lord, saying with the Prodigal, Luk. 15. Father, I have sinned against Heaven, and against thee, and I am no more worthy to be called thy Son. 3. It will make them also to pray the more fervently, and effectually to God, for mercy and forgiveness as David did, being afflicted in mind with the sight and sense of his sins, when God's judgements were upon him, Psal. 38. 4. It will make them to hate and abhor sin so much the more, and the more to shun it for the time to come. 5. And lastly, As he in the time of the Law, that was pursued for murder, which he had unwittingly and unwillingly committed, did fly hard to the Altar, or to the City of refuge to save his life: so when a man acknowledgeth, that it are his sins, that do cause God to pursue him with his judgements, it will make him to fly the faster unto, and to lay the firmer hold on Jesus Christ, that he may obtain forgiveness, and salvation by him. But when men do deny that their sins are any cause of God's corrections, then when they lie under his judgements, they will neither search out their sins, nor humble themselves before God for them, nor pray so much the more earnestly for the pardon of them, nor repent and turn unto God from them. But on the contrary, such persons (as we see it is both the Opinion, and the practice of many now at this day) will say, that they need not, neither to repent, nor to pray for the pardon of their sins, nor to make any confession of them, and so they take a course to shut Heaven gates against themselves. For as St. John telleth us, If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, 1 Joh. 1.8, 9 that is, with inward penitency & compunction of heart, and with a lively hatred, and abhorring of them, God is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. To the same effect speaketh Solomon. Prov. 28.13. He that covereth his sins, (as every one doth, who saith, that he hath no sin) shall not prosper: but he that confesseth, and forsaketh them, shall find mercy. Quest. 12. Whether a man may be assured of Salvation by his love to the Brethren, Quest. 12 and by other effects and fruits of Sanctification? Or whether he can be assured of Salvation, no otherwise, but only by Faith in Christ? SECT. I. A Man may be assured of his Salvation by his Repentance. TO this Mr. D. answereth, When the soul is loaden with the burden of sin, and sense of misery, Confer. p. 18 it is sufficient for our assurance, to believe God in his promises, and we read of nothing else. Act. 16.31. Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved. No doubt it is true, that he who believeth in God according to his promises, which in the Gospel he hath made unto us, I find (saith he) but one only condition of actual Reconciliation of man to God, p. 56. that is, as he explaineth himself, whereby we know that God is reconciled to us, p. 51. Confer. between a sick man, etc. p. 5. shall obtain remission of sins and salvation; but these promises are not made to any one that continueth in sin, although he be never so much terrified, and troubled with the fear of Hell: but to those only that repent, and turn unto God. And hereupon it is, that the true Christian in believing repenteth, and repenting believeth. Thus Faith and Repentance are twisted together, as it were, and indeed are never separated, as he himself acknowledgeth. Whereupon it followeth necessarily also, that a man may be assured of his salvation, by his repentance. And this he dareth not deny, but saith, that it is a sure mark of salvation, whatsoever faileth. But he hath no sooner granted this, but in the next words he laboureth to rob and bereave Christians of all the comfort, which their Repentance will afford them; for he saith, That a man cannot know his Repentance to be true, neither by his hearty sorrow for his sins past, nor by his steadfast purpose to forsake all sin, and to walk in all godliness. First, He saith, that Reprobates, as Esau, Gen. 27.1. and Judas, Math. 27.3. repent, and sorrowed hearty for their sins. And (saith he) doubtless all that do despair, do hearty sorrow for their sins, as they that are swallowed up with over much sorrow. But I answered him, that such do sorrow hearty in deed, but nor for their sins; but for the punishment and damnation of them, which they are afraid of. The Apostle therefore calleth this Worldly Sorrow, 2 Cor. 7.10. and saith, that it causeth death: but in the next words he telleth us, that godly sorrow (which is when a man after a godly manner is sorry for sin, because it is sin, or because it is an offence against God, and a dishonour to him) worketh repentance unto salvation, 2 Cor. 7.10. never to be repent of. Whosoever therefore findeth such godly sorrow in himself, may thereby be assured of salvation. The like is to be said of him that purposeth, not by fits and flashes; but steadfastly to forsake all sin, and to walk in all godliness. For seeing the heart, that is, the will, tanquam Regina, as a Queen, commandeth all the inferior faculties of the soul, and members of the body; It is certain therefore, that if a man be not diverted from his purpose, * If he be constant in his purpose, I say, for many times sensual affections do rebel against the will, and do lead it away captive with them. Act. 11.23. Heb. 13. Psal. 119.6. but be constant in it, he will perform it, whilst he is not letted by outward violence, which the soul, or the conscience in working holiness, never is. And hereupon it was, that Barnabas, when he saw the grace of God, which he had bestowed upon the Brethren at Antioch, exhorted them, that they would with purpose of heart cleave unto the Lord. And the Apostle speaking of himself, saith, We know we have a good Conscience in all things, willing that is resolving to live honestly. And hereby also did David assure himself of God's favour, when he said, Then shall I not be confounded, when I have respect unto all God's Commandments. That which he allegeth to impeach this, Object. is frivolous, and of no weight, to wit, that the Scribes and Pharisees had a purpose to lead a godly life; and yet our Saviour rejected their obedience, saying, Mat. 5.20. Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharises, ye shall in no case enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. For their righteousness was externa non interna justitia, outward only before men, but the inward purity of the heart was wanting in them. For which cause our blessed Saviour, compared them to whited Sepulchers, and told them, that they did make clean the outside of the Cup, and of the platter, whereas their inward part was full of uncleanness. Besides this, Luk. 11.39. they tythed Mint, and anise, and Cummin; but neglected the weightier matters of the Law, as our Saviour layeth this to their charge. He is much mistaken therefore, Mat. 23.25. when he saith, that the Scribes and Pharises had a constant purpose to forsake all sin, and to walk in all holiness. But (saith he) St. Paul a Pharise saith of himself, Object. Phil. 3.6. that he before his conversion, was as touching the righteousness, which is of the Law blameless. The answer hereunto is, Answ. that he speaketh only of the outward righteousness of the Law, as his enemies the Pharises understood it. His meaning therefore is, that he was unblameable in the Opinion of the Jews, who were seduced by the Pharises, and did as much as they required of him, or that he was unblameable, in regard of his outward conversation before men: and what if St. Paul did think well of himself, whilst he was a Pharise, and did persecute the Church of God, can none therefore, no not those, who have received the spirit of God, whereby they know the things that are given them of God, 1 Cor. 2.12. be assured that they do in truth serve God according to all his Commandments? SECT. II. Faith and Repentance are distinct Graces. Object. Confer. p. 19, 20. Answ. Synop. purioris Theologiae. BUt he telleth us wherefore he acknowledgeth true Repentance to be a sure mark of salvation, to wit, because Repentance includeth Faith as a part thereof. Whereunto I answer, as the learned professors of Leyden, and other Protestants do, that Repentance is sometimes taken generally, for the whole conversion of a sinner from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, and so faith is a part of it; but otherwise the holy Scripture speaketh of Faith and Repentance, as of two distinct graces. For so doth St. Paul, when he saith, that he kept back from the Ephesians, Act. 20.21. nothing that was profitable for them, but taught them repentance towards God; and faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ. Whence I reason thus, Conf. p. 20. those virtues, or those graces that are differenced by their objects, are different virtues, but so are repentance and faith: therefore they differ really, & non sicut totum, & pars, and not as the whole, and the part, Object. Act. 2.37, 38. the one whereof is included in the other. But saith he, when the Jews asked, what shall we do to be saved? Peter answered, Repent and be baptised, And when the Jailor made the same Question, Paul answered, Act. 16.31. Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved: therefore either repentance must include faith, or else St. Peter giveth not a full answer: yea rather, say I, or else Mr. D. is deceived: for in that saying of St. Peter, Faith is not included in the word Repent; but in the words following, And be baptised in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that is, in the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ. Although otherwise (as I have said before) I do not deny but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Repentance, when it is used alone, and not opposed to faith, may comprehend, or include in it, faith in Christ Jesus, as a part of our conversion. SECT. III. That Charity doth not bind a man universally to give half his Goods to the poor, as Zacheus did. HE granteth also, That Love to the Brethren is a sure and certain note of a true Child of God, and of Salvation, is plainly taught, 1 Joh. 3.4. which place is vindicated from the false gloss which Mr. D. hath set upon it, Pag. 234. Confer. Pag. 7, 8. that where unfeigned love to the Brethren is found, it may be a testimony of grace received (but addeth) that a man cannot love them, unless he do sell, either the whole, or half of his possessions, and divide them among such of his Brethren, as he knoweth to be poor. But if this be an inseparable note of true charity, as he teacheth, I dare boldly say, he by this Doctrine of his, will much more trouble men's Consciences, than we do by ours, and give them less assurance of Salvation: 1 Joh. 3.14. For he that loveth not his Brother abideth in death. Now how many can he find in this Kingdom, that with Zacheus do give half their goods to the poor, or that having Lands and possessions, do with those primitive Christians sell them, and lay down at their Ministers, Act. 4. or Pastor's feet, the price of them, that it may be distributed amongst their Brethren, as their necessity shall require? doubtless he will find but a few, if any, that will do this. Now what, shall we exclude all the rest from the state of grace, and consequently, from all hope of salvation? I dare not do so; and yet I must needs say, seeing the faith that is available to salvation, worketh by love, Gal. 5.6. the great want of love, in many forward professors of the Gospel, may give them just cause to doubt of their salvation. Luk. 19 Act. 2.45. & 4.34, 35. But that I may come nearer to Mr. D. although Zacheus at his conversion, gave half his goods to the poor, and those that were possessors of Lands, sold them, and laid down the money at the Apostles feet: yet the Lord no where bindeth us by any precept to do the like; neither do their examples bind all to imitate and follow them in this their practice. For God distributeth his graces diversely, to some he giveth very large hearts, and stirreth them up to do more, than others can ordinarily attain unto, who have received an inferior portion of the spirit, 1 Pet. 4.10. or gift of grace. And hereupon it is, that St. Peter exhorteth, As every man hath received the gift, so minister the same one to another, as good Stewards of the manifold grace of God. And St. Paul exhorting the Corinthians to be liberal in their contributions to the poor Saints at Jerusalem, doth not call upon them to give half, or any certain and determinate part of their goods unto them, although they were in great necessity; but (saith he) Every man as he purposeth in his heart, so let him give, not grudgingly, or of necessity, 2 Cor. 9.7. for God loveth a cheerful giver. There are sometimes more, & sometimes fewer poor to be relieved by us, and sometimes their necessity is greater, and sometimes less. Now according hereunto, are we to proportion our giving of Alms, as the Casuists do teach very well, unto whom I refer Mr. D. for the rectifying of his judgement; only this I will say, that unless it be in case of extreme necessity, when the poor cannot otherwise be maintained, but will perish for want of necessaries, a man is not bound to sell his possessions, and to give the price unto them: in doing whereof, he should exhaust the Fountain of his liberality, and be disabled from doing good in time to come. Yea should this be generally practised, it would be the overthrow of the Commonwealth: but as St. Paul saith, He is for to give, 2 Cor. 8.13. not that other men may be eased, and he burdened; but what his abundance may be a supply for their wants, that is, that he may supply their necessities, by giving them that he may spare, without wasting and overthrowing of his Estate. SECT. iv Concerning Restitution of Goods unjustly gotten. HE bringeth in also his dying convert, Confer. p. 22. at the end of it. restoring fourfold unto those whom he had defrauded, as if those that have wronged others were bound to restore fourfold, after the example of Zacheus. But surely in this, he is much mistaken; for neither did the Law of Moses in all cases require a fourfold satisfaction. It is true, Exod. 22.47. he that stole a Sheep, if he did kill it, or sell it, was to restore fourfold; but for an Ox so stolen and alienated, he was to restore five fold: but if the theft were certainly found in his hand alive, whether it were Ox or Ass, or Sheep; in this case, he was to restore only double. So if a Thief did steal out of a man's house, money, or Stuffe, and was found, and was convicted thereof, he was to pay double: But in some other cases, the Law required less satisfaction, as is to be seen. It was Zacheus abundant piety therefore, Exod. 22. that moved him to restore four fold, either because (as St. Paul speaketh of the repenting Corinthians) he would be revenged on himself, Levit. 6. for the wrong and injuries which he had done; or because he would be sure to make full satisfaction to those, whose money, or goods, 2 Cor. 7.11. he had by false accusation taken from them, or for some other cause unknown unto me. All therefore that have defrauded, oppressed, or wronged others, are not bound to imitate Zacheus in this. For the moral Law, or the Law of nature, which only now under the Gospel, doth bind all men, of all Nations, requireth only restitution of that which is unjustly taken from others; either in the same identical thing, if it be not wasted or impaired in the value and worth of it: or if it be either become worse than it was, when it was taken away, or be lost, or sold, or otherwise alienated, than it is to be restored in the equivalent, or full worth of it. And if the owner thereof sustained any damage, or loss through the want of it, since the time that it was taken from him, full satisfaction is to be made him for that also, that so he may be made whole again, and be restored unto as good a state and condition, as he would have been in, had he never been rob, oppressed, or defrauded. Justitiae est suum cuique reddere, it is the property of justice, to render to every man his own. The Law of nature therefore binds those that have wronged others, to such satisfaction as I have spoken of. For they cannot be said to have their own rendered unto them, unless they receive both the thing that was unjustly taken from them, and the profit which would have arisen from it; (the charges deducted in managing, or employing of it) or if they could, or would have turned it to no profit, had it never been taken, nor withheld from them, yet satisfaction is to be made them, pro damno emergente, for the loss which they have sustained through the want of it, if any such hath befallen them. If such restitution be not made paenitentia non agitur, sed fingitur, as St. Augustine saith, a man's repentance is not true, but counterfeit. For how can a man be said to repent and forsake sin, as long as he keepeth that wherein he hath sinned, by him. This Doctrine is delivered by Divines generally, as a certain truth grounded on the Law of nature, Ezech. 18.7 and on the written word of God. But I have scarce met with any to my remembrance, excepting Mr. D: that doth but so much as intimate, or insinuate a necessity of a four fold Restitution. For it was not the moral, but the political, or judicial Law, that required of the Israelites, in some cases a fourfold, in some other a five fold, or two fold Restitution. And as the learned do well note, this was exacted, and prescribed, non per modum satisfactionis, not by way of satisfaction, which would have been sufficiently made in the equivalent, (as I said before) sed per modum paenae, but by way of punishment, to terrify and restrain men from such wickedness, and injustice. For which cause it was, that the punishment was aggravated, where the theft tended greatly to the detriment and damage of the Commonwealth. For; for this very cause it was, that he who stole an Ox, was to restore five fold; but he that stole a Sheep, but four fold, to wit, because the decay of Oxen, would have been a greater discommodity to the Israelites, then of their Sheep: for they were forbidden to multiply Horses; we read therefore, little mention made of them: but frequent, of their Oxen, Kine, Asses and Sheep. If their Oxen therefore should have been taken from them, the tillage of their ground must have failed, to say nothing that their Oxen also did draw their carriages, and tread out their Corn, which Sheep could not do. For this Reason also it is, that if the Ox, or the Sheep that were stolen, were found alive with the Thief, he was to restore but two fold, because they might still be preserved, and kept alive for the benefit of the Commonwealth. SECT. V A Man may be assured of Faith, and consequently, of Salvation by the inseparable Effects of Sanctification. BUt to leave this, I would know of him, when he offereth Christ freely to all, without any conditions, If he see many that live still in sin, without any repentance, or reformation of life, hereby embolden themselves to rely on Christ for salvation, whether he will not tell them, that this their Faith is nothing else, but carnal confidence, or presumption, which is a more dangerous Rock, then that of desperation, which he chargeth us by our Doctrine to drive men upon: Recon. of God to man, Pag. 64. though falsely. For as St. Augustine saith, in several places of his Homilies, plures pereunt sperando, quam desperando, more do perish by presumption, then by desperation. And here I will tell him, what both I myself, and some others heard one speak, with great rejoicing, whose conversation was none of the best. We never had the Gospel preached until now, Christ is freely offered unto all, nothing is required of us, free Grace is preached. What will you say to those, who hearing you preach thus, do turn the grace of God into lasciviousness, and say, That they know they shall be saved by their Faith in Christ, who is freely offered them, without any conditions? what you and those, who preach thus, will say, I know not; but sure I am, St. Paul saith to them, and to all, Prove yourselves, whether ye be in the Faith. And then he showeth how this is to be done. 2 Cor. 13.5. Know you not your own selves, that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be Reprobates? As if he should say, Whosoever they are that believe in Christ, they have him dwelling in them by his Spirit: hereby therefore shall you know, that ye are true believers, even by his spirit, whereof ye are made partakers. For as St. John also saith, Hereby we know, that he abideth in us, 1 Joh. 3.24. by the Spirit that he hath given us. He therefore, that upon good proof, and experience, findeth that the Spirit of God is in him, mortifying his carnal lusts and affections, and renewing him in holiness, may be assured hereby, that he is by Faith engrafted into Christ, and that he shall be saved by him. For it is not flesh and blood that worketh such an inward and universal change in us, but the spirit of God by Faith in Christ Jesus. And of this St. john assureth us, when he saith, This is our Victory that overcommeth the World even our Faith. As if he should say, it is our Faith in Christ, 1 joh. 5.4. (whereby we are made partakers of the spirit of God, which he merited for us, who believe in him) that makes us Conquerors of the World, that is of those sinful lusts, that reign in worldly men, and not any power or strength of our own. Where sin therefore is thus conquered, there is true faith; but in whomsoever sin still reigneth, 'tis in vain for him to boast of his faith, or of the free grace of God; for as yet he can lay no claim thereto. Thus Mr. D. I have proved, that our love to the Brethren, and other effects of the spirit, which are never separated from true Faith, do bear witness to our Faith, and testify the truth of it, not only before men, Confer. with a sick man. Pag. 8. (as you say) but inwardly also to our souls and consciences, which you must not deny, if you remember what you have written, concerning the reconciliation of Man to God. pag. 57, 59, 60. for there you say, that joy in the Holy Ghost, and the love of God, and of our Brethren, and new obedience, are inseparable Companions to our reconciliation by Faith. Every one of these therefore must needs assure us of our reconciliation to God, unless you will say, that a man may know that he hath faith, but cannot know, either that he rejoiceth in God, or that he loveth God and his Children, or that he obeyeth his word and Commandments, of which I can see no reason, seeing faith is as spiritual, supernatural, and as hard to be known, as any of these. For my part, I cannot conceive, how the souls of those that are reconciled unto God, should have such abundant joy, as you speak of, be filled even with floods of comfort, and have no knowledge, nor feeling thereof at all. And though the true love of God cannot always so easily be seen, and discerned by every one in whose heart it is, as such superabundant joy and rejoicing may: yet if he that loveth God could not know that he doth so, our Saviour would not have said unto Peter, Lovest thou me? neither could Peter have answered, as he did, Yea Lord, thou knowest that I love thee: ●●h. 21.15. ●sal. 116.1. Nor could David so confidently have said, as he doth, I love the Lord, because he hath heard my voice and my supplications. Now as a true Christian may know that he loveth God, so may he also that he truly repenteth, and liveth not according to his fleshly lusts, but according to God's Commandments, and is therefore his Servant. For else how could job have said, job 42.6. Psal. 116.6. that he abborred himself, and repent in dust and ashes? Or how could David have said, Lord, truly I am thy Servant, I am thy Servant, and the Son of thine Handmaid? It will be worth the while also, to take further notice what Mr. D. hath written concerning the love of God, and the keeping of his Commandments. This Garment of love (saith he) is like the Garment of divers colours, wherewithal the King's Daughters which were Virgins, were apparelled. If a woman be seen in the street, without a party coloured Garment, it is concluded, that she is either none of the King's daughters, or at lest no Virgin: so is that Ornament of love, I say, that thing wherewith all the people of God, reconciled to him, are adorned: if we see a soul altogether stripped of this Ornament, we conclude they are not in the number of God's people, at least not reconciled. Therefore the Holy Ghost concludes, He that loveth not, knoweth not God, 1 joh. 4.8. And as on the affirmative he pronounceth, Grace be on all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity, Eph. 6.24. So also on the negative, If any love not the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be Anathema Maranatha, 1 Cor. 16.22. Now with the love of God is joined the keeping of his Commandments, as an inseparable effect thereof. This is the love of God, that we keep his Commandments, 1 Joh. 5.3. If ye love me, keep my Commandments. 1 john 14, 15. If a man love me, he will keep my words, Vers. 23. Christ entering into the soul, shall drive out whatsoever is profane, and draw up the soul by the cords of love, unto new obedience. And to this place we refer hatred of sin, love of virtue, a godly sorrow for transgression committed, revenge upon ourselves, for the things that are past, and a jealous care for that which is to come. Thus far Mr. D. From all which, I pray you, may not I infer and conclude, both negatively, that he who liveth in sin and loveth the World, and the things thereof, is destitute of the true love of God, and as yet, can have no assurance of salvation? and affirmatively, that if a man can find, that he sincerely and unfeignedly loveth God, and testifieth the truth hereof, by obedience unto his Commandments, he may hereby, (and not by faith only, as Mr. D. will have it) be assured of God's love, and of his own eternal salvation by Jesus Christ? Doubtless, St. Peter would have us thus to conclude, 2 Pet. 1.5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. and resolve upon it; for he biddeth us make our Calling and Election sure, by the practice of other virtues, as well as of Faith; and consequently, giveth us to understand, that assurance of salvation is to be had, not from Faith only, but from charity also, and from brotherly love, and all those other Virtues and Graces that are joined with it; and by the Apostle in that place, particularly rehearsed, and reckoned up. For it must needs be granted, that those who are assured of their election, are thereby also assured of their salvation; seeing it is not possible, that any of the Elect should perish, Math. 24.24. For God's decrees are immutable, his counsel shall stand, and he will do all his will and pleasure, Isa. 46.10. SECT. VI Objections answered, and Doubts resolved. THere remaineth nothing now, but that I answer certain Reasons of Mr. D. which I have not yet touched, whereby he goeth about to prove, that our works of piety, or charity, cannot possibly assure us of salvation, when faith lieth hid, that we cannot see that we believe, by the inward testimony of our Conscience. Object. Convers. J. Baptist. p. 51. The first of them is this, That which maketh me doubt of my Faith, will make me doubt of the sincerity of my works. No, it will not; for the cause many times lieth hid, when the effect discovereth itself, and is obvious to sight and sense. Answ. 1 He that is shut up in a Dungeon, or in a dark house, cannot see the Sun when it is risen; yet notwithstanding, he may assure himself, that it is not night, but day, and that the Sun is risen, by those beams of light, which do dart into the house, through some little crevices, or chinks that are in the wall: and even so in like manner, when a man's faith cannot be seen, being overclouded with tentations: yet by the lively effects thereof, by his love to God, and to his word and Children, and by the opposition which he maketh against all sinful lusts and tentations, and by his constant purpose, desire, and endeavour to obey God, and to please him in all things: he may gather, that he is not destitute of Faith, though he cannot so clearly see it, nor behold it directly, and immediately in itself, or in its own proper acts. Again, whereas he saith, That which maketh him doubt of his faith, will make him doubt, not of his work; but of the sincerity of it. Answ. 2 I further answer, That there is a two fold sincerity, the one agentis seu operantis, of the person that doth the work; the other operis, of the work that is done. 1. The sincerity of the person consists in the true intention of his mind, or heart, and so it is opposed to hypocrisy. Now whether a man doth his works in sincerity and truth, or but in hypocrisy, his own Conscience will tell him. 2. The sincerity of the work, is when it is true and real, and not imaginary, or counterfeit. Now if sincerity be taken in this sense, there is apparent reason, why many a believer doubteth more of the sincerity of his faith, then of his works; to wit, because his faith is assaulted with strong, yea, and now and then, with hideous, and with fearful tentations, which do shake it, and make him to doubt of the truth of it; whereas he may have no such cause to doubt of the truth of his works. Even as, though not the same man, yet some other for the same cause, may doubt more of the truth and sincerity of some of his virtues, actions and works, then of others. As for example, of his chastity, rather than of his liberality and justice, because lascivious thoughts, do now and then rise in his mind, although he taketh no delight in them, but resisteth them, and grieveth, and condemneth himself for them. Whereas he is not so assaulted in the exercise of other vettues, which maketh him less to doubt of the truth and sincerity of them. Lastly, Whereas he saith, That which maketh me Answ. 3 doubt of my faith, By returning the Objection. will make me doubt of the sincerity of my works. I must tell him, That if this reason of his be any thing worth, than neither will his faith give him any assurance of his salvation, when he doubteth of the sincerity of his works, or of his love to God and Man; Gal. 5.6. for the true justifying and saving faith worketh by love. But contrary hereunto he telleth us, (as you heard before) that when the soul is loaden with the burden of sin, and sense of misery, it is sufficient for our assurance to believe God in his promises, according to that, Act. 16.21. Believe in the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved. Object. A second Reason of his, is this, How is it possible I should judge my works sincere, when I cannot see I believe? Whatsoever is not of faith is sin. Answ. To this I answer, It is one thing to be without faith, another for a man to want the sense, and sight, or feeling of his faith. No works in deed are any thing worth, where faith is altogether wanting; for without faith it is impossible to please God. Heb. 11.6. But as fire on the hearth cannot be seen, when it lieth covered under ashes: so is the faith of God's dear Children many times so covered, by reason of doubts, that arise in their minds, or the dimness of their spiritual eyesight, that they cannot see it. Yet I hope Mr. D. will not say, that all their works in this case are unsound, or that they, or others, shall do well to think so of them, as long as their Consciences do tell them, that whatsoever they do, they do it in sincerity, and in the singleness of their hearts, and not as time-servers, or men-pleasers. Object. Lastly, He asketh, What works are done in faith, that the same acts may not be done in the spirit of bondage? Answ. I answer him, That though the same acts that are done in faith, may be done in the spirit of bondage, He that is acted only by the Spirit of bondage, doth love sin still; and whatsoever good he doth, Act. 15.9. it is only for fear, and not out of love to God, Heb. 9.14. that he may glorify him. quoad materiale, according to the matter of them, yet not quoad formale, that is, according to the purity and sanctity of them, for it is faith that purifieth the heart, as St. Peter saith. And as another Apostle telleth us, It is faith in the blood of Christ, that purifieth the Conscience from dead works, to serve the living God. Men in deed may be restrained from acting sin for a time, by the terror and fear of God's judgements, which the spirit of bondage worketh in them; but when that fear is gone, or when it is but forgotten, as usually it is in their mirth and merriments, than they break out again, and commit the same sins which they did before with greediness. The sum of all than is this, it is faith and the filial fear of God, and not the spirit of bondage, that maketh men hold out in a constant course of obedience to all God's Commandments. And it is faith that purifieth the heart, and inflameth it with the love of God, and of his Son jesus Christ. No fear of punishment, nor terror of Hell, can mortify sin, or make it odious and loathsome. For notwithstanding these fears, the love of sin, and vicious affections will still reside, and remain in the soul. SECT. VII. The Conclusion. THus have I answered his Objections; wherefore to conclude this matter, this I say, That where a man doubteth of his faith, especially in time of tentation, yet he may have some assurance from his works, that he is not altogether without faith. And on the other side, a man's faith when it is grounded on the promises of the Gospel, that is, when he resteth and relieth on Jesus Christ, not only for the pardon of his sins, but for the spirit of sanctification, and endevoreth to obey God in all things, may assure him of both these, although he doubteth of the sincerity, and truth of some of his works, by reason of the relics of the flesh, or of that carnal corruption, that doth adhere as yet unto them. But the best assurance of all other is, when a man upon proof and examination findeth that both his faith and works, are upright before God, that is sincere and sound, though subject to many infirmities, and imperfections, 2 Pet. 1.5. to 12. See this Question handled again. Quest. 13. Whether the Gospel may properly be said to be a Covenant, as that of the Law was? SECT. I. The Gospel is properly a Covenant. Mr. S. his peremptory resolution and determination is this, God makes no Covenant properly under the Gospel, as he did at first. Man is not restored in such a way of Covenant and condition as he was lost; but more freely, and more by grace, and mercy, that is, as he explaineth himself, by free promise, without binding us to any conditions. He will have the Gospel therefore to be called a Covenant, non proprié, not properly, (for as he acknowledgeth in every Covenant properly so called, there are conditions) sed laté, but in a large sense, or acception: as the Lord calleth his promise, that he will never destroy the World with a flood, by the name of his Covenant. But against this assertion of his I shall by God's Grace make it evident, that the Gospel is properly a Covenant, not a Covenant of works indeed, as the Law was: yet as the Protestants have hitherto called it, and as it is indeed, the Covenant of Grace. First, I reason thus, the promises of the Gospel, or of the new Testament are not absolute, but conditional. Mr. S. therefore, will he, nill he, must grant, that the Gospel is properly a Covenant; for he acknowledgeth that to be a Covenant, Gen. 9 See also Mat. 6.14. &. 18.3. Joh. 8.24. which requireth conditions, or wherein men are bound to the performance of conditions. It's true indeed, Mr. S. and our new teachers, do confidently avouch, that the Gospel offereth salvation unto all, without any conditions, but this is apparently false, as these Scriptures following do evidence. Rom. 8.13. If ye live after the flesh, ye shall die; but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live. Behold therefore the goodness, and severity of God: Rom. 11.22 to them which fell, severity; but towards thee, goodness, if thou continue in his goodness: Col. 1.22. otherwise thou shalt be cut off. Christ hath reconciled you in the body of his flesh, 1 Tim. 2.15. through death to present you holy, and unblameable, and unreprovable in his sight, if ye continue in the faith grounded and settled; and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel. The Woman being deceived was in the transgression, notwithstanding, 2 Tim. 2.11, 12. she shall be saved in Childbearing, if they continue in faith, and charity, and holiness, with sobriety. If we be dead with Christ, we shall also live with him. If we suffer, we shall also reign with him: 2 Tim. 2.20 if we deny him, he will also deny us. In a great house, there are not only Vessels of Gold, and of Silver, but also of Wood, and of Earth; and some to honour, and some to dishonour. Heb. 3.14. If a man therefore purge himself from these, he shall be a Vessel unto honour, sanctified, and meet for the Master's use, and prepared unto every good work. We are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end. 1 Joh. 1.7. If we walk in light, as he (that is, God the Father) is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sins. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. Vers. 9 Behold I stand at the door and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come into him, and will sup with him, and he with me. In all these, Rev. 3.20. and in many other places of holy Scripture, salvation is offered us not simply, and absolutely, whether we believe or no, and whether we forsake sin, and obey God, or no; but if we do such, and such things, as the Lord requireth of us, that is, upon condition of our faith and obedience. This is so evident, that Mr. S. is forced to acknowledge, that there are conditions required in the Gospel, and that it is a Covenant; But he thinketh to put it off with this evasion. 1. He saith, That Christ is the only covenanted person. The Covenant is made with him, and not with us. And 2. That he hath satisfied all the conditions thereof for us, that he hath repent, and that he was mortified for us. But let us examine these things, and see what truth there is in them. SECT. II. The Covenant of Grace is made not only with Christ, but with us also, who do believe in him. FIrst of all then, whereas he saith, the Covenant is made with Christ, therefore not with us. He might as well say, the Surety here amongst men, is bound to pay the debt: therefore not the principal debtor himself, whereas it is well known, that both the debtor and his sureties, do many times all of them, stand bound together unto the Creditor. Now so do both Christ and we stand bound together, in the Covenant of grace to God the Father, but after a far different manner. For the Covenant of salvation is made with Christ, as with our Mediator, and surety, who undertook to satisfy the justice of God for our sins, and to bring us again to God, from whom we were revolted and gone astray, that so we may serve him, and glorify him, according to our bounden duty. It is made with us also, as with the peculiar people, whom Christ hath purchased unto God, who by Covenant do bind ourselves to believe in Christ, and to glorify him, and his Father for the work of our Redemption. That the Covenant of the Gospel is thus made, not only with Christ our head, and our surety; but with us also that are his members, is most evident from those words of the Lord, wherein both the persons with whom the Covenant is made, and the form thereof is related and expressed. This is the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel, Jer. 31.34. & 32, 33. Heb. 8.8.9, 10, 11, 12. saith the Lord (with the spiritual Israel of all Nations, not the carnal Israel) after those days I will put my Laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts, and I will be to them a God, and they shall be to me a people, etc. We see here with whom this new Covenant of the Gospel is made, with the house of Israel: now the house of Israel is not persona singularis, one individual person, as Christ is, sed totum aggregatum, but a multitude united together, as the Church of God is. 2. The Lord also Ezech. 16.8, 9 telleth us, that he entered into Covenant with the Israelites, when he found them defiled in their filthiness, which cannot be spoken of Christ, and then washed their blood from them, which must be understood of the Covenant of grace, not of works. The Covenant of grace therefore was not made with Christ only, but with all his members also, who in their natural condition, are such as were the Israelites here described. 3. We read also Gen. 17.7. Gen. 17.9. That the Covenant of grace was made with Abraham, and all his seed: It was not made therefore with Christ only. Yea, which is more, God said unto Abraham, Thou shalt keep my Covenant, thou and thy seed after thee, in their generations. This Co●enant therefore was not only a gracious promise of salvation on God's part; but Abraham and his seed were also bound by it, to do something, that is, Gen. 17.1. to believe in the promised Messiah, and to glorify God for their salvation by him. But here it will be said, Object. the Covenant which Abraham and his seed were commanded to keep, was that all their males should be circumcised the eighth day. It is true; Answ. but that outward circumcision did bind them inwardly to circumci e their hearts; for the Circumcision of the flesh, was not commanded for itself barely; but in regard of the mystical signification thereof, whereupon the Lord spoke unto the Israelites, who were circumcised in the flesh and said, Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiffnecked, Deut. 10.16. Where this spiritual Circumcision was neglected, the Covenant whereof it was a token, was not kept but broken, as that complaint which the Lord taketh up concerning the carnal Israelites, plainly showeth, All these Nations (to wit, all the Heathen Nations there reckoned up) are uncircumcised, and all the house of Israel, Jer. 9.26. are uncircumcised in their heart. The Apostle also telleth us, that that is not circumcision which is outward in the flesh, but which is in the heart, Rom. 2.28, 29. 4. When David also saith, All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth, unto such as keep his Covenant, and his Testimonies. Psal. 25.10. And again, The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting, upon them that fear him, and his righteousness, Psal. 103.17, 18. (justitia promissionum, his righteousness in fulfilling his promises) unto children's Children; To such as keep his Covenant, and to those that remember his Commandments to do them. I would know of what Covenant, and of what testimonies and commandments it is, that David here speaketh. Doubtless not of the legal Covenant; for that is not a Covenant of mercy, but of justice, that exacteth all that is required in it, without remitting any thing, or showing any mercy unto those that do transgress it. Deut. 27.26. It is of the Evangelical Covenant therefore, that David speaketh, when he saith, that God will be merciful unto those that keep his Covenant. Now I cannot conceive, how we cannot be said to keep this Covenant, and the Testimonies and Commandments thereof, if the Covenant of the Gospel were made only with Christ, and we were bound to nothing, nor nothing were required of us by it, as a part of this Covenant belonging to us. For were it so, than we could be said, neither to keep it, nor to break it, no more than mankind can be said to keep the covenant, that God made with Noah, Gen. 9.11. that he would no more destroy the Earth with a Flood. God's absolute promise to Noah concerning this his mercy, is here called his covenant. It is God himself therefore, who faithfully performeth and keepeth this covenant, throughout all generations. But it cannot be said to have been kept by Noah, or any of his posterity, who by this Covenant were bound to nothing. 5. To these former Testimonies, may be added those words of the Lord, to the Israelites, Exod. 19.5. where, after he had told them, what great things he had done for them, he subjoineth. Now therefore, if ye will obey my voice indeed, and keep my Covenant, than ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above all people; for all the Earth is mine. And ye shall be unto me a Kingdom of Priests, and an holy Nation. Here the Lord hath promised great things unto his people; but it is upon condition, that they obey him and keep his Covenant. If it be said, That this was spoken to the carnal Israelites, and therefore belongeth not to us. I confess indeed, That it was spoken, not only to the Elect, but to the whole Nation of the Israelites: Answ. but how? verily as they typified, or as they analogically represented the spiritual Israel of God, or the called of God of all Nations: whence it followeth, that believers now under the Gospel, are confederate with God, and therefore are to keep the covenant of the Gospel, that they may be a peculiar people, and a royal Priesthood unto God; 1 Pet. 1.9. for so St. Peter applieth this promise unto all true believers, as unto those to whom all the blessings of the covenant do belong. Nec enim alios quam faederatos, & faederis conditionem servantes, decrevit Deus beatitudinis facere participes; for neither hath God decreed, to make any other partakers of blessedness, than those that are confederate with him, and that keep the condition of the covenant, as saith the most learned and judicious Rivetus writing on these very words of the Lord unto the Israelites. 6. I do also reason thus, As the Law is the covenant of works, or at least wise, as the covenant of works is revealed in the Law: So the gospel revealeth, and maketh known unto us the covenant of grace, or of salvation, by the mere mercy of God, through Jesus Christ. As the Law therefore binding us to the perfect obedience thereof, if we will be saved, and otherwise denouncing damnation, if we transgress it, doth hereby show, wherein the covenant of works consisteth. So seeing the gospel doth not offer remission of sins, and salvation by Christ unto all, nor unto any absolutely; but unto those only that do repent, and believe the Gospel, Mark 1.15. and obey Christ, Heb. 5.9. It followeth therefore, that the Gospel bindeth us to the obedience thereof, as to our part of the covenant of grace: yet so, that we are to do the things which the Gospel requireth, not by our own strength, as the Law enjoineth, Sed subsidio gratiae divinae, à Christo pronobis partae; but by the assistance of God's grace, which Christ hath purchased for us. So that even in this regard, the Gospel is a covenant of grace, as well as in respect of our free justification, and eternal salvation in Heaven: because our salvation, from the beginning unto the end thereof is of grace, and not of nature; or by any power or strength of our own free will. For all the powers of our souls are in bondage to sin and Satan, until they be freed by Christ, as our Saviour himself giveth us to understand, when he saith, If the Son shall set you free, ye shall be free indeed, Joh. 8.26. And St. Paul telleth us, Col. 1.13. That it is not we ourselves, by any power of our own; but God of the riches of his grace, who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and translated us into the Kingdom of his dear Son. Thus the very works, or acts of Faith, Repentance, and new obedience which we are bound unto in the Gospel, are effects of God's grace in us. We presume not therefore, to do them by any power of our own, but do covenant the performance of them, by the grace of God in Jesus Christ, diligently using the means that are prescribed us in the Gospel, for the building of us up in grace, and waiting upon God for a blessing on them. 7. And lastly, When the people of God in the old Testament, had revolted from him by Idolatry, and other foul sins: We read, that when they repent, 2 King. 23. they bond themselves by Covenant, to walk after the Lord, and to keep his Commandments, and his testimonies, and his Statutes. Now shall we say, that they renewed the legal covenant. We have no reason to think so; for they knew it was impossible for them to keep it. They covenanted therefore, to keep God's Commandments evangelically, whereunto they had before bound themselves, when they were circumcised; yea, and not only so, but were born under this covenant, being descended from Abraham, and the ancient Patriarches, with whom and their Seed, the Lord entered into covenant. It was this covenant of the Gospel; (for such was the covenant which the Lord made with Abraham, as is to be seen, Gal. 3.17, 18.) that the Israelites, when they repent, and returned unto the Lord from Idolatry, renewed with him. These things which I have thus alleged, do make it manifest, both that the covenant of grace is properly a covenant, and that it is made, not only with Christ our head, but with every one of us that are his members, who by this covenant are bound to faith in Christ, and new obedience, that so we may glorify God, and be saved eternally, through his rich mercy in Jesus Christ. Against this that I have said, Answ. Mr. S. undertaketh to prove, that the covenant is made with Christ only; for so St. Paul saith, To Abraham and his seed, Gal. 3.16. were the promises made. He saith not, to seeds, as of many, but as of one, And to his seed, which is Christ. But, how he can prove hence, Object. that the covenant of grace was made only with Christ, and not with any other, I cannot see. The contrary rather may be concluded, and deduced from these words; for the Apostle saith, That the promises were made to Abraham, and to his seed, which is Christ. To Christ indeed only, as to the Mediator, in whom the covenant is confirmed of God, as the Apostle explaineth himself in the next words: but, otherwise to Abraham the Father of the faithful; and consequently, to all that tread in his steps, as to those to whom forgiveness of sins, and the other benefits and blessings purchased by Christ, and promised in the covenant, do appertain and belong. This will be the more manifest, and evident unto us, if we do consider, what St. Paul meaneth by the promises, which were made to Abraham and his seed. The words indeed are difficult, and therefore diversely understood by the learned. The most common exposition is, that by the promises are meant, that promise of the Lord to Abraham, In thy seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed, And that the Apostle speaketh, numero plurali, in the plural number; because this promise was at several times repeated, and made unto Abraham. Now it is evident, that the seed here spoken of, is Christ; for in him only it is, that all the Nations of the Earth are blessed. But it doth not hereupon follow, that the covenant is made only with him. For from these very words, we may infer against Mr. S. that all Christ's members are comprehended in the covenant, as well as he, though after another manner, and in another sort. For the promise is made unto Christ only, that he shall be the Author of blessedness unto all Nations; but unto them, that they shall be blessed in him. Now I would know how all Nations shall be blessed in Christ? verily not so, as if no one person of any Nation were to be excluded; for then all the World should be saved, and none should be damned. The meaning therefore of this gracious promise, must needs be that all Nations should be blessed in Christ, not absolutely; but according to the conditions expressed, and laid down in the Gospel, wherein the covenant of grace is fully opened, and unfolded. Or that Elect, who are to be gathered out of all Nations, shall be blessed in Christ, who only fulfil the conditions of the covenant. There is another exposition of these words of the Apostle, and that is, that by the promises of which St. Paul here speaketh, we are to understand the promise which the Lord at several times made unto Abraham, that he would give unto him, and to his seed, the Land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession, as a type of the eternal inheritance of Heaven, whereof it was an assurance unto them. That whereby Estius, and other learned men, are led and induced to renounce the former exposition, and to embrace this latter, is, because St. Paul without any necessity, doth twice repeat this word [And] saying to Abraham, and his seed, were the promises made. He saith not, and to seeds as of many; but as of one, and to thy seed. For the sense would have been as complete and full, say they, if the word [And] had been left out, and he had said, he saith not of seeds as of many, but as of one, to thy seed. They think therefore, that St. Paul hath no reference to that promise, In thy seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed, where this word [And] is not found; but to these words, To thee, and to thy seed, will I give the Land of Canaan: unto which St. Paul, by repeating this word [And] there expressed, seemeth to relate. But, if we shall admit of this Exposition, it will no way advantage Mr. S. For Piscator, and those that follow it, as also St. Augustine, (as Estius telleth us) by Abraham's seed, do understand, not Christ in propria persona sua, in his own person only, sed Christum mysticum, Cor. 12.12. but mystical Christ, as Piscator speaketh, that is, Christ and his members, as St. Paul also doth, when he saith, As the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body, so also is Christ, that is to say, Christ and his members: Piscator giveth two Reasons, why these words of the Apostle, [which seed is Christ] are not to be understood properly, to wit, of Christ's person only. First (saith he) the Apostles scope is against it, which is to prove, that eternal life is given unto believers, for Christ's sake, and that according to the promises which he made unto Abraham, as appeareth from the fourteenth Verse. Again, This absurdity is against it, that eternal life should be given to Christ only. I have thus laid down the several expositions of these words of the Apostle, that it may appear the more evidently, that it cannot from hence be collected, that the covenant was made only with Christ, and not with his members. For otherwise, if I shall speak what I think, I am fully persuaded, that St. Paul in saying, To Abraham and his seed, which is Christ, were the promises made, hath reference to that gracious evangelical promise, in thy Seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed. This is the promise (or the covenant as St. Paul speaketh in the foregoing words,) which the Lord made with Abraham, as S. Peter plainly giveth us to understand, in those words of his unto the Israelites. Act. 3.25. Ye are the children of the covenant, which God made with our Fathers, saying unto Abraham, And in thy seed shall all the kindreds of the Earth be blessed. Where you see St. Peter expresseth the word [And] even in this promise, as it is also set down, Gen. 22.18. where the Lord speaketh to Abraham, and saith, In blessing I will bless thee, etc. And in thy seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed. Thus the foundation of the latter Exposition before spoken of, is removed, and falleth to the ground. Now from these words of St. Peter, it may also be plainly proved against Mr. S. that the covenant of salvation is not made only with Christ: For wherefore doth he say unto the Israelites, Ye are the children of the covenant, which God made with the Fathers; but because this covenant belonged unto them, and they were comprehended in it. SECT. III. Christ did not repent, and believe for us, but we must perform these conditions ourselves. LEt us now see, whether Christ have fulfilled all the conditions of the covenant of the Gospel for us: Whether he hath believed, repent, and was mortified, and obeyed the Gospel for us. We acknowledge with St. Paul, that Christ is the end of the Law, Rom. 10.4. for righteousness unto us, and that we are justified before God by his obedience. We acknowledge also, that the spots of sin, that adhere to our works of sanctification, are washed away in his blood; and so not only our persons, but our works also become acceptable to God, not for any merit, or intrinsical holiness, or worthiness of their own; but as St. Peter saith, by Jesus Christ: 1 Pet. 2.5. Rev. 7.14. in whose blood the Saints of God have washed their Robes of righteousness and holiness, and made them white. All this we do willingly grant; but that Christ should perform for us those very duties of faith and repentance, and mortification, which are required of us in the Gospel, seemeth to me very strange. For as we are discharged from fulfilling the Law, to be justified thereby, because Christ hath thus fulfilled it for us; so if Christ have believed and repent for us, will it not follow hereupon, that God will not require these duties of us, or that he will not condemn us, though we neglect and omit them; no more than he will, because we transgress his Law, and do not perfectly fulfil it to be thereby justified. When the Scripture saith that Christ died for us, is not the meaning hereof, that he died nostra vice in our stead, and so by his death hath redeemed us from death, and damnation everlasting? so when David said, Would God I had died for thee, my Son Absalon, his meaning was, that he desired to have died in Absalon's stead, that he might by his own death, have freed Absalon from death. In like manner therefore, if we shall say, that Christ believed, repent, and was mortified for us, the meaning hereof will be, that he performed all these duties in our stead, and so hath freed and discharged us from them. What other construction these words will bear, I know not; but sure I am, that many are emboldened by them, too much to neglect the practice of repentance, and the duties of sanctification and holiness. But not to stand any longer upon this, I would know how it can be justified, that Christ either believed, or repent, or was mortified for us? For first, When Mr. S. saith, that Christ believed for us, he speaketh not of the legal faith, or confidence in God (for thus Christ believed for us, seeing for us he fulfilled the whole Law; nor of the faith and confidence that Christ had in God his Father, that he would uphold and strengthen him, to perform the great work of our Redemption; but of justifying faith, which is, that whereby we rely on Christ, for the pardon of our sins. Now this justifying faith, est in nobis subjectiuè, non in Christo is in us, as in its proper subject, not in Christ. And this both the Prophet Habakuk, Hab. 2.4. and the Apostle St. Paul do teach us, when they say, Justus fide suà vivet, the just shall live by his own faith, and not by the faith of another. Gal. 2.16. The true believers therefore say not, Christ hath believed for us; but we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the Law. But if it should be granted, that Christ believed for us, that we by that faith of his, might be justified: how shall we salve that other saying of his? how shall we make it good, that Christ repent for us? for repentance always presupposeth sin: it is a turning from sin, unto righteousness. Such is the repentance, which the Lord in his Gospel required of us. Now what Christian ears can endure to hear, that Christ should be said to have turned from sin unto righteousness. Christ was never overtaken with any sin, he never turned from God: therefore he cannot be said to have turned from sin unto God, as we do when we are converted. Nor can he be said to have been mortified for us; for there was no flesh, nor none of the old man in him, that required any mortification. SECT. IU. How Christ is made unto us Sanctification. BUt let us see now, how Mr. S. endevoureth to prove and make good, that Christ hath fulfilled all the conditions of the Gospel for us. The Apostle (saith he) teacheth, Object. that Christ is made unto us of God, Sanctification: his holiness therefore, is ours, he wrought it for us. 1 Cor. 1.20. Whatsoever holy duties therefore of faith, or new obedience are required of us in the Gospel, Christ hath fulfilled them for us. Thus I have urged, and enforced his Argument to his greatest advantage, as I suppose. For answer whereunto I say, Answ. that Christ may be said to be made unto us Sanctification three manner of ways. 1. Imputatiuè, by way of imputation. 2. Meritory, by way of merit. 3. Effectiuè, efficiently, or effectually working it in us. The first of these Mr. S. maketh choice of and pitcheth upon. For he will have Christ's holy obedience, to be imputed unto us for our sanctification. Now I grant, that it is imputed unto us indeed, Rom. 5.19. but for our justification, not for our sanctification. For as St. Paul saith, by the obedience of one (that is of Jesus Christ) many are justified, or made righteous. Again, If Christ's holiness should be imputed unto us, for our sanctification, than sanctification should not be inherent in us; but external, and without us, as our justification is. And lastly, Then there should be no real difference between our justification and sanctification, neither should they be different graces, but altogether the same. For wherein consisteth our justification, but in the imputation of Christ's holy obedience unto us. Now if our sanctification do consist in this also, Heb. 10.29. & 13.12. what real difference will there be between them? I do indeed acknowledge, that the holy Scripture doth now and then make no real difference between sanctification and justification. For whereas the Apostle saith ordinarily, that we are justified by the blood of Christ, it is said, that we are sanctified by his blood. Where I conceive, that sanctification, is either put for justification, or at the least, that justification is included in it, as it must needs be, if we shall say that the meaning of the Apostle is, that the blood of Christ hath merited both our justification and our sanctification. 2. In this sense I do willingly grant, that Christ is made unto us sanctification, that is, by the merit of his passion purchasing it, and by his blood washing away the spots of sin, that do adhere to our sanctification. 3 And lastly, I do also acknowledge (as all Orthodox Protestants do) that Christ is our sanctification, not only meritorieé, by way of merit, sed effectiué; but efficiently also, because by his spirit, which he hath purchased of his Father, he doth sanctify us, or effect and work holiness in us. And thus (as I take it) I have cleared the Apostles meaning, and made it manifest, that he hath no intent to teach, that Christ believed for us, and obeyed the Gospel for us, in that sense, as Mr. S. taketh his words, when he saith, That Christ is made unto us of God sanctification. SECT: 5. Although the promises of the Gospel are offered unto sinners, yet they have no right, nor interest in them, unless they do receive them. LEt us now examine another of Mr. S. his Arguments, whereby he goeth about ro prove, that the promises of the Gospel do belong to sinners, as sinners, and that there is no condition of faith, nor of repentance required of them, that they may be partakers of remission of sins, and of salvation through Christ. What (saith he) were the Churches of the Corinthians, Object. Ephesians, Colossians; and what was Paul, before Christ came to him? were they sinners, or qualified? And what were all that believed, before they believed? Answ. They were sinners. It's true, they were so; but though the promises were then offered unto them, yet they did not then belong to them, nor had they any interest in them, until they received them; but as the Apostle saith, Eph. 2.12. They were strangers from the Covenants of promise, and so should have remained, & continued for ever, had they rejected them, as did the Jews, and some other Citizens of Antioch in Pisidia, when Paul and Barnabas preached, Act. 13.46. and offered Christ unto them. Briefly therefore I do reason thus. Promises do belong to those, to whom they are made, and not to any other: but the promises of the Gospel, concerning remission of sins, and eternal salvation in Heaven, are made to those that either do for the present, or shall hereafter repent, and believe in Christ, and not to any other: therefore none have any right to these promises, but such believers and repentant sinners. Object. This was written before Mr. S. his death. It may be Mr. S. or some other, will here reply, and say, are the promises of the Gospel then to be offered to none, but to those that do repent and believe? Yes, They are to be offered unto all, neither Infidels, nor any other sinners excluded: but not absolutely, sed sub conditione fidei & resipiscentiae; but upon condition, that they do repent, Mar. 16, 16 Act. 3.19. and believe, if they will have their sins blotted out, and be saved through the mercy of God in Christ. Thus indeed, promissiones Evangelij sunt universales conditione & promulgatione, sed non applicatione, the promises of the Gospel are to be preached, and propounded unto all; but all do not appropriate, and apply them to themselves, nor interest themselves in them. Now wherefore is this? but as I said before, because the promises are not absolute, but conditional. For were they absolute, and no condition at all were required, than one man should have as great an interest in them, and as good right to them, as another, whether he were believer, or unbeliever. SECT. VI How the promises of the Gospel, or of the new Testament, are said to be better than the promises of the old, or of the Law. Object. BUt against this that hath been said, it is further objected, The Law promised life upon condition; for so it saith, Leu. 18.5. hoc fac & vives, do this, and thou shalt live. Heb. 8.6. The promises of the Gospel therefore, seeing (as the Apostle saith) they are better than those of the Law, are absolute, and not conditional. Answ. But I answer, No such thing followeth hereupon. For the Apostles words are, That Christ is the Mediator of a better Covenant, which was established upon better promises, to wit, than the former covenant was, which God by the Ministry of Moses, made with the Israelites. Now by this former covenant, if he meaneth the covenant of grace, as it was administered unto the Israelites of old, under the Law of Moses, and by this latter and better covenant, the same covenant of grace, as it is plainly laid down in the Gospel: the promises of this latter covenant are better than those of the former. First, Because they are clearly delivered in express and plain words, whereas those were darkly shadowed out under types and figures, and dimly represented in obscure Prophecies. Secondly, Because there is a greater measure of the spirit, and of the graces thereof, both promised and exhibited, now under the new Testament, since the coming of Christ in the flesh, than was formerly in the old Testament: This may well be the meaning of the Apostle. But if we shall say, that he doth in these words of his compare together, the covenant of works, and the covenant of grace, than I say, that the promises of the Gospel are better promises, then are the promises of the covenant of works. First, Because remission of sins is promised in the Gospel, which is not to be had by the Law. For whosoever fulfilleth not all the Commandments thereof, Deut. 27.26. it shutteth him up under the everlasting wrath, and curse of God, without any hope of pardon. Again, The promises of the Gospel, are said to be better than those of the Law, because the Gospel promiseth grace, whereby we are enabled to perform the conditions thereof, which the Law doth not. For the Law only forbiddeth sin, and commandeth that which is holy, and just, and good, but ministereth no power to perform that which it requireth; but in the new covenant of the Gospel, the Lord promiseth, that he will write his Laws in our hearts, and put his spirit within us, Heb. 8. and cause us to keep his Commandments, and to do them. Thus by the grace of God in Christ, we are strengthened, and enabled to keep the covenant of the Gospel: whereas it is altogether impossible for us, so to keep the Law, as to be justified and saved thereby. SECT. VII. The learned Protestants do hold, the promises of the Gospel not to be absolute, but conditional. THere is one Objection more, which I think good to remove, and that is this. The learned Protestants, as by name Bucanus, Locis Com. Theol. and some others, make this main difference between the Law and the Gospel, that the promises of the Law were conditional; but the promises of the Gospel sunt gratuitae, are free promises. It may seem therefore, that Mr. S. and those that teach, as he doth, do preach true Protestant Doctrine, and that we which teach otherwise, have revolted, and departed from the Protestant Religion, at leastwise in this particular. Answ. But I answer, It is nothing so; for Bucanus explaineth himself, and showeth what he meaneth by the conditions, which he speaketh of, to wit, such as are causae, causes of the blessings that are promised. Whereas therefore the Gospel saith, si credideris, if thou shalt believe, particula [si] non est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: this particle if, is not a note of a cause, but of a consequence, saith he. Now this we do willingly grant, that remission of sins, and salvation are freely promised in the Gospel, and that our faith and repentance are no causes of them. Bucanus therefore teacheth altogether as we do; for in the next words he saith, that our faith or our believing non est causa, vel meritum, sed modus vel instrumentum, sine quo non potest fieri applicatio beneficiorum Christi, is not a cause or merit, but a means or instrument, without which there can be no application of Christ's benefits unto us. And if this be not enough, he saith afterwards in express words, that Jeremy calleth the Law of Moses, being considered by itself, and in itself, the legal and old Covenant, because it was the covenant of our creation, whereby the Lord required of us perfect obedience, to be performed by our own strength; but the Gospel a new, or a free covenant, sub conditione fidei, ex gratuito favore ab ipso nobis donandae, upon the condition of faith, to be freely given us by him. Thus Bucanus (who in his common places hath abridged, and drawn into a short sum both Calvin, and the principal and best of the Protestant writers, that were before him) showeth how we are to understand them, if any of them any where or other do say, that the promises of the Gospel are not conditional, as those of the Law were. And for further confirmation, that the Protestants do teach, that salvation is offered us in the Gospel, non simpliciter & absolute, sed sub conditione fidei & resipiscentiae, not simply and absolutely, but upon condition of our faith and repentance, I will also allege, Volume. 2. Thes. Theol. Loc. 4. what Pis●●tor and Pareus, two of the most principal Protestant Doctors do write. First of all then, Piscator setting down the difference between the Law and the Gospel, hath these words, The covenant of the Law is, whereby the Lord of old promised unto the Israelites, all sorts of temporal blessings, and eternal life itself, upon condition of perfect obedience, to be performed by them to his Law, by their own strength: and on the contrary, threatened sundry and divers curses, and eternal death itself, to all that should transgress, but even one Commandment of the Law; and they on the other side, promised that obedience unto God. The sanction, or ratification of this covenant is described, Exod. 24. The covenant of grace is that whereby God hath promised his gracious favour for ever, to all that believe in Christ, upon condition indeed of that their faith, and sincere piety, or new obedience joined with it: notwithstanding of neither, to be performed as by the believers own strength; but as by that free favour to be bestowed on them by him; and they on the other side, being assisted by God's grace, do promise faith and obedience unto him. ●olleg. 1. de lvang. et gratia, p. 21. Pareus also setting down the difference between the Law and the Gospel, amongst other things hath these words. The Law promiseth life, with condition of a man's own righteousness: the Gospel promiseth the same, with condition of repentance, and faith in Christ. This might be sufficient, notwithstanding, because the same Pareus doth excellently in another place express and unfold the conditions of the covenant of grace, I will therefore here transcribe, and translate that which he there saith, into English, that all those who are illiterate and unlearned amongst us, as well as others, may see and perceive, that the Doctrine formerly taught by us here in England, is the very same which the learned Protestants also beyond Sea have taught, from which our new illuminated teachers have revolted and departed; and therefore in this particular, are but half Protestants, if so much. His words are these. Colleg. theol. 2. de faed. Dei, part 2. There were three conditions of the covenant of grace, without which there could have been no peace between God and Man. The first was, That some one should be a purchaser or procurer of this peace, that is, a Mediator, who upon a way agreed upon, should make peace between God and man. That way was, that he should proceed, or come forth from God unto mankind, not only as an herald, or as a Messenger between them (for he could not come forth from men) declaring Gods will concerning peace; but that he should both pacify God's wrath, by the dignity of his person, merit and intercession, and that he should also by his divine efficacy, confer upon men grace, righteousness, and life eternal by him obtained for them. The former of these was necessary, in regard of God's justice and truth: the latter, in regard of men's imbecility. The second condition was, That God for the intercession, satisfaction, and merit of the Mediator, should receive sinners into his grace or favour of enemies, should make them his friends, and Sons, and bless them with eternal joy and happiness with himself. The third condition was, that men should acknowledge this comprehensive grace of God towards them, receive by faith the benefits purchased by the Mediator, offered and given in the Gospel, and be thankful unto God, in all holy obedience. Let every one that readeth these things, see and consider, whether it be Protestant Doctrine, to teach, that there are on our part no conditions at all in the covenant of grace; but that all the conditions thereof belong unto Christ, as Mr. S. will have it. SECT. VIII. That the promising, or passing over of a thing, not absolutely, but upon a condition, doth not infer merit in him that performeth the condition; but is only a bar to the enjoying of the thing promised, whilst the condition is not performed. But against this that hath been said, Object. it is further thus objected. If God should exact, or require any thing by way of condition of us, than our salvation should not be of grace, but of merit. But no such thing followeth hereupon; Sol. for we are bound to serve, and to obey God, both by right of Creation, and of Redemption. Now what may not God require of us, that which is his own? yea, and upon condition also of our Faith and Repentance, if we will be partakers of the reward which he freely promiseth unto our obedience? Methinks this should not be denied, especially seeing it is for our good, that God doth offer salvation unto us, upon such conditions; for hereby we are stirred up to use the means of our salvation, the more carefully and diligently, that so we may be both for the present assured, and hereafter partakers of the thing promised, to our endless comfort. Again, God in his Gospel requireth no other conditions of us, but what we in duty are bound to perform: now what! can we be said to merit any thing by doing of our duty? I trow not; for our Saviour teacheth us, when we have done all that is required of us, yet to say, that we are unprofitable Servants, we have but done that which in duty we were bound to do, Luk. 17.10. Moreover, God hath elected and chosen us to the means, as well as to the end, for by the means we come to the end. And hereupon it is, that the end that is, eternal salvation is not promised absolutely, but upon condition of the means that lead unto it, that is, of Faith and Repentance, which God of his grace worketh in us, and we by the grace of God are to perform, because we are elected unto them, as well as to the end itself, which is our eternal salvation by Christ. Now that which we thus obtain by the free election of God, and for the merit of Christ, and not by any power of our own, but by the work of his grace, it would be too much pride in us, to think that we do any way merit it: by this that hath been said, it appeareth, that the thing which is made over unto us, upon a condition, non transit in meritum, doth not become meritorious upon our performance of that condition, unless it be res indebita, a thing to be done by us, whereunto we are not bound; and unless also there be some proportion and equality, between it and the reward: otherwise a condition is only a bar to the receiving and enjoying of the thing promised, until it be fulfilled; or if the condition be not fulfilled at all by us, or in the time appointed, and set down, than we lose the thing promised, and deprive ourselves of it. A Gentleman (as I heard some few years since from a Servant of his) did promise to give unto the Vicar, in an impropriate Rectory, that belonged unto him 40 l. per annum, if he would receive it as his free gift, and testify this under his hand. Now I demand, whether this requiring of him to receive it as a free gift, did turn it into a merit? Doubtless, it did not; for unless the Vicar would under his hand, acknowledge that he received it as a free gift, he was to forfeit it, and to lose it, as indeed he did: not because he did think that he should have merited some thing, if he had fulfilled this condition; but out of pertinacy and stomach, because his predecessor had more; or out of the pride of his heart, contemning this gift, as too small and mean, for a man of that worth, which he took himself to be. Now the same is to be said concerning eternal life, which God offereth unto us, upon condition of our faith and repentance; for the exacting of this condition, doth neither make eternal life, to be any whit the less the free gift of God; nor doth it any whit diminish, or destroy our bond of thankfulness to God, for this his unspeakable and unconceivable blessing and benefit. SECT. IX. Although Salvation is not promised to any, but upon condition of Faith and Repentance; yet the Lord hath absolutely promised to his Elect Grace, to perform both these. YEt notwithstanding, Because I would not willingly conceal any part of the truth, I do freely grant, that the promises of the Lord, are in some sort absolute, that is, in respect of the grace promised by God unto his people, whereby they may be enabled to keep his Covenant, and his Commandments, or in respect of his spirit, which he hath promised them. With Dr. Field therefore, and other learned Protestants I say, that the promises of the Gospel are absolute, in respect of the means; but conditional, in regard of the end. Their meaning is, that salvation which is the end of our hope, is not where offered us; but upon condition of our Faith and Repentance. Where these therefore are wanting, there can be no hope of salvation. But because it is not in our power, to repent and believe, the Lord therefore hath promised his Elect absolutely, that he will put his spirit within them, Zech. 36.27. and write his Law in their hearts, and cause them to walk in his Statutes, and to keep his judgements; and do them Object. In this regard we acknowledge the promises of the Gospel to be absolute, and not conditional to the Elect, which may serve also for an answer to that saying of the Lord, I will put my spirit within them, and cause them to walk in my Statutes, alleged by Mr. S. to prove that the promises of the Gospel are absolute, and not conditional. They are indeed in that sense, or in that respect and regard which I have specified: and more than this cannot be inferred, nor rightly concluded from these words. SECT. X. How the Evangelical Covenant may be said to be made with all the visible members of the Church. I'll only add one thing more, and that is this. Although the Lord doth promise his Spirit unto his Elect only, whereby they are enabled to obey the Gospel, and to lay hold of salvation: yet he doth enter into a conditional covenant with all the visible members of his Church. For as all that were circumcised of old were taken into covenant with God, not only the Israelites, but proselytes also of the Gentiles, and their seed: so unto all, both Jews and Gentiles, that do join themselves unto the Church, and are baptised: doth God promise and covenant salvation upon condition, that they do repent and believe in Christ; and they for their parts, do restipulate and bind themselves to perform the same. As many therefore of these as do conform themselves unto the world, and live still in sin and unbelief are Covenant-breakers, and their Baptism becometh, no Baptism unto them: Even as Circumcision of old, was made uncircumcision unto those that lived wickedly, Rom. 2.25. and did not keep covenant with God. Not only believing Parents therefore themselves, but their seed also are taken into covenant with God; and hereupon it is, that the Children of believers are called holy, 1 Cor. 7.14. that is, sanctitate faederali, by a federal sanctity, or holiness, whereby they are dedicated, and consecrated unto God, (even as the Vessels of the Temple, and the Priests and Levites and Tithes, and all consecrated things were called holy, not in regard of internal, but external holiness, being set apart for the most holy God, and his service.) Thus as all the Israelites of old, Parents and their Children, were taken into Covenant with God, and circumcised, and therefore called an holy Nation, Exod. 19.6. so all believers now, and their Children, are reputed and reckoned within the covenant of the Gospel, and are therefore baptised, and by their Baptism consecrated unto God, and bound to obey him, and to serve him, as an holy people. It is manifest therefore, that as God did with the Israelites of old, so he doth now enter into a conditional covenant with all the visible members of the Church, that is, with all that make profession of the faith of Christ, and of obedience to his Gospel, and with their seed. And this doth St. Paul plainly give us to understand, Rom. 11.17. where speaking of believers of the Gentiles, he saith, that they were taken out of their own wild Olive-Tree, and grafted into the true Olive-Tree, and made partakers of the Root and fatness thereof. For what meaneth he hereby, but that the Church of the Gentiles is by God joined unto the Church of the Israelites, or rather made one Church and people with them, and invested with the selfsame privileges. As the Israelites and their Children therefore were of old taken into covenant with God, Deut. 29.11, 12, 13. so are we now and our Children. SECT. XI. The absurdities which do ensue and follow upon their assertion, who do deny the Gospel to be a Covenant. THus (as I take it) I have sufficiently corroborated and confirmed my first Reason, or Argument against the exceptions taken, and objections made against it by Mr. S. and others. I have made it evident, that there are conditions required of us in the Gospel: it followeth therefore necessarily from his own words, that the Gospel in regard of us, as well as of Christ, is really and properly a Covenant. Now for the conclusion, and shutting up of this present question and controversy, I will put Mr. S. in mind of some of those absurdities, which he and all those do thrust themselves upon, who deny the Gospel to be a covenant, in regard of us, and affirm it to be nothing else, but an absolute promise of salvation by Christ. First, From hence it will follow, that neither Simon Magus, nor any other Apostates, no nor any Christians that live dissolutely, or flagitiously, after their Baptism, are to be accused, or charged with any breach of Covenant against God, no more than Infidels, or Heathens that never heard of Christ at all. Secondly, It will also as necessarily follow from hence, that not only others, but even the primitive and most ancient Christians, ever since the days of the Apostles, have dealt impiously, who received none into their Communion by Baptism, but those that first renounced the world, the flesh, and the Devil, and bound themselves by a vow, promise or covenant to believe in Christ, and to serve God, and to walk before him, in the ways of his Commandments, all the days of their life. Lastly, From hence also it followeth, that it is not lawful for Christians to enter into covenant with God, because this would be superstition, and will-worship, having no foundation in the Gospel. And so it will follow also, that Mr. S. and as many as are of his Opinion, if they have taken the Parliament Covenant, have dissembled and played the Hypocrites, both with God and Man. For if the Law only be a Covenant in regard of us, and not the Gospel, than men's binding themselves to God by covenant, was lawful under the Law; but not under the Gospel. Quest. 14. Whether those Ministers that do offer remission of sins, and salvation by Christ, not to all absolutely; but upon condition that they do repent, and believe in Christ, be legal teachers? And whether by this their Doctrine they do make the Gospel a Covenant of works, as the Law is? SECT. I. The Law neither teacheth nor accepteth of Faith and Repentance, but requireth perfect obedience to all the Commandments thereof. He therefore preacheth not legally, but evangelically, that offereth pardon to those that repent and believe. Mr. S. and our new illuminated preachers, do accuse us, and charge us, who preach as the Protestant, and all Orthodox teachers have ever done, that we are legal teachers, because we do not with them offer remission of sins, and salvation to all absolutely, and without any conditions; but tell men (as the Apostles do) that they must repent and believe in Christ, that their sins may be blotted out, and that they may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. Object. What is this (say these men) but to teach, and preach legally, when you do thus tie men to conditions, for the obtaining of salvation, as the Law did? Answ. It's true indeed, we should be legal teachers, if we did require of men the same conditions, for the obtaining of salvation, and after the same manner that the Law doth; but we are far from this: for the Law requireth perfect obedience to all the Commandments thereof, that is to say, all manner of good works, as that whereby we are to be justified before God, or as the cause of our salvation. Now we on the contrary do teach, that we are saved only and altogether by the grace of God, through the merits and satisfaction of Jesus Christ. And we say, that works are necessary to our justification, at leastwise, to the continuance of it, after a far inferior manner, that is, necessitate presentiae, non efficientiae, as duties necessarily accompanying it, and going with it; not as any causes meriting, or working it. Thus whereas the Law requireth works, as causes of our justification, and salvation, we require Faith, Repentance, and such works or duties, as the Gospel teacheth, only as necessary conditions, without which we cannot be saved. For (as I have proved in the former Question) the Gospel indeed offereth salvation unto all by Christ; but not absolutely, but upon condition of their faith, and repentance. Where faith therefore in the Lord Jesus Christ, and repentance are wanting, it is in vain for men to believe that they are reconciled unto God, or that they are in the state of salvation, which is the Doctrine now taught by Mr. D, Mr. S. and many others. Whereas these men than do think, that all conditions are legal, they are herein deceived. For the difference between the Law and the Gospel, is not that the one requireth conditions to be performed, and the other none at all, which were it so, than the Gospel should be a Doctrine of licentiousness, and carnal liberty; but in this, that the Law offereth salvation unto none, but unto those that do perfectly fulfil it, without failing in any the least duty therein required and commanded; but the Gospel offereth pardon of all sins, and transgressions unto all that believe in Christ, and rise up out of their sins, by repentance when they are fallen, and do not still lie in them. Thus the Law is a covenant of works, because it promiseth salvation to none, but to those that do the works therein prescribed and commanded; Rom. 10.8. but the Gospel is a covenant of faith, or as St. Paul calleth it, the word of faith, because it promiseth forgiveness of sins, and salvation to all those that renouncing themselves, and their own works, do rely only upon Christ for salvation, according to the promises of his Gospel. SECT. II. Both repentance, and all manner of good works, are commanded and required in the Gospel. THis that I have already said, might be sufficient for an answer unto this Question: notwithstanding, because many at this day by hearing of our late new Preachers, and reading of their Books, have their minds and understandings so vitiated, and depraved, that whensoever they hear us teach the necessity of repentance unto salvation, or hear us press the practice and performance of good works, upon men's Consciences, presently they think that we are enemies unto the grace of God, and do preach nothing but the Law. (For so indeed some few years since, when one heard me tell my hearers, that as long as any one of them did live in sin, and not practise repentance, it was in vain for him to believe, that his sins were forgiven, and that he should at the coming of Christ to judgement rise again in his own body, to live eternally with Christ. After he was returned home from the Church, he spoke aloud in the hearing of divers, and said, here is nothing but preaching of the Law, preaching of Repentance. Repent and ye shall be saved, repent, and Heaven Gates shall be set open for you. To the intent therefore, that such poor seduced souls may be brought to see their error, I will handle this matter a little more fully. First of all then, It is certain, that the Law requireth perfect obedience of us unto all the Commandments thereof, and will not accept of any repentance, if we fall but into any one sin, or fail in any one duty; but concludeth, and shutteth us up under the curse of God. The Doctrine of Repentance therefore (as these men think) is not legal, Deut. 27.26. but merely Evangelical. And therefore when Christ taught the people repentance, it is said, that he preached not the Law, but the Gospel. Now it is manifest and evident also, Mar. 1.15. that all manner of good works, which are the fruits and effects of repentance, are required and commanded in the Gospel, as well as in the Law. For St. Paul telleth us, that we are God's workmanship, Eph. 2.10. created in Christ Jesus, unto good works, which he hath appointed, that we should walk in them. When St. Paul saith here, that we are created in Christ Jesus, unto good works; it is certain, that this is the voice, not of the Law, but of the Gospel. For the Law neither speaketh of our new Creation in Christ Jesus, that is, of our Regeneration, neither maketh any mention of Christ at all. Christus enim non est revelationis naturalis sicut est lex, Rom. 2.14. sed supernaturalis. It is not the Law, but the Gospel, that revealeth Christ unto us. It is therefore the Gospel also, and not the Law, that informeth us, and telleth us, that Christ gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, Tit. 2.14. and purify a peculiar people unto himself, zealous of good works. And seeing this is one end of Christ's passion, for as much as he hath delivered us out of the hands of our enemies, that we might serve God without fear in holiness and righteousness, Luk. 1.74, 75. before him all the days of our life, And did therefore bear our sins in his own body on the Tree, that we being dead to sin, should live to righteousness: hereupon St. Paul wrote unto Titus, and said, This is a faithful saying, and these things I will, 1 Pet. 2.24. that thou affirm constantly, that they which have believed in God, Tit. 1.8. might be careful to maintain good works. And afterwards, in that Chapter, Vers. 14. He writeth thus unto him, Let ours also learn to maintain good works, for necessary uses, that they be not unfruitful. In all these, and many other places of the Gospel, are good works required of us. Yea, I will say more, they are required as necessary to our eternal salvation in Heaven, though not by way of merit, yet as a condition necessarily to be performed by us, Eph. 2.10. and as the way wherein we are to walk to Heaven. For our Saviour hath told us plainly, Mat. 5.20. That except our righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharises, we shall in no case enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. These things which I have thus alleged, being rightly considered, any one may see, that they do not preach the Gospel rightly and truly, who do not press the necessity of good works, on the Consciences of their hearers. SECT. III. Why the Gospel, seeing it prescribeth and requireth works, is not to be called a Covenant of works, as well as the Law? Or how it can be said, to be the Covenant of Grace? BUt not unlikely, some one or other, will here say, what difference is there then in this particular, between the Law and the Gospel, if both do urge the necessity of good works? or why is not the Gospel to be called a Covenant of works, and not of grace, as well as the Law? I will show you the reason hereof. 1. The Law is called the Covenant of works, because works are therein required, as causes antecedent to our justification and salvation; or as that whereby, and for which we are to be justified: now, so are they not in the Covenant of the Gospel, as hath been sufficiently showed before. 2. Again, The Law is also called the covenant of works, because works are therein commanded, and required; but no power nor ability is ministered and given to perform them: but the Gospel is the ministration of the spirit. 2 Cor. 3.8. For it doth not only command us to repent, and to bring forth the fruits of repentance, which are good works; but showeth how we may be enabled to do this, to wit, by faith in Christ, who hath merited not only forgiveness of sins; but the spirit of sanctification for all that do believe in him. Gal. 3.14. The Gospel therefore is a Covenant, not of works, but of grace; not only because it teacheth, that we are justified not of works, but of grace; but because by faith in the promises thereof, we do obtain grace to repent, and to do all those things, which it requireth of us. Lastly, The Gospel is truly said, to be the covenant of grace, because it is such a covenant, as is not only begun, and entered into, but altogether ratified, and consummated by grace. For first, It was merely and only of grace and mercy, that God after we had broken, and dissolved the former covenant of works, or of the Law, was pleased to enter into a new covenant of salvation with us: the form whereof is revealed in the Gospel. Secondly, (as I said before) it is merely of his grace, that God enableth us to perform the conditions of this new covenant, to wit, Faith and Repentance, which otherwise would become impossible unto us; for we are as unable of ourselves to repent, and believe in Christ, as we are to fulfil the whole Law. It's true, Faith and Repentance are in themselves easier conditions, than the universal and most perfect obedience which the Law requireth. But otherwise, As, it is as impossible for a man, when he is dead to lift up a straw, as an Ox: so, while we are dead in trespasses and sins (as we are all by nature, Eph. 2, 3. and of ourselves) it is as impossible for us to believe, and obey the Gospel, as it is for us to fulfil the Law, until we be quickened by the spirit of Christ. Thirdly, It is of grace that we are kept and upheld by the power of God, from falling away from him, or that he keepeth us firm and fast in his Covenant; for otherwise, if he should leave us to ourselves, but a day, or an hour, we should break, and altogether dissolve the covenant of the Gospel, as we did the legal covenant. Lastly, It is of grace, and not for any merit, or desert of ours, that we are in part for the present, Eph. 2, 8. Tit. 3.5. and shall hereafter perfectly and fully be made partakers of the benefits and blessings that are conveyed and passed over unto us, in the covenant of the Gospel, that is to say, of justification, adoption, sanctification, and glorification, or eternal happiness in Heaven. Thus the new covenant of the Gospel is wholly of grace, and therefore deservedly, it is called the covenant of grace and not of works, as is the Law. Now seeing all these things are acknowledged, professed, and constantly taught by us, what cause hath Mr. S. or any other, to say, that we turn the Gospel into a covenant of works, or to allege against us, that saying of the Apostle, Rom. 11.6. if it be of works, it is no more of grace. It's true indeed, if we did make works any cause of our salvation, than we should make the Gospel a covenant of works, as the Law was; but this we do not, but require them as necessary conditions to be performed by us, in way of thankfulness to God, for our salvation by Christ, and for other necessary uses, and not to merit any thing by them. Quest. 15. Whether the Orthodox Protestant Ministers, who teach men to believe in Christ, and to repent, that they may obtain remission of sins, and salvation by Christ; or those who offer Christ and Remission of sins to all, without requiring any thing of them, either Faith or Repentance, or ●e● obedience, do preach Christ the more truly, and more to the edification, and consolation of their hearers? SECT. I. Where is showed, which is the right way of preaching the Gospel. IT is most certain, that those who preach the Gospel, as Christ himself, and his Apostles did, are they who preach Christ, not only most truly, but most to the edification, and consolation of their hearers. Now so do not they, who offer Christ and Salvation by him, to sinners as sinners; or to sinners, without any condition, either of Faith or Repentance; but who teach men to repent, and believe in Christ, that they may be saved; or which offer Christ and Salvation by him to all, the greatest sinners not excepted, if they will lay hold of him, and his merits by Faith, and turn from their sins, and practise Repentance. That our Saviour did thus preach the Gospel, St. Mark assureth us, Chap. 1.14.15. For there he saith, that after John was put in prison, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of the Kingdom of God, and saying, the time is at hand, repent ye, and believe the Gospel. I know not what they will here reply, Object. except perhaps they will say, that John had before preached the Gospel to the Galileans, and that they had received it. Now they do not deny, but grant and teach, that after that men have received the Gospel, than Faith, and Repentance, and new obedience are to be pressed upon them; but not when Christ is first offered, and tendered unto them. But John's preach may be a sufficient confutation of such conceits, and surmises as this; Answ. for he began his Ministry with the Doctrine of Repentance, as is to be seen, Math. 3.2. And thus when the Apostles were sent by Christ, to preach the Gospel to the Jews: it is also said of them, that they went out, and preached, that men should repent; yea, Mar. 6.12. contrary to the Opinion and practice of our new teachers, we are told, Heb. 6.1. that the Apostles, when they planted Churches, began and laid the foundation in the Doctrine of Faith and Repentance. And indeed that which is elsewhere written, and recorded of the Apostles preaching of Christ, and his Gospel, doth sufficiently evince and testify, that they offered not remission of sins, and salvation by Christ to all absolutely, without any conditions; but exhorted men to repent and believe in Christ, that they might obtain pardon of their sins, and be saved by him. Thus when certain, who were pricked in their hearts, by hearing Peter preach, Act 2.37. said unto him, and to the rest of the Apostles, Men and Brethren, what shall we do? Peter said unto them, Repent and be baptised every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins. The same St. Peter also, having reproved the Jews for consenting to Christ's death, and shown them who he was: in the next place he letteth them understand, what they were to do, that they might be saved by him, Repent ye therefore, and be converted, Act. 3.19. that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. When the Jailor also being terrified, and troubled in his mind with the fear of God's judgements, Act. 16.30, 31. came to Paul and Silas, and said to them, Sirs, What must I do to be saved? they said, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved. And St. Paul saith, that he being called and sent of God, Act. 26.20. shown both to Jews and Gentiles, that they should repent, and turn to God, and do works meet for repentance. These things which I have thus alleged, do manifest and make it evident, that the Apostles did never offer salvation unto any, but upon condition of their repentance, and faith in Christ. Now that all other Ministers of the Gospel ought to do the like, those words of our Saviour, do sufficiently inform us, when he saith, That repentance, and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all Nations. Luc. 24.47. Not remission of sins singly, and a part by itself (as our neoterics will have it) but repentance and remission of sins together. Thus did Christ, and thus did his Apostles preach; and thus hath Christ ordained, that all other should preach: We may be assured therefore, that this is the best, or rather the only way of preaching the Gospel. For were there any better, we cannot otherwise think, but that Christ would both have followed it himself, and have enjoined all his Ministers to do the same. SECT. II. Where is showed, which is the most profitable way of preaching the Gospel. THis that I have said, might be a sufficient Answer to the former Question, and to all the several parts and branches of it. Notwithstanding, because the novelists do cry out against us, and say that with our many years preaching, we have converted few, or none; but by urging such a necessity of repentance, to the obtaining of salvation, (as we do) do terrify and trouble many, and drive them into desperation: therefore I will now, by God's gracious assistance, prove unto them, that our Doctrine is more likely to convert sinners, and to comfort them being converted, then theirs. To speak first of the former. We do indeed denounce God's judgements against men, while they live in sin, and are led by their carnal lusts, telling them that they must repent, and amend their lives, if they will have any hope of salvation by Christ. Thus do we deal with obstinate sinners, endeavouring to save them with fear, that is, with the terror of God's judgements, as St. Judas commandeth us. Jud. Verse 22, 23. If such preaching do no way at all conduce to a sinner's conversion, why doth he say, On some have compassion, making a difference; and others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire. But they tell us, that we lay too hard a task upon men, and that they have no power, Object. nor ability to repent and practise these things, which we do require of them. It's true, they have not of themselves; but it doth not follow hereupon, Answ. that our preaching of repentance unto sinners, and our denouncing of God's judgements against them is in vain, and to no purpose. 1. For the Spirit of God worketh with, and by his word, when it is preached, and maketh it effectual, at one time or other, to as many as are ordained to eternal life. The Law indeed only terrifies sinners, but converteth none; Act. 13.48. 2 Cor. 3.7, 8, 9 for which cause the Apostle calleth it the Ministry of death and of condemnation; but the Gospel he calleth the Ministry of the spirit, because God sends down his spirit into the hearts of the Elect, while the Gospel is ministered, and preached unto them; for so we read of Cornelius & his Companions, Act. 10.44. that while Peter preached the Holy Ghost fell on all that heard the word. And while Lydia heard Paul preach, the Lord by his spirit opened her heart, and converted her to the faith of Christ. Thus is the spirit given in the Ministry of the word, Act. 16.14. and maketh it effectual to work Faith and Repentance in the Elect, when these duties are preached, and pressed upon them. 2. Again, We have this comfort, that Christ hath merited for those that do believe in him, 1 Cor. 1.36. not only the pardon of their sins, but the spirit to sanctify them, and to work repentance in them. Act. 5.31. We are not therefore to set upon the work of repentance in our own strength; for than we are sure to be soiled, and shall prevail nothing; but we are to rely on Christ for his spirit, and for his grace, Gal. 3.14. that we may thereby be enabled to do those things, which he requireth of us. For we receive the promise of the spirit (that is, the spirit of God which Christ hath merited for us, and God hath promised us) by Faith. Thus though we be never so weak of ourselves, yet as St. Paul saith, Phil. 4.13. we are able to do all things (that God requireth of us) through Christ which strengtheneth us. 3. And lastly, We have this comfort also, that by our prayers we may obtain not only other inferior gifts, but the Holy Ghost himself, Luck. 11.13. the Author of all sanctifying grace, as our Saviour assureth us hereof. Albeit then, we be never so unable of ourselves to repent, and to bring forth the lively effects and fruits thereof, yet by our prayers offered up unto God, in the name of Christ, we may obtain power to do all these things. Such strong consolation have we against the difficulty of repentance. Now all these things being well considered, let any indifferent man judge, whether are like to bring men out of their sins, and to bring on their conversion, they that by their Doctrine do stir them up to labour and strive against sin, and to call upon God for grace, whereby they may be enabled to subdue it, relying not on their own strength, but on Christ's merits, who hath purchased the spirit of God for them, or they that will have men, even while they live in profane swearing, drunkenness, whoredom, or any other the like impieties or impurities, Reconcil. of God to man, p. 40, 41, 42 to believe that their sins are pardoned, and that they are reconciled unto God, and in the state of salvation, which is Mr. D. his Doctrine preached and much applauded by many. There is not any one that considereth rightly hereof, and perceiveth what the necessary, and unavoidable consequences hereof are; but he will say, that this is to lay a foundation for presumption and carnal security. And indeed this is the very use, which many have made of this Doctrine already. For though they live in sin, and are led captive by their sensual lusts, as formerly they were; yet hearing these m●n offer Christ unto all, without requiring any thing of them either faith repentance, or any reformation of their sinful li●es, re●●ing them that grace is freely offered in the Gospel, without any conditions, and free●y to be taken and received of all: hereupon they are confident that they shall be saved by Christ, though they li●e like libertines, and cast off all care of reforming their wicked ways and works. It is too late now after they ha●e thus preached free grace unto them, according to this n●w way of theirs, to tell them, that if they do finally continue in infidelity, and impenitency, they shall be damned. For their former Doctrine hath made them secure, insomuch, that they do now resolve (as one did of late ha●ing read a certain Treatise of Mr. S.) that they will no more hearken unto any judgements, or terrors, threatened and denounced against sin, as they had formerly done. And well may they resolve thus with themselves, if it be true which Mr. S. teacheth, to wit, that God in the Gospel doth absolutely offer remission of sins, and salvation by Christ, to all without any condition, yea to sinners, as sinners. For it is most certain, that God will fulfil and perform all his absolute promises, to all those to whom they are offered and made, neither can their infidelity, or their wickedness frustrate the performance of them. He promised absolutely, and without any condition, Gen. 8.22. that while the earth remaineth, Seedtime and Harvest, and cold and he●t, and Summer and Winter, and day and night, shall not cease. Gen. 9.9. He promised also as absolutely, that the World should never more be destroyed with a Flood, and that he would set his Bow in a Cloud, for a sign, and in assurance hereof. Now these promises of his, he hath ever since constantly performed, throughout all Generations, though the World hath been never so wicked. God did as absolutely promise Christ, and accordingly sent him into the World, in a most corrupt time, to renew all things. Thus the wickedness, or the infidelity of man cannot frustrate, nor disannul the promises of God, that are absolute. Wherefore if the promises of life and salvation by Christ unto all, to whom he is offered, and preached, be absolute, and without any condition: how can final impenitency, or infidelity (as Mr. D. telleth us) cause any to forfeit, and frustrate them to their damnation? But let us see how our adversaries go about to prove, that their Doctrine is more likely to gain sinners to God, and to bring them to repentance, and amendment of life than ours is? Object. It is not possible, say they, for a man to believe that his sins are forgiven him; but he will love God, and in lieu of thankfulness, consecrate himself unto his service. Whereas therefore they do require no such hard conditions of men, to discourage them from believing as we do; but offer Christ and salvation by him freely unto all, though they live in their sins, and profess that they cannot leave them, who seethe not that they will sooner believe this Doctrine than ours? and then afterwards, being thus persuaded of the pardon of their sins, they will love God for his mercy, and forsake sin, and consecrate themselves unto his service. Answ. It is ttue indeed, he that truly believeth, will love God, and will out of thankfulness towards him for his mercy, renounce the World, and his own lusts, and consecrate himself unto his service. For first, The true believer by his faith in Christ, Joh. 7.38. doth obtain grace, and power, and strength to love God, and to obey him. And secondly, That faith of his, upon serious and due meditation and consideration▪ first, of his own eternal misery by sin; and secondly, of God's wonderful mercy towards him in Christ, (who suffered his most bitter passion for his redemption; and passing by many others, doth offer salvation freely unto him) will inflame his heart with the love of God, and excite and stir him up to the obedience of his Commandments. But a false faith produceth no such gracious effects, but nourisheth and nusleth men in carnal security, as we see in many, who faith they believe in Christ, and trust to be saved by him, as well as the best, and yet live still in their sins, and never go about to reform themselves. Now such is the faith, which Mr. D. and his Companions do teach; for they will have men to believe, that their sins are pardoned, and that they are reconciled to God, before they go about to rise out of them by repentance, which faith of theirs is no true, but a false faith; for as I have before proved, repentance and remission of sins, do always go together. Where there is no repentance therefore, there can be no remission of sins. All therefore that such a faith can do, is but to stir up those, who do thus falsely persuade themselves that their sins are pardoned, to love God for his mercy towards them, and to obey him (which it seldom or indeed never doth;) but grace it obtaineth none, to crucify sin in them, and to sanctify them; and therefore though they should strive never so much to serve God, and to obey him according to all his Commandments, yet it is not possible that they should do this, because there is no principle of grace, nor no spiritual life in them. SECT. III. Wherein is showed who do preach Christ most comfortably. BY this that hath been said, any one that is not possessed with prejudice, may easily see and perceive, whether the Protestant way of preaching the Gospel, or the new way taken up here of late in England, be like to bring forth better fruits, and to prove more profitable, and more pertinent to the edification of the hearers. To leave this therefore, it remaineth now in the last place to be discussed, whether of these two ways, maketh more for the comfort of men's souls and consciences. Whereunto thus I answer, That is solid and true comfort, which is grounded on God's infallible word, and not on men's fancies, that are deceitful. But such is the comfort which the old and Orthodox Protestant Doctrine affords the hearers thereof, and not the Doctrine of our Novelists. For we teach (as the Gospel doth) that though men have been never so great sinners in times past, yet that all those sins of theirs are forgiven by God and blotted out when they do repent and believe in Christ. We exhort therefore, all that do thus repent and believe, to be of a good comfort, and not to be terrified with any fear, but to rest assured that they shall undoubtedly be saved, through the mercy of God in Jesus Christ. Thus do we comfort true believers, with the unfallible and unfailable promises of God's word, which are the only safe and sure ground of comfort. Object. But I know that our adversaries in this controversy, will here be ready to say, that they do so also. For although they do teach, and tell their hearers, that they were reconciled unto God, and justified freely by his grace, before they did believe; and therefore without faith, as we have heard Mr. D. speak. Yet they say, that they can have no assurance hereof, until they believe. Thus they teach men to believe, not that they may be justified, but that they may be assured of their justification, and salvation by believing. Now I do willingly acknowledge that true faith, Answ. when it is wrought in a man's heart, by God's word and spirit, is an undoubted testimony of his salvation. For as St. John saith, He that believeth hath the witness, that is, 1 Joh. 5.10. of his adoption, and consequently of his salvation in himself. But the faith which these men do teach, is nothing else but a fancy. For they will have wicked men, D. his Conf. p. 20. 21. even when they do continue in their sins, to believe that these sins of theirs are pardoned; and tell them, that by believing this, they are assured of their justification before God, and of salvation. Now this is not true faith, but detestable, and most damnable presumption. For faith is to believe the promi es of God, and to rely upon them, Psal. 119.41, 42. as on its foundation. Now I would know, whether God have any where made any promise of forgiveness to men, while they continue in their sins? surely no; but on the contrary, he threatneth them by his Prophet David, and saith, That he will wound the hairy scalp of such as go on forward in their wickedness. Psal. 68.21. And our Saviour himself told his hearers, That except they did repent, they should all perish. It is not possible therefore, for any to believe, (truly, Luc. 13.3. I mean) that their sins are pardoned until they do repent. Or if, even then while they continue in sin, they will needs persuade themselves, as many do, that their sins are pardoned, and forgiven through God's mercy, and Christ's merits, this is nothing else but presumption. Those therefore that preach thus, instead of comforting their hearers (as they persuade them, and make them to believe) do nothing else, but delude and deceive them. For true justifying faith, is not for a sinner, whilst he continueth in his sins, to believe that they are pardoned, which is false; but to rely upon Christ, for the pardon of them, according to the promises of his Gospel, and not according to his own fancy, and fond imagination, as Libertines and carnal Gospelers do. That this is that faith, whereby we obtain pardon of our sins, and are justified before God's tribunal, St. Paul maketh manifest and plain, when he saith, All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God, Rom. 3.23, 24, 25. being justified freely by his grace, through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ, whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation by faith in his blood. It is not then our believing that our sins are pardoned, whereby we are justified; but it is our faith in Christ's blood, that is, our relying on the merits of his death and passion, whereby we obtain the pardon of them: even as many did in like manner, by faith in Christ obtain the health of their bodies from our Saviour, when they were miraculously cured by him. Mah. 8.13. For when our Saviour required faith of them, saying, Mar. 9.23. be it unto thee, according to thy faith; Or, if thou can●t believe, all things are possible to him that believeth, what is meant here by faith? or what were they to believe? That they were already made whole by Christ? No, for that was false: but that Christ was of that power, that he could, and so gracious and good, that he would heal them, and hereupon to rely, and put their trust and confidence in him, that he would cure them. This was their faith, whereby they obtained the health of their bodies from Christ, as is yet further to be seen in the Canaanitish Woman. Mat. 9.21. For she said in herself, (that is in her heart she believed and was persuaded) If I may but touch the hem of his Garment, I shall be whole, not I am already but I shall be whole. That this was the faith whereby she obtained the health of her body, our Saviour's words to her do assure us. For he turned him to her, and said Daughter, be of good comfort thy faith hath made thee whole. E●en so in like manner did we, when we were dead in our sins, obtain the spiritual health of our souls, not by believing that our sins were pardoned; but by persuading ourselves that God of his rich mercy would pardon them, according to the gracious promises, which he hath made unto us in his Gospel, and by relying upon him for the pardon of them. For as Christ required faith of them for the obtaining of their bodily health; so also doth he of us, for the spiritual health of our souls. As they therefore were cured of their corporal maladies, by relying on Christ, according to his word: so shall we be saved eternally, by relying on Christ, according to the promises of his Gospel. SECT. iv Two Objections answered. AGainst this that I have said, I find two Objections raised, which I do think good to remove, that they may not lie as stumbling blocks in the way of any well-minded people, to endanger them upon error. First, Some do reason thus, If a man cannot believe that his sins are pardoned, until he do repent, than Repentance shall go before faith, which they hold as an absurdity; for whatsoever is not of faith, is sin, Rom. 14.23 saith St. Paul. And again, He telleth us, That without faith; Heb. 11.6. it is impossible to please God. But hereunto I answer, That although Repentance goeth before that act of faith, whereby a man believeth that his sins are pardoned: yet it doth not follow hereupon, that it goeth before all faith in general, no nor yet before justifying and saving faith. For if I shall speak Logically and properly, there are (as I conceive) no less than four several acts of faith; but I do make choice rather to speak popularly, and therefore I will contract two of them into one. The first act of faith, is for a man to believe, that the whole word of God is true, or that I may speak more particularly to the matter in hand, it is for him to believe, that Jesus Christ, being sent of his Father, hath perfectly wrought and accomplished our salvation, and that he doth offer this salvation unto all those, who do repent and believe in him. This act of faith doth not only go before repentance, but before all other acts of faith also. For if a man do not believe, both that Christ hath absolutely, and perfectly accomplished our redemption and salvation, and that he doth also offer the salvation which he hath purchased unto all that do repent, and believe in him, he will have no encouragement, neither will it be possible for him, either to repent, or believe, & to rest and rely on Christ for salvation. This is that faith which is commonly called fides dogmatica, vel historica, doctrinal, or historical faith, because it goeth not beyond the faith of the Doctrine, or of the History of the Bible. Now this, though it be absolutely necessary unto salvation, yet it is not saving faith because it justifieth no man, nor giveth to any man any interest, or right unto salvation. 2. The second act of faith is, That a man do not despair, though his sins be never so many, or never so great; but believe, or persuade himself, that God of his mercy through Christ will pardon them, and so cast himself upon Christ; or that he do trust upon Christ for salvation, according to the promises of the Gospel. This is saving faith; or it is that act of faith, whereby we are justified and saved, as St. Paul giveth us to understand in those words of his (which I have already alleged) Rom. 3.23, 24, 25. All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God, being justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ, whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood. Behold, it is faith in Christ's blood, that is in his death and passion whereby God becometh propitious, that is, gracious and merciful unto us; and consequently whereby we are justified, and saved. Now this act of faith, is in nature before repentance, though in time it go with it. I will make this plain by a familiar comparison. Sol est natura prior lumine ex illo orto. The Sun is in nature before the light that springeth, and proceedeth from it; because in nature the cause is always before the effect: but the Sun and its light are simul tempore, together in time. For as soon as the Sun was created, and placed by God in the Firmament, at the very same instant, did it illighten the World. And even so in like manner faith in Christ, is in nature before repentance; but they go together in time. For seeing there is no promise of pardon made to any one in the Gospel, while he continueth in sin, it followeth necessarily therefore that true justifying faith cannot be separated from repentance, no more than saving repentance can be without such a true faith. And this (as I take it) is the cause, why remission of sins and salvation are in some places of holy Scripture, attributed to repentance, and in some other to saith, to wit, because faith and repentance are as it were twisted and enfolded the one in the other. For neither can a man repent without faith, nor can he believe in Christ, for the pardon of his sins, unless his faith did stir up repentance in him, and a settled purpose to forsake all sin. For as long as a man liveth in sin, he hath no promise from God to ground his faith upon. The true Christian therefore in believing repenteth, and in repenting believeth: these are two inseparable Companions, and as it were twins, that are bread and born together. Although then that act of faith whereby we do believe in Christ, is in nature before repentance, as the cause is before the effect: yet there is no priority, nor posteriority of time between them; Faith is the first wheel in the Clock, that moveth all the rest. Mr. Panb. Vind. Grat. for a man cannot believe in Christ for salvation, according to the promises of the Gospel, unless this faith of his do excite and stir him up to the practice of repentance. The third and last act of faith, is that whereby a man believeth that his sins are blotted out and forgiven, and that he is in the state of salvation. The former is called a direct act, because it maketh a man to look directly upon Christ, and to cast himself upon him for salvation. This latter is called a reflexed act, because a Christian reflecting and looking back upon himself and his own soul, seethe faith and repentance wrought in him; and hereupon concludeth that his sins are pardoned, and that he now is the Child of God, and an Heir of Heaven: This he believeth, because he seethe the conditions accomplished in him, to which God hath promised remission of sins and salvation, that is to say, faith and repentance. Thus whereas the former act of faith, whereby a man doth truly believe in Christ, maketh him partaker of the remission of sins, and giveth him right, and a true title to the Kingdom of Heaven: this latter assureth him of this, and breedeth and begetteth great peace, quietness, and comfort in his heart and conscience. Now this last act of faith, whereby a man thus believeth that his sins are pardoned, and is assured of his salvation, doth not go before, but followeth after repentance. For until a man seethe and perceiveth that he hath forsaken sin, and that he doth repent, he cannot confidently believe that his sins are pardoned, nor can he have any firm assurance of salvation, because he hath no word of promise from God, whereon to ground that faith and assurance of his. Object. Another stumbling-block, which our novelists have cast in the way of many good Christians, is this, whereas St. Paul telleth us, 1 Tim. 1.15 that Christ came into the World to save sinners: behold say these men, he came to save sinners, not repentant sinners; and hereupon they infer and conclude, that a man before he repenteth, even at that very time, when he liveth in sin, aught to believe that his sins are pardoned, and that he is in the state of salvation. But I answer, Answ. That they do deceive both themselves and others, fallacia consequentis, with a fallacious consequence. For when, or how doth Christ save sinners? verily, Mat. 9.12. not while they do continue in sin without repentance; for he himself telleth us, that he calleth them to repentance, and so saveth them. But for a man to continue in sin, and yet to be saved, are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things that will not consist nor stand together, for this implieth a manifest contradiction. Thus than it is, Christ saveth sinners by freeing and delivering them, both from the gilt of their sins, and from the tyranny and dominion of sin, by faith in his blood, and by the power of his spirit. For so St. Paul having rehearsed and reckoned up many foul, and filthy, and fearful sins, wherewith the Corinthians had spotted and polluted themselves in times past, before their conversion to the faith of Christ, presently addeth, But ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, 1 Cor. 6.11. but ye are justified in the blood of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God. It is the greatest folly and madness in the World therefore, for a man to believe that his sins are pardoned, and that he is in the state of salvation, as long as he continueth and remaineth an impenitent, and unreformed sinner: for the Angel of the Lord that was sent unto Joseph, the espoused Husband of the blessed Virgin Mary, telleth us how we are saved by Christ, Act. 3.26.2. He shall save his people from their sins. He doth not say, He shall save his people in their sins, that is while they live and lie in them; But he shall save them from their sins, that is, by freeing and delivering them from them. Whereof St. Peter also assureth us, in that saying of his to the Jews, God having raised up his Son Jesus, sent him to bless you, in turning away every one of you from his iniquities. 2. That I may make this matter yet more plain, and remove all ambiguity: this I add further, that when St. Paul saith, This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the World to save sinners, he speaketh not the partiali, sed totali salute, not of salvation in part, but of that whole salvation, which Christ hath purchased for us, and worketh in us, and bestoweth upon us, that is to say, not of the pardon of our sins only, but as well also of our sanctification, and of all other things that do any way or other concur to the perfecting of our salvation. For Christ doth not save us in part, but most perfectly. He hath purchased for us, not only our justification, but our adoption, sanctification, redemption from Hell, and glorification in Heaven. And hereupon it is, 1 Cor. 1.30. that St. Paul saith, He is made unto us of God wisdom, justice, sanctification, and redemption. We must therefore rely upon Christ by faith for all these, and not separate any one of them from the rest, as carnal Protestants do, who believe in Christ for the forgiveness of their sins, and for their salvation in Heaven; but not for grace, whereby to mortify their sinful lusts, and to live holily. Now wha, Can this faith of theirs save them? no surely, for Christ's merits must not be separated and divided, no more than his person. Christ in his Gospel offereth both himself and all his merits unto us. He therefore that receiveth him as man, but not as God, that receiveth him as his Priest to reconcile him unto God, and to save him from Hell; but not as his King to command him, and to reign over him, that receiveth him for his justification, but not for his sanctification, setteth up a false Christ unto himself, and shall receive no salvation from him at all. SECT. V A twofold Corollary, or conclusion deduced and drawn from the former answers. BY this that I have said, in answer to the two former objections, it may appear, that faith is to be considered, either more strictly, as it relateth to our justification; or more largely, as it hath reference to our whole salvation. 1. To believe in Christ, to our justification, is (as I have said before) for us to rely upon him, for the pardon of our sins, not according to our own fancies and imaginations, but according to the gracious promises of his Gospel. For so St. Paul calleth the Gospel verbum fidei, Rom. 10.8. the word of faith, that is, the word of faith which we preach; as if he should have said, That Gospel, which we the Apostles of Christ, and other his faithful Ministers do preach, is the word of faith. Now wherefore is it that Paul doth call the Gospel the word of faith? Is it not first, Because faith is bred and begotten in our hearts, by the hearing of the Gospel? And secondly, Because it is built and grounded on the Gospel as on its foundation? For our Saviour himself also telleth us, That the faith which he requireth of us, is the faith of the Gospel, or it is for us to believe the Gospel. Now I have proved already, Mar. 1.15. Psal. 130.5. Psal. 119.42 that Christ in his Gospel doth no where offer pardon to such as continue in sin, but only to those that repent, and turn unto him from their evil ways. And hereupon St. Peter having convicted the Jews of great and gross impiety against God, and his Son Christ Jesus, afterwards exhorteth them, and saith, Repent and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, etc. And at the end of that Chapter, Act. 3.19. he telleth the Jews, (as we have already heard) that God sent his Son to save them (not by suffering them to continue in their sins; but) by turning every one of them from their iniquities. This I have the more largely insisted on, that none may, neither fancy, that their sins are pardoned, while they do live in them without repentance; nor yet rely upon Christ, for the pardon of them, unless they do stir up themselves to the practice of repentance. Secondly, If Faith be considered more largely, as it hath reference to our whole salvation, so (as I have said before) we are to rely upon Christ, not for the pardon of our sins, and for our redemption and deliverance from Hell only; Joh. 7.38. but as well also for our sanctification, and for all things, which do accomplish & consummate our salvation; for all these are we to rely upon Christ, in the use of all those means which he hath prescribed us, such as are the reading, hearing, meditating of God's word, laying of it up in our hearts, & the applying of it to our souls, with prayer, godly conference, striving against sin, endeavouring to do the things which God commandeth, and the like. For God will not have us to be idle, but to use such means, as he hath appointed for the furtherance of our salvation, and to depend upon him for his blessing on them, Isa. 38.18. which he will not deny, but in due time vouchsafe us: for as the holy Prophet saith, Blessed are all they that wait for him. For the clearing of what hath been said, I will briefly answer an Objection or two, that I have lately met with. First, There are those that reason thus, The faith which Christ requireth in the Gospel, that we may be saved by him, must needs include more in it then trust and confidence in his blood; for such faith or confidence is an affection of the sensitive part, or faculty of the Soul, therefore no sure note of salvation. Hereunto I answer, That affections are not only in the sensitive appetite, but also in the will; for wherefore else is it, that the will is said to be appetitus rationalis, si nil appetat? And is not love an affection of the soul? yet every one is commanded to love the Lord his God with all his heart, with all his soul, with all his strength, and with all his mind, Deut. 6.5. Luk. 20.27. that is, with the superior, as well as the inferior faculties of the soul. The other Objection which I have met with is this. Christ justifieth us as our King, absolving and acquitting us from the sentence of condemnation, which we by our sins had deserved, and not only as our Priest, by his blood, which he shed for us, when he offered up himself as a sacrifice of sweet smelling savour unto his Father. Unto this I answer, That Christ justifieth us per modum meriti, by way of merit, as our great high Priest, offering up himself as a propitiatory sacrifice unto his Father for us. But he justifieth us as our King, and our supreme judge, by absolving us from our sins, and pronouncing us righteous for the merit of his blood and obedience, whereby he became obedient unto his Father unto death, even the death of the Cross, and so fulfilled the Law for us. Whereas then St. Paul saith, (and we also with him) that we are justified freely, through the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood: the meaning hereof is, that we do rely on Christ's death and passion, as the only means whereby God's wrath is appeased, and our salvation purchased. But all this nothing hindereth, but we may, and do willingly grant and hold, as an undoubted truth, that we must receive Christ, not only as our Priest, to be reconciled unto God by him; but as well also as our Prophet, to be taught the will of God by him, and as our King to reign over us, if we would be saved by him, and live for ever. SECT. VI More Objections answered, and some Cases of Conscience resolved. THese things I have thus discussed the more largely, that men may not deceive themselves with a false faith, which can never bring any true comfort to their souls; but in the end, will plunge them into perdition everlasting. Now there remains nothing but that I answer such other Objections, and resolve such doubts, as are raised against this Doctrine: whereas then we do teach the Children of God, to reason thus for their comfort, Whosoever repenteth, and believeth in Christ, his sins are pardoned by God, and he shall undoubtedly be saved; but I do thus repent and believe, therefore my sins are pardoned, and I shall through God's mercy be eternally saved. Object. Against this, it is first objected, that our repentance, and our obedience are imperfect, This Objection proveth only, that we cannot be justified by our repentance, and by our obedience; but not that we cannot by them, as by signs and tokens, be assured of our justification and salvation. & many ways defective: there is no comfort therefore to be taken in them; for such impure works as these, cannot stand in God's sight. Nothing can please him, but that which is pure and perfect. Answ. It is true indeed, I confess, that if God should examine our repentance, and our obedience in strictness of justice, it is not possible that he should accept of them; but his mercy is such towards us through Christ, that for his sake, he pardons the imperfections of our actions, while we do that which is commanded us in sincerity, 1 Chron. 29.17. Psal. 32.2. and not in hypocrisy. For as David saith, The Lord loveth uprightness. And therefore in another place, he pronounceth him blessed, In whose spirit there is no guile. 2. Again, Christ washeth away the impurity that adhereth to our actions in his blood. For so we read, that the Saints of God have washed, not only themselves, but their robes, Rev. 7.14. that is, their works of righteousness, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. And hereupon it is, that St. Peter encourageth us to offer up our spiritual sacrifices of prayer and praises, and new obedience, 1 Pet. 2.5. and telleth us, that they are acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. 3. And lastly, It cannot but be also a great comfort unto us, that whereas the Law condemneth us, for every transgression and disobedience of ours; yet the Lord of his rich mercy in Jesus Christ, is pleased to accept of our service, when we do not lie still in our sins, after we are fallen; but do rise again by repentance, and endeavour to obey him, according to all his Commandments. If any man were bound upon a great penalty, to go to any place or other without stumbling, or falling, if he do but once trip and stumble in his journey, he incurs that penalty: and even so in like manner, because the Law requireth universal obedience of us, and curseth us, if we break but any one Commandment thereof: therefore if we should commit but one sin in all our life, there were no hope of salvation by the Law; but a fearful expectation of judgement and wrath everlasting. But now seeing Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law; and, although he commandeth us to walk before him in all the ways of his Commandments, is yet pleased to pardon our falls, if we do not lie still, and welter and wallow in the puddle of our sins, as many do; but rise again by repentance. O what a comfort may this be unto us? For even as a little Child that is weak, and gins to go, may truly be said to walk to such or such a place, although he taketh many a fall, if he do not lie still, but rise again presently, and never cease going, until he come thither: so although, as St. James saith, Jam. 3.2. we do in many things offend all, that is, take many falls while we are in our journey towards Heaven: yet if we do not lie still in any sin, but rise up again speedily by repentance, and proceed in our obedience to God's Commandments, we may truly be said to walk in the way of righteousness, and shall in the end come to Heaven, through the mercy of God in Christ Jesus. But it may here be said, Object. There are many good souls that labour and strive constantly and continually to repent & believe, and yet they are so troubled with doubts and fears, which do rise in their minds, that they cannot say, nor they cannot assure themselves, that they do repent and believe. Now what comfort can it be unto them, that every one that repenteth and believeth, hath his sins pardoned, when they know not themselves to be of this number? Answ. Concerning such I say, that they may take much comfort from this Doctrine, which I have taught, and delivered; for let them use the means of their salvation constantly, as they do, and continue their striving against sin, and endeavouring to obey God, according to all his Commandments; and than although through multitudes of doubts and fears which do encounter them, (as this is the case of those that are troubled with melancholy, and hideous tentations) they cannot firmly believe, or be persuaded that their sins are pardoned: yet let them cast themselves into the arms of God's mercy, through Christ, and it will not be possible that they should miscarry. For as all those were cured of their bodily diseases and infirmities, who came unto Christ, and believed, and relied upon him for help: so if these men, and these women of whom I now speak, do rely on Christ, both for the pardon of their sins past, and for their sanctification, and whole salvation, he will uphold them against all their spiritual adversaries, and bring them safe through all difficulties, to the possession of his glorious Kingdom. Unto all such therefore I say, as the holy Prophet Isaiah doth, Isa. 50.10. Who is there among you that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice of his Servant, that walketh in darkness, and hath no light? Let him trust in the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God. Thus I have showed how the Children of God are to be dealt with, that they may receive comfort from the holy and heavenly Doctrine of Christ, which is taught by all Orthodox Protestants. Quest. Now I know it will be demanded, what comfort this Doctrine of ours can afford to wicked and ungodly men, that live in sin, and do not yet repent? Answ. Whereunto I say, that such may turn this Doctrine to their great comfort. For albeit they find their carnal lusts, whereof they are held captive, to be too strong for them to subdue and overcome; yet let them not, through despair, give over themselves to the power of the Devil, but let them humble themselves before God, acknowledging their deserved condemnation; and when they have done this, let them set upon their sins, as David did on the great Goliath, not in their own strength, but in the name of the Lord, that is, in faith and confidence, 1 Sam. 17. that God through Christ, will make them conquerors of all the infernal powers of darkness, if they do not voluntarily cast away their Weapons, and resign and yield themselves captives to their lusts; but fight and strive against them, in a constant use of the means of their conversion and salvation, with prayer. We read in the fifth of St. John's Gospel, that a multitude of impotent people, of blind, halt, and withered, lay by the Pool of Bethesda, waiting for the moving of the waters. For an Angel went down at a certain season into the Pool, and troubled the water: whosoever than first after the troubling of the water, stepped in, was made whole of whatsoever disease he had. After the like manner, ought all sorts of sinners to rely upon Christ, in the use of the means of grace, waiting for the powerful working of the spirit in their hearts, whereby they may be freed from the servitude of their carnal lusts, and enabled to serve God acceptably, according to his word and will. Thus may the wickedest sinners that are, through God's grace, convert and turn this Doctrine to their comfort. But if any one shall here say, Object. This can be no comfort at all, to such as are not willing, nor have any desire at all to leave their sins. To such a one I say, Let Mr. D. and his novelists, Answ. if they list, comfort such, and tell them, they are to believe that their sins are forgiven them, and that they are justified, and reconciled unto God by the death of Christ. If (I say) they have a mind thus to comfort them, let them take this to themselves, and rejoice in it, as in a peculiar prerogative of their own. For surely those that are faithful to Christ, dare not comfort such, knowing that the terrors, not the comforts of God's word do appertain and belong unto them: and yet, lest such carnal minded men should presumptuously hope for mercy, while they continue in their sins, and have no purpose to reform their lives, I must tell them, that the comfort which Mr. D. and such others do reach out unto them with the one hand, Doct. of J. Baptist pag. 27. they dash and overthrow it with the other. For having taught their hearers, that they are justified, and reconciled to God before they do believe even while they live in their sins. Yet * Recon. of God to man, Pag. 32, 33. Ib. p. 44. Recon. of man to God, p. 60, 61. afterwards they tell them, that a final infidelity will damn them; and that if they do not love God, and leave sin, they can have no hope of Heaven. Good Christian Reader, I have, I think, met with, and confuted the most material errors, which Mr. D. hath scattered here and there, in his three Treatises, especially those wherein he doth oppugn the Orthodox, and ancient Protestant Doctrine. There are indeed besides these, divers novellous, most strange▪ and forced expositions of Scripture, to be found in those Treatises, whereof I will only give thee a taste, by instancing in a few of them. Mat. 6.14. First of all then, whereas our Saviour saith, If you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your heavenly Father forgive you your trespasses. Recon. of God to man. p. 25 He saith, that forgiveness is here to be taken, not properly, but for the manifestation of forgiveness. As if our Saviour should have said, Except ye forgive men, neither will your heavenly Father so fully declare, and manifest himself unto your Consciences. A worthy Exposition! for will it not hence follow, that a man may have his sins pardoned, and forgiven by God, though he never forgive those that offend him: but this will not be so evident to his Conscience? Yet for confirmation of this his Exposition, he allegeth those words of our Saviour, Luc. 7.47. unto the penitent woman. Her sins which are many are forgiven, for she loved much. And hereupon inferreth, and saith, forgiveness in this place includeth the manifestation of forgiveness. But I answer, Forgiveness is here taken really, and properly, and her great and abundant love to Christ, was the evidence, and manifestation thereof. As if I should say, The Sun is risen; for it shineth upon the wall. In this speech the meaning is, that the Sun is really risen, though perhaps that might not be the very first moment of the rising thereof, when this was spoken; and the Suns shining upon the wall is made a sign, or an evidence and manifestation thereof. And even so in like manner, when our Saviour saith, Her sins which are many are forgiven her, his meaning was, that they were really forgiven, though not at that instant only, but from the first moment of her conversion. And he maketh this manifest, by his next words, from her abundant love, which she so many ways showed and expressed towards him, saying, For she loved much. I know Mr. D. will not here say with the Papists, that her love to Christ, was the cause that he pardoned and forgave her her sins; but that he drew an Argument from thence to prove, and to evidence that her sins were forgiven. And so this conjunction causal (for) est causa consequentiae, non consequentis▪ is only the cause of the consequence in his Argument, or in his reasoning; but not of the thing itself, whereof he speaketh, that is, of the pardon of her sins. He would prove also from the judgement of Protestant Interpreters, that our Saviour speaketh not of remission of sins really, but of the manifestation thereof, because when we pray in the fifth Petition of the Lords Prayer, Forgive us our trespasses: they make this to be the meaning hereof▪ that the Children of God, whose sins are already pardoned, do pray for more assurance thereof. But I have showed already Quest. 9 that they make this to be the meaning thereof only in part, and not the full sense of that Petition, as Mr. D. would have it. Recon. of God to man. pag. 43. Another place of Scripture, which he perverteth, and corrupteth by a novellous and strange Exposition, are those words of St. Paul, 1 Cor. 6.9. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God; Be not deceived, neither fornicators, nor Idolaters, nor Adulterers, etc. shall inherit the Kingdom of God. The meaning hereof he will have to be, that they shall not enter into the Kingdom of God here on Earth, which is his Church. But in expounding these words thus, he cometh far short of the meaning of the Apostle; for albeit it is most certain, that the unrighteous are no true members of the Church, though they be in it for a time; yet the Scripture when it speaketh of the inheritance which Christ hath purchased for his Saints, from which the unrighteous are excluded, referreth the possession thereof, not to this World, where we sojourn for a time, as Pilgrims in a strange Country; but to that happy life that is to come. Thus our Saviour at the day of judgement, will say unto his Elect people, and righteous Servants. Mat. 25.34 Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the Kingdom prepared for you, from the foundation of the world, St. Paul also telleth us, that flesh and blood shall not inherit the Kingdom of God, 1 Cor. 15. neither shall corruption inherit incorruption. Which words it were absurd, to refer unto the Kingdom of grace, or to say, that the Apostle excludeth all such out of the Church here on earth, who carry about them corruptible flesh and blood. St. Peter also in plain words, so speaketh of the inheritance of Heaven, as of a thing, the possession whereof is not to be had in this life, but in the World to come. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, which according to his abundant mercy, hath begotten us again unto a lively hope, by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in Heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God, 1 Pet. 1.3, 4, 4. through faith unto salvation, ready to be revealed in the last time. When St. Paul therefore saith, that Fornicators, Adulterers, and such unrighteous persons shall not inherit the Kingdom of God, his meaning is, that they shall never enter into the glorious Kingdom of Heaven, but be excluded thence, and be cast into Hell. 3. As strangely doth he expound those words of the Apostle, Heb. 12.14. Recon. of God to man, p. 43, 44. Without holiness no man shall see the Lord, that is (saith he) with spiritual eyes, or with the eyes of faith: whereas the Apostle speaketh not here in praesenti, of that Vision, or seeing of the Lord, which is to be had in this present World; but in futuro, of our seeing of him hereafter, to our endless comfort in his Kingdom, and in his glory, in the same sense as St. John doth, 1 Joh. 3.2. We know, that when Christ shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is. Most false therefore it is, (which Mr. D. saith) To see God, and to inherit the Kingdom of God, are nothing else but to believe in God, and in his Son Jesus Christ. When we come to Heaven, faith in Christ shall cease, and yet we shall not cease then to see God. Another place of holy Scripture, 1 Cor. 13.13. Confer. with a sick man. pag. 7. 1 joh. 3.14. which he grossly perverteth with a false Exposition, and so goeth about to deprive the godly of the comfort, which they take from it, are those words of St. John, We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the Brethren. Many good souls have acknowledged, that when all other grounds of comfort have failed them, or at the least, when in time of temptation, they have not been able to apprehend any comfort from any thing else: yet these words of the Apostle have upheld them from despairing of their Estate, because their Consciences did testify unto them, that they did unfeignedly love, and ardently affect all that are godly. Now this comfort also Mr. D. denyeth them. * Confer. p. 9 I do (saith he) for the present believe, that St. John doth principally speak of our assurance, whereby we know one another to be the Children of God. And Conf. p. 8. He telleth us, that it is before man, that our love beareth witness to our Faith. For he saith, that St. John's meaning is not, that a man may know by his love to the Brethren, that he himself particularly is in the state of grace; but that the faithful in general, by means of the love which they professed, and shown one to another, were well persuaded one of another, and believed by the judgement of charity, that they were all the Children of God. But this Exposition of his, crosseth the main scope and drift, or the purpose and intention of the Apostle, in writing this Epistle, which was to comfort the faithful, by showing them what signs and tokens, and particular evidences they had of the forgiveness of their sins, and of their salvation by Christ; for so he saith, Chap. 5.13. These things have I written unto you (whereof their love to the Brethren was one) that believe on the name of the Son of God, that ye may know, that ye have eternal life, and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of God, that is, perseverantly unto the end. What will Mr. D. except against this? Will he say, as Estius and the Papists do, that the Apostles meaning is not, that every, or any ordinary faithful man knoweth certainly, that he is translated from death to life, and therefore in the state of salvation? but that he speaketh generally in the person of all the faithful, and is thus to be understood? We Christians know by an assured faith, that all good faithful people (of which number we severally trust that we are) are translated from death to life. But surely this Exposition of his, est nimis jejuna, is too hungry and lean. For what comfort will it be to any one, to know certainly, that all good Christians, and true believers, are translated from death to life, as long as he knoweth not, whether he himself be of that number, but doubteth hereof? Again, Shall we think, or can we persuade ourselves, that St. John wrote so large an Epistle, and used so many Arguments, only to make known unto the faithful, that all good Christians, or that all good faithful people have their sins pardoned, and are in the state of salvation, which they never doubted of. It's certain, That St. John in writing this Epistle, had a farther intent, and that is to make it evident unto us, by many infallible signs and tokens, how we may know, that we are the Children of God, and that we are translated from death to life, which is a matter of greatest comfort, and rejoicing to a Christian heart, that can be. Mr. D. indeed (for I would not willingly do him any wrong) acknowledgeth that true charity is an assured sign or mark of grace received; but for all that, Cor a s pag. he holdeth that a Christian cannot certainly know, that he hath charity, whereby he may be assured, that he is the Child of God. But herein he joineth with the Papists. For they say, as Estius doth, quantum de dilectione fraternâ certi sumus, tantum & de isto, look how much we are assured of our love to the Brethren; so much are we assured of that also: he meaneth, that we are translated from death to life, whereof he spoke before. Now he hath told us, that this cannot certainly be known of us, and so his meaning is, as also Mr. D. that we cannot certainly, but conjecturally only know, that we love the Brethren. Thus both Mr. D. and they, would make St. John a silly and sorry disputant, as if he would prove ignotum per ignotius, that which is unknown to us, by another thing, which is as much, or more unknown; for how can we know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the Brethren? if we have no more certain knowledge of this, then of the former. Our conjectural hope that we love the Brethren, will only breed, and beget in us an Opinion that we are translated from death to life, but no knowledge thereof at all. But on the contrary St. John saith not, We hope, we conjecture, or we think; but we know that we have passed from death to life. And he proveth it as effectu, tanquam signo hujus infallibili, by an effect of this translation, as an infallible sign thereof; because (saith he) we love the Brethren. Thus he maketh our love of the Brethren, an evidence that we are in the state of salvation. And hereupon St. Augustine writing on these words saith, redeat unusquisque ad cor suum: Si ibi invenerit charitatem fraternam, securus sit, quia transiit à morte ad vitam. Let every one return unto his own heart: if he doth there find brotherly charity, let him be secure, because he hath passed from death to life. Surely St. Augustine would never have spoken thus, if he had thought, that a Christian can have no certain knowledge of his love to the Brethren. For it is not an uncertain hope, or an opinion grounded on conjectures, that can breed and beget any security in the soul. Thus Christian Reader, I have given thee a taste of Mr. D. his faculty, in expounding of the Scriptures after his fancy. More of his detorted Expositions, I cannot acquaint thee with, because I neither remember any more, nor have his Book by me, it being restored to the owner, by him that lent it me long since. And indeed, I should both trouble myself, and the Reader, in rehearsing any more of them; and this Treatise would swell, and grow into too great a bulk, whereby the weaker sort of Christians might be deterred, and discouraged from reading of it; for whose sake principally, I have penned and published it, that they may be settled and established in the truth, which hath been formerly taught them, and not be carried away with the deceiptfulness of novellous errors. Here I made an end long since, and thought to have proceeded no further; but upon a second review of Mr. D. his three Treatises, I started these Questions following, which having discussed, and determined, I do here add unto the former, hoping that they will not be altogether unacceptable, unto not a few good Christians; because the most of them may give some satisfaction unto them, in divers doubts and scruples of Conscience, wherewith their souls are exercised. Quest. 16. WHether all that are called of God, and consequently that are his Children, have always, and at all times their hearts ravished, and replenished with surpassing joy and comfort? Quest. 17. Whether the Repentance which the Prophets taught and exhorted their hearers unto in the old Testament, be the same which is taught in the new? Quest. 18. Whether there was any actual forgiveness of sin in the old Testament? Quest. 19 Whether there be not many things to be done by us, before we can be saved? Quest. 20. Whether a man may not have a steadfast hope in God, that he shall be saved, who hath a care to keep God's Law, to do all things commanded, and to shun all things forbidden, to the uttermost of his power? Quest. 21. Whether a desire to believe be faith itself? Quest. 22. Whether he that useth the means of salvation constantly, may not confidently expect, and hope to be saved through God's mercy in Christ? Quest. 23. Whether every one that he may be assured of the forgiveness of his sins, and of his salvation, is, without reason, or against reason, to believe that his sins are pardoned, and that God hath given him eternal life? Quest. 24. Whether he that hath oppressed, defrauded, or otherwise wronged his Neighbour in his goods, and outward Estate, can believe that his sins are pardoned, before he hath made him restitution and satisfaction? Quest. 25. Whether the way for a wicked man to overcome and leave his sins, be for him to believe that his sins are pardoned, and forgiven him? Quest. 26. Whether every one that truly believeth in Christ, be assured of salvation? Quest. 27. Whether every one, who in his Conscience is not assured of his reconciliation to God, and of his own salvation, be a wicked man? Quest. 28. Whether a man can take no comfort in any of God's promises, unless he be first assured of his Faith? FINIS.