REPROBATION ASSERTED:
OR,
THE DOCTRINE OF ETERNAL ELECTION AND
REPROBATION PROMISCUOUSLY HANDLED, IN ELEVEN
CHAPTERS.
WHEREIN THE MOST MATERIAL OBJECTIONS MADE
BY THE OPPOSERS OF THIS DOCTRINE, ARE FULLY ANSWERED;
SEVERAL DOUBTS REMOVED, AND SUNDRY CASES OF CONSCIENCE
RESOLVED.
BY JOHN BUNYAN OF BEDFORD, A LOVER OF
PEACE AND TRUTH.
‘What then? Israel hath not
obtained that which he seeketh for; but the election hath
obtained it, and the rest were
blinded.’—Romans 11:7
London: Printed for G. L., and are to be
sold in Turn-stile-alley,
in Holbourn. Small 4to, 44 pages.
EDITOR’S
ADVERTISEMENT.
This valuable tract was first published
without a date, but according to Doe’s List, about
the year 1674, and has never been reprinted in a separate
volume; it appeared in only one edition of the collected
works of John Bunyan—that with the notes by Ryland
and Mason; and in his select works, published in America in
1832. No man could have been better qualified to write upon
the subject of reprobation than Bunyan.—His
extraordinary knowledge of, and fervent attachment to, the
holy oracles, peculiarly fitted him with unwavering verity
to display this doctrine of divine truth. He was incapable
of any misrepresentation with a view of concealing what
fallen reason might deem a deformity, or to render the
doctrines of the cross palatable to mankind. His object is
to display the truth, and then humbly to submit to the
wisdom of God, and zealously to vindicate it. There is no
subject which more fully displays our fallen nature, than
that of reprobation. All mankind agree in opinion, that
there ever has been an elect, or good class of society; and
a reprobate, or worthless and bad class; varying in
turpitude or in goodness to a great extent and in almost
imperceptible degrees. All must unite in ascribing to God
that divine foreknowledge that renders ten thousand years
but as one day, or hour, or moment in his sight. All
ascribe to his omnipotence the power to ordain or decree
what shall come to pass—and where is the spirit that
can demonstrate a shade of difference between such
foreknowledge and preordination. All agree that in the
lower class of animals some of the same species pass their
lives in luxury and comfort, while others are cruelly
tormented, this world comprising their whole term of
existence; and will those who refuse to submit to the
sovereignty of God in the doctrine of election dare to
arraign his conduct in leaving some out of his electing
love? The reprobate or worthless lose nothing by the
happiness of others. It is inscrutably hid from mankind who
are the elect, until the Holy Spirit influences them with
the love of God in Christ Jesus, and this sometimes in the
last moments of life. There is every encouragement, nay
incentive, to the sinner who feels the burthen of guilt to
fly for refuge to the hope set before him in the gospel.
‘It is a faithful saying, and worthy of all
acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save
SINNERS’; even the chief of sinners. The glad tidings
are addressed to ALL sin-sick souls; and Bunyan’s
statement of this truth is clear, scriptural, and
reasonable. Very different is the account of the
reprobation given by R. Resburie in his Stop to the
Gangrene of Arminianism, 1651. ‘For the reprobate God
decrees the permitting of sin in order to hardening, and
their hardening in it, in order to their
condemnation.’ p. 69. ‘As election is the book
of life, so reprobation of death; the names of the
reprobate are there registered for destruction.’ p.
73. It is much to be regretted that sentiments like these
have been too commonly uttered. It is as an antidote to
such ideas that this little work was written; but,
unfortunately, it has never been widely circulated and
read. May the divine blessing follow this attempt to spread
these important, although to many, unpalatable,
doctrines.
GEORGE OFFOR.
REPROBATION ASSERTED.
CHAPTER 1.
That there is a
Reprobation.
In my discourse upon this subject, I shall
study as much brevity as clearness and edification will
allow me; not adding words to make the volume swell, but
contracting myself within the bounds of few lines, for the
profit and commodity of those that shall take the pains to
read my labours. And though I might abundantly multiply
arguments for the evincing and vindicating this conclusion,
yet I shall content myself with some few scripture
demonstrations: the first of which I shall gather out of
the ninth of the Romans, from that discourse of the
apostle’s, touching the children of the flesh, and
the children of the promise.
1. At the beginning of this chapter, we find
the apostle grievously lamenting and bemoaning of the Jews,
at the consideration of their miserable state: ‘I say
the truth in Christ, [saith he] I lie not, my conscience
also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost, that I have
great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart. For I
could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my
brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh’: Poor
hearts, saith he, they will perish; they are a miserable
sad and helpless people; their eyes are darkened that they
may not see, and their back is bowed down alway (Rom
11:10). Wherefore? Have they not the means of grace? Yes
verily, and that in goodly measure. First they ‘are
Israelites; to whom pertaineth the adoption, and the
glory, and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and
the service of God, and the promises; whose
are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the flesh
Christ came, who is over all, God blessed for ever.
Amen.’ What then should be the reason? Why saith he,
though they be the children of Abraham according to the
flesh, yet they are the children of Abraham BUT according
to the flesh: ‘For they are not all Israel [in
the best sense] which are of Israel: neither, because they
are the seed of Abraham, are they all children: but,
in Isaac shall thy seed be called.’ That is, they
that are the children of the flesh, they are not the
children of God; but the children of the promise shall be
counted for the seed. So then, here you see that they that
are only the children of the flesh, as the greatest part of
Israel were, they are those that are neither counted for
the seed, the children of promise, nor the children of God;
but are rejected, and of the reprobation. This therefore
shall at this time serve for the first
scripture-demonstration.
2. Another scripture you have in the
eleventh chapter of this epistle, from these words,
‘The election hath obtained it, and the REST were
blinded’ (Rom 11:7). These words are
shedding[1] words, they sever between men and
men; the election, the rest; the chosen, the left; the
embraced, the refused: ‘The election have obtained
it, and the rest were blinded.’ By rest
here, must needs be understood those not elect, because set
one in opposition to the other; and if not elect, what then
but reprobate?
3. A third scripture is that in the Acts of
the Apostles, ‘And as many as were ordained to
eternal life, believed’ (13:48). ‘And as
many’; by these words, as by the former, you may see
how the Holy Ghost distinguisheth or divideth between men
and men; the sons, and the sons of Adam. ‘As many as
were ordained to eternal life, believed’: If by
many here, we are to understand every individual, then
not only the whole world must at least believe the gospel,
of which we see the most fall short, but they must be
ordained to eternal life; which other scriptures
contradict: for there is the rest, besides the elect; the
stubble and chaff, as well as wheat: many therefore
must here include but some; ‘For though - Israel be
as the sand of the sea, a remnant shall be saved’
(Rom 9:27; Isa 1:9, 10:22,23).
I might here multiply many other texts, but
in the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be
established. Let these therefore for this, suffice to prove
that there is a reprobation. For this I say, though the
children of the flesh, the rest besides the
election, and the like, were not mentioned in the word; yet
seeing there is such a thing as the children of the
promise, the seed, the children of God, and the like, and
that too under several other phrases, as predestinated,
foreknown, chosen in Christ, and written in the Book of
life, and appointed unto life, with many others: I say
seeing these things are thus apparent, it is without doubt,
that there is such a thing as a reprobation also (Rom 8;
Eph 1:3,4; 1 Thess 5:9).
Nay, further, From the very word election,
it followeth unavoidably; for whether you take it as
relating to this, of distinguishing between persons as
touching the world to come, or with reference to
God’s acts of choosing this or that man to this or
that office, work, or employment in this world, it still
signifieth such a choosing, as that but some are therein
concerned, and that therefore some are thence
excluded. Are all the elect, the seed, the saved, the
vessels of mercy, the chosen and peculiar? Are not some,
yea the most, the children of the flesh, the rest, the
lost, the vessels of wrath, of dishonour, and the children
of perdition? (Rom 11:9; 1 Peter 2:8,9; Matt 10:16; 2 Sam
6:21; Psa 78:67,68; John 15:16; 2 Cor 4:3; Rom 9:21,22;
John 17:12).
CHAPTER 2
What Reprobation is.
Having thus shewed you that there is such a
thing as a reprobation, I come now to shew you what it is.
Which that I may do to your edification, I shall
First shew you what this word reprobation signifieth in
the general, as it concerneth persons temporary and visibly
reprobate: Second, more particularly, as it
concerneth persons that are eternally and invisibly
reprobate.
First, Generally, As it concerneth
persons temporarily and visibly reprobate, thus: To be
reprobate is to be disapproved, void of judgment, and
rejected, &c. To be disapproved, that is, when the word
condemns them, either as touching the faith or the holiness
of the gospel; the which they must needs be, that are void
of spiritual and heavenly judgment in the mysteries of the
kingdom; a manifest token [that] they are rejected. And
hence it is that they are said to be reprobate or void of
judgment concerning the faith; reprobate or void of
judgment touching every good work; having a reprobate mind,
to do those things that are not convenient, either as to
faith or manners. And hence it is again, that they are also
said to be rejected of God, cast away, and the like (2 Cor
13:6,7; 2 Tim 3:8; Titus 1:16; Rom 1:28; Jer 6:30; 1 Cor
9:27).
I call this temporary visible reprobation,
because these appear, and are detected by the word as such
that are found under the above-named errors, and so
adjudged without the grace of God. Yet it is possible for
some of these, however for the present disapproved, through
the blessed acts and dispensations of grace, not only to
become visible saints, but also saved for ever. Who doubts
but that he who now by examining himself, concerning faith,
doth find himself, though under profession, graceless, may
after that, he seeing his woeful state, not only cry to God
for mercy, but find grace, and obtain mercy to help in time
of need? though it is true, that for the most part the
contrary is fulfilled on them.
Second, But to pass this, and more
particularly to touch the eternal invisible reprobation,
which I shall thus hold forth: It is to be passed by in, or
left out of, God’s election; yet so, as considered
upright. In which position you have these four things
considerable: 1. The act of God’s election. 2. The
negative of that act. 3. The persons reached by that
negative. And, 4. Their qualification when thus reached by
it.
1. For the first. This act of God in
electing, it is a choosing or fore-appointing of some
infallibly unto eternal life, which he also hath determined
shall be brought to pass by the means that should be made
manifest and efficacious to that very end (Eph 1:3-5; 1
Peter 1:2).
2. Now the negative of this act is, a
passing by, or a leaving of those not concerned in this
act; a leaving of them, I say, without the bounds, and so
the saving privileges of this act; as it followeth by
natural consequence, that because a man chooseth but some,
therefore he chooseth not all, but leaveth, as the negative
of that act, all others whatsoever. Wherefore, as I said
before, those not contained within this blessed act, are
called the rest besides the election. ‘The
election hath obtained it, and the rest were
blinded.’
3. The persons then that are contained under
the negative of this act, they are those, and those only,
that pass through this wicked world without the saving
grace of God’s elect; those, I say, that miss the
most holy faith, which they in time are blest withal, who
are fore-appointed unto glory.
4. And now for the qualification they were
considered under, when this act of reprobation laid hold
upon them; to wit, They were considered upright.
This is evident, From this consideration,
that reprobation is God’s act, even the negative of
his choosing or electing, and none of the acts of God make
any man a sinner. It is further evident by the similitude
that is taken from the carriage of the potter in his making
of his pots; for by this comparison the God of heaven is
pleased to shew unto us the nature of his determining in
the act of reprobation. ‘Hath not the potter power
over the clay, of the same lump?’ &c. (Rom 9:21).
Consider a little, and you shall see that these three
things do necessarily fall in, to complete the
potter’s action in every pot he makes.
(1.) A determination in his own mind what
pot to make of this or that piece of clay; a determination,
I say, precedent to the fashion of the pot; the which is
true in the highest degree, in him that is excellent in
working; he determines the end, before the beginning is
perfected (Isa 41:22, 46:10). ‘For this cause
[very purpose] have I raised thee up’ (Exo
9:16).
(2.) The next thing considerable in the
potter; it is the so making of the pot, even as he
determined; a vessel to honour, or a vessel to dishonour.
There is no confusion nor disappointment under the hand of
this eternal God, his work is perfect, and every way doth
answer to what he hath determined (Deut 32:4).
(3.) Observe again, That whether the vessel
be to honour or to dishonour, yet the potter makes it good,
sound, and fit for service; his fore-determining to make
this a vessel to dishonour, hath no persuasion at all with
him to break or mar the pot: Which very thing doth well
resemble the state of man as under the act of eternal
reprobation, for ‘God made man upright’ (Eccl
7:29).
From these conclusions then,
Consider, 1. That the simple act of
reprobation, it is a
leaving or passing by, not a cursing of the
creature.
Consider, 2. Neither doth this act
alienate the heart of God from the reprobate, nor tie him
up from loving, favouring, or blessing of him; no, not from
blessing of him with the gift of Christ, of faith, of hope,
and many other benefits. It only denieth them that benefit,
that will infallibly bring them to eternal life, and that
in despite of all opposition; it only denieth so to bless
them as the elect themselves are blessed. Abraham loved all
the children he had by all his wives, and gave them
portions also; but his choice blessing, as the fruit of his
chiefest love, he reserved for chosen Isaac (Gen
25:5,6).
Consider Lastly, The act of
reprobation doth harm to no man, neither means him any;
nay, it rather decrees him upright, lets him be made
upright, and so be turned into the
world.[2]
CHAPTER 3.
Of the Antiquity of
Reprobation.
Having now proceeded so far as to shew you
what reprobation is, it will not be amiss if in this place
I briefly shew you its antiquity, even when it began its
rise; the which you may gather by these following
particulars.
First, Reprobation is before the
person cometh into the world, or hath done good or evil:
This is evident by that of Paul to the Romans: ‘For
the children being not yet born, neither having done
any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to
election might stand not of works, but of him that calleth;
it was said unto Rebecca, The elder shall serve the
younger’ (9:11). Here you find twain in their
mother’s womb, and both receiving their destiny, not
only before they had done good or evil, but before they
were in a capacity to do it, they being yet unborn; their
destiny, I say, the one unto, the other not unto, the
blessing of eternal life; the one chose, the other refused;
the one elect, the other reprobate. The same also might be
said of Ishmael and his brother Isaac, both which did also
receive their destiny before they came into the world: for
the promise that this Isaac should be the heir, it was also
before Ishmael was born, though he was elder by fourteen
years, or more, than his brother (Gen 15:4,5, 16:4,5,16,
17:25, 21:5). And it is yet further evident,
1. Because election is an act of grace;
‘There is a remnant according to the election of
grace’ (Rom 11:5). Which act of grace saw no way so
fit to discover its purity and independency, as by
fastening on the object before it came into the world; that
being the state in which at least no good were done, either
to procure good from God, or to eclipse and darken this
precious act of grace. For though it is true that no good
thing that we have done before conversion, can obtain the
grace of election; yet the grace of election then appeareth
most, when it prevents[3] our doing good, that
we might be loved therefore: wherefore he saith again,
‘That the purpose of God according to election might
stand, not of works, but of him that calleth; it was said
unto her, The elder shall serve the younger’ (Rom
9:11,12).
2. This is most agreeable to the nature of
the promise of giving seed to Abraham; which promise, as it
was made before the child was conceived, so it was
fulfilled at the best time, for the discovery of the act of
grace, that could have been pitched upon: At this time will
I come (saith God) ‘and Sarah shall have a son’
(Gen 18:14); which promise, because it carried in its
bowels the very grace of electing love, therefore it left
out Ishmael, with the children of Keturah: ‘For in
Isaac shall thy seed be called’ (Rom 4:16-19,
9:7).
3. This was the best and fittest way for the
decrees to receive sound bottom, even for God both to
choose and refuse, before the creature had done good or
evil, and so before they came into the world: ‘That
the purpose of God according to election might
stand,’ saith he, therefore before the
children were yet born, or had done any good or evil,
it was said unto her, &c. God’s decree would for
ever want foundation, should it depend at all upon the
goodness and holiness either of men or angels; especially
if it were to stand upon that good that is wrought before
conversion, yea, or after conversion either. We find, by
daily experience, how hard and difficult it is, for even
the holiest in the world, to bear up and maintain their
faith and love to God; yea, so hard, as not at all to do it
without continual supplies from heaven. How then is it
possible for any so to carry it before God, as to lay, by
this his holiness, a foundation for election, as to
maintain that foundation, and thereby to procure all those
graces that infallibly saveth the sinner? But now the
choice, I say, being a choice of grace, as is manifest, it
being acted before the creature’s birth; here grace
hath laid the cornerstone, and determined the means to
bring the work to perfection. Thus ‘the foundation of
God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them
that are his’ (2 Tim 2:19). That is, who he hath
chosen, having excluded works, both good and bad, and
founded all in an unchangeable act of grace; the negative
whereof, is this harmless reprobation.
Second, But secondly, To step a
little backward, and so to make all sure: This act of
reprobation was before the world began; which therefore
must needs confirm that which was said but now, that they
were, before they were born, both destinated before they
had done good or evil. This is manifest by that of Paul to
the Ephesians, at the beginning of his epistle; where,
speaking of Election, whose negative is reprobation, he
saith, ‘God hath chosen us in Christ before the
foundation of the world.’ Nay further, if you please,
consider, that as Christ was ordained to suffer before the
foundation of the world, and as we that are elected were
chosen in him before the foundation of the world; so it was
also ordained we should know him, before the foundation of
the world; ordained that we should be holy before him in
love, before the foundation of the world; and that we in
time should be created in him to good works, and ordained
before that we should walk in them. Wherefore reprobation
also, it being the negative of electing love; that is,
because God elected but some, therefore he left the rest:
these rest therefore must needs be of as ancient standing
under reprobation, as the chosen are under election; both
which, it is also evident, was before the world began.
Which serveth yet further to prove that reprobation could
not be with respect to this or the other sin, it being only
a leaving them, and that before the world, out of that free
choice which he was pleased to bless the other with. Even
as the clay with which the dishonourable vessel is made,
did not provoke the potter, for the sake of this or that
impediment, therefore to make it so; but the potter
of his own will, of the clay of the same lump, of the clay
that is full as good as that of which he hath made the
vessel to honour, did make this and the other a vessel of
dishonour, &c. (1 Peter 1:20,21; 1 Cor 2:7; Eph 1:3,4,
2:10).[4]
CHAPTER 4.
Of the causes of
Reprobation.
Having thus in a word or two shewed the
antiquity of Reprobation, I now come in this place to shew
you the cause thereof; for doubtless this must stand a
truth, That whatever God doth, there is sufficient ground
therefore, whether by us apprehended, or else without our
reach.
First then, It is caused from the
very nature of God. There are two things in God, from
which, or by the virtue of which, all things have their
rise, to wit, the eternity of God in general, and the
eternal perfection of every one of his attributes in
particular: for as by the first, he must needs be before
all things; so by virtue of the second, must all things
consist. And as he is before all things, they having
consistence by him; so also is he before all states, or
their causes, be they either good or bad, of continuance or
otherwise, he being the first without beginning, &c.,
whereas all other things, with their causes, have rise,
dependance, or toleration of being from him (Col
1:17).
Hence it follows, that nothing, either
person or cause, &c., can by any means have a being,
but first he knows thereof, allows thereof, and decrees it
shall be so. ‘Who is he that saith, and
it cometh to pass, when the Lord commandeth
it not?’ (Lam 3:37). Now then, because that
reprobation, as well as election, are subordinate to God;
his will also, which is eternally perfect, being most
immediately herein concerned; it was impossible that any
should be reprobate, before God had both willed and decreed
it should be so. It is not the being of a thing that
administers matter of knowledge or foresight thereof to
God, but the perfection of his knowledge, wisdom, and
power, &c., that giveth the thing its being: God did
not fore-decree there should be a world, because he foresaw
there would be one; but there must be one, because he had
before decreed there should be one. The same is true as
touching the case in hand: ‘For this cause [very
purpose] have I raised thee up, for to shew in thee
my power’ (Exo 9:16; Rom 9:17).
Second, A second cause of eternal
reprobation, is the exercise of God’s sovereignty;
for if this is true, that there is nothing either visible
or invisible, whether in heaven or earth, but hath its
being from him: then it must most reasonably follow, that
he is therefore sovereign Lord, &c., and may also
according to his own will, as he pleaseth himself, both
exercise and manifest the same; being every whit absolute;
and can do and may do whatsoever his soul desireth: and
indeed, good reason, for he hath not only made them all,
but ‘for his pleasure they both were and are
created’ (Rev 4:11).
Now the very exercise of this sovereignty
produceth reprobation: ‘Therefore hath he mercy on
whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he
hardeneth’ (Rom 9:18). ‘Hath not the potter
power over the clay, of the same lump?’ And doth he
not make his pots according to his pleasure? Here therefore
the mercy, justice, wisdom and power of God, take liberty
to do what they will; saying, ‘My counsel shall
stand, and I will do all my pleasure’ (Isa 46:10; Job
23:13; Dan 4:35; Isa 43:13).
Third, Another cause of eternal
reprobation, is the act and working of distinguishing love,
and everlasting grace. God hath universal love, and
particular love; general love, and distinguishing love; and
so accordingly doth decree, purpose, and determine: from
general love, the extension of general grace and mercy: but
from that love that is distinguishing, peculiar grace and
mercy: ‘Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?’
saith the Lord, ‘yet I loved Jacob’ (Mal 1:2).
Yet I loved Jacob, that is, with a better love, or a love
that is more distinguishing. As he further makes appear in
his answer to our father Abraham, when he prayed to God for
Ishmael: ‘As for Ishmael, [saith he] I have heard
thee: Behold, I have blessed him, and will make him
fruitful. But my covenant will I establish with Isaac,
which Sarah shall bear unto thee’ (Gen 17:20,21).
Touching which words, there are these things
observable.
1. That God had better love for Isaac, than
he had for his brother Ishmael. Yet,
2. Not because Isaac had done more worthy
and goodly deeds, for Isaac was yet unborn.
3. This choice blessing could not be denied
to Ishmael, because he had disinherited himself by sin; for
this blessing was entailed to Isaac, before Ishmael had a
being also (Rom 4:16-19; Gen 15:4,5, chapter
16).
4. These things therefore must needs fall
out through the working of distinguishing love and mercy,
which had so cast the business, ‘that the purpose of
God according to election might stand.’
Further, Should not God decree to shew
distinguishing love and mercy, as well as that which is
general and common, he must not discover his best love at
all to the sons of men. Again, if he should reveal and
extend his best love to all the world in general, then
there would not be such a thing as love that doth
distinguish; for distinguishing love appeareth in
separating between Isaac and Ishmael, Jacob and Esau, the
many called, and the few chosen. Thus by virtue of
distinguishing love, some must be reprobate: for
distinguishing love must leave some, both of the angels in
heaven, and the inhabitants of the earth; wherefore the
decree also that doth establish it, must needs leave
some.
Fourth, Another cause of reprobation,
Is God’s willingness to shew his wrath, and to make
his power known. This is one of those arguments that the
holy apostle setteth against the most knotty and strong
objection that ever was framed against the doctrine of
eternal reprobation: ‘Thou wilt say then unto me,
[saith he] Why doth he yet find fault?’ For if it be
his will that some should be rejected, hardened, and
perish, why then is he offended that any sin against him;
‘for who hath resisted his will?’ Hold, saith
the apostle; stay a little here; first remember this, Is it
meet to say unto God, What doest thou? ‘Shall the
thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast
thou made me thus? Hath not the potter power over the clay,
of the same lump,’ &c. Besides, when you have
thought your worst, to wit, that the effects of reprobation
must needs be consummate in the eternal perdition of the
creature; yet again consider, ‘What if God,
willing to shew his wrath,’ as well as grace
and mercy? And what if he, that he may so do, exclude some
from having share in that grace that would infallibly,
against all resistance, bring us safe unto eternal life?
What then? Is he therefore the author of your perishing, or
his eternal reprobation either? Do you not know that he may
refuse to elect who he will, without abusing of them? Also
that he may deny to give them that grace that would
preserve them from sin, without being guilty of their
damnation? May he not, to shew his wrath, suffer
‘with much long-suffering’ all that are
‘the vessels of wrath,’ by their own voluntary
will, to fit themselves for wrath and for destruction? (Rom
9:19-22). Yea, might he not even in the act of reprobation,
conclude also to suffer them thus left, to fall from the
state he left them in, that is, as they were considered
upright; and when fallen, to bind them fast in chains of
darkness unto the judgment of the great day, but he must
needs be charged foolishly? You shall see in that day what
a harmony and what a glory there will be found in all
God’s judgments in the overthrow of the sinner; also
how clear the Lord will shew himself of having any working
hand in that which causeth eternal ruin; notwithstanding he
hath reprobated such, doth suffer them to sin, and that
too, that he might shew his wrath on the vessels of his
wrath; the which I also, after this next chapter, shall
further clear up to you. As ‘the Lord knoweth how to
deliver the godly out of temptations,’ without
approving of their miscarriages; so he also knoweth how
‘to reserve the unjust unto the day of judgment to be
punished’ (2 Peter 2:9): yet never to deserve the
least of blame for his so reserving of them; though none
herein can see his way, for he alone knows how to do
it.[5]
CHAPTER 5.
Of the Unchangeableness of Eternal
Reprobation.
Many opinions have passed through the hearts
of the sons of men concerning reprobation; most of them
endeavouring so to hold it forth, as therewith they might,
if not heal their conscience slightly, yet maintain their
own opinion, in their judgment, of other things; still
wringing, now the word this way, and anon again that, for
their purpose; also framing within their soul such an
imagination of God and his acts in eternity, as would suit
with such opinions, and so present all to the world. And
the rather they have with greatest labour strained
unweariedly at this above many other truths, because of the
grim and dreadful face it carrieth in most men’s
apprehensions. But none of these things, however they may
please the creature, can by any means in any measure,
either cause God to undo, unsay, or undetermine what he
hath concerning this, decreed and established.
First, Because they suit not with his
nature, especially in these foundation-acts: ‘The
foundation of God standeth sure’ (2 Tim 2:19), even
touching reprobation, ‘that the purpose of God
according to election might stand’ (Rom 9:11).
‘I know [saith Solomon] that whatsoever God doeth, it
shall be for ever: nothing can be put to it, nor any thing
taken from it,’ &c. (Eccl 3:14). ‘Hath he
said, and shall he not do it? Hath he spoken, and
shall not make it good?’ (Num 23:19). His decrees are
composed according to his eternal wisdom, established upon
his unchangeable will, governed by his knowledge, prudence,
power, justice, and mercy, and are brought to conclusion,
on his part, in perfect holiness, through the abiding of
his most blessed truth and faithfulness: ‘He
is the rock, his work is perfect: for all his
ways are judgment: a God of truth and without iniquity,
just and right is he’ (Deut 32:4).
Second, This decree is made sure by
the number, measure, and bounds of election; for election
and reprobation do inclose all reasonable creatures; that
is, either the one or the other; election, those that are
set apart for glory; and reprobation, those left out of
this choice.
Now as touching the elect, they are by this
decree confined to that limited number of persons that must
amount to the complete making up the fulness of the
mystical body of Christ; yea so confined by this eternal
purpose, that nothing can be diminished from or added
thereunto: and hence it is that they are called his body
and members in particular, ‘the fulness of him that
filleth all in all’ (Eph 1:23) and ‘the measure
of the stature of the fulness of Christ’ (Eph 4:13).
Which body, considering him as the head thereof, in
conclusion maketh up one perfect man, and holy temple for
the Lord. These are called Christ’s substance,
inheritance and lot (Psa 16); and are said to be booked,
marked, and sealed with God’s most excellent
knowledge, approbation and liking (2 Tim 2:19). As Christ
said to his Father, ‘Thine eyes did see my substance,
yet being unperfect; and in thy book all my members
were written, which in continuance were fashioned,
when as yet there was none of them’ (Psa
139:16). This being thus, I say, it is in the first place
impossible that any of those members should miscarry, for
‘Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God’s
elect?’ (Rom 8:33) and because they are as to number
every way sufficient, being his body, and so by their
completing to be made a perfect man: therefore all others
are rejected, that the ‘purpose of God according to
election might stand’ (Rom 9:11). Besides, it would
not only argue weakness in the decree, but monstrousness in
the body, if after this, any appointed should miscarry, or
any besides them be added to them (Matt 24:24).
Thirdly, Nay further, that all may
see how punctual, exact, and to a tittle this decree of
election is, God hath not only as to number and quantity
confined the persons, but also determined and measured, and
that before the world, the number of the gifts and graces
that are to be bestowed on these members in general; and
also what graces and gifts to be bestowed on this or that
member in particular: He ‘hath blessed us with all
spiritual blessings - in Christ, according as he hath
chosen us in him before the foundation of the word’
(Eph 1:3,4). And bestoweth them in time upon us,
‘According to the eternal purpose which he purposed
in Christ Jesus our Lord’ (Eph 3:11). He hath given
to the eye, the grace that belongeth to the eye; and to the
hand that which he also hath appointed for it. And so to
every other member of the body elect, he doth deal out to
them their determined measure of grace and gifts most fit
for their place and office. Thus is the decree established,
both of the saved, and also the non-elect (Rom 12:3; Eph
4:16; Col 2:19; Eph 4:12,13).
Fourth, But again, another thing that
doth establish this decree of eternal reprobation, is the
weakness that sin, in the fall, and since, hath brought all
reprobates into: For though it be most true, that sin is no
cause of eternal reprobation; yet seeing sin hath seized on
the reprobate, it cannot be but thereby the decree must
needs be the faster fixed. If the king, for this or the
other weighty reason, doth decree not to give this or that
man, who yet did never offend him, a place in his privy
chamber; if this man after this shall be infected with the
plague, this rather fastens than loosens the king’s
decree. As the angels that were left out of God’s
election, by reason of the sin they committed after, are so
far off from being by that received into God’s
decree, that they are therefore bound for it in chains of
everlasting darkness to the judgment of the great
day.
CHAPTER 6.
Whether to be reprobated be the same with
being appointed before-hand unto eternal condemnation? If
not, how do they differ? Also whether reprobation be the
cause of condemnation?
It hath been the custom of ignorant men much
to quarrel at eternal reprobation, concluding, for want of
knowledge in the mystery of God’s will, that if he
reprobate any from eternity, he had as good have said, I
will make this man to damn him; I will decree this man,
without any consideration, to the everlasting pains of
hell. When in very deed, for God to reprobate, and to
appoint before-hand to eternal condemnation, are two
distinct things, properly relating to two distinct
attributes, arising from two distinct causes.
First, They are two distinct things:
Reprobation, a simple leaving of the creature out of the
bounds of God’s election; but to appoint to
condemnation is to bind them over to everlasting
punishment. Now there is a great difference between my
refusing to make of such a tree a pillar in my house, and
of condemning it unto the fire to be burned.
Second, As to the attributes;
reprobation respects God’s sovereignty; but to
appoint to condemnation, his justice (Rom 9:18; Gen
18:25).
Third, As to the causes; sovereignty
being according to the will of God, but justice according
to the sin of man. For God, though he be the only sovereign
Lord, and that to the height of perfection; yet he
appointeth no man to the pains of everlasting fire, merely
from sovereignty, but by the rule of justice: God damneth
not the man because he is a man, but a sinner; and
fore-appoints him to that place and state, by fore-seeing
of him wicked (Rom 1:18,19; Col 3:6).
Again, As reprobation is not the same with
fore-appointing to eternal condemnation; so neither is it
the cause thereof.
If it be the cause, then it must either, 1.
Leave him infirm. Or, 2. Infuse sin into him. Or, 3. Take
from him something that otherwise would keep him upright.
4. Or both license Satan to tempt, and the reprobate to
close in with the temptation. But it doth none of these;
therefore it is not the cause of the condemnation of the
creature.
That it is not the cause of sin, it is
evident,
1. Because the elect are as much involved
therein, as those that are passed by.
2. It leaveth him not infirm; for he is by
an after-act, to wit, of creation, formed perfectly
upright.
3. That reprobation infuseth no sin,
appeareth, because it is the act of God.
4. That it taketh nothing, that good is,
from him, is also manifest, it being only a leaving of
him.
5. And that it is not by this act that Satan
is permitted to tempt, or the reprobate to sin, is
manifest; because as Christ was tempted, so the elect fall
as much into the temptation, at least many of them, as many
of those that are reprobate: whereas if these things came
by reprobation, then the reprobate would be only concerned
therein. All which will be further handled in these
questions yet behind.
Object. From what hath been said,
there is concluded this at least, That God hath infallibly
determined, and that before the world, the infallible
damnation of some of his creatures: for if God hath before
the world [was made] bound some over to eternal punishment,
and that as you say, for sin; then this determination must
either be fallible or infallible; not fallible, for then
your other position of the certainty of the number of
God’s elect, is shaken; unless you hold that there
may be a number that shall neither go to heaven nor hell.
Well then, if God hath indeed determined, fore-determined,
that some must infallibly perish; doth not this his
determination lay a necessity on the reprobate to sin, that
he may be damned; for, no sin, no damnation; that is your
own argument.
Ans. That God hath ordained (Jude 4),
the damnation of some of his creatures, it is evident; but
whether this his determination be positive and absolute,
there is the question: for the better understanding
whereof, I shall open unto you the variety of God’s
determinations, and their nature, as also rise.
The determinations of God touching the
destruction of the creature, they are either ordinary or
extraordinary: those I count ordinary that were commonly
pronounced by the prophets and apostles, &c., in their
ordinary way of preaching; to the end men might be affected
with the love of their own salvation: now these either
bound or loosed, but as the condition or qualification was
answered by the creature under sentence, and no otherwise
(1 Sam 12:25; Isa 1:20; Matt 18:3; Luke 13:1-3; Rom 2:8,9,
8:13, 11:23; 1 Cor 6:9-11).
Again, These extraordinary, though they
respect the same conditions, yet they are not grounded
immediately upon them, but upon the infallible
fore-knowledge and fore-sight of God, and are thus
distinguished. First the ordinary determination, it stands
but at best upon a supposition that the creature may
continue in sin, and admits of a possibility that it may
not; but the extraordinary stands upon an infallible
fore-sight that the creature will continue in sin;
wherefore this must needs be positive, and as infallible as
God himself.
Again, These two determinations are also
distinguished thus: the ordinary is applicable to the elect
as well as to the reprobate, but the other to the reprobate
only. It is proper to say even to the elect themselves,
‘He that believeth shall be saved, and he that
believeth not shall be damned’; but not to say to
them, These are appointed to UTTER destruction, or that
they shall utterly perish in their own corruptions; or that
for them is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever (1
Kings 20:42; 2 Peter 2:12; Jude 13).
So then, though God by these determinations
doth not lay some under irrecoverable condemnation, yet by
one of them he doth; as is further made out
thus:
1. God most perfectly foreseeth the final
impenitency of those that so die, from the beginning to the
end of the world (Prov 15:11; Psa 139:2; Isa
46:10).
2. Now from this infallible foresight, it is
most easy and rational to conclude, and that positively,
the infallible overthrow of every such creature. Did I
infallibly foresee that this or that man would cut out his
heart in the morning, I might infallibly determine his
death before night.
Object. But still the question is,
Whether God by this his determination doth not lay a
necessity on the creature to sin? For, no sin, no
condemnation: this is true by your own
assertion.
Ans. No, by no means: for,
1. Though it be true, that sin must of
absolute necessity go before the infallible condemnation
and overthrow of the sinner; and that it must also be
pre-considered by God; yet it needs not lay a necessity
upon him to sin: for let him but alone to do what he will,
and the determination cannot be more infallible than the
sin, which is the cause of its execution.
2. As it needs not, so it doth not: for this
positive determination is not grounded upon what God will
effect, but on what the creature will; and that not through
the instigation of God, but the instigation of the devil.
What? might not I, if I most undoubtedly foresaw that such
a tree in my garden would only cumber the ground,
notwithstanding reasonable means, might not I, I say, from
hence determine, seven years before, to cut it down, and
burn it in the fire, but I must, by so determining,
necessitate this tree to be fruitless? the case in hand is
the very same. God therefore may most positively determine
the infallible damnation of his creature, and yet not at
all necessitate the creature to sin, that he might be
damned.
Object. But how is this similitude
pertinent? For God did not only foresee sin would be the
destruction of the creature, but let it come into the
world, and so destroy the creature. If you, as you foresee
the fruitlessness of your tree, should withal see that
which makes it so, and that too before it makes it so, and
yet let the impediment come and make it so; are not you now
the cause of the unfruitfulness of that tree which you have
before condemned to the fire to be burned? for God might
have chose whether he would have let Adam sin, and so sin
to have got into the world by him.
Ans. Similitudes never answer every
way; if they be pertinent to that for which they are
intended, it is enough; and to that it answereth well,
being brought to prove no more but the natural consequence
of a true and infallible foresight. And now as to what is
objected further, as that God might have chose whether sin
should have come into the world by Adam, to the destruction
of so many: to that I shall answer,
1. That sin could not have come into the
world without God’s permission, it is evident, both
from the perfection of his foresight and power.
2. Therefore all the means, motives, and
inducements thereunto, must also by him be not only
foreseen, but permitted.
3. Yet so, that God will have the timing,
proceeding, bounding, and ordering thereof, at his
disposal: ‘Surely the wrath of man shall praise thee,
and the remainder of wrath shalt thou restrain’ (Psa
76:10; 1 Kings 22:20-22; John 8:20; Luke
22:51,52).
4. Therefore it must needs come into the
world, not without, but by the knowledge of God; not in
despite of him, but by his suffering of it.
Object. But how then is he clear from
having a hand in the death of him that
perisheth?
Ans. Nothing is more sure than that
God could have kept sin out of the world, if it had been
his will; and this is also as true, that it never came into
the world with his liking and compliance; and for this, you
must consider that sin came into the world by two
steps:
1. By being offered. 2. By
prevailing.
Touching the first of these, God without the
least injury to any creature in heaven or earth, might not
only suffer it, but so far countenance the same: that is,
so far forth as for trial only: as it is said of Abraham;
‘God tempted Abraham’ to slay his only son (Gen
22:1), and led Christ by the Spirit into the wilderness to
be tempted of the devil (Mark 1:12; Luke 4:1). This is done
without any harm at all; nay, it rather produceth good; for
it tends to discover sincerity, to exercise faith in, and
love to his Creator; also to put him in mind of the
continual need he hath of depending on his God for the
continuation of help and strength, and to provoke to
prayers to God, whenever so engaged (Deut 8:1-3; 1 Peter
1:7; Heb 5:7; Matt 26:22,41).
Object. But God did not only admit
that sin should be offered for trial, and there to stay;
but did suffer it to prevail, and overcome the
world.
Ans. Well, this is granted: but yet
consider,
1. God did neither suffer it, nor yet
consent it should, but under this consideration; If Adam,
upright Adam, gave way thereto, by forsaking his command,
‘In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt
surely die’ (Gen 2:17, 3:3). Which Adam did, not
because God did compel him or persuade him to it, but
voluntarily of his own mind, contrary to his God’s
command: so then, God by suffering sin to break into the
world, did it rather in judgment, as disliking Adam’s
act, and as a punishment to man for listening to the
tempter; and as a discovery of his anger at man’s
disobedience; than to prove that he is guilty of the misery
of his creature.
2. Consider also, that when God permitted
sin for trial, it was, when offered first, to them only who
were upright, and had sufficient strength to resist
it.
3. They were by God’s command to the
contrary, driven to no strait to tempt them to incline to
Satan: ‘Of every tree of the garden thou mayest
freely at,’ saith God; only let this
alone.
4. As touching the beauty and goodness that
was in the object unto which they were allured; What was
it? Was it better than God? Yea, was it better than the
tree of life? For from that they were not exempted till
after they had sinned. Did not God know best what was best
to do them good?
5. Touching him that persuaded them to do
this wicked act; was his word more to be valued for truth,
more to be ventured on for safety, or more to be honoured
for the worthiness of him that spake, than was his that had
forbad it? The one being the devil, with a lie, and to kill
them; the other being God, with his truth, and to preserve
them safe.
Quest. But was not Adam unexpectedly
surprised? Had he notice beforehand, and warning of the
danger? For God foresaw the business.
Ans. Doubtless God was fair and
faithful to his creature in this thing also; as clearly
doth appear from these considerations.
1. The very commandment that God gave him,
fore-bespake him well to look about him; and did indeed
insinuate that he was likely to be tempted.
2. It is yet more evident, because God doth
even tell him of the danger; ‘In the day that thou
eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.’
3. Nay God by speaking to him of the very
tree that was to be forborn, telling him also where it
stood, that he might the better know it; did in effect
expressly say unto him, Adam, if thou be tempted, it will
be about that tree, and the fruit thereof: wherefore if
thou findest the tempter there, then beware thy
life.
(1.) To conclude then: though sin did not
come into the world without God’s sufferance, yet it
did without his liking: God suffered also Cain to kill his
brother, and Ishmael to mock at Isaac, but he did not like
the same (Gen 4:9-11; Gal 4:30).
(2.) Therefore though God was first in
concluding sin should be offered to the world; yet man was
the first that consented to a being overcome
thereby.
(3.) Then, Though God did fore-determine
that sin should enter, yet it was not but with respect to
certain terms and conditions, which yet was not to be
enforced by virtue of the determination, but permitted to
be completed by the voluntary inclination of a perfect and
upright man. And in that the determination was most
perfectly infallible, it was through the foresight of the
undoubted inclination of this good and upright
person.
Quest. But might not God have kept
Adam from inclining, if he would?
Ans. What more certain? But yet
consider,
1. Adam being now an upright man, he was
able to have kept himself, had he but looked to it as he
should and might.
2. This being so, if God had here stept in,
he had either added that which had been needless, and so
had not obtained thankfulness; or else had made the
strength of Adam useless, yea his own workmanship in so
creating him, superfluous; or else by consequence
imperfect.
(3.) If he had done so, he had taken Adam
from his duty, which was to trust and believe his Maker; he
had also made void the end of the commandment, which was to
persuade to watchfulness, diligence, sobriety, and
contentedness; yea, and by so doing would not only himself
have tempted Adam to transgression, even to lay aside the
exercise of that strength that God had already given him;
but should have become the pattern, or the first father to
all looseness, idleness, and neglect of duty. Which would
also not only have been an ill example to Adam to continue
to neglect so reasonable and wholesome duties, but would
have been to himself an argument of defence to retort upon
his God, when he had come at another time to reckon with
him for his misdemeanours.[6]
Many other weighty reasons might here be
further added for God’s vindication in this
particular, but at this time let these suffice.
CHAPTER 7.
Whether any under Eternal Reprobation
have just cause to quarrel with God for not electing of
them?
That the answer to this question may be to
edification, recall again what I have before asserted; to
wit, That for a man to be left out of God’s election,
and to be made a sinner, is two things; and again, For a
man to be not elect, and to be condemned to hell-fire, is
two things also. Now I say, if non-election makes no man a
sinner, and if it appoints no man to condemnation neither,
then what ground hath any reprobate to quarrel with God for
not electing of him? Nay, further, reprobation considereth
him upright, leaveth him upright, and so turneth him into
the world; what wrong doth God do him, though he hath not
elected him? What reason hath he that is left in this case
to quarrel against his Maker?
If thou say, because God hath not chosen
them, as well as chosen others: I answer, ‘Nay but, O
man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the
thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast
thou made me thus?’ (Rom 9:20). ‘Behold, as the
clay is in the potter’s hand, so are ye
in my hand, O house of Israel,’ saith the Lord God
(Jer 18:6). So then, if I should say no more but that God
is the only Lord and Creator, and that by his sovereignty
he hath power to dispose of them according to his pleasure,
either to choose or to refuse, according to the counsel of
his own will, who could object against him and be
guiltless? ‘He giveth not account of any of his
matters’ (Job 33:13). ‘And what his soul
desireth, even that he doeth’ (Job
23:13).
Again, God is wiser than man, and therefore
can shew a reason for what he acts and does, both when and
where at present thou seest none. Shall God the only wise,
be arraigned at the bar of thy blind reason, and there be
judged and condemned for his acts done in eternity? Who
hath directed the Spirit of the Lord, ‘or who hath
been his counsellor?’ (Rom 11:34). Do you not know
that he is far more above us, than we are above our horse
or mule that is without understanding? ‘Great things
doeth he, which we cannot comprehend’ (Job 37:5).
‘Great things and unsearchable, marvellous things
without number’ (Job 5:9).
But, I say, should we take it well if our
beast should call us to account for this and the other
righteous act, and judge us unrighteous, and our acts
ridiculous, and all because it sees no reason for our so
doing? Why, we are as beasts before God (Psa
73:22).
But again, to come yet more close to the
point: the reprobate quarrels with God, because he hath not
elected him; well, but is not God the master of his own
love? And is not his will the only rule of his mercy? And
may he not, without he give offence to thee, lay hold by
electing love and mercy on whom himself pleaseth? Must thy
reason, nay, thy lust, be the ruler, orderer, and disposer
of his grace? ‘Is it not lawful for me to do what I
will with mine own?’ saith he, ‘Is thine eye
evil, because I am good?’ (Matt 20:15).
Further, What harm doth God to any
reprobate, by not electing of him; he was, as hath been
said, considered upright, so formed in the act of creation,
and so turned into the world: indeed he was not elected,
but hath that taken anything from him? No, verily, but
leaveth him in good condition: there is good, and better,
and best of all; he that is in a good estate, though others
through free grace are in a far better, hath not any cause
to murmur either with him that gave him such a place, or at
him that is placed above him. In a word, reprobation maketh
no man personally a sinner, neither doth election make any
man personally righteous. It is the consenting to sin that
makes a man a sinner; and the imputation of grace and
righteousness that makes [men] gospelly and personally just
and holy.
But again, seeing it is God’s act to
leave some out of the bounds of his election, it must needs
be, therefore, positively good: Is that then which is good
in itself made sin unto thee? God forbid: God doth not evil
by leaving this or that man out of his electing grace,
though he choose others to eternal life, through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Wherefore there is not a reprobate that
hath any cause, and therefore no just cause, to quarrel
with his Maker, for not electing of him.
And that, besides what hath been spoken, if
you consider,
1. For God to elect, is an act of sovereign
grace; but to pass by, or to refuse so to do, is an act of
sovereign power, not of injustice.
2. God might therefore have chosen whether
he would have elected any, or so many or few; and also
which and where he would.
3. Seeing then that all things are at his
dispose, he may fasten electing mercy where he pleaseth;
and other mercy, if he will, to whom and when he
will.
4. Seeing also that the least of mercies are
not deserved by the best of sinners; men, instead of
quarrelling against the God of grace, because they have not
what they list, should acknowledge they are unworthy of
their breath; and also should confess that God may give
mercy where he pleaseth, and that too, both which or what,
as also to whom, and when he will; and yet be good, and
just, and very gracious still: Nay, Job saith, ‘He
taketh away, who can hinder him? Who will say unto him,
What doest thou?’ (Job 9:12).
The will of God is the rule of all
righteousness, neither knoweth he any other way by which he
governeth and ordereth any of his actions. Whatsoever God
doth, it is good because he doth it; whether it be to give
grace, or to detain it; whether in choosing or refusing.
The consideration of this, made the holy men of old ascribe
righteousness to their Maker, even then when yet they could
not see the reason of his actions. They would rather stand
amazed, and wonder at the heights and depths of his
unsearchable judgments, than quarrel at the strange and
most obscure of them (Job 34:10-12, 36:3, 37:23; Jer 12:1;
Rom 11:33).
God did not intend that all that ever he
would do, should be known to every man, no nor yet to the
wise and prudent. It is as much a duty sometimes to stay
ourselves and wonder, and to confess our ignorance in many
things of God, as it is to do other things that are duty
without dispute. So then, let poor dust and ashes forbear
to condemn the Lord, because he goeth beyond them; and also
they should beware they speak not wickedly for him, though
it be, as they think, to justify his actions. ‘The
Lord is righteous in all his ways, and holy in all
his works’ (Psa 145:17; Matt 11:25; 1 Cor 2:8; Job
13:6-8).[7]
CHAPTER 8.
Whether Eternal reprobation in itself, or
in its doctrine, be in very deed an hindrance to any man in
seeking the salvation of his soul.
In my discourse upon this question, I must
entreat the reader to mind well what is premised in the
beginning of the former chapter, which is, That reprobation
makes no man a sinner, appoints no man to condemnation, but
leaveth him upright after all. So then, though God doth
leave this most of men without the bounds of his election,
his so doing is neither in itself, nor yet its doctrine, in
very deed, an hindrance to any man in seeking the salvation
of his soul.
First, It hindreth not in itself, as
is clear by the ensuing considerations:—
1. That which hindreth him is the weakness
that came upon him by reason of sin. Now God only made the
man, but man’s listening to Satan made him a sinner,
which is the cause of all his weakness: this therefore is
it that hindreth him, and that also disenableth him in
seeking the salvation of his soul. ‘Let no man say
when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be
tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man’
(James 1:13). ‘God made man upright; but they have
sought out many inventions’ (Eccl 7:29; Eze 16:30;
Hosea 13:9, 14:1; Gen 3:8-11).
2. It hindreth not in itself, for it taketh
not anything from a man that would help him, might it
continue with him; it takes not away the least part of his
strength, wisdom, courage, innocency, or will to good; all
these were lost by the fall, in that day when he died the
death. Nay, reprobation under some consideration did rather
establish all these upon the reprobate; for as it decrees
him left, so left upright. Wherefore man’s hindrance
cometh on him from other means, even by the fall, and not
by the simple act of eternal reprobation (Gen
3).
3. As reprobation hindreth not either of
these two ways, so neither is it from this simple act that
Satan is permitted either to tempt them, that they might be
tried, or that they might be overthrown.
(1.) It is not by this act that Satan is
permitted to tempt them that they might be tried; because
then the Son of God himself must be reached by this
reprobation; he being tempted by the devil as much, if not
more than any. Yea, and then must every one of the elect be
under eternal reprobation; for they also, and that after
their conversion, are greatly assaulted by him. ‘Many
are the troubles of the righteous,’ &c. (Matt
4:1,2; Heb 2:17, 4:15).
(2.) Neither is it from the act of
reprobation that sin hath entered the world, no more than
from election, because those under the power of election
did not only fall at first, but do still generally as
foully, before conversion, as the reprobate himself.
Whereas, if either the temptation, or the fall, were by
virtue of reprobation, then the reprobates, and they only,
should have been tempted, and have fallen. The temptation
then, and the fall, doth come from other means, and so the
hindrance of the reprobate, than from eternal reprobation.
For the temptation, the fall and hindrance being universal,
but the act of reprobation particular, the hindrance must
needs come from such a cause as taketh hold on all men,
which indeed is the fall; the cause of which was neither
election nor reprobation, but man’s voluntary
listening to the tempter (Rom 3:9).
(3.) It is yet far more evident that
reprobation hindreth no man from seeking the salvation of
his soul: because notwithstanding all that reprobation
doth, yet God giveth to divers of the reprobates great
encouragements thereto; to wit, the tenders of the gospel
in general, not excluding any; great light also to
understand it, with many a sweet taste of the good word of
God, and the powers of the world to come; he maketh them
sometimes also to be partakers of the Holy Ghost, and
admitteth many of them into fellowship with his elect; yea,
some of them to be rulers, teachers, and governors in his
house: all which, without doubt, both are and ought to be
great encouragements even to the reprobates themselves, to
seek the salvation of their souls (Matt 11:28; Rev 22:17;
Heb 6:4,5; Matt 25:1,2; Acts 1:16,17).
Second, As it hindreth not in itself,
so it hindreth not by its doctrine: for, all that this
doctrine saith is, that some are left out of God’s
election, as considered upright. Now this doctrine cannot
hinder any man. For,
1. No man still stands upright.
2. Though it saith some are left, yet it
points at no man, it nameth no man, it binds all faces in
secret. So then, if it hinder, it hindreth all, even the
elect as well as reprobate; for the reprobate hath as much
ground to judge himself elect, as the very elect himself
hath, before he be converted, being both alike in a state
of nature and unbelief, and both alike visibly liable to
the curse, for the breach of the commandment. Again, As
they are equals here, so also have they ground alike to
close in with Christ and live; even the open, free, and
full invitation of the gospel, and promise of life and
salvation, by the faith of Jesus Christ (Eph 2:1,2; Rom
3:9; John 3:16; 2 Cor 5:19-21; Rev 21:6, 22:17).
3. It is evident also by experience, that
this doctrine doth not, in deed, neither can it
hinder any (this doctrine I mean, when both rightly stated
and rightly used) because many who have been greatly
afflicted about this matter, have yet at last had comfort;
which comfort, when they have received it, hath been to
them as an argument that the thing they feared before, was
not because of reprobation rightly stated; but its doctrine
much abused was the cause of their affliction: and had they
had the same light at first they received afterwards, their
troubles then would soon have fled, as also now they do.
Wherefore discouragement comes from want of light, because
they are not skilful in the word of righteousness: for had
the discouragement at first been true, which yet it could
not be, unless the person knew by name himself under
eternal reprobation, which is indeed impossible, then his
light would have pinched him harder; light would rather
have fastened this his fear, than at all have rid him of it
(Heb 5:12-14).
Indeed the scripture saith, the word is to
some the savour of death unto death, when to others the
savour of life unto life. But mark, it is not this doctrine
in particular, if so much as some other, that doth destroy
the reprobate. It was respited at which Pharaoh hardened
his heart; and the grace of God that the reprobates of old
did turn into lasciviousness. Yea, Christ the Saviour of
the world, is a stumbling-block unto some, and a rock of
offence unto others. But yet again, consider that neither
HE, nor any of God’s doctrines, are so simply, and in
their own true natural force and drift: for they beget no
unbelief, they provoke to no wantonness, neither do they in
the least encourage to impenitency; all this comes from
that ignorance and wickedness that came by the fall:
Wherefore it is by reason of that also, that they stumble,
and fall, and grow weak, and are discouraged, and split
themselves, either at the doctrine of reprobation, or at
any other truth of God (Exo 8:15; Jude 4:1; 1 Peter
2:8).
Lastly, To conclude as I began, there
is no man while in this world, that doth certainly know
that he is left out of the electing love of the great God;
neither hath he any word in the whole bible, to persuade
him so to conclude and believe; for the scriptures hold
forth salvation to the greatest of sinners. Wherefore,
though the act of reprobation were far more harsh, and its
doctrine also more sharp and severe, yet it cannot properly
be said to hinder any. It is a foolish thing in any to be
troubled with those things which they have no ground to
believe concerns themselves; especially when the latitude
of their discouragement is touching their own persons only.
‘The secret things belong unto the Lord our
God’ (Deut 29:29). Indeed every one of the words of
God ought to put us upon examination, and into a serious
enquiry of our present state and condition, and how we now
do stand for eternity; to wit, whether we are ready to meet
the Lord, or how it is with us. Yet, when search is fully
made, and the worst come unto the worst, the party can find
himself no more than the chief of sinners, not excluded
from the grace of God tendered in the gospel; not from an
invitation, nay a promise, to be embraced and blest, if he
comes to Jesus Christ. Wherefore he hath no ground to be
discouraged by the doctrine of reprobation (1 Tim 1:15;
Acts 3:19; 2 Chron 33; John 7:37, 6:37; Mark
2:17).
CHAPTER 9.
Whether God would indeed and in truth,
that the gospel, with the grace thereof, should be tendered
to those that yet he hath bound up under Eternal
Reprobation?
To this question I shall answer,
First, In the language of our Lord,
‘Go preach the gospel unto every creature’
(Mark 16:15); and again, ‘Look unto me, and be ye
saved; all ye ends of the earth’ (Isa 45:22).
‘And whosoever will, let him take the water of life
freely’ (Rev 22:17). And the reason is, because
Christ died for all, ‘tasted death for every
man’ (2 Cor 5:15; Heb 2:9); is ‘the Saviour of
the world’ (1 John 4:14), and the propitiation for
the sins of the whole world.
Second, I gather it from those
several censures that even every one goeth under, that doth
not receive Christ, when offered in the general tenders of
the gospel; ‘He that believeth not, - shall be
damned’ (Mark 16:16); ‘He that believeth not
God hath made him a liar, because he believeth not the
record that God gave of his son’ (1 John 5:10); and,
Woe unto thee Capernaum, ‘Woe unto thee Chorazin! woe
unto thee Bethsaida!’ (Matt 11:21) with many other
sayings, all which words, with many other of the same
nature, carry in them a very great argument to this very
purpose; for if those that perish in the days of the
gospel, shall have, at least, their damnation heightened,
because they have neglected and refused to receive the
gospel, it must needs be that the gospel was with all
faithfulness to be tendered unto them; the which it could
not be, unless the death of Christ did extend itself unto
them (John 3:16; Heb 2:3); for the offer of the gospel
cannot, with God’s allowance, be offered any further
than the death of Jesus Christ doth go; because if that be
taken away, there is indeed no gospel, nor grace to be
extended. Besides, if by every creature, and the like,
should be meant only the elect, then are all the
persuasions of the gospel to no effect at all; for still
the unconverted, who are here condemned for refusing of it,
they return it as fast again: I do not know I am elect, and
therefore dare not come to Jesus Christ; for if the death
of Jesus Christ, and so the general tender of the gospel,
concern the elect alone; I, not knowing myself to be one of
that number, am at a mighty plunge; nor know I whether is
the greater sin, to believe, or to despair: for I say
again, if Christ died only for the elect, &c. then, I
not knowing myself to be one of that number, dare not
believe the gospel, that holds forth his blood to save me;
nay, I think with safety may not, until I first do know I
am elect of God, and appointed thereunto.
Third, God the Father, and Jesus
Christ his Son, would have all men whatever, invited by the
gospel to lay hold of life by Christ, whether elect or
reprobate; for though it be true, that there is such a
thing as election and reprobation, yet God, by the tenders
of the gospel in the ministry of his word, looks upon men
under another consideration, to wit, as sinners; and as
sinners invites them to believe, lay hold of, and embrace
the same. He saith not to his ministers, Go preach to the
elect, because they are elect; and shut out others, because
they are not so: But, Go preach the gospel to sinners as
sinners; and as they are such, go bid them come to me and
live. And it must needs be so, otherwise the preacher could
neither speak in faith, nor the people hear in faith.
First, the preacher could not speak in faith, because he
knoweth not the elect from the reprobate; nor they again
hear in faith, because, as unconverted, they would be
always ignorant of that also. So then, the minister neither
knowing whom he should offer life unto, nor yet the people
which of them are to receive it; how could the word now be
preached in faith with power? And how could the people
believe and embrace it? But now the preacher offering mercy
in the gospel to sinners, as they are sinners, here is way
made for the word to be spoke in faith, because his hearers
are sinners; yea, and encouragement also for the people to
receive and close therewith, they understanding they are
sinners: ‘Christ Jesus came into the world to save
sinners’ (1 Tim 1:15; Luke 24:46,47).
Fourth, The gospel must be preached
to sinners as they are sinners, without distinction of
elect or reprobate; because neither the one nor yet the
other, as considered under these simple acts, are fit
subjects to embrace the gospel: for neither the one act,
nor yet the other, doth make either of them sinners; but
the gospel is to be tendered to men as they are sinners,
and personally under the curse of God for sin: wherefore to
proffer grace to the elect because they are elect, it is to
proffer grace and mercy to them, as not considering them as
sinners. And, I say, to deny it to the reprobate, because
he is not elected, it is not only a denial of grace to them
that have no need thereof, but also before occasion is
given on their part, for such a dispensation. And I say
again, therefore, to offer Christ and grace to man elect,
as simply so considered, this administers to him no comfort
at all, he being here no sinner; and so engageth not the
heart at all to Jesus Christ; for that comes in, and is
effected on them as they are sinners. Yea, to deny the
gospel also to the reprobate, because he is not elect, it
will not trouble him at all; for saith he, So I am not a
sinner, and so do not need a Saviour. But now, because the
elect have no need of grace in Christ by the gospel, but as
they are sinners; nor the reprobates cause to refuse it,
but as they are sinners; therefore Christ by the word of
the gospel, is to be proffered to both, without considering
elect or reprobate, even as they are sinners. ‘The
whole have no need of the physician, but they that are
sick: I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance’ (Mark 2:17; 2 Cor 5:14,15; Luke
7:47).
Thus you see the gospel is to be tendered to
all in general, as well to the reprobate as to the elect,
TO SINNERS AS SINNERS; and so are they to receive it, and
to close with the tenders thereof.[8]
CHAPTER 10.
Seeing then that the grace of God in the
gospel, is by that to be proffered to sinners, as sinners;
as well to the reprobate as the elect; Is it possible for
those who indeed are not elect, to receive it, and be
saved?
To this question I shall answer several
things: but first I shall shew you what that grace
is, that is tendered in the gospel; and secondly,
what it is to receive it and be saved.
First then, The grace that is offered
to sinners as sinners, without respect to this or that
person, it is a sufficiency of righteousness, pardoning
grace, and life, laid up in the person of Christ, held
forth in the exhortation and word of the gospel, and
promised to be theirs that receive it; yea, I say, in so
universal a tender, that not one is by it excluded or
checked in the least, but rather encouraged, if he hath the
least desire to life; yea, it is held forth to beget both
desires and longings after the life thus laid up in Christ,
and held forth by the gospel (John 1:16; Col 1:19,23; 1
John 5:11,12; Acts 13:38,39; Rom 10:12-14,
16:25,26).
Secondly, To receive this grace thus
tendered by the gospel, it is,
1. To believe it is true.
2. To receive it heartily and unfeignedly
through faith. And,
3. To let it have its natural sway, course
and authority in the soul, and that in that measure, as to
bring forth the fruits of good living in heart, word, and
life, both before God and man.
Now then to the question.
Is it possible that this tender, thus
offered to the reprobate, should by him be thus received
and embraced, and he live thereby?
To which I answer in the negative. Nor yet
for the elect themselves, I mean as considered dead in
trespasses and sins, which is the state of all men, elect
as well as reprobate. So then, though there be a
sufficiency of life and righteousness laid up in Christ for
all men, and this tendered by the gospel to them without
exception; yet sin coming in between the soul and the
tender of this grace, it hath in truth disabled all men,
and so, notwithstanding this tender, they continue to be
dead. For the gospel, I say, coming in word only, saveth no
man, because of man’s impediment; wherefore those
that indeed are saved by this gospel, the word comes not to
them in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy
Ghost; is mixed with faith even with the faith of the
operation of God, by whose exceeding great and mighty power
they are raised from this death of sin, and enabled to
embrace the gospel. Doubtless, all men being dead in
trespasses and sins, and so captivated under the power of
the devil, the curse of the law, and shut up in unbelief;
it must be the power of God, yea the exceeding greatness of
that power that raiseth the soul from this condition, to
receive the holy gospel (Eph 2:1-3; 1 Thess 1:5,6; Col
2:12; Heb 4:1,2; Eph 1:18,19, &c.).
For man by nature, (consider him at best),
can see no more, nor do no more than what the principles of
nature understands and helps to do; which nature being
below the discerning of things truly, spiritually, and
savingly good, it must needs fall short of receiving,
loving and delighting in them. ‘The natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are
foolishness unto him: neither can he know them,
because they are spiritually discerned’ (1 Cor 2:14).
Now I say, if the natural man at best (for the elect before
conversion are no more, if quite so much) cannot do this,
how shall they attain thereto, being now not only corrupted
and infected, but depraved, bewitched and dead; swallowed
up of unbelief, ignorance, confusion, hardness of heart,
hatred of God, and the like? When a thorn by nature beareth
grapes, and a thistle beareth figs, then may this thing be
(Matt 7:16-18). To lay hold of and receive the gospel by a
true and saving faith, it is an act of the soul as made a
new creature, which is the workmanship of God: ‘Now
he that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is
God’ (2 Cor 5:5). ‘For a corrupt tree cannot
bring forth good fruit’ (Luke 6:43-45). ‘Can
the Ethiopian change his skin?’ (Jer
13:23).
But yet the cause of this
impossibility.
1. Lieth not in reprobation, the elect
themselves being as much unable to receive it as the
other.
2. Neither is it because the reprobate is
excluded in the tender, for that is universal.
3. Neither is it because there wanteth
arguments in the tenders of the gospel, for there is not
only plenty, but such as be persuasive, clear, and full of
rationality.
4. Neither is it because these creatures
have no need thereof, for they have broken the
law.
5. Wherefore it is, because indeed they are
by sin dead, captivated, mad, self-opposers, blind,
alienated in their minds, and haters of the Lord. Behold
the ruins that sin hath made!
Wherefore whoever receiveth the grace that
is tendered in the gospel, they must be quickened by the
power of God, their eyes must be opened, their
understandings illuminated, their ears unstopped, their
hearts circumcised, their wills also rectified, and the Son
of God revealed in them. Yet as I said, not because there
wanteth argument in these tenders, but because men are
dead, and blind, and cannot hear the word. ‘Why do ye
not understand my speech [saith Christ]; Even
because ye cannot hear my word’ (John 8:43; Acts
9:15, 26:9,10; Psa 110:3; Gal 1:15; Matt 11:27).
For otherwise, as I said but now, there is,
1. Rationality enough in the tenders of the gospel. 2.
Persuasions of weight enough to provoke to faith. And, 3.
Arguments enough to persuade to continue
therein.
1. Is it not reasonable that man should
believe God in the proffer of the gospel and life by it? Is
there not reason, I say, both from the truth and
faithfulness of God, from the sufficiency of the merits of
Christ, as also from the freeness and fullness of the
promise? What unreasonable thing doth the gospel bid thee
credit? Or what falsehood doth it command thee to receive
for truth? Indeed in many points the gospel is above
reason, but yet in never a one against it; especially in
those things wherein it beginneth with the sinner, in order
to eternal life.
2. Again, touching its persuasions to
provoke to faith: With how many signs and wonders, miracles
and mighty deeds, hath it been once and again confirmed,
and that to this very end? (Heb 1:1-3; 1 Cor 14:22). With
how many oaths, declarations, attestations, and
proclamations, is it avouched, confirmed, and established?
(Heb 6:17,18; Acts 13:32; Jer 3:12; Gal 3:15). And why
should not credence be given to that gospel that is
confirmed by blood, the blood of the Son of God himself?
Yea, that gospel that did never yet fail any that in truth
hath cast themselves upon it, since the foundation of the
world (Heb 9:16-18, 12:1-3).
3. Again, as there is rationality enough,
and persuasions sufficient, so there is also argument most
prevalent to persuade to continue therein, and that to
heartily, cheerfully, and unfeignedly, unto the end: did
not, as I have said, blindness, madness, deadness, and
willful rebellion, carry them away in the vanity of their
minds, and overcome them (Eph 4:17-19).
(1.) For, first, if they could but consider
how they have sinned, how they have provoked God, &c.,
if they could but consider what a dismal state the state of
the damned is, and also, that in a moment their condition
is like to be the same, would they not cleave to the gospel
and live?
(2.) The enjoyment of God, and Christ, and
saints, and angels, being the sweetest; the pleasures of
heaven the most comfortable, and to live always in the
greatest height of light, life, joy, and gladness
imaginable, one would think were enough to persuade the
very damned now in hell.
There is no man then perisheth for want of
sufficient reason in the tenders of the gospel, nor any for
want of persuasions to faith; nor yet because there wanteth
arguments to provoke to continue therein. But the truth is,
the gospel in this hath to do with unreasonable creatures;
with such as will not believe it, and that because it is
truth: ‘And because I tell you the truth,
[saith Christ] therefore ye believe me not’ (John
8:45).
Quest. Well, but if this in truth be
thus, how then comes it to pass that some receive it and
live for ever? For you have said before, that the elect are
as dead as the reprobate, and full as unable as they, as
men, to close with these tenders, and live.
Answ. Doubtless this is true, and
were the elect left to themselves, they, through the
wickedness of their heart, would perish as do others.
Neither could all the reasonable persuasive prevalent
arguments of the gospel of God in Christ, prevail to make
any receive it, and live. Wherefore here you must consider,
that as there is mercy proclaimed in the general tenders of
the gospel, so there is also the grace of election; which
grace kindly over-ruleth and winneth the spirit of the
chosen, working in them that unfeigned closing therewith,
that makes it effectual to their undoubted salvation; which
indeed is the cause that not only in other ages, but also
to this day, there is a remnant that receive this grace;
they being appointed, I say, thereto, before the world
began; preserved in time from that which would undo them,
and enabled to embrace the glorious gospel of grace, and
peace, and life (1 Kings 19:18; Rom 11:5; 1 Thess
5:9).
Now there is a great difference between the
grace of election, and the grace that is wrapped up in the
general tenders of the gospel a difference, I say, and that
both as to its timing, latituding, and working.
1. Touching its timing; it is before, yea
long before, there was either tender of the grace wrapped
up in the gospel to any, or any need of such a tender (Eph
1:4,5).
2. They also differ in latitude; the tenders
of grace in the gospel are common and universal to all, but
the extension of that of election special and peculiar to
some. ‘There is a remnant according to the election
of grace’ (Rom 11:5).
3. Touching the working of the grace of
election; it differs much in some things from the working
of the grace that is offered in the general tenders of the
gospel. As is manifest in these particulars:
(1.). The grace that is offered in the
general tenders of the gospel, calleth for faith to lay
hold upon, and accept thereof; but the special grace of
election, worketh that faith which doth lay hold thereof
(Acts 16:31, 13:48; Phil 1:29; 2 Thess 1:11).
(2.) The grace that is offered in the
general tenders of the gospel, calleth for faith, as a
condition in us, without which there is no life; but the
special grace of election worketh faith in us without any
such condition (Mark 16:15,16; Rom 11:5,6).
(3.) The grace that is offered in the
general tenders of the gospel, promiseth happiness upon the
condition of persevering in the faith only; but the special
grace of election causeth this perseverance (Col 1:23; Eph
2:10; Rom 11:7; 1 Peter 1:5-7).
(4.) The grace offered in the general
tenders of the gospel, when it sparkleth most, leaveth the
greatest part of men behind it; but the special grace of
election, when it shineth least, doth infallibly bring
every soul therein concerned to everlasting life (Rom
10:16, 8:33-35).
(5.) A man may overcome and put out all the
light and life that is begotten in him by the general
tenders of the gospel; but none shall overcome, or make
void, or frustrate the grace of election (Jude 4; 2 Peter
2:20-22; Matt 24:24; Rom 11:1-3, &c.).
(6.) The general tenders of the gospel,
considered without a concurrence of the grace of election,
helps not the elect himself, when sadly fallen. Wherefore,
when I say the grace that is offered in the general tenders
of the gospel, I mean that grace when offered, as not being
accompanied with a special operation of God’s eternal
love, by way of conjunction therewith. Otherwise the grace
that is tendered in the general offers of the gospel, is
that which saveth the sinner now, and that brings him to
everlasting life; that is, when conjoined with that grace
that blesseth and maketh this general tender effectually
efficacious. The grace of election worketh not without, but
by these tenders generally; neither doth the grace thus
tendered, effectually work, but by and with the grace of
election: ‘As many as were ordained to eternal life
believed’ (Acts 13:48): The word being then effectual
to life, when the hand of the Lord is effectually therewith
to that end (Mark 16:20). They ‘spake [saith the
text] unto the Grecians, preaching the Lord Jesus. And the
hand of the Lord was with them; and a great number
believed, and turned unto the Lord’ (Acts
11:20,21).
We must always put difference between the
word of the gospel, and the power that manageth that word;
we must put difference between the common and more special
operations of that power also; even as there is evidently a
difference to be put between those words of Christ that
were effectual to do what was said, and of those words of
his which were but words only, or at least not so
accompanied with power. As for instance: that same Jesus
that said to the Leper, ‘Say nothing to any
man,’ said also to Lazarus, ‘Come forth’;
yet the one obeyed, the other did not; though he that
obeyed was least in a capacity to do it, he being now dead,
and stunk in his grave. Indeed unbelief hath hindered
Christ much, yet not when he putteth forth himself as
Almighty, but when he doth suffer himself by them to be
abused who are to be dealt with by ordinary means:
Otherwise legions of devils, with ten thousand impediments,
must fall down before him, and give way unto him. There is
a speaking, and a so speaking: ‘They so spake, that a
great multitude, both of the Jews, and also of the Greeks,
believed’ (Acts 14:1). Even as I have hinted already,
there is a difference between the coming of the word when
it is in power (1 Thess 1:5), and when it is in word only.
So then, the blessed grace of election chooseth this man to
good, not because he is good; it chooseth him to believe,
not because he doth believe; it chooseth him to persevere,
not because he doth so; it fore-ordains that this man shall
be created in Christ Jesus unto good works (Eph 1:4-6), not
if a man will create himself thereto (1 Peter 1:2; Eph
2:10).
What shall we say then? Is the fault in God,
if any perish? Doubtless no; nor yet in his act of eternal
reprobation neither: it is grace that saveth the elect, but
sin that damns the rest: it is superabundant grace that
causeth the elect to close with the tenders of life, and
live; and it is the aboundings of sin that holds off the
reprobate from the rational, necessary, and absolute
tenders, of grace. To conclude then; the gospel calleth for
credence as a condition, and that both from the elect and
reprobate; but because none of them both, as dead in sin,
will close therewith, and live; therefore grace, by virtue
of electing love, puts forth itself to work and do for some
beyond reason; and justice cuts off others, for slighting
so good, so gracious, and necessary a means of salvation,
so full both of kindness, mercy and reason.
CHAPTER 11.
Seeing [that] it is not possible
that the reprobate should receive this grace and live, and
also seeing [that] this is infallibly foreseen of
God; and again, seeing God hath fore-determined to suffer
it so to be; Why doth he yet will and command that the
gospel, and so grace in the general tenders thereof, should
be proffered unto them?
Why then is the gospel offered them? Well,
that there is such a thing as eternal reprobation, I have
shewed you; also what this eternal reprobation is, I have
opened unto you: and shall now shew you also, that though
these reprobates will infallibly perish, which God not only
foresaw, but fore-determined to suffer them most assuredly
so to do; yet there is reason, great reason, why the
gospel, and so the grace of God thereby, should be
tendered, and that in general terms, to them as well as
others.
But before I come to lay the reasons before
you, I must mind you afresh of these
particulars:
1. That eternal reprobation makes no man a
sinner.
2. That the fore-knowledge of God that the
reprobate would perish makes no man a sinner.
3. That God’s infallibly determining
upon the damnation of him that perisheth, makes no man a
sinner.
4. God’s patience and long-suffering,
and forbearance, until the reprobate fits himself for
eternal destruction, makes no man a sinner.
So then, God may reprobate, may suffer the
reprobate to sin, may pre-determine his infallible
damnation, through the pre-consideration of him in sin, and
may also forbear to work that effectual work in his soul
that would infallibly bring him out of this condition, and
yet neither be the author, contriver, nor means of
man’s sin and misery.
Again, God may infallibly foresee that this
reprobate, when he hath sinned, will be an unreasonable
opposer of his own salvation; and may also determine to
suffer him to sin, and be thus unreasonable to the end, yet
be gracious, yea very gracious, if he offer him life, and
that only upon reasonable terms, which yet he denieth to
close with (Isa 1:18; 55:12).
The reasons are,
1. Because not God, but sin, hath made him
unreasonable; without which, reasonable terms had done his
work for him: for reasonable terms are the most equal and
righteous terms that can be propounded between parties at
difference; yea the terms that most suiteth and agreeth
with a reasonable creature, such as man; nay, reasonable
terms are, for terms, the most apt to work with that man
whose reason is brought into and held captive by very sense
itself (Eze 18; 33).
2. God goeth yet further, he addeth promises
of mercy, as those that are inseparable to the terms he
offereth, even to pour forth his Spirit unto them;
‘Turn at my reproof, and behold I will pour forth of
my Spirit unto you, and incline your ear; come unto me,
hear and your soul shall live’ (Prov
1:23-27).
Now then to the question itself, to wit,
that seeing it is impossible the reprobate should be saved;
seeing also this is infallibly foreseen of God, and seeing
also that God hath beforehand determined to suffer it so to
be; yet I shall shew you it is requisite, yea very
requisite, that he should both will and command that the
gospel, and so grace in the general tenders thereof should
be proffered unto them.
FIRST REASON.—And that first, to shew
that this reprobation doth not in itself make any man
absolutely incapable of salvation: for if God had intended
that by the act of reprobation, the persons therein
concerned should also by that only act have been made
incapable of everlasting life, then this act must also have
tied up all the means from them, that tendeth to that end;
or at least have debarred the gospel’s being offered
to them by God’s command, for that intent; otherwise
who is there but would have charged the Holy One as guilty
of guile, and worthy of blame, for commanding that the
gospel of grace and salvation should be offered unto this
or that man, whom yet he hath made incapable to receive it,
by his act of reprobation. Wherefore this very thing, to
wit, that the gospel is yet to be tendered to these
eternally reprobated, sheweth that it is not simply the act
of God’s reprobation, but sin, that incapacitateth
the creature of life everlasting. Which sin is no branch of
this reprobation, as is evident, because the elect and
reprobate are both alike defiled therewith.
SECOND REASON.—God also sheweth by
this, that the reprobate do not perish for want of the
offers of salvation, though he hath offended God, and that
upon most righteous terms; according to what is written,
‘As I live, saith the Lord God, I have no pleasure in
the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his
way, and live’ (Eze 33:11, 18:31,32). ‘Turn ye
unto me, saith the Lord of Hosts, and I will turn unto you,
saith the Lord of Hosts’ (Zech 1:3). So then, here
lieth the point between God and the reprobate, I mean the
reprobate since he hath sinned, God is willing to save him
upon reasonable terms, but not upon terms above reason; but
not reasonable terms will [go] down with the reprobate,
therefore he must perish for his
unreasonableness.
That God is willing to save even those that
perish for ever, is apparent, both from the consideration
of the goodness of his nature (Psa 145:9), of man’s
being his creature, and indeed in a miserable state (Job
14:15, 3:16). But I say, as I have also said already, there
is a great difference between his being willing to save
them, through their complying with these his reasonable
terms, and his being resolved to save them, whether they,
as men, will close therewith, or no; so only he saveth the
elect themselves, even ‘according to the riches of
his grace’ (Eph 1:7). Even ‘according to his
riches in glory, by Christ Jesus’ (Phil 4:19).
Working effectually in them, what the gospel, as a
condition, calleth for from them. And hence it is that he
is said to give faith (Phil 1:29), yea the most holy faith,
for that is the faith of God’s elect, to give
repentance (Acts 5:31), to give a new heart, to give his
fear, even that fear that may keep them for ever from
everlasting ruin (Eph 1:4); still engaging his mercy and
goodness to follow them all the days of their lives (Jer
32:40; Eze 36:26,27), that they may dwell in the house of
the Lord for ever (Psa 23:6), and as another scripture
saith, ‘Now he that hath wrought us for the selfsame
thing, is God’ (2 Cor 5:5; Rom 8:26,
&c.).
But I say, his denying to do thus for every
man in the world, cannot properly be said to be because he
is not heartily willing they should close with the tenders
of the grace held forth in the gospel, and live. Wherefore
you must consider that there is a distinction to be put
between God’s denying grace on reasonable terms, and
denying it absolutely; and also that there is a difference
between his withholding further grace, and of hindering men
from closing with the grace at present offered; also that
God may withhold much, when he taketh away nothing; yea,
take away much, when once abused, and yet be just and
righteous still. Further, God may deny to do this or that
absolutely, when yet he hath promised to do, not only that,
but more, conditionally. Which things considered, you may
with ease conclude, that he may be willing to save those
not elect, upon reasonable terms, though not without
them.
It is no unrighteousness in God to offer
grace unto the world, though but on these terms only, that
they are also foreseen by him infallibly to reject; both
because to reject it is unreasonable, especially the terms
being so reasonable, as to believe the truth and live; and
also because it is grace and mercy in God, so much as once
to offer means of reconciliation to a sinner, he being the
offender; but the Lord, the God offended; they being but
dust and ashes, he the heavenly Majesty. If God, when man
had broke the law, had yet with all severity kept the world
to the utmost condition of it, had he then been unjust? Had
he injured man at all? Was not every tittle of the law
reasonable, both in the first and second table? How much
more then is he merciful and gracious, even in but
mentioning terms of reconciliation? especially seeing he is
also willing so to condescend, if they will believe his
word, and receive the love of the truth. Though the
reprobate then doth voluntarily, and against all strength
of reason, run himself upon the rocks of eternal misery,
and split himself thereon, he perisheth in his own
corruption, by rejecting terms of life (2 Thess 2:10; 2
Peter 2:12,13).
Object. But the reprobate is not now
in a capacity to fulfil these reasonable terms.
Ans. But I say, suppose it should be
granted, is it because reprobation made him incapable, or
sin? Not reprobation, but sin: if sin, then before he
quarrel, let him consider the case aright, where, in the
result, he will find sin, being consented to by his
voluntary mind, hath thus disabled him: and because, I say,
it was sin by his voluntary consent that did it, let him
quarrel with himself for consenting, so as to make himself
incapable to close with reasonable terms; yea, with those
terms because reasonable, therefore most suitable, as
terms, for him notwithstanding his wickedness. And I say
again, forasmuch as those reasonable terms have annexed
unto them, as their inseperable companions, such wonderful
mercy and grace as indeed there is, let even them that
perish, yet justify God; yea cry, ‘His goodness
endureth for ever’; though they, through the
wretchedness of their hearts, get no benefit by
it.
THIRD REASON.— God may will and
command that his gospel, and so the grace thereof, be
tendered to those that shall never be saved, (besides what
hath been said) to shew to all spectators what an enemy
sin, being once embraced, is to the salvation of man. Sin,
without the tenders of the grace of the gospel, could never
have appeared so exceeding sinful, as by that it both hath
and doth: ‘If I had not come and spoken unto them,
[saith Christ] they had not had sin: but now they have no
cloke for their sin’ (John 15:22). As sins that
oppose the law, are discovered by the law, that is, by the
goodness, and justness, and holiness of the law (Rom 7); so
the sins that oppose the gospel, are made manifest by that,
even by the love, and mercy, and forgiveness of the gospel:
If ‘he that despised Moses’ law died without
mercy, - of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he
be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of
God?’ (Heb 10:28,29). Who could have thought that sin
would have opposed that which is just, but especially mercy
and grace, had we not seen it with our eyes? And how could
we have seen it to purpose, had not God left some to
themselves? Here indeed is sin made manifest: ‘For
all he had done so many miracles amongst them,’ (to
wit, to persuade them to mercy) ‘yet they believed
not on him’ (John 12:37). Sin, where it reigneth, is
a mortal enemy to the soul; it blinds the eyes, holds the
hands, ties the legs, and stops the ears, and makes the
heart implacable to resist the Saviour of souls. That man
will neither obey the law nor the gospel, who is left unto
his sin: which also God is willing should be discovered and
made manifest, though it cost the damnation of some: For
this very purpose, saith God to Pharaoh, ‘have I
raised thee up, for to shew in thee my power; and
that my name may be declared in all the earth’ (Exo
9:16; Rom 9:17). For God, by raising up Pharaoh to his
kingdom, and suffering him to walk to the height, according
as his sin did prompt him forward, shewed unto all
beholders what a dreadful thing sin is; and that without
the special assistance of his Holy Spirit, sin would
neither be charmed by law nor gospel. This reason, though
it be no profit unto those that are damned; yet it is for
the honour of God, and the good of those he hath
chosen.
It is for the honour of God, even for the
honour of his power and mercy: for his power is now
discovered indeed, when nothing can tame sin but that; and
his mercy is here seen indeed; because that doth engage him
to do it. Read Romans 9:22,23.
FOURTH REASON.—God commandeth that the
tender of the gospel, and the grace thereof, be in general
offered to all, that means thereby might be sufficiently
provided for the elect, both to beget them to faith, and to
maintain it in them to the end, in what place, or state, or
condition soever they are (Eph 1). God, through the
operation of his manifold wisdom, hath an end and an end in
his acts and doings amongst the children of men: and, so in
that he commandeth that his gospel be tendered to all, an
end, I say, to leave the damned without excuse, and to
provide sufficiency of means for the gathering all his
elect. ‘Oh that God would speak, [saith Zophar] and
open his lips against thee; and -shew thee the secrets of
wisdom, that they are double to that which is’
(Job 11:5,6). For though God worketh with and upon the
elect, otherwise than with and upon the reprobate; yet he
worketh with and upon the elect, with and by the same word
he commandeth should be held forth and offered to the
reprobate. Now the text thus running in most free and
universal terms, the elect then hearing thereof, do through
the mighty power of God close in with the tenders therein
held forth, and are saved. Thus that word that was offered
to the reprobate Jews, and by them most fiercely rejected,
even that word became yet effectual to the chosen, and they
were saved thereby. They gladly received the word,
‘and as many as were ordained to eternal life
believed’ (Acts 13:48).[9] ‘Not as
though the word of God had taken none effect’ (Rom
9:6). ‘God hath not cast away his people whom he
foreknew’ (11:2). The word shall accomplish the thing
for which God hath sent it, even the salvation of the few
that are chosen, when tendered to all; though rejected by
most, through the rebellion of their hearts (Acts 28:28;
Heb 4:1-3).
Object. But if God hath elected, as
you have said, what need he lay a foundation so general for
the begetting faith in his chosen particulars, seeing the
same Spirit that worketh in them by such means, could also
work in them by other, even by a word, excluding the most,
in the first tenders thereof, amongst men?
Ans. I told you before, that though
this be a principal reason of the general tenders of the
grace of the gospel, yet it is not all the reason why the
tender should be so general, as the three former reasons
shew.
But again, in the bowels of God’s
decree of election, is contained the means that are also
ordained for the effectual bringing of those elected to
that glory for which they were fore-appointed; even to
gather together in one, all the children of God (John
11:52). ‘Whereunto he called you, [saith Paul] by our
gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus
Christ’ (2 Thess 2:14). God’s decree of
election then, destroyeth not the means which his wisdom
hath prepared, it rather establisheth, yea ordains and
establisheth it; and maketh that means which in the outward
sound is indefinite and general, effectual to this and that
man, through a special and particular application (Gal
2:20,21): thus that Christ that in general was
offered to all, is by a special act of faith applied to
Paul in particular; ‘He loved me, and gave himself
for me.’
Further, As the design of the Heavenly
Majesty is to bring his elect to glory by means, so by the
means thus universal and general, as most behooveful and
fit; if we consider not only the way it doth please him to
work with some of his chosen, in order to this their glory,
but also the trials, temptations, and other calamities they
must go through thereto.
1. Touching his working with some, how
invisible is it to these in whose souls it is yet begun?
How is the word buried under the clods of their hearts for
months, yea years together? Only thus much is discovered
thereof, it sheweth the soul its sin, the which it doth
also so aggravate and apply to the conscience (Jesus still
refraining, like Joseph, to make himself known to his
brethren) that were there not general tenders of mercy, and
that to the worst of sinners, they would soon miscarry, and
perish, as do the sons of perdition. But by these the Lord
upholdeth and helpeth them, that they stand, when others
fall for ever (Psa 119:49).
2. And so likewise for their trials,
temptations, and other calamities, because God will n