The Sovereignty of God
The Introduction
The author's introduction to the work as a whole.
Introduction:
A
Practical Discourse Of God’s Sovereignty
This
high and tremendous attribute, being an ocean that has neither bank nor
bottom, may not be lightly launched into by any, however strongly
built and well manned, much less by so weak a vessel, without a divine
compose, and an anchor within the veil. That the author of this
discourse came into it, was not of choice or design, but of course and
emergent necessity. Could he have found another basis to repose that
doctrine on, which was, at first, his only intended subject, he had not
touched on this. But, apparently to him, no ground would bear the weight
of Election, but that of Sovereignty, and there it fixed as on a rock;
all the lines of its whole circumference running there, and resting
there, as in their center, where also the scripture had laid it; Romans
9, Ephesians 1, etc. And, however it be a foundation disallowed of men,
every observing Christian shall find, that without acknowledging
divine Sovereignty, for the original, supreme, and unaccountable
disposer of persons and things, he shall want a principal means of
supporting his faith, and quieting his understanding, in the course of
common providences; much more of those mysterious occurrences, and
supernatural truths, which he is certainly concerned about.
In
this preface I shall treat first of God's sovereignty, and then of his
righteousness, as its natural adjunct. The sum of the first lies in this
proposition, namely, “That the great God, blessed forever, has an
absolute power and right of dominion over his creatures, to dispose and
determine them as seems him good.”
That
there is such a power, and that this power belongs to God, no other
reason needs be assigned, but, that “he is God, and there is none
besides him: “there can be no more, because, 1. There can be but one
infinite; for such a being fills heaven and earth; and so there is no
place or room for another. 2. There can be but one omnipotent; for he
that is such, has all others under his feet: besides, where one can do
all, more would be impertinent. 3. There can be but one supreme; supreme
power may reside in many, as in mixed monarchies and commonwealths; but
as lawmakers and supreme, they are but one. 4. There can be but one
first cause, from which all beings else derive their original; “of
whom, and for whom, are all things,” 1 Corinthians 8:6. And if he is
the Author of all, he needs must have a sovereign right and power to
determine all; both as to their being, order, efficacy, and end.
“That
sovereign power belongs to God,” is a truth so natural, and obvious to
reason, that other proof seems as needless, as that the sun is the
fountain of light: nor shall I suppose that any who will read this
discourse, can so far forget themselves to be creatures, as to seek a
proof of their Creator's sovereignty; “the things that are seen so
loudly proclaiming his eternal power and Godhead.” But since, with our
easy admitting the notion, it is none of the smallest difficulties to
own it in our practice, and bear ourselves answerably towards him:
since also so huge a weight is borne on the shoulders of this divine
attribute, and our souls are so highly concerned in the interest and
influence of it, it needs must be our duty, and well worthy of our time,
to look over the instances of it, and to mark and consider them well, as
things greatly importing our instruction; whereby we may know something
of the greatness of that God in whose hands our souls are; as also of
our infinite distance from him, and nothingness to him; and so, with
the more humbleness of mind, and self-abasement; as also with the more
faith, and creature like affiance, submit to him, and bear ourselves on
him. To this end, the scriptures have enrolled several ensigns of
sovereignty; by which, as by so many footsteps, we are led to the
absolute will and power of God, as the supreme cause and disposer of
all.
The
great act of sovereignty was God's decree for making the world, and of
doing, or permitting to be done, whatever should be in it, to the
folding of it up. The heavens and the earth, and all the hosts of them,
as yet had no being: it was at his pleasure, whether he would make them
or not: and if he would, what being be would give them; to what end, and
how that end should be accomplished. And that these were all ascertained
by the decree is evident, for “known to God were all his works (which
he would do in time) from the beginning of the world.” Acts, 15:18.
The scheme and substance whereof (and I hope without intrusion) may be
drawn to this effect: “That the great God, most high and holy, being
infinitely good, happy and blessed in himself, was also infinitely
prompt and well pleased to communicate thereof to others; to which end,
he designed to raise up creatures, angels and men: that for the
manifestation of his sovereignty, he would confirm a certain number of
those angels in their primitive state; leaving the rest to themselves;
who falling from that state, should be cast down, and “reserved in
chains of darkness, to the judgment of the great day,” that in this
lower world, he would set up the first man to be the head and
representative of all that should come of him; that this single person
should be created in the image of God, fit to enjoy communion with him,
and endued with power to abide therein: that to manifest the weakness of
creatures, and their perpetual dependence on God, he would thus leave
him to his first stock, with a perfect freedom of will, to retain, or
lose at his own choice; but not without setting before him the
happiness or ruin that would certainly follow his well or ill using that
freedom; and, being so left, the fallen angel tempting him to
disobedience, and also prevailing, both himself and all his posterity
should by this revolt fall under the curse: that, for the declaration of
his sovereign grace, he would, and accordingly did, choose a certain
number of Adam's posterity (in themselves all alike depraved and lost),
and ordain them to eternal life; and to make known the power of his
wrath, and his just displeasure against sin, he would leave the rest in
that state of perdition they would bring themselves into: that of those
vessels of wrath, Satan himself (whom they chose to follow) should be
the head and ruler: as also over them that were elected, for a time,
namely, until the Messiah, their true and proper Head, and into whom he
had chosen them, should rescue them out of his power; that to this end,
and that he might be known to be just, as well as merciful, in
justifying of them, the Son of God should take on him the place of a
second Adam, and come into the world with a human body; in which he
should fulfill all righteousness, and, by the infinite virtue and merit
of his death, should satisfy the law in all its demands, destroy the
devil, dissolve his works, and reconcile the elect to God: that he
should be raised again from the dead, and invested with all power
befitting the Captain of their salvation; so that he might effectually
minister to them whatsoever should be requisite for bringing his sons to
glory.” This I take to be the sum of God's decree; the great ensign or
standard royal of sovereignty, of which all the others are but
consequents, and to which they arc subordinate.
The
first visible ensign of sovereignty, was creation, or God's giving the
world an actual existence in time, according to his decree from
everlasting; bringing that huge, yet void and formless mass, at first
out of nothing; and then, this glorious fabric out of that confusion:
his hanging the earth on nothing: his assigning to every sort of
creatures ouch form and station, to order, use, and efficacy, and impressing
on them such laws and instincts of nature, as seemed to him good, (but
all in a regular subservience to the good of the whole,) which also was
effected by his word. What he would, was done with such immediate
suddenness, as if the things themselves bad proceeded with his breath:
“For he spake, and it was done; he commanded, and it stood fast,”
Psalm 38:9. Also note the instant production of light in Genesis 1:3 and
9. The waters separating from the other elements, and gathering into a
body, and their going up and down to the place he had founded for them,
Psalm. 104:8, with many others, of which you have an index in the first
of Genesis, are witnesses of it: as also his so fixing this
establishment, that they continue to this day according to that
ordinance, Psalm 119:91.
Consequent
to this, as a second ensign of sovereignty, is that universal
providence, by which the creation is sustained, and all inferior
causes guided to their designed end; and this, notwithstanding all
supposable accidents, which might possibly happen, to obstruct or divert
them. And that the creatures have at times deviated from their first
rules and settlement, is no derogation from the doctrine of God's
sovereignty, but rather an illustration of it; as showing, that the
creatures are still in his hand, as clay in the potter's. Hence we find
their innate propensities to be sometimes suspended; at other times
overacted; and at times, again, quite contrary to the law of nature: and
this not casually, nor by the force of created powers, nor yet for any
private or self concern, but to serve some special and superior end,
which their Lord had to be done. To instance a few: and,
1.
Of the creatures without life: As the windows of heaven opening, and
the fountains of the great deep breaking up, notwithstanding the
firmament above and the bounds beneath, to drown the world of ungodly
men, Genesis 7:11. The Red Sea's dividing, and standing up as a wall, to
make way for his people's escape, Exodus 14:22. The sun and moon's
standing still till they were avenged of their enemies, Josh. 10:13.
The stars to the same end fighting against Sisera, Judges 6:20. The
sun's going back in Ahaz's dial, to help Hezekiah's faith, 2 Kings
20:11. The fiery furnace devouring those at a distance, who cast in the
holy confessors, and not so much as touching them that were cast into
it, Daniel 3:22, 27. The winds and sea, which are such impetuous, and,
one would think, even lawless, creatures, stir not, nor breathe, but to
fulfill his word, Psalms 148:8; Mark 4:30, 42.
2.
Of living creatures, that have not the use of reason. How readily went
they by pairs into Noah's ark, at God's appointment! Genesis 7:8, 9. The
frogs, lice, locusts, etc. with what supernatural boldness did
they assault and perplex the Egyptians so that the magicians
themselves confessed that the finger of God was in it, Exodus 8:19!
(and as strangely withdrew when their work was done, verse 13).
Witnessed also by the dumb ass's reproving the prophet’s madness, 2.
Pet 2:16. The lion's killing the seduced prophet for breaking God's
command, yet not eating the carcass, nor tearing his ass, 1 Kings
13:26,28. A ravenous bird bringing Elijah food in his solitary
condition, 1 Kings 17:6. The great fish’s receiving Jonah, and, at
God's command, casting him on dry land, without harm, Jonah 1:17, with
chapter 2:10. The lions' also not hurting Daniel in their den, yet
greedily devouring his accusers, Daniel 6:22, 24. It must needs be a
sovereign power, which thus superintends, restrains, and inverts the
course of nature at his will.
Thirdly.
Another ensign, asserting God's supremacy, and rightful dominion, is the
general vote and subscription of men, especially the most knowing, and
such as best understand him. 1. They own it in their practice or
actions. Abel offers the firstlings of his flock to God, Genesis 4:4.
Abraham leaves his native country at God's command, to go “he knew not
whither,” Genesis 12:4. He also offers his only and innocent son
Isaac, in whose life and “posterity all nations were to be blessed,”
Genesis 22:2.10. Job, when stripped of all, falls down and worships, Job
1:21. When Aaron's two sons were destroyed by fire from heaven, he held
his peace, Lev. 10:2, 8. Eli, when the tingling sentence was denounced
against his house, said, “It is the Lord, let him do what seemeth him
good, 1 Samuel 9:18. David, when driven from God's sanctuary, and his
throne was usurped by Absalom, said, “Behold, here I am, let him do to
me as seemeth good to him,” 2 Samuel 16:26. The men of Nineveh, their
destruction being pronounced positively, of which they had no promise of
remission, and consequently no visible ground of hope, yet believed God,
fasted, “lay in sackcloth, and turned from their evil way,” Jonah
3:5, 8. 2. They likewise own it in their confessions and attestations.
Melchizedek and Abraham do both style him “The Most High God,
possessor of heaven and earth,” Genesis 14:19. 22. Job professes, that
though he were righteous, yet if God will contend with him, “be will
not contend with him, but make supplication to his Judge,” Job 9:15.
“The Lord has made all things for himself,” Proverbs 16:4. “For
his pleasure they are and were created,” Revelation 4:11. “We are
the clay, and thou our potter,” Isaiah 64:8, “He worketh all things
after the counsel of his own will,” Ephesians 1:11. “He giveth not
account of any of his matters,” Job 33:3. “In his hand is the soul
of every living thing,” Job 12:10. “He is the God of the spirits of
all flesh,” Numbers 16:22. “All nations before him are less than
nothing and vanity,” Isaiah 40:17. “He stills the tumult of the
people,” Psalm 16:7. “If it be of God, ye cannot overthrow it,”
Acts 5:89. “The counsel of the Lord, it shall stand,” Proverbs
19:21. Psalm 38:11, “The lot is cast into the lap, but the whole
disposing thereof is of the Lord,” Proverbs 16:38. The kingdom is the
Lord's, and he is Governor among the nations,” Psalm 22:28.
Nebuchadnezzar, that proud and potent monarch, whose “greatness
reached to the heaven, and his dominion to the end of the earth, Daniel
4:22, all nations trembled before him: whom he would be slew, and whom
he would he kept alive, Daniel 5:19, who said in his heart, I will
ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God, I
will be like the most High: and who is that God that shall deliver out
of my hand!” Daniel 3:15. Yet even he, this child of pride, is made to
confess One higher than himself, and to bow before him; proclaiming to
the world, that “the most High doth according to his will, in the army
of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth, and none can stay his
hand, or say to him, What doest thou? and those that walk in pride he is
able to abase,” Daniel 4:37. “For thou hast said in thine heart, I
will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of
God: I will also sit on the mount of the congregation, in the sides of
the north: I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like
the most High.” Isaiah
14:13,14. It might further be instanced in Cain, Pharaoh, Balaam, and
other wicked men, how they were even constrained to acknowledge the
sovereignty of God; as appears by comparing Exodus 6:2, with 9:27, 28,
and Numbers 22:18. Darius, also, in Daniel 6:26-28.
Fourthly.
Another evidence, or witness, we have from the angels, who are “great
in power;” notwithstanding which, they do perfectly own and submit to
the sovereignty of God. Where subjects are numerous, wise, and magnanimous,
and withal perfectly submit to the will of their Lord, it argues their
Lord is an absolute sovereign: and such subjects are the angels. 1. The
elect or good angels: these show it by their ready submission to any
service their Lord is pleased to appoint them. They are his intelligencers
in this lower world. “And the angel answered and said to me, These are
the four spirits of the heavens, which go forth from standing before the
Lord of all the earth. The black horses which are therein, go forth into
the north country, and the white go forth after them; and the grisled go
forth toward the south country. And the bay went forth, and sought to
go, that they might walk to and fro through the earth: and he said. Get
ye hence; walk ye to and fro through the earth. So they walked to and
fro through the earth,” Zechariah 6:5-7. “There was a day when the
sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord,” Job 2:1.
Not that he needs their advice, but to show a little of the majesty of
his kingdom. They are also his messengers: he sends them on his errands,
to negotiate his affairs among men, and to reveal his purposes, both
concerning his church and the world. Daniel 2:19 and 8:13, 16, chapter
1:21, chapter 11; Ezekiel 1:4. They are his chariots, Psalm 68:17. His
reapers, Matthew 13; 89, 49. The executioners of his judgments, 2 Samuel
24:16, 2 Kings 19:35. And Christ's attendants at his coming, Matthew
25:31.
2.
The apostate angels, or wicked spirits. Though the testimony we have
from these is not from love or good will, yet it is as great an
evidence of God's sovereignty as the other; in that, being enemies to
God, proud and imperious, they are yet overawed, and compelled to
submit. And hence it was, that the devil dared not to answer again, when
that fatal sentence was pronounced on him for seducing our first
parents, Genesis 3:15. We have him also presenting himself before the
Lord, to give account of his actions; and to touch Job, or any thing he
had, he durst not, without leave from God, nor vary a jot from the rule
prescribed him. “There was a day when the sons of God came to
present themselves before the Lord, and Satan came also among them, to
present himself before the Lord. And the Lord said to Satan, Behold, he
is in thine hand; but save his life,” Job 2:1,6. In the Evangelists
are many instances of Christ's commanding them forth with authority; yea
a whole legion at once, Luke 8:30, 33. Nor could they so much as enter
into the swine without his leave, Mark 5:12. And, which is more, they
were subjected to the apostles, who had but a delegated, or secondhand
power over them, Luke 10:17.
Fifthly.
We have the Lord himself asserting his sovereign prerogative. In how
lofty a style, and with what imperial authority, doth he utter himself
to Pharaoh! “And in very deed, for this cause have I raised thee up,
for to show my power on thee,” Exodus 9:16. The apostle quotes the
place to prove, that God may raise up men, and appoint them to what use
and service he will: “For the scripture saith to Pharaoh, Even for
this purpose have 1 raised thee up, that I might show my power in thee,
and that my name might be declared throughout all the earth,” Romans
9.17. “Who has made the seeing, or the blind? have not I the Lord?”
Exodus 4:6,11. “I kill and I make alive,” Deuteronomy 32; 39. “I
will shew mercy on whom I will shew mercy,” Exodus 33:19. “I am the
first and I am the last, and besides me there is no God: and who, as I,
shall call, and shall declare it, and set it in order before me? since I
appointed the ancient people, and the things that are coming, and shall
come,” Isaiah 44:6,7. “My counsel shall stand; I will do all my
pleasure,” Isaiah 46:10. “My word shall accomplish all that which I
please; it shall prosper in the thing whereto I send it,” Isaiah
55:11. “And if the prophet be deceived, I the Lord have deceived that
prophet, and I will destroy him,” Ezekiel 14:9. A remarkable story is
that of the lying spirit, and the effectual commission lie had from
God, to persuade, and also to prevail: “And the Lord said, Who shall
persuade Ahab, that he may go up and fall at Ramoth Gilead? And one said
on this manner, and another on that manner. And there came forth a
spirit, and stood before the Lord and said, I will persuade him. And the
Lord said, wherewith? And he said, I will go forth, and I will be a
lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets. And he said, Thou shalt
persuade him, and prevail also: go forth and do so.” 1 Kings 22:20,
21, 22. How should we tremble before God, at the hearing of such a word!
But yet, I do not reckon the last two as acts of pure sovereignty, hut
rather of his justice; as punishing one sin, by leaving to another;
according to that in Romans 1:21.28. “Because that when they knew God,
they glorified him not as God, nor liked to retain him in their
knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind.” And yet there is
here an impression of sovereignty, in that he deals not so with all who
are alike obnoxious to it.
Sixthly.
Another ensign of sovereignty is formed of those several acts and
institutes, which cannot be derived (at least not so immediately) from
any other attribute than that of sovereignty. I shall instance a few,
namely, The putting of man's everlasting condition on his eating or
non-eating the fruit of such a tree, Genesis 2; 17. In not destroying
Adam presently on his disobedience; and in the free promise of a Savior,
unsought to for it, Genesis 3:15. In protecting Cain when he had
forfeited his life to justice, Genesis 4:15. In preserving Ham from the
deluge, though he was as wicked as those that perished, Genesis 7:13. In
ordering the blessing to Jacob, who sought it unduly; and denying it to
Esau, who sought it diligently, and to whom it belonged of natural
right, Genesis 27:19, 34. 38. In the sudden turning of Esau's heart to
love Jacob, whom he had inveterately hated, and came with full purpose
to destroy; yet in a moment his heart is melted; he weeps on his neck,
and offers himself and soldiers to be his convoy, Genesis 27:41, with
chapter 32:6, and 33:4, 12. In causing a feat to be on the Amorites,
that they did not pursue Jacob, when highly provoked by his sons'
cruelty on the men of Shechem, Genesis 36:5. In sending a message of
peace to Sihon, whom he had determined to destroy; and to that end had
hardened his spirit, and made him obstinate, Deuteronomy 2:26. In
causing those nations to destroy one another, who came leagued to
destroy his people, 2 Chronicles 20:1, 22, 23. In destroying Esau's
mount irreparably, and forever: while Israel, whose land also was full
of sin, shall not be forsaken, Obad. verse 8 9. 16, 18, 21. Mal. 1:4.
especially considering that these were the several effects of his loving
the one, and hating the other, and that “before they had done either
good or evil,” Mal. 1:2, 3. Romans 9:11, 13. In sending Ezekiel to a
rebellious house, that “would not hear;” and not sending him to them
that would: “Not to many people of a strange speech, and of an hard
language, whose words thou canst not understand: surely, had I sent thee
to them, they would have hearkened to thee. But the house of Israel will
not hearken to thee; for they will not hearken to me; for all the house
of Israel are impudent and hard hearted, Ezekiel 3:6,7, and Matthew 11;
21. In hiding the mysteries of his kingdom “from the wise and prudent,
and revealing them to babes,” Matthew 11:25, and speaking in parables
to the multitude, “lest they should be converted,” Mark 4:11, 12;
Acts 16; 6, 7.
It
is further manifest, by the Lord's punishing sometimes lesser
trespasses, and that severely, and in his own; while winking at those of
a greater magnitude in other men. Moses is excluded Canaan for a hasty
word, though smartly provoked, Deuteronomy 32:51, 52, when Jonah is but
mildly reproved for passionately expostulating, Jonah 4. Uzziah dies
for but touching the ark, 1 Chronicles 13:9, 10, while the Philistines
bore it away in triumph, 1 Samuel 5:1. Hezekiah but shows the
ambassadors from Babylon his house and treasures, and for this his sons
and all must go into captivity, “And Hezekiah hearkened to them, and
shewed them all the house of his precious things, the silver, and the
gold, and the spices, and the precious ointment, and all the house of
his armor, and all that was found in his treasures: there was nothing in
his house, nor in all his dominion, that Hezekiah shewed them not. Behold
the days come, that all that is in thine house, and dial which thy
fathers have laid up in store to this day, shall be carried into
Babylon: nothing shall be left, saith the Lord,” 2 Kings 20:13,17. Not
that any sin is little in itself, or punished beyond its demerit; but
the Lord is pleased thus to do, partly to show his displeasure against
sin, and that he will not bear with it, even in those that are dearest
to him, but partly also, if not chiefly in such like cases, to set forth
his sovereign greatness, and the uncontrolableness of his matters.
“Why dost thou strive against him? for he giveth not account of any of
his matters,” Job 33:13. Psalm 73 is full to the same purpose. That
also of Job, and the manner of God's dealings with him, is much to be
remarked: he had lived a very strict and holy life; (“not a man like
Job in all the earth;” the Lord himself seems to glory in him;) to
which all outward blessings were promised, and freedom from such sufferings;
and when bereft of all, “held fast his integrity,” Job 1:8 and 2:3,
yet the Lord goes on to afflict him, and leaves him wholly (saving his
life) in Satan's power. Had he been a wicked man, as his friends
objected, those sufferings had evidenced the justice of God; but now
his sovereignty: which also seems to be intended by that speech of God
to Satan, “Thou movest me against him, to destroy him without
cause,” Job 2:3.
Seventhly.
There are yet other footsteps of sovereignty by which that high and holy
attribute is further illustrated to us, namely, “The Lord's overruling
the designs and actions of men, to bring his own counsels to pass;”
although improper in their own nature, yea, disservient thereto; and
sometimes by men contrived on purpose to prevent them. The project of
building Babel's tower, to keep that rebellious rout together, is turned
to their utter dispersion, Genesis 11;4, 8. Jacob's dissimulation, and
palpable abuse of his father's infirmity, proved the means to obtain his
blessing, and that contrary to his settled intention, Genesis 27:18,
29. Laban dealt hardly with Jacob, to keep him low, and to serve himself
of him, but God takes occasion thence to give him Laban's substance, and
that by Laban’s consent and agreement, Genesis 29. To obviate Joseph's
dreams, his brethren sell him into Egypt: and by this means the Lord
keeps them all alive, and accomplishes that honor to Joseph, which they
intended to prevent, Genesis 37:9, 20, 28; 42:6, 1:18, 20. Pharaoh lays
inseparable burdens on the people, to diminish them; and the Lord
multiplies them under it. “The more they were oppressed, the faster
they grew,” Exodus 1:12. Moses, a keeper of sheep, a man of slow
speech, and one that had no mind to the work, Exodus4:10, 13, yet he
shall be God's ambassador to Pharaoh, (the proudest and most inflexible
monarch on earth,) and bring Israel out of bondage. And who shall be his
commander in chief, to deliver his people from their potent oppressors,
but Deborah, a woman, Judges 4:9! At another time, Gideon, “whose
family was poor in Manasseh, and he the least in his father's house,”
Jud. 6:15, and though he had a numerous and powerful enemy to deal with,
and, one would think, had need of all the hands he could make to fight
them, yet his army of two and thirty thousand, must be reduced to three
hundred men, and they to have no other arms but trumpets, and lamps in
their pitchers; and by these he delivers them from that huge host,
Judges 7:3, 6-7. And much like to this was Shamgar's killing six hundred
men with an ox goad, Judges 3:31, and Samson a thousand with a jaw bone
of an ass, chapter 10:15. It may further be traced in his producing
contrary effect by the same cause; and then again the same effects by
causes contrary, Exodus 4; 6,7. So Daniel and his fellows had a fairer
countenance with vegetables and water, than those who eat of the king's
own provision, Daniel 1:16. It is further evidenced, by his causing the
wrath of man to turn to his praise; which, in the nature and tendency of
it, is to destroy them that praise him, Psalm 76:10. By his catching
“the wise in their craftiness, and causing them to fall by their own
devices,” Job 5:12,13, cf. Psalm 5:10. Witness Ahab, 1 Kings 22:20,
22, and Haman, Esth. 7:10. The persecution of the saints at Jerusalem
was designed to suppress the doctrine of Christ; which yet was thereby
dispersed into many countries, and caused “to grow mightily,” Acts
8:1, 4. So the preacher's imprisonment proved to the furtherance of the
gospel, Philippians 1:12.14. And since the Scriptures were finished,
human stories, and our own observation, do abundantly prove the matter
in hand. Do but consider how it prevailed to the dethroning of Satan,
and turning the world upside down, and this by means of the weakest and
moat unlikely, to reason, that could be pitched on: not by the sword and
spear, the bow and battleaxe, the barbed horse, and the martial heroes
of the earth, but by the bare word of God; and this, not by the hand of
learned scribes and Pharisees, lawyers, doctors, poets, or philosophers,
but by poor illiterate fishermen, carpenters, publicans, tentmakers. And
who shall be the subjects and party militant of this never to be
conquered kingdom? Not “the wise and prudent, mighty and noble; but
babes, the poor, weak, despised, and things that are not; and by these
he confounds the things that are,” 1 Corinthians 1:27. And by what
arms? “patience, and faith in the blood of the Lamb,” Revelation
12:11 and 14:12.
Consider,
also, the constant persecution of the church, and that by men of all
sorts, especially those of greatest power and policy; the barbarous
devastations that have been made on it; and with what implacable enmity
the world is edged against it; and that yet it stands invincible, and is
still getting ground: you cannot but acknowledge the evident footsteps
of sovereign power, “that the most High beareth rule over all,”
Daniel 4:25, 26, and as for the counsels of the wise, he turneth them
backward,” Isaiah 44:25.
Eighthly.
An especial ray of this glorious power shines forth in God's actual
predominating over and subduing the spirits of men, in calling and
converting whom he will. One would think that a rational being should
better discern his own interest, and out of choice comply with the will
of his Maker, as who must needs know what is beat for his creature, and
who in reason can have no other design on him but his good: but we find
otherwise; the best things degenerated turn the worst, and are hardest
to reduce. Of all creatures, man fallen, doth most avert, impugn and
resist, when God would turn him out of his natural course;
notwithstanding the sorest of evils do attend his present state, and all
desirable happiness would apparently follow his change; yet so wedded
is he to his lusts, and headstrong in his own will, that none of these
things move him: but on he goes, and on he will, yea, though an incensed
angel with a drawn sword should withstand him. To crush them to nothing,
or break them to pieces, were easily effected; a little of divine power
would do that. But to humble a proud and lofty spirit; to soften and
melt an obdurate heart; to tame, meeken, and reconcile a sanguinary
rebel; to change the very inwards of one habituated in sin and enmity
against God, and make him pliable to divine impressions: this highly
proclaims the exceeding greatness of his power; it is a glorious trophy
of divine sovereignty. Which is also farther conspicuous, and greatly
illustrated, in maintaining the work begun, and bearing it on through
all opposition. For there needs the same Almightiness of power to
preserve the new creation, as at first to raise it. The way of God being
altogether upwards and supernatural, there is a great proneness in
creatures to revolt from it, like a rolling stone on the steep of a
hill. The remains of old nature would, torrent like, bear down all, if
sovereign power did not bar up the one, and sustain the other. For a
spark of divine nature to live in the breast of a lapsed creature, is as
great a miracle, and as high an effect of sovereign power, as all the
instances before enumerated, and more.
Ninthly.
The sovereignty of God displays itself with a yet more astonishing
glory, in his eternal disposure of men's everlasting condition. To show,
or not to show mercy, to persons equally dignified, (or rather
undignified.) in themselves; to make of the same lump one vessel to
honor, and another to dishonor, is the sublimest act, and most apparent
demonstration of sovereign power concerning men. The reason of which,
and that to satisfaction, might have been given, and would, had it
befitted the greatness of God, or the trust and reverence we owe him;
but for the present he is pleased to give none other but that of his
light; he may do what he will with his own, Romans 9:18.
Lastly.
Most transcendently glorious, and for ever adorable, is the sovereignty
of God, in his ordaining the man Jesus, “who was holy, harmless,
undefiled, and separate from sinners,” and was also united to the
second person, “to make his soul an offering for sin.”
That the Lord of glory should be made sin, and a curse; that was
such a tremendous act of divine sovereignty as never shall be
paralleled, and should therefore for ever seal up our lips from replying
against God, about his disposing of sinful worms; which thing, whenever
we hear or think on, we should put our mouths in the dust.
Before
I come to the inferences, I would add a caution or two, to prevent those
sinister deductions which our deceitful hearts may be ready to draw
from this sovereign truth.
Caution
1. See that you make not God the author of sin by charging his sacred
decree, with men's miscarriages, as if that were the cause or occasion
of them; which we are sure it is not, nor can be, any more than the sun
can be the cause of darkness. Be it always remembered, that the Lord's
rejecting of men puts nothing of evil into them, nor necessitates the
will; it only leaves them to their own ways, which they freely choose,
yet banking them in, and stopping them up, as he did the fountains of
the great deep, lest they deluge the world with sin.
Caution
I1. Go not about to palliate, nor think to extenuate your sin, by
arguments fetched from God's decree. Thai sin of the Jews, in
“crucifying the Lord of glory,” was in no wise lessened because the
counsel of God had determined the thing to be done, for they perpetrated
it with wicked hands. Nor is men's unbelief ever the less culpable, from
God’s eternal disposement of their conditions; for it is not on that
consideration that they stumble at the word, or turn the deaf ear to it,
or resist it, but from their own natural blindness, and enmity against
it.
And
so I come to the inferences of this greatly important doctrine; and,
First.
From the scriptures
so copiously holding it forth, I infer that the doctrine of God's
sovereignty is a very teaching doctrine, and full of instruction; and,
consequently, that it is both a duty, and much for our profit, to be
well acquainted with it. And great confidence I have, that the farther
you go in an humble fiducial disquisition and contemplation of it, the
clearer will be the reason thereof, and the more usefulness will still
appear to be in it. Let reason but keep its own place (that is, let it
go by the rules of right and reason,) and nothing wilt by more consonant
thereto, than that “the Most High should bear rule over all, and do
according to his will,” and that men, who are atoms of clay animated
by his breath, should own him for their sovereign Lord, and accordingly
submit to him; yea, though so it were that our own personal welfare were
not concerned in it, it will be of singular use and moment to us in the
whole of our lives. Nothing like this will allay those carnal
reasonings, which are so unreasonably prone to put in their verdict of
spiritual things, which yet carnal reason has no cognizance of, and will
indeed be silenced by nothing else; the apostle, therefore, thinks them
not worthy a further reply, whose captious inquiries the sovereignty of
God will not satisfy: “Thou wilt say then to me, Why doth he yet find
fault? for who has resisted his will? Nay, but, 0 man, who art thou that
replies against God? Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it.
Why hast thou made me thus? Has not the potter power over the clay, of
the same lump to make one vessel to honor, and another to dishonor?”
Romans 9:19-21. Oh that the glory of this high attribute might hide
pride from men!
Second
inference, which
naturally flows from this doctrine, is that of the psalmist: “O
come, let us worship, and bow down, and kneel before the Lord, our
maker.” Psalm 95:6. Let us give him the glory of this great attribute,
by a real and practical owning that indispensable bond of obedience
which it lays on every creature: we are highly obliged by it, both in
point of subjection, and in point of faith.
First,
in point of subjection, to his laws, ordinance?, and providences. 1. For
the laws of God, and his appointments. These we are to attend, observe,
and obey; I cannot say, “For the Lord has need of them;” for neither
can our righteousness profit him, nor our wickedness impair him, Job
22:2, 3, chapter 24:7. “He is the Lord thy God, and worship thou
him,” Psalm. 45:12. This is that strong reason by which he has backed
both commands and prohibitions: “I am the Lord thy God.”
Exodus 20:2. Thou shall do thus: and thus thou shalt not do, “I am the
Lord: “this he sets in the front of all; and with this he closeth the
rear, and guards them on every side. Moses brings it in as a convincing
reason why we should love God with our whole heart, and keep his
commandments, namely, because he is the Lord, and he only, Deuteronomy
6:4. No one, therefore, may pretend to a right of giving laws to men, or
to an interest in their love and obedience, save with respect to God,
and the authority they have from him. And though he sometimes is pleased
(and it is a great condescension in the great God,) by arguments taken
from our own good, to draw us to obedience: “Do it, for it is for your
life.” Deut 32:37. Yet in our spirits, that of his sovereign glory
should have the preference. To cast out Ishmael was a thing grievous to
Abraham; but being commanded of God, he “debates it not, nor delays to
do it.” Therefore hold on your way, though never so great obscurity is
on it at present: mind your duty in the midst of discouragements, go as
Peter, who, though he had labored all night, and caught nothing, yet
says, “Master, at thy command I will let down the net again.” Luke
5:5.
2.
Be subject to his ordinances. If he please to command the using such
means as have no natural virtue towards such an effect, as in Moses
stretching his hand over the sea, and smiting the rock with his rod; so
water in baptism, and bread and wine in the Lord's supper, presume not
to say, “What is there in these?” Godliness is a mystery, which only
faith can understand: there is no divine institution but has meat in
it that you know not of, which, if rightly used, will speak for itself.
If he please to make clay of dust and spittle, contemn it not, but
subject to his will and way, and be thankful for thy cure.
Samson's
hair was an ordinance to him, which when he alighted, the spirit of God
left him, and he became as other men, and recovered not until it was
grown again: “Lo, thou shall conceive, and bear a son; and no razor
shall come on his head; for the child shall be a Nazarite to God from
the womb; and he shall begin to deliver Israel out of the hands of the
Philistines,” Judges 18:5. “And Delilah made Samson sleep on her
knees; and she called for a man, and she caused him to shave off the
seven locks of his head; and she began to afflict him, and his strength
went from him. Howbeit the hair of his head began to grow again after he
was shaven,” chapter 16:19. 22.
3.
As touching the providences of God: observe them, and submit to them.
Look not on them as empty things; the least may yield you instruction,
as also the most unlikely: “Out of the eater comes forth meat, and
out of the strong, sweetness,” Judges 14:14, though the thing be a
riddle to a heart uncircumcised, plough with his heifer, and ye shall
find it. Neither look on them as things impertinent; but say rather,
“Is there not a cause,” though I see it not? the Lord does nothing
in vain. Neither yet look on them as things contingent; a sparrow falls
not without his will, and “the hairs of your head are all numbered,”
Matthew 10:29, 30. David was “dumb, and opened hot his mouth.” Why?
“Because thou, Lord, didst it,” Psalm 39:9, and Shimei's cursing he
bears patiently on the same account, “The Lord has bidden him,” 2
Samuel 16:10, 11.
There
may be such a mixture and confusion of things, and your expectation so
delayed and frustrated, that your wild untamed heart may be ready to
wrangle it out. “Why falls it alike to all? why to the just according
to the work of the wicked; and to the wicked according to the work of
the righteous?” Ecclesiastes 8:14. or, “Why one event to them
both?” This is not to inquire wisely; you should rather conclude,
“The Lord has need of them;” that is, he has occasion to use such
& providence to fulfill a word, or purpose: and that of greater
importance than to satisfy your private concern, or present expectation.
If you would cast, so as to
lie by your mark, this attribute of sovereignty gives you the best
ground. Search and observe as much as you will, so you take faith along
with you, without which you can do nothing warrantable. Faith is a sworn
officer to the great king, and has a key for every lock that is fit to
be opened: it forces nothing, but where it can net enter, it stays
without, and waits a better season. Let faith also be chief speaker in
all your debates; and then the result will be, that carnal reason and
present sense (though very tenacious and stubborn) shall yield the
cause, and let you go.
The
sum of all this is, that though you be not conscious to yourself of any
particular cause or miscarriage, besides what is common to men (which
was the case with Job,) “Lay your hand on your mouth,” as Job did,
Job 40:4. “The most High doth according to his will: “this even the
proudest of kings acknowledged, Dan 3:34, 35, “when his understanding
returned to him,” and so will you: and know, that if your spirit be
out of frame in your present condition, it would not, at present, be
better in any other.
Secondly,
our faith also is highly concerned in the sovereignty of God: for it
both obliges to believe in him, and also affords matter for faith to
work on. To these ends the Lord holds it forth to Abraham; “I am the
Almighty God; walk before me, and be thou perfect,” Genesis 17:1.
This was what enabled him to believe he should have a son, even while
the deadness of his own body, and of Sarah's womb, wrought strongly
against it, Romans 4:19. This also was what made him so readily assent
to the offering up of his son, when he had him. He had as much to say
against it, as could well be supposed; for the promise was, that “in
Isaac all the families of the earth should be blessed,” Genesis 28:14,
which promise, and this command, Abraham's reason could not reconcile.
The contradiction would surely have run him down, had not his faith in
(his great attribute held fast, and guided the reins; suggesting to him,
that he who gave Isaac a being from a withered stock, was also able to
raise him from the dead, Hebrews 11:19. Abraham therefore disputes it
not; stands not so much as to consider of it, but up he gets early to do
it, Genesis 22:3, and hence he obtained that honorable title, to be
called “the friend of God!” James 2:23.
Ye
have seen now what Abraham did, “Go ye and do likewise;” take hold
of God's sovereignty as your own, engaged by a covenant of grace,
and so to be exerted for
your good. Faith gives propriety in any attribute it looks on, and draws
out the virtues thereof for itself. And therefore, whatever difficulties
are in your way, be not disheartened at them; but call in this sovereign
power, by faith, to your help. Remember the ready subjection which all
creatures do pay to his word; by which alone (without creatures'
service) he can level the mountains, and make crooked things straight;
restrain, alter, invert, and turn upside down the very course of nature;
so that which is death in itself, shall be life to you. New cords and
withes, when touched by his word, are as flax and tow when touched by
the fire; iron shall be as straw, and brass as rotten wood, Judges 16:7;
Job 41:27. Therefore lengthen the cords, and strengthen the stakes of
your faith; you cannot believe greater things, or better than God can do
for you. Even sin itself, which is the great (and really the only) evil;
it is his enemy as much as yours: and you may be sure he would not have
suffered its being in the world if he had not a power to correct and
curb it, yea, and to destroy it too, at his pleasure: take hold of his
sovereign strength, and your work is done.
But
here also a caution or two may seasonably be added, for such reasons as
are mixed with them.
1.
If death in the pot has once been healed, and your borrowed axe head
(sunk once, past hopes of recovery) brought again to your hand, 2 Kings
6:6, see that remissness grow not on it, lest at another turn the handle
drop after the head. Gather not wild gourds a second time, 2 Kings 4:39,
etc., lest your prophet be absent, or meal denied you. Presume not to
dally with temptations (as Samson did,) and then think to go out and
shake yourself, as at other times, Judges 16:20. The divine power is too
great a thing to be trifled with, or made to serve with the follies of
men.
2.
Never look on this great attribute of sovereignty without your mediator.
As without him, it cannot but be matter of terror and amazement to
sinners; it is be only can render it propitious to you. As nothing is
pleasing to God but in and through Christ, so
nothing in God is comfortable to men, or for their eternal good,
but as it comes to them through him; as waters out of the sea
immediately are not potable, unless they be first decocted by the sun,
or pass through some vein of earth, to make them congruous to our
nature.
I
shall here mention two particulars of nearest concernment to us, where
we are in a special manner to have respect to the sovereignty of God.
1.
As touching your own condition, (your everlasting condition,) submit to
mercy, to sovereign mercy; that is, yield yourself to God without
capitulating, or making terms with him. Those Syrians well understood
the meaning of this; they put ropes on their heads, and themselves in
the conqueror's bands, on an uncertain conjecture, [“peradventure they
will save us alive,”] 1 Kings 30:31. So do ye, although ye have but a
[may be] “we shall be hid,” Ephesians 2:8. mind your duty, and leave
the issue to God;
believe
above hope, and against hope: follow God in the dark, as your father
Abraham did, not knowing whither he would lead him: thus to do, is to
give glory to God. Therefore, “fear the Lord, and obey the voice of
his servant;” even then, “when ye are in darkness, and have no
light,” Isaiah 50:10. (namely, of his special favor and love to you in
particular.) And though never so great discouragements are before you,
from the guilt of sins committed, the power of indwelling corruptions,
and your present averseness to believing; and here withal, that faith is
the great commandment; let your heart answer, Is it my duty [my duty] to
believe? Nay, then I must. Remember his greatness, his absolute
dominion, the uncontrolableness of his matters; that he has concluded
all in unbelief, that he might have mercy on all,” Romans 11:32. (that
is, that the salvation of those who shall be saved might appear to be of
mercy, and to be so acknowledged: ) to him therefore commit your
cause, and commit it to him as your sovereign lord, and so leave it with
him; and see that you take it not out of his hand again, by your
doubting the issue of it: and know, that then is your soul nearest to
peace and settlement, when brought to this submission. “Be in subjection
to the father of spirits, and live,” Hebrews 13:9.
But
let not the word be misconstrued. I do not mean, by submission, that you
should be satisfied under a denial of mercy, on the account of God's
absolute dominion: I cannot think that a necessary term or qualification
in your treating with God for salvation: for, 1. I do not find that God
requires such a submission, as the condition of obtaining mercy; nor
that he has made any promise to give such a submission, in order to that
end; nor any instance in scripture of the saints having or endeavoring
such a frame of spirit in that business; nor yet that men are any where
taxed for not attaining to it. They are blamed, indeed, and that
worthily, for not submitting to the righteousness of God; (that is, for
not renouncing their own, and flying to that of Christ;) and this
blameworthiness you cannot escape, if finding yourself lost and undone,
you will not presently run to Christ, without first finding in yourself
something that may seem to commend you to him. 2. Such a submission
seems repugnant to God's revealed will. For, if this be the “will of
God, even our sanctification,” that we should believe on his Son, and
love him with our whole heart, then it cannot be his will that we should
be willing to remain in an unsanctified state, in unbelief and enmity
against him; which are the inseparable conjuncts of willingness to be
separated from God. 3.. Because the promise of case and rest is made to
the weary and heavy laden, coming to Christ; not to a contentedness to
be divided from him: and the promise of satisfaction is to your
hungering and thirsting after righteousness; not to the cessation of
your desire, without the thing which only can satisfy. 4. Because, to be
satisfied without obtaining mercy, is to be satisfied with an utter
incapacity to glorify the grace of God, and to enjoy communion with him,
which are the principal end and duty of men. 5. It is cross to the
genuine and concreted principle of the reasonable creature, which is, to
seek its own happiness; in any thing short of which it ought not to
acquiesce. 6. Such a submission cannot be requisite in preparatory work;
because that would suppose the highest pitch of grace attained (if it
yet be a grace, and attainable,) before you believe; and consequently,
that it is not a grace out of Christ's fullness; for ye are supposed to
have it before ye go to him. And there' fore, when I say, ye must
submit, without capitulating or making terms, my meaning is, ye are not
to treat on terms of your own making, not propound any thing to God, but
what sovereign mercy propounds to you, as the
way
and means of obtaining your great end; and great reason ye have for this
submission; for herein lies your interest; those being, in truth, the
only terms by which a lost and sinful creature can be rendered solvable,
or capable of being saved; as will further appear in the sequel of
this discourse.
I
think, with humble submission, that if any point of time may be supposed
before the decree, it was then that absolute dominion bore sway; but
ever since election came in, it is grace that reigns: not that
sovereignty is ceased, but transferred: before it was in power, but. now
in grace? in grace, as touching the elect, and in justice, respecting
the rest. Grace is the attribute God delights to honor, and all the
other are, if I may so speak, as subjects of this: even Christ himself
was made a servant, to perform the pleasure of his grace: '. Behold my
servant, whom I uphold; mine elect, in whom my soul delighteth: I have
put my spirit on him: he shall bring forth judgment to the Gentiles,”
Isaiah 42:1. So then, that you are to submit to, is the good pleasure of
God's will, as held forth in the covenant of grace, undertaking for, and
perfectly able to have you; and as having his sovereign power engaged to
make it good. Which seem? the scope of that passage in Moses' prayer for
the people, when they had highly provoked God: “Let the power of my
Lord be great, according as thou hast spoken,” etc. Numb. 14:17, 18,
19. It was to pardon, and still to own them for his people. And to this
agree all those scriptures which hold forth the power of God as the
ground of faith; as that by which he is able to pardon sin, to subdue
iniquity, and to hold your souls in life. You are therefore directed, if
you will have peace with God, to take hold of his strength,” Isaiah
27:5, which cannot be meant of a contentedness in having that strength
put forth to destroy, but as being perfectly able and engaged by his
covenant to save you. As to the time when the Lord will manifest his
love to you; as also the manner and measure of his dispensing it; the
good pleasure of his will is expressly, and with all quietness of
spirit, to be submitted to: but as to the thing itself, you ought not to
be said nay} but do as he did, who had power with God, and prevailed.
“He wept, and made supplication,” Hosea 12:4. but still resolved,
“I will not let thee go, except thou bless me,” Genesis 32:26.
2.
As for the other nearest concernment, touching your children, deal in
like manner for them, by submitting them to the same mercy. It is true,
that next to your own personal salvation, there cannot be a greater
evidence of God's love to you, than to choose your children after you,
nor any thing more desirable to you: therefore, “command them, and
instruct them to keep the way of the Lord,” Genesis 18:1'9, that he
may bring on them the blessing you most desire for them: but be not over
solicitous, and cast down, because you see not yet the marks of election
on them. The Lord doth not indeed bind himself to take all a believer's
children, nor doth he limit himself from taking any others. There is
nothing declared touching his purpose to take all the one, lest they
should thence take occasion to be remiss in their duty (which, till
conversion, is very natural to us: nor doth he exclude the children of
others: for that might discourage, and weaken their hands to that which
is good. In this various dispensing of his everlasting love, he is
pleased so to reserve his liberty and sovereign prerogative, that he
greatly manifests his love to believers, in so frequent choosing of
their seed; and the freeness of his grace, in not rejecting wholly the
seed of others.
Infer.
3. How happy and
sovereignly blessed are those who have an interest in this great and
sovereign Lord! Be the earth ever so unquiet, and the tumult of it ever
so boisterous and unruly, the Lord is above them. He sits on the waters,
as a prince in his chariot, guiding all as he will; he is that great
dictator, whose word is the law indeed: if he but say, Come, Go, Do
this, there needs no more. Who would not be the subject of such a prince
and much more his favorite? and yet, this high privilege every soul is
blessed with, that has its truth taken hold of his covenant: for that
takes in all between the two eternities, and eternity itself withal; and
the spirit or strength of the whole lies in those few (but very
compendious) words, “I will be your God.” When the Lord would
comfort his people to purpose, and put on their eagles' wings, what a
glorious narrative doth he make of his power and sovereign greatness, in
Isaiah 40, from verse 12 to verse 26! And then tells them, that all this
is theirs, verse 27. And if God be yours, all things are yours. Who, and
where is he that can supplant you of his blessing? you may rejoice in
his highness, the thoughts whereof are matter of terror to other men.
After the rehearsal of all the happiness and glory that men or angels
are capable of, it shall all be comprised in this, as the original
thereof, and sum of the whole, “Happy are they whose God is the
Lord,” Psalm 144:15.
Infer.
4. We may see here
the reason why God cloth sometimes defer to answer the doubts and
queries we stick at, and most desire to be resolved about: it is not
only to shew his sovereignty, but to bring our hearts to a practical
acknowledgment of it. Moses was very unwilling to go on this message to
Pharaoh: many pretences he had to put it by: while the danger he might
be in for killing the Egyptian was the bottom objection, though he
speaks it not out. Indeed, the men who sought his life were now dead,
which if he had known before, all those excuses had probably been
spared: but the Lord was pleased to conceal it from him until he had
brought him to a full compliance with his will, and then reveals it to
him unmasked, Exodus 3:11, and 4:10, 13, 19. So, likewise, he would not
take off his hand from Job, until he had well learned him this lesson,
Job 42:2, etc. Say not therefore (because you have not returns so soon
as you would,) “The Lord has forsaken me; my Lord has forgotten me,”
Isaiah 49:14. But follow that great resolution recorded of old, “I
will wait on the Lord, who hideth his face (at present) from the house
of Jacob, and I will look for him,” Isaiah 8:17.
Infer.
5. Let no man, then,
who will say, “the Ix rd he is God,” presume to entrench on his
sacred royalty, by seeking a reason of his decrees, beyond or besides
the good pleasure of his will. Even sovereigns of dust will not admit it
in subjects, though of the some mould with themselves. It is an
imperial secret, “the chief of the ways of God;” it belongs to
himself alone to know it; and the knowledge thereof would not profit us
now. Besides, there is enough revealed, of great importance to us at
present, on which to employ the utmost of our time and strength. By over
grasping, we may sprain our hands, and unfit them for service, otherwise
within their compass, but we gain nothing. Therefore go not about to
fathom this great deep. Who, but one of shallow understanding, would
think to measure the sea by handfuls? or to give a demonstrative reason
of its various and convertible courses! Remember that you may magnify
his word, Job 36:24. But lessen it not, by pretending to comprehend it,
Ecclesiastes 8:17. .' Sanctify the Lord in your hearts, and fear before
him,” Isaiah 8:13.
Infer.
6. This gives a
reason, why men of the largest capacity, for learning and natural
understanding are so mightily puzzled and labyrinthed in spiritual
matters, particularly the doctrine of election: why they do so
strongly oppose it, and are so hardly reconciled with it. They are not,
in truth, subdued to the doctrine of God's sovereignty: and therefore,
while in discussing those points of faith, they judge as their natural
optics represent them, they lose both themselves and the truth; which
yet, in some degree, “is made known to babes,” (men of low stature
to them) whose spirits the Lord has subdued to rest contented with what
their Father is pleased to tell them; and for the rest (as namely, the
manner and reason of God's disposements and dispensations) they live by
faith in his righteousness; waiting for the day that shall reveal all
things, when the tabernacle of God, which yet is in heaven, shall be let
down among men, or they taken up into it, and these hidden things of
sovereignty shall be more openly known among them.
Lastly,
This doctrine of
God's absolute dominion, clears away all that made ground and rubbish,
which the principles of freewill grace do found their election on; and
shews us the only true and proper foundation of scripture election; with
those other important truths which hold on it, or are consequents of it:
all which have their head in the sovereignty of God, and are derived
thence, as rivers are from the sea: as through his blessing and grace
may appear afterwards. And so I shall close up this first part of the
preface, with that holy rapture of the Psalmist: “Be thou exalted,
Lord, in thine own strength; so will we sing, and praise thy power,”
Psalm 21:13. “The Lord has prepared his throne in the heavens, and
his kingdom ruleth over all. Bless the Lord, ye his angels, that excel
in strength! Bless the Lord, all ye his hosts, ye ministers that do his
pleasure,” Psalm 103:21.
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