joyned with Faith in every man that is justified, but it shutteth them out from the Office, or justifying; nor does it shut out the Justice of good Works necessarily to be done afterwards of Duty to God, but only excludes them from deserving our Justification, which comes freely from the Mercy and Grace of God, whereby he has provided that Ran∣som to be paid by Christ, which all the World in any part was not able to pay of themselves.
3. That this Saying, that we are justified by Faith only, is not meant as if justifying Faith were alone in any without Charity, &c. at any time or season; nor the other, that we are justified freely, so as to imply that we may be idle, or that nothing is required to be done on our parts; neither that other, of our being justified without Works, that we should do nothing at all; but thus, to take away clearly all merit of our Works to deserve Justification at God's hands, and also to express the Weakness of man, and the Goodness of God, the imperfection of our Works, and the most abundant Grace of Christ, and to ascribe the merit and deserving of our Justification to Christ alone. That though we have, and ought to have Faith within us with Hope, Charity, and other Graces, and do never so many good Works thereunto, we must renounce the Merit of all our said Virtues that are or may be in us, as things too weak and insufficient and imperfect to deserve remission of Sins, i. e. our Justification. and must trust only in God's Mercy, and the Sacrifice of Christ for the same.
4. That therefore Christ himself is the only meritorious Cause of it. That our own Works do not justifie us, to speak properly of Justifi∣cation, i. e. to say, our Works do not merit or deserve Remission of Sins, but God of his own Mercy gives it us through the Deservings of his Son: Nevertheless, because Faith doth send us to Christ for this Remission, and by it we embrace the Promise of God's Mercy, and of the Remission of our Sins, which thing none other of our works properly do, therefore it is said that Faith without Works doth justifie us.
5. But this Faith that justifies, is not a dead or carnal, but a living Faith; and this living Faith is a full Trust in God through Christ, which upon the consideration of the greatness of his Mercy, which it apprehends and relies upon, is at the same time moved through the assistance of the Spirit, to serve and please him, out of this pure and only Principle, the Love of God.
Now he that will consider and compare these Doctrines with each other, will find, that they both agree in the lapsed State of Mankind, and the necessity of God's sending his Son, whom he hath set forth to be our Propitiation, and that though he