CHAPTER 2
OF THE ETERNITY AND IMMUTABILITY OF THE DECREES OF ALMIGHTY GOD, DENIED AND OVERTHROWN BY THE ARMINIANS.
IT hath
been always believed among Christians, and that upon infallible grounds, as I
shall show hereafter, that all the decrees of God, as they are internal, so
they are eternal, acts of his will; and therefore unchangeable and irrevocable.
Mutable decrees and occasional resolutions are most contrary to the pure nature
of Almighty God. Such principles as these, evident and clear by their own
light, were never questioned by any before the Arminians began ajki>nhta kinei~n, and to profess themselves to
delight in opposing common notions of reason concerning God and his essence,
that they might exalt themselves into his throne. To ascribe the least
mutability to the divine essence, with which all the attributes and internal
free acts of God are one and the same, was ever accounted uJperbolh< ajfeo>thton, “transcendent atheism,” in the
highest degree. Now, be this crime of what nature it will, it is no unjust
imputation to charge it on the Arminians, because they confess themselves
guilty, and glory in the crime.
First, They
undermine and overthrow the eternity of God’s purposes, by affirming that, in the
order of the divine decrees, there are some which precede every act of the
creature, and some again that follow them: so Corvinus, the most famous of
that sect. Now, all the acts of every creature being but of yesterday,
temporary, like themselves, surely, those decrees of God cannot be eternal
which follow them in order of time; and yet they press this, especially in
respect of human actions, as a certain, unquestionable verity. “It is certain
that God willeth or determineth many things which he would not, did not some
act of man’s will go before it,” saith their great master, Arminius. The like
affirmeth, with a little addition (as such men do always “proficere in pejus”),
his genuine scholar, Nic. Grevin-chovius. “I suppose,” saith he, “that God willeth
many things which he neither would nor justly could will and purpose, did not
some action of the creature precede.” And here observe, that in these places they speak not of God’s
external works, of those actions which outwardly are of him, — as inflicting of
punishments, bestowing of rewards,
and other such outward acts of his providence, whose administration we confess to be various, and diversely
applied to several occasions, — but of the internal purposes of God’s will, his
decrees and intentions, which have no present influence upon, or respect unto,
any action of the creature; yea, they deny that concerning many things God hath
any determinate resolution at all, or any purpose farther than a natural
affection towards them. “God doth or omitteth that towards which, in his own
nature and his proper inclination, he is affected, as he findeth man to comply
or not to comply with that order which he hath appointed,” saith Corvinus. Surely these men care not what indignities they cast upon the God
of heaven, so they may maintain the pretended endowments of their own wills;
for such an absolute power do they here ascribe unto them, that God himself
cannot determine of a thing whereunto, as they strangely phrase it, he is well
affected, before, by an actual concurrence, he is sure of their compliance.
Now, this imputation, that they are temporary, which they cast upon the decrees
of God in general, they press home upon that particular which lies most in
their way, the decree of election. Concerning this they tell us roundly, that
it is false that election is confirmed from eternity: so the Remonstrants in
their Apology, notwithstanding that St Paul tells us that it is the “purpose of
God,” Romans 9:11, and that we were “chosen before the foundation of the world,”
Ephesians 1:4. Neither is it any thing material what the Arminians there grant,
— namely, that there is a decree preceding this, which may be said to be from
everlasting: for seeing that St Paul teacheth us that election is nothing but
God’s purpose of saving us, to affirm that God eternally decreed that he would
elect us is all one as to say that God purposed that in time he would purpose
to save us. Such resolutions may be fit for their own wild heads, but must not
be ascribed to God only wise.
Secondly, As they
affirm them to be temporary and to have had a beginning, so also to expire and
have an ending, to be subject to change and variableness. “Some acts of God’s
will do cease at a certain time,” saith Episcopius. What? doth say thing come
into his mind that changeth his will? “Yes,” saith Arminius, “He would have all
men to be saved; but, compelled with the stubborn and incorrigible malice of
some, he will have them to miss it.” However, this is some recompense, — denying God
a power to do what he will, they grant him to be contented to do what he may,
and not much repine at his hard condition. Certainly, if but for this favor, he
is a debtor to the Arminians. Thieves give what they do not take. Having robbed
God of his power, they will leave him so much goodness as that he shall not be
troubled at it, though he be sometimes compelled to what he is very loath to
do. How do they and their fellows, the Jesuits, exclaim
upon poor Calvin, for sometimes using the hard word of compulsion, describing
the effectual, powerful working of the providence of God in the actions of men;
but they can fasten the same term on the will of God, and no harm done! Surely
he will one day plead his own cause against them. But yet blame them not, “si
violandum est jus, regnandi causa violandum est.” It is to make themselves
absolute that they thus cast off the yoke of the Almighty, and that both in
things concerning this life and that which is to come. They are much troubled
that it should be said that every one of us bring along with us into the world
an unchangeable pre-ordination of life and death eternal; for such a supposal
would quite overthrow the main foundation of their heresy, — namely, that men
can make their election void and frustrate, as they jointly lay it down in
their Apology. Nay, it is a dream, saith Dr Jackson, to think of God’s decrees
concerning things to come as of acts irrevocably finished; which would hinder
that which Welsingius lays down for a truth, — to wit, “that the elect may
become reprobates, and the reprobates elect.” Now, to these particular sayings
is their whole doctrine concerning the decrees of God, inasmuch as they have
any reference to the actions of men, most exactly conformable; as, —
First, Their distinction of them
into peremptory and not peremptory (terms rather used in the citations of
litigious courts than as expressions of God’s purpose in sacred Scripture), is
not, as by them applied, compatible with the unchangeableness of God’s eternal
purposes. Pro>skairoi, say they, or temporary
believers, are elected (though not peremptorily) with such an act of God’s will
as hath a co-existence every way commensurate, both in its original,
continuance, and end, with their fading faith; which sometimes, like Jonah’s
gourd, is but “filia unius noctis,” — in the morning it flourisheth, in the
evening it is cut down, dried up, and withereth. A man in Christ by faith, or
actually believing (which to do is, as they say, in every one’s own power), is, in their opinion, the
proper object of election; — of election, I say, not peremptory, which is an
act pendent, expecting the final perseverance and consummation of his faith;
and therefore immutable, because man having fulfilled his course, God hath no
cause to change his purpose of crowning him with reward. Thus also (as they
teach), a man according to his infidelity, whether present and removable, or
obdurate and final, is the only object of reprobation; which, in the latter
case, is peremptory and absolute, in the former conditional and alterable. It
is the qualities of faith and unbelief on which their election and reprobation
do attend. Now, let a faithful man, elected of God according to his present
righteousness, apostate [apostatize] totally from grace (as to affirm that
there is any promise of God implying his perseverance is with them to overthrow
all religion), and let the unbelieving reprobate depose his incredulity and
turn himself unto the Lord; answerable to this mutation of their conditions are
the changings of the purpose of the Almighty concerning their everlasting
state. Again; suppose these two, by alternate courses (as the doctrine of
apostasy maintaineth they may), should return each to their former estate, the
decrees of God concerning them must again be changed; for it is unjust with him
either not to elect him that believes, though it be but for an hour, or not to
reprobate unbelievers. Now, what unchangeableness can we fix to these decrees,
which it lies in the power of man to make as inconstant as Euripus; making it,
beside, to be possible that all the members of Christ’s church, whose names are
written in heaven, should within one hour be enrolled in the black book of
damnation?
Secondly, As these not-peremptory decrees
are mutable, so they make the peremptory decrees of God to be temporal. “Final
impenitency,” say they, “is the only cause, and the finally unrepenting sinner
is the only object, of reprobation, peremptory and irrevocable.” As the poet
thought none happy, so they think no man to be elected, or a reprobate, before
his death. Now, that denomination he doth receive from the decrees of God
concerning his eternal estate, which must necessarily then be first enacted.
The relation that is between the act of reprobation and the person reprobated
importeth a co-existence of denomination. When God reprobates a man, he then
becomes a reprobate; which if it be not before he hath actually fulfilled the
measure of his iniquity, and sealed it up with the talent of final impenitency
in his death, the decree of God must needs be temporal, the just Judge of all
the world having till then suspended his determination, expecting the last
resolution of this changeable Proteus. Nay, that God’s decrees concerning men’s
eternal estates are in their judgment temporal, and not beginning until their
death, is plain from the whole course of their doctrine, especially where they
strive to prove that if there were any such determination, God could not
threaten punishments or promise rewards. “Who,” say they, “can threaten
punishment to him whom, by a peremptory decree, he will have to be free from
punishment?” It seems he cannot have determined to save any whom he threatens
to punish if they sin, which [it] is evident he doth all so long as they live
in this world; which makes God not only mutable, but quite deprives him of his
foreknowledge, and makes the form of his decree run thus: — “If man will
believe, I determine he shall be saved; if he will not, I determine he shall be
damned,” — that is, “I must leave him in the meantime to do what he will, so I
may meet with him in the end.”
Thirdly, They affirm no decree of
Almighty God concerning men is so unalterable but that all those who are now in
rest or misery might have had contrary lots; — that those which are damned, as
Pharaoh, Judas, etc., might have been saved; and those which are saved, as the
blessed Virgin, Peter, John, might have been damned: which must needs reflect
with a strong charge of mutability on Almighty God, who knoweth who are his.
Divers other instances in this nature I could produce, whereby it would be
farther evident that these innovators in Christian religion do overthrow the
eternity and unchangeableness of God’s decrees; but these are sufficient to any
discerning man. And I will add, in the close, an antidote against this poison, briefly showing what the Scripture
and right reason teach us concerning these secrets of the Most High.
First, “Known unto
God,” saith St James, “are all his works from the beginning,” Acts 15:18;
whence it hath hitherto been concluded that whatever God doth in time bring to
pass, that he decreed from all eternity so to do. All his works were from the
beginning known unto him. Consider it particularly in the decree of election,
that fountain of all spiritual blessings, that a saving sense and assurance
thereof (2 Peter 1:10) being attained, might effect a spiritual rejoicing in
the Lord, 1 Corinthians 15:31. Such things are everywhere taught as may raise
us to the consideration
of it as of an eternal act, irrevocably and immutably established: “He hath
chosen us before the foundation of the world,” Ephesians 1:4: his “purpose
according to election,” before we were born, must “stand,” Romans 9:11; for to
the irreversible stability of this act of his will he hath set to the seal of
his infallible knowledge, 2 Timothy 2:19. His purpose of our salvation by
grace, not according to works, was “before the world began,” 2 Timothy 1:9: an
eternal purpose, proceeding from such a will as to which none can resist,
joined with such a knowledge as to which all things past, present, and to come
are open and evident, must needs also be, like the laws of the Medes and
Persians, permanent and unalterable.
Secondly, The
decrees of God, being conformable to his nature and essence, do require
eternity and immutability as their inseparable properties. God, and he only,
never was, nor ever can be, what now he is not. Passive possibility to any
thing, which is the fountain of all change, can have no place in him who is
“actus simplex,” and purely free from all composition; whence St James
affirmeth that “with him is no variableness, neither shadow of turning,” James
1:17; with him, that is, in his will and purposes: and himself by his prophet,
“I am the LORD, I change not; therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed,” Malachi
3:6; where he proveth the not changing of his gracious purposes, because he is
the LORD. The eternal acts of his will not really differing from his
unchangeable essence, must needs be immutable.
Thirdly, Whatsoever
God hath determined, according to the counsel of his wisdom and good pleasure
of his will, to be accomplished, to the praise of his glory, standeth sure and
immutable; for
“the Strength of
Israel will not lie nor repent; for he is not a man, that he should repent,” 1
Samuel 15:29.
“He declareth the
end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet
done, saying, My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure,” Isaiah
46:10;
which certain and infallible execution of his pleasure is extended to particular contingent events, Isaiah 48:14. Yea, it is an ordinary thing with the Lord to confirm the certainty of those things that are yet for to come from his own decree; as,
“The LORD of hosts
hath sworn, saying, Surely as I have thought, so it shall come to pass; and as
I have purposed, it shall stand, that I will break the Assyrian,” etc., Isaiah
14:24,25;
“It is certain the
Assyrian shall be broken, because the Lord hath purposed it;” which were
a weak kind of reasoning, if his purpose might be altered. Nay
“He is of one
mind, and who can turn him? and what his soul desireth, that he doeth,” Job
23:13.
“The Lord of hosts
hath purposed, and who shall disannul it?” Isaiah 14:27.
So that the purpose
of God and immutability of his counsel ( Hebrews 6:17) have their certainty and firmness
from eternity, and do not depend on the variable lubricity of mortal men; which
we must needs grant, unless we intend to set up impotency against omnipotency,
and arm the clay against the potter.
Fourthly, If God’s
determination concerning any thing should have a temporal original, it must
needs be either because he then perceived some goodness in it of which before
he was ignorant, or else because some accident did affix a real goodness to
some state of things which it had not from him; neither of which, without
abominable blasphemy, can be affirmed, seeing he knoweth the end from the
beginning, all things from everlasting, being always the same, the fountain of
all goodness, of which other things do participate in that measure which it
pleaseth him to communicate it unto them. Add to this the omnipotency of God:
there is “power and might in his hand,” [so] that none is able to withstand
him, 2 Chronicles 20:6; which will not permit that any of his purposes be
frustrate. In all our intentions, if the defect be not in the error of our
understandings, which may be rectified by better information, when we cannot do
that which we would, we will do that which we can: the alteration of our
purpose is for want of power to fulfill it; which impotency cannot be ascribed
to Almighty God, who is “in heaven, and hath done whatsoever he pleased,” Psalm
115:3. So that the immutability of God’s nature, his almighty power, the
infallibility of his knowledge, his immunity from error in all his
counsels, do show that he never faileth in accomplishing any thing that he
proposeth for the manifestation of his glory.
To close up this
whole discourse, wherein I have not discovered half the poison contained in the
Arminian doctrine concerning God’s decrees, I will in brief present to
your view the opposition that is in this matter betwixt the word of God and the
patrons of free-will: —
S.S. |
Lib. Arbit. |
“He hath
chosen us in him before the foundation of the world,” Ephesians 1:4. |
“It
is false to say that election is confirmed from everlasting,” Rem. Apol.
|
“He
hath called us according to his own purpose and grace, before the world
began,” 2 Timothy 1:9.
|
“It
is certain that God determineth divers things which he would not, did not
some act of man’s will go before,” Armin. |
“Known
unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world,” Acts 15:18.
|
“Some
decrees of God precede all acts of the will of the creature, and some
follow,” Corv.
|
“Declaring
the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not
yet done, swing, My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure,”
Isaiah 46:10.
|
“Men
may make their election void and frustrate,” Rem. Apol.
|
“For
the children being not yet born, neither having done any good or evil, that
the purpose of God according to election might stand,” as Romans 9:11.
|
“It
is no wonder if men do sometimes of elect become reprobate, and of reprobate,
elect,” Welsin.
|
“The
foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that
are his,” 2 Timothy 2:19.
|
“Election
is uncertain and revocable, and whoever denies it overthrows the gospel,”
Grevinch.
|
“The
counsel of the LORD standeth for ever, the thoughts of his heart to all
generations,” Psalm 33:11.
|
“Many
decrees of God cease at a certain time,” Episcop. |
“My
counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure,” Isaiah 46:10.
|
“God would
have all men to be saved, but, compelled with the stubborn malice of some, he
changeth his purpose, and will have them to perish,” Armin.
|
“I
am the LORD, I change not,” Malachi 3:6.
|
“As
men may change themselves from believers to unbelievers, so God’s
determination concerning them changeth,” Rem.
|
“With
the Father of lights is no variableness, neither shadow of turning,”
|
“All
God’s decrees are not
|