Mr. Baxters APHORISMS Exorized and Anthorized: OR, An Examination of, and Answer to, a Book written by Mr. Rich. Baxter Teacher of the Church at Kederminster in Worcestershire; ENTITƲLED, Aphorisms of Justification.
THE SECOND PART.
CHAP. I.
The following Doctrine of Mr. Baxters Book reduced to some few heads, and the question between him and the Protestants about Justification by works stated.
HItherto we have been busied about the view of Mr. Baxters swelling, which the more and the farther we gazed on, the more it increased, and after a long expectation of an issue, at length the imposthumated matter breaks out in the sight of all men, to the offence of all spiritualized men, Justification by workes. This is the declared and professed Subject of all the following part of this Treatise, what before he did but hint and whisper in a kind of darkenesse, now [Page 4] he preacheth on the top of the house, proclaiming it as the sole Soul-saving doctrine, canonizing as Saints the Papists for the constant holding forth of it, and Anathematizing all the Protestants Churches as Apostaticall for departing from it, as by examining what followes in this his Tractate will appear.
For the avoiding of confusion, and prevention of a voluminous prolixity, into which I see my self already carried by following him Thesis after Thesis, (being necessitated thereby as he speaks, so to examine and answer the same things often in many places;) I shall endeavour to reduce unto some few heads, the sum of what he saith upon this Question, examining that which is to the purpose, and leaving the rest that is inconsideraable or impertinent to it.
1 Then I shall endeavour to draw out from him the state of the Question what he holdeth, and how he holds it forth to us.
2 I shall examine his Arguments and Reasons, by which he endeavoureth to confirme his assertion or assertions.
3 I shall also examine what force there is in the Reasons which he bringeth to clear himself and his doctrine from being derogatory to the grace of God and full efficacy of Christs mediation; or from all tainture of Popery, Socinianism, or other heresies. Within this Triangle I conceive the whole fabrick of his doctrine of workes to be comprehended; and in examining of these fully, nothing to be left unexamined, that may make for his purpose.
1 The state of the Question, or his assertions which he maintaineth, I shall (as neer as may fitly be done) transcribe from him in his own words: thus,
1 The bare act of beleeving is not the only condition of the new Covenant but severall other duties also are part of this condition, [viz. of Justification] (For this is his meaning, and if he be not so understood, he is understood besides his meaning, and in what he saith he saith nothing. His Tractate contains Aphorisms of Justification only. And the conditions of the new Covenant which tend to Illumination, Sanctification, Glorification, &c. must not be confounded with those of Justification; if it were granted him, that the Gospell dispenseth all or any of these upon conditions. In this sense therefore he must, he will be understood.) Thes. 60. pa. 235.
[Page 5]2 That these duties coordinate with Faith to our Justification as conditions thereof, are Repentance, praying for pardon, forgiving others, love, hearing the word, consideration, conviction, godly sorrow, knowledge of Christ, assent to the truth of the Gospell, subjection, consent, acceptance, cordiall covenanting, self-resigning, esteeming and preferring Christ before all, loving him above all, sincerity, perseverance, affiance, sincere obedience, and works of love, serious, painfull and constant use of Gods ordinances; hearing, praying, meditating; in a word, all good works, i. e. all the works of Righteousnesse, holinesse, mercy, &c. which the Law requireth: [yet with this proviso that all these legall workes must be called not our Legall but our Gospell Righteousnesse.] Thes. 60. p. 235, 236. & p. 240, 241, 242. & Thes. 73, 74, p. 289. 290, 291, 292.
3 That the non-performance of any one of these doth hinder, but it is not one or many, but a concurrence of all these together in one, that sufficeth to condition us unto Justification, Thes. 61. So that when the promise of life is made in Scripture to our beleeving in Christ, or to any other inseparable concomitant of Faith, you must understand it Caeteris paribus, viz. that your knowledge, repentance, obedience, good workes, &c. are not an inch behind your faith; or in sensu composito, that it is a compounded Faith, hath all other vertues not only included in it, but also actuated, and cooperating with it for justification, or else you must be shaken off unjustified; yea though all the rest be in act and but one out of act, Thes. 61. and its Explication. He saith not this indeed totidem verbis, word by word: But let him deny the least particle of all this to be his meaning, he shall by such a denyall extremely wound, if not wholly subvert his cause, and yeeld it to us.
4 It is not the habit of these vertues as infused from above into us, but the act or work of them as set in operation by us, that justifieth. For so saith he of Faith it self (much more implieth it of the other vertues) that it is the act of faith alone, as it is our act or work that justifyeth, a [...]d consequentially that we are justifyed wholly by works, viz. as the alone condition or causa sine qua non.
5 That some of these justifying vertues or works, are antecedaneous to, or fore-going preparatives of, some integrall parts, some proper, essentiall, formall acts, some differentiall and essentiall▪ [Page 6] parts, some modifications, some in separable products, some both parts and necessary consequents, and subservient acts, some necessary continuing and exercising means, and lastly some separable adjuncts of Faith, yet tending to the well being thereof; and thus having adorned faith like the Cornish Chough with the feathers of all the best birds, he sends it to scar aloft with these plumes to heaven for justification, which without this borrowed help, of it self it was not in a capacity to do, pa. 240, 241, 242.
In these particulars I take the whole sum of his doctrine about this Question to be comprehended. He addeth indeed some lenitives here and there to mitigate and make tolerable the asperity and harshnesse of these his assertions, which we shall examine among the reasons that he brings to manifest his doctrine not to be derogatory from the glory of Gods grace, &c. as being more proper to that then this place. All the forementioned particulars may be summed up in this one, That all the acts or works of all morall vertues, and of all insu [...]ed Habits (if he grant any such) are required coordinately with faith to make up the conditio, upon which we shall, and without which we cannot be justifyed.
In opposition to this, all the Protestant Churches do and still have maintained that Faith alone, and the same not as it is in the consideration of a habit or vertue, or as an act of ours, but by way of a means or instrument (as hath been before explained) justifyeth, without any concurrence of works with it in the act and office of justifying. This assertion he endeavours to destroy, and establish his own, with many Arguments, which we shall examine severally either after other.
CHAP. II.
Mr. Baxters preface to his first Argument drawn from Scriptures to prove Justification by works, examined; and the Scriptures which the Protestant writers bring against it, and Mr. Baxter would have stifled in darknesse, here brought to light; together with the opinion of the most eminent Protestant writers upon this Subject.
HIS first argument is drawn from Scriptures, unto which he thus prefaceth,
We gladly accept this rule of dispute, and pronounce all other rules in Questions of this kinde to be irregular. Yet have we somewhat to say to the proposer of it.
1 Why hath he in the former part of this Tractate so much wandered from the rule of Scripture as insufficient or improper to try his opinions, and make use (in stead of it) of so much exotick learning, the Jesuits sophistry, and Socinus his right reason, as if the Scripture were not, but these were to be attended on as proper Judges in such matters?
2 When all the Scriptures which he here bringeth to prove a cooperation of workes with faith to justification (scarce any one of them excepted, as I undertake if he call me to it to shew) have been alleaged by the Monkes and Jesuits against us, and been answered over and over a hundred times by our Divines; why doth he here urge them as Scriptures of his own collection, and require an interpretation to be given to them that might manifest they hold not forth Justification by works? how doth he abase the Ministers his readers, for whose seducing he hath compiled this Book, by imprinting within himselfe [Page 8] a supposition, that their Libraries consist only of Aristotle and Schibler, and that they are as ignorant of the controversie between the Papists and us, as they were born? Else if he supposed they had read such controversies, he would not have called for an interpretation of these Scriptures as now first alleaged by himselfe. Simplicity in handling the truths of Christ is necessary to declare the heart upright. If Mr. Baxter had possessed such a jewell within his bosome, he would have exploded all tricks of subtlety and craft with an Anathema Maranatha; and told us plainly, these Scriptures have been urged by the Papists for their justification by works, that the Protestants have said somewhat to elude the force of such Scriptures by forced interpretations of them, but against every interpretation of every such Scripture, he thus and thus excepteth, and desireth these exceptions of his to be answered, else he cannot be convinced but that works cooperate with faith to Justification. But in the midst of a room that is hung with a thousand candles and torches, to cry out, O that some one would give me one spark of light in this dark dungeon! this is no lesse then to pronounce all save himself within the room blind, that in the midst of light they see nothing. Or otherwise to pronounce all these lights darknesse in comparison of his more shining light. Let not Mr. Baxter so contemn all the Anti-papisticall worthies as smoaking snuffs in comparison of his beames; nor think all his yoak-fellowes in the Ministry at the present to be such glow-wormes and slimy sots, that being thus spitted with his base ▪esteem of them, they should be insensible of it, and goe away rejoycing, as sprinkled with his holy water.
3 Why doth he only quote Scriptures and bring for himself and against us only Arithmeticall figures and ciphers, without the words of those Scriptures, and telling us how they make for him & against us? would he have us to understand that he means to argue from them no otherwise then the Priests and Jesuites have done before him? we might then answer all in a word by sending him to those pretious servants of Christ who have answered the Argumentations of these Priests and Jesuites from these Scriptures. Or is it to straighten us with a doubtfulnesse, what to answer, because we know not how he will argue from these Scriptures? and to reserve to himself an advantage to except [Page 9] against all our answers, that we have not spoken to the purpose, he meant not so, but thus and thus to have argued from these Testimonies. What better answer to such a roving disputer, then to leave him roving, untill he will cease from circling, and fall upon some point wherein he will declare himself that he would be answered? This I should do, had it been my only purpose to have answered Mr. Baxter; but because my aime was and is least to grapple with him, (from whom I expect nothing better but many things worse, after all wiser mens endeavours then mine, [and could shew reason for it]) but chiefly to preserve the single hearted Christians free from his infection; I shall not wholly passe by, without examination, these Scriptures, that none by the misunderstanding of Scriptures may be carryed into Anti-scripturall errors.
4 But how seasonable is the Caution that he gives us, to take heed of giving any uncommodious or forced interpretation to those Scriptures which the Papists, and after them the Socinians have urged for their justification by workes? As if all our Divines and Martyrs for Christ in these last 200. years have abused the Seriptures with false interpretations, and so have been Apostates from Christ in departing from Rome: and that the Jesuits and Socinians have been the only sincere interpreters of Scriptures: when contrariwise all that have but looked over the pale into their writings, find nothing so sacred, no Scripture so plain which they do not violate and distort with their Sophisticall cavillations. That Hell it self hath in no age vomited out any brood of hereticks that can parallell these in audacious abuse and violation of Scriptures; yet while Mr. Baxter fights with their Arguments and maintains their assertions, he cals upon us, Take heed, abuse not Scriptures.
5 Why doth he not produce first, (seeing he professeth himself a Protestant and Anti-papist) those manifold and cleer Scriptures which all the Protestant Churches alleage for stablishing of justification by faith alone, and the expelling of works from having any part with faith in this work, and answer their Arguments drawn from such Scriptures; before he brings in the Scriptures which the Jesuits have mu [...]ered up against their assertion? At least why doth he not declare as well what the Protestants have to say for themselves, as what the [Page 10] Papists have to say against them, that both sides may be heard? But to make a roar on the one side, and to exhibit the other party as mute as fishes, having nothing to say, or reason to give for their own Religion, nor to gainsay the adversaries in opposing it; is this fair and Christian dealing? Thus to stifle our cause, or rather the cause of Christ in darkenesse, and to imprison the light by which we have walked from the time of Luther untill this day, what doth it argue in him lesse then what Christ tels us, He that doeth evill hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds which are evill should be reproved? Joh. 3. 20.
These things thus premised, let us come now to the Scripture, making it the Judge and touchstone in this Controversie: But so, as that it shall be requisite for me to supply what Mr. Baxter hath left untouched, what Scriptures our Divines bring to prove justification to be only by faith, and to deny all cooperation of works therein. And herein I shall put limits to my self not letting out all that they produce, (for so should I offend with immoderate length) but some particulars, that the weakest reader may see, what Mr. Baxter would not give him to see, that our Churches are not destitute of strong grounds for the bearing up of their faith and assertions. And when this is done, I shall descend to examine the force of those Scriptures quoted by Mr. Baxter, to see whether they make for him, and against us.
I shall begin from the reasoning of the Apostle Rom. 3. 20. &c. having before proved both the Jews by and under the Law, and the Gentiles without the Law, to be guilty before God; he concludes, Therefore by the deeds of the Law, there shall no flesh be justifyed, &c. and ver. 21. The righteousnesse of God [viz. to justification] is manifested without the Law, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets (to wit, a righteousnesse which the Law is ignorant of, the righteousnesse or life which is by faith. From this righteousnesse the tenour of the Law or legall Covenant turns aside, telling us, he that doeth them shall live in them, Gal. 3. 11, 12.) ver. 22. Even the righteousnesse of God which is by the faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all that beleeve. Lo here it is denyed to be by the most righteous works which the most perfect Law of God himself prescribeth, and attained by faith only, ver. 24. Being justifyed freely by his grace, through the redemption which is [Page 11] by Jesus Christ, what can be said more fully? It shall not be impertinent to annote briefly out of Zanchy, what he hath upon Hier. zanch De natura Dei Lib. 4. Cap. 2. Th. 2. this verse more largly: when the Apostle saith we are justifyed by his grace, Per Gratiam intelligit gratuitum Dei favorem, omnibus nostris exclusis, sive naturalibus, sive supernaturalibus dignitatibus, saith he; i. e. by Grace the Apostle meaneth the free love or favour of God, excluding all parts and pieces of our worth both naturall and supernaturall: and addeth, that the Apostle still opposeth grace to all our works, and to all our inward vertues wrought in us by the holy Ghost himself, [as well as to our legall and morall righteousnesse] yea to faith it selfe as it is a work, as is manifest to every one that hath with any consideration read this Epistle. Therefore saith he, he excludeth all works, that he may conclude our Justification to be by grace alone. Yea more, the Apostle (saith he) not contented to say we are justifyed by grace, addeth thereto [...] his grace, that is, by the grace which is in God, not by any gift of grace infused by him into ourselves, that it might be wholly of God and not of our selves at all in the least part. Yea not contented with all this he addeth freely, to notifie that there is not required any work or qualification on our part to put us into the possession thereof, for so it should not be wholly by the free and naked favour of God, as he tearms it. And lastly he addeth by the redemption which is by Jesus Christ, by this work of Christ excluding all ours; hitherto that profound Zanchius. Neither cannot it be freely by the redemption of Christ, if our qualifications and conditions be brought to interesse us to it, for so should we be in some kinde purchasers and not receive it freely. The Apostle proceeds, ver. 25. Whom God hath set forth as a propitiation through faith in his bloud to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sins, &c. The whole thing of Gods ordination to make the redemption, propitiation and remission of sinnes which is by Christ, actually ours to our comfort, is here assigned to be saith in his blood, and not any foregoing, concomitant, or subsequent vertue or duty of ours annexed to it; and all to declare his righteousnesse. Ver. 26. His righteousnesse (he saith again) that he may be just and the justifyer of him that beleeveth in Jesus. If Mr. Baxters fancy stand of the Legall righteousnesse in Christ, and the Evangelicall righteousnesse in us; the Apostles assignation of the end of Gods justifying us by Christ [Page 12] should be maimed. For he should have said, To declare, to declare I say his righteousnesse, and our righteousnesse, that he might be just and a justifyer, and we might be just and justifyers of our selves. And then we are to expunge the next verse, Where is boasting then? it is excluded; by what law? of works? nay but by the law of faith. For boasting should not be at all excluded, if our works should bear a part with faith in justifying: so should we have matter of glorying in our selves still. How full is the Apostle here in the confirmation of Justification by faith without works? had he seen what the Papists and Mr. Baxter over their shoulders would have objected against it, he could not have spoken more punctually. Yet as I know what the Papists say for themselves, so I am not ignorant what Mr. Baxter will except for himself. But I reserve the Examination thereof for another place where he goeth about to purge his doctrine from all contrariety that it hath to the doctrine of the Apostle, and from any derogation from the Grace of God.
A second Testimonie or authority from Scripture we may draw from Rom. 4. 1, &c. I shall be short in it. The Apostle here denies,
1 Our father Abraham the father of the faithfull himself to have been justifyed by works, for then he should have whereof to glory, ver. 2, 3. But as Abraham was, so all the faithfull are justifyed by faith without works; or to render the words of the Text, By faith and not by works. Here Mr. Baxter hath no evasion, as in the former Chapter, viz. that the works of the Law only are denyed, for Abraham was under the promise, not under the Law, nether was the Law then given; and the promise, under which he was, was without all condition of works; so that the Apostle here excludeth works indefinitely: I mean not good and evill works, for no man ever brought evill works as evill to be thereby justifyed. But good works, whether Legall or Evangelicall, all acts and deeds both of naturall and infused righteousnesse and holinesse.
2 In affirming of him that worketh, i. e. that seeketh justification by works, that the reward is reckoned of debt to him, that he requires it as due, and shall not receive it if it be not found due in Justice; but to him that worketh not, but beleeveth on him that justifyeth the ungodly, his faith is imputed to righteousnesse, i. e. as hath [Page 13] been already evinced, Christ by faith apprehended is of the free grace of God made righteousnesse to him. When Mr. Baxter therefore claps his bundle of works upon the shoulders of faith to officiate with it to justification, he teacheth us to reject the grace of God, and to exact at Gods hands both the righteousnesse of Christ, and the end of it our salvation, as a debt and due in justice. The Apostle puts no medium here either between faith and works, or between grace and debt; where workes peep up with faith to justifie in any degree, faith is destroyed, grace rejected; works alone stand pleading for justification and salvation at the barre of Gods justice, from thence alone God heareth the plea of works; in vain is it to plead them at the throne of grace, there nothing else but the plea of faith in Christ is heard and excepted, ver. 4, 5.
3 In describing the righteousnesse of justification to be a righteousnesse without works, a blessednesse consisting in the covering, forgiving and not imputing of sin, ver. 6, 7, 8. so that to obtrude works with faith into the office of justifying, is to subvert Gods justification, and erect our own, i. e. our own condemnation.
4. Ver. 16. From all his precedent reasoning the Apostle concludeth, Therefore it is of faith that it might be by grace: and left this should be taken for a justification peculiar to Abraham and not common to all beleevers, he addeth, that the promise might be sure to all the seed &c. which is of the faith of Abraham: as before he had said, that he might be the father of all them that beleeve, that righteousnesse might be imputed to them also: even to them which walke in the steps of the faith of our father Abraham, ver. 11, 12. And again afterwards, ver. 23. It was not written for his sake alone that it was imputed to him, but for us also to whom it shall be imputed, if we beleeve in him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead, ver. 24. In all which places though faith and beleeving alone are named, yet are they named in opposition to and with an exclusion of works: as the attentive reader of that chapter will easily perceive.
Not to fill up the paper with any other series or body of disputation which the Scriptures plentifully afford for the confirmation of our doctrine, I shall only annex some scattered testimonies thereof compleatly proving the same. The whole stream of the Gospell runs this way; We that are Jewes by nature [in covenant with God] and not sinners of the Gentiles, [Page 14] Knowing that a man is not justifyed by the works of the Law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have beleeved in Jesus Christ that we might be justifyed by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the Law, &c. Gal. 2. 15, 16. By the position of faith works are here deposed. By grace are ye saved through faith, and that not of our selves, it is the gift of God. Not of works, lest any man should boast, Ephes. 2. 8, 9. Not of works, but of him that calleth, Rom. 9. 11. Not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy, Rom. 9. 16. Not by works of righteousnesse which we have done, but according to his mercy, Tit. 3. 5. This is the work of God, [that which is in stead of all works, and effectual to justification without all works] to beleeve in him whom he hath sent, Joh. 6. 29. They which are of faith are the children of Abraham, and blessed with our father Abraham, for as many as are of the works of the Law are cursed, Gal. 3. 7, 9, 10. Beleeve in the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved, Act. 16. 31. Not by the Law of works, for it is written, The just shall live by faith, Gal. 3. 11. If by grace, then it is no more of works, else grace should be no more grace: if of works then, it is no more grace, else should work be no more work, Rom. 11. 6. Hence is the opposition which the holy Ghost every where maketh between Gods righteousnesse and our righteousnesse, Rom. 10. 3. The righteousnesse of faith and the righteousnesse of works, Rom. 9. 30, 31, 32. Phil. 3. 9, 10. and the consenting harmony of Scriptures that so oppose Law and Gospell, faith and works, Gods grace and mans righteousnesse, Moses and Christ, the righteousnesse which is by promise, and that which consists in doing, Gods imputation and our qualifications; so that if the one be admitted the other must be excluded from justification. Unto which if I should add all of the the rest Testimonies and examples of Scripture, together with the Arguments which our Divines bring thence, I should (to use Mr. Baxters phrase) be necessitated to transcribe almost all the Scripture that relateth to the New Covenant.
The conclusion therefore of our Divines is not only that works have not, but also that they connot have any place in or to our Justification, because righteousnesse and life are meerly and wholly by promise, even by the free and absolute promise made to Abraham, which was without all conditions annexed, Gal. 3. 8, 16, 17. 18. therefore without works, freely conferred on the children of the promise. That they are by inheritance, therefore descend freely upon them that are sons by saith, Gal. 3. 18. [Page 15] Heb. 9. 15. Rom. 4. 13, 114, 16. and not attained by works. That in respect of the righteousnesse of works, Paul knew nothing by himselfe, wherein he was not perfectly sincere, and sincerely perfect, yet deems not himself to be thereby justifyed for the Lord is his judge and justifyer [whose justifications are free] 1 Cor. 4. 4. That if justification were in any part by works, then had man somewhat at least, whereof to glory before God; but he hath nothing whereof to glory, therefore &c. Rom. 4. 2. That it is by imputation wholly, therefore cannot be from any inherent good in our selves, Rom. 4. 3, 4. That if flowes wholly from faiths object or correlate, not at all from any vertue of faith as a qualification inherent in us: much lesse therefore from any other qualification or work of ours whatsoever. To which I might add their many other reasons proving that works cannot justifie. That it is by promise (as I said) which is still opposed to works: Gal. 3. 17, 18, 22. even by that promise that was made to Abraham, which was free, absolute, and without all condition of works, that Gospel promise, In thee all Nations of the earth shall be blessed? A promise admitting only them that are of faith to blessednesse, but rejecting them that are of works to the curse, Gal. 3. 7, 8, 9, 10. Yea by the same absolute and unconditionall promise or covenant oft renewed, Jer. 31. 31,-34. & 32. 40. That this promise is made Yea and Amen, ratifyed and effectuallized in Christ Jesus, 2 Cor. 1 20. Not in works, no nor in faith as the Papists work, or Arminians act and deed, or otherwise then as it is (as Luther describes it Allegorically) Luth. in Gal. Ca. 2. v. 16. the matter whereof Christ is the form, imforming and giving life and vertue to it; an act apprehending Christ as its object in whom all its vertue lyeth; the cloud or darknesse in which Christ dwelleth, as God was formerly in a cloud or darknesse upon mount Sinai and in the Temple: or as all our Divines say, the hand by which we receive Christ made of God righteousnesse to us and in us, Gal. 3. 27. 1 Cor. 1. 30. 2 Cor. 5. 21. That the life of justification consisteth not in works at all, nor in faith considered in a sense divided from Christ, but in Christ our life living in us; so that the life which we live is by the faith of the Son of God, by the recumbency of our souls by faith upon the Son of God which is our life, and that this is to live by faith, Gal. 2. 20. Col. 3. 4. Gal. 3. 11. That Christ with all his righteousnesse to remission and salvation, is given us freely of God, [Page 16] (not sold as by Judas to his enemies) and so made ours without money without, price, without fine, or rent. In the Covenant of grace there is nothing smelling of a Simoniacall contract, it is wholly of Gods giving, not in the least particle of our purchasing, Isa. 9. 6. Joh. 3. 16. Isa. 55. 1. That the life and justification which are by the second Adam, descend to us in the same manner with the sin and condemnation from the first Adam. But these descended by our naturall union and communion with the first Adam, not by our imitation of him. For death reigned from Adam, over them that had not sinned, after the similitude of Adam: Therefore also righteousnesse and justification descend to us by the union and communion which we have with the second Adam Christ Jesus, and not from our imitation of him and configuration to him; for when we were yet enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son. Not but that every one to whom the sin and condemnation of Adam once descended, are thenceforth imitators of and configured to Adam: or that they to whomsoever the righteousnesse and justification of Christ have descended, do not thenceforth become imitators of and are configured to the image of Christ; but that these imitations and configurations do follow and not goe before such union and communion, declaring not producing the sin and condemnation which are from Adam, or the righteousnesse and justification which are from the Lord Christ, Rom. 5. 11. 19. And this is a sound Argument which the Apostle bringeth to prove that works can in no respect justifie or save: For we are Gods workmanship (saith he) created in Christ Jesus to good works, which God hath ordained before that we should walk in them, Ephes. 2. 9, 10. where we may take notice that good works are Gods end in saving or justifying us from sin. But the means do alway in order of nature go before and not follow the end, (in execution I mean, though not in intention.) That we are first in Christ the justifyer and in possession of the justification that is by him, and then being new created in Christ to the image of God are inabled to do good works. That God hath ordained before that we should walk in them being saved or justifyed, not that we should be saved or justifyed by them. That the righteousnesse of God [by which we are justifyed] is from faith to faith, not begun by faith and ended in works, which according to the Apostle is a beginning in the [Page 17] spirit, and a seeking to be perfected by the flesh, Rom. 1. 17. Gal. 3. 3. Should I proceed so far as the Scriptures as a leading thread would guide me for the confirmation of justification without works, I should be taken as exorbitant. For the rest I shall refer the reader to such writers as have handled the point of justification against the Papists; or to the disputations of the Apostle himself against the false Apostles who taught the same doctrine with Mr. Baxter, though not expresly in the same words. They taught that we cannot be saved by Christ, by faith in Christ alone, except we be circumcised and keep the Law, or do the works which the Law commandeth, Act. 15. 1, 24. Mr. Baxter teacheth in this his 60. Thesis, that
B. The bare act of beleeving is not the onely condition of the New Covenant; but severall other duties also are parts of that condition.
If we take together with his words that which in the precedent Chapter we have manifested to be his meaning in these words, and that by the bare act of beleeving, he understands faith without and in opposition to works (for himself knoweth that it is his Pontificall-Arminian-Socinian, not our Protestant Evangelicall doctrine which holds out justification by beleeving as either a bare or a cloathed act or work) then he teacheth the same doctrine for which the Apostle anathematized the false Apostles and arch-church-troublers in his time, Gal. 1. 7, 8, 9. & 5. 12. And what the Apostle hath against them is against Mr. Baxter their own son (I will not say in the faith, but) in perverting the faith and Gospell. For neither did they deny faith, but Mr. Baxters bare faith, faith without works to be effectuall to justification.
Against this assertion common to him and them, if there were no other Scriptures contradicting, but what I have alleaged, no arguments brought by our Divines to subvert it, and to establish the contrary doctrine, but what have been here expressed and implied; (al which are scarce a drop of their ful bucket) yet doth Mr. Baxter declare any finglenesse of heart, or sincere aime to advance the glory and truth of God, in suppressing all this and all the rest in silence, so to beguile his more Logicall then Theologicall readers (whom he knowes to be more acquainted with Sophistry [Page 18] then Divinity, with exotick scriblings then Canonicall Scriptures) with an opinion that the stream of Scriptures runne all to his Mill, and that we have nothing from the Word favouring our cause?
Neither let any object that our Churches do only deny the merit of works, not the necessity of them as a condition to justification. Herein I shall have a fit place to speak afterward as to Mr. Baxter and as it is his plea to lenifie his self-arrogating assertion. In the interim to manifest the simplicity of our gudgeons that are apt to swallow the most portentous errours if offered to them involved in fine terms of logicall notions, among whom some that erewhile did prosecute with bel, book and candle, some to death, some to banishment, some to sequestrations whom they thought but to smell a little of the perfumes of the purple whore; These very same men now having inriched themselves with the spoyles of them whom by their outcries they erewhile pursued, are mad to drench themselves with the very dregs of the cup of fornication which is in the hand of the whore, and kisse the lips of Mr. Baxter which hath blessed with plausible words the doctrine which before they detested as cursed; and withall to shew how degenerate these are from our antient worthies, who as Champions of Christ have defended this article of justification against the whole rabble of Antichrist; I shall declare how little difference they were wont to put beteen merits and conditions, that though they held somewhat to differ in the sound, yet held them to be one in substance, and still concluded against the Papists that there is no place for works in the office of justification, either as merits or conditions thereof; but that when the Scripture saith we are justifyed without works, all works both of Law and Gospell, are excluded from being any way subservient to justification, either to the beginning or finishing thereof, either as meriting it or conditioning us for it. I shall mention only some few (lest I should seem to attribute much to the authority of men) yet so that these few speak out the mind and deliver the common judgement of all the rest.
First, I shall produce that famous Martyrologist Mr. Fox, what he speaketh to this purpose in that book of his De Christo gratis justificante. Having alleaged that testimony of the Apostle Rom. 4. 16. It is of faith that it might be of grace, to the end that the promise [Page 19] might be sure, &c. he addeth, Atqui quonam modo firma, nisi sit gratuita? Fox de Christo gratis. Justif. p. 127. aut quo modo gratuita, si quoquam modo ex operibus? i. e. But how is the promise sure, except it be free? or in what manner or respect free, if in any manner or respect it be of works? Thus he excludeth works in all respects either of causality or conditionality from justification. Again, Duo sunt promissionum genera, plurimum inter Idem ibid. p. 221. se diversa: alterum ad legem spectans certis adnexum conditionibus, alterum Evangelii proprium sine omni legis conditione gratuitum, i. e. There are two kinds of promises [made in Scripture] much differing either from other: the one legall, tyed to certain conditions; the other Evangelicall or proper to the Gospell, free and without all conditions of the Law, not tyed to any conditions as the legall promises are.
Unto him I annex Dr. Fulk, in that Sermon of his which Mr. Fox translated out of English into Latine, and annexed to the end of that Tractate of his own before-mentioned. Isaac not Ismael (saith he) had the inheritance: Quia nimirum unica ad hanc Dr. Fulkii concio. p. 13. haereditatem perveniendi via patet, per solam promissionem, solam misericordiam, solam fidem. Ismael vero juxta carnem natus est, Isaac per promissionem. Haereditas autem sola nititur promissione; promissio vero nulla meritorum pactione, sed sola Dei misericordia perficitur, i. e. Because there is opened one only way to the inheritance, viz. by promise alone, mercy alone, faith alone. But Ismael was born after the flesh, Isaac by promise. But the inheritance is grounded upon promise only, and the promise is accomplished without any paction [or condition of works] by the sole mercy of God. And a little after, Certissimos se haeredes sciant ii, qui ad Isaaci exemplum ita se comparant, Id. ibid. p. 19. ut nullo alio ad eam titulo adnitantur, nisi sola Dei promissione; quique non nisi gratia solum ad eam adspirant: qui denique fide eam sola amplectuntur; non meritis, non operum studiis, viam ad eam affectant, i. e. Let them know themselves to be most certain heirs, who after the pattern of Isaac, do bend to it upon no other title but the alone promise of God: and who aspire to it by grace alone: and lastly, who embrace it by faith onely, and affect not the way to it, by merits or any endevours of their own works. And anon after, Quemadmodum legale justitiae foedus Id. ibid. p. 22. exquisitam omnibus modis innocentiam ita flagitat, ut nullam veniae spem largiatur delinquenti: ita Evangelica altera illa icta nobiscum pactio misericordiae, justitiam nobis gratuitam exhibet, nullamque exigit operum adjunctam conditionem, i. e. Even as the legall covenant of justice [Page 20] so requires of us an innocency in all respects exquisite, that it gives no hope of pardon to the offender: So that other Gospell Covenant of mercy made with us, holds forth to us a free righteousnesse, and requires no additory condition of works. And in the next page he affirmes the promise or covenant of the Gospell to be gratuitam omnibus nullisque impeditam Id. p. 23. conditionibus, free to all men, or from all, and intangled with no conditions.
In the third place I annex Mr. Calvin that great light shining from the hand of Christ upon all the reformed Churches. Inde justificare dicitur fides (saith he) quod oblatam in Evangelio justitiam recipit & amplectitur; Quod autem per Evangelium dicitur offerri, eo excluditur omnis operum consideratio, i. e. Faith is hence said to justifie because it receiveth and embraceth the righteousnesse offered in the Gospell. But in that it is said to be offered in the Gospell, hereby all consideration of works is excluded: and so works in all considerations either of causality or conditionality totally rejected. And having proved this from the difference which the Apostle putteth between the Law and the Gospell, Rom. 10. 3, & deinceps, he addeth, Videsne ut legis & Evangelii discrimen hoc faciat, Calv. Just. lib. 3. cap. 11. §. 17. quod illa operibus justitiam tribuat, hoc citra operum subsidium gratuitam largiatur? i. e. Ye see what difference he maketh between the Law and the Gospell, that the Law attributeth righteousnesse to works, the Gospell gives it free without the assistance of works. An excellent place (saith he) and that which will extricate us from many difficulties, if we understand, cam quae datur nobis per Evangelium justitiam legis conditionibus solutam esse, i. e. that the righteousnesse which is given us by the Gospell is cleared from the conditions of the Law. And then speaking of the opposition that the Apostle maketh between the Law and the Promise, Gal. 3. 18. It cannot be denyed (saith he) that the Law hath also its Promises, and therefore there must be something in the Promises of the Gospell distinct from those of the Law, else could there be no such opposition; and concludes that the difference is this, that the Gospell promises are free, ac sola Dei misericordia suffultae, quum legis promissiones ab operum conditione pendeant, i. e. and leaning upon the sole mercy of God, when the promises of the Law depend upon the condition of works.
Likewise in the next Section from that of Gal. 3. 2. Hab. 2. 4. we are not justifyed by the Law, because the just shall live by faith, he addeth, that this argument cannot stand, unlesse it be consented unto in calculum fidei non venire opera, sed prorsus Idem ibid. §. 18. separanda esse, i. e. that works have nothing to do, in the borders of faith to justifie, but must be wholly separated from it, and proceeds, that the Law and faith are here opposed. Therefore because works are required to the righteousnesse of the one, ergo sequitur ad hujus justitiam non requiri, it follows therefore that they are not required to the righteousnesse of the other; and further in the same place, Herein the Gospell differs from the Law, quod operibus non alligat justitiam, sed in sola dei misericordia collocat, that it binds not righteousnesse to works, but placeth it in the sole mercy of God. And, Fides sine operum adminiculo &c. Faith without any proppage of works resteth wholly upon mercy. And that wherewith he concludes this Section; That the righteousnesse by which we are justifyed is not ushered into our possession by works, nec operando nos eam consequi, sed vacuos accedere ut eam recipiamus, i. e. not that we attain it by working, but come with our hands empty of all works to be filled with it.
With those agreeth Ph. Melanchthon, Evangelium offert remissionem per imputationem justitiae & vitam aeternam sine conditione legis aut operum nostrorum, i. e. the Gospell offers remission by the imputation of righteousnesse, and eternall life without condition of the Law or our works. Again, Vulgo imaginantur homines Evangelium esse promissionem conditionalem: at ab hac imaginatione abducendi▪ sunt, i. e. Men must be drawn off from that vulgar imagination that the Gospell is a conditionall promise.
And upon Rom. 4. Credens est salvus sola fide sine operibus; Neque nostra obedientia aut causa est aut conditio propter quam accepti sumus coram Deo, i. e. He that beleeveth is saved by faith only, without works; Neither is our obedience either a cause or a condition for which we are accepted before God.
So Zanchius in Hos. 2. 21. Notandum est hanc esse simplicem & Evangelicam sine omni conditione promissionem: Hic nihil exigit Deus sed simpliciter promittit quod velit ipse, &c. This is a simple and Evangelicall promise [which is] without all condition; where [Page 22] God requireth nothing but simply promiseth what he pleaseth.
As for Luther it is superfluous to cite him being every where so full both in the positing and confirming of this doctrine; let but his Sermon upon Tit. 3. 5. be read; he shall be there found calling it devillish doctrine, and the teachers thereof Hypocrites, who teach salvation to be far off (and not already attained) and to be sought for by works: concluding, Quicunque salutem non ex mera gratia per fidem ante omnia opera, &c. whosoever receives not salvation out of meer grace, by faith, before all works, he shall never be saved.
I had a purpose to have annexed the Testimonies of some more of the Chieftains against Antichrist, but there is no need. Mr. Baxter for his part is not a Zizca, warreth not by other mens eyes, seeth and knoweth against whom he levelleth, is not ignorant that all, especially the more antient and unsophisticated worthies of all the Churches, speak the same things and in the same tone with these against the Papists. Neither was it my purpose to deal at all in this passage with Mr. Baxter, but to shew the vanity of some Pharisaicall, Cabalisticall, Sophisticall, but little Scripturall and Theologicall Rabbies, who with Anti-evangelicall spirits, (partly to set up again a Babell or Babylon of works, as a mount against Antinomianism, as they term the liberty and purity of the Gospell; and partly in a prostrate devotion wherewith they sacrifice to every Barbarism and Aphorism of exotick arts, to which they must submit though it be to the denying of the whole word of God, for fear they should not be reckoned Scholars:) are ready to gallop after Mr. Baxters Sophisticall Lectures into the very Lateran of Rome, not knowing whence they run nor whither, whose company they leave, and whose they follow; such levity and giddinesse hath taken their head-pieces; that as having gotten a professed Protestant Divine to lead them into the worst sink of Popery, they run with head and shoulders, thronging who shall be foremost: so no doubt, if under the profession or misprision of a Jesuite Paul himself should descend to preach again and maintain the Doctrine of the Gospell in all its [Page 23] verity, power and purity, (and not in a dialecticall phrase) they would throw it back in his face, as Jesuiticall and devillish. For without such lightnesse and emptinesse it were impossible for them to be so suddenly and easily whirled into an applause of an assertion so grosly and palpably Popish and Damning, by a peevish veneration of the learning and holinesse of the Penman thereof. As if among the Jewish Scribes and Pharisees, and Popish Monkes and Jesuits, there were not to be found in depth of Learning, and strictnesse of Legall righteousnesse many to whom this man may possibly serve, and but serve as a shaddow.
But it sufficeth here to have manifested that the Doctrine of Mr. Baxter is totally the same (in this particular) with the doctrine of the Jesuits. Or if in any respect we shall find it in what remains to be examined, not wholly the same; I doubt not but in every such difference which we shall meet with, to demonstrate that it is far worse then theirs. Or if it be not so, let him produce any one knowing man within any of the Protestant Churches (except he will make the Concision of Socinians and Arminians the true Protestants) that hath ever taught or held this doctrine.
CHAP. III.
The first Argument for Justification by Works, drawn from Scriptures examined. The Scriptures [cited] prepared to Mr. Baxters hand by the Papists; and the Protestants answer to all the Arguments drawn from those Scriptures by the Papists, by him concealed; and the abhorrency of those Scriptures from the conclusion, which they are brought to prove, demonstrated.
HAving in part supplyed what Mr. Baxter would have buryed here in silence, some of the Scriptures and Arguments from Scriptures which are brought by the Protestants to remove works from having concurrence with faith in the businesse of justifying; let us now examine the Scriptures which he quoteth to prove their cooperation with faith to justifie. Here (as I said) we meet not with words but figures; partly therefore because he maintains the same assertion with the Papists, partly because the Scriptures which he quoteth are all such as the Papists have urged before him against us, so that he hath taken them up at the second hand, as they were collected to his hand by the Fryers and Jesuits, himself not expressing how he would argue from those Scriptures; I conceive it is his desire that we should understand he means so to argue as his Masters have done before him. My labour therefore here will be the lesse, because the labour of so many before me hath been so full to manifest how alien and improper these Scriptures are to desend what these men would have defended by them. For why should I say again what so many worthies have said, untill Mr. Baxter shall make it his taske to prove some infirmity and insufficiency in that which they have spoken?
All that Mr. Baxter here saith he doth almost wholely transcribe out of Bellarmine, giving us a compendium of what Bellarmine hath at large, and so Mr. Baxter here [Page 25] is but Bellarmine abridged. Let us lay them together, and 1 They jumpe in one common conclusion,
One of these duties according to Bellarmine first, and after Explicat. p. 234. him according to Mr. Baxter here, is Repentance. In this alone they differ that Mr. Baxter puts Repentance as the first, and Bellarmine puts it as the fourth in order after Faith, and concurring with it in the pardon of sin, and salvation. The Scriptures which Mr. Baxter alleageth for repentance are some from Bellarmine, some from Bellarmines fellowes.
To this place I referred those Scriptures which Mr. Baxter quoted, Thes. 14. pa. 90. beginning with Mark. 1. 15. to prove repentance a collaterall with faith. All which are here quoted over again saving these three, Act. 20. 21. Revel. 2. 5. & ver. 16. all which three Scriptures speak no lesse home to his purpose, then if he should thus argue: Kederminster is in Worcestershire, ergo, it supports Pauls Church at London. Act. 20. 21. The Apostle having affirmed himself to have dealt faithfully in preaching all that was profitable to them, to evince it, gathers into two heads the sum of all his doctrine which he had testifyed among them, viz. Repentance toward God, and faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ: what is there in this to prove repentance a concomitant with faith to justifie? is every profitable doctrine effectuall to justifie? A mans food and garments are both profitable to him, shall I therefore concude either that his garments do nourish him, or his meat clothe him? Revel. 2. 5, Christ admonisheth the Angell of the Church of Ephesus, To repent and do his first works, else will he come and remove his candlestick out of its place, except he repent: what is this to justification? will he say that the removing of the candlestick out of its place, was either the justifying of the unjustifyed, or unjustifying of him that was before justifyed? And Revel. 2. 16. Christ cals upon the Angell of the Church at Pergamos, Repent, or else I will come to thee quickly, and will fight against them [viz. the Balaamites and Nicholaitans mentioned in the two former verses] with the sword of my mouth. Surely Mr. Baxter must flie from the latter and rationall meaning, and follow [Page 26] the precepts of Origen in fishing after the Spirit, or an Allegoricall sense of these words, to make them speak any thing for his justification by repentance. All the rest Scriptures quoted in the 14. Thesis, we have again in a bunch here pa. 235. in the explication of his 60. Thesis to prove the same thing.
And here why doth he deal worse then Bellarmine, in attributing justification which he makes to consist in pardon and salvation, to repentance, without manifesting, as Bellarmine doth, what he means by repentance? This is but to strive about words and leave the matter in darknesse. As for the other particular Scriptures here quoted, if I should particularly examine them, we should find not a few of them (as the three former) coming no neerer to the question in hand then Tybris doth to Thames. As for all such of them as have the least shew or sound of speaking for him, he hath them in part from Bellarmine whom he here followeth, and in part from other Jesuits and Fryers that controversally handle the Popish justification against us. I refer therefore the reader to informe himself from the many answers of the many Protestant Theologists which they have extant against Bellarmine and the rest of that generation; from whom, if truth and sobernesse be dear to him, it is almost unpossible but that he must receive satisfaction.
Yet something shall I speak in generall of these quoted Scriptures. As many of them as do hold forth the promise of life upon condition of repentance to sinners, or to sinners if they repent (all the rest quotations being altogether besides the purpose:) [These all] speak of a legall or of an Evangelicall repentance. Of a legall repentance consisting meerly in a feeling of, humiliation and contrition for, hatred against, departing from sinne; and applying of the endeavours to all morall vertue and obedience. This is a meerly morall repentance derivable from the strength of naturall conscience illuminated by the Law and common knowledge of Gods will and nature. In this sense is the word taken in most of the Scriptures quoted from the old Testament, and some also possibly of those that are quoted out of the new. But then the life by these Scriptures promised is not the life of justification, or of spirituall and supernaturall blessednesse: but that which the administration under the Law is wont to call life, viz.
[Page 27]1 The fruition of the land of Canaan, which prefigured the life and rest both of grace and glory. And
2 Of the blessings of health, honour, peace, plenty, safety, and other temporall benefits promised to the obedient in the Land of Canaan.
This is clear to him that will see, from the 18 of Ezek. where so often mention is made of life and death, Turn and live, if ye turn not ye shall die: what is here meant by this life and death, may be understood from that proverb cursedly used by the Jews whereof mention is made in the beginning of the Chapter; The fathers have eaten sowre grapes and the childrens teeth are set on edge: the fathers have sinned, and death is inflicted upon the children for their fathers fault. This gave occasion for the delivery of all the doctrine comprehended within this Chapter, in which God throughly vindicateth his justice from inflicting death upon the children, righteous children, for their wicked parents offences; shewing how justly they dyed which dyed, and lived which lived, in reference to their own not their fathers sinne and righteousnesse: what then was this death here denounced, or the setting of the teeth on edge, but the plague, famine, sword, which had been upon them in the Land, and their captivity and exile now upon them in Babylon out of the Land of their inheritance? these temporall evills are the death here affirmed to be inflicted, and denounced to be continued upon them. The life promised upon condition of their repentance, and turning from their evill wayes, was their restauration to the land, and blessings of the land of Canaan again. The same is evident from the words of Moses, in Deuteronomy, where Moses having in the name of God, pronounced the many blessings and whole confluence of secular happinesse to the obedient, and to them that after much transgression and many curses for their transgressions should repent and turn; and denounced curses upon curses, a whole deluge of judgements, and temporary afflictions one on the neck of another against as many as should dis [...]bey the Commandements, &c. cap. 28. & cap. 29. he doth cap. 30 15, 19. Call heaven and earth to witnesse that he had done his duty in setting before them life and death, good and evill, blessing and cursing, inplying the life and death here mentioned consisted chiefly in outward prosperity and adversity, stroaking and striking. That these were the apples and the rods to allure and terrifie them yet in their minority and [Page 28] under a paedagogie, untill faith should come and the Sun of tighteousnesse shine in its splendor, that they might walk by faith, and not by feeling, act from love, and not from fear, from the Spirit of adoption, and not of bondage: so that this shadie life promised to a legall repentance, is nothing to the life of justification, but so far beneath it, that it is in no capacity to be used as a proofe about it. These therefore serve not at all to drive on Mr. Baxters conclusion.
In the second place, Those Scriptures which he quotes that offer life upon condition of Evangelicall repentance doe not make for him any more then the former. For Gospell repentance, is taken either in a large or strict sense, in the more large sense it is the same with conversion or regeneration, and oft times equipollent and the same thing with faith, (though some little consider it to be so.) And this is as oft as repentance is put for the one and whole thing required on our part to put us into the actuall and sensible possession of the grace and life of the Gospell, as Mat. 3. 2. Mark. 6. 12. Repent, for the Kingdom of God is at hand. The summe of their preaching was Repent, so Luk. 13. 3, 5. Except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish. & 24. 47. and many other of the Scriptures which he quoteth. In all these places repentance containeth primarily the change of our relation, and but secondarily of our qualifications and manners. It is a quidam motus, in which acti agimus, being moved by Gods Spirit we move; the terminus a quo in this motion is self, our self-righteousnesse and self-confidences, from which we turn no lesse then from our polluted self, sinfull self, and sinfull wayes. The terminus ad quem is God, the grace of God inviting us. The medinm per quod is the Lord Christ through whom we have accesse to the Father for remission first; and then for sanctification also. And as the scope of the Gospell requires us to understand in such Scriptures repentance in this sense, so neither do the two Greek words, rendered in Latine Resipisc [...]ntia, in English Repentance, refuse this sense. For what is that change of the mind, of the judgement, wisdome and will, when it is taken for a Theologicall vertue, but a change of these in reference to happinesse? A renouncing of and departing from natures groaping and erring directions, by our own works and righteousnesse to seek for blessednesse; and a cleaving [Page 29] to the directions of the Gospell pointing out Christ as the alone way to it? For instance, Paul while yet impenitent and unconverted, walked by the light of his naturall conscience, as it was informed and awaked by the Law, and by this rule walked as a strict Pharisee; touching the righteousnesse which is in the Law blamelesse, Phil. 3. 5, 6. and looking (as Mr. Baxter doth) upon the doctrine of free grace, and righteousnesse freely imputed, as upon a licentious doctrine, was carried with full sails of zeal totally to destroy it: I verily thought with my self (saith he) that I ought to do many things against the Name of Jesus, &c. which thing I also did, &c. Act. 26. 9, 10. Now when the Lord Christ met him in the midst of his raging madnesse, so working upon his heart that he now beleeved in Christ whom he had erewhile persecuted, received him and rested on him for righteousnesse, whom he had erewhile blasphemed: What will ye call this obedience to the faith, this closing of his heart with Christ in stead of further dashing against him? was it not his conversion, his repentance? or is the promise of life (I mean the life of justification) made to any other repentance besides this? In this sense therefore repentance is not a quid distinctum, a thing distinct from, but one and the same with justifying faith; or if it be objected that it is somewhat larger then justifying faith: I shall not contend but acknowledge that it comprehends whole faith, both qua justificat, & qua sanctificat, to justification and to sanctification. Yet this hinders not but that these two phrases, repentance to life or remission of sins, and faith to life and the remission of sins, are in the language of the holy Ghost one and the same.
Where repentance is taken in a stricter sense, and some of the Scripture, which he quotes seem to promise remission of sins or life to it; we must necessarily understand of every such Scriptures that it speaketh of the repentance which is actuated in our first conversion and calling, or after it. That which is in our first conversion or calling, when it is taken in a strict sense, is not as in the former sense put as the whole thing required on our parts, but seems in words a coordinate with faith to interest us in the righteousnesse and life which are by Christ. Such are these Scriptures, Repent and beleeve the Gospell: repentance toward God and faith toward the Lord Jesus Christ, Mark. [...]. 15. Act. 20. 21. and many other. But in these, repentance and [Page 30] faith together make up no more then in other Scriptures, either faith alone or repentance alone in their large sense import: and so repentance is taken for self-denyall, self-abhorring, self-subduing, and faith for embracing Christ: both these are repentance or faith in their larger sense. To no other end doth repentance cast and empty out self but to be filled with Christ, nor doth faith receive Christ untill self be let out and evacuated that it may receive him. See we it in Paul, his casting away his Phi. 3. 8, 9. own righteosnesse as dung and losse, and putting on of Christ, to win and wear him for righteousnesse, were two concurrent acts either of one faith or one repentance, (for we may use after the holy Ghost, either term indifferently) and repentance here is no distinct thing from faith, nor faith from repentance, and in naming these two the holy Ghost nameth not two gifts of grace, but two acts of the same gift of grace in us; so that hitherto the Scriptures which Mr. Baxter quotes to prove that repentance as a really distinct thing from faith justifyeth, do wholly fail him. For (as our Divines well say against the Papists) though these two acts must needs cooperate together, viz. the casting out of self and the receiving of Christ; yet it is the latter alone that doth properly and instrumentally justifie by receiving the justifyer and his righteousnesse; the former act doth but disponere materiam (as one saith not too catachrestically) doth but put a man as it were in a justifiable posture and capacity, doth but obi [...]em tollere, pluck out and cast away the barre that might fasten the door against Christs entrance; and this it doth not as a distinct vertue from faith, but as a subservient act of faith to its receiving of Christ.
Lastly, those of the forequoted Scriptures which speak of repentance in a strict sense advantagious to life after conversion, and that which the Papists and Mr. Baxter call the first justification, (as 2 Cor. 7. 10. and some other) [these] speak of repentance indeed really distinct from faith, being an effect or fruit of faith. But this repentance is in no other sense called repentance to life, then as by it the Saints sometimes recover the sense and comfort of their justification, that had for a while laid fainting in them; or as it is impowred from above to repair, confirme and increase the life of sanctification in them. And this is besides the question in hand, [whether repentance justifyeth.] I shall therefore pretermit to speak futher of it. And thus have we one file of [Page 31] his Scripture quotations examined, and do finde that all which he would thence deduce to confirme a collaterall officiating of repentance [as a thing really distinct from faith] together with faith to justification; stands him in no stead at all.
The second duty which he nameth as an equall condition with faith, of our justification, is praying for pardon, and forgiving Pag. 230. others. In this though he follow Bellarmine, yet he holds not himself to Bellarmines words, but having overtaken him, runs beyond him. Bellarmine thus speaketh, having mentioned before two things that justifie, Thirdly, (saith he) Spes obtinendae veniae, est etiam dispositio ad justitiam et remissionem peccatorum, i. e. Hope of forgivenesse is also a disposition to righteousnesse and the remission of sins. Mr. Baxter outruns him and saith, that praying for pardon, and forgiving of others too, are conditions of pardon; but suppose that I do hope and pray for pardon, and forgive others too, shall I then be forgiven? Mr. Baxter will not promise that, but if I do that, ( caeteris paribus) then forsooth I may hope well: but what is this sensus compositus, or caeteris paribus? viz. if I do this and all that else is to be done, i. e. all the duties which either Law or Gospell commands me. But I demand, if all this be done, am I then justifyed? Neither will he grant me this: I am then conditionally justifyed, as I was before I did any thing; yea more, I am now a probationer for justification, and upon my bene se gesserit, my good behaviour, I am justifyed for an hour possibly untill I be unjustifyed again: but if I do all and never cease to do all either while I am living, &c. or when I am dead; there may be possibly a day, (when there be no more days) when I may (if all things faie well) be justifyed. But further that all may faie well, will he tell me what the caeteris paribus, the rest conditions are, that I may perform them all and not misse in number? Thus far possibly he will condescend, to make known some of them, and to give me some generalls of the rest, and make known the materia prima in which the substantiall formes lurk, yea the genera and the species that are such subalternatim, but the species specialissimas & infimas together with their individuals, he either will not or cannot particularize the seed of Mr. Baxter in this kind is more numerous then the seed of Abraham, more then the starres of heaven, then the sands of the sea for multitude; yet if [Page 32] one be wanting, I am as far from justification as if I had nothing: So blessed a man will Mr. Baxters conditions make me. But let me on the contrary part demand of Mr. Baxter, Suppose a person truely in the Covenant of grace, vitally in Christ, if he have never a one of these additory conditions actually moving in him, is not his justification and glory as certain as anothers that hath all the conditions? Mr. Baxter dares not deny the supposition to be possible; for then shall he exclude all dying Infants from the kingdome of heaven, which in another book of his it is said he flatly denyeth) the consequent therefore cannot be denyed, that justification before God is as sure without as with these conditions; and so no condition at all to be granted of our justification, save that which may assure and declare it to our selves. What mis-spent time will it be then to bawl about two or three of many decads and centuries, yea myriads of conditions, by disputing whether they be conditions; when if we know not and have not all the rest it shall go as well with those that have none of them, as with them that have all to one? I had almost said, when these all brought as conditions (in Mr. Baxters sense) to Gods tribunall will without doubt condition him that brings them, to condemnation.
But because Mr. Baxter and his disciples may be angry if we hear not what so great a Master saith, for our own safety we will attend to hear what Scriptures he alleageth.
The first he brings from the prayer of Solomon, 1 King. 8. 30, 39. Hear (Lord) thy servants when they shall pray towards or in this place, and forgive them, and give to every man according to his wayes. What will hence follow? either, ergo whosoever prayeth in or towards Solomons Temple in Jerusalem shall be forgiven, so far as forgivenesse consisteth in giving to every man according to his ways; or shall be forgiven as to the famine and pestilence, &c. ver. 38. mentioned, so as he pray caeteris paribus though he be never forgiven as to hell fire: or, ergo there was a time when prayer for pardon was a condition of forgivenesse, viz. when the Temple stood at Jerusalem, if prayer were made in it or towards it; but now since the desolation of the Temple this condition for the space of 1600. years, hath been out of force. Let him conclude better for himself from these premises if he can; [Page 33] I can conclude no better thence to the maintenance of his assertion. And it is worthy of consideration to take notice how extremely the Apostles logick and Mr. Baxters logick do differ. From the like promise of salvation made in Scriptures to them that pray for it, the Apostle concludes that we are justifyed and saved by faith; thus, Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall Rom. 10. 13, 14. be saved. How then shall they call upon him in whom they have not beleeved? His argumentation runs thus, Whosoever do [rightly] call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved: but beleevers only call [rightly] upon the name of the Lord: ergo, beleevers only shall be saved. He argues here from the effect to the cause, from acceptable prayer, to faith from whence it floweth; concluding, that salvation is promised to prayer, not as it is an act performed in its self, but as it is a fruit of faith, ascribing all the furtherance unto salvation by prayer, to faith that breaths it out, and all the efficacy which faith hath to salvation, to the Lord [ i. e. the grace of God, or Christ the Mediatour] beleeved in. So making faith to be that which, in the vertue of its object, saveth; and not prayer either in its act, or in respect of the spirituall disposition of the heart to pray.
And with the Apostles argument from prayer to faith, I might also argue to manifest that the Scriptures which Mr. Baxter quoteth to prove that forgiving of others is a collaterall condition with faith to justification or forgivenesse, have no force in them to prove such a conclusion. viz. Mat. 6. 12, 14, 15. Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtours, for if we forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly father will also forgive you; but if ye forgive not men their trspasses, neither will your heavenly father forgive your trespasses. Mat. 18. 35. So likewise shall my heavenly father do to you also, if ye from your hearts forgive not every man to his brother their trespasses. The like also in Mar. 11. 25, 26. When ye stand praying forgive, &c. as in the former Scriptures Luke 6. 35. Forgive and ye shall be forgiven. Isa. 5. 15. And the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and if he hath committed sins they shall be forgiven him. Joh. 14. 13, 14. Whatsoever ye shall aske in my Name I will do it, &c. 1 Joh. 5. 15. Whatsoever we aske, we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him. The rest have nothing of sound, much lesse of substance to the purpose for which they are quoted.
How much these Scriptures together with those of the former [Page 34] bunch that were intended by Mr. Baxter for the foysting in of Repentance, and of the next bundle that he would have to force in all the works of love and obedience into the office of justification, may prevail with some simple and ignorant persons, I know not. For these not being able to compare Scripture with Scripture, and spirituall things with spirituall, nor to search into the pith and bottom of Scriptures, are carried (as the Apostle saith) with every wind and sound of doctrine, whither their seducers will. But I do not comprehend what Mr. Baxters designe is, who having compiled this work chiefly, if not only, for the reading of the Learned, should fardle up together these Scriptures to deceive such: for the very quotations will send them not only to the Scriptures, but also to the Commentators upon these severall Scriptures, where they must needs find him and the Jesuits so wresting from them the same doctrine, and Mr. Baxter so fully answered in their answer to the Jesuites that his Readers will not be able to decide which is the verier Jesuit, he, or those whom he followeth. I had a thought therefore to transmit the Reader to the Commentators.
But to manifest to the simple how little there is in substance in these quoted Scriptures, making for Mr. Baxter, I shall interpose these few things.
1 That the Scriptures are all of Gods inspiration, concenting together in o [...]e harmony, no where dashing either against other, no more then God their Author dasheth against himself: so that we must necessarily conclude that neither all, nor any one of these Scriptures doth in its proper and genuine sense, contradict those before alleadged Scriptures of justification by faith, and not by works; by faith, without works; by the righteousnesse of faith, and not by our own righteousnesse; by the law of faith, in opposition to the law of works, &c. as before. If then these Scriptures should bring in justification and remission but in part by our own works and righteousnesse, Scripture would here be set in commotion against Scripture, and God against God.
2 Mr. Baxter doth here make this work of forgiving and praying for forgivenesse, as also in the next place all love, obedience, and the works thereof not simply conditions of justification and forgivenesse, (which in some sense far from Mr. Baxters, some of our Theologists admit) but collaterally and [Page 35] in the same relation with faith; and this is the highest toppe of Papall presumption, not the worst of Jesuits speak more derogatorily to the depressing of Gods grace, or more proudly to the exalting of mans works, worth and righteousnesse.
3 From this doctrine of his it would follow that praying and forgiving others must be such a condition of justification, that where it is there is justification, where it is not there is not justification, the positing or not positing of the one including the summe of the other: for so it is with faith; He that beleeveth shall be saved, he that beleeveth not shall be damned, Mark. 16. 16. so Joh. 3. 36. Will Mr. Baxter say so of forgiving others, and praying for forgivenesse? are all that do it justifyed? dares he to say it? No otherwise, but with his caeteris paribus, and sensu composito, if he doth this and all things else which a Christian should do. And thus I might also make every civill and indifferent Action the condition of justification. A mans sleeping by night, and working by day, his eating when he is hungry, and drinking when he is thirsty, his improving of his ground [...] before he sowes them, and sowing them when improved, and reaping them when the crop is come to maturity; all these and the like may be as well called conditions of justification, for these also caeteris paribus, when all things else are done which a Christian should do, do stand as full in strength to justification as those works which Mr. Baxter particularizeth; yea this caeteris paribus, makes sin, guilt, ungodlinesse, perdition, &c. more properly conditions of justification, then any of those which Mr. Baxter nameth; for without the actuall being of those none can be justifyed in Christ before God: For Christ Came not to call the righteous but sinners to Repentance, Mat. 9. 13. He hath shut up all under guilt, under sin, that the promise of righteousnesse by the faith of Jesus Christ might be upon all that beleeve, Rom. 3. 19, 22, 23, 24. He justifyeth the ungodly, Rom. 4. 5. And saveth that which was lost, Mat. 18. 11. Are these duties to be performed coordinately with faith that we may be justifyed? surely rather then those which Mr. Baxter nameth, for these still go before, but those of Mr. Baxter, (as far as they relate to it) do follow justification.
4 The scope of these Scriptures is to urge upon all that draw near to God in prayer, to purge out all hatred and purposes [Page 36] of revenge against their brethren from their hearts, and the argument by which this duty is pressed, is, that else it (as also any other reigning sin allowed within the heart) will make both their persons and prayers an abomination to the Lord. God will not hear, will not forgive such as bring, while they bring such a devill in their hearts before him; they shall depart without any more answer of peace to their souls, then they are disposed to give to their brethren against whom they are provoked. From these Scriptures therefore we may gather how they are qualifyed which are forgiven and justifyed, not by what qualifications and works they have obtained justification. That whosoever hath tasted of the pardoning grace of God, the same by beholding in Christ the glory of Gods grace as in a glasse is transformed into the same image of grace, love, mercy, goodnesse, pity, &c. towards his brethren, as himself hath found in God, and sees shining forth upon him from the face of God through Christ, 2 Cor. 3. 18. That in whomsoever this mercy and goodnesse of God appears not, whatsoever he boasteth of faith, and devoutnesse in prayer, yet it is certain that he is empty of justifying faith, and of the justification which is by faith: and so we have here some description of the justifyed and unjustifyed, not a precept of duties by which the unjustifyed may attain to be justifyed.
5 The three last quotations of Mr. Baxter, do subvert utterly all that he built by the former quotations: For these Scriptures affirming it to be not indefinitely prayer, but the prayer of faith which saveth and obtaineth forgivenesse; that not the asking simply, but the asking of the faithfull in Christs Name is prevalent; that not every one, but we know that whatsoever we aske we have our petitions granted; do manifest that whatsoever vertue is in prayer it floweth from faith, prayer it self is a dead work unlesse faith enliven it, and all our works of mercy and forgiving, dead works, untill faith becomes the living root from which they derive life, or rather hath breathed out the life which it hath suckt from Christ our life into them. That it is Christs name and mediation that makes all accepted with God, and that not to all, but to those peculiar ones of Christ that are in union and conjunction with Christ, it being a priviledge peculiar to true beleevers that is here mentioned under the word we, we have it (saith the Apostle) the world hath [Page 37] no part in it. Esaus forgiving, Sauls confession of sin, and Simon Magus his prayer for forgivenesse, may (as in Mr. Baxters last quotation Act. 8. 22.) perhaps, be so far heard, and forgivenesse obtained from the Lord, as to the exempting of them from some temporall vengeance, but not to interest them in the justification of the Gospell: If the cryes and workes of any of these dogs bring them in to partake of the childrens bread, it is but in mans judgement alone; before God it was their faith and cleaving to Christ, yea being in Christ by faith, that of dogs made them children, and partakers of the Gospell priviledges. So these Scriptures in no wise prescribe (as I said) the duties by or for which we are, but delineate the Acts and qualifications of those that are justifyed by Christ.
So much in generall to the summe of these Scriptures; as for the meaning of the severall Scriptures, and how Mr. Baxter argues from them as the Papists; how the Sophisters (for so our men fitly tearm the Papists) endeavour from them to prove justification by works, and the Protestants answer and confute them; I leave to the Reader to fetch from the Commentators themselves, whom they shall finde to speake fully, as Mr. Baxter knoweth but concealeth, not daring to enter the Lists with them.
The third duty which he brings as coofficiating with Pag. 236. faith to justification, is a complexion of duties, the whole swarm, the vast mountain of duties, all that men and Angels can devise to be duty: yet that he might declare how he can measure and contain so huge an Ocean in his fist, he crusheth them so together as that they may be held in the concave of two Eg-shels, love and sincere obedience, and their works. Fain would he have followed Bellarmine as his sh [...]ddow at every turne; but he finds his genius somewhat differing from Bellarmines: The Cardinall was for prolixity, Mr. Baxter is for brevity. Bellarmine puts love in the fourth place as operating to justification with faith, and thence proceeds to more. But Mr. Baxter follows him here to love, and weary to go after him any further in particulars, shakes hands in love with him and parts from him with good leave in respect of his method, but in his matter to hold with him throughout the work.
The first Scripture which he quotes is the first which Bellarmine alleadgeth; thus,
B. Luk. 7. 47. (though I knew in Pinks interpretation of that.)
It seems Pink hath given the right interpretation of that Text which all the Protestants give. But Bellarmine interprets it otherwise, and must not Christ mean as Bellarmine will have him? The words of the Text are these, Wherefore I say unto thee, her sins which are many are forgiven, for she loved much: But to whom little is forgiven, the same loveth litle. What doth Mr. Baxter hence conclude? the same with Bellarmine, her much love was the ground of the forgivenesse of her many sins, and so her love went before her justification and forgivenesse, which followed as the fruit or consequent thereof. Bellarmine and his fellowrs put authority and holinesse upon this interpretation, else would not Mr. Baxter who makes right reason the foundation and rule of his Religion, forswear his wit and reason to follow it. For it is evident from the Text to all that are not sworn enemies to the truth, that the Lord Jesus reasoneth here from the effect to the cause, and not from the cause to the effect: from the womans great love, that many sins were forgiven her causing this love; not from the greatnesse of her love as from the cause why so many sins were forgiven her. So runs the Text, Which will love most, he to whom the creditor hath forgiven 500. pence, or he Ve. 41, &c. to whom he forgave 50? The answer was, I suppose he to whom most was forgiven. Thou hast well said (saith the Lord) so it is with this woman, she loves much because much was forgiven her; Who sees not here the forgivenesse to be the cause of the love, not the love of the forgivenesse? Or will Bellarmine which affirmes this woman to be Mary Magdalen, or Mr. Baxter after him, say that while she was yet a Harlot and had seven Devils in her, that she loved Christ much? how good was it to be possessed of a whole legion of such white Devils that breathed into the soul possessed, such strong love of Christ? But why then said Christ to her Thy faith hath saved thee, ver. 50. did her faith only save her, but her love justifie her? This is one piece of Mr. Baxters new Divinity, and with him I leave it. Let him learn modesty and truth from Soarez himself a Prelate among the Papists: Oportet advertere in hoc quod dicitur quoniam dilexit multum: non prius dilexisse multum, & magnam dilectionem causam fuisse tantae remissionis; sed vice versa, quoniam remissa sunt ei peccata multa, ideo dilexisse multum: Soarez in locum.
He addes Mat. 5. 44. Luk. 6. 27, 45. Love your enemies, &c. That ye may be the children of your heavenly Father, &c. What will Mr. Baxter hence conclude, but that our love, &c. is the cause or ground of our Adoption? That we love God first, and then he us afterward? That not his grace but our righteousnesse makes us his Children and him our father? But contrariwise Christ here exhorteth the children to be like the father; directs his words to the already Adopted, so to put on the image and resemble the nature and operations of their heavenly Father, that they may be, i. e. declare themselves to be the children of the heavenly Father. Like that of Joh. 13. 35. By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples if ye love, &c. And that of 1 Joh. 3. 10. In this the children of God are manifest, and the children of the Devill, he that loveth not, is not of God, &c. So love on our part doth not make but manifest us to be the children of God.
But remarkeable is his next quotation Joh. 15. 12, 17. This is my commandement, that ye love one another, ergo love justifyeth; as good as if I should argue, Christ commanded Peter to angle and take a fish: ergo Peters angling and catching a fish justifyed him. As if whatsoever Christ commanded, he commanded to justification. And as full to his purpose is 1 Cor. 2. 9. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard, &c. what the Lord hath laid up for them that love him: ergo, my love was the condition of Gods laying up for me: as if God had not laid up for me before I loved him. How agrees this with that which after he annexeth, Mat. 25. Inherit the Kingdome prepared for you before the beginning of the world? and Rom. 8. 28. All things shall work together for good to them that love God; [who are they?] such as are called according to his purpose, if called then justifyed, and who denyeth the riches of Gods grace dispensing all things for the good of his justifyed ones that love him? But what is this to loves justifying? And rare logick from the next two Scriptures, Grace be with them that love the Lord Jesus, Eph. 6. 24. And he that loveth him not, let him be Anathema Maranatha, 1 Cor. 16. 22. Ergo, love to Christ justifyeth in rank and life with faith: when I make my love the ground or condition of Gods grace, and cease to make the grace of Christ the foundation of my love to Christ, then will I expect that Mr. Baxter will justifie me, untill then I shall be in his account Anathema maranatha.
Again, God hath promised the Crown, the Kingdom to them that love him, Jam. 1. 12. & 2. 5. Ergo, Justification is a Crown and Kingdom, and love will then justifie when it brings us to the Crown and Kingdome, untill then we are unjustifyed. He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, Joh. 14. 21. Ergo, our love to Christ begets love in the Father, and ergo, the love of the Father is our justification; and what else Mr. Baxter will, for he concludes, quidlibet e quolibet. I love them that love me, and they that seek me early shall finde me, Prov. 8. 17. Ergo, God doth not love us untill we love him, nor seek us till we seek him, and so God is moved by us, not we by him, and perhaps justifyed (for of this he speaketh) by us before we are justifyed by him. That I may cause them that love me to inherit substance: and I will fill their treasures, ver. 21. Ergo; our justification is in our chests and purses, and our love prevails upon God and Christ to fill them up to the brim with this golden justification.
I know not whether I may lawfully follow him in his non sequiturs and playing with the sacred Oracles of God; surely neither Lucian, nor Corn: Agrippa with his Asse, could ever treat of holy things more ludibriously, or expose the sacred word of God to more scorn then this man doth: were it out of weaknesse that he doth it, he were to be pittied: But who knoweth not if Mr. Baxter knoweth not what validity or invalidity there is in every Argument to prove? Where was conscience then in quoting so many Scriptures which are no more proper to prove that to which they are applyed, then they are to demonstrate a world in the Moon? he knoweth the most of them have neither sound nor shew that way, and those that have some shew have but a shew, and being thoroughly urged to his present purpose would neither prove what he would have here proved, but contrariwise crush in pieces some of his former assertions, which are the pillars of the whole structure made in this book, and falling will necessitate the ruine of the whole fabrick. All this he saw, therefore stopped at the quotation, without alleadging or applying the Scriptures quoted. If the man were no more happy in in his Philosophy then in his Theology, he should have very little thanks from Rome. And it is to be doubted his esteem will be the lesse there for his pretending to be a Scripturist, and over-turning, or at least shaming with his fingering of Scriptures, the specious frontispice [Page 41] which he had erected by his Sophistry. Unlesse possibly this may advantage him that he shewes the same genius and spirit in arguing from Scriptures, with those holy Fathers and Fryers; for so profoundly do we find them arguing, Thou art Peter and upon this rock, &c. Mat. 16. Ergo, the Pope is Christ vicar and vicegerent, &c. Master, or Lord, Here are two swords, Luk. 22. 38. Ergo, the Pope hath both swords of Ecclesiasticall and Civill power committed to him; God made two lights, the greater to rule the day, the lesser the night, G [...]n. 1. Ergo, the Popes power is so much more excellent then Kings and Emperors, as the glory of the Sun surpasseth that of the Moon. I beat down my body and keep it in subjection, 1 Cor. 9. Ergo, we must doe penance, and whip and scourge our backs when there is occasion. Every mans work shall be tryed by fire, 1 Cor. 3. Ergo, there is a purgatory of fire to be passed thorough after men are dead. With hundreds more of the same kind and worth, wherein it seems Mr. Baxter here would imitate them to ingratiate himself into their favour.
As for the residue of Mr. Baxters quotations in this place, they are for the most part, if not all, urged in another place, to prove works the condition of our glorification and future salvation, and untill then I forbear to answer them. But lest any in the interim should stand doubting at any of the Scritures h [...]re quoted promising either love, or life, or grace, or glory, to men thus and thus qualifyed, and conceive that such qualifications are the ground and condition together with faith to in right us in that which is promised; I think it fit to premonish by the way (what all Protestant writers have [...]maintained and cleared against the Papists) that the ground of our right in such selicities promised, is not the qualifications or works of the person, but the new relation of the person so qualifyed, his union with Christ, justification and adoption before God. Such promises not being made to all, but to the Saints in Christ so doing; I shall clear it up to you by a similitude. Isaac promiseth his son Esau his blessing, but bids him go a hunting and bring him venison, and then in eating it, he will blesse him: what was that which enrighted Esau to the blessing, that was the ground or condition upon which Isaac would blesse him? the venison caught and dressed? nothing lesse; for if a 1000. others should have presented him with a 1000. pieces of venison at severall times, all dressed and fitted to his appetite, the blessing should [Page 42] have been reserved entire for Esau, and they all have been sent away empty; as appeareth by his dealing with Jacob presenting his made venison, how agreeing so ever the dish was to the palate of the old Patriark, yet he will examine thorowly who it is, whether his very son Esau that brings it, before he gives the blessing: It was not then the venison, but the sonrship, yea primo-geniture of Esau that was the ground and condition of Isaacs promise to blesse him. So is it also to his justifyed and adopted ones in Christ, that the Lord saith, Aske and ye shall have, seek and ye shall finde, knock and it shall be opened to you, Run and ye shall obtain, Overcome and ye shall be crowned, Love and I will love you, Be mercifull and I will be mercifull to you, Humble your selves and I will lift you up; and a thousand more such promises of grace, as far as they hold forth spirituall and saving blessings, they are the Childrens bread, dispensations of God within his own family; no stranger hath part in it, or right to it. Let the world, those that are not beloved, aske, seek, knock, run, fight, &c. the Lord may possibly out of the goodnesse of his providence, infinitenesse of his wisdome and bounty of his nature, reward with corporall and temporall good things, their carnall and temporall endeavours, but untill by the spirit of adoption they are through faith united to Christ, they have no right by the new Covenant to make claim to the spirituall and saving blessings promised; neither are they any otherwise to be ratifyed to any but as they were beloved of God in Christ before there were any such qualifications and motions in them, as Mr. Baxter cals conditions; as hath been before declared.
Yea suppose that Esau could not have brought the venison to his Father, had been hindered or drawn aside from seeking it, or seeking could not find it, or finding could not have taken and brought it; should the promise and purpose of Isaac to blesse him, for this cause have failed, He performed not the condition, he shall therefore be bereaved of the blessing? Nothing lesse: for the generall and fundamentall ground and condition, the relation of a son, of the first-born son, stood still fixed; unto which the good will of the Father, and the blessing in the Fathers purpose was entailed. In like manner, though a child of God fail in some of the works and qualifications which Mr. Baxter cals conditions of the new Covenant, yet this makes [Page 43] not the promise of the Covenant, or the beneficence of the Covenanter promising, to be void, because these are grounded, (so far as they are grounded out of God) upon Christ, our union unto Christ, and new relation to God in Christ. All which I doubt not shall be made manifest in its own place; only what hath been said I thought fit to be said by the way, for the prevention of doubts and perplexities that might ingage the weak reader, before we come thither.
I should here have put an end to what I had to say to his first Argument drawn from Scriptures, having spoken to all that in this place are quoted, saving those which he brings again elsewhere, for which place I have put off my examination of them: But that p. 310. he comes with a new supply. Lest therefore I should make another work of it there, or minister occasion to any of saying that where his Argument is most fortifyed, there I shun and shrink from answering, I shall examine here also what force such of those Scriptures as have not been here quoted and examined, have to prove justification by works; and so much the rather because he tels us there, that the assertion is evident from these following Scriptures.
B. Mat. 12. 37. By thy words thou shalt be justifyed, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned. Justification and Condemnation seem here by our Saviours testimony to depend upon the sinfull and blamelesse use of our tongues, Ergo, upon works.
We may grant all in our Saviours sense without advantaging Mr. Baxters cause or endammaging our own. For the Lord Christ here directeth his words to those Legall, Jewish, Pharisaicall Justiciaries who stuck fast to the righteousnesse of the Law for justification, and in zeal thereof blasphemed (as in the precedent part of the Chapter upon which this dependeth is to be seen) Christ and his Gospell. This blasphemy Christ here reproveth and smiteth with a weapon fetcht out of their own Armory: Even your own law forbids such evill words and blasphemies, holding forth Justification and Condemnation not only upon condition of good and evill works but words also, so that there is nothing spoken of the justification of the New but of the Old Covenant only. A reprehension and commination pat to them to whom it was denounced, the threat of the Law to [Page 44] them that refused the Gospell, and were and would be under the Law. But this is nothing to the justification of the new Covenant, that followes the rule of the Gospell.
The next Scripture not contained and examined in the former sardle of quotations is,
B. 1 Joh. 1. 9 If we confesse our sins, God is faithfull to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from our iniquities. Here confession another work seems to be a condition of forgivenesse and justification.
1 If we look strictly to the words, Mr. Baxter must hence argue only, that our confession is a condition of Gods faithfulnesse, as if God either cannot or will not be faithfull except we confesse. But let us give Mr. Baxter the largest advantage that he can claim in the meaning of the words, that God is positively and not hypothetically or conditionally faithfull; and that of his faithfulnesse he will forgive and cleanse, if we confesse. In this sense then whereas the Apostle speaketh affirmatively not negatively, (if we confesse he will forgive; not, if we confesse not, he will not forgive) I do
2 Demand whether confession be so a condition of forgivenesse that whosoever confesseth shall be forgiven. This Mr. Baxter will not affirme, without his caeteris paribus, whereof the Text speaks not a word, expresly or implicitely for him, and if he conclude negatively he concludes not from the Text but his own fancie.
Obj. But if you deny forgivenesse upon confession made, you deny what the Text affirmeth and so fight against the word it self, denying what it clearly affirmeth.
Answ. True, if we deny it to them to whom the Text grants and promiseth it: But the Apostle speaks here not to the unjustifyed and unforgiven, but to the Sants forgiven and justifyed already, and the Emphasis of the proposition or promise is in the word we, if we that are in Christ confesse, God will hold faithfull in keeping Covenant with us, and forgive. So that this is a consolation to the Saints against all their dayly infirmities. They have a priviledge above all the world besides, If they sin they have an advocate with the Father, &c. through whom when they confesse and bewail their sins, the grace of God will by his Spirit testifie and seal to their consciences the forgivenesse of them.
[Page 45]3 To descend without the Text to Mr. Baxters conditio sine qua non, there must be more then a grain of salt to make his assertion savory, that without confession there is no forgivenesse. For if by it he mean that of the Apostle, Confession with the mouth, he shall exclude many thousands from justification whom the Scripture excludeth not.
4 I grant to Mr. Baxter that some of our Divines have affirmed (though I fear somewhat rawly and inconsiderately) that confession is a condition sine qua non, of forgivenesse, yet far from Mr. Baxters sense; viz. with these three limitations whereof Mr. Baxter will not endure the test.
1 Of the forgivenesse which is by the new Covenant, or as it is declared and sealed up to our consciences; Not of the forgivenesse which was laid up in the hands as laid up in the hands of Christ, and ours in him before we beleeved or confessed.
2 Such a condition as is not in the same relation with faith, as Mr. Baxter makes it: the very naming whereof they detest as absolutely contradicting the nature and authority of the Gospell.
3 Such a condition as explodes the caeteris paribus & sensu composito of Mr. Baxter so that though they speak somewhat of Mr. Baxters words, yet they are at a defiance against his sense and meaning. How and in what sense they will have it a condition, is no place here to treat. It hath been a digression to say any thing of it, because it is utterly besides the Text to which alone here I was to speak.
B. Act. 8. 22. Repent of this thy wickednesse, and pray God, if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee.
This Scripture I passed by in the former heap of his quotations, as possibly a mistake in the quotation; but finding it here again, and afterward in a third place, I see the man means as he quoteth, and cannot enough marvell what he can fish from this Scripture to prove any thing of mans works a condition of justification. If the word [If] here make or argue a condition, it must be on Gods not on mans part, that man must repent and pray upon condition that God will forgive, else not, if forgivenesse be not the causa sine qua non of repentance and [Page 46] prayer. But this is nonsense to have God upon terms, if he will have any duty from us. He must therefore mean on the other side, God will forgive upon condition of prayer and repentance. But how he will perswade this Scripture to say it, is past my capacity to comprehend. Here is no promise (himself grants there is but an half-promise) of forgiving on Gods part, [ Append. pag. 79.] and nothing mentioned as a condition on mans part. But contrariwise duties of naturall righteousnesse commanded or counselled to a naturall man, upon such cold encouragement as the Scripture affords to the carnall devotions of carnall men carnally performed; If perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven. If Mr. Baxters Assertions be but so sound as his Arguments, neither will serve for good Bellmettall.
How far repentance is a condition hath been discoursed of, and discussed already.
Is then Baptism a condition so necessary that without it there is no washing away of sin? And must the Popish Tenent be found writren in Mr. Baxters Calender with red letters, Sacramenta opere operato conferunt gratiam? or doth Baptism prove ineffectuall to all that do not, cannot, call upon the name of the Lord? Then whether Mr. Baxter be more against himself or against the Protestant Churches, who can decide? More modestly speaks even Bellarmine, which makes the desire of receiving the Sacraments a condition of justification, expelling from forgivenesse them that desire them not; this man rigorously and cruelly shakes into condemnation those that do not, because they have not opportunity to receive them though their desire be unfeigned: or if he doth not so, this Scripture proves not Baptism to be the condition sine qua non. As for calling upon the name of the Lord, I have before spoken to.
I should be in a Labyrinth of doubts how he would argue hence for himself, were it not that elsewhere he explaineth himself in his book, thus, If the righteous be scarce saved by all their strivings, how shall they be saved that strive not at all? We deny not the duty of striving in holy things, yea of striving for salvation; though in Mr. Baxters sense we deny it. Yet the meaning of this Text as appears by its dependence upon the verse precedent, is, If the corruptions and unbelief of heart be so great in the very Saints and beleevers, that they must passe through the purifying fire of Gods judgments more and more to perfect them before they be made vessels of honour in the Kingdome of glory; or that they need the scourge of Gods correction to whip them back to Christ, that they perish not by following their own thoughts: What then shall become of the wicked, which are wholly full of corruption and unbeleef, without any spark of faith, and whom the Lord hath given up to a spirit of slumber, like Bastards without all Chastisements hindering, to roll themselves into ruine?
The Apostle here speaketh of the righteousnesse (not of Justification but) of Sanctification, except we will say, he here digresseth from that which he makes the subject of this whole Chapter. But whether he means the righteousnesse of justification or of sanctification, yet the obedience he here speaketh of is that which cap. 1. ver. 5. he declares himself to have received commission and Apostleship to preach, viz. obedience to the faith, the su [...]me whereof is faith in Christ Jesus.
What he would infer from his two last quotations, 1 Pet. 1. 2. 22. Let him that can understand, declare and make answer to it. I yeeld that his profoundnesse condemns my shallownesse. I dare not contradict him in what he would, because I have not the wit to imagin what he would say. It seems he had [Page 48] determined such a number of quotations, and took at adventure those that came next to his view to make up that precise number. Any other Scriptures besides these being (as to my apprehension) no lesse pat and proper to his purpose then these.
CHAP. IV.
The vanity and ridiculousnesse of Mr. Baxters second and third Arguments discovered: The former that, Because faith is the more principall, and works the lesse prinpall condition of our Justification; and that all other duties are in some respect or other, reducible to faith, therfore we may be said to be justifyed by other works and duties, yet to be justifyed by faith alone. The second drawn from a wide and irregular definition of faith that it containeth all works in its belly, therefore whosoever is justifyed by those works, is justifyed by faith only.
A second Argument he drawes from an anticipation of an objection, which he prevents by turning the edge of it against the objectors and applying it to the strengthening of his own assertion. The objection that he sees in readinesse against him, is, that this doctrine of justification by duties and works, wholly overthroweth that highest and most fundamentall Gospel doctrine of justification by faith alone. This he denies, and affirmes Thes. 62. p. 238. that although we be justifyed by a thousand duties besides,
True, if Mr. Baxter give the denomination, but the question is not, what things may be called, but what they are. A woe [Page 49] is pronounced to them that call or put light for darknesse, and darknesse for light, good for evill, and evill for good, &c. I shall no further presse the unaptnesse of the phrase, Mr. Bavter, declaring in that which followeth, his meaning to be, that faith may be the only condition notwithstanding; which he proves thus,
B. 1 Because it is the principall condition, and the other but the lesse principall. And as the whole countrey hath oft its name from the chief City; so may the conditions of this Covenant from faith.
2 Because all the rest are reducible to it; either being presupposed as necessary antecedents as means, or contained in it as its parts, properties or modifications, or else implyed as its immediate products or necescessary subservient means or consequents.
I speak first to the latter of these two arguments, because he speaks first in the explication to the confirmation of it. It is almost as wise an argumentation as I knew once used by some home-bred, course-spun sons of a Country farmer, who having heard that their father upon a day was sworn Constable at the Court, made merry at home, concluding from their fathers Constableship that they were all Constables and must rule the Parish, because they were his sons and dwelt in house with him: or as that of the Athenian boy that boasted himself to be the ruler of Athens, thus proving it, that he ruled his mother, and his mother swayed his father, and his father being Lord Maior that year swayed Athens. Yea more of reason, at least lesse of reasonlesnesse is there in both these arguings, then in that of Mr. Baxter; theirs concluded only the sons to to partake necessarily of their fathers office: this man makes all that are in any respect of kindred, yea of any relation to faith for such their relation to partake of the office of faith to justifie. For so he reasoneth, all the rest are reducible to faith as Antecedents [going before it] means [to obtain it] or parts, or properties, or necessary adjuncts and modifications, or products [effects] or consequents. What then? Ergo, these all in regard of their alliance or affinity to faith, justifie and bear a part with faith in its office of justifying. And yet when these justifie as much as faith, we must understand that faith justifyeth alone: [Page 50] Because what all these allies of faith do, that faith it self may be said to do. This is indeed Logick to prevail with his Kederminsterians, or rather such of them as know no difference between Logick and Garlick. It is as if I should dispute thus, God made choyce of David before all and any other of the sons of Abraham to be King and to rule over Israel; therefore all the progenitours of David as well Tamar, and Ruth, and R [...]hab, as Judah, Pharez, and Booz, yea more specially Jesse the father of David, and all the brethren of David, yea all the sons and generation of David to Joseph the Carpenter; (let me dilate my self more boldly) all the tribe of Judah, which were flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bone; nay all Israel which were allies to him, and met with him in one common father Jacob; these all partaked of Davids kingship, and were partners with him in the office of ruling, because they all were one way or other reducible to David as going hefore him, or following him, &c. and yet when all these were Kings with David, neverthelesse David was King alone. Or thus, The eye only of all the members of the body is appointed to the office of seeing, neverthelesse the head that holds and gives influence to it, the eye-lids that cover it, the veins that convey nutriment to it, the cheeks, nose, lips, and teeth that are contiguous to it, the hands and feet that are guided by it, &c. all these and many more do partake of the office of seeing together with the eye, and when all these doe see as well as the eye, yet the eye doth see alone, because all the rest are reducible in some way of alliance to the eye. If Mr. Baxters dispute be not one and the same with this in its grounds, then is all my reason gone out of my head into my cap. And at such arguing, Agelastus that laught only once (when he saw his horse eat Thistles) would be tickled into a second laughter.
And no more weight is there in his former reason, Because faith is the principall condition and the other lesse principall. And as a whole County, &c. Here
1 I would demand in what respect according to Mr. Baxter, Mr. Baxter can make faith the more principall, and the rest qualifications and duties the lesse principall conditions. Not in respect of their nature, for if one be, all are spirituall and Divine. Nor in respect of priority in time, for if not all yet many of the rest are of the same age and birth with faith. Nor in [Page 51] respect of durance, for many of them survive faith as justifying. Nor in its instrumentality to justification, for he denyeth any such thing to be in faith. Nor in office, for in it he confounds all together. Nor in the amplitude of its object, for herein love as in other things requires the preeminency. Nor in order of operation, for he makes many of them Antecedents to faith. Nor in the perfection of its effect, for he affirmes the rest to perfect what faith hath but begun. In what respect then is faith the more principall? Mr. Baxter shewes not, because according to his principles, it is beyond my principles to conceive that he can shew. Yet he saith it because it serves his turn here to say it; degrading faith at one place, and enthroning it in another at his pleasure, for his own ends.
2 But if it be the principall condition, &c. what will follow hence for Mr. Baxters advantage? This he makes to follow, That as the whole Country hath oft its name from the chief city, so may the rest duties from faith: why doth he not speak plain? it may be, saith he; but is it so? where doth the Scripture give this name to faith it self? much lesse to other duties in faith implyed? Neither is the question about the name but the offices of all these. It is rare that the Country takes its name from the chief City; yet this is not in question, but whether the whole Country partake of the priviledges and charter of the chief City. This may indeed be, where potentates that have the absolute Lordship of both, grant to both the same priviledges. Yet then the priviledges and dignities of the chief City are not its alone being common to the whole Country with it.
3 But to the very thing in hand without painting and dawbing; When the Lord hath rejected Mizpah, Shiloh, Dan, Bethel, and all other the Cities and Country of Israel saving Jerusalem alone there to vouchsafe his presence and to be sought unto; it is then a rejection of God, to set up Gods name and worship elsewhere saving at, and equalize any other place with Jerusalem the Metropolis. Hence is that complaint of God, Israel hath forsaken Hos. 8. 14. his maker and buildeth temples. So when God hath consecrated faith alone and qualifyed it for the receiving of Christ to justification, having rejected all our own righteousnesse and works from being priviledged together with it to this office and worke; it is no lesse then a forsaking of God and of Christ to performe the most holy duties or to produce [Page 52] the most Celestiall qualifications in the least part to justifie us.
4 All that Mr. Baxter dares to conclude hence is, that works and duties may be, not that they are, conditions of justification. But how from these reasons he will bring about that these all are the conditions, or condition, and yet faith the alone condition, if he had so many eyes as Argus, to guide him, and so many hands as Briareus to work with by that guidance, he shall be never able to effect.
Yet in the explication pa. 239. Mr. Baxter to charme his overly reader into a delusion, pretends a proof of this Thesis by two similitudes, which I forbear to transcribe because they are not worthy of so much labour. For
First, Similies do illustrate not prove. He should first have proved, and then illustrated.
Secondly, They are not adequate or fitted to the question, speak only to a part of, and not to the whole Thesis, conclude at the best only that faith may in some case imply many other duties, but in no wise that when faith is said to justifie, other duties are implyed under the word faith as justifying together with it; much lesse that all other duties justifie, yet faith alone justifyeth. If he would reason by them home to his position, he must reason to this Tenour.
In the former, suppose a King or State give to me by commission the government of such an eminent City or Castle, but with this proviso and upon these articles, that I disband the Army by which before I laid siege to it, remove from me all my Regiments, quit my self of all my Souldiers, and so enter into the possession and government, and all the honour and profits thereof, by my self alone and one Counsellour to serve and assist me in the managing of the said government: If now by vertue of this Commission I enter, not having disbanded the said Army, but carry it in with me, some under a pretense of guarding my person, others as my individuall adherents from whom I cannot be separated, others to retain the Citizens within the bounds of due loyalty to me, and the rest under a pretext of propagating the dominion of that power that hath so invested me with the government: No man will doubt but I enter as a Traytor, not as a loyall Trustee to the power which hath deputed me. Who will not laugh at it as a sophisticall or rather [Page 53] ridiculous plea, when he hears me maintaining that I entred with that one Counseller alone, for all the rest are implyed in him, some as his right, some as his left hand, some his parents, some his children, some his friends, some his servants, &c. and so I have but him alone in having so many thousands with him? So the new Covenant gives me Christ with justification and blessednesse in him, with this Commission and proviso, that I disband my own strength and righteousnesse, the whole Army of my works by which before I laid siege to it, to make all mine by my own winning, and to enter into possession with faith alone apprehending all from the hand of free grace. Shall I not be a Traytor if I carry the whole Army of works to take and hold possession for me, though I▪ make never so golden a pretext of faith only, to which all these are reducible.
The same is the tenour of the redemption of the galley slave, if you will not run from the Scripture in stead of following it in making comparisons. But unto it I shall have a more proper place to speak afterward, when we come to Mr. Baxters great adored Argument of receiving Christ as our Lord as well as Saviour; or if there be not occasion offered there, in the interim the slaves future service is not a condition but a consequent of his present redemption.
But let us see now whether Mr. Baxter with this paint of that which he cals right Reason, do fight against God or Man, doth resist the placits of men, or else the holy Ghost himself. He required before that all might be tryed by Scriptures. Let us now bring his doctrine to the touch-stone. I shall not repeat all or any of the Scriptures before alleadged, or that might be further alleadged against him. One arrow out of that holy quiver, one Scripture out of the whole body of Gospell doctrine shall suffice to smite to the heart, to death it self, all that he goeth about here with fine flourishes of wit to establish. Eph. 2. 8, 9, 10. thus speaks the holy Ghost, By grace are ye saved through faith, and that not of your selves, it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast: For ye are Gods workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.
That the word Saved is an equipollent here with Justifyed, if [Page 54] there should be any that will deny, yet Mr. Baxter will and must affirme, unlesse he will beat in pieces one of the chief pillars of the fabrick erected in this book, and overthrow what he hath built. In this truth he must joyn with us, though in other he estrange himself from us. The same Act of God being called justifying as it dischargeth us from the state of our misery as considered to be a state of sin: and saving as it delivereth us from it under the consideration of it as a state of condemnation and vengeance. Mr. Baxter will grant, cannot but grant this. And then there will naturally drop from this Scrtpture these following positions.
1 That the justification or salvation of the Covenant of grace is by faith.
2 That it is not of works, but by faith in opposition to works.
3 That the very works which flow from our union to Christ, and to which we are new created in Christ Jesus, even those which Mr. Baxter calleth the righteousnesse of the Gospell, are excluded from bearing any part with faith in our justification.
4 That the not justification by works doth in no wise hinder the beleevers performing of them, for they are created in Christ Jesus, their hearts are new wrought by the Spirit to a holy delight in them.
5 That God hath not ordained them to justifie, but for the new created and justifyed in Christ to walk in them.
6 That to teach otherwise of works, the very works of Sanctification, is to depresse Gods grace, and to extoll mans boasting and vain-glory.
7 Even these gospell works and righteousnesse are excluded from having any part in justifying not only as collaterals with the satisfaction of Christ, but also as collaterals with faith, i. e. from bearing a part either in causality or conditionality with faith to justifie.
I challenge Mr. Baxter and all his Legall and Anti-evangelicall disciples here to deny any one of these positions to spring naturally from this Text. And if the the holy Ghost here speak all this, then by it all that Mr. Baxter speaketh throughout this whole Tractate for justification by works is by the breath of [Page 55] Gods mouth blown to the curse, as in many things I shall by Gods help shew afterward.
At the present what he speaketh of works comprehended in faith to justification is here shaken off as a Sophisticall, phantasticall, Antiscripturall dream, the holy Ghost here by the positing of faith, in expresse words rejecting works, Gospell works, all that Mr. Baxter makes a part with faith in that which he cals Evangelicall righteousnesse, from all and any copartnership with faith in saving or justifying; so excludes all, as that he denyeth that justification by grace can any more stand, if the best Gospell works of the best Saints are put in any cooperation with faith in the promoting of it.
All the rest that he hath in the explication pa. 240. and thence to pa. 243. is wholly besides the question, which is not whether works and duties be reducible to faith, or in what respect every particular qualification and duty standeth to it. But whether reduced or not reduced, it doth by Gods appointment help with saith to justify us before God. This we have found to be an usuall feat of Mr. Baxter, where his assertions are confident and peremptory, but his proofs of them light and shadie, to devise in such case some witty passage wherewith to divert the considerations of his reader, from the shame and nakednesse of his foregoing Arguments. And this most probably was his drift and craft here, having given us but words in stead of Arguments to prove that works are comprehended and implied in faith, in all such Scriptures as attribute justification to faith only; that the emptinesse and nothingnesse of his argumentation to make this good may not appear to the reader, he tols him a way to attend to a subtle and plausible dispute, of the relation that every good endowment and work hath particularly to faith. In which discourse of his we will not examine how many things are true and how many false; for if they were all true they are nothing to the thing in question; viz. whether in the severall relations that Mr. Baxter makes them to stand to faith, or in any other they help with faith to justification, and that so, as that when all these with faith cojustifie, we may be yet said to be justifyed by faith alone. When he hath spoken all by meer affirming without confirming, he thus indeed at last concludeth, pa. 243.
How ecliptick is falshood, but sincerity open and full? No man invites another to his house but to some end, either to taste of some dainties, or hear some good tidings, or see some excellent work, or for some other end. He should have named the end, and we would grant him all; thus, that as much as the door, head, legs, armes, clothes of the invited, do partake with the mouth in the act of tasting, or with the eye in seeing, or the ear in hearing: so much when we are invited to Christ, do other duties and workes partake with faith in receiving him to justification.
A third argument (if indeed it be not one and the same in substance, and differ only in words from the former) he draweth from a wide, wilde, vast, confused and incircumscriptive definition of faith, begotten of his own brain, and now first as an overgrown monster born into the world, and baptized by the father of it with the name of justifying faith. This definition he giveth, Thes. 70. pa. 279. I put this in the third place, not because Mr. Baxter doth so, (for he hath many things between the former and this) but because of its cognation, if not identity with the former.
No doubt he saw the former argument more to shame then help his cause, therefore in likelihood he brings it here again in another mode and forme, if so paradventure it may relieve him. Thus then runs his definition.
Never more dubiousnesse in the most dubious Oracles of Apollo Delphicus, then in this definition, if indeed it be a definition, because Mr. Baxter so calleth it. He so speaks all, that by all he might astonish some and deceive others, yet if he be questioned, his words bind him to nothing, but that he may goe off and on at his pleasure. The subtilissimus Doctor could not more warily have provided himself with evasions so sure that if all the world together should indeavour it, none can catch him.
1 If we demand of him whether he speak of faith quae Justificat, & qua Justificat, which Justifyeth, and as it Justifyeth? he leaves us here at a losse, and will no [...] tell us.
2 In saying, Faith as it comprehendeth all the condition, &c. and by all the condition understanding all the duties which the Law requireth, if he be demaunded whether there be a faith which comprehendeth all these? or if so, whether as parts of it self or things reducible to it? or if the latter, why are all these, or how, more comprehended in faith, then faith and all other of the rest (in his sensu composito) comprehended in any one of the rest? or if in the former sense, whether it be a faith of Gods making, or of Mr. Baxters making, made in the defining, and defined in the making? To no one of these our doubts that he leaves upon us by his ambiguity of speaking, hath he one word to resolve us; so that where to finde an answer to him he leaves us uncertain.
3 If we should aske him [where he saith in the beginning of of the definition, It is when a sinner, &c.] whether he means that [Page 58] the quando is the genus of faith? or whether it be a regular definition of an act or habit to posit when it is, and not what it is? and if so, why doth he not define it by a certain rather then by an indefinite time, by Anno Mundi, or Anno Domini, or Imperii, or Regni, &c. that from the Chronicle we may seek and finde it? Or if by his quando we can find out the time, how shall we find and know the thing? Be it that we can hit the time when all that followeth is done, and so upon Mr. Baxters authority conclude that then faith is, yet do we not remain so uncertain as at first, what it is, that we may make use of it to justification? he speaks nothing to certifie us; that from what he saith, we might take the occasion to consent with him or dissent from him.
4 If we would know from him of all those things at whose being, positure and acting, he tels us faith is, whether they include faith constitutively, or else but declaratively, whether faith consists of these, as the whole of its parts, or the genus of its species, or the compound of its simples; or else whether all these do but declare and evidence the truth of faith in a man? If declaratively alone, how then do those things which only declare faith, any more then declare and evidence Justification by faith? and how then holds his conclusion hence, that we are justifyed before God by these, because so justifyed by faith? Or if constitutively as many severall parts and ingredients, they make up (as it were the body of) faith; how then doth the holy Ghost oppose faith and works, even to the excluding either of other, (about the point of justifying) as in other Scriptures, so in that before mentioned Text, Eph. 2. 8, 9, 10. Is there a conflict of flesh and spirit, Jacob and Esau, Christ and Eaxter, in one and the same body and bowels of faith, either to destroy the other [as to Justification?] or if faith be made up of works, and the holy Ghost doth so frequently in Scripture reject, yea accurse works from the justification of the new Covenant, how is not faith it self which is nothing else but a body and bundle of works, accursed from justification also? In none of these ambiguities that he hath left in his Thesis, doth he speak one word to sa [...]isfie us.
Lastly, where he saith that faith is, when all these duties are done, sincerely to the end, if we demand him whether he mean tha [...] when there is an end of doing them, or of the man that [Page 59] doth them, that then faith hath its being and not till then, and so all other duties act in justifying while we live, and faith after all when we are dead? or whether he means that as long as these duties are done, faith is; but when they ar [...] not done, or when they cease to act, faith is not, but loseth its being: Fuit Ilium & ingens gloria Teuerorum; I had once a faith and a ravishing joy in beleeving, either while I was under sufferings for Christs sake, but now my sufferings are ended, and I am no more persecuted, my faith is expired; or while I waited on all the ordinances of Christ: but now my sick bed, or prison, or banishment, intercepts me from many of Christs ordinances, My faith is lost? which of these wayes, or in what third sense he will be understood, let him that can conjecture; but in respect of any thing that we have under his hand in the Thesis, he is yet free to choose his meaning; so that in all that he saith here, he hath armed himself against all exceptions, by saying it so that we shall not know his meaning. Only thus far we may speak with Augustine, Si non vis intelligidebes negligi. What is not an understandable Argument, we shall contemn as no Argument.
But his illustration and proof may possibly follow in his Explication. Thither also we will follow him to examine which one of all these things delivered here so ambiguously, he doth there plainly illustrate or prove, it runne [...] thus, pa. 281.
Of the condition enough hath been said before, we look for proof. That all this is sometime called [I mean in Gods not Mr. Baxters Scriptures] faith, we also will say it is plain, if he make it plain by his. Hence, viz.
1 In all these Scriptures obeying of the Gospell is one and the same thing which in other Scriptures is called the obedience of faith, i. e. obedience to that Gospell doctrine which requireth [Page 60] to rest upon Christ alone by faith for righteousnesse and life without any intermixture to attain the same, called obedience to the Gospell, to distinguish between the Gospell and Legall way of justification. This Mr. Baxter knoweth well, therefore he gives us the quotation without the words of these Texts, most of them being such, as if there were nothing else said in the whole Word, even these are enough to subvert as pernicious his assertion.
2 The thing in question is not whether the Gospell command these duties, but whether it commands us to do them that we may be justifyed by such deeds? and whether because the Gospell commands them, it doth therefore call them faith? or that all which is to be done in obedience to the Gospell, is straightway to take up either the Nature or Name of faith?
3 How doth he contradict himself here, in what he had said before, Thesis 31. pa. 154. where he affirmed the Commandements of the Gospell (in relation to these duties) to be the establishment of the Morall Law, and the perfect obedience in the Law commanded; and that this is but an adjunct of the new Covenant [or Gospell] and not a proper part thereof? Will he say then that all the works which the Morall Law commandeth are faith? or by the Gospell Metamorphosed from works into faith?
B. The fufilling of the conditions of the new Covenant, is oft called faith, &c.
But these forementioned are parts of the condition of the new Covevenant; Ergo, they are implyed and included in faith, Gal. 3. 12, 23, 25.
A wretched Argument lame in every foot, in which one principle is begged to maintain another. Neither of the premises nor yet the conclusion, having any soundnesse either as they are considered a part, or all together. Or if he could have proved either proposition from Scripture, would he have suffered them to passe under his bare affirmation alone? The Scripture annexed prove only an opposition between faith and works, the Gospell and the Law; but are as far as heaven from earth, from proving either of the premises. Neither doth the conclusion infer what it should from the premises, i. e. what is contained in them. I should in particulars shew the deformed nakednesse of the [Page 61] Syllogism, if it did not enough shew it self without my help. How rotten must the cause needs be, which puts so profound a man to such miserable shifts, and absurd arguings, to defend it where there is no opposer?
What followes in the same S [...]ction, is all one as if he had said, not so, but so, &c. because I have over and over told you so, and what I have told you must needs be true.
The other things in the explication are not to this question.
Lest any should except that I wrong Mr. Baxter in calling these two latter, his second and third Arguments [to prove justification by works] when he doth not so call them, though he doth so use them: I have prosecuted the matter of them wholly as considered in it self, without any further reference to the conclusion, then as himself in expresse words applies them to it.
CHAP. V.
The fourth and great Argument of Mr. Baxter examined, and the inference, that because Christ as Lord as well as Saviour is the object of justifying faith, as justifying, therefore we are justifyed by works as well as by faith, is confuted. And withall proved that Christ as our Lord dying for us, and not as Lord and a Lawgiver is the object of faith as justifying. Mr. Baxters Reasons to prove the contrary, answered.
HIS fourth Argument is drawn from the Object of Faith, and the due qualification of the same Object. It runnes thus, as by his disputes compacted and compared together, appeareth.
B. If Christ be the object of justifying faith, as such, not only in his Priestly office, as our Redeemer and Saviour, but also in his Kingly office our Lord and Ruler, then other works and duties of obedience are as much required as faith in justifying us before God.
[Page 62]But Christ is the object of justifying faith as such, not only in his Priestly but also in his Kingly office, as our Lord as well as our Redeemer and Saviour; Ergo, other works and duties of obedience have so much to do injustifying as faith. [He saith affiance, which whether i [...] at all differs from faith, and whether he means not the same with faith, we shall see afterward, if it be necessary.]
The Assumption he layes down and goes about to prove Thes. 66. and in its explication beginning pa. 255. The consequent of the proposition he hath and endeavours to confirme in and under Thes. 72, 73.
This one of all his Arguments hath the Dominicall letter on it; it is the wood, the rest are but the hay and stabble of his building; his sacra anchora, if this hold not, the man with his vessell, and all the trash-treasure therein must perish upon the Rocks. All the rest of his Arguments are but bubbles in comparison of this bottle-glasse. Therefore he attributes much to this, gloryeth in it, and only doth not fall down and worship it. It was hinted before here and there in all his discourse, but here he manageth it with all his strength and art.
I shall speak first to the Assumption, because he first puts and endeavours to prove it. And here now appears what his end was in laying a third opinion of the righteousnesse of Christ to justification, besides the active and passive righteousness: viz. a righteousnesse meritorious for us, and not imputed to us; after he had been 10. years for the passive righteousnesse only, as he notifies to us, pa. 54, 55. The ground it seems of altering his judgment is, because that opinion would not subserve to his justification by works; which he hath so pertinaciously determined to set up, that whatsoever of sacred or humane Authority he meets with opposit to it he shoulders it out of the way; and whatsoever occurres out of any sink and puddle making for it, he takes up as a treasure. But the Meritoriousnesse of Christs Legislative and Kingly office to satisfie for our sins, being laid as a groundwork, he thought (it seems) would tend much to the exalting of the works done by the Commandement of King Jesus, to justification: therefore he took it up from Grotius, and made use of it as a paved way to Justification by works, which here almost from the same grounds he urgeth. And so we see that from the very beginning to the end of this Tractate, all that he hath, conspireth and aspireth to this [Page 63] end [justification by works,] and to elude all that the Gospell hath against it.
But let us come to examine his Assumption to this Argument and what he brings for it.
In a good sense we might grant him both all this and all the substance of all the Arguments which he brings to prove it. For none of the Protestant Churches have▪ denyed, but maintain,
1 That all the offices of Christ are needfull and cooperating to, and in the worke of Mediatourship; that Christ not only as our high Priest, but also as our King and Prophet made satisfaction for us, and makes his satisfaction effectuall to us.
2 That the object of justifying faith is Christ in all his offices King, Priest, and Prophet.
3. That these offices of Christ are not to be severed by us, because counited and coworking in him. He layes not down, nor puts from him any one of his offices when he either justifyeth, sanctifieth or illuminateth, &c. but doth all and every of them, as Lord, Saviour and Teacher.
Yet when all this is granted to him, his cause is never the stronger, nor ours at all the weaker. Nay he declares himself guilty of the fault wherewith he chargeth the innocent, viz. of separating Christs offices, holding him forth to us as redeeming us only as our high Priest, governing and giving Lawes to his Church only by his Kingly office, enlightening us in the truth only as our Prophet: when contrariwise we teach that Jesus Christ, i. e. the Anointed of God, in all his offices, and anointings, is made unto us of God wisdome, righteousnesse, sanctification and redemption; not wisdome in one only of his offices, righteousnesse in another, &c. but all in all, as the Scripture witnesseth, 1 Cor. 1. 30. Neverthelesse we deny not but some acts and benefits of Christ are to be attributed more properly and peculiarly to one then another office of Christ, yet so that the cooperation of the other offices therein is nor wholly to be denyed.
But this we deny, that there is any other fountain opened for the washing away of our sins but the bloud of Christ only; or any other satisfaction made to the justice of God but by the sacrifice of Christ alone; yet so as this bloud and sacrifice as they are primarily our high Priests, so are they our Kings and Prophets also, howbeit the bloud and sacrifice of one Christ alone. And herein we follow the Scriptures leading threed which affirm not only the Priest to have dyed for us, but our Prophet or Shepheard also: I am the good Shepheard, and give and lay down my life for the sheep, Joh. 10 11, 15. He came not to be ministred unto but to minister, and to give his life a ransome for many, Mat. 20. 28. viz. to seal the doctrine with his bloud which he had taught with his lips, and to make the way through the veil of his flesh, thorough his bloud, which he had taught to be the only way into the Holiest to the Father. And as the Shepheard so the Lord and King also; It was the LORD, that was betraye [...] ▪ 1 Cor. 11. 23. crucifyed, 1 Cor. 2. 8: killed, Act. 3. 15. and rais [...] again, 1 Cor. 6. 14. Even the Lord of glory and Prince of life. Ther [...] fore it is that the holy Ghost cals it the Lords death, 1 Cor. 11. 2 [...]. The Lords body, and the Lords bloud, 1 Cor. 11. 27, 29. And needfull was it that Christ as Lord and King with all his power should thus grapple with sin, death and hell, on our behalfe; how else should he have vanquished them, and having spoyled these Principalities and powers, made a shew of them openly, and triumphed over them? Col. 2. 15. And without this victory his death had been to us vain, our enemies had remained unconquered, and our selves unransomed. The strong man had not been driven out by a stronger then he, Luk. 11. 21, 22. Thus we neither divide nor separate the offices of Christ one from another, but conjoyn them all in the death and passion of Christ, by which alone we beleeve and teach that the Lord, Priest and Prophet, Christ Jesus hath made satisfaction for our sins.
But we utterly deny that which Mr. Baxter drives at, that Christ as our Lord, that is, as a Lawgiver, and [to speak in Mr. Baxters words, Thes. 31.] as he doth establish the morall Law commanding perfect obedience, and forbidding every sin, as exactly as under the Covenant of works; is the object of justifying faith, as justifying. This was that great and principall article which Luther with so much vehemency defended against the Papists, viz. that Christ is Luth. in Gal. Cap. 2. 20: & alibi. no Moses, no Exactor, no giver of Lawes [in reference to justification] but a giver of grace, a Saviour, &c. pronouncing it an accursed [...]and [Page 65] hellish doctrine which the Papists taught, that he justifyeth as a Law-giver, that they which so paint him out, make him not a Christ but a Fiend or Devill.
The state of the question then is betwixt him and us, not whether Christ as Lord as well as Saviour; but whether by the sacrifice of himself for us, or else by giving Laws and Commanding all duties of obedience to us also; be the object of justifying faith, as justifying, i. e. whether our faith by obeying Christ in the works of righteousnesse as well as by cleaving to Christ crucifyed do justifie? We maintain that the death of Christ, or Christ dying for us, is alone offered to our faith for justification: he contrariwise, that Christ as commanding the duties of obedience is the object of faith as justifying.
Our Assertion that Christ suffering for us is the alone object of justifying faith, as such; may be confirmed by many Arguments.
One Argument may be drawn from the offerings and sacrifices of the old Testament, and the sacraments both of the old and new Testament. Such as these have exhibited, or do still exhibit Christ to us for redemption or justification, such is our faith still to receive him. But these all have exhibited and do exhibit Christ, not as a Law-giver, but as an offering or sacrifice for our sins: therefore under this notion our faith is to receive him to justification. So all the sacrifices, circumcision, paschal Lamb, &c. under the old Testament, directed the faith of men to Christs sacrifice to the bloud and wounds of Christ for purging, &c. Or if any will say (as he may truly say) that circumcision typified also the renovation of the heart by the Spirit of Christ, himself may answer himself that this was to sanctification, and not to justification.
2 The whole stream of the Gospell leads our faith to Christ crucifyed or dying for justification. As the serpent was lifted up in the wildernesse, so shall the Son of man be lifted up, [viz. upon the crosse] that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life, John 3. 14, 15. I determined to know (i. e. to preach among you for your knowledg) nothing else but Christ, and him crucifyed, 1 Cor. 2. 2. If I be lifted up I will draw all men to me, (signifying what death he should die.) Joh. 12. 32, 33. He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud, &c. Joh. 6. 47, - 58. Whom God hath set forth [Page 66] as a propitiation through faith in his bloud, Rom. 4. 25. Being justified by his bloud, Rom. 5. 9. The bloud of Christ cleanseth from all sin, 1 Joh. 1. 7. The Lambe of God [sacrificed] that taketh away the sins of the World, Joh. 1. 29. Having made peace through the bloud of his Crosse. Col. 1. 20. And reconciled us in the body of his flesh through death, Ver. 21, 22. Having redemption through his bloud even the sorgivenesse of sin, Col 1. 14. He hath purchased his Church with his bloud, Act. 20. 28. Having boldnesse to enter into the Holiest by the bloud of Jesus, by the new and living way, which he hath consecrated through the veil of his flesh, Heb. 10. 19, 20. He was wounded for our sins and bruised for our iniquities, and by his stripes we are healed, Isa. 53. 5. God forbid that I should glory in any thing but in the Crosse of our Lord Jesus Christ, Gal. 6. 14. I might even weary the Reader with allegations of Scriptures every way as pertinently and properly making Christ dying for us the object of faith as justifying. And I challenge Mr. Baxter and all his admirers, to produce one Scripture proving Christ as a Law-giver to be the object of our faith to justification. If they cannot do it, let it be acknowledged as an audacious and daring presumption in Mr. Baxter, from his own authority, without and against the Word, to lay it down here as a position and principle of Religion.
3 If the death and sufferings alone of Christ (and not his giving of Lawes and commanding duties of righteousnesse) be the sole and entire satisfaction which he hath given to the justice of God for us, then Christ in his death, and not at all in his Laws and Commands of such duties, is to be made the object of our faith for justification. But the former is true: therefore the latter also.
Both the consequent and consequence of the Proposition must needs be granted by all Protestants (though not by Remonstrants and Socinians) which hold the imputation of the obedience of Christ to us by which he hath satisfyed Gods justice; that he for us and we in and by him have done our law: that his satisfying obedience is by imputation so fully made ours to justification as if we had done it our selves; which is the doctrine of all Protestant Churches. But Mr. Baxter hateth this phrase of imputation of Christs obedience, will not, cannot admit it; for then he destroyes and pronounceth all at the best to be erroneous whatsoever he hath spowted out for sacred doctrine; he grants the imputation of nothing else but our own faith and works to justification; so [Page 67] that after his principles the consequence is not so clear. Let us see therefore whether also after and upon his own grounds, it may stand firm and undenyable.
1 Then, Mr. Baxter Thes. 18. affirmes our Legall righteousnesse (as he cals it) i. e. that righteousnesse by which the Law is satisfyed for our breaches of it, to be in Christ; and in calling this Legall righteousnesse ours, and the satisfaction therein made ours, he doth imply that the satisfaction of Christ is the thing that being made ours is that which justifyeth us. This he speaks out yet more plainly, pa. 218. telling us that Christs satisfaction must be made ours, else we cannot be justifyed: that so far as by imputation no more is understood then the bestowing of Christs satisfaction on us, so that we shall have the justice and benefits thereof as truely as if we had satisfyed our selves; in this sense he granteth the imputation of Christs satisfactory righteousnesse; and thus according to his principles, that act, or those acts of Christ by which he made satisfaction for us, or rather Christ in these acts is to be made the object of our faith as justifying. According to this rule pa. 54. he makes the Active righteousnesse of Christ (considered as such) part of the satisfaction together with the Passive: and to lay a ground for that which he here inferreth, pa. 57, he affirms that among other parts of Christs righteousnesse or Active obedience, his assuming of the humane nature, his establishing and sealing the Covenant, his working miracles, his sending his Disciples to convert and save the world, his overcoming death and rising again, &c. (which were all works most proper to his kingly office) to have been meritorious and satisfactory. And all this to lay a foundation for what here and Thes. 72. he buildeth, viz. Christ as a Law-giver as well as a Redeemer is the object of justifying faith as such, and that obedience to his Laws as well as faith in his sufferings, hath to do in our justification.
We finde then Mr. Baxter making Christ in his Legislative righteousnesse upon this ground alone to be the object of justifying faith, as therein he in part satisfyed for our disobedience. Therefore hoc nomine and in this respect must the consequence of the proposition stand firm with him, viz. If only the death and sufferings of Christ and not at all his Legislative righteousnesse, be the sole and entire satisfaction, &c. then Christ in his death onely and not, &c. is to be made the object of faith as justifying. [Page 68] For in that righteousnesse alone by which Christ satisfyed, is faith to apprehend him to justification, by his own rules.
The Assumption then remaines alone needfull to be proved, viz. that Christs death and suffering alone is the entire satisfaction. This is clear to them which will not wilfully retain beams in their eyes, from these Scriptures which affirm the life of Christ sacrificed for us to be the Ransom, Mat. 20. 28. 1 Tim. 2. 6. The Price by which we are purchased and redeemed from thraldome. 1 Cor. 6. 20. & 7. 23. The propitiation for our sins through faith in his bloud. Rom. 3. 25. 1 Joh. 4. 10. i. e. that one and only act of Christ by which our sinnes are expiated, the justice of God satisfyed, and his wrath appeased, so that we finde him now a God propitious and gratious to us.
But if we will hear the Scriptures speaking at large and articulately confirming this position, that the satisfaction made by Christ is begun, continued and perfected meerly and wholly in and by Christs sufferings, in steed of many Testimonies which the Scripture affordeth, I shall pitch upon two disputes only of the Apostle in the Epistle to the Hebrews. The former in cap 9. beginning at the 11 and 12 verses. That Christ being become an high Priest, &c. by his own bloud entred once into the Holy place, having obtained for us eternall Redemption. I need not explain the words for the edification of any that hath but read the Scriptures, and taken but overly into his consideration, how that which was yearly under the Law figured in the act of the high Priest the type, was at length effectually accomplished by Christ the Antitype. Again, ver. 13, 14. If the bloud of Buls, &c. sanctifyed to the purifying of the Flesh, how much more shall the bloud of Christ, which by the eternall Spirit offered himselfe to God, without spot, purge your conscience from dead works? &c. An undeniable vertue and efficacy in the bloud of Christ alone, without any further acts of Christ himself to purge the conscience, e. i. to absolve and justifie, is here affirmed. And further ver. 15. He is the M [...]diatour of the new Covenant, that by means of death, for the redemption of the transgressions under the first Testament, they which are called may receive the promise of the eternall inheritance, i. e. the eternall inheritance promised, by means of Christs death, and not by his Legislative righteousnesse. And ver. 26▪ Christ now once at the end of the world hath appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. What sin? All sin according [Page 69] to that of John, The bloud of Christ purgeth from all sin, 1 Joh. 1. 7. And if from all sin, what sin is there left for Christs giving of Lawes to put away? or what of justification left out for it to perfect? or of full satisfaction not made, for it, to compleat? Lastly, ver. 28. Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many. How did he bear them, but as the Apostle saith, He hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law, being made a curse for us? Gal. 3. 13. and in bearing them on our behalfe he satisfyed justice on our behalf. And this is affirmed to be by offering himself for us, not by giving Laws to us, or injoyning duties upon us.
His second dispute is chap. 10. where the Apostle having mentioned the feeblenesse of the sacrifices offered by the Law, to take away sin, brings in Christ offering himself to accomplish what these could not, and declaring his ready obedience to fulfill that will of God written in the volume of Gods book to offer himself a sacrifice for sin, with a Lo, I come: by this will of God (saith he) we are sanctifyed by the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all, ver. 5, — 10. He saith not, we have our consecration to be holy, by the commands of Christ, &c. but by the offering of his body. And that by sanctification is to be here understood purification and justification; I think it will not be denyed: However ver. 12. it is added, that he having once offered sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down at the right hand of God, his sitting down and resting argues his work the work of our redemption and justification perfected in every degree and number. His rest is as Gods rest was from the beginning, then the work of Creation, now of Redemption being made absolutely perfect, the rest followed; and where had this work its beginning, progresse and perfection? In his once offering of sacrifice for sins for ever. Nothing here of Christs Law-giving and rule from the bottom to the top of the work of Redemption or Justification. The sacrifice alone satisfyed, so far all things of man are here excluded, as that nothing else of Christ is required. As it is more fully yet expressed ver. 14. For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctifyed. His perfecting Mr. Baxter will not deny to be his making of perfect satisfaction for them, and this is done by one offering of Christ. Will Mr. Baxter be so audacious as to oppose the holy Ghost with his Nay, telling that there must be somewhat else besides this offering, viz. Christs Law-giving as part of the satisfaction made for us. Lastly, [Page 70] to put all out of doubt, and besides the bounds of cavilling, what the Apostle should mean here by sanctifying and perfecting, this also is unfolded in plain words, ver. 17, 18. viz. The taking away of their sinnes and iniquities: And where the remission of these is, there is no more offering, &c. satisfaction is made to the full and no need of any addition for the perfecting thereof.
I acknowledg there are many things required to condition Christ that he might be an effectuall offerer and offering, else could not the redemption and justification which are by him have been completed; or the satisfaction made for us been perfect. Yea that after the work of satisfaction, as formerly of Creation finished, and a totall resting from any further addition to it, yet the Father worketh and the Son worketh hitherto in the businesse of governing and preserving of what is so created and repayred: yet this doth not at all hinder but that full satisfaction is made by the alone offering of Christ.
And here once more I call upon Mr. Baxter and all his adherents to bring forth any one testimony of Scripture, to prove that either Christs Law-giving or any other act of Christ, besides this one of offering himself a sacrifice for sin, is by the Scripture in whole or in part affirmed satisfactory to God for our justification. Let them not as Mr. Baxter before doth from pa. 54. to pa. 61. bring their peradventures, and may▪ bees, and possibles, and verisimilies, (for are the conjectures and results of a working and self-conceited brain, to be laid as a foundation whereon to build an Article of our faith?) But let them bring the oracle of the Word testifying either that Christ hath done, or God hath required of him or accepted from him such and such works in part of satisfaction. Else our ears will be deaf to hear mans prattle, being attentive in such matters only to the voice of the holy Ghost.
This shall suffice for the opening and confirming of ou [...] Tenet, untill it shall be further opposed. Now let us hear what Mr. Baxter hath to say against us, or for the proof of his Assumption.
If he mean otherwise then I have before declared to be the judgment of Protestants, and (as he terms them) godly and learned Divines, of singular esteem in the Church of God, pa. 53. and one of them to be of more authority then many writers and readers, Appen. pa. 12. he feigneth an Adversary, and beats the winde. But against our Assertion as I have explained it; or for his Assertion setting up the commands of duty by Christ together with the sacrifice of Christs death, to be the object of faith as justifying, if he say any thing we are to examine it. As for the rest which he speaks besides the purpose, we shall look on it and neglect it.
B. 1. The Gospell doth not reveal Christs offices as separated: but as they are revealed, so they must be beleeved.
This makes not against us, but against himself. We make Christ in his offering himself for us our Melchisedek, King, Priest and Prophet; he divides in restraining the Kingly office only to giving of Lawes, &c. and not at all acting mediatorily in his death.
B. 2. Neither doth it offer Christ in his Pristly office only as separated form his Kingly: though it may sometimes presse the acceptance of him in one respect; and sometimes in another: but as he is offered, so he must be received.
We grant him all, but what hence will result to his use?
B. 3. Scripture no where tyeth justification to the receipt of him as our Priest only; therefore we must not do so.
Scripture every where affirmeth Gods justice to be satisfyed by the blood of Christ, and sends our faith to that fountain alone for purging; therefore we must do so.
B. 4. How commonly doth Scripture joyn his offices together, calling him our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ?
Hath Mr. Baxter in a dream met with any bug-bear that doth otherwise?
1 The husband is in some sense said sometimes to save the wife, and the wife to save the husband; and the Ministers to save themselves and [Page 72] others, 1 Cor. 7. 16. 1 Tim. 4. 16. Must therefore the husband, or wife, or Minister be made the object of saving or justifying faith as such?
[...] The question is not here how many acts of Christ, of men, of our selves, are instrumentall to our salvation, but what act of Christ hath satisfyed for our sinnes, by the application whereof we are constituted actually righteous, are pardoned and justifyed before God? This we maintain to be Christs offering himselfe to God for us, and let Mr. Baxter disapprove it.
3 We deny not that Christ hath other operations by which to perfect and sustain the justifyed to eternall life; yea to prevent our faith, infusing it, and directing it to himself crucifyed, and satisfying for us; and to follow it by supporting it and holding us fixed by faith to himself thus satisfying for us, and to stabish his Kingdome within us in peace, righteousnesse and joy in the holy Ghost; yea that in these Christ must be made the object of our faith for our confirmation, dependence and comfort: But as justifying and fetching from him the matter of justification, or rather the righteousnesse by which we are justifyed, it must know nothing else but Christ and him crucifyed; as before hath been proved, and we wait to hear from Mr. Baxter or any of his disciples, one Scripture to confute it.
Sound without substance, no more to his purpose then if he had said nothing. What one Protestant ever held it a sincere faith that apprehends Christ to justification, and not for illumination, and sanctification also? will it then follow that illumination and sanctification are justification? or that faith as these [Page 73] wayes acting doth justifie? Then also my hand in feeding clothes me, and in clothing feeds me.
An invincible argument! he that will not be swayed by it, let him continue in his wits still. As if whatsoever thing God had an end to exalt by Christs death must be the object of faith as justifying. God intended by it to exalt his elect; are the elect therefore the object of justifying faith? Besides we say not that the receiving of Christ as Priest alone justifyeth.
Himself (as I have shewed) separateth: we joyn them together in Christs passion, and in the rest of his acts and benefits.
It is not a new thing to see heresie usurping the chaire to condemne truth of errour. The reasoning here is wholly carnall and naturall, besides the rule of the Gospell. When he calls faith a naturall way of receiving the mercy offered by Christ, and our own worth and works (implyedly) the spirituall way, [Page 74] how doth he put light for darknesse, and darknesse for light, giving to the truely spirituall, cause of renewing that of the Apostle, 1 Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, &c. Can Heaven and Hell be more opposite either to other then the Apostles doctrine to Mr. Baxters? The Apostle cals the way of faith alone, the Spirit, and the way of works superadded to faith for justification, the flesh, Gal. 3. 3. Is it Flesh or Spirit in Mr. Baxter that makes him a contradictor of the holy Ghost speaking by the Apostle. The way of faith is the way of grace, supernaturall, Flesh and bloud cannot reveal it unto us, but our Father which is in heaven. But the way of works is beneath grace, dictated by nature it self, therefore naturall, but so that all the force of nature cannot effectuallize it to justification.
It is a slander that he puts upon the Orthodox whom he hateth, therefore represents them as Noddies, and Simpletons, pretending that they teach faith to be nothing but an accepting of pardon, and accepting of holinesse, [ &c.] Nay we make neither pardon, nor holinesse, nor the [ &c.] but Christ Jesus the object of our faith, adhere and cleave to him for all, yet not confounding his benefits, or the means by which he applyeth them, but wait by faith at the severall sluces by which he conferreth his severall benefits, to receive the washing away of our guilt by the effusion of his bloud, and holinesse or sanctification by the effusion of his Spirit and not contrariwise holinesse by his bloud, and pardon by the effusion of his Spirit. So we repair by faith to Christ for all, because in him as in the spring is all; yet so as that in coming to him alone that hath all, we come to the Sun of righteousnesse for light, to the fountain for life, and to the Spirit of sanctification which flowes from him for holynesse. He cryes against separation, and makes it (as I have shewed) for union, and makes confusions. Where doth he mention any office or operation of faith to sanctification? or use of sanctification but to justification? or what is faith with him but a compound of all endowments, works, and duties? And thus he confounds faith and works, Christs righteousnesse, and mans righteousnesse, morall honesty, and Gospell sanctification, of all together making up one linsy-woolsy justification or righteousness to justification, which the Spirit of God never revealed, but the spirit of Mr. Baxter hath hatched.
What he speaketh of Christ stablishing his office, either is above my understanding, or else is not at all to his purpose. And what of accepting as under the notion of accepting, or as under the notion of a condition, hath been enough spoken to in what was before said about the instrumentality of faith.
All that followeth is wholly averse from, and adverse to the doctrine of the Gospell, Jewish and Popish. For what meanes he by our title in Law, and the wedding garment, but the whole furniture of works and duties done in obedience to a supposed legislative authority of Christ? Without these and before these to take possession, i. e. to dare to adhere to Christ for justification is usurpation, and an incurring of Gods vengeance for usurping: Thus beating off from Christ sinners, chief sinners for whom Christ hath dyed. How doth the spirit of the rejected Jewes work upon this man? when they heard of righteousnesse and Act. 22. 21, 22, 23. salvation offered to the Gentiles, a common and profane people that were not holy, how did they stretch their throats, and rend their clothes in a zeal against this indignity? So this man hearing of the justificition of Publicans and sinners, hath his eye evill because God is good: tears himself with anger, crying, usurpation, vengeance, hell-fire; why? because they had not put on the filthy rags of mans righteousnesse, which he cals the wedding garment, and thereby gotten title to Christ before they were so bold as to beleeve in him, and girded on their own gaol-clothes first, and then have put on Christ upon them, that their own righteousnesse might have been neerest the heart, and Christs righteousnesse at a further distance, as having no efficacy but from our own righteousnesse effectuallizing it. Unto all this I shall use only that oracle of the Lord Christ, The Publicans and harlots enter into the Kingdome of God before these Pharisaicall justiciaries, and whited sepulchers. Let Christ alone be my wedding garment, I leave all that unrighteous righteousnesse which Mr. Baxter would wrest out from the Kingly office, entire to Mr. Baxter to compleat his righteousnesse to justification. I know no other title to the justification of the new Covenant, which the chief sinners must look after before they possesse it, but the grant of grace in the new Covenant, and their closure by faith with Christ, in whom God presents himself to justifie and reconcile them to himself. One voice of my Bride-groom, crying, Whosoever thirsteth, i. e. is dry and empty of all good in himself, let him come to me, [Page 76] and whosoever will, let him drink of the well of the water of life freely, Rev. 22. 17. is of more force with me then ten thousand contradicting voices such as this of Mr. Baxter, There is more adoe then come in, and sit down, and take what we have a mind to: If this man had the imaginary place of Peter to be Porter of heaven, how quickly would he forfeit his place by repelling those whom alone Christ will have admitted, and admitting those that Christ will have repelled? Christ admits beleevers, not doers, this man rejects all beleevers that are not doers before they are beleevers.
The rest that he saith here is sacrificed to his Goddesse the Lady Condition. A deity that the Scriptures never knew; nor yet all the whole University of Athens. They erected an Altar indeed to the unknown God, Act. 17. 23. see the depth of Mr. Baxter, he hath found the Antipodas which the old Mathematicians wrote of, but could never find: the deity which the learned Athenians worshiped, but worshiped they knew not what. This Goddesse Condition by some help of the Socinians and Arminians hath M. Baxter brought to light, and invested her with more glittering ornaments then they had wit to do; only he hath not yet built a Temple, and there enthroned her, for all men to fall down with him and worship her. Yet of this Almighty power he proclaimes her that she binds the hands of God and Men: the one cannot give, the other cannot receive without her mediation. Neither the eternall Father, nor the eternall Son can shew the least mercy to a poor sinner, nor the sinner partake of one crumb of mercy from the Father by the Son, unlesse this great Lady Condition say Amen to it; so high and so to vast a bignesse hath the Man already stretched her. Yet is he still adding, and in this place he is nayling in the offices of Christ into her bulk. But because this Colossus is only from his own brain, and nothing of Gods Word brought to own one piece of it, let us leave him admiring if not adoring his fabrick or figment, and refer our selves to answer when he brings any thing from Gods Word.
We have seen by this time the invalidity of the Assumption of Mr. Baxters Argument, and of all the Reasons which he brings to prove it; either to give proppage to his own assertion, or any way to shake and weaken ours.
I am to examin also the consequent and consequence of his Proposition. And here I deny both that other works and duties are required with faith to justification, and all consequency hereof from this supposition that Christ in all his offices is the object of faith as justifying. This Mr. Baxter layeth down first in and under his 72. Thesis, pag. 266. & deinceps. His Thesis runs thus,
The Antecedent of this Position is nothing else but the reassuming of his former Assumption with a short explication and a short obscuration added to it. His obscuration in this, that he names justifying without the adjection there used [as such] we will understand him here meaning what there he speaks, else we run from the question. His explication, that here he unfolds what he meant there by accepting Christ for Lord, viz. the hearts subjection, [to Christs Legislative power, or his commanding of woeks and obedience.] In this sense we deny still that the accepting of Christ for Lord is an essentiall part of justifying faith, as such. And all that which he seems further to bring for the confirmation thereof, pa. 287, & 288. is but the saying over again of what he had said before, and a little prattle of Physicall and morall Philosophy, which is as fit to explain to us the mystery of Christ, faith and justification; as a net is to hold fast the winde: and yet if all his reasoning thence were granted, his cause is as naked and weak with it as without it. The rest is nothing but words, his own words, his bare affirmations, wherewith we have been so much wearied, that the very thought of them is offensive. We expect Gods word, let him bring it, or hold his peace.
The consequent of this Thesis, which is also the consequent of the proposition of the Argument which we are here examining; he puts here more fraudulently then I rendered it there, viz. that sincere Obedience doth as much justifie as affiance, that, as the fruit of our accepting Christ for Lord and Law-giver, as much [Page 78] as this, which is a fruit of accepting Christ for our Saviour. How slippery is falshood, and how full of evasions? Let him speak positively and plainly, hath such obedience any thing to do in justifying us? I should not lie if I should say, I have conquered so many Armies, taken so many Towns in, and brought so much gold from the West-Indies, as Mr. Baxter: yet though I speak no lie, I cannot be excused from speaking vanity in saying it; for neither of us have done it. But let us see whether there be more positivenesse in his poofs then in his affirmations. In his 288. pag. thus he speaketh to it.
If by this profound reasoning there be any that will not be persuaded to be a Christian of Mr. Baxters painting, let him continue to be not only almost but altogether a Christian of Christs making, and he shall never sustain damage thereby to his conscience or salvation. The question is not here how neer or how remote a fruit of faith, obedience is, but whether the neerest or most distant fruits thereof, considered (as Mr. Baxter doth) as our acts or deeds; nor yet whether these acts as close to, and remote from the heart, nor whether imperate or elicit acts, but whether such acts are at all appointed of God to justification? We deny it, and Mr. Baxter brings nothing to prove it.
Yet not to suffer the lesse exercised and informed Reader to depart unsatisfyed, nor to roll up in darknesse and silence any truth of the Gospell, proper here to be cleared; I shall manifest in what respect Mr. Baxters assertion may be here warily granted. Christ as Saviour, and satisfier, i. e. by the sacrifice of his death, hath made a way for sinners to God, yea made himself the way, and is in respect thereof made to us of God, righteousnesse. This he did principally (not only) as our high Priest, the other offices were not excluded. This was not the whole work that he was sent to do. He must bring into the way also that he hath made, all that are to be saved in it and by it, Joh. 10. 16. And having brought them he must also enable them to bring [Page 79] forth fruit to God by being their sanctifier, Joh. 15. 5. Rom. 7. 4. 6. in these works he acteth principally as our Prophet and King. To bring us into communion with him, and into that way which he hath made through himself to righteousnesse and blessednesse, as our Prophet he teacheth, and as our King commandeth, but as Priest, Prophet and King effectuallizeth his teaching and commands by his Spirit: In this respect his commands to us of coming by faith into union with him, of adhering to him, and reposing our selves wholly upon him for righteousnesse and life, we grant that Christ as our King commanding, as far as we look to the thing commanded, viz. faith in his bloud alone for justification, is an eminent instrument of our justification; and as he effectuallizeth the merits of his death to us may not be unproperly made the object of our faith as justifying. But in his other forementioned operations upon us by his Word and Spirit, not only to teach and command, but also by his infinite power to enliven us to bring forth fruits of so great a salvation, and to walke worthy of it in all holinesse and righteousnesse, and exactnesse to fulfill all duties and works of Christian obedience; In this he is to be made indeed the object of justifying faith, or (which is the same) of sanctifying faith, yet not at it justifyeth, but as it sanctifyeth. We should not a little maim both the office of faith, and the benefits which we have by Christ, if we should restrain them all to justification. Nay Christ is made unto us as well sanctification as righteousnesse; and faith adhereth as fast to Christ for the one as the other: else is it not a legitimate but bastard faith. Neverthelesse Christ is not in the same respect the object of faith as sanctifying, and of the same as justifying.
Because this is Mr. Baxters supereminent Argument, in which himself seems most to trust, and by which so many learned Ministers do even professe themselves staggered and astonished: I shall omit nothing unexamined that he speaketh in the affirming or confirming of it, lest any should take occasion to say that the strongest part thereof is not, because it could not be, answered. Therefore have I left out nothing of what he hath said to the other Proposition; though many things were unworthy of Animadversion. To the consequent of this Proposition, he speaketh more in his next two Theses, viz. 73. & 74. what is inserted in [Page 80] these two Aphorisms, more fit to be examined under another notion; I shall here forbear to transcribe, leaving it for its proper place. What is to the present purpose, he thus expresseth,
B. Thes. 73. pa. 289. Faith only doth not justifie, in opposition to the works of the Gospell, but those works do also justifie.
Thes. 74. Both faith and works justifie in the same kind of causality, viz. as Causae sine quibus non, or mediate and improper causes; or (as Dr. Twisse) causae dispositivae, &c. The like may be said of Love, and of others in the same station.
These are but meer affirmations, and contain no reasons to confirme, only in the latter Thesis, seemingly at least, is produced the authority of that Antinomian Dr. Twisse: but with so fine a conveyance as that he may be kept in or left out at pleasure if Mr. Baxter be dealt with to make good his allegation of him. He knowes the name and authority of Dr. Twisse to be great and amiable, as an eminent servant of Christ, and patron of his truth. He concludes therefore that his assertions will be swallowed with the more facility having such an authority to sweeten and fortifie them. Therefore so interserteth his Testimony, that his Reader may suppose Dr. Twisse to affirm works to be causas dispositivas of justification. I neither have read all that Dr. Twisse hath written, neither do I so far trust my memory, as to deny it flatly and peremptorily. Yet by knowing Dr. Twisse aright, I am as confident that Bellarmine hath taught the righteousnesse of justification to be meerly by imputation, and our justification only by faith, as that Dr. Twisse hath any way affirmed works in this or any other respect to prevent or operate to our justification. If he did, why doth not Mr. Baxter quote the place, as elsewhere he doth very diligently when the Testimony of the Author makes for him? or why in the end of his Appendix, where he sucks out of Dr. Twisse and others, all that he thinks may make for his advantage, doth he not cite this so pregnant a Testimony? But he hath left to himself an evasion, that when he hath beguiled whom he can with such an authority, being found at last, he can answer his meaning is, the term or phrase, (viz. causa dispositiva) upon some other, not to this Argument, is that which Dr. Twisse useth. I finde him indeed calling works causas sine quibus non; or dispositivas salutis, of our salvation or glorification, never of our justification: And so far is he from attributing [Page 81] under this term what Mr. Baxter attributeth, that he seriously abandoneth it. So he expresseth himself, Vind. Lib. 1. Par. 2. Sect. 2. Proxime finem. Vix majus p [...]ceatum est quam justificationem quaerere ex operibus: and almost in the next words, Nullum opus Deo gratiu [...] & acceptius est, quam sibi & justitiae suae in negotiosalutis renunt iare, et in Christo unice confidere. But come we now to that which he speaks for confirmation, the first part consists in prefacing. His own conscience telling him that it is a Pharisaicall, Popish principle which he hear positeth, he forelayes his Proeme to the proofe thereof thus;
B. I know this is the doctrine that will have the loudest out-cries raised against it: and will make some cry out, Heresie, Popery, Socinianism, and what not? For mine own part the searcher of hearts knoweth, that not singularity, affection of novelty, nor any goodwill to Popery, provoketh me to entertain it; but that I have earnestly sought the Lords direction upon my knees, before I durst adventure on it, and that I resisted the light of this conclusion as long as I was able; but a man cannot force his own understanding, if the evidence of truth force it not, though he may force his pen or tongue to silence or dissembling. That which I shall do further is to give you some proofs, &c.
First, here a word to such Ministers as being more the disciples of men then of Christ, and better versed in Sophistry then Divinity, do only not deify Mr. Baxter, maintaining all his doctrine in this book to be the doctrine of all the Protestant Churches. Why do they anger the man in charging him with so low a spirit, that he hath nothing but what is common with him and the most eminent lights in the Church? will not he be offended at it? doth he not here in some kind pronounce himself a dissenter? and that what he here asserteth is that which the Protestant Churches detest as heresie? doth not himself even before experience what acceptance his book would have, as it were proclaime himself in this point departed from us into the Tents of Papists and Socinians?
As to Mr. Baxter, 1. We have before granted to him that he gives no cause of suspicion that affection of singularity and novelty hath drawn him into this opinion. For he is not herein singular, nor is his doctrine new, but such as the Phari [...]ees in Christs time, and the false Apostles in the Apostles times, and the worst of Hereticks from thence unto our dayes have unanimously pestered [Page 82] the Church with. Yet in this I appeal to Mr. Baxter whether some affection of repute by being a deviser of a new way and new Arguments for the confirmation of this old Popish, Socinian doctrine hath not possessed him?
2. Whether the searcher of all hearts witnesse for him that no good will to Popery in generall provoked him to trouble the Church with his doctrine, I will not judge: But if good will to this part of Popery that consists in justification by works, (unto which if all the rest garbage of Popery be compared, it is insufficient to counterpoise it in mischief) did not provoke, let him shew what hath provoked him to it. Is it in hatred to the Papists that he hath laboured so stoutly to maintain their Kingdome? Is not this the pillar of all Popery? and if this be demolished, what is there of all their heresies but will fall after?
3. As to his sincerity in this businesse in following conscientiously his judgment; I know, I finde in my self, the heart is deceitfull above all things and desperately evill, who can finde it out? I search only my own not anothers heart, that is out of my orb, and beyond my fathom. But I should give the more credence to Mr. Baxter speaking of his own sincerity in this businesse, did I not see him forsaking the fountain, and digging to himself cisterns, deriving from every puddle of Papists, Arminians, Socinians and Atheists, both his tenents, and all fallacious Sophistry to maintain them, leaving the pure word of God, and tossing it either from him, or for himself at his pleasure.
4. As for his prayer if presented to God after his own principles as an Act helping to justifie him, and no further, through the mediation of Christ, then as the same mediation take efficacy (as to him) from his own works and worth; no marvell if the justice of God flung it back as dirt in his face, and left him to that de luding spirit which worketh by those false Apostles whom he had studied so many years, having spent but a few days upon the Scriptures as himself confesseth. So the Pharisee after his praying departed from the presence of God, unjustifyed, unregarded. Such devout Protestations may possibly take impression upon the weak and ignorant: But Satan in the vizzard of an Angell of light, and Satan in his own ghastly visage, is to them that are strong in the faith, the same Satan and alike shunned. Besides when men rest not satisfyed with the sacred truth of the Word, but will as it were rake the very dung of Gods enemies [Page 83] for quaintifies of knowledge which the Word hath not; if they are blacked no marvell, for their delight is to dwell with Colliers. And God hath threatned to send them strong delusions that they should beleeve a lie, &c. 2 Thes. 2. 10, 11, 12. Yeelding them up to waxe worse, deceiving others, being themselves deceived or self-deceivers, 2 Tim. 3. 13.
He promiseth some proofs of what he saith, and one argument he puts in this explication, thus,
An Herculean Argument, as soon may a man wrest the Club out of Hercules his hand, as make void the conclusion which is inserred by this Argument. If my eye discerneth colours upon condition it look diligently upon them, and my hand doth inrich me upon condition that it stretcheth forth it self to receive a Princes beneficence, and my heel be put into the same condition with my eye and my hand, then my heel doth discerne colours in the same way with my eye, and enrich me in the same way with my hand: But both parts of the Antecedent are as firmly proved before, as the both parts of Mr. Baxters antecedent. Ergo the conclusion is as very a blank as Mr. Baxters.
If Mr. Baxters oft saying of the same thing doth prove the thing to be true, then this cannot be denyed to be a truth. For who can number the times that he hath kissed and spit in the mouth of this Ashteroth Condition, setting it up cheek-mate with Christ himself in justifying us. For Thes. 56. he yoaks together Christ and faith in the same way of causality to justification, and here and every where faith and obedience or works, so that Christ, faith and works are collaterals in justifying, how? as they meet together in this one Great Colossus condition, or causa sine qua non. Christ is the condition, (even in his satisfaction) and faith is the condition, and works is the condition: so that Condition (it seems by him) justifyeth more then works, or faith, or Christ: for neither works alone, nor faith alone, nor Christ, alone doth justifie. But this mouth-almighty Condition, when like Bel and the Dragon, she hath eaten up and swallowed into her bowels, Christ, faith, and works; doth of, and by her self alone justifie, such a Justifyer, and such a Justification. I should speak more seriously, [Page 84] if Mr. Baxter had ministred to me more serious matter whereof to treat. Chaffe is wont to be exposed to the winde when the Wheat as more substantiall is allotted to a more substantiall handling.
The rest of his Arguments which he brings in other Theses, I shall examine by themselves.
CHAP. VI.
The fift Argument answered, and the dispute of St. James Cap. 2. opened, and the Reasons drawn thence to prove justification by works, refuted.
THe former was Mr. Baxters great Argument, the fift in number is like to it, yet not so much hugged and honoured by him as the former, because that was his own, born of his own brain: This he takes up as fully formed by the Papists to his hand and use, so that he is not to have the entire honour of it, but every petty Monk and Sacrificer will challenge his part therein. This is indeed their great and sole Argument against the Protestants. The rest they bring is unworthy the hearing. This therefore Mr. Baxter here, that the Popish cause may stand and ours fall, Atlas-like, puts his shoulder and whole strength under to support.
B. Thes. 75. pa. 292. The plain expression of St. James should terrifie us from an interpretation contradictory to the Text, and except apparent violence be used with his Chap. 2. 21, 24, 25. &c. it cannot be doubted but that a man is justifyed by works and not by faith only. Eusebius, Hierom.
I mean not here to seek an evasion by pleading that this Epistle in the primitive times of the Church, before the controversie about justification by faith, or by works and faith was in agitation, was questioned by some and denyed by others to be of divine authority. Or that Erasmus, Luther, Musculus, Cajetan a Cardinall of the Romish some great Divines of these latter times have not received it into the Canon; or that among those that embrace it as Canonicall, it is much disputed what James is the [Page 85] Authour of it? For (besides the Syriac interpreter that weakly attributes it to James the brother of John who in the cradle of the Church was slain with the sword by Herod, Act. 12. 1, &c.) some name James the son of Alpheus the Brother of Christ, and one of the 12 Apostles: others, James sirnamed Oblias, or the Just, (of whom J [...]sephus writeth, the Author of it; & adhuc sub judice lis est: Or that the matter, method and (if I may so speak) spirit of this Epistle, sounds not in one harmony with the rest parts or books of the new Testament, but rather after the writings of the books under the old Covenant, or after such as stuck still to the old Covenant, as Philo Judaeus and others: (all which Mr. Baxter better knows to have been by many objected, then I know how satisfactorily to answer it) By these and other reasons some have expunged it from the Catalogue of Scriptures which are of divine inspiration, and have reduced it into the kind and number of writings that are usually termed Ecclesiasticall; in a good sense, not disagreeing any where from the Canon, yet not of that dignity as to be accepted as a part of the Canon it self.
I shall leave these things to be disputed by others, and examine the testimonies which Mr. Baxter hence alleageth what and how far it makes for him, as the authority of the holy Ghost himselfe.
Here it is remarkable that Mr. Baxter who followes the Jesuits every foot and inch in the interpreting of this and all other Scriptures from which he would with them set up justification by works, like a man made all of zeal, perks up to terrifie us from an interpretation contradictory to the text, and from using apparent violence to it; implying that all the Protestant Churches and Saints which have stood in the defence of the faith of Christ against the Papists, now almost 200. years, have dealt thus sacrilegiously in robbing this Text of its due sense: And the Fryers and Jesuites alone (good men) have stood up as the fast friends of Christ, to maintain this truth of Christ, and the spirit and meaning of this Scripture, against the violation of the sacrilegious hands of these hereticall Protestants: And that himself is now at last stirred up by the Spirit that hath wrought so powerfully upon the Jesuits, to vindicate and set forth the true meaning of this Text, with the same fidelity and sincerity which they his Masters have used before him. Therefore to excite all [Page 86] men to gaze on his ingenuity and sincerity, and to admire him as the one alone man among Protestants raised up to undeceive all the Churches that have so long strayed from the holy mother Church, he thus like wisedome it self uttereth his voice.
After this his protestation of his integrity, zeal and tendernesse of conscience in interpreting Scriptures, and the impression which he feels or feigns in his soul which the heretick Protestants have made by not expounding this Scripture in the same words which the Jesuits do: Let us see with what tendernesse and fear himself in the next words speaketh of it.
He that in all this can see one least spark of that professed sincerity which he protesteth in himself and requires in others worthier then himself, let him make it out: I can see nothing else but fraud, doublenesse and falshood.
1 When he sayeth that it is the very scope of a Chapter, and not only some one phrase that here holds forth justification by works before God, it is the same which he hath from Bellarmine, Bel. lib. 1. de justif. cap. 15. Scopus Jacobi (saith he) fuit demonstrare fidem veram atque Catholicam [Page 87] ad salutem sine operibus non sufficere, &c. i. e. The scope of James [in his Chapter] was to shew that a true and Catholick faith is not sufficient without works to salvation; and with as much truth and fidelity doth this man speak it, as did the other from whom he learned it. This being no more the scope of this Chapter or of James in it, then to deny the salvation which is by Christ, and to set on men to seek it by the Law.
2 That this phrase of justification by works [in Mr. Baxters sense] is no whit dissonant from any other Scripture, whether he means difference in sound, or difference in substance, is as very a paradox, as if he had said that contradictories are not dissonāt. For if this doctrine after Mr. Baxters sense must stand as true doctrine, and for the Gospell of Christ, then must we cast away almost if not altogether all the other Scriptures of the new Testament as hereticall; and limit our selves to this alone, and to Mr. Baxters glosse in it to learn true righteousnesse and the way to life. For how vain, empty and audacious his annihilating of Pauls doctrine about justification with one breath is, we shall see in its proper place; and finde that he destroyes the genuine scope and meaning of that Apostle in many of his Epistles to sacrifice all▪ to his imaginary scope of James in some few words here delivered.
3 When he tels us of wresting and making a Creed, &c. he proclaims to the World that all the Protestant Churches which have constantly defended justification by faith without works, i. e. by Christ Jesus apprehended by faith without concurrence of works, &c. have wrested and violated the Scripture, set up a Creed of their own in despight of the Scriptures speaking to the contrary. For what he cunningly and seemingly fastens upon one Mr. Pemble, he layes to the charge of all the Protestant Churches, there being not one of them that hath not at all times held and spoken the same things with Mr. Pemble. And so pronounceth the faith of Christ to have been no where sound, but within the confines of Rome; and that the Protestant Churches are all hereticall and apostates, have rejected the faith of Christ, and sought righteousnesse and salvation by a Creed of their owne making.
4 Neverthelesse his sincerity in the very next words after his such stout pleading for the Papists, fals foul with them for making the Scripture a nose of wax: to delude the simple with an [Page 88] opinion that he hath no confederacy with them. Yet
5 Holds them fast by the hand telling us that he will joyn with them and follow James in their sense and interpretation to seek justification by works and not by faith only.
But let us come to the text it self and see whether St. James will be brought to dance after St. Bellarmine and Mr. Baxter with all their piping and charming, and in this, the sincerity of these two great champions in the interpreting of this Scripture will appear.
First for the scope of the Words, who can better expresse it then the Author? This himself declares to be the subversion of the false confidences of shadie beleevers, who being destitute of true faith gloried in the meer shadow and profession of it, as if it should justifie and save them, though it never wrought to their Sanctification, but left them to every good work reprobate. Against this pernicious delusion he bends the whole drift of his dispute, and proveth such a faith to be vain, dead, devillish; and on the contrary, that the faith which justifyeth is lively and operative in good works. This will be manifested in examining the severall passages of the dispute, specially to him that will take the labour of reading but some of the many hundreds of our Divines that have answered the Arguments of the Papists hence deduced; either in their Commentaries upon this Epistle, or in handling this Controversie against them. And herein some of the learned among the Papists are more plyant to obey and lesse stubborn to resist the truth then Mr. Baxter. The scope of the Apostle (saith Cajetan) is to shew, quod non fide sterili sed foecunda justific [...]mur; i. e. that we are justifyed not by a barren but fruitfull faith. Thus do we finde James himself sta [...]ing the question, ver. 14. What doth it profit, though a man say he hath faith and hath not works, shall his faith save him? It is against the saying and false professing of faith, that hath no force or life to bring forth good works, and not against faith ind [...]ed which worketh by love that the Apostle here argueth, denying to it any efficacy to Justification: this is the thing which we shall finde him prosecuting throughout his whole disputation: and on the contrary part affirming faith which is living and active to good works to be also alive and effectuall to justifie. This will more properly offer it self to be made out in the next place. Let us then come to examine Mr. Baxters dispute from the authority of James; Pag. 293.
This he goeth about to doe by dashing in peeces all whatsoever hath been sayd by all or any of the Protestant Churches or Writers against the Papists in expounding this Text, thus.
This is his shewing the clearnesse of that in St. James, viz. to anathematize all that any of the faithfull servants and Martyrs of the Lord Jesus within the Protestant Churches have spoken in the Exposition therof▪ that it may bee embraced by all after the Catholick that is Romish interpretation. Two things wee except against in this his clarifying passage. 1. That being very good both at confounding and dividing, as hee sees either to make for his turn, hee doth heer by dividing seek to pervert, as erewhile by confounding we found him to obscure the truth. Why doth he make two opinions, two expositions heer of that which is but one? Hath he learned of Ma [...]chiavel so to deal in spiritualls, as hee prescribes in Politicks, Divide & impera? Why els should hee set at division those that are united? Or make them to fight one against another, who speak the same things? Or set in opposition Iohn against Calvin, and Calvin against Iohn? Or David against Pareus, and Pareus against David? And so other thousands, when every of these gives both these expositions which he mentioneth, in one. Possibly as to some particulars in this question he may meet with some particular Writer urging the one onely, but he knowes that most, and those not the meanest, make use of both, as shalbe shewed. 2. Wee except against him that in alleadging the [...]e expositions, he doth subtlely hide the grounds upon which the Protestants doe fix these their expositions. And thus he exposeth them to the vulgar at least, as groundless dreams, shifting evasions, wherof no reason can be given on our part: That all the reason lieth▪ on the Papists part, with whom therfore he hath joyned. Is this Christian, or Jes [...]iticall dealing? Would it not bee expected from him that professeth himselfe a Protestant and zealous Presbyter [...] [...]n▪ when [...]e divides himselfe [Page 90] utterly from them, all them, of whose side hee professeth himselfe to be, at least to set down their opinions and grounds thereof, and to confute those grounds; and not (as hee doth) deny and fight against the conclusion without speaking a word to the premisses.
What he therefore fraudulently omits I shall heer supply, rendring the expositions as our Divines give it and the grounds of it, and not as Mr. Baxter corrupts it. We have found him acknowledging, that if it be but some one phrase dissonant from the ordinary language of Scripture, that one must bee reduced to the rest, and not all the rest to that one. pa. 297. So stands the case heer. The ordinary language, yea drift of the New Testament, is to hold forth Justification by faith without works (as wee have seen before) and every one that will but consideratively reade as other the Evangelists, so chiefly the Gospell written by Iohn the Apostle, the Acts of the Apostles, the Epistles to the Romans, to the Galatians, to the Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, and Hebrews, especially and above the rest, and withall from the rest it must needs appeare. This one passage in one Epistle hath a sound of differing & but a soūd Must al be reduced to this or this to all? According to the rule therefore allowed by Mr. Baxter himselfe, our Divines give an interpretation to this one passage, that may declare it, (though it hath a seeming,) yet not to have a reality of dissent from the rest. Because if this be Canonicall and from the H. G the H. G. cannot contradict himselfe.
In expounding this dispute of James, therefore the Protestants take notice of a two fold homonymy of words, one in the word Faith, the other in the word Justifying, both which Paul and James use, but use them the one in one, and the other in another sence, so that though they seeme somwhat to differ in words, yet in sense they speake the same thing.
1. They say as when Paul speakes of Faith to justification, by Faith he meanes a true and lively Faith, which fetcheth power from the merits of Christ to Iustifie, and from the spirit of Christ to Sanctifie: so Iames here battereth under the name of Faith, a bare profession and boasting of Faith, which some Hypocrites leaned on to Iustifie them, being wholly destitute of Faith indeed that is alive, and effectuall to draw from Christ matter both to Iustification and Sanctification. 2. They say that as Paul takes the word Iustifying for remission and absolution before God, so James takes it (as oft as he requires here works to Iustifie) for the declaration of the truth of our Faith, and Iustification before men.
Yet let not this their distinction (if it may fitly be so termed) and exposition bee taken up unlesse it hath sufficient grounds from the Text to beare it up. I shall begin first with the latter, because Mr. Baxter there begins. That Justification by works is by James understood the declaring us to man, to have true Faith and to be Iustified by it, they bring these reasons to prove. 1 James himselfe even in expresse words affirming it ver. 18 Shew me thy Faith without thy workes, and I will shew thee my Faith by my works, where he tels us that by Iustifying, he means the shewing or declaring our Faith, and Justification (not to God) but one to another. And thus he denieth Faith which is not Shewed by works, to Iustifie i. e. to Shew or declare us to men Iustified 2. ver. 21, where he saith, was not Abraham our Father justified by works, when he had offered Isaack his Son upon the Altar? doth he speake of Gods Iustifying Gen. 15. 6. him, or declaring him to be justified, unto men? Not the former, for God had justified him by Faith many yeares before, and there was no di [...]uption (according to Mr Baxters doctrine) in the intervall, by any apostacy made by Abraham, that of justified he became unjustified; and needed here to be justified an [...]w. How then was hee justified by offering his Sonn? Can there be any other way not repugnant to reason devised, but this; that God here by proving and bearing him up in so searching a proof and Temptation, to shew so matchless an act of obedience, did declare to the world that his Faith was in sincerity, his feare and love unfained, so that all must be restrayned from charging him with selfe respects and Hypocrisy, in all the professions that he made towards God; Or what less is to be drawn from those word [...] from Heaven Gen: 22 12. upon this act of Abrahams obedience, Now I know that thou fearest God seeing thou hast not witheld thy Son, thy onely Son from me? Did not God know what was, what himselfe had wrought in Abrahams hart before this tryall of him? doth he need outward actions to manifest to him what is in the heart within? M. B. so much cleavs to thē that make all things w ch God doth to flow from his prescience that he will not ungod God so much as to deny that he knew as perfectly before as after tryall: Why saith he then, now I know, but to intimate that now he had given a strong evidence both to the present and future generations to know that God knew, and therby to convince men of all ages that they also must know the truth of Abrahams Faith, feare, and justification? 3. The same might bee said of Rahabs justification by workes, in receiving the Messengers, [Page 92] and letting them forth another way. ver. 25. Did such a work as this justifie her before God? or obtain to her remission of sins, and deliver her from everlasting vengeance? when there cannot be the least probable conjecture that shee had then any Faith in Christ, or had ever heard of a Christ to come? Then let us disclaime that Fabulam de Christo (as one of the Popes termed the Gospell) Righteousness is by workes without Faith, without Christ, and Stapletons glosse [...]apleton, Anrid. p. 82 83. upon Pauls Iustificamur fide, i. e. non abs (que) side, we are justified by Faith i. e. not without Faith, because Faith is necessary to justification, though not without works sufficient to it; must be rejected as too Evangelicall. And then also how shal Mr: Baxters Thesis not fal which makes workes collateralls with Faith in Christ to justification? workes can do it without Christ. But if all this intrench upon Blasphemy, then was shee justified by workes to men, to the Israelites, who by this Act toward them had so farr evidenced her fidelity to them and their cause, that thereupon shee was taken into Covenant with them, delivered from the ruine which befell Iericho, and after as it were adopted or naturallized into the Commonwealth of Israell. Ye have one part of the exposition and the grounds of it, which Mr: Baxter concealed, that the unwary reader might despise it as groundlesse. Mr: Baxter opposeth it, tell [...] us it is false, and it may appeare thus.
B. p. 294. The Worlds Iustification frees us but from the worlds Accusation, to which it is opposed: And therefore it is but either a Iustification from Mans Laws; or else a particular Iustification of us in respect of some particular Facts; or else an usurped Iudgement and sustification: for they are not constituted our Iudges by God: and therefore wee may say with Paul, it is a small thing with me to be judged of you or of mans judgement. And so a small thing to be justified by men from the accusations of the Law of God.
But the justification in James, is of greater moment as appears in the Text. For 1. It is such as salvation dependeth on. ver. 14.
2. It is such as followeth only a saving Faith. But the world may as well justifie us when we have no faith at all.
I therfore affirm, 1. That the world is no lawfull judge of our righteousness before God, &c. 2. Nor a competent capable judge and cannot passe any certain true sentence, &c. 3. If they could, yet works are no certain Medium, or evidence, [Page 93] wherby the world can know us to bee righteous. For there is no outward work which an hypocrite may not perform: and inward works they cannot discern, &c. So that if it bee not certain that the Text speaketh of justification before God, I scarce know what to be certain of.
It were more tolerable and excusable for me to leave the grounds of one single man giving his private interpretation of this Scripture, despised unexamined, and unanswered; than for him so to deale with all the Churches of Christ: But I will not be a follower of him that followes not Christ in lowliness, and his Precept in selfe-deniall.
His dispute here is two fold; 1 to prove that Iames speaks not, of the declaration of our justification before men. 2. To prove that he speaks of our justification before God, when he mentioneth justification by works.
To the former all that he saith is Sophisticall and Fallacious. For if wee grant that by the World hee meanes the whole generation of men both good and evill (which yet can hardly bee drawne from his dispute, which to make our assertion odious would make it out as relating only to the wicked of the world, that these must be the alone Judges,) Notwithstanding his whole Argumentation is a meer [...] a waving the question with a false assumption that by Justification before men, we meant a raising of a Tribunall upon earth, in opposition to Gods in heaven, there to set up men to be judges, and to passe sentence of justification and remission of sinnes one upon another, according to the evidence of every ones works. The falshood wherof hee proves by the illegality of such a judicature, and incompetency of the judges, and evidence for it. And what is this but a Devill of his own raysing and laying again? For what one rationall man in any of the Reformed Churches ever dreamed of such a justification? All that wee understand heerby is but a declaration and discovery of the tree by its fruits, of the state of a man before God, that he hath justified or not justified him, according as we see the fruits of justification, i. e. the works of sanctification following or not following the profession of faith. And all this not by a judiciall sentence given for or against any, nor by the judgement of infallible faith or knowledge; but in the judgement of charity alone, which hopeth all things, beleeveth all things, thinketh no evill, (except by strong evidence it bee drawn to it) 1. Co. 13. 5. 7.
In fighting against this doctrine Mr. Baxter fighteth against Christ, against the Holy Ghost the Author of it, not onely heer, but elsewhere also. By their fruits ye shall know them, saith our Saviour, Mat. 7. 16. By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples, if yee love one another, Io 13. 35. that the World may know that thou hast loved them, Io: 17. 28. He that is of God heareth us, he that is not of God heareth us not, hereby know we the Spirit of Truth and the Spirit of Error, 1. Io 4. 6. Let your light so shine forth before others that they seeing your good workes may glorifie your Father which is in Heaven, Ma: 5. 16. I magnifie my office if by any meanes I may provoke my bretheren &c. and save some of them. Ro. 11. 14. By your orderly carriage. &c. the unbeleever shall be convinced, fall downe worship God, and report that God is in you of a truth, 1. Cor. 14. 24. 25. That he that is of the contrary part may be ashamed, having nothing evill to say of you, Tit. 2. 8. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles, that whereas they speake evill of you, they may by your good works which they see, glorifie God, 1 Pet. 2. 12. Because by this deed thou hast given great occasion to the enemies of God to blaspheme, 2. Sam. 12. 14. God hath begun, and will perfect in you the good worke, as it is meet for me to judge of you, because, &c. Phil. 1. 6▪ 7. I am perswaded of you things that accompany salvation, because of your works and labours of love, &c. Heb. 6. 9, 10. Wee give thanks to God for you, &c. since we heard of your Faith in Christ Jesus, and love to all the Saints, for the hope which is laid up for you in Heaven, Col. 1. 3, 4 5, To the Saints which are at Rome, Corinth, &c. and hundreds of the like Scriptures which testifie the declaration, such a declaration of the Faith, Saintship, Justification and salvation of others, by the evidence of their works, that we ought, that it is a sinne in men by the judgement of Charity not to acquiesce therein: And on the contrary part, testifying the want of such an evidence to be an occasion given to all men to reject our Faith and justification in the profession thereof as spurious and vaine. Against all these Mr. Baxter excepreth, pronouncing that mans judgement herein is illegall▪ incompetent, and the evidence insufficient, therefore to make use of any judgement or discerning in this kind, is usurpative. Doth he herein fight against men, or against God? Suppose that the event in any thing prove contrary to our judgement, yet is there not sin in such judgement, while we follow Christs Rule, and to be deceived by Charity rightly ordered, if it may be called a deceivednesse, yet is it no sinfull deceivednesse. What hee produceth [Page 95] from the Apostle, Ʋnto me it is a small thing to be judged of you, or of mans judgement, &c. 1 Cor. 4. 3. is nothing subservient to his turne: For the Apostle there speaketh of their unjust Censures of him, besides and against Christs Rule, the Rule of Charity, (from which while they erred, their judgement was not to be regarded) and in relation to the future judgement which followes not mans, but Christs owne knowledge of us. Thus have we found one part of his arguing vaine and wide from the scope, in going about to prove that James his Justification by works is not to be taken for the declaring of us to men to be truly justified.
His second dispute is to prove that this Justification by Works is to be understood of our justifying by works at Gods Tribunall. His Reasons to prove it are partly in his words before transcribed, partly in a new supply thereunto added. The first Reason in the former is,
No mans immoderate prolixity and tediousness hath ever so much troubled mee, as this mans pretended affectation of conciseness and brevity. By it, when hee speakes nothing, he gets the advantage to bee thought of fooles, that he speaketh great and mysticall things. Were it not that I regard such as are too apt to run after his whistle though they know not his tune, I should rather kick at such Delphicke mystericall passages of his, than take them up to looke on them. If James here take not justifying and saving for the same thing, then (to use Mr. Baxters words) I am not certaine what to be certaine off. So that when he saith it is such a justification as salvation dependeth on, it is one as if hee had said it is such a justification as justification dependeth on, or such a salvation as salvation dependeth on. The Apostle there speaks of a dead and barren Faith, of a profession not a being of Faith, and by an interrogation bearing the force of a strong Negation, by saying, Can Faith, [or the saying that he hath Faith,] save him? he means, and saith, it cannot save him: and that is the same with him▪ as if he had said, it cannot justifie him. Here wee have indeed an idle dreame of Faith that cannot save. But a Iustification that cannot justifie, or cannot save, or can justifie and not save, is as far from James as neare to Mr. Baxter.
That the justification of the New Covenant in which God evidenceth by faith to us that we are justified in Christ, or the justification which consisteth in the evidencing by works to men the truth both of our Faith and Gospel Justification, so far that in charity they are to regard us as truly beleeving, and truly justified; do both follow either saving faith, or that which in charity to them that profess it, men are to account a saving faith: none denieth. But it will not hence follow, that works justifie us at Gods Judgement seat, because they follow faith that declareth and evidenceth us to our selves to be so justified. He comes with a new supply pa. 296.
1. Had the Action been kept secret from men, it could not have justified him before God or men. Not before God, for no actions as actions are the ground of his justifying us (as hath bin already abundantly proved.) Nor before men: for this action could not have declared the truth of his faith to them that never heard of the man or his Action. But God having ordeyned him to bee a Father of the Faithfull, and pattern of all beleevers to the worlds end, and to confer Blessedness with Abraham, upon all that walk in the steps of the Faith of our Father Abraham. Ro. 4. 9. 12. hath recorded this Action of his, to justifie and magnifie the truth of his Faith to all that in all ages shall beleeve, and to incite them by his patterne by the like eminent obedience to justifie their Faith also to others.
2. We are not to enquire what the evil world will judge of such an Action, but whether Abraham, or rather the spirit of God working in and by Abraham, did not give in this Action a sufficient demonstration to convince the evill world (much more the saints chosen out of the world) of the truth of his Faith. Which conviction if the evill world will carnally neglect or cursedly oppose, it shall leave them the more inexcusable in the day of Judgement.
This is one of his extravagancies. He hath all this while disputed of Justification by works: what he cannot prove of works, now he proves of Faith. James saith, Abraham beleeved God, and it was imputed to him for righteousness. Was it imputed to him of God, [Page 97] for a partiall or for a perfect righteousness? If but unto righteousness in part, let him prove it, or stand guilty before God for perverting his word. If in the whole, then is there no place left for works to challenge a part. Or let him produce from James the like sentence of works imputed to Abraham to Righteousness; else he puts the handle of his Argument into our hands to retort it upon him. Abrahams Faith was imputed to him [by the testimony of Iames] to righteousness; Ergo [by the testimony of Iames] works were not so imputed to him.
So [his Epiphonem] I leave that interpretation to sleep, is the only sound thing that he hath spoken to this question. For he hath said nothing that hath any power to awaken much less to rowze it: So that it may sleep, and that securely and in safety, because they are but false Alarms that he soundeth against it.
The second interpretation (as Mr. Br. terms it) or as it is indeed the second homonymy or different sense of words, wherin our Divines affirm Iames and Paul to speak in sound one, but in meaning disagreeing eyther from other, is in the word [Faith] as hath been sayd. Paul when he attributes justification to Faith without works, means a living faith fruitfull in good works. Iames where he denies Faith without works to justifie, means a dead faith, a meer profession of faith that hath neither life nor being, much less fruitfulness in good works. That Iames takes the word Faith in this sense appears by these Reasons from the Text it selfe.
1. From the scope of his dispute which we shall find to be (as I sayd) to beat down the presumption of carnall professors, who reposed the hope of salvation wholly upon a bare profession of faith, though the faith wherof they boasted had no vertue to sanctification & obedience; and to prove that alone to be a justifying Faith which is alive to good works. This even Cajetan himself one of the pillars Cajetan in Jacob. of the Romish Church, giveth as the scope of the Text, as I have shewed; & he further expresseth himself thus: Adverte hic prudens Lector, quod Iacobus non sentit Fidem sine operibus mortuum esse &c. Quoniam constat nos per fidem justificari, etiam sine operibus, sed sentit fidem sine operibus, i. e. renuentem operâri, vel non paratam operari esse mortuum, esse vanam, & non justificare. That is, Let the prudent Reader heer note, that Iames means not that faith is dead without works [to accompany and help it in justifying us] for it is evident that faith justifieth, even without works: but his meaning is, that faith without works, that is, that refuseth or is not in a readiness [Page 98] to good works, is dead, vain, and justifieth not. Thus he makes the scope of James heer to prove that an idle and fruitless faith is not a saving or justifying faith. So that we find it easier in this argument to find the truth from the very Papists than from Mr. Br.
2. From the 14. ver. where James putting the question of faith without works, saith not indefinitely, can faith, but annexeth the article to it, [...], can this faith save? Is there power in such a faith to save, which hath no power to sanctifie? In like maner as heere, ver. 20. What in our Translation is rendred faith [absolutely] is there also in the Originall put with the restriction of the same article [ that] faith which is without works is dead.
3. From the attributes that he gives to the faith to which he denieth justification, viz. a dead faith, ver. 17. 20. 26. A faith of Devils, ver. 19. But a dead and Devillish faith are not a true Gospel faith, but at the best a figment and counterfeit thereof.
4. From the similitude by which he illustrateth his disputation: If a man in a pretence of charity, speaks comfortable words to his hungry and naked brother, Alas poor soul be cloathed, be filled, but ministreth nothing to him for his refreshing; will any call that flourish of words true charity? Is it any more then a paint therof? So also of him that saith hee hath faith, but evidenceth it not by its fruits &c. The verball faith doth no more profit to justification, than the verball charity to sanctification. If one of these in the mind of the Author be true charity, then according to the minde of the Author also, the other is true Faith,
5. From the object of that Faith which James excludeth from Iustification, Mr. Baxter acknowledgeth that the object of justifying Faith is Christ, Thes. 66.-68. and their explication. But let him shew that James doth here expresly or impliedly, in any one passage of his dispute, make Christ the object of that Faith which he excludes from justification: or any other object than the Faith of a meer Heathen or Hypocrite may pitch upon, viz. generall truths, that there is a God &c. else let him grant from his owne principles that it is not true Faith but an unprofitable Historicall Faith (as some terme it) which is here excluded.
Thus have our writers in answer to the Papists Cavills, expressed the minde of James in this place, or rather from him selfe declared what himselfe expresseth to be his minde and this they expresse (not as Mr. Baxter perverts them) by some one, but by both of these interpretations viz. of the word [justifying] and the word [Page 99] [Faith] manifesting out of James himselfe, that as oft as in this dispute he attributes justification to works, he speaks of justification i e. the declaration or manifestation thereof to men. As when vers. 21 Abraham, and ver. 25. Rahab and ver. 24. A man indefinitely, are said to be justified by works, he meanes they are so manifested and declared by their works to us. This is a usuall phrase not only in Scripture, but in our common expressions and our common talk. I will justifie what I have spoken or done; i. e. I will declare it, make it appear to be all good, true, and just: I will justifie him from all that is layd to his charge, i. e. I will declare and prove him just and free from all that he is charged with. Again where hee denieth justification to that dead faith that worketh not by love: that by faith he means a false profession and counterfeit of, and not the true justifying faith: and who among us ever said, that to say, I have faith, (never expressing the power and fruits of it) can justifie a man? So there is nothing to be found in James crossing the Protestant, yea Evangelicall and Apostolicall conclusion, that we are justified [in our consciences before God] by faith alone without works, i. e. by a living and working, not a dead faith: yet without works can we not be declared and manifested just unto men.
That which Mr. Br. hath spoken against the former part of this interpretation, viz. justification before men, we have found to be either less or worse than nothing. To the other, viz. the denying of justification to faith that is a counterfeit, a false profession of faith, hee saith nothing; and why? because hee hath not what to say. Therfore he stifles it in darknes, will not have his Reader hear of it, for then actum est, he must run to S. Francis, or some other Saint, S. James leaves him in the mire. It is no lesse ludicrous than fallacious that he turns the state of the question another way, and danceth round about it, never comming to that which our Divines answer. 1. Having devised pag. 294. that we say James speaks of works as justifying our faith, not our persons, he doth pa. 296. goe about to prove that works justifie the person, not the faith only. And who ever denied this position? Doe not wee all say that the holy life declares the truth of faith, and therin justifieth (as to men) the professor of it from all hypocrisie in making such a profession? 2. pag. 297. he falls foul with the Ghost of sweet Mr. Pemble, for saying that by Faith and works Iames understands a working Faith. And after a sharp chiding, without examining his Reasons (the matter whereof I have before examined) at length p. 298. fetching breath, [Page 100] he offers him peace and friendship, upon condition that he will arise from the grave & say what Mr. Baxter saith. But despairing of that, and concluding, if he should rise again from the dead, he would still say with the Protestant Churches and Writers, that Fides solùm justificat non autem fides sola: Faith alone justifieth, but not that Faith which is alone [without works.] because that alone faith is not a true Faith; he 3. Makes a transition to fall out with all Protestant Churches, for attributing too much to Faith, in making it instrumentall to Iustification: that when Believers are said to receive Christ, Io. 1. 12. and to receive abundance of Grace, and of the gift of Righteousnesse, Rom. 5. 17. wee will not say they receive this Christ, this gift of his Righteousnesse to Iustification, without any receiving instrument, but make Faith the instrument by which we receive the same. p. 299. A most pernicious Doctrine to Mr. Baxters Cause. If it stand Mr. Baxters Iustification by workes in the same relation with Faith as its Concause, must needs fall and tumble downe to hell, for works will not be bowed into any instrumentality to co-operate with Faith in receiving Christ and his righteousness. When contrariwise, if we would say as he doth, and which we must take his word without any further demonstration, to bee true, then in despite of Paul and the Holy Ghost, our justification should be parted between faith and works, and Mr. Brs. new Gospel stand, the Gospel of Grace being wholly taken out of the way as unprofitable.
But in all that he saith, hee diligently keeps off from speaking a word to what our Divines say in proving from James himselfe, that he means not true faith when hee denies to the counterfeit or profession of it any efficacy to justifie; and let the conscientious Reader judge whether he doth this in zeal for Christ or against him? Let none except that possibly hee never read any of them that have thus expounded James. What one of them hath he then read? Nay I rather question what one of them hath he not read? or with what one thing is he unacquainted that any of them hath written? He is a stranger to Mr. Br. that will accuse him of little reading. Even Mr. Pemble himselfe whose words hee can almost if not altogether rehearse without book, gives it as the common interpretation of Protestant Writers, so that he cannot be ignorant of it. Yet he saith nothing to it, and saith all to what none denieth. Is this sincerity in handling the chiefe point of mans salvation? Such as hee begged from God upon his knees? or the use of that which he injoyns upon [Page 101] us▪ tenderness in the interpretation of Scriptures? But we must leave him in his own way because hee is resolute therein. Sith hee will not answer us, let us answer him, in these things which in stead of an answer to us, he would fish from the Text for himself.
We grant it doth much, yea almost all, in the justification wherof James there speaks, viz. before men. And this is that which he speaketh. ver. 21. 22. 23. of Abrahams justification by works, fulfilling that Scripture which sayth, Abraham beleeved God, and it was imputed to him for righteousness. How did his justification by works fulfill the Scripture which affirmed him to be justified by faith? but as this great work and fruit of his faith declared and manifested to men the truth of that Scripture, and the truth of his faith by which he was so many yeers before justified.
All is granted as before, of the justification before men. The profession of Faith, or to say we have Faith is not sufficient without declaring it by works so to justifie us. Therefore saith the Apostle, Shew me (if thou canst) thy Faith without thy works, and I will shew thee my Faith by my works, vers. 18.
We grant that the hypocriticall profession of Faith which James reproveth, is as all other sinne, alive to condemne the unbelievers and unjustified, but dead to the use of justifying us in our consciences before God, or outwardly before men. But that the addition of workes to such a dead Faith can make it alive to justifie a man before God, we deny, neither doth James affirm; though there may [Page 103] be some force that way to his justification before men, who are subject to failings in their judgement.
In the fourth place he findes something to say for, and something against the Analysis of Piscator and Mr. Pemble. When he would depresse it at the utmost, he can onely say that they seeme to faile in the Explication of the 22. verse about the [...], Faiths working with Abrahams workes, and perfecting by workes. In this I leave the Reader to peruse Mr. Baxter, and them whom hee opposeth, from thence to judge which party layes the surer ground of their interpretation. As to the question in hand, the working of both together to justifie and declare his faith perfect or sincere to men, doth nothing strengthen his assertion, or weaken ours.
The rest that hee hath in this Section are meere words without proofs: as also his Answer given to some Objections made on our part, and the same so curt, that the best examination of them is to leave them unexamined, untill he bring somthing to prove them. Yet what of all that hee saith heere hath, or seemes to have force to some other end, I may possibly in its proper place call it into Examination.
CHAP. VII.
Argument. Mr. Baxters sixth Argument to prove justification by works, drawne from the Identity of the Conditions of justification and salvation examined. To which are added the Rules which Protestant Writers give for the Right understanding of such Scriptures as promise eternall life to men of such works and qualifications: & an enquiry into the force of those Scriptures out of which Mr: Baxter seeks to evince that eternall life runs upon condition of works.
A Sixth Argument he draweth from the Identity of Justification and Salvation, in relation to the Condition of their procurement and attainment. He layes it thus. p. 310▪
We except here against the Terms or Phrases used in the proposition, and that 1. against that which by way of distinction, hee names our [FULL] Justification, implying thereby that there is an empty, or at least partiall, maimed, and not full Iustification before God; as by what he hath oft said before, & by his own expressing himselfe, and his meaning in the Explication of his Thesis he makes evident. The Protestants utterly deny this 1. and 2. partiall, and full, unperfect and perfect Iustification, acknowledging one onely Iustification of the New Covenant, which (as an act of God) is simul & semel, perfect, admits of no degrees or increases, though as to a mans owne apprehension and comfort it hath its increases and decreases. And whatever Mr. Baxter hath hitherto brought to proove on his part, wee have found no lesse vaine than is that which hee seekes to prove. The Scrip [...]ure is altogether ignorant of such a two fold Iustification, so that we leave it as Mr. Baxters, not Gods Iustification.
2. Against that which by the like way of distinction, hee calls our everlasting salvation, implying thereby a temporary salvation which is by Christ, in respect whereof the saved may be unsaved againe, and so the salvation which they have by Christ become transitory, not everlasting. Both these wee deny and detest as Popish, Socinian, and Arminian doctrines; what audaciousnesse is it in Mr. Baxter to name them, and not to prove them? to beguile his credulous Reader (not acquainted at all with Controversies) with an opinion that these things are knowne and granted by Protestants, who detest the hearing of them, and with unresistable arguments of Scripture oppugne the Authours of them: Wee shake off as prodigies in the Gospel Doctrine of Iustification and Salvation, the Attributes which hee giveth in that sence in which hee gives them. It is a bad Cause that seekes the support of Sophistry and fallaciousness to support it. Truth loves to bee attended with simplicity and plainnesse, Let Mr. Baxter say why he puts these two distinguishing Attributes here; the thing in question requires them not. But his rotten Cause will receive no appearance of support by this Argument without them.
Againe as to the rest of his Argument, why doth hee assume and conclude otherwise than he proposed? The Proposition speaks of a Full Iustification, and an Everlasting Salvation, but the assumption of a Salvation only, and the conclusion of a Iustification only, without their Attributes of Everlastingnesse and Fullnesse, Doth he not [Page 104] know the falaciousnesse of such Arguings? why then doth he use it? Is it because he is wholly made of it, and cannot shun it? or because his Cause is such that it cannot stand without it? that to use plaine dealing will discover the deformity of it? or for the congruity which such a kind of Argumentation hath with the cause, fallaciousnesse with falshood? Let him either propose what he assumeth and concludeth, or else assume and conclude as he proposeth. And then he must argue one of the two wayes, either first thus:
Here the arguing is regular, but it is about immaginary things, such as neither the word nor the Churches of Christ are acquainted with. Wee deny that in Mr. Baxters sence there is any Full Justification as opposite to a maimed, true Iustification, or any Everlasting Salvation in his sence, as opposite to a true spirituall salvation, that is temporary and transitory. So that his Arguing is the same as if he should argue from Jupiters thunder to Jupiters lightning, or from Bellerophons horse to Bellerophons saddle: when all these were Fictions, had their being only in immagination, not in reality.
Or secondly thus: ‘Our Justification and our salvation have the same conditions on our part. But sincere obedience is without doubt a condition of our salvation: Therefore also of our justification.’
Heere I distinguish the word salvation, that it is taken in Scriptures (when by it is meant the everlasting salvation of the whole man by Christ,) sometimes for the state of grace which wee attaine here, sometimes for the state of glory above. In the former sense we finde it, 2. Cor. 6. 2. Now is the day of salvation, Luk. 19. 9. This day salvation is come to this house: So Acts 28. 28. Rom. 11. 11. Heb. 6 9. and in other places. In which sense we are said to be saved when we effectually receive the word of Christ, and Christ Jesus to whom that word directeth for Salvation. 1 Cor. 1 18. To us that are saved, Ephes. 2. 5, 8. By Grace ye are saved. So 1 Cor. 15. 2. 2 Cor. 2. 15. 2 Tim. 1. 9 Tit. 3. 5. and elsewhere. In all which i [...] is said, wee are [not that we shalbe] saved: that Christ hath, [not that he will] save us. And the same is further confirmed in the word life, where Believers are said to have life, 1 Io. 5 12. Everlasting eternall life, Io. 3. 36 and 5. 24. and 6. 6, 47, 54. to bee [Page 105] passed from death to life, Jo. 5. 24. All which proveth a life, eternall life, and everlasting salvation, in this world that cannot be lost, but shall have its coronation in glory above. In this sense wee grant the Proposition. so far as we have before granted any condition of justification. But we utterly deny the assumption. And what Mr. Br. saith, sincere obedience is without all doubt a condition of Salvation, we affirme to be all the doubt, the whole thing in question. If it be granted of salvation in this sense, it must be granted of justification also. Because justification and salvation in this sense are not 2 things but one & the same. It being cal'd justification as we are freed & delivered from the state of misery considered as a state of sin: and salvation, as we are delivered from the same misery considered as a state of wrath and condemnation. To say therfore that our justification and salvation have the same condition, is all one as to say our justification and our justification; or our salvation and our salvation have the same conditions: and wee might as well assume and conclude hence, Obedience is a condition of our salvation, Ergo of our salvation also, as of our salvation Ergo of our justification also.
In the latter sense, if Mr. Baxter take salvation for our future glorification then we utterly deny the consequent of the proposition. It is false that he saith, justification and salvation have the same conditions. For what is a consequent of justification is an antecedent of salvation. And obedience [in Mr. Baxters sence] cannot be a condition without the position whereof God doth not justifie, because it followes justification and goeth not before it. And in this sense I have oft spoken before to the minor, and shal have occasion to speak again. But let us see how he goeth about to prove his major proposition.
How far any thing of this is true, there hath been given an Examination before, to his Explanations before.
Wee grant more in aright sense, viz▪ that in being Justified, we are saved. But what of this?
Therefore we reject both. And let Mr. Baxter look to himselfe for maintaining both.
The greater is his sin that teacheth such a way to justification as bars up the way to salvation, making it impervious and unpassable to Gods people. B. That which a man is justified by he is saved by.
This is Christs mediation, or Christ the mediator, for there is salvation in no other, nor any other name given us under Heaven by which we may be saved, Act. 4. 12. By the righteousness of [this] One, Grace came upon all to justification of life. So we are saved by Christ, and not by Condititions.
This must be, because hee will have it to bee the result of all his dispute. But he only saith it, but proves it not. All that he layeth as the foundation of this Conclusion (excepting that which in other words is the conclusion it selfe) doth not infer it. For it being granted what he saith (but sheweth not) that the Scripture saith it, that we are therefore justified that we may be saved, that there is no other way to Salvation but by justification; and that it be as derogatory to Christs righteousness, to be saved as to be justified by works; will it follow for all this, that justification and salvation have the same conditions on our part? The reasoning is one and the same in reason, as if I should thus argue: Having 1. slandered the Scriptures, and said, they say what I say, I should further proceed. Therefore are we created that we may be saved; neither is there any way to salvation but by creation: It would be as derogatory to the grace of God to be created by our own working, as to be saved by our own working: Therfore though Glorification be adding of a greater happinesse than we had by Creation, and so Creation is not enough therto, yet on our part they have the same conditions. The reasoning after the Principles of true Protestants would not in its conclusion (though in its premises) seem altogether absurd. Because they affirm the absolute will and good pleasure of God, without any conditions on mans part (in Mr. Baxters sense of Conditions) to be the alone cause both of his creating and saving us. But after Mr. Baxters Principles it would bee both absurd and odious; for so our good works must bee the condition of our Creation, because they are so of our salvation, that we must be created by ou [...] sincere obedience, b [...]cause by it we are saved▪ and that our sincere obedience must go before our Creation, because they so do before our salvation, and [Page 107] so when we have perseveringly obeyed without a being, we shall at length bee created and have a being. They that are taken with such Arguments, I doubt are in the number of them that are made to be taken, 2 Pet. 2. 12. And who can hold that which will away?
Mr. Baxter saw the wall gaping and ready to fall before hee had finished it, therfore hastens to plaister and dawb it, thus.
These are but words comparing that which is reall, with that which is but imaginary. We still deny such a full and finall justification at the bar of Christ compleating that which was but unperfect, conditionall and reversible heer upon earth. All that hee hath said to prove it hath been examined and found insufficient. We look for proof indeed, and meet with nothing but words. They that are once possessed of it by faith, are fully and finally possessed of it.
His peremptory and bold conclusion is now come (even upon his own grounds) to [I think;] and why had hee not kept his thoughts to himself untill he had known reason enough for rationall men to have concluded with him: yet upon this thought he addeth, and why not to our entire continued justification upon earth? To which we need say no more in answer but this, because wee must not build any Article of our Faith upon the thoughts of men, but upon the word of God.
To the objection which hee supposeth some may make, and to which he answereth before it be made against him, I say no more, but let him answer our reall not imagined objections; and such we shall so long defend untill by the light of the word wee finde them unworthy of defence. The Scripture which hee brings to prove the persever [...]nce of Faith to be the condition of our persevering justification runs thus, Heb. 3. 14. We are made partakers of Christ, if wee hold the beginning of our confidence stedfast to the end. Here perseverance is made a declaration and evidence of the truth of our Faith, and of our participation of or Communion with Christ at present, not a condition either of our justification or the perseverance therof. By this it shalbe evidenced that ye are truly in Christ, and just [...]fied by him, if ye persevere, for th [...]se that fall away w [...]re but seemingly, never [Page 108] truly in Christ. They that are his in truth, continue so to the end. Like that v 6. We are the house of Christ, if we hold fast our confidence to the end, compared with 1 Jo. 2. 19. They went out from us, but they were not of us, for if they had been of us, they would without doubt have continued with us; but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us. So the perseverance; or not persevering of these would manifest who had been, & who had not been truly pertakers of Christ, and the house of his habitation, not the condition of their persevering justification, for then should it be for a time at least the condition of the perseverance of their justification who were never truly pertakers of Christ, and consequently in Mr. Brs. phrase, had never a beginning of justification.
Hitherto of what Mr. Baxter hath said to confirme the Proposition. Hence he descendeth to prove the Assumption, That Obedience is an undoubted condition of our salvation. That wee may not here beat the winde, we do first understand his obedience to be the obedience of good workes, else is it the same with Faith, as I have shewed, and that of Faith in Scripture sense, and not in Mr. Baxters large unscripturall, and uncircumscriptive definition. So much also many of the Scripture testimonies which hee alleadgeth here & elswhere (which I shal reduce to this place) declare. Yea himself in many places before hath set to his hand that it is his meaning.
2. We understand him here by Salvation to mean that which he a little before calls glorification, and not simply the salvation which is one and the same with Iustification.
But 3. We except against him, that whereas without ceasing he beats our eares even into deafnesse with that Roman▪ Rampant, Exotick word [CONDITION,] scarce uttering a sentence which he doth not blesse or curse with it: though hee know the holy Scripture hath upon this Argument not the least mention of it, that wee might thence learn; that it is but borrowed from the Papists, and improved much by the Arminians, with whose common language through his familiarity with both parties, hee is more acquainted than we can be who have no trafficque with them: yet he will not fully make knowne to us the meaning of the word, whether the signification thereof be boundlesse, or within what limits it is bounded? whether it comprehends under it all the necessary Antecdents of glorification, or no? if so, whether it comprehends not under it as well much disobedience as obedience, and works of the Divel as of God, as the Cansas sine quibus non, we shall obtaine salvation by [Page 109] Christ? Or whether by Conditions we must understand onely Duties? and if so, whether those alone which go before, or else also those that accompany and follow justification and glorification? And withall, whether those duties as morall or as spirituall? because his Divinity being most drawne from naturall Philosophers and Theologers, mounts not above Morality, tels us nothing of spirituall things that the Gospel wholly treats of, shuns the very word [Spiriall] as a rock on which all the pride of man might suffer shipwrack, and the grace of God in Christ be alone exalted. Besides how far th [...]se conditions are to be stretched, whether only so far as that only their absence doth hinder, but their presence doth not put or inferr justification and salvation as the effects, (in which sence wee are wont to take the Causa sine qua non,) or else so far that both their absence doth hinder, and their performance produce these effects? In these and many other things whereof I shalbe forced to speake in its proper place, Mr. Baxter will not impart his meaning to us, that he may take his liberty to traverse his ground, and under the name of Condition, ascend and descend, run sometimes in a wheele, and sometimes in a race, play all in sight, and least in sight, at his pleasure, reserving still to himselfe this advantage, to help himself with his Conditions, widening and straitening them, making them the same with, or more than his Causa sine qua non, (having kept the power in his own hand) as it shalbe most inservient to his ends. In the meane while wee are permitted onely to heare the humming and bombing, but not to see the buz, whether it be a Hornet or a Beetle.
What hee will not himselfe directly tell us, wee must therefore take leave to gather from his writing as well as we can. In his Explication of this Thesis, even in that part thereof which I have before transcribed, being to prove that justification and salvation have the same Condition, hee tells us oft that we are both justified and saved by works. Here to follow his owne exposition, he teacheth, pa. 300 that the word [ By] implieth more than an idle (presence and) concomitancy, if they only stand by while the work is in doing, it could not bee said, we are justified by works. That it speaks out works to have their agency and operation in procurement, or in that kind of causality which they have. And this is the same which under the 17. 18. and 19. Theses he had before delivered, of a twofold Righteousness, Christs Righteousnes, and our Righteousness, ours as absolutely necessary as his to salvation, both [in [Page 110] their kind] effectually procuring it. So in that which followeth in the explication, where, to be the condition of our salvation, and to have a hand in, or give right to justification, are put by him as the same thing, or as equipollent phrases. So that under the word condition, he involves all the Papists efficiency, and as much as (after their and his defining and modifying of Merits) is comprehended in their doctrine of Merits.
In this sense therfore we deny Works or Obedience to be a condition of salvation. 1. Because thousands are saved without works, viz. all that have been or shalbe saved being never in a capacity to work. 2. Because the New Covenant in promising salvation makes it to follow grace and faith, not works, yea grace and faith in opposition to works, as hath been before shewed, cap. 15. of justification and salvation together. And that not by the vertue of that dung and rags and filth of mans righteousness, wherwith Mr. Br. filleth the belly of his faith in the largest sense, Thes. 70. but by the vertue of Christ its object which it receiveth, Jo. 1. 12. and of the a [...]undance of the grace and righteousness which it receiveth from Christ in receiving him, Ro. 5. 19. 3. Because it is by inheritance, as by our union unto Christ wee are made and adopted to bee with him, children and joint heirs, Act. 26. 18. Ro. 8. 16. 17. Gal. 3. 18. Eph. 1. 11. 14. Gal. 3. 29. and 4. 30. 31. Tit. 3. 7. and else-where, and that of Grace freely, therfore without works. For then should it be of debt, and no more of Grace, Ro. 4. 4. and 11. 6. 4. Because if it be at all by works then wholly by works, Christ is excluded, will not profit, will be all or nothing, do all, without works, and give no place or partnership to works with him in the business of salvation, if we bring any thing of works to save us, hee leaves us wholly to our works to save or damn us. If ye be circumcised, Christ shall not profit you, ye are debtors to the whole Law, i. e. If ye bring works in part to save you, yee must trust wholly to works to save you, Christ is become of none effect to you, Gal. 5. 2. 3. 4. 5. Neither can they bee a condition in that way of causality to which Mr. Br. professes himselfe to tie it, viz as the Causa sine qua non. For 1. the property of that kind of causality or conditionality not extended beyond it self, can only by its absence, deny the effect (as in this case the want of obedience and good works can onely deny them which refuse or neglect them, to be saved or have right to salvation) but by i [...]s presence cannot Ponere (as the say) i. e. conclude or evince the effect, that he which doth them shall live in them or be [Page 111] saved by them, no nor yet that they shall be saved. For if they can, it is by some other, and not by this kinde of causality which Mr. Baxter attributes to them. 2 Neither doth it (as himselfe describes its opperation in its causality to salvation) remove the impediments of salvation which are in generall sinne, in particular chiefly unbeleefe. If good workes can remove these it may save. But it can neither remove the guilt of that which is past by way of purging it or satisfying for it; neither is it made instrumentall to put us into the possession of Christs satisfaction and purging, for it precedes not but follows it (whatsoever Mr. Br. hath sayd to the contrary.) Nor can it stop the flux of sin and unbeleefe, but that it breaks out upon every of our good works to make them in themselves evil and damnable, and doth no further or otherwise remove, than by denying unbeliefe so far as we doe beleeve, and the neglect of duties as far as we have diligence and zeal to perform them. But this cannot bee called rightly the removing of the hindrances of our salvation: therfore it cannot be the Causa sine qua non of our salvation. 6. Because salvation is the gift of Gods free grace, Ro. 6. 23. Jo. 10. 28. 2. Ti. 4. 8. But it is a payment of justice and not a gift of Grace, which is made the wages of works. Didst thou not agree with me for a peny? Take what thine is [by contract and condition of the bargain] and go thy way, Mat. 20. 13. 14. Wheras contrariwise the free gift hath no other foundation or condition but Gods free love and good pleasure. He hath mercy on whom he will have mercy, Ro. 9. 15. So that it is not of him that willeth, or of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy, verse 16. Many other Arguments have our Divines against the Papists about this question, which I intreat the Reader to fetch from them for his fuller satisfaction. Now let us see what Mr. Baxter brings to prove, that obedience and good workes are the condition of our salvation.
Yet by the way let us note, that the Argument it selfe which here Bell. de ju [...] 4. [...] he seeks to confirme, is the Papists, and great is Belarmines striving to maintaine it as his great prop of justification and salvation by works. Si promissio vitae aeternae est conditionata, (faith he) ut C [...] probavimus, certè necessarium est implere conditionem, si quis salvus fieri velit, [...]e if the promise of eternall life be conditionall [...] I have proved in the first Chapter, certainly he must nec [...] fill the condition that will [...]e [...] saved. This Condition of which hee speakes is the same with Mr. Baxters, viz. the Condition of works.
Neither shall it be impertinent heer to take into consideration some rules of our Divines for the right understanding of the minde of the holy Ghost in promising eternall life, unto persons of such and such qualifications, or that perform such and such duties, before wee descend to examine the particular promises and testimonies which Mr. Br. alleadgeth. These are principally such as follow.
1. That they belong (so farre as to bee effectuallized) to none else but such as are vitally within the covenant of Grace, under the protection of the bloud of the Lamb in spirituall union with Christ. Jesus the mediator of the new Covenant according to that of the Apostle. All the promises of God in him are yea, and in him Amen, [never effectuallized to them that are not in him] 2 Co. 1. 20. To Abraham and his seed were the promises made, he saith not his seeds as of many, but of one, and to thy seed which was Christ. viz. in him alone, and to them alone to be confirmed which are in Christ. Gal 3. 16. Therfore the blessedness which Matthew in sound of words seems to hold forth more generally Ma. 5 3. &c. Luke as the Expositor of him, or rather of the mind of Christ in those promises, contracts to the right objects or persons to whom they were to bee made good, thus Jesus lifted his eyes upon his disciples and said, Blessed be [YEE] poor, for yours is the Kingdome of God. Blessed are YEE that hunger, YEE that weep &c. implying that the blessedness was to come upon them, not by the vertue of these Acts and qualifications mentioned, but upon this ground alone that they were his Disciples, by him Gospellized and received into Covenant, this is that which Augustine so much presseth in such promises to looke to the Root which is Christ, and that the reward is not from their works, because they are holy, but because they are holy or Saints which wrought them, and that they are thence saints from whence righteous, not from the works but from the Faith of the workers.
2. That in such promises the qualifications or works of the persons to whom they are directed are mentioned not as the ground or foundation of the blessednesse promised, but to shew the method and order which God observes in bringing them to the possession therof. Because he is holy, pure, spirituall, therfore he powrs into them his purifying, sanctifying, and adopting spirit to conform them to his own will and nature, before hee brings them into the full and reall fruition of himself. So hee promiseth all the heaven of felicities to the meek, the righteous, the saints, to them that love him, that fear him, that obey him; not therby insinuating that hee [Page 113] found them, but that he hath made, or will make them such, as many as he will crown at last with glory. Heerin the power of that father of Spirits excelleth and exceedeth the power of the fathers of our bodies. He new creates their hearts new forms their wills, puts into them a new spirit, therby making them as Peter saith, partakers of the Divine Nature, and to enjoy the kingdome of God within them heer, before they be translated to it above.
3. Nevertheless the foundation of all these promises is not such acts and qualifications in us, but the relation of sons, in which wee stand before God. Such God beheld us in Christ before wee were born, such hee hath made us that truly beleeve by the grace of the new Covenant, having begotten us to himself of incorruptible seed, 1. Pet. 1. 23. we are born of God, and have received the spirit of adoption by which we cry Abba, Father: So that our salvation dependeth not upon the vertues and good works which are mentioned in the promises, but upon this our relation of sons: if sons then heirs, &c. Ro. 8. 15. as a speciall friend of Mr. Br. who walks by the same rule and the same spirit with him hath acknowledged, heerin consenting with our Divines and stoutly maintayning their Assertion, at least because it seemed to give some fulture to his cause. And I suppose Mr. Br. will not heer leave him whom in all the rest he followeth.
4. Yet what the Lord giveth to and hath prepared of endlesse glory for his children as his children, he doth oft-times hold forth and promise to them as a reward of such gifts of grace in them, and of works which they have done, or sufferings that they have undergone for his sake. Not but that it was provided for them and promised to them, before all such works and sufferings as they were children: but for some other honourable ends, which I shall in part mention, having first instanced some promises of this kind. Before the birth of Isaac long, had the Lord of free grace promised to Abraham all blessedness corporall and spirituall, present and future, that his seed should be as the dust of the earth, as the stars of heaven numberless, that he should bee blessed, and in him all nations of the earth be blessed: that the land of Canaan the type and the eternall land of Promise the Antitype should be his and his seeds for ever. Ge. 12 2. 3. and 13. 15. 16. and 15. 1-6. and 17. 1-8. Yet afterward cha. 22. when Abraham had shewed that notable fruit of his faith, fear, and love to God, in offering his son Isaac in obedience to Gods command, God called from heaven to him by an Angel, and sayd. By my self have I sworn, because thou hast done this thing, and hast not [Page 114] with held thy son, thy only son, That in blessing I will blesse thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the stars in heaven, and as the sand &c. and in thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because thou hast obeyed my voice, Ge. 22. 15-18. We see heer that promised as a reward of this act of obedience of Abraham, which God had by promise made sure to him before ever hee offered his son, or had the son to offer. To this I might annex the harmony of Scriptures, that testifying the kingdome of glory to be prepared for them that shall enjoy it, from the beginning of the world; purchased for them by Christs death, Mat. 25. 34. Heb. 9. 15. That they were begotten to it by the seed of God begetting Christ in them, 1. Pet. 1 3. 4 and are inrighted to it by their adoption: yet notwithstanding God cals it the Reward of the inheritance, and promiseth it to them for their works and faithfull service in the Lord: Nor implying therby that the workes done put them into a worthiness or capacity to receive it, (For if a thousand times more were done and suffered by them that are not in Christ, that are not adopted Children it should be nothing to salvation) but for other very glorious and spirituall ends, among which may be numbred these that follow.
1. To declare the operation of the Spirit of Adoption upon the Saints, that having the promise made, and the hop [...] of this eternall inheritance begotten in them freely by Grace in Christ, and the same witnessed and assured to them of meere mercy; it doth not permit them to turn the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ into lasciviousness, but stit & encourage them to all doings & sufferings for Christ by the intuition of the reward: having their eyes-fixed upon the reward before them, they are animated by it to do all things, knowing that their labour is not vaine in the Lord; to all sufferings concluding, that all are not worthy to be compared to the glory to be revealed to them; to rejoyce in all, having an eye to the recompence of the reward. And so all their obedience is in a way of love and thankfulnesse for the right which is freely given them to the Kingdome, not thereby to inright themselves to it.
2. To declare Gods acceptance as well of the works as the persons of his adopted ones, and thereby to hearten them to well doing, when in every act and service of love which they perform, in every suffering that they beare for his sake, he still as it were meets them, not only with his apples and flaggons, but also with his Crown and Kingdome, for this and for that service renewing still the promise of it: This sets an edge upon their Love, and sublimates their Spirits to [Page 115] more and greater undertakings. What? doth my Heavenly Father take notice of and accept so graciously these weak services, renew the Covenant, and as it were bring down Heaven and himselfe into mee, upon such slender performances, so that I walke and work, and do and suffer not onely in the hope, but even in the view and possession of blessedness! what is there so high or low, great or small, to which I should not stretch or stoop to please so good a Father? shall I receive so great a salvation so frequently set afresh before mine eye, and new ratified to me; without doing or rendring any thing for it?
3. To manifest to the evill world that God in the midst of the riches of his grace is also infinitely righteous, a Lover and Rewarder of purity, piety, holinesse, righteousness, and all the works thereof. For to these his promises of life are extended, and into these hee leadeth his children, new creating them to the performance thereof, having ordeined them to walke therein. So that hereby the mouth of the enemies of Christ, and blasphemers are stopped from crying out against the inequality of Gods wayes, or charging Christ to be unjustly a friend of Publicans and sinners. Seeing that although hee loves them even while they are such, and pittieth them because they are such, yet he loves them not as such, much lesse glorifieth them as such: But first purgeth them with his owne bloud, and sanctifies them by his owne Spirit, and leads them forth in his owne strength into all obedience both of doing and suffering, encouraging them by his precious promises in all the way of their Pilgrimage, and telling them that no least portion of all their labours or patience in the Lord shall passe unregarded or unrewarded; and in the end of all their journey crownes them and their obedience with the eternall glory promised. Yet so as that all the glory which was promised to them in that which some of the Fathers and the Schoolmen call the Viâ the Way, and that is actually conferred upon them in Patriâ, in the Countrey, in Heaven, was theirs by grace in Christ before the foundation of the World was laid, much more before they did either good or evill: and theirs in themselves and to their own apprehensibleness if not apprehension, at their fi [...]st union unto Christ, and adoption into Gods Family through Christ: so that if we look to the foundation therof in God, it is his free Grace and Love unto us in Christ. or in our selves it is our union unto Christ, and relation of Sonship towards God in Christ. Yet so as usually works intervene, and the promises of God [Page 116] both to the works and workers, as for many other, so for the reasons and ends heer expressed, oft renewed
Now let us attend Mr. Br. to hear from him what Scriptures or reasons he brings to prove his Assumption.
This Scripture makes against him not for him. 1. If Christ bee the authour, then is not our obedience the ground of it, but wee should be authors therof to our selves, at least hee should bee in part author of it by his, and we in part by our obedience, and so the honour therof should be parted between Christ and our selves. But this Mr. Br. would have to bee set up as his doctrine, 2. Therfore when he is sayd to be such to them that obey him, it is the same as if it were sayd, to them that hurling away as dung their own righteousness, do beleeve in, and receive him alone to salvation. For so to obey Christ, to obey the Gospel, and that which Christ calleth the hearing and keeping of My word, My commandements, My sayings, [in so many places as that it is hard [...]o number them] are equipollent terms, and hold forth the obedience to the doctrine of faith, in opposition to the obedience which the Law or old Covenant prescribeth to salvation, a seeking of salvation by the righteousness of Christ, and no more by our own righteousness. 3. If it were otherwise, yet the persons that shall bee saved by Christ are heer described only, and not a condition by which they are to be saved, prescribed.
He alleadgeth not the words, and may bee ashamed to quote the place to prove the salvation which is by the Gospel, to follow the tenour of works; knowing that the Apostle there goeth about to convince the Jews that the Law cannot save them, by shewing upon what terms salvation runneth under the Legall or old Covenant.
The doing of Christs commandements heer, is the same which Heb. 5. 9. is called the obeying of Christ, and the meaning of both is there explained. Faith which Christs commandement calls for, gives right to the tree of life, and to all the priviledges of the new Hierusalem.
What he would infer from the three former of these verses, hee saith not, and I dream not. Any other three verses in the whole Bible might have been quoted as pertinent to his purpose as these, as far as my dull brain can comprehend. To the 25. if by the Law of Liberty he understands the Law of the Old Covenant, or of the Decalogue, and by blessed everlasting salvation, (as he erewhile termed it) then hee prescribes salvation hence to bee sought by the Law, and not by Christ, by the covenant of works, not of grace, and so the salvation of man shall stand or fall upon these terms, as hee doth or doth not forget to doe all that is commanded in the Law: and Christ must not be at all looked after, heer is no mention at all of him: and thus to argue is worse than Popish, even Jewish. But if he understand by the Law of Liberty the Gospel, then hath it the same sense with the former Scriptures, teacheth us to seek salvation in a Gospel way, as a free gift from free grace as children of liberty whom the son hath made free, and not as children of bondage by works. He that doth th [...]s shall be blessed in this his deed. Some of our Expositors I know expound it another way, yet not with, but against Mr. Baxter. B. Ma. 5. 1. to the 13.
To this enough hath been sayd a little before in this Chapter.
The former verse runs thus: Whosoever therfore shal break one of the least of these Cōmandments and teach men so to do, the same shalbe least in the Kingdom of Heaven: But whosoever shall do and teach them the same shalbe great in the Kingdom of Heaven. Christ here speaketh of Teachers under the Gospel. And the sense (as may be gathered from the precedent verses) is this: Whosoever under a pretence of the liberty of the Gospel, shall take to himselfe, or instill into others a licentiousnesse, to break the Commandements of the Law, or to neglect any of that holiness and righteousness which is the matter of the Law, that man shalbe an instrument of little, yea of no use in the Gospel Church: But whosoever shal so learn and teach Christ as in and thrrough him, to take into his owne and presse upon other mens affections, and practise all the duties of holiness and righteousnesse which the Law requireth, in a Gospel way, this man shall be an instrument of great good in the Gospel Church, as one that hath learned, and teacheth Christ to salvation and to sanctific [...]tion also. If this in its substance be not the meaning of this Scripture, I know not the meaning of any one Text of Scripture.
The latter which is the 20. verse is read in these words. Exc [...]pt [Page 118] your Righteousnesse exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the Kingdome of Heaven. True, Theirs was their owne Righteousness, the Righteousnesse of works which could never satisfie for or expiate their unrighteousness. Except we trample this as dung (in respect of confidence in it) to put on Christ for righteousness, who hath both satisfied, and expiated, we shall never enter into the spirituall Priviledges of the Kingdome of Grace, much lesse into the joyes of the Kingdome of glory. What is there in either of these verses to promote Mr. Baxters salvation by Works?
And will Mr. Br. take up the broad and vulgar way of expounding this broad and that narrow gate and way? That by the broad way and wide gate, are to be understood the way of prophaneness, Atheisme, Lust, Luxury, Carnall security, &c. and by the strait Gate and narrow way, strictnesse of life and conversation? unless he ride in this common Rode, there is nothing to be found that will square with his purpose. But that this interpretation is wide from the scope of Christ, will appeare 1. by comparing Luke with Mathew; who Luke 13 24 thus renders the words of Christ, Strive to enter in at the strait Gate, for many shall seeke to enter in, and shall not bee able. Whence it appeares that both these Gates and Wayes are such as men seek to enter into life by. And was there ever that man so mad, so void of the naturall light of reason and conscience, that did strive to enter into life by Prophanenesse, Lust, Atheisme, and impure living? Doth not the Apostle tell us, that the most stupified among the Heathen do so far know the judgement of God, as to know these things to be worthy of death? Rom. 1. vers▪ ult. [...]. When it is said of the narrow way and gate, few there be that finde it▪ if it should be understood of the strictness of Morall holinesse and righteousnesse, it might well be said, few there are that enter by it, but to say, few there be that finde it, is not agreeable to reason. For who is there that findes it not? The very Light of nature teacheth all men this naturall way to life by the strictnes and perfection of their naturall and morall righteousness. And this is the greatest beam in their eye blinding them that they cannot see the straight and effectuall way indeed.
What then is the strait gate and narrow way to life, wherof Christ heer speaketh? Let Christ himselfe interpret himself; I am the way I am the door, by mee if any man enter, none can come to the Father but by me, Jo. 10. 9. and 14. 6. The way into the holiest, i. e. into heaven consecrated or new made for us through the vail of Christs flesh, saith the Apostle, Heb. 10. 19. 20. or let Mr. Br shew that the Gospel owneth any other way to life. This is the way that few find, when Peter had seen and spoken but of a glimpse and glance of it. Blessed art thou Simon Bar-jona, saith our Saviour, for fl [...]sh and bloud hath not revealed it to thee, but my Father which is in heaven, M [...]. 16. None can enter into it except the Father draw him. Jo 6. 44. Except he be taught and have learned of the Father, ver. 45. And great striving must there be against ou [...] own wisedome, before we can be brought to leave the way that nature hath taught to find and enter into this way which the Father revealeth. What then (say yee) is the broad way and wide gate by which men seek to enter into life? I answer M. Brs. way, the way of our own righteousness and strict carriage. It is broad and wide because all learn it from nature corrupted, which tel [...]s us it was the way if we had kept it, but cannot tell us that it is now blocked up to sinners, so that many, so many as seek for life by their own righteousness and works, doe by this supposed way of life passe to destruction. Not but that the way of vice is a broad way also▪ bu [...] our Saviou [...] speaks not heer of it, but of the broad way by which men seek life but find destruction. To this effect is that of our Saviour, [...]he Publicans and harlots enter into the kingdome of heaven before the strict▪ living Pharisees Ma 21. 31 By what way did these vitious livers enter but by Christ into the Kingdom? else if strictness of life had been the way to it, the Pharisees had entred before them. This is the interpretation of this Gospel text after the tenour of the Gospel, and so Mr. Br. suo se jugulavit gladio, hath brought a sword to cut the throat of his own cause.
This is the will and work of the Fathers willing and commanding [as to life] that we beleeve on him wh [...]m he hath sent, Jo. 6. 29.
Hypocrites that come with their mouths full of Works and merits to plead for Heaven shall all be shaken off, and the ground of [Page 120] their exclusion is this, I know you not, ye were not built upon mee, had no union with mee, no setled dwelling and recumbency upon me, therfore he shakes off both them and their works, as workers and works of iniquity.
The righteousness of the Law is perfect. And they walk not after the flesh but after the spirit, which (as the same Apostle saith) worship God in the spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh, i. e. (as in the following verses he expoundeth) in legall priviledges, or works of their own Righteousnes, Phi. 3. 3. In these the righteousnes of the Law is fulfilled. They have a perfect righteousnes even Christ made Righteousnes to them which the Law weak through the flesh could not produce in them.
Who they are chiefly that in reference to life and death, doe live after the flesh, and after the spirit, the same Apostle teacheth not only in the forequoted Text, Phi. 3. 3. but also Gal. 3 3. Are yee so foolish? having begun in the spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh? In which words I challenge Mr. Baxter, yea the whole p [...]ck of Jesuits, if they dare to deny that by beginning in the spirit the Apostle means their trusting wholly on Christ for justification and salvation, and by being made perfect by the flesh their seeking to perfect it by works; viz Circumcision, and with it the morall duties which the Law commandeth. If in this place [...]e will take the flesh and spirit in a larger sense, yet compare we this 13 with the 1. vers of the Chapter, and it will appear heer is nothing for his turn. Ver. 1. he saith, There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus. But who are they? Such as walk not after the flesh but after the spirit. Let now Mr. Baxter put what sense he will upon flesh and spirit in the 13. verse, it must bear the same sense as in the 1. verse. And then if any demand why they that live after the flesh must die? the answer is in readiness, Because they are not in Christ Iesus: or why they that mortifie &c▪ by the spirit, shall live? Every one can answer, because they are in Christ Iesus. So that in these there is no condemnation, to the other nothing but condemnation. Because he that hath the son hath life, he that hath not the son hath not life. 1 Jo. 5. 2.
Heer according to promise I annex what I left unanswered cap. [Page 121] 16. of the third bunch of Scriptures quoted by Mr. Baxter, p 236. referring them to this place to be examined as speaking more soundingly to glorification than to iustification by works. I shall begin as I there left▪ at
When he meaneth the same with Bellarmine (as he hath enough manifested under his 26. Thesis) let him speak out the same with Bellarmine; viz. That none shall receive salvation by Christ, but those that by works merit it, and make themselves worthy of it. Let him so express himselfe and hee shall not want an expresse answer. At present while he will lurk in the dark, we will leave him in the dark.
Whether we look to that which precedes, or that which followeth this Text, we shall find its testimony to be to Mr. Baxters cause, what a Colledge Brush, alias called a hatchet, to a Freshmans Gown, cutting it in peeces because it will not be cleansed. If to that which goeth before, we are bidden v. 5-11. to follow the example of Christ (as far as he was in a capacity to give him selfe a patterne to us in this kind) in selfe deniall, who being in the form of God, and equall with God, took to himselfe the forme of a servant, made himselfe of no reputation, abased himselfe to the death, to the Cross, to the Curs: and so became exalted on high above all names &c. So must wee deny and abase our selves in our relation as Christ did himselfe in his▪ lay all the false glitter and glory of our works and righteousness in the dust, as he did his true glory: watching with a holy feare and trembling over our backsliding heart that is apt assoon as any shew of righteousness and goodness appears in our selves and works, to depart from Christ, and to rest in it as our sanctuary: in this case is it that the Apostle requires this continuall working and heaving out selfe from our selves, that Christ may be our All. And that with much fear, and trembling watchfulness over our deceitfull hearts, that are apt still to decline from his righteousnes, and to close with our own, if there bee not continuall working and warring against its fleshly working in this kind. If wee look to that which follows, all confidence in our own strength is prohibited, and all dependance and relying upon Gods grace and power is commanded, that wee [Page 122] stand alway in a trembling feare of falling and sinking through our miserable weaknesse and proneness to Apostacy, and therefore keep firme and continuall hold-fast in the grace and power of God extended to us in Christ for our supportation; because it is God alone that worketh in us both to will and to doe, of his good pleasure▪ and not of any worth or workes of ours moving him. ver. 13. Such a working out of our salvation, that consisteth in working away all our owne works, & righteousnes, as insufficient yea as destructive to it, and in working up our selves by the power of God into Christ; into the shelter of Gods grace for salvation, wee grant to Mr. Baxter. But this will not please him. Yet because the Apostle (as by the context is evident) teacheth this and no other working for salvation here, we must leave him so displeased as they are wont to be that by their owne plea destroy theire owne cause, and minister matter out of their owne mouth to be judged.
B. Ro. 2. 7. 10. hath been before answered.
B. 1. Co. 9. 24. so run that ye may obtaine▪ & 2. Tim. 2. 5. If a man strive for mast [...]ries, he is not crowned except he strive lawfully.
What this running & striving [or fighting is] the same Apostle teacheth us by his example. 2. Tim. 4. 7. 8. I have fought the good fight (saith he) I have finished my course▪ what meanes he by these? the next words declare, I have kept the Faith: henceforth &c.
This is, if in despite of all sufferings or persecutions, wee stand fast in the Faith, and adhere firme to Christ, we shall reign with him; But if for feare of persecution we deny him and fall from the Faith he also will deny us, that ever wee had any true union and communion with him by faith.
The Apostle heer forbids the rich to trust in, or to make their uncertain riches a foundation of happines to themselves, and contrariwise admonisheth them that this trashy felicity should not hinder them from laying a good foundation of their everlasting blisse in [Page 123] heaven. He saith not (as Mr. Br. abusively wresteth his words, in his Append. p. 95.) that they should lay their good works as a good foundation against the time to come, that they may lay hold on eternall life. For so should he have contradicted himself, 1. Co. 3. 1 [...] 11. According to the grace of God given me, I have laid the foundation &c. For other foundation can no man lay, than that is layd, Jesus Christ. So this exhortation is the same in substance with that of our Saviour, Lay not up for your selvs treasure upon earth, where moth▪ and rust doth corrupt &c. but lay up for your selves treasure in heaven where neither moth &c.
Amen, For the word of God makes Christ our All, and in us all, Col. 3. 11. Search the Scriptures (or the word of God) sayth the same our Saviour, for in them ye think to have eternall life, and they are they which testifie of me, [not of works to have wrought out eternall life for you] yet yee will not come to mee, [but to works and your own righteousness] that ye may have life, Io. 5. 39. 40.
Righteous judgement. For what other cause should the cursed be sentenced to the curse, but for their unbeleefe and evill deeds, which brought and deserved the curse? Would he have them to be damned for their faith and good works? The rest Scriptures have been urged and examined before.
Now of all these Scriptures, let Mr. Br. name but two that were not prepared to his hand, eyther by Bellarmine, or some other Papists in their disputes against the Protestants? or shew any reason, why he mentions most of them, having no shew of subserviency to his purpose, unless he thinks them hallowed by their fingering?
If there bee expected a larger and fuller Answer to the Arguments which the Papists draw from any of these Scriptures, I transmit to some of the many hundreds of our Divines that have answered them.
CHAP. VIII.
Arg. Mr. Baxters 7. Argument for Justification by Works examined, drawne from the Tenour of the last dayes Judgement which he saith shall pass according to works. And these questions discussed, whether, upon whom, and in what respects the last sentence shall so passe according to Works.
A Seventh Argument which he brings to prove Justification by works is drawne from the issues upon which our future Judgement shall passe in the last day. That (saith he) shall be according to works: Therefore is this also. But let him bee heard speaking his owne words.
B. Thesis 80. pag. 317. It is most clear in the Scripture, and b [...]yond all dispute, that our Actuall, most proper, compleat Justification at the great Judgement will be according to our works, and according to what we have done in the Flesh, whether good or evill: which can bee no therwise than as it was the Condition of that Justification. And so Christ at that great Assize will not give his bare will of Purpose as the Reason of his proceedings, but as he governed by a Law, so he will judge by a Law; and will then give the reason of his publicke sentence from mens keeping or breaking of the conditions of his Covenant, that so the mouths of all may be stopped, and the equity of his Judgement may be made manifest to all; and that he may there set forth his hatred to the sins, and not only to the persons of the condemned; and his love to the obedience, and not only to the persons of the justified.
This also he hath from Bellarmine & the other Jesuits & Papists. Neither is there any one besides his fourth Argument which he hath not transcribed from them: and even that also is by them somewhat hammered to his use. Nay, from the very beginning to the end of this his Tractate all is theirs as to the matter thereof: onely the translating of it into English, and reducing it to his owne method and order he can call his; but the substance of all is theirs [as to Justification by works,] and from them in common with the Socinians and Arminians, [as to Justification by Faith, as an Act or [Page 125] Worke.] This I could easily make evident by affixing but marginall quotations of those Popish and Arminian Authours to this Worke, whom in every particle hee followeth, as having spoken the same things before him; if I had now that which once I had, that which might be called a Library. By how much the more I admire some that make their concourse & confluence to him from all parts as to an Oracle, to learne from him that which at home by their owne fire, Eckins, Hosius, Vega, &c. or the more ancient Schoolemen before them, or Be [...]armin [...] with the Jesuits and Arminians, since them, would have taught them more at large; or which besides other hundreds of our Divines, one Chamier in his 3 Tome of his Panstratia, would have given them to understand at large, together with a large and full confutation of all [as to the Papists:] Yet see with what confidence Mr. Baxter speaketh. It is most clear and beyond all dispute, &c. What is so cleare? that our proper, compleat, and actuall justification, &c. This is cleare by Scripture. Yet neither hath he alleadged or can alleadge any one Scripture that tels us of or teacheth any such justification. The Papists tell us indeed of a two-fold Justification, but both in this life. They say Christs judgement or sentence; or our account and reckoning, not our justification, shall thus pass in the last day. The Arminians indeed say as Mr. Baxter, and hee hath learned to speake as confidently as they, proving as little as they. Now what boldness is it to call that, from a pretended cleare testimony of Scripture, our Actuall, most Proper, compleat Justification, which the Scripture doth in no place call or bid us to call Justification in any sense or conconsideration? we would grant to Mr. Baxter the use of his owne Phrase and use it with him, if he would understand by the Justification in the day of Judgement, onely either the publication and open declaration of the justification before given and received; or the conferring on Believers the Glorious and eternall fruits above of their justification here; or their exemption from the sentence of vengeance which shalbe then pronounced, against & from condemnation, which shalbe then executed upon the unbelieving world: (in which sense it is sometimes indeed in Scripture called our Redemption, and the day of Redemption to the Saints, which to the world will be an evill day, a day of judgement.) But this will not satisfie him, and the Scripture grants no more: so that we cannot please him without displeasing God.
Againe when he saith our most Proper Justification will be at the [Page 126] great Judgement according to our workes, and according to what wee have done in the flesh, whether it be good or evill. Doth he meane first, that the measure of our justification wilbe according to the measure of our works, great works, and a great and full justification; a little Treasury of workes, and a little corner of justification? This agrees not with his owne phrase in tearming it a compleat justificacation. Nor will it cohere with the definition that he gives to this justification, Thes. 39. making it to consist in Gods acquitting from the Accusation, and condemnation of the Law. This Act of God or of Christ doth not recipere magis & minus, hee that hath more works cannot be said to bee more, or he that hath less to be less acquitted: but i [...] at all acquitted, then compleatly acquitted; acquitting, and not acquitting being contradictories that admit of no medium, but the one or other must stand in all its force.
Or 2. doth he mean that the being or not being of justification doth follow the being or not being of our Works, no works and no justification, but if works then justification? will it not hence necessarily follow both that many which have died in Christ shall be condemned? viz. all that after their union to Christ by the Spirit, departed out of this life before they had time and oportunity to doe such works as Mr. Baxter after instanceth and many that never believed in Christ, never were in Christ shall bee justified by Christ in the last day viz. such as have lived and died such as the Apostle Paul was before his conversion: touching the Righteousnesse which is by the Law blamelesse, Phil. 3. 6. and that of sincerity in opposition to hypocrisie and vaine glory, walking in all good Conscience before God? As for faith in Christ hee doth not heere touch upon, and Acts 23. 1 whether any of his reasons which hee brings to confirme his Thesis will infer it, we shall see in examining them.
3. When he saith that Christ at that great Assize will not give his bare will of Purpose as the reason of his proceedings, &c. Let him say whether his intent in this passage were not to cast an Odium upon the Protestants, as if they so taught: And except hee can produce any one man that hath so taught, and hath not still asserted that the damnation of the damned shall be for their sinnes, and the glorification of the glorified a free gift of God for the satisfaction which Christ hath made for them with reference to their being in Christ: Let him confess that he hath slandered them.
4. In the rest that is contained in this Thesis we finde nothing but contradictions, his unsaying and gainsaying of what he had before [Page 127] said. A little before, pag 294, 295. to destroy that interpretation of James which our Divines bring, that when he speakes of justification by workes, hee meanes the declaring to men by works the truth of their Faith and Justification; the man is angry and cries out An usurped Judgement and Justification, I affirme, The World is no lawfull Judge of our Righteousnesse before God; neither are they competent or capable Judges of our Righteousnesse or unrighteousnesse; neither are works a certaine Medium or evidence whereby the world can know us to be righteous, for the outward part an hypocrite may performe, and the inward part, Principles and ends of the worke they cannot discern. Why was it that hee was so hot there against the possibility of manifesting to men the truth of our Righteousness? It was against his Cause there to owne it. Here contrariwise, Justification in the last day must passe by workes to declare to the World not only the righteousnes & obedience of the justified, but also the equity of the Justifier, and to stop every month from speaking against either. And now the world is no longer an usurping, but a lawfull Judge, not an insufficient, but a competent and capable Judge, not onely of mans righteousness, but of Christs equity in judgement, and works are become a certaine Medium and evidence to manifest both to the world. How comes this sudden change? he [...]r it tends to the promoting of his cause to affirme it. And this alters the Case quoth Ploydon. How rightly did Mr. Baxter describe his owne acting in this businesse, p. 291. I resisted (saith he) the Light of this Conclusion as long as I was able. It is the light of the Conclusion, not of the Premises that swayeth him. First hee pitcheth upon this Conclusion, Works justifie, there was light in this Conclusion, it fell out of the Lant-horne of the Jesuits sophistry into his bosome, and by that light he is swayed, and having taken up the conclusion in such light of its owne from them, now he digs downward for day, and takes up that which erewhile he shook off as darkness, for light to illustrate and prove it. So his light conclusion is first formed, and afterward he seeks for Crutches and reasons what come first to hand to support it, sacrificing here more to hast than to reason lest his idol should fall before he returnes with his props to sustaine it. And what if upon new thoughts we shall finde all that is here said all so, unsaid again? Let us passe to his explication, peradventure we may stumble at such a stone before we come off from it.
B. Explication.
Heere I have these things to prove: 1 that the Justifying sentence shall passe according to works as well as Faith: 2. That the Reason is, because they are parts of the condition.
For the first see Mat: 25. 21. 23. well done good a [...]d faithfull servant, thou hast been faithfull over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things, enter thou into the ioy of thy Lord. And most plaine is that from the mouth of the judge himselfe describing the order of the processe of that day Mat. 25. 34 35. Come ye blessed inherit the Kingdome &c: [for I was hungry &c. So 1 Pet 1. 17. who without respect of persons judgeth according to every mans worke. So 2. Co 5. 10. we must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ, that every one may receive the things done in his body, acording to that he ha [...]h done whether good or bad. So Rev. 20. 12. 13. They were judged every man according to his works, Heb. 13. 17. Phil 4 17. Mat. 12. 36 &c. but this is evident already.
The Scriptures that he brings to prove that the justifying sentence shall passe according to workes, as well as Faith are first here put and therefore first to be examined. And against his reasoning from them I except. 1. [as well as Faith] is here foysted in being wanting in the position. And why heere supplyed but to beguile the simple with a good opinion of his assertion as if he attributed something to Faith also in Christs and Pauls sense. When contrariwise he teacheth that Faith hath nothing to doe in this businesse, but in the notion of our Act, our righteousnesse or worke, so that with him to be justified by Faith is to be justified by our owne worke. 2. That there is no one of these Scriptures but is alledged by Bellarmin and his fellows against the Protestants, and by them fully answered & manifested to make nothing for justification or salvation by works, scripture after scripture, no one of them pretermitted. When Mr. Baxter now stands up in Bellarmins place against us, is it sufficient for him to tel us what Bellarmin hath said against the truth (as if we could not without him know it) and to leave unanswered yea unmentioned the hundreds of our side that have retorted upon him his owne arguments to the subverting of his owne cause, that by these Scriptures he would have maintained? If he would [Page 129] have another answer; ought he not to have excepted against the validety of those that have beene already given? Is he worthy to heare more from vs that hath stopped his eares against all that so many worthies have said already, scorning to take notice thereof? Nay when he will onely alledge the Scriptures, and not take the labour to tel us what or how he will conclude from them he leaves us not in a capacity to declare so much as our consent with him or dissent from him. Yet for the use of the weaker sort of readers that have not ability to make recourse to those learned workes where these controversies are handled, or to understand them in that language in which most of them are written; I shal speak something in generall to all these Scriptures.
First of that of Mat. 25. 21. 23. or rather taking the whole parable together, beginning at ver. 14. and ending at v. 30. granting it on both sides to be the same Parable which Luke recordeth chap. 19. beginning at the 12. and ending at the 27. verse, (which very few have questioned, no one hath had cause to deny) then it suits not at all with Mr. Baxters purpose, or his Judgement dayes justification. For the Kingdome of Heaven, and the Lords comming and reckoning with his Servants, and retribution of their service is to be taken for Christs comming to preach first in his owne person, and then to set up and stablish the Gospel by the Ministry of his Apostles. The servants to be reckoned with are principally the Teachers of the Iewes; the Talents used, or abused, are the mysteries of the Gospel revealed, though veyled under the Law. The matter of the Account is what each by his serious studies and labours had cleared up to himselfe and others of this Gospel and saving knowledge of Christ before his comming for the advancement and advantage of Christ at his comming. They which had spent their labours this way, received at Christs comming a double measure of the spirit of illumination in the knowledge of Christ and salvation by him, and were intrusted with a fu [...]ler measure of this sacred Treasure to bee the dispencers thereof to the world. But hee which [...]ad wrapt his Talent in a N [...]pkin and hid it in the earth, left the Doctrine of Christ (scattered throughout the old Testament) under a veile as he found it, without searching into it, and clearing it up to others; was l [...]ft in the state of infidelity, rejected, and bound over hand and foot by his unbeliefe to perdition. And his Citizens which sent word after him, wee will not have this man to rule over us, we will have a Christ, such a one as wee have framed [Page 130] to our selves in our owne immaginations, but not this Christ; have their doom not only denounced, but executed also upon them, bring them hither and sl [...]y them before me. Who are these but the great Body and Nation of the Iewes, that professed themselves Citizens and the onely Saints of God, but for their refusall of Christ, were slaine and destroyed by the sword of the Romans? And so the parable comprehends in it a Prophecy of the successe of the Kingdome of Grace, now in the way of erecting in its power; as to the Iews: So saith Luke in that 19. Chapter, verse 11. Hee added and spake a parable because he was nigh to Jerusalem, and because they thought that the Kingdom of God should immediatly appeare, by this Parable foretelling them that the Citizens, the Children of the Kingdom, the Iews for their rejection of Christ should bee cast out into utter darknesse, where is weeping and gnashing of teeth: i. e. into blindnesse of minde and stubbornnesse of heart, accompanied with all calamity and misery, as we see them undergoing untill this day. This I acknowledge to be but my owne private opinion▪ yet such as I could easily manifest from the Text it selfe (if occasion were) to be very probable, if not certainely the minde of Christ. Yet let it stand or fall, sub calculo melioris Indicii.
But if we are to understand all of Christs last Comming to judgement, it ministers nothing to advantage Mr. Baxters Cause, but enough to ruinate it: For first the faithfull Servants that shall bee so richly rewarded, are such as wrought with a free spirit, and the reward which they received was a free gift, they challenged it not in St. Conditions name, and Christ confers it freely as their munificent Lord. That hee mentions their service argues not either dignity or desert in their service, but the riches of his grace that having justified their persons, hee had in regard their service also. The unprofitable servant cast into utter darknesse, is Mr. Baxters legall man, serving with a mercenary and slavish spirit, expects nothing from Christ but in the way of justice, lookes upon him as upon an Austere man, a strait Law-giver, and a rigorous exactor of the fulfilling of his Lawes; I knew thee that thou art an hard man reaping where thou hast not sowne, and gathering where thou hast not strawed, and I was afraid, (saith he) and so did nothing because of his feare of so strict a Lord, at least nothing to purpose, nothing to the advancing of the Kingdome of Christ in righteousnesse, peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost within himselfe or others.
The second Scripture, Mat. 25. 34. 35. is most plain (sayth Mr. [Page 131] Baxter) in which the mouth of the Judge himselfe describeth the order of the processe of that day; Come ye blessed inherit &c. For I was hungry &c. The Judges mouth describes, but why doth Mr. Baxters mouth refuse to speak out the description which the Judge maketh of the processe of that day? If hee began at ver. 31. when Christ is set in his throne to call all Nations before him, to judgement, he declares the maner of the processe, 1. by separating the sheep from the goats, 2. by setting the sheep at his right hand. What the sheep were himself declares, Jo. 10. such as hear his voice, his Gospel voice and are Gospellized and spirituallized by it. What hee means by his right hand, the Apostle declares, 1. Thess 4 16 17. The dead in Christ shall rise first, and shall bee caught up in the clouds to meet with the Lord in the ayre: What to do? not only to be with the Lord, but also, as the same Apostle sayth, to sit with him in judgement▪ and to judge the world, 1. Co. 6. 2. This is the right hand of Christ, to which the saints perhaps shall bee advanced, even before the dead out of Christ shall be raysed. To this at last is annexed what Mr. Br. alleadgeth, Come yee blessed of my Father, inherit the Kingdome prepared for you from the beginning of the world Who seeth not heer the grounds of their glorification to bee, that they were Christs sheep? the heirs of God, and his elect vessels? That they are to be convened before Christ, not as prisoners to bee judged, but to bee owned as his justified ones, and to receive the glorious fruits of their justification and adoption, a Kingdome by inheritance; yea to sit as partners and Commissioners with Christ in judging the world? what the Lord Iesus addeth, for I was hungry &c and yee thus and thus ministred unto me; will Mr. Baxter because of the word for, conclude these offices to be the cause of their justification? then let him also conclude, that the cause of Gods shewing mercy to Paul was his ignorance and unbeliefe. This will as well follow from those words of Paul, 1 Tim. 1. 13. I obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly in unbeliefe. To his condition the proper place is to speak afterward.
So the 1 Pet. 1. 17. who without respect of Persons judgeth according to every mans work, holds forth thus much to us, that God cannot be deluded or corrupted, as oft times earthly Iudges are, either to pervert justice for favour or carnall ends, or to take appearances for substance, but jugeth all both persons and actions according to what they are, not what they seem.
In like mnner, 2 Cor. 5. 10. the Apostle appeales (as may appeare [Page 132] by the 11. and 12. verses compared with this) from the standers and censures of the false Apostles to the judgment Seat of God. They had (it seems) questioned among the Corinthians, the sincerity of both the Apostle and his Ministry: Hee refers all to Christ the Iudge. Before him wee must all appeare (saith he) and hee will reveale who are the sincere, and which the hypocriticall Professors and Preachers of Christ, they or I to take vengeance of the one, and to owne the other.
He maimeth that testimony of Rev. 20. 12, 13. that the force therof may not be understood by his Reader. Let him supply what he hath cut off, the Book of life by which they which are in Christ are to be judged, which is there mentioned aswel as the other books by which the world is to be judged, and then the judgments which the Saints are to pass through wil appear to be a judgment of Grace, not of strict justice; & to consist in their admission to the Kingdom after the tenour of Grace, not of Workes. The other three Scriptures he seeth to have so little even of shew in them for his use, that he deigns not the labour to alleage the words; and let him not expect that I should stil do it for him.
Thus far we grant that the sentence of Iudgement (though not the justifying sentence) shall passe in the last day according to works. 1. The whole world that hath not heard of Christ, much less beleeved on him, shall be judged according to their works, to life or death, according as their works have been perfect or unperfect: yea to a measure of vengeance answering to the measure of their sinnes, some to many, some to fewer stripes.
2. The whole bulk of professed Christians also shall [in this respect] be judged according to their works: viz. that as their professions of and actings in Christ, were eyther in truth or in hypocrisie, meerly formall, or else Vitall and reall, so shall they be either exempted from, or adjudged unto vengeance. And so the secrets of all hearts shall bee then disclosed, the Sheep and Goats, Saints and Hypocrites shall then bee fully seperated one from the other, which untill that time shall never be wholly done, nor bee known to all whose works were vitall, and whose dead works.
3. That the very Saints as compared one with another, shall be judged according to their works, i. e. shall be adjudged to glory in severall measures above, according to the severall measures of their services and sufferings heere, is the opinion of many, eminent for learning and godliness; neither doe their Reasons yet wholly sway [Page 133] me who dissent from them, and will have neither right hand nor left hand, nor sun, nor stars, nor great, nor small, but all equall in one degree of glory. It is no proper place heer to dispute it, but I see no reason to conclude that hee which distributeth his gifts of grace heer in different measures, may not so also there distribute the degrees of glory. Seeing both are by the purchase of his death, and whether by the former he puts us in a greater or lesser capableness of the later, is in question.
But in any other sense, how (as he sayth) the sentence of justification shall passe according to works, and that as hee infers from 2. Co. 5. 10. according to works, whether good or evill, I cannot conjecture. 1. Not according to works as they are a condition, (which is the next thing hee undertakes to prove) for evill works cannot be the condition of our justification, either negatively that if we have done evill, we neyther are nor shalbe justified; then all must bee damned: nor positively, that whosoever hath done evill, shall be justified; then all shall be saved. Nor 2. shall it passe so as that according to our good works we shall be justified, and according to our evill works we shall be condemned; then every man, at least every true Christian, should be both saved and damned. 3 Nor that we shalbe much justified if we have all good works, & little justified if we have done some evil works also, for that is the last judgment, where every man shall have a full discharge or no discharge. I must leave this as one of Mr. Baxters Mysteries, it must die with him (as to my understanding,) unless hee vouchsafe his interpretation.
As for the thing it selfe, I utterly deny that they which are in Christ shall be so judged or justified according to their works as other men, that they shall stand as prisoners with the world at the bar of Christ, to bee judged for life and death as the other, according to their works. What that the Lord Christ should then discover the nakedness, and lay open in the sight of men and divels all the sin and shame of his beloved members? That he should cast in their faces all the filth of all their originall and actuall pollution even when they are upon the threshold of heaven? Let it be Mr. Baxters doctrine, my eares are abhorrent from the sound thereof. It is against the stream of Gospel doctrine, which tells us that Christ hath born their sin and curs, and done their law, therfore they are not to be called to such a reckoning. That their iniquities are forgiven and sins covered, Ro. 4. 7. That the Lord will no more remember them [Page 134] Heb. 10. 17. That they are not under the Law, but under Grace, Ro. 6. 14. Therfore exempted from the accusations of the Law at the Bar of Justice, where the world is to be tried, and to receive no other judgement, but what flowes from the throne of grace. That there is no condemnation to them; that the law of the spirit of life which is in Christ Jesus hath freed them from the law of [...]in and death, Ro. 8. 1. 2. So that the Law hath no m [...]re power of judgmēt over thē, than the lawes of our Land to try an Angel of Heaven for life and death. That none can lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect, because God justifieth them, and who is hee that is the judge and condemner? even Christ which is their Saviour, Ro. 8. 33. 34. That they are the sheep that shalbe first separated and set at the right hand of Christ, before he enters upon the judging of the world, and so freed from judgement by the mercy of God in separating them, as Augustine well observeth. Aug. de Consens. Evang. lib. 2. cap. 30. That they shall not come into condemnation, but are passed from death to life, Jo. 5. 24. That what to the world is the day of judgement, to these is the day of Redemption, Lu. 21. 28. They shall not come into judgement to answer for any one of their sins, as is well observed by Reverend Mr. Fox, the author of that which we call the De Christo gratis Justif. p. 336. Book of Martyrs, for (saith he) Sublatâ offensâ, tollitur simul Judicii obligatio. i. e. The sin being taken away [ viz. by the Lamb of God, as appears Io. 1. 29.] all obligation of judgement is taken away with it.
As for the works and righteousness, which these Scriptures declare shalbe mentioned to beleevers in that their Jubilizing day, this speaks out the infinit freeness and riches of Gods grace in covering their nakedness. and setting forth only the beauty and ornaments which he hath put upon them: but in no wise any sufficient ground or reason upon which they might expect so great a salvation. Suppose a noble and indulgent Father hath a prodigall and rebellious son, that for many yeers hath grieved the spirit of his Father with his impure cariage, and exorbitant outrages, to whom notwithstanding his Fathers heart is no less indeared than was Davids to Absolom, therfore never hath a thought of disinheriting him, but reserves his whole heritage, together with a boundles treas [...]re entire for him; in the mean while wooing and even melting him with loving kindness into love and duty [...] at length the son repenteth, becomes ashamed of his base carriage toward so good a Father, returns to him, waits on him, ministreth to him in his weakness and sickness: and his Father by his last Will and Testament [Page 135] gives him all, naming him therin his good and beloved son that hath done him great service, ministred to him much comfort in the time of his necessity. Will any hence gather, that the attendance of such a son on such a Father at last, is a sufficient ground and reason for the Fathers setling on him so vast an estate? Could not the Father have hired a stranger for a few Crowns to have done him as much service? Doth not the mentioning of the sons good deeds which he would seem to reward with so rich munificence, speak out only the remarkable goodness of the Father, that hath buried in oblivion all the disobedience and mischiefs which his son hath committed, and will have his good parts alone to be mentioned? or if another that was not his son had done a thousand times more in his service should he have been entitled for it to the inheritance? So also in this case to attribute to the works of beleevers the reason or ground of their glorification because the Grace of Christ mentioneth them, is to lay the honour of Christs Grace in the dust. They that shall be glorified, even when Christ of his infinite Grace extolleth their service done to him, shall depresse themselves, that the entire prayse may bee his: Lord when did wee thus and thus minister to thee? what ever did we of any worth that thou shouldest owne it as a service to thee? what thou imputest is no otherwise our observance but in thy acceptance.
It is therefore denyed that the justifying sentence (as Mr Baxter termes it) shall passe in the last day either for or according to works, otherwise than hath beene before granted. And if wee shall not at last be glorified according to and for our workes, but that Mr. Brs. proofes in this particular faile; Then is his labour lost in going about to prove the second particular that the reason hereof is because they are parts of the condition. It must first appear that it is, before wee trouble our selves to know in what respect it is so. So that we will not contend about the second particular with him, to deny what he concludeth, that workes concurre in the same concausality with Faith to our glorification, 1. Not to evidence the truth of our Faith, nor secondly as the righteousnesss which the Law requireth, not thirdly as a meer signe by which God doth discern our Faith, nor fourthly as a mere sign to satisfie the justified person himselfe, nor fiftly to satisfie the condemned world of the sincerity of our Faith. All this we grant, and further adde in the sixt place nor as a condition (in Mr Baxters) sense of our glorification. And because none of these or other wayes, therefore not at all.
The Scriptures which he brings pa. 322. n. 5. that seeme to hold forth the promise of glorification for our workes, are of the same nature with those examined in the former Chapter alleaged by him and all (as those) gathered by the Papists to his hand, and either do conclude no more than what a little before we have in this Chapter granted, or pertaine to some of those ends of such promises of life which God maketh to our obedience, specified in the former chap. I shall therefore here pretermit to speak to them, because Mr Baxter alleageth them to another end here, viz to prove that the mention of these works to judgement is more than to signifie their sincerity to the condemned world, as in the end of that Section he expresseth himselfe. And this we deny not. So that it were impertinent to examine the premises where the conclusion is granted.
CHAP. IX.
Whether according to Mr. Baxter, Doe and live be the voice of the Gospel as well as of the Law? The question stated, and resolved whether, and in what respects Believers must act or work from life, not for life.
IN the eighth place (as naturall motions are strongest when they come neerest to their period and center, so) at the conclusion of his Aphorismes, pag. 3. 4. and so onward to the end, he multiplies Argument upon Argument, or rather twisteth many arguments together in one, under the notion of Queries; The substance of all may bee gathered together into this one Syllogisme.
That Doctrine which by necessary consequence draweth after it many intolerable absurdities, mischiefs, and soul-damning evills, must needs be a fals [...] doctrine.
But so doth the Doctrine of justification by Faith, or by Christ instrumentally received by Faith, without the addition of works, in a concausality with F [...]h or Christ.
Ergo, It is a false doctrine.
The Proposition is granted him. The Assumption hee goeth about to cleer and make good, by enumerating the particular absurdities and mischiefs that are consequentiall to this Doctrine. And [Page 137] this he doeth by way of interrogations bearing the force of strong Affirmations. I shal examine them in order. The first query he puts in these words.
A simple negation would here best suit with so untoward and audatious a question? Neither shall I say any more to it, but admonish the Reader to take notice, that hee doth in these words frame an enditement against Christ, his Apostles, and all that beare the name of Protestants, for sacriledge in wresting the holy Scriptures. And that, 1. Though he doth not (and why? but because he cannot) bring any one Scripture which they have so wrested. 2. And thereby affirmeth plaine enough to the capacity of every understanding reader, that the Papists and Arminians alone have purely and truely interpreted the Scriptures as to the point of justification, whom himselfe therefore followeth as their obedient disciple. And 3. shewes us no reason therof, but leaves us to conjecture what his meaning is, viz that the Scripture is no farther Canonicall, than after the interpretation and sense which the holy Mother Church alloweth it.
Nay we retort the argument upon him. Iustification by works constraines the assertors thereof not onely to wrest many Scriptures, but also to destroy and nullifie the whole Gospell and Salvation of Christ. Therefore it is false doctrine.
This first query was but a warning peece, but who can stand to beare the force of the second? The man as if hee had newly come forth of Vulcans shop, is all fiery, spits out nothing but lightening and thunderbolts, blowing into the bottome of Hell all that stand in his way. How formidably he layes about him, they that dare to come so neer may finde partly in this second querie it selfe, but principally in his Appendix pag. 76. &c. and in the highest strength of his wrath, pag. 83. and onward to the end of pag. 98. First his querie here runs in these words:
In what part of the world Mr. Baxters [elsewhere] lyeth in which his confutation of this doctrine is to be found I know not, I am not inquisitive to know. I have enough in this and desire not to fish in any more of his foule waters.
But in pronouncing this doctrine of working and performing duties not for life, bu [...] from life and salvation, not to the end that we may be justified by them, but in thankfullnesse for our justification by Christ without workes, to bee an Antinomian and damning doctrine if reduced to practice; he p [...]rremptorily pronounceth not onely all Protestant Churches and saints, but also Paul himselfe an Antinomian and damned. For 1. that Paul and all the Apostles of Christ doe teach and urge upon all the Saints of Christ all diligence in good workes and duties, and fruitfulnesse in obedience, in thankfulnesse for their Iustification Mr. Baxter will not, cannot deny, for if he should, he cannot be ignorant that he shall be forthwith overwhelmed with testimonies of Scriptures against him that himself must acknowledge unwrested. Yea he must quench not only the light of the Gospell, but also of reason and nature it selfe (which possibly are more authentique with him than Gospell) to deny that we are to be really as well as verbally thankfull to God for his least, much more for his greatest benefits such as are our Iustification and salvation.
But that the Apostle also teacheth that we are not to performe good works and duties that we may be justified and saved by them, is evident. To him that worketh (saith he) i. e. seeketh it by works, the reward is reckoned not of grace but of debt, shall be conferred on him if due in strict Iustice, he must expect nothing from grace. But to him that worketh not [seeks not the attainment therof by works] his Faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse. Ro. 4. 4. 5. to which he addeth the testimony of David, pronouncing the man blessed to whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes. ver. 6, 7, 8 By [Page 139] Grace are ye saved through Faith, not of workes, least any man should boast Eph. 2. 8, 9. we knowing that a man is justified by the workes of the Law, have beleeved in Christ Iesus that we might be justified by the Faith of Christ for by the works of the Law none can be justified. Gal. 3 16. Not by workes of righteousnesse which we have done but of his mercy he hath saved us, Tit. 3. 5. That no man is justified by the Law it is evident, for the just shall live by Faith. The strength of the reasoning is in the opposition of the Righteousnesse by which the Gospell to that by which the Law justifieth. By Faith, therefore not by our sinceerest and exactest study of the righteousnesse which the Law prescribeth. Gal. 2. 11. with many other testimonies, before frequently alledged. Lo heere the Apostle teaching the same doctrine which Mr. Baxter damneth, a working not for Iustficacation by his workes, but from justification and in thankfulnesse for it. Yea hee reduceth it to practise also. [ Wee knowing that there is no iustification by workes] have beleeved in Christ Jesus that we may be justified. Gal. 2. 16. I count all things doung that I may winn Christ and bee found in him, not having my owne Righteousnesse which is of the Law, but that which is through Phil. 3. 8, 9 the Faith of Christ, the Righteousnesse of God by Faith. Behold wee heere in these Scriptures the Apostle teaching and reducing to practise every particle of the doctrine which Mr. Baxter heere d [...]mneth. What followeth? According to Mr. Baxter Paul is an Antinomian, and damned. Let me also be so damned with Paul the Antinomian, rather then justified in the way of Mr. Baxters justification. Mr. Baxter cannot evade here by any sophisticall interpretation of Pauls sense and meaning in these scriptures. For they which have delivered this doctrine of Paul in Pauls words, or in words equivalent professe themselves to hold it also in Pauls sence and meaning. So that Mr. Baxter in interpreting Pauls, interprets their meaning also: so that it is evident that his wrath here is against the very doctrine of Paul, though his pretence bee to blow up them onely which speake after him. But Mr. Baxter hath a greater authority than Paul can boast of for himselfe, to pronounce them all Antinomians and damned with Paul that followe Pauls doctrine, viz. the determination of the Holy councell of Trent which hath thus concluded, Si quis dixerit &c. If any shall say that a man is justified by Faith alone without workes, let him be accursed. Who dares now to equillize Pauls Tent to the Popes Throne and so many Cardinals and Bishops palaces?
As to the matter it selfe, it is all sophisticall and fallatious that Mr. Baxter here delivereth. Let him bring that Antinomian to light that hath ever taught that we must not labour and strive for justification and salvation, against whom his Argument may holde good that he must needs bee damned, because he that seeketh not and striveth not to enter shall never enter. Some indeede by expressing themselves too briefly have given occasion to Mr. Baxter and such as he is, to catch a phrase or sentence from them that may smel of some absurdity as considered in it selfe and by its selfe: such as is that which he heer mentioneth, we must work from life, and not for life. But if the scope of the Authors in such phrases be gathered, from that which went before, and that which followeth, it will appear clearly they meant, we are not to work and perform duties to this end that wee may bee justified and saved by such works as works and duties, but to perform them in love and thankfulness to him that justifieth us freely of meer grace, without works, through the Redemption which is by Christ Jesus. And this is the Question betweene Mr. Baxter and the Papists on the one part, and the Antinomians, i e. the Protestants on the other part, whether wee must perform good works and duties to bee justified and saved by them and for them so performed, yea by them or for them as they are our inherent righteousness, our perfect, possible, and meritorious Righteousness? All which he affirms, and the Protestants with one consenting voice deny: as hath been before, and may after, before we part from Mr. Br. be more fully manifested.
What he concludes with as a notable absurdity and inconvenience that will befall his doctrine of works, if we will not say what he sayth: [viz. If good works bee no part of the Condition of our full justification and salvation, who will use them to that end? For how it can procure justification as a means, and not be the condition therof, I cannot conceive.] Besides his fallacy before noted in arguing from justification and salvation simply and indefinitely taken, to a full justification and salvation of his own devising, and so controvertibly again from this latter to that former: it concerns him to look to the inconvenience and danger, which useth and practiseth, not to us which use not good works to that end. And now is his time to consider, that his full justification, when hee thinks to possesse it, do not evaporate into no justification, no salvation.
Now to make way for the examination of what hee hath more largely to this purpose in his Answer to the tenth & eleventh Questions [Page 141] in his Appendix, and to shew how hee there fights with his own phantasm, feigns an Adversary and then quells him, falls out with his own shadow, never comming neer that which hee hath made to be the Question between him and the Protestant Churches, but when the Adversary is Eastward, hee rides out in indignation Westward, beating every bush and wounding every bough that he meets with, proclayming it an Adversary, and so returns at last with as much gallantry, as ever did William the Conquerour: it shall be expedient (for the disabusing of such as are apt in this kind to bee abused) to premise something for the right stating of the Question heer controverted.
First then the doings, duties, and works, about which the Question is conversant, are of two kinds, Legall or Evangelicall, such as have their foundation in that law which is of Natural and Moral, or such as are founded on precepts and doctrines of Gospell Positive right. By the former I mean such works and duties as the naturall conscience (specially if holpen by the written Law) can apprehend to be, and urge upon man as duty though there had never been a Christ or Gospell to adde further light. By the later I meane such duties, as are only in generall comprehended in the Law, [whatsoever the Lord shall at any time declare to bee his will, and impose upon thee as thy duty, thou shalt observe and do] but cannot possibly be known in speciall to bee duties, without a new revelation from heaven, such as the Gospell is. The former duties are naturall, founded in Nature it selfe: the later supernaturall, because without a supernaturall manifestation they cannot be known, and without a supernaturall power infused they cannot bee effectually performed. All this Mr. Br. himselfe granteth in this his Treatise, saving the very last clause, which also because I finde him not any where flatly denying, I shall forbear to prove, taking it as granted with the rest.
2. That this naturall righteousness and obedience was the Condition of the Old Covenant, as to life, and so remayneth still to them that▪ remayn under the Old Coveant, but so as that no man living can be saved by it since Adams fall, but that whosoever is saved, the same is saved after the tenour of the New Covenant, i. e. the Covenant of Grace or the Gospel. This also Mr. Baxter hath frequently taught and granted.
3. That the duties of the New Covenant are of two sorts, eyther more or lesse principall; the more principall is fayth, or receiving [Page 142] and embracing the Lord Christ, together with the justification and salvation that are by him. The lesse principall duties (which are also pure Gospel duties) are such as are subservient to faith, or to the receiving of Christ alone to justification, quickening, illumination, sanctification, &c. or to the reteyning of him and fuller closing with him to all these & all other Evangelical ends for which he is given to us by the Father. These 3. Positions are so frequently granted by Mr. Baxter in this his Book, that I forbear to quote the places.
4. That justification and salvation, as the Scripture terms them a reward, (if indeed it doth ever so term justification, as properly and strictly taken) may bee considered first as benefits already conferred and in our possession, in part or in the whole, or else as rewards heerafter to be conferred; the ground and foundation wherof was layd in our first conversion and union to Christ by faith, together with the earnest and pledge of the spirit given to us by God to assure us of our full possession of all the fruits therof in the future. And 2. if future, the Gospel proposeth these as rewards of his free grace and benignity, or else as rewards of d [...]bt, due to our service, and for the service done to him. Neither in this can Mr. Baxter oppose or dissent.
5. Then to come home and close to the Question, it remains to be expressed how far all these duties are to be done for life, I mean how far all or any kind of these are to bee performed for the attayning of justification and salvation as a reward, and how far onely in love and thankfulness for the reward alr [...]ady made ours in possession or in hope.
1. We grant, that the [...] which are wholly under the Old Covenant, having never the Gospel revealed unto them, are bound to seek justification and salvation by the works of the Law or naturall righteousness still: but they shall never attaine what they so seek, because they are impotent to fulfill the condition Yet their unableness is no prejudice to Gods authority and obligation upon them. It is otherwis [...] with them that live under the Gospel, and have the Covenant of Grace in Christ revealed to them, but have not yet so [...]ffectually received Christ by f [...]ith as to be [...] justified and declared righteous within their own souls: These are indeed to seek for justification and s [...]lvation, yet not by the workes of the Law, or legall, naturall, and meerly morall righteousnesse, for this were to reject the new Covenant or Gospel, with the justification which [Page 143] is by Christ, and to hold themselves fast under the old Covenant in an incapacity to be justified and saved: The best works of naturall righteousness which they can performe, being but dead works of dead men, like the stinch of Carrion, offensive to the pure nosthrills of God, who will therefore condemn, not justifie for them.
2. They that are in Christ and have obtayned justification and inchoat salvation by him, i. e. have their conscience absolved and saved from sin and obligation to vengeance, by faith in his bloud, are to perform those works of naturall righteousnes, not for life, but from life, not to procure thereby the life of justification, (for they have it already in Christ, and to seek it more compleatly to be perfected by such works is as hath been before shewed, to be so foolish as having begun in the spirit, [to seeke] to bee perfected by the fl [...]sh) but in duty and thankfulness for so full and free a pardon and Gal. 3. 3. absolution, which all our doings, all our sufferings are insufficienr to answer; Nevertheless the intuition of so great a redemption already attayned and in our possession, together with the promise of so glorious an inheritance for the future life, already confirmed to us by the seal of the spirit in the bloud of Christ, are of such infinite value that we are to walk still in the splendor and glory of it, so that our spirits should bee sublimated above earth and selfe, to dwell, and to spend our selves, and be spent in the bosome of that Grace, from which wee have received so much, and expect yet so much more of ravishing and never ending felicity. What neither eye hath seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man in a naturall way conceived, of the riches of the incomprehensible bounty and free grace of God, being once revealed to us, and made ours in possession, or in hope, ought so to spiritualize us, so to swallow us up into the spirit that we should no longer walk after the flesh, but after the spirit, to delight in the Law of God, in all the holiness and righteousnes which the Law teacheth, after the inner man. He that seeks not so to doe, hath hugd in his arms a dream of Christ, not Christ himselfe, hath had him possibly in his fancy, never in his heart and conscience. Hee that hath effectually met with God in Christ, reconciling the world to himselfe, and there tasted the love of God, or rather God which is love, hath suffered a Metamorphosis, and is changed all into love, hath so beheld God shining in Christ, as in a glasse, that he is transformed into the same image, is or would bee w [...]olly configured to the likeness of God.
Yea, we grant more, that the truly justified and adopted ones of [Page 144] the Lord, may perform these works of naturall righteousness which the Law commandeth, with respect to and expectation of the future glory which shall be revealed to them and conferred on them for Christs sake, as a reward of such their imperfect service; yet not a reward of debt purchased by and due to their works, but of free gift and grace from their indulgent father, who of his infinite love and bounty is wont to recompence the mites of his dear childrens labours, with the talents of his grace and bounty, not because they are worthy, but because he is gracious, yea Grace and Love it selfe, Ro. 4 4. 5. Goe ye into my vineyard, and whatsoever is right [or meet] ye shall receive, Mat. 20. 7. It must bee a boundless reward what such a father shall think right and meet to bestow upon his dear children. Their reward shall bee proportioned, not to the pittance of their poore service, but to the riches of their fathers bounty, and uncircumscriptiveness of his treasure. The respect of such infinite treasure in their fathers hand, and the riches of his love to bestow it in largest dimensions upon them, with a gracious respect to their dutifulness, and service, should serve as a strong motive and attractive to them to be still doing for him. When I was yet in my bloud, hee loved and cleansed me, Ezek. 16. 6,-9. When dead, he quickned me, Eph. 2. 1. When without strength to work, when a sinner, when ungodly, when an enemy, he gave his son to die for me, and reconciled me to himselfe: What will he now doe for mee so quickned, reconciled, washed, and justified, having attained strength, if I employ that strength in his service? Ro. 5. 6-10. Now wee are the sons of God, but it doth not yet appear what wee shall bee, onely wee know that when he appears we shall bee like him, having therefore this hope, we ought to purifie our selves as he is pure. 1. Jo. 2. 25. 3. Thus are the saints to draw encouragement to obedience, from the consideration of the reward, or rather from the infinite love and bounty of the rewarder.
3. That they which are out of Christ, (yet under the means of Grace, and Ministry of the Gospel) must performe all pure Gospel duties (which the Law requireth onely in generall and implicitely, but the Gospel specifieth expresly) to the severall ends to which the wisdome of God hath severally related them; some to justification, some to sanctification by Christ Jesus. It is their duty to hear, learn, study, and meditate, upon the doctrine of Grace, and mystery of Christ, duly to prize and value it, to desire, gasp, cry, and pray for the effectuallizing of it to themselves, to embrace and receive [Page 145] Christ, to repent of their long estrangedness from him, to deny themselves, and cast away all opinion of and confidence in their owne righteousness, that Christ alone may bee embraced, and the dung being cast out, they may bee replenished with that which is indeed the Treasure: and all this that they may bee justified and saved, not by and for these duties so performed, but by and for Christ to whom they seek and strive in all these duties to come into union▪ All this the Gospel both tacitely implieth and expresly teacheth: and the Law also in generall and inclusively commandeth as hath been sayd, Thus the Kingdome of Heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force. Here stil Christ is al to justification, & salvatiō & Faith the alone instrument to receive him. All the other actings are but subservient to Faith in this its instrumentall service to make way for it. As when a treasure is offered by a munificent benefactor to a poor beggar, the grace of the benefactor and pretiousnesse of the treasure is that which inricheth him, and the hand the alone instrument to receive it; yet must the eye guide him, the understanding prompt him, the wil move him, the feet carry him, and other actings of the minde and body bee subservient to him, that the hand may rerceive that which inricheth him. At length when all is done, such a begger hath more apparent grounds of boasting that hee hath been, and done somewhat to his owne enriching, than the best of us that we have been or done any thing to our own Justification. For though the Benefactor hath poured upon him freely of his own mercy, not for, or upon condition of his crying, running to him, emptying his hand of what was in it before, and stretching it forth to bee filled with the treasure profered him: yet the benefactor gave him neither a heart to desire nor wisdome to value, nor light to guide him, nor feet to carry him, nor a hand to receive the treasure conferred. It is otherwise in our Justification by Christ. God freely gives it in Christ, and all the power, will, actings, and instruments by which we come into the possession of it▪ Neither when we affirme all these to be our duty while yet unjustified, doe we thereby affirme that all must be done before we can bee justified. The grace of God oft prevents our operation in most of these, justifying us by Faith, before we have time to put our selves upon many of these operations. In this sense I know none that denieth an obligation upon sinners to act and worke for their justification and salvation.
4 They that are justified ought to be still active and industrious [Page 146] in all the duties of the Gospell tending to their confirmation in the Faith, stablishment in Christ, illumination in the misteries of the Gospell, denyall of themselves, and seeking to be wholly swallowed up into the Lord Iesus, that they may be dayly more filled and ravished with fuller assurance and comfort of their justjfication & salvation by him. This we find the Apostle making his taske, Phill. 3. 8 9 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. And hereunto tend the many memento's scattered by the holy Ghost in the Gospell, watch, pray, take heed, beware, stand fast, hold fast, Run, fight, strive, continew &c. All which tend to the laying not of such our labours, but Christ Jesus abou [...] whom these our labours are to be exercised as the foundation of happinesse more and more fixedly within our s [...]ules. Whatsoever Gospell du [...]ies and labours God hath ordeined for the faster setling of us upon the Rock of Righteousness, the emp [...]ying ou [...]selvs of our nothingnesse, and making Christ [...]all, those all are to be done by the saints not onely from life, but also for life to be had and confirmed to them not in these duties, but in Christ more and more formed and perfected in them to righteousnesse and salvation by these their religious indeavours.
These four Conclusions I know none of the Protestant (or as Mr. Baxter terms them Antinomian) Teachers denying. Whatsoever therefore he bringeth not thwarting and opposing some of these Assertions, he doth but Oleum & operam ludere, spend time and wit to prove that which none denieth, and to oppose that which none teacheth and patronizeth. These things therefore thus premised, it is easie to answer all that he will seeme to himselfe to have laid impregnably for justification by works in his Appendix.
To begin with pag. 76. of that his Appendix, and passing over that bold peremptory Pharisaicall and popish Assertion, that Doe this and live, is the language both of the Law and the Gospel, together with the explication and feigned sense of [ Doe and live] as it is the voice of the Gospel, p. 77. (there being nothing for, but all against this doctrine throughout the whole Gospel, as hath been already fully proved) all that he brings for the confirmation of it in the sense in which he will be understood, is ineffectuall to this end. All his posiions pag. 78, 79, 80. may in the sense before mentioned, be granted him, viz. 1. That a wicked man or unbeliever may and must labour to obtaine the first life of Grace. 2. That a man may act for the increase of this spirituall life when he hath it. 3. That we may and must act for the life of Reconciliation, Justification, and Adoption. [Page 147] 4. That we may act for the assurance of both our Justification and Sanctification. 5. That wee may act for Eternall Salvation.
All these things are wholly besides the question, and no more either powerfull or proper to prove that [Do and live] (in the sense which he affirmeth and all Protestans deny) to be the voice and Tenour or scope of the Gospel, than if he had said nothing at all. He might expect the beguiling of the simple, but not of any knowing and considerative person with this dispute of his totally alien from the matter about which he disputeth. For himselfe knoweth, that they which use this Phrase, [ We must work from life, not for life] do in this expression. 1. Speak only of those that are already alive in Law againe, i. e. justified and absolved from all their sins through faith in Christs bloud, and so delivered from the Curse and death of the Law: 2. That they mean principally, if not only the the life of Justification, reconciliation, and Adoption, that they which in respect of this life, are already alive before God of meere Grace, uniting them to Christ which is their Life, ought not to seek the same life by works, as if it were not already attained; for this were to reject Grace and Christ as insufficient to Life, and to flye to works as either alone sufficient, or without which Grace and Christ are not sufficient to it. 3. That if at any time by and under this expression they comprize besides the life of Justification, &c. here, the life of glory hereafter also; in excluding our acting and working for it, they exclude them only as our acts and workes, i. e. as acts and works either of Gods worship, or of righteousness and charity towards our neighbour commanded by the Law of Nature, by the righteousnesse thereof to live: Not those Gospel duties of Gods ordination to be subservient to our union unto and receiving of Christ to bee our alone righteousnesse by which to live. This way themselves doe, and teach all, both believers and unbelievers to act for life. The sum of their doctrine about Justification and salvation breathing out it selfe in calling all from all iniquity to the fountain of Christs bloud for cleansing, and from all confidence in the righteousness of their owne workes to put on him alone for their alone righteousnesse at Gods Tribunall. Whatsoever acting and working there is in selfe-searching, selfe-denyall, selfe-renouncing, whatsoever in the study, knowing, desiring, seeking, comming to Christ, that they may receive and retaine him to bee their sole and whole life and righteousnesse.
All this they doe, and teach to bee done and that for life. This [Page 148] way (say they) the Kingdome of Heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it (yea hold it also) by force. Nevertheless even these Actings they disclaim also as by their righteousness interessing to Christ and life in him; and will no otherwise act by these for life, but as they are ordinately subservient to Faith and to living by Faith, i. e. by Christ whom Faith apprehendeth. Even Faith it selfe [as an act or work justifying] they explode, leaving it to the Papists, Socinians, Arminians, and among these to Mr. Baxter which heere pag. 80. of his Appendix, as elsewhere teacheth it.
So the question is not, when God of the freeness and riches of his Grace, doth offer unto us Christ with Righteousness, and life in him as a free gift; whether we ought to act and work for the receiving and holding of it, or not? But whether wee ought to work ordinately as God prescribeth, or inordinately as Mans mad God Reason fancieth. We only deny that when such a gift is so offered we ought to run with fist, foot, sword, and club, to force it out of Gods hand as our due, (as they doe which after the doctrine of Mr. Baxter and his Masters invade God with their works, to claime it as due to their righteousness;) But we teach men tolie prostrate in the sense of their own vileness, gasping after it and receiving it as a free gift of Mercy; granting man in the very first acting of his will toward Christ, and Gods acting upon him to draw him to Christ, the relation of more then a naturall patient, (not pronouncing him a stock or stone as our Adversaries object to us) even of obedientiall subjection (as they term it in the Schools) and ever after of a free Agent to fetch life and motion from Christ by the spirit.
Thus far and no further doe we grant [doe and live] to bee the voyce of the Gospel, viz. as there is a doing in receiving Christ and adhering to him; and as the will in receiving Christ, is as well an Agent as a Patient. Mr. Baxters sense wee reject, and have spoken to his reasons heer brought to confirm it. And whatsoever he hath sayd elswhere, hath been before examined.
As to the Scriptures which he quoteth to confirm his 5. Position, p. 80. and his glorying that they prove wee may act for salvation, p. 81. which as generally posited by him no man ever denied: there is no need of answering, that which they are brought to prove being granted. At length in the same pa. 81. of his App. he frameth an objection made against his doctrine thus:
To this Objection he gives a three fold Answer.
But is it sincere if it come from love to God? Is there not aswell a naturall love as a naturall fear of God in the hearts of all both good and bad? Or was there ever any that hated God as God and good? Or that served him from hatred to him? If such a Naturall or Morall Love (for I finde not Mr. Baxter ascending any where higher,) suffice to make the obedience of men sincere, and because sincere, a perfect and sufficient righteousnes to justification and salvation; Then all will more fitly cohere than the golden crowne with the golden pantofle: a universall conditioning righteousness, with a universall conditionall salvation. All shall be saved (except the Antinomian Paulites, or Protestants) if Mr. Baxters Gospel stand: if he misse, none else but they.
I conclude therefore, that to love God and not our selves, and so to do all without respect to our own good, is no Gospel frame of spirit.
As home to the matter as his doctrine of Justification to the truth. Where was conscience when will and wit alone shew themselves to beguile his Readers with meere opinions and imaginary suspitions? Who ever opposed the ordinate love of God to the ordinate and subordinate love of our selves? When he hath degraded [Page 150] us from being men, yea into a state beneath Beasts and bruits, telling the world that we doe not appetere bonum, desire and move unto any thing that is good, yea our chiefe good, thenceforth hee thinks the world in stead of hearing will trample us, as other stocks and stones that have no sensitive appetite. Our doctrine is of another frame. Wee oppose the love of God which is from the spirit of Adoption, (not from Nature) to the servile feare which is from the spirit of Bondage: following heerin the light and testimony of the Holy Ghost, Ro. 8. 15. 1. Jo. 4. 18. And this I doubt not, to be also the meaning of the Apostle, Gal. 5. 6. where hee makes the all on our part to justification, consist in Faith, which worketh by love, i. e. in faith which carrieth out the beleever to work, no more in slavish fear and by a mercenary spirit, but in the freedome and spirit of Love.
And whosoever will but vnwinde the Clew of Pauls disputation in the whole 4. Chapter, especially from verse 21. and so forward to this 6. verse of Chap. 5. shall I think have the suffrage of his own Reason for this interpretation. For the Apostle having disputed of the bondage discending from Hagar to Ismael and his Children, from Mount Sinai to those that held themselves under the Covenant of Works [Doe and live] there given; and withall of the Freedom discending from Sarah to Isaac and his seed, viz. the seed of Christ then included in and typified by Isaac, i. e. from the New and spirituall Jerusalem to all true Christians, concludes of all such We are not the Children of the bond woman, but of the free: and in 5. Chap. verse 1. exhorting them to stand fast in the liberty, wherewith Christ hath made them free; And forbidding, and in the next 3 verses shewing the danger of returning againe under the servile yoke of the Covenant of works [Do and live] whereas by Faith and not by works, the hope of Righteousness is to be expected, he concludes in the sixth verse, that neither circumsition nor uncircumsition, ( i. e. neither workes, nor any externall priviledges of the workers) avail any thing (to life and righteousnesse) but Faith which worketh by love; what is that but Faith which worketh by a new principle of filiall love and not from that olde principle of servile feare the proper adjunct of the Covenant of workes? This is to be the Children of the free not the bond woman, by the Faith of Christ alone to seek for righteousnesse, yet to be still working from a principle of love not of feare to bring forth fruits of sanctification to him that hath freely justified us. This man saith the Apostle hath entred into [Page 151] his rest as God hath entred into his rest. Heb. 4. 10. As God having consummated the worke of Creation, rested and ceased from his worke, because all was perfect and needed no addition; and Christ having offered one sacrifice for sins, for ever, sat downe at the right hand of God, ceasing from further sufferings, because our redemption is fully perfected and nothing more needed to bee added: Heb: 10. 12. 14. So every beeleever in respect of the rest of Grace, having received by Faith the righteousnesse which is by this one sacrifice of Christ for the purging of all his sins, sitteth downe for ever at rest in the fruition and firme tenure thereof, ceasing from his owne workes to perfect his justification because it is already compleated and nothing needeth to be added to it. All his workings henceforth is to manage so great a salvation to the glory of the Author, as God worketh hitherto and Christ worketh, for the governing and disposing to their proper ends the Creatures made, and elect men redeemed.
Mr. Baxter contrariwise teacheth men so to love themselves as with love to destroy themselves, and so to seek for life as to be sure to lose it; forbidding them to enter into their Rest of Grace, and calling them back to the yoke of bondage againe, not suffring them to cease from their owne workes, nor to doe that worke of God, Jo 6. 29. nor to act in the Sp. of love, but of feare and bondage. Is not he one of those hard Taskmasters from whose cruelty Christ calleth his Disciples, Come unto mee all yee that are weary and heavy laden, [with the yoakes and burthens which your legall Teachers impose on you,] and I will give you rest? &c. These will never permit you to have rest to your soules, Mat. 11. 28, 29.
I conclude therefore, that Mr. Baxters Conclusion of this his second Answer to the Objection, is as patt to the purpose as an Oyster-shell to a hungry appetite: and the love to our selves which he teacheth, to tend only to selfe-ruining.
Al this is also totally besides the Questiō, which is not whether we may, but how we are to labour, whether with that most excellent and Gospel-frame of spirit consisting in love and thankfulnesse, or mercenarily by works? and whether in the way of Faith which the Gospel, or of naturall Righteousness which the Law teacheth? Many shall seeke to enter and shall not bee able, faith the Master. Wee through the spirit wait for the hope of Righteousness by Faith, saith the Apostle: Not so, but by and for our Works, not at all by Faith, but as it is an act or worke, saith Mr. Baxter, let him shew his light and Authority to be greater than Pauls, before hee looke that wee should run after him.
I shall put one question to him arising from the last of his Interrogatories, which will be harder for him to resolve than a thousand such as he hath here wil be to us. When hee tels us we must labour for the full certainty of Heaven hereafter; is there any such certaintainty in this world attainable according to his principle of but [...] conditionall justification and salvation untill the day of Judgement [...] or how is it to be obtained? Let him make it out to us. If he doth it, I shall conclude, that he can also turne Heaven into Earth, and Earth into Heaven, and nothing to bee unpossible to him: if not, let his Reader judge whether his indeavour be to delude, or else to teach.
In the next Chapter or Section, if wee attend onely to the sound and roare of words, Mr. Baxter appeares more formidable from pag. 83. to the 98. of his Appendix, in which hee presents us with thirteen Considerations, to shew the vanity, and intolerable damnable wickednesse of this [supposed] doctrine, which he opposeth. But the whole sloud of his wit, wrath, and eloquence, heere poured out together, runs into the dead Sea, by a desart and desolate way in which it meets with no mortall crearure to wet or hurt it. For who is there of all mankinde that hath said wee ought not to act for life in the sense which this man suborneth, or otherwise than I have before oft expressed? Much lesse is there any professed Christian that hath asserted (as hee insinuateth) That wee must not come to Christ that we may have life, nor strive to enter in at the straite gate, nor lay violant hands on the Kingdome of Heaven, nor lay up for our selves a Treasure in Heaven, nor seeke the Kingdome of God and the Righteousnesse the reof, nor presse on for the attainment of the Resurrection? &c. Let him be named by Mr. Baxter, that he may be brought forth and stoned which thus blasphemeth, I [Page 153] shall not hinder it. That which they teach is that Workes are not to be performed to this end, that as works or doing as opposed to believing, by, and for their owne, or our owne Righteousnesse in doing them, they should put us into the possession of the life of justification and blessednesse.
If Mr. Baxter have any thing to say against this assertion, or against that which I before laid as the state of the question, it wilbe taken into examination: till then I shall leave him to fight with his owne shaddow, having no loose time to spend in gazing upon the activity of such a Combatant.
CHAP. X.
Arg. The Authour of the Booke intituled, The Marrow of Moderne Divinity, vindicated from the Aspersions wherewith Mr. Baxter defameth him and his Doctrine.
HEere because I am to follow, and my taske is, not to leave Mr. Baxter untill I have examined all that hee saith to prove Justification by works; I am necessitated to fall into that which will be judged a Digression.
After hee hath enacted by a Law, that to say, wee must not worke for life, is a Blasphemy, or at least an intolerable errour, and to hold it practically a necessarily damning Doctrine, that whosoever doth it must be everlastingly damned for it. (All which wee acknowledge to bee in some sense true after the sound of the words, though after the meaning of the Authour they can never be saved which practically hold the contrary, as possibly I shall afterwards shew.) Now he proceeds to indite and arraigne to condemnation one Authour, as guilty of this damning Doctrine, viz. The Authour of the Book called, The Marrow of Moderne Divinity, and many his Accessaries, viz. all those Divines that have [Page 154] annexed their approbatory subscriptions to the usefullnesse of it; so finde we the man expressing himselfe, Aphorism. pag 330.
This he speaketh onely in generall, we shall finde his particulars following. To this therefore I answer onely in generall;
1 That it were to bee desired that Mr Baxter had inured no more dishonour upon thos [...] Divines to whom he dedicates his book by such his dedication; than those forementioned Divines have attracted to themselves by their applauding epistles.
2 And that those Divines, with Mr. Baxter himselfe, could mention so many sound parts in his booke, both in the matter and ends of the Author; as hee hath picked out imaginary errours in the other.
3 As to the doctrine of that booke which he so accuseth, I shall there examine in particulars where Mr. Baxter particularly drawes it into accusation and judgement.
Onely by the way let me thus far excuse my selfe.
1 I never knew who was the Author of that worke.
2. Neither have I read it otherwise than here and there a fragment as I found it lying in my friends houses; so that I could no otherwise judge of it but ex ungue Leonem, what the whole was but by that which my slender judgement told me the part which I read was, not onely orthodox but singularly usefull.
3 That I never knew there was a second part of it, much lesse saw it until Mr Baxter by his quotation therof so told me. But that since I have gotten both parts, yet by meanes of other imployments have not had time any further to read it but where Mr. Baxter accuseth it of error.
4. That if I knew the Author to be yet living, I should have wholly left the defence of himselfe to himselfe. It was not so much the animosity as the ingenuity of Scaliger which caused him when he heard that one had busied himselfe about the correcting of the errors in his writings, to cry out, Ego meos corrigam errores, I my selfe will be the corrector of my owne errors. The same taske may [Page 155] this Author justly challenge to himselfe (if living) to be himselfe the defender of his owne writings. Perhaps he is doing it, perhaps he hath done it, I shall therefore in my uncertainty what is done, onely with such brevity seeke to disabuse the doubting readers of both, that I shall in no wise prevent the Authors fuller vindicating of his owne or rather Gods cause in his hand. Let us then attend to Mr Baxters accusations, particularized, Append. pag. 100. and so onward. It was questioned as may be seen pag. 99. why he excepted against the Book called the Marrow of Modern Divinity? he answers there, because it is guilty of this hainous doctrine. This he begins now pag. 100 to shew in particulars, alleaging first the words of that booke thus:
Having thus alleaged the Author, he thus endeavours to accuse and confute him:
Who ever heard any doctrine more unanswerably proved to bee hainous? If any man question by what Arguments, he can easily answer [Page 156] himselfe, by this [...]hat Mr. Baxter trying and finding himselfe unable to do it, at length grants it to be sound and good. Thus are they driven oft-times to wound themselves who draw the Sword against the Truth. The Author of that booke proveth that beleevers or the redeemed of Christ are no longer to serve for feare of H [...]ll by the testimony of the H. G. Lu. 1. 74. 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear, in holinesse and righteousnesse &c. Mr. Baxter to evade the force of this Scripture, first contendeth that by enemies are here to be understood not spirituall but mortall enemies, wicked men and their persecutions. Now may not a blind man perceive this to bee a shifting not an answer of this Scripture?
1. The groūd of this not fearing is here layd to be our deliverāce cut of their hands, whom else we should feare. And will Mr▪ Baxter say that Christ came to deliver his elect from the persecutions of men, and not from sin, death, hell, which were our most formidable enemies? This were to make Christs kingdome to be of this world, and to joyn with the carnall Iewes that expected such a carnall Christ and c [...]rnall kingdome that might be eminent in the world.
2. Or hath he actually purchased to us such a deliverance? doth not experience declare the contrary?
3. Or must we so long suspend our serving of God in Righteousnesse and Holiness untill we be actually delivered from all feare and danger of mens persecutions? For so runs the Text as well in the originall as in our translation, that the deliverance is layd as the ground of the service, and that put in our possession, before this can be put in execution, at least without feare.
4. Is not deliverance heere the same thing with the salvation mentioned ver. 77, which Iohn was to preach? but that was salvation, and so is this deliverance, by the remission of sins; and consequently we must serve (who are in Christ,) without feare of vengeance and Hell.
He sees that with this evasion he cannot decline the edge of this Scripture; therefore takes up the right interpretation of it at last, thus: Or if it be even a feare of God that is there meant &c. Why had he not spoken full to the point in question and said the feare of Hell? This minsing will nothing help him. All that he saith against it in this sense, is but such as is wont to proceed from the extravagancy of an astonished and self confounded man. For who ever said that a beleever must cast off all feare of God and not be possessed still with [Page 157] a filiall feare to displease him? Or that as farr as he is in danger of sin and suffering he must not feare it, to shun it? Or that so farr as our assurance is still unperfect [or perfect] a jealousy of our own harts and a dreadfull Reverence of God are [not] necessary? But what is all this to the serving of God for feare of Hell? How doth he daub with untempered morter? At length he determines the question. But not the legall terrors of our former bondage, such as arise from the apprehension of sin unpardoned, and of Gods beeing, our enemy. I need to say no more, but where then is the feare of Hell in a beleever? doeth it arise from the apprehension of the pardon of his sin, and of God reconciled to him in Christ? what can be said more weakly to confute, or more strongly to confirme that which he cals a hainous doctrine? Is Mr. Baxter an adversary or an accessary to him whom he pronou [...]ceth the Author of this wicked, intolerable, damnable doctrine? Himself speaks more to confirm it than the person whom he opposeth. But how according to his principles, the terrors of our former bondage as he describes it, are in this life removed, neyther can I see, nor he make out without contradicting himselfe.
Enough Magisterially if it were true what he objecteth, to say only and not to demonstrate the truth of what hee objecteth. But if false, who perceiveth not the censorious spirit of the Objector? That it is false appeareth evidently: for how doth hee deny the plain sense which denieth no sense at all of the Text, but onely declares what he thinks to bee the more principall scope of Christ in that Text, than other? And in this the context will evince that hee speaketh the truth.
B. In the 155. page, He maketh this the difference betweene the two Covenants: One sayth, Doe this and live, the other sayth, Live and doe this: the one sayth, Doe this for life, the other sayth, Doe this from life.
But I have provedfully that the Gospel saith also, Doe this for life.
1. Now hee manifesteth wherin the haynousnes of the doctrine [Page 158] of this Book, and the intolerable damnable wickedness of the Author consisteth: viz. in his blindness that hee did not foresee what Antichristian doctrine Mr. Baxter would afterward divulge to the world, and say hee had fully proved it: but for lacke of this foreknowledge, doth heer deliver the contrary truth of Christ prepossessing the minds of men therewith against Mr. Baxters future impostures.
But 2. Let him not say he hath fully proved, but let him fully prove that doing and works as the Scriptures doe oppose the same to faith and receiving of Christ, (in which sense this Author speaketh) are injoyned by the Gospel to justification of life, or the life of justification, and then let him expect that his Gospel shall stand, and the Gospel of Christ lie prostrate at his feet.
3. Because Mr. Baxter will never bee able to prove this, the true Disciples of Christ will still hold this as one principle difference between the two Covenants, that the one requires us to seeke life after the tenour of Justice, the other after the tenour of Grace. The one bids us to seeke it by Works, the other by Fayth. The one presupposeth the originall righteousness given us in Adam, bidding us by it to follow after happiness, the other offereth Christ unto us as the fountain of life both of Justification and Sanctification, calling upon us to receive or beleeve in him for both, that both may be ours when Christ is ours. He is our life, and when Christ our life (not works our life) shall appear, we also shall appear with him in glory. This is all that this Author meaneth in this passage, as himselfe makes evident. If in this he be an Hereticke, let mee live and die with him in his Heresie. To prevent mistake, I meane heere the Covenant of works in Mr. Baxters sense throughout this his Treatise, viz. the first Covenant made with Adam.
B. So in his second part page 190. his great note to know the voyce of the Law by, is this, That when in Scripture there is any Morall worke commanded to bee done, eyther for the eschewing of punishment, or upon promise of any reward temporall or eternall, or else when any promise is made with the condition of any worke to bee done which is commanded in the Law, there is to bee understood the voyce of the Law.
A notorious and dangerous mistake, which [Page 159] would make almost all the New Testament, and the very Sermons of Christ himselfe, to bee nothing but the Law of works. I have fully proved before, that Morall duties as part of our sincere obedience to Christ, are part of the condition of our salvation, and for it to be performed. And even Faith is a Morall duty. It is pity that any Christian should no better know the Law from the Gospel, especially one that pretendeth to discover it to others.
About the matter heer delivered by this Author, enough hath been spoken before, in examining what Mr. Baxter hath sayd in many parts of his Aphorisms contrary to it. Touching the proofe of the contrary Assertion, Mr. Baxter hath sayd no more than, nor so much as Bellarmine had sayd before him, and left prepared to his hand. Hee should therefore more properly have sayd, Not I, but Bellarmine hath fully proved, and therefore fully because Mr. Baxter so affirmeth. As to the Assertor of it, why doth hee pitch upon this Author alone, when Calvin, Fulk, Mr. Fox, (as I have before Chap. 15. alleadged and quoted them) Dr. Amesius, Medul. Theol. lib. 1. cap. 22. Se. 19. In a word all Protestant Divines from Luther till this present time, have in substance, and most of them that have occasion to pitch upon the same Subject, have even totidem verbis, delivered the same doctrine, (as to mercenary, or rewards of debt) having learned the same from the Apostle, why doth he single out this one as a singular man? Let him with Bellarmine, Stapleton, Maldonat, and the rest of that hair, roar out against all the Reformed Churches, A notorious and dangerous mistake &c. A herd of Hereticks and ignorant Animalls; It is pity that any Christian should no better know the Law from the Gospel, especially such as pretend to discover it to others.
As to his Morall duties, and even Faith as a Morall duty to bee performed for salvation; hee speaks like such morall men as nature now blinded and corrupted formeth, whose principle it is, Naturam ut optimam ducem sequi, to follow Nature and naturall instinct, or Reason as their best guide, knowing not spirituall things, because the Naturall man cannot receive them. If he savoured so much the Gospel as Philosophy, why doth not the phrase which Christ & his Apostles use [ of the spirit and spirituall things] so much delight him as that of the Philosophers [ Morall and Moralities?] As [Page 160] much was Christs offering himselfe a sacrifice and giving satisfaction to the Justice of God a Morall duty, and so not meritoricus for us, because due to God from him by the Law for himselfe: as Faith in Christ and other purely Gospel duties subservient unto Faith. For both these duties on Christs and on our part are comprehended under this one generall of the Law of nature: Whatsoever I shall command thee thou shalt doe. I shall leave the justification and salvation by Morall Faith and Morall duties to Mr. Baxter and with the Apostle, through the Spirit wait for the hope of Righteousnesse by Faith. Gal. 5. 5
Is then every teacher, (after Mr. Baxters Canon) which declares what the voice, force, curse, and condemnation of the Law is, a Legall and Anti-Evangelicall preacher? So he affirmes Paull to bee if he speake out what the curse and condemnation of the Law is. Then not onely Paul, but Christ also and all his Apostles are Legall not Gospel preachers. For he will not deny them to have so made out the Law in its force &c. Or when the Apostle in that quoted Stripture speakes of their Damnation which would not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousnesse, doth he not leave them under the damnation of the Law for not embracing the Gospell? doth not the Law hereby take occasion to damne them the more deeply for neglecting and rejecting the truth? The proper office of the Gospell is not to condemn but to save. Onely when its salvation is contemned it yeelds backe the contemners under the greater guilt to the Law to power out on them the larger, if not largest measure of its curse and wrath. Do not thinke (saith our Saviour to the Iewes that rejected his Gospell,) that I will accuse you to the Father, there is one that accuseth you, even Moses in whom you trust. Jo. 5. 45.
But whether the inference of making Paul a Legall Preacher, is to be ascribed to Mr Baxter or to the Author of the Marrow of Modern Divinity is easily discernible. That Author had onely sayd that one sentence of Paul in a whole Epistle was the voice of the Law. Mr. Baxter inferreth that so to say is to make Paul a Legall Preacher; & consequentially that to preach any thing of the Law makes a Legall Preacher. Let now Mr. Baxter name one Minister within [Page 161] this Nation that hath taught such ranke Antinomisme, as himselfe here that professeth himselfe an Antaegonist to destroy it. But wee may perceive by this he will be all things, as well Antinomian as Arminian and Papist to smother the truth of the Gospell.
How extreamly is this man in love ( Narcissus like) with his own beauty, or rather fancy? Every other Visage not begotten of his seed, and fashioned to his image is an Owle with him. The words of the Authour are these: [The Law saith], knowest thou not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God. Be not deceived, &c. 1 Cor. 6. 9. And therefore thou being a sinner and not righteous, shalt not inherit the Kingdome of God. This is all that he hath against which Mr. Baxter raiseth his hubub, a shamefull abuse of the Scripture! Let him deny if hee can this to bee (though lesse principally and secondarily the voice of the Gospel, yet) primarily and more principally the voice of the Law. If not, then surely as he hath a Gospel, so also hath hee a Law of his owne making. Or what other ground is there why such shall not inherit the Kingdome, but because they are not in Christ? Fer whosoever is baptized with the bloud of Christ to justification, is baptized also with his spirit to sanctification. And if not in Christ, then under the Law. If under the Law, then under the curse and condemnation of the Law; and consequentially under the threat of the Law here denounced. Or what should hinder the Apostle from denouncing the curse of the Law against them that are and wilbe under the Law? Let Mr. Baxter have his will that the Gospel condemnes them for their finall unbeliefe and rebellion against Christ: yet doth [Page 162] not the Law condemne them too for all their unrighteousness, fornications, Adulteries, &c. If he deny it, wee shall finde him the Author of a sweet peece of Gospel Doctrine: That they which are in Christ are under the Curse of the Law, (so hath hee before stoutly asserted) but they which are enemies of Christ, are exempted from it. If he confess it, then the shame returns upon himselfe which he layes on this Author.
Let him but add what followeth, & it wil appear there is no footing for him in these his words, for al the abusive carpings wherwith he seeks to disgrace him. I thinke [...]sayth the Author) that Preach [...]r was ignorant of the Mystery of Fayth, for it is of the Nature of sovereigne Waters, which so wash off the corruption of the Ʋl [...]er, that they coole the heat, and stay the spreading of the insection; and so by degrees heal the same: Neither did he know that it is the Nature of Cordialls, so to comfort the heart and [...]ase it, as to expell the nox [...]ous humours, and strengthen Nature against them.
Is it not heere evident that the fayling which hee censureth in that Minister, is his mistake of the power and Nature of Spirituall and Gospel comforts, that hee dared not to speake a word o [...] consolation to a wounded soule, before hee saw and had had p [...]oofe of his reformation, (though never so much burthened with the consideration of his sinne past, and gasping after Christ and forgiveness by him) for fear such spirituall comfort would carry him backe into carnall liberty againe. Nay, sayth this Author▪ The Mystery of Faith, or consolation which is by faith in Christ Jesus, is like sovereigne Waters and Cordialls, doth not onely comfort the wounded soule against the guilt, but also subdue the power, and stay the spreading of sinn, strengthening the soule against the future [Page 163] prevalency of corruption: so that the due application and reception of it is the best furtherance, and not at all a hinderance to the reformation of the Life.
This doctrine may possibly offend Mr. Baxters palate, but I am sure it squares with the Gospel. All that Mr. Baxter hath therefore, pag. 104. 105. against the Authors words wrested into a wrong sense expresseth Mr. Baxter what hee is, but in no wise weakeneth the estimation of the Author with them that are wise. [...]or he doth neyther explicitely nor implicitely affirme, that justifiing▪ Faith is a beleeving that our sinnes are pardoned, as Mr. Baxter untruly suggesteth▪ [...]nd thence draws matter of sugillation
He names the Mystery or [...]aith, which is one and the same as if he had sayd the Mystery of Christ, or the Mystery of the Gospel, all which in holy Writ, are [...]lent [...]rme. And what he affirms of this Mystery of Faith or [...] the deeper it sincks into the heart the more it purifies [...] strengtheneth in the power of godliness. Mr. Baxter [...] [...] affixed to this Doctrine shall not hinder my [Amen] [...]
He might more properly have sayd, Many other intolerable slanders his candor and conscience could have i [...]ured upon this booke. For so his next words would have verified what hee had sayd; [ as his m [...]king the New Covenant to threaten nothing &c.] When the Au [...]hor in the quoted place speaketh nothing of the New Covenant, but of the Law of Christ, by which hee there declareth himselfe to meane the Ten Commandements, as they are now in the hand and disposing of Christ. And this Law he understands also in relation, not to the whole world, but to them that are implanted into Christ; his words being directed to Neophytus. To such (Christ having already borne the penalty of the Law in their stead) [Page 164] temporall and fatherly chastisements onely for their purging and perfecting, are threatned in case through infirmity they transgresse the Law. In this, I conceive, hee alludeth to the priviledges of the Covenant made with David as the Type of Christ, and his seed as the Type of Christs seed, and so pertayning (as a Gospel liberty) no lesse fully to us than to them. If his children forsake my Law, breake my statutes &c. Then will I visit their transgressions with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes; nevertheless my loving kindness will I not take utterly from him, nor suffer my faithfulnes to fail, my Covenant will I not break &c. Ps 89. 31-34. And this is M. Brs. own doctrine when he teacheth that there is no deathly violation of the new Covenant besides final unbelief & rebellion against Christ, in and under Thes. 32. 33. 34. and 37. But the Author whom Mr. Br. calls heer ad partes, speaks not of finall unbeleefe or rebellion incident to the world, but of some particular transgression of any of the Ten Commandements (as hee expresseth himselfe) through the infirmity incident to the Saints. What fire and fury is there in this mans wrath, that having made an Adversary, will have him wounded, vel per me, though through his owne heart, ani [...]am (que) in vulnere ponit. If it be an intolerable errour in this man, much more in Mr. Baxter, who much more vehemently and upon slig [...] er and slenderer grounds asserts it.
The Scriptures which Mr. Baxter alle [...]dgeth as contraried by this doctrine, speak eytherof such rebells▪ as when the Grace of Christ is offered them, persist in a finall refusall of it, or of such hypocrites as having once seemingly tasted it, Apostatize utterly from it. And with these this Author hath nothing heere to doe. Onely Mr. Baxter being heavily burthened with another Monster, which hee had a purpose to have disburthened himselfe of in a Tractate of Universall Redemption, being prevented by another, must needs now and then case himselfe of it, and speake out how hatefull to him the doctrine of the certaine perseverance of the Saints in grace is.
The other things which hee hints and but hints at as errours in this Author, might bee taken into examination, if Mr. Baxter would alleadge his words, and shew what hee excepts against in them. I see not but the passages are pure and cleare enough in the Booke, if hee would forbeare the casting in of his salt-petre to corrupt them.
As he sayth it was not his businesse to have objected, so neither was it my businesse to have defended, had h [...]e not sought under a pretence of opposing this Booke, to defame many truths of Christ.
CHAP. XI.
Whether according to Mr. Baxter, the Doctrine of Justification by Faith without works tend to carnall Liberty, and to the driving of Obedience out of the World.
IN prosecuting his second Quere, Mr. Baxter hath lead us a long race. In the rest he is more straight and short.
A third Quere which bears the force of another Argument to subvert Justification by Faith without works, hee so proposeth as contayning another absurdity and evill likely to follow upon this doctrine: His words are as followeth:
I shall examine heere first the Quere it selfe; then the amplification of it. The Quere or Interrogation bears the force of a strong Affirmation. That the doctrine of Justification by Grace without Work [...] doth tend to drive obedience out of the world, and to relax mens diligence to good works. It must bee therefore a prodigious doctrine that produceth so cursed an effect.
First then I demand whom he censureth as the Authors of so direfull an evill, God or men? If the Holy Ghost hath not taught men this doctrine, let the guilt of this evill bee upon such men as have entertayned it. But the Holy Ghost hath taught it. To him that worketh not but beleeveth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his Faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse. But hee that worketh, or brings works to be justified by them, is excluded Ro. 4. 4. [...]. His is the blessedness to whom God imputeth Righteousness without works, ver. 6. Not of works but of him that calleth, Ro. 9 11. If at works, then not by Grace, if by Grace then not of works, Ro. 11. 7. By Grace through Faith not of works, Eph. 2. 8. 9. Not our owne righteousnesse [Page 167] but the righteousnesse which is by the Faith of Christ, Phil. 3. 9. Not by works of righteousnesse which wee have done, but according to his mercy. And many more testimonies before in a fitter place alleadged, all in one harmony evincing the Holy Ghost to bee the Author of this Doctrine. So that Mr. Baxter loadeth not man but God with this reproach, of seeking to drive obedience out of the world.
2. Whether hee hath not taken up this slander from the Monks and Jesuits? Whether there bee any of them that having written against Justification by Faith, which hath not aspersed it and our Churches that hold it, with this scandall? Or any one of the Protestant Divines which hath defended this Article of our Faith, but hath spoken fully to the vindicating of this Doctrine from this so injurious a slander? When Mr. Baxter is so much Popish that hee takes up every most frothy Objection of every shaveling of that side to adore it; and so much an Anti-Protestant that hee scorns to mention what on our part hath beene regested in way of answer to it: why takes he up his habitation among Protestants but to corrupt and seduce them?
3. If hee meane by the World the unbeleevers of the World, that are strangers to Christ and the Covenant of Promise, how can it bee sayd properly, this Doctrine tends to drive out obedience from the World? Can it drive out of the World that which is not in it? Had he sayd, it tends to drive out the Formality, and outside Morality, and base Hypocrisie from the World, wee might have considered of it. But to tell of driving out obedience, that which God accepteth and alloweth as true Obedience, from such as would never bee drawne to it, implies a kinde of contradiction.
4. If hee meane Spirituall and Gospel Obedience, the obedience of Faith, which consisteth in the deniall of our owne righteousnesse, and our owne strength, and cleaving to Christ alone, for Justification and Sanctification; and that this Doctrine doth (not drive it out of the World, but) hinder the World from pertaking of it: how doth the Wisedome of Christ, and the Wisdome of Mr. Baxter heerein dash eyther against other? God so loved [Page 168] the world (saith Christ) that hee gave his onely begotten Sonne, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have life everlasting, Jo. 3. 16. He that believeth in mee, out of his belly shall flow Rivers of living water, Jo. 7. 38. If I bee lifted up from the Earth I will draw all men to me, Jo. 12. 32. Come unto me all that are weary and heavy layden, and I will refresh you, Mat. 11. 28. Goe preach the Gospel to every Creature, hee that beleeveth shall be saved, Mark. 16. 15, 16. This is a faithfull saying, &c. that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief. 1 Tim. 1 15. They that receive abundance of Grace, and the Gift of Righteousnesse, shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ: and hundreds more the like Scriptures, in which the fulnesse of grace and righteousnesse offered to the world to the chiefe sinners of the world freely to be given to as many as will receive and believe in Christ; is made an attractive to obedience, and not (as Mr. Baxter slandereth this Doctrine) a hinderance to it.
5. If there be any of the world that are so offended at this Doctrine, as to make it a stone of stumbling to them, and an hinderance to the obedience of faith; they are the worst people of the world, Jewes, or of a Jewish spirit, Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites, who having made cleane the outside of the cup and platter, (though the inside be unpurged from its guilt) think themselvs the alone holy and righteous persons, will not enter into the Kingdome of Grace, unlesse their owne worth and righteousnesse shall usher them into it, and the Publicans and Harlots bee barr'd out [...] unworthy: rend their cloaths and cast dust in the aire like mad-men, if mention bee made of admitting with them the unclean Gentiles, Acts 22. 21, 23. If the Prodigall sonne be entertained, refuse in great wrath any more to meddle in their Fathers house and service, Luke 15. 28, - 30. And will not hearken though earnestly entreated: These many years have I served and never transgressed, and shall now this companion of harlots be here with mee? and these last that came in at evening bee made equall with us that have borne the burthen and heat of the day? Mat. 20. 12. They had their owne Farmes, Oxen, Wives, Therefore as happy enough at home they would not come to pertake of the Lords F [...]ast, but left it to the poore, blinde, and la [...], &c. But against such the Lord hath sworne that they should not taste of his supper, Luk. 14. and the misery of this doome wee see lying heavy upon that Nation to this [Page 169] day. Is it not enough to Mr. Baxter that hee hath not himselfe taken heed of this Leaven of theirs, but that hee must seeke to sowre us with it tco, that we might incurre the like vengeance?
6. If there bee such as turne this Doctrine into licentiousness, that because good works are not appointed of God to be the condition of their justification, will therefore relax their diligence, the fault is not in the Doctrine, but in the corruption of their hearts. They ought to conclude from Grace to duty, and not to carnall liberty: If they do otherwise, it is not because they have, but because they have not effectually drank into themselves this Doctrine. Else if all the means of Grace which carnall men abuse should bee guilty of their abuse, then the death of Christ, and preaching of the Gospel must be anathematized, because he is laid as a stone at which some will stumble, and as well for the fall as the rising of many in Israel, and that is to some the savour of death, as well as to others the savour of life. The children must not lose their bread, for feare the doggs should catch after it to satisfie their rapine. The Apostle had delivered a sacred doctrine of Gospell truth▪ Where sinne abounded, Grace abounded much more, Ro. 5. 20. Hee seeth easily this doctrine would be abused by sensuallists, therefore annexeth an Objection, Shall we continue in sinne that Grace may abound? Ro. 6. 1. This use some might make of it. Doth hee therefore recall his doctrine? Nothing lesse. Better many wretches to wantonize to their ruine, than one soule for which Christ hath died, lose such a prop of consolation.
7. The truly beleeving saints cannot so reason or abuse the grace of God, or relax their obedience; as for other reasons so specially for those alleadged by the Apostle, in the following part of that 6. Chapter to the Romans.
8. Wee doe not by the Preaching of this Doctrine open a door to prophanenesse, but following the guidance of the Scripture, make use of it as the strongest obligation to obedience: as in Answer to the next of Mr. Baxters Queres shall be manifested.
Lastly, Mr. Baxters Doctrine of justification by Works, is guilty of as many other crimes, so of this also wherewith hee chargeth ours.
1. By instilling into men a supposition of a possibility and necessity of attayning such a righteousness of their owne, and worthiness of their works, by the worth and merit whereof, they may deserve Christ and justification by him. The selfe-righteous Justiciaries will greedily swallow downe this bait, and then little regard the obedience of faith: Will not come in to Christ but upon their owne Terms and Articles. For the whole need not the Physitian but the sicke. Proofe enough heereof we have in the Scribes and Pharisees, who if they might not be admitted as the only sons of God, wholly rejected the Kingdome of God. The very Publicanes and Harlots entring before them. Such pride is there naturally in mans heart, that if they have any thing of their owne, faire though but in appearance, they thinke the Gospel of Christ more credited by their profession of it, than themselves benefited by it.
2. By blunting the edge of mens desires after Christ, If it must be their owne works and righteousness that must mediate their interest in Christ and justification by him, despaire of attainment strikes them dead from further labouring and moving to this end. For what righteousness, what works, can bee sufficient to such an atchievement? So obedience to the Faith is nipt in the very budde, where there is a sense and conviction of a mans naughtiness and nothingness.
3. By taking off the spirits of a Christians love, joy, and alacrity, in beleeving and serving, when a humble and selfe-denying soul is once choaked with Mr. Baxters Doctrine, that all the benefit which he hath or can have by Christ, is to be only a probationer for justification and life, even to his dying day; that till then hee is but conditionally pardoned and conditionally adopted; that Gods love to him may be anon turned into hatred, his sinnes againe imputed, and himselfe hurried into hell: That his safety still depends upon his own works & righteousnes, no peny, & no Pater noster: that the grace of God is let to farme for fine and rent; no one promise of the word in all this his Booke being alledged by Mr. Baxter [Page 171] (which I can remember) of any support which the beleever shall receive from God in the state of Grace, but all, Selfe doe, and selfe have: This Doctrine eyther benummeth and freezeth up all a poore Christians love and delight in serving God, emasculating his spirits to obedience: or reduceth him under a yoke of bondage, making him to worke possibly but in feare, not of love; as under the rod, or rather in the fire, fearing death and hell all his life time. And whether this bee (saving in Mr. Baxters accompt) obedience, or disobedience, let them that are spirituall judge.
4. By turning the very obedience of his Disciples into disobedience and rebellion. The best works done to be justified by them, and for them, are the greatest abhomination in Gods accompt, his Grace and Salvation are either denied or refused when wee bring works to appropriate it to us, Rom. 4. 4, 5. what is righteousnesse in its matter, is sin in its end. Therefore shall wee finde still that whosoever are admitted to, those that seek to ingratiate themselvs by their good works though done in Christs name, are hurled off from Christ. I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. I know you not, depart from mee yee workers of iniquity. More joy for one sinner that repenteth, than for ninety nine just persons that need no repentance.
For a more full and satisfactory answer to the Argument contained in this Quere, I leave the Reader to the perusing of the Protestant Divines that have written upon this Subject, and abundantly refuted this calumny of the Papists: what I have here said is rather an addition to them, then a full answer to the Quere, which I leave to be fetcht from them.
What he speakes in the Amplification of this Quere, needeth no large examination. First, he grants, That love and thankfulness should be enough, [to hold us to obedience and duty] and will bee so when all our ends are attained in our ultimate end: then wee shall act for these ends no more, &c. How untowardly doth this passage, and and another passage of the former Quere hang together? what he pronounceth here, that love and thankfulnesse should be enough to hold us to duty, without doing for justification and salvation, and that which here should be, and hereafter shall be our perfection, [Page 172] the same he affirmes there, if practiced, will undoubtedly damne the Practicer. So according to Mr. Baxter, if a Christian endeavour sincerely to do what he should, and to come as neere in this life as it is possible, to the perfection which he shall enjoy in the future, hee shall undoubtedly bee damned for it. Who then goes about to drive obedience out of the world? he, or they whom he opposeth?
What use is to be made of the affections of feare, desire, hope, and care, to the attainment of our great ends, hath been enough discussed in the examination of the former Quere, and would be a meere Tautology here to do it againe.
Let it be proved once that God hath left Justification by workes to be a motive to obedience, it shall be granted to bee a help to the destroying of Obedience, to take downe this one Motive. But if contrariwise Justification of sinners by Works, and Morall Obedience bee erected not by God, but by the Devill, Mr. Baxters neither Sophistry, nor Oratory shall induce us to leane upon the Devils crutch, both to the forfeiting of our Justification, and turning our Obedience into sin.
CHAP. XII.
Whether the doctrine of justification by Faith without workes be a soul-cozening doctrine? or harden the people in a soul-cozening Faith? what the doctrine of Faith which the Protestant Churches holde, is? and how farr from deserving this Calumny? with something about the facility or difficulty to perswade the multitude to such a Faith.
HIs fourth Quere by which as by another Argument he goeth about to make odious and to destroy justification by Faith without works, runs thus:
A Chip of the same blocke with the former, in the use of it Mr. Baxter as he hath learned of them from whom he hath received it, levels against the very heart of Christ and his Gospell. Had hee said with Iames that to say we have Faith and not to have workes, is to cozen our souls, I should have said with him. But in that he speaketh not of a soul-cozening profession of Faith, but layeth so horrid an imputation upon Faith it selfe, this gives us cause to examine what Faith he meaneth, that we may be able to discern whether that Faith, or else Mr. Baxter by defaming it, goe about to cozen our souls, and so embrace the true friend and reject the Cheater.
This cozening Faith, according to Mr. Baxter, must needs bee that which squareth not in its nature and manner of justification [Page 174] with the justifying Faith. viz. that Gospell Faith which (neither as a deed and worke, as a worke of Morall duty, and worke of our owne righteousnesse, of our perfect and meritorious righteousnesse, doth begin and but begin to inright us to Christ and justification by him, leaving to eyther vertues and works to perfect it: but) as an instrument ordeyned and given us of God, by which we receive Christ alone offering up himselfe a sacrifice for us to bee cur whole righteousness to justification, and that without works and in opposition to works.
That this is Pauls doctrine and Pauls justifying Faith, I suppose hath beene enough evinced before: and shall (God assisting) bee more fully eleared in its due place, when I come to examine the reasons which Mr. Baxter bringeth to proove his doctrine not to bee opposite to Pauls, but the same with it. Therefore in calling this Faith a soule couzening Faith, hee proclaimes Paul, (yea Christ himselfe which revealed to Paul his Gospel) a cheater and couzener: learning this calumniation from that Jewish and Pharisaicall generation from which he hath derived his Doctrine. Joh. 7. 12. But the testimony of the Holy Ghost runnes contrary to Mr. Baxters pronouncing them that joyne Works with Faith as necessary conc [...]uses with it to Justification, to bee the couzeners, troublers, and subverters of mens soules. Col. 2. 4. Gal. 5. 12. Act. 15. 1. 24.
But to vindicate the Doctrine of the Protestant Churches (and therein also the doctrine of the Gospel, both being one, and one [...]) from having any thing in it that may give footing to this [...], that we teach a soule-couzening Faith: and to manifest that Mr. Baxter doth knowingly asperse the Doctrine of Faith, and them that held it with this slander: I shall collect into a few heads the doctrine which our Churches teach, yea which Mr. Baxter knoweth they teach, as to this Question.
First then they affirme, That God hath layd up in one Christ alone all supplies for poore sinners to relieve them against all their spiritual wants: of which supplies these 2 are principal ones, righteousnesse to justification, and the Spirit to Sanctification. The one delivereth from guilt and condemnation; the other from the domination of sin and impotency to acceptable obedience. The former stateth the sinner Rectum in Curia▪ righteous before God again, having his sin pardoned and no more imputed: the latter spirituallizeth, [Page 175] quickneth, and new formeth him again to the will and image of God in holinesse and righteousnesse.
2 That whosoever receiveth one receiveth both these supplies from Christ, none puts him on to justification, but puts him on to sanctification also: and so becomes a new creature as well in reality as in relation: becomes inherently as well as imputatively righteous by him.
3 That it is one and the same Faith which is instrumentall both to justification and sanctification, though not by one and the same but by severall and different Acts. As my hand even the same hand is instrumentall both to feed and cloth me, though not by the same but by different Acts. It is the will of my benefactor (to hold my selfe to Mr. Baxters simily) having ransommed me from Turkish thraldome and appointed me to honourable service in his house, to leave open to me both his wardrop and his store▪ house or promptuary of provisions, with a command that I should pertake freely and richly of both; that by the one I might be fitly habited and adorned, by the other nourished and strengthened for honorable service to be done to him. In both these my hand is instrumentall to serve and furnish me, yet by severall Acts. It neither fetcheth meat from his wardrop nor clothing from his Pantry and Cellar, but by several Acts from both and either, what in both and either is laid up for me; yet so as all is my Lords goods, and by my pertaking thereof I am put into a capacity of dooing him faithfull and acceptable service. I need not make the application, every one can do it for himselfe. The eternall King having layd downe the life of his owne son for the ransom of my soule, hath opened to me all his treasuries in one & the same Christ, the treasury of his blood & merits to purge me from the guilt of sin, and obligation to judgement and vengeance, so that having put on Christ crucified my Law is done, my sin forgiven, my nakednesse and filthinesse covered, and I stand in Christ as perfectly righteous as if I had never offended: the treasury of his spirit and spirituall gifts, sufficient to turn my water into wine, to renew my hart, and to sannctifie me throughout, that henceforth I shall hate sinn no lesse than hell, and delight in the Law of God after the inner man, taking no lesse pleasure in the holinesse than in the happinesse which are by Christ. The eternall Father offers both together, and neither without the other. And the same spirit which drawes to one drawes to both. The same Faith which apprehends one apprehends both, is not a justifying except it be also [Page 176] a sanctifying Faith. Yet by severall Acts and from severall treasuries in the same Christ, the same Faith fetcheth justification from his satisfaction and new inherent righteousnesse from the spirit of sanctification.
4 That as justification ought and doth declare it selfe to the person justified by its proper and immediate fruits, peace of conscience, joy in the Holy Ghost, prizing Christ above all things, soul contentation in him, living and dwelling upon him, selling all to enjoy him alone to righteousnesse and salvation, counting all things dung and losse in comparison of him, emptying our selves more and more of our owne righteousnesse, of our owne-selfe confidence, that hee may be made out all at Gods Tribunall; repairing no more to Abana [...], Pharfar, no nor to Jordan it selfe, but to the one fountaine of Christs blood, there to Wash dayly and be cleane; neither in this mountain nor yet at Hierusalem, but in Christ alone to worship that we may be accepted: So also sanctification doth and ought to shew it selfe to us and others by its fruits▪ to our selves by the seeds and habits of love, righteousnesse, holinesse &c. affecting the heart within: To others by the fruits and workes of the spirit manifested in the practise without, viz. all the Acts of love, mercy, goodnesse, sanctity, piety, charity, equity, patience, meeknesse, &c. as also in subduing the flesh by the spirit, mortifying every evill affection, fighting against every sinn, that we may shew our selves a peculiar people of the Lord, zealous of every good worke.
5 That justification and sanctification by Faith in Christ do evidence either the other. He that can finde himselfe truely justified may know himselfe to be no lesse truly sanctified by Christ, because he that is in union with Christ so as to be pertaker of his justifying and saving righteousnesse, by being so joyned to Christ is become one spirit with him, saith the Apostle. The spirit of sanctification discendeth and giveth influence from the head to the whole body and every member thereof. So on the other side, he that by being one spirit is sanctified by the same spirit of Christ, may by this evidence know himselfe that Christ by the same spirit is made righteousnesse to him, and is in the same relation to God with Christ being justified, adopted, &c. a son and heir with him to all the inheritance. Sanctification (I say) truly understood is such an evidence, (for none are sanctified but the justified, and all the justified by Faith, are sanctified) if it be sanctification indeede, it may be made an evidence of justification.
[Page 177]6 Yet neither all seeming peace and quietnesse of conscience, or joy in expectation of salvation, or hope that is made the ground of this joy, and such other like seeming effects of Justification are alway sure evidences to a man that he is justified; because not alway fruits or parts of sanctification, they may proceed from another and baser principle, viz. from the deceitfulnesse of their heart, or self-love, and self-advancing, or from the spirit of slumber upon the conscience, or from ignorance of Gods way and method of bringing many Children to glory: Nor are all seeming holiness, honesty, meeknesse, temperance, patience, and other like vertues, either in their habite, as they really affect the heart, or in their act, as they are with an ardent zeale for God, brought forth into practice; sure evidences of sanctification by Christ: because these also may proceed from other and baser principles, and not from the Spirit of Christ, as from the abiding prints of the Law of Nature written in the heart, or from the power and suggestions of a convinced and awaked conscience, or from strong impressions made into the soule by a morall and vertuous education, or other like sub-celestiall, and unspirituall principles. So that our certaine and known union to Christ, and our justification and sanctification sensibly thence flowing, may be properly and unfailingly made our sound evidence of the spirituall life and acceptablenesse of our vertues and works: But these in themselves in no wise certaine evidences and demonstrations to us of our justification and sanctification by Christ. Sanctification is one thing, and a zealous endeavour to be in all things conformed to the will of God, is or may be another. The former is only from the Spirit of Christ, and wrought only in them which are in Christ. The later may proceed from morall principles, and is incident even to them also that are aliens from Christ.
7 Neverthelesse, even these vertues and good works do so farr evidence, that from the Negation of these, a man is certainely denyed to be in Christ, or to be justified or sanctified by the faith of Christ. I mean that whosoever can allow himself in the habituall practice of any known sin, or rejection of any known duty, that man may know himself, and be known of others to be an Alien from Christ. Because whosoever is in Christ, is a new Creature, all things are become new; not only in respect of his relation, but of his manners and conversation also; and in whomsoever the Spirit of Sanctification dwelleth, it dwels in a state of reign, not of bondage.
Withall, these vertues and good works, when they are found to flow from our union to Christ, and the love of God shed abroad in our hearts through Christ: and upon examination a man can truly say, that he hath ceased to hew from any other Q [...]arrie, or to dip from any other Fountain than from Christ, that from his Spirit alone hee daily sucketh life, as the branch from the root to bring forth fruit, and from the sacrifice of Christs death a sweet odour to make himself and his fruit acceptable, then they serve as good seconds to prove to his soul that he is justified and sanctified: But so that his being in Christ must first prove his fruit to be good, before his fruit can have any power to evidence him to be in Christ, and the evidence of both his justification and sanctification consisteth not so much in the qualifications which he hath attained, or works which he doth and hath done, as in his continuall waiting upon Chrih, from him alone to receive what hee ought to be and to do in all wel-pleasing before God, and the love of God in Christ enabling to obedience.
8 That although Sanctification and the fruits thereof do each in its own degree (as aforesaid) more or lesse evidence our Justification, yet have they no concausality with Faith to the producing of it. All that are in Christ, are Saints in Christ, yet their sanctity goes not before their being in Christ, but is an immediate fruit thereof. The forgiveness of sin and Adoption doth in order go before their doing of acceptable service to God, and unacceptable service cannot justifie.
9 The grace of God which bringeth salvation [and justification] teacheth men to deny ungodlinesse, &c. and to live soberly, &c. Cals upon all to stretch forth their Faith to apprehend to themselves in Christ both the imputed and the inherent righteousness: so far is it from breathing a soul-cozening or a soul-corrupting faith. Therefore is the justifying Faith called by the Holy Ghost a most holy Faith, Jude 20. A [soule] purifying Faith, Act. 15. 9. A sanctifying Faith, Act. 26. 18. Implying its efficacy as well to sanctifie as to justifie, and that there is no true sanctification but that which is instrumentally obtained, or at least received by Faith.
Lastly, that one chief end of our Justification is, that we bring forth acceptable fruit to God here inchoate, hereafter in perfect obedience to God, and conformity with him: And the Justifier doth and will attain his end in justifying; therefore brings none to glory, but such as have all vertues and good works at least in their [Page 179] root and seed while they are here; and if after their effectuall calling they live to have time and opportunity, do not unfeig [...]edly endeavour universally to declare the same in their practice. So that to dream of any glorified man in heaven, that was not actually a Saint upon earth, is a dream from hell, not from heaven.
All these things might have been largely proved both from the Scriptures and our Protestant Writers; but that I esteem them all to be so known to be the consenting asserteons of all our Churches, and by them so fully confirmed by the word, that I should but abuse time to take it up in particularizing what is in this Case so generally written and read.
I have been the more large in expressing the doctrine of the Protestant Churches upon this Argument, to wipe off the stain which Mr. Br. hath learned of the Papists to lay upon it in this and the former quere, which are wholly framed to beguile the weaker sort, having nothing in them to stagger the Judicious. And now I leave it both to the strong and weak to judge, whether the Accuser of the Brethren [himself] can possibly expresse more impudence and falshood in slandering the Churches of Christ than this man hath done? or if he had not bound himself to speak after the Jesuits and Monks whatsoever they traducingly say, whether there be any colour of reason for him to have layd upon us these two accusations? To hold my self to that which I am now examining, what is there in this Faith and Doctrine thereof, which I have described, deserving to be called a soul-cozening Faith? And when he addeth, That Faith which is by many thought to justifie (his meaning is, which all the Protestant Churches and Divines teach) and which our people doe all most easily embrace, is the receiving of Christ for their Saviour, and expecting pardon and salvation by him, but not withall receiving him for their Lord and King, nor delivering up themselves to be ruled by him. Let him now name that one Church, or one Theologist in any one of the Protestant Churches that hath so taught, and divided the receiving of Christ, as Lord and King, from receiving him as Saviour and pardoner, in justifying Faith: or els confess that he hath drunk deeply into the Jesuits prenciples, that all equivocations, frauds, lyes, slanders, and whatsoever is worse than these, are all not only lawfull, but also meritorious, when practiced for the advanc [...]ment of the Triple Crown, and the Holy Mother-Church of Rome. We do indeed divide works from Faith, and banish them from having any [Page 180] concausality with it in justifying: But let Mr. Br. produce one that hath divided Christ the King from Christ the Saviour, or denyed him in either Title to be the object of justifying Faith: or any one that hath taught that to be a justifying Faith, which expecteth salvation from Christ, but will not deliver up the soul to be ruled by him. I chalenge Mr. Br. to vindicate herein his reputation, and to manifest that he followeth the dictates of Naturall conscience at least, and not of wilful malice against the truth, by naming one that hath taught any such thing. The Protestant Churches and Writers are so cleer herein, that they do not divide from justifying Faith, the very Assent that there is a God, that hee made the world, that he drowned it, and repair'd it; that Christ was the Son of the Virgin Mary, that hee was born at Bethlehem, circumcised at eight days old, disputed among the Doctors, turned water into wine, and did many miracles, or whatsoever els the Scriptures in the least things affirme to be true. All this the justifying Faith assents to, neither can it not assent to every truth of the word; yet it so assents, not as justifying. In this act it knows nothing but Christ and him crucified. Much lesse do they so divide, as Mr. B. here against knowledg and conscience objecteth. They so far shew themselves abhorrent from it, that they utterly deny any to come to the Kingdom of glory, but through Christs Kingdom of grace.
But the Doctrine it self w ch here he reneweth about the object of Faith, Christ as our Lord as well as our Saviour, I have examined before in answer to his fourth Argument. Thither I send the Reader for satisfaction what the Protestants hold, and upon what grounds, here it is besides the matter to fall into a new dispute about it.
It shall suffice here only to examine the new Argument which he brings to prove, that the Doctrine which holds forth justification by Faith, is a soul-cozening; but that which teacheth justification by works, is a soul-saving doctrine. For this is his meaning in what he disputeth here of Christ the Saviour, and Christ the Lord made the object of justifying Faith, as hee hath largely explayned himself before: And if hee mean not so, all that he here sayth is but a hunting after Grashoppers in the snow to fight with them: For none is there to be found opposing what he sayth in the words and phrase he useth. But himself is a sure Interpreter of himselfe, and we must take him as himself hath explayned his [Page 181] meaning. And then his Argument is drawn from the easinesse or difficulty of receiving the one or the other Doctrine. It must be a soul-cozening doctrine, which all are easily perswaded to be cozened with. Thus wee find him expressing himself in that part of the Query which is before transcribed. Our people (saith he) do all most easily embrace it; I meet with no one but is resolved in such a faith, till it be overthrown by teaching them better. They would all trust Christ for the saving of their souls, &c. And in the following part of the Querie.
Were he a true Israelite in whom there is no guile, which speaketh, all this might be granted him. But because he hath fully declared, that he meaneth by receiving Christ for our Saviour, justification by Faith in Christ the Redeemer, and by receiving him for our Lord and Governour, justification by works, nothing can be safely granted to him. The whole summ of his Argumentation amounts to this syllogism:
That doctrine of Justification which the multitude doth easily embrace, is a soul-cozening doctrine: but that which they are not without much difficulty perswaded to receive, is a soul-saving doctrine.
But the multitude easily embraceth Justification by Faith alone, and not without difficulty Justification by works:
Ergo the former is a soul-cozening, the latter a soul-saving doctrine.
He must acknowledge that he thus argueth, or argueth nothing, or nothing to the question. To the Proposition I distinguish first about the meaning of the terms: And first about the word embracing [Page 182] or receiving, betwixt a vitall or effectuall, and a meerly historicall embracing, betwixt a reall receiving, and an assent of the judgment that the thing is to be received: or more plainly, beleeving, and a mans saying he doth beleeve, or his profession of Faith. 2 Between that which is easie or difficult in it self, or to mans naturall ability: and that which God makes easie by the concurrence, or leaves difficult by the with-holding of his grace.
Having thus distinguished, in whatsoever sense he takes the Terms, I deny both Consequen [...] of the Proposition. For if he mean onely an externall assent to the verity and goodness of the doctrine, All men which have reason in their understandings, and freedom in their wills, do with the like facility choose that w ch is made out to them to be good, and refuse that which is made out to them to be evill. Or if he mean a vitall and effectuall embracing, the doctrine of Justification is alike difficult to all that are of the carnall multitude. It is a spirituall doctrine, and the naturall man receiveth not, cannot receive spirituall things, 1 Cor. 2. 14. Again if he mean an easines and difficulty in it self and to mans naturall ability, The true doctrine of Justification is alike difficult, yea unpossible to all effectually to receive. None can come to the Son except the Father draw him, Jo. 6. 44. But if he mean a facility and easines of receiving by means of the concurrence of Gods grace making it easy, then is it alike easy to all men that are holpen alike by Gods grace; and alike difficult, yea unpossible to all that are left destitute of it. So that the easines or difficulty of perswading the multitude to entertain this or that doctrine of Justification, can be no sure rule of concluding either doctrine to couzen, or to save the soul.
Besides I deny the assumption in the whole and in both its parts. For how can that which is a supernaturall doctrine be easily received by naturall men, the whole stream of whose wisedom and will is against it: such as is Justification by Faith in the redeemed? or that which is a naturall doctrine dictated by naturall reason and conscience, (I mean a doctrine of naturall right) be so excedent in difficulty to receive: such as is Justification by works?
Mr. Br flies here to Experience to apologize for him. Try (saith he) the ungodly people, whether all would not, whether there be a man to be found that will not easily be perswaded to beleeve that Christ will pardon and save them: But whether it be not the hardest thing in the world to perswade them to take Christ for their Lord, and to yeeld obedience accordingly, [Page 183] &c. Not to except here against his words in which he putteth a believing that Christ will pardon and save, for a justifying Faith: (though when he doth but dream he hath taken that advantage against another, as wee have seen, he insults over him as over a mock-man or puppet, and can hardly abst [...]in from tossing him in a blanket:) Nor against the ill disposing of the parts of the Antithesis, glancing lightly over that which he would blow off into a vapour, but giving its full weight and power to that which he will have to stand: I shall take his words in that sense in which he would be understood by as many as he hath a hope to beguile. And thus to his direction, try whether all do not profess their Faith in Christ the Saviour, that they trust and will trust in his merits alone for salvation and pardon: I answer, Try the ungodly multitude whether they do not every Mothers Child profess that they embrace Christ for their Lord, and that they do and will yeeld obedience to him to their dying day, as well as God shall give them grace?
Object. But they say and do not, professe but yield not actually this obedience.
Answ. So the former also say and do not, profess a full reliance upon and receiving of Christ for righteousness, but perform it not. For if they so received Christ, they should have Rivers of living water flowing out of them, Jo. 7. 38. of carnall should become spirituall, and of unclean, holy.
Nay if experience must be the judge, Mr. Brs Cause falleth. I have tryed it, and by tryall found it the hardest task to perswade the multitude to receive Christ Crucified alone, to their justification and salvation. Prove the more ungodly party, specially in the time of their distress, upon their death-bed, or otherwise when their Conscience is awaked, and the terrors of God are upon them: Seek now to perswade them to repose their affrighted souls upon Christ their Altar, to trust in the Mediation of his blood, how averse are they? they look upon Christ as a hard and strict man, a Judge, a Law-giver, distributing strict justice to every man according to his works. And they alas have no vertue, or goodness, or holines, to ingratiat themselves into his favour, but sin enough to incense the very jealousie of his fury against them, therefore dare not come to him because they have no worth of their own righteousnes and works that they can plead for themselves. Look to the more whited Pharisees, the Saints of Mr. Brs forming: how hard [Page 184] is it to perswade them to cast off their own righteousnes that they may be found in Christ alone. They put on their own raggs first, and not Christ at all, but upon them. They thank God they have served God from their youth up, have not defiled themselves with the filth and iniquity which they have seen in others, have had such vertues, and been full of such and such good works, therefore they doubt not but Christ will recompence them with life and salvation. But he that seeks to spoil or to perswade them to spoil themselves of the glory and power of such their vertues and good works to justification, shall find it as hard a task as to wrest the Club out of the hand of Hercules, as it is in the Proverb. Men after mine own heart saith Mr. Br. Be it so, yet that is nothing to the question, except they be after Gods heart. And Mr. Brs Argument is hereby dissolved: For it appears that it is not easy to perswade the multitude to receive Christ alone to salvation.
But whether his chief scope in this his reasoning, be not to condemn all the Protestant Churches of levity and impiety, for departing from Rome so easily in thousands and ten thousands together, in so many Nations, and within so few years, by the lure of this Libertine and soul-cozening doctrine (as he terms it) I leave it to his own Conscience to judge. This himself makes evident, that in the Articles of grace and justification, he holds it a damnable schism in us so to have divorced our selves from Rome, and applyeth himself with all his strength, to make up the breach, and bring us back again.
The rest which Mr. B. hath interserted, and which followeth in this Quere, is light and ridiculous, prepared for the gulling of light and ridiculous men, altogether beneath the weight and depth which is in Mr. Bax. and which he useth when he deals with men like himself, solid and serious, at least in naturall and morall knowledg, such is that which he hath, p. 327.
Not to speak here either of the prime piece of knowledg here taught, wherein Morall and Theologicall sincerity, i. e. Phylosophicall and Metaphysicall sincerity consists, viz. in taking the whole and not [Page 185] the halfe of things: Nor secondly, of the mans fastidious scorn of Scripture-terms, and his hunting after exotick words, to dimm and stifle the purity and simplicity of the Gospel: I shall come to the matter it selfe, and here I demand of himself,
1 Whether they which receive Christ crucified do not receive whole Christ? Christ which by the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God, saith the Apostle, Heb. 9. 14. What was there here wanting of whole Christ? There was his divine nature, the Eternall Spirit offering, the humane nature himself offered, and the same in the integrity and purity of its celestiall endowments: Without spot; if this be but half Christ, which is the other half?
2 Or because he understands by whole Christ, Christ in the fruits of all his offices, (as is most probable) whether he will deny them to receive whole Christ, which apply not all the severall Acts and Fruits of his severall offices to one and the same end, but to severall ends to which his wisedom hath appropriated them. Suppose a son of some Luke, that is a Physician, a Minister of the Gospel, and a Father in his Family. If the sayd son shall make use of the Acts and Fruits of all these Offices of his Father, not at all to one end, but to the severall ends to which they are proper; of his Art and Physick to cure his diseased body, of his Gospeldoctrine to illuminate his understanding, and heal his wounded soul, and of his provision of victuals to preserve his life, and nourish his body: and not of physick, word and bread together, for one and the same the nutriment of his body, shall this man therefore be said not to own and receive his whole Father, but half of him? Even so the Offices of Christ are various, and his actings in them tend to various ends, some to our quickning, som to our enlightning, some to our justification, some to our sanctification, &c. Do I take but half Christ, because I apply not all the Actings and Fruits of all his Offices to my Justification only, and none of them to the other honourable ends to which he hath appointed them? who can bear the absurdity?
3 Whether it be possible for any man (according to the rule and tenor of the Gospel) by a lively faith to apply to himself the satisfaction of Christs death, and yet to remain unpardoned and unjustified? or for such a one to abide unspiritualliz'd and unsanctfied? If not, then the reason why the multitude w ch profes they trust Christ for the saving of their souls (as M r B. is pleasd to phrase it) do remain unjustified, is because they profess, but have not a [Page 186] lively faith in his death: and not (as Mr. Br. saith) for want of I know not what Moral, Theological, decompounded, phantastical sincerity consisting in laying hold on the half of Christ, i. e. either his wounded, and not his whole parts, or Christ the Mediator, not the Mediator Christ. I can no better distinguish his meaning, sith himself hath refused to do it. Of the same nature is that which he hath, pag. 328.
Either all this relates to Justification, or it is meer babble in the Ayr, sound without sense or substance, as much to his purpose as was his that trudged about all the Town from shop to shop to buy two penny-worth of Circumstance for the cure of his tooth-ach. For his quere is, whether our Doctrine which teacheth Justification by faith without works, do not confirm men in their soulcozening Faith. If all doth relate to justification, then let him that can find, help me, without help I cannot find as much as a grain of reason in all or any part of it, such reason at least as befits Mr. Br. who grounds all his Religion upon reason.
To the first Clause I stand stupified, not knowing how to preach Christ to justification, but as Christ the Justifier; to pardon, but as Christ the pardoner; or to salvation, but as Christ the Saviour. Should I preach him as a condemner to justification, as an unpardoning Judg to salvation? As to his justifying me as he is a Lawgiver, either there hath been wanting something in Mr. B. dexteriry of teaching, or in my docility to apprehend, I am yet to be taught this lesson. All that he hath said hitherto, hath made it but odious and absurd, and here hee saith no more to perfect it.
To that which follows, the absurdity of it doth enough confute [Page 187] it self. Who can endure to hear that the Apostles when they preached to Jewes and Pagans did; and we, if we should be sent to preach to the Turks and Indians, must first preach Christ alone to justification, and so generate in them a soul-ct zening faith: But when once they become professors of the Christian Faith, then the Apostles did, and we must teach them better, urging them no longer to cozen their souls with faith in Christ the Saviour, but by their own works to justifie and save themselves. He that delights in such a Gospel, let him be Mr. B. disciple.
It seems he is angry with James for not helping him erewhile in his great exigency, that he singles out him from all the Apostles, to father him with this intolerable doctrine. But whether James give him herein any relief, hath been before examined.
As for the rest of the Apostles, let Paul give the Testimony for himself and them. There is one Lord and Mediator, Christ Jesus, one Faith, one Baptisme, one Lord and Father of all, Ephe. 4. 5. 1 Tim 2. 5. Not two Christs, and two Faiths, one to cozen at first, and the other to save the soul afterward. If Paul or an Angell from heaven should preach any other Gospell then what you have heard [from me at first while Pagans] let him be accursed, Gal. 1. 8. Therefore many years after the Romans and Galathians had been professors of the Christian faith, he seeks to root them fast by faith alone in Christ, and not to start from their first principles; reducing such as went a whoring after works to help faith in justifying them, pronouncing them accursed, and Apostates from Christ, that should so fall off from their first liberty in Christ.
That all obedience, yea faith in Christ to all obedience, vertue and good works is to be preached and urged upon them that profess the Christian faith, is so true, that he is but a maimed preacher of Christ that doth it not, but all to sanctification, not to justification. This is the true Preacher of Christ that preacheth Christ to good works, not works to win Christ, that seeks to bring us into Marriage-union with Christ, that we may bring forth fruit to God, Rom. 7. 4. Not that we should bring forth bastard-fruit from another, that we may be married to Christ. But this is not Mr. Brs. business, he speaks of fruit to justification.
To conclude what I have to say to this Quere, It is his doctrine that teacheth a soul-cozening Faith, a Faith made up of a fardle of works and rags of our own righteousness, as in his larger definition of justifying Faith he hath described it.
CHAP. XIII.
Mr. Baxters calumnie, that this doctrine doth harden the Papists in their Popery, and give occasion to many learned Protestants to turn Papists, answered.
HIS fifth Quere hath no shew of weight in it, deserving an examination, savouring more of the Spleen than of the judgment of the Author. Nevertheless, though it declares only the stomach and indignation of the man against the truth, rather then any strength in his hand to hurt it: yet because it is formed for the deceiving of the simple and unwary, upon whom sounds oft times take no less impression than actuall strokes; to prevent damage to such I shall examine whatsoever may seem materiall in it, as I have the rest.
That by obedience he meaneth all morall qualifications and works as they are vertues and works, we have before learned from his own words: so his meaning is, that the Doctrine of Paul, and the Churches which follow him, viz. Justification by Faith, and not by works, is guilty of the damnable and pernicious evills which he here chargeth upon it. These evills are two.
1 It is the great stumbling-block of the Papists.
2 It hath carried back many learned men from the Protestant Religion to Popery. To both these I shall speak in order. 1 Of its hardning the Papists in Popery.
I answer, 1 Was not Christ (and that in this very point of justifying the ungodly by an imputed righteousness, without any inherent righteousness of their own) a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence to the Jewes; as which they were so offended, that to their eternall ruine, they reject the Gospel and salvation of Christ unto this day? Rom. 9. 32, 33. 1 Cor. 1. 23. 1 Pet. 2. 8. What then? must Christ be anathematized? Nay, but let the truth of Christ [Page 189] stand, and man be the lyar, the transgressor: It is scandalum, acceptum non datum, an offence taken, not given: And blessed is he who soever shall not be offended in [or at] Christ, Mat. 11. 6. Lu. 7. 23. But if any will be offended, and dash, the Lord Christ admonisheth him of the danger: Whosoever shall fall on this stone shall be broken; but on whomsoever it shall fall, it will grind him to powder, Mat. 21. 44.
2 And as sound a reason is it that our doctrine of Justification hinders the Papists from turning Protestants, as was that of some Statists that complained against the Church of Geneva, that they hindered the conversion of Papists in those parts, by forbidding dancing; and the like grave consideration by some great Politicians in England, that the forbearing of Bull and Bear-baiting, and other sports on the Lords day, hardned the Papists of Lancashire in their Popery. When Religion is made a meer piece of policy, and to have in it at the best no more than a dress of dreggish formality or morality, no marvail if such dirty and unspirituall means are made use of to spread it.
3 But how deep doth this effect lurk in its cause, so that only this one mans sagacity can smell it out? That the Papists in the least things will not turn Protestants, except we in the worst turn Papists. For this Article of Justification is the greatest of all the questions controverted between us and the Papists. All the rest not ingredients of, or meerly relating to this, may the Papists continue in (if not of malice or wilfulnesse) with a possibility of salvation. They are but wood, hay, and stubble built upon the foundation, the very builders whereof may be saved, but so as by fire, saith the Apostle. But a Trentified Papist, by the coherent judgment of the best Divines, cannot be saved, because hee holdeth not the foundation sure and pure, but mixeth mans works with the grace of God in Christ to Justification. And their judgment is grounded upon the authority of the Apostle: Yee are faln from grace, Christ is become void [or forfeyted] to you, whosoever are justified by works. An ardent love to Romes shavelings out of doubt possesseth Mr. Br. that he doth not only wish himself (as did the Apostle) but would make himself and all us accursed, that they might be (not saved, but) damned with us. For if they reject all other their errors, and practically retain but this one, by it they forfeyt all the salvation of the Gospel.
4 Nay contrariwise, as long as this Article of the Gospel was diligently preached, and stoutly maintained in the Protestant [Page 190] Churches, and that not with qui [...]ks and quidities of humane Art, but by the nervous arguments of Scripture alone: so long the Kingdom of Antichrist more and more decayed, and they which were before marked up as slaves to that rivall of Christ, brake the fetters, and came in by thousands and ten thousands, taking the Kingdom by a holy and violent force. But since the time this Doctrine hath been less preached and patronized, the Reformed Churches have been still in a languishing, and the Antichristian Kingdom in a growing condition; as Mr. Br. himself, so great a Reader, and so fully acquainted with the Ecclesiasticall Histories, must necessarily grant. And why hath this stop to the promoting of the Gospel befaln the Churches, but that the Lord Christ doth herein declare his offence taken against us for not making him our all, that hee also ceaseth so victoriously, as in former times to vouchsafe his presence among us?
5 But since Mr. Br. is leapt home to them, and many foot beyond many of the more moderate sort of them, in the point of justification by works, and so hath removed the slumbling-block, let him speak by experience, how many of them are come in to him to be his Proselytes, rejecting the Papacy, and other their Popish errors. Or whereas his Friends the Arminians have in this and many other of their Tenents so many decads of yeers closed fully with them, where is the confluence of Papists to them seen, that shaking off their former opinions and practices, profess themselves Converts? A Cardinals Hat perhaps hath been sent, or a fat Bishopprick promised to some of the most deserving men among them (in relation to the Romish Cause) to allure them to further and higher deservings of this kind. But the holy Mother Church (I warrant you) sticks where she was. If shee should permit but one stone of her Fabrick to be loosed, it might cause a crack in the whole.
This part of the Quere I shall therefore upon these Considerations leave as reasonless, and examine the next whether there be any more reason in it.
To the 2 d. That it hath had a great hand in turning many learned men from the Protestant Religion to Popery.
1 I demand whether there be not a contradiction in the Quere? How were they ever escaped from the dreggs of Popery, that yet held Justification by works, which is the very root out of which all other Popish errors almost spring, and by it self alone is worse than all the rest?
Or how can such persons be said to have turned from the Protestant Religion, that joyned not with the Protestants in the very Foundation. Let all the Confessions of all the Protestant Churches be read, and but one produced that hath not with all defiance r [...]j [...]cted justification by works as a foul abhomination. They must needs be very learned men, that had learned this mysticall Art of turning in Religion from them to whom they were not joyned, unto them from whom they were never severed.
2 If any have so turned, they went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would without doubt have continued with us: But they went out from us, that they might be made manifest that they were not of us, 1 Joh. 2. 19.
3 Nevertheless they that are truly learned, i. e. w ch have the mysterie of Christ revealed to them, not by flesh and blood, but by their Father which is in heaven, that have learned as the truth is in Christ Jesus, that have been taught of God, and have so heard and learned of the Father, that by his teaching they come to Christ, being drawn and given to Christ by the effectuall teaching of God: these shall never turn back again; They are built upon the Rock, and all the gates of Hell shall not prevail against them: It is the will of the Father, that of all those which are thus given to Christ, he should lose nothing, but raise it again at the last day, Mat. 16. 18. Eph. 4. 21. Jo. 6. 45. 39.
4 By the vanity, levity, changes and whirlings of these learned ones in humane literature, the Lord is pleased to publish to the world how vain, and of no power such learning is (while unsa [...] ctified) to true blessedness. I thank thee O father, &c. that thou hast hidden these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them to babes, Mat. 11. 25. I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent, saith the Lord. Where is the wise? where is the Scribe? where is the disputer of this world? Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? 1 Cor. 1. 19, 20. Professing themselves wise, they became fools, [because] they became vain in their imaginations, Rom. 1. 21, 22. So vain, that they bring the transcendent mysteries of divine things to be tryed in the scales of humane reason, and that which the Apostle saith is falsly called Science, i. e. philosophicall learning. A due stroke of Gods judgment upon them that will be wise without Christ, and against him; that while they will dispute, and in their disputations subject the doctrines of Faith (which can have no other foundation but the authority of the word) to the rules and principles of secular Arts, they shall [Page 192] with all their Art and Learning, dispute themselves out of Christ, out of Happiness.
5 No more hath befaln them herein, than God had before threatned should be the doom of such. Because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved: For this Cause God shall send them strong delusions that they should believe a lye, that they might all be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness, 2 Thes. 2. 10. 12.
6 And most justly, for pride goeth before destruction. And what higher degree of pride, than that an impure worm should swell with such an opinion of his own righteousness, that he will refuse the life and salvation which are by Christ, except his own righteousness be valued at so high a rate by the eternall God, as to constitute him worthy of it? Yet such is the high spirit of these self-righteous workers, that they will enter heaven, triumphing in their own strength and righteousness, or els refuse to enter. Magis honorificum est habere aliquid ex merito (saith Bellarmine, speaking of Merit) quam ex sola donatione; ideo deus ut filios suos magis honoraret, &c. It is more honourable to have something of merit than of meer gift; Therefore God, that he might the more honour his Children, hath made a way that they should get to themselves eternall life by their own merits. To the same purpose is that of another of the same nest, Absit ut justi vitam eternam expectent, ut pauper Tapper. in. Art. Lovan. Tom 2. art. 9. Eleemosynam, multo enim gloriosius est, ipsos quasi victores & triumphatores eam possidere, tanquam palmam suis sudoribus debitam. i. e. Far be it that the righteous should expect eternall life, as a poor man doth an Alms. For it is much more glorious that they should possess it, as conquerours and triumphers do the Crown due to their labors. When this arrogant conceit once possesseth M. Brs. learned men to make themselves glorious by their ecclypsing of the glory of Gods grace, no marvail if we see them not so much turning as turned out among the dogs and swine. How can ye believe which seek honour one of another, and not the honour which is of God only, John 5. 44.
7 Yet for one that Mr. Br. can mention, who in hatred of this Doctrine hath made a defection from, I dare to undertake to produce hundreds that by the sweetnesse of it, and demonstration of the Spirit in preaching it, have been drawn to the profession of the Protestant Religion. It is a conclusion of Luther, lamenting the schisms and Controversies stirred in the Churches about lighter [Page 193] and lesser things: That if these had been layd aside, and this one Article of Justification by Faith alone had been by the counited labors of all the Churches, most of all (though not only) preached and continued to be preached to this day, saith he, the whole Kingdom of the Pope had by this time laid wholly shivered. How adversatively do the spirits of Luther and Mr. Br. fight either against the other? Yea of the many learned that Mr. Br. speaks of, we can find him particularizing but one, his St. Grotius, pag. 331. thus,
Is Grotius so turned off? most likely is it sure, that Mr. Br. will follow him, and truly we may add [if not] this doctrine, surely that which is worse hath turned off Mr. Br. to Triden [...]ine and Jesuitized Popery: See Mr. Brs. Aphorisms, not in four pages only, but almost in all the passages of that Book and its Appendix: And thus Grotius and he make up (if not many, yet) a number of learned men turn'd to Popery.
This shall suffice to have said to the matter of Mr. Brs. Quere; But memorable and worthy to be written upon the purest chrystal waters, where he that can may read them, are the reasons which Mr. Br. annexeth, for which this Doctrine hath had a great hand in turning many learned men to Popery, viz.
And again, p. 331. This Doctrine was offensive to Melancton,
What of all this? and what is the issue at last? Therefore these learned men with great learning and wisedom, took the advantage Cum ratione in sanire, like a pampred horse, with a fly in his tayl, to catch the snaffle in the teeth, and in great indignation to runn mad to Rome. Who els but Mr. Brs. learned men could have expressed so much grace and wit? And it seems they were all fellow-students in the same School, els could not their good wits have jumpt together upon so pretty a slight. And it seems Mr. Br. by his exagitation of the damnable doctrines of the Antinomians in our days, doth tacitely invite the learned to joyn with him in prosecuting the same learned device.
As to the matter of these severall particulars, somwhat, yet not much is needfull to be said. 1 To that of George Major, &c. Mr. Br. here discovereth fully (what elswhere in this his Tractate he doth not totally hide) his enmity and swelling against the first reformation of the Churches by Luther and others, that hee accounts it a schismaticall defection, not a due reformation. Hee spares the names of Luther, Zuinglius, Calvin, &c. lest his spitting in their faces, sh [...]uld make his own odious to all knowing Christians: But the Doctrine which he reprehendeth under the names of Illyricus, Gallus, Amsdorfius, &c. he knows to be the frme which those former Divines, w ch all the Protestant Churches have taught and propugned. Concerning Gallus, either what he was, or what he did, I can give no account. Illyricus is reported by some to have been somwhat hot and heady in prosecuting all that he undertook; but that at any time he entred the lists with George Major, I find not. This I find, that they both lived and conversed together at Jenes in the same University, and were both adversaries to Strigelius a famous Divine, unto whom between them they procured great persecution: But Amsdorfius was one of those eminent instruments of Christ in the reformation, who bare the burden and heat of the day, was a Colleague with Luther in the University of Wittenberg at the first dawning forth of the Gospel, his yoke-fellow in the labor [...] and in the sufferings of the Gospel, both in prosperous and difficult times one and the same; Holding fast the same principles which were laid in his heart while a young man, even to his old age, and death, which God prolonged untill the 88. year of his age. I know not any one professed Protestant that hath aspersed [Page 195] him for any thing that in all that time of so long a life, he either committed or omitted, as unworthy of a learned and faithful Minister of Christ, until the candor of M. Br. hath now done it. Truth it is, that George Major in his time, about a hundred years sithence, when Luther was dead (not daring so to do while he was living) set forth some propositions and disputations of the necessity of good works to salvation; and finding himself quickly encountred, he after more fully explained himself, or rather endeavoured to make his Doctrine the more smooth to be swallowed, by allaying it thus: That we are justified by faith only, but not saved without works. So that good works are necessary though not to justification, yet to salvation. At this his Doctrine, as all the Churches and their Ministers were much offended, so were there many that confuted it; among others Strigelius, Wigandus, & this Amsdorfius, who wrote against him his Bona opera officiunt saluti: Good works are hinderances of salvation. A proposition I acknowledg not well sounding in words; but the substance of Treatises is not to be judged alway from their Titles; This work of Mr. B. hath a golden Title, Aphorisms of Justification: untill a man hath read the Book, he would have supposed from the Title, they had bin Aphorisms to maintain, not to destroy Justification by free grace. So on the other side the Paradoxical sound of Amsdorfius his titular position, doth in no wise deny his Treatise thereon to be orthodox, except Mr. Br. can produce any thing thence to prove that he affirms good works in themselves to be so, and not only in the sense wherein George Major affirms them necessary to salvation. Or why this Assereion stifly maintained by George Major, should not be counted a heresie in him as well as in the Papists, or the Pharisees before them, I see no other reason but this, that then Mr. Br. having more worthily deserv'd than he, will be thought fit to be honoured with the Title of Doctor in the same profession.
2 To that of Melchior Adamus, I say no more, but that the Testimony of an Adversary without proofes is unworthy, or at least incompetent to bow our belief to it. What wresting and curtilating there is of their sentences, whom in this case such men would defame, is obvious to every mans notice. He should in stead of his Individuum vagum, his quidam, have named some singular persons, & at least have quoted some of their writings, in which they have propugned such assertions, that we might have searched and found whether it were so, if he would have been believed. Otherwise, if these [Page 196] things were only for disputations-sake handled in the Schools, this argues not the propugners to be of that judgment.
3 What he saith of Melancton and Bucer, whether it be true or false, is of the like moment. Be it that some crazie brains, or corroding sonns of Momus (with whom the world too much at all times aboundeth) envied because they could not match, and sought to defame, because they envied the excellent parts of these two Worthies, was either of them so wise and learned, as to run headlong from Christ to Rome, upon it? Nay, this is a piece of learning which Mr. B. & his Grotius have of very late yeers learned and taught. The true servants of Christ in former times were so little scholasticall, that they were ignorant in this Art. Yet whether Melancton after the death of Luther gave not some occasion to the Protestant Churches to mourn till this day for the yet remaining fruits of his timorousness, or (as Mr. Br. will have us call it) moderation, I leave to the wise who are acquainted with the passage of those times, to judg. But I never understood any such thing imputed to Bucer, or that he hath left any other but a sweet savour behind him. Nor any thing that can so dim the worth of Melancton, that his name should not be in continuall veneration among the Saints: For who can say he is without his infirmities? But in the point of Justification by Faith only, he was sound till death.
4 But what hee saith of the Antimonian Teachers what they preach at present, and yet are magnified for the only preachers of Free Grace, is that which startles Mr. Br. and makes him run many furlongs beyond Grotius. If his hast had not put him out of breath, he might have told us what places of England are haunted with these Spirits, that we might have shunned them. Why should a man of such animosity that scorns to look upon Colier, Hobson, Spriggs, and such like fellows, be so troubled about these unconsiderate animals which he here mentioneth: what the former three are I do not know; yet by what I have heard of them, I should think them not so inconsiderate as these, to affirm justifying faith to consist in a mans believing that he is justified, or in a perswasion that God loveth him? But that there are either more than one fountaine opened for the purging away of sinne, or any other propitiation for our sins set forth by God. Besides Christ alone, or any other means to effectuallize it to the chief sinners besid [...]s faith in his blood, or that the justification which is by Faith, i [...] [Page 197] (according to the tenor of the Gospel) revocable, I am so far an Antinomian of Mr. B. defining, to deny, and cannot find him so learned a Papist or Pharisee to prove it.
There is nothing else which I see in this Quere which he hath not in substance said, and so hath been examined before, or else will more properly offer it self to examination in that which remaineth to be examined. And this shall suffice to have said to that one and yet five-fold Argument comprehended in his five Quere's.
CHAP. XIV.
Mr. Baxters last Argument drawn from the Testimony of many approved Authors Examined and Answered.
HIs last Argument is drawn from the testimony and authority of many eminent Divines in the Protestant Churches, which he saith have taught and published this doctrine before him. This Argument is principally urged not in the Aphorisms, but the Appendix. And although Mr. Br. tell us, App. p. 111. that he alleageth them (not to confirm his doctrine, but) to shew that he is not singular, but hath the concurrent judgments of others therein: And App. p. 167. & 188. that he doth it to satisfie them which charge him with singularity, not as an appeal to man: Yet it is too evident that his purpose herein is to abuse the less knowing and considering part of his Readers with this more then with the most of his other Arguments. Great names he knowes doe make deep impressions upon the fancies of men that have much of affection, but little of judgment. And that these look not so much to the matter as to the men. Could they think Mr. Br. hath here said no more then these and these confessedly pious and learned Worthies have said before him, they will take him for a blasphemer that shall say against him. Therefore he musters together so many choyce vessels and pretious servants of Christ, trusting to the either imbecility or credulity of his vulgar Readers, that either they cannot or will not examin and compare these and Mr. B. together, and then Mr. Br shall be taken to be of the same spirit with Dr. Preston, Dr. Twisse, Calvin, Pareus, Perkins, and the other renowned Divines whom he alleageth, and then also it must be all truth that he hath said, after such men, and whosoever shall oppose [Page 198] him must be brought forth to be stoned.
But where is the mans sincerity that will be justified by the morall sincerity of his obedience and works? Was it not wholly banished from him, when he cited these men as concurring in judgment with him, when he knowes them all to detest his assertions against which we except, more then death it self, and that many of them have jeoparded, and some of them laid down their lives and blood to give testimony to the contrary Assertions? Or will Mr. B. name any one of these at whose judgment his doctrine shall stand or fall, as true or erroneous? Why doth he thus abuse the simple, thereby discovering his impudent fallaciousness to the intelligent, with whom elswhere he seeks chiefly to ingratiat himself? But come we to the Testimonies which he alleageth.
Who hath denied this? Or what is this to Justification by works? It may possibly be something to the Question not considerately there proposed; but nothing at all listing with that conclusion, to which all the rest which he delivers are but preparatives.
Next to Mr. Wallis he alledgeth Dr. Preston, at the end of the same page. The six first Positions wherein he affirms him to speak the same thing with himself, I see no sound reason why any should except against. But if Mr. B. or Dr. Preston, or Paul, or an Angel from heaven shall deduce erratick and erroneous Conclusions from those Premisses, they are not to be heard, but resisted at the face. None of the worst Hereticks but agree in some principles with the most Orthodox, yet this nothing hinders but that the assertions in which they dissent may be altogether pernicious.
How far and how unanimously all the Protestant Churches maintain the seventh point wherein Mr. B. affirms this pious and learned Doctor to agree with him, hath been before fully expressed, in the examination of the fourth Argument. So that it is useless here to run over so many passages of the Author, from p. 112. to p. 117. of the Appendix, to declare that this one man saith what all the rest say and hold with him, viz. That justifying Faith is an accepting of Christ as Lord and Saviour. But what is this to the substance of the question to which Mr. B. answereth?
Where it is objected to Mr. Br Qu. 14. that he so layeth this position, that he may thereby lay a ground-work for Justification [Page 199] by works? Doth Dr. Preston to this end make Christ as Lord the object of Justifying Faith? or any where affirm him to be offered as a Law-giver or Commander of morall works and duties, to our justifying? Much less doth he affirm that such works have any thing to do with Faith in justifying.
A notable skill hath Mr. Br in confounding when he should divide and distinguish, and in distinguishing when there is no need; as either may serve to his purpose. He knowes that Dr. Preston when he treats of the New Covenant, comprehends under it the whole doctrine and all the Promises of Grace made Yea and Amen in Christ; as the same Christ is given to us not onely to Justification, but also to regeneration, illumination, sanctification, and whatsoever the Grace of the Eternall Father hath made him to us. And when he treats of Faith, he handles it as the instrument by which not onely Justification, but also all the other benefits of Christ may be made ours, in receiving Christ the treasury & spring of all appropriated to us. Therefore in describing the New Covenant he describes it in generall as the womb of all the blessings which are attainable by Christ, and not of Justification and Salvation alone. And in describing Faith he describes it as the instrument by which we apprehend and appropriate to our selves, not onely Christ as righteousness and salvation, but also as wisedome and sanctification, yea all that tends to the perfecting of a poor sinner, to our selves. Therefore is it that he speaks more largely of the Covenant, and treats more fully of it then needed, if he had been to speak of it onely to Justification and Blessedness: and that he speaks of Faith more largely, and mentioneth other acts of it then are required to this one end: And necessarily must he so do, else should he have maimed both the Covenant of Grace, and the Faith of Christ. Here whatsoever Dr. Preston speaketh of the Covenant and Faith in generall, of which some part belongeth to the interessing of us to sanctification and other blessings which are by Christ, Mr. Br to beguile his Reader, confoundeth and confineth to Justification, as being spoken of it alone. When contrariwise the Doctor doth enough cleerly express the distinct benefits of the Covenant, and the distinct acts of Faith receiving the distinct benefits; in the very words which he alledgeth out of him, App. p. 117. Thou shalt receive the gift of Righteousness wrought by him, for an absolution for thy sins, and for a reconciliation with me: [This is our Justification] And thereupon thou shalt grow up in love and obedience [Page 200] towards me [This is our sanctification.]
But suppose he should have affirmed that Faith, as it cleaveth to Christ, not onely for the sprinkling of his blood for Justification, but withall for the effusion of his spirit to sanctification, and the shedding forth of his beams for illumination, and the stretching forth of his Almighty arm for supportation, &c. doth in all these acts justifie: as some Divines do seem to speak, though (without prejudice to their reputation) not enough advisedly: yet both he and they are so far from making either the most spiritual knowledge and wisedom, which are the immediate fruits of illumination; or love, righteousnes, and holines, and their acts or works which are the immediate fruits of sanctification, to be in any respect usefull to justification; that they utterly deny, peace, joy, and hope, the immediate fruits of Justification, to be any way effectuall and usefull in this business. But I find not Dr. Preston any where laying that ground-work, much less erecting such a building on it.
To the five last points if Mr. Br hold them in that which I have expressed to be Dr. Prestons sense, yea which himself expresseth to be his own sense, I have nothing to say against him. The tenth onely excepted, to which I must be also mute, because neither doth Mr. Br alledg what the Doctor saith, and I have not that Treatise of his to inform me.
But all this is but a playing with holy things, he might as well have said Dr. Preston consents with him in confessing there is a God, a Christ, a Justification, a man, a sinner to be justified, as have said most of what he hath here said. We expected he should have produced testimonies of other Divines speaking in common with him, what he speaks in common with the Papists, in opposition to the doctrine of the Protestants.
In his Appendix, p. 167. and thenceforth to the end of the Book, he brings a new supply of Testimonies, which he intituleth
I shall examine so many of them as have any shew of agreement with Mr. Br in those things wherein he fights against the doctrine of the Protestant Churches.
How prettily would he here instill into the thought of his Reader, that Dr. Twisse is a man of levity, here a subverter of Antinomianism, whereof in his Aphorisms, p. 173. he complained him to be a Pillarer? that here he subverteth Justification from eternity, whereof elswhere he is an assertor? Nay here he speaketh of the Justification which is by vertue of the New Covenant, of the obteining of it actually to our selves. This neither Papist nor Protestant, neither Dr. Twisse no [...] M r. Br ever affirmed to be without Faith.
Bax. 2. Bishop Hooper cited by Dr. Jackson. Christ onely received our infirmities and originall disease, and not the contempt of him and his Law. Expounded by Dr. Twisse against Dr. Jackson, p. 584.
His meaning in my judgment is onely this, that Christ hath made satisfaction for the imperfection of our faith and holiness, although we continue therein untill death: But he hath not made satisfaction for the contempts and hatred of his word, &c. in case men do continue therein unto death.
Here is nothing of that which Mr. B. hunts after, that Christ hath satisfied for no offence, no infirmity committed against the New Covenant, but this alone is the sum of it, that they shall have no benefit by Christ, no one sin committed against the Law or Gospel pardoned to them, who live and dye impenitent and unbelievers. According to that of our Saviour, Jo. 8. 24. Therefore I said unto you ye shall dye in your sins, for if ye beleeve not that I am he, ye shall dye in your sins.
1 In how different a sense from Mr. B. the Protestants take the word Condition hath been before expressed. 2 But in that sense in which they [that use it] take it, it is one thing to be the condition of the New Covenant, another to be the condition of Justification, which is but one of many benefits of the Covenant of Grace. Had Alsteed in the Explication of himself affirmed holiness of life a condition of justification, we should have had it at the full from Mr. B.
About the second thing wherein he alledgeth this mans testimony, [Page 202] I know no man questioning Mr. B. Neither is his next Testimony alledged from Sadeel, any thing of all the things wherein Mr. B. joyneth with the papists against the Protestants, therefore I spare the labour to transeribe it.
B. 4 Rivet in disputat. de satisfactione. God was not bound to accept the satisfaction performed by another though sufficient, &c. Therefore there was a necessity that a Covenant should intercede, and God himself propound a Mediator.
That there must an agreement intercede on his part who was satisfied, without which the satisfaction had been in vain.
Idem. ibid. Thes. 4, 5, 6.
The act which in satisfaction God performeth, is of a supreme judge, relaxing his own Law and transferring [...]he penalty of it upon another: so that in this relaxation Gods supreme dominion may be observed, &c. And by the transferring the penal [...]y from the sinner, and exacting it of the surety; the relation of a party offended, as such, is rem [...]ved from God, &c. J [...]. 4 12.
God did relax his Law as being positive, and so relaxable, it is abrogate, &c. The rest is off from the Qu [...]stion.
To what purpose he here produceth the Testimony of this famous Doctor, except it be to declare his consent with himself and Grotius, that the Law is not abrogated but relaxed onely, by means of Christs mediation; I know not. If so Rivet hath nothing for him, but much directly against him. 1 He affirms what no rationall man ever denied, that the Grace of God is free and not bound. How else should it be Grace? 2 Yea it is free not onely from Co-action, but from absolute necessity also. Onely the purpose of God being presupposed, that he would so save by grace as that no one title of his justice should fall, it was necessary there should be the interceding of a Covenant and a Mediator. But is this to any other purpose then what he concludes with, viz. [to fill up the vacant pages, p. 188.] 3 That there must also an agreement or Covenant to this end pass between the Father and [...]he Son; is ours not his doctrine. 4 The relaxation of the Law in passing this Covenant between the Father and the Son, is the common doctrine of all protestants, as also that this is an act of Supream dominion of God that is under no Law. But when this Covenant is ratified, so that Christ becomes the undertaker, and God the accepter of satisfaction in relation to them for whom the satisfaction is made, so that the penalty of the Law as to their sins, [Page 203] is transferred upon Christ: whether the Law be not so abrogate to them, that they are no longer under the Curse of it, is the thing in question. And here Dr. Rivet gives his verdit for us against Mr. B. That to these the Law is abrogate, and God no more stands in the relation of a party offended against them. What more proper sword-man could he have brought forth to have hewn in pieces his own Cause?
What doth he mean by citing the Testimony of this Doctor so frequently, and catching fragments from him, whom he knows in the whole bulk of his works to destroy what himself would set up? yea though he complains against him for erecting the main pillar of Antinomianism, will he at length become his Disciple and build pillars with him. Dr. Twisse doth enough wash his hands from Mr. Br doctrine, even in these passages here cited from him, as I could fully manifest. But because I see the task would be tedious to examine particularly every particular testimony which he citeth: The same persons speaking in severall of the quoted places the same thing, and many speaking no more then one at once hath said before: I shall therefore abridge my self, in shewing in generall the dissenting judgment of those writers from him, however he would deceive his Reader with a credulous opinion that they consent with him. This will be done with an easie labour: when contrariwise to speak singularly to every singular testimony, would not yeeld forth fruit worthy the labour.
First then all the Testimonies of Dr. Twisse, Append. p. 172, 173. That of Junius, p. 173. of Pareus, Piscator, Aretius, p. 174. Dr. Willet, p. 179, 180. Mr. Burges of Justification, p. 187. are here compiled to tell them that are no friends to the doctrine of grace, (though it alone must befriend them if they will be saved) that all these Divines consent with him in his doctrine, fi [...]st of a universall conditionall redemption or justification purchased by Christ, without any more effectuall satisfaction made to the justice of God for them that shall be saved, then for them that shall be damned: and secondly that morall obedience and good works are Concauses or Collaterall conditions with faith to justification.
To manifest how faithfull he is in these his allegations, I shall briefly express what the judgment of all Protestants is about these [Page 204] points, that the advised Reader may judge whether these dissent from the rest and prepared the way for Mr. Br to prosecute his Assertions.
1 They grant that the promulgation of righteousnes & life is to be made universally & conditionally to all. God knoweth who are his, but the Heralds of his grace know not. Therefore by the command of Christ they are to testifie this word of life to all without exception, promising upon condition of beleeving, in the name and by the word of Christ, righteousness and salvation. In mean time they meintein, Christ hath satisfied onely for those that the Father hath given him, so effectually as that by vertue of Christs purchase they shall receive power from above to beleeve unto salvation.
2 They are wont oft to use the word salvation (as the Scripture also doth) for glorification hereafter: and so take it as a distinct thing from justification: and involve into the condition of salvation more then into the condition of Justification.
3 By the word Condition they understand oft all the necessary antecedents, and sometimes also the necessary consequents either of justification or salvation. But so as they term such Antecedents the conditions, without which going before those ends cannot be attained, and those Consequents the conditions without which following we cannot attain the certain knowledge that we are justified and inrighted to glory.
4 That as oft as they speak of conditions of justification, they mean the justification of the New Covenant, not the justification immanent in God, or that which Mr. B. calleth Christs own justification as the publick person, Aph. p. 195.
5 They utterly deny morall obedience and good works to be in any other sense a condition of justification, but as it is a consequent thereof to evidence it. Mr. B. indeed, as if he had not enough injured Mr. Burges, by making him in some kind a Patron of his Whimsies, in prefixing his name to this his Book, Dedicating it to him as above others an eminent Fautor of such doctrines; would willingly here also draw him quasi obtorto collo, to be the Founder of this his Jesuiticall error, as he makes him out, App. p. 187, 188. But I have before shew'd that the preaching of repentance and the preaching of Faith for the remission of sins, are in Gospel language one and the same thing. If Mr. Burges mean otherwise (but so as law confident of the contrary) I should put no difference in the authority of Mr. B r and Mr. Burgess in this assertion. [Page 205] The same force he useth to draw Dr. Willet to be of his part, p. 180, 181. where indeed in one clause the Doctor seems to me to have verified that proverb, Quando (que) bonus dormitat Homerus: yet without giving thereby any advantage to Mr. B. yea he speaks directly opposit to him.
6 They deny all causality of good works to salvation.
7 Much more a concausality in the same kind with Faith, and the satisfaction of Christ.
8 Most of all, that they in any rationall sense merit it.
9 Or that as they make up the inherent righteousness of man to be a Collaterall with the sacrifice of, or righteousness which is by Christ, to Salvation; so that we are saved by works, for works, as by Christ and for Christ. All this dirt they leave to Mr. B. to lick off from the nailes of the Iesuits, bidding defiance against it as a Cursed doctrine. What they understand then of works as a condition of Salvation, is in this comprized; that to salvation already attained, they have the relation of an adjunct consequent, and effect: But to the salvation hereafter to be attained, the relation of an Adjunct antecedent and disponent, as also of an Argument confirming the hope and assurance thereof. They express themselves usually in the phrase of that Father, (though possibly misunderstood by some) Via regni sunt, non causa regnandi, which some do, all should thus construe (not that they are the way to the Kingdom above, Christ alone being this way, but) they are the way of the Saints which are Christs spirituall Kingdom: according to that of the Apostle, We are saved, not by works, for &c. God hath ordained us to walk in them, Eph. 2. 8-10. in the way of sanctification are they to be found, not in the wayes of iniquity and prophanness, who are inrighted by Christ to salvation.
Let now the vast difference and contrariety in so many particulars between M. Brs. and these Divines opinions, about this Question be considered, and then let it be judged whether Mr. Br. had not taken his leave of all bashfulness, when he would impose on his Readers an opinion, that he delivers upon this Argument nothing but what they had taught before him.
2 The Testimonies which he cites from Calvin, p. 175. Perkins, p. 177. do only affirm that the inherent righteousnes of sanctification doth sometimes give the name of righteous persons to beleevers, in the Scriptures, and this none denyeth. But here is no mention made that we are termed right [...]us from the righteousness [Page 206] of our own works, as or because they are the condition of our justification, which is Mr. Br. Tenet. Calvin indeed rightly ascribes it to the imputed righteousnes of Christ, from which originally and radically our own unperfect righteousnes is owned of God, and our selves righteous in doing it. But in no wise affirmeth that this our unperfect righteousnes hath any finger in the procuration of Christs righteousness to be imputed to us. But consequentially given a flat denyall of it, which is the thing questioned in Mr. B. As for Mr. Perkins, he hath in the place alledged nothing relating to the question. So that he doth an unexpiable wrong to the name of these famous men, to father them with this his error.
3 That which he citeth from Perkins, p. 176. & 178. and from Zanchy, p. 179. from Dr. Davenant, p. 181. Molinaeus, Scharpius, and Pareus, p. 185. and Mr. Burgess, p. 186. are nihil ad rem Nothing to the doctrines of Mr. Br that are questioned and charged as Popish, &c. He commits a Paralogism in detorting them into his opinions from which they are abhorrent. It is a meer ignoratio Elenchi, to bring these writers as concluding with him contradictorily to our Conclusions, who say nothing against us or for him. As those of Scharpius and Pareus, p. 185. where he makes th [...] wherein they affirm the substance of the New Covenant [in generall] to consist, to speak for him in contradiction to what we conclude of Justification, that is but one speciall part of that Covenant: as if all that is affirmed or denyed of the former are so also of the latter. The falshood whereof I have before manifested. Although Mr. Burgess in his Testimony alledged, p. 186. speaks more against Mr. Br then for him, yet I make not his Conclusion a part of my Creed, as being too peremptory, and boldly fettering the hands of Gods grace to Lawes, which God hath not imposed upon himself: viz. That Remission of sins is given us onely in the use of those Graces, [which he had before named.] Had he said [ordinarily, or mostly] in steed of [onely] I should not have excepted against him. But I take him to be so pious and learned, that upon a review he will relax and dispense with his [ onely] as not bottomed on the Scriptures there alledged, or any other. The like may be said to the like speech of Molinaeus, p. 185. if he mean so universally as Mr. Burgess speaketh. But perhaps neither of them by remission of sins mean Justification, but a quid distinctum from it, if so then they speak nothing to Mr. Brs purpose. [Page 207] The other fore-cited Testimonies out of Perkins and Zanchy, labour of the same fallacy, having nothing against us in those points in which Mr. Br. professeth himself an adversary to us.
4 But it seems he most triumpheth in the testimony of Mr. Ball. Him he magnifieth and exalteth with suparletive praises, more then all the great Theologers whom he alledgeth before and after him, as if all the rest were but Sycamores to this Cedar: [This great, leaaned and holy Divine as almost England ever bred,] and why so super excellent? for [...]ooth he goes on in Grotius [that Cassandrian Papist] his own words translated. And which is there of the D [...]vines which England hath bred, that can be praised for so illustrious an act besides Mr. Br. and him? I envy not the praises of the man, yet this act of his meriteth it not, no not from Mr. B. For as far as he transcribes him, p. 182. Mr. Ball no further fo [...]lowes Grotius then to Gods relaxing of the Law to take satisfaction from Christ in our steed: But if he had also asserted that after satisfaction actually taken, they which in Christ have satisfied, are yet all their life-time under the Curse of the Law to bear it in their own persons; would Mr. B. have hidden it? Yet this is the thing in question between Mr. B. and the Protestants, whether after the giving and receiving of satisfaction for our breaches of the Law, the Curs of the Law be either nulled, or els onely in part relaxed, as to our bearing it.
Yea if he [...]e as M [...]. B. stiles him, then have we the testimony of so great learned and holy a Divine as almost England ever bred against Mr. B. himself not being able to deny any one almost that England ever bred, which hath written more directly and contrarily to Mr. B. then this man in his Tractate of Faith, about Justification. If elswhere he contradicts himself, I shall oppose Ball against Ball, yea Ball in afflictions, when he lived by Faith and had nothing else but Christ apprehended by Faith to support his troubled soul, to Ball n [...]w raised to a prosperous state in the world, and wh [...] seeing the Court infected with Popery Socinianism and Arminianism, and no other bridge to preferm [...]nt so effectuall as some shew of bending at least to these wayes, might possibly as far as Conscience would permit him, make use of the language there held most authentick. I say of the language, for I cannot condemn his doctrine alledged in his three following Testimonies it taken in a good sense. But his ambiguities of words seem to speak him out to have had a levell to somewhat els besides the supporting of the truth; and yet [Page 208] his Conscience seems to hold him bound from saying any thing manifestly against the truth. Mr. B. may possibly tickle himself with his words, but his matter duly pondered gives him a sting sufficient to perswade him to forbear laughter. Let the unbiassed judicious Reader, add consideration to his reading and then judge.
The rest of the testimonies which he hath here cited and quoted I let passe as altogether besides the questions which Mr. B. hath set in agitation between himself and all the Protestant-Churches.
And thus at length have his Arguments been examined which he brings to confirm his Justification by works.
He hath many things tending to the confirmation of some other Paradoxes scattered in his Aphorisms, beginning at p. 123. of his Appendix, and ending at p. 164. but because those things are handled by way of disputation against others, and Mr. B. as a challenger doth call out there by name Mr. Owen and Maccovius to a Duell with himself, each after other, exposing them to the world as base and silly Animals in what they have said, except they come forth into open field to make it good: It shall be both impertinent and uncivil in me to meddle in a business to which others and the same far more worthy and able, are called as to their peculiar task: I should not be excused by any herein from being one that loveth [...], to be busie in another mans office, specially seeing I know not what these challenged have done or are doing in the defence of themselves and the doctrine which they have asserted. Were it that their reputation alone, and not a truth of Christ w ch they had undertaken to defend were here clouded by Mr. B. I should think it no fault in them to pass it by in contemptuous silence: but seeing Mr. B. endeavours upon their ruines to erect his mounts against the City of the living God, to destroy it, or at least spoyle it of its principall immunities; denying the full justification of the Lords redeemed ones in this world, & holding them under the curs and wrath of God both in their life and death: I perceive not how they can be silent, without betraying the truth of God which they once undertook to defend. Since this was written I understand Mr. Owen hath fully vindicated himself, and learnedly defended all that Mr. B. had laid on his score.
Thus far to his Arguments that he hath brought to prove Justification by works. I find no more, nor in these have I hidden any thing but set them forth in their fullest strength.
CHAP. XV.
Mr. Baxters Plea to prove his Doctrine free from Popery, examined and refuted.
I Come now to the most accurate, finest, and chiefest part of Mr. Brs. Art, his Alcumistry, by which hee turneth the basest metals into gold, darkness into light, death into life, deformity into beauty, and hell into heaven it self. All this he with strong endeavours labours to accomplish, while with strong confidence hee goes about to vindicate his doctrine from all error, all infection of Popery, Socinianism, Pharisaism, and to render it the same with the doctrine of Paul and of Christ, guiltless of all derogation to the praise of Gods grace, Christs merits, or the Saints comfort; Yea to set it forth in such a splendor, that although hee hath hitherto described such a grace of God, as by his donation was no more appropriated and peculiarized to Peter then to Judas, to the cursed in hell, than to the Saints in heaven: and such a Christ as reigneth Tyrant-like in the Kingdom of grace, chaining up his own, all his own subjects and friends, under the curse of the Law to bear the horrors and torments of it in soul and body all their life, yea after death as long as the world shall continue: though he hath taken away from the Saints (after their self-denyall, repentance, building themselves by their most holy Faith upon Christ the Rock, after their renovation and sanctification by the Spirit) all hope and possibility of attaining any assurance of Gods unchangeable love to them, or of their sinns irrevocably pardoned, or of their perseverance in the state of Grace, or of their indefeazable right to glory, or of their exemption from the curse and wrath of God while they live, or of the rest and freedom of their souls after death, either from the flames of Hell, or of Purgatory as long as the world standeth: After hee hath taught that no man shall have any part in Christ and his benefits, which procureth it not by his own righteousness, his own perfect righteousness [ in suo genere] yea by the merits of his righteousness: After that he hath proclaimed that his Gospel brings no better tidings of joy than these: Yet at length hee comes to varnish over such a Grace, such a Christ, such a Gospel, such a state of believers [Page 210] (who are all of his own faigning) with such paints and fine colours, as by them to enamour all men to embrace these as the only true and appetible Grace, Christ, Gospel, and state of beleevers. That this Doctrine is as smooth as Esau's hands, as free from Popery, Socinianism, from all injurie against the grace of God, all-sufficiency of Christs merits, consolation of the Saints, yea from all error whatsoever, as Lazarus was from sores, or the poor Gadaren from Devills, that had but a legion of them within him: That it agrees so harmoniously with the doctrine of Paul, as light with darkness, Christ with Belial, and the Temple of God with Idols: That in these things the Covenant of Grace consisteth indeed, therefore invites all at the consideration of the innocency and profundity of this his Gospel, to follow him in seeking a sure salvation by their own righteousness in the Curse of the Law.
To insist no longer upon generals, I shall examine the particular Apologies which he makes for this his Doctrine of Justification by works, to cleer it from the false imputations which the ignorant Antinomians that is (in his Construction) Luther, Calvin, Twisse, Pemble, and their followers might charge it withall.
His first Task which he appoints to himself, is to vindicate it from having any smack of Popery; how so? doth not both he and they maintain in the same words that we are justified by works? this he cannot deny. But forsooth there is a great difference in this, whose pen it is that drops the assertion. The Papists do it with a quill of a Capitoline, Mr. Br. with a quill of a Kederminster goose. This alters the case saith Ploydon, & makes the same Proposition to be Popery and no Popery. But let us hear himself speaking, and multiplying his reasons why it must not be taken for Popery.
Suppose all these things were true, and the difference between him and the Papists were so great and manifold, as in these particulars he pretendeth, yet all this nothing evinceth his Doctrine not to be Popish, especially among Scholars to whom he appealeth. For 1 All this would but excuse him a tanto, non a toto, that in these particulars he is not, though in many other and greater, he be Popish.
2 Though he differed from them in the premisses, yet he is one with them in the conelusion. Bellarmine brings his arguments, and Stapleton his, to prove that works justifie. Are they not both Papists, because their arguments differ, when their Conclusion is one? Mr. Br thinks, that in some particulars his curious wit hath prompted him with a finer and surer way of demonstration to stablish Justification by works, than ever entered into the Cardinals Cap or Cranion: Doth this deny him to be a Papist, because he speaks more for them than they could for themselves? 3 Though Bellarmins and Brs. way of arguing do in some particulars differ, yet is the later as great an opposite to the truth of the Gospell in his way, as the former in his. Both oppugn with their utmost strength the doctrine of grace, though they divide the battell between them, the one scaling from the North, the other from the South.
2 But it cannot be truly sayd, that there are truly those reall differences between Mr. Brs. and the Papists Doctrine, which hee here particularizeth. For 1 Though in some of these particulars he speaks not the idem, yet he speaks the Tantundem with them. 2 Where he speaks not the very idem, hee speaks more grosly, Pharisaically, and adversatively to the truth then they. For the manifesting hereof, let us particularly examine those particulars in which he saith he differs from them.
1 This speaks out their Doctrine to be more tolerable then his. For the Scripture denies not the increase of sanctification to be in part by works (which is all that the Papists hold) But accurseth [Page 212] them that shall attribute Justification either in its beginning or growth (if there were any such thing) to works. 2 It is not true, that the Papists make whole or all Justification to consist in Sanctification. For in their many divisions and distinctions of Justification, among the rest they have this. There is a first and a second justification. The former of Infants and new Converts conferred in baptism. This consists in remission of sins meerly by the blood of Christ, sprinkled by the Spirit in Baptism upon Infants that are not of age actually to believe; and received also by Faith by believing Converts in their Baptism. The later end indeed they make to consist in the infusion of the habit of grace and sanctification: when the justified man, ex justo justior fit, is more and more justified. This will afterward be manifested: So that all Scholars must acknowledg Mr. Br. to have the Tantundem, and almost in every apex the Idem of this Doctrine. Yea worse is his doctrine in this particular than theirs. For he makes Sanctification and good works a Collateral with the righteousness of Christ in justifying. They abandon this doctrine, teaching that they are but fruits of Gods grace and Christs merits. Thus he sets up vain man as Cheek-mate with Christ, they set him at his foot-stool, or appoint him to follow and apprehend the hemm of his garment, to draw vertue from him, though indeed to other and prouder ends then he hath ordained.
1 All this is said, not shewed and proved. 2 If the Papists did wholly as he saith, Mr. Br. to every particle of what he charges them with, might tune up the Poets Epigram, Jam sumus ergo pares: Jam sumus ergo pares. In all this we shake hands. What fouler confounding of the Covenants can there be then what Mr. Br hath committed: when he makes DO, and LIVE, to be the voyce of both Covenants, denying any usefulness to Faith it self in justifying, but as it is a deed and morall work. Let Babel it self be raked from end to end, there will not be found more confusion. The Papists say, doing and works, as works and doing cannot be our righteousness to justifie us: But as they receive purification from the blood and grace of Christ, so they obtain acceptance with God, and becom our righteousnes to justifie us. Christ (say they) [Page 213] hath merited that our fulfilling of the Law should justifie us. Mr. Br. saith nay, but our fulfilling the works which the Law requireth, meriteth that we should receive Christ to Justification (as we shall see by and by) Let now any rationall man judg which party doth most confound the Covenants, he that makes the works of the Law in and for themselves, as they are simply done, meritorious to Justification: or they that ascribe nothing to works but what they have from Christ. Both I acknowledg are to be abandoned; but the deeper grain of self-extolling, the more sensuall lusting after the flesh-pots of Aegypt is in Mr. Brs. Doctrine. Let none object that Mr. Br. attributes it not to works as works of the Law, but of the Gospel, himself knoweth and hath learned that poor shift of the Papists; and that they come off handsomer with it upon their, then it is possible for him to do upon his principles.
This I conceive he puts as a third difference between his and their doctrine. For what he saith under this third particular, that when they say justified, they mean sanctified, that he had made before the first difference. If this be the difference, then is he much more guilty than they. I obtained mercie, because I did it of ignorance, saith the Apostle, implying that they which did it maliciously against the light of their own understandings, were excluded from mercy. He that knoweth his fathers will, and doth it not, shall be beaten with many stripes. Yet I conceive Mr. Br. means here the Schoolmen of ancient times of Barbarism: not the Jesuits, Arminians, Socinians, and other Scholastick, Phylosophick Theologasters of these later times: For these are so knowing (in Mr. Brs. account) in the doctrine of Justification, that hee hath borrowed all his knowledg and doctrine from them. And why the former should be esteemed more sottishly ignorant in this than in other no lesse mysteriall doctrines of the Gospel I know not. In thingt naturall and morall indeed they wrote as learned Philosophers, so farr as refined reason could conduct them. But in things purely Evangelicall (saving about the persons and natures of Christ, which they also handled more Metaphysically than Theologically) besides some fragments gathered out of Augustine, I could hardly ever meet with a sound piece in such of them as have come to my reading. There may be a time when Mr. Br. may recant his profit [Page 214] and delight in dipping holy waters from the muddy streams, contemning the pure fountain of the Gospel.
Or if he puts the difference in the former words;
And in that which standeth as it were in a fourth place.
Not to except here against his maimed alleadging of their opinions, thereby feigning a distance from them, that hee might allure his readers without suspition to joyn as neer with them as himself: Let us take it for truth what he saith of them, and then let the indifferent Reader judg. 1 Whether is the most arrogant Doctrine, the Papists that say, works that follow, and are the fruits of Faith, and are done in the strength of grace supernaturally infused into the soul do merit? or Mr. Br. that saith, works as concauses with, not fruits of Faith, that flow from no other grace, but Pelagius his morall Suasion, without any Physicall renovation and change upon the will (as for distinctions sake some of our Divines are wont to express themselves) do so merit? If Mr. Br. mean any thing els by grace, he conceals it as a mysterie from us, and will not throughout his whole book give one hint at it: but makes man in his own naturall and morall qualifications, the meriter of his own Justification by Christ. 2 Or which ascribes most to works, they that attribute to them inherent justice, which is the lesser; or hee that ascribes to them the meriting of Christs imputed righteousnes, which is the greater? Concerning legall and Evangelicall Righteousness, I have spoken enough before: And the phrase of the Papists and Mr. Br. is one and the same herein.
This might suffice to take off this delusion from his Readers, that his Doctrine is not Popish. But to manifest more fully in the sight of the Sun, that every one may run reading it, and read it running, how grosly, and in how many particulars his Doctrine is Papisticall, I shall draw out in a parallel his Doctrine, and the Doctrine of the Papists, setting them side by side, that whosoever will, by comparing them may determine whether there be any [Page 215] worse Popery from Rome it self than from Kedderminster. This I shall make the subject of the next Chapter.
CHAP. XVI.
The Doctrine of Mr. Baxter and of the most Trentified and Jesuitized Papists, compared together in many particulars, and found one and the same.
The Doctrine of the Papists and of Mr. Baxter compared together in many particulars, in their Relation to Justification.
PAPISTS.
1. THere is a two-fold Justification, a first and a 2 d. Justification: the one inchoate, unperfect, more properly to be termed the beginning or root of and a disposition to justification, or being justified, than Justification it self, or our being fully justified before God.
2 The first justification is by the first grace given, before all good works for the remission of sins for the meer merits of Christ to Infants by baptism, to them that are of Age by Faith. The second justification, is by new obedience and good works, by which the faithfull deserve increase of Righteousness to their fuller Justification.
3 Good works are the condition of Justification, without which Christs satisfaction is not applyed to us. [ Of this opinion Bellarmine affirmeth some of his fellows to be, and finds no fault with it or them, onely himself takes up what seem'd to him more probable. Himself also speaks to the same purpose.] The Gospel promising life upon condition of actuall & working Righteousness which consists in keeping the Commandents.
4 It is false therefore that we are justified by Faith onely, the Scriptures no where affirm it, let him be accursed that shall say it. Many other graces, vertues and works are required to it, viz. The fear of God, hope in his mercy, Love, Repentance, a desire to receive the Sacraments, a purpose to lead a new life, and keep the Commandements [ under this l [...]st speciall they comprize all good works whatsoever.]
Nay so far are both parties from this Faith, that Faith onely justifieth, that Both teach we are justified by Works only. For
5 We are justified by the Act of Faith, which is a work, and a Law, so that if we are not justified [Page 217]by works, Faith it self must be excluded from justifying. Though we are not justified by any works ( i. e.) by any works of the Law, yet by a work of the Gospel, such as Faith is, we may be justified.
6 Our Adversaries ( i. e. the Protestants) consent together in this, that good works are not necessary to salvation, otherwise than by the necessity of their presence, but that they have not any relation to salvation, as merits, or causes, or conditions thereof, &c. We contrariwise say that good works are necessary to a righteous man, unto salvation, by way of [causality or] efficiency, because [they effect] or work salvation.
7 When the Apostle saith, we are justified by Faith and not by Works, there is to be understood a Synecdoche in the words of Paul, that when he saith we are justified by Faith, hee meaneth [not without works, but] by Faith and works together, [ so that Faith is put for Faith, & works of Faith.]
8 The good works of justified men [which effect their Justification] [Page 218]are absolutely just and in their Mode or manner, perfect.
9 So the perfection of our righteousnes and Justification is not from Faith but from works, For Faith doth but begin Justification, and afterward it hath assumed to it self Hope and Charity, it doth [by these] perfect it.
10 Good works merit without all doubt, yet not by any intrinsecall vertue and worth in themselves, but by vertue of Gods promise. A promise made with a condition of work, brings to pass that he which performs the work, is said to have merited the thing promised, and may challenge the reward as his debt in Law.
11 The Hereticks teach that it is unpossible for a righteous man to fullfill Gods Law. The Catholicks teach that it is absolutely possible for a righteous man to fullfill it, by the help of Gods Grace, and Spirit of Faith and Charity infused into them in their Justification.
12 The contrary doctrine w ch denyeth Justification by works, and the Merit of works is a pernicious [Page 219]doctrine, an enemy to all good endeavours & good works, invites all to a licentiousness of sinning, and to transgress without fear or shame; what evil will he fear, or what good will he not despise, who thinks faith alone sufficient to righteousness?
13 Though a man hath received the infusion of grace, and the Spirit of Faith and Charity, and is now justified, yet he is under the penalty and curse of the Law still. For Christ hath given and God hath taken satisfaction onely for the fault, but not for the punishment, so that when God hath fully pardoned the fault, he may and will inflict the punishment upon the offender.
14 Yea this punishment remains upon the Justified both inlife and death, and after death in Purgatory.
15 For the Righteous or Justified man is so under the obligation of Gods Law, that except he shall fullfill it, he shall not be saved.
16 Because our Justification being still conditionall, even after we are Justified, may be somtimes lost, somtimes reteined, now had, and then lost, and after recovered yea and lost again, as we do hinder or not hinder the Grace of God.
17 No man can be assured of his eternall Election, that he is ordeined [Page 220]of God to life; or of his perseverance in grace to the end; and consequently not of his salvation. For the Scripture in express words teacheth, that Salvation depends of the condition of works; But no man can certainly conclude that he shall do [much less persevere to do] all that Christ hath Commanded.
18 It cannot be that the Righteousness of Christ be imputed to us in that sense that by it we may be called, and be formally righteous; although it be true that Christs merits be imputed to us, because God hath made them ours by donation, and we may offer them to God the Father for our sinns, because Christ hath taken upon him the burthen of making satisfaction for us, and of reconciling us to God the Father: yet the denomination of righteous persons is from the intrinsecall righteousnes in themselves.
19 Though we are justified by the works which the Law commandeth, yet are we not justified by them as they are works of the Law; but as they are Evangelicall [Page 221]and works of the Gospel, done in the strength of Christ, and by the power of renewing grace powred upon the Elect by Christ under the Gospel.
20 Love or Charity is the form of Justifying Faith, so that when faith doth Justifie, it justifieth by charity as its form which gives it its life and motion; so that if Faith justifieth, love justifieth either in an equality with it, or more than it.
21 Justifying Faith consisteth in the Assent of the judgement to all things which are written in the word of God: No other faith is required of any. But an implicit Faith is sufficient in the Laity and ignorant, which are not acquainted with the Scriptures, in whom it is enough to beleeve as the Church beleeveth, i. e. as their Clergy teacheth and beleeveth, though they do not explicitly and in particulars know what the Church beleeveth.
BAXTER.
JƲstification is two-fold, either in Trident. Conc. Sess. 6. c. 6, 7, 8. Tilet. in Apol. p. 237. & in defēs. Trid. Conc. adversus Chemnitiū, part 1. title of Law, or in sentence of Judgment. [In this later, having out-runn the Papists, to meet with them again, he looks back to the former, and makes it two-fold thus] Justification in title of Law is to be considered either in its first point & possession, or in its [after] continuance and accomplishment: The later he makes entire, & consequently (in the way of opposition there used) the former to be put in part, Aph. p. 302. 311.
The first point and possession of Justification I acknowledg to be by faith alone, without either the concomitancy or co-operation of works; Iidem Ibid. for they cannot be performed in an instant: But the continuance and accomplishment of Justification is not without the joynt procurement of obedience. Aphor. p. 302.
The righteousness of the New Covenant [i. e. in his sense, faith, and works] is the only condition of our interest in, and enjoyment of Bel. l. 1. de purg cap 14 Sect. 4. Ratio. 4. Bell. lib. 4. de Just. c. 2. the Old. [i. e. of the righteousness of Christ to justification] Both these righteousnesses are absolutely necessary to salvation. Aph. Thes. 17. 19. 60. and from thence every where untill the very end of his Book.
The bare Act of beleeving is not Trid. Conc. in the forecited place. the only Condition of the New Covenant, but severall other duties also are parts of that Condition. I desire no more of those that deny this, but that the Scripture may be judg Whosoever shall reduce the contrary Doctrine Bell. de Justif. lib. 1. cap. 13, &c. into practice (viz. to seek salvation and Justification by faith only, not at al by works) it wil und [...]ubtedly damn him. Those other duties that justifie are Repentance, praying for pardon, forgiving others, Love, sincere obedience, works of Love (i. e. all good works) not faith alone, or some of these works and vertues with it, but all must have their concurrence to justifie, Aphor. p. 235, 236, 237. 325.
Nay so far are both parties from this Faith, that Faith onely justifieth, that Both teach we are justified by Works only. For
We are still said to be justified by Bell. de Justif. lib. 1. Faith which is an Act of ours. Append. p. 80. Morall duties are part [Page 217]of the condition of our salvation; a [...] for it to be performed: And ev [...] faith is a Morall duty. [So th [...] Daventria. So Pemble cites the Papists objecting. Treat. of justif. p. 37. according to Mr. Brs. doctrin [...] Morall works and duties alon [...] as such, are required of us to J [...] stification, and not Faith it se [...] this way usefull, but as a mora [...] work and duty, Append. p. 80.
When the Apostle saith [by wor [...] and not by faith only] hee plain [...] makes them concomitant in procur [...] ment, Bell. de necessitate operum ad salutem. or in that kind of Causal [...] which they have: especially seeing [...] saith not (as he is commonly inte [...] preted) [not by faith which is [...] lone] but [not by faith onely.] [...] the phrase [Justified by works] t [...] word [by] implyeth more than an [...] dle concomitancy: If they should on [...] stand by, while Faith [...] all, [...] would not be said, we are justifi [...] by works, Aph. p. 299, 300.
Faith in the largest sense, as comprehendeth all the conditions See Weimrichius. l. 1. in Epist. ad Romanos, c. 3. p. 207. the N: C: is when a sinner, &c. do beleeve the truth of the Gospell, a [...] accept of Christ as his only Lord a [...] Saviour, &c. and sincerely (thou [...] imperfectly obey him as his Lord, fo [...] Osor. lib. 3. de Instit. n. 70. giving others, loving his people, be [...] ring all what sufferings are impose [...] diligently using his Means and Or [...] nances, &c. And all this sincerely [...] to the end, Aph. Thes. 70. & Ap [...] Bel. lib 4. de Justif. c. 10. Qu. de veritate honor. operum. p. 243.
This personall Gospell-righteo [...] ness is in its kind a perfect Righ [...] ousness: [Page 218]and so far we may admit the doctrine of personall perfection. Aphor. Thes. 24.
The first point of Justification (and that which is but a point, the first point must needs be a very small pittance Bell. de Ju [...]if. lib. 1. [...]ap. 20. Malden. in Matth. 9. of it) I grant to be Faith alone, but the accōplishment (i. e. the perfitting thereof) is not without the joynt procuremēt of obedience, Aph. p. 302.
In a Larger sence as promise is an obligation, and the thing promised is [...]el. de Mer. called Debt; so the performers of the Condition are called worthy, and the thing promised is called Debt. Thes. [...]ea all the [...]apists, as [...]lleaged [...]y Cal. Inst. [...]b. 3. ca. 14. [...]ect. 12. & [...]ap. 17. [...]ect. 3. 15. 26. Yea in this Meriting, the obligation to reward is Gods ordinate Justice, and the truth of his promise, and the worthiness lieth in our performance of the Condition on our part. Aph. pa. 141.
As it was possible for Adam to have fullfilled the Law of works, by that Bell. lib. 4. [...]le Justif. [...]ap. 1. power which he had received by nature: So is it possible for us to fullfill the Conditions of the New Covenant (i. e. the righteousness which the Law requireth) by the power which we receive from the Grace of Christ. [But whether this be grace or no grace Pelagius his imaginary, or the Gospel real grace, he wil not let us know, so that herein the Papists are more ingenious than he, for they express themselves plainly of effectuall Grace indeed.] Thes. 27.
The Doctrine of Justification by Hos. in Con [...]ut. pa. 140 [...]b. 3. Faith onely, tendeth to drive obedience out of the world; For if men [Page 219]do once beleeve, that it is not so much Canis. inprefat. in Andr. Vega Andr. Vega de Justif. in Epist. prefat. Osor. de Justif. lib. 2, & 7. as a part of the Condition of their Justification, will it not much tend to relax their diligence? And it doth much confirm the world in their Soulcozening Faith, &c. Aphor. pag. 325, 326.
It was not the intent of the Father Trident. Cone. Sess. 6. cap. 14, 16. & Sess. 14. cap. 8; 9. Bel. de Purgatorio. Bel. de Poenitent. lib. 4. or Son, that by this satisfaction the offenders should be immediately delivered from the whole Curse of the Law, and freed from the evill which they had brought upon themselves, but some part must be executed in soul and body, and remain upon them at the pleasure of Christ: And this Curse is upon not onely affenders in generall, but also upon the Elect, and beleevers, Aph. p. 65, 66, 68.
Not till the day of Resurrection & Judgement will all the effects of Sin Bellarmine and all his fellows. Bel. de Justif. lib. 4. cap. 7. Syn. Trid. ib. can. 12. and Law & wrath be perfectly removed [from the beleevers & justified.]
Beleevers after they be justified, are under the Law as it is a Covenant of works, [for life and death.] Aph. p. 78, 79. 82.
Onely a conditionall but not an absolute Andr. Vega de Fide & operibus q. 2 So also Thomas Seotus. & Bellarmine. discharge is granted to any in this life. When we do perform the cō dition yet still the discharge remains conditionall, till we have quite finished our performance, and where the condition is not performed the law is still in force & shall be executed, A. p. 82.
[ The justification of beleevers in this life is conditionall, ut supra, &] [Page 220] Men that are but thus conditionally Bellarmine prosecuteth this Argument at large. pardoned and justified, may be unpardoned and unjustified again, for their non-performance of the conditions, and all the debt so forgiven, be required at their hands. [so that there can be no certainty of perseverance to salvation.] Aph. Thes. 44. He seems in the explication to lenifie his assertion, but to it I have spoken before.
Our Legall Righteousnes is not personal or in our selves, and in our own qualificatiōs & actions &c. but wholly without us in Christ: Our Evangelicall Bel. de justif. Lib. 1. Righteousness consisteth in our own Actions of Faith & Gospel obedience. This is the onely Condition of our interest in the Righteousness of Christ. Now by reason of this personall righteousnes consisting in the Rec [...]tude of their own dispositions and actions, the godly are called Righteous in Scripture, and their faith and duties are said to pleas God, viz. at they are related to the Covenant of grace, i. e. as they are cōditions procuring our Justification by Christ; [as well as in regard of the imputed Righteousnes,] which he addeth but as a cypher, bringing no proof for it but all seemingly for the former, Aphor. Thes. 18, 19, 20, 22, and its explication, p. 119. &c.
We are justified by works commanded This is the generall vote of all Popish writers, none excepted. in the Law, yet as they make up not our Legall but our Evangelicall Righteousness, not as they are done upon legall terms, but as they are conditions [Page 221]of the New Covenant. This is the chief substāce of M r Brs whole book; and it is a poorer shift to elude the doctrine of Paul, than is that of the Papists.
Love is an essentiall part of Justifying Faith, & not properly a fruit of of it. Aph. p 266. When Faith therefore The common Tenet of Papists. [ not love] is said to justifie, it is said so to work (in its essentiall work of accepting) by Love, pa. 268. That both are necessary to salvation, & are concurrent in apprehending Christ, is doubtless. p. 271. Love doth truly receive Christ &c. p. 224.
The people are to understand, that for them to take upon trust from their Teachers, what they cannot yet reach to see in its own evidence, is less absurd and more necessary, that many This also is a known Tenet among the Papists. do imagin. Epistle to the reader in the last page save two.
These may suffice for a Taste by which the reader may judge, whether Mr. Brs and the Papists Barrells are filled with the same Herring, or not. Should I proceed to Compare also his and their equivocations, ambiguities, & mentall reservations, together with their purposed and not unwary Contradictions, when to say and deny the same thing in severall places, as may severally make for their advantage: But specially if I should go on to Compare them, how they bring the same arguments to prove their severall assertions, and the same distinctions and other shifts of Sophistry to elude the Scriptures [Page 222] and reasons which make against them; I should procedere ad infinitum almost, begin but finde no end.
In alleaging the words of the severall Authors, something here and there hath perhaps been abbreviated, some words (standing as cyphers without waight in reference to the questions Controverted) interserted, to make up some orderly Connexion of the following with the foregoing particular cited: But no where have I wittingly Committed any such alteration of the words as to alter in one Title the sense of the Writer; as will be evident to all that will but take the pains to examine the citations with their authentique or books from which they are cited.
Neither is there any one thing alleaged in which the two parties Cohere, but what hath been still Controverted between the Papists and Protestants. Else would it be easie to produce a thousand particulars wherein the Pope and Luther themselves speak one and the same thing without opposition or difference.
If any where, when Mr. Br and the Papists speak the same words, yet Mr. Br means not punctually the same thing with the Papists, in every such allegation I undertake to manifest that he is worse and delivers more self-exalting, & Grace-depressing doctrine than they.
Yet all this is too little to set forth the frame of Mr. Brs spirit: he may take himself injured, and left too obscure, if he be but matched with the Papists, and have no pre-eminence granted him before and above them in exalting mans righteousnes, and nullifying the Grace of God in Christ. That we may not rob him of the praise to which his ambition seems to aspire, we will grant to him, that the Papists are but the Pigmies, and he the Giant: that in the battell between Michael and the Dragon he hath superexcelled, & more deserved the Scarlet Hat, Miter, Crosier, yea Triple Crown it s [...]lf, than they that have and wear them; if not by his Art yet at least by his daring boldnes in his undertakings. This service therefore I shall do him, to manifest not onely his equality with but also his ex [...]perancy above many of the famous Champions of Rome. That many of the brave Cardinals, Bishops, Jesuits, and Fryars, of the Church of Rome are Protestants in the poynt of Justification, as compared with Mr. Br: and that he sheweth himself in many particular [...] about this doctrine, a Papist of a deeper dye than the more modest Papists, yea than some of the most Jesuitized and Trentified Rabbi's among them. This shall be the business of the next Chapter.
CHAP. XVII.
A comparing of Mr. Baxters Doctrine with the Doctrine of some of the more Modest, and other more Trentified and Jesuitized Papists, in which he is found more Antichristian than they.
Papists.
1 IT is to be noted that the Scripture attributeth this imputation of Righteousness to no other thing but Faith.
2 Faith hath not of it self any efficacy, as it is our act, to forgive and reconcile: but all its vertue proceeds from its object, namely Christ, whose vertue and merit God hath disposed to apply to the sinner unto Justification, by Faith on him.
3 If it be enquired how the Law of Faith is distinguished by Paul against the Law of works, even of morall works, when Faith also is comprehended under the genus [or kind] of works; for to beleeve is our work: The solution is, that to beleeve in him that justifieth the ungodly, leaneth upon the Righteousnes of another, to wit, of God through Christ: but other works do lean upon their own Righteousness; every work is in [or after] it self [Page 224]good, and makes him good that hath it.
4 If Faith as it is a certain Act, and of it self, should procure Righteousness, then were not Righteousness given freely. God hath not used works to justifie, as he hath used Faith, that men should not boast, attributing Righteousness to the vertue or merit of works.
5 Faith is not counted to us for Righteousness, as if it self were made our Righteousness; but because it brings a Righteousness on man before God; not as it is an act of man, then Grace should be of works, for to beleeve is a kind of work: but of Gods will, as he hath willed that Righteousness should be given to man by Faith, and the vertue of Christ upon whom man beleeveth, should be communicated to the beleever. This is to count [or impute] Faith to Righteousness before God.
6 Whereas we attain a twofold Righteousness by Faith, an inherent Righteousness, &c. by which we become pertakers of Gods nature; and the Righteousness of Christ imputed to us, [Page 225] &c. It remains to be enquired, upon which of these we ought to lean [or trust] and to account our selves justified before God? My judgment is that we are to rest, to rest I say as upon a stable thing that firmly susteineth, namely the Righteousness of Christ imputed to us, and not on the holiness and grace inherent in our selves. For this is unperfect, &c. therefore we cannot for it be counted Righteous before God. But the imputed righteousness of Christ is a perfect righteousnes, in which there is nothing that can offend the eyes of God, but all things that can abundantly please him. Ʋpon this alone therefore are we to rest as upon a thing sure and stable, and to beleeve that by it alone we are justified.
7 This may undoubtedly be affirmed, and it is the opinion of all Divines, that God can justifie men and make them pleasing and amiable to him, without any inherent quality or habits infused.
8 To the same purpose and somewhat more fully speaketh Bellarmine. The guilt or obligation to punishment ( saith he) may be taken away without the infusion of Righteousnes. For nothing hinders by how much the less [Page 226]God can will the not ordeining to punishment, and the pardoning of the offence, and the not accounting him for an enemy, to whom he hath not granted the gift of habituall Righteousness.
9 The Scope of James (in the second Chapter of his Epistle) is to shew that we are justified not by a barren but by a fruitfull Faith.
10 The meaning of James is not that Faith without works is dead, &c. For it is evident that we are justified by Faith even without works. But his meaning is, that Faith without works, that is which refuseth to work, or is no [...] disposed to work, is a dead Faith, vain and justifieth not. What therefore James alleageth out of Gen. 15. Abraham beleeved God, to this purpose he alleageth it, that he beleeved being in readiness to work. Therefore he saith that in the work of offering his Son, the Scripture was fulfilled, speaking of his Faith prepared to work: It was fulfilled (I say) as to the execution of that great work, to which his Faith was prepared.
11 If any where in Scripture thou hearest reward or wages promised, know that it is no otherwise due then by Gods promise, [Page 227]freely he hath promised, freely he gives. If thou wilt abide in his Grace and Favour, make no mention of thy Merits.
12 All Papists consentingly make the Merits of Christ the foundation of mans merits, as far as he can merit. Neither Faith nor works, nor doing nor sufferings (say they) have any other vertue to merit then what they receive from the merits of Christs death, then as they are dipt in his blood; this makes them acceptable to the Father.
13 When Christ saith of the woman, Luk. 7. 47. Many sins are forgiven her, for she loved much; it is to be understood not that she loved much, and so her much love was the cause of her great forgiveness, but contrarywise that because many sins were forgiven her, therefore she loved much.
14 To be given freely, and to be a retribution to works, are as much opposit, as that which is free and that which is from Justice, or as not due, and debt. And this way of inference the Apostle useth in the beginning of this 4 th [Page 228]Chapter [ viz. speaking of Justification by Grace.]
15 The work of Justice is wages or Reward, and this way of Justice Grace excludeth, whose work is meer gift or Donation.
16 In this verse the Apostle concludeth that Christ hath saved us from all the evill both of fault and punishment. That there is nothing of condemnation remaining to them that are in Christ, because all judgment is taken away both to the fault and the punishment.
17 It is certain that when originall sin is remited, that the evils which it brought are not remitted and taken away, as all finde by experience: Notwithstanding they remain not under the consideration of punishment, because the fault being taken away, there can be no desert, as to punishment, remaining.
18 I will remember their iniquities no more, saith the Lord, i. e. I will neither in this world injoin any Penance for them, nor in that which is to come inflict any punishment for them. So hath the Holy Ghost promised that our sins shall be forgiven by the New Covenant of Grace.
19 In regard of the uncertainty of our own righteousness, and the danger of vain glory: it is [Page 229]most safe to repose our whole confidence in the sole mercy and benignity of God.
Baxter.
THe bare act of beleeving is not the onely condition of the New Cardinall Contarenus in Rom. 4. Covenant, but severall other duties also are parts of that Condition. The Common opinion that justifying faith, as justifying, doth consist in any one single act, is a Wretched Mistake. [by the one act of faith he means, Faith in opposition to works.] Aph. p. 235, 248.
Faith it self is our righteousnesse, viz. our Evangelicall, as Christ is our Legall Righteousnesse. It self Toletus a Iesuite, upon Rom. 3. is imputed to us for righteousnesse, Aph. p. 125, 126. It justifieth as it is an act of ours, and as it is a morall duty, App. p. 80. & 102.
Both Faith and workes make up one condition, one righteousness, one perfect righteousness of our own, by Cardinall Cajetan upon Rom. 3. which we merit to be justified by God by the legall righteousness which is in Christ. [And consequently Faith doth not lean upon anothers, and works upon their own righteousness, but both make up one compounded righteousness and goodness which make us righteous and good also, and by this righteousness and goodness, deservers of justification & salvation.] [Page 224] Aph. Thes. 17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, 26. and scatteringly throughout the whole Book.
Faith as an act of ours, and of it self, with other workes, procureth Righteousness: And God hath used Toletus the Iesuit up on Rom. 1. works to justifie as he hath used faith, even in the same kinde of causality. [So we have found Mr. Br. oft affirming as may be seen in our former quotations: Let him deny that he holds the consequents of these two Antecedents, if he will.]
It is so far from being an error to affirm that Faith it self is our righteousness, that it is a truth necessary for every Christian to know, yea it both is our Righteousnesse, and is imputed to us for righteousnesse. The [very] personall performance of faith shall be imputed to us, for a sufficient personall payment [of righteousnes] Idem in Rom. 4. as if we had paid the full [duty and righteousnesse which the Law requireth.] This is the substance of his words, though not his very words, which being continued in terms of a Metaphor, cannot without the citing of the whole similitude be expressed to the understanding, otherwise, Aphor. p. 125, 126, 129.
There is a two-fold righteousnesse attainable by Christ [at least in words] the one an inherent righteousnesse in our selves, consisting in the seed and acts of Faith, Love, Holinesse, &c. the other in Christ, but [Page 225]made over to beleevers, by Gods Donation if not imputation. Both of these are absolutely necessary to salvation, neither is the one perfect and the other Contarenus Card. in Tractat. de Justif. unperfect, as to justification, but the inherent perfect in its kinde as well as the imputed, so that both in their kinds of causality are to be rested on as things sure to support us to justification before God: and we are as truly justified by and for the inherent as the imputed righteousnesse, if the righteousnesse which is in Christ meriteth a possibility of the justification of a sinner before God, he must by his inherent and actuall righteousnesse merit the actuall application of Christs righteousnesse, and justification by it, else he cannot be justified. [Mr. Br cannot deny every particle of this doctrine to be his own in words at length, & that hath been already manifested in those former & these latter quotations.]
The inherent righteousnesse is absolutely necessary to salvation, Aph. Medina in 1. 2. Qu. 110. [...]. 2, 4. Thes. 17. [Otherwise justification from eternity also would peep in, and then Actum est, &c. And if absolutely necessary, how can God justifie without it?]
Manum a tabula, this is enough to wipe out Bellarmine from Mr. Brs Kalender of Saints. A whole ile of Salt is too little to season Bell. de Justif. lib. 1. cap. 16. this passage. It overthrowes the great Goddesse Condition so pretious to Mr. Br. and erects that Image of [Page 226]Iealousie in its place, justification an immanent act in God. For if God may justifie where there is no infused righteousnesse, where then is the condition? Then is the justification in God, and not termined on the Conscience of the justified: but Bellarmine hath his time to deny it again, els Actum esset de Amicitia.
Except apparent violence be used Ca [...]etan on Iames. with this Chapter, &c. i [...] cannot be doubted but that a man is justified by works and not by Faith onely, Thes. 75.
James saith that Faith is dead being alone, because it is dead to the use and purpose of justifying, For in it self it hath a life according to its quality still, &c. And so works make Faith alive, as to the attainment of Cajetan [...]bidem. its end, justification. Works therefore justifie (not onely proving our Faith to be sound, but) themselves being in the obligation as well as Faith, and in the same kind of causality and procurement with Faith, Salmero on cap. 2. Iac. though not in equality with it, which I prove thus. When it is said we are justified by works, the word [by] implyeth more then an idle concomitancy, &c. as I have before alledged him, p. 229, 230.
Mr. B. makes the promise of God an obligation by which God is bound to man, so that man may challenge God for debt; pronouncing the performers, [Page 227]worthy, & their performances Fryar Ferur on Mat. 20. 1. merit. Yea scarce admits of any one drop of Gods blessings to discend upon the good or bad which he ascribes not to some kind of mans merits, Aph. p. 137-141.
‘ Mr. B. contrariwise ascribes all the meritorious vertue of mans works to their own righteousnes, leaving man so long naked of the righteousnes w ch is by Christ, untill he hath by his own strong indeavours merited it: so that according to his doctrine, the application of Christs merits to any is the fruit of that mans merits, and not the mans merits the fruit of Christs merits: this is cleer, from the former allegations.’
M. Br. interprets it the contrary way, Aph. p. 236. ‘as the understanding Reader will easily perceive. [Let all judge that have but a mite of reason, whether Soarez Bishop on the place. this man hath any awe of the Scripture which so abuseth it, yet cries out upon others as faulty.’ To use his own words, he may as well make a Creed of his own, whatsoever the word saith to the contrary.
There is no such opposition, ‘Justification is from the ordinate Salmero disp, 35. ad Rom. justice of God, and the fruit of the merit of our righteousnes: yet a free gift of free grace nevertheless.’ So he declares his judgment in the fore-cited places.
‘Mr. Br. directly teacheth the contrary doctrine throughout Dominicus a Soto in Rom. 4. his Book, every where solving the absurdity of his doctrine by his conditions.’
‘Nay he hath not so saved & freed us from the punishment and curse, but that they that are in Christ must bear it both Soto, Salmero, & Aquinas [...] upon Ro 8. 1. in soul and body.’ As his alledged words before declare.
‘Mr. B. asserts the contrary doctrine, and propugneth it with ten Arguments, which Vasquez in 3. Thō. disp. 156. cap. 3. de paenalitatibus. have been examined in the first part of this Tractate.’
‘Nay the beleevers sins tho pardoned, yet are but conditionally pardoned; so that they Anselm. are still in Gods remembrance to inflict the curse and punishment of the Law upon them, as the curse, in life and death, giving them no full discharge till the day of judgment.’ The place hath been cited before.
‘So to repose our confidence Bellarmine. on sole mercy and grace, is a soul-cozening Faith, Aph. p. 326. [Page 229]He must be undoubtedly damned that doth not work and obey to be justified and saved by, and for his obedience and works, ibid. p. 325. compared with p. 300. & 320.’
Let now not only Schollars, to whom Mr Br appealeth to judg of his freedom from Popery, but with them all rationall and conscientious men give their verdict, whether he be not so cleer as Pilate when he had washed his hands, was from the blood of Christ: and whether the better Divinity come from Rome, or from Kederminster.
CHAP. XVIII.
Whether Mr. Baxters Plea here be of sufficiency to prove his Doctrine free from Socinianism.
THe second aspersion of infamy, from which he endeavours to vindicate his doctrine is Socinianism: This hee goeth about to do in these words:
How forcible and unresistible is the power of Conscience, flying in the face of the guilty, and accusing where men applaud, or at least hold their peace? Who either of men or Angels could have charged Mr. Br. for saying that which he had not yet said? or for venting Socinian Doctrine in his writings before he had yet written? What none els can do, M. Br. is forced by Conscience to do against himself: to arraign himself at the Bar for Socinianism. Conscience is the accuser, what Patron will he retein to be his defender? Nothing out of himself can suffice to answer an accuser within himself: Therefore he fees Reason, that is his sophisticated, and sopisticall wit, art, and craft, to plead his Cause against Conscience.
The first of these exceptions which these make for him against the Charge, is the abuse which some make of this imputation, laying it upon all that speak not as they.
But 1. This is besides the Charge: These some had not then spoken against Mr. Br. it is the accusation of his own conscience which he should have answered, and he hnows it not to have confederated with those some of whom he speaketh.
2. I know none of those some that have layd that aspersion upon any of those Divines which he mentioneth save one; and that one I suppose would be very angry with any other man in England (M. Br. alone excepted) that should go about to rob him of that honour which Mr. Br. calls a reproach. It is for brotherhoodssake that he hears it from him.
3. But his craft herein is to befool his Readers with an opinion that he is of the same judgment with Pareus, Wotton, Gataker, &c. of whom they that are dead have as much shewed their abhorrency from, and opposition against his Doctrines, as any that have lived upon earth. And those that are living, if they be consistent with themselves in their former writings (whereof I nothing doubt) are as far from Mr Br. as he is from Christ and his truth.
4. His jeer that he casteth upon them that are Adversaries to his Doctrine, terming them Zealous Divines, infinuating that they [Page 231] have zeale without knowledg and learning, I leave as proper to him that in that way of wisdom and righteousness which his own reason either as refined with Philosophy, or corrupted with Sophistry suggesteth, seeks for justification and eternall glory. Let us be accounted fools to the world, and no bodies in that which is falsly called science, so that we may be wise in, and zealous for that which is the power and wisedom of God to salvation.
The second Plea which he makes for himself is the singlenes and sincerity of his studies, bent rather to seek out what is Scripture truth than what is Socinianism, & that he thinks that Socinus his Nature, Studies, and Attainments did not so much vary from his name. Faustus, the happy, that he should be so unhappy as to hold nothing true: and consequently that neither himself is so unhappy, but that he hath learned some Truths from this happy Socinus, and perhaps such as he could never learn from Christ, his Apostles, or faithfull Ministers.
But 1. This may be said of Faustus the Conjurer, who by giving himself to the Devill, did not exterminate all notions of all truths from his soul. Will Mr Br. be his Disciple also? Both had the like effectuall influence from Satan, neither know I which to prefer.
2. Who sent Mr. Br. to learn from such Teachers? to seek for light in darkness, or Heaven in Hell, or Scripture-Truth, in the precept of Pagans, or glosses of Papists, or Socinus his God Reason? Is it not because there is no God in Israel, that he goes to enquire of Baal-zebab the God of Ekron? 2 King. 1. 3. The Lord Jesus rebuketh, silenceth, and refuseth to hear the Spirit of lies, even when hee speaks truth, Mar. 1. 23, 24, 25. and abandoneth the spirituall Devil no less than if he had blasphemed, Mat. 4. So also Paul, Acts 16. 16-18. The truth of Christ needs not any, disdains all props from Hell to sustain it. He that will not dip from the fountain, but at the pools which the unclean beasts have defiled, let him without our envy have mudd and dung enough in the water which he drinketh.
3. It is much to be doubted the mans heart deceives him. Were his studie so unfeigned and serious to know what is Scripture truth, he would more study the Scripture it self, and less Bellarmin, Socinus, Arminius, and such like Sophisters, whose whole study it is to corrupt all, and to leave no Scripture unperverted.
4. Had he not ploughed with Socinus his Heyfers (or rather Bulls) he could never have sowed so much darnell in the field of Christ.
The third Plea which he bringeth to prove that his Doctrine is free from Socinianism is, because there is one point wherein hee dissenteth from Secinus. That Socinus and his followers deny any expiatory sacrifice that Christ hath offred to God to satisfie his Justice for our sins; or that ther is any effectual vertue in Christs death to purge our Consciences from dead works. But that he becomes our Saviour only in this, that [he hath given us more perfect precepts of Righteousness than were contained in the Law and the Prophets, and withall he] hath given us a Copie or pattern by his own practice to which we must be conformed: And so we must be justified (not by the blood of Christ, but) by our own obedience in following these precepts and this pattern which he hath given us. In this point Mr. Br. professeth himself so farr from joyning with him, that hee casteth off this Doctrine with abhorrence.
But this reasoning hath no soundness in it: For
1 It is the same, as if I should argue, that Goliah was not of the race of the Giants, because he had not upon each hand six fingers, and upon each foot six toes, at some of the Giants progeny had, and possibly the Giant himself. Or that Mr. Br. should seek by this Argument to prove himself no English-man, because he dwels neerer the Severn than Thames. So also might the Jews elude the words of Christ, and Elymas the words of Paul, as slanderous, arguing themselves not to be the children of the Devill, because they had flesh and bone, so had not the Devill. They had never carried Christ aloft, and set him on a pinacle of the Temple (fearing they might fall headlong thence themselves) so had the Devill. The seed, the Lusts of the Devil abiding and reigning in them, spake them out to be children of the Devill, though they brake not out in them into every particular Act as in the Devill. The utmost that M. Br. can from such premisses conclude is, that (though in many things els it be, yet) in this one his Doctrine is not aspersed with Socinianism.
2. I think it will not be objected by any to M. Br. that he is ambitious in all things to be a Socinian, but in such only wherein the Socinians are most subtle Sophisters than the Jesuites, and doe bring more shew of sophisticated reason to exalt Popery than the Papists themselves, and with greater plausibility and craft do pervert the truth and simplicity of the Gospel, more extolling mans pride, and more nullifying Gods grace, than any of the Champions [Page 233] of the Pope had either the wit or the audacity to do untill these had taught them. If then in the before-mentioned point hee holds not with Socinus, no marvell, for then should he have relinquished the Papists. I do not think that his wits do run in Pilgrimage to Racovia, upon any other grounds but in love to Rome, and in abhorrence of free Jerusalem, Gal. 4. 26.
3. Hee should have cleered (if hee could) his Doctrine from other peeces of Socinianism, which he knows it guilty of, & would be objected against him. As 1. His To Credere, or Act of believing, justifying a sinner 2. All other works of obedience, as our Acts or works, justifying in an equality, and in the same manner with Faith (without mentioning any vertue that they have from the death of Christ to this end, as the Papists teach, but rather that Christ fetcheth vertue from these to justifie:) 3 His doctrine of Gods dispensing with, and relaxing of his Law. To which I might add in the 4 th. place, his canonizing and almost deifying Reason, and that without any adject of (renewed or spirituallized, even of) naturall and sophisticall reason, to which he doth so frequently in his book almost sacrifice as to the sole and sufficient Judg of the Scriptures, and guide unto salvation. These things he cannot deny to be originally from Socinus, though probably brought home to him by other dirty Channels, and not dipt from the spring or rather puddle it self. It is but a vain piece of his sophistry to defend himself where none will accuse, and to hide himself in the dark, where ke knows he should meet with opposition and accusation.
4 He professeth himself to be but yet a puny in the School of Secinus, hath read but little of their doctrine, yet is much sowred with the Leaven thereof, when hee hath more fully tryed the quaintnes & depth of their sophistry (in which his soul delighteth more than in the plainnes & foolishnes of the Gospel) who knoweth whether he may not, following such a guide as reasō, at length also sup up with pleasure what now he casteth off with defiance? the Apost. speaks somthing that may put us in fear of it, 2 Tim. 3. 13.
5 Even this error of Socinus, against which in speciall he protesteth his abhorrence, he doth in generall maintain with as strong a Front as any of the Socinians. They say that Christ offereth salvation to all, but it is every particular mans particular faith and obedience, their actuall believing and obeying, following his precepts and treading in his steps to the end, that in the end makes [Page 234] him to be actually and effectually a Saviour to them. And this is the sum and full dimension of Mr. Brs. doctrine. Only they make Christ the Prophet chiefly, but this man Christ as Priest and King, to be the Saviour. In this they both agree, that except we by our own righteousness become self-Saviours, we shall have no salvation by him.
What else he hath in this Section for the vindicating, yea magnifying of his doctrine, hath been oft spoken to already, and will a little after be examined again, where hee useth the Tantundem, though not literally the Idem of these words, to apologize for his doctrine against other crimes imputable to it.
CHAP. XIX.
Mr. Baxters first Reason examined, by which he endeavours to evince his Doctrine not to be repugnant to Pauls, viz. that Pauls question in his Epistles, and his question in his Aphorisms, are not one but divers. Pauls question, what is that proper Righteousness by which we are justified from the laws malediction, which the Apostle concludeth to be Christs satisfaction only. But Mr. Brs. and St. Iames his question, what is the condition of this Justification by Christs Righteousnes, whether Faith alone, or works also?
WEe have examined what he hath to say for the vindicating of his Doctrine from Popery and Socinianism: we expected also that hee should in the next place have shewed, or at least pretended some distance between him and the Arminians: But it seems he glories in it as his Crown to be reputed one of their part. Therefore leaving this, he undertakes a greater Task, an Herculean Labour in his third dispute of this kind, viz. to cleer his doctrine from all opposition to Paul and the Scriptures. This is a work indeed, which if hee discharge honourably, and full up to what he promiseth, all will grant him the Lawrell above all the Angelical and Seraphical Divines that have in any age made use of ink and paper. It is the sole thing that we long after for satisfaction. Let him bless us with sound demonstrations to prove it, wee shall all run after him: And though some madd men may [Page 235] term us Papists, Socinians, Arminians, or whatsoever else, we shal gladly bear it to become his Disciples. All what else he hath said would be superfluous to every conscientious man. This alone would win him: But how poorly and Pigmie-like this supposed Giant dischargeth this bold adventure, let his owne words declare.
B. p. 307, &c. Lastly, let us see whether S. Paul, or any other Scripture do contract (I thinke it should be printed [do contradict]) this. And for my part I know no one word in the Bible that hath any strong appearance of contradiction to it. The usuall places quoted are these, Rom. 3. 28. & 4. 2, 3, 14, 15, 16. Gal. 2. 16. & 3. 21, 22. Eph. 2. 8, 9. Phil. 3. 8, 9. In all which, and in all other the like places you shall easily perceive, 1 That the Apostles dispute is upon this question, what is the Righteousness which we must plead against the accusation of the Law? or by which we are justified as by the proper Righteousness of that Law? And this he well concludeth, is neither works nor Faith, but the Righteousness which is by Faith, that is Christs Righteousnes.
But now St. James his question is, what is the condition of our Justification by this Righteousness of Christ? whether Faith onely? or works also?
This is the first part of this his Dispute: Let us examine what force it hath to the end for which he useth it, whether it reconciles Paul to M r Br. or shew they never contradicted one the other?
1 He tells us he knows no one word in St. Paul or the Bible, that hath any strong appearance of contradiction to his Doctrine. To which I answer,
1 That wee look not to appearances whether they be weak or strong: But if there be not strong Contradictions in the doctrine of the Apostle, and of the Gospel to his, there is no cause of dissenting from him.
2 Who more blind and ignorant than hee that will not know and see?
3 No marvail if hee see not while hee looks thorow the spectacles of Naturall reason and sophisticall reasonings, whereas spirituall things cannot be discerned but spiritually, 1 Cor. 2. 14.
4 Let him examine whether the words of Christ be not verified upon him. For judgment I am come into the world, that they which see not might see, and they which see might be made blind, Joh. 9. 39. But [Page 236] blessed be God who hath hid these things from the wise and prudent, and revealed them to babes, Mat. 11. 25.
5 If he see not, know not, his wilful ignorance and blindnesse must not be made the rule of other mens Faith and Judgment, nor prejudice their happiness in seeing and knowing. It is somewhat a lofty language, he hnoweth not. What then? Therefore either there is no such thing, or no man can know it, or it is a fancy in any other to believe it. Not Mr. Br. but Christ is our ipse dixit, wee draw the Treasures of wisedom and knowledg from Christ, not from Mr. Br.
2 Hee acknowledgeth that other men at least seem to know what he denies himself to know, Scriptures that have (if not a strong, yet) some appearance of Contradiction to him, and quotes the Scriptures, which he saith are usually quoted, viz. Rom. 3. 28, &c.
Here 1 I demand of him who they are that quote, and against whom they quote those Scriptures? That they which quote them are the Protestant Churches and writers▪ and that they are the Papists against whom they are so usually quoted, he must needs confess, because he can produce none but Protestants that do, none but Papists against whom they do alledg these Scripures. For although the Arminians do enough declare themselves in their writings that they hold in common with the Papists, Justification by works, yet I could never find that they would suffer this Tenet to be brought to a dispute; but being charged therewith, they have with sacred protestations & adjurations denyed any such thought in their hearts, and so never permitted these or any other Scriptures to be quoted against them about this question, still declining the dispute. It must be therefore the Papists against whom Mr. Br. saith these Scriptures have been usually quoted. And this speaks out to us in many respects what the frame of this mans spirit is.
1 The integrity and ingenuity of his Conscience, that having but 2 pages backward, verbally renounced the Papists and all concurrence of his doctrine with theirs, he useth only a short digression to smooth the face, end spit in the mouth of Socinus; and then forthwith makes a bridg of S t Paul, to return and make peace, and confirm a league with the Papists, as it were stroking the shavelings and telling them. Notwithstanding all that I have said, I doubt not but ye well perceive therein the equivocations and mentall reservations which I have learned from you. Still my horses are your horses, my charrets your [Page 237] charrets, I am as yee are, and your Adversaries my Adversaries. Mark ye well how finely I shall here divert from you the Scripture darts which the Hereticks fling at you. This all may see to be the sum of his words, or at least implyed therein.
2 His consistency with himself, that what ere-while he denyed, here he affirms, viz. that he is not only Popish in this point, but also a patron of the Popish Cause: And thus also while he endeavors to purge his doctrine from all contradiction of Scripture, he becomes a Contradictor of himself.
3 His honesty in explaining his meaning at last, whom he pointed at throughout his Treatise under the name of ignorant Antinomians, viz. all that have quoted those Scriptures against justification by works.
4 His good will to the Protestant Religion, and to the doctrine of grace, that rather than these shall stand, he will say and unsay, joyn with, and borrow from Papists, Socinians, Arminians, (and why not the Turkish Alcaron also, or whatsoever prodigies of Doctors) that send men to blessednesse by the merit of their owne works.
5. His matchles worth arising out of all these, for which such a confluence of Divines from all parts of England is made to him, even such as were ere-while Zelots against Popery, Socinianism and Arminianism, untill they had fatted themselves with the spoyls of the friends thereof. Hath not the Lord cause to visit upon these men the breach of his Covenant, whereof they professe themselves at this day transcendently zealous? Is not this one principall branch thereof? Let others dream waking of the further exaltation of the present Ministry of this Land, I see no ground of expecting any Change but to the abasing thereof, though my self must take a share in such an abasement. With such plausibility every where is this man and every seducer received in their sowing the worst errors, if they will but pretend a zeal against supposed Antinomians: And so generally is the doctrine of grace slighted. I undertake to defend against all Opponents, that Mr. Br hath no one assertion in his whole Book about Justification by works, nor more than one, if one proof or argument to confirm such an assertion; nay scarce any word, phrase, or Apex, which hee hath not received from the Papists, Socinians, or at the best from the Arminians. I acknowledg in some places he runs more in the Arminian, than Popish method and dialect, when they speak more to the extolling [Page 238] of mans righteousness, and annihilating of Gods grace: But in no one particle is he better then they. I appeal not only to the Learned, but also to the rationall among the Readers of his Book, when they looked upon its Title, Aphorisms of Justification, whether they expected not that the truth of the Gospel and doctrine of the Protestant Churches should have been stoutly defended by so Scholastick a man, against Papists, Arminians, &c. But when contrariwise they find him undertaking no Combat against them, but all for them, and making none other his Aversaries but Protestants, sometimes under, sometimes without the nick-name of Antinomians: Is it not a strange piece of incredulity, when hee so plainly discovereth himself, not to believe him, to whom he is a Friend, and to whom an Adversary? And a gross delusion to lick up as honey from the dirt of Mr. Brs. shoos, what they detest as poyson from the lips of Bellarmin, Socinus, and Arminius? But I incurr blame by digressing, therefore return to the matter.
2 I except against his quotations as done partially and unfaithfully, to beget in his weak and credulous Reader, an opinion that he and the Papists his Masters have the whole body of the Scriptures on their side to prove Justification by works; But that the Protestants can only catch here and there a sentence of Scripture that hath a seeming, and scarce a seeming to speak for them. It is a Maxime of Mr. Br. himself, that men are seldom bold with Scripture to force it, but they are first bold with Conscience to force it, pag. 297. Yet here he is bold not only to force, but to stifle Scriptures. When himself quoteth a Scripture to maintain his Popish Justification, see how he improves it in the same page: If it were but some one phrase dissonant from the ordinary language of Scripture, I should not doubt but it were to be reduced to the rest. But when it is the very scope of a Chapter, &c. no whi [...] dissonant from any other Scripture; I think he that may so wrest it as to make it unsay what it saith, may as well make him a Creed of his own, let the Scripture say what it will to the contrary. Lo, what a mountain he can make of a mole-hill, and bring all Scriptures into the belly of one, making that one of what dimension he listeth, & all the rest to say what he commands them, when he is to plead for the Papists: But here when he is [...]o produce what the Protestants have to urge against the Papists, what mincing and mayming doth he use? forcing the whole body of the Gospel into a Cherristone; it is but here and there a sound without substance that they beguile themselves with. Did the man [Page 239] (as he pretends) seek to apprehend to himself, and sincerely to make out unto others Scripture T [...]u [...]h, we should find him faithfully alledging what the Churches of Christ have cited against Antichrist. His false dealing herein declares his hatred of the Truth, that he will not have the Scriptures shine upon it in their full splendor, that it may not be known and embraced. Nay we have the main body of the New Testament speaking for us, specially almost all the Doctrinal part of the Epistles to the Romans, Galathians, Ephesians, Colossions, Hebrews, all the four Evangelists, specially S t John, as I have before shewed: A breviate of Scriptures w ch our Divines have urged to this purpose I have before given, and it would be useless here to rehearse.
3. Even these few Scriptures which he quoteth, affirm that man is justified by Faith without the deeds of the Law, that if he were justified by Works, he had whereof to glory and boast himself; that if they which are of the Law be heirs, Faith is made void, and the promise of no effect. That it is of Faith that it may be of Grace; that it is by Grace through Faith, not of Works. Were there nothing else, is there not a strong appearance of Contradiction in these Scriptures to Mr. Brs. doctrine, that we are justified by Faith and Works together?
4 But see we how he evades these Scriptures and all other Testimonies of the Apostles, viz. That his dispute is, what is the Righteousness which we must plead against the Accusation of the Law? or by which we are justified as the proper Righteousness of the Law? and this hee well concludeth is neither works nor faith, but the Righteousness which is by Faith, i. e. Christs Righteousness. But St. James his question is, what is the condition of our Justification by this Righteousness of Christ? whether Faith only? or Works▪ also? so farr Mr. Baxter.
Must not Mr. Br. needs be happy that hath learned so perfectly that which he cals else-where the Papists Feat of making the Scriptures a nose of wax, and turning them into his own complexion. Let any one now alledg against him that of the Apostle, Gal. 1. 8. If Paul or an Angell from heaven shall preach to you any other Gospel than what you have received, let him be accursed. Cannot he as prettily and solidly shift the Curse from him, and retort it upon the denouncer as he doth these Scriptures upon the alledgers. True may hee say, but I am not Paul, nor an Angell from heaven, therefore the Curse cannot fall on me. Nay, I have made Paul to preach another Gospel since his death, thatn what he preached in his life, Therefore [Page 240] Paul is accursed. As good grounds hath he for this as his former arguing.
But let us see whether his interpretation of these Scriptures be so solid as pretty. To that of James I have spoken before, therefore shall say little here. Onely I cannot omit how unsufferable his audacious confidence is, that he thinks it enough to say, without shewing, or endeavouring to shew it from the Context or otherwise, this is the meaning of Pauls, and that the scope of James his dispute. No such immodesty is oft there to be found in the very Jesuits, Socinians, and Arminians. They, when they go about to pervert in stead of expounding any Scripture, labour stoutly from the Context, and from a seeming Coherence of other Scriptures, to make such a perverting exposition either probable or plausible: This man doth all pro Imperio, Sic volo, sic jubeo, &c. I say it, what man or Angell dares to deny it? Doth hee think all the world to be his Diocess, that he may force (what he hath, or saith he hath upon his Kederminsterians) upon the consciences of all men an implicit Faith, that all must believe when and because he saith it? Is the infallible spirit gone out of Zedechiah, 1 King. 22. 24. or out of Bellarmine or Arminius in [...]o him? Or doth he execute the office of the Popes Legate, speaking to us only that which is decreed in his unerring Chair? or hath hee gotten a monopoly of Socinus his Right Reason, which is infallible? what else can hee alledg that his word must be taken for a Law without dispute? Or is it indeed because he finds Gods word will yeeld him no succour, therefore he must proprio Marte militare, act in his own name, because God is not with him? So indeed it seemeth, for neither God, nor reason, nor any thing els, but a high conceit of himself will be accessary to his reasonless Conclusions, viz. that James his question is, what is the condition of our Justification by Christs Righteousness; when James in his whole dispute there, neither expresly nor implyedly utters a word of Christs righteousness, or if Mr. Brs Jesuito-Arminian condition, nor any thing that can easily be reduced to Christ himself. Or where doth Paul dispute only of the righteousnes proper to justification, and not also of the way and means by which this righteousness may be applyed to us and made ours? Or in which of his quoted Scriptures, or any other of the Apostles writings; when he excludes works, doth he exclude Faith also from its subserviency to justifying? Such peremptory dreams of a haughty brain cannot be more fitly answered than with contempt [Page 241] and [...]ilence. Thus should I do, were it not in respect to some pious and not unlearned men, that have taken some infection of the Epidemicall disease of our times, too easily to drink down errors, differing herein only from the vulgar, that error is more appetible to them from a learned and sophisticall, than truth from a plainer, though faithfull hand. Let a man once have the name of a learnnd Scholar, and strict-walking Pharisee, all his Doctrines by such men are concluded to be of rare use and excellency, before they be seen whether they be white or black, from Heaven or from Hell,▪ Not a few of these men having in my hearing stood firm and up moved in the defence of the doctrines of this book of Mr. Brs. not being able to speak any thing to refell the objections made against it, but this, that the Author thereof is an eminently learned and pious man. As if Satan had not the wit to make choyse of his instruments that have the most compleat aptitude and power to deceive, or that the Jews had not so much to say for their Pharisees, the Papists for their Bellarmine, and the Remo [...]strants for their Arminius, or the Devill had forgotten his ancient subtlety when he will seduce from the verity of Christs Gospel, to change himself into an Angell of Light, or that no damning errour could proceed from a self-saving, or rather self-deceiving Pharisee. To cleer up the truth to such, at lest to give their occasion to search the Scriptures by which they may cleer it to themselves, I shall lay and compare together Paul and Mr. Br. in that which Mr. Br. saith was the question about which Paul disputed, that it may be made evident whether they agree, or contradict either the other.
To this purpose by the way, there is to be taken out of the way a fallacy that lurketh in Mr. Brs. words, where he saith, The dispute of St. Paul is upon this Question; It is not enough to say this was A Question, exc [...]pt he say also it was the Question, yea the Onely Question upon which the Apostle disputed in those places where he excludeth works, and inferreth Faith alone to be ordeined as effectuall to justification. He disputed in some of his Epistles upon many questions. To reduce what hee disputed severally to the severall questions, all to one, were to make non-sense of the whole. The same may be said of all mens, yea of the most Scholastick disputes of Mr. Br. himself, who is a greater Philosopher, and more studied in Logick and Metaphysicks than ever the Apostle was. But I deny it to be the onely or the chief question about which St. Pa [...]l so disputeth, what is the Righteousnesse which wee must plead against [Page 242] the Accusation of the Law? or by which wee are justified as the proper Righteousness of the Law? I grant it to be one, but a less principall question upon which he disputes. But the more principall question is, in generall, by what means we may be interessed into Christ, or obtain the righteousness of Christ to become ours, and so still ret [...]in it to justification? More particularly whether the Native Faederall holiness of the Jewes, and the priviledges of the Covenant in part mentioned, Rom. 9. 4, 5. & Phil. 3. 5. & Gal. 2. 15. Or their actuall and personall righteousnesse and sincere obedience to the Law mentioned, Phil. 3. 6. Mat. 20. 12. and the 19, 20. together with all the Typicall purgings mentioned in the 9. & 10. Chapters of the Epistle to the Hebrews? On the other side, whether all the Naturall and Morall righteousness of the Gentiles, which they performed by the instinct of the Law of Nature written in their Consciences, without the help or knowledg of Gods written law, or their exemption from the Covenant of God made with the Jews, (For some of the believing Gentiles, reading the promises made of calling unto the grace of Christ them that were not Gods people, or beloved before, weakly concluded that their former uncircumcision and uncovenant-ship was a speciall furtherance to their admission unto Christ, as may be probably gathered from Rom. 11. 19. & Gal. 5. 6.) whether any of these kinds of holinesse and works of righteousness, either with Faith, or without Faith? or whether Faith alone without all, or any of these, be required as instrumentall, subservient, and effectuall to inright us to the Justification which is by Christ? This was the more principall question upon which Paul disputeth in the places before mentioned; Somewhat he saith to the former, but lesse principally, and seldom but in subserviency to this. So the question upon which Paul disputes in his Epistles, and Mr. Br. in his Aphorisms, is one and the same, but their Conclusions absolutely contradictory either to other. The one concludeth that Faith alone without mans works and righteousness; The other, that not faith alone, but Faith as a work together with all other works of righteousnesse do justifie, and all morall duties collaterally with Faith are required to make the Righteousness of Christ ours to justification. No greater or more palpable Contradiction can be devised. Whosoever shall preach another Gospell [of Justification otherwise than by Faith in Christ without works] let him be accursed, saith Paul: Whosoever shall be practically a solifidian, trust to a [Page 243] bare Faith, and not work for Justification shall be Damned saith Mr. Br. If one of these be granted to be an Apostle of Christ, the other must needs be proclaimed to be the Apostle of Antichrist. But whether this which I have expressed be indeed the principal question on which the Apostle so disputeth, adhuc sub judice lis est. We are left uncertain on both hands may some say. True, and if I onely say and not shew it, I shall be guilty of the fault which I blame in Mr. Br. And so we may deserve both to be laught at as Triflers. This therefore is the next thing to be added.
First then if we do but consider to whom, and against whom the Apostle handleth these disputes, (for Mr. Br. reduceth them all to his Epistles) it will be more than probable to every rationall man, that his most principall question is, By what means we possesse and continue in the possession of the righteousnesse which is by Christ, to Justification? And but secondarily, less principally, and in subserviency to this question, What the righteousnesse is by which we are to be justified. The persons to whom he writeth were all Christians, the purest and most eminent Churches of Christ, that had received the pure doctrine of Christ by the preaching of the Apostles, viz. that (whereas sinn and death and the Curse by sinn reigned over all men in all the world, so that all wete Children of wrath, and every soul guilty before God) Christ was given of the Father to be the Author of Righteousness and life, by the Mediation of his death; that in him and in no other name under heaven was salvation attainable, that whosoever would beleeve in him should have everlasting life; should be Justified freely by Grace through the Redemption which is in Jesus Christ; and by their very receiving of him should obtein power to become the sonns of God; notwithstanding all their former pollutions, & without all prejacent qualifications in them to purchase so great a Redemption. Such was the doctrine preached to them, and in the embracing and professing of this Doctrine, and their Faith in Christ the alone redeemer they were first admitted into Christ gathered into Churches and so continued a while stablished in this truth with the joy of the Holy Ghost abounding in them. The persons against whom he disputeth were chiefly if not onely the False Apostles of the Circumcision, who also professed the Faith of Christ and preached it, not the unbeleeving Jewes, for these should not have had any such audience from the Churches; But such as went out from the Apostles and the Church that was at Hierusalem to preach Christ, Act. 15. 24. Such as came [Page 244] from James, Gal. 2. 12. Such as boasted themselves to be of C [...]phas, to hold forth the doctrine of Peter, 1 Cor. 1. 12. Such as preached Christ of envie, strife, and conten [...]i [...]n, not sincerely, but under the lu [...]e of so holy a name to take the advantage to deceive, Phil. 1. 15, 16. Who not labouring to gather Disciples to Christ out of infidelity as the Apostles had done, entred into the sever [...]ll Churches before stablished by the Apostles, troubling them with words, subverting their souls, teaching them that they must be circumcised and keep the Law of Moses, els they could not be saved, Act. 15. 1. 24. And these were of the Sect of the Pharisees which beleeved, Act. 15. 5. Emissaries out of those Many thousands or rather Myriads of the Jewes at Hierusalem which beleeved yet were all zealous of the Law, Act. 21. 20. Had the Apostles dispute been against such as had apostatiz [...]d from the profession of Christ, and against such unbeleevers as had seduced them from trusling on Christs imputed, to rest upon their own inherent righteousness, for justification; i [...] had not been besides the purpose to have it his question (as Mr. Br saith) whether it be Christs righteousness or our own righteousness that we must plead against the accusations of the Law? But seeing both the seduced and seducers with whom he dealeth were such as professed faith in Christ, as their justifier and Saviour, and questioned onely whether Faith alone, or els their righteousness & works also together with Faith, were required to inright them to Christs righteousnes and salvation, it had been impertinent if not ridiculous to have made it his question what the proper righteousnes is by which we are justified; For this had been to decline and not to prosecute the question between him and them. They would have granted him all that he concluded without the least dammage to their Cause. Therefore his question was principally, By what means we come to partake of the righteousness of Christ to Justification?
2 Let the Apostle himself give his Testimony what his principall question was, For he better knew his own minde than Mr. Br or my self. And first in his Epistle to the Romans having for an introduction to the question, in the three first Chapters proved both the Jewes with all their legall and the Gentiles with all their naturall righteousness and unrighteousness to be under sin, guilt, and condemnation, he no sooner in the third Chapter begins to speak of the mean of their recovery Christ Jesus, but he annexeth also by what means we come to have right in him. In both which he no less Contradicteth Mr. Br than if he had seen before what Mr. Br [Page 245] hath written so many ages after. Or the former he affirmeth that we are justified (as by Christ, so) by the Redemption which is in Jesus Christ, as he was set forth to be a propitiation [or expiatory sacrifice] for our sinns, Rom. 3. 24, 25. Not as Mr. Br before so stoutly Contended, as he is our Lord, i. e. in his sense our Lawgiver. Of the latter, that it is faith alone that makes this redemption and Propitiation ours to Justification, namely, Faith in his bloud, Faith without the deeds of the Law, Faith which excludeth, without works which include boasting, ver. 25, 27, 28. And this faith in the death of Christ, without works, without deeds, cannot include in it, Morall works and righteousness unto Justification, as Mr. Br would extort from it elsewhere, by making Christ as our Lord and Lawgiver the object of Justifying Faith. At length he Concludeth ver. 30. that both in them which have some seeming and plausible qualification of righteousness and works, and in them that have it not, it is not that righteousness of their own, but Faith which Justifieth. And that this Faith is no less effectuall to the justifying of them that unto that very day, have been ungodly, than of them which from their very birth have seemed to be holy to the Lord. So much is Comprehended in those words of the Apostle; It is one God which Justifieth the Circumcision by faith, and the un-circumcision through Faith. In these words is included the whole State of Pauls question. The Apostle writing to the Church that was at Rome, Consisting of beleeving Jewes and Gentiles, endeavours to heal the divisions, Close the breaches, and settle a sweet union and Communion between them. This he applyeth himself unto, first in that great and fundamentall point of Christianitie, viz. Justification by Christ, in which they dissented: Both Jewes and Gentiles acknowledged Justification and salvation to be by Christ alone, but in this they differed. The Jewes Confined this salvation by Christ to themselves alone, that to them onely he was promised, that they alone were qualified and in a capacity to receive him and the benefits that are by him. That he came to be the Saviour of his own hallowed people that had waited for him, not of the common and unclean Pagans that were aliens from the Common wealth of Israel, and strangers from the Covenant of promise. To this purpose they boasted of their Naturall, Faederal, and personall righteousness and holines, qualifying them for the Justification which is by Christ, of all which the Gentiles were destitute. Their naturall Righteousness and holiness, that they were Jewes by nature and not sinners of the Gentiles, the seed of Abraham the holy stock to whom and whose seed the [Page 246] promise was made: Their Faederall holines, That they alone of all nations were in Covenant with God, and did bear the badge and seal of the Covenant, Circumcision in their Flesh, by which they were distinguishd from all other people, as holy to God, when all other Nations under the Sunne were an abhomination in his sight: Their Legall holiness that they had the Law, Word, and Oracles of God Committed to them, all other Nations being left without Law, without God, and without hope, in the world. Their personall and Actuall righteousness, that in reference to this holy Law of God they had walked exactly, kept it from their youth, and touching the righteousness thereof were blameless; When contrarwise the Gentiles had walked inordinately, lawlesly after the instinct of their own nature, and lusts of their own hearts, servants to idols and devills, not to God. For this Cause they Contended that they by this their righteousness had, that the Gentiles by means of their unrighteousness had not right to the redemption and Justification which are by Christ. That the Gentiles in stead of the naturall holiness before mentioned must become Proselytes, and so the ascititious or adopted Children of Abraham, becoming Jewes, must receive the seale of the Covenant Circumcision in their flesh; receive and be brought under the Law; and become personally righteous in keeping it; Else they could not be saved by Christ, Act. 15. 1, 24. Their bare Faith in Christ without their own righteousness and works could not make them partakers of the tighteousnesse and salvation which are by Christ. And who seeth not here that Mr. Brs doctrine is one and the same in generall with theirs that were the first heretical troublers and subverters of the Church of Christ? But against this plea of the beleeving Jewes, the Apostle layeth his Contradictory Conclusion, That both the Circumcision and the uncircumcision, they that had and they that had not all or any of these kinds of righteousness were made partakers of Justification through Christ, onely by Faith in him. That our own prejacent works and righteousness are nothing to further, nor our former unrighteousness and sinn any thing to hinder our Justification, but Faith in Christ is all: He that beleeveth is not condemned, he that beleeveth not is already condemned, whether he be Jew or Gentile, clean or unclean outwardly; because as he had said before ver. 22, 23. There is no difference, For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God. This Conclusion that Faith alone without our prejacent or concomitant works and righteousness do make the righteousness [Page 247] which is by Christ ours to Justification, he proveth soundly in the 4 th Chapter. 1 From the example of Abraham the Father of the Faithfull. By what means Abraham found and obteined the Justification which is by Christ, by the same means all now obteine it that are Justified. But Abraham found or obteiaed it not by his own righteousness or works, but by Faith. Therefore so do now all that are justified. The proposition he leaves as standing so firm on its own pillars that none will dare to seek the demolishing thereof. The assumption he proves in both its members, that it was not by his own righteousnes: either Natural, i. e. derived from parents and ancestors, for they were Idolaters and served other Gods, Josh. 24. 2. Or faederall in the Jewes sense, for he was justified before he was circumcised, and after received Circumcision as a seal of the Righteousness of Faith, ver. 10, 11, of this 4 th Chapter to the Romans: or Legal, For he was so Justified 400 years before the Law was given: Or personall by the works of righteousness which he had done: For then first he should have had matter of boasting that he had done something towards his own Justification, ver. 2. And secondly, then his justification should have been reckoned not of Grace but of debt, and so the glory thereof should have redounded to Abraham and not to God, ver. 4. And if by no one of these kinds of his own, then not at all by his own righteousness. That it was by Faith he proves by clear Testimony of Scripture, ver. 3. Therefore the conclusion stands that we are justified also by faith without works. That Faith and not any righteousness of our own makes Christs righteousness ours.
Another Argument he draws from clear and evident Scripture, witnessing that the righteousness and justification, which consisteth in the forgivenes, not imputing and covering of sinn, is made ours without works, [therefore by Faith alone] ver. 6, 7, 8.
When in these two Arguments none can deny but that the righteousness and Justification which Abraham obteined, and which Consisted not in the doing, but in the imputing of righteousness, and in the pardoning and not imputing of sinn; is the Justification which is by Christ; and when the Apostle laboureth not at all to prove this to be The proper Righteousness to Justification, but takes it as granted and unquestioned: all must acknowledge that his question was not, What righteousness it is that Justifieth? whether Christs? or ours? But when all his dispute is confined to this one point, to prove that this righteousness by Christ is made ou [...]s not [Page 248] at all by works, but altogether by Faith, what rational man can be so swayed by a Spirit of Contradiction, as to say with Mr. Br. that St Pauls question was not to make out, by what means this Justification by Christ may be made ours? Whosoever will see these two Arguments further and fully illustrated and amplified, together with more arguments to these annexed, let him peruse the residue of this 4 Chap. And if he return with his Reason sound, and brings not this verdit, that it is impudence not judgement in Mr. Br. to state Pauls question as he doth: Then am I a stranger both to Paul and Reason.
Again, when the Apostle still insisting upon the same subject, setts forth the priviledges of them that are justified by Faith, doth withall affirm that while they were yet sinners, Ch [...]ist dyed for them, and so they became Justified by his bloud; and being yet enemies are reconciled to God by his death, Rom. 5. 1, 8, 9, 10. thereby implying that there is nothing of our own works and righteousness, (except sin and enmity against God be such) that doth or can Concurr to our justification; so leaving justification to Faith onely: it is evident that his principall question was not whether we are Justified by Christ, but whether Faith alone or works with Faith are appointed of God in order to Justification?
I shall forbear to cite short testimonies from other Epistles of the Apostle, evincing this Truth: and pass to his Epistle to the Galathians in which he wholly levelleth to this mark. It cannot be denyed by Mr. Br. himselfe that the Apostle there disputeth not of a legal but Gospel Justification, and that this is a Justification onely by Christ: that when he saith, If any man, if we, or an Angel from heaven preach any other Gospel, &c. his meaning is, not a Justification out of Christ (for this should be a legal not a Gospel Justification) but any other way to the Justification which is by Christ, save that which we have preached, let him be accursed, Gal. 1. 8, 9. Herein it was agreed between the Apostle and the false Apostles, that Christ is the alone Justifier, and that salvation is onely by him, and to this all the seduced ones among the Galathians assented. Else had they been Apostate from Christ to the Law, and not to another Gospel, as the Apostle terms it, Gal. 1. 6. And from their beginning in the Spirit to seek perfecting by the flesh. The question therefore was whether Faith alone in Christ, or e [...]e together with it, a naturall, faederall and practicall righteousness after the rule of the Law, were required to the acquiring of the Justification which is by Christ.
Hence is that his zealous expostulating with Peter and Barnabas for giving some occasion to the Gentiles to question whether besides Faith in Christ, some Conformity to the Law were not also needfull to Justification. We (saith he) who are Iewes by Nature, and not sinners of the Gentiles, knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the Law, but by the Faith of Iesus Christ, even we have beleeved in Iesus 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, Gal. 2. 15, 16. The sum of his debate is as if he had said: If we that besides the supereminent prerogative vouchsafed to us to be the Apostles of the Lord Jesus, have a derivative holines by nature and the Covenant of God, from Abraham, and withall a righteousness o [...] works by living up to our utmost in the highest pitch of obedience to the Law; having found by revelation from the Lord Iesus Christ, that all these are nothing available, but Faith alone proper and effectuall to obtein the salvation and righteousness which is by Christ; have wholly rejected all confidence in and use of these in order and reference to justification, and made our addresses by Faith alone to partake of his righteousness: why do we by our judaizing beguile the poor Gentiles that have none of these prerogatives, into a pernicious opinion of perfitting their justification by Christ, with their practicall righteousness in obedience to the Law? Where it is to be noted that in one and the same verse the Apostle doth thrice expresly banish works from having any thing to doe in the business of justification by Christ, and no less often attribute it to Faith and bel [...]leeving in Christ without all help of works. And can it be doubted what the question is about which he disputeth?
To the same scope is directed all that he delivereth in the third Chapter. That he pronounceth the Galathians, foolish and even bewitched that having obteined justification already by Faith alone in Christ, they would be seduced to seek the perfecting thereof by works, Gal. 3. 1, 2, 3. That while they were ambitious to become the Children of Abraham, they fell utterly from Abraham and from the justification which Abraham found, by seeking it another way then Abraham found it, viz. by works and not by Faith onely, ver. 6, 7, 8, 9. That so to seek it, was the way to meet with the Curse in steed of the blessing of Christs righteousnesse, ver. 10-12. of which more may be said a little after. That the justification which is by Christ, discendeth by promise to us, and promises are the object of Faith not of works, ver. 17, 18, 22. [Page 250] But all this together with what the Apostle disputeth of liberty and bondage in the fourth Chapter, I leave to them that will but considerately read it, to judge whether it evinceth not that to be Pauls question which I have mentioned.
Lastly, when the Apostle, Gal. 5. 4. brandisheth so heavy a denuntiation against such as had suffered themselves in this point to be sedueed by the false Apostles whom M r Br. followeth as his guides and gods. Christ is become of no effect to you, whosoever of you are justified by the Law ye are fallen from Grace. What force had there been in this wrathfull threat, if the question between him and them had been about the proper Righteousness by which we are justified? if they had held i [...] to be their own righteousness in opposition to Paul that held it to be the righteousness of Christ, they would have laughed at such a Commination as a meerly frighting squibb or scar-crow answering, we grant all, that we are fallen from Grace, that Christ is become of no effect to us: But what damage can by all this befall us? we make not Christ our Justifier, but labour to Justifie our selves, we seek Salvation not from Grace, but as a debt in justice due to the Righteousness of our own works. The Apostle surely was not such an ignorant Antinomian, as to dispute so impotently that his Arguments might by subtle Baxterians be thus flung back as absurdities in his face: It is therefore evident that the Galathians when most sednced, ceased not to make Christ their Righteousness, but had yeelded to this imposture (as the next V [...]rse declareth) that not Faith alone but their own works and righteousnes with it, were pre-required to make them capable of the righteousness which is by Christ, and that upon this ground the Apostle denounceth them to be Apostates from Christ and Grace, because they sought by their own righteousness to entitle themselves to the righteousnesse which is by Christ, and sought it not by Faith alone. If any demand the reason of this Consequence, that whosoever seeketh right to the Justification of Christ by his own works, makes himself an alien from Christ, from Grace; the Apostle in part implyeth it in that which he speaketh in these 4 and 5 verses of Chapter 5. But had more fully explained himself, Chap. 3. 9, 10, 11, 12. So that by comparing together what he hath said in both places, the reason of his Conclusion resulteth into all mens view: viz. that such a one seeketh the righteousness and salvation which are by Christ, in a legall not an evangelicall way, by works and not by Faith, [Page 251] therefore is bound to bring the perfect righteousness and works which the Law requireth to make him capable of justificasion by Christ, or els falls from Christ, from Grace, to his everlasting ruine.
I shall add no more upon this subject, not because the Scripture hath no more, but because I hold this sufficient, and know the morosity and humorousness of most readers in our times, preferring an erroneous conciseness, before a sound and full manifestation of the truth. But my endeavour is to please not men but Christ. I leave Mr. Br to trample his own rule, not to be bold with Scripture by being first bold with Conscience. I dare not usurp to my self his peremptory audaciousness with one breath of the mouth to destroy the whole Gospel, in saying onely not shewing and proving that it must be thus understood. He that can so do with holy things, bewrayeth much pride and prophanness in his heart, though he be never so much pharisaically enamelled and philacterized in the outside. Let him see how he can answer God for his audacious curtness, I shall not fear the censures of men for my length in bringing to light what he hath stifled in darkness. Let my style please or displease fancies, it shall suffice me to have taken off his first Paradoxicall imposture that he brings to prove his doctrine to be the same with Pauls. This is not all that he hath to say, his other Reasons or rather Sophisms follow in the next Chapter.
CHAP. XXI.
Mr. Baxters other Reasons to evince the same thing, Examined.
No less or-cu [...]a [...]ly than the Devil of old was wont to speak out of Delphos. For this also as the former is onely said not shewed and proved. What doth he mean by such imperious Conclusions, but out of the abounding of his humility and self-abasement to proclaim to the world that he is a God, and that the words of his lips must be made the judge of all Scriptures, and the Canon of all mens Faith? When he hath spoken we must subject both judgments and Conscience, without searching further. It is a truth, he that cannot err hath said it. Were it a Conclusion universally received in the Churches of Christ, which he here delivereth, it had been indeed superfluous to wast time and labour in proving what all grant. But when it it but a dream of his own brain sneezed thence through his Nostrils, or some spirit by his Chimistry [...]x [...]r [...]cted out of Bellarmine, Socinus, and Arminius their notionall Fanci [...]s; when all the pious and judicious of all the Protestant Churches have been unacquainted with it, & lay down Conclusions c [...]n [...]radictory to it, what els but a most arrogant self Confidence, and contempt of his betters, could move him thus to spit Paradoxe [...], without the least e [...]deavours to give a demonstration of the least probability of them. Doth he th [...]nk his raptures so Divine, that the holiest and most judicious of all mortals must lick his spittle as Angels food, without enquiring what substance and vertue there is in it? But this is the spirit and genius of the esuits, whom he followeth as his guides if not Gods, and against whom in this very case our Classicall Divines have so much and justly complained in these latter years. S [...]tis est hodie Jesuit is nostris (saith Dr. Twisse) pro authoritate nescio qua, quidlibet affirmare, & dictata sua nulla probatione fulta, nobis obtrudere. i. e. The Jesuits of Vind. lib. 1. par. 2. degr. 3. sect. 1. prope finem. our time think it sufficient by their own I know not what Authority, to affi [...]m any thing, and obtrude upon us their own dictates without any proof to support them. And Chamier often, calling it their Tyranny, [Sic volo, sic jubeo, &c.] Qui cum alienam sententiam Panstr. tom. 1. lib. 1. c. 19. n. 11. adeo refellant frigide suam tamen obtrudant nulla confirmatam Argumento, i. e. which when they so coldly refell the opinion of others, yet obtrude their own without any Argument to confirme Ibid. lib. 2. cap. 6. n. 8. it. Againe, Quis non miretur abijs viris null [...] [...] indicatam vim consequentiae, sed relictam nobis divinandam? At haec non jam segnities est sed dolus malus. Certe hoc eorum est ingenium, qui maxime sunt inter sophistas, nempe, ut eas occultent partes quas vident, infirmissimas. i. e. Who would not marvell, that these men should conclude, [Page 253] without shewing by any sign the force of the Consequence. But leaving us to Divine or conjecture it? This is not sloth but evill deceit. This indeed is the quality of these men that are greatest among the Sophisters, to hide those parts which they see most weak. As to Mr. Brs distinction here (which is of the same kind with the most of those that he hath in this Tractate) between the works of the Law as they are they fulfilling of the Conditions of the Law our selves, or as they are the fulfilling of the Conditions of the Gospel: enough were said, if I should onely say what Chamier saith to the like wild distinctions of the Jesuits, Si e Scriptura, Id. To. 2. l. 8. cap. 6. n. 17. cedo locum, & cedimus: Sin e Scholasticorum somniis, [...], i. e. If these distinctions be taken out of the Scripture, name where and we submit; but if out of the dreams of the School men, we leave them to the Crowes.
But observable it is that when the most conspicuous men in Learning and all outward accomplishments, do once fall from the truth and simplicity of the Gospel, they forth with yeeld up themselves, not caring what stone they throw, if with it they may wound the Grace of God and face of the Lord Christ. Thus do we find Mr. Br. here contradicting himself, to choak the truth. In his former Sophisticall eluding of the authority of Pauls testimony against him, we found him affirming, that where Paul and James treat of Justification, it was James his Question and not Pauls, what is the Condition of our Justification by the Righteousnesse of Christ? whether Faith onely? or works also? But Pauls Question to be, what the Righteousnesse is which we must plead against the accusations of the Law? or by which we are justified as the proper Rightousnesse of that Law? viz. whether our own or Christs righteousnesse? Here now in the very nex [...] breath without any one word interserted, he affirms Pauls Question to be what he there denyed, what the condition is of our Justification by Christ or having part in Christ? What he excludeth and what he includeth to this purpose. This is the integrity of the man, first wilfully to lay down his Conclusion, that he will pervert the Gospel of Christ, and then to say and gain-say any thing, all things, that Malice it self against the Gospel can prompt or dictate to him.
And what is it that he produceth here in the second place to elude and lay prostrate Pauls authority? The notion and sound of his great God Condition, a god which neither Christ nor any of his Prophets or Apostles ever knew, much less ever named as operative [Page 254] in the business of Justification. Yet such a Dagon to Mr. Br. that if he fall shivered, all Mr. Brs. Divinity together with himself must fall after into the dirt. As to the matter it self, whether there be any Conditions of the Gospel? and what Condition? and how far it may be granted? all these have been so fully examined before, that unless I delighted to feed upon crambe a hundred times more then bis cocta, I must here to prevent the inconvenience of nauseousness to my self and the Reader, in steed of Answer transmit the Reader to what hath been Answered oft before.
As for that which he philosophizingly distinguisheth between the works and conditions of the Law, and the works and conditions of the Gospel: 1 He onely saith all but proveth nothing; therefore deserves onely the contempt of, not an Answer from his Reader. 2 He saith nothing but what he hath been taught by the Papists, that though we cannot be justified by the works of the Law, yet we are justified by Gospel works such as Faith is. And must the Conclusions of the holy Apostaticall not Apostolicall Church be Canonicall to us, because he hath made them so to himself? 3 If he therefore forbears to prove what he saith because he holds it enough proved by the Papists already, and so transmits his Reader to their Writings: We also refer the reader to the perusall of the works of our Protestant writers that have dashed into shivers all such seeming proofs of the papists, and brought to light the truth which they sought to imprison in darkness. 4 Whatsoever he fableth here of Gospel works, yet are they all legall or works of the Law which he obtrudeth upon men to Justification, or (as he here phraseth it) to acquire part in Christ, even to Faith it self he attributes no such property or power, but as it is a morall work which the Law commandeth, as we have found him speaking. 5 (to come to that in which the whole force of his reasoning here lyeth) It is false what he affirmeth, either that Paul doth in express words, or in the sense and scope of his speech, exclude onely the works of the Law, but never the fulfilling of the same works, as required by the Gospel (for unless he so meaneth he saith nothing) from their co-operation with Faith to Justification: or that this is the reall difference between Legall and Gospel works, that whereas in matter and substance they are one, yet as they are done to justifie us by their own righteousness, they are works of the Law, but as done to justifie us by the righteousness of Christ, so they are works of the Gospel, or Gospel Conditions. This is nothing but the Sophistry [Page 255] of a brain sophisticated with strong delusions to falsifie and nullifie the pure word of God. For,
1 What doth he bring to prove [...]y least particle of what he saith? if he had the testimony of God and Christ on his side, would he leave their name and authority unmentioned.
2 The Apostle when he treats of Justification by Christ, doth not onely exclude works of the Law, but works indefinitely and universally, any works, all works from having any power ordinate or not ordinate, to give us part in it or him, as hath been fully in its place before demonstrated.
3 His dispute every where is (as was declared and confirmed in the former Chapter) not so much what is the righteousnesse which by its own power and vertue justifieth, but what it is that instrumentally uniteth us to Christ for justification by him: This he denyeth to all to any works, and attributes to Faith alone, as hath been there evidenced.
4 In such places where he expresly speaketh of the works of the Law he means the Law written, as it was given and pertained to the Jewes alone, as a signall evidence of Gods love to them above all other Nations. This is cleer from the Apostles own Testimony, Ro. 2. 12, 14. 17. & 5. 13. as also where he numbreth Circumcision, the observation of times and meats, and other rituall peeces of the Ceremoniall Law, together with the morall works of the Decalogue. And will Mr. Br say that these rituall works are Conditions also of our part in Christ?
5 When he so giveth the Adject of the Law to works, calling them the works of the Law, he doth it to beat down the pride and boasting of the Jewes that gloried in the Law, Rom. 2. 23. declaring to them that although the Law were one principall prerogative vouchsafed to them not to any other people, Rom. 9. 4. yet the works of the Law so glorious and privilegious had nothing to do with Faith to further our Justification by Christ: but that the Gentiles without the Law had as free accesse to God by Faith in Christ, as they with all the furniture of the Law and its works.
6 Paul doth exclude all works under what name or notion soever, from justifying so as Faith justifieth, or to be instrumentall and conditionall to justification as Faith is. But Faith is instrumentall or (as M. Br. terms it) conditionall to receive Christ to Justification. Thereforr works are excludeded from being so conditionall, or to be Conditions of the Gospel, as he phraseth it. [Page 256] This is apparent by those Scriptures where Paul saith, Not of works but of Faith, by Faith without works, to him that worketh not, but beleeveth, &c. as hath been [...] before alledged and amplified. And all this of works without the adjection of the Law, yea of works done hundreds of years before the Law (to which Paul had reference in such disputes) was given.
7 Paul denyeth to works any operation in the Justification of Abraham, or of us that obtein the same Justification with Abraham. But the works which are denyed to justifie Abraham, could not in Pauls sense be the works of the Law, being acted 430 years before the Law was given; and the Justification which is common to Abraham and his spirituall seed, was and is justification by Christ. So that works have nothing to do with Faith to condition us for justification by Christ. This hath been made out in the former Chapter, from Rom. 4. 1, &c.
8 And lastly, If such imperious, arbitrary, unreasonable, and unproved distinctions be harkened to in Divinity, what one part either of Law or Gospel shall abide sacred? The whole word, as Mr. Br. the great Artificer in the Trade, somewhere complaines, shall be made a waxen Nose. For with as much integrity as Mr. B. hath here used to put the greatest Article of the Gospel to a topsie turnie, may I mock at all the Commandments of the Decalogue, with a distinctionary vanity to nullifie them. Thou shalt have no other Gods before me. True, may I say, but God meaneth other Gods of the Pagans devising, not excluding the Gods of my own feigning. Thou shalt not make to thy self any graven Image. That is right (said the Greeks once) but God here excludeth the graven Images which the Romanes, not the painted Images which we adore. Thou shalt not steale, the thief may here distinguish, the lean Cattell are here excluded not the fat. Thou shalt not murther; the Pharisees glosse upon it was, to wit, my friends, but my enemies I may. The like might I say of the rest, yea of every Gospel truth also, and all with as good reason as Mr. Br. here deals with Paul. We are justified, or have part in Christ, not by works but by Faith, by Faith without works, saith Paul: Right saith Mr. Br. for he excludeth works onely as they are works of the Law, not as they are works and Conditions of the Gospel. Yet, Ʋltra Sauromatus fugere hine libet, it makes me not onely to wish but even to hold my self almost in a desart as impatient of the company of some of our distinctionary Rabbies, that admire and are ready to blesse themselves [Page 257] at the wit and profoundness of such wilde, barbarous, prophane, & senseless distinctions of this incomparable man that hath not his Peer in England, when in this piece of his worth there is not a ploughboy so rustick but would easily whistle so prophanely in this kinde as he: And if the reason were given to Mr. Br. why he is in this artifice more full than others, it might be given in the Poets words;
Though I might except in some sense against this assertion; yet because I cannot apprehend waking, what he dreams sleeping, how he will from this assertion prove that Paul either doth not exclude works from Justification, or doth not attribute it to Faith alone, I leave it unexamined: If by Receiving Christ, he means our taking him as our Lord to be obeyed in all his Commandments that we might thereby be justified, enough hath been said before in the examination of his 66, 72, & 73 Thes. in answer to the fourth Argument that he brings for justification by works: unto it I refer the reader.
The vanity and falsity of this assertion hath been discovered in the examination of his 62, & 70 Theses, in which is Comprehended his 2 Argument for Justification by works. What is there said being perused, will take off (I suppose) from the reader all expectation of any more to be here said to it. Onely by the way all may note, 1 That what he saith here labours of the same disease with the former, it is onely said not proved. We must all sit at the Feet of this Gamaleel and beleeve, because this great Doctor and Magister noster hath spoken it. 2 That although it be the Popish Cause which he here mainteineth, yet he with a holy Craft makes use rather of the Arminian than Popish Phrase, the more easily to beguile the simple, Calling works (not as the Papists do plainly Works, but) Obedience to Christ, and Obedience to the Gospel. How doth he fitt his bait to be swallowed by gudgeons that cannot discern a line from a halter. He knows there is a generation of men that detest swines [Page 58] flesh, yet feed every morning upon pistles of pork as the greate [...]elicacie. Change the name, and they disaff [...]ct not the subst [...]n [...]e. 3 Yet what he here saith he hath received in matter though noti [...]n words from Stapleton the Priest and his fellows. We are just [...]ed (saith the Apostle) by Faith, not by works, i. e. (saith Staplet [...]) not by works without faith, but by works and Faith: that is (saith Mr. Br.) [not by works or obedience out of Faith,] but by works implyed in Faith. Let him that can decide which of these two is the finer Sophist [...]r and Papist. 4 And no less harmoniously do Pauls words and Mr. Brs exposition and distinction upon them agree together, than a harp and a harrow. Paul affirms Justification or imputation of Righteousness to be without works, Rom 4. 6 Mr. Br expounds his meaning to be without works which are not, but by works that are implyed in Faith. As good a distinction as if I should distinguish between the brains that a man hath out of his head, and the brain which he hath in his head▪ How great is his self-Confidence that he should think such absurd distinctions should take with any rationall man, onely upon this Authority, because such a Cathedral scholar hath said it? And when Paul saith so frequently, Not by works but by Faith, he should mean by Faith, works also implyed in Faith? This were to affirm that Paul in the delivery of the sacred doctrine of the Gospel speaks by Contraries, and that what things he setts in opposition we must take to be in a Conjunction, so that if he had said a man seeth with his eyes not with his heels, we must understand him to mean that he seeth with his eyes and heels together, or with his heels implyed in his eyes.
What he addeth of beleeving and obeying the Gospel, that they are the two summaries of the Gospel, hath been before examined, and both found to be the same thing. Obedience to the Gospel being nothing else but the hearts submission to the voyce of Christ and doctrine of the Gospel in stretching forth faith to apprehend Christ alone to Justification, illumination, sanctification, &c. resting upon him both for salvation, and for grace and power to walk worthy of it, as hath been more fully before expressed.
Thus much in way of examination of the third part of his vindication, viz. that his doctrine in nothing dissents from Pauls. And in this poynt I doubt not but we have found Paul and him no less Cohering, than Christ and Antichrist.
CHAP. XXII.
Whether there be any validity in Mr. Brs Apologizing for his Doctrine, that it is not derogatory from the Righteousness of Christ.
THe 4 th part of his vindication is to free his doctrine [of Justification by works] from being derogatory to Christ and his righteousness. Here unto his endeavours bend in many parts of this his Tractate. In stead of all, I shall mention onely two or three places which Comprehend the summe and whole of all the rest.
Bax. pa. 307. The Righteousness which we must plead against the Lawes accusations, is not one grain of it in our Faith or works: but all out of us in Christs satisfaction.
Again, Appendix pa. 78. Our dooing [or works] are required, not to be any part of our Legall Righteousness, nor any part of satisfaction for our unrighteousness; but to be our Gospel Righteousness, or the Condition of our participation in Christ, who is our Legall Righteousness, and so of all the benefitts that come with him.
What his meaning is he expresseth Aphor. Thes. 79. pa. 313. in a Syllogism, thus:
This Doctrine is no whit derogatory to Christ and his Righteousness: For
He that ascribeth to Faith or obedience, no part of that work which belongeth to Christs satisfactory righteousness, doth not derogate in that from that Righteousness.
But he that maketh Faith and Obedience to Christ, to be onely the fullfilling of the Conditions of the New Covenant, and so to be onely Conditions of Justification by him, doth give them no part of the work of his Righteousness: Seeing he came not to fulfill the Gospel, but the Law.
Ergo— &c.
I shall speak onely to the Syllogism, because in it is fully Comprehended all that Mr. Br. hath to say for the vindication of his doctrine from so fowl a scandal and blemish. And here I shall in the first place onely minde the reader of what hath been before Copiously (in its place) manifested, that Mr. Br. takes up this Feat of arguing from the Papists, who to Clear their doctrine of Merit and [Page 260] Justification by works, from being derogatory to Christ and his Merits, do plead against us, That they in no wise lessen the Merits of Christ, by teaching that good works do Merit and Justifie: But that herein they advance the Merits of Christ in ascribing to them this soveraign vertue and power, to give validity and worth to mans good works to Merit and Justifie. Nay the Hereticks (say they) degrade the Merits of Christ, in teaching that mans works cannot Justifie or Merit, as if there were not force enough in Christs Merits to enable them to it. Whether theirs or Mr. Brs Argumentation have more shew of reason to support it, I leave to the intelligent reader to judge.
2 The whole Argument is Sophisticall and fallacious: 1 In that his Argument is not full and wide to the proving of his position. The position which by this Argument he pretends to Confirm, is in his own words, that This doctrine [of his] is no whit derogatory to Christ and his Righteousness. But his Argument is shapen onely to prove, that his doctrine doth not derogate from Christs righteousness, not that it doth not derogate from Christ himself. Were it granted that it doth not derogate from Christs righteousness, yet it follows not that it doth not derogate from Christ, any more than if a man should ascribe all due praises to Mr. Brs learning, but should deny his honesty, Charity, Chastity, verity, or other like vertue in him; yet because he doth not derogate from the learning of the man, he doth not derogate from the man himself in any of his accomplishments. Mr. Brs doctrine may derogate from Christ in veiling his grace, mercy, and fullnes in other Conditions required to the Compleating of his Mediatorship, though it did (where it doth not) ascribe to his Righteousness its due praise and fullness. 2 In that he playes with equivocation of words: For to shun the deserved hatred which the Papists doctrine incurreth from the Saints of Christ, he delivers their doctrine not in theirs but in the Arminian phrase, putting under the name and in stead of [ good works] Obedience to Christ: For this is an equivocall phrase, and as oft as it is used in the New Testament in order to Justification, it is the same thing with Faith, and differs not a whit from it. The obedience of Faith, obeying of the Gospel, and obedience to Christ, signifying nothing else but the deniall of our selves and our own righteousness, and our trusting in Christ alone for Justification and salvation, as Christ and his Gospel Command; in opposition to the voyce of the Law that [ knowing nothing of Christ, speaking nothing of [Page 261] faith] saith, Doe and work that thou mayest be saved, Gal. 3. 12. But Mr. Br. takes this obedience to Christ not in that Gospel but in this legall sense, for the fulfilling of the Moral works which the Law requireth, to interesse us in the justification which is by Christ, and so deceives his reader with the homonymy of the phrase. 3 In putting a restricting in his Argument, upon the Righteousness of Christ, which in his position that he was to prove was left at large and in generall, Christ and HIS Righteousness: but in the Argument he putts a limitation upon it in the Major, That Righteousness, which also he explaineth to be onely the Satisfactory Righteousness, of Christ: as if there were no other but that righteousness in Christ, & whosoever derogates not from it could not derogate at all from Christs righteousness. I may subscribe to the righteousness of Mr. Br. in some Acts of his, though I onely desire but finde it not in other. Many other Acts of righteousness were required in Christ (even as he is our Mediator) besides that by which he gave satisfaction to Justice for our Sinns, without which his satisfactory righteousness becomes unavaileable to us. And he that derogates not from the one, may derogate from the other. Yet see we the boldness of our Sophister, what he restreigneth in the proposition about Christs righteousness, in the Assumpeion he leaves indefinite, loose, generall, and without restriction again, not [ that] righteousness, but [ HIS] Righteousness: so making his Argument, by his fallacy of four terms, to run four-footed. 4 By begging the question in Calling good works (which with him is the same with Obedience to Christ) the Condition of the New Covenant and Justification by Christ. Well doth he put it upon himself, saying, He that maketh them such, for neither God nor Chtist ever made them such. 5 His Activity and Liegerdemain, which he useth to draw off his reader from Considering the palpable sophistry used in this Argument. This he seeks to do by giving and prosecuting in the explication of this Thesis, a seeming reason that he bringeth to prove his assumption; viz. that Christ came not to fullfill the Gospel but the Law, and then spending his whole explication about it. When (not to speak how equivocall and ambiguous the phrase is, and in its most literal and grammatical sense the assertion altogether false) we utterly deny, either that Christ hath fulfilled the works of the Law or the Gospel in our stead, otherwise than by giving satisfaction by his death for our infirm and maimed fulfilling of them; or that works done to justifie us are as all works of the Gospel, but are contrariwise [Page 262] wise wholly works of the Law; or that Christ hath any more satisfied for our infirmities in fullfilling the works of the Law than of the Gospel, in that sense in which Mr. Br. distinguisheth them. It was his part not to say but to prove soundly his assertion, if he would not have it exploded for a new and vain fancy, rather than to have answered in his explication, objections of his own making that scarce touch upon the matter in question.
This might suffice as a full answer to his Argument, to have proved it in so many particulars to be unargumentall, no argument, or a faulty argument, not a Syllogism but a Para-logism. Yea not to leave an occasion to any of excepting that the propositions of the syllogism may have some force in them or either of them apart from other, to his purpose; I shall afford the labour to examine them also.
To the Consequent of the Major I have many things to say. 1 That it is (as the whole Argument) sophistical, a meer declining of not a speaking to the question; The word [ in that] is foysted in besides the question, and makes that which is said unsaid, as altogether besides the question. That which he undertakes to prove, is (in his own words) that His doctrine is no whit derogatory from Christ and his Righteousness. To prove this see how grossly he acts the Sophister to be gu [...]le fools, in stead of a Logician to satisfie the intelligent. He that ascribeth (saith he) [ to works or] obedience, no part of that work which belongeth to Christs satisfactory Righteousness, doth not derogate [in that] from that Righteousness. No less true than the Gospel, but so farr from the question as the earth is from heaven. For who ever questioned whether the not ascribing to works that which belongeth to Christs satisfactory righteousness, be a derogating feom that righteousness? Yea it were madness in any to question it. For if the not ascribing should so derogate, then God, Christ, Spirit, Word, Apostles, Prophets, all Protestants, yea all animate and inanimate Creatures without understanding, should be guilty of derogating from Christs satisfactory righteousness. For none of these ascribe to works any part of that work which belongeth to that righteousness of Christ. How palpable is this cheat which Mr. Br. would put upon us? He that doth not ascribe &c. doth not derogate in that, i. e. in his not ascribing to mans works what belongs to Christ, from Christ. By the like Argumentation might Joah clear himself from the guilt of murther Committed upon two better men than himself; and Christs Tormentors themselves from having [Page 263] any hand in his death: Thus might they learn of Mr. Br. to plead; They that wound not, that keep a mans head from wounding, do not in that take away his life. True, the not wounding of the head was not prejudiciall to the life of them whom they slew. But the wounding and piercing of their bodies and shedding out their bowells, made them as actually murtherers, as if they had also dashed out the brains of them whom they slew. It was not what they did not, but what they did that Constituted them guilty of murther. So it is not Mr. Brs not ascribing but his ascribing to works that derogates from Christ. Shall we thinke that Mr. Br. slumbered and doated into this fallacy? Is he a puny that he should need to be taught how to express himself in an argument? Nay all must see that he knows it to be a heterodox and desperate Conclusion which he mainteineth, that no honest and holy means can pillar up; therefore tramples all ingenuity under-foot, running over it to fetch patronage from his Sophistry. And even herein bewraies the high thoughts that he hath of himself, that all his flies are Eagles, and his gross [...]st Conceptions oracles; and his abasing of all others, that they are so blinde as not to see, and so blunt as to be all taken in his rook nets.
Or if we take his meaning thus, That his doctrine in making Works a Collaterall with Faith to Justification, (which he would say plainly if he meant not fraudulently, and had not his own judgement and Conscience suggesting to him the weakness & falshood of such an assertion) because it ascribeth no part of the work of Christs satisfactory righteousness to works, doth not derogate from Christ and his righteousness: Then I deny both the Consequent and Consequence of the Proposition. For 1 It derogates from him and it a full potency and efficacy to justifie any one, untill it be animated and enlivened by our own works to do it, leaving it all feeble & dead to produce its effect untill our obedience as its Concause gives life to it. And this is Contradictive to the doctrine of the Apostle, who asserteth the efficacy and actuall efficiency of Christ and his righteousness to justifie us yet ungodly, Rom. 4. 5. yet without strength [to work] yet sinners, yet enemies, and so workers against him, Rom. 5. 6, 8, 9, 10. 2 It derogates from it its glory, in parting and dividing our Justification between his righteousness & our righteousness; so ascribing part of the praise to man which ought to be attributed full and entire to Christ. This also is contrary to the doctrine of the Apostle, that excludes [Page 264] works under every notion from having to do in the business of Justification, to exclude Boasting, lest any man should boast, or glory in himself, Rom. 3. 27. & 4. 2. Eph. 2. 9. But that He that glorieth may glory in the Lord, 1 Cor. 1. 29, 30, 31.
Nay it doth not onely derogate from, but totally destroy and nullifie the righteousness of Christ, as to us and our justification. For so first the Apostle testifieth, Christ is become of no effect to you, whosoever of you are justified by the Law, Gal. 5. 4. And to be justified by the Law, or by the works of the Law, are with the Apostle the same thing, as hath been oft shewed before. Yea to seek justification in any part or degree by the works or obedience which the Law requireth as a Condition of Justification, is to seek to be Justified by the Law. Works being the Condition of Justification by the Law and not by Grace. 2 Because it obstructeth the way of Justification which Christ hath made and sends poor souls to seek it in a way that is impervious, by which there can be no access to Christ his righteousness. For the righteousness of Christ is given of free Love, pure grace, meer mercy; as a free Gift, Rom. 5. 15. Freely offered and received, Rev. 22. 17. Without money and without price, Isa. 55. 1. He is the worst Simoniak that seeks to buy this gift of the Holy Ghost for money, to make it his by his own Merit and obedience. Whosoever is admitted to it, such a one is rejected from it: For Christ came to call not the Righteous but sinners to repentance. The Publicans and Harlots enter when these are excluded. They shall come from the East and from the West &c. From all parts of Paganism and Barbarism, that shall sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jaakok, in the kingdome of God, in the possession of gra [...]e and righteousness by Christ: but these that think themselves in their own righteousness to be the children of the kingdome shall be cast out with the Jewes, into whose doctrine & manners they are naturallized. And justly, For he that worketh, i. e. brings works to inright him to Justification, Challengeth it as Debt from Gods Justice, as the fruit of his own work & Merit that God oweth to him, not as a free gift from his grace, Rom. 4. 4. Who will envie to him the fruit of his deservings? This is Condemnation from the Tribunall of Justice where no flesh can be justified; when they which [ work not] but beleeve on him which Justifieth the ungodly, i. e. which bring Faith alone without works as Coadjutors to put them into the actuall and sensible possession of the righteousness which is by Christ; these even these alone shall be justified at the throne of grace, Rom. 4. 5. Why? these seek it in the way where God [Page 265] is present to give it: The other in a way wherein God never was, never will be present to bestow it.
Lastly I deny the Assumption also. It is false that Mr. Br. making (so as he doth it) Obedience or Works the condition of Justification by Christ, doth not give them any part of the work of Christs righteousness. For it belongeth to Christs righteousness by it self alone, and to Christ by his Mediatory righteousness alone to perfect for ever the Justification and salvation of his redeemed ones, Heb. 10. 14. And that without any accessary help of their own righteousness, John 13. 10. But Mr. Br. so parteth justification between Christs righteousness and our righteousnesse, as that he makes them equally concurrent to our salvation and justifying: That Christs Righteousness without ours can no more profit us, than ours without Christs: yea makes Christs righteousness wholly unprofitable to every man, till by the serving and deserving of each man it be purchased and made usefull to benefit him. And so by making the efficacy of it the fruit of our Merit, he dis-robes it of its honour and ornament, derogating from it its all-sufficiency by it self to perfect us, that he may arrogate to our righteousness what is stoln from his. But how farr this doctrine of his derogates both from the grace of God, and merits of Christ hath been oft discussed. After all that hee hath said to the defacing of both, here he wipes his mouth, and saith it was never foul: and will have his Reader conclude, that when his face of Christ is spittled, yet if it be from Mr. Brs. lips touched with a Cole from Bellarmine and Arminius, it is a blessing of him.
This one truth I acknowledg, implyed, though not expressed in this Argument of Mr. Br. that he acknowledgeth himself to be the man that hath made obedience or works condition of the New Covenant, or of justification by Christ. In this I contradict him not. It is of mans, not of Gods making, it's a creature of his own, not created by God, at least not by God assigned to this use and end. It being therefore not formed to his hand, but a graven image, the work of his own hand, we leave him (sith he will do it) alone without us to persist in worshipping it.
CHAP. XXIII.
Whether the Reasons which hee bringeth prove him not to be a Legallist and Anti-gospeller.
HIS fifth endeavour is to vindicate his doctrine from being legall and Anti-Evangelicall: That although it hold Beleevers not only under the bondage, but also under the Curse of the Law, in life and death till the day of Judgment, Thes. 9. pa. 65. & p. 73. and else-where oft: Though it makes works the condition of the New, as well as of the Old Covenant; though he maintains that Doe and Live, is the voyce of the Gospel as well as of the Law, Append. p. 81. Yet is he not a Pharisee or Legallist, nor his doctrine ungospel-like; It is purely Christian, and full of sweet and ravishing Consolation to a Beleever, not the least tangue of the Covenant of works, but the odour and very marrow of the Covenant of grace in it. It would be too long to set forth in his own words all the reasons that scatteringly throughout this Book of his hee bringeth to prove a probability and likelihood of truth in this his Paradox. The sum of it is this.
The force of all this hath been examined already, as else-where, so most copiously in the Examination of his ninth Thesis, and the explication thereof, to which for the prevention of Tautologizing [Page 267] here, I refer the Reader. Only let him by the way consider with me how fitly these glosses of Mr. Br. do agree with many plain and evident Sriptures. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us, Gal. 3. 13. i. e. saith M. Br. from the rigour of the Curse, not from the Curse it self, for it lyeth upon us still: or from the Curse, that it shall not follow us to heaven after the world is ended; not but that untill the worlds end it shall torment us both dead and living. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus, who walke not after the Flesh, but after the Spirit, Rom. 8. 1. i. e. No condemnation in its full rigour, but condemnation unto, and the execution of the Curse they must bear untill the day of judgment, and after that he knoweth not what will become of them. Blessed is the man whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sinns are covered, Rom. 4. 7. i. e. in part blessed, and in part cursed. The blood of Christ purgeth from all sin, 1 Joh. 1. 7. i. e. from all sin, not from all the curse and vengeance due to any one of our sins are we delivered. God for Christs sake hath forgiven you all your sins and trespasses, Eph. 4. 32. Col. 2. 13. i. e. hath forgiven you the fault, but not the curse and punishment. By one offering, Christ hath perfected for ever them that are sanctifird, i. e. hath laid a ground to perfect them if he will in the next world, not that he hath perfected them in point of Justification here. The time past is put for a time to come, and a certain for an uncertain time. Heb. 10. 14. They that are once purged by sacrifice, have no more conscience of sinn, i. e. when they are wholly purged in heaven, not while they are but in part purged upon earth. Heb. 10. 2. Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more, Heb. 10. 17. i. e. no more as forgiven to spare them: But as long as the Sun and Moon endure, I will remember to pour out the Curse and vengeance for them. Wee are justified by the blood, and reconciled to the Father by the death of the Son, Rom. 5. 9, 10. That is, we have right and title so to be reconciled and justified in another world, if we lose it not by the way. He was wounded for our transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities, and with his stripes we are healed, Isa. 53. 5. i. e. So healed with his stripes that he shall wound us again with the strokes of his Curse so sorely, that we shall be healed no more while the world lasteth. I have sworn that I would no more be wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee, Isa. 54 9. i. e. I have sworn, but never meant to stand to it. I might instance hundreds more of such Scriptures, wherewith Mr. Brs. glosses and distinctions do as well agree as fire & towe together. If Mr. Br. did [Page 268] so much honour the very intrals of Gods word, as hee doth the backside of Aristotles Topicks, he would not dare so to elude and elide them. But Gods authority with him must (it seems) stand or fall, as it hath or hath not approbation from Aristotles or Socinus his Reason, being submitted to the censure thereof. And then what living plant of God can stand, where this man brings the Axe of his distinctions to fell and prepare billets in heaps for his Cole-fires?
All this is without book, the dictates not of the Holy Ghost, but of Mr. Br. and that spirit which wrought in his Masters from whom he learned it. For 1. The Scriptures which he alledgeth in any part of this Treatise to make any part thereof probable, have been examined, and none of them found to speak for him, most against him. Neither do these assertions of Scripture that affirm Christ to give, or promise that he will give life, salvation, &c. to such or such qualified or working persons, [as to them that love him, or fear him, or obey him, or to the meek, the righteous, &c.] any more infer that these qualifications or works have any proper or improper causality to produce their justification; than when the Scriptures affirm him to give grace and life to Centurions, Publicans, Harlots, Sinners, Enemies, U [...]godly, Chief sinners, Samaritans, Heathen, do infer, that their being such had any causality unto their justification.
2. Nay the Scriptures utterly deny the Gospel to have to do with the Law in this voyce, Do, and Live, as I have before oft alleged them. Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but of his Mercy he hath saved us, by Faith not of works. Not of workes, but of Grace. And how poor a shift Mr. Br. useth to elude the force of these and the like Scriptures, hath been shewed in the examination of his vindicating himself from being contradictive to St. Paul.
3. Yea if works in any notion or consideration be brought as coupled with Faith to promote Justification, the Scriptures affirm them to destroy the hope of Justification, and to repell the grace of Christ, by which the Beleevers are justified. If ye be circumcised (which in Pauls sense there is, if yee bring but this one work to forward your Justification by Christ) ye are bound to keep the whole law; Christ is become of no effect, ye are faln from grace, and faln under the Curse, Gal. 5. 3, 4. & 3. 10.
4. And if works or obedience in Mr. Brs. sense (which is the doing of the moral Righteousness that the Law commandeth) be not as much as adjuvant to Justification, then surely sincere obedience cannot be helpful, where obedience, yea perfect obedience is excluded. This is, and appears to be either an instinct, or a distinction of Mr. Brs. own brain, not a doctrine of the Scripture, for [Page 270] which way shall we turn the leaves thereof to find it?
5. Yea, how rational, or how ridiculous this distinction or gloss of Mr. Br. applyed to those Scriptures which deny justification by the obedience of works, I leave both to the seeing and the blind to judg. By the works of the law no flesh shall be justified, saith the Apostle, i. e. saith Mr. Br. by the perfect obedience of works, but by unperfect obedience, if sincere, we may be justified. Not of works but of grace, i. e. not of works perfectly done, but of works unperfectly, yet sincerely done: so grace and works may be made friends, that is, Gods grace and mans vain glory may kiss each other as co-equal workers of mans justification. Not by works of Righteousnes which we have done, but of his mercy, &c. i. e. which wee have done perfectly, but which we have done maimedly, yet sincerely. If some Festus should hear such a Commentary of Mr. Br. upon Paul, he would conclude sure, that one of them is beside himself, much learning hath made him madd. Either Paul, that he had not wit or words to express his own meaning, that in the whole bulk of his disputes, denying unto our works and righteousness indefinitely, all operation to Justification, & doth not as much as with a Parenthesis, in any place inform his Reader that he speaks not of Gospel, but of legall works, not of sincere, but of perfect obedience; that these are rejected from, those necessarily required to justification: Or Mr. Br. that without craving leave of Paul, by such gross distinetions goes about to make him unsay what he hath said, and the world to believe, that in all what he wrote of Justification, hee meant to be understood on the contrary to what hee speaketh.
6. If we bring works at all to procure justification by Christ, we do by evacuating the grace of God and merits of Christ to our selves, oblige & put a bondage upon our selvet to fulfil the whole Law legally in its perfection, else can we never be justified, but abide under the Curse for ever. For he that worketh, requireth the reward as a debt in law, and not as a gift of grace; therefore, except his work be so perfect, as that it can in strict justice save him, hee can never attain salvation, as by comparing together these Scriptures will be evident, viz. Gal. 5. 3, 4. & 3. 10. Rom. 4. 4, 5. & 9. 30, 31, 32.
7. As to the rules or qualifications which he gives to covenanting and obedience that it may be sincere, they are in substance meerly legal, the Name of Christ being only put in stead of the Name [Page 271] of God. And who is there not only of the Jesuits & Socinians, with the Arminians, from whom he borroweth most of his principles, but even of the reall Antinomians, whom he pretends to oppose, who in all those particulars thinks not himself or gives not cause to all to think them as sincere as Mr. Br? what ground have we to conclude but that they know the ends, nature and conditions of the Covenant so truly, and obey with so much deliberation and as little fittishness and rashness; so seriously, without dissimulation and slightness; so freely, intirely, and singly, a [...] Mr. Br. doth? Thus every stigmatized Heretick in his own way, bringing with him such a sincerity of obedience, shall thereby be possessed of the investiture of Christs righteousness, though he seek it in his own, not in Gods way, by his own righteousness, and not by Faith alone, which alone God hath stamped with an aptitude and efficacy to this work.
And it hath been almost so oft answered as said. Therefore I shall referr the Reader to the places where it hath been answered, and specially to the examination of those his disputes in which he labours to cleer his doctrine from all tincture of Popery, from all contradiction to Paul, and from being derogatory to Christ, & his righteousnes. Here only I add, that this doctrine is the same with that of the most legal Pharisees, against whom the Apostle so much inveigheth, wishing them accursed & cut off, for troubling the Churches therwith, Gal. 1 9. & 5. 12. For they arrogated to themselves alone part in Christ & his Righteousnes, because of their own personall righteousness in the works and obedience which the Law requireth; resisting the Gentiles, & denying to them all possibility to partake in the Justification which is by Christ by means of Faith alone, except they also fulfilled the righteousnesse which the Law required to give them right to him and it. Yea Mr. Br. [with these] ascribes more to works than the very unbeleeving Pharisees. For these claymed Justification only by their works; but he and the beleeving Pharisees challenged for their works, right both [Page 272] in the Justifier and in his justification also: For Causa causae est etiam causa causati. As farr as they ascribe to their works a Causality to make Christ theirs, they make them causal to render the Justification which is by Christ theirs also.
B. 3. That neither is his Doctrine legall, nor doth he ascribe too much to works, because he maketh Faith and obedience to be but a Condition, or a M [...]dium, or a poor improper Causa sine qua non, of our Justification, Aph. pa. 223, 224. and our doing no part of satisfaction for our unrighteousness (for this hee seems to have ascribed before to our sufferings in bearing the Curse) but to be our Gospel-Righteousness, or the Condition of our participation in Christ who is our legall Righteousness, & so of all the benefits that come by him, App. p. 78. I say, that subjection and obedience justifie. 1 Not as works simply considered: 2 Nor as legall works: 3 Nor as meritorious workes: 4 Nor as good works which God is pleased with: 5 But as Conditions to which the free Law giver hath promised Justification and life
Nay your ( i. e. the Protestants) doctrine ascribeth farr more of the work to man than mine; For you make Justification an effect of your own Faith, and your faith an instrumentall cause of it, and so make your self your own Justifier. And you say your faith justifieth as it apprehendeth Christ, which is the most intrinsicall, essentiall consideration of Faith; & so faith hath much of the Honour. But while I affirm that it justifieth only as a condition, which is an extrinsicall consideration, and alien from its essence and Nature, I give the glory to him that freely giveth mee life, and that made so sweet a condition to his Covenant, and that enableth me to perform the said Condition, App. pag. 120, 121.
All this hath been oft and fully examined before in its place also, and how little truth there is in any part or parcell thereof discovered. It would be weariness to the flesh, and vexation to the Spirit, but to look so often upon his great Goddess, his Queen of Heaven [CONDITION] as he blesseth her. O that his conscience had been so well acquainted with Christ, as his fancy is with this Idoll; he would not then have pestered the Church with such an imaginary Deity, nor prostituted all that is called God at the feet of such a Proserpina. I am weary any more to attend to him, making the will of God, i. e. God willing conditional, and [Page 273] so the immutable God a conditional God, the salvation of Christ conditional, & so Christ a conditional Saviour; or the witness & seal of Christ a conditional seal and witness, and so the Holy Ghost a conditional Spirit of Adoption; or the gospel of righteousness, forgiveness, and life, a conditional Gospel, and consequently nulling all th [...]se, and pronouncing them no God, no Christ, no Holy Ghost, no Gospel. For a conditional proposition doth Nihil ponere, and after M r Brs. principles, it is in mans righteosness to give or destroy the actual existence of every of these. But I leave to him that delights therein to bury himself in this gu [...]ph. I conceive my self obnoxious to censure for spending and spilling so many words already, to shew the deformity and ugliness of this imaginary Chimera. Here therefore it shall suffice (leaving the Reader to the perusall of what hath been said already upon this subject) to mind him of these two things.
1. That both the whole and every least fragment of all that is here collected, whether we look to the substance or Artifice used about it, is not his, but borrowed partly from the Papists, partly from the Socinians, and their Apes the Arminians, as hath been before shewed: and if I shall be called thereto, I am ready more fully to shew, by quoting the Authors, out of whom he hath transcribed all almost word for word, to his use: So that the Reader may consult with such of our Writers, that have answered their sophistry, if he desire to read more fully and largely upon this subject, and not expect it from mee who have already transgressed (as some will judg) by my too much largeness thereon, as to Mr. Baxter.
2 That although the voyce here be the voyce of Jacob, yet the hands are the hands of Esau. Sweet words, but subverting doctrine in matter and substance. Pills of poyson wrapt up in gold, we except not against the gold, but the poyson therein inclosed, not against the Terms of words considered by themselves, but against the pernicious doctrine which they palliate. Whether we ascribe too much to Faith by making it an instrument, see the examination of his answer to the last question which he propoundeth in the explication of Thes. 56. But how false and fallacious his flaattering words which he useth here to make tolerable, yea sweet his arrogant doctrine of Justification by works (viz. that Wee, that is, I and the Papists, with Socinus and Arminius, make our righteousnesse but a Condition, or Medium, or a poor improper Causa sine qua non, no [Page 274] part of satisfaction for our unrighteousness, Not as works simply considered, nor as Legall works, nor as Meritorious works, Nor as good works with which God is pleased, but as our Gospel-righteousness, and conditions to which the free Law-giver hath promised justification and life) will easily appear to him that considereth what & how much hee ascribeth to works. Though he cals works a poor Causa sine qua non, yet himself affirmeth that some Causes sine qua non, deserve farr greater praise in morall respect, than some that have a proper Causality, do, Aph. pa. 216. w ch though in words he deny of Faith (meaning by faith all obedience and good works which hee calls the severall Acts of Faith, Aph. p. 126.) that it doth so deserve, Aphor. p. 224. yet in matter and substance he affirms it. And
For as I have more than hinted before,
1 He maketh our righteousnes of works and Christs satisfactory righteousness, co-ordinate and collateral in the procurement of our Justification, the one as absolutely necessary as the other to the attainment of this end; the one to purchase a possibility of Justification, the other to render that which was but in possibility, actual and effectual to us: Both satisfactory, the one as a sufficient Fine and payment, the other as satisfactory Rent and homage, Aph. Thes. 17, 18, 19. pa. 129.
2 He puts both in the same order and kind of Causes, making our righteousness and Christs satisfaction to be both the Causa sine qua non, Thes. 56. For although he names Faith there, yet himself declares himselfe under Faith to mean and comprehend obedience also. This Civility alone he vouchsafeth to Christ, that he names Christs satisfaction before our faith or obedience, because it seems that is the elder. But in order, power and authority, to the producing of this effect, Christ hath no pre-eminence given him above man.
3 He affirms mans righteousness to be as perfect as Christs righteousness in order to Justification, viz. both perfect [in suo genere] Christs righteousness perfect to do its work, & mans to its work; or (as he explains himself) both perfect in the perfection of sufficiency in order to its end. So that here also is a parity, no efficiency in Christs righteousness without mans, nor in mans without Christs to justifie. But when the two perfections meet, if neither lose its perfection, they may after the world is ended, perfect our justification, Thes. 24. p. 132. In the mean while, till our works be [Page 275] added to Christs satisfaction, what he saith of faith, that he every where implyeth of the satisfaction of Christ, that it is dead being alone, as to the use and purpose of justifying. And so as works make faith alive, so they make Christs satisfaction alive, as to the attainment of its end, justification.
4 That works justifie in the same kind of Causality and procurement with faith, not only proving Faith to be sound; but themselves being in the same obligation with Faith, not idle Concomitants, only standing by while Faith doth all (which some fools might imagine hee meaneth, when he calls them onely necessary Antecedents of Justification, pa. 223.) Nay they are Concomitants with Faith in the [very Act of] procuring it, and in that kind of Causality which they have, p. 299, 300.
5 They do all this as they are works. Even Faith it self justifieth, as it is an Act of ours, Append. p. 80. and as a morall duty, Append. p. 102. So do all other Morall duties as they are part of our sincere obedience to Christ, ibid.
6 That we are justified not only by works, Aph. p. 300. and according to our works, but also for our works, pa. 320. that good works are a ground and Reason of it, p. 221.
7 That we are justified for our works, that is, for the Merit of them. Not Merit in the most proper and strict sense, which is the performance of somewhat not due (by one that is not under the Soveraignty of him to whom it is performed) of that worth in it selfe, which bindeth him to whom it is done, in strict and naturall justice to requite him. Such an obligation can no creature lay upon God; Neither could perfect obedience, in respect of the Law of Works (if man had continued still upright) have so merited. [But so far as it was possible for a perfect man to have merited under the Covenant of works] hee may now merit also under the Covenant of Grace by his works, viz. in an improper way of Meriting: where the obligation to reward is Gods Ordinate Justice, and the truth of his promise, and the worthinesse lyeth in our performance of the Condition on our part. [Thus farr might Adam in his perfection have merited according to the Law of works, and so farr may wee merit according to the Covenant of Grace.] Aphorism, Thesis, 26. & pa. 138. 140, 141.
Let all this be laid together, and who can but per-force acknowledge together with the horns of the Lamb, the voyce of the Dragon also? and all that he hath spoken pretendedly to the diminution [Page 276] of works, under the fine terms of his [ causa sine qua non, his Gospel Condition, and necessary Antecedents] to be really but a Cloke to hide his diminution of Christ and exaltation of sinfull man? A Syrens song to draw poor souls to dash against the Rocks and be drowned in the gulph? Why had he not made our works conjunctly vvith Christs satisfaction, in his Thes. 56. the procatarctick and meritorious cause of our Justification, as well as he doth the satisfaction of Christ conjunctly with our Faith [or obedience] in the same Thesis the Causa ssne qua non, thereof? Had he so done, could he have ascribed more to vvorks under the name of a Meritorious cause, then he doth under the title of a poor improper Causa sine qua non? But by so doing he should have shewed himself in the light, when contrariwise he that doth evill hateth the light, neither cometh to the light lest his deeds should be reproved. Let now any of his Disciples produce (I will not say one Arminian, but) one Socinian, Papist, yea or Jew, that ascribes more to works, then this man, in derogation from Christ and Grace, else let him cease to be a follower of him, or openly and ingenuously profess that he followeth him as a Jew, Papist, or Socinian, and consequently that he hath made not Mr. Br. but M r Brs Masters his Master also in the doctrine of Justification: And that in advancing self so high, as to affirm he meriteth no less fully and properly then Christ himself hath or could have done: For, his merits are in order to Gods ordinate not naturall justice. But to shew the vanity of his distinction here, how carelesly he eludeth the holy Scriptures as meer shaddows and play-games, the Apostle denyeth man in this or that or in any sense to be justified by works. He saith not, Not by works, [as the efficient or meritorious cause, or as the Medium or Antecedent, or Condition, or Causa sine qu [...] non] lest any man should boast: but positively and peremptorily, not by Works as by Faith, yea not by works in any acceptation, upon any score and accompt. Mr. B rs chippings therfore have no more force then a chip to make the Holy Ghost to unsay what he hath said. And it is as good sense as if I should say, Mans bread doth not apparrell him, as it is the maker, or matter, or instrument, or merit of his clothing, but as it is the antecedent, or medium, or condition, or Causa sine qua non of his apparrelling, when contrariwise it doth not at all in any sense apparrell him.
CHAP. XXIV.
Mr. Baxters Sophism to prove that his Doctrine of Justification by Works, doth not at all derogate from the Doctrine of Faith, examined, and found to be meer vanity.
BEcause the Scripture attributeth Justification to Faith without works, and to Faith in opposition to works, excluding works and requiring Faith alone to apprehend the Righteousnesse which is by Christ, and denominating it the Righteousnesse of Faith, Rom. 4. 11. The Righteousnesse which is of Faith, Rom. 9. 30. & 10. 6. in opposition to the Righteousnesse of works. He easily seeth that he shall be excepted against for his antiscripturall doctrine in making Faith and works Concomitants in the same kind of causality and procurement of Justification. Therefore he makes it his sixth task to vindicate this his doctrine from all derogation from Faith, and from all unscripturall confounding of Faith and works together. To prove himself as innocent in this as in all the rest, he brings these Reasons.
B. Thes. 62. 1 Because though he makes Works and Faith to be the Conditions of our Justification yet (according to Scripture phrase) Faith may be called the onely Condition of the New Covenant, 1 Because it is the principall Condition, and works but the lesse principall: And so as a whole Countrey hath oft its name from the chief City, so may the Conditions of this Covenant from Faith. 2 Because all the rest are reducible to it; Either being presupposed as necessary Antecedents or means, or conteined in it as its parts, properties, or modifications; or else implyed as its immediate products, or necessary subservient means or consequents.
All without Book, one of M r Brs Mysticks that hath no one sound of Gods word patronizing or favouring it. Witnesse Mr. Br. who neither in his Thesis, nor in its Explication hath alledged one Scripture to make it good. Is Pythagoras come among us in a new body, speaking nothing but Parables and Paradoxes, which vulgar capacities can no more comprehend then they can Plato's Idea's, or Democritus his Atomes? If so, it shall be needfull for him to injoin upon his Schollars (as he did of old) five years dumbnesse or silence: Els if the mouth of a very Asse should be open, it would rebuke the madnesse of the Prophet, for delivering things [Page 278] so contradictive to the word, to himself, and to reason.
1 To the word and the Holy Ghost speaking by it, who every where opposeth Faith and works, as to Justification, making them to exclude not to infer or imply either the other. By faith, therefore not [at all] by works: not by works, therefore by faith alone. But this man puts them in a conjunction, makes Faith and works together the Condition of our justification, from thence to conclude that Faith is the onely Condition, and justifieth alone. So much a greater Artist is Mr. Br. then the Holy Ghost, and so ambitious of the praise of wisedome that he thinks himself to be but a vulgar idiot, if his wisdom be not stretched Nine whole words by measure, beyond and above the wisedom of the Holy Ghost.
2 Contradictive to himself. For Aph. p. 300. He denyeth that which he calleth an idle Concomitacny of works with Faith, that they onely stand by while Faith doth all, and concludes that they act together with faith in the same kind of causality to procure Justification, and so denyeth that we are justified by Faith onely. Here contrariwise he denyeth all such co-working of works with Faith, but that faith may be said to be the onely Condition, and to justifie onely.
3 Contradictive to reason also, (and yet this next to [ Condition] he seems to honour as the greatest God) it must be to the Goats and sheep of the mountains, not to Christs sheep, to men that have reason, that Mr. Br. must deliver this doctrine, That we are justified not by faith alone, but by works also, yet it stands nevertheles as a firm Maxim, faith is the onely condition, or justifieth alone. If the lips were shut and sealed up, yet reason would use a ventriloquy, or force a way thorow the ears to reclaim against such an absurdity. If I should so reason of Condemnation the contrary to Justification, that when the blind lead the blind and both fall into the ditch, when seducers pervert those that are made to be taken and destroyed, and so all utterly perish and are damned; That tho all are damned, yet it is but the leader and seducer alone that is damned, he for all that he hath seduced, and they all but damned in him their principall and leader: Would not Mr. Br be one of the first that would cry out at such an Arguing, as absurd and not Logicall.
Yet because he is a man made up of the very spirits of Reason, and brings his Reasons that his Assertion agrees with right reason according to the tenor of the Gospel: I shall produce two or three in steed of many Gospel Scriptures, and lay by them his Reasons [Page 279] to see how pertinently they will agree as a Commentary with the Text. The Holy Ghost tells us, Eph. 2. 8, 9. We are saved by Grace through faith, not of works lest any man should boast. Mr. Br. Comments upon this Text thus, i. e. Principally by Faith least any man should boast principally [of himself.] But not of works principally to exclude this principall boasting, yet lesse principally of works also that man may also boast lesse principally [of himself.] Or thus, according to his second reason: Of Faith and not of works unreducible to Faith lest any should boast, yet of works also that by some relation or cognation are reducible to Faith, that of such works we might boast. Shall we call this a hatchet or a Comment upon the Text. Which of these Explications is the more absurd? Or as if in this latter that runs more smoothly then the former, we might not conclude so wisely of any morall vertue or duty: When we are said to be justified by any or all good qualifications and works, we are said to be justified by Mercy or Chastity or Wisdom onely, because all other vertues and works are reducible to this, by some one or other kind of relation or cognation.
Again, Rom. 4. 16. It is of faith that it may be of grace, the Antithesis whereof is given, ver. 4. Not of works that it might not be of debt. The Comment which Mr. Brs first reason gives to this Text is, Nay it is both of Faith and works, works are comprehended in Faith as the lesse principall in the principall: So that the meaning of the Text is, that it is principally of Faith, that it may be principally of Grace, but lesse principally of works that [at least] less principally it may be of debt also. His second reason thus Comments, It is of Faith, that is of Faith, and works reducible to Faith, that it may be of Grace, not of works unreducible to faith, (such as are murther, witchcraft, Sodomy, blasphemy, &c.) that it may not be of debt.
Again, Tit. 3. 5. Not by works of righteousnesse which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, i. e. saith Mr. Br. Not principally by our works, but according to his mercy. Yet lesse principally by our works, and not according to his mercy. Or not by works of righteousnesse done by us that are not, but according to Gods mercy that is reducible to Faith. What else to make of it when he hath taught me, I may divulge. I might annex many Texts of the same nature, upon which these two reasons of his set as Comments, will speak out so much of sense, as the Commentator [Page 280] doth in them of Conscience. But I have fully both examined and an [...]wered before, all that is comprised in this Thesis, where I took occasion to weigh every branch thereof, under the notion of his second Argument which he brings to prove Justification by works. To it I refer the reader for fuller satisfaction.
All this hath been fully and oft answered before. Here onely I shall intreat the reader to retein in mind what hath been before pointed at.
1 That the Gospel mentioneth not, knoweth not any such distinction of a first and second Justification by Christ, but speaks onely of one justification. That this doubling of Justifications is but a juggling fancy of the Papists by them first created, and by Mr. Br. licked into a finer mode and form, for the pillaring up of their Justification by works which hath no proppage from the word.
2 That according to Mr. Brs principles who caseth both together in one kind of causality, it cannot be discerned how [otherwise then by bare and glozing words] any pre-eminence can be given so as duly to belong to Faith above and before works in this businesse.
3 That even where and in what respects Mr. Br. gives a pre-eminence, it belongeth more properly to works then to Faith: Because the consummation and perfitting of Justification is so far more excellent then the beginning thereof, as that which is perfect, then that which is unperfect. And herein he equalizeth and in som phrases seems to prefer works to Faith, in their operation to perfect what is begun.
4 That the Scripture affirms not onely the first but also the last point and period, the consummation as well as the beginning of Justification to be by Faith. By the Gospel the righteousnesse of God (viz. which he giveth us to Justification) is revealed from Faith to [Page 281] Faith, saith the Apostle; he saith not from Faith to works, but from Faith to Faith, that is (omitting other Interpretations partly ridiculous, and partly invalid and besides the scope of the Apostle) from Faith inchoat to Faith growing and consummat, or coming neerer and neerer to consummation. This Exposition the choicest of our Divines give, as both properly agreeing with the drift of the Text, and as owned and patronized by the like phrase in other Scriptures: From strength to strength, Psal. 88. 7. From glory to glory, 2 Cor. 3. 18. which even all acknowledge to be understood, from one to another, from a lesser to a greater degree of strength and glory. So also of this phrase, from faith to faith. And thus not onely the beginning but also the increase and consummation of Gospel Justification in our own Consci [...]nces before God, is here attributed to Faith, which as it groweth to more and more strength, by apprehending more and more revelations of the Gospel; so it more and more declareth and evidenceth to the soul the certainty of our Justification, to the continuall stablishment and increase of our peace and joy in the Holy Ghost. And thus the Magis and Minus is in us not in God; and whatsoever of increase there is, is from Faith not from works. Nay the same Apostle tels us it is a most unglorious task which this uncomparably wise and profound man undertakes, viz. to teach them that are wise to salvation to become fools thereunto. Are yee so foolish? saith he, having begun in the Spirit, are yee now made perfect by the Flesh? That by the Spirit and the Flesh is to be understood Faith and works in order to Justification, cannot, will not be denyed. When therefore Mr. B. teacheth men to seek the beginning of Justification by faith, and the perfecting thereof not by Faith onely but by works also, he teacheth them to be foolish [ O foolish] the worst fools to salvation, and to be wise onely to condemnation. This is to be wise according to Mr. B. wisedom in this Tractate, that is wise after the Flesh not after the Spirit, in seeking happiness in the way of works which the wisedom of the Flesh teacheth, not in the way of Faith w ch the wisdom of the Spirit, the wisedom of Christ & his Gospel revealeth. But all this, together with a plain and full discovery of the vanity of this evasion, hath been in its due place before held out, which would be but a tyring of the Reader here again to be troubled with.
Onely the generall and chief thing which Mr. Br. both here and elswhere layeth as a foundation to his Justification by works, [Page 282] it shall not be amisse briefly to examine here, for the prevention of deceit to his Reader, before I put a totall conclusion and period to what I have thought fit to except against this Work of his. If it prove sandy and unsound, his great Colossus of Justification by works, falls all to shivers. This is his quaint interpretation of [ faith] in all such Scriptures as ascribe to Faith (in opposition to works) our justification. That then by it we are to understand all Gospel duties, all that Christ Commandeth; not Faith in a distinct consideration from other qualifications and duties, but Faith in a collective sense, comprizing all morall duties and actions within it, which is Faith and all its fruits, yea more, Faith and all that is reducible to it. And thus according to Mr. Br. so oft as we are said to be justified by Faith not by works, we must understand that the Holy Ghost meaneth, that we are justified by Faith and works done after the tenor of the Gospel, not by Faith and works done after the tenor of the Law. Behold now the unfathomed depth of Mr. Brs wit, and the unlimitted verge of his power. His wit surpassing all the wisedom of all good and Orthodox men and Angels; of whom no one had ever the reach since the world began, to find with all his searching such a bugbear sense lurking in the plain Scripture Texts of the Apostle: His power, that with the stroking of this Mercuriall rod, he makes fire and water, life and death, hell and heaven, to lay down all their enmity each to other, and sweetly to coll lodge and incorporate together. Who would have thought that Paul who so seriously and sacredly professeth that he had rather in the Church to speak five words with his understanding so that he might teach and edifie others also, than ten thousand in an [unknown] Tongue, 1 Cor. 14. 17, 19. And in preaching the Gospel discended to the unlearned and babes to feed them with milke, to make all plain and easie to their understandings, 1 Cor. 3. 2. should yet every where deliver the chief doctrine of the Gospel [Justification by Christ] in so dark Parables and riddles, that none could find it out, untill this Oedipus inspired from Socinus and Arminius, rose up to un [...]iddle him? For let there be named any one Protestant in any age (till Mr. Br. held out his Candle to give light to the Sun) that ever could dream of this Allegoricall sense, after the principles of Origen, lurking in Pauls words? Or what hinders now but Faith may be turned into works and works into Faith, Grace into strict justice and strict justice into free Grace, the Law into Gospel and the Gospel into meer Law; since Mr. Br. hath made a reconciliation [Page 283] and composure between Faith and Works in the point of Justification.
But whether this interpretation of Mr. B. be so firm as it is pretty and witty, hath been before examined, as elswhere, so in the Examination of his third Argument for Justification by works, drawn from his large definition of Faith which he giveth in his Thesis 70. Here onely I shall mention some phrases or names by which Justifying Faith is described in Scriptures, and leave it to the judgment of every intelligent Reader, to determine whether works can properly or in any tolerable sense be said to be comprized in faith as acting in the same kind of causality about such acts as those phrases or names imply.
1 As Mr. Br. himself in his shorter definition defineth faith, it is called our Receiving of Christ, Jo. 1. 12. and that not in that wide sense which Mr. Br. fancieth, but in that strict sense wherein Paul interprets it, viz. the receiving of Christ to be our Righteousnes, or receiving abundance of Grace and of the gift of righteousness by him, Rom. 5. 16.
2 It is called the directing of the eye, or looking to Christ yea to Christ lifted up [upon the Cross] for healing. Io. 3. 14.
3 A coming to Christ for Life, Jo. 6. 37. & 5. 40.
4 The eating of his flesh and drinking of his blood to everlasting life, Jo. 6. 53-56.
5 A putting on of Christ [as a Garment of Righteousness] to cover our nakednesse and filthinesse, Phil. 3. 9. Rev. 3. 18. I could add many the like phrases if it were needfull. But these may suffice; and who is there that sees not these to imply an instrumentality in faith to make Christ ours to Justification? Yea and that in faith onely and not in works at all? for how can Charity, Chastity, Mercy, righteousnesse, and the severall acts of these and other qualifications, of which most have our Neighbour or Brother for their immediate Object, about which in acting they are occupant; be called the receiving, intuition of, and coming to Christ? the eating of his flesh and drinking his blood, or the putting on of him for righteousnesse? It would seem strange to me that any man waking and not dreaming should conclude such works to be Antecedents, and not the fruits of Justification and life by Christ. Or that when faith is described by these denominating phrases, works also as couched in faith, should contrary to their nature be so denominated. [Page 284] Nay Faith is thus dive [...]sly named in opposition to works, yea to Gospel works. For so doth our Saviour answer and determine the question put to him, what to do [under the Gospel] that we might work the works of God? i. e. what is to be done on our part that we may be justified and saved? This is the work of God (saith he) [that is, this is in steed of all doings all workings] that ye beleeve in him whom he hath sent, Jo. 6. 28, 29. which after he expresseth more fully to be a beleeving in him that came down from heaven, and that gave, and as he gave his life for the world, and giveth life to the world. All works are excluded that this beleeving might be reserved, sole, entire, sacred, and soveraign to receive Christ to Justification and salvation.
Here at length I shall put a period to my Examination of this Tractate of Mr. Br. in which I have not wittingly let passe any one particle of all that he hath brought to the re-erecting of Justification by works, without examining the strength and force of it, w ch if he had done in relation to all the Arguments which the Protestant Churches and Divines have brought against it, before he adventured peremptorily to pronounce their doctrine H [...]torodox and Antinomistick, and the doctrine of the Papists in this point sound and holy; I am of opinion that either this work of his had never come forth to the subverting of souls and troubling of the Church, or if it had so come forth, it would have been a very abomination to all that are not made to be taken, and trampled under foot as an accursed thing. But now having begun in that manner as we see, to set up this worst piece of damning Popery, under a false pretence of love to the Protestant, and hatred of the Popish Religion. It is not to be expected but that seeing his reputation jeoparded, he will per fas & nefas, proceed to seek the support of it, though it be to the further ecclipsing of the Grace of God and honour of Christ.
CHAP. XXV.
The Conclusion of the whole Treatise, demonstrating that although we with the Scriptures exclude works from Justification, yet we include them as necessary to a Christian life, and that no less seriously, and upon more spirituall grounds, than the Evill Workers that will be justified by them.
HAving ended (at present) with Mr. Baxter, I have for the Conclusion of all, somewhat to say that may have relation to the weak reader. It is a difficult thing to remove works from justification, and not to expose our selves therein to the Censure of babish, ungospellized, and unstablished men, that we therein banish them also from the life and practice of a Christian. When we teach that the righteousness of the Gospel is revealed from Faith to Faith: as it is written, the just shall live by Faith, [not by works:] Rom. 1. 17. And that no man is justified by the Law, i. e. by the strictest observation of the righteousness of the Law, Because it is written, that the just shall live by Faith, Gal. 3. 11. That the inheritance is by Faith, not by works, lest any man should boast, Rom. 4. 1, 2. Eph. 2. 8, 9. That it is of Faith that it may be of Grace: and if it be of grace, then is it no more of works, else grace were no more Grace; But if it be of works, then is it no more of grace, otherwise works were no more works, Rom. 4. 16. & 11. 6. That whosoever seeketh justification and blessedness by works, worketh himself out of it, and shall never attaine it, because they sought it not by Faith, but as it were by the works af the Law, Rom. 9. 31, 32. At the sound of this doctrine the unspiritual man excepteth, and flesh and bloud swelleth murmuringly Crying out, What profit is it then to serve the Lord? Why should I fast, pray, give alms, shew mercy, study holines and purity, deny my self the pleasures of sinn, any more, when all these have no [...]fficacy in them to justifie and save? It was the Clamor of men against Paul, when he preached the riches of grace abounding the more, by the abounding of Mans sinns: We will therefore sinn (said they) that Grace may abound, Rom. 6. 1. And do evill that good may come, Rom. 3. 8. This doctrine of Faith makes voyd the Law, loosing us from all obligation to perform the holines and righteousness which the Law requireth, Rom. 3. 31. And (as Mr. Br. teacheth them further to reply against God) tendeth to drive obedience out of the world. For if it be denyed that man can [Page 286] merit happiness by his own righteousness, he will cease to be righteous and take the bitt in his teeth to run rebell. So deep an impression hath the Covenant of works yet still in mans heart, that though he be insufficient to do or to think as he ought, 2 Cor. 3. 5. yet he will have [ Do and Live] to be the issue of Life and Death still. And Mr. Br. teacheth them to stopp the hole of mans insufficiency with this nayl (not of the Sanctuary but of Alexander the Copper-Smith) because we cannot perform legall therefore Gospel-obedience shall do the work, (as if work were not work, when the Title of Gospel is written on it) and because we cannot fullfill perfect, therefore sincere obedience shall serve the Turn.
Hence is it that the Popish and Arminian doctrines wherewith this Book of Mr. Br. is fully fraughted, takes every where so plausibly with, and hath such Compleat acceptance among the multitude both of the learned and unlearned. It is a doctrine not above but agreeing with the principles of Nature and the naturall man: even the naturall Conscience suggesteth it to the unlearned, to seek for happiness by their own righteousness. And both that and the precepts of Moral Philosophy also, together with the Law of Moses, instruct the learned to seek for the Summum Bonum, the best felicity, all felicity in the way of vertue and vertuous performances. Here now when any comes to them in the name of Christ, holding forth to them the same doctrine, it kindles in them so swiftly as fire in towe, no need of the teaching of God, or renewing of the Spirit; Flesh and bloud of it self gives its suffrage to it. An easie task have these teachers to perswade men and draw disciples after them, and set them in an activeness and dexterity of practicing what they teach. It is easily learned to swimm swiftly with the stream, and to drop the Bowle down the hill. But to teach men to live by Faith, and yet to be fruitfull in good works too: Not to seek justification and life by their righteousness, yet to be zealous of all righteousnes and good works continually; hic labor hoc opus est. It is above the principles of Nature to apprehend it. He must swimm against the stream, and roll the Bowl against the Hill, walk after the Spirit and not after the Flesh, that puts it effectually into practice.
Yet that our Doctrine doth not let loose the reins to the flesh, nor (howsoever carnall sensuallists may abuse it to their Condemnation) in the least degree blunt the spirits of the spirituall man to well-doing, nor deny the both expediency and necessity of all good works in the life of a Christian, is evident. 1 Because although [Page 287] we exclude morall qualifications and works from officiating to Justification, yet we retein and include them in and unto sanctification. Our doctrine with Christs and his Apostles, holds forth the Lord Jesus to every soul to be received both as a justifier and sanctifier; declareth him to have descended from heaven both to justifie the ungodly, and to sanctifie the justified. That he is made unto us of God, not onely Righteousness, but Sanctification also: To justifie us by an imputed and sanctifie us by an inherent righteousness: The one by the effusion of his bloud, the other by the infusion of his Spirit. That his office is not onely to satisfie justice for us that we may live, but also to new principle and create us, that we may live to God. Not onely to redeem us from all iniquity, but withall to purifie us [into] a peculiar people, zealous of good works. In whom both these works are not in good measure, neither of them is in any measure, effectually accomplished. That sanctification is the purchase of Christs bloud, but the immediate effect of his Spirit; merited by his death, but Conferred and Communicated by his life as all power both in heaven and in earth is given into his hand, and as he is ascended on high to give gifts to men. That both imputed and inherent righteousnes as termined and actually existent in and upon man, proceed from his union unto Christ. That Sanctification is as great and glorious a work as Justification, and our real as our relative holiness and righteousness: Neither could it be discerned so cleerly how we were quickened [in Law] & raised from the dead, who were dead in sinns and trespasses, and so passed from death to life, from Condemnation to salvation, by the forgiveness of sinn; were we not also quickened & raised up from under the death and bondage of sinn, no more to serve sinn, but as alive from the dead, had our fruit [and living motions] to practicall holines and righteousness. That as well our sanctification as our Justification, is in Christ, and both from him derivable to us by Faith in him. That Faith is qualified by God to apprehend Christ both to purifie us by his bloud, and to sanctifie us by his Spirit, and so becomes instrumentall both to Justification and sanctification, yet by a twofold Act; as the Condemned Traytor extends one and the same hand to receive from his gracious Prince a pardon of his Treason, and a Commission to be his vice-gerent in some Noble and magnificent office therein to serve his Prince, promote the welfare of his Countrey, and make his own name and person famous and pretious in the eyes of all men, among whom his present vertuous behaviour [Page 288] and Noble atchievements may wipe off and bring to oblivion the stain of his former delinquency. That one (and the same a chief) end of our Justification by Christ is our sanctification & the fruits thereof, here inchoat and increasing, hereafter Consummate and perfected. Therefore are we delivered out of the hands of our enemies, that we may serve him without Fear in holiness and righteousness, Luk. 1. 74, 75. Therefore are we dead to and delivered from the Law, by the body of Christ, that we should be married to another, even to him that is raised from the dead, that we might bring forth fruit to God, and serve not in the oldness of the letter, but in the Newness of the Spirit, Rom. 7. 4, 6. Christ hath made us Kings and Priests, or a Royall Priesthood unto God, to offer up living sacrifices acceptable to God through him, 1 Pet. 2. 5, 9. Rev. 1. 6. To our instalment therein are pre-required, the sanctification of Consecration, and the sanctification of habitual righteousness and holiness infused into us and set in actual operation in us. The former of these is done chiefly by the sacrificed bloud of Christ sprinkled upon the Conscience, and the sacred vestiments of his Righteousness put on by Faith (as was typified primarily of Christ the High Priest, and secondarily of the Priesthood of Saints under the kingdome of Christ, by the Consecration of Aaron and his sonns, with the bloud of the Altar sprinkled on them, and the putting on of holy vestiments upon them, their own being Cast off, Lev. 8.) The latter Chiefly by the Spirit of Christ, in livening enabling and acting them to the work and worship for which they are Consecrated (and I know not but this may be also figured in the ordination of the Priests under the Law, by the Anoynting oyl in the same Chapter mentioned and used.) That differs but little from Justification as termined to this its end: This differs not at all from sanctification when it is taken in the sense wherein the scriptures often, and our Divines still use it, (when they distinguish between Justification and sanctification) viz. in its active sense, the inspiration of the habits of holiness and righteousness, in its passive sense, the same habits inspired into the soul. Whosoever wanteth either of these prerequisits to this sacred office, we grant him to be but a titular Priest, a Mock-Saint. For without Consecration to offer as a Priest speaks him an usurper: And to profess Priest and not to offer speaks him a rebell and revolter. We own no sanctification by the Spirit of Christ, which hath not Justification by his bloud, in order going before it, nor any Justification or forgiveness by the death of Christ, which hath not sanctification by his Spirit, in order of nature following it.
Thus we do not (as the Papists and Mr. Br. learning from the Papists object calumniously) exclude works from the life of a Christian; but assert them to be necessary to a Christian life: so necessary, that without them whosoever is Capable of working, is no Christian. Though we exclude them from Justification, yet we include them in sanctification, their habits as parts in the whole, their acts or themselves acted, as fruits thereof. Nay we do not deny in a good sense some kind of Causality which they have to sanctifie, that is, to the increase of sanctification. To him that hath, it shall be given, and he shall have more abundantly. Well done good and faithfull servant, thou hast been faithfull in a little, I will make thee Ruler over much, &c. saith our Saviour; Ask and ye shall have, seek and ye shall finde, knock and it shall be opened to you. The ground or earth which drinketh in the Rain which cometh oft upon it, and bringeth forth herbs [or fruit, &c.] is neer to a blessing. But that which bringeth forth bryars and thorns is rejected and neer to cursing, &c. Heb. 6. 7, 8. with many other the like Testimonies of Scripture, which it would be superfluous here to recite. How then do we in the least measure blunt the edge of mens affections to good works, by teaching that they do not justifie, when we affirm them necessary to sanctification? If Mr. Br. should affirm that Bread and Wine and other Creatures appropriated to mans nutriment, are not ordeined of God to Clothe him, or that his garments are not ordeined of God to Feed him; doth he therein minister to me just Cause to exclaym against him, that he fights against natural reason, perswading men never more to eat, because their meat is not appointed to Clothe them? or to walk naked because he saith, their garments are not usefull to nourish them? No more Cause hath Mr. Br. or the Papists to accuse us that we banish good works from the life of a Christian, by teaching that they are not usefull or appropriated to justifie, but to sanctifie very usefull in all the particulars before-mentioned. How unacquainted with the frame of a Christian spirit are these objectors? Either they do not experimentally know, or else do stifle within themselves this knowledge, that a Christ-enjoying and Gospellized soul gaspeth no less for deliverance from the bondage, than from the Condemnation of sinn: delights so much in performing duty to Christ, as in receiving pardon from him; groanes so pathetically under the body as ever he did under the guilt of sinn: Cryeth with equall vehemency of aff [...]ction [...] for holiness unto God as for happiness with him; for Conformity to him in righteousness [Page 290] as in glory: makes no other use of his redemption, than to run at liberty the race of obedience set before him: embraceth and delighteth in sanctifying as well as in saving grace, in the infusion as in the imputation of righteousness: labours to dispense all for the Lord and his service, whatsoever he hath received from the Lord and his free grace. Therefore whatsoever the Lord powrs upon him to sanctification is received with so great joy in the Holy Ghost as that which is communicated to him to justification: and he labours to be and express himself wholly Christs, as well as to obtein Christ wholly his. As for Mr. Brs meerly Morall Men that will receive Christ neither to Justification nor to sanctification, but upon their own terms, purchasing him by Fine and rent, that the glory might be partly theirs and not wholly Christs; It is enough that Mr. Br. hardens and subverts them in this their Moral madness wholly contradictive to the spirituallness and wisdome of the Gospel. We shall not be insnared by all the nicities of his Arts and Chimicall extracts of the spirits of his spoyling Philosophy, to involve our selves with him in the guilt of poysoning so many souls, and turning their best righteousness and devotion into sinn, by encouraging them to appropriate the same to such an end as is destructive to the glory of Gods grace, and contrary to the minde and rule of the Gospel. We have one Master which is Christ, his dictates expressed by him and his Apostles in the plainness and foolishness of their preaching are so sacred and authoritative with us, that neither the most labyrinthical mazes of sophistry shall unwinde us, nor the extravagancies of the most luxuriating witts, nor the most Curious plausibilities of humane reason shall (by Gods Grace) unreason us so from our selves, as to undisciple us from him. Yea though we could not in some things give a satisfactory answer to the sophisticated reasonings of these disputers against Christ and his Gospel, yet should we fit down as fools with Christ and his Apostles adoring the manifold wisdome of God revealed in a mystery, rather than be wise with these men to the world; knowing that the foolishness of God is wiser, and the weakness of God is stronger than men: And we seek wisdome and happiness from the mines of Christs Gospel, not from the dry quarrie of mans literature and inventions.
2 Though we reject it as an arrogant and presumptuous doctrine, which Mr. Br. in Common with the Papists teacheth, [That we are justified and saved by our good qualifications and works [Page 291] for our works, for the merit and worthinesse of our good works] yet we teach and believe that they are (in respect of all that have age, ability, and time to perform them) necessary Consequents of our Justification and Antecedents of our glorification. Let a man pretend what he will of Faith in Christ; yet if by Faith hee do not cleave firmly to him, to derive from him power to mortifie every sinn, to perform all duty: if he can allow within himselfe any known evill, or continue in the neglect of any known duty, without striving to get the victory in the strength of Christs Spirit, over every such infirmity: wee take such a man so farr from Christ, as Christ is from Belial, A branch in Christ not bearing fruit, which is appointed to be cut off and cast into the fire, because he was never in Christ otherwise but by a formall profession, never had vitall union to him, or communion with him, by the ligatures of Faith and the Spirit. For sanctification is an individual companion of Justification: And the office of Christ is to be the Author of both to all that believe. Otherwise the work of his Mediator-ship should not be compleated in either one of these, and so he should not be our Christ if a halfe Christ only to us. And Sanctification is still begun and carried on towards perfection also (where there is time and meanes) in the kingdom of Grace, before its perfecting and swallowing up into glory, in the Kingdom of glory. No righteousness and holiness of man is begun in the next life: But there shall be the consummation in power, of that which here was begun in truth, though it laboured of, and languished with much infirmity.
3 Wee are guiltless of those Crimes wherewith Mr. Br. endeavours to defame us and our Doctrine. For 1. Neither doe wee teach or think (as M. Br. suggesteth) that nothing is preaching Christ, but preaching him as a pardoning justifying Saviour? Aph. pa. 328. Indeed we preach Justification to consist, if not only, yet chiefly in the pardon of sinn through the mediation of Christs death. That this benefit of Christ is perfected by the satisfaction which he hath made to Gods justice in suffering for us, and appropriated to us by faith alone. But wee deny this to be all the Gospel-grace exhibited to us by Christ, and in and through him. We hold him forth as the Light of the world also, having all the treasures of wisedom and knowledg hid in him, Joh. 8. 12. Col. 2. 3. from whom are all the irradiations and Revelations of all the mysteries [Page 292] of Grace effectuall to life and holiness, Mat. 13. 11. 1 Cor. 2. 10. And to the word and spirit of Christ we send all men for illumination. And the Life of the world, not only to restore them to life in law, by Justification, but as the Lord and principle of Life, to beget in us an inherent life active and moving to all obedience. Therefore we endeavour to send all to Christ for life, even for this life, because the whole judgment and dispensation thereof is committed to him, and he is our all [to sanctification also.] Joh. 5. 21, 22, 25, 26. Col. 3. 11. We indeed except against that Doctrine as more Legal than Evangelical, that roars & thunders Condemnation against poor Exiles in a dry wilderness, where is no water, fainting and even dead with thirst, if they do not arise, work, and fulfill their task. We require first, that the Rock be cloven with the Rod of God, that the water of life may gush out in full Rivers, and that the fainting souls be brought to drink thereof, and then called upon in the life and strength which they have hence received, to work and be doing. Yea to come to this stream often to drink, that their strength and spirits may be daily more revived, that they may b [...]come daily more enabled for, and more abundant in the work of the Lord. We have not with Mr. Br. yet learned the skill of preaching good works to make Christ ours, but follow the rule of the Scriptures, to preach Christ into the hearts of men, to make them fruitfull in good works. Neither doe wee count all formall obedience and righteousnesse of men, though conscientiously, and by the guidance of Naturall Conscience, performed to be either sanctification, or the fruit thereof.
That onely is sanctification which flowes from the heart of Christ, and is infused by the Spirit of Christ. For the attai [...] ment thereof we call all men into union and fellowship with Christ; so far are we from holding that Nothing is preaching Christ, but the preaching him as Justifier and Saviour, that we hold it an empty Preachment that preacheth any good thing without Christ, or out of Christ, of which men are not taught to make Christ the Alpha and the Omega. We leave it to Mr. Br. and his brethren to urge works, duties, obedience, &c. and once in a Moon, upon an auspicious Tropick thereof, to remember Christ and grace, and tell us that all must be done by the help of grace, and without Christ we can do nothing: Yet leaving us uncertain still, whether it be the Grace and Christ of Pelagius, or else of God reconciled to us, that [Page 293] he speaketh. I should be too long in expressing fully how we hold forth Christ, whole Christ, and only Christ, to Adoption, protection, perseverance, strengthening, comforting, perfecting, &c. In a word, to all that is either good to be received, or good to be done. In him wee teach that God will have all his fr [...]sh springs to reside, that without him we are nothing, can do nothing; that in him and by him we have all, and can do all things. That therefore we preach nothing but Christ, yet preach all that is to be preached in preaching him, because in him it pleased the Father that all fulness should dwell, Col. 1. 19. even all fulness for us: so that in him we are full, out of him meer emptiness. We would not have one beam of this Sun of Righteousness clouded, but labour to discover to our people his full glory and Soveraignty to all those sacred ends to which God hath consecrated him, that if any would have nothing of Christ to be preached but his pardoning and saving, the sin may be wholly theirs, not ours, that they will receive the skirt of Christ, and consequently refuse Christ, when we preach to them whole Christ, and all the benefits that are by him.
Nor 2 do we deny an ordinate and subordinate love to our selves (as M [...]. Br. slanders us no lesse bitingly than secretly, App. pa. 81, 82.) in teaching that it is the most Gospel- [...]rame of Spirit to perform duty out of meer love to God, without seeking by such duties wrought [ quasi opere operato] remission of sins, redemption from Hell, and right to glory by the Merit thereof, (as he teacheth us to do, thinking no doubt, his glory shall be great, if he can there perswade where all the su [...]tlest sons of Satan, the Jesuits have not been able.) Nay we maintayn that none can regularly love himself who loveth not God above himself, and seeks not Gods glory more than his own good. That whosoever in a pretext of love to himself brings his fardle of trashie works at the feet of Christ, by them to purchase to himself the benefits of his death, is of all men the worst enemie to himself, incurs rejection and expulsion from Christ and all the benefits of his death and resurrection. For hee was sent to seeke o [...]ely that which was lost, came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repen [...]nce. He loves himself indeed, and spiritually, that for his love to God denies himself. The self-dejected Publican is acce [...]ted with God, when the prating Pharisee is hurled with his mouth full of works out at the door. Or is there any great difference between this and the Devils doctrine preached to our first [Page 294] Parents? Ye shall be as Gods, said the Devill; Ye shall be all Christs, Saviours, Justifiers, saith Mr. Br. Your righteousness and Christs righteousness shall jump together into the same kind of Causality to justifie and save you. Our first Parents hearkned, and seeking to become Gods, became Devils, or (what is worse) slaves to the Devill. We have all felt the smart, yet many, and that of them which are termed Angels, listen earnestly to the like hissing of the Serpent now again. We can but mourn for them, that in madd love to themselves will hasten up to heaven, by climbing high Steeples, that look fairly thither-ward, but can never heave them up to it, nay contrariwise can give them no such sustentation, but that they fall thence, and dash themselves into shivers. Yet in our doctrine is contained a wise and ordinate love to our selves: Though we use not works as waxen wings to soar aloft to kisse the Sun, and settle our selves in the same Sphere with him, yet wee make use of our qualifications and duties to the continuall encrease of our sanctification: and to what greater good for himself can mans strongest love to himself aspire, than to his full and real perfection, consisting in his restitution to Gods image, and conformity to his will and nature? This shall be the Consummate blessedness which we shall enjoy above, and it is a blessedness inchoate and increasing, while we passe from strength to strength in it here. Who are the self-haters and self-destroyers, the Papists or we, the success will at length evidence, and such professed Divines and Christians among us, as have not their eyes soyled with Kederminster dust and smoak, can discern already.
Nor thirdly, doth our doctrine tend to drive obedience out of the world: So that we may answer Mr. Brs question, Aphor. p. 325. [ If men once beleeve that works are not so much as a part of the Condition of our Justification, will it not much tend to relax their dilig [...]nce?] with the authority of the Apostle, who having taught his Ephesians that we are saved by grace through faith, not of works lest any man should boast, Eph. 2. 8, 9. Yet concludeth, that as many as have learned Christ truly, and heard him, and have been taught by him as the truth is in Jesus: These all have learned to put off concerning the former▪ conversation, the old Man which is corrupt, &c. and to be renewed in the spirit of the mind, and to put on the New Man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness, Eph. 4. 20.—24. If Mr. Br. had been taught of God as the truth is in Jesus, I should think he would not have put, at [Page 295] least upon deliberation left in print such a question and bold Cavill against the Apostle, yea against Christ himself.
Object. But if good works will neither justifie nor save me, why should I do them, and not take the liberty to do what I list?
Answ. The voyce of a Rebel against God, who if hee may not serve God to his own ends, will not serve him at all, and professeth openly that he doth all that he doth in Gods work, not for Gods sake, but for his own sake. An Objection more deserving to be answered with a Thunder-bolt, than with Scripture-reason. Yet may there be alledged many other most holy and honourable ends for which we are to do good works, though we be not justified and saved by them. These I had thought here to have particularized, but the work is swoln already to a bignes and dimension never intended at first. And this Task hath been already so fully performed by so many of our Protestant Writers in answer to the Papists, that I should but glean after them to say a little, but begin a new work, if I should say all that they have sayd, and might be said to this purpose. I therefore transmit the Reader for his full satisfaction to read Calv. Instit. lib. 3. Cap. 16. Zanch. Confess. Fidei pro se & sua Familia, bound with his Miscellan Ʋrsin. Catech. Quest 91. Catech. and his Quest. 5. upon that Question. Tylenus Synt. part 2. disp. 46. Th. 8, 9, 10, 11. where is to be read too short an abbreviation of the three former. But M. Perkins in one of his works I remember (though at present I am bereaved of them all) hath the very same words of Zanchy translated into English in answer to this question. And since these, whole hundreds both of English and forreign Divines, have after Zanchy and Perkins delivered the same things in substance with them, though some more largely, some more compendiously, so that to the exercised Reader it will be superfluous for me to write any thing upon the same subject.
I shall conclude all in the words of Augustine, as more needing his Apology than himself, where he useth it. Lib. de Spir. & Litera. Cap. 35. Haec egi libro isto loquacius fortasse quàm sat est: Sed contra inimicos Gratia Dei paraeùm mihi dixisse videor. Nihil que mihi tam multum dicere delectat, quam ubi mihi & Scriptura ejus plurimum suffragatur, & id agitur, ut qui gloriatur, in Domomino glorietur, & in omnibus gratias agamus, Domino Deo nostro sursum corda habentes; unde a patre luminum omne Datum optimum, & omne donum perfectum est; that is, These things have I treated of in this Book, it may be with more than enough [Page 296] plenty of words and language: But I seem to my selfe to have spoken little against the Enemies of the grace of God. And I take delight to be large in speaking about nothing else so much, as when both the Scripture doth most give its testimony with me, and the question treated on is, that hee which glorieth may glory in the Lord, and that in all things we may give thanks to God, having our hearts lifted up to the Father of Lights from whom every good and every perfect gift discendeth.
He it is that freely justifieth us by his Grace, To him be the praise and glory of all, and let his Kingdom come, and be speedily inlarged throughout the world, that from all parts thereof there may be a joyfull acclamation of Saints, Amen, Amen.
Explication.
I have oft heard, that one fool may put more Questions in an hour, then a whole University of Divines can answer in an age. If it be true, what are we to conclude of the Questions of M r Baxter, the mirror of his age, for wit and profoundness in learning, who sitteth in the Chair alone, passing his censure upon all the Divines that are or have been, such are ignorant and unstudied, such judicious and learned, &c. his Questions surely will try the braines of men: and oh that he were so dexterous in Answering as in Questioning! Then (to use his own words) we would take him for a Divine indeed, yea for a Teacher sent from Heaven, for no mortal weight upon Earth can answer many things which he questioneth. Let us therefore hear himself answering himself.
A compleat and profound answer, who so stupid or way-ward, that he resteth not satisfied with it? The Question was, Whether the redeemed are immediately upon the price paid delivered from any of the curse of the Law, if not from all? He answers, in this case the undertaking of satisfaction had the same immediate effects upon Adam, as the satisfaction it self, upon us, or for us: But what were those immediate effects upon Adam? He answereth, a riddle, unriddle what this is, what these effects are, & eris mihi magnus Apollo, such a one shall have a Temple built unto him, from which to give answer and resolution to all other questions and doubts in Divinity, Oracularly. And who more deserving of this honour, then Mr. Baxter? Who more able to unriddle his own Question, than himself? That he therefore may be taken for the Divine indeed, he so resolveth the Question, as his own words above declare. The benefit which Adam and Eve forthwith received upon Christs undertaking to make satisfaction for them, is the most remarkable immediate effect of Christs death, whereof the redeemed partake. But the suspension of the rigorous execution of the sentence of the Law, was the benefit that Adam and Eve upon such undertaking of Christ for them, forthwith received. Ergo, The suspending of the rigorous execution of the sentence of the Law, is the most observable immediate effect of Christs death, whereof the redeemed partake. The Proposition he proveth thus, becaus there were none els existent besides Adam and Eve, when Christ so undertook; therefore the effects of his satisfaction must be upon them, or upon none. The assumption he takes to be clear by its own light, onely he addeth, that this suspending was a kind of deliverance.
If this be not the sum and force of his answer to the Question, Capiat qui capere potis est, I must plead my self not guilty of understanding him. But it is enough evident that this is his meaning. Now if I listed to answer his Argument, I should tell him that both premisses labour of one and the same fallacy, which is in Schools termed Petitio principij, an assuming of that as granted, which is in Question. The validity of both Propositions depending upon these begg'd Principles, that Christ first undertook to make satisfaction to God for the sin of Adam and Eve when they were existent, and that they were in the number of the redeemed ones, as soon as they had sinned, for so was the Question, whether the redeemed, &c. are freed from any of the Curse of the Law? Now what Mr. Baxter goes about to prove, he doth it by the example of Adam and Eve, which [Page 28] is in no wise a competent proof, unless they be proved first to have been existent when Christ undertook to satisfie, and secondly to have been then redeemed. For the most observable effects of Christs death pertain to the redeemed, not to the world. Both propositions then being faulty, the Conclusion is not worth a button In charity indeed we do not in any wise question the redemption and salvation of our first parents, (though the time of their conversion be disputable whether before the curse inflicted) But not the judgment of charity, but the undeceiving word of God must be made the ground of our Faith. Untill therfore he bring some proof of Scripture that Adam and Eve were existent when Christ undertook then also and redeemed, in all that he saith, he saith nothing.
Yet because this still leaveth sub judice litem, and certain Conclusions cannot be inferred upon premisses left uncertain. I should answer secondly, That the Curse pronounced and inflicted upon Adam, related to him not as a private but publike person. For so he fell, and so was he sentenced. As comprehending the Elect, he had the blessing of the seed of the woman, but as representing those that perish, so he had the Curse. But touching those things which he and the other godly do suffer, the learned Sadeel (Adver sus humanas satisfactiones) answereth this Popish Argument here proposed by Mr. Baxter, out of Augustine. Posset aliquis dicere, (saith Augustine) Si propter peccatum Deus dixerit homini, In sudore vultus tui edes panem tuum, & spinas & tribulos proseret tibi terra, &c. Cur fideles post peccatorum remissionem eosdem dolores patiuntur? Respondemus (saith Austin) Ante remissionem esse supplicia peccatorum post remissionem esse certamina exercitationes (que) justorum, i. e. Some one may say, If for sin God said to man, In the sweat of thy face thou shalt eat thy bread; and the earth shall bring forth to thee bryars and thorns, &c. Why do the beleevers after the remission of sinns suffer these sorrowes? We answer (saith Austin) Before remission these are punishments of sinns, after remission they are tryalls and exercises of the Righteous. Whereunto Sadeel addeth, Non sequitur, si mors & vitae praesentis aerumnae per se sunt peccati poenae, quippe propter peccatum in mundum ingressae; eas esse proptereà peccatorum paenas ipsis etiam fidelibus, quibus peccata sunt propter Christum condonata. i. e. It followeth not if death and the sorrows of the present life be in themselves the punishments of sinn, because they entred into the world for or by means of sinn; that they are therefore punishments of sinn to the very faithfull also, to whom their sinns are forgiven for Christs sake.
But to do him a pleasure should we give him his Argument, forgiving the unsoundnes of it; what doth he conclude? Thus much that the suspending of the rigorous execution of the sentence of the Law is the most observable immediate effect of Christs death, that the redeemed of the Lord partake of. By suspending the rigorous execution of the Law, he means, that he doth forbear an hour or a day, or some short time, to destroy their lives and cast their souls into hell: But so that every moment they must stand in expectation of it, and that to their greater torment at last, as their sinns during the time of the suspension is increased. Whosoever now of Gods redeemed ones receives comfort by this doctrine, will (I doubt not) give his verdit for Mr. Baxter, having so nobly and divinely resolved this question; that He is a Divine indeed.
He tells us there be other effects of Christs death, &c. But he is not at leisure now to communicate them. But if they have no more sweet and marrow than this, let him keep them to himself, we will not be inquisitive after them.
Very short, yet not so sweet as short. He saith it, but he proves it not. For the Scripture which he brings for proof, doth onely declare what the Elect are by nature before conversion, not what they are before God in relation to his Covenant of Grace. But Mr. Baxter purposeth to speak more largely hereunto in another place, which will give me occasion to enlarge my answer. At present he is in travell with his answer to the third question, and cannot be at rest untill he be delivered of so beautifull a Monster, and thus it comes from him.
Bax. To the third question. I confess we have here a knotty question; The common judgment is, that Christ hath taken away the whole Curse (though not the suffering) by bearing it himself; and now they are onely Afflictions of Love, and not punishments. I do not contradict this Doctrine, through affectation of singularity, the Lord knoweth; but through constraint of judgment; and that upon these grounds following.
1 It is undeniable that Christs taking the Curs upon himself did not wholly prevent the execution upon the offender. Ge. 3. 7, 8, 10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
[Page 30]2 It is evident from the event, seeing we feel part of the Curs fulfilled on us: we eat in labor and sweat; the earth doth bring forth thorns and brayars; women bring forth their children in sorrow; our native pravity is the Curs upon our souls; we are sick, weary, full of fears, sorrows and shame, and at last we dye and turn to dust.
3 The Scripture tells us that we all dye in Adam, (even that death from which we must at the Resurrection be raised by Christ,) 1 Co. 15. 21, 22. And that death is the wages of sin. Ro. 6. 23. and that the sickness and weakness and death of the godly, is caused by their sins. 1 Co. 11. 30, 31. And if so, then doubtles they are in execution of the Law, though not in full rigour.
4 It is manifest that our sufferings are in their own nature evils to us, and the sanctifying of them to us, taketh not away their naturall evil, but onely produceth by it, as by an occasion, a greater good: Doubtles so farr as it is an effect of sinn it is evill, and the effect of the Law also.
5 They are ascribed to Gods anger, as the moderating of them is ascribed to his l [...]ve. Psa. 30. 5. and a thousand places more.
6 They are called punishments in scripture, and therefore we may call them so. Lev. 26 41, 43. Lam. 3. 39. & 4. 6, 22. Ezras 9. 13. Hos. 4. 9. & 12. 2. Lev. 26. 18, 24.
7 The very nature of affliction is to be a loving punishment, a naturall evil sanctified, and so to be mixt of evil and good, as it proceeds from mixt causes. Therefore to say that Christ hath taken away the Curs and evill, but not the sufferings, is a contradiction, becaus so farr as it is suffering it is to us evill and the execution of the Curs. What Reason can be given why God should not do us all that good without our sufferings which now he doth by them, if there were not sin and wrath and law in them? Sure he could better us by easier means.
8 All those Scriptures and Reasons that are brought to the contrary, do prove no more but this, that our afflictions are not the Rigorous execution of the Law, that they are not wholly or chiefly in wrath; but as the common love of God to the wicked is mixt with hatred in their sufferings, and the hatred prevaileth above the love; so the sufferings of the godly proceed from a mixture of Love and Anger, and so have in them a mixture of good and evill; But the Love overcometh the Anger, therefore the good is greater than the evill, and so death hath lost its sting, 1 Co. 15. 55, 56. There is no unpardoned sin in it which shall procure further judgement, and so no hatred though there be anger.
9 The Scripture saith plainly that death is one of the enemies that is not yet overcome, but shall be last conquered. 1 Co. 15. 26. And of our corruption the case is plain.
[Page 31]10 The whole stream of scripture maketh Christ to have now the disposing of us and our sufferings, to have prevented the full execution of the Curse, and to manage that which lyeth on us to our advantage, and good; but no where doth it affirm that he suddenly delivereth us.
We have here an Antiscripturall, and an Antichristian Conclusion; yea a conclusion that hath many Antichristian and Popish Conclusions involved therein. Therefore Mr. Baxter being extremely ambitious that an assertion of that nature should stand, hath pillared and propped it up with no less than ten Arguments, delighted more (as it seemes) with number than with the waight and strength of them. And that he may go orderly to work, he forelaies such a stating of the question as may not disadvantage him, leaving the question obscure and ambiguous still. The Common judgment (saith he) i. e. The Consenting judgment of all the reformed Churches is, that Christ hath taken away the whole Curse, (though not the sufferings) by bearing it himself, and now they are afflictions of love and not punishments. Who can perswade the Serpent to be streight, and ceas from Crookednes and winding in his motions? He that mainteineth a good Caus needs no shifts; simplicity, ingenuity and plain dealing sufficeth him. Shall we think that Mr. B: minceth and maimeth the judgment of the Orthodox Divines, but for the advantaging of the Popish Caus which he mainteins against them? With a Counited Judgment they assert a totall freedome by Christ, both from the Curs and the sufferings also, as they have reference to the execution of the law, yea from the law also as it threateneth and curseth them that are in Christ: so that their sufferings are chastisements and tryalls, flowing from the same grace & love from which Christ himself and the redemption which we have by him have issued, dispensed toward them by a gracious and reconciled father, not inflicted upon them by an incensed and unreconciled Judge. But Mr. B: casteth a veil over their judgments, and lets but a corner thereof to appeare; becaus if he had set forth their judgment at the full, it would have marr'd most of his Arguments wherewith he fights against them.