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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A44689 The right use of that argument in prayer from the name of God on behalf of a people that profess it by John Howe. Howe, John, 1630-1705. 1682 (1682) Wing H3038; ESTC R29443 33,646 66

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making a right judgement His wisdom holiness and justice which appeared in putting a people so related to him under seasonable rebukes and discountenance when the state of the case and the methods of his Government required it And so much the rather because they were so related According to that You only have I known of all the families of the earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities Amos 3. 2. The matter here to be disputed was not whether it did not occasion a present dishonour to the God of Israel to let the enemy have such a seeming ground of spiteful suggestions concerning him as if he were impotent or variable or false to them that had intrusted themselves to his protection and care but whether that dishonour were not recompenst with advantage by the greater glory that accrued to him afterwards And this also is the matter that must come under judgement if at length he should finally cast off such a people whether upon the whole all things being considered and taken together it be not more for the honour of his name and the reputation of his rectoral attributes to break off such a relation to them than continue it Wherein he is not concern'd to approve himself to the opinion of fooles or half-witted persons and whose shallow judgment too is govern'd by their disaffection but to such as can consider Perhaps to such as shall hereafter rise up in succeeding ages For he is not in haste His steady duration commensurate with all the successions of time and which runs into Eternity can well admit of his staying till this or that frame and contexture of providence be compleated and capable of being more entirely viewed at once and till calmer minds and men of less interested passions shall come to have the considering of it And in the mean time he hath those numberless myriads of wise and holy sages in the other world the continual observers of all his dispensations that behold them with equal unbyast minds and from the evidence of the matter give their concurrent approbation and applause with all the true members of the Church on earth Great and marvellous are thy works Lord God Almighty just and true are thy wayes thou King of Saints Rev. 15. 3. But it is enough and much more considerable to approve himself to himself and that all his dispensations are guided according to the steady eternal Reason of things which is an inviolable law to him from which he never departs and from the perpetual uniform agreement of all his providences whereto an indubious glory will result unto him that will never admit the least Eclipse or ever be capable of being drawn into dispute And according whereto it will appear if ever he forsake such a people the concernment of his name and glory in the matter was the great inducement to it that he did even owe it to himself and had not otherwise done right to his own name And whatsoever might be argued from it to the contrary will be found capable of a clear and easie answer so as that the weight of the argument will entirely ly on this side For 1. As to his Power he hath reason to be ever secure concerning the reputation of that having given and knowing how further to give when he pleases sufficient demonstrations of it otherwayes Nor was it ever his design to represent himself as a Being of meer Power which of it self hath nothing of moral excellency in it nor do the appearances of it tend to beget that true notion of God in the minds of men which he designed to propagate otherwise than as the glory of it should shine in conjunction with that of his other Attributes that are more peculiarly worthy of God more appropriate to him and more apt to represent him to the world as the most sutable object of a Religious veneration Whereas meer power is capable of having place in an un-intelligent nature and in an intelligent tainted with the most odious impurities He never desir'd to be known among men by such a name as should signifie power only un-accompani'd with wisdom holiness c. And 2. For his wisdom it is seen in pursuing valuable ends by methods sutable to them and becoming himself It became the absolute Soveraignty of a God to select a nation that he would favour more than other nations but would ill have agreed with his wisdom to have bound himself absolutely to them so to favour them howsoever they should demean themselves 3. His bounty and goodness though it found them no better than other people was to have made them better Nor was it any disreputation to his goodness to divert its current when they after long tryal do finally resist its design 4. His Clemency must not be made liable to be mistaken for inadvertency or neglect And to give the world cause to say Tush God seeth not neither is there knowledge in the most high Nor for indifferency and unconcernedness what men do as if good and bad were alike to him And that such as do evil were good in the sight of the Lord and he delighted in them words wherewith he sometime complain'd that men wearied him Mal. 2. 17. He is not to redeem the reputation of one attribute by the real prejudice of another i. e. the offense and grievance to it which acting directly against it if that were possible would occasion 5. His sincerity will be highly vindicated and glorifi'd when it shall be seen that there is nothing more of severity in such a dispensation when ever it takes place than was plainly exprest in his often repeated fore-warnings and threatnings even long before And therefore 6. He is herein but constant to himself and should be more liable to the charge of mutability and inconstancy if finally when the case should so require he should not take this course And 7. As to his righteousness and fidelity towards such a people even those to whom he more strictly oblig'd himself than ever he did to any particular nation besides Let but the tenour of his Covenant with them be consulted and see whether he did not reserve to himself a liberty of casting them off if they revolted from him And whether these were not his express termes that he would be with them while they were with him but that if they forsook him he would forsake them also Therefore much more is he at liberty as to any other people to whom he never made so peculiar promises of external favours as he did to this people Nor hereupon can any thing be pleaded from his name or that is within the compass of its signification with any certainty that it shall conclude and be determining on the behalf of such a people There is a real great doubt in the case whether the argument may not weigh more the other way And whether the wickedness of such a people may not be grown to such a prodigious excess that