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A89578 A sacred record to be made of Gods mercies to Zion: a thanksgiving sermon preached to the two Houses of Parliament, the Lord Major, Court of Aldermen, and Common-Councell of the city of London, at Christ-Church, June 19. 1645. Being the day of their publike thanksgiving to almighty God for the great and glorious victory obtained by the Parliaments army under the conduct of Sir Thomas Fairfax in Naseby-field. / Marshall, Stephen, 1594?-1655. 1645 (1645) Wing M773; Thomason E288_36; ESTC R200112 25,316 41

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hand written they will be without all question Scribimus indocti doctique Diurnalls and Weekly Intelligencers undertake to set them all down but shall posterity bee left to make their computatiō draw their estimate of the Lords dealing by such Books as these should not we rob God our selves his Cause his Church in al ages if we should leave it to such Historians as these God forbid rather let some of the choicest men in the Land be set about it It was said of Claudian that he wanted matter to write of suitable to his wit but what wit is suitable to this matter Who is sufficient for these things who can tell the loving kindnesse of the Lord who can shew forth all his goodnesse My humble suit therefore to the Right Honourable Houses is a thing which I am assured God expects from you even that you would provide that some worthy faithfull heart and heads and pens bee set on work who may undertake this Work and have leave as Mr. Fox had in Queen Elizabeths dayes to search all the Registries and be enabled to hold forth all the light that may bee that the Generations to come may see a true picture a faithfull Story of these three or foure last years And let him doe it faithfully let him not be discouraged with the Politicians fear That it is dangerous to write truth in the present age not safe to come too neere the heels of truth lest it kicke out his teeth But as the Penmen of the Scripture wrote mans folly and Gods goodnesse so let him bee encouraged to let the world know great things God hath done for us and how little we have done for our selves no gratious man shall have the lesse glory in Heaven by letting God have his glory by us on earth though it be in publishing our weaknesses and follies I once again humbly beseech you the thing may bee done And yet further to provoke you consider that in all ages the eminentest men have been employed in this kind of Work Moses wrote the dealings of God for 2500 years from the Creation to their entring into Canaan and afterward it was carryed on by other chiefe Instruments above half the Old Testament is a Chronicle of the things done by the Lord in War and Peace for his people In the New Testament four Evangelists wrote the story of Christ Luke writing the Acts of the Apostles and how ill could the world have wanted one of these How miserable had we been if we had been deprived of them And since that time I appeale to all Scholars whether the choicest men in learning have not been imployed in this service and let all English men speake whether they think any book written in our Mother tongue hath brought more glory to God and stirred up more zeale for Christ and encouraged people more to a holy life and to own Gods Cause couragiously then Mr. Foxes books of Martyrs the Acts and Monuments of the Church In all this I plead not for the honour of any man or men let them all be laid in the dust so God may be glorified they who doe worthily shall have glory enough with God in Heaven yet God would have them also had in everlasting remembrance but it is for God and his honour that I plead there are such things of God of his Wisdome Power Goodnesse Compassion Mercy to be set forth that should the Lord move your hearts to resolve upon it this day it were a testimony of your thankfulnesse next to the going on vigorously in the Reformation and setling of the Church and you can pitch upon nothing that shall bring more eternall glory to the Lord that hath done these great things for us thn to cause these things to be written for the Generations to come that the people not yet created may praise the Lord FINIS Introduction Shewing the fitnesse and scope of the Text Dan. 9. 25. The meaning of the words Esa. 43. 1 2. Jer. 31. 22. Ephes. 2. 10. The first most generall Observation The great work of Gods redeemed People is to praise him Psal. 65. 1. Ephes. 3. ult. Esa● 46. ult. More particular Observations First from the persons who shall doe it Thence I observe the condition of God people whē deprived of Gods Ordinances And when they injoy the libertie of them Ezek. 37. 2. Observat. A people redeemed from low condition most fit to praise God Zeph. 3. 11 12 13. Psal. 22. 24 25 26. 1. I came one great cause why our miseries continue We are not yet brought low in our eyes How great the sinne of such people is when they forget this duty Prov. 30. 21 22 Esay 1. 2. Ezek. 16. 4 5 6 22. 2. Part. The work it selfe That God might in all ages have the glory of this great work Observat. 1. Ephes. 3. 21. In all ages God will have a people to praise him Dan. 2 44. Psal. 102 25 26 27 28. Observat. 2. The whole work of Gods redeemed people is to provide that God may have his glory in all ages Proved by example of the Saints 2 Sam ●2 27. Exod. 1● Judg. 5. 1 Sam. 4. 13 17 18. Jos. 7. 6 7 10. Psal. 116. 10 Psal. 103. 1 2. Psal. 118. 23. Psal. 100. 1. Ps. 103. 20 21. Psal. 48. per to●um Vers 14. And by reason Esa. 43. 7. Application Exhortation 1. To the Parliament to doe this How they may doe it Motives thereunto First Motives ● God chiefly minds this 1 Cor. 7. ●● 2. This onely will end our troubles Esa. 26. 1. Esa. 11. 3. Dan. 2. 3. This will be the everlasting honour of them who do it Part. 3. The meanes whereby they should seek to perpetuate Gods glory Observat. One great meanes to preserve and render unto God his due glory is to record his mercies Proved by Scripture Exod. 15. Judg. 5 Gen. 41 51. Gen. 22. 13 1 Sam. 7. 12. Hester 9. M. Arrows●nih Ebenezert And by reason 1. Gods glory is hereby preserved and spread abroad Psal. 111. 4. Eccles. 3. 14. Thus people who receive them are hereby bettered And the instruments imployed by God are had in due remembrance and honour 3. The generations to come have their due these works concern them And may many wayes be gainers by them Rom. 15. 4. 1 Cor. 10. 11. E●ra 9. 10. ● Vse 1. If posterity then much more they who receive these deliverances should praise God for them Exhortation to all to doe it Especially for mercy The greatnes of this Victory Both in the substance And circumstances which greatly magnifie Gods mercy in it ● The 〈◊〉 when it was done Psal. 125. 33. 2. The place 8. The persons by whom 1 Cor. 1. 27 28 29. 4. The manner how Vse 2. Exhortation to record these Mercies for the Generation to come Dan 4. Psal. 10.
bee done his heart is set upon record his work of building of Zion and let what else so ever be forgotren it matters not ought yee not to be like minded unto our Lord Secondly let me assure you there is nothing else will ever appease our troubles but the vigorous carrying on of this work A great many are afraid lest the quick establishing of Religion through the multitude of mens divided thoughts and ungodlinesse of many mens minds should make our troubles and conflicts more then they have been but be ye assured the Lords Kingdome being provided for in the right way God will prepare salvation for walls and bulwarks hee will be the safety of that Kingdome which advanceth his Kingdome the Kingdome of Christ it is a Kingdome of Peace as himselfe is a Prince of Peace It will never make tumults it will appease tumults in a Kingdome where Christs Scepter prevailes whare hee strikes the Earth with the rod of his mouth Cockatrices will be charmed and all enemies shall bee hush't and quiet It will I say make no tumults where it is received but let mee tell you Christs heart is so set upon the advancement of his Kingdome that where it is not received himselfe will breed tumults enow for them that oppose him and the stone cut out of the mountaine without hands will dash asunder all men and all things all Kingdoms all States that shal not give way to him I adde further concerning your selves that there is nothing will bring so great and everlasting glory to you as to have been instruments in your generation to further the work wherein Christs honour is so much concerned you have read Books and know the world I beseech you tell me out of all the ages of the world that are past cull out the choisest among men in their generations and say who among them was really an eminent Man if it were not for being an instrument in helping forward the Church of Christ multitudes have made stately buildings Fish-ponds Gardens Palaces Some have erected Kingdomes what is become of them all Jam seges est ubi Troja fuit is the doome of all of them they are all turned into vanity and so are the Makers of them Consider the greatest wisest richest learned'st of all who have lived if they were not for Christ and his Church what glory doth now remaine to any of them how much so ever they magnified themselves or were flattered by others who now wil honour them who now extols Pharaoh for a wise King Absalon for a compleat Courtier Achitophel for a politique States-man who now would have the lot of any of them do they not all lye buried ingloriously hath not the Lord made the moth corruption to rot them al But now look into Gods Book and read all Chronicles and you shall find that all they who have set their hearts to this work all Rulers Counsellers Parliaments who have been for the Lord and his Church and Kingdome their memoriall is honourable and blessed in all ages they are still eminent and glorious and shall bee so to the worlds end and in Heaven to all Eternity Set therefore your hearts to this great work shew a reall defire to glorifie him who hath these great things for us This Right Honourable Lords and Patriots I had to say unto you and as for you the rest of this Honoured and Reverend Assembly very many things might bee suggested unto you as means to exalt the glory of this our God and Saviour but the onely thing I shall at the present commend unto you is to be often with God in the Mount follow him with your prayers and supplications give him no rest till hee hath carryed on this great and Honourable Assembly to doe this work that they may raise the foundations for many Generations This from the second part of the Text The work that they should doe not to seek themselves but how the glory of God may be preserved in the present and future Generations The third and last followes which concernes the way they shall take to perpetuate Gods glory for building his Church and answering his peoples prayers what way shall they take for it This shall be written in perpetuam reimemoriam for an eternall monument of it The onely Lesson which I shall hence observe is this That one great way of giving God his deserved glory for his building of his Church and answering his peoples prayers is by causing these wonderfull workes of God to be written for the generations to come For the truth of it it is one of Gods Ordinances You shall finde it in the 78 Psal. vers. 5. where the Prophet had exhorted them to give eare and learne what God had done for them that they might teach it to their children This said he hee ordained for a Law and a Statute for Israel what was this Ordinance that they should write it and teach their posterity to come the wonderfull things which God hath done for his people he commanded not onely themselves to know him and his works and to talk of them but to provide that the generations to come might know what God had done So in the 17. of Exod. 14. vers. When God had begun to appeare for his people in a Warre against Amalck write it said he in a Booke a Book of the Warres of God for his Church and against his enemies must bee written and kept as a record from age to age So also Moses commanded them in the 31 of Deut. 19. vers. Now therefore write ye this Song for you and teach it the Children of Israel A song must be written and learned to expresse what God had done for a people who were most unworthy of the Mercies bestowed upon them So likewise Ester Est 9. 32. The great work of Gods defeating the conspiracy of Haman and deliverance of his Church was recorded not onely by an anniversary feast but it must bee written in a Booke Thus you see the Lord hath often enjoyned his people to record and transmit to posterity the great things which hee hath done for them And as he hath commanded it so his Spirit hath ordered and brought to passe that it hath been so Moses and Samuel and the rest of the Prophets have done it what should I trouble you with a discourse of particular instances since the whole Book of God is nothing but a Chronicle Book of Acts and Monuments of the Lords wonderfull works in gathering and building protecting and saving and doing good to his Church and destroying their Enemies And they did it many wayes sometime they made Eucharisticall Songs which they taught their children sometime they wrote them upon their Childrens names sometime by giving names to the places where the mercies were received sometime erecting stones and pillars sometime by appointing yearly Feasts of remembrance Many of which wayes were presented unto you the
A SACRED RECORD To be made of GODS MERCIES TO ZION A Thankesgiving Sermon Preached to the two Houses of Parliament the Lord Major Court of Aldermen and Common-Councell of the City of London at Christ-Church June 19. 1645. Being the Day of their Publike Thanksgiving to Almighty God for the Great and Glorious Victory obtained by the Parliaments Army under the Conduct of Sir THOMAS FAIRFAX in Naseby-field By Stephen Marshall B. D. Minister of Gods Word at Finching-field in ESSEX Exod. 17. 14. And the Lord said unto Moses Write this for a Memoriall in a Booke and rehearse it in the Eares of Joshua m Psal. 44. 1. Our Fathers have told us what Works thou didst in their dayes in the times of Old Psal. 78. 4. Wee will not hide them from their Children shewing to the Generation to come the praises of the Lord and his strength and his wonderfull Works that he hath done London Printed by Rich. Cotes for Stephen Bowtell and are to be sold at the sign of the Bible in Popes-head-Alley TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE THE LORDS and COMMONS Assembled in PARLIAMENT YOur time is so taken up with the important Worke of rescuing these bleeding Kingdomes and the Church of Christ in and with them that I am sure you are not at leisure to read long Epistles and were I able in a Dedication to write what might very much kindle your zeale provoke your whole inward man and thereby further your great Work I conceive it were onely to tell the world what counsell I thought might doe you good and therefore in stead of studying to present you with an Epistle which few of you would read I doe onely obey your Order and at your Command publish to the view and for the use of all and present unto your selves this plaine Sermon Preached unto you upon the day of your late Thanksgiving unto God for one of the greatest mercies the Victory and what came with it duly considered that God hath bestowed upon our unworthy Nation these many yeares What else I desire to have pressed upon your hearts I chuse to doe it when I am called at any time to Preach unto you or rather to beg it for you at the Throne of Grace where you and your great Work are every day as by many thousand others humbly remembred by Your most obliged Servant STEPHEN MARSHALL Die Veneris 20. Junii 1645. IT is this Day Ordered by the Lords in Parliament Assembled That Mr. Marshall one of the Assembly of Divines who Preached yesterday in Christ-Church London before the Members of both Houses of Parliament and in the presence of the Lord Major Aldermen c. of the City of London is hereby thanked for his great pains that he took in the said Sermon it being a day of Publike Thanksgiving within the said City and Lines of Communication for the late prosperous successe of the Parliaments Forces under the Command of Sir Thomas Fairefax And that he is hereby desired to Print and Publish the said Sermon which none shall presume to Print or re-print but by Authority under his own hand Jo. Brown Cleric Parliamentorum Die Veneris 20. Junii 1645. ORdered by the Commons assembled in Parliament That Sir Peter Wentworth and Sir William Masham doe returne the Thanks of this House to Mr. Vines and Mr. Marshall for the great paines they took in the Sermons they yesterday Preached at the intreaty of both Houses before the said Houses the Lord Major and Aldermen at Christ-Church in London And that they be dered to Print their Sermons And it is Ordered that none shall presume to Print their Sermons but such as shall bee authorized under their hands writing H. Elsynge Cler. Parl. D. Com. I doe appoint Stephen Bowtell to Print my Sermon Stephen Marshall A THANKESGIVING SERMON PREACHED To the two Houses of Parliament June 19. 1645. PSAL. 102. 18. This shall bee written for the Generation to come and all the People which shall bee created shall praise the Lord Right Honourable and Beloved I Have formerly in two Sermons opened the two Verses immediately going before this Text The first of them before the Right Honourable the House of Peeres The latter before the Honourable House of Commons and there shewed at large that these two Verses did containe two Circumstances which alwayes accompany the Lords Work of building up of his Church and they are rendered as two Arguments why all the world should stand in admiration of it The one is because when ever the Lord builds up Zion Hee dotb appeare in his Glory hee appeares like himself magnifying all his Attributes The other that he does then return a gracious answer unto the Prayers of his afflicted People These two were handled in the valley of Baca the valley of Teares upon dayes of Humiliation that out of them you might receive some strength in your mourning after the Lord to help you to wait upon him while you are at his Work building the Street and Wall of Hierusalem in a troublesome time But now the Lord having in great measure given a gracious experience and fruit of those two in this late great and unexpected Victory and Mercy wherein God hath appeared in his Glory and answered his Peoples Prayers in our exceeding low condition his Providence having also called me by your choice to meet you in the valley of Beracah the valley of Blessing to praise God for this I could not thinke of a fitter Text then of the very next words to those that helped you in the dayes of your Mourning which containes the use which the Church in all ages shall make of the Lords building up of Zion And though my time for preparation hath been very short yet I am incouraged because I have been taught of God that a Peace-Offering to himself is easily found And I have often found from you that my poore endeavours how weak soever being the best I have have never been rejected And therefore without further Apology and Preface let us consider of the words as they thus lie This shall bee written for the Generation to come And the People which shall bee created shall praise the Lord Here are you see two Sentences And for the Interpretation of them some Expositors doe conceive that the first Sentence containeth the use that the Generation who receive this Mercy shall make of it They shall Write it for the good of Posterity The second they think containes the use that the future Generation shall make of former Mercies that are thus written and and transmitted to them The People that shall bee created shall praise the Lord the unborn Generation shall praise God for it But others and I think more rightly doe conceive that both sentences are meant of the same individuall People and that the one of them is but an Exegeticall interpretation of the other or rather the first of them is an expression of one way how the redeemed of the Lord shall
Leicester taken in againe and other tydings are come out of other parts of the Kingdome some mercies about Taunton others about Chester hath our God cast them in that this day might be as a day of Jubilee to us Shall not God have glory for all this shall not our hearts bee lifted up to give him praise Would God have a Chronicle written that the ages to come may stand amazed at it and shall we that see these things and enjoy them thus unexpectedly confine and pen up our praises to one day of Thanksgiving and not have our whole heart and our whole life filled with studies and endeavours to exalt him let this be our first Use if we should write them in a Book to provoke others then surely we should write them in our hearts to provoke our selves to praise him The other Use I would make of it is this That seeing the Lord would have his wonderfull Works written for the Generations to come Let the Honourable Houses of Parliament looke upon it as a duty they owe unto God and to the present and future age to provide that these glorious and admirable works which God hath done for England and Scotland since the beginning of our troubles may faithfully bee transmitted to posterity you hear God hath appointed it for a law and an Ordinance that the generations to come should know his wonderfull Workes and it 's both due and expected by one age from another it hath been the received Opinion of wise men that the World is more beholding to them who write Histories then to any men living except onely those that did the excellent Works which the others writ Tully tells you that History is the witnesse of time the light of truth the life of memory the school-Mistris of ourlife c. When yet alasse all their Histories were written with ignorance vanity passion partiality and gave very little help to our main businesse to teach us the administrations of God and the way hee hath taken in carrying on his Church which is the Kingdome of our Lord Jesus Christ But now by the true and faithfull setting forth to the World what the Lord hath done for us you should honour God and advantage his Church as much as in any thing that you can possibly doe unlesse it be the building of the Church it self Never could more excellent things tending to advance the goodnesse wisdome power and mercy of God bee manifested to the world then this story of our times would afford The Jews have a saying That when God destroyed all the World there was a Copy of all kept in the Arke with Noah and after the Floud was gone this Copy was re-printed and spread over all the world The meaning was that the Creatures that were kept there did fill all the world with Creatures of the same nature that the World had before Truly I have often thought that were all the Copies in the world lost of Gods admirable dealing with an unworthy people except only those mentioned in the Scripture there might be a re-impression of them out of the admirable things that God hath done for us since these publike caelamities came upon us and all the world might learn sufficient out of our Story what a God our God is and learn to know and trust and fear him forever give me leave onely to name some Capita rerum some heads of things which is fit the World should read and know They should read of a Parliament called together by a strange providence and when they were called God dealt with them as hee commanded Ezekiel to deale with his own haire Ezekiel 5. one third part of it to be thrown away into the wind another to be burnt in the City and another to be againe purged and refined and kept in the skirt of his garment They should read of 4 or 500 Commons and multitude of Peeres some of them passing through the fire some scattered into all the corners of the land seeking to destroy the Nation that had entrusted them and a remnant left behind fined and refined and humbled again and again and kept to do wonderfull things for the Lords glory and his peoples good They should likewise read of Army after Army and fight after fight which wee have had with our Enemies of every one whereof they should be able to say what my Noble Lord said immediately after Kynton fight That there was never any thing wherein there was lesse of man and more of God They should acknowledge in all wee have done there was little of man and much of God There they should likewise read how this famous City and all the Countries where the Gospel had prevailed have faithfully stood to God and his cause even to their owne exhausting in the midst of infinite discouragements and how the rest that were nursed up under Popery and superstition both Lords and Commons and Gentlemen and whole Counties did endeavour to fight themselves into slavery and labour to destroy the Parliament that is themselves and all that is theirs There they should read how God broke all our crutches we leaned upon our Counsels our Treasuries our Armies and never prospered us really till he had deeply humbled and made us to look to himself onely for help how he brought the two Nations into a Covenant with him and set them upon a work of Reformation of Religion and carryed on that work in a troublesome time in a time of Warre better then in likelihood it would have been in a time of Peace There they should read the fruits and effects of Prayer how he suffered his Almighty hand to be as it were directed by it They should see what strange Plots were discovered prevented detected how God made some of our strong Holds to be easily delivered and others of no strength little lesse then miraculously preserved against all the Force of the enemy how usually God made our losses to bee our gaine and did us most good by undoing us compelling us often to say Perissemus nisi perissemus wee had been undone if we had not been undone and how our enemies that rose against us evermore found their gaine to prove their losse and that which raised them up highest instantly laid them lowest What shall I say they shall in a thousand particulars read in this Story our folly and Gods wisdome our weaknes and Gods strength our divisions and confusions and Gods ordering them all to serve his holy ends They should read such things as I am confident no History in the world is able to hold out the like Now I beseech you is it not pity that these things should be lost shall we deprive the world posterity of these things Serimus arbores we plant Trees which may beare fruit to after ages and shall we not doe this which like Nebuchadnezzars tree would beare fruit to all the world or shall wee hazard them to bee written by a lying or unskilfull