Cases of Conscience
The manner in which men must come
to Christ in order to be saved.
Cases
of Conscience
by Dr. William Perkins
Chapter
5
Of
the first main question touching man.
Question
1: What
must a man do, that he may come into God's favor, and be saved?
For
answer to this question, some grounds must be laid down before hand.
The first is this: that we must consider and remember, how 1. by
what means God brings any man to salvation.
For look how God saves others, so that he who does not know how
to be saved, must use the means whereby God saves them.
Section
7
In
the work effecting of man salvation ordinarily there are two special
actions of God: the giving of the first grace, and after that, the
giving of the second. The
former of these two works has 10 actions. 1.
God gives man the outward means of salvation, especially the
ministry of the word: and with it, he sent some outward and inward
cross, to break and subdue the stubbornness of our nature, that it may
be made it pliable to the will of God.
This we may see an example of the jailer, Acts 16.
And of the Jews that were converted at Peter's Sermon, Acts 2. 2.
This done, God brings the mind of man to consideration of law, and
therein generally to see what is good, and what is evil, what is sin,
and what is not sin. 3. Upon a serious consideration of the law, he
makes a man particularly to see and know his own peculiar and proper
sins, whereby he offends God. 4. Upon the site of sin he strikes the
heart with legal fear, whereby when a man sees his sin he makes and to
fear punishment and hell, into despair of salvation, in regard of
anything in Him.
Now these four actions, are indeed no fruits
of grace, for Reprobate may go thus far; but their only works of
Preparation going before grace; the other actions which follow, are
affects of grace. 5. The fifth action of grace therefore is, to stir up the mind
to serious consideration of the promise of salvation propounded and
published in the Gospel. 6. After
this the sixth is, the kindle of the heart, some sense of the sparks of
faith, that is, a will and desire to believe, in grace to strive against
doubting and despair. Now
in the same instant, when God begins to kindling the heart, any sparks
of faith, then also He justifies the sinner, and with this begins the
work of sanctification. 7. Then, so soon as faith is put it into the heart, there is
presently a combat: for a fight of doubting, despair, and distrust.
And in this combat, Faith shows itself, by fervent, constant, and
earnest invocation for pardon: and after invocation follows the strength
and prevailing of this desire. 8. Furthermore, God in mercy quite
unsettles the conscience, as touching the salvation of the soul, and the
promise of life, whereupon it rests and stays in itself. 9. Next after
this settled assurance, and persuasion of mercy, falls a storing up of
the heart to evangelical sorrow, according to God, that is, a grief for
sin, because it is sin, and because God is offended: And then the Lord
works repentance, whereby the sanctified heart turns itself on him.
And though this repentance be one of the last in order, yet it
didn't itself first: as when a candle is brought into our room, we first
see the light before we see the candle, and that the candle must needs
be before the light can be. 10. Lastly,
God gives a man grace to endeavor to obey his commandments by new
obedience. And by these
degrees doth the Lord give the first grace.
The second work of God tending to salvation
is the giving of the second grace, which is nothing itself, but the
continuance of the first grace given.
For look as by creation, God gave a being to man and all other
creatures, and then by his providence continued the same being which was
as it were a second creation; so in bringing a man to salvation, God
gives the first grace: for example, to believe and repent; and then in
mercy gives the second, to preserve and continue in faith and repentance
to the end. And this, if we
regard man in himself, is very necessary. For as fire, without supply of
matter where it is fed and contained, would soon go out, so, unless God
of His goodness should follow His children, and by new and daily
supplies continue His first grace in them, they would undoubtedly lose
the same, and finally fall away.
The second ground for the answer of this
Question is taken from some special places in Scripture, where the same
is moved and resolved. The
men that were at Peter’s Sermon, being touched with the sense of their
own misery, upon the doctrine which had been delivered, as the Holy
Ghost saith, were pricked in their hearts, and cried out one to another,
“Men and brethren, what shall we do?” Peter moved by the Sprit of
God, answers them, “Repent, and be baptized for the remission of your
sins.” The like was the
case of the jailor; who after that stubbornness of his heart was beaten
down, by fear of the departure of the prisoners, he came trembling, and
fell down before Paul and Silas and moved this question to them,
“Sirs, what must I do to be saved?” to they gave the answer
“Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shall be saved, and thine
household.” The young man
in the Gospel comes to Christ and asks him, “What shall I do to be
saved?” Christ answers
him “Keep the Commandments.” When
he replied that he had kept them from his youth, Christ tells him, that
he must go yet further, and sell all that he hath and give to the poor. And John tells the Scribes and Pharisees, who came unto his
Baptism, and confessed his sins, That if they would flee from the wrath
to come, they must repent and “bring forth fruits worthy of
repentance.” Form these
places then, I frame this answer to the Question in hand: the man that
would stand in the favor of God and be saved must do four things: first,
humble himself before God; secondly, believe in Christ; thirdly, repent
of his sins; fourthly, perform new obedience to God. |
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