But whatever difference there may be between credit and trust, they agree in those particulars which
affect the point at issue; the one, no less than the other, has relation to revealed truth as its foundation. In
some cases it directly refers to the Divine veracity; as in Psal. cxix. 42, I trust in thy word. And where the
immediate reference is to the power, the wisdom, or the mercy of God, or to the righteousness of Christ,
there is a remote relation to veracity; for neither the one nor the other would be objects of trust, were they
not revealed in a way of promise. And from hence it will follow, that
------------------
* John v. 40; Rom. ix. 31, 32; x. 3; 1 Cor, vi. 17.
+ On the Commission, p. 83.
[p. 342]
trusting in Christ, no less than crediting
his testimony, is the duty of every sinner to whom the revelation is made.
If it be asked, What ground could a sinner, who shall at last prove to have no interest in the salvation
of Christ, ever possess for trusting in him? let it be considered what it was for which he was warranted or
obliged to trust. Was it that Christ would save him, whether he believed in him or not? No: there is no such
promise, but an explicit declaration of the contrary. To trust in this, therefore, would be to trust in a
falsehood. That for which he ought to have trusted in him was the obtaining of mercy, in case he applied
for it. For this there was a complete warrant in the gospel declarations, as Mr. Booth, in his Tidings
to Perishing Sinners, has fully evinced. There are principles, in that performance, which the writer of these
pages, highly as he respects the author, cannot approve. The principal subjects of his disapprobation have
been pointed out, and he thinks Scripturally refuted, by Mr. Scott;* but with respect to the warrant which
every sinner has to trust in Christ for salvation, Mr. B. has clearly and fully established it. I may add, if any
man distrust either the power or willingness of Christ to save those that come to him, and so continue to
stand at a distance, relying upon his own righteousness, or some false ground of confidence, to the rejection
of him, it is criminal and inexcusable unbelief.
Mr. Booth has (to all appearance, designedly) avoided the question, Whether faith in Christ be the duty
of the ungodly? The leading principle of the former part of his work, however, cannot stand upon any other
ground. He contends that the gospel affords a complete warrant for the ungodly to believe in Jesus; and
surely he will not affirm that sinners are at liberty either to embrace the warrant afforded them or to reject
it? He defines believing in Jesus Christ "receiving him as he is exhibited in the doctrine of grace, or
depending upon him only." But if the ungodly be not obliged, as well as warranted, to do this, they are at
liberty to do as the Jewish nation did, to receive him not, and to go on depending upon the works of the
law for acceptance with God. In the course of his work, he describes the gospel message as full of kind
invitations, winning persuasions, and importunate entreaties; and the messengers as commissioned to
persuade and entreat sinners to be reconciled to God, and to regard the vicarious work of Jesus as "the only
ground of their justification," -- pp. 36, 37, 2d ed. But how if they should remain unreconciled, and continue
to disregard the work of Christ? How if they should, after all, make light of this "royal banquet," and prefer
their farms and their merchandises to these "plentiful provisions of Divine grace?" Are they guiltless in so
doing, and free from all breach of duty? I am persuaded, whatever was Mr. Booth's reason for being silent
on this subject, he will not say they are.
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* See his Warrant and Nature of Faith.
==========
[From Joseph Belcher, editor, The Complete Works of the Rev. Andrew Fuller, Volume II, 1845; rpt. 1988, pp. 328-342. Document provided by David Oldfield, Post Falls, ID. — jrd]
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