THE
DOCTRINE OF JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH
by John Owen
CLICK FOR
PART 6
PART 7
PART 8
General Considerations, Previous Unto the Explanation of the Doctrine of Justification
PART 6 - PART 7 - PART 8
PART 6
SIXTHLY
Introduction of grace by Jesus Christ into the whole of our relation unto God, and its respect unto
all the parts of our obedience--No mystery of grace in the covenant of works--All religion
originally commensurate unto reason--No notions of natural light concerning the introduction of
the mediation of Christ and mystery of grace, into our relation to God, Eph.1:17-19--Reason, as
corrupted, can have no notions of religion but what are derived from its primitive state--Hence the
mysteries of the gospel esteemed folly--Reason, as corrupted, repugnant unto the mystery of
grace-- Accommodation of spiritual mysteries unto corrupt reason, wherefore acceptable unto
many--Reasons of it--Two parts of corrupted nature's repugnancy unto the mystery of the
gospel:
- That which would reduce it unto the private reason of men--Thence the Trinity denied,
and the incarnation of the Son of God; without which the doctrine of justification cannot stand--
Rule of the Socinians in the interpretation of the Scripture
- Want of a due comprehension of
the harmony that is between all the parts of the mystery of grace-- This harmony proved--
Compared with the harmony in the works of nature--To be studied--But it is learned only of them
who are taught of God; and in experience--Evil effects of the want of a due comprehension
hereof--Instances of them--All applied unto the doctrine of justification.
WE can never state our thoughts aright in this matter, unless we have a clear
apprehension of, and satisfaction in, the introduction of grace by Jesus Christ into the whole of
our relation unto God, with its respect unto all parts of our obedience. There was no such thing,
nothing of that nature or kind, in the first constitution of that relation and obedience by the law of
our creation. We were made in a state of immediate relation unto God in our own persons, as our
creator, preserver, and rewarder. There was no mystery of grace in the covenant of works. No
more was required unto the consummation of that state but what was given us in our creation,
enabling us unto rewardable obedience. "Do this, and live," was the sole rule of our relation unto
God. There was nothing in religion originally of that which the gospel celebrates under the name
of the grace, kindness, and love of God, whence all our favourable relation unto God does now
proceed, and whereinto it is resolved; nothing of the interposition of a mediator with respect unto
our righteousness before God, and acceptance with him;--which is at present the life and soul of
religion, the substance of the gospel, and the centre of all the truths revealed in it. The
introduction of these things is that which makes our religion a mystery, yea, a "great mystery," if
the apostle may be believed, 1 Tim.3:16. All religion at first was suited and commensurable unto
reason; but being now become a mystery, men for the most part are very unwilling to receive it.
But so it must be; and unless we are restored unto our primitive rectitude, a religion suited unto
the principles of our reason (of which it has none but what answer that first state) will not serve
our turns.
Wherefore, of this introduction of Christ and grace in him into our relation unto God, there are
no notions in the natural conceptions of our minds; nor are they discoverable by reason in the best
and utmost of its exercise, 1 Cor.2:14. For before our understanding were darkened, and our
reason debased by the fall, there were no such things revealed or proposed unto us; yea, the
supposition of them is inconsistent with, and contradictory unto, that whole state and condition
wherein we were to live to God, seeing they all suppose the entrance of sin. And it is not likely
that our reason, as now corrupted, should be willing to embrace that which it knew nothing of in
its best condition, and which was inconsistent with that way of attaining happiness which was
absolutely suited unto it: for it has no faculty or power but what it has derived from that state; and
to suppose it is now of itself suited and ready to embrace such heavenly mysteries of truth and
grace as it had no notions of, nor could have, in the state of innocence, is to suppose that by the
fall our eyes were opened to know good and evil, in the sense that the serpent deceived our first
parents with an expectation of. Whereas, therefore, our reason was given us for our only guide in
the first constitution of our natures, it is naturally unready to receive what is above it; and, as
corrupted, has an enmity thereunto.
Hence, in the first open proposal of this mystery, namely, of the love and grace of God in Christ,
of the introduction of a mediator and his righteousness into our relation unto God, in that way
which God in infinite wisdom had designed,--the whole of it was looked on as mere folly by the
generality of the wise and rational men of the world, as the apostle declares at large, 1 Cor.1;
neither was the faith of them ever really received in the world without an act of the Holy Ghost
upon the mind in its renovation. And those who judge that there is nothing more needful to enable
the mind of man to receive the mysteries of the gospel in a due manner but the outward proposal
of the doctrine thereof, do not only deny the depravation of our nature by the fall, but, by just
consequence, wholly renounce that grace whereby we are to be recovered. Wherefore, reason (as
has been elsewhere proved), acting on and by its own innate principles and abilities, conveyed
unto it from its original state, and as now corrupted, is repugnant unto the whole introduction of
grace by Christ into our relation unto God, Rom.8:7. An endeavour, therefore, to reduce the
doctrine of the gospel, or what is declared therein concerning the hidden mystery of the grace of
God in Christ, unto the principles and inclinations of the minds of men, or reason as it remains in
us after the entrance of sin,--under the power, at least, of those notions and conceptions of things
religious which it retains from its first state and condition, is to debase and corrupt them (as we
shall see in sundry instances), and so make way for their rejection.
Hence, very difficult it is to keep up doctrinally and practically the minds of men unto the reality
and spiritual height of this mystery; for men naturally do neither understand it nor like it: and
therefore, every attempt to accommodate it unto the principles and inbred notions of corrupt
reason is very acceptable unto many, yea, unto the most; for the things which such men speak and
declare, are, without more ado, without any exercise of faith or prayer, without any supernatural
illumination,--easily intelligible, and exposed to the common sense of mankind. But whereas a
declaration of the mysteries of the gospel can obtain no admission into the minds of men but by
the effectual working of the Spirit of God, Eph.1:17-19, it is generally looked on as difficult,
perplexed, unintelligible; and even the minds of many, who find they cannot contradict it, are yet
not at all delighted with it. And here lies the advantage of all them who, in these days, do attempt
to corrupt the doctrine of the gospel, in the whole or any part of it; for the accommodation of it
unto the common notions of corrupted reason is the whole of what they design. And in the
confidence of the suffrage hereof, they not only oppose the things themselves, but despise the
declaration of them as enthusiastical canting. And by nothing do they more prevail themselves
than by a pretence of reducing all things to reason, and contempt of what they oppose, as
unintelligible fanaticism. But I am not more satisfied in any thing of the most uncontrollable
evidence, than that the understandings of these men are no just measure or standard of spiritual
truth. Wherefore, notwithstanding all this fierceness of scorn, with the pretended advantages
which some think they have made by traducing expressions in the writings of some men, it may be
improper, it maybe only not suited unto their own genius and capacity in these things, we are not
to be "ashamed of the gospel of Christ, which is the power of God unto salvation to every one
that believeth".
Of this repugnancy unto the mystery of the wisdom and grace of God in Christ, and the
foundation of its whole economy, in the distinct operations of the persons of the holy Trinity
therein, there are two parts or branches:
- That which would reduce the whole of it unto the private reason of men, and their own
weak, imperfect management thereof. This is the entire design of the Socinians. Hence,
-
- (1.) The doctrine of the Trinity itself is denied, impugned, yea, derided by them; and
that solely on this account. They plead that it is incomprehensible by reason; for there is in
that doctrine a declaration of things absolutely infinite and eternal, which cannot be
exemplified in, nor accommodated unto, things finite and temporal. This is the substance
of all their pleas against the doctrine of the holy Trinity, that which gives a seeming life
and sprightly vigour to their objections against it; wherein yet, under the pretence of the
use and exercise of reason, they fall, and resolve all their seasonings into the most absurd
and irrational principles that ever the minds of men were besotted withal. For unless you
will grant them that what is above their reason, is, therefore, contradictory unto true
reason; that what is infinite and eternal is perfectly comprehensible, and in all its concerns
and respects to be accounted for; that what cannot be in things finite and of a separate
existence, cannot be in things infinite, whose being and existence can be but one; with
other such irrational, yea, brutish imaginations; all the arguments of these pretended men
of reason against the Trinity become like chaff that every breath of wind will blow away.
Hereon they must, as they do, deny the distinct operations of any persons in the Godhead
in the dispensation of the mystery of grace; for if there are no such distinct persons, there
can be no such distinct operations. Now, as upon a denial of these things no one article of
faith can be rightly understood, nor any one duty of obedience be performed unto God in
an acceptable manner; so, in particular, we grant that the doctrine of justification by the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ cannot stand.
- (2.) On the same ground the incarnation of the Son of God is rejected as "atopoon
atopootaton",--the most absurd conception that ever befell the minds of men. Now it is to
no purpose to dispute with men so persuaded, about justification; yea, we will freely
acknowledge that all things we believe about it are "graoodeis muthoi",--no better than old
wives' tales,--if the incarnation of the Son of God be so also. For I can as well understand
how he who is a mere man, however exalted, dignified, and glorified, can exercise a
spiritual rule in and over the hearts, consciences, and thoughts of all the men in the world,
being intimately knowing of and present unto them all equally at all times (which is
another of their fopperies), as how the righteousness and obedience of one should be
esteemed the righteousness of all that believe, if that one be no more than a man, if he be
not acknowledged to be the Son of God incarnate.
Whilst the minds of men are prepossessed with such prejudices, nay, unless they firmly assent
unto the truth in these foundations of it, it is impossible to convince them of the truth and
necessity of that justification of a sinner which is revealed in the gospel. Allow the Lord Christ to
be no other person but what they believe him to be, and I will grant there can be no other way of
justification than what they declare; though I cannot believe that ever any sinner will be justified
thereby. These are the issues of an obstinate refusal to give way unto the introduction of the
mystery of God and his grace into the way of salvation and our relation unto him.
And he who would desire an instance of the fertility of men's inventions in forging and coining
objections against heavenly mysteries, in the justification of the sovereignty of their own reason,
as unto what belongs to our relation unto God, need go no farther than the writings of these men
against the Trinity and incarnation of the eternal Word. For this is their fundamental rule, in things
divine and doctrines of religion,--That not what the Scripture says is therefore to be accounted
true, although it seems repugnant unto any reasonings of ours, or is above what we can
comprehend; but what seems repugnant unto our reason, let the words of the Scripture be what
they will, that we must conclude that the Scripture does not say so, though it seem never so
expressly so to do. "Itaque non quia utrumque Scripture dicat, propterea haec inter se non
pugnare concludendum est; sed potius quia haec inter se pugnant, ideo alterutrum a Scriptura non
dici statuendum est", says Schlichting ad Meisn. Def. Socin. p.102;--"Wherefore, because the
Scripture affirms both these" (that is the efficacy of God's grace and the freedom of our wills),
"we cannot conclude from thence that they are not repugnant; but because these things are
repugnant unto one another, we must determine that one of them is not spoken in the Scripture:"-
-no, it seems, let it say what it will. This is the handsomest way they can take in advancing their
own reason above the Scripture; which yet savours of intolerable presumption. So Socinus
himself, speaking of the satisfaction of Christ, says, in plain terms: "Ego quidem etiamsi non semel
sed saepius id in sacris monumentis scriptum extaret, non idcirco tamen ita prorsus rem se habere
crederem, ut vos opinamini; cum enim id omnino fieri non possit non secus atque in multis llis
Scripturae Testimoniis, una cum caeteris omnibus facio; aliqua, quae minus incommoda videretur,
interpretatione adhibita, eum sensum ex ejusmodi verbis elicerem qui sibi constaret;"--"For my
part, if this (doctrine) were extant and written in the holy Scripture, not once, but often, yet
would I not therefore believe it to be so as you do; for where it can by no means be so (whatever
the Scripture says), I would, as I do with others in other places, make use of some less
incommodious interpretation, whereby I would draw a sense out of the words that should be
consistent with itself." And how he would do this he declares a little before: "Sacra verba in alium
sensum, quam verba sonant, per inusitatos etiam tropos quandoque explicantur". He would
explain the words into another sense than what they sound or propose, by unusual tropes. And,
indeed, such uncouth tropes does he apply, as so many engines and machines, to pervert all the
divine testimonies concerning our redemption, reconciliation, and justification by the blood of
Christ.
Having therefore fixed this as their rule, constantly to prefer their own reason above the express
words of the Scripture, which must, therefore, by one means or other, be so perverted or wrested
as to be made compliant therewith, it is endless to trace them in their multiplied objections against
the holy mysteries, all resolved into this one principle, that their reason cannot comprehend them,
nor does approve of them. And if any man would have an especial instance of the serpentine wits
of men winding themselves from under the power of conviction by the spiritual light of truth, or at
least endeavouring so to do, let him read the comments of the Jewish rabbins on Isaiah, chap.53,
and of the Socinians on the beginning of the Gospel of John.
- The second branch of this repugnancy springs from the want of a due comprehension of that
harmony which is in the mystery of grace, and between all the parts of it. This comprehension is
the principal effect of that wisdom which believers are taught by the Holy Ghost. For our
understanding of the wisdom of God in a mystery is neither an art nor a science, whether purely
speculative or more practical, but a spiritual wisdom. And this spiritual wisdom is such as
understands and apprehends things, not so much, or not only in the notion of them, as in their
power, reality, and efficacy, towards their proper ends. And, therefore, although it may be very
few, unless they be learned, judicious, and diligent in the use of means of all sorts, do attain unto
it clearly and distinctly in the doctrinal notions of it; yet are all true believers, yea, the meanest of
them, directed and enabled by the Holy Spirit, as unto their own practice and duty, to act suitably
unto a comprehension of this harmony, according to the promise that "they shall be all taught of
God." Hence, those things which appear unto others contradictory and inconsistent one with
another, so as that they are forced to offer violence unto the Scripture and their own experience in
the rejection of the one or the other of them, are reconciled in their minds and made mutually
useful or helpful unto one another, in the whole course of their obedience. But these things must
be farther spoken unto.
Such an harmony as that intended there is in the whole mystery of God. For it is the most curious
effect and product of divine wisdom; and it is no impeachment of the truth of it, that it is not
discernible by human reason. A full comprehension of it no creature can in this world arise unto.
Only, in the contemplation of faith, we may arrive unto such an understanding admiration of it as
shall enable us to give glory unto God, and to make use of all the parts of it in practice as we have
occasion. Concerning it the holy man mentioned before cried out, "O anexichniastou demiourgias"
"O unsearchable contrivance and operations". And so is it expressed by the apostle, as that which
has an unfathomable depth of wisdom in it, "O bathos ploutou", etc. "O the depth of the riches
both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways
past finding Rom.11:33-36. See to the same purpose, Eph.3:8-10.
There is a harmony, a suitableness of one thing unto another, in all the works of creation. Yet we
see that it is not perfectly nor absolutely discoverable unto the wisest and most diligent of men.
How far are they from an agreement about the order and motions of the heavenly bodies, of the
sympathies and qualities of sundry things here below, in the relation of causality and efficiency
between one thing and another! The new discoveries made concerning any of them, do only
evidence how far men are from a just and perfect comprehension of them. Yet such a universal
harmony there is in all the parts of nature and its operations, that nothing in its proper station and
operation is destructively contradictory either to the whole or any part of it, but every thing
contributes unto the preservation and use of the universe. But although this harmony be not
absolutely comprehensible by any, yet do all living creatures, who follow the conduct or instinct
of nature, make use of it, and live upon it; and without it neither their being could be preserved,
nor their operations continued.
But in the mystery of God and his grace, the harmony and suitableness of one thing unto another,
with their tendency unto the same end, is incomparably more excellent and glorious than that
which is seen in nature or the works of it. For whereas God made all things at first in wisdom, yet
is the new creation of all things by Jesus Christ ascribed peculiarly unto the riches, stores, and
treasures of that infinite wisdom. Neither can any discern it unless they are taught of God; for it is
only spiritually discerned. But yet is it by the most despised. Some seem to think that there is no
great wisdom in it; and some, that no great wisdom is required unto the comprehension of it: few
think it worth the while to spend half that time in prayer, in meditation, in the exercise of self-
denial, mortification, and holy obedience, doing the will of Christ, that they may know of his
word, to the attaining of a due comprehension of the mystery of godliness, as some do in
diligence, study, and trial of experiments, who design to excel in natural or mathematical sciences.
Wherefore there are three things evident herein
- That such an harmony there is in all the parts of the mystery of God, wherein all the
blessed properties of the divine nature are glorified, our duty in all instances is directed and
engaged, our salvation in the way of obedience secured, and Christ, as the end of all, exalted.
Wherefore, we are not only to consider and know the several parts of the doctrine of spiritual
truths but their relation, also, one unto another, their consistency one with another in practice, and
their mutual furtherance of one another unto their common end. And a disorder in our
apprehensions about any part of that whose beauty and use arises from its harmony, gives some
confusion of mind with respect unto the whole.
- That unto a comprehension of this harmony in a due measure, it is necessary that we be
taught of God; without which we can never be wise in the knowledge of the mystery of his grace.
And herein ought we to place the principal part of our diligence, in our inquiries into the truths of
the gospel.
- All those who are taught of God to know his will, unless it be when their minds are
disordered by prejudices, false opinions, or temptations, have an experience in themselves and
their own practical obedience, of the consistency of all parts of the mystery of God's grace and
truth in Christ among themselves, of their spiritual harmony and cogent tendency unto the sane
end. The introduction of the grace of Christ into our relation unto God, makes no confusion or
disorder in their minds, by the conflict of the principles of natural reason, with respect unto our
first relation unto God, and those of grace, with respect unto that whereunto we are renewed.
From the want of a due comprehension of this divine harmony it is, that the minds of men are
filled with imaginations of an inconsistency between the most important parts of the mystery of
the gospel, from whence the confusions that are at this day in Christian religion do
proceed.
Thus the Socinians can see no consistency between the grace or love of God and the satisfaction
of Christ, but imagine if the one of them be admitted, the other must be excluded out of our
religion. Wherefore they principally oppose the latter, under a pretence of asserting and
vindicating the former. And where these things are expressly conjoined in the same proposition of
faith, as where it is said that "we are justified freely by the grace of God, through the redemption
that is in Christ Jesus; whom God has set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood,"
Rom.3:24,25, they will offer violence unto common sense and reason, rather than not disturb that
harmony which they cannot understand. For although it be plainly affirmed to be a redemption by
his blood, as he is a propitiation, as his blood was a ransom or price of redemption, yet they will
contend that it is only metaphorical, a mere deliverance by power, like that of the Israelites by
Moses. But these things are clearly stated in the gospel; and therefore not only consistent, but
such as that the one cannot subsist without the other. Nor is there any mention of any especial
love or grace of God unto sinners, but with respect unto the satisfaction of Christ as the means of
the communication of all its effects unto them. See John 3:16; Rom.3:23-25; 8:30-33; 2 Cor.5:19-
21; Eph.1:7; etc.
In like manner, they can see no consistency between the satisfaction of Christ and the necessity of
holiness or obedience in them that do believe. Hence they continually glamour, that, by our
doctrine of the mediation of Christ, we overthrow all obligations unto a holy life. And by their
sophistical reasonings unto this purpose, they prevail with many to embrace their delusion, who
have not a spiritual experience to confront their sophistry withal. But as the testimony of the
Scripture lies expressly against them, so those who truly believe, and have real experience of the
influence of that truth into the life of God, and how impossible it is to yield any acceptable
obedience herein without respect thereunto, are secured from their snares.
These and the like imaginations arise from the unwillingness of men to admit of the introduction
of the mystery of grace into our relation unto God. For suppose us to stand before God on the old
constitution of the covenant of creation, which alone natural reason likes and is comprehensive of,
and we do acknowledge these things to be inconsistent. But the mystery of the wisdom and grace
of God in Christ cannot stand without them both.
So, likewise, God's efficacious grace in the conversion of sinners, and the exercise of the faculties
of their minds in a way of duty, are asserted as contradictory and inconsistent. And although they
seem both to be positively and frequently declared in the Scripture, yet, say these men, their
consistency being repugnant to their reason, let the Scripture say what it will, yet is it to be said
by us that the Scripture does not assert one of them. And this is from the same cause; men cannot,
in their wisdom, see it possible that the mystery of God's grace should be introduced into our
relation and obedience unto God. Hence have many ages of the church, especially the last of
them, been filled with endless disputes, in opposition to the grace of God, or to accommodate the
conceptions of it unto the interests of corrupted reason.
But there is no instance more pregnant unto this purpose than that under our present
consideration. Free justification, through the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, is cried out
against, as inconsistent with a necessity of personal holiness and obedience: and because the
Socinians insist principally on this pretence, it shall be fully and diligently considered apart; and
that holiness which, without it, they and others deriving from them do pretend unto, shall be tried
by the unerring rule.
Wherefore I desire it may be observed, that in pleading for this doctrine, we do it as a principal
part of the introduction of grace into our whole relation unto God. Hence we grant,
- That it is unsuited, yea foolish, and, as some speak, childish, unto the principles of
unenlightened and unsanctified reason or understandings of men. And this we conceive to be the
principal cause of all the oppositions that are made unto it, and all the deprivations of it that the
church is pestered withal. Hence are the wits of men so fertile in sophistical cavils against it, so
ready to load it with seeming absurdities, and I know not what unsuitableness unto their
wondrous rational conceptions. And no objection can be made against it, be it never so trivial, but
it is highly applauded by those who look on that introduction of the mystery of grace, which is
above their natural conceptions, as unintelligible folly.
- That the necessary relation of these things, one unto the other,--namely, of justification by the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ, and the necessity of our personal obedience,--will not
be clearly understood, nor duly improved, but by and in the exercise of the wisdom of faith. This
we grant also; and let who will make what advantage they can of this concession. True faith has
that spiritual light in it, or accompanying of it, as that it is able to receive it, and to conduct the
soul unto obedience by it. Wherefore, reserving the particular consideration hereof unto its proper
place, I say, in general,
-
- (1.) That this relation is evident unto that spiritual wisdom whereby we are enabled,
doctrinally and practically, to comprehend the harmony of the mystery of God, and the
consistency of all the parts of it, one with another.
- (2.) That it is made evident by the Scripture, wherein both these things--justification through
the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, and the necessity of our personal obedience--are
plainly asserted and declared. And we defy that rule of the Socinians, that seeing these things are
inconsistent in their apprehension or unto their reason, therefore we must say that one of them is
not taught in the Scripture: for whatever it may appear unto their reason, it does not so to ours;
and we have at least as good reason to trust unto our own reason as unto theirs. Yet we
absolutely acquiesce in neither, but in the authority of God in the Scripture; rejoicing only in this,
that we can set our seal unto his revelations by our own experience. For,
- (3.) It is fully evident in the gracious conduct which the minds of them that believe are
under, even that of the Spirit of truth and grace, and the inclinations of that new principle of the
divine life whereby they are acted; for although, from the remainders of sin and darkness that are
in them, temptations may arise unto a continuation in sin because grace has abounded, yet are
their minds so formed and framed by the doctrine of this grace, and the grace of this doctrine, that
the abounding of grace herein is the principal motive unto their abounding in holiness, as we shall
see afterward.
And this we aver {state to be true} to be the spring of all those objections which the
adversaries of this doctrine do continually endeavour to entangle it withal. As,
- If the passive righteousness (as it is commonly called), that is, his death and suffering, be
imputed unto us, there is no need, nor can it be, that his active righteousness, or the obedience of
his life, should be imputed unto us; and so on the contrary: for both together are
inconsistent.
- That if all sin be pardoned, there is no need of the righteousness; and so on the contrary, if
the righteousness of Christ be imputed unto us, there is no room for, or need of, the pardon of
sin.
- If we believe the pardon of our sins, then are our sins pardoned before we believe, or we
are bound to believe that which is not so.
- If the righteousness of Christ be imputed unto us, then are we esteemed to have done and
suffered what, indeed, we never did nor suffered; and it is true, that if we are esteemed our selves
to have done it, imputation is overthrown.
- If Christ's righteousness be imputed unto us, then are we as righteous as was Christ
himself.
- If our sins were imputed unto Christ, then was he thought to have sinned, and was a
sinner subjectively.
- If good works be excluded from any interest in our justification before God, then are they
of no use unto our salvation.
- That it is ridiculous to think that where there is no sin , there is not all the righteousness
that can be required.
- That righteousness imputed is only a putative or imaginary righteousness, etc.
Now, although all these and the like objections, however subtilely managed (as Socinus boasts
that he had used more than ordinary subtlety in this cause,--"In quo, si subtilius aliquanto quam
opus esse videretur, quaedam a nobis disputate sunt", De Servat., par.4, cap.4.), are capable of
plain and clear solutions, and we shall avoid the examination of none of them; yet at present I shall
only say, that all the shades which they cast on the minds of men do vanish and disappear before
the light of express Scripture testimonies, and the experience of them that do believe, where there
is a due comprehension of the mystery of grace in any tolerable measure. Seventhly, General
prejudices against the imputation of the righteousness of Christ:
- That it is not in terms found in the Scripture, answered.
- That nothing is said of it in the writings of the evangelists, answered, John 20:30,31--
Nature of Christ's personal ministry--Revelations by the Holy Spirit immediately from Christ--
Design of the writings of the evangelists.
- Differences among Protestants themselves about this doctrine, answered--Sense of the
ancients herein--What is of real difference among Protestants, considered.
PART 7
SEVENTHLY
There are some common prejudices, that are usually pleaded against the doctrine of the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ; which, because they will not orderly fall under a
particular consideration in our progress, may be briefly examined in these general previous
considerations:
- It is usually urged against it, that this imputation of the righteousness of Christ is nowhere
mentioned expressly in the Scripture. This is the first objection of Bellarmine against it.
"Hactenus", says he, "nullum omnino locum invenire putuerunt, ubi legeretur Christi justitiam
nobis imputari ad justitiam; vel nos justos esse per Christi justitiam nobis imputatam", De
Justificat., lib.2 cap.7; an objection, doubtless, unreasonably and immodestly urged by men of this
persuasion; for not only do they make profession of their whole faith, or their belief of all things in
matters of religion, in terms and expressions nowhere used in the Scripture, but believe many
things also, as they say, with faith divine, not at all revealed or contained in the Scripture, but
drained by them out of the traditions of the church. I do not, therefore, understand how such
persons can modestly manage this as an objection against any doctrine, that the terms wherein
some do express it are not "rhetoos", found in the Scripture just in that order of one word after
another as by them they are used; for this rule may be much enlarged, and yet be kept strait
enough to exclude the principal concerns of their church out of the confines of Christianity. Nor
can I apprehend much more equity in others, who reflect with severity on this expression of the
imputation of the righteousness of Christ as unscriptural, as if those who make use thereof were
criminal in no small degree, when themselves, immediately in the declaration of their own
judgment, make use of such terms, distinctions, and expressions, as are so far from being in the
Scripture, as that it is odds they had never been in the world, had they escaped Aristotle's mint, or
that of the schools deriving from him.
And thus, although a sufficient answer has frequently enough (if any thing can be so) been
returned unto this objection in Bellarmine, yet has one of late amongst ourselves made the
translation of it into English to be the substance of the first chapter of a book about justification;
though he needed not to have given such an early intimation unto whom he is beholding for the
greatest part of his ensuing discourse, unless it be what is taken up in despiteful revilings of other
men. For take from him what is not his own, on the one hand, and impertinent cavils at the words
and expressions of other men, with forged imputations on some of them, on the other, and his
whole book will disappear. But yet, although he affirms that none of the Protestant writers, who
speak of the imputation of the righteousness of Christ unto us (which were all of them, without
exception, until of late), have precisely kept to the form of wholesome words, but have rather
swerved and varied from the language of the Scripture; yet he will excuse them from open error,
if they intend no more thereby but that we are made partakers of the benefits of the righteousness
of Christ. But if they intend that the righteousness of Christ itself imputed unto us (that is, so as to
be our righteousness before God, whereon we are pardoned and accepted with him, or do receive
the forgiveness of sins, and a right to the heavenly inheritance), then are they guilty of that error
which makes us to be esteemed to do ourselves what Christ did; and so on the other side, Christ
to have done what we do and did, chap.2,3. But these things are not so. For, if we are esteemed
to have done any thing in our own persons, it cannot be imputed unto us as done for us by
another; as it will appear when we shall treat of these things afterwards. But the great and holy
persons intended, are as little concerned in the accusations or apologies of some writers, as those
writers seem to be acquainted with that learning, wisdom, and judgment, wherein they did excel,
and the characters whereof are so eminently conspicuous in all their writings.
But the judgment of most Protestants is not only candidly expressed, but approved of also by
Bellarmine himself in another place. "Non esset", says he, "absurdum, si quis diceret nobis
imputari Christi justitiam et merita; cum nobis donentur et applicentur; ac si nos ipsi Deo
satisfecissemus". De Justif., lib.2, cap.10;--"It were not absurd, if any one should say that the
righteousness and merits of Christ are imputed unto us, when they are given and applied unto us,
as if we ourselves had satisfied God." And this he confirms with that saying of Bernard, Epist. ad
Innocent. 190, "Nam 'si unus pro omnibus mortuus est, ergo omnes mortui sunt,' ut videlicet
satisfactio unius omnibus imputetur, sicut omnium peccata unus ille portavit". And those who will
acknowledge no more in this matter, but only a participation "quovis modo", one way or other, of
the benefits of the obedience and righteousness of Christ, wherein we have the concurrence of the
Socinians also, might do well, as I suppose, plainly to deny all imputation of his righteousness
unto us in any sense, as they do, seeing the benefits of his righteousness cannot be said to be
imputed unto us, what way soever we are made partakers of them. For to say that the
righteousness of Christ is imputed unto us, with respect unto the benefits of it, when neither the
righteousness itself is imputed unto us, nor can the benefits of it be imputed unto us, as we shall
see afterward, does minister great occasion of much needless variance and contests. Neither do I
know any reason why men should seek countenance unto this doctrine under such an expression
as themselves reflect upon as unscriptural, if they be contented that their minds and sense should
be clearly understood and apprehended;--for truth needs no subterfuge.
The Socinians do now principally make use of this objection. For, finding the whole church of
God in the use of sundry expressions, in the declaration of the most important truths of the
gospel, that are not literally contained in the Scripture, they hoped for an advantage from thence
in their opposition unto the things themselves. Such are the terms of the Trinity, the incarnation,
satisfaction, and merit of Christ, as this also, of the imputation of his righteousness. How little
they have prevailed in the other instances, has been sufficiently manifested by them with whom
they have had to do. But as unto that part of this objection which concerns the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ unto, believers, those by whom it is asserted do say,
-
- (1.) That it is the thing alone intended which they plead for. If that be not contained in the
Scripture, if it be not plainly taught and confirmed therein, they will speedily relinquish it. But if
they can prove that the doctrine which they intend in this expression, and which is thereby plainly
declared unto the understandings of men, is a divine truth sufficiently witnessed unto in the
Scripture; then is this expression of it reductively scriptural, and the truth itself so expressed a
divine verity. To deny this, is to take away all use of the interpretation of the Scripture, and to
overthrow the ministry of the church. This, therefore, is to be alone inquired into.
- (2.) They say, the same thing is taught and expressed in the Scripture in phrases equipollent.
For it affirms that "by the obedience of one" (that is Christ), "many are made righteous",
Rom.5:19; and that we are made righteous by the imputation of righteousness unto us, "Blessed is
the man unto whom God imputeth righteousness without works," chap.4:6. And if we are made
righteous by the imputation of righteousness unto us, that obedience or righteousness whereby we
are made righteous is imputed unto us. And they will be content with this expression of this
doctrine,--that the obedience of Christ whereby we are made righteous, is the righteousness that
God imputes unto us. Wherefore, this objection is of no force to disadvantage the truth pleaded
for.
- Socinus objects, in particular, against this doctrine of justification by the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, and of his satisfaction, that there is nothing said of it in the "Evangelists",
nor in the "report of the sermons of Christ unto the people, nor yet in those of his private
discourses with his disciples"; and he urges it vehemently and at large against the whole of the
expiation of sin by his death, De Servator., par.4, cap.9. And as it is easy "malis inventis pejora
addere", this notion of his is not only made use of and pressed at large by one among ourselves,
but improved also by a dangerous comparison between the writings of the evangelists and the
other writings of the New Testament. For to enforce this argument, that the histories of the
gospel, wherein the sermons of Christ are recorded, do make no mention of the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ (as in his judgment they do not), nor of his satisfaction, or merit, or
expiation of sin, or of redemption by his death (as they do not in the judgment of Socinus), it is
added by him, that for his part he is "apt to admire our Saviour's sermons, who was the author of
our religion, before the writings of the apostles, though inspired men". Whereunto many
dangerous insinuations and reflections on the writings of St Paul, contrary to the faith and sense
of the church in all ages, are subjoined. See pp.240,241. But this boldness is not only
unwarrantable, but to be abhorred. What place of Scripture, what ecclesiastical tradition, what
single precedent of any one sober Christian writer, what theological reason, will countenance a
man in making the comparison mentioned, and so determining thereon? Such juvenile boldness,
such want of a due apprehension and understanding of the nature of divine inspiration, with the
order and design of the writings of the New Testament, which are the springs of this precipitate
censure, ought to be reflected on. At present, to remove this pretence out of our way, it may be
observed,
-
- (1.) That what the Lord Christ taught his disciples, in his personal ministry on the earth, was
suited unto that economy of the church which was antecedent unto his death and resurrection.
Nothing did he withhold from them that was needful to their faith, obedience, and consolation in
that state. Many things he instructed them in out of the Scripture, many new revelations he made
unto them, and many times did he occasionally instruct and rectify their judgments; howbeit he
made no clear, distinct revelation of those sacred mysteries unto them which are peculiar unto the
faith of the New Testament, nor were to be distinctly apprehended before his death and
resurrection.
- (2.) What the Lord Christ revealed afterward by his Spirit unto the apostles, was no less
immediately from himself than was the truth which he spoke unto them with his own mouth in the
days of his flesh. An apprehension to the contrary is destructive of Christian religion. The epistles
of the apostles are no less Christ's sermons than that which he delivered on the mount.
Wherefore,
- (3.) Neither in the things themselves, nor in the way of their delivery or revelation, is there
any advantage of the one sort of writings above the other. The things written in the epistles
proceed from the same wisdom, the same grace, the same love, with the things which he spoke
with his own mouth in the days of his flesh, and are of the same divine veracity, authority, and
efficacy. The revelation which he made by his Spirit is no less divine and immediate from himself,
than what he spoke unto his disciples on the earth. To distinguish between these things, on any of
these accounts, is intolerable folly.
- (4.) The writings of the evangelists do not contain the whole of all the instructions which the
Lord Christ gave unto his disciples personally on the earth. For he was seen of them after his
resurrection forty days, and spoke with them of "the things pertaining to the kingdom of God,"
Acts 1:3; and yet nothing hereof is recorded in their writings, but only some few occasional
speeches. Nor had he given before unto them a clear and distinct understanding of those things
which were delivered concerning his death and resurrection in the Old Testament; as is plainly
declared, Luke 24:25-27. For it was not necessary for them, in that state wherein they were.
Wherefore,
- (5.) As to the extent of divine revelations objectively those which he granted, by his Spirit,
unto his apostles after his ascension, were beyond those which he personally taught them, so far
as they are recorded in the writings of the evangelists. For he told them plainly, not long before hit
death, that he had many things to say unto them which "then they could not bear," John 16:12.
And for the knowledge of those things, he refers them to the coming of the Spirit to make
revelation of them from himself, in the next words, "Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is come,
he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that
shall he speak: and he will show you things to come. He shall glorify me: for he shall receive of
mine, and shall show it unto you," verses 13,14. And on this account he had told them before, that
it was expedient for them that he should go away, that the Holy Spirit might come unto them,
whom he would send from the Father, verse 7. Hereunto he referred the full and clear
manifestation of the mysteries of the gospel. So false, as well as dangerous and scandalous, are
those insinuations of Socinus and his followers.
- (6.) The writings of the evangelists are full unto their proper ends and purposes. These were,
to record the genealogy, conception, birth, acts, miracles, and teachings of our Saviour, so far as
to evince him to be the true, only-promised Messiah. So he testifies who wrote the last of them:
"Many other signs truly did Jesus, which are not written in this book: but these are written, that ye
might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God," John 22:30,31. Unto this end every thing
is recorded by them that is needful unto the ingenerating and establishing of faith. Upon this
confirmation, all things declared in the Old Testament concerning him--all that was taught in types
and sacrifices--became the object of faith, in that sense wherein they were interpreted in the
accomplishment; and that in them this doctrine was before revealed, shall be proved afterward. It
is, therefore, no wonder if some things, and those of the highest importance, should be declared
more fully in other writings of the New Testament than they are in those of the
evangelists.
- (7.) The pretence itself is wholly false; for there are as many pregnant testimonies given unto
this truth in one alone of the evangelists as in any other book of the New Testament,--namely, in
the book of John. I shall refer to some of them, which will be pleaded in their proper place,
chap.1:12,17; 3:14-18,36; 5:24.
But we may pass this by, as one of those inventions concerning which Socinus boasts, in his
epistle to Michael Vajoditus, that his writings were esteemed by many for the singularity of things
asserted in them.
- The difference that has been among Protestant writers about this doctrine is pleaded in the
prejudice of it. Osiander, in the entrance of the reformation, fell into a vain imagination, that we
were justified or made righteous with the essential righteousness of God, communicated unto us
by Jesus Christ. And whereas he was opposed herein with some severity by the most learned
persons of those days, to countenance himself in his singularity, he pretended that there were
"twenty different opinions amongst the Protestants themselves about the formal cause of our
justification before God". This was quickly laid hold on by them of the Roman church, and is
urged as a prejudice against the whole doctrine, by Bellarmine, Vasquez, and others. But the
vanity of this pretence of his has been sufficiently discovered; and Bellarmine himself could fancy
but four opinions among them that seemed to be different from one another, reckoning that of
Osiander for one, De Justificat., lib.2, cap.1. But whereas he knew that the imagination of
Osiander was exploded by them all, the other three that he mentions are indeed but distinct parts
of the same entire doctrine. Wherefore, until of late it might be truly said, that the faith and
doctrine of all Protestants was in this article entirely the same. For however they differed in the
way, manner, and methods of its declaration, and too many private men were addicted unto
definitions and descriptions of their own, under pretence of logical accuracy in teaching, which
gave an appearance of some contradiction among them; yet in this they generally agreed, that it is
the righteousness of Christ, and not our own, on the account whereof we receive the pardon of
sin, acceptance with God, are declared righteous by the gospel, and have a right and title unto the
heavenly inheritance. Hereon, I say, they were generally agreed, first against the Papists, and
afterwards against the Socinians; and where this is granted, I will not contend with any man about
his way of declaring the doctrine of it.
And that I may add it by the way, we have herein the concurrence of the fathers of the primitive
church. For although by justification, following the etymology of the Latin word, they understood
the making us righteous with internal personal righteousness,--at least some of them did so, as
Austin in particular,--yet that we are pardoned and accepted with God on any other account but
that of the righteousness of Christ, they believed not. And whereas, especially in their controversy
with the Pelagians, after the rising of that heresy, they plead vehemently that we are made
righteous by the grace of God changing our hearts and natures, and creating in us a principle of
spiritual life and holiness, and not by the endeavours of our own free will, or works performed in
the strength thereof, their words and expressions have been abused, contrary to their intention and
design.
For we wholly concur with them, and subscribe unto all that they dispute about the making of us
personally righteous and holy by the effectual grace of God, against all merit of works and
operations of our own free will (our sanctification being every way as much of grace as our
justification, properly so called); and that in opposition unto the common doctrine of the Roman
church about the same matter: only they call this our being made inherently and personally
righteous by grace, sometimes by the name of justification, which we do not. And this is laid hold
on as an advantage by those of the Roman church who do not concur with them in the way and
manner whereby we are so made righteous. But whereas by our justification before God, we
intend only that righteousness whereon our sins are pardoned, wherewith we are made righteous
in his sight, or for which we are accepted as righteous before him, it will be hard to find any of
them assigning of it unto any other causes than the Protestants do. So it is fallen out, that what
they design to prove, we entirely comply with them in; but the way and manner whereby they
prove it is made use of by the Papists unto another end, which they intended not.
But as to the way and manner of the declaration of this doctrine among Protestants themselves,
there ever was some variety and difference in expressions; nor will it otherwise be whilst the
abilities and capacities of men, whether in the conceiving of things of this nature, or in the
expression of their conceptions, are so various as they are. And it is acknowledged that these
differences of late have had by some as much weight laid upon them as the substance of the
doctrine generally agreed in. Hence some have composed entire books, consisting almost of
nothing but impertinent cavils at other men's words and expressions. But these things proceed
from the weakness of some men, and other vicious habits of their minds, and do not belong unto
the cause itself. And such persons, as for me, shall write as they do, and fight on until they are
weary. Neither has the multiplication of questions, and the curious discussion of them in the
handling of this doctrine, wherein nothing ought to be diligently insisted on but what is directive
of our practice, been of much use unto the truth itself, though it has not been directly opposed in
them.
That which is of real difference among persons who agree in the substance of the doctrine, may be
reduced unto a very few heads; as,
-
- (1.) There is something of this kind about the nature of faith whereby we are justified, with
its proper object in justifying, and its use in justification. And an instance we have herein, not only
of the weakness of our intellects in the apprehension of spiritual things, but also of the remainders
of confusion and disorder in our minds; at least, how true it is that we know only in part, and
prophesy only in part, whilst we are in this life. For whereas this faith is an act of our minds, put
forth in the way of duty to God, yet many by whom it is sincerely exercised, and that continually,
are not agreed either in the nature or proper object of it. Yet is there no doubt but that some of
them who differ amongst themselves about these things, have delivered their minds free from the
prepossession of prejudices and notions derived from other artificial seasonings imposed on them,
and do really express their own conceptions as to the best and utmost of their experience. And
notwithstanding this difference, they do yet all of them please God in the exercise of faith, as it is
their duty, and have that respect unto its proper object as secures both their justification and
salvation. And if we cannot, on this consideration, bear with, and forbear, one another in our
different conceptions and expressions of those conceptions about these things, it is a sign we have
a great mind to be contentious, and that our confidences are built on very weak foundations. For
my part, I had much rather my lot should be found among them who do really believe with the
heart unto righteousness, though they are not able to give a tolerable definition of faith unto
others, than among them who can endlessly dispute about it with seeming accuracy and skill, but
are negligent in the exercise of it as their own duty. Wherefore, some things shall be briefly
spoken of in this matter, to declare my own apprehensions concerning the things mentioned,
without the least design to contradict or oppose the conceptions of others.
- (2.) There has been a controversy more directly stated among some learned divines of the
Reformed churches (for the Lutherans are unanimous on the one side), about the righteousness of
Christ that is said to be imputed unto us. For some would have this to be only his suffering of
death, and the satisfaction which he made for sin thereby, and others include therein the obedience
of his life also. The occasion, original, and progress of this controversy, the persons by whom it
has been managed, with the writings wherein it is so, and the various ways that have been
endeavoured for its reconciliation, are sufficiently known unto all who have inquired into these
things. Neither shall I immix myself herein, in the way of controversy, or in opposition unto
others, though I shall freely declare my own judgment in it, so far as the consideration of the
righteousness of Christ, under this distinction, is inseparable from the substance of the truth itself
which I plead for.
- (3.) Some difference there has been, also, whether the righteousness of Christ imputed unto
us, or the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, may be said to be the formal cause of our
justification before God; wherein there appears some variety of expression among learned men,
who have handled this subject in the way of controversy with the Papists. The true occasion of the
differences about this expression has been this, and no other: Those of the Roman church do
constantly assert, that the righteousness whereby we are righteous before God is the formal cause
of our justification; and this righteousness, they say, is our own inherent, personal righteousness,
and not the righteousness of Christ imputed unto us: wherefore they treat of this whole
controversy--namely, what is the righteousness on the account whereof we are accepted with
God, or justified--under the name of the formal cause of justification; which is the subject of the
second book of Bellarmine concerning justification. In opposition unto them, some Protestants,
contending that the righteousness wherewith we are esteemed righteous before God, and accepted
with him, is the righteousness of Christ imputed unto us, and not our own inherent, imperfect,
personal righteousness, have done it under this inquiry,--namely, What is the formal cause of our
justification? Which some have said to be the imputation of the righteousness of Christ, some, the
righteousness of Christ imputed. But what they designed herein was, not to resolve this
controversy into a philosophical inquiry about the nature of a formal cause, but only to prove that
that truly belonged unto the righteousness of Christ in our justification which the Papists ascribed
unto our own, under that name. That there is a habitual, infused habit of grace, which is the
formal cause of our personal, inherent righteousness, they grant: but they all deny that God
pardons our sins, and justifies our persons, with respect unto this righteousness, as the formal
cause thereof; nay, they deny that in the justification of a sinner there either is, or can be, any
inherent formal cause of it. And what they mean by a formal cause in our justification, is only that
which gives the denomination unto the subject, as the imputation of the righteousness of Christ
does to a person that he is justified.
Wherefore, notwithstanding the differences that have been among some in the various expression
of their conceptions, the substance of the doctrine of the reformed churches is by them agreed
upon and retained entire. For they all agree that God justifies no sinner,-- absolves him not from
guilt, nor declares him righteous, so as to have a title unto the heavenly inheritance,--but with
respect unto a true and perfect righteousness; as also, that this righteousness is truly the
righteousness of him that is so justified; that this righteousness becomes ours by God's free grace
and donation,--the way on our part whereby we come to be really and effectually interested
therein being faith alone; and that this is the perfect obedience or righteousness of Christ imputed
unto us: in these things, as they shall be afterwards distinctly explained, is contained the whole of
that truth whose explanation and confirmation is the design of the ensuing discourse. And because
those by whom this doctrine in the substance of it is of late impugned, derive more from the
Socinians than the Papists, and make a nearer approach unto their principles, I shall chiefly insist
on the examination of those original authors by whom their notions were first coined, and whose
weapons they make use of in their defense.
PART 8
EIGHTHLY
Influence of the doctrine of justification into the first Reformation--Advantages unto the world by
that Reformation--State of the consciences of men under the Papacy, with respect unto
justification before God--Alterations made therein by the light of this doctrine, though not
received--Alterations in the Pagan unbelieving world by the introduction of Christianity--Design
and success of the first reformers herein--Attempts for reconciliation with the Papists in this
doctrine, and their success--Remainders of the ignorance of the truth in the Roman church--
Unavoidable consequences of the corruption of this doctrine Eighthly.
TO CLOSE these previous discourses, it is worthy our consideration what weight was
laid on this doctrine of justification at the first Reformation and what influence it had into the
whole work thereof. However the minds of men may be changed as unto sundry doctrines of faith
among us, yet none can justly own the name of Protestant, but he must highly value the first
Reformation: and they cannot well do otherwise whose present even temporal advantages are
resolved thereinto. However, I intend none but such as own an especial presence and guidance of
God with them who were eminently and successfully employed therein. Such persons cannot but
grant that their faith in this matter, and the concurrence of their thoughts about its importance, are
worthy consideration.
Now it is known that the doctrine of justification gave the first occasion to the whole work of
reformation, and was the main thing whereon it turned. This those mentioned declared to be
"Articulus stantis aut cadentis eccleseae", and that the vindication thereof alone deserved all the
pains that were taken in the whole endeavor of reformation. But things are now, and that by
virtue of their doctrine herein, much changed in the world, though it be not so understood or
acknowledged. In general, no small benefit redounded unto the world by the Reformation, even
among them by whom it was not, nor is received, though many bluster with contrary pretensions:
for all the evils which have accidentally ensued thereon, arising most of them from the corrupt
passions and interests of them by whom it has been opposed, are usually ascribed unto it; and all
the light, liberty, and benefit of the minds of men which it has introduced, are ascribed unto other
causes. But this may be signally observed with respect unto the doctrine of justification, with the
causes and effects of its discovery and vindication. For the first reformers found their own, and
the consciences of other men, so immersed in darkness, so pressed and harassed with fears,
terrors, and disquietments under the power of it, and so destitute of any steady guidance into the
ways of peace with God, as that with all diligence (like persons sensible that herein their spiritual
and eternal interest was concerned) they made their inquiries after the truth in this matter; which
they knew must be the only means of their deliverance. All men in those days were either kept in
bondage under endless fears and anxieties of mind upon the convictions of sin, or sent for relief
unto indulgences, priestly pardons, penances, pilgrimages, works satisfactory of their own, and
supererogatory of others, or kept under chains of darkness for purgatory unto the last day. Now,
he is no way able to compare things past and present, who sees not how great an alteration is
made in these things even in the papal church. For before the Reformation, whereby the light of
the gospel, especially in this doctrine of justification, was diffused among men, and shone even
into their minds who never comprehended nor received it, the whole almost of religion among
them was taken up with, and confined unto, these things. And to instigate men unto an abounding
sedulity in the observation of them, their minds were stuffed with traditions and stories of visions,
apparitions, frightful spirits, and other imaginations that poor mortals are apt to be amazed withal,
and which their restless disquitments gave countenance unto.
"Somnia, terrores magici, miracula, sagae Nocturni lemures, portentaque Thessala,"--[Hor.,
Ep.2,2,209.] were the principal objects of their creed, and matter of their religious conversation.
That very church itself comparatively at ease from these things unto what it was before the
Reformation; though so much of them is still retained as to blind the eyes of men from discerning
the necessity as well as the truth of the evangelical doctrine of justification.
It is fallen out herein not much otherwise than it did at the first entrance of Christianity into the
world. For there was an emanation of light and truth from the gospel which affected the minds of
men, by whom yet the whole of it, in its general design, was opposed and persecuted. For from
thence the very vulgar sort of men became to have better apprehensions and notions of God and
his properties, or the original and rule of the universe, than they had arrived unto in the midnight
of their paganism. And a sort of learned speculative men there were, who, by virtue of that light
of truth which sprung from the gospel, and was now diffused into the minds of men, reformed and
improved the old philosophy, discarding many of those falsehoods and impertinencies wherewith
it had been encumbered. But when this was done, they still maintained their cause on the old
principles of the philosophers. And, indeed, their opposition unto the gospel was far more
plausible and pleadable than it was before. For after they had discarded the gross conceptions of
the common sort about the divine nature and rule, and had blended the light of truth which brake
forth in Christian religion with their own philosophical notions, they made a vigorous attempt for
the reinforcement of heathenism against the main design of the gospel. And things have not, as I
said, fallen out much otherwise in the Reformation. For as by the light of truth which therein
brake forth, the consciences of even the vulgar sort are in some measure freed from those childish
affrightments which they were before in bondage unto; so those who are learned have been
enabled to reduce the opinions and practices of their church into a more defensible posture, and
make their opposition unto the truths of the gospel more plausible than they formerly were. Yea,
that doctrine which, in the way of its teaching and practice among them, as also in its effects on
the consciences of men, was so horrid as to drive innumerable persons from their communion in
that and other things also, is now, in the new representation of it, with the artificial covering
provided for its former effects in practice, thought an argument meet to be pleaded for a return
unto its entire communion.
But to root the superstitions mentioned out of the minds of men, to communicate unto them the
knowledge of the righteousness of God, which is revealed from faith to faith, and thereby to
deliver them from their bondage, fears, and distress, directing convinced sinners unto the only way
of solid peace with God, did the first reformers labour so diligently in the declaration and
vindication of the evangelical doctrine of justification; and God was with them. And it is worth
our consideration, whether we should, on every cavil and sophism of men not so taught, not so
employed, not so tried, not so owned of God as they were, and in whose writings there are not
appearing such characters of wisdom, sound judgment, and deep experience, as in theirs, easily
part with that doctrine of truth wherein alone they found peace unto their own souls, and whereby
they were instrumental to give liberty and peace with God unto the souls and consciences of
others innumerable, accompanied with the visible effects of holiness of life, and fruitfulness in the
works of righteousness, unto the praise of God by Jesus Christ.
In my judgment, Luther spake the truth when he said, "Amisso articulo justificationis, simul
amissa est tota doctrina Christiana". And I wish he had not been a true prophet, when he foretold
that in the following ages the doctrine thereof would be again obscured; the causes whereof I
have elsewhere inquired into.
Some late writers, indeed, among the Protestants have endeavoured to reduce the controversy
about justification with the Papist unto an appearance of a far less real difference than is usually
judged to be in it. And a good work it is, no doubt, to pare off all unnecessary occasions of debate
and differences in religion, provided we go not so near the quick as to let out any of its vital
spirits. The way taken herein is, to proceed upon some concessions of the most sober among the
Papists, in their ascriptions unto grace and the merit of Christ, on the one side; and the express
judgment of the Protestants, variously delivered, of the necessity of good works to them that are
justified, on the other. Besides, it appears that in different expressions which either party adhere
unto, as it were by tradition, the same things are indeed intended. Among them who have
laboured in this kind, Ludovicus le Blanc, for his perspicuity and plainness, his moderation and
freedom from a contentious frame of spirit, is "pene solus legi dignus". He is like the ghost of
Tiresias in this matter. But I must needs say, that I have not seen the effect that might be desired
of any such undertaking. For, when each party comes unto the interpretation of their own
concessions, which is, "ex communi jure", to be allowed unto them, and which they will be sure to
do in compliance with their judgment on the substance of the doctrine wherein the main stress of
the difference lies, the distance and breach continue as wide as ever they were. Nor is there the
least ground towards peace obtained by any of our condescensions or compliance herein. For
unless we can come up entirely unto the decrees and canons of the Council of Trent, wherein the
doctrine of the Old and New Testament is anathematized, they will make no other use of any
man's compliance, but only to increase the glamour of differences among ourselves. I mention
nothing of this nature to hinder any man from granting whatever he can or please unto them,
without the prejudice of the substance of truths professed in the protestant churches; but only to
intimate the uselessness of such concessions, in order unto peace and agreement with them, whilst
they have a Procrustes' bed to lay us upon, and from whose size they will not recede.
Here and there one (not above three or four in all may be named, within this hundred and thirty
years) in the Roman communion has owned our doctrine of justification, for the substance of it.
So did Albertus Pighius, and the Antitagma Coloniense, as Bellarmine acknowledges. And what
he says of Pighius is true, as we shall see afterwards; the other I have not seen. Cardinal
Contarinus, in a treatise of justification, written before, and published about the beginning of the
Trent Council, delivers himself in the favour of it. But upon the observation of what he had done,
some say he was shortly after poisoned; though I must confess I know not where they had the
report.
But do what we can for the sake of peace, as too much cannot be done for it, with the safety of
truth, it cannot be denied but that the doctrine of justification, as it works effectually in the church
of Rome, is the foundation of many enormities among them, both in judgment and practice. They
do not continue, I acknowledge, in that visible predominancy and rage as formerly, nor are the
generality of the people in so much slavish bondage unto them as they were; but the streams of
them do still issue from this corrupt fountain, unto the dangerous infection of the souls of men.
For missatical expiatory sacrifices for the tiring and the dead, the necessity of auricular
confession, with authoritative absolution, penances, pilgrimages, sacramentals, indulgences,
commutations, works satisfactory and supererogatory, the merit and intercession of saints
departed, with especial devotions and applications to this or that particular saint or angel,
purgatory, yea, on the matter, the whole of monastic devotion, do depend thereon. They are all
nothing but ways invented to pacify the consciences of men, or divert them from attending to the
charge which is given in against them by the law of God; sorry supplies they are of a
righteousness of their own, for them who know not how to submit themselves to the
righteousness of God. And if the doctrine of free justification by the blood of Christ were once
again exploded, or corrupted and made unintelligible, unto these things, as absurd and foolish as
now unto some they seem to be, or what is not one jut better, men must and will again betake
themselves. For if once they are diverted from putting their trust in the righteousness of Christ,
and grace of God alone, and do practically thereon follow after, take up with, or rest in, that
which is their own, the first impressions of a sense of sin which shall befall their consciences will
drive them from their present hold, to seek for shelter in any thing that tenders unto them the least
appearance of relief. Men may talk and dispute what they please, whilst they are at peace in their
own minds, without a real sense either of sin or righteousness, yea, and scoff at them who are not
under the power of the same security; but when they shall be awakened with other apprehensions
of things than yet they are aware of, they will be put on new resolutions. And it is in vain to
dispute with any about justification, who have not duly been convinced of a state of sin, and of its
guilt; for such men neither understand what they say, nor that whereof they dogmatize.
We have, therefore, the same reasons that the first reformers had, to be careful about the
preservation of this doctrine of the gospel pure and entire; though we may not expect the like
success with them in our endeavours unto that end. For the minds of the generality of men are in
another posture than they were when they dealt with them. Under the power of ignorance and
superstition they were; but yet multitudes of them were affected with a sense of the guilt of sin.
With us, for the most part, things are quite otherwise. Notional light, accompanied with a
senselessness of sin, leads men unto a contempt of this doctrine, indeed of the whole mystery of
the gospel. We have had experience of the fruits of the faith which we now plead for in this
nation, for many years, yea, now for some ages; and it cannot well be denied, but that those who
have been most severely tenacious of the doctrine of justification by the imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, have been the most exemplary in a holy life: I speak of former days. And
if this doctrine be yet farther corrupted, debased, or unlearned among us, we shall quickly fall into
one of the extremes wherewith we are at present urged on either side. For although the reliefs
provided in the church of Rome, for the satisfaction of the consciences of men, are at present by
the most disliked, yea, despised, yet, if they are once brought to a loss how to place their whole
trust and confidence in the righteousness of Christ, and grace of God in him, they will not always
live at such an uncertainty of mind as the best of their own personal obedience will hang them on
the briers of; but retake themselves unto somewhat that tenders them certain peace and security,
though at present it may seem foolish unto them. And I doubt not but that some, out of a mere
ignorance of the righteousness of God, which either they have not been taught, or have had no
mind to learn, have, with some integrity in the exercise of their consciences, betaken themselves
unto that pretended rest which the church of Rome offers unto them. For being troubled about
their sins, they think it better to retake themselves unto that great variety of means for the ease
and discharge of their consciences which the Roman church affords, than to abide where they are,
without the least pretence of relief; as men will find in due time, there is no such thing to be found
or obtained in themselves. They may go on for a time with good satisfaction unto their own
minds; but if once they are brought unto a loss through the conviction of sin, they must look
beyond themselves for peace and satisfaction, or sit down without them to eternity. Nor are the
principles and ways which others take up withal in another extreme, upon the rejection of this
doctrine, although more plausible, yet at all more really useful unto the souls of men than those of
the Roman church which they reject as obsolete, and unsuited unto the genius of the present age.
For they all of them arise from, or lead unto, the want of a due sense of the nature and guilt of sin,
as also of the holiness and righteousness of God with respect thereunto. And when such principles
as these do once grow prevalent in the minds of men, they quickly grow careless, negligent,
secure in sinning, and end for the most part in atheism, or a great indifference, as unto all religion,
and all the duties thereof.
END of PART VI and PART VII and PART VIII
RETURN TO PAGE
SECTION
PART 6
PART 7
PART 8
RETURN TO
| CONTENTS & PREFACE & TO THE READER |
| General Considerations PART 1, 2, 3 |
| General Considerations PART 4, 5 |
GO TO |Main Text - SECTION I |
| Main Text - SECTION II |
| Main Text - SECTION III |
| Main Text - SECTION IV |
| Main Text - SECTION V |
| Main Text - SECTION VI, VII |
| Main Text - SECTION VIII |
| Main Text - SECTION IX, X |
| Main Text - SECTION XI, XII |
| Main Text - SECTION XIII, XIV, XV, XVI, XVII |
| Main Text - SECTION XVIII, Part 1 |
| Main Text - SECTION XVIII, Part 2 |
| Main Text - SECTION XIX |
| Main Text - SECTION XX |
|