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I might have done otherwise, is of my power.' Now when, after all this, they are forced to confess some evangelical grace, though consisting only in a moral persuasion, by the outward preaching of the word, they teach,

Thirdly, That God sendeth the gospel, and revealeth Christ Jesus unto men, according as they well dispose themselves for such a blessing. Sometimesh (say they in their synodical writings) God calleth this or that nation, people, city, or person, to the communion of evangelical grace, whom he himself pronounceth worthy of it, in comparison of others' so that whereas, Acts xviii. 10. God encourageth Paul to preach at Corinth by affirming that he had 'much people in that city' (which doubtless were his people then, only by virtue of their election); in these men's judgments' 'they were called so, because that even then they feared God, and served him with all their hearts, according to that knowledge they had of him, and so were ready to obey the preaching of St. Paul.' Strange doctrine, that men should fear God, know him, serve him in sincerity, before they ever heard of the gospel, and by those means deserve that it should be preached unto them! This is that pleasing of God before faith that they plead for; Act. Synod. pag. 66. 'That preparation and disposition to believe, which men attain by the law, and virtuous education;' that something which is in sinners,' whereby though they are not justified, yet they are made worthy of justification:' form conversion and the performance of good works is, in their apprehension, a condition pre-required to justification;' for so speak the children of Arminius: which if it be not an expression, not to be paralleled in the writings of any Christian, I am something mistaken. The sum of their doctrine, then, in this par

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h Interdum Deus hanc vel illam gentem, civitatem, personam, ad evangelicæ gratiæ communionem vocat, quam ipse dignam pronuntiat comparative, &c. Rem. Declarat. Sent. Synod.

Illi, in quorum gratiam, Dominus Paulum in Corinthum misit, dicuntur Dei populus, quia Deum tum timebant eique, secundum cognitionem quam de eo habebant, servicbant ex animo, et sic ad prædicationem Pauli, &c. Cor. ad Molin. 3.

sect. 27.

Per legem, vel per piam educationem vel per institutionem-per hæc enim hominem præparari, et disponi ad credendum, planissimum est. Rem. act. Synod. Præcedit aliquid in peccatoribus, quo quamvis nondum justificati sunt, digni efficiantur justificatione. Grevin. ad Am. pag. 434.

m Tenendum est, veram conversionem præstationemque bonorum operum esse conditionem prærequisitam ante justificationem. Filii. Arm. præf. ad cap. 7. ad Rem.

ticular concerning the power of free-will, in the state of sin and unregeneration, is, That every man having a native inbred power of believing in Christ, upon the revelation of the gospel, hath also an ability of doing so much good, as shall procure of God that the gospel be preached unto him; to which, without any internal assistance of grace, he can give assent and yield obedience: the preparatory acts of his own will, always proceeding so far, as to make him excel others, who do not perform them, and are therefore excluded from farther grace: which is more gross Pelagianism than Pelagius himself would ever justify; wherefore, we reject all the former positions, as so many monsters in Christian religion, in whose room we assert these that follow.

First, That we being by nature dead in trespasses and sins, have no power to prepare ourselves for the receiving of God's grace; nor in the least measure to believe, and turn ourselves unto him. Not that we deny, that there are any conditions pre-required in us for our conversion, dispositions preparing us in some measure for our new birth or regeneration; but we affirm that all these also, are the effects of the grace of God, relating to that alone as their proper cause; for of ourselves, without him we can do nothing;' John xv. 15. 'We are not able of ourselves to think any thing as of ourselves;' 2 Cor. iii. 5. much less do that which is good: in respect of that, every one of our mouths must be stopped, for we have all sinned and come short of the glory of God;' Rom. v. 19. 23. we are by nature the children of wrath, dead in trespasses and sins;' Eph. ii. 1. Rom. viii. 9. Our new birth is a resurrection from death, wrought by the greatness of God's power. And what ability, I pray, hath a dead man, to prepare himself for his resurrection? Can he collect his scattered dust, or renew his perished senses? If the leopard can change his spots, and the Ethiopian his skin, then can we do good, who, by nature, are taught to do evil; Jer. xiii. 23. we are all ungodly; and without strength considered when Christ died for us; Rom. v. 6. wise to do evil, but to do good, we have no strength, no knowledge. Yea, all the faculties of our souls, by reason of that spiritual death under which we are detained by the corruption of nature, are altogether useless in

respect of any power, for the doing of that which is truly good; our understandings are blind or darkened; being alienated from the life of God, through the ignorance that is in us, because of the blindness of our hearts;' Eph. iv. 18. whereby we become even darkness itself; chap. v. 8. So void is the understanding of true knowledge, that the natural man' receiveth not the things that are of God; they are foolishness unto him;' 1 Cor. ii. 14. Nothing but confounded and amazed at spiritual things, and if he doth not mock, can do nothing but wonder, and say, 'What meaneth this;' Acts ii. 12, 13. Secondly, we are not only blind in our understandings, but captives also to sin in our wills; Luke iv. 18. whereby we are servants to sin;' John viii. 34. free only in our obedience to that tyrant; Rom. vi. Yea, thirdly, all our affections are wholly corrupted, ' for every imagination of the thoughts of the heart of man is evil continually;' Gen. vi. 5. While we are in the flesh, the motions of sin do work in our members, to bring forth fruit unto death; Rom. vii. 5.

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These are the endowments of our nature, these are the preparations of our hearts for the grace of God, which we have within ourselves. Nay,

Secondly, There is not only an impotency, but an enmity, in corrupted nature to any thing spiritually good. The things that are of God are foolishness unto a natural man ;' 1 Cor. ii. 14. And there is nothing that men do more hate and contemn, than that which they account as folly. They mock at it, as a ridiculous drunkenness; Acts ii. 13. And would to God our days yielded us not too evident proofs of that universal opposition, that is between light and darkness, Christ and Belial, nature and grace; that we could not see every day the prodigious issues of this inbred corruption swelling over all bounds, and breaking forth into a contempt of the gospel, and all ways of godliness. So true it is, that the carnal mind is enmity against God; it is not subject unto his law, neither indeed can it be;' Rom. viii. 7. So that,

Thirdly, As a natural man, by the strength of his own free-will, neither knoweth nor willeth; so it is utterly impossible he should do any thing pleasing unto God. Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? then can he do good;' Jer. xiii. 23. 'An evil tree cannot bring forth

good fruit,' without faith it is impossible to please God;' Heb. xi. 6. And that is not of ourselves, it is the gift of God;' Eph. ii. So that though Almighty God, according to the unsearchableness of his wisdom, worketh divers ways and in sundry manners, for the translating of his chosen ones, from the power of darkness to his marvellous light; calling some powerfully in the midst of their march in the ways of ungodliness, as he did Paul, preparing others by outward means and helps of common restraining grace, moralizing nature before it be begotten anew by the immortal seed of the word; yet this is certain, that all good in this kind, is from his free grace, there is nothing in ourselves as of ourselves but sin: yea, and all those previous dispositions wherewith our hearts are prepared by virtue of common grace, do not at all enable us to concur by any vital operation, with that powerful blessed renewing grace of regeneration whereby we become the sons of God. Neither is there any disposition unto grace so remote as that possibly it can proceed from a mere faculty of nature, for every such disposition must be of the same order with the form that is to be introduced, but nature in respect of grace is a thing of an inferior allay, between which there is no proportion; a good use of gifts may have a promise of an addition of more, provided it be in the same kind. There is no rule, law, or promise, that should make grace due upon the good use of natural endowments. But you will say, here I quite overthrow free-will which before I seemed to grant; to which I answer: that in regard of that object concerning which now we treat, a natural man hath no such thing as free-will at all, if you take it for a power of doing that which is good and well pleasing unto God in things spiritual, for an ability of preparing our hearts unto faith and calling upon God, as our church article speaks, a home-bred self-sufficiency, preceding the change of our wills by the almighty grace of God, whereby any good should be said to dwell in us, and we utterly deny that there is any such thing in the world. The will though in itself radically free, yet in respect of the term or object to which in this regard it should tend, is corrupted, enthralled, and under a miserable bondage; tied to such a necessity of sinning in general, that though unregenerate men are not restrained to this or that sin in particular, yet

VOL. V.

for the main they can do nothing but sin. All their actions wherein there is any morality, are attended with iniquity, ' an evil tree cannot bring forth good fruit; even the sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord.' These things being thus cleared from the Scripture the former Arminian positions will of themselves fall to the ground, having no foundation but their own authority; for any pretence of proof they make none from the word of God. The first two I considered in the last chapter, and now add only concerning the third, That the sole cause why the gospel is sent unto some and not unto others, is not any dignity, worth, or desert of it in them to whom it is sent, more than in the rest, that are suffered to remain in the shadow of death, but only the sole good pleasure of God, that it may be a subservient means for the execution of his decree of election. 'I have much people in this city;' Acts xx. I thank thee, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes; even so, Father, for so it seemed good in thy sight;' Matt. xi. 25, 26. So that the Arminian opposition to the truth of the gospel in this particular, is clearly manifest.

S. S.

'Of ourselves we can do nothing;' John xv. 5.

'We are not able of our selves to think any thing as of ourselves;' 2 Cor. iii. 5.

'We are by nature children of wrath, dead in trespasses and sins;' Eph. ii. 1.

'Faith is not of ourselves, it is the gift of God;' Eph. ii.

Who maketh thee differ from another? or what hast thou, that thou hast not received? and if thou hast received, why boastest thou, as if thou hadst not received?' 1 Cor. iv. 7.

Lib. Arbit.

'We retain still after the fall, a power of believing and of repentance, because Adam lost not this ability;' Rem. Declarat. Sen. in Syn.

'Faith is said to be the work of God, because he commandeth us to perform it;' Rem. Apol.

'There is no infusion of any habit or spiritual vital principle necessary to enable a man to believe;' Corvin.

'There is nothing truer than that one man maketh himself differ from another: he who believeth when God com

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