爱德华兹:论恩典(英文)
<p><br><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Simsun; font-size: medium; "><pre style="word-wrap: break-word; white-space: pre-wrap; "></p><p>     __________________________________________________________________</p><p><br></p><p>           Title: Treatise on Grace</p><p>      Creator(s): Edwards, Jonathan (1703-1758)</p><p>          Rights: Public Domain</p><p>   CCEL Subjects: All;</p><p>     __________________________________________________________________</p><p>     __________________________________________________________________</p><p><br></p><p>  The Backslider in Heart</p><p><br></p><p>      by</p><p><br></p><p>  Jonathan Edwards</p><p>     __________________________________________________________________</p><p><br></p><p>  THAT COMMON AND SAVING GRACE DIFFER, NOT ONLY IN DEGREE, BUT IN</p><p>  NATURE AND KIND."</p><p><br></p><p>   SUCH phrases as common grace, and special or saving grace, may be</p><p>   understood as signifying either diverse kinds of influence of God's</p><p>   Spirit on the hearts of men, or diverse fruits and effects of that</p><p>   influence. The Spirit of God is supposed sometimes to have some</p><p>   influence upon the minds of men that are not true Christians, and that those dispositions, frames, and exercises of their</p><p>   minds that are of a good tendency, but are common to them with the</p><p>   saints, are in some respect owing to some influence or assistance of</p><p>   God's Spirit. But as there are some things in the hearts of true</p><p>   Christians that are peculiar to them, and that are more excellent than</p><p>   any thing that is to be found in others, so it is supposed that there</p><p>   is an operation of the Spirit of God different, and that the value</p><p>   which distinguishes them is owing to a higher influence and assistance</p><p>   than the virtues of others. So that sometimes the phrase common grace,</p><p>   is used to signify that kind of action or influence of the Spirit of</p><p>   God, to which are owing those religious or moral attainments that are</p><p>   common to both saints and sinners, and so signifies as much as common</p><p>   assistance; and sometimes those moral or religious attainments</p><p>   themselves that are the fruits of this assistance, are intended. So</p><p>   likewise the phrase, special or saving grace, is sometimes used to</p><p>   signify that peculiar kind or degree of operation or influence of God's</p><p>   Spirit, whence saving actions and attainments do arise in the godly,</p><p>   or, which is the same thing, special and saving assistance; or else to</p><p>   signify that distinguishing saving virtue itself, which is the fruit of</p><p>   this assistance. These phrases are more frequently understood in the</p><p>   latter sense, viz., nor for common and special assistance, but for</p><p>   common and special, or saving virtue, which is the fruit of that</p><p>   assistance, and so I would be understood by these phrases in this</p><p>   discourse.</p><p><br></p><p>   And that special or saving grace in this sense is not only different</p><p>   from common grace in degree, but entirely diverse in nature and kind,</p><p>   and that natural men not only have not a sufficient degree of virtue to</p><p>   be saints, but that they have no degree of that grace that is in godly</p><p>   men, is what I have now to shew.</p><p><br></p><p>   1. This is evident by what Christ says in John 3:6, where Christ,</p><p>   speaking of regeneration, says -- "That which is born of the flesh is</p><p>   flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." Now, whatever</p><p>   Christ intends by the terms flesh and spirit in the words, yet this</p><p>   much is manifested and undeniable, that Christ here intends to shew</p><p>   Nicodemus the necessity of a new birth, or another birth than his</p><p>   natural birth, and that, from this argument, that a man that has been</p><p>   the subject only of the first birth, has nothing of that in his heart</p><p>   which he must have in order to enter in the kingdom. He has nothing at</p><p>   all of that which Christ calls spirit, whatever that be. All that a man</p><p>    that has been the subject only of a natural birth don't go beyond</p><p>   that which Christ calls flesh, for however it may be refined and</p><p>   exalted, yet it cannot be raised above flesh. 'Tis plain, that by flesh</p><p>   and spirit, Christ here intends two things entirely different in</p><p>   nature, which cannot be one from the other. A man cannot have anything</p><p>   of a nature superior to flesh that is not born again, and therefore we</p><p>   must be "born again." That by flesh and spirit are intended certain</p><p>   moral principles, natures, or qualities, entirely different and</p><p>   opposite in their nature one to another, is manifest from other texts,</p><p>   as particularly: Gal 5:17-- "For the flesh lusteth against the spirit,</p><p>   and the spirit against the flesh: and they are contrary the one to the</p><p>   other; so that ye cannot do the things which ye would;" Ver.19, "Now</p><p>   the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these: Adultery,</p><p>   fornication," etc. Ver.22-- "But the fruit if the Spirit is love, joy,</p><p>   peace," etc; and by Gal. 6:8-- "For he that soweth to the flesh shall</p><p>   of the flesh reap corruption: but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of</p><p>   the Spirit reap life everlasting." Rom. 8:6-9-- "For to be carnally</p><p>   minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace" etc. 1</p><p>   Cor 3:1-- "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual,</p><p>   but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ." So that it is</p><p>   manifest by this, that men that have been the subjects only of the</p><p>   first birth, have no degree of that moral principle or quality that</p><p>   those that are new born have, whereby they have a title to the kingdom</p><p>   of heaven. This principle or quality comes out then no otherwise than</p><p>   by birth, and the birth that it must come by is not, cannot be, the</p><p>   first birth, but it must be a new birth. If men that have no title to</p><p>   the kingdom of heaven, could have something of the Spirit, as well as</p><p>   flesh, then Christ's argument would be false. It is plain, by Christ's</p><p>   reasoning, that those that are not in a state of salvation, cannot have</p><p>   these two opposite principle in their hearts together, some flesh and</p><p>   some spirit, lusting one against the other as the godly have, but that</p><p>   they have flesh only.</p><p><br></p><p>   2. That the only principle in those that are savingly converted, whence</p><p>   gracious acts flow, which in the language of Scripture is called the</p><p>   Spirit, and set in opposition to the flesh, is that which others not</p><p>   only have not a sufficient degree of, but have nothing at all of, is</p><p>   further manifest, because the Scripture asserts both negatively, that</p><p>   those that have not the Spirit are not Christ's. Romans 8:9-- "But ye</p><p>   are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God</p><p>   dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none</p><p>   of his;" and also that those that have the Spirit are His.</p><p>   1 John 3:24-- "Hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which</p><p>   he hath given us." And our having the Spirit of God dwelling in our</p><p>   hearts is mentioned as a certain sign that persons are entitled to</p><p>   heaven, and is called the earnest of the future inheritance (2 Cor 1:22</p><p>   and v.5, Eph. 1:14;) which it would not be if others that had no title</p><p>   to the inheritance might have some of it dwelling in them.</p><p><br></p><p>   Yea, that those that are not true saints have nothing of the Spirit, no</p><p>   part nor portion of it, is still more evident, because not only a</p><p>   having any particular motion of the Spirit, but a being of the Spirit</p><p>   is given as a sure sign of being in Christ. 1 John 4:13-- "Hereby know</p><p>   we that we dwell in him, and he in us, because he hath given us of his</p><p>   Spirit." If those that are not true saints have any degree of that</p><p>   spiritual principle, then though they have not so much, yet they have</p><p>   of it, and so that would be no sign that a person is in Christ. If</p><p>   those that have not a saving interest in Christ have nothing of the</p><p>   Spirit, then they have nothing; no degree of those graces that are the</p><p>   fruits of the Spirit, mentioned in Gal 5:22-- "But the fruit of the</p><p>   Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith,</p><p>   meekness, temperance." Those fruits are here mentioned with that very</p><p>   design, that we may know whether we have the Spirit or no.</p><p><br></p><p>   3. Those that are not true saints, and in a state of salvation, not</p><p>   only have not so much of that holy nature and Divine principle that is</p><p>   in the hearts of the saints, but they do not partake of it, because a</p><p>   being "partakers of the divine nature" is spoken of as the peculiar</p><p>   privilege of true saints, (2 Peter 1:4.) It is evident that it is the</p><p>   true saints that the apostle is there speaking of. The words in this</p><p>   verse with the foregoing are these: "According as his Divine power hath</p><p>   given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through</p><p>   the true knowledge of Him that hath called us to glory and virtue:</p><p>   whereby are given to us exceeding great and precious promises: that by</p><p>   these ye might be partakers of the Divine nature, having escaped the</p><p>   corruption that is in the world through lust." The "Divine nature" and</p><p>   "lust" are evidently here spoken of as two opposite principles in man.</p><p>   Those that are in the world, and that are the men of the world, have</p><p>   only the latter principle; but to be partakers of the Divine nature is</p><p>   spoken of as peculiar to them that are distinguished and separated from</p><p>   the world, by the free and sovereign grace of God giving them all</p><p>   things that pertain to life and godliness, giving the knowledge of Him</p><p>   and calling them to glory and virtue, and giving them the exceeding</p><p>   great and precious promises of the gospel, and that have escaped the</p><p>   corruption of the world of wicked men. And a being partakers of the</p><p>   Divine nature is spoken of, not only as peculiar to the saints, but as</p><p>   one of the highest privileges of the saints.</p><p><br></p><p>   4. That those that have not a saving interest in Christ have no degree</p><p>   of that relish and sense of spiritual things or things of the Spirit,</p><p>   of their Divine truth and excellency, which a true saint has, is</p><p>   evident by 1 Cor. 2:14-- "The natural man receiveth not the things of</p><p>   the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he</p><p>   know them, because they are spiritually discerned." A natural man is</p><p>   here set in opposition to a spiritual one, or one that has the Spirit,</p><p>   as appears by the foregoing and following verses. Such we have shewn</p><p>   already the Scripture declares all true saints to be, and no other.</p><p>   Therefore by natural men are meant those that have not the Spirit of</p><p>   Christ and are none of His, and are the subjects of no other than the</p><p>   natural birth. But here we are plainly taught that a natural man is</p><p>   perfectly destitute of any sense, perception, or discerning of those</p><p>   things of the Spirit. by the words "he neither</p><p>   does nor can know them, or discern them;" so far from this they are</p><p>   "foolishness unto him;" he is a perfect stranger, so that he does not</p><p>   know what the talk of such things means; they are words without a</p><p>   meaning to him; he knows nothing of the matter any more than a blind</p><p>   man of colours.</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence it will follow, that the sense of things of religion that a</p><p>   natural man has, is not only not to the same degree, but nothing of the</p><p>   same nature with that which a true saint has. And besides, if a natural</p><p>   person has the fruit of the Spirit, which is of the same kind with what</p><p>   a spiritual person has, then he experiences within himself the things</p><p>   of the Spirit of God; and how then can he be said to be such a stranger</p><p>   to them, and have no perception or discerning of them?</p><p><br></p><p>   The reason why natural men have no knowledge of spiritual things is,</p><p>   because they have nothing of the Spirit of God dwelling in them. This</p><p>   is evident by the context: for there we are told that it is by the</p><p>   Spirit that these things are taught, (verses 10-12;) godly persons in</p><p>   the next verse are called spiritual, because they have the Spirit</p><p>   dwelling in them. Hereby the sense again is confirmed, for natural men</p><p>   are in no degree spiritual; they have only nature and no Spirit. If</p><p>   they had anything of the Spirit, though not in so great a degree as the</p><p>   godly, yet they would be taught spiritual things, or things of the</p><p>   Spirit, in proportion to the measure of the Spirit that they had. The</p><p>   Spirit that searcheth all things would teach them in some measure.</p><p>   There would not be so great a difference that the one could perceive</p><p>   nothing of them, and that they should be foolishness to them, while to</p><p>   the other they appear divinely and remarkably wise and excellent, as</p><p>   they are spoken of in the context, (verses 6-9,) and as such the</p><p>   apostle spoke here of discerning them.</p><p><br></p><p>   The reason why natural men have no knowledge or perception of spiritual</p><p>   things is, because they have none of the anointing spoken of, (1 John</p><p>   2:27:) "The anointing which ye have received of him, abideth in you,</p><p>   and you need not that any man teach you." This anointing is evidently</p><p>   spoken of here, as a thing peculiar to true saints. Ungodly men never</p><p>   had any degree of that holy oil poured upon them, and therefore have no</p><p>   discerning of spiritual things. Therefore none of that sense that</p><p>   natural men have of things of religion, is of the same nature with what</p><p>   the godly have. But to these they are totally blind. Therefore in</p><p>   conversion the eyes of the blind are opened. The world is wholly</p><p>   unacquainted with the Spirit of God, as appears by John 14:17, where we</p><p>   read about "the Spirit of truth whom the world cannot receive, because</p><p>   it knoweth him not."</p><p><br></p><p>   5. Those that go for those in religion that are not true saints and in</p><p>   a state of salvation have no charity, as is plainly implied in the</p><p>   beginning of the 13th chapter of the 1st Epistle to the Corinthians.</p><p>   Therefore they have no degree of that kind of grace, disposition, or</p><p>   affection that is so called. So Christ elsewhere reproves the</p><p>   Pharisees, those high pretenders to religion among the Jews, that they</p><p>   had not the love of God in them, (John 5:42.)</p><p><br></p><p>   6. That those that are not true saints have no degree of that grace</p><p>   that the saints have is evident, because they have no communion or</p><p>   fellowship with Christ. If those that are not true saints partake of</p><p>   any of that Spirit, those holy inclinations and affections, and</p><p>   gracious acts of soul that the godly have from the indwelling of the</p><p>   Spirit of Christ, then they would have communion with Christ. The</p><p>   communion of saints with Christ does certainly very much consist in</p><p>   that receiving of His fulness and partaking of His grace spoken of,</p><p>   John 1:16-- "Of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace,"</p><p>   and in partaking of that Spirit which God gives not by measure unto</p><p>   Him. Partaking of Christ's holiness and grace, His nature,</p><p>   inclinations, tendencies, love, and desires, comforts and delights,</p><p>   must be to have communion with Christ. Yea, a believer's communion with</p><p>   the Father and the Son does mainly consist in his partaking of the Holy</p><p>   Ghost, as appears by 2 Cor. 13:14--"The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ,</p><p>   and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost."</p><p><br></p><p>   But that unbelievers have no fellowship or communion with Christ</p><p>   appears, (1.) because they are not united to Christ. They are not in</p><p>   Christ. For the Scripture is very plain and evident in this, that those</p><p>   that are in Christ are actually in a state of salvation, and are</p><p>   justified, sanctified, accepted of Christ, and shall be saved. Phil.</p><p>   3:8-9--"Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the</p><p>   excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have</p><p>   suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may</p><p>   win Christ, and be found in Him." 2 Cor. 5:17-- "If any man be in</p><p>   Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away ; behold, all</p><p>   things are become new." 1 John 2:5--"But whoso keepeth his word, in him</p><p>   verily is the love of God perfected : hereby know we that we are in</p><p>   Him; and 3:24-- "He that keepeth His commandments dwelleth in Him, and</p><p>   He in him. And hereby we know that he abideth in us, by the Spirit</p><p>   which He hath given us." But those that are not in Christ, and are not</p><p>   united to Him, can have no degree of communion with Him. For there is</p><p>   no communion without union. The members can have no communion with the</p><p>   head or participation of its life and health unless they are united to</p><p>   it. The branch must be united with the vine, otherwise there can be no</p><p>   communication from the vine to it, nor any partaking of any degree of</p><p>   its sap, or life, or influence. So without the union of the wife to the</p><p>   husband, she can have no communion in his goods. (2.) The Scripture</p><p>   does more directly teach that it is only true saints that have</p><p>   communion with Christ, as particularly this is most evidently spoken of</p><p>   as what belongs to the saints, and to them only, in 1 John 1:3,</p><p>   together with verses 6-7-- "That which we have seen and heard declare</p><p>   we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship with us: and truly our</p><p>   fellowship is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ." Ver.</p><p>   6--"If we say that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness,</p><p>   we lie, and do not the truth: but if we walk in the light, as he is in</p><p>   the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus</p><p>   Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin." Also in 1 Cor. 1:9--"God is</p><p>   faithful, by whom ye were called unto the fellowship of his Son Christ</p><p>   Jesus our Lord."</p><p><br></p><p>   7. The Scripture speaks of the actual being of a truly holy and</p><p>   gracious principle in the heart, as inconsistent with a man's being a</p><p>   sinner or a wicked man. 1 John 3:9-- "Whosoever is born of God doth not</p><p>   commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because</p><p>   he is born of God." Here it is needless to dispute what is intended by</p><p>   this seed, whether it be a principle of true virtue and a holy nature</p><p>   in the soul, or whether it be the word of God as the cause of that</p><p>   virtue. For let us understand it in either sense, it comes to much the</p><p>   same thing in the present argument ; for if by the seed is meant the</p><p>   word of God, yet when it is spoken of as abiding in him that is born</p><p>   again, it must be intended, with respect to its effect, as a holy</p><p>   principle in his heart : for the word of God does not abide in one that</p><p>   is born again more than another, any other way than in its effect. The</p><p>   word of God abides in the heart of a regenerate person as a holy seed,</p><p>   a Divine principle there, though it may be but as a seed, a small</p><p>   thing. The seed is a very small part of the plant, and is its first</p><p>   principle. It may be in the heart as a grain of mustard-seed, may be</p><p>   hid, and seem to be in great measure buried in the earth. But yet it is</p><p>   inconsistent with wickedness. The smallest degrees and first principles</p><p>   of a Divine and holy nature and disposition are inconsistent with a</p><p>   state of sin; whence it is said "he cannot sin." There is no need here</p><p>   of a critical inquiry into the import of that expression; for doubtless</p><p>   so much at least is implied through this, "his seed being in him," as</p><p>   is inconsistent with his being a sinner or a wicked man. So that this</p><p>   heavenly plant of true holiness cannot be in the heart of a sinner, no,</p><p>   not so much as in its first principle.</p><p><br></p><p>   8. This is confirmed by the things that conversion is represented by in</p><p>   the Scriptures, particularly its being represented as a work of</p><p>   creation. When God creates He does not merely establish and perfect the</p><p>   things which were made before, but makes wholly and immediately</p><p>   something entirely new, either out of nothing, or out of that which was</p><p>   perfectly void of any such nature, as when He made man of the dust of</p><p>   the earth. "The things that are seen are not made of things that do</p><p>   appear. Saving grace in man is said to be the new man or a new</p><p>   creature, and corrupt nature the old man. If that nature that is in the</p><p>   heart of a godly man be not different in its nature and kind from all</p><p>   that went before, then the man might possibly have had the same things</p><p>   a year before, and from time to time from the beginning of his life,</p><p>   but only not quite to the same degree. And how then is grace in him,</p><p>   the new man or the new creature?</p><p><br></p><p>   Again, conversion is often compared to a resurrection. Wicked men are</p><p>   said to be dead, but when they are converted they are represented as</p><p>   being by God's mighty and effectual power raised from the dead. Now</p><p>   there is no medium between being dead and alive. He that is dead has no</p><p>   degree of life ; he that has the least degree of life in him is alive.</p><p>   When a man is raised from the dead, life is not only in a greater</p><p>   degree, but it is all new.</p><p><br></p><p>   The same is manifest by conversion being represented as a new birth or</p><p>   as regeneration. Generation is not only perfecting what is old, but</p><p>   'tis a begetting from the new. Then nature and life that is then</p><p>   received has then its beginning: it receives its first principles.</p><p><br></p><p>   Again conversion in Scripture is represented as an opening of the eyes</p><p>   of the blind. In such a work those have light given them that were</p><p>   totally destitute of it before. So in conversion, stones are said to be</p><p>   raised up children to Abraham: while stones they are altogether</p><p>   destitute of all those qualities that afterwards render them the living</p><p>   children of Abraham, and not only had them not in so great a degree.</p><p>   Agreeably to this, conversion is said to be a taking away a heart of</p><p>   stone and a giving a heart of flesh. The man while unconverted has a</p><p>   heart of stone which has no degree of that life and sense that the</p><p>   heart of flesh has, because it yet remains a stone, than which nothing</p><p>   is further from life and sense.</p><p><br></p><p>   Inference 1. -- From what has been said, I would observe that it must</p><p>   needs be that conversion is wrought at once. That knowledge, that</p><p>   reformation and conviction that is preparatory to conversion may be</p><p>   gradual, and the work of grace after conversion may be gradually</p><p>   carried on, yet that work of grace upon the soul where by a person is</p><p>   brought out of a state of total corruption and depravity into a state</p><p>   of grace, to an interest in Christ, and to be actually a child of God,</p><p>   is in a moment.</p><p><br></p><p>   It must needs be the consequence; for if that grace or virtue that a</p><p>   person has when he is brought into a state of grace be entirely</p><p>   different in nature and kind from all that went before, then it will</p><p>   follow that the last instant before a person is actually a child of God</p><p>   and in a state of grace, a person has not the least degree of any real</p><p>   goodness, and of that true virtue that is in a child of God.</p><p><br></p><p>   Those things by which conversion is represented in Scripture hold forth</p><p>   the same thing. In creation something is brought out of nothing in an</p><p>   instant. God speaks and it is done, He commands and it stands fast.</p><p>   When the dead are raised, it is done in a moment. Thus when Christ</p><p>   called Lazarus out of his grave, it was not a gradual work. He said,</p><p>   "Lazarus, come forth," and there went life with the call. He heard His</p><p>   voice and lived. So Christ, John 5:25-- "Verily, verily, I say unto</p><p>   you, The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice</p><p>   of the Son of God : and they that hear shall live,"--which words must</p><p>   be understood of the work of conversion. In creation, being is called</p><p>   out of nothing and instantly obeys the call, and in the resurrection</p><p>   the dead are called into life: as soon as the call is given the dead</p><p>   obey.</p><p><br></p><p>   By reason of this instantaneousness of the work of conversion, one of</p><p>   the names under which conversion is frequently spoken of in Scripture,</p><p>   is calling: Rom. 8:28-30--"And we know that all things work together</p><p>   for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to</p><p>   his purpose. For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be</p><p>   conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among</p><p>   many brethren. Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called;</p><p>   and whom he called, them he also justified ; and whom he justified,</p><p>   them he also glorified." Acts 2:37-39-- "Now when they heard this, they</p><p>   were pricked in their heart, and said unto Peter and to the rest of the</p><p>   apostles, Men and brethren, what shall we do? Then Peter said unto</p><p>   them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus</p><p>   Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the</p><p>   Holy Ghost. For the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to</p><p>   all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call."</p><p>   Heb. 9:15, (last clause)--"That they which are called might receive the</p><p>   promise of eternal inheritance." 1 Thess. 5:23-24 --"And the very God</p><p>   of peace sanctify you wholly... Faithful is he that calleth you, who</p><p>   also will do it." Nothing else can be meant in those places by calling</p><p>   than what Christ does in a sinner's saving conversion. By which it</p><p>   seems evident that it is done at once and not gradually; whereby</p><p>   Christ, through His great power, does but speak the powerful word and</p><p>   it is done, He does but call and the heart of the sinner immediately</p><p>   comes. It seems to be symbolised by Christ's calling His disciples, and</p><p>   their immediately following Him. So when He called Peter, Andrew,</p><p>   James, and John, they were minding other things ; but at His call they</p><p>   immediately left all and followed Him. Matt. 4:18-22-- Peter and Andrew</p><p>   were casting a net into the sea, and Christ says to them as He passed</p><p>   by, Follow me ; and it is said, they straightway left their nets and</p><p>   followed Him. So James and John were in the ship with Zebedee their</p><p>   father mending their nets, and He called them, and immediately they</p><p>   left the ship and their father and followed Him. So when Matthew was</p><p>   called: Matt. 9:9-- "And as Jesus passed forth from thence, He saw a</p><p>   man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom: and He saith unto</p><p>   him, Follow me. And he arose and followed Him." Now whether they were</p><p>   then converted or not, yet doubtless Christ in thus calling His first</p><p>   disciples to a visible following of Him, represents to us the manner in</p><p>   which He would call men to be truly His disciples and spiritually to</p><p>   follow Him in all ages. There is something immediately and</p><p>   instantaneously put into their hearts at that call that they had</p><p>   nothing of before, that effectually disposes them to follow.</p><p><br></p><p>   It is very manifest that almost all the miracles of Christ that He</p><p>   wrought when on earth were types of His great work of converting</p><p>   sinners, and the manner of His working those miracles holds forth the</p><p>   instantaneousness of the work of conversion. Thus when He healed the</p><p>   leper, which represented His healing us of our spiritual leprosy, He</p><p>   put forth His hand and touched him, and said, "I will; be thou clean."</p><p>   And immediately his leprosy was cleansed. Matt. 8:3; Mark 1:42; Luke</p><p>   5:13. And so, in opening the eyes of the blind, which represents His</p><p>   opening the eyes of our blind souls, (Matt. 20:30 etc., ) He touched</p><p>   their eyes, and immediately their eyes received sight, and they</p><p>   followed Him. So Mark 10:52; Luke 18:43-- So when He healed the sick,</p><p>   which represents His healing our spiritual diseases, or conversion, it</p><p>   was done at once. Thus when He healed Simon's wife's mother, (Mark</p><p>   1:31,) He took her by the hand and lifted her up; and immediately the</p><p>   fever left her, and she ministered unto them. So when the woman which</p><p>   had the issue of blood touched the hem of Christ's garment, immediately</p><p>   the issue of blood stanched, (Luke 8:44.) So the woman that was bowed</p><p>   together with the spirit of infirmity, when Christ laid His hands upon</p><p>   her, immediately she was made straight, and glorified God, (Luke</p><p>   13:12-13;) which represents that action on the soul whereby He gives an</p><p>   upright heart, and sets the soul at liberty from its bondage to glorify</p><p>   Him. So the man at the pool of Bethesda, when Christ bade him rise,</p><p>   take up his bed and walk, (he) was immediately made whole, (John</p><p>   5:8-9.) After the same manner Christ cast out devils, which represents</p><p>   His dispossessing the devil of our souls in conversion; and so He</p><p>   settled the winds and waves, representing His subduing, in conversion,</p><p>   the heart of the wicked, which is like the troubled sea, when it cannot</p><p>   rest; and so He raised the dead, which represented His raising dead</p><p>   souls.</p><p><br></p><p>   The same is confirmed by those things which conversion is compared to</p><p>   in Scripture. It is often compared to a resurrection. Natural men (as</p><p>   was said before) are said to be dead, and to be raised when they are</p><p>   converted by God's mighty effectual power from the dead. Now, there is</p><p>   no medium between being dead and alive ; he that is dead has no degree</p><p>   of life in him, he that has the least degree of life in him is alive.</p><p>   When a man is raised from the dead, life is not only in a greater</p><p>   degree in him than it was before, but it is all new. The work of</p><p>   conversion seems to be compared to a raising the dead to life, in this</p><p>   very thing, even its instantaneousness, or its being done, as it were,</p><p>   at a word's speaking. As in John 5:25, (before quoted)-- "Verily,</p><p>   verily, I say unto you, the hour is coming, and now is, when the dead</p><p>   shall hear the voice of the Son of God: and they that hear shall live."</p><p>   He speaks here of a work of conversion, as appears by the preceding</p><p>   verse; and by the words themselves, which speak of the time of this</p><p>   raising the dead, not only as to come hereafter, but as what was</p><p>   already come. This shews conversion to be an immediate instantaneous</p><p>   work, like to the change made on Lazarus when Christ called him from</p><p>   the grave: there went life with the call, and Lazarus was immediately</p><p>   alive. Immediately before the call sinners are dead or wholly destitute</p><p>   of life, as appears by the expression, "The dead shall hear the voice,"</p><p>   and immediately after the call they are alive; yea, there goes life</p><p>   with the word, as is evident, not only because it is said they shall</p><p>   live, but also because it is said, they shall hear His voice. The first</p><p>   moment they have any life is the moment when Christ calls, and as soon</p><p>   as they are called, which further appears by what was observed before,</p><p>   even that a being called and converted are spoken of in Scripture as</p><p>   the same thing.</p><p><br></p><p>   The same is confirmed (as observed before) from conversion being</p><p>   compared to a work of creation, which is a work wherein something is</p><p>   made either out of nothing, or out of that having no degree of the same</p><p>   kind of qualities and principles, as when God made man of the dust of</p><p>   the earth. Thus it is said, "If any man be in Christ he is a new</p><p>   creature;" which obviously implies that he is an exceeding diverse kind</p><p>   of creature from what he was before he was in Christ, that the</p><p>   principle or qualities that he has by which he is a Christian, are</p><p>   entirely new, and what there was nothing of, before he was in Christ.</p><p><br></p><p>   Inference 2. Hence we may learn that it is impossible for men to</p><p>   convert themselves by their own strength and industry, with only a</p><p>   concurring assistance helping in the exercise of their natural</p><p>   abilities and principles of the soul, and securing their improvement.</p><p>   For what is gained after this manner is a gradual acquisition, and not</p><p>   something instantaneously begotten, and of an entirely different</p><p>   nature, and wholly of a separate kind, from all that was in the nature</p><p>   of the person the moment before. All that men can do by their own</p><p>   strength and industry is only gradually to increase and improve and</p><p>   new-model and direct qualities, principles, and perfections of nature</p><p>   that they have already. And that is evident, because a man in the</p><p>   exercise and improvement of the strength and principles of his own</p><p>   nature has nothing but the qualities, powers, and perfections that are</p><p>   already in his nature to work with, and nothing but them to work upon;</p><p>   and therefore 'tis impossible that by this only, anything further</p><p>   should be brought to pass, than only a new modification of what is</p><p>   already in the nature of the soul. That which is only by an improvement</p><p>   of natural qualities, principles, and perfections -- let these things</p><p>   be improved never so much and never so industriously, and never so</p><p>   long, they'll still be no more than an improvement of those natural</p><p>   qualities, principles, and perfections; and therefore not anything of</p><p>   an essentially distinct and superior nature and kind.</p><p><br></p><p>   'Tis impossible (as Dr Clarke observes) "that any effect should have</p><p>   any perfection that was not in the cause: for if it had, then that</p><p>   perfection would be caused by nothing." 'Tis therefore utterly</p><p>   impossible that men's natural perfections and qualities in that</p><p>   exercise, and however assisted in that exercise, should produce in the</p><p>   soul a principle or perfection of a nature entirely different from all</p><p>   of them, or any manner of improvement or modification of them.</p><p><br></p><p>   The qualities and principles of natural bodies, such as figure or</p><p>   motion, can never produce anything beyond themselves. If infinite</p><p>   comprehensions and divisions be eternally made, the things must still</p><p>   be eternally the same, and all their possible effects can never be</p><p>   anything but repetitions of the same. Nothing can be produced by only</p><p>   those qualities of figure and motion, beyond figure and motion: and so</p><p>   nothing can be produced in the soul by only its internal principles,</p><p>   beyond these principles or qualities, or new improvements and</p><p>   modifications of them. And if we suppose a concurring assistance to</p><p>   enable to a more full and perfect exercise of those natural principles</p><p>   and qualities, unless the assistance of influence actually produces</p><p>   something beyond the exercise of internal principle: still, it is the</p><p>   same thing. Nothing will be produced but only an improvement and new</p><p>   modification of those principles that are exercised. Therefore it</p><p>   follows that saving grace in the heart, can't be produced in man by</p><p>   mere exercise of what perfections he has in him already, though never</p><p>   so much assisted by moral suasion, and never so much assisted in the</p><p>   exercise of his natural principles, unless there be something more that</p><p>   all this, viz., an immediate infusion or operation of the Divine Being</p><p>   upon the soul. Grace must be the immediate work of God, and properly a</p><p>   production of His almighty power on the soul.</p><p>     __________________________________________________________________</p><p><br></p><p>  SHEWING WHEREIN ALL SAVING GRACE DOES SUMMARILY CONSIST"</p><p><br></p><p>   The next thing that arises for consideration is, What is the nature of</p><p>   this Divine principle in the soul that is so entirely diverse from all</p><p>   that is naturally in the soul? Here I would observe,--</p><p><br></p><p>   1. That that saving grace that is in the hearts if the saints, that</p><p>   within them above nature, and entirely distinguishes 'em</p><p>   from all unconverted men, is radically but one -- i.e., however various</p><p>   its exercises are, yet it is but one in its root; 'tis one individual</p><p>   principle in the heart.</p><p><br></p><p>   'Tis common for us to speak of various graces of the Spirit of God as</p><p>   though they were so many different principles of holiness, and to call</p><p>   them by distinct names as such, -- repentance, humility, resignation,</p><p>   thankfulness, etc. But we err if we imagine that these in their first</p><p>   source and root in the heart are properly distinct principles. They all</p><p>   come from the same fountain, and are, indeed, the various exertions and</p><p>   conditions of the same thing, only different denominations according to</p><p>   the various occasions, objects, and manners, attendants and</p><p>   circumstances of its exercise. There is some one holy principle in the</p><p>   heart that is the essence and sum of all grace, the root and source of</p><p>   all holy acts of every kind, and the fountain of every good stream,</p><p>   into which all Christian virtues may ultimately be resolved, and in</p><p>   which all duty and holiness is fulfilled.</p><p><br></p><p>   Thus the Scripture represents it. Grace in the soul is one fountain of</p><p>   water of life, (John 4:14,) and not various distinct fountains. So God,</p><p>   in the work of regeneration, implants one heavenly seed in the soul,</p><p>   and not various different seeds. 1 John 3:9--"Whosoever is born of God</p><p>   doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him." ... The Day </p><p>   has arisen on the soul is but one. The oil in the vessel is simple and</p><p>   pure, conferred by one holy anointing. All is "wrought" by one</p><p>   individual work of the Spirit of God. And thus it is there is a</p><p>   consentanation of graces. Not only is one grace in some way allied to</p><p>   another, and so tends to help and promote one another, but one is</p><p>   really implied in the other. The nature of one involves the nature of</p><p>   another. And the great reason of it is, that all graces have one common</p><p>   essence, the original principle of all, and is but one. Strip the</p><p>   various parts of the Christian soul of their circumstances,</p><p>   concomitants, appendages, means, and occasions, and consider that which</p><p>   is, as it were, their soul and essence, and all appears to be the same.</p><p>   </p><p><br></p><p>   2. That principle in the soul of the saints, which is the grand</p><p>   Christian virtue, and which is the soul and essence and summary</p><p>   comprehension of all grace, is a principle of Divine Love. This is</p><p>   evident,</p><p><br></p><p>   (1.) Because we are abundantly taught in the Scripture that Divine Love</p><p>   is the sum of all duty; and that all that God requires of us is</p><p>   fulfilled in it, --i.e., That Love is the sum of all duty of the heart,</p><p>   and its exercises and fruits the sum of all duty of life. But if</p><p>   the duty of the heart, or all due dispositions of the hearts, are all</p><p>   summed up in love, then undoubtedly all grace may be summed up in LOVE.</p><p><br></p><p>   The Scripture teaches us that all our duty is summed up in love;or,</p><p>   which is the same thing, that 'tis the sum of all that is required in</p><p>   the Law; and that, whether we take the Law as signifying the Ten</p><p>   Commandments, or the whole written Word of God. So, when by the Law is</p><p>   meant the Ten Commandments : Rom. 13:8--"Owe no man any thing, but to</p><p>   love one another: for he that loveth another hath fulfilled the law" ;</p><p>   and, therefore, several of these commandments are there rehearsed. And</p><p>   again, in ver. 10, "Love is the fulfilling of the law." And unless love</p><p>   was the sum of what the law required, the law could not be fulfilled in</p><p>   love. A law is not fulfilled but by obedience to the sum of what it</p><p>   contains. So the same apostle again: 1 Tim. 1:5-- "Now the end of the</p><p>   commandment is charity" .</p><p><br></p><p>   If we take the law in a yet more extensive sense for the whole written</p><p>   Word of God, the Scripture still teaches us that love is the sum of</p><p>   what is required in it. Matt. 22:40. There Christ teaches us</p><p>   that on these two precepts of loving God and our neighbour hang all the</p><p>   Law and the Prophets, --that is, all the written Word of God. So that</p><p>   what was called the Law and the Prophets was the whole written Word of</p><p>   God that was then extant. The Scripture teaches this of each table of</p><p>   the law in particular.</p><p><br></p><p>   Thus, the lawyer that we read of in the 10th chapter of Luke, vv.25-28,</p><p>   mentions the love of God and our neighbour as the sum of the two tables</p><p>   of the law; and Christ approves of what he says. When he stood up and</p><p>   tempted Christ with this question, "Master, what shall I do to inherit</p><p>   eternal life?" Christ asks him what was required of him "in the Law?"</p><p>   He makes answer, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,</p><p>   and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy</p><p>   mind, and thy neighbour as thyself;" and Christ replies, "Thou hast</p><p>   answered right: this do, and thou shalt live;" as much as to say, "Do</p><p>   this, then thou hast fulfilled the whole law."</p><p><br></p><p>   So in Matthew 22:36-38, that commandment, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy</p><p>   God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind,"</p><p>   is given by Christ himself as the sum of the first Table of the Law, in</p><p>   answer to the question of the lawyer, who asked Him, "Which is the</p><p>   great commandment in the law!" And in the next verse, loving our</p><p>   neighbours as ourselves is mentioned as the sum of the second Table, as</p><p>   it is also in Romans 13:9, where most of the precepts of the second</p><p>   Table are rehearsed over in particular: "For this, Thou shalt not</p><p>   commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt</p><p>   not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet ; and if there be any</p><p>   other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, namely,</p><p>   Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself."</p><p><br></p><p>   The Apostle James seems to teach the same thing. James 2:8-- "If ye</p><p>   fulfil the royal law according to the scripture, Thou shalt love thy</p><p>   neighbour as thyself, ye do well."</p><p><br></p><p>   Thus frequent, express, and particular is the Scripture in teaching us</p><p>   that all duty is comprehended in Love. The Scripture teaches us, in</p><p>   like manner, of nothing else. This is quite another thing than if</p><p>   Religion in general had only sometimes gone under the name of the Love</p><p>   of God, as it sometimes goes by the name of the fearing of God, and</p><p>   sometimes the knowledge of God, and sometimes feeling of God.</p><p><br></p><p>   This argument does fully and irrefragably prove that all grace, and</p><p>   every Christian disposition and habit of mind and heart, especially as</p><p>   to that which is primarily holy and Divine in it, does summarily</p><p>   consist in Divine Love, and may be resolved into it: however, with</p><p>   respect to its kinds and manner of exercise and its appendages, it may</p><p>   be diversified. For certainly there is no duty of heart, or due</p><p>   disposition of mind, but what is included in the Law and the Prophets,"</p><p>   and is required by some precept of that law and rule which He has given</p><p>   mankind to walk by. But yet the Scripture affords us other evidences of</p><p>   the truth of this.</p><p><br></p><p>   (2.) The apostle speaks of Divine Love as that which is the essence of</p><p>   all Christianity in the thirteenth chapter of 1st Corinthians. There the apostle evidently means a comparison</p><p>   between the gifts of the Spirit and the grace of the Spirit. In the</p><p>   foregoing chapter the apostle had been speaking of the gifts of the</p><p>   Spirit throughout, such as the gift of wisdom, the gift of knowledge,</p><p>   the gift of faith, the gift of healing or working miracles, prophecy,</p><p>   discerning spirits, speaking with tongues, etc.; and in the last verse</p><p>   in the chapter he exhorts the Corinthians to "covet earnestly the best</p><p>   gifts;" but adds, "and yet shew I unto you a more excellent way," and</p><p>   so proceeds to discourse of the saving grace of the Spirit under the</p><p>   name of a)ga/ph love, and to compare this saving grace in the heart</p><p>   with those gifts. Now, 'tis manifest that the comparison is between the</p><p>   gifts of the Spirit that were common to both saints and sinners, and</p><p>   that saving grace that distinguishes true saints; and, therefore,</p><p>   charity or love is here understood by divines as intending the same</p><p>   thing as sincere grace of heart.</p><p><br></p><p>   By love or charity here there is no reason to understand the apostle</p><p>    only of love to men, but that principle of Divine Love</p><p>   that is in the heart of the saints in the full extent, which primarily</p><p>   has God for its object. For there is no reason to think that the</p><p>   apostle doesn't mean the same thing by charity here as he does in the</p><p>   eighth chapter of the same Epistle, where he is comparing the same two</p><p>   things together, knowledge and charity, as he does here. But there he</p><p>   explains himself to mean by charity the love of God: </p><p>   --"Now as touching things offered unto idols, we know that we all have</p><p>   knowledge. Knowledge puffeth up, but charity edifieth. And if any man</p><p>   think that he knoweth anything, he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to</p><p>   know. But if any man love God, the same is known of him," etc.</p><p><br></p><p>   'Tis manifest that love or charity is here (Chap. 13) spoken of as the</p><p>   very essence of all Christianity, and is the very thing wherein a</p><p>   gracious sincerity consists. For the Apostle speaks of it as the most</p><p>   excellent, the most necessary, and essential thing of all, without</p><p>   which all that makes the greatest, and fairest, and most glittering</p><p>   show in Religion is nothing -- without which, "if we speak with the</p><p>   tongues of men and angels, we are become as sounding brass and tinkling</p><p>   cymbals" -and without which, though we have "the gift of prophecy, and</p><p>   understand all mysteries, and all knowledge, and have all faith, so</p><p>   that we could remove mountains, and should bestow all our goods to feed</p><p>   the poor, and even give our bodies to be burned, we are nothing."</p><p>   Therefore, how can we understand the Apostle any otherwise than that</p><p>   this is the very thing whereof the essence of all consists; and that he</p><p>   means the same by charity as a gracious charity, as indeed it is</p><p>   generally understood. If a man does all these things here spoken, makes</p><p>   such glorious prophecies, has such knowledge, such faith, and speaks so</p><p>   excellently, and performs such excellent external acts, and does such</p><p>   great things in religion as giving all his goods to the poor and giving</p><p>   his body to be burned, what is wanting but one thing? The very</p><p>   quintessence of all Religion, the very thing wherein lies summarily the</p><p>   sincerity, spirituality, and divinity of Religion. And that, the</p><p>   Apostle teaches us, is LOVE.</p><p><br></p><p>   And further, 'tis manifestly the Apostle's drift to shew how this</p><p>   excellent principle does radically comprehend all that is good. For he</p><p>   goes on to shew how all essences of good and excellent dispositions and</p><p>   exercises, both towards God and towards man, are virtually contained</p><p>   and will flow from this one principle: "Love suffereth long, and is</p><p>   kind, envieth not, ... endureth all things" etc. The words of this last</p><p>   verse especially respects duties to God, as the former did duties to</p><p>   men, as I would shew more particularly afterwards.</p><p><br></p><p>   (Here it may be noted, by the way, that by charity 'believing all</p><p>   things, hoping all things,' the Apostle has undoubtedly respect to the</p><p>   same faith and hope that in other parts of the chapter are mentioned</p><p>   together and compared with charity, And not</p><p>   believing and hoping, in the case of our neighbour, which the apostle</p><p>   has spoken of before, in the last words of verse 5th, and had plainly</p><p>   summed up all parts of charity towards our neighbour in the 6th verse.</p><p>   And then in this verse the apostle proceeds to mention other exercises</p><p>   or fruits of charity quite of another kind--viz., patience under</p><p>   suffering, faith and hope, and perseverance.)</p><p><br></p><p>   Thus the Apostle don't only represent love or charity as the most</p><p>   excellent thing in Christianity, and as the quintessence, life and soul</p><p>   of all Religion, but as that which virtually comprehends all holy</p><p>   virtues and exercises. And because love is the quintessence and soul of</p><p>   all grace, wherein the divinity and holiness of all that belongs to</p><p>   charity does properly and essentially consist, therefore, when</p><p>   Christians come to be in their most perfect state, and the Divine</p><p>   nature in them shall be in its greatest exaltation and purity, and be</p><p>   free from all mixtures, stripped of these appurtenances and that</p><p>   clothing that it has in the present state ; and it shall lose</p><p>   many other of its denominations, especially from the peculiar manner</p><p>   and exercises accommodated to the imperfect circumstances of the</p><p>   present state, they will be what will remain. All other names will be</p><p>   swallowed up in the name of charity or love, as the apostle, agreeably</p><p>   to his chapter on this, (1 Cor. 13.,) observes in verses 8-10--</p><p>   "Charity never faileth.... But when that which is perfect is come, then</p><p>   that which is in part shall be done away." And, therefore, when the</p><p>   apostle, in the last verse, speaks of charity as the greatest grace, we</p><p>   may well understand him in the same sense as when Christ speaks of the</p><p>   command of love God, etc., as the greatest commandment --viz., that</p><p>   among the graces, that is the source and sum of all graces, as that</p><p>   commanded is spoken of as the sum of all commands, and requiring that</p><p>   duty which is the ground of all other duties.</p><p><br></p><p>   It must be because Charity is the quintessence and soul of all duty and</p><p>   all good in the heart that the apostle says that it is "the end of the</p><p>   commandment," for doubtless the main end of the commandment is to</p><p>   promote that which is most essential in Religion and constituent of</p><p>   holiness.</p><p><br></p><p>   3. Reason bears witness to the same thing.</p><p><br></p><p>   (1.)Reason testifies that Divine Love is so essential in Religion that</p><p>   all Religion is but hypocrisy and a "vain show" without it. What is</p><p>   Religion but the exercise and expressions of regard to the Divine</p><p>   Being? But certainly if there be no love to Him, there is no sincere</p><p>   regard to Him; and all pretences and show of respect to Him, whether it</p><p>   be in word or deed, must be hypocrisy, and of no value in the eyes of</p><p>   Him who sees the heart How manifest is it that without love there can</p><p>   be no true honour, no sincere praise! And how can obedience be hearty,</p><p>   if it be not a testimony of respect to God! The fear of God without</p><p>   love is no other than the fear of devils; and all that outward respect</p><p>   and obedience, all that resignation, that repentance and sorrow for</p><p>   sin, that form in religion, that outward devotion that is performed</p><p>   merely from such a fear without love, is all of it a practical lie, as</p><p>   in Psalm 66:3-- "...How terrible art Thou in Thy works! through the</p><p>   greatness of Thy power shall Thine enemies submit themselves unto</p><p>   Thee." In the original it is "shall thine enemies lie unto Thee" --</p><p>   i.e., shall yield a feigned or lying obedience and respect to Thee,</p><p>   when still they remain enemies in their hearts. There is never a devil</p><p>   in hell but what would perform all that many a man performed in</p><p>   religion, that had no love to God; and a great deal more if they were</p><p>   in like circumstances and the like hope of gain by it, and be as much</p><p>   of a devil in this heart as he is now. The Devil once seemed to be</p><p>   religious from fear of torment: Luke 8:28-- "When he saw Jesus, he</p><p>   cried out and fell down before him, and with a loud voice said, What</p><p>   have I to do with thee, Jesus, thou Son of God most high? I beseech</p><p>   Thee, torment me not." Here is external worship. The Devil is</p><p>   religious; he prays -- he prays in a humble posture; he falls down</p><p>   before Christ, he lies prostrate; he prays earnestly, he cries with a</p><p>   loud voice; he uses humble expressions -- "I beseech Thee, torment me</p><p>   not;" he uses respectful, honourable, adoring expressions -- "Jesus,</p><p>   Thou Son of God most high." Nothing was wanting but LOVE.</p><p><br></p><p>   And with respect to duties towards men, no good offices would be</p><p>   accepted by men one from another, if they saw the heart, and knew they</p><p>   did not proceed from any respect in the heart. If a child carry it very</p><p>   respectfully to his father, either from a strong fear, or from hope of</p><p>   having the larger inheritance when his father is dead, or from the like</p><p>   consideration, and not at all from any respect to his father in his</p><p>   heart; if the child's heart were open to the view of his father, and he</p><p>   plainly knew that there was no real regard to him. Would the child's</p><p>   outward honour and obedience be acceptable to the parent? So if a wife</p><p>   should carry it very well to her husband, and not at all from any love</p><p>   to him, but from other considerations plainly seen, and certainly known</p><p>   by the husband, Would he at all delight in her outward respect any more</p><p>   than if a wooden image were contrived to make respectful motions in his</p><p>   presence?</p><p><br></p><p>   If duties towards men are accepted of God as a part of Religion</p><p>   and the service of the Divine Being, they must be performed not only</p><p>   with a hearty love to men, but that love must flow from regard to Him.</p><p><br></p><p>   (2.) Reason shews that all good dispositions and duties are wholly</p><p>   comprehended in, and will flow from, Divine Love. Love to God and men</p><p>   implies all proper respect or regard to God and men; and all proper</p><p>   acts and expressions of regard to both will flow from it, and therefore</p><p>   all duty to both. To regard God and men in our heart as we ought, is</p><p>   the same thing. And, therefore, a proper regard or love comprehends all</p><p>   virtue of heart; and he that shews all proper regard to God and men in</p><p>   his practice, performs all that in practice towards them which is his</p><p>   duty. The Apostle says, Romans 13:10-- "Love works no ill to his</p><p>   neighbor." 'Tis evident by his reasoning in that place, that he means</p><p>   more than is expressed -- that love works no ill but all good towards</p><p>   our neighbor; so, by a parity of reason, love to God works no ill, but</p><p>   all duty towards God.</p><p><br></p><p>   A Christian love to God, and Christian love to men, are not properly</p><p>   two distinct principles in the heart. These varieties are radically the</p><p>   same; the same principle flowing forth towards different objects,</p><p>   according to the order of their existence. God is the First Cause of</p><p>   all things, and the Fountain and Source of all good; and men are</p><p>   derived from Him, having something of His image, and are the objects of</p><p>   His mercy. So the first and supreme object of Divine love is God; and</p><p>   men are loved either as the children of God or His creatures, and those</p><p>   that are in His image, and the objects of His mercy, or in some</p><p>   respects related to God, or partakers of His loveliness, or at least</p><p>   capable of happiness.</p><p><br></p><p>   That love to God, and a Christian love to men, are thus but one in</p><p>   their root and foundation-principle in the heart, is confirmed by</p><p>   several passages in the First Epistle of John: chap. 3:16-17-- "Hereby</p><p>   perceive we the love of God, because He laid down His life for us: and</p><p>   we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren. But whoso hath this</p><p>   world's goods,... how dwelleth the love of God in him?" Chap. 4:20,21--</p><p>   "If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar: for he</p><p>   that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom</p><p>   he hath not seen? And this commandment have we from him, That he who</p><p>   loveth God love his brother also." Chap. 5:1,2-- "Whosoever believeth</p><p>   that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: and every one loveth Him that</p><p>   begat, loveth him also that is begotten of him. By this we know that we</p><p>   love the children of God, when we love God, and keep His commandments."</p><p><br></p><p>   Therefore to explain the nature of Divine Love, what is principally</p><p>   requisite is to explain the nature of love to God. For this may</p><p>   especially be called Divine Love; and herein all Christian love or</p><p>   charity does radically consist, for this is the fountain of all.</p><p><br></p><p>   As to a definition of Divine Love, things of this nature are not</p><p>   properly capable of a definition. They are better felt than defined.</p><p>   Love is a term as clear in its signification, and that does as</p><p>   naturally suggest to the mind the thing signified by it, as any other</p><p>   term or terms that we can find out or substitute in its room. But yet</p><p>   there may be a great deal of benefit in descriptions that may be given</p><p>   of this heavenly principle though they all are imperfect. They may</p><p>   serve to limit the signification of the term and distinguish this</p><p>   principle from other things, and to exclude counterfeits, and also more</p><p>   clearly to explain some things that do appertain to its nature.</p><p><br></p><p>   Divine Love, as it has God for its object, may be thus described. 'Tis</p><p>   the soul's relish of the supreme excellency of the Divine nature,</p><p>   inclining the heart to God as the chief good.</p><p><br></p><p>   The first thing in Divine Love, and that from which everything that</p><p>   appertains to it arises, is a relish of the excellency of the Divine</p><p>   nature; which the soul of man by nature has nothing of.</p><p><br></p><p>   The first effect that is produced in the soul, whereby it is carried</p><p>   above what it has or can have by nature, is to cause it to relish or</p><p>   taste the sweetness of the Divine relation. That is the first and most</p><p>   fundamental thing in Divine Love, and that from which everything else</p><p>   that belongs to the Divine Love naturally and necessarily proceeds.</p><p>   When one the soul is brought to relish the excellency of the Divine</p><p>   nature, then it will naturally, and of course, incline to God every</p><p>   way. It will incline to be with Him and to enjoy Him. It will have</p><p>   benevolence to God. It will be glad that He is happy. It will incline</p><p>   that He should be glorified, and that His will should be done in all</p><p>   things. So that the first effect of the power of God in the heart in</p><p>   REGENERATION, is to give the heart a Divine taste or sense; to cause it</p><p>   to have a relish of the loveliness and sweetness of the supreme</p><p>   excellency of the Divine nature; and indeed this is all the immediate</p><p>   effect of the Divine Power that there is, this is all the Spirit of God</p><p>   needs to do, in order to a production of all good effects in the soul.</p><p>   If God, by an immediate act of His, gives the soul a relish of the</p><p>   excellency of His own nature, other things will follow of themselves</p><p>   without any further act of the Divine power than only what is necessary</p><p>   to uphold the nature of the faculties of the soul. He that is once</p><p>   brought to see, or rather to taste, the superlative loveliness of the</p><p>   Divine Being, will need no more to make him long after the enjoyment of</p><p>   God, to make him rejoice in the happiness of God, and to desire that</p><p>   this supremely excellent Being may be pleased and glorified. (Love is</p><p>   commonly distinguished into a love of complacence and love of</p><p>   benevolence. Of these two a love of complacence is first, and is the</p><p>   foundation of the other,--i.e., if by a love of complacence be meant a</p><p>   relishing a sweetness in the qualifications of the beloved, and a being</p><p>   pleased and delighted in his excellency. This, in the order of nature,</p><p>   is before benevolence, because it is the foundation and reason of it. A</p><p>   person must first relish that wherein the amiableness of nature</p><p>   consists, before he can wish well to him on the account of that</p><p>   loveliness, or as being worthy to receive good. Indeed, sometimes love</p><p>   of complacence is explained something differently, even for that joy</p><p>   that the soul has in the presence and possession of the beloved, which</p><p>   is different from the soul's relish of the beauty of the beloved, and</p><p>   is a fruit of it, as benevolence is. The soul may relish the sweetness</p><p>   and the beauty of a beloved object, whether that object be present or</p><p>   absent, whether in possession or not in possession; and this relish is</p><p>   the foundation of love of benevolence, or desire of the good of the</p><p>   beloved. And it is the foundation of love of affection to the beloved</p><p>   object when absent; and it is the foundation of one's rejoicing in the</p><p>   object when present; and so it is the foundation of everything else</p><p>   that belongs to Divine Love.) And if this be true, then the main ground</p><p>   of true love to God is the excellency of His own nature, and not any</p><p>   benefit we have received, or hope to receive, by His goodness to us.</p><p>   Not but that there is such a thing as a gracious gratitude to God for</p><p>   mercies bestowed upon us; and the acts and fruits of His goodness to us</p><p>   may and very often are, occasions and incitements of the exercise</p><p>   of true love to God, as I must shew more particularly hereafter. But</p><p>   love or affection to God, that has no other good than only some benefit</p><p>   received or hoped for from God, is not true love. without</p><p>   any sense of a delight in the absolute excellency of the Divine nature,</p><p>    has nothing Divine in it. Such gratitude towards God requires no</p><p>   more to be in the soul than that human nature that all men are born</p><p>   with, or at least that human nature well cultivated and improved, or</p><p>   indeed not further vitiated and depraved than it naturally is. It is</p><p>   possible that natural men, without the addition of any further</p><p>   principle than they have by nature, may be affected with gratitude by</p><p>   some remarkable kindness of God to them, as that they should be so</p><p>   affected with some great act of kindness of a neighbour. A principle of</p><p>   self-love is all that is necessary to both. But Divine Love is a</p><p>   principle distinct from self-love, and from all that arises from it.</p><p>   Indeed, after a man is come to relish the sweetness of the supreme good</p><p>   there is in the nature of God, self-love may have a hand in an appetite</p><p>   after the enjoyment of that good. For self-love will necessarily make a</p><p>   man desire to enjoy that which is sweet to him. But God's perfections</p><p>   must first savour appetite and sweet to men, or they must first</p><p>   have a taste to relish sweetness in the perfection of God, before</p><p>   self-love can have any influence upon them to cause an appetite after</p><p>   the enjoyment of that sweetness. And therefore that divine taste or</p><p>   relish of the soul, wherein Divine Love doth most fundamentally</p><p>   consist, is prior to all influence that self-love can have to incline</p><p>   us to God; and so must be a principle quite distinct from it, and</p><p>   independent of it.</p><p>     __________________________________________________________________</p><p><br></p><p>  SHEWING HOW A PRINCIPLE OF GRACE IS FROM THE SPIRIT OF GOD."</p><p><br></p><p>   I. That this holy and Divine principle, which we have shewn does</p><p>   radically and summarily consist in Divine Love, comes into existence in</p><p>   the soul by the power of God in the influences of the Holy Spirit, the</p><p>   Third Person in the blessed Trinity, is abundantly manifest from the</p><p>   Scriptures.</p><p><br></p><p>   Regeneration is by the Spirit: John 3:5-6--"Verily, verily, I say unto</p><p>   thee, Except a man be born of water, and of the Spirit, he cannot enter</p><p>   into the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and</p><p>   that which is born of the Spirit is spirit." And verse 8-- "The wind</p><p>   bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst</p><p>   not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that</p><p>   is born of the Spirit."</p><p><br></p><p>   The renewing of the soul is by the Holy Ghost: Titus 3:5-- "Not by</p><p>   works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy</p><p>   he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy</p><p>   Ghost." A new heart is given by God's putting His Spirit within us:</p><p>   Ezekiel 36:26,27-- "A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit</p><p>   will I put within you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your</p><p>   flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit</p><p>   within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my</p><p>   judgments and do them." Quickening of the dead soul is by the Spirit:</p><p>   John 6:63-- "It is the Spirit that quickeneth." Sanctification is by</p><p>   the Spirit of God: 2 Thess. 2:13-- "God hath from the beginning chosen</p><p>   you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the</p><p>   truth." Romans 15:16-- "That the offering up of the Gentiles might be</p><p>   acceptable, being sanctified by the Holy Ghost." 1 Cor. 6:11-- "Such</p><p>   were some of you: but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are</p><p>   justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God."</p><p>   1 Peter 1:2-- "Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father,</p><p>   through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of</p><p>   the blood of Jesus Christ." All grace in the heart is the fruit of the</p><p>   Spirit: Gal. 5:22, 23-- "But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy,</p><p>   peace, long -suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness,</p><p>   temperance." Eph. 5:9-- "The fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness and</p><p>   righteousness and truth." Hence the Spirit of God is called the Spirit</p><p>   of grace, (Heb. 10:29.)</p><p><br></p><p>   This doctrine of a gracious nature being by the immediate influence of</p><p>   the Spirit of God, is not only taught in the Scriptures, but is</p><p>   irrefragable to Reason. Indeed there seems to be a strong disposition</p><p>   in men to disbelieve and oppose the doctrine of true disposition, to</p><p>   disbelieve and oppose the doctrine of immediate influence of the Spirit</p><p>   of God in the hearts of men, or to diminish and make it as small and</p><p>   remote a matter as possible, and put it as far out of sight as may be.</p><p>   Whereas it seems to me, true virtue and holiness would naturally excite</p><p>   a prejudice (if I may so say) in favour of such a doctrine; and that</p><p>   the soul, when in the most excellent frame, and the most lively</p><p>   exercise of virtue, --love to God and delight in Him,-- would naturally</p><p>   and unavoidably think of God as kindly communicating Himself to him,</p><p>   and holding communion with him, as though he did as it were see God</p><p>   smiling on him, giving to him and conversing with him; and that if he</p><p>   did not so think of God, but, on the contrary, should conceive that</p><p>   there was no immediate communication between God and him, it would tend</p><p>   greatly to quell his holy motions of soul, and be an exceeding damage</p><p>   to his pleasure.</p><p><br></p><p>   No good reason can be given why men should have such an inward</p><p>   disposition to deny any immediate communication between God and the</p><p>   creature, or to make as little of it as possible. 'Tis a strange</p><p>   disposition that men have to thrust God out of the world, or to put Him</p><p>   as far out of sight as they can, and to have in no respect immediately</p><p>   and sensibly to do with Him. Therefore so many schemes have been drawn</p><p>   to exclude, or extenuate, or remove at a great distance, any influence</p><p>   of the Divine Being in the hearts of men, such as the scheme of the</p><p>   Pelagians, the Socinians, etc. And therefore these doctrines are so</p><p>   much ridiculed that ascribe much to the immediate influence of the</p><p>   Spirit, and called enthusiasm, fanaticism, whimsy, and distraction; but</p><p>   no mortal can tell for what.</p><p><br></p><p>   If we make no difficulty of allowing that God did immediateiy make the</p><p>   whole Universe at first, and caused it to exist out of nothing, and</p><p>   that every individual thing owes its being to an immediate, voluntary,</p><p>   arbitrary act of Almighty power, why should we make a difficulty of</p><p>   supposing that He has still something immediately to do with the things</p><p>   that He has made, and that there is an arbitrary influence still that</p><p>   God has in the creation that He has made?</p><p><br></p><p>   And if it be reasonable to suppose it with respect to any part of the</p><p>   Creation, it is especially so with respect to reasonable creatures, who</p><p>   are the highest part of the Creation, next to God, and who are most</p><p>   immediately made for God, and have Him for their next Head, and are</p><p>   created for the business wherein they are mostly concerned. And above</p><p>   all, in that wherein the highest excellency of this highest rank of</p><p>   beings consist, and that wherein he is most conformed to God, is</p><p>   nearest to Him, and has God for his most immediate object.</p><p><br></p><p>   It seems to me most rational to suppose that as we ascend in the order</p><p>   of being we shall at last come immediately to God, the First Cause. In</p><p>   whatever respect we ascend, we ascend in the order of time and</p><p>   succession.</p><p><br></p><p>   II. The Scripture speaks of this holy and Divine principle in the heart</p><p>   as not only from the Spirit, but as being spiritual. Thus saving</p><p>   knowledge is called spiritual understanding: Col. 1:9-- "We desire that</p><p>   ye might be filled with the knowledge of his will in all wisdom and</p><p>   spiritual understanding." So the influences, graces, and comforts of</p><p>   God's Spirit are called spiritual blessings: Eph. 1:3-- "Blessed be the</p><p>   God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all</p><p>   spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ." So the imparting of</p><p>   any gracious benefit is called the imparting of a spiritual gift: Rom.</p><p>   1:11-- "For I long to see you, that I may impart unto you some</p><p>   spiritual gift." And the fruits of the Spirit which are offered to God</p><p>   are called spiritual sacrifices: 1 Peter 2:5-- "A spiritual priesthood</p><p>   to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ."</p><p>   And a spiritual person signifies the same In Scripture as a gracious</p><p>   person, and sometimes one that is much under the influence of grace: 1</p><p>   Cor. 2:15-- "He that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself is</p><p>   judged of no man;" and 3:1-- "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you</p><p>   as unto spiritual but as unto carnal." Gal. 6:1-- "If a man be</p><p>   overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the</p><p>   spirit of meekness." And to be graciously minded is called in Scripture</p><p>   a being spiritually minded: Rom. 8:6-- "To be spiritually minded is</p><p>   life and peace."</p><p><br></p><p>   Concerning this, two things are to be noted.</p><p><br></p><p>   1. That this Divine principle in the heart is not called spiritual,</p><p>   because it has its seat in the soul or spiritual part of man, and not</p><p>   in his body. It is called spiritual, not because of its relation to the</p><p>   spirit of man, in which it is, but because of its relation to the</p><p>   Spirit of God, from which it is. That things are not called spiritual</p><p>   because they appertain not to the body but the spirit of man is</p><p>   evident, because gracious or holy understanding is called spiritual</p><p>   understanding in the forementioned passage, (Col. 1:9.) Now, by</p><p>   spiritual understanding cannot be meant that understanding which has</p><p>   its scat in the soul, to distinguish it from other understanding that</p><p>   has its seat in the body, for all understanding has its seat in the</p><p>   soul; and that things are called spiritual because of their relation to</p><p>   the Spirit of God is most plain, by the latter part of the 2d chapter</p><p>   of 1st Corinthians. There we have both those expressions, one</p><p>   immediately after another, evidently meaning the same thing: verses 13,</p><p>   14-- "Which things also we speak, not in the words which man's wisdom</p><p>   teacheth, but which the Holy Ghost teacheth; comparing spiritual things</p><p>   with spiritual. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the</p><p>   Spirit of God." And that by the spiritual man is meant one that has the</p><p>   Spirit is also as plainly evident by the context: verses 10-12-- "God</p><p>   hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all</p><p>   things, yea, the deep things of God. For what man knoweth the things of</p><p>   a man," etc. Also ver. 15-- "He that is spiritual judgeth all things,"</p><p>   by which is evidently meant the same as he that hath the Spirit that</p><p>   "searcheth all things," as we find in the forgoing verses. So persons</p><p>   are said to be spiritually minded, not because they mind things that</p><p>   relate to the soul or spirit of man, but because they mind things that</p><p>   relate to the Spirit of God: Romans 8:5, 6-- "For they that are after</p><p>   the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the</p><p>   Spirit the things of the Spirit. For to be carnally minded is death;</p><p>   but to be spiritually minded is life and peace."</p><p><br></p><p>   2. It must be observed that where this holy Divine principle of saving</p><p>   grace wrought in the mind is in Scripture called spiritual, what is</p><p>   intended by the expression is not merely nor chiefly that it is from</p><p>   the Spirit of God, but that it is of the nature of the Spirit of God.</p><p>   There are many things in the minds of some natural men that are from</p><p>   the influence of the Spirit, but yet are by no means spiritual things</p><p>   in the scriptural sense of the word. The Spirit of God convinces</p><p>   natural men of sin, (John 16:8.) Natural men may have common grace,</p><p>   common illuminations, and common affections that are from the Spirit of</p><p>   God, as appears by Hebrews 6:4. Natural men have sometimes the</p><p>   influences of the Spirit of God in His common operations and gifts, and</p><p>   therefore God's Spirit is said to be striving with them, and they are</p><p>   said to resist the Spirit, (Acts 7:51;) to grieve and vex God's Holy</p><p>   Spirit, (Eph. 4:30; Isaiah 63:10;) and God is said to depart from them</p><p>   even as the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul: 1 Sam. 16:14-- "But</p><p>   the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from the</p><p>   Lord troubled him."</p><p><br></p><p>   But yet natural men are not in any degree spiritual. The great</p><p>   difference between natural men and godly men seems to be set forth by</p><p>   this, that the one is natural and carnal, and the other spiritual; and</p><p>   natural men are so totally destitute of that which is Spirit, that they</p><p>   know nothing about it, and the reason given for it is because they are</p><p>   not spiritual, (1 Cor. 2:13-15.) Indeed sometimes those miraculous</p><p>   gifts of the Spirit that were common are called spiritual because they</p><p>   are from the Spirit of God; but for the most part the term seems to be</p><p>   appropriate to its gracious influences and fruits on the soul, which</p><p>   are no otherwise spiritual than the common influences of the Spirit</p><p>   that natural men have, in any other respect than this, that this saving</p><p>   grace in the soul, is not only from the Spirit, but it also partakes of</p><p>   the nature of that Spirit that it is from, which the common grace of</p><p>   the Spirit does not. Thus things in Scripture language are said to be</p><p>   earthly, as they partake of an earthly nature, partake of the nature of</p><p>   the earth; so things are said to be heavenly, as they in their nature</p><p>   agree with those things that are in heaven; and so saving grace in the</p><p>   heart is said to be spiritual, and therein distinguished from all other</p><p>   influences of the Spirit, that it is of the nature of the Spirit of</p><p>   God. It partakes of the nature of that Spirit, while no common gift of</p><p>   the Spirit doth so.</p><p><br></p><p>   But here an enquiry may be raised, viz.:--</p><p><br></p><p>   Enq. How does saving grace partake of the nature of that Spirit that it</p><p>   is from, so as to be called on that account spiritual, thus essentially</p><p>   distinguishing it from all other effects of the Spirit? for every</p><p>   effect has in some respect or another the nature of its cause, and the</p><p>   common convictions and illuminations that natural men have are in some</p><p>   respects the nature of the Spirit of God; for there is light and</p><p>   understanding and conviction of truth in these common illuminations,</p><p>   and so they are of the nature of the Spirit of God--that is, a</p><p>   discerning spirit and a spirit of truth. But yet saving grace, by its</p><p>   being called spiritual, as though it were thereby distinguished from</p><p>   all other gifts of the Spirit, seems to partake of the nature of the</p><p>   Spirit of God in some very peculiar manner.</p><p><br></p><p>   Clearly to satisfy this enquiry, we must do these two things:-- 1. We</p><p>   must bear in mind what has already been said of the nature of saving</p><p>   grace, and what I have already shewn to be that wherein its nature and</p><p>   essence lies, and wherein all saving grace is radically and summarily</p><p>   comprised viz., a principle of Divine Love. 2. We must consider what</p><p>   the Scripture reveals to be in a peculiar manner the nature of the Holy</p><p>   Spirit of God, and in an enquiry of this nature I would go no further</p><p>   than I think the Scripture plainly goes before me. The Word of God</p><p>   certainly should be our rule in matters so much above reason and our</p><p>   own notions.</p><p><br></p><p>   And here I would say--</p><p><br></p><p>   (1.) That I think the Scripture does sufficiently reveal the Holy</p><p>   Spirit as a proper Divine Person; and thus we ought to look upon Him as</p><p>   a distinct personal agent. He is often spoken of as a person, revealed</p><p>   under personal characters and in personal acts, and it speaks of His</p><p>   being acted on as a person, and the Scripture plainly ascribes every</p><p>   thing to Him that properly denotes a distinct person; and though the</p><p>   word person be rarely used in the Scriptures, yet I believe that we</p><p>   have no word in the English language that does so naturally represent</p><p>   what the Scripture reveals of the distinction of the Eternal</p><p>   Three,--Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,--as to say they are one God but</p><p>   three persons.</p><p><br></p><p>   (2.) Though all the Divine perfections are to be attributed to each</p><p>   person of the Trinity, yet the Holy Ghost is in a peculiar manner</p><p>   called by the name of Love --A)ga/ph, the same word is that translated</p><p>   charity in the 13th chapter of 1st Corinthians. The Godhead or the</p><p>   Divine essence is once and again said to be Love: 1 John 4:8 -- "He</p><p>   that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love." So again, ver. 16--</p><p>   "God is love; and he that dwelleth in love, dwelleth in God, and God in</p><p>   him." But the Divine essence is thus called in a peculiar manner as</p><p>   breathed forth and subsisting in the Holy Spirit; as may be seen in the</p><p>   context of these texts, as in the 12th and 13th verses of the same</p><p>   chapter-- "No man hath seen God at any time. If we love one another,</p><p>   God dwelleth in us, and His love is perfected in us. Hereby know we</p><p>   that we dwell in Him, and He in us, because He hath given us of His</p><p>   Spirit." It is the same argument in both these verses: in the 12th</p><p>   verse the apostle argues that if we have love dwelling in us, we have</p><p>   God dwelling in us; and in the 13th verse he clears the face of the</p><p>   argument by this, that his love which is dwelling in us is God's</p><p>   Spirit. And this shews that the foregoing argument is good, and that if</p><p>   love dwells in us, we know God dwells in us indeed, for the Apostle</p><p>   supposes it as a thing granted and allowed that God's Spirit is God.</p><p>   The Scripture elsewhere does abundantly teach us that the way in which</p><p>   God dwells in the saints is by His Spirit, by their being the temples</p><p>   of the Holy Ghost. Here this apostle teaches us the same thing. He</p><p>   says, "We know that he dwelleth in us, that he hath given us his</p><p>   Spirit;" and this is manifestly to explain what is said in the</p><p>   foregoing verse-- viz., that God dwells in us, inasmuch as His love</p><p>   dwells in us; which love he had told us before--ver. 8--is God himself.</p><p>   And afterwards, in the 16th verse, he expresses it more fully, that</p><p>   this is the way that God dwells in the saint-- viz.. because this love</p><p>   dwells in them, which is God.</p><p><br></p><p>   Again the same is signified in the same manner in the last verses of</p><p>   the foregoing chapter. In the foregoing verses, speaking of love as a</p><p>   true sign of sincerity and our acceptance with God, beginning with the</p><p>   18th verse, he sums up the argument thus in the last verse: "And hereby</p><p>   we know that he abideth in us, by the Spirit which he hath given us."</p><p><br></p><p>   We have also something very much like this in the apostle Paul's</p><p>   writings.</p><p><br></p><p>   Gal. 5:13-16-- "Use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh, but by</p><p>   love serve one another. For all the law is fulfilled in one word, even</p><p>   in this, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. But if ye bite and</p><p>   devour one another, take heed that ye be not consumed one of another.</p><p>   This I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust</p><p>   of the flesh." Here it seems most evident that what the apostle exhorts</p><p>   and urges in the 13th, 14th, and 15th verses,-- viz., that they should</p><p>   walk in love, that they might not give occasion to the gratifying of</p><p>   the flesh,--he does expressly explain in the 16th verse by this, that</p><p>   they should walk in the Spirit, that they might not fulfil the lust of</p><p>   the flesh; which the great Mr Howe takes notice of in his "Sermons on</p><p>   the Prosperous State of the Christian Interest before the End of Time,"</p><p>   p. 185, published by Mr Evans. His words are, "Walking in the Spirit is</p><p>   directed with a special eye and reference unto the exercise of this</p><p>   love; as you may see in Galatians 5, the 14th, 15th, and 16th verses</p><p>   compared together. All the law is fulfilled in one word, (he means the</p><p>   whole law of the second table,) even in this, Thou shalt love thy</p><p>   neighbour as thyself. But if ye bite and devour one another, (the</p><p>   opposite to this love, or that which follows on the want of it, or from</p><p>   the opposite principle,) take heed that ye be not consumed one of</p><p>   another. This I say then, (observe the inference,) Walk in the Spirit,</p><p>   and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh. To walk in the Spirit is</p><p>   to walk in the exercise of this love."</p><p><br></p><p>   So that as the Son of God is spoken of as the wisdom, understanding,</p><p>   and Logos of God, (Proverbs 8; Luke 11:49; John 1, at the beginning,)</p><p>   and is, as divines express things, the personal wisdom of God; so the</p><p>   Spirit of God is spoken of as the love of God, and may with equal</p><p>   foundation and propriety be called the personal love of God. We read in</p><p>   the beloved disciple's writings of these two --Logos and A)ga/ph, both</p><p>   of which are said to be God, (John 1:1; 1 John 4:8-16.) One is the Son</p><p>   of God, and the other the Holy Spirit. There are two things that God is</p><p>   said to be in this First Epistle of John--light and love: chap.</p><p>   1:5--"God is light." This is the Son of God, who is said to be the</p><p>   wisdom and reason of God, and the brightness of His glory; and in the</p><p>   4th chapter of the same epistle he says, "God is love," and this he</p><p>   applies to the Holy Spirit.</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence the Scripture symbol of the Holy Ghost is a dove, which is the</p><p>   emblem of love, and so was continually accounted (as is well known) in</p><p>   the heathen world, and is so made use of by their poets and</p><p>   mythologists, which probably arose partly from the nature and manner of</p><p>   the bird, and probably in part from the tradition of the story of</p><p>   Noah's dove, that came with a message of peace and love after such</p><p>   terrible manifestations of God's wrath in the time of the deluge. This</p><p>   bird is also made use of as an emblem of love in the Holy Scriptures;</p><p>   as it was on that message of peace and love that God sent it to Noah,</p><p>   when it came with an olive-leaf in its mouth, and often in Solomon's</p><p>   Song: Cant. 1:15-- "Thou hast doves' eyes": Cant. 5:12-- "His eyes are</p><p>   as the eyes of doves:" Cant. 5:2-- "Open to me, my love, my dove," and</p><p>   in other places in that song.</p><p><br></p><p>   This bird, God is pleased to choose as the special symbol of His Holy</p><p>   Spirit in the greatest office or work of the Spirit that ever it has or</p><p>   will exert--viz., in anointing Christ, the great Head of the whole</p><p>   Church of saints, from which Head this holy oil descends to all the</p><p>   members, and the skirts of His garments, as the sweet and precious</p><p>   ointment that was poured on Aaron's head, that great type of Christ. As</p><p>   God the Father then poured forth His Holy Spirit of love upon the Son</p><p>   without measure, so that which was then seen with the eye--viz., a dove</p><p>   descending and lighting upon Christ--signified the same thing as what</p><p>   was at the same time proclaimed to the Son--viz., This is my beloved</p><p>   Son, in whom I am well pleased. This is the Son on whom I pour forth</p><p>   all my love, towards whom my essence entirely flows out in love. See</p><p>   Matt. 3:16,17; Mark 1:10-11; Luke 3:22; John 1:32-33.</p><p><br></p><p>   This was the anointing of the Head of the Church and our great High</p><p>   Priest, and therefore the holy anointing oil of old with which Aaron</p><p>   and other typical high priests were anointed was the most eminent type</p><p>   of the Holy Spirit of any in the Old Testament. This holy oil, by</p><p>   reason of its soft-flowing and diffusive nature, and its unparalleled</p><p>   sweetness and fragrancy, did most fitly represent Divine Love, or that</p><p>   Spirit that is the deity, breathed forth or flowing out and softly</p><p>   falling in infinite love and delight. It is mentioned as a fit</p><p>   representation of holy love, which is said to be like the precious</p><p>   ointment on the head, that ran down upon the beard, even Aaron's beard,</p><p>   that went down to the skirts of his garments. It was from the fruit of</p><p>   the olive-tree, which it is known has been made use of as a symbol of</p><p>   love or peace, which was probably taken from the olive-branch brought</p><p>   by the dove to Noah in token of the Divine favour; so that the</p><p>   olive-branch and the dove that brought it, both signified the same</p><p>   thing--viz., love, which is specially typified by the precious oil from</p><p>   the olive-tree.</p><p><br></p><p>   God's love is primarily to Himself, and His infinite delight is in</p><p>   Himself, in the Father and the Son loving and delighting in each other.</p><p>   We often read of the Father loving the Son, and being well pleased in</p><p>   the Son, and of the Son loving the Father. In the infinite love and</p><p>   delight that is between these two persons consists the infinite</p><p>   happiness of God: Prov. 8:30.--"Then I was by him, as one brought up</p><p>   with him: and I was daily his delight, rejoicing always before him;"</p><p>   and therefore seeing the Scripture signifies that the Spirit of God is</p><p>   the Love of God, therefore it follows that Holy Spirit proceeds from or</p><p>   is breathed forth from, the Father and the Son in some way or other</p><p>   infinitely above all our conceptions, as the Divine essence entirely</p><p>   flows out and is breathed forth in infinitely pure love and sweet</p><p>   delight from the Father and the Son; and this is that pure river of</p><p>   water of life that proceeds out of the throne of the Father and the</p><p>   Son, as we read at the beginning of the 22nd chapter of the Revelation;</p><p>   for Christ himself tells us that by the water of life, or living water,</p><p>   is meant the Holy Ghost, (John 7:38, 39.) This river of water of life</p><p>   in the Revelation is evidently the same with the living waters of the</p><p>   sanctuary in Ezekiel, (Ezek. 47:1, etc.;) and this river is doubtless</p><p>   the river of God's pleasure, or of God's own infinite delight spoken of</p><p>   in Ps. 36:7-9-- "How excellent is thy loving-kindness, O God! therefore</p><p>   the children of men put their trust under the shadow of thy wings. They</p><p>   shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy house; and thou</p><p>   shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures. For with thee is</p><p>   the fountain of life." The river of God's pleasures here spoken of is</p><p>   the same with the fountain of life spoken of in the next words. Here,</p><p>   as was observed before, the water of life by Christ's own</p><p>   interpretation is the Holy Spirit. This river of God's pleasures is</p><p>   also the same with the fatness of God's house, the holy oil of the</p><p>   sanctuary spoken of in the next preceding words, and is the same with</p><p>   God's love, or God's excellent loving-kindness, spoken of in the next</p><p>   preceding verse.</p><p><br></p><p>   I have before observed that the Scripture abundantly reveals that the</p><p>   way in which Christ dwells in the saint is by His Spirit's dwelling in</p><p>   them, and here I would observe that Christ in His prayer, in the 17th</p><p>   chapter of John, seems to speak of the way in which He dwells in them</p><p>   as by the indwelling of the love wherewith the Father has loved Him:</p><p>   John 17:26 "And I have declared unto them thy name, and will declare</p><p>   it; that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them, and I in</p><p>   them." The beloved disciple that wrote this Gospel having taken </p><p>   particular notice of this, that he afterwards in his first epistle once</p><p>   and again speaks of love's dwelling in the saints, and the Spirit's</p><p>   dwelling in them being the same thing.</p><p><br></p><p>   Again, the Scripture seems in many places to speak of love in</p><p>   Christians as if it were the same with the Spirit of God in them, or at</p><p>   least as the prime and most natural breathing and acting of the Spirit</p><p>   in the soul. So Rom. 5:5-- "Because the love of God is shed abroad in</p><p>   our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us:" Col. 1:8-- "Who</p><p>   also declared unto us your love in the Spirit:" 2 Cor. 6:6-- "By</p><p>   kindness, by the Holy Ghost, by love unfeigned:" Phil. 2:1-- "If there</p><p>   be therefore any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any</p><p>   fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels and mercies, fulfil ye my joy,</p><p>   that ye be like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of</p><p>   one mind."</p><p><br></p><p>   The Scripture therefore leads us to this conclusion, though it be</p><p>   infinitely above us to conceive how it should be, that yet as the Son</p><p>   of God is the personal word, idea, or wisdom of God, begotten by God,</p><p>   being an infinitely perfect, substantial image or idea of Himself, (as</p><p>   might be very plainly proved from the Holy Scripture, if here were</p><p>   proper occasion for it;) so the Holy Spirit does in some ineffable and</p><p>   inconceivable manner proceed, and is breathed forth both from the</p><p>   Father and the Son, by the Divine essence being wholly poured and</p><p>   flowing out in that infinitely intense, holy, and pure love and delight</p><p>   that continually and unchangeably breathes forth from the Father and</p><p>   the Son, primarily towards each other, and secondarily towards the</p><p>   creature. and so flowing forth in a different subsistence or person in</p><p>   a manner to us utterly inexplicable and inconceivable, and that this is</p><p>   that person that is poured forth into the hearts of angels and saints.</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence 'tis to be accounted for, that though we often read in Scripture</p><p>   of the Father loving the Son, and the Son loving the Father, yet we</p><p>   never once read either of the Father or the Son loving the Holy Spirit,</p><p>   and the Spirit loving either of them. It is because the Holy Spirit is</p><p>   the Divine Love itself, the love of the Father and the Son. Hence also</p><p>   it is to be accounted for, that we very often read of the love both of</p><p>   the Father and the Son to men, and particularly their love to the</p><p>   saints; but we never read of the Holy Ghost loving them, for the Holy</p><p>   Ghost is that love of God and Christ that is breathed forth primarily</p><p>   towards each other, and flows out secondarily towards the creature.</p><p>   This also will well account for it, that the apostle Paul so often</p><p>   wishes grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father, and from the Lord</p><p>   Jesus Christ, in the beginning of his epistles, without even mentioning</p><p>   the Holy Ghost, because the Holy Ghost is Himself the love and grace of</p><p>   God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. He is the deity wholly</p><p>   breathed forth in infinite, substantial, intelligent love: from the</p><p>   Father and Son first towards each other, and secondarily freely flowing</p><p>   out to the creature, and so standing forth a distinct personal</p><p>   subsistence.</p><p><br></p><p>   Both the holiness and happiness of the Godhead consists in this love.</p><p>   As we have already proved, all creature holiness consists essentially</p><p>   and summarily in love to God and love to other creatures; so does the</p><p>   holiness of God consist in His love, especially in the perfect and</p><p>   intimate union and love there is between the Father and the Son. But</p><p>   the Spirit that proceeds from the Father and the Son is the bond of</p><p>   this union, as it is of all holy union between the Father and the Son,</p><p>   and between God and the creature, and between the creatures among</p><p>   themselves. All seems to be signified in Christ's prayer in the 17th</p><p>   chapter of John, from the 21st verse. Therefore this Spirit of love is</p><p>   the "bond of perfectness" (Col. 3:14) throughout the whole blessed</p><p>   society or family in heaven and earth, consisting of the Father, the</p><p>   head of the family, and the Son, and all His saints that are the</p><p>   disciples, seed, and spouse of the Son. The happiness of God doth also</p><p>   consist in this love; for doubtless the happiness of God consists in</p><p>   the infinite love He has to, and delight He has in Himself; or in other</p><p>   words, in the infinite delight there is between the Father and the Son,</p><p>   spoken of in Prov. 8:30. This delight that the Father and the Son have</p><p>   in each other is not to be distinguished from their love of complacence</p><p>   one in another, wherein love does most essentially consist, as was</p><p>   observed before. The happiness of the deity, as all other true</p><p>   happiness, consists in love and society.</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence it is the Spirit of God, the third person in the Trinity, is so</p><p>   often called the Holy Spirit, as though "holy" were an epithet some way</p><p>   or other peculiarly belonging to Him, which can be no other way than</p><p>   that the holiness of God does consist in Him. He is not only infinitely</p><p>   holy as the Father and the Son are, but He is the holiness of God</p><p>   itself in the abstract. The holiness of the Father and the Son does</p><p>   consist in breathing forth this Spirit. Therefore He is not only called</p><p>   the Holy Spirit, but the Spirit of holiness: Rom. 1:4-- "According to</p><p>   the Spirit of holiness."</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence also the river of "living waters," or waters of life, which</p><p>   Christ explains in the 7th of John, of the Holy Spirit, is in</p><p>   the forementioned Psalm called the "river of God's pleasures;"</p><p>   and hence also that holy oil with which Christ was anointed, which I</p><p>   have shewn was the Holy Ghost, is called the "oil of gladness": Heb.</p><p>   1:9--"Therefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of</p><p>   gladness above thy fellows." Hence we learn that God's fulness does</p><p>   consist in the Holy Spirit. By fulness, as the term is used in</p><p>   Scripture, as may easily be seen by looking over the texts that mention</p><p>   it, Is intended the good that any one possesses. Now the good that God</p><p>   possesses does most immediately consist in His joy and complacence that</p><p>   He has in Himself. It does objectively, indeed, consist in the Father</p><p>   and the Son; but it doth most immediately consist in the complacence in</p><p>   these elements. Nevertheless the fulness of God consists in the</p><p>   holiness and happiness of the deity. Hence persons, by being made</p><p>   partakers of the Holy Spirit, or having it dwelling in them, are said</p><p>   to be "partakers of the fulness of God" ar Christ. Christ's fulness, as</p><p>   mediator, consists in His having the Spirit given Him "not by measure,"</p><p>   (John 3:34.) And so it is that He is said to have "the fulness of the</p><p>   Godhead," is said "to dwell in him bodily," (Col. 2:9.) And as</p><p>   we, by receiving the Holy Spirit from Christ, and being made partakers</p><p>   of His Spirit, are said "to receive of his fulness, and grace for</p><p>   grace." And because this Spirit, which is the fulness of God, consists</p><p>   in the love of God and Christ; therefore we, by knowing the love of</p><p>   Christ, are said "to be filled with all the fulness of God," (Eph.</p><p>   3:19.) For the way that we know the love of Christ, is by having that</p><p>   love dwelling in us, as 1 John 4:13; because the fulness of God</p><p>   consists in the Holy Spirit. Hence our communion with God the Father</p><p>   and God the Son consists in our possessing of the Holy Ghost, which is</p><p>   their Spirit. For to have communion or fellowship with either, is to</p><p>   partake with Them of Their good in Their fulness in union and society</p><p>   with Them. Hence it is that we read of the saints having fellowship and</p><p>   communion with the Father and with the Son; but never of their having</p><p>   fellowship with the Holy Ghost, because the Holy Ghost is that common</p><p>   good or fulness which they partake of in which their fellowship</p><p>   consists. We read of the communion of the Holy Ghost; but not of</p><p>   communion with Him, which are two very different things.</p><p><br></p><p>   Persons are said to have communion with each other when they partake</p><p>   with each other in some common good; but any one is said to have</p><p>   communion of anything, with respect to that thing they partake of, in</p><p>   common with others. Hence, in the apostolical benediction, he wishes</p><p>   the "grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God the Father,</p><p>   and the communion or partaking of the Holy Ghost." The blessing wished</p><p>   is but one--viz., the Holy Spirit. To partake of the Holy Ghost is to</p><p>   have that love of the Father and the grace of the Son.</p><p><br></p><p>   From what has been said, it follows that the Holy Spirit is the summum</p><p>   of all good. 'Tis the fulness of God. The holiness and happiness of the</p><p>   Godhead consists in it; and in communion or partaking of it consists</p><p>   all the true loveliness and happiness of the creature. All the grace</p><p>   and comfort that persons here have, and all their holiness and</p><p>   happiness hereafter, consists in the love of the Spirit, spoken of Rom.</p><p>   15:30; and joy in the Holy Ghost, spoken of Rom. 14:17; Acts 9:31,</p><p>   13:52. And, therefore, that which in Matt. 7:11-- "If ye then, being</p><p>   evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more</p><p>   shall your Father which is in heaven, give good things to them that ask</p><p>   Him?" is in Luke 11:13, expressed thus: "If ye then, being evil, know</p><p>   how to give good gifts unto your children; how much more shall your</p><p>   heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him?" Doubtless</p><p>   there is an agreement in what is expressed by each Evangelist: and</p><p>   giving the Holy Spirit to them that ask, is the same as giving good</p><p>   things to them that ask; for the Holy Spirit is the sum of all good.</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence we may better understand the economy of the persons of the</p><p>   Trinity as it appears in the part that each one has in the affair of</p><p>   redemption, and shews the equality of each Person concerned in that</p><p>   affair, and the equality of honour and praise due to each of Them. For</p><p>   that work, glory belongs to the Father and the Son, that They so</p><p>   greatly loved the world. To the Father, that He so loved the world,</p><p>   that He gave His only-begotten Son, who was all His delight, who is His</p><p>   infinite objective Happiness. To the Son, that He so loved the world,</p><p>   that He gave Himself. But there is equal glory due to the Holy Ghost on</p><p>   this account, because He is the Love of the Father and the Son, that</p><p>   flows out primarily towards God, and secondarily towards the elect that</p><p>   Christ came to save. So that, however wonderful the love of the Father</p><p>   and the Son appear to be, so much the more glory belongs to the Holy</p><p>   Spirit, in whom subsists that wonderful and excellent love.</p><p><br></p><p>   It shews the infinite excellency of the Father thus:--That the Son so</p><p>   delighted in Him, and prized His honour and glory, that when He had a</p><p>   mind to save sinners, He came infinitely low, rather than men's</p><p>   salvation should be the injury of that honour and glory. It shewed the</p><p>   infinite excellency and worth of the Son, that the Father so delighted</p><p>   in Him, that for His sake He was ready to quit His own; yea, and</p><p>   receive into favour those that had deserved infinitely ill at His</p><p>   hands. Both shews the infinite excellency of the Holy Spirit, because</p><p>   He is that delight of the Father and the Son in each other, which is</p><p>   manifested to be so great and infinite by these things.</p><p><br></p><p>   What has been said shews that our dependence is equally on each Person</p><p>   in this affair. The Father approves and provides the Redeemer, and</p><p>   Himself accepts the price of the good purchased, and bestows that good.</p><p>   The Son is the Redeemer, and the price that is offered for the</p><p>   purchased good. And the Holy Ghost is the good purchased; the</p><p>   Sacred Scriptures seem to intimate that the Holy Spirit is the sum of</p><p>   all that Christ purchased for man, (Gal. 3:13-14.)</p><p><br></p><p>   What Christ purchased for us is, that we might have communion with God</p><p>   in His good, which consists in partaking or having communion of the</p><p>   Holy Ghost, as I have shewn. All the blessedness of the redeemed</p><p>   consists in partaking of the fulness of Christ, their Head and</p><p>   Redeemer, which, I have observed, consists in partaking of the Spirit</p><p>   that is given Him not by measure. This is the vital sap which the</p><p>   creatures derive from the true vine. This is the holy oil poured on the</p><p>   head, that goes down to the members. Christ purchased for us that we</p><p>   should enjoy the Love: but the love of God flows out in the proceeding</p><p>   of the Spirit; and He purchased for them that the love and joy of God</p><p>   should dwell in them, which is by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.</p><p><br></p><p>   The sum of all spiritual good which the saints have in this world, is</p><p>   that spring of living water within them which we read of, (John 4:10;)</p><p>   and those rivers of living waters flowing from within them which we</p><p>   read of, (John 7:38,39,) which we are there told is the Holy Spirit.</p><p>   And the sum of all happiness in the other world, is that river of</p><p>   living water which flows from the throne of God and the Lamb, which is</p><p>   the river of God's pleasures, and is the Holy Spirit, which is often</p><p>   compared in Sacred Scripture to water, to the rain and dew, and rivers</p><p>   and floods of waters, (Isa. 44:3; 32:15; 41:17,18, compared with John</p><p>   4:14; Isa. 35:6,7; 43:19,20.)</p><p><br></p><p>   The Holy Spirit is the purchased possession and inheritance of the</p><p>   saints, as appears, because that little of it which the saints have in</p><p>   this world is said to be the earnest of that purchased inheritance,</p><p>   (Eph. 1:13,14; 2 Cor. 1:22, v.5.) 'Tis an earnest of that which we are</p><p>   to have a fulness of hereafter. The Holy Ghost is the great subject of</p><p>   all gospel promises, and therefore is called the Spirit of promise,</p><p>   (Eph.1:13.) He is called the promise of the Father, (Luke 24:49.)</p><p><br></p><p>   The Holy Ghost being a comprehension of all good things promised in the</p><p>   gospel, we may easily see the force of the Apostle's inquiry: Gal.</p><p>   3:2-- "This only would I learn of you. Received ye the Spirit by the</p><p>   works of the Law, or by the hearing of faith? " So that in the offer of</p><p>   redemption 'tis of God of whom our good is purchased, and 'tis God that</p><p>   purchases it, and 'tis God also that is the thing purchased. Thus all</p><p>   our good things are of God, and through God, and in God, as Rom.</p><p>   11:36-- "For of him, and through him, and to him, and in him, are all things: to whom be glory for</p><p>   ever."All our good is of God the Father, and through God the Son, and</p><p>   all is in the Holy Ghost, as He is Himself all our good. And so God is</p><p>   Himself the portion and purchased inheritance of His people. Thus God</p><p>   is the Alpha and Omega in this affair of Redemption.</p><p><br></p><p>   If we suppose no more than used to be supposed about the Holy Ghost,</p><p>   the honour of the Holy Ghost in the work of Redemption is not equal in</p><p>   any sense to the Father and the Son's; nor is there an equal part of</p><p>   the glory of this work belonging to Him. Merely to apply to us, or</p><p>   immediately to give or hand to us blessing purchased, after it is</p><p>   purchased, is subordinate to the other two Persons,--is but a little</p><p>   thing to the purchaser of it by the paying an infinite price by Christ,</p><p>   by Christ's offering up Himself a sacrifice to procure it; and 'tis but</p><p>   a little thing to God the Father's giving His infinitely dear Son to be</p><p>   a sacrifice for us to procure this good. But according to what has now</p><p>   been supposed, there is an equality. To be the wonderful love of God,</p><p>   is as much as for the Father and the Son to exercise wonderful love;</p><p>   and to be the thing purchased, is as much as to be the price that</p><p>   purchases it. The price, and the thing bought with that price, answer</p><p>   each other in value; and to be the excellent benefit offered, is as</p><p>   much as to offer such an excellent benefit. For the glory that belongs</p><p>   to Him that bestows the gospel, arises from the excellency and value of</p><p>   the gift, and therefore the glory is equal to that excellency of the</p><p>   benefit. And so that Person that is that excellent benefit, has equal</p><p>   glory with Him that bestows such an excellent benefit.</p><p><br></p><p>   But now to return: from what has been now observed from the Holy</p><p>   Scriptures of the nature of the Holy Spirit, may be clearly understood</p><p>   why grace in the hearts of the saints is called spiritual, in</p><p>   distinction from other things that are the effects of the Spirit in the</p><p>   hearts of men. For by this it appears that the Divine principle in the</p><p>   saints is of the nature of the Spirit; for as the nature of the Spirit</p><p>   of God is Divine Love, so Divine Love is the nature and essence of that</p><p>   holy principle in the hearts of the saints.</p><p><br></p><p>   The Spirit of God may operate and produce effects upon the minds of</p><p>   natural men that have no grace, as He does when He assists natural</p><p>   conscience and convictions of sin and danger. The Spirit of God may</p><p>   produce effects upon inanimate things, as of old He moved on the face</p><p>   of the waters. But He communicates holiness in His own proper nature</p><p>   only, in those holy effects in the hearts of the saints. And,</p><p>   therefore, those holy effects only are called spiritual; and the saints</p><p>   only are called spiritual persons in Sacred Scripture.</p><p><br></p><p>   Men's natural faculties and principles may be assisted by the operation</p><p>   of the Spirit of God on their minds, to enable them to exert those acts</p><p>   which, to a greater or lesser degree, they exert naturally. But the</p><p>   Spirit don't at all communicate Himself in it in His own nature, which</p><p>   is Divine Love, any more than when He moved upon the face of the</p><p>   waters.</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence also we may more easily receive and understand a doctrine that</p><p>   seems to be taught us in the Sacred Scripture concerning grace in the</p><p>   heart--viz., that it is no other than the Spirit of God itself dwelling</p><p>   and acting in the heart of a saint,-- which the consideration of these</p><p>   things will make manifest:--</p><p><br></p><p>   (1.) That the Sacred Scriptures don't only call grace spiritual, but</p><p>   "spirit."</p><p><br></p><p>   (2.) That when the Sacred Scriptures call grace spirit, the Spirit of</p><p>   God is intended; and that grace is called "Spirit" no otherwise than as</p><p>   the name of the Holy Ghost, the Third Person in the Trinity is ascribed</p><p>   to it.</p><p><br></p><p>   1. This holy principle is often called by the name of "spirit" in</p><p>   Sacred Scripture. So in John 3:6-- "That which is born of the Spirit is</p><p>   spirit." Here by flesh and spirit, we have already shewn, are intended</p><p>   those two opposite principles in the heart, corruption and grace. So by</p><p>   flesh and spirit the same things are manifestly intended in Gal. 5:17--</p><p>   "For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the</p><p>   flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other; so that ye cannot</p><p>   do the things that ye would." This that is here given as the reason why</p><p>   Christians cannot do the things that they would, is manifestly the same</p><p>   that is given for the same thing in the latter part of the 7th chapter</p><p>   of the Romans. The reason there given why they cannot do the things</p><p>   that they would is, that the law of the members war with against</p><p>   the law of the mind; and, therefore, by the law of the members and the</p><p>   law of the mind are meant the same as the flesh and Spirit in</p><p>   Galatians. Yea, they are called by the same name of the flesh and</p><p>   Spirit there, in that context, in the continuation of the same</p><p>   discourse in the beginning of the next chapter:-- "Therefore there is</p><p>   no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus, that walk not after</p><p>   the flesh, but after the Spirit." Here the Apostle evidently refers to</p><p>   the same two opposite principles warring one against another, that he</p><p>   had been speaking of in the close of the preceding chapter, which he</p><p>   here calls flesh and Spirit as he does in his Epistle to the Galatians.</p><p><br></p><p>   This is yet more abundantly clear by the next words, which are, "For</p><p>   the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from</p><p>   the law of sin and death." Here these two things that in the preceding</p><p>   verse are called "flesh and spirit," are in this verse called "the law</p><p>   of the Spirit of life" and "the law of sin and death," evidently</p><p>   speaking still of the same law of our mind and the law of sin spoken of</p><p>   in the last verse of the preceding chapter. The Apostle goes on in the</p><p>   8th chapter to call aversation and grace by the names of flesh and</p><p>   Spirit, (verses 4-9, and again verses 12,13.) These two principles are</p><p>   called by the same names in Matt. 26:41-- "The spirit indeed is</p><p>   willing, but the flesh is weak." There can be no doubt but that the</p><p>   same thing is intended here by the flesh and spirit as (compare what is</p><p>   said of the flesh and spirit here and in these places) in the 7th and</p><p>   8th chapters of Romans, and Gal. 5. Again, these two principles are</p><p>   called by the same words in Gal. 6:8. If this be compared with the 18th</p><p>   verse of the foregoing chapter, and with Romans 8:6 and 13, none can</p><p>   doubt but the same is meant in each place.</p><p><br></p><p>   2. If the Sacred Scriptures be duly observed, where grace is called by</p><p>   the name of "spirit," it will appear that 'tis so called by an</p><p>   ascription of the Holy Ghost, even the third person in the Trinity, to</p><p>   that Divine principle in the hearts of the saints, as though that</p><p>   principle in them were no other than the Spirit of God itself, united</p><p>   to the soul, and living and acting in it, and exerting itself in the</p><p>   use and improvement of its faculties.</p><p><br></p><p>   Thus it is in the 8th chapter of Romans, as does manifestly appear by</p><p>   verses 9-16-- "But you are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so</p><p>   be the Spirit of God dwell in you," etc. "Now if any man have not the</p><p>   Spirit of Christ, he is none of his," etc.</p><p><br></p><p>   Here the apostle does fully explain himself what he means when he so</p><p>   often calls that holy principle that is in the hearts of the saints by</p><p>   the name "spirit." This he means, the Spirit of God itself dwelling and</p><p>   acting in them. In the 9th verse he calls it the Spirit of God, and the</p><p>   Spirit of Christ in the 10th verse. He calls it Christ in them in the</p><p>   11th verse. He calls it the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the</p><p>   dead dwelling in them; and in the 14th verse he calls it the Spirit of</p><p>   God. In the 16th verse he calls it the Spirit itself. So it is called</p><p>   the Spirit of God in 1 Cor. 2:11,12. So that that holy, Divine</p><p>   principle, which we have observed does radically and essentially</p><p>   consist in Divine love, is no other than a communication and</p><p>   participation of that same infinite Divine Love, which is GOD, and in</p><p>   which the Godhead is eternally breathed forth; and subsists in the</p><p>   Third Person in the blessed Trinity. So that true saving grace is no</p><p>   other than that very love of God-- that is, God, in one of the persons</p><p>   of the Trinity, uniting Himself to the soul of a creature, as a vital</p><p>   principle, dwelling there and exerting Himself by the faculties of the</p><p>   soul of man, in His own proper nature, after the manner of a principle</p><p>   of nature.</p><p><br></p><p>   And we may look back and more fully understand what the apostle John</p><p>   means when he says once and again, "God is Love," and "He that dwelleth</p><p>   in Love dwelleth in God, and God in him," and "If we love one another,</p><p>   God dwelleth in us," and "His Love is perfected in us," "Hereby</p><p>   we know that we dwell in him and he in us, because he has given us of</p><p>   his Spirit."</p><p><br></p><p>   By this, also, we may understand what the apostle Peter means in his</p><p>   2nd Epistle 1:4, that the saints are made "partakers of the Divine</p><p>   nature." They are not only partakers of a nature that may, in some</p><p>   sense, be called Divine, because 'tis conformed to the nature of God;</p><p>   but the very deity does, in some sense, dwell in them. That holy and</p><p>   Divine Love dwells in their hearts, and is so united to human</p><p>   faculties, that 'tis itself become a principle of new nature. That</p><p>   love, which is the very native tongue and spirit of God, so dwells in</p><p>   their souls that it exerts itself in its own nature in the exercise of</p><p>   those faculties, after the manner of a natural or vital principle in</p><p>   them.</p><p><br></p><p>   This shews us how the saints are said to be the "temples of the Holy</p><p>   Ghost" as they are.</p><p><br></p><p>   By this, also, we may understand how the saints are said to be made</p><p>   "partakers of God's holiness," not only as they partake of holiness</p><p>   that God gives, but partake of that holiness by which He himself is</p><p>   holy. For it has been already observed, the holiness of God consists in</p><p>   that Divine Love in which the essence of God really flows out.</p><p><br></p><p>   This also shews us how to understand our Lord when He speaks of His joy</p><p>   being fulfilled in the saints: John 17:13-- "And now I come unto thee;</p><p>   and these things I speak in the world, that they might have My joy</p><p>   fulfilled in themselves." It is by the indwelling of that Divine</p><p>   Spirit, which we have shewn to be God the Father's and the Son's</p><p>   infinite Love and Joy in each other. In the 13th verse He says He has</p><p>   spoken His word to His disciples, "that His joy might be fulfilled;"</p><p>   and in verse 26th He says, "And I have declared unto them Thy name, and</p><p>   will declare it; that the love wherewith Thou hast loved Me may be in</p><p>   them, and I in them."</p><p><br></p><p>   And herein lies the mystery of the vital union that is between Christ</p><p>   and the soul of a believer, which orthodox divines speak so much of,</p><p>   Christ's love--that is, His Spirit is actually united to the faculties</p><p>   of their souls. So it properly lives, acts, and exerts its nature in</p><p>   the exercise of their faculties. By this Love being in them, He is in</p><p>   them, (John 17:26;) and so it is said, 1 Cor. 6:17-- "But he that is</p><p>   joined unto the Lord is one spirit."</p><p><br></p><p>   And thus it is that the saints are said to live, "yet not they, but</p><p>   Christ lives in them," (Gal. 2:20.) The very promise of spiritual life</p><p>   in their souls is no other than the Spirit of Christ himself. So that</p><p>   they live by His life, as much as the members of the body live by the</p><p>   life of the Lord, and as much as the branches live by the life of the</p><p>   root and stock. "Because I live, ye shall live also," (John 14:19.) "We</p><p>   are dead: but our life is hid with Christ in God," (Col. 3:3.) "When</p><p>   Christ, who is our life, shall appear," (Col 3:4.)</p><p><br></p><p>   There is a union with Christ, by the indwelling of the Love of Christ,</p><p>   two ways. First, as 'tis from Christ, and is the very Spirit and life</p><p>   and fulness of Christ; and second, as it acts to Christ. For the very</p><p>   nature of it is love and union of heart to Him.</p><p><br></p><p>   Because the Spirit of God dwells as a vital principle or a principle of</p><p>   new life in the soul, therefore 'tis called the "Spirit of life," (Rom.</p><p>   8:2;) and the Spirit that "quickens." (John 6:63.)</p><p><br></p><p>   The Spirit of God is a vital principle in the soul, as the breath of</p><p>   life is in the body: Ezek. 37:5--"Thus saith the Lord God unto these</p><p>   bones, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live;" and</p><p>   so verses 9,10...</p><p><br></p><p>   That principle of grace that is in the hearts of the saints is as much</p><p>   a proper communication or participation of the Spirit of God, the Third</p><p>   Person in the Trinity, as that breath that entered into these bodies is</p><p>   represented to be a participation of the wind that blew upon them. The</p><p>   prophet says, "Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon</p><p>   these slain that they may live," is now the very same wind and the same</p><p>   breath; but only was wanted to these bodies to be a vital principle in</p><p>   them, which otherwise would be dead. And therefore Christ himself</p><p>   represents the communication of His Spirit to His disciples by His</p><p>   breathing upon them, and communicating to them His breath, (John</p><p>   20:22.)</p><p><br></p><p>   We often, in our common language about things of this nature, speak of</p><p>   a principle of grace. I suppose there is no other principle of grace in</p><p>   the soul than the very Holy Ghost dwelling in the soul and acting there</p><p>   as a vital principle. To speak of a habit of grace as a natural</p><p>   disposition to act grace, as begotten in the soul by the first</p><p>   communication of Divine light, and as the natural and necessary</p><p>   consequence of the first light, it seems in some respects to carry a</p><p>   wrong idea with it. Indeed the first exercise of grace in the first</p><p>   light has a tendency to future acts, as from an abiding principle, by</p><p>   grace and by the covenant of God; but not by any natural force. The</p><p>   giving one gracious discovery or act of grace, or a thousand, has no</p><p>   proper natural tendency to cause an abiding habit of grace for the</p><p>   future; nor any otherwise than by Divine constitution and covenant. But</p><p>   all succeeding acts of grace must be as immediately, and, to all</p><p>   intents and purposes, as much from the immediate acting of the Spirit</p><p>   of God on the soul, as the first; and if God should take away His</p><p>   Spirit out of the soul-- all habits and acts of grace would of</p><p>   themselves cease as immediately as light ceases in a room when a candle</p><p>   is carried out. And no man has a habit of grace dwelling in him any</p><p>   otherwise than as he has the Holy Spirit dwelling in him in his temple,</p><p>   and acting in union with his natural faculties, after the manner of a</p><p>   vital principle. So that when they act grace, 'tis, in the language of</p><p>   the apostle, "not they, but Christ living in them." Indeed the Spirit</p><p>   of God, united to human faculties, acts very much after the manner of a</p><p>   natural principle or habit. So that one act makes way for another, and</p><p>   so it now settles the soul in a disposition to holy acts; but that it</p><p>   does, so as by grace and covenant, and not from any natural necessity.</p><p><br></p><p>   Hence the Spirit of God seems in Sacred Scripture to be spoken of as a</p><p>   quality of the persons in whom it resided. So that they are called</p><p>   spiritual persons; as when we say a virtuous man, we speak of virtue as</p><p>   the quality of the man. 'Tis the Spirit itself that is the only</p><p>   principle of true virtue in the heart. So that to be truly virtuous is</p><p>   the same as to be spiritual.</p><p><br></p><p>   And thus it is not only with respect to the virtue that is in the</p><p>   hearts of the saints on earth, but also the perfect virtue and holiness</p><p>   of the saints in heaven. It consists altogether in the indwelling and</p><p>   acting of the Spirit of God in their habits. And so it was with man</p><p>   before the Fall; and so it is with the elect, sinless angels. We have</p><p>   shewn that the holiness and happiness of God consist in the Holy</p><p>   Spirit; and so the holiness and happiness of every holy or truly</p><p>   virtuous creature of God, in heaven or earth, consist in the communion</p><p>   of the same Spirit.</p><p>     __________________________________________________________________</p><p><br></p><p>            This document is from the Christian Classics Ethereal</p><p>               Library at Calvin College, http://www.ccel.org,</p><p>                    generated on demand from ThML source.</pre></span></div></p><p></p>
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